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                  <text>Dems need
to fight
harder

Partly cloudy.
High of 47.
Low near 31.

Martinsville
knocks Point
from playoffs.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 187, Volume 64

Tuesday, November 25, 2014 s 50¢

Dog and kennel licenses coming
Staff report

POMEROY — Meigs County
Auditor Mary T. Byer-Hill says
dog and kennel licenses for
2015 will be available Dec. 1.
Section 955.01 of the Ohio
Revised Code states that every
person who owns, keeps or
harbors a dog more than three
months of age must purchase a
license for that dog before the
31st day of January of each year.
You will have the option to

purchase a one-year or threeyear or permanent tag for your
dog. The one-year dog tag
will be $12 and is valid for the
calendar year in which it is
issued. The state of Ohio has
passed a new code for county
auditor’s to provide dog owners the option of purchasing
a dog tag that will be valid
for three years, as well as the
option to purchase a permanent tag for your dog. The

Hemlock
Grange
announces
new project

cost of the three-year tag will
be $36 and $120 for the permanent tag.
Kennel licenses will also be
available for a person, partnership, firm, company or corporation professionally engaged
in the business of breeding
dogs for sale. The cost of a
kennel license will be $60 and
that will include five tags.
Additional kennel tags can be
purchased for $1 each.

Licenses may be purchased
Monday through Friday from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the
Meigs County Auditor’s Office
on the second floor of the
Meigs County Courthouse.
Current year tags and kennel
tags may also be purchased
from Karen Heater, Meigs
County dog warden. Contact
the Meigs County Auditor’s
Office at 992-2698 with questions regarding the purchase of

a 2015 dog license.
People who wish to purchase tags by mail, a printable
application is available for both
kennel license and individual
dog license on the auditor’s
website at www.meigscountyauditor.org. When submitting
your license by mail, include a
self addressed stamped envelope along with the application
and payment made payable to
the Meigs County Auditor.

Halloween costume contest winners

Staff report

HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grange met recently at the
Grange Hall, with Rosalie Story
conducting the meeting.
After the flag salute and a patriotic song, accompanied by Ann
Lambert on piano, the business of
the Grange was conducted. The
Christmas Project will be food and
money to the Meigs Co-op Food
Pantry.
Chuck Yost, delegate to the Ohio
State Conference, gave his report
and commented on some of the
resolutions discussed. Out of 87
resolutions turned in, 19 were from
Meigs County granges.
The members discussed the price
of the cookbook published by Hemlock Grange. and decided to lower
the price of the cookbook to $5
each. If anyone wishes to purchase
one, call 992-5919 or 992-7079.
The results of the Hemlock
entries at state session are as follows: First Place/People’s Choice
Award to Rosalie Johnson with her
quilt, Opal Grueser receiving first
place for her animal picture and
Sara Cullums receiving third place
for quilt by group.
Kim Romine, lecturer, used
“Thanksgiving Trivia” as her program, with answers including The
first department store to hold a
Thanksgiving parade was Gimbel’s,
the Macy’s first parade took place
in 1924, the first Thanksgiving in
1621 was believed to have lasted
three days, there were 102 people
aboard the Mayflower and it is
believed that by the first Thanksgiving only five Pilgrim women
survived. She ended her program
with a question: What are unhappy
cranberries called? Blueberries.
December’s meeting will be preceded by a pot roast dinner at 6:30
p.m. All members are invited.

ABOVE, winner
of $150 Sawyer
Spillman, from West
Portsmouth. He is
pictured with Steve
Shockley of Taylor
Motors, who was the
primary sponsor of
the local contest
and his father.
Spillman dressed
as a race car driver
and even had a race
car as part of his
costume. AT LEFT,
runner up winner
of $50 sponsored
by Mark Porter,
pictured with Teresa
Porter, is Layla and
Tanner Robson. They
dressed up as Ana
and Olaf and are
from Long Bottom.

Energy savings hard to measure

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

By Julie Carr Smyth

protected for proprietary or other
legal reasons.
The committee was created
COLUMBUS — Ohio’s top
earlier this year as part of legislautility regulator provided sparse
tion that paused state alternativedetails on Monday to a new legisla- energy mandates in a compromise
tive panel studying the economic
struck by Gov. John Kasich and
impact of state renewable energy
proponents of repealing them altomandates that have been paused
gether.
for two years.
State Sen. Troy Balderson, a
Tom Johnson, chairman of the
Zanesville Republican and commitPublic Utilities Commission of
tee co-chair, said the panel may be
Ohio, told the Energy Mandates
meeting during the lame duck sesStudy Committee that much of
sion, but it does not intend to wrap
what they hoped to learn was
up its work by year’s end. He said

Associated Press

— SPORTS
Cross Country: 6
Football: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Television: 8
Comics: 9

Submitted photos

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

lawmakers are focused on gathering information.
“The goal of this committee is to
get some answers. It’s not to repeal
anything,” he said.
Co-chair state Rep. Peter Stautberg, a Cincinnati Republican,
anticipated another hearing or two
may be held in December.
Johnson, a former state lawmaker and budget director, provided
brief testimony in a presentation
that many observers — including
See ENERGY | 5

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES

JANET MAE EPPERLY DUFFY
RACINE — Janet Mae
Epperly Duffy, of Racine,
formerly of Pomeroy,
passed away Saturday,
Nov. 22, 2014, at the
home of her daughter
after an extended illness.
She was born Jan. 30,
1934, in Cabin Creek,
W.Va., to the late Walter
Frank and Ella Gertrude
Adkins Epperly.
Janet was a switchboard operator for several
years at Pomeroy’s General Telephone Office.
She was also employed at
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
as a secretary and later in
safety department. Janet
was a member of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy and a past member of the Catholic Women’s Club and the Child
Conservation League. She
also was an avid bowler.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Edward Patrick “Pat”
Duffy; sisters Christabelle
Gillespie, Mary Zelle
(Vernon), of Ashworth,
Va., “Dutie” Phalin and
Bette Miller; brother

JAMES RAY FERRELL

Frank Epperly Jr.; half sisters and brothers Bethalene Williams, Francis
Lahoma Bash, Kathleen
Epperly, Dean Epperly
and Gayle Adkins; and
brothers-in-law and
sisters-in-law Rita Hamm,
Betty Epperly, Bill Miller
and Thomas Williams.
She is survived by her
daughters and sons-in-law
Tina and Dave Neigler
and Patricia and Greg
Taylor; grandchildren
Breanna, Kaitlyn and
Garrett Taylor; brotherin-law Vernon Ashworth;
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral Mass will be
11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov.
26, 2014, with Father
Tim Kozac officiating
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Burial will
follow at Sacred Heart
Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday
at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

RUTH SMITH
REEDSVILLE — Ruth
Smith, 69, of Reedsville,
passed away Saturday,
Nov. 22, 2014, at The
Ohio State University
Medical Center in Columbus.
She was born Nov. 25,
1944, in Reedsville, the
daughter of the late Verdie Winslow and Elizabeth Baker Smith.
She is survived by a
sister, Barbara Richards;
and several nieces and
nephews.
In addition to her par-

ents, she was preceded in
death by three half-brothers and a half-sister.
Graveside services
will be 1 p.m. Tuesday,
Nov. 25, 2014, at the
Reedsville Cemetery with
Pastor Russ Carson officiating.
There will be no visitation. Arrangements are
by White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio.
You can sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Please call for more information on local pricing.

NEWSROOM:
Lindsay Kriz
740-992-2155 Ext. 2555
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

4-H Committee
Plat Book sales
POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee
has reduced the price of the current plat book to
$10. Funds support the 4-H program in the county
by providing funds for supplies, camp and college
scholarships, learning opportunities and more. To
purchase a plat book, you can stop by the Extension
Office on Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m (closed 12-12:30 for lunch) mail $15 (for book,
shipping &amp; handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, PO Box 32, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit
the Meigs County Recorder’s Office in the Court
House.

District 18 public works
committee meeting

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

CONTACT US

CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Ed Litteral
740-353-3101 Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

Young, Shane Reed
Ferrell, Aaron Davis
and Jim Porter; and
great-nieces and greatnephews Heath Ryen,
Makenna Greaves,
Gabriel Young, Allyson
Davis, Michael Davis,
Hannah Porter, Jimmy
Porter, Lily Porter and
Aiden Porter.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Wednesday,
Nov. 26, 2014, at Meigs
Memory Gardens with
Jeff Davis officiating.
Visiting hours will be
noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday at Meigs Memory
Gardens.
The family would like
to give special thanks to
some of James’ wonderful friends, Dave Doefer,
Mark and Maryann
Davis, Greg Davis and
Jo Ann Tyree.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

MARIETTA — A meeting of the District 18
Executive Committee will be 10 a.m. Dec. 11 at the
Best Western, 701 Pike Street, Marietta (formerly
known as the Holiday Inn). The purpose of this
meeting is for the Executive Committee to select
projects for Round 29 funding under the Ohio Public Works Commission State Capital Improvement
and Local Transportation Improvement Programs
(SCIP/LTIP). If you have questions regarding this
meeting, contact Michelle Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

Civitas Media, LLC

EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — James
Ray Ferrell, 57, of Syracuse, passed away Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014, at
his home. He was born
in Charleston, W.Va., on
July 14, 1957, the son of
the late Dilford Wilson
Ferrell and Marjorie Lou
Ferrell.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by his brother
Dilford D. Ferrell; and
a special niece Amy Jo
Davis.
James was a graduate
of Southern High School
and a veteran of the U.S.
Marine Corps.
He is survived by his
brother Reed (Judy)
Ferrell, of Northport,
Fla.; three sisters, Mary
(Mel) Fry, of New
Haven, W.Va., Trina
(Dick) Davis, of Syracuse, and Teresa Icenhower, of Syracuse; nieces and nephews Melanie
Higgins, Andrea (Zach)

TUE., NOV. 25

$10 donation is appreciated for immunization
POMEROY — There
will be no Meigs Co. Tea administration; however,
no one will be denied
Party meeting on Nov.
services because of
25. The next meeting
an inability to pay an
will be held on Dec. 9.
The Tea Party would like administration fee for
state-funded childhood
to wish everyone a very
vaccines. Please bring
Happy Thanksgiving.
medical cards and/or
POMEROY — The
commercial insurance
Meigs County Health
cards, if applicable. Flu
Department will conshots are available for
duct an Immunization
people aged 6 months
Clinic on Tuesday,
and older. Only Ohio
Nov. 25 from 9-11 a.m.
Medicaid via Caresource
and 1-3 p.m. at 112
is accepted for those
E. Memorial Drive
aged 19 years or older.
in Pomeroy. Please
Zostavax (shingles) vacbring child(ren)’s shot
cine is also available.
records. Children must
Call for eligibility deterbe accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. A mination.

ADVERTISING:
Sarah Thompson
740-992-2155 Ext. 2554
sthompson@civitasmedia.com
Brenda Davis
740-992-2155 Ext. 2553
bdavis@civitasmedia.com
SPORTS:
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
Alex Hawley, Ext. 2100
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

In Loving Memory of

Marvene Caldwell
who passed away November 25th, 2013

A year has passed away
On November 25th, this day
God called you from us and
the world to stay
Without time to say goodbye
Your loving touch,
your laugh, your footsteps
&amp; your vacant chair;
These memories time cannot erase,
but will be more precious as
the years pass.

from the Area Agency on Aging 8

Call Today!
1-800-331-2644

Area Agency on Aging
.areaagency8.org

60549336

BELVILLE
GALLIPOLIS — Marlene Callicoat Belville, 88, of
Gallipolis, and formerly of the Swan Creek Community,
died Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 29, 2014,
at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis, with Pastor Alvis Pollard and Chaplain Fred
Williams officiating. Burial will follow in Swan Creek Cemetery in Crown City, Ohio. Friends and family may call the
funeral home between 5-8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28, 2014.
BROWN
GALLIPOLIS — Maureen C. Brown, age 73, of Gallipolis, died Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014, in the Emergency
Room at Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 29, 2014,
at Gallipolis Christian Church with Pastor Michael Lynn
officiating. Burial will follow at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
between 5-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28, 2014, and at the church
on Saturday one hour prior to services.
A complete obituary will be published in Wednesday’s
edition.
CLARK
LAKE PLACID, Fla. — Eldon Clark, 68, of Lake Placid,
Fla., formerly of Gallipolis, died Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at
Ft. Myers Gulf Coast Hospital, Ft. Myers, Fla. Arrangements will be announced later at the convenience of the
family. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
DURST
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio — Lillian L. Durst, 90, formerly
of Leon, W.Va., died Sunday, Nov. 22, 2014, at University
Hospital Conneaut Medical Center. Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2014, with visitation two
hours prior at Littleton and Rue Funeral Home, Springfield.
HARRIS
GALLIPOLIS — Irene J. Harris, 81, of Gallipolis, died
Thursday, Nov. 20, 2014, in the Emergency Department at
Holzer Medical Center.
In keeping with Irene’s wishes, there will be no calling
hours. A graveside service will be at the convenience of
the family at Ohio Valley Memory Garden. Expressions
of sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
LAFFERTY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Aaron Walter Lafferty, 26, of
Huntington, passed away Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at Cabell
Huntington Hospital, Huntington.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2014,
at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.
Visitation will be 1-2 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2014 at the
funeral home.
MAHOOD
COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va. — Deborah Lynn (Hill)
Mahood, 55 of Cottageville, passed away Thursday, Nov.
20, 2014, at her home.
Service was 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at Casto
Funeral Home Chapel in Evans, W.Va. Burial followed in
the Creston Cemetery. Visitation was one hour prior to
time of service.
NORVELL
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mrs. Linda Marie Norvell, 65, of Point Pleasant, passed away Wednesday, Nov.
19, 2014, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A tribute to the life of Mrs. Linda Marie Norvell was at
1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, at Gatens-Harding Funeral
Home Chapel, Poca, W.Va., with Pastor Dr. Mark Stauffer
officiating. Burial followed in Tyler Mountain Memory
Gardens. The family received friends one hour prior to the
service Monday.
SAYRE
CARSON CITY, Nev. — Beatrice Sayre died Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, after an extended illness and several
admissions to Carson Tahoe Hospital.
An informal memorial service will be 2 p.m. Saturday
Dec. 6, 2014, at Walton’s Funeral Home located at 1281 N.
Roop St., Carson City. The family requests that no flowers
be sent, but if people would like, donations can be made in
Bea’s name to the Carson-Tahoe Hospital Foundation, P.O.
Box 2168, Carson City, NV 89702.
WHITE
LETART FALLS, Ohio — Carroll “Pinky” White, 74, of
Letart Falls, died Friday, Nov. 21, 2014, while surrounded
by his loved ones.
Services were conducted at noon Monday, Nov. 24,
2014, at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va.,
with the Rev. Jim Satterfield and the Rev. Dwayne Stutler
officiating. Burial will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery in
Racine, Ohio.
Friends visited the family at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, and again one hour prior to
Monday’s service.
WOLFE
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Harvey Earl Wolfe, 70, of
Glenwood, passed away Friday, Nov. 21, 2014, at Pleasant
Valley Nursing and Rehab Center.
A graveside service was held at the Greenbottom
Memorial Park in Lesage, W.Va., at 11 a.m. Monday, Nov.
24, 2014, with American Legion Post 23 of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., and the West Virginia National Honor Guard conducting full military graveside honors. At Harvey’s request
there was no viewing or visitation. Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, is serving the family.

The Area
Agency on
Aging honors
Caregivers
and provides
Caregiver
Advocacy &amp;
Resources.

60549954

Missed by your family &amp; friends;
Husband, Howard; children
Howie, Bob &amp; Martie &amp;
her beloved kitty Bingo

We S
alute Caregivers!
Salute

ADKINS
ASHTON, W.Va. — Mary Ann Adkins, 70, of Ashton,
passed away Sunday, Nov. 22, 2014, at home after a
sudden illness. Arrangements are incomplete and will
be announced by Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., when they are available.

Serving Seniors in Athens, Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry
&amp; Washington Counties

WRIGHT
VINTON, Ohio — Clyde C. Wright, 79, of Vinton, died
Thursday, Nov. 20, 2014, at his residence.
Funeral services were conducted at 11 a.m. Monday,
Nov. 24, 2014, at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton
Chapel, with Pastor Dan Lamphier officiating. Burial will
follow at Vinton Memorial Park in Vinton.

�STATE/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 25, 2014 3

Holiday sales Obama awards Medal of Freedom to 18
projected
to rise more
By Nedra Pickler

Freedom is reserved for individuals
who have made “meritorious contributions” to U.S. security, world
WASHINGTON — President
peace or cultural endeavors. Obama
Barack Obama on Monday bestowed said he took great pleasure in being
America’s highest civilian honor on
able to present the award to Ethel
trailblazers in the arts, sports and
Kennedy, since it was her brotherpolitics, along with a couple of enter- in-law the former president who
tainers who are among his personal
expanded and elevated the honor
favorites.
more than a half century ago.
The 18 notables who gathered
Obama noted that over the sumin the White House East Room to
mer, Ethel Kennedy challenged him
receive the Presidential Medal of
to douse himself in water to support
Freedom left even the president
ALS research. “I don’t like pouring
himself in awe. Obama said the cerice water on top of my head. That is
emony is one of his favorite events
probably the only time I’ve ever said
because it celebrates “people who
no to Ethel, by the way,” Obama said
have made America stronger and
to laughter.
wiser and more humane and more
Others receiving the award
beautiful.”
included NBC journalist Tom
He revealed the first record he
Brokaw, author Isabel Allende,
ever bought was by honoree Stevie
Native American activist Suzan
Wonder and confessed a crush on
Harjo, actress Marlo Thomas, econoMeryl Streep, gushing about her
mist Robert Solow, former Rep.
ability to promote empathy on and
Abner Mikva of Illinois, physicist
off the screen through charitable
Mildred Dresselhaus and golfer
works.
Charlie Sifford. Composer Stephen
“Her husband knows I love her.
Sondheim was scheduled to receive
Michelle knows I love her. There’s
the award, but Obama said he
nothing either of them can do about couldn’t make it and will be included
it,” the president joked.
in next year’s class of honorees.
The Presidential Medal of
The loudest applause came when

Associated Press

CINCINNATI (AP) — Ohio’s holiday retail
sales are expected to rise even higher than
national estimates as job gains and lower gas
prices help fuel consumer confidence, according to an economic forecast released Monday.
The University of Cincinnati Economics
Center offered its annual projections for the
holiday period that kicks into high gear later
this week with Thanksgiving and Black Friday shopping.
The center expects a 4.5 percent increase
in Ohio retail spending for November and
December. The National Retail Federation
trade group has forecast that retail sales in
November and December will rise 4.1 percent
above the same period in 2013. The Ohio
report projects $14.5 billion in holiday retail
spending.
Michael Jones, director of research for the
UC center, said consumer confidence levels
are at a seven-year high as the economy
rebounds, while falling gas prices leave more
money in household budgets. The latest statewide gas survey Monday showed the average
price for a gallon of regular gas in Ohio was
$2.74, compared to $3.25 a year ago.
“Consumers have higher employment numbers, they have increased wages, they’re feeling better about the economy, there’s lower
energy prices,” Jones said. “There’s a lot of
factors that are really driving this increase in
holiday sales this season.”
The Ohio forecast is done in conjunction
with the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants
and uses sales data, consumer confidence and
other factors in its forecasting model.
The biggest percentage increases in holiday sales are expected in the Columbus and
Toledo metropolitan areas, up 6.3 percent
each, and the Cincinnati area expected to rise
5.1 percent.
Cleveland area holiday sales are expected to
increase 3.9 percent, followed by the Akron
area at 1.8 percent and Youngstown at 1.3
percent. The Dayton area is forecast to be
down slightly.

Obama gave posthumous medals
to family members of civil rights
workers James Chaney, Andrew
Goodman and Michael Schwerner,
who were slain in 1964 as they
participated in a historic voter
registration drive in Mississippi.
Other posthumous awards were for
choreographer Alvin Ailey and Reps.
Patsy Mink of Hawaii and Edward
Roybal of California, founder of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus.
There also was a sustained cheer
for Michigan Democratic Rep. John
Dingell, who is retiring at the end of
this year after the serving the longest tenure in congressional history,
after he mustered the strength to
stand and receive his medal.
“His life reminds us that change
takes time,” Obama said, noting
that Dingell was a tireless fighter for
health care reform who stood at his
side when he signed the Affordable
Care Act into law. “It takes courage
and persistence, but if we push hard
enough and long enough, change is
possible.”
Associated Press writers Stacy Anderson and
Darlene Superville contributed to this report.
Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.
com/nedrapickler

US judge sentences cartel lieutenant
By Michael Tarm

unmoving in a Chicago
courtroom, listening
through a SpanishCHICAGO — A U.S. judge speaking interpreter as
sentenced a reputed lieutenChief U.S. District Judge
ant of captured Mexican
Ruben Castillo’s tone
drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’
Guzman to 22 years in prison became more stern.
“I tell you on behalf of all
Monday for his role in a $1
citizens
of Chicago ... we
billion trafficking conspiracy,
are
tired
of this drug trafsaying the stiff sentence
ficking,”
he
said.
should send a message to trafThe case is regarded as
fickers everywhere.
one of the U.S. government’s
Alfredo Vasquezmost important against
Hernandez, 59, stood

Associated Press

Mexican cartels. Guzman
remains jailed in Mexico and
Mexican authorities haven’t
said if they might extradite
him to Chicago.
Minutes before the sentence was imposed, a deferential Hernandez said he
wanted to apologize.
“I ask you for forgiveness
and for you to have pity on
me,” he told the judge.
Defense attorney Paul
Brayman had asked that

Castillo impose no more
than the mandatory minimum 10-year sentence,
saying “anything more ...
is a death sentence” for his
client. Hernandez pleaded
guilty this year to possessing heroin and cocaine
with intent to distribute.
After the hearing,
Hernandez’s 43-year-old
son, Gabriel Vasquez, told
reporters the punishment
was too harsh.

Columbus named finalist for Democratic convention
COLUMBUS —
Columbus was one
of three finalist cities
announced Monday to
host the Democratic
Party’s next presidential
nominating convention.
Democratic National
Committee members
selected the Ohio capital
along with Philadelphia
and New York. The decision eliminates Birmingham, Ala., and Phoenix
from the running.
Columbus’ place on the
short list retains the possibility that Ohio would
play host to both parties’
conventions in the same
year. Republicans have
picked Cleveland as their

convention site.
The event attracts
thousands of political
operatives, donors and
journalists to the host
city picked every four
years. Democratic party
leaders are expected to
select the winning convention site in December
or early January.
Columbus’ geography
and location in a bellwether state are viewed
as strengths, while its
lack of a subway system
is a drawback.
It would be Columbus’
first national political
convention and a feather
in the cap of a city that’s
grown to feel its assets

are widely overlooked.
The city named several prominent Ohioans
— including astronaut
and former U.S. Sen.
John Glenn and his wife,
Annie; Frances Strickland, wife of former
Gov. Ted Strickland;
and Jeni Britton Bauer,
founder of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams — to
its 50-member Columbus2016 Host Committee as part of its lobbying effort to land the
convention. It provided
Jeni’s ice cream and free
wireless Internet access
as treats for attendees
of Democratic National
Committee’s summer

found the ice cream to
bus in August, during
meeting in Atlanta.
The offerings followed which its chief executive, be among the things that
surprised her most.
the DNC’s tour of Colum- Amy Dacey, said she

Lawsuit challenges
juvenile arrests, detentions
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

having spent 15 days in detention and six
months on house arrest, “with no indication that a probable cause determination
COLUMBUS — Authorities in southwas made to justify restrictions on his libwest Ohio routinely and unconstitutionally erty,” the lawsuit said.
arrest and detain children without proper
The Hamilton County administrator
evidence that they committed a crime,
declined to comment. Curt Kissinger,
according to a federal lawsuit seeking an
Hamilton County juvenile court adminimmediate end to the practice.
istrator, said the office had just received
The Hamilton County juvenile court
the lawsuit and was still reviewing it. A
and detention systems also process black
message was left for the Hamilton County
juveniles at much higher rates than whites, juvenile detention center.
according to the lawsuit filed late Sunday
In 2013, black children were almost 10
by the Children’s Law Center in Covingtimes more likely to be arrested than white
ton, Kentucky, near Cincinnati.
in Hamilton County, and more than twice
When individuals are detained, the Conas likely to be detained, the lawsuit said.
stitution requires that the state has some
It said almost 80 percent of children
evidence against them, said Kim Tandy,
arrested
in Hamilton County last year
the center’s executive director.
were
black,
though only about one in three
“Without that, whether the person’s
black
children
is considered at risk of
guilty or not, the process just fundameninvolvement
in
the justice system.
tally is unfair,” she said.
More
than
6,000
children were arrested
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of two
last
year
in
Hamilton
County, with nearly
children arrested this year and last. One,
40
percent
of
those
housed
in the county
referred to by his initials, S.W., was arrestJuvenile
Court
Youth
Center
at a cost of
ed on Sept. 12 for allegedly committing a
$221 a day, according to the Children’s
robbery, despite only vague descriptions
Law Center.
of suspects, and acquitted a month later,
Two years ago, the U.S. Justice Departaccording to the lawsuit
ment raised similar concerns about court
Probable cause requires police to protreatment of juveniles in Shelby County in
vide solid evidence about the source of
Tennessee, home to Memphis.
allegations against the target of an arrest
Earlier this month, the Ohio Supreme
warrant.
Court ruled that Toledo Municipal Court
A second child, L.D., was arrested last
year on a robbery charge when he was 14, had improperly issued arrest warrants
and eventually convicted of a lesser charge, without proper evidence for 17 years.

Associated Press

Holiday Urgent Care Hours
Thursday, November 27

Friday, November 28

Gallipolis: Closed

Gallipolis: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Athens: Closed

Athens: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Jackson: Closed

Jackson: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Meigs: Closed

Meigs: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

(Thanksgiving Day)

(Day after Thanksgiving)

The Clinic at Walmart operated by Holzer in Athens
will be CLOSED Thursday, November 27 (Thanksgiving Day) Friday, November 28 (Day after Thanksgiving), and will resume
normal hours November 29.

60549748

1-855-4HOLZER (1-855-446-5937)

www.holzer.org

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The USA’s
misnamed
Freedom Act
The proposed USA Freedom Act was billed in
some quarters as “sweeping” reform of controversial data collection practices by the National
Security Agency that were publicly disclosed 18
months ago by Edward Snowden, who was then
an intelligence contractor with the spy agency.
The legislation, drafted by Sen. Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt., fortunately failed on Tuesday to muster the
60 votes necessary to advance to the Senate floor
for final consideration.
Several provisions of his proposal are worthy
of support by lawmakers on both sides of the
aisle who count themselves protectors of the
constitutional right of the American people “to
be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects against unreasonable searches.” But the
bill’s fundamental flaw was that, while purporting
to rein in spying on Americans, it also would have
extended concerning portions of the Patriot Act,
the law enacted in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001
terror attacks, which authorized mass surveillance
of not only foreign nationals, but also the American people.
The Freedom Act would have curbed the NSA’s
mass collection of phone records. It would have
required the government to disclose the number
of individuals whose data was collected and how
many of those were citizens. It also would have
created a panel of privacy advocates to help protect the privacy and civil rights of the American
people.
Yet, those provisions were not sufficient to merit
passage of the legislation by the Senate because
the law also would have upheld portions of the
Patriot Act, thereby moving the country closer to
a surveillance state where the government’s unreasonable searches — like reading the emails of lawabiding citizens — have become commonplace.
The Patriot Act is why the NSA was able to
secretly collect the phone records of tens of millions of Americans. It is why spy agencies can
continue to snoop through the Internet accounts
of U.S. citizens without their knowledge or consent. And it is why the government can go so
far as to monitor credit card and other financial
transactions of the American people. Above all,
we believe it also ushered in the justification for
the increased use of unilateral executive action by
former President George W. Bush and President
Barack Obama.
Sen. Rand Paul, the Kentucky Republican, is
right in his belief that a better way to reform the
NSA is to let the Patriot Act lapse when it comes
up for renewal next summer. Going into 2015, the
Senate should allow the Patriot Act to expire and,
in new and separate legislation, address the security and privacy needs of the American people.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

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

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

THEIR VIEW

Dems must learn how to fight

Loss is central to experiyour gloriousness — once
ence, but the emphasis on
thought repulsive — is now
making an ever-larger playcommonplace.
room with small to massive
The Democratic Party
toys tends to trivialize “all
might have run the table on
things considered.”
the GOP had it become virIn our time of monkey
tuosic in the show business
see, monkey do, so much
of American politics, which
Stanley
is about the long struggle
comes down now to special
Crouch
to accurately mirror the
King Features effects, not necessarily the
opposition on the basis of
story line or the acting, which
columnist
success — and that success
might be good. If not, the specan pollute sensibility, creatcial effects will move the gross
ing a novel craving until enjoyment
ball into the end zone. In previous
arrives within the unpleasant splenand far-less-decadent eras, stupendor of pain. That is called masochdous acting and marvelous writing
ism, and championships are built on were the special effects sought by
the ability to endure in the boxing
the people. What has changed is
ring, on the football field, even being indicative of our politics no longer
able to make it through the hot
being held in place by the facts of
weather sent to the tennis court.
the matter.
Being able to “take it” is exagThe state of contemporary music
gerated until one can present being
shows what people are willing to
victimized in counterfeit letters and
hear; something less than talent and
hear applause in growing waves.
feeling that rises from the ground
This means being accepted into the
and from the epic of life itself.
caustic fraternity of professional
These days, those human and
bleeders, politicians who love to
humane desires have been replaced
show the makeup of their fraudulent by electronics focused on amplificawounds, and benefit from every
tion, the bigger the sound — no
fright night at the ballot box.
matter if distorted — the better.
That is one of the explanations
The sound crews are more interestfor the fright night of the recent
ing to the public than the musicians,
midterm elections. On a train
who no longer need the ability to
going to Chicago from New York, a
sing; slogans sounding like adverman attributed the massive loss of
tisements can be spoken and called
electoral blood by the Democrats
some sort of new music. The carpetnot so much to their bad strategy
bombing of slogans with no proof
or less-than-impressive candidates,
attached will do. Karl Rove knows
but to their inability to effectively
how to do it, and where and how
thump their chests over the facts.
often to send in the robocalls.
He thought their constantly being
Rove is the comeback kid of the
terrified of any association with
red team, the right team, the redthe president and his policies was
necks disguised as conservatives,
extremely foolish. Bragging about
those claiming to hate President

Barack Obama for constitutional
injustice performed by the federal government — as Sen. Mitch
McConnell says, they must only
rebel, rebel and rebel. After comfortably living on the intellectual
Redneck Riviera, he handily beat his
opponent without having to brag
about his voting record. Ready to be
the straw boss of the Senate, he is
upright and now ready to legislate.
There is much talk about the need
for a leader, or a number of leaders,
in Washington. The House and the
Senate have them; they have sold
out to big money and the agendas
pushed and bankrolled by the most
rabid fat cats, more lions and tigers
than domesticated pets.
A little humility is not needed;
having lost at the ballot box, the
Democrats must learn how to fight
and resist the public persona that
was built by Strom Thurmond and
became most different from the
past. Thurmond prayed daily, on his
knees with Clarence Thomas and
his blond wife; Anita Hill did not
sway the senator with her charges
against Thomas. She could be
defeated; Thurmond knew how to
do it because he was a real soldier.
He had become a new man, put his
past behind him and proved that
coming to power demanded adjustment to the newly available troops.
Once Democrats learn how to
fight, great battles may be won on
both sides in a couple of years —
not now, no chance, just more training. Of course, if you can’t stand the
heat in the kitchen …
Stanley Crouch can be reached by email at
crouch.stanley@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
25, the 329th day of 2014.
There are 36 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Nov. 25, 1984,
William Schroeder of
Jasper, Ind., became the
second man to receive a
Jarvik-7 artificial heart,
at Humana Hospital
Audubon in Kentucky.
(Schroeder lived 620
days on the device.) The
Ethiopian famine relief
song “Do They Know It’s
Christmas?” was recorded
in London by the charity
supergroup Band Aid.
On this date:
In 1783, the British
evacuated New York, their
last military position in
the United States during
the Revolutionary War.
In 1864, during the
Civil War, Confederate
agents set a series of
arson fires in New York;
the blazes were quickly
extinguished.

In 1908, the first issue
of The Christian Science
Monitor was published.
In 1914, baseball Hall of
Famer Joe DiMaggio was
born in Martinez, Calif.
In 1920, radio station
WTAW of College Station, Texas, broadcast the
first play-by-play description of a football game,
between Texas University
and the Agricultural and
Mechanical College of
Texas. (Texas won, 7-3.)
In 1944, baseball commissioner Judge Kenesaw
Mountain Landis died at
age 78.
In 1957, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
suffered a slight stroke.
In 1963, the body of
President John F. Kennedy was laid to rest at
Arlington National Cemetery; his widow, Jacqueline, lighted an “eternal
flame” at the gravesite.
In 1974, former U.N.
Secretary-General U
Thant died in New

York at age 65.
In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair erupted as President Ronald Reagan and
Attorney General Edwin
Meese revealed that profits from secret arms sales
to Iran had been diverted
to Nicaraguan rebels.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Noel Neill is
94. Playwright Murray
Schisgal is 88. Actress
Kathryn Crosby is 81.
Actor Matt Clark is 78.
Actor Christopher Riordan is 77. Singer Percy
Sledge is 74. Pro Football
Hall of Fame coach Joe
Gibbs is 74. Singer Bob
Lind is 72. Author, actor
and economist Ben Stein
is 70. Actor John Larroquette is 67. Actor Tracey
Walter is 67. Movie director Jonathan Kaplan is 67.
Author Charlaine Harris
is 63. Retired MLB AllStar Bucky Dent is 63.
Dance judge Bruno Tonioli (TV: “Dancing with the
Stars”) is 59. Singer Amy

Grant is 54. Former NFL
quarterback Bernie Kosar
is 51. Rock musician Eric
Grossman (K’s Choice)
is 50. Rock singer Mark
Lanegan is 50. Rock
singer-musician Tim Armstrong is 49. Actor Steve
Harris is 49. Actor Billy
Burke is 48. Singer Stacy
Lattisaw is 48. Rock
musician Rodney Sheppard (Sugar Ray) is 48.
Rapper-producer Erick
Sermon is 46. Actress Jill
Hennessy is 45. Actress
Christina Applegate is 43.
Actor Eddie Steeples is
41. Actress Kristian Nairn
is 39. Former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb
is 38. Actor Jerry Ferrara
is 35. Actor Joel Kinnaman is 35. Actress Valerie
Azlynn is 34. Former first
daughter Jenna Bush
Hager is 33. Former first
daughter Barbara Pierce
Bush is 33. Actress Katie
Cassidy is 28. Contemporary Christian singer
Jamie Grace is 23.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 25, 2014 5

Pentagon chief Hagel stepping down under pressure
By Julie Pace
and Robert Burns
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Under pressure from
President Barack Obama,
Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel submitted his resignation Monday amid White
House concerns about his
effectiveness and broader
criticism from outside about
the administration’s Middle
East crisis management.
The president said he and
Hagel had determined it was
an “appropriate time for him
to complete his service.”
Hagel, a former
Republican senator, never
broke through the White
House’s notably insular
national security team.
Officials privately griped
about his ability to publicly
communicate administration
policy and more recently
questioned whether he had
the capacity to oversee new
military campaigns against
the Islamic State group in
Iraq and Syria.
Hagel is the first high-level
member of Obama’s national
security team to step down
in the wake of both a disastrous midterm election for
the president’s party and
persistent criticism about
the administration’s policies
in the Middle East and elsewhere. It’s unclear whether
Hagel’s forced resignation
signals the start of a broader
shake-up of the president’s
team; White House officials
said it was possible there
could be more departures.
Among the leading contenders to replace Hagel
is Michele Flournoy, who
served as the Pentagon’s
policy chief for the first
three years of Obama’s
presidency. Flournoy, who
would be the first woman to
head the Pentagon, is now
chief executive officer of the
Center for a New American
Security, a think tank that
she co-founded.
Flournoy is said to
be interested in the top
Pentagon job but seeking
assurances from the White
House that she would be
given greater latitude in
policymaking than Hagel.
Flournoy is also considered

Flournoy tops
Pentagon shortlist
By Bradley Klapper
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Michele Flournoy, formerly the Pentagon’s policy chief and among
President Barack Obama’s more hawkish
advisers, could be in line to become the first
woman to lead the U.S. military after Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel’s resignation.
Passed over by Obama for the job 20
months ago, Flournoy heads a short list
of candidates to direct the war against the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, and help
Afghanistan fight the Taliban insurgency.
Other contenders include Ashton Carter,
until last year the Pentagon’s No. 2-ranked official, and Robert Work, Hagel’s current deputy.
Sen. Jack Reed isn’t interested in the job,
a spokesman said Monday. Obama had
mentioned Reed on Monday as he recounted
a 2008 trip to Afghanistan with the Rhode
Island Democrat and Hagel, then a Republican
senator from Nebraska.
At the White House, Obama said Hagel
would stay on until the Senate confirms a successor. No timeframe for the transition was
given.
Flournoy, among the most senior female
officials in Pentagon history, has a long history with Obama. After winning the 2008
election, President-elect Obama asked her
to co-lead his transition team at the Defense
Department. She then kept a relatively low
a possible defense secretary
for Hillary Rodham Clinton
if Clinton should win the
presidency in 2016.
Others mentioned as possible replacements include
Ashton Carter, the former
deputy defense secretary,
and Robert Work, who currently holds that post.
With Hagel’s departure,
Obama will be the first president since Harry Truman to
have four defense secretaries. Hagel’s two predecessors, Robert Gates and Leon
Panetta, complained after
leaving the administration
about White House micromanagement and political
interference in policy decisions.
Rep. Buck McKeon,
chair of the House Armed
Services Committee, suggested Obama consider his
own role in his administration’s foreign policy struggles rather than seeking

Energy
From Page 1

legislators and lobbyists — had expected to be rich with detail. He opted to
address only how much has been paid
by Ohio utilities to the third-party
administrators that help meet energy
efficiency and education targets, and
then gave information on only two companies.
Johnson said the chair asked him to
stick to the single issue, though that
matter seemed to be in dispute.
He reported that Akron-based
FirstEnergy has paid $5.5 million to
third-party administrators in the past
five years, reducing energy use by 507
million kilowatt hours. Columbus-based
American Electric Power paid about
$845,000 over to deliver an annual savings of 328 million kilowatt-hours of
power.
The Public Utilities Commission calculated FirstEnergy’s costs at 1.1 cents
per kilowatt-hour, and AEP’s at a quar-

profile as undersecretary of defense for policy,
engaged in efforts to end the war in Iraq, reinvigorate the military campaign in Afghanistan
and redesign U.S. defense strategy to deal
with severe budget cuts.
Always loyal to the president publicly,
Flournoy often played the role of principled
objector in closed-doors meetings, differing
on matters such as the size and scope of the
Afghan surge with Vice President Joe Biden
and Tom Donilon, Obama’s former national
security adviser. Her suggestions were often
more muscular in approach than those Obama
authorized.
When she left office in December 2011,
Flournoy cited strains on her family life after
three years in one of the most demanding
national security jobs in Washington. She is
married and has three children.
At the same time, Flournoy, who is now
53, said she hoped to return to government
service one day. And when Defense Secretary
Leon Panetta stepped down after Obama’s
re-election, she was among those mentioned
for the post. Obama opted for Hagel, however. Flournoy would likely have a relatively
easy confirmation in the new Republican-led
Senate.
For the last three years, Flournoy has served
as chief executive of the Center for a New
American Security, a think tank she co-founded in 2007. Through a spokesman Monday,
she declined a request for an interview.
A person close to Flournoy said she
wants to be defense secretary, but has some
concerns about the job. Obama and a small
group of White House advisers have kept

another changeover at the
Pentagon.
“When the president goes
through three secretaries, he
should ask, ‘Is it them or is it
me?’” said McKeon, R-Calif.
Hagel has had his own
frustrations with the White
House. In recent weeks,
he sent a letter to National
Security Adviser Susan Rice
in which he said Obama
needed to articulate a clearer
view of the administration’s
approach to dealing with
Syrian President Bashar
Assad. The letter is said to
have angered White House
officials.
In some ways, Hagel was
seen as an attempt by the
White House to install a
Pentagon chief who would
be less likely than Gates
and Panetta to pitch policy
fights with the West Wing.
Some foreign policy experts
noted the irony in the White
House ousting a defense sec-

ter of a cent per kilowatt-hour. Johnson
said details for other Ohio-based utilities weren’t available, and he couldn’t
immediately provide additional information requested by lawmakers on how
the figures related to overall costs of the
program nor how the savings is divvied
up among power companies, third-party
groups and consumers.
A kilowatt-hour of power in Ohio
costs between 8 cents and 10 cents to
produce, on average.
Lawmakers peppered Johnson with
requests for more detail on the impacts
the energy mandates have had on jobs
and utilities’ bottom lines — which
opponents anticipate will show negative
consequences. Johnson said much of
the information they seek is protected,
but he would do what he could and
return another day.
The Ohio Environmental Council’s
Jack Shaner, whose organization backs
the mandates, said he was heartened
that lawmakers requested further information on jobs and energy efficiency
impacts of the mandates — “because
we win on those issues,” he said.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 56.80
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.42
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 112.75
Big Lots (NYSE) — 50.44
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 54.04
BorgWarner (NYSE) —58.13
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 27.80
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.265
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.01
Collins (NYSE) — 85.16
DuPont (NYSE) — 72.15
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.37
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.00
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 69.29
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.96
Kroger (NYSE) — 58.51
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 79.97
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 116.35
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.21

BBT (NYSE) — 38.07
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.87
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.68
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.99
Rockwell (NYSE) — 114.26
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.63
Royal Dutch Shell — 71.06
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 38.36
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 85.40
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.69
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.73
Worthington (NYSE) — 38.38
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 24, 2014, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

retary who largely played the
role the president appeared
to have been seeking.
“The White House picked
him because they wanted
somebody they could control and would be a policy
nonentity and they got a
policy nonentity,” said Rosa
Brooks, who served at the
Pentagon during Obama’s
first term. “It seems unfair
to make him a fall guy for
White House policy failures.”
The timing of Hagel’s
departure sets up a potential
confirmation fight in the
Senate. Republicans, who
will take control of the body

tight control over matters of national security,
often frustrating more apolitical figures such
as former Defense Secretary Bob Gates. The
person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly
about Flournoy’s thinking and demanded
anonymity.
Also factoring into Flournoy’s decision is
the prospect of getting the top job if Hillary
Rodham Clinton were to become president,
according to the individual. Flournoy got
her start in government in the 1990s as a
Pentagon expert on strategy under President
Bill Clinton.
Like Hagel, Panetta and Gates, Flournoy
has railed against the military funding cuts
known as “sequestration,” urging significant
new investments in the armed forces.
In Afghanistan, where she has been credited
with helping strengthen the national army,
Flournoy has urged a slower withdrawal
strategy — a policy Obama appears now to
be adopting with his recent authorization of
a wider U.S. military role in the country next
year.
Just months ago, with a security agreement
in doubt, U.S. officials were floating the idea
of pulling all U.S. troops out of Afghanistan —
as happened in Iraq in 2011.
Before she joined the Obama administration, Flournoy’s think tank cautioned against
a policy of “unconditional disengagement”
from Iraq and called for a residual force of up
to 60,000 U.S. troops to prevent a renewed
civil war.
Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Robert Burns and
Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

next month, have been deeply critical of the president’s
foreign policy.
Hagel submitted his
resignation letter to Obama
on Monday morning after
what his advisers said were
a series of private discussions about his future that
he initiated with Obama last
month. The 68-year-old has
agreed to remain in office
until a successor is confirmed by the Senate.
Hagel’s aides assert that
he is leaving at an appropriate juncture. The aides were
vague about what persuaded
him to quit, suggesting that
he ultimately agreed with

Obama that the Pentagon
needed a new leadership
focus for the coming two
years.
Hagel has steered the
Pentagon through a major
review of nuclear weapons
management, as well as
reforms to the military
justice system and to the
military health system. But
his departure also coincides
with a period of great uncertainty over the course of the
administration’s campaign
to defeat the Islamic State
group, as well as worry over
Russia’s actions in Ukraine,
and further defense budget
cuts.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 5, 2014 s Page 6

Rio Grande men fall short at XCC nationals
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

LAWRENCE, Kan. — The University of Rio Grande saw its hopes
of a strong showing fall short, as
the RedStorm ran to a 29th-place
finish in the NAIA Men’s Cross
Country National Championships,
Saturday afternoon, at a cool and
damp Rim Rock Farm.
Rio Grande, which punched its
ticket to the meet by winning the
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference championship two
weeks earlier, finished with 775
points and did finish in front of
seven other schools in the 37-team
field.
The RedStorm were forced to
Submitted photo by URG Athletics
run
without junior Kyle Sanborn
Rio Grande junior Matt Engstrom, right, runs during
(Dover,
OH), who had finished secSaturday’s NAIA Men’s Cross Country National
ond among head coach Bob Willey’s
Championships at Rim Rock Farm in Lawrence, Kan.

runners in three of the team’s four
previous outings and third in the
other. Sanborn did not make the
trip due to a knee injury.
Sophomore Dallas Guy (Buffalo,
OH), who had Rio’s top showing
in each of its five prior races this
fall, did the same on Saturday, but
finished 101st among the 320 individual runners with a time of 26:28
- 37 seconds faster than his winning
time at the KIAC championship.
Sophomore Blake Freed (Uhrichsville, OH) had the RedStorm’s second-best finish, crossing the finish
line in 27:17 in 204th place. Sophomore Lane Hagar (Hilliard, OH)
finished 219th in a time of 27:28.
The remainder of Rio’s contingent included sophomore Nate
Goodhart (Kent, OH), who was
237th in a time of 27:38; junior

Matt Engstrom (Dover, OH), who
finished 261st in 28:08; and freshman Todd Tolliver (Riverside, OH),
who was 305th after crossing in
30:16.
Oklahoma City won its secondconsecutive national championship
with 55 points, 58 points ahead
of Southern Oregon, who finished
as the runner-up for the second
straight year. The remainder of the
top five included third-place Olivet
Nazarene (Ill.) (142), Eastern
Oregon (144) and Aquinas (Mich.)
(183).
Individually, Wayland Baptist’s
Benard Keter torched the 8-kilometer course by flying to the finish
in 24:36, five seconds ahead of DJ
Flores of Eastern Oregon.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at
the University of Rio Grande.

Rio men
cruise past
the Sabers
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

MONTGOMERY, W.Va. — The University of Rio Grande men’s basketball team
used a monster scoring surge over the final
10 minutes of the first half to open up a
25-point halftime lead and the RedStorm
went on to post an easy 98-68 win over
Barber-Scotia (N.C.) College in the final
round of the Neal Baisi Classic, Saturday
afternoon, at West Virginia UniversityTech’s Baisi Athletic Center.
Rio Grande rebounded from its first loss
of the season on Friday to Washington
Adventist (Md.) University to get its sixth
win in seven tries.
The Sabres slipped to 1-7 with the loss.
A three-point goal by Barber-Scotia’s
Rashad Green tied the game at 22-22 with
10:17 left in the opening half, but Rio
Grande closed the period on a 35-10 run
- including 29-8 over the final 6:50 of the
stanza - and never looked back.
The Sabres got no closer than 22 points
at any stage of the second half and the RedStorm twice led by as many as 36 points
before settling on the 30-point final margin.
Senior guard Evan Legg (Piketon, OH)
poured in a game- and career-high 22 points
to pace five Rio players in double figures.
Junior guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus,
OH) had 20 points and 12 rebounds in the
winning effort, while freshman guard Will
Hill (Worthington, OH) had a career-high
14 points to go along with a team-high five
assists and a game-high three steals.
Junior center Dwayne Bazemore
(Columbus, OH) netted 13 points to go
along with a game- and career-high 18
rebounds and four blocked shots. Senior
guard Tyler Davis also got in on the act,
finishing with a career-high 12 points.
Rio Grande shot 55.9 percent from the
field for the game (38-for-68) and held
commanding 51-27 edge in rebounding.
Barber-Scotia got 18 points from Shaquille Wilson, while Christopher Calvan
and Jonathan Allison finished with 17 and
10 points, respectively. Walter Jackson III
shared game-high honors with Hill, handing out five assists in a losing cause.
Rio Grande resumes its six-game road
swing on Tuesday night, traveling to Batavia, Ohio for a meeting with the University
of Cincinnati-Clermont. Tip time is set for
6 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at
the University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 25
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande at Cincinnati-Clermont, 6 p.m.
Women’s college basketball
Ohio Christian at Rio Grande, 6
p.m.
Friday, Nov. 28
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande at St. Xavier, 7 p.m.

Photos by David PerrySKC Photography

Point Pleasant running back Grant Safford (37) is grabbed by Martinsburg defender Beau Collis (76) during a carry in Saturday’s Class AAA quarterfinal
game in Martinsburg, W.Va.

Bulldogs bite Point Pleasant, 49-28
By Gary Clark

the game. “They have such
outstanding athletes and we
hoped we could limit their
MARTINSBURG, W.Va
opportunities, but it wasn’t
— The Point Pleasant Big
to be. They hurt us through
Blacks traveled to Martinsthe air and a lot of that had
burg Saturday afternoon to
to do with us not having
meet up with the four-time
Cody Mitchell in the seconddefending Class AAA cham- ary.
pion Bulldogs, and although
“Cody makes a lot of big
the Mason County team lost plays for us defensively as
its quarterfinal round battle, well as offensively, and I
Point Pleasant served notice would like to think he would
that it can compete with the have made somewhat of a difstate’s best football teams.
ference during this game.”
Coach Dave Darst’s grid
Martinsburg wasn’t the
11 took Martinsburg well
only offense on the field, as
into the second half before
the Big Blacks made a valuthe host team tallied a pair
able statement with some big
of late scores to put the game plays of their own.
away by a 49-28 margin.
PPHS picked up 271 yards
The Big Blacks fought
in total offense, with 207 of
from behind all afternoon
those yards coming on the
long and battled back contin- ground while another 64
uously to keep the contest in came through the airways.
doubt, but it was not to be as Senior quarterback Aden
Martinsburg (11-1) advanced Yates experienced a phenomto the semifinal round while enal afternoon with 132 rushPPHS (10-1) saw its remark- ing yards on 22 carries and
able season come to an end. another 64 yards and three
Big plays by the MHS
TDs passing.
offense were the order of
Yates accomplished this
the day, with the Bulldogs
feat after receiving repeated
riddling the Point defense
physical blows by the Marfor five touchdowns covertinsburg defense throughout
ing more than 52 yards
the 48 minute affair.
each. The other two Bulldog
“Aden is a really tough
scored covered a distance of kid,” Darst said. “He took
more than 20 yards apiece.
some crushing blows but
The Berkeley County
would not give in and still
opponent piled up 518 yards kept leading our offense. If
in total offense, with 279
he isn’t a first-team selecyards coming on the ground tion on the all-state ballot,
and another 239 through the there is something definitely
air.
wrong with the process. He
was the leader in our offen“We knew going in that
sive scheme and that was a
Martinsburg had a big-play
segment of our performance
offense,” Darst said after

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Point Pleasant defender Tanner Hill runs through Martinsburg ball carrier
Carter Walburn (2) during Saturday’s Class AAA quarterfinal contest in
Martinsburg, W.Va.

that I was pleased with.”
Joining Yates with exceptional games defensively
was junior linebacker Cody
McDaniel, who was credited with more than dozen
tackles in the outing. Senior
defensive end Jon Peterson
finished his high school
career with a strong showing
of nine tackles, as a well as a
blocked punt and a 29-yard
pass reception.
Gage Buskirk caught a pair
of Yates’ scoring tosses, with

Grant Safford picking up 65
tough yards on the ground
in 17 tries for the local gridders.
Martinsburg jumped out to
a quick 14-0 advantage with
two TDs on its first two possessions. Trey Boyd went 52
yards on the second play of
the game before Carter Walburn threw a 55-yard pass to
Dylan Brewer less than four
minutes later.
See BULLDOGS | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

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60543521

LEGAL NOTICE
Urban Financial Group, Inc.
flk/a Urban Financial of America, LLC,
vs.
Dorothy C. Greene
(Deceased), et al.
The Defendants, Unknown
Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and
Assigns and their Spouses, if
any, of Dorothy C. Greene, but
whose current addresses are
unknown, will take notice that
on June 23,2014, the Plaintiff,
Urban Financial Group, Inc.
f/kJa Urban Financial of America, LLC, filed its Complaint in
Case No. 14-CV-062, in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio, seeking a
foreclosure of its mortgage interest in the real
property located at 405 W.
Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Permanent Parcel No.
160 1518000,("Real Estate"),
and alleged that the Defendants, have or may have an interest in this Real Estate.

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The Defendants, Unknown
Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and
Assigns and their Spouses, if
any, of Dorothy C. Greene, are
required to answer the
Promotional Plaintiff's
Packages Complaint within twenty-eight
Starting At...(28) days after the last date of
FOR
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publication of
this12notice.
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event that the Defendants, Unknown Heirs,Upgrade
Legatees,to
Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their
Spouses, if any, of Dorothy C.
Greene, fail to respond in the
allotted time,
judgment by default can be
entered against them for the
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the Plaintiff's
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Carrie L. Rouse (0083281)
Ryan F. Hemmerle (0079721)
Attorney for Plaintiff
Reisenfeld &amp; Associates, LPA
LLC
3962 Red Bank Road
Cincinnati, OH 45227
voice: (513) 322-7000
facsimile: (513) 322-7099.
11/25,12/02,12/09/14

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Tuesday, November 25, 2014 7

LEGAL NOTICE
Urban Financial Group, Inc.
flk/a Urban Financial of America, LLC,
vs.
Dorothy C. Greene
(Deceased), et al.
The Defendants, Unknown
Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and
Assigns and their Spouses, if
any, of Dorothy C. Greene, but
whose current addresses are
unknown, will take notice that
on June 23,2014, the Plaintiff,
Urban Financial Group, Inc.
f/kJa UrbanLEGALS
Financial of America, LLC, filed its Complaint in
Case No. 14-CV-062, in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio, seeking a
foreclosure of its mortgage interest in the real
property located at 405 W.
Main Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, Permanent Parcel No.
160 1518000,("Real Estate"),
and alleged that the Defendants, have or may have an interest in this Real Estate.
The Defendants, Unknown
Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and
Assigns and their Spouses, if
any, of Dorothy C. Greene, are
required to answer the
Plaintiff's
Complaint within twenty-eight
(28) days after the last date of
publication of this notice. In the
event that the Defendants, Unknown Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their
Spouses, if any, of Dorothy C.
Greene, fail to respond in the
allotted time,
judgment by default can be
entered against them for the
relief requested in the Plaintiff's
Complaint.

PUBLIC NOTICE
JD Drilling Co, P.O. Box 369,
Racine,_Ohio 45771, (740)
949-2512 is applying to permit
a well for the injection of brine
water produced in association
with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Showalter
#1,Sec. 18, Chester Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the _
Ohio Shale Formation at a
depth of 2958 to 3314 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1000 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
680 psi. Further information
can be obtained
by contacting
LEGALS
JD Drilling Co or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road, Building F-2, Columbus,
Ohio 43229-6693, (614) 2656922. For full consideration, all
comments and objections must
be-received. by the Division, in
writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.
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.

Carrie L. Rouse (0083281)
Ryan F. Hemmerle (0079721)
Attorney for Plaintiff
Reisenfeld &amp; Associates, LPA
LLC
3962 Red Bank Road
Cincinnati, OH 45227
voice: (513) 322-7000
facsimile: (513) 322-7099.
11/25,12/02,12/09/14

Help Wanted General

MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406
Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
an opening for a full-time Surgical
First Assistant in the Operating
Room. One year surgery
experience required.
Apply at Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V

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

Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICE
JD Drilling Co, P.O. Box 369,
Racine,_Ohio 45771, (740)
949-2512 is applying to permit
a well for the injection of brine
water produced in association
with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Showalter
#1,Sec. 18, Chester Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the _
Ohio Shale Formation at a
depth of 2958 to 3314 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1000 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
680 psi. Further information
can be obtained by contacting
JD Drilling Co or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department
of
Help Wanted
General
Natural Resources, Division of
Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road, Building F-2, Columbus,
Ohio 43229-6693,
(614) 265EMPLOYMENT
6922.OPPORTUNITY
For full consideration, all
comments and objections must
be-received. by the Division, in
Have you
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paced, competitive, decisive, persistent, eager, bold, forceful,
and inquisitive. How about assertive? Do you like to meet new
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Notices

60549233

Attention Landlords
The Housing Authority of the
County of Jackson is currently
seeking new landlords. We
have vouchers available for
qualifying families but we need
your help in assisting these
families. Should you have any
questions about renting
through our Voucher Program
please contact any of our Section 8 staff at 304-372-2345.
We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, and scrap metal, We Pay old Cars 50/50
scrap payment Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
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www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Other Services
Will do House cleaning, Painting, Babysitting, Mowing,
Weedeating, Housecleaning.
Sitting with elderly. 1-740-5914597 or 1-740-612-5013
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Help Wanted General
Applicator
Operate fertilizer or crop protectant application equipment.
CDL required. Includes warehouse duties. Agricultural
background helpful Forklift
Certification preferred but not
required. Able to pass background check, drug screen and
MVR check. To apply please
visit our website at www.southernstates.com and apply to requisition #2517. EOE M/F/D/V
Position for detailer/light mechanic work. Ask for Dave. 740446-4400

�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS
but will not have a reserved spot.
GAHS basketball
reserved seating on sale Annual Meet of the
CENTENARY, Ohio — Reserved
Ghosts Thursday
seats for boys basketball tickets went
on sale Nov. 20 at GAHS. You may
pick up the tickets in the office from
7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on regular school
days. The tickets are on sale for $50.
They include all boys games. The
December 27 game against Meigs will
be played at the middle school due to
the Coaches Corner Wrestling Invitational at the high school. The reserved
seat tickets will get you into the game

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The annual
“Meet of the Ghosts” of Thanksgiving
games past will be held this Thanksgiving day at 11 a.m. at the old Middleport
football field. All former Middleport
and Pomeroy football players and families are invited to attend. The Middleport and Pomeroy football game was
annually played for years on Thanksgiving day, and this annual event allows

former players to take get together and
replay, and reminisce about the games
of the past.

Pomeroy/Middleport
holiday hoops tourney

GAHS Foundation
Game at Oak Hill

RUTLAND, Ohio — The Middleport
and Pomeroy youth leagues will be
holding their annual basketball tournament from Thursday, Dec. 18, through,
Tuesday, Dec. 23, and resume play on
Friday, Dec. 26, through Tuesday, Dec.
30. The tourney will be held at the Rutland Civic Center and is for both boys
and girls in grades 4-6, all in separate
divisions. For more information, contact Dave at (740) 590-0438 or Ken at
(740) 416-8901.

OAK HILL, Ohio — The Foundation
basketball game between Gallia Academy and Oak Hill has been moved to
Tuesday, Nov. 25, at OHHS. The girls
contest will be played at 6 p.m. and the
boys will tipoff at 7:30 p.m. All tickets
are $5 and no passes will be honored.
All proceeds will be donated.

Top-ranked RedStorm advance
By Randy Payton

the win and will move on
to the second round of
the tourney where they’ll
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
face Northwood (Fla.)
— Jorge Guinovart
on Monday, Dec. 1, at 4
scored on a header off a
p.m., at the Seacrest Socfree kick from teammate
cer Complex in Delray
Heitor de Melo to snap a Beach, Fla. Northwood
1-1 tie and send the topearned a bye into the
seeded University of Rio Round of 16 as the final
Grande on to a 4-1 win
site host.
over Baker (Kan.) UniverBaker, which earned
sity in the opening round its spot in the tourney
of the NAIA Men’s Soccer by capturing the Heart
National Championship,
of America Athletic
Saturday afternoon, at
Conference tournament
Evan E. Davis Field.
title as the No. 6 seed,
The RedStorm
saw a three-game winimproved to 16-1-2 with
ning streak snapped and

closed its season at 9-9-3.
Rio Grande got the win
despite being without
the services of two of its
starters - junior forward
Luiz Filho (Sao Paulo,
Brazil), who was injured
in the team’s KIAC/
GCAC tournament title
win over Point Park
University, and senior
midfielder Cesar Lopez
(san Salvador, El Salvador), who was sitting out
a mandatory one-game
suspension for receiving
a red card in the same
game.
Additionally, the Red-

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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Storm lost the services
of senior goalkeeper Jon
Dodson (Tiffin, OH) - the
KIAC Defensive Player
of the Year - early in the
match after he collided
with a pair of Baker players during a scramble
in front of the Rio goal.
Dodson had played every
second in goal for the
RedStorm this season
prior to the injury.
Rio took a 1-0 lead
on a goal by sophomore
forward Willian Paulino
(Sao Paulo, Brazil) just
5:32 into the contest, but
the Wildcats took advanTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25

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Submitted photo by URG Athletics

Rio Grande’s Alex Haddad battles Baker University’s Preston
Phillips for control of the ball during the first half of Saturday’s
NAIA Men’s Soccer National Championship Tournament game
at Evan E. Davis Field. The top-ranked RedStorm eliminated the
Wildcats with a 4-1 win.

tage of an errant pass by
the RedStorm and tied
the game when Blake
Levine found the back
of the net via an assist
by Keaton Anchors with
16:01 remaining in the
first half.
Guinovart, a freshman
midfielder from Barcelona, Spain, broke the tie
just over eight minutes
later when headed a shot
after a free kick from
the left wing by de Melo
(Sao Paulo, Brazil) past
Baker goalkeeper Patrick
Rydberg to give the RedStorm a lead they would
never relinquish.
Rio Grande added
unassisted goals from
sophomore midfielder
Callum Cobb (Aldershot,
England) just 3:42 into

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$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
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Tower is accepting applications for waiting
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Mobile homes for rent in the
Spring Valley area. $450480/month plus deposit.
740-446-4400
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Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Engineering/Drafting Position: qualification MUST have
degree in engineering/drafting
at least 3 years experience
with Auto Cad. Position is a 40
hour plus overtime. Pay rate is
based on level of degree and
experience. After 90 days
health insurance and life insurance is offered. One week
paid vacation after 1 year of
employment and 4 paid holidays. Please send resume to
70764 State Route 124 Vinton
OH 45686 SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY.
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
have basic mechanical ability.
Traveling required. Health Insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124
Vinton, OH 45686
740-669-5300

Houses For Sale

the second half and from
freshman forward Tyler
Martin (Columbus, OH)
with 4:40 left in the
match to set the final
score.
Junior goalkeeper
Ludovic Delapeyre (Boissy Saint Leger, France)
earned the win for Rio,
stopping three shots in
just over 78 minutes of
playing time. Dodson had
one save before leaving
with his injury.
Rydberg stopped 12
shots in a losing cause for
Baker.
Rio Grande outshot the
Wildcats, 19-10, including
16-5 in shots on goal.

Miscellaneous

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

Stereo/TV/Electronics
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
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

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 25, 2014 9

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

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6 5 2 8

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Magical season for Rio women comes to end
By Randy Payton

11 in the final regular season
coaches’ poll, improved to 16-31 with the win.
LEBANON, Tenn. — ThirdRio Grande, which qualified
seeded Cumberland University for the tourney by virtue of
scored four times in the final
winning the Kentucky Intercol34-1/2 minutes to break open
legiate Athletic Conference
a tight game and defeat the
tournament championship, saw
University of Rio Grande, 5-0,
its most successful season in
in the opening round of the
the program’s history end at
NAIA Women’s Soccer National 12-6.
Championship Tournament,
The RedStorm, who were
Saturday afternoon, at Lindsey making their first-ever national
Donnell Stadium.
tournament appearance, established a new single-season
Cumberland, ranked No.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

school record for victories.
For the game, Cumberland
outshot Rio 18-2 overall and
10-0 in shots on goal, but led
just 1-0 thanks to a goal by
Emily Shires off an assist by
Kaitlen Kisiloski with 10:17
remaining in the first half.
That’s how things stayed
until Kaitlin Phillips found the
back of the net on the rebound
of a shot by Shires which hit
the post just over 10 minutes
into the second half to make it
2-0.

Twelve minutes later, Taylor
Nay pushed the Bulldog lead to
3-0 with an unassisted marker
and Shires scored her second
goal with just under 11-1/2
minutes left to play, taking a
long pass on the left side from
teammate Mackenzie Keele
and firing a shot that went off
the hands of Rio Grande senior
goalkeeper Allison Keeney
(Cincinnati, OH) and into the
net.
An own goal against the RedStorm with 46 seconds remain-

ing set the final score.
Keeney stopped five shots
in her final collegiate game for
Rio.
Lindsay Kitson recorded
the shutout in net for Cumberlands.
Along with Keeney, Saturday’s game also marked the
final contest in the careers
of midfielder Renee Davis
(Amsterdam, OH) and forward
Karla Garn (Morrow, OH).
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

RedStorm women fall at West Virginia University Tech
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

MONTGOMERY, W.Va. — The University of Rio Grande failed to maintain
a 12-point first half lead and then came
up empty in a frantic attempt to force
overtime in the closing seconds as
West Virginia University-Tech held on
to defeat the RedStorm, 77-75, in nonconference women’s basketball action
as part of the Neal Baisi Classic at the
Baisi Athletic Center.
Head coach David Smalley’s team,

which began the season with four
straight wins, suffered its second consecutive loss to a team from the Mountain State in a five-day span after dropping a 61-53 decision at West Virginia
State University on Tuesday.
WVU Tech, which defeated another
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference school - Alice Lloyd College - in
the opening round of the Classic on Friday, improved to 5-3 with the win.
The game featured two ties and 12
lead changes, but Rio Grande enjoyed
the biggest advantage for either team,

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twice leading by 12 points late in the
first half at 36-24 following a jumper by
junior guard Sarah Bonar (Hartford,
OH) with 3;13 left before the intermission and 38-26 after a pair of free
throws by sophomore guard Sharday
Baines (East Cleveland, OH) with 2:42
remaining before the break.
The host Golden Bears sliced the
deficit to four by halftime, 42-38, and
eventually went in front, 48-47, after
a bucket by Rocio Ruiz-Berdejo with
16:57 left in the game.
The RedStorm quickly regained the
advantage, leading by as many as six
points, and maintaining their cushion
until a three-pointer by LaKisha Adkins
sent Tech back in front, 68-67, with
6:10 remaining.
The Golden Bears fell behind again
moments later, but rallied to take the
lead for good, 74-73, on another basket
by Ruiz-Berdejo with 2:12 left.
Tech stretched its lead to four points
until a jumper by Rio sophomore guard
Aly Herren (Mason, OH) with 20 seconds left made it 77-75.
After nearly coming up with a steal
on the Golden Bears’ ensuing possession, the RedStorm did come up with a

Bulldogs

steal with eight seconds remaining, but
a three-pointer and consecutive stickbacks off of offensive rebounds failed to
find the mark before time expired.
Senior guard Brianna Thomas (Newark, N.J.) led five Rio players in doublefigures with a game-high 19 points,
while senior center Morgan Daniels
(Gallipolis, OH) had a season-high 14
points and nine rebounds and sophomore forward Brooke Marcum (Vinton,
OH) tallied 11 points and a game-high
13 rebounds.
Bonar added 10 points and a gamehigh five assists for the RedStorm,
while sophomore forward Alexis Payne
(Deep Water, WV) also had 10 points.
Cheyanna Lusk matched Thomas’
game-high 19 points and Bonar’s gamehigh five assists to lead Tech, while
Ruiz-Berdejo had 13 points and 11
rebounds. Adkins also had 13 points for
the Golden Bears and Keymonisha Dudley tossed in 10 points.
Rio Grande returns to action on Tuesday night when Ohio Christian University visits the Newt Oliver Arena for a 6
p.m. tip-off.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

their own 27 facing a third
and one situation, but the
Big Blacks held MHS to no
From Page 6
gain on successive plays to
reclaim possession.
PPHS closed to within a
Three plays later, Point
possession with an 11-play,
reached the end zone when
76-yard drive that was instru- Yates found Peterson wide
mented by Yates. A 15-yard
open in the end zone for six
pass to Buskirk culminated
points. Lunsford converted
the drive with Dylan Lunthe PAT kick and made it a
sford booting the point after 21-14 affair with 4:48 remainto make it a 14-7 contest
ing in the first half.
with 3:53 remaining in the
PPHS wasn’t finished
opening quarter.
yet as Peterson blocked a
MHS continued its offenMartinsburg punt to set up
sive success yet again by
the Big Black offense at the
scoring for the third time
Bulldogs’ 33-yard line. Seven
in only nine offensive plays
plays later, Grant Safford
in the first stanza. Walburn
covered the final yard of the
again connected with Brewer drive with a burst off left
from 62 yards away to push
tackle. Lunsford evened the
the Bulldogs edge to 21-7
count at 21-all with just 53
at the 2:40 mark of the first
seconds left before halftime.
period after Fisher BoeckIn what turned out to be
mann booted his third cona difference maker in the
secutive point after try.
contest, MHS came up with
Point Pleasant, however,
another score in the final
began its comeback effort
minute after travelling 56
with a courageous defensive yards in three plays — which
effort led by McDaniel and
was aided by a 15-yard penPeterson. The hosts were on alty on PPHS.

Walburn connected with
Brewer for the third time in
the first half after a 21-yard
aerial with 26 seconds
remaining gave the Bulldogs
a 28-21 cushion at the break.
The Bulldogs continued
their offensive success into
the third quarter after getting a 44-yard Trey Boyd run
with 8:53 to go in the canto.
Boeckmann’s PAT kick made
it a 35-21 contest.
Point Pleasant, however,
didn’t surrender and staged
another critical comeback with
a 14-play, 81-yard drive. Yates
found Buskirk from 18 yards
out to cap the possession and
Lunsford tacked on the PAT
with 2:28 left in the third, making it a 35-28 contest.
Unfortunately the remainder of the outing proved to
be all Martinsburg, with the
Bulldogs scoring a late third
quarter TD and another sixpointer at the midway point
of the fourth.
Another game-changing
moment for PPHS came
when the guests failed to
capitalize on a McDaniel
interception at the MHS 19
late in the final period. The
Big Blacks drove inside the
Martinsburg 10 but came
up short on a fourth and one
situation — which ultimately
iced the game for the hosts.
Eric Mitchell caught a
24-yard TD pass from Walburn inside the final minute
of the third for a 42-28 edge,
then Eric Brown rumbled 91
yards to paydirt to wrap up
the scoring at 49-28.
“We gave it our best shot
and I’m proud of our kids
effort,” Darst said afterwards.
“We can leave here and hold
heads high.
“I’m happy for Coach
(Dave) Walker and his staff.
He is a great coach and a
good friend and I wish him
the best. We experienced
some breakdowns defensively, but overall it was a great
experience for our team.”
It was the final gridiron
game for seniors Jon Peterson, Dylan Lunsford, Bryan
Hart, Aden Yates, Brian
Gibbs, Gage Buskirk, Cody
Siders, Cody Marcum, Trenton Ramey, Travis Wamsley,
Caleb Sayre, Noah Morgan,
Chase Moses, Trevor Daniels
and Brandon Troy in the
Black, Red and White.

�</text>
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