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                  <text>Visit
from
ODNR

All
TVC-Ohio
honors

Love in
Ireland
EDITORIAL s 4

NEWS s 3

SPORTS s 8

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 45, Volume 71

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 s 50¢

Round-the-clock work reopens Main Street
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

ODOT crews worked over the weekend to reopen West Main Street following
Friday morning’s rock slide. On Monday morning traffic was moving as normal
in the area.

POMEROY — Trafﬁc was
moving as normal on West
Main Street Monday morning
after crews worked over the
weekend to clear a rock slide
near the Marathon gas station.
“Our crews worked nonstop from Friday morning
through Sunday morning to
get the road reopened,” said
Ashley Rittenhouse, public
information ofﬁcer for Ohio
Department of Transportation
District 10.
Rittenhouse said crews

worked to clear trees and
brush from the area where the
rock slid in order to more easily access it before they could
begin chipping away at the
large rock.
“Due to its large size, it had
to be broken up and removed
from the hillside in pieces,”
said Rittenhouse.
With the work completed,
the road reopened around
11:30 a.m. on Sunday morning.
The slide initially occurred
around 4 a.m. on Friday. While
power was temporarily disrupted in the area following

the slide early Friday, it was
restored by mid-morning on
Friday. There were no injuries
reported.
In previous Sentinel reports,
Rittenhouse commented as
to the potential cause of the
slide, saying at this time it
appears it was caused by a
buildup of moisture in the
area.”
“We are thankful no one was
hurt,” she said on Friday.
In addition to ODOT, also
on the scene were personnel from American Electric
Power and the Pomeroy Police
Department.

FOR THE RECORD

Meigs County
Sheriff ’s Office
Day Shift
March 6
Investigate complaint — Deputies responded to
report of a break in at a residence in Racine. No
items were found to be missing. Incident remains
under investigation.
Theft — Deputy Perry received a report in
reference to some prescription medication that
had been stolen from a residence in Long Bottom.
Deputy Perry is still investigating the matter.
Threats and harassment — Deputy Myers
received a report in reference to telephone harassment. An investigation is being conducted and
charges are pending.
March 7
Medic assist — Deputies responded to a call
in Tuppers Plains of a male who may have been
possibly hit by a vehicle. Upon arrival, deputies
learned that the male did not get hit by a vehicle,
and refused any treatment by EMS.
Courtesy photos

March 8
Investigate complaint — A male subject came
to the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce to report someone had used
his identity to obtain two credit cards. This matter
remains under investigation.
Transportation — Deputies completed multiple
prisoner transports totaling over 600 miles.
March 9
Domestic dispute — Deputies King, Jones and
Snoke responded to Yellowbush Road in Racine
in reference to a possible domestic dispute in
progress. Brandi N. Lane, age 32, of Racine was
arrested for disorderly conduct by intoxication
and placed in the Middleport Jail.
March 10
Domestic violence — Deputy Snoke took a
report from a man who reported problems with
his wife. Deputy Snoke went to the residence on
Happy Hollow Road and spoke with all parties
involved. Deputy Snoke determined it was a verbal
argument and no charges were ﬁled.
Probation — Deputy Myers and Adult Parole
Authority Ofﬁcer Congrove checked on a subject
See OFFICE | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 8
Classifieds: 10
Comics: 11

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

Students at Southern Local (grades PreK-12) have been participating in the Spring Breakfast Challenge with other Ohio schools as well
as participating in National School Breakfast Week. Shown with their prizes are winners of the Southern School Breakfast Challenge
(front, from left), Madison Fowler, Mason Baisden, Sammie Morris, Caden Hupp, Savannah Roush, Grace Lee, and Izzy Klein; (back, from
left) Braydon Essick, Austin Bare, Jordan Gilbride, Jared Myers, Matthew Hall, Sydnee Morris, and Supervisor Scott Wolfe. The grand
prize winner was Caden Hupp.

Southern participates in Breakfast Challenge
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Students
at Southern Local have
been participating in the
Spring Breakfast Challenge with other Ohio
schools as well as participating in National School
Breakfast Week. Grades
Pre-K through grade 12
participated.
National School Breakfast Week (NSBW) is a
week-long celebration of
the school breakfast program. Member schools
celebrate with events,
special incentives and
promotions to increase
breakfast participation.
Breakfast participation is
a goal for many schools
in the National School
Lunch Program. NSBW
is the perfect time to
bring attention to the
school breakfast program.
Breakfast participation
at Southern improved
14.9 percent during the
week, noted Lunchroom
Supervisor Scott Wolfe:
“We would hope that
students would eat breakfast and lunch every day.
Many of the servings are
quality name brand products such as Bob Evans.
It’s healthy, it’s tasty and
it’s free.”

Students at Southern Local have been participating in the Spring Breakfast Challenge with other
Ohio schools. Principal Tricia McNickle awarded these students for their efforts in making the week
a success. Shown with their prizes are winners of the Southern School Breakfast Challenge (front,
from left) Nevaeh Books, Bethany Roberts, Dravin Landis, Kaydance Stover, Tyrell Johnson; (back,
from left) Jeremy Harmon, Emma Shuster, Garrett Collingsworth, Brenlan Kincaid, Ana Fellure, Skyler
Allen, Ethan Rose, Peryton Milliron, Leland Parker, Bella Foley, and grand prize winner of a Hatchimal,
Ana Fellure.

Goals of the NSBW program
are:
?dYh[Wi[�ijkZ[dj�fWhticipation in the program
Ifh[WZ�j^[�c[iiW][�
to parents that schools
are serving healthy and
tasty breakfasts at school
;Whd�c[Z_W�Yel[hage from local papers,
blogs, and news media to
improve awareness
9edd[Yj�m_j^�j[WY^ers and administrators
at school to spread the
word that school meals
are healthy
Southern offers free
breakfast for all students.

“Our elementary numbers are signiﬁcant, but
yet we know that some
kids that should be eating aren’t,” said Wolfe.
“Breakfast is the fuel
that kicks off the day and
helps kids learn. Here’s
where we need help from
our parents in asking
them to urge their kids
to eat. The high school
kids did a good job with
the challenge, but on a
daily basis the numbers
are low. Our teachers did
a great job promoting the
week and so did much of
the student body. ”

Incentives were given
to classrooms and individual prizes were presented to students who
were part of a drawing
that included those who
ate all ﬁve days. Brian
Allen’s high school homeroom won the 9-12 challenge and Rachel Hupp’s
Kindergarten homeroom
won the elementary challenge.
Individual winners
were Madison Fowler,
Mason Baisden, Sammie
Morris, Caden Hupp,
See CHALLENGE | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, March 21, 2017

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

EDNA LUCILLE ICENHOWER DAVIS

ROSALIE G. SAYRE

POMEROY — Edna
Lucille Icenhower Davis
law, Jennifer Sayre; a sis- passed peacefully in her
RUTLAND — Rosalie
ter, Pansy Jordan; special sleep Tuesday, March 14,
G. Sayre, 87, Rutland,
friends, Sharon Riggs and 2017, at Holzer Assisted
passed away Sunday,
March 19, 2017, at Kimes Marlene Carpenter.
Living in Gallipolis.
In addition to her parConvalescent Center.
Lucille was a devoted
ents she was preceded
Born Oct. 13, 1929,
wife and mother who
in death by her husband, cherished her grandchilin Athens she was the
daughter of the late Dana Joe N. Sayre in 2000; a
dren and was happiest
E. and Etta Leona Carsey grandson, Shane Sayre;
when she so selﬂessly
brothers, Everett A. Turn- cared for her grandchilTurner. Rosalie was a
er, Dana S. Turner; and
homemaker and a memdren and extended family
ber of Christ Temple Fel- grandson-in-law, Darren
members. She was deeply
Tackett.
lowship Church.
loved and will be missed
Services will be
She is survived by a
by all who knew her. She
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
son, Timothy Joe (Kay)
was born on Sept. 16,
Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Sayre; daughter, Helena
1925, in Mason, West VirHome, with Pastor Den(Roger) Riggs; grandginia, daughter of the late
nis Weaver ofﬁciating.
children, Jodi (Garry)
George Frederick IcenVisitation will be Tuesday hower and Edna Amelia
Rayburn, Christine
2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the
Bragg, Jason Riggs; sevIcenhower.
funeral home. Burial will
eral great-grandchildren,
She is survived by her
be in Wells Cemetery.
including Zack Sayre,
sons, Danny Davis and
You may sign her regis- Jenny Clark of Pomeroy
Ashleigh Sayre, Autumn
Tackett, and Aiden Tack- ter book at www.bigonyand Chuck Davis and
jordanfuneralhome.com.
ett; a granddaughter-inTonya Lawson of Middleport; daughter-in-law,
Diane Lynch; grandchilMALONE
dren, Chuck Davis Jr.,
WURTLAND, Ky. — Marjorie Frances Malone, 85, Chelsea Davis, Nikki
of Wurtland, passed away Monday March 20, 2017.
Davis, Michael Davis,
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in David Davis, Ryan Davis,
charge of arrangements which are incomplete.

MAYNARD, JR.

Rachelle Davis, Angie
Day and Billy Davis; great
grandchildren, Nathan,
Christopher, Matthew
and Jordan; several great
great grandchildren;
brother, Charles Icenhower; sisters, Delores
Gorley and Jane Chapin;
brother-in-law, John Dillard; and several nieces
and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
William Davis Sr.; son,
William Davis Jr.; daughter-in-law, Corky Davis;
and brothers and sisters,
Fredy, John, Betty, Eleanor, Lenore and Freda.
Memorial services
will be held on Saturday,
March 25, 2017, at 11
a.m. at the Meigs Memory Gardens mausoleum.
In lieu of ﬂowers donations may be made in
memory of Edna to the
Alzheimer’s Association
or the United Methodist
Church in Middleport.

PROCTORVILLE — Edward Truman Maynard,
Jr., 72, of Proctorville, passed away Friday March 17,
2017 at home.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Tuesday
March 21, 2017 at Living Waters Revival Center, 831
Virginia Avenue, Huntington, W.Va. Burial will follow
in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller. Visitation will be
held from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday March 20, 2017 at Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville.

COGAR
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Vernon Cogar, 95,
of Point Pleasant, passed away Saturday, March 18,
2017, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, March
22, 2017, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with Pastor Billy Zuspan ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at Eckard Cemetery in Point Pleasant. The
family will receive friends one hour prior to the funeral service Wednesday at the funeral home.

SIDENSTRICKER

CLARK
SOUTH POINT — Beatrice Mae Clark, 77, of
South Point, passed away Monday, March 20, 2017 at
St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

ALLEN
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Rodney Alan Allen, 51, of
Glenwood, W.Va., passed away on Friday, March 17,
2017.
Final arrangements are incomplete and will be
announced by Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., when they become available.

THOMPSON

QUEEN
PATRIOT — Bobby Joe Queen, 51, of Patriot,
passed away at 5:30 a.m. on Sunday, March 19, 2017
in the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Friends may call from 11a.m.-1 p.m. on Wednesday,
March 23, 2016 in the Cremeens-King Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Cremation will follow.

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Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
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twolfe@civitasmedia.com

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shawley@civitasmedia.com

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The Stewart-Johnson Veterans of Foreign Wars
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tuition scholarships of $500 each to qualifying
area college students, and to high school seniors
who have been accepted into a college or university.
Members of the V.F.W. Post 9926 and their
immediate families will receive ﬁrst consideration
for the scholarships, but other veterans and their
families will also be considered. Scholarship applications are available at the V.F.W. Post in Mason.
Completed forms must be received by the V.F.W.
by April 21.
For more information, contact your high school
guidance counselor or V.F.W. member Robert
Caruthers at 304-812-5905 or 740-416-5262.

TUESDAY EVENING

CONTACT US
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

Staff Report

CHESAPEAKE — Jennings Franklin Thompson,
80, of Chesapeake, passed away Monday, March 20,
2017 at home.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 22, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, . Visitation will be held 12 noon to
2 p.m. Wednesday, March 22, 2017.

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SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — John L. Sidenstricker, 72, of
Southside, W.Va., passed away on Saturday, March 18,
2017, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, March
22, 2017, at 1 p.m., at the Deal Funeral Home with
Charlie Dabney ofﬁciating. Burial will be in the Loggerhead Cemetery, Southside. Friends may call on the
family from 6 to 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 21, 2017, at the
funeral home.

Stewart-Johnson post
awarding scholarships

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

DAR hear from ODNR

Courtesy photos

Friday, March 24
MIDDLEPORT —
Snack and Canvas with
Michell Musser will be
held on Friday, March
24th at 6 P,M, at the
Riverbend Art Council,
290 North 2nd Avenue,
Middleport, Ohio. For
more information and
to reserve a space call
Donna Byer at 740-9925123.
MIDDLEPORT —

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

Easter
Egg Hunt

Road
Closure

SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department will host its
annual Easter Egg Hunt on April 15.
Donations are being accepted toward
the purchase of bicycles and other
prizes. Donations may be sent to the
ﬁre department at PO Box 266, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Village
Cleanup Days

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Thursday, March 23
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District
Board of Supervisors
will hold their regular
monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce
is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite
D, Pomeroy.
POMEROY — Alpha
Iota Masters will meet
at 11:30 a.m. at Fox’s
Pizza in Pomeroy.

MEIGS BRIEFS

MIDDLEPORT — On Wednesday,
March 22, the Village of Middleport
Public Works Dept. will be performing a culvert replacement near the
intersection of Flood Road and Mill
Street. During this repair trafﬁc will
not be able to access Mill Street from
Bradbury Road between the hours of
6:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY — County Road
32, Eagle Ridge Road, will be closed
for slip repair beginning Tuesday,
March 21, 2017 and continuing for
approximately two weeks. The slip is
located 1/10 mile east of T-119, Vinegar Street.

The Return Jonathan Meigs
Daughters
of
American
Revolution met recently at the
Pomeroy Library, with Speaker
Eric Hayes from ODNR, Athens
County Conservation Specialist
Technician, who gave a program
on facts concerning native
wildlife and vegetation found
in our Southeastern Ohio
region. He gave a slideshow
presentation with a question
and answer period afterward.
He works with projects along
the Buckeye Trail, and teaches
conservation to all age
groups in his work. He also
teaches children archery and
fishing. The DAR welcomed a
new member, Carrie Synder,
Wilkesville , Ohio into our group
at this meeting also.

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

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 3

The monthly free community dinner at the
Middleport Church
of Christ will be held
at 5 p.m. They will
be serving chicken
noodle soup, chicken
salad sandwiches, and
dessert. The public is
invited. Doors open at
4:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 25
POMEROY — A 70th
birthday celebration for
Celesta Coates will be
held from 2-5 p.m. at
the Eagles in Pomeroy.
Cards are welcome.
Monday, March 27
MIDDLEPORT —
The Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission will meet at
9 a.m. at the Veterans
Service Ofﬁce, located
at 97 N. Second Avenue
in Middleport.
CHESTER TWP.
— The Meigs County
Ikes will hold its annual
Family Night and White
Elephant Auction at 7
p.m. at the club house
on Sugar Run Road. The
club will provide hamburgers and hot dogs.
Members to bring favorite covered dish, drinks,
table service, family
members, and item(s)
for the auction

of the New Farmers
Bank Building.
Saturday, April 1
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Birthday celebration for
Kas Bissell-Seckman’s
80th birthday will be
held at St. Paul United
Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains from 1-4
p.m. Hosted by Barbara
Summerﬁeld and Sam
Seckman.
BURLINGHAM —
The Burlingham Cemetery Association will be
holding a public meeting at the Burlingham
Church at 10 a.m.
SCIPIO TWP. — A
pancake breakfast will
be held from 8 a.m. to
noon at the Scipio Twp.
Volunteer Fire Department.
Sunday, April 2
GALLIPOLIS — OhKan coin club will be
having their annual coin
show at the Quality Inn
in Gallipolis, Ohio from
10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Thursday, April 6
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical
Association will be having the monthly board
meeting at the Academy
at 6:30 p.m. Everyone
is welcome to come. If
anyone has anything to
add to or be put on the
Tuesday, March 28
agenda for the evening,
POMEROY — Ohplease let the historical
Kan coin club will be
having a meeting at 6:30 association know before
April 5.
p.m. in the upper room

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Community Lenten Services
Each service begins at 7 p.m., with
the host church to provide a light supper starting at 6 p.m. Any and all offerings will go towards the Meigs Ministerial Association in helping us with our
various ministries.
Thursday, March 23 — Restoration

Fellowship to host with Daniel Fulton
to speak.
Thursday, March 30 — New Beginnings to host with Randy Smith to
speak.
Thursday, April 6 — St. Paul Lutheran (Pomeroy) to host with Adam Will
to speak

MIDDLEPORT — Large item
cleanup days in the village of Middleport will take place March 27-30.
Items may be placed along the curb
on the regular trash service day
and will be collected free of charge.
Accepted items include carpet, furniture, scrap lumber, bicycles and toys,
doors and windows. Items not accepted include chemicals, ﬂuorescent
lights, electronics, medical waste,
batteries, tires, paint, fuel tanks and
liquids. For assistance please contact
the village garage at 740-992-5711.

Mulberry Country
Kitchen hours
POMEROY — The Mulberry Country Kitchen will be closed the last
week of March (28-30). Menu favorites scheduled that week (hot open
faced pork sandwich on Tuesday and
meatloaf dinner on Thursday) will be
served the week of April 4 when the
kitchen reopens.

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

Kindergarten
Registration
RACINE — Kindergarten registration for Southern Local School
District is Wednesday and Thursday,
April 12 and 13. Preschool registration is slated Monday and Tuesday,
April 10 and 11. Registration runs
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Two weeks
prior to registration, parents can call
the school ofﬁce at 740-949-4222 to
schedule an appointment. Head Start
will also do their screenings on this
date.

Cemetery
Cleanup
SUTTON TWP. — Sutton Township
will commence mowing cemeteries on
or about April 1, 2017, pending weather
conditions. If you have anything on the
grave plots that you wish to keep, please
remove them prior to the above date.
OLIVE TWP. — Olive Twp. Cemetery
Cleanup will begin on April 3. Please
remove ﬂowers or decorations you wish
to save prior to this date.
LETART TWP. — Letart Township
cemetery clean up is to begin soon.
Please have everything removed from
graves by April 5. Anything over 6 inches from the headstone will be removed if
not maintained.
RUTLAND TWP. — The Rutland
Township Trustees request that cemeteries in Rutland Township be cleaned off
by March 15 and nothing returned to
graves until after March 31 for Spring
Cleanup.
BURLINGHAM — The trustees of
Burlingham Cemetery in Meigs County
will be cleaning the cemetery over the
coming weeks. Any grave decorations
that family members want to keep should
be removed no later than April 1.

Lincoln
Day Dinner
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs
County Republican Party’s annual
Lincoln Day Dinner will be held
on Thursday, March 23 at 6 p.m. at
Meigs High School. Lt. Gov. Mary
Taylor will be the speaker for the dinner, other state and local ofﬁcials are
expected to be in attendance. Tickets
are available from Kay Hill or by calling Bill Spaun at 740-992-3992.

Fish
Fry
POMEROY — Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy will host a ﬁsh
fry on Fridays March 24, and 31 from
noon-7 p.m. Carryout is available. The
ﬁsh fry is sponsored by the Knights of
Columbus Monsignor Jessing Council
#1664 with the proceeds beneﬁting
local charities.

Humane Society
bag sale
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Humane Society Thrift Store
in Middleport, Ohio, is having a bag
sale Monday, March 20 through Friday, March 24.

RACO Yard Sale
Items Needed
RACINE — The Racine Area Community Organization is currently
accepting yard sale items for its May
Scholarship yard sale. The money
raised will be used for scholarships
for the Southern Local Class of
2018. RACO accepts good re-usable
clothing, household items, furniture,
etc.. They do not accept televisions,
computer hardware or dirty unusable
materials. To schedule an appointment to drop off items or to arrange
to have items picked up please contact
Zachary Manual at 740-444-2793 or
Kim Romine at 740-992-2067 or 740992-7079. Please no calls after 9 p.m.

OHIO VALLEY HISTORY
By Chris Rizer
Special to OVP

Of course, we all know
that baseball has always been
a major pastime in Mason
County, W.Va., as it has across
the country. However, a century of storytelling has turned
a particular match-up into a
local legend.
In 1910, during their annual
pre-season “barnstorming,”
the Cincinnati Reds stopped
in Hartford, W.Va. This was
a common occurrence in the

early 1900s, providing the
major-league teams with a
good way to practice and gain
local support. The game, likely
in October, was held at the
town’s baseball ﬁeld. This ﬁeld
was behind the school, now
the community center, and is
now completely covered in forest. All that we know for sure
about outcome of the game is
that the Hartford City Blues
beat the Cincinnati Reds. Yes,
for all of you currently scofﬁng
at the paper, it is true.
A newspaper article from

Oct. 25 of the next year reads,
“The Cincinnati Reds were
here again last week and
contested with the Hartford
Team, and the story is somewhat different from last year.
Hartford won last year, but
were easily defeated this year
by a score of 5-1.” This proves
the story, though it doesn’t
give much detail about that
legendary game.
Now don’t get me wrong.
Hartford was not the only
local team that the Reds
played. They are just the only

team that is known to have
won.
Both the Cincinnati Reds
and Pittsburgh Pirates traveled through the Bend Area
multiple times, playing teams
such as Syracuse, Pomeroy,
Hartford, and Mason. For
example, on October 2nd,
1899, the Mason team played
Cincinnati. They lost, but they
played well, for it is said that
received considerable complements from their opponents.
Sadly, sports history
throughout Mason County

has never been fully recorded,
so we do not know whether
there were other similar occurrences.
Based upon a photo
obtained from Mildred Gibbs’
“Founding and Development
of New Haven,” Hartford team
members included Lem Ruttencutter, George Lerner (manager), Pat Rea, Harry Gibbs,
Charles Kell, Joe Pierce,
Avalene “Lee” Moore, Frank
“Fat” Chapman, Mitt Wayland,
Ira Fields, and Charles “RickyTicky” Fields.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Looking for clues
from a 2005 special
election in Ohio
By Nathan L. Gonzales
Contributing columnist

WASHINGTON — Are Democrats in the early
stages of their own tea party movement? It’s one of the
biggest outstanding questions at this point in the cycle.
But as we collectively look at the past for prologue, I
don’t understand why our memories only go back eight
years.
There was a time, not too long ago, when Democrats
were out of the White House and in the minority in
both chambers of Congress, and a demoralizing presidential election loss helped jump-start a movement back
to the majority.
The initial focus this year is on the special election to replace former Republican Rep. Tom Price in
Georgia’s6th District, one of four vacant seats created
by President Donald Trump’s Cabinet selections.
Trump narrowly carried the suburban Atlanta district
over Hillary Clinton 48-47 percent last fall. That result
has drawn national Democratic and media interest,
even though the partisan lean of the district is probably
closer to Price’s 62-38 percent victory last fall or Mitt
Romney’s 61-38 percent margin over President Barack
Obama in 2012.
But that doesn’t mean Democrats can’t come close in
the June special election runoff.
In 2005, Democrats were reeling after losing the
previous year’s presidential election to unpopular
incumbent George W. Bush. When Bush subsequently
selected GOP Rep. Rob Portman to be United States
trade representative, Ohio’s2nd District seat opened up
for a special election.
Republicans shouldn’t have had to worry about the
southern Ohio district, which stretched from the Cincinnati suburbs east to Portsmouth. Democrats hadn’t
held the seat in 30 years and Bush had drubbed John
Kerry in the district 64-36 percent just a few months
earlier.
Former state Rep. Jean Schmidt survived a crowded
GOP primary ﬁeld with 31 percent against former Rep.
Bob McEwen, state Rep. Tom Brinkman, Sen. Mike
DeWine’s son, and seven others while Paul Hackett, a
lawyer and former Milford city councilman, won the
Democratic nomination with less drama.
In the special general election, the combination of
Bush and Hackett’s military service in Iraq with the
Marines Corps Reserves helped the race gain national
attention. It was one of the ﬁrst contests to capture the
interest of the liberal “netroots” blogging community
and was one of the ﬁrst elections held under the reign
of Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard
Dean and his “50-State strategy.”
Schmidt won the Aug. 2, 2005, special election narrowly, 52-48 percent, and both sides rushed to frame
the results. Democrats asserted that the result (compared to Portman’s 43-point victory in 2004) was clear
evidence of a larger movement heading into the 2006
midterms while Republicans dismissed it as a lowturnout special election in an off-year.
In the end, Democrats were right. Even though
Republicans won special elections in 2005 and 2006 in
all three districts they previously held (California’s 48th
and 50th were the others), Democrats gained 30 seats
in November 2006 and retook the House majority.
Democratic strategists are careful to avoid setting
expectations too high for next year while trying to harness the energy that’s followed from Trump’s inauguration. Georgia Democrat Jon Ossoff, 30, has capitalized
on the opportunity by raising millions of dollars, largely
from liberal activists across the country, for his 6th District campaign.
Ossoff isn’t a perfect candidate (he apparently doesn’t
live in the district and is easily tied to liberal Democrats
through donations and endorsements), but neither was
Hackett. The Ohio Democrat had a notoriously short
temper and even referred to Bush as the son of a female
dog to USA Today. But that brashness is part of what
resonated with the Democratic base at the time.
The mood of the Democratic Party isn’t all that different now.
“The wounds are so fresh and raw,” said one veteran
Democratic strategist. “There is venomous anger on the
Democratic side because of Trump.
“People are so amped because this is the ﬁrst election
outlet to channel it somewhere,” the strategist added.
But there is a risk of getting too emotionally and
ﬁnancially tied to a speciﬁc special election result. If
some Democrats convince themselves that Georgia’s
6th is winnable and they fall short, it could dampen
enthusiasm and even hinder candidate recruitment
elsewhere.
But Hackett’s loss is just one reason to avoid jumping to conclusions based on special elections. Stuart
Rothenberg recently wrote for Inside Elections about
the May 2010 special election in Pennsylvania’s12th
District. Democrats won that competitive race just
six months before losing 63 seats nationwide and the
House majority.
“Special elections rarely do good things for morale,”
said the Democratic strategist, who requested anonymity to speak candidly. “They are such a time, money,
and emotional suck. The results are exaggerated one
way or the other. People get sad or happy.”
In reality, it’s just one seat and there is a temptation
to “over-learn” lessons from an individual race which
took place under conditions that aren’t easily replicated.
Just be warned that no matter the results in Georgia
or the other special elections, exaggeration will be a
common theme. And it’s OK to wait until next year to
project the national political climate.

THEIR VIEW

Love reigns in Ireland
I’d grown up roaming the
My trip to Ireland
fairy glens. I slid deeper
began with love and
into my seat and permitended with a lovely, bitted the ﬁrst rays of
tersweet goodbye.
light to soak into
It was my honeymy hands and face.
moon, after all,
“You folks said
and I was swoonyou’re heading to
ing before the
County Cork?” the
plane even landed
waitress asked, setamong the gorting a map on the
geous green hills.
Michele Z. table and pointing
I had no need to
to a town spelled,
search for a pot of Marcum
gold. My treasure Contributing C-o-b-h.
“We’re kissing
was sitting beside columnist
the Blarney Stone
me, holding my
ﬁrst,” I said, blowhand and I was
ing air kisses from my
blissfully soaring on the
ﬁngertips toward my
wings of his love.
After a traditional Irish husband. “I’m a writer
and I want the gift of elobreakfast of scrambled
quent speech the legend
eggs, ﬁgs and black pudpromises.”
ding—that’s sausage
“She’s already quite a
with pig’s blood and
talker.” My man cocks
oatmeal, I expected the
his head toward the map.
locals to top off my meal
“This is one town you
with a “Top O’ the morndon’t want to miss—the
ing to ya.” Instead, one
Titanic’s last port of
after another inhaled a
call,” she says circling
breath of brisk air and
the town “Cobh” with
exhaled with a smile.
her pen. It used to be
“Lovely Day,” they said.
spelled like it sounds,
I sipped my Ameri‘Cove,’ but after the
cana—the coffee closQueen of England visest to house blend I
ited, they renamed it
could get—nodded and
Queensland. Now it’s
raised my mug toward
Cove again, just spelled
the elderly gentleman
with an Irish twist.
tipping his hat my way.
We headed out and
I barely had one breakafter kissing one of the
fast under my belt and
most famous rocks in
already I felt connected
the world, skimmed over
to the community as if

“I breathed deep into the love I felt, knowing
if I ever felt down, all I had to do was look up
and that’s a lovely view indeed.”
the narrow road south in
our rented car, my husband awkwardly shifting
gears with his left hand
and navigating the left
side of the road while I
fended off tree branches
smacking me through the
open window. When we
weren’t calling out the
names of the roads as
they corresponded to our
map, we were watching
the hillsides for a glimpse
of a leprechaun, but the
only creatures we spotted
were sheep and goats.
Soon we rounded
a curve, the colorful
buildings of Cobh rising
like crayons against the
pristine blue harbor. I
imagined the smiling,
the waving of those on
board the Titanic. They
had departed that day in
hopes for a smooth ride
over the ocean. Instead
they wrecked and sunk
lifeless to their ﬁnal resting place—the ocean
ﬂoor.
I imagined the man
made notorious by the
movie version tightening the belt around the
waist of the woman he

loved—his life vest—as
he kissed her lips for the
ﬁnal time. I stroked my
husband’s arm, feeling as
loved as she must have. I
wondered if it was possible for this feeling to last
and not be swallowed up
by time.
A cathedral perched
on the bank as if it were
a lighthouse. My eyes
trailed its steeple pointing towards the heavens
as if to say, “There is
where your answer lies.”
Two weeks later, we
were whisked away from
our paradise and on the
plane home. My love to
my right winked at me,
a Guinness in one hand
and my hand in his other.
Life was as lovely as the
lush hillsides whisking
past my window view
from above. I breathed
deep into the love I felt,
knowing if I ever felt
down, all I had to do
was look up and that’s a
lovely view indeed.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks
on AIR radio. Access more at
soundcloud.comlifespeaks.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday,
March 21, the 80th day of
2017. There are 285 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On March 21, 1952,
the Moondog Coronation
Ball, considered the ﬁrst
rock and roll concert,
took place at Cleveland
Arena.
On this date:
In 1556, Thomas Cranmer, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, was
burned at the stake for
heresy.
In 1685, composer
Johann Sebastian Bach
was born in Eisenach,
Germany.
In 1804, the French
civil code, or the “Code
Napoleon” as it was later
called, was adopted.
In 1925, Tennessee Gov.
Austin Peay (pee) signed
the Butler Act, which
prohibited the teaching of
the Theory of Evolution

in public schools. (Tennessee repealed the law in
1967.)
In 1935, Persia ofﬁcially
changed its name to Iran.
In 1946, the recently
created United Nations
Security Council set up
temporary headquarters
at Hunter College in The
Bronx, New York.
In 1957, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
began a four-day conference in Bermuda.
In 1963, the Alcatraz
federal prison island in
San Francisco Bay was
emptied of its last inmates
and closed at the order of
Attorney General Robert
F. Kennedy.
In 1972, the Supreme
Court, in Dunn v. Blumstein, ruled that states
may not require at least a
year’s residency for voting
eligibility.
In 1981, Michael Donald, a black teenager in
Mobile, Alabama, was

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“History is principally the inaccurate
narration of events which ought not to have
happened.”
— Ernest Albert Hooten,
American anthropologist (1887-1954)

abducted, tortured and
killed by members of the
Ku Klux Klan. (A lawsuit brought by Donald’s
mother, Beulah Mae
Donald, later resulted
in a landmark judgment
that bankrupted one Klan
organization.)
In 1997, President
Bill Clinton and Russian
President Boris Yeltsin
wrapped up their summit
in Helsinki, Finland, still
deadlocked over NATO
expansion, but able to
agree on slashing nuclear
weapons arsenals.
In 2006, the social
media website Twitter
was established with
the sending of the ﬁrst
“tweet” by co-founder

Jack Dorsey, who wrote:
“just setting up my twttr.”
Ten years ago: Former
Vice President Al Gore
made an emotional return
to Congress as he pleaded
with House and Senate
committees to ﬁght global
warming; skeptical Republicans questioned the science behind his climatechange documentary, “An
Inconvenient Truth.”
Five years ago: A previously divided U.N. Security Council sent a strong
and united message to the
Syrian government and
opposition to immediately
implement proposals by
international envoy Koﬁ
Annan to end Syria’s yearlong bloodshed.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 5

Himes to serve as Acting Director of Ohio Department of Health
Staff Report

lenges at both the Turnpike Commission and at the Department of Health.
I appreciate his service and wish him
and his family well in this new chapter of their lives,” said Kasich.
Himes has been an attorney with
the Ohio Department of Health
for more than 10 years where his
work has focused on environmental
health and compliance issues. Himes
was named General Counsel at the

lier in the Administration. Himes
will replace the Department’s curCOLUMBUS — Governor John R.
rent director, Rick Hodges, effective
Kasich has appointing Lance Himes
March 31. Hodges announced Monto serve as Acting Director of the
day that he is leaving to pursue new
Ohio Department of Health, following opportunities outside of the Administhe resignation of the current directration.
tor.
“Rick has been a valued member of
Himes currently serves as the
our team since the beginning of the
Department’s Chief Legal Counsel
Administration and has enthusiastically and adeptly taken on big chaland served as Acting Director ear-

From page 1

Savannah Roush, Grace
Lee, Izzy Klein, Braydon
Essick, Austin Bare, Jordan Gilbride, Jared Myers,
Matthew Hall, and Sydnee
Morris. The grand prize
winner was Caden Hupp.
Incentives were provided by the district, Scott
Wolfe, and Tricia McNickle. McNickle took the contest one step further by
rewarding another group
of her students, K-3, who
ate all ﬁve days during the
breakfast challenge. Winners sponsored by Principal McNickle were Nevaeh
Books, Bethany Roberts,
Dravin Landis, Kaydance
Stover, Tyrell Johnson, Jeremy Harmon, Emma Shuster, Garrett Collingsworth,
Brenlan Kincaid, Ana Fellure, Skyler Allen, Ethan
Rose, Peyton Milliron,
Leland Parker, Bella Foley
and Grand prize winner of
a Hatchimal, Ana Fellure
In addition to the breakfast week, the Southern
lunchroom and school
counseling programs headed by Andrea Wiseman
teamed up to have “Breakfast with a Buddy.” The
“Breakfast with a Buddy”
campaign concluded the
Ohio School Breakfast
Week Challenge and No
One Eats Alone Day.
Students who eat breakfast have better nutrition,

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

54°

55°

HEALTH TODAY
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
1.79/2.52
Year to date/normal
8.59/8.56

Snowfall

(in inches)

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Primary: cedar/juniper, elm
Mold: 141

SUN &amp; MOON

Primary: aspergillus

Today
7:30 a.m.
7:41 p.m.
3:11 a.m.
1:22 p.m.

Low

Wed.
7:29 a.m.
7:42 p.m.
3:58 a.m.
2:15 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Mar 27

First

Apr 3

Full

Last

Apr 11 Apr 19

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

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

Major
7:13a
8:00a
8:45a
9:30a
10:16a
11:02a
11:50a

Minor
1:01a
1:47a
2:33a
3:18a
4:03a
4:49a
5:37a

Major
7:37p
8:24p
9:10p
9:56p
10:41p
11:28p
----

Minor
1:25p
2:12p
2:58p
3:43p
4:28p
5:15p
6:03p

WEATHER HISTORY
On March 21, 1952, a massive
outbreak of tornadoes raged from
Missouri to Alabama. They killed 343
people and caused over $15 million
in property damage.

THURSDAY

Moderate

High

Lucasville
59/32

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.09
16.84
21.79
12.74
13.29
24.03
12.07
27.29
35.29
13.12
20.80
34.20
19.70

Portsmouth
60/32

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.60
none
+0.11
-0.07
+0.26
-0.02
-0.51
+0.88
+0.75
+0.41
+1.80
none
+1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

69°
52°

71°
52°

Warmer with times of
clouds and sun

Variably cloudy, a
shower in the p.m.

MONDAY

66°
46°
Clouds and sun with a
little rain

66°
45°
Low clouds

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
59/31

Athens
58/29

St. Marys
59/30

Parkersburg
60/29

Coolville
59/31

Elizabeth
59/32

Spencer
59/33

Buffalo
60/34
Milton
60/35

St. Albans
61/35

Huntington
62/32

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
57/45
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
66/54
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
62/57
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

Marietta
59/30

Murray City
58/28

Ironton
61/34

Ashland
61/35
Grayson
61/34

March 13
Animals at large — Dispatch
received a call about several
horses loose on Bashan Road
near Bashan. Deputy Stacy
arrived in the area and helped
the reporting individual corral
the horses temporarily until the
owner could arrive from the
Five Points area to put them
back into their permanent pen.
Suspicious vehicle — Dispatch received a call about a
Jeep parked on Townsend Road
near State Route 681 with
a subject just sitting inside.
Deputy Chris Jones arrived in
the area and located the Jeep.
He made contact with a subject
sleeping inside. The subject
advised that he lives in Athens
County, had an argument with
his wife and left the home for
the night. Deputy Jones checked
the subject for warrants and had
dispatch check with Athens to
insure he was not wanted there.
Everything checked out okay,
the subject was advised that he
could not just stop and sleep at
the end of someone’s driveway
and advised to move on.

SATURDAY

Wilkesville
59/30
POMEROY
Jackson
60/31
59/30
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
60/32
60/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
56/26
GALLIPOLIS
61/33
60/33
60/32

South Shore Greenup
61/34
59/31

49

Logan
58/28

McArthur
58/28

Very High

Very High

Mostly sunny and
warmer

Adelphi
58/28
Chillicothe
57/29

FRIDAY

58°
42°

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

Waverly
58/30

Pollen: 4

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
Trace/2.8
Season to date/normal
5.9/21.7

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Partly sunny and
chilly

0

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

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

Sun and clouds today. Partly cloudy and colder
tonight. High 61° / Low 33°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

44°/28°
58°/36°
87° in 1921
16° in 1923

EXTENDED FORECAST

47°
22°
47°

on Burlingham Road and was
demanding $15,000. Deputies
had already taken a complaint
earlier in the night from the
resident that lived at the address
given by the unknown caller
concerning a child custody matter. Deputies believed that the
new call was just an attempt to
cause trouble. Deputies responded to the address and made contact and everything was found
to be in order. A case has been
started on the prank call and
remains under investigation.

mount heater missing from his
porch. The reporting individual
looked in the other man’s vehicle
and located the missing items.
From page 1
He requested the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
on probation and located several
to come to the residence and
road signs at the residence on
handle the situation. Deputy
Bailey Run Road. RepresentaJones is handling the investigatives from the Meigs County
tion and charges are pending.
Highway Garage were sent to
Civil matter — Deputy Jones
the scene to recover the road
was sent to a residence in Rutsigns. Charges are pending.
land on a possible domestic
Juvenile — Deputy Snoke
situation. Deputy Jones spoke
checked on a juvenile at a resiwith the parties involved and
dence on Rice Run Road at the
determined that it was a civil
request of Children Services.
issue between siblings who were
Deputy Snoke contacted the
arguing over a vehicle that one
juvenile and parent and everyowned, but the other had paid
thing was okay.
for some repairs. The problem
was settled and no charges ﬁled.
March 11
Domestic violence — DepNight Shift
uty Patterson was sent to a
residence on Bailey Run Road
March 10
because a non-custodial mother
Underage party — Dispatch
was outside the residence of
received a call of a possible
her daughter causing problems. underage drinking party on
When Deputy Patterson arrived, North Main Street in Rutland.
he spoke with each party and
Deputies arrived and patrolled
determined that no violence had the area and the party was
taken place and the mother was found. Several subjects under
allowed to leave. No charges
the age of 21 were found to be
ﬁled.
drinking, and one juvenile, age
EMS assist — EMS requested 17. All subjects that did not live
a unit to secure the scene at a
there were taken to the sheriff’s
residence on State Route 681.
ofﬁce to be issued citations.
Deputy Patterson went to the
The juvenile was transported to
scene until the squad could
his home in Gallia County and
transport the patient to the ER. released to his mother. Charges
Theft — Deputy Jones took
are pending on the juvenile.
a report from an individual on
Barringer Ridge Road, about
March 11
the theft of some tools and
Prank call — Dispatch
other items from his porch. The received a call from Athens
individual reported that another Police Department advising that
man was at his residence to
they had received a call from an
work on a vehicle when he
unknown caller stating the he
had three hostages at an address
noticed some tools and a wall

8 PM

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

Office

perform better in school,
and have higher test
scores and better behavior.
Skipping breakfast hurts
kids’ overall cognitive
performance, which has a
negative impact on their
levels of alertness, attention, memory, problemsolving and mathematics
skills.
By contrast, students
who eat school breakfast
have been shown, on average, to attend 1.5 more
days of school per year
and score 17.5 percent
higher on standardized math tests. Ohio
students can start their
day ready to learn with a
nutritious breakfast. The
Ohio School Breakfast
Challenge encourages all
schools to give their students a great start to their
day with a healthy breakfast. All schools offering
the School Breakfast Program can participate in the
Spring Challenge-February
1, through April 6.
Southern also offers a
free school lunch to kids
in Pre-School through the
8th grade. This is a free
lunch every single day to
all students as a result of
the Community Eligibility Program or CEP. The
kitchen staff has offered
many new entrées this
year including tortellini,
chicken alfredo, various
types of barbecue, chicken
dishes, and homemade
soups.

Clendenin
60/35
Charleston
62/31

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
22/11

Billings
45/35

Montreal
41/12
Minneapolis
39/18
Chicago
51/27

Denver
66/38

Kansas City
60/35

Toronto
New York
51/18
56/34
Detroit
54/24
Washington
63/39

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
79/50/s
29/9/pc
82/60/pc
53/39/c
62/38/pc
45/35/c
63/45/sh
50/30/c
62/31/c
82/54/t
55/36/c
51/27/pc
60/28/c
50/27/pc
58/28/pc
87/63/s
66/38/c
47/28/pc
54/24/pc
85/72/s
85/62/pc
56/27/pc
60/35/c
80/59/s
85/51/s
62/57/sh
66/37/c
78/59/pc
39/18/pc
74/46/t
81/61/pc
56/34/pc
83/48/pc
84/55/s
59/37/pc
89/64/s
55/27/pc
47/25/c
78/52/pc
70/45/c
61/37/sh
76/53/c
66/54/t
57/45/r
63/39/c

Hi/Lo/W
80/53/pc
30/2/s
73/48/c
42/23/pc
46/24/pc
65/41/pc
62/40/c
33/15/s
44/23/pc
63/34/pc
66/40/pc
39/28/pc
43/24/pc
33/22/s
41/23/s
82/64/pc
73/47/pc
46/34/pc
37/22/s
85/72/pc
84/63/pc
42/26/pc
54/38/c
67/50/r
58/46/sh
64/51/r
50/32/pc
81/61/s
41/31/pc
59/38/pc
82/61/pc
36/22/s
68/54/t
87/61/s
41/24/s
84/59/pc
36/19/s
29/8/s
59/29/pc
53/25/pc
51/37/c
67/46/sh
61/49/r
52/39/r
48/27/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
82/60

High
Low

El Paso
88/56
Chihuahua
89/52

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

93° in Fort Stockton, TX
-4° in Saranac Lake, NY

Global
High
Low

Houston
85/62
Monterrey
89/57

Miami
78/59

111° in Vredendal, South Africa
-43° in Delyankirskiy, Russia

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

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Challenge

Department of Health in October
2011. Before joining the department,
Himes practiced law in Cincinnati
for seven years. He graduated from
Wittenberg University with a bachelor’s degree majoring in business
and geography and received his law
degree from the University of Cincinnati, College of Law.
Hodges has served as director since
2014.

�6 Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

20
March Match
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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

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8 locals earn All-TVC Ohio basketball honors
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

River Valley senior Jacob Dovenbarger (32) is guarded tightly by Meigs junior
Christian Mattox (1), while RVHS junior Dustin Barber (10) and Meigs senior
Dillon Mahr (11) look on, during the Marauders’ victory at MHS, on February 17.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division has released the 2017
all-league teams, as selected
by the coaches from within the
seven-team league, featuring
eight players from Meigs and
Gallia counties.
On the boys side, three
Marauders and two Raiders
were selected to the All-TVC
Ohio team.
Meigs (9-3 TVC Ohio) —
which ﬁnished tied for second
with Athens — landed seniors
Jared Kennedy and Luke
Musser, as well as junior Christian Mattox on the all-league
squad. This is Musser’s second
all-league honor, as he was also

named to the team as a sophomore. Kennedy and Mattox are
both ﬁrst time honorees.
River Valley (3-9) claimed
ﬁfth in the league and was
represented on the All-TVC
Ohio team by senior Jacob
Dovenbarger and junior Dustin
Barber, both of whom are ﬁrst
time honorees.
For the second straight season, Vinton County head coach
Matt Combs was named TVC
Ohio boys Coach of the Year.
Combs led the Vikings to an
11-1 mark in the league and the
outright TVC Ohio championship.
The league’s Most Valuable
Player honor was shared by
Vikings senior Tristan Bartoe
and Bulldogs senior Grifﬁn
Lutz, both of whom are on the

all-league team for the third
consecutive season. Lutz was
also league Most Valuable Player in the 2015-16 season.
On the girls all-league team,
Meigs landed two players,
while River Valley had one representative.
The Lady Marauders (8-4)
claimed third in the league
and was represented by sophomores Kassidy Betzing and
Madison Fields, both of whom
were also on the list as freshmen.
RVHS senior Erin Jackson
earned her ﬁrst All-TVC Ohio
honor, representing the sixth
place Lady Raiders (2-10).
Alexander’s Cory McKnight
was named girls Coach of the
See HONORS | 9

Redskins pound
Point in opener, 15-0
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HURRICANE, W.Va. — A tough start to the
new year.
The Point Pleasant baseball team mustered only
two hits while host Hurricane posted at least three
runs in three out of four innings at the plate Saturday during a 15-0 decision in a non-conference,
season-opening matchup in Putnam County.
The Big Blacks (0-1) prodcued only ﬁve total
baserunners in the ﬁve-inning mercy-rule setback,
and only twice did the guests have a baserunner
advance to second base while never advancing to
third.
Tucker Mayes walked with one out in the second and advanced to second on a two-out single
by Alec Smith. Abe Stearns led the fourth off with
a single, but was forced out on a ﬁelder’s choice by
Miles Williams. Williams eventually ended up at
second on a two-out walk by Tyler Mitchell before
the inning ended.
The Redskins (1-0), on the other hand, sent a
dozen batters to the plate in the ﬁrst inning alone,
which resulted in eight runs on eight hits and a
walk for an early eight-run cushion.
HHS tacked on three more runs in the second,
added another in the third and tallied three more
scores in the fourth for a commanding 15-0 cushion through four complete.
PPHS went down in order in the top half of the
ﬁfth, which ultimately wrapped up the mercy-rule
outcome.
Hurricane outhit the guests by a sizable 15-2
overall margin, with Point Pleasant committing
the only two errors of the contest. HHS stranded
seven runners on base while the Big Blacks left
four on the bags.
Logan McClure was the winning pitcher of
record after allowing one hit and one walk over
See POINT | 9

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, March 21
Baseball
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
Sherman at Hannan, 5:30 p.m.
Softball
Wirt County at Point Pleasant 5:30 p.m.
Wahama at Roane County, 5:30 p.m.
Tennis
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Wednesday, March 22
Baseball
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Softball
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Track and Field
Hannan and Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4 p.m.
Thursday, March 23
Baseball
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Softball
Parkersburg South at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Roane County at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Lincoln County at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Friday, March 24
Baseball
Tolsia at Hannan, 5:30 p.m.
Softball
Logan at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Tennis
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Track and Field
Point Pleasant in host Paul Wood Invitational,
4:30 p.m.
Wahama at Capitol Invitational, 4:30 p.m.

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern senior Laura Pullins goes in for a layup in front of South Gallia junior Erin Evans, during the Lady Eagles victory over SGHS, in
Tuppers Plains on January 12.

All-TVC Hocking basketball list features 13 locals
EHS senior Laura Pullins named co-Most Valuable Player
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— The Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
has released the 2017 allleague team, as selected
by the coaches from within the nine-team league,
featuring 13 players from
Meigs, Mason and Gallia
counties.
On the girls all-league
team, seven locals were
selected led by league
runner-up Eastern (14-2
TVC Hocking) with three
honorees. EHS senior
Laura Pullins — who was
named co-Most Valuable
Player along with Waterford junior Alli Kern —
earned her third straight
All-TVC Hocking honor.
Meanwhile, EHS junior
Elizabeth Collins and
sophomore Jess Parker
are both on the all-league
squad for the second
straight season.
The Lady Tornadoes
(8-8), who ﬁnished tied
for fourth in the league
with Federal Hocking,
landed two players on the
all-league team in seniors
Faith Teaford and Macie
Michael. Teaford is making her third straight
appearance on the AllTVC Hocking team, while
Michael is a ﬁrst time
honoree.
South Gallia (2-14) and
Wahama (0-16) ﬁnished

eighth and ninth respectively, and each landed
one player on the allleague team. SGHS junior
Erin Evans and WHS
sophomore Maddy VanMatre each received their
ﬁrst all-league honor for
their efforts this winter.
The girls Coach of the
Year was Federal Hocking’s Jeremy Tolson.
On the boys all-league
team, six locals were
selected led by Southern
and Wahama with two
each.
The Tornadoes (9-7)
claimed fourth in the
league and were represented on the All-TVC
Hocking team by seniors
Tylar Belvins and Crenson
Rogers. Blevins is a ﬁrst
time selection, while Rogers earned his way onto
the list for the second
straight season.
Eastern (8-8) ﬁnished
tied for ﬁfth with Belpre
and was represented on
the all-league team by
Jett Facemyer. This is the
second straight year that
Facemyer has made the
All-TVC Hocking team.
Wahama (7-9) claimed
seventh in the league
and landed senior Philip
Hoffman and junior Noah
Litchﬁeld on the all-league
team. Hoffman is a repeat
selection, while Litchﬁeld
is a ﬁrst time honoree.
South Gallia (2-14) took
eighth in the nine-team

league and was represented on the All-TVC Hocking team by Caleb Henry,
a sophomore and a ﬁrst
time honoree.
The TVC Hocking boys
Most Valuable Player
was Waterford’s Jordan
Welch, while the Coach
of the Year award went to
Wildcats’ head coach Tom
Simms. Simms — who
was co-Coach of the Year
last winter — led the
Wildcats to an unbeaten
campaign in the league.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division Boys
Basketball
1. Waterford (16-0):
Jordan Welch* (12),
Isaac Huffman* (12),
Travis Pottmeyer (11), Ty
McCutcheon (12).
2. Trimble (12-4): Tyler
Slack (12), Ryan Richards
(12), Randy Hixson*
(11).
3. Miller (10-6): Seattle
Compston (11), Carson
Starlin* (11).
4. Southern (9-7): Tylar
Blevins (12), Crenson
Rogers* (12).
T-5. Belpre (8-8):
Deijon Bedgood** (12),
Mythius Houghton (12).
T-5. Eastern (8-8): Jett
Facemyer* (12).
7. Wahama (7-9): Noah
Litchﬁeld (11), Philip
Hoffman* (12).
8. South Gallia (2-14):

Caleb Henry (10).
9. Federal Hocking
(0-16): Jared Hawk (12).
Most Valuable Player:
Jordan Welch, Waterford.
Coach of the Year: Tom
Simms, Waterford.
* — denotes previous
All-TVC Hocking honor.
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division Girls
Basketball
1. Waterford (16-0): Alli
Kern** (11), Megan Ball*
(11), Hayley Duff (11),
Jillian McCutcheon (12).
2. Eastern (14-2):
Laura Pullins** (12), Jess
Parker* (10), Elizabeth
Collins* (11).
3. Belpre (12-4): Cheyenne Barker* (12), Trinidy King (12).
T-4. Federal Hocking
(8-8): Destiny Tabler*
(12), Hannah Dunfee*
(11).
T-4. Southern (8-8):
Faith Teaford** (12),
Macie Michael (12).
6. Miller (7-9): Ashley
Spencer (9), Chloe Rine
(11).
7. Trimble (5-11): Emily
Ward (12), Sydney Hardy
(11).
8. South Gallia (2-14):
Erin Evans (11).
9. Wahama (0-16):
Maddy VanMatre (10).
Co-Most Valuable Players: Alli Kern, Waterford;
Laura Pullins, Eastern.
Coach of the Year:
Jeremy Tolson, Federal
Hocking.
* — denotes previous
All-TVC Hocking honor.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahama
baseball camp
MASON, W.Va. — The ﬁrst annual Wahama Baseball Camp will be held for any boy in grades K-8 from
10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 25, at the
Wahama baseball ﬁeld.
The price of the camp will be $30 per camper or
$50 a family.
Food and refreshments will also be sold at the camp.
The camp will be conducted by the Wahama baseball staff and players.
Every aspect and fundamentals of the game will be
covered and discussed.
If bad weather occurs, the camp will be held at
Gary Clark Court within the basketball gymnasium at
Wahama High School.
Applications can be picked up at Wahama High
School and New Haven Elementary.
Campers can also register the day of the camp.
For more information contact Coach Hoffman at
740-856-4077 or Coach Bumgardner at 304-593-4955.

Berlin Hiland defeats
Waterford 61-41 in
Division IV final
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Angela Troyer scored
20 points and Morgan McMillen had 17 for Hiland as
it won its ﬁfth state title with a 61-41 victory against
defending champion Waterford in the Division IV ﬁnal
on Saturday at Value City Arena.
Troyer was the 2017 Associated Press Player of the
Year in Division IV and made 4 of 5 3-pointers.
“The award was great, but ultimately winning a
state championship in my senior year is all I wanted,”
Troyer said.
McMillen had 10 of her points in the second half
when the Hawks (29-1) outscored Waterford 18-9 in
the third quarter to take a 49-30 lead.
“I felt like we had good control most of the game,”
Hiland coach Dave Schlabach said.
Hiland also won titles in 2000, ‘05, 06 and 08. The
Hawks have been runner-up on ﬁve occasions, most
recently in 2013.
Alli Kern had 17 points for Waterford (25-4), who
was also runner-up in 2015.
Hiland took it largest lead of the ﬁrst half, 27-16,
with 4:10 left in the second quarter on the strength
of hitting four straight 3-pointers over a two-minute
stretch.

Point

for the victors.
Short led HHS by
knocking in four RBIs,
followed by Perry and
From page 8
Dunham with three RBIs
three innings while strik- each. Perry, Dunham,
ing out two. Williams
Adkins, Birthisel, Bailey
took the loss after surand Cox also scored twice
rendering eight earned
apiece in the triumph.
runs, seven hits and a
Adkins also led off the
walk over two-thirds of an bottom of the fourth
inning of work.
inning with a solo home
run to right-center ﬁeld.
Aaron Perry and Nate
Point Pleasant is at
Dunham paced the hosts
Nitro
on Monday and
with three hits apiece,
will
make
its home debut
followed by Garrett Gress
Wednesday
when Wayne
and Noah Short with two
comes
to
town
for a 7
safeties each. Bo Adkins,
p.m.
contest.
Jake Allen, Noah Birthisel, Liam Bailey and Tyler Bryan Walters can be reached at
Cox also had a hit apiece 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Honors

Co-Most Valuable Players: Tristan Bartoe, Vinton County; Grifﬁn Lutz,
Athens.
From page 8
Coach of the Year: Matt
Year after guiding the
Combs, Vinton County.
Lady Spartans to a perfect
* — denotes previous
12-0 mark in the league.
All-TVC Ohio honor.
The league’s Most Valuable Player award went
Tri-Valley Conference
to Alexander’s Leah Rich- Ohio Division Girls
ardson, who is a four-time Basketball
all-league honoree.
1. Alexander (12-0):
Leah Richardson*** (12),
Jala Mace** (12), Rachel
Richardson* (10), McKena Rice (10).
Tri-Valley Conference
2. Nelsonville-York
Ohio Division Boys
(9-3): Samantha Taylor*
Basketball
(12), Jessie Addis** (11),
1. Vinton County (11Mary-Kate McCulloch
1): Tristan Bartoe**
(12), Derick Jones* (12), (10).
3. Meigs (8-4): Kassidy
Naylan Yates (11), Jake
Betzing*
(10), Madison
Speakman (11).
T-2. Athens (9-3): Grif- Fields* (10).
4. Vinton County (7-5):
ﬁn Lutz** (12), Dalton
Cozart (11), Justin Hynes Cassie Bentley (11), Darian Radabaugh (11).
(10).
5. Athens (3-9): Laura
T-2. Meigs (9-3): Jared
Manderick (9), Emma
Kennedy (12), Luke
Harter (10).
Musser* (12), Christian
6. River Valley (2-10):
Mattox (11).
Erin Jackson (12).
4. Alexander (7-5):
7. Wellston (1-11): SydChace Harris (12), Luke
ney Mullins* (10).
Kish (11).
Most Valuable Player:
5. River Valley (3-9):
Leah Richardson, AlexJacob Dovenbarger (12),
ander.
Dustin Barber (11).
Coach of the Year: Cory
6. Wellston (2-10): Matt
McKnight,
Alexander.
Simpson (11).
* — denotes previous
7. Nelsonville-York
All-TVC Ohio honor.
(1-11): Aron Davis (12)
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 9

Gilmour Academy beats Versailles 56-54
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Naz Hillmon
scored 24 points and
grabbed 17 rebounds
as Gates Mills Gilmour
Academy held on for its
ﬁrst title with a 56-54
win against Versailles
in the girls Division III
ﬁnal at Value City Arena
on Saturday.
“Give credit to my
teammates,” Hillmon
said. “They got up and
down the court whether
it was on offense or
defense.”
Hillmon, a 6-foot-2
junior, was named The
Associated Press 2017
player of the year in
Division III.
“She’s an amazing
post player,” said Versailles forward Danielle
Winner, who led the

Tigers with 13 points.
Hillmon put Gilmour
(24-6) on top 39-37 at
the start of the fourth
quarter Saturday. She
then gave the Lancers
their largest lead, 51-41,
with 2:50 left in the
game.
Gilmour led 56-50
with 16.8 seconds left
but Versailles (26-4) got
to within 56-52 on two
free throws by Danielle
Winner and Lindsey
Winner’s put-back with
4.7 seconds left.
Versailles forced a
forced a turnover and
Kami McEldowney
made it 56-54 with 2.5
seconds left but Versailles couldn’t get a
shot off after intercepting an inbound pass.
“We didn’t have

enough time,” Versailles
coach Jacki Stonebraker
said. “We needed more
than two or three more
seconds.
“These girls did a
great job of staying
together and coming
back. I know everybody
thought the game was
over with a minute to
go.”
The 37-37 score after
three quarters was beﬁtting the closeness of
the game. Versailles led
26-23 to start the third
quarter but Gilmour
scored the next ﬁve
points and took a 37-33
lead before Lindsey
Winner and Danielle
Winner hit ﬁeld goals to
tie the score.
The ﬁrst half was
tight with the score

being tied for 5:10 of the
16 minutes and there
were ﬁve lead changes.
Versailles eventually
pulled away for its biggest lead with just 37
seconds left in the half
when McEldowney hit
a 3-pointer from the left
corner for a 26-21 lead,
but Hillmon picked up
loose ball underneath
the Gilmour basket and
scored with 11 seconds
left for the 26-23 score
at the break.
The game remained
in doubt until the end,
but Gilmour coach Bob
Beutel had conﬁdence in
his players.
”They really kept
their focus and made
the most of every lesson
learned this season,” he
said.

Alter beats Hathaway Brown 58-41
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
The senior class of Kettering
Archbishop Alter had the perfect ending.
Seniors Libby Bazelak and
Braxtin Miller combined for 44
points as the Knights won their
third straight girls Division II
title with a 58-41 win Saturday
against Shaker Heights Hathaway Brown at Value City Arena.
Miller had 23 points and
Bazelak 21 while each had eight
rebounds.
Alter (28-2) has six seniors,
ﬁve of whom started, that have
won 151 games the past four
seasons and reached the state
tournament all four years.
“All of us played together
since we were in third grade,”
Miller said. “This is something
we dreamed about as kids.”
Alter led by 15 early in the

fourth but Hathaway Brown
(18-11) got to within 46-39
before Bazelak and Miller each
scored four points down the
stretch, and the Knights turned
a close game into wider margin
with several easy baskets at the
end.
“It’s kind of hard to put into
words what they mean, but
what they did on the court kind
of sums it up,” Alter co-coach
Christina Hart said. “They
played together. They looked
for one another. They did it as a
team. That’s what they’ve done
for four years.”
Kaydan Lawson had 14 points
and Dani Lawson 11 for Hathaway Brown.
Hathaway Brown was down
double digits in the ﬁrst half but
pulled to 28-24 with 5:21 left in
the third quarter when Bazelak

and Miller took over to increase
Alter’s lead to 40-27. Bazelak
had seven points and Miller
added ﬁve during the run.
Michael Coreno cited Alter’s
experience in being able to hold
off the Blazers’ rally.
“You could see that big-game
experience and the fact they
played together so long, it kind
of wears you down,” he said.
The game was a meeting of
Division II royalty.
In addition to Alter’s three
straight titles, the Knights
also were champs in 2008 and
runner-up in 2010 and 2014, the
latter being the freshmen year
for this senor class.
Hathaway Brown won its ﬁve
consecutive titles from 2009-13
and played for the title in the
two years before the winning
streak began.

Mount Notre Dame beats Notre Dame Academy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Julia Hoeﬂing scored 18
points, eight in the fourth
quarter, to help Cincinnati
Mount Notre Dame to its
sixth title with a 54-44
win against Toledo Notre
Dame Academy in a Division I ﬁnal on Saturday.
The six titles tie Pickerington and South Euclid
Regina for the most titles
in the history of the girls
tournament, which began
in 1976.
“This one means a lot to
me,” Mount Notre Dame
coach Scott Rogers said. “I
took this one in more than
others. I’ve enjoyed the
kids so much.
“To do what they’ve
done is absolutely short of

incredible. . This team is so
young; to understand what
it takes to get to this game
is special.”
Mount Notre Dame’s
most recent championship
came in 2009 to cap a fouryear reign. The Cougars
also won in 2004.
It was more heartbreak
for Toledo Notre Dame
Academy, which has never
won a title despite being in
the state tournament ﬁve
of the past six years with
another runner-up ﬁnish in
2015.
“It’s horrible. It’s hard,”
coach Travis Galloway
said.
Mount Notre Dame
(26-4) held a 42-31 lead
with six minutes to play

at Value City Arena. But a
3-pointer by Mariah Copeland and two quick scores
by Bre Hampton-Bey
made it 42-38 before Maria
Pisciotta made a basket to
put Mount Notre Dame
ahead 44-38.
“Our goal wasn’t to just
get here. Our goal was to
win it,” Hoeﬂing said. “We
had to ﬁnish it off.”
Hampton-Bey had eight
of her 22 points in the
fourth quarter for Notre
Dame Academy.
“We knew we had
enough heart (to come
back),” Hampton-Bey said.
“We didn’t give up.”
Mount Notre Dame got
15 points from Abby Voss
and 12 from Gabbie Mar-

shall.
The Cougars trailed 11-4
after the ﬁrst quarter and
17-10 early in the second,
but held Notre Dame Academy without a point for
more than four minutes.
They went on an 11-0 run
to move to a 21-17 advantage and took a 24-20 lead
into halftime.
Marshall had two steals
and two baskets in the
opening 45 seconds of the
third quarter to make it
28-20.
”That was the key,”
Rogers said. “I told her at
halftime, ‘Gabbie, don’t
lose faith.’ She hadn’t been
hitting shots but she had
those two steals and we
were off and running.”

IN BRIEF

Huntington beats Capital,
earns 4th AAA title in 5 years

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Mikal Dawson scored
26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds as Huntington defeated
Capital 50-42 Saturday night in the Class AAA championship game.
It was the third title for Huntington in the last four years.
The Highlanders pulled away in the second half, outscoring Capital 15-7 in a pivotal third quarter. Dawson had a
three-point play with 2:24 left in the third quarter to put
Huntington up 29-24, the largest lead of the game for either
team at that point.
Dewey Brown’s layup 31 seconds later gave Huntington
a seven-point cushion. Capital never got closer than ﬁve
the rest of the way.
John Dawson, playing on his fourth championship team,
added 15 points for the Highlanders. He played for two
title teams at Huntington, was at Class A champion St.
Joseph last year before transferring back to Huntington.
Leondre Rogers had 18 points and 11 rebounds to lead
Capital, which was in its ﬁrst championship game since
winning back-to-back titles in 2000-01.
Huntington now has won six titles in the last 13 years
and 12 overall.
The Huntington girls won the Class AAA state title last
week.

The girls team beat Blueﬁeld a week ago for its ﬁrst
championship since 1997.
Horton and Jalen Bridges made back-to-back
3-pointers to give the Polar Bears the lead for good,
51-50, with 1:56 remaining. Deandre Payne’s threepoint play with 1:25 remaining made it a two-possession game. Fairmont Senior sealed the win with ﬁve
three throws in the ﬁnal minute.
Bridges ﬁnished with 14 points for Fairmont
Senior (25-3).
Drew Williamson led Chapmanville (23-5) with 26
points, including 14 in the third quarter when Chapmanville surged ahead 42-35. Obinna Anochili-Killen
added 12 points and 10 rebounds for Chapmanville.
It was just the third state tournament appearance
for Chapmanville.

Notre Dame beats
Ravenswood, wins Class A title

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Jarrod West Jr.
scored 29 points and Notre Dame rode a fast start to
a 63-55 victory over Ravenswood on Saturday for the
Fighting Irish’s ﬁrst Class A state championship.
Gabe Zummo added 15 points for Notre Dame,
which raced to a 43-21 halftime lead.
West, the son of Notre Dame coach and former West
Virginia standout Jarrod West, was 9 of 13 shooting in
the game and added six assists and four rebounds.
Ravenswood made a furious run to cut the deﬁcit to
58-51, but Notre Dame made seven of 14 free throws
in the ﬁnal 2:07 to ﬁnish off the game.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Tavon Horton
Riley Heatherington had 25 points and eight
scored 16 points and Fairmont Senior used a 14-4
rebounds to lead Ravenswood, which was trying to add
run in the ﬁnal 2:50 to beat Chapmanville 59-54 for
to Class AA titles won in 2006 and 2009.
its second straight Class AA championship Saturday.
Notre Dame had made it to the title game for the
Fairmont Senior swept the state basketball titles.
ﬁrst time since 1986.

Horton leads Fairmont Senior
to 2nd straight boys AA title

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

10 Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

AP SPORTS BRIEFS
WVU rifle team to show off NCAA
opening 14 seconds to take an early
49ers wide receiver linked to a post
rifle trophy at open house
lead, the Flyers made just one of their on his personal blog detailing his

The group arrived Sunday morning, raising the flag from the back
ﬁrst 16 shots. That enabled the Lady ALS diagnosis, but the site crashed
of a pickup truck . They planned to
Vols to take an 18-4 lead after a Scha- Sunday night, apparently from an
stay throughout the games and be
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
quilla Nunn layup with 1:33 left in the overﬂow of trafﬁc.
on grounds as fans arrived at Bon
— The West Virginia riﬂe team is
opening quarter.
“I’ve been asked if playing football
Secours Wellness Arena.
showing off its NCAA championship
But that’s when Tennessee went
caused this,” Clark said in the post.
Greenville police had the group
trophy at an open house.
into a cold streak of its own. The
“I don’t know for sure. But I certainly move the truck about 50 feet away,
WVU says in a news release that
Lady Vols made just 4-of-16 shots in
suspect it did.”
citing safety concerns if the flag
fans can greet coach Jon Hammond
the second quarter. The Flyers went
The 60-year-old Clark wrote that
tipped over.
and his team on Tuesday evening at
Protesters say they hope to make
the WVU Riﬂe Range in Morgantown. on a 9-2 run midway through the peri- he began experiencing symptoms in
od, with Jordan Wilmoth’s 3-pointer
September 2015. He’s lost signiﬁcant their presence known to the NCAA.
The Mountaineers won their ﬁfth
cutting Tennessee’s lead to just 25-22 strength in his left hand and also has The governing body lifted its ban
straight NCAA riﬂe championship
with 2:21 remaining in the half. They weakness in his right hand, midsecagainst South Carolina holding
earlier this month in Columbus,
continued chipping away from there,
tion, lower back and right leg.
championships in 2015.
Ohio. It was the 19th national riﬂe
Clark won two Super Bowls with
In 2002, the NAACP held a march
title overall and the sixth under Ham- with Lauren Cannatelli’s free throws
with 16 seconds left tying the game
the 49ers during a nine-year career
in downtown Greenville to protest
mond.
at 29.
that ended in 1987. He memorably
the state flying the flag on StateMountaineer freshmen Morgan
Dayton again took the lead in the
pulled down the winning touchdown house grounds during the NCAA
Phillips won the smallbore individual
regionals at the arena.
title and classmate Milica Babic took opening seconds of the third quarter, pass from Joe Montana in the 1981
on an Alex Harris layup. However, the NFC Championship Game against the
On Sunday, North Carolina plays
the air riﬂe crown.
Flyers scored just three points over
Dallas Cowboys, a play remembered
Arkansas followed by Duke against
the last six minutes of the quarter as
simply as “The Catch.”
South Carolina.
Tennessee rebounds in the
Tennessee led 51-42 after three.
Clark, whose No. 87 has been
South Carolina was unable to host
second half to put away Dayton
Reedsville Eastern graduate and
retired by the 49ers, also encouraged NCAA predetermined championcurrent UD junior Jenna Burdette
the NFL and the players’ association ships because of the organization’s
ﬁnished the game with seven points,
to work together in making football
ban, which began in 2001. The
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Diathree rebounds and three assists.
safer.
NCAA regional in 2002 was allowed
mond DeShields scored 24 points to
After his playing career ended,
to remain in the state. That led the
lead ﬁfth-seeded Tennessee to a 66-57
Clark served as general manager of
NAACP and others to turn out for a
ﬁrst round victory over Dayton on
Dwight Clark says he has
the 49ers and Cleveland Browns.
march to the arena steps in support
Saturday in the NCAA Tournament.
of taking down the flag.
The Lady Vols (20-11) used a
ALS, suspects football a cause
The issue was settled in 2015
strong second half to pull away from
Confederate flag flies next to
after the massacre of nine black
the 12th-seeded Flyers (22-10),
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Dwight
NCAA arena in South Carolina Charleston church goers by Dylann
shooting 52 percent after halftime to
Clark revealed Sunday that he has
Roof, who was seen in pictures with
earn the victory. DeShields and MerLou Gehrig’s disease and suspects
the Confederate flag. State lawmakcedes Russell wouldn’t let the Flyers
playing football might have caused
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) — A
ers voted to remove the flag in July
couldn’t mount a comeback. They
the illness.
small group of protesters flew a
2015 and the NCAA lifted its sancscored 23 of Tennessee’s 37 points in
Clark announced on Twitter that he large Confederate flag from the
tions. Roof was convicted of multhe second half to lead the way.
has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a
top of a parking garage next to the
tiple murder counts and sentenced
Dayton started the game miserably. disease that attacks cells that control arena hosting two men’s NCAA
to death.
After getting two free throws in the
muscles. The former San Francisco
Tournament games.

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from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General
Job opportunity
Local Manufacturer looking
for good reliable welders.
Some experience required.
Must pass Welding test,
Pre employment drug,
physical and Background
check required. Benefits
available. Apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH.
60583312

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a
results orientated
salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
problem solver, goal oriented,
have a positive attitude, and
have the ability to multi-task
in a demanding,
deadline-oriented
environment. Must have
reliable transportation and
clean driving record. We seek
success driven individuals
looking to build a future with
a growing organization with
publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and
Point Pleasant, WV.

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

House for Rent-2 Bedroom,
No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Please email cover letter,
resume and references
to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com
Lakin Hospital
is currently accepting
applications for an
Office Assistant II
position. We offer a
competitive benefits package
including retirement.
To apply go online to
www.personnel.wv.gov
or contact us at
11522 Ohio River Road,
West Columbia, WV 25287
or via telephone at
(304) 675-0860. Ext. 154.
For Sale By Owner
Brent IE Potter Wheel, Weight
bench w/adjust. Weights,
Shenniu 2-25 Tractor, plows,
bale mover. PSR350 Yamaha
keyboard, Mackie 408S mixer
&amp; Speakers. 740-441-5175

Livestock
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

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am. Office is
located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

Black Angus Bulls
Call after 5pm
1-740-288-1460
Carpeting
Mollohan Carpet
Free Estimates, special on
vinyl, carpet &amp; vinyl planks
317 St Rt &amp; N Gallipolis, Oh
740-446-7444
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Houses For Rent
Immaculate 2 BR apt.
Appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. 10 minutes
from town. $450/mo
614-595-7773 or
740-645-5953

Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162

LEGALS

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Draft NPDES Permit Renewal - Subject to Revision
Leading Creek Consrvy Dist
30340 SR 124, Langsville, OH
Facility Description: Wastewater-Iron &amp; Manganese Removl
Receiving Water: Little Parker Run
ID #: 0IY00023*FD
Date of Action: 03/21/2017
3/21/17

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LEGALS

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 April
3rd Council Meeting. Deadline for bids is 4pm on April 3rd.
Please mail or deliver bids to the Mayor
at 660 E. Main Street, Suite A, Pomeroy, OH 45760.
3/19/17, 3/21/17, 3/22/17
LEGALS

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held at 9:00
a.m. on April 3, 2017 in the 3rd floor conference room at the
Meigs County DJFS. 175 Race St. Middleport, Ohio 45760 to
receive public comment on the Countyҋs Comprehensive Social
Services Plan which is required by Title XX of the Social
Security Act.
The plan will encompass funding reimbursement for the eligible
Title XX Programs for the period of October 1, 2017-September
30, 2018 and October 1, 2018-September 30, 2019.
The hearing location is handicap accessible and all providers of
the Title XX eligible services are urged to attend to provide oral
testimony or have written testimony submitted into the record of
proceedings.
Chris Shank, MCDJFS
3/21/17

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 11

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

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Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

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SPORTS

Tuesday, March 21, 2017 12

OHSAA girls
basketball alltournament
teams
announced
Hampton-Bey leads
Division I All-Tournament
Team
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Toledo Notre
Dame Academy senior
guard Bre Hampton-Bey
has been named the outstanding player on The
Associated Press Division
I all-tournament team.
Even though Notre
Dame Academy lost the
title game to Cincinnati
Mount Notre Dame on
Saturday, Bey had 22
points, 10 rebounds and
three assists after getting
11 points, 10 rebounds
and six assists in a semiﬁnal win.
Joining her on the alltourney team is teammate
and senior guard Mariah
Copeland, who totaled 25
points in two games.
Also named are Mount
Notre Dame sophomore
forward Julia Hoeﬂing (18
points and seven rebounds
in the title game); Mount
Notre Dame junior forward Abby Voss (27 points
and 21 rebounds in two
games); and Newark freshman guard Gabby Stare
(16 points in a semiﬁnal
loss).

60710627

Miller and Bazelak lead
Division II All-Tournament
Team
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Senior guards
Braxtin Miller and Libby
Bazelak led Kettering
Archbishop to its third
straight title to be named
the outstanding players
on the Associated Press
Division II all-tournament
team.
Bazelak scored 41 points
in two games, including 21
in the championship game.
Miller had 23 in the title
game and 38 in the two
games and 16 rebounds.

These pets are so doggone cute, we need everyone’s help picking a winner!

Round up all your friends &amp; log on to the
&amp; vote for your favorite pet.
Winner takes home $50.
VOTING ENDS 3-26

To VoTe PLeaSe ViSiT:

Sherry K. Queen DVM t Brian K. Hendrickson DVM
Janice Williams, DVM t Bill Harnetty DVM
1520 State Rte. 160, Gallipolis, OH 45631 • 740-446-9752

60708753

60643040

mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com

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