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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business

Rain,
High 64,
Low 57

Locals
named to
all-district

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 83, Volume 71

Thursday, May 25, 2017 s 50¢

Dunfee, Cleland top SHS Class of 2017
By Sarah Hawley

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Salutatorian Sierra Cleland and Valedictorian Daniel Dunfee

RACINE — The Southern
High School Class of 2017 top
students will address their
fellow graduates on Saturday
evening during the graduation
ceremony.
Daniel Dunfee has been
named the class valedictorian,
while Sierra Cleland is the
salutatorian.
Dunfee is the son of Diane
Dunfee and Don Dunfee of
Racine. He plans to attend
Ohio University to major is
geological sciences with a possible minor in Spanish.
Dunfee has participated
in Boy Scouts of America
where he is an Eagle Scout,

is a Vigil Honor in the Order
of the Arrow, is a baptismal
member of the Racine United
Methodist Church. He has also
participated in six years of pep
and concert band, six years of
Science Olympiad and was a
2016 Regional Scholar.
Cleland is the daughter of
Shannon and Chase Cleland of
Racine. Cleland plans to attend
Marshall University to major
in chemistry with a pharmacy
background.
Cleland has been a member
of the volleyball, basketball
and softball teams, and has
participated in National Honor
Society, Student Council,
Ohio Association of Student
Councils, iBelieve Foundation,

Science Olympiad, concert
and pep band, Farmers Bank
Junior Board of Directors and
Regional Scholars.
Reﬂecting on her high
school years, Cleland said that
it has been a fun four years,
but a long four years.
“Everyone says it’s the time
of your life but I hope not.
I don’t want to peak in high
school,” said Cleland. She
added that she is ready for college to experience something
new.
Dunfee said that there has
been a lot of fun with teachers
and friends
“It has been a long four years
but it feels really short. I know
See SHS | 5

Charges expected
after officers called
to ‘large party’
Staff Report

COLUMBIA TWP. — Numerous individuals are
facing charges after deputies were called to a “large
party” in Columbia Twp. over the weekend.
Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood reports that
on Saturday, May 21, at approximately 12:30 a.m.,
his ofﬁce received complaints about a large party
at a residence on Cone Road in Columbia Twp.
Information received by dispatch was about 40-50
vehicles were parked on the road, next to the road
and in ﬁelds with beer cans lying all over the place.
Deputies arrived at the residence to ﬁnd approximately 100 teenagers and young adults present
with underage drinking as well as drug usage
allegedly occurring. Several party goers ran into
the wooded area around the residence. Inside the
residence more teenagers were located as well as
one underage female who had to be transported by
squad to a local hospital. During the time ofﬁcers
were there, most of those who ran into the wooded
area came back out to the ofﬁcers. Most of the
teenagers and young adults were from other counties such as Hocking and Franklin counties.
Assistance was requested from other agencies
and the Ohio State Patrol, the Ohio Investigative
Unit, Vinton County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, McArthur
Police Department, Syracuse Police Department
and the Middleport Police Department responded
to assist.
The owner of the residence, Mindy Grady, age
36, and her 18-year-old son, Dominick, were at the
residence and transported to the sheriff’s ofﬁce
but later released pending charges being ﬁled by
the Ohio Investigative Unit, which is also ﬁling
charges on all persons who were drinking under
the age of 21.
All of the teenagers who were under 21 years
old that had been drinking as well as all who were
under the age of 18 years old, were turned over
to their parent or guardian at the scene or at the
sheriff’s ofﬁce.
Ofﬁcers had several vehicles that were parked
on the roadway towed from that location and
impounded.
The case is still under investigation.

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

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Scholarship and award winners, (Front) Danielle Morris, Kylie Dillon, Madison Dyer, Abby Eads, Jade Dudding, Morgan Lodwick, Alliyah
Pullins, Alison Hatfield, Breanna Hall, Mariah Reynolds, Madison Russell, Dena Stanley; (row 2) Alexis King, James Parsons, Sky Brown,
K.J. Tracy, Layne Acree, Jared Kennedy, Grant Adams, Courtney Jones, Trae Hood, Devyn Oliver, Savannah Smith, Gracie Hoffman; (row 3)
Jordan Roush, Raeline Reeves, Jana Robinette, Jake Roush, Tyler Williams, Kendra Robie, Dannett Davis, Emily Henry, Brady Lane, Dillyn
Ohlinger, Luke Musser, Cody Bartrum, Alexander Barton; (row 4) Karlie Norton, Sarah Curl, Elena Musser, Dillon Mahr, Leia Barnette,
Daniel Welch, Hannah McKinley, Parker Haggy, Alexander Henson, Keaton Huffman, Nicole Folmer, Earl Rusty Fields, Hannah Kennedy.

MHS grads receive more than $470k in scholarships
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS —
Graduates for the Meigs
High School Class of
2017 received more than
$470,000 in scholarships
and awards during the
annual senior awards
ceremony on Wednesday
morning at Meigs High
School.
Students to receive
honors diplomas during Friday’s graduation
ceremony include, Kylie
Marie Dillon, Alexander
Zavien Rowan Zen-Eagle
Henson, Gracie Kathryn
Hoffman, Jared Michael
Kennedy, Dillon Andrew
Mahr, Angela Danielle
Morris, Elena Marie
Musser, Raeline Noelle
Reeves, Jake Clayton
Roush and Jordan Nicole
Roush.
Class of 2017 honorarians are Kylie Marie
Dillon, Gracie Kathryn
Hoffman, Courtney
Gertrude Jones, Dillon
Andrew Mahr, Angela
Danielle Morris, Elena
Marie Musser, Raeline
Noelle Reeves, Jake Clayton Roush, Jordan Nicole
Roush and Tyler Jacob
Williams.
Below is a complete
list of scholarships and
awards presented to the
Class of 2017.
Graduation at Meigs
High School is scheduled

Bachtel Scholarship recipients (from left) Tyler Williams, Cody Bartrum, Jordan Roush and Gracie
Hoffman.

for 8 p.m. on Friday, May
26. Doors will open at
6:30 p.m.
Scholarships
1967 Brownell Avenue,
Middleport Alumni
Scholarship, $1,000 each
— Allison Hatﬁeld, Dillyn Ohlinger and Gracie
Hoffman
4-H Committee Scholarship, $250 — Allison
Hatﬁeld
American Electric
Power Educational Scholarship, $8,000 — Gracie
Hoffman
American Red Cross
Scholarship, $500 —
Kendra Robie and Madi-

son Russell
Athens Elks Lodge
Scholarship, $1,000 —
Dena Stanley
Bob and Corena Barnitz Scholarship, $750 —
Jared Kennedy
Brandi Thomas Memorial Scholarship, $1,500
— James Parsons and
Sky Brown
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative Scholarship,
$750 — Jordan Roush
Campbell University,
$14,000 — Trae Hood
Charles and Lavara
Yeauger Memorial
Scholarship, $250 — KJ
Tracey
Cruisin’ Saturday

Night Car Show Scholarship, $1,000 — Brady
Lane
David V. Stivison
Appalachian Scholarship
(COAD), $1,000 —
Keaton Huffman
Delma Roush Scholarship (Ohio State University), $16,000 — Elena
Musser
Dennis Boggs-Adam
Grimm Memorial Scholarship, $500 — Kendra
Robie and Tyler Williams
Div. 13 Basketball
Coaches Association
Scholarship, $500 — Dillon Mahr
Dr. Kelly Roush Get
See MHS | 4

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Thursday, May 25, 2017

Father and brother of alleged bomber detained

DEATH NOTICES
PREDDY

By Maggie Michael

VINTON — Teresa R. Preddy, 53, Vinton, passed
away Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at her home.
In accordance with her wishes there will be no services at this time. Cremation services are under the
direction of the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton
Chapel.

Associated Press

CAIRO — The father
and younger brother
of the man who British
police say bombed an
Ariana Grande concert
in Manchester have been
detained in Libya, where
anti-terror authorities
said the brother confessed to knowing “all
the details” of the attack
plot.
Hashim Abedi, the
18-year-old brother of
alleged British-born
bomber Salman Abedi,
22, was detained in
Tripoli Tuesday night, a
spokesman for a Libyan
anti-terror force said
Wednesday.
The Special Deterrent
force said in a statement
on its Facebook page that
Hashim Abedi had told
investigators after his
arrest that both he and
his brother belonged to
the Islamic State group.
“The brother was
aware of all the details of
the terrorist attack,” the
statement said.
The father of both
young men, Ramadan
Abedi, 51, was detained
on Wednesday shortly
after telling The Associated Press in a phone
interview from Tripoli
that his son Salman, who
British ofﬁcials said died
in the Manchester attack,
was innocent and had
been planning a religious
pilgrimage to Mecca.
The father has not
been charged and was
only detained for questioning, Special Deterrent force spokesman
Ahmed bin Salem said.

BANNISTER
SOUTH POINT — Carolyn Natalie Bannister, 69,
of South Point, passed away Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at
Heartland of Riverview, South Point.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

SIDERS
POINT PLEASANT — Nelson E. (Butch) Siders,
63, of Point Pleasant, and formerly of Gallipolis, died
at his home in Point Pleasant on Thursday, May 18,
2017.
No funeral service is planned.

NELSON
POINT PLEASANT — Searle Nelson, 76, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., passed away on May 24, 2017.
Arrangements will be announced by the Deal Funeral
Home.

JACKSON
SOUTHSIDE — Bernice I. Jackson, 83, of Southside, W.Va., died Wednesday, May 24, 2017 at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation in Point Pleasant.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be
announced by the Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

ALUMNI EVENTS
Chester
The Chester High
School Alumni Banquet
will be held at 6:30 p.m.
on Saturday, June 3 at
Eastern Elementary
School. For reservations
contact Betty Newell at
740-985-3351.

with the banquet being
served at 6:30 p.m. Anniversary years will be 1942,
1947, 1952, 1957, 1962
and 1967. Ticket sales for
the event have ended.

Southern
Southern High School
Class of 1977 reunion, 3
p.m., Saturday, May 27,
Harrisonville-Scipio
at the Racine American
The HarrisonvilleScipio Alumni Association Legion Hall. This is a covered dish event. For more
banquet will be held at
information call Bobbi
6:30 p.m. on Saturday,
at 740-416-3422, Jerrena
May 27 at the Alumni
at 740-416-1934, Alisa at
Center on State Route
740-949-8003.
143, Harrisonville. The
The Southern High
Classes of 1947 and 1957
School Class of 1964 will
will be recognized. For
more information contact be having a reunion potMary Haning at 740-698- luck/picnic on Saturday,
May 27, at noon at the
0452.
Syracuse Community CenPomeroy
ter. If the weather is nice,
the reunion will be held at
The Pomeroy High
School Alumni Banquet to the shelter house; if not,
be held on Saturday, May inside the community center. For more information,
27, 2017 in the Meigs
contact Carol Reed at 740High School Cafeteria.
Social hour begins at 5:30, 949-2910.

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Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions May 24, 2017.

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CONTACT US
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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bsergent@civitasmedia.com

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dmorrison@civitasmedia.com

MANAGING EDITOR
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shawley@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Ahmed Bin Salman | Special Deterrent Force via AP

Hashim Ramadan Abedi appears inside the Tripoli-based Special
Deterrent anti-terrorism force unit after his arrest on Tuesday
for alleged links to the Islamic State extremist group. Abedi is
the brother of Salman Abedi, who has been identified as the man
behind the bombing that killed 22 people and wounded scores
at an Ariana Grande concert Monday night in Manchester. The
Special Deterrent Force says that Hashim confessed both he
and his brother were a part of the Islamic State group and that
Hashim had been aware of the details of the attack.

rich North African country after he was accused
of helping Islamists by
tipping them off before
police raids.
He denied having ties
to any of Libya’s militant
groups, including the
Libya Islamic Fighting
Group, which was linked
to al-Qaida.
“This is nonsense,” he
commented, adding that
under Gadhaﬁ, “anyone
who went to a mosque
raised question marks.”
After less than a year
in Saudi Arabia, Ramadan Abedi said he ﬂed
to the U.K., where he
sought political asylum
and lived for 25 years.
In 2011, Abedi
returned to Libya during
the mass uprising that
descended into a civil
war and ended with Gadhaﬁ’s ouster and death.
Libya has since sank into
lawlessness, with rebels

turning into militias and
undermining successive
transitional governments.
The Abedi family,
however, is close to the
family of al-Qaida veteran Abu Anas al-Libi,
who was snatched by
U.S. special forces off a
Tripoli street in 2013,
then died in U.S. custody
in 2015.
Al-Libi was on the
FBI’s most wanted
terrorist list and was
accused of having links
to the 1998 bombings of
two American embassies
in Africa.
The wife of Abu Anas
told the AP that she went
to college in Tripoli with
Abu Ismail’s wife, who
was studying nuclear
engineering. The two
women also lived together in the U.K. for years
before they returned to
Libya.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR
Revival
POMEROY —A revival will be held May 23-28
at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, 39589 State Route 143,
Pomeroy. Services will be held at 7 p.m. nightly,
with the exception of Sunday when the service will
be at 6:30 p.m. Evangelist Rev. Peter Casolino of
Indianapolis, Indiana.

Sunday, June 4
HEMLOCK GROVE — The Hemlock Grove
Christian Church (38387 Hemlock Grove Rd, Pomeroy) will host a free community dinner and a movie
beginning at 6 p.m. The menu will consist of lasagna, bread, salad, dessert and beverages. The movie
will be announced. Contact Pastor Diana Kinder at
740-591-5960 for more information.

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Prior to his detention Ramadan Abedi
conﬁrmed that British
authorities had arrested
another son, Ismail, 23,
on Tuesday as part of the
concert attack probe.
“We don’t believe in
killing innocents. This is
not us,” the senior Abedi
said. “We aren’t the ones
who blow up ourselves
among innocents. We go
to mosques. We recite
Quran, but not that.”
Authorities say 22
people died and nearly
120 were wounded in the
bombing.
Ramadan Abedi said
the last time he spoke to
Salman was ﬁve days ago
as he was getting ready
for a trip to Saudi Arabia
to perform Umrah, a
smaller pilgrimage to the
holy city of Mecca.
“He sounded normal.
There was nothing worrying at all until two days
ago (when) I heard the
news that they suspect
he was the bomber,”
Abedi, a father of six,
said.
He said Salman visited
Libya a month-and-a-half
ago and only returned to
Manchester after winning a cheap ticket to
Umrah. He said Salman,
who was in his second
year of studying economics, was planning to
return to Libya to spend
the holy month of Ramadan with the family. He
denied that his son had
ever been to Syria.
The senior Abedi
worked as a security
ofﬁcer under dictator
Moammar Gadhaﬁ’s rule.
In 1993, he ﬂed the oil-

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(:45) Wives
(5:30)
Gridiron Gang ('06, Spt) Xzibit, Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson. TVPG
Coach Carter ('05, Dra) Samuel L. Jackson. TV14
Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt House Hunt. House Hunt. FlipVega (N) FlipFloVegas H.Hunt (N) House (N)
Bridge to Terabithia (2007, Family) AnnaSophia
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest ('06, Adv) Johnny Depp. Jack
Robb, Zooey Deschanel, Josh Hutcherson. TVPG
Sparrow tries to save his soul from Davy Jones and his army of sea-phantoms. TV14

6 PM

400 (HBO)

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Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

450 (MAX)

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

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Jason Bourne Jason Bourne
Vice News
finally remembers who he is. He searches Tonight
for the truth behind his past. TV14
(:05)
28 Days Later ('02, Hor) Naomie Harris, Cillian
Murphy. A virus that transforms humans into angry
zombies kills all but a handful of survivors. TVM
(:10)
I Am Number Four ('11, Act) Alex Pettyfer. An
extraordinary teen must elude an enemy who has already
killed three people like him. TV14
(5:25)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Forgetting Sarah Marshall After a
(:50) Silicon
musician is dumped by his actress girlfriend, Valley "The
he travels to Hawaii to heal. TVMA
Blood Boy"
In the Heart of the Sea ('15, Dra) Benjamin Walker, Chris
Hemsworth. The story of the sinking of the whaling ship
Essex, which inspired the novel Moby Dick. TV14
Twin Peaks "The Return: Parts One and Two" The stars
turn and a time presents itself.

10 PM

10:30

(:20) Veep

(:50) Chris

"Qatar"

Gethard

(:05) Deepwater Horizon

('16, Act) Kurt Russell, Mark
Wahlberg. TV14
Dark Net (N) Penn &amp;
Teller.. "SelfEsteem"

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 25, 2017 3

OVB donates to Southern Playground Project

“I am grateful for this
opportunity to serve the
Point Pleasant Register
and its surrounding
communities ”
— Chase Janey

Janey joins
OVP team
Staff Report

Women CEOs earn big pay, but few have top job
By Joseph Pisani
AP Business Writer

NEW YORK — Women
CEOs earned big bucks
last year, but there’s still
very few of them running
the world’s largest companies.
The median pay for a
female CEO was $13.1
million last year, up 9 percent from 2015, according
to an analysis by executive data ﬁrm Equilar and
The Associated Press. By
comparison, male CEOs
earned $11.4 million, also
up 9 percent.
But the number of
women in CEO roles has
barely budged. Just 6 percent of the top paid CEOs
in the U.S. last year were
women, according to the
Equilar and AP analysis,
a slight increase from
about 5 percent in 2015
and 2014.
The highest paid
woman was Virginia
Rometty of International
Business Machines Corp.,

bumping out Yahoo’s
Marissa Mayer from the
top spot.
Rometty earned $32.3
million last year from the
technology company, a
63 percent jump from the
year before, mainly due
to $12.1 million in stock
option awards she didn’t
receive in 2015.
Mayer earned $27.4
million last year, making
her the second-highest
paid woman. But she may
be out of a job after Yahoo
Inc. completes the sale
of its websites and email
services to Verizon Communications Inc. in June.
She’s not expected to join
Verizon, and Yahoo has
said Mayer will receive
a $23 million severance
package if she departs.
Third on the list was
Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo
Inc., the maker of Mountain Dew soda and Lay’s
potato chips. She earned
$25.2 million, up 13 percent from 2015. She was
followed by Mary Barra,

the CEO of automaker
General Motors Co., who
earned $22.4 million.
On the bottom of the
list was Susan Story of
American Water Works
Co., the utility company,
who earned $4.1 million.
To calculate pay, Equilar added salary, bonus,
perks, stock awards, stock
option awards and other
types of compensation.
Equilar only looked at
companies in the Standard &amp; Poor’s 500 index
that ﬁled proxy statements with federal regulators between Jan. 1 and
May 1, 2017. And it only
included CEOs that have
been in their roles for at
least two years in order to
exclude sign-on bonuses.
Of the 346 CEOs in
that group, just 21 were
women.
The only black woman
on the list, Xerox’s Ursula
Burns, left the CEO role
in January after the document management company split in two. Burns,

who earned $13.1 million
as CEO last year, retired
as chairman of Xerox
Corp.’s board this week.
Gracia Martore, who
earned $8.5 million last
year, announced earlier
this month that she will
retire as CEO of Tegna
Inc., the TV station
owner and operator. Her
replacement is a man.
Experts say companies
need to do more to get
women into CEO roles.
Janice Ellig, the coCEO of executive search
ﬁrm Chadick Ellig, says
“unconscious bias” in
the workplace is keeping women from getting
opportunities that will
put them on track to for
top roles.
Companies need to
“start recognizing that
gender inequality exists,”
say Ellig, who is also
chairperson of the Women’s Forum of New York.
“If you don’t recognize
a problem, you can’t solve
a problem,” she says.

Janey can be reached at cjaney@
civitasmedia.com or at 304-675-1333,
ext. 1993.

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

Help Right Here At Home
• Mesothelioma
• Lung Cancer
• Wrongful Death

740-992-6368

200 E. 2nd�6WUHHW�3RPHUR\��2+�Ř�WHQODZ#VXGGHQOLQNPDLO�FRP

60717682

OVB/Courtesy

Ohio Valley Bank Pomeroy Branch Operations Manager Jody Lavender (center) surprises Principal Tricia McNickleT (left) and Elementary
Physical Education Teacher Heather Dailey-Johnson (right) with a $5,000 donation to the Southern Local Schools playground project.
The donation was made as part of OVB’s Community First mission. Funds will be used to construct a playground at the elementary
school. Donations are still being accepted for the project.

OHIO VALLEY — A
new face, with ties to both
Ohio and West Virginia,
has joined Ohio Valley Publishing.
Chase Janey, of Gallipolis, has joined the OVP
team as a Business Development Representative,
working out of the Point
Pleasant Register ofﬁce. He
will assist customers with a
variety of advertising needs
and digital advertising
options at OVP.
“We are very happy to
have Chase joining us,”
Bud Hunt, publisher at
OVP, said. “I believe our
advertisers will enjoy getting to know him and take
advantage of his knowledge
in the digital space.”
Born in Gallipolis, Janey
later moved away from the
area, growing up in a military family. He graduated
in 2013 from Bridgeport
High School, Bridgeport,
W.Va., and returned to Gallia County in 2016. He’s
the son of Don and Jennifer
Walker, Gallipolis. He has
studied communications
and business at Concord
University and then at the

University of Rio Grande.
Prior to working for the
Point Pleasant Register,
Janey worked for Osmosis
Marketing Solutions, Gallipolis, as a Marketing Assistant. His hobbies include
reading, hiking, ﬁshing,
writing and music.
“As the newest member
of the Point Pleasant Register team, I look forward to
working with, and for, local
businesses by helping them
ﬁnd advertising solutions
customized to their speciﬁc
needs,” Janey said. “I am
grateful for this opportunity
to serve the Point Pleasant
Register and its surrounding communities.”
“We are excited to welcome Chase to the Point
Pleasant Register,” Julia
Schultz, advertising manager for OVP, said. “I’m very
conﬁdent Chase will bring
excellent customer service
and new business marketing ideas to our friends in
Mason County. He shares
our enthusiasm for growing small businesses in the
area.”

How food stamp cuts could
ripple through the economy
NEW YORK — A proposal to curtail the nation’s
food stamp program would
pinch families struggling
to pay for groceries and
ripple through other areas
of the economy, including
supermarkets and discounters, as people shufﬂe their
budgets.
President Donald Trump
is proposing a roughly 30
percent reduction in the
federal budget for the program formally known as
the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, or
SNAP. His overall budget
proposal met a chilly reception from lawmakers, and
is unlikely to be passed as
is. But it suggests increasing work requirements for
SNAP recipients, and says
states should both share
in the cost of the program
and determine the level of
beneﬁts they provide. That
would lead to fewer people
in the program, or could
reduce how much help they
get.
Last year, more than 44
million people received an
average of about $125 a
month in SNAP beneﬁts,
totaling about $66.6 billion, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
How any cuts would play
out across industries would
depend on how people
adjust to pay for food, how
reliant a retailer is on SNAP
spending and other factors.
Here’s a look at what we
know.
WHO USES SNAP, AND
WHERE ARE THEY

SHOPPING?
SNAP households are
already on extremely tight
budgets. To qualify, a family
of four’s take-home pay can
be no more than $2,025 a
month, while a two-person
household can earn no
more than $1,335.
More than 260,000 locations were authorized to
accept SNAP credits last
year. Superstores such as
Wal-Mart and Target got
52 percent of redemptions,
supermarkets like Kroger
got 30 percent, and convenience stores got about
6 percent, according to
the USDA . The rest was
split among other kinds of
stores.
The USDA doesn’t
specify how much is spent
at speciﬁc retailers. But
in 2013, Wal-Mart Stores
Inc. told the Wall Street

Journal that it gets about
18 percent of total SNAP
beneﬁts. That would have
been about $13.43 billion
in 2012.
WHAT HAPPENED WITH
PREVIOUS SNAP CUTS?
It’s complicated. Since
food is a ﬁxed cost, retailers
have said that people used
money intended for other
purposes to pay for groceries after a recent pullback
in the program.
“They’re paying cash
or on a credit card if
they didn’t have the food
stamps. And then they will
give up on something else,”
Kroger’s CEO at the time,
Dave Dillon, said in December 2013. That was after
the SNAP beneﬁts that
were expanded during the
recession returned to their
previous levels.

Rutland Bottle Gas invites you to their

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Friday, May 26th 8am-5 pm
Free hot dogs &amp; refreshments

Prize Giveaways!
1st-Napoleon Gas Grill 2nd &amp; 3rd-$25 gift card

May 26th Specials
20 lb cylinder reﬁlls-$8.00

Heater sale-50-70% off select models
10% off all ﬂoor models
(most heaters have warranties-some as is)
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AP Food Industry Writer

60718558

By Candice Choi

�NEWS

4 Thursday, May 25, 2017

Daily Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, May
25, the 145th day of 2017.
There are 220 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On May 25, 1977, the
ﬁrst “Star Wars” ﬁlm (later
renamed “Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope”)
was released by 20th Century Fox.
On this date:
In 1787, the Constitu-

MHS
From page 6

Back in Action Scholarship, $200 — Sky Brown
Dreama Sue Cremeans
Memorial Scholarship,
$300 — Mariah Reynolds, Karlee Norton, Bryanna Hall and Madison
Russell
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio Bachtel Scholarship, $7,500 — Gracie
Hoffman, Cody Bartrum,
Jordan Roush and Tyler
Williams
Hagan Scholarship,
$40,000-plus — Danielle
Morris
Holzer Science Award,
$300 — Raeline Reeves
John Lentes Jr. Memorial Scholarship, $500 —
Grant Adams
Josh Napper Memorial
Scholarship, $1,500 —
Dannett Davis
Linnie Taylor Scholarship, $500 — Dannett
Davis and Jade Dudding
Linnie Taylor Scholarship, $1,000 — Abby
Eads and Madison Dyer
Louise Morhart Grant
Music Scholarship, $800
— Dillyn Ohlinger and
Sarah Curl
Marshall University
Michael A. Perry Scholarship, $2,000 — Mariah
Reynolds
Marshall University
Scholarships, $2,400 —
Jade Dudding
Marshall University
Scholarships, $2,500 —
Nicole Folmer
Meigs Athletic Booster
Scholarship, $500 —
Cody Bartrum, Devyn
Oliver, Gracie Hoffman
and Luke Musser
Meigs High School
Alumni Scholarship, $500
— Cody Bartrum, Gracie
Hoffman and Raeline
Reeves
Meigs Local Teachers
Association, $300 —
Jordan Roush and Kylie
Dillon
MHS Alumni Band
Scholarship, $250 —
Alexander Barton and
Hannah McKinley
MHS Faculty Scholarship, $300 — Layne
Acree
Middleport Alumni
Scholarship, $1,000 —
Trae Hood
Morehead State University Scholarships, $6,000
— Daniel Welch
Morehead State University Scholarships, $12,800
— Hannah McKinley
Mount Vernon Nazarene University Scholarships, $17,000 — Jana
Robinette
Mount Vernon Nazarene University Scholarships, $21,295 — Jordan
Roush
Middleport Youth
League, David Boyd
Scholarship, $500 — Alliyah Pullins and Morgan
Lodwick
New Haven American
Legion Scholarship, $500
— Parker Haggy
Northbend Church
Scholarship, $500 — Gracie Hoffman and Jordan
Roush
Ohio University Cutler
Scholarship, $100,000 —
Dillon Mahr
Ohio University Scholarships — Alexander Barton ($1,000), Alexis King
($3,500), Alexander Henson ($8,000), Courtney
Jones ($6,975), Danielle
Morris ($3,500), Grant

tional Convention began
at the Pennsylvania State
House (Independence Hall)
in Philadelphia after enough
delegates had shown up for
a quorum.
In 1810, Argentina began
its revolt against Spanish
rule with the forming of the
Primera Junta in Buenos
Aires.
In 1916, the Chicago
Tribune published an interview with Henry Ford
in which the automobile
industrialist was quoted as

Adams ($4,000), Hannah Kennedy ($3,500),
Jake Roush ($5,500),
Jared Kennedy ($5,000),
Keaton Huffman
($3,500), Kendra Robie
($2,475), Kylie Dillon
($6,500), Madison Dyer
($3,500), Raeline Reeves
($8,000), Rusty Fields
($3,500), Tyler Williams
($2,000)
One Shot Scholarship,
$500 — Raeline Reeves
OVEC Kyger Creek Science Scholarship, $350 —
Gracie Hoffman
Parker Long Scholarship, $500 — Parker
Haggy
Ralph Werry Memorial
Scholarship, $100 — Jana
Robinette
Rutland Alumni Scholarship, $750 — Emily
Graham and Madison
Dyer
Shawnee State University Academic Scholarship, $4,000 — Abby
Eads
Shawnee State University Academic Scholarship, $2,500 — James
Parsons
Student Council Scholarship, $150 — Abby
Eads and Kylie Dillon
Susan G. Park Scholarship (Middleport Alumni), $1,000 — Danielle
Morris
The Ohio State University Provost Scholarship,
$10,000 — Elena Musser
Tifﬁn University Scholarships, $12,000 — Tiffany Kelley
University of Rio
Grande, Alberta Koehler
Scholarship, $1,000 —
Mary Williard
University of Rio
Grande, Bernard Fultz
Scholarship, $1,300 —
Emily Henry
University of Rio
Grande, Community
College Jake Bapst Scholarship, $6,600 — Leia
Barnette
University of Rio
Grande, Fruth Pharmacy
Scholarship, $1,000 —
Alliyah Pullins
University of Rio
Grande, Helen Russell
Clark Scholarship, $1,000
— Luke Musser
VFW Post 9926 Scholarship, $500 — Karlee
Norton and Trae Hood
Washington and Jefferson College Presidential
Scholarship, $34,000 —
Morgan Lodwick
Wayne F. White and
Bob Evans Legacy Scholarship (FAO), $500 —
Jade Dudding, Sky Brown
and Savannah Smith
West Virginia Wesleyan
Scholarship, $20,000 —
Devyn Oliver
St. Paul Lutheran
Church of New Haven
Scholarship — Layne
Acree
Certificates and Awards
United States Marine
Corps. Scholastic Excellence — Tyler Williams
and Elena Musser
United States Marine
Corps. Distinguished
Athlete Award — Jared
Kennedy and Savannah
Smith
United States Marine
Corps. Semper Fidelis
Music Award — Alexander Barton and Dillyn
Ohlinger
Joseph Billingsley was
recognized for having
enlisted in the Marines.
Ohio National Guard
recruits recognized were
Jared Kennedy, Nathanael

saying, “History is more or
less bunk.”
In 1935, Babe Ruth hit
his last three career home
runs — nos. 712, 713 and
714 — for the Boston
Braves in a game against
the Pittsburgh Pirates. (The
Pirates won, 11-7.)
In 1942, U.S. Army Lt.
Gen. Joseph Stilwell, frustrated over being driven
out of Burma by Japanese
forces during World War
II, told reporters in Delhi,
India: “I claim we got a hell

of a beating.”
In 1957, the third tube of
the Lincoln Tunnel connecting New York and New Jersey was opened to trafﬁc.
In 1961, President John
F. Kennedy told Congress:
“I believe that this nation
should commit itself to
achieving the goal, before
this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and
returning him safely to the
earth.”
In 1968, the Gateway
Arch in St. Louis was

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“A historian is a prophet in reverse.”
— Friedrich von Schlegel,
German diplomat and writer (1772-1829)

dedicated by Vice President
Hubert Humphrey and
Interior Secretary Stewart
Udall.
In 1979, 273 people died
when an American Airlines
DC-10 crashed just after
takeoff from Chicago’s
O’Hare Airport. Six-year-

old Etan Patz (AY’-tahn
payts) disappeared while
on his way to a school bus
stop in lower Manhattan.
(In April 2017, former store
clerk Pedro Hernandez,
convicted of killing Etan,
was sentenced to at least 25
years in prison.)

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

(Top left) Grant Adams receives the John Lentes Jr. Memorial Scholarship from Cathy Lentes. (Top right) National Guard Specialist David
Wilson recognizes students Austin Snodgrass, Keira McCourt, Nate Hoover and Jared Kennedy who have enlisted in the Ohio National
Guard. (Bottom right) K.J. Tracey receives the Charles and Lavara Yeauger Scholarship presented by his grandmother in memory of his
late great-grandparents. (Bottom left) Sgt. Brett Walling recognizes Marine Corps. recruit Joseph Billingsley.

The first inductees to the Spanish National Honor Society are pictured with Spanish teacher Richelle Hecker (center). (From left) Kylie
Dillon, Raeline Reeves, Jordan Roush, Hecker, Danielle Morris, Gracie Hoffman and Kylie King.

“Nate” Hoover, Keira
McCourt, and Austin
Snodgrass. Each will
receive paid tuition as
members of the National
Guard.
Farmers Bank Junior
Board participants —
Cody Bartrum, Kylie Dillon, Jade Dudding, Gracie
Hoffman, Jared Kennedy,
Dillon Mahr, Elena Musser, Raeline Reeves and
Abby Watson
Senior Athlete Awards
— Tyler Williams,
Danielle Morris, Jana
Robinette, Madison Dyer,
Mersadies Markins, Jessie Donahue, Breanna
Colburn, Brock Roush,
Gracie Hoffman, Lexi
Moon, Freddie Hill,
Adam Cotterill, Keaton
Huffman, Dannett Davis,
Jordan Roush, Tyler
Shull, Morgan Lodwick,
Luke Musser, Garrett
Buckley, Nate Hoover,
James Parsons, Chase
Whitlatch, Trae Hood,
Jake Roush, KJ Tracey,
Layne Acree, Tyler Bachtel, Lilli-Ann Frechette,
Sky Brown, Cameron
Smith, Cody Bartrum,
Jared Kennedy, Savannah Smith, Grant Adams,
Alex Henson, Devyn Oliver, Alliyah Pullins, Dillon
Mahr, Courtney Jones,
Sarah Curl, Kendra Robie,
Kylie Dillon, Keynath
Rowe, Elena Musser and
Allie Hatﬁeld.
OHSAA State Award
(presented to community

members who have an
impact on the athletic
programs) — Gary Coleman and Vic Gillian
National Federation
of High Schools athletic
excellence — Danielle
Morris and Luke Musser
OHSAA Scholar Athlete — Gracie Hoffman
and Dillon Mahr
Archie Grifﬁn Sportsmanship Award — Sky
Brown and James Parsons
OHSAA Courageous
Student Award — Jade
Dudding
WSAZ Best of the
Class — Gracie Hoffman,
Elena Musser, Raeline
Reeves and Jordan Roush
National Merit Scholarship Program — Raeline
Reeves
Perfect Attendance —
Kevin VanMeter (4th nine
weeks), Rusty Fields (all
year) and Angela Danielle
Morris (all year)
Calculus (All As) —
Sky Brown, Tyler Williams, Jordan Roush, Danielle Morris, Dillon Mahr,
and Gracie Hoffman
Physics (All As) —
Devyn Oliver, Courtney
Jones, Alex Henson, Sky
Brown, Tyler Williams,
Jordan Roush, Jake
Roush, Kendra Robie,
Raeline Reeves, Danielle
Morris, Dillon Mahr and
Gracie Hoffman
Pre-calculus top senior
— Dillyn Ohlinger
Students of the Month
— Jade Dudding, Joe

Billingsley, Gracie Hoffman, Hannah Kennedy,
Lillian Hill, Brady Lane
and Emily Graham
Senior Auto Awards
— Clayton Erwin, Adam
Will, Hunter Stewart,
Nate Smith, Bradley
McGrath, Charles Cleland
(Eastern), Steven George
(Southern). Highest
scorer on exams, Bradley
McGrath
Health Tech II Awards,
completion of phlebotomy certiﬁcate — Briana
Barrett, Paige Buckley,
Cory Caruthers, Bryanna
Hall, Macy Hopkins,
Lindsey Jenkins, Karlee
Norton, Tehya Ramage, Mariah Reynolds,
Madison Russell, Dylan
Weaver, Dianne Willard,
Maddison Woodyard
Senior English (highest
average) — Megan King
Senior College Prep
English (highest average)
— Grant Adams
Advanced Placement
Literature and Composition (highest average)
— Gracie Hoffman and
Raeline Reeves
Drama Club Awards
— Ryan Eblin, Jamie
Starcher, Alex Barton,
Stephanie Grady, Alex
Henson, Jessie Donahue,
Katie Collins, Emi Henry,
Jordan Roush, Dannett
Davis, Bodi Priddy,
Tiffany Kelly, Nikki Folmer, Dillon Mahr, Abby
Watson, Jade Dudding,
Lexi King, Elena Musser,

Hannah Kennedy, Raeline
Reeves, Savannah Smith
(4 year member), Janna
Robinette (4 year member), and Sarah Curl (4
year member)
Spanish National
Honor Society — Jordan
Roush, Gracie Hoffman,
Kylie King, Kylie Dillon,
Raeline Reeves and Danielle Morris
Anatomy II (All As or
A average) — Abby Eads,
Morgan Lodwick, Allie
Hatﬁeld, Courtney Jones,
Stephanie Grady, Devyn
Oliver, Madison Dyer,
Jana Robinette, Jade Dudding, Abby Watson, Sylvia
Dowell, Sky Brown and
Hannah Kennedy. Top
student — Sky Brown
Anatomy I (All As) —
Alliyah Pullins and Savannah Smith. Top senior
— Savannah Smith
Ohio Basketball Coaches Association Scholarship Society Gold Certiﬁcate — Luke Musser,
Jared Kennedy, Tyler Williams and Dillon Mahr
Academic All-Ohio —
Dillon Mahr
Most Improved Automotive Technology —
Brady Lane
Red Cords (donate
blood three times or
recruit ﬁve donors) —
Kendra Robie, Madison
Russell, Dannett Davis,
Paige Buckley, Mariah
Reynolds, Karlee Norton,
Tehya Ramage and Lindsey Jenkins

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

From page 1

I’ve had a lot of fun
with teachers and
friends, board game
and card tricks,” said
Dunfee.
“There have been
ups and downs, a
few problems with
grades, but everything worked out in
the end they got it
sorted out. I’ll give
kudos to them for
ﬁguring it all out. I’m
very appreciative for
the administration
taking the time to ﬁx
it all,” said Dunfee.
Cleland agree.
“We made it,” said
the salutatorian.
“It’s been a long
race, but we ﬁnished
it with our heads held
high and ﬂags waiving in the wind,” said
Dunfee of his high
school years coming
to an end.
As for what has
prepared them the
most as they go to
college in the fall,
but noted the science
department at Southern Local, which was
particularly important as they will both
be pursuing science
related degrees in college.
As for any advice
or wisdom for others
as he moves on to
college, Dunfee said
he had two.
“Knowledge is a
weapon. I intend
to be formidably
armed,” said Dunfee.
“And, nothing is ever
easy.” Both come
from the Sword of
Truth novels.
Dunfee, Cleland
and the rest of the
Southern High
School Class of 2017
will graduate at 8
p.m., Saturday, May
27.

port Hill Cemetery; 10:15 a.m.
— Addison Cemetery; 10:30
a.m. — Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery; 11 a.m. — Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery; 11:15
a.m. — Stewart-Bennett Park
Middleport; 12:30 p.m. — Howell Hill Cemetery; 1 p.m. — Burlingham Cemetery.
RACINE — The Racine
American Legion will be hosting
a Memorial Day program at the
POMEROY — The BrooksGrant Chapter Sons of the Union post in Racine, located across
the street from the Star Mill
Veterans will hold a special serPark. The program will start
vice at 11 a.m., Saturday, May
at 10 a.m. The Southern High
27 at the Meigs County Civil
War Monument, Second Street, School band will play, followed
by a guest speaker. RefreshPomeroy. The program will be
ments will be served. Everyone
presented by the chapter, with
special guest speaker John Haas, is invited.
BURLINGHAM — The 127th
Civil War historian for the Ohio
Memorial Day Service will be
Historical Connection, ColumMay 29, at 1 p.m. at the Burlingbus, Ohio.
ham Church. The Honor Guard
MIDDLEPORT — Feeneyof Feeney Bennett Post 128 of
Bennett Post #128, American
the American Legion of MiddleLegion, Middleport, Ohio, will
be conducting tributes at numer- port will be performing the
military tribute at the cemetery
ous locations on Monday, May
at 1 p.m. and the service will fol29. The schedule is as follows,
low in the church. Rick Jones, a
8:45 a.m. — Middleport Levy;
9 a.m. — Middleport Riverview career army man and the grandCemetery; 9:15 a.m. — Bradford son of Frank and Victoria Jones,
Cemetery; 9:30 a.m. — Middle- will be special speaker and music
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.

Memorial Day
events

Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention,
all information should be
received by the newspaper
at least ﬁve business days
prior to an event. All
coming events print on a
space-available basis and
in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@civitasmedia.
com.
Card Shower
Dove White will celebrate her 70th birthday
on June 1. Cards may be
sent to her at 44107 Carr
Road, Coolville, Ohio
45723.

8 AM

2 PM

58°

60°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.54
4.61
3.57
17.32
16.95

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:09 a.m.
8:43 p.m.
6:18 a.m.
8:38 p.m.

First

May 25 Jun 1

Full

Jun 9

Last

Jun 17

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
11:53a
12:23a
1:28a
2:36a
3:43a
4:47a
5:45a

Minor
5:38a
6:39a
7:44a
8:51a
9:58a
11:01a
11:58a

Low

Moderate

High

Major
---12:19p
1:59p
3:07p
4:12p
5:14p
6:11p

Minor
6:08p
7:09p
8:15p
9:22p
10:27p
11:28p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
Providence, R.I., had light snow on
May 25, 1832. On May 25, 1838, 10
inches of snow fell at Bradford, Pa.,
with a small amount in Pittsburgh.

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 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.

High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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
12.64
16.47
21.56
12.79
12.78
24.87
12.19
26.24
34.31
12.51
19.60
34.60
19.00

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.56
+0.08
+0.01
+0.59
-0.23
+1.32
-0.80
+0.22
-0.05
-0.04
-0.60
+1.40
-0.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

78°
57°

78°
53°

74°
55°

Warmer with times of
clouds and sun

Cloudy with a
thunderstorm or two

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Beautiful with clouds
and sun

Chance for a couple
of showers

Mostly cloudy with a
couple of showers

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

Logan
64/56

Adelphi
64/56
Chillicothe
65/56

NATIONAL CITIES

Portsmouth
62/56

Marietta
64/55

Murray City
63/55
Belpre
64/56

Athens
63/55

McArthur
62/55

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Friday, June 2
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County PERI
Chapter 74 will be held
at 1 p.m at the Mulberry
Community Center, 156
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Sammi Mugrage
Thursday, June 1
CHILLICOTHE — The will be the guest speaker.
Southern Ohio Council of All Meigs County Public
Governments (SOCOG)
Employee Retirees are
will hold its next board
urged to attend.
meeting at 10 a.m. at 27
MARIETTA — The
West Second Street, Suite Buckeye Hills Regional
202, Chillicothe, Ohio,
Council Executive Com45601. Board meetings
mittee, which also serves
usually are held the ﬁrst
as the RTPO Policy ComThursday of the month.
mittee, will meet at 11:30
For more information,
a.m. at 1400 Pike Street,
call 740-775-5030, ext.
Marietta.

80°
63°

St. Marys
65/56

Parkersburg
63/54

Coolville
63/56

Wilkesville
62/55
POMEROY
Jackson
64/56
63/56
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
65/57
63/56
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
64/54
GALLIPOLIS
64/57
65/57
63/57

South Shore Greenup
62/55
61/55

47

103.

79°
63°

Lucasville
62/56

Very High

held in their Family Life
Center at the corner of
Fifth and Main Streets.
The doors open at 4:30
p.m. and the meal is
served at 5 p.m. This
month they will be having
hot dogs and sauce, pasta
salad, chips, and dessert.
The public is welcome.

78°
61°

Very High

Primary: walnut/hickory/other
Mold: 1976
Moderate

SATURDAY

Waverly
62/56

Pollen: 75

Low

MOON PHASES
New

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Primary: cladosporiuma
Fri.
6:08 a.m.
8:43 p.m.
7:09 a.m.
9:48 p.m.

FRIDAY

5

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

Friday, May 26
MIDDLEPORT — The
monthly Free Community
Dinner at the Middleport
Church of Christ will be

EXTENDED FORECAST

62°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 5, State Route 124
in Meigs County will be closed
between Township Road 29
(Wells Run Road) and Township
Road 144 (Dewitts Run Road)
for a slip repair project. The

dleport to discuss a new
lease for the ofﬁce.
POMEROY — Alpha
Iota Masters will meet
at 11:30 a.m. at Ginos in
Mason, West Virginia.
SYRACUSE — The
Ladies of the Meigs
County Republican party
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Carleton School in
Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone
is welcome. Please come
and join us in discussing
how we can make money
to support our local candidates. We will welcome
any and all input.

Thursday, May 25
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil and 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.
MIDDLEPORT — A
special meeting of the
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will
be held at 2 p.m. at the
Veterans Service Ofﬁce,
97 N. Second Ave., Mid-

Cool today with a few showers. Cloudy most of
the time tonight. High 64° / Low 57°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

69°
60°
77°
55°
91° in 1939
40° in 1963

Marjorie Reuter will be
celebrating her 93 birthday on May 29. Cards
may be sent to 138 Beech
St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Road
Closure

estimated completion date is
September 1, 2017.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

TODAY

WEATHER

and song will be provided by the
Hayes family and Greg Jones.
POMEROY — American
Legion Post 39 will be conducting Memorial Day services as
follows: 9 a.m. — Rocksprings
Cemetery; 9:30 a.m. — Beech
Grove Cemetery; 10 a.m. —
Sacred Heart Cemetery; 10:30
a.m. — Bridge of Honor Flags;
noon — Ceremonies at the
Pomeroy Levy with melodies
from the Southern High School
Band under the direction of
Chad Dodson and guest speaker
Sgt. Major Jim Freeman; 1:30
p.m. — memorial service at
Meigs Memory Gardens; 2 p.m.
— Chester Cemetery, followed
by Hemlock Grove Cemetery.

Milton
62/56

St. Albans
64/57

Huntington
61/56

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
70/52
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
68/55
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
67/58
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Spencer
64/56

Buffalo
63/57

Ironton
61/55

Ashland
60/54
Grayson
61/55

Elizabeth
65/56

Clendenin
64/55
Charleston
64/56

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
66/49

Billings
63/43

Montreal
70/51

Minneapolis
72/59
Detroit
66/54
Chicago
67/52

Denver
73/46

Kansas City
76/59

New York
63/58
Washington
75/60

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
86/54/s
52/41/c
83/66/s
73/60/sh
77/57/pc
64/45/pc
73/48/pc
59/51/r
75/61/pc
81/64/s
57/42/sh
73/56/t
78/63/pc
69/56/pc
75/61/pc
97/78/pc
67/45/t
79/56/c
73/54/pc
84/70/pc
91/77/pc
78/62/pc
80/61/c
89/68/s
86/73/pc
67/57/sh
83/69/pc
89/78/t
78/55/c
86/71/pc
88/73/s
73/60/sh
88/67/pc
86/62/s
77/60/pc
95/68/s
69/53/sh
58/47/r
81/60/s
81/57/s
84/67/t
71/49/pc
68/52/pc
78/55/s
78/60/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

107° in Needles, CA
25° in Angel Fire, NM

Global

Houston
90/74
Monterrey
97/72

Today
Hi/Lo/W
88/55/s
52/38/sh
71/57/sh
66/60/t
76/58/t
63/43/pc
68/48/pc
56/52/r
64/56/t
72/56/t
62/42/t
67/52/pc
65/53/sh
67/56/sh
65/55/sh
92/75/s
73/46/t
75/59/pc
66/54/r
86/70/sh
90/74/pc
68/54/sh
76/59/pc
96/71/s
80/65/s
67/58/c
71/58/sh
89/77/t
72/59/pc
75/56/pc
83/68/s
63/58/r
86/65/s
82/60/pc
72/60/t
100/73/s
69/55/t
59/49/r
73/59/t
76/57/t
78/62/pc
71/53/pc
68/55/c
70/52/pc
75/60/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
71/57

El Paso
97/72
Chihuahua
101/64

Toronto
55/51

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

High
117° in Chandrapur, India
Low -6° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
89/77

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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740-949-2210
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60701680

SHS

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thursday, May 25, 2017 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 25, 2017 s 6

NASCAR
shakes up
schedule
for 2018
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
(AP) — NASCAR
announced several changes to its 2018 schedule
Tuesday, including new
tracks for the ﬁnal 11
races of the season.
Indianapolis Motor
Speedway will become
the 26th race of the Cup
season and the ﬁnal
chance to set next year’s
playoff ﬁeld.
The race will be run
Sept. 9 and not be part of
the summer schedule for
the ﬁrst time since it was
added to the NASCAR
schedule in 1994.
“The Brickyard 400 has
been one of NASCAR’s
premier events for 25
years, and we’re thrilled
the race is moving to one
of the most important
dates on the NASCAR
calendar,” said J. Douglas
Boles, IMS president.
Las Vegas Motor
Speedway will replace
Chicagoland Speedway as
the opening event in the
10-race playoff series.
Chicago moves to a regular-season race in July.
Richmond International
Raceway, which had been
the playoff cutoff race
since the format debuted
in 2004, will move into
the playoffs.
Charlotte Motor Speedway’s playoff race will
now be run on the venue’s
road course instead of its
1.5-mile oval.
It will be the ﬁrst NASCAR road course race in
Charlotte’s 58-year history.
The Charlotte “roval”
is a 13-turn, 2.4-mile road
course that incorporates
part of the inﬁeld and all
but 400 feet of Charlotte’s
1.5-mile oval.
Mario Andretti, Jeff
Gordon, A.J. Allmendinger, Jeff Burton and Max
Papis have all tested the
roval.
“Charlotte Motor
Speedway has always
been about innovation,”
said Marcus Smith,
president and chief executive ofﬁcer of Speedway
Motorsports Inc. “Hosting the ﬁrst road course
race in NASCAR’s playoffs, as well as the drama
of closing out the playoffs’
ﬁrst round, means that
tension will be high and
competition will be ﬁerce
as soon as the green ﬂag
drops.”
The opening three-race
playoff round will be
Las Vegas-RichmondCharlotte.
The next round will be
Dover-Talladega-Kansas.

Eastern junior Austin Coleman (12) delivers a pitch during the Eagles’ victory over Trimble on April 17 in Tuppers Plains.

8 locals named all-district in baseball
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

A total of eight players from
the Ohio Valley Publishing
area were chosen to the 2017
All-Southeast District baseball
teams in Ohio, as voted on by
the coaches within the region.
Each of the six local programs — Eastern, Gallia
Academy, Meigs, River Valley,
Southern and South Gallia —
had at least one representative
in their respective divisions,
but the Eagles were also the
only squad that had more than
one choice on the lists.
Eastern had a total of three
selections on the Division IV
East team, which included a
ﬁrst team choice for junior Austin Coleman. Coleman was also
the D-4 player for the year for
the East team.
Senior John Little and junior
Ethen Richmond were also chosen as second team recipients
for Eastern.
Senior Trey Pickens was a
ﬁrst team choice and the lone
selection for Southern on the
D-4 East squad, while sophomore Chase Kemper earned
South Gallia’s only selection as
a honorable mention choice.
Ryan McClintic of South
Webster was chosen as the
Division IV East coach of the
year.
Meigs came away with a ﬁrst

team selection on the Division
II South team as senior Luke
Musser was the Marauders’
only choice.
Junior John Stout was Gallia
Academy’s lone selection in D-2
after garnering second team
accolades.
Athens senior Brendan Sato
was the D-2 South player of
the year, while Jim Thrash of
Marietta and Chris Stewart
of Athens both shared coach
of the year honors in the D-2
South list.
Senior Austin Ragan was the
lone River Valley choice on the
Division III East team after
earning second team honors.
Daniel Rutherford of Coal
Grove was the D-3 East player
of the year, while Wheelersburg
skipper Michael Estep won D-3
East coach of the year honors.
Hunter Hardy of Sheridan
(D-2 North), Tyler Armentrout
of Westfall (D-3 West) and
Brody Riffe (D-4 West) were
selected as the player of the
year in their respective divisions.
Doug Fisher of Sheridan
(D-2 North), Ron Allen of Zane
Trace (D-3 West) and Dan
McDavid of Green (D-4 West)
were named the coaches of the
year in their respective divisions.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

2017 All-Southeast District
baseball teams
Division II South
FIRST TEAM
Brendan Sano, Athens (Sr);
Turner Hill, Marietta (Sr);
Logan Kottenbrook, Waverly
(Sr); Harley Patterson, Unioto
(Jr); Brandon Schamp, Marietta (Sr); Bryce Gandee, Warren

By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Thursday, May 25
Track and Field
Division II regional at Athens HS, 5 p.m.
Friday, May 26
Track and Field
Division III regional at Fairfield Union HS,
5 p.m.
Tennis
OHSAA state tournament at Mason, 9 a.m.
Saturday, May 27
Track and Field
Division II regional at Athens HS, 11:30 a.m.
Tennis
OHSAA state tournament at Mason, 9 a.m.

Saturday, June 3
Track and Field
OHSAA state meet at Jesse Owens Stadium, 9 a.m.

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

River Valley senior Austin Ragan (2) delivers a pitch to an Athens batter during
their Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division baseball game on April 6 at River Valley
High School.

(Sr); Brock Stewart, Athens
(Sr); Luke Musser, Meigs (Sr);
Billy Cooper, Jackson (Sr);
Clay Edler, Unioto (Sr).
Player of the Year:
Brendan Sano, Athens.
Co-Coaches of the Year:
Jim Thrash (Marietta) and
Chris Stewart (Athens).
See BASEBALL | 7

4 from GAHS named all-SEOAL tennis

See NASCAR | 7

Friday, June 2
Track and Field
OHSAA state meet at Jesse Owens Stadium, 9 a.m.

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Pierce Wilcoxon captured allSoutheastern Ohio Athletic League tennis honors for
the third consecutive season.

CENTENARY, Ohio — A three-peat, a
repeat, a coach’s share, and a senior girl
securing one ﬁnal spot on the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League’s ﬁnal all-league
list.
The Gallia Academy High School tennis team, as announced on Thursday, was
represented on the ﬁnal all-SEOAL list
by two singles players and one-half of a
doubles duo.
For the Blue Devils, junior Pierce
Wilcoxon was selected to the all-SEOAL
ﬁrst-team club for the third and ﬁnal time
— while senior Miles Cornwell captured
all-league ﬁrst-team accolades for the second time in his career.
Fellow GAHS senior MiKayla Edelmann
ended up as Honorable Mention, while
Randy Christian —concluding his ﬁfth
season as Blue Devil coach — claimed triCoach of the Year honors.
The Blue Devils, along with Jackson
and Logan, shared the SEOAL champion-

ship with 4-2 league records, as Athens
—which went winless at 0-6 — was the
only other league team competing in boys
tennis.
In addition, the three-way share
between Gallia Academy, Jackson and
Logan marks the ﬁrst-ever such split in
league history for the sport.
It also marked just the third time since
the league went to single-round or double
round-robin competition —starting in
1979 — that the SEOAL champion(s) lost
exactly two matches.
From 1972 when boys tennis began
league competition until 1978, the conference champion was determined by a
single-day tournament.
The Blue Devils end SEOAL play with
nine league tennis titles, trailing only
Marietta (14) and Athens (13) — while
leading Jackson (four) and Logan (two).
Wilcoxon repeated to the ﬁrst-team singles players list, as he moved down from
ﬁrst singles last season to second singles
See GAHS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Kyrie-markable: Irving’s 42 carries Cavaliers

MLB

New York
Baltimore
Boston
Tampa Bay
Toronto

W
26
25
23
23
21

L
17
20
21
25
26

Minnesota
Cleveland
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City

W
25
24
21
20
19

L
18
20
23
24
26

Houston
Texas
Los Angeles
Oakland
Seattle

W
31
24
25
21
20

L
15
22
23
25
26

Washington
Atlanta
New York
Miami
Philadelphia

W
27
20
19
16
15

L
17
23
24
29
28

Milwaukee
St. Louis
Chicago
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

W
25
22
23
21
20

L
21
20
21
24
26

Colorado
Arizona
Los Angeles
San Francisco
San Diego

W
30
28
27
20
16

L
17
19
19
27
31

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.605
—
—
.556
2
—
.523
3½
1
.479
5½
3
.447
7
4½
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.581
—
—
.545
1½
—
.477 4½
3
.455
5½
4
.422
7
5½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.674
—
—
.522
7
1
.521
7
1
.457
10
4
.435
11
5
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.614
—
—
.465 6½
5½
.442
7½
6½
.356 11½
10½
.349 11½
10½
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.543
—
—
.524
1
3
.523
1
3
.467
3½
5½
.435
5
7
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.638
—
—
.596
2
—
.587
2½
—
.426
10
7½
.340
14
11½

GAHS
From page 6

this year.
As a freshman, he
paired with his sister
Adriana as a doubles
team to land ﬁrst-team
all-SEOAL.
This season, he went
a perfect 6-0 in SEOAL
singles action — and was
one of two players nominated for league Player of
the Year.
That repeat honor went
to Jackson senior Connor
Radune — a three-time
ﬁrst-team all-SEOAL
selection at ﬁrst singles.
Wilcoxon was joined
on the ﬁrst-team singles
squad by Cornwell, who
played second singles last
season but bumped down
to third singles this year.
Cornwell was actually
all-SEOAL all four years,
making the ﬁrst team as
a freshman before backto-back seasons of Honorable Mention.
Rounding out the ﬁrstteam singles group were
freshman Eli Sonnenmair
of Athens, junior Nicholas Kudlapur of Logan
and junior Blake Wyatt of
Jackson.
Both Logan doubles
teams were the only doubles teams named — as
junior Jeremiah Martin
paired with senior Riley
Kelch, while senior Seth
Primmer played with
junior Colton Lonberger.
In addition to Edelmann, Jackson senior
Caden Southard and Athens junior Freddie Hassett earned Honorable
Mention.
Southard and Martin
made Honorable Mention a year ago.
Joining Christian as
Coaches of the Year were
Jackson’s Chad Radune
and Logan’s Robbie Ball.
The all-SEOAL boys
tennis team stands as the
league’s ﬁnal all-confer-

NASCAR

Thursday, May 25, 2017 7

L10
5-5
3-7
5-5
5-5
5-5

Str Home
L-1
14-7
L-4
15-7
W-2
13-9
L-3 14-13
W-3 10-11

Away
12-10
10-13
10-12
9-12
11-15

L10
6-4
6-4
4-6
4-6
5-5

Str Home
W-4 11-13
W-1
8-10
L-3 12-10
L-2
8-8
W-1 12-11

Away
14-5
16-10
9-13
12-16
7-15

L10
6-4
8-2
7-3
5-5
3-7

Str Home
W-2
16-9
L-1
16-8
W-3
15-8
W-1 15-10
L-4
13-9

Away
15-6
8-14
10-15
6-15
7-17

L10
5-5
7-3
3-7
3-7
2-8

Str Home
W-2
13-7
W-2 10-10
W-1 11-13
L-1
6-14
L-4
8-10

Away
14-10
10-13
8-11
10-15
7-18

L10
6-4
4-6
6-4
2-8
6-4

Str Home
L-3 12-13
L-1 12-13
W-1 12-11
L-1 14-13
L-2
12-9

Away
13-8
10-7
11-10
7-11
8-17

L10
7-3
7-3
6-4
7-3
2-8

Str Home
W-3 13-10
W-2 20-8
W-2
17-7
L-1 11-10
L-1
9-14

Away
17-7
8-11
10-12
9-17
7-17

ence list, as this was the
SEOAL’s ﬁnal season —
as the oldest non-city athletic league in Ohio will
end operation on June 1.
After 92 years, the conference will be defunct
due to a lack of members.
However, there is tennis to still be played for
Wilcoxon.
That’s because he and
fellow junior Miguel
Velasco, the Blue Devils’
ﬁrst singles player this
season, have reached the
Division II state doubles
tournament — to be held
on Friday and Saturday
inside the outdoor Lindner Family Tennis Center
in Mason.
Wilcoxon and Velasco,
paired exclusively for
the postseason, captured
all ﬁve of their sectional
matches — before sweeping their three district
contests.
In sweeping the Southeast District sectional
and Southeast-East District championships,
the GAHS pair has now
played — and won — the
minimum 16 sets, while
having only dropped ﬁve
total games.
Velasco and Wilcoxon
will have a maximum of
four more matches at the
state, as their openinground opponent is that
of fellow juniors George
Arenas and Kyle Demers
of Cincinnati Wyoming.
The single-elimination
bracket features 16 clubs,
with the opening round
and quarterﬁnals set for
Friday.
The semiﬁnals and
state championship
matches are set for Saturday, starting at 9 a.m.
In addition, Radune —
the Division II SoutheastEast District singles
champion —represents
the SEOAL at the state.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

ing a Speedweeks tradition with the exhibition
“Clash” returning to a
From page 6
Sunday afternoon start
one week earlier.
The Clash will be folThe third round is Marlowed by qualifying for
tinsville-Texas-Phoenix,
the Daytona 500.
with the championship
The Clash was ﬁrst
ﬁnale at HomesteadMiami Speedway on Nov. held in 1979 and won by
Buddy Baker.
18 exactly nine months
The event was on a
after the season-opening
Sunday from 1979 until
Daytona 500.
1991. There was a oneThe changes drayear switch to Saturday,
matically alter the type
then the race returned to
of tracks in the 10-race
Sundays from 1993 until
playoff.
2002.
There will now be a
In 2003, it moved to a
road course, a restrictorSaturday night start.
plate track, two short
“Combining the Clash
tracks, two 1-mile tracks
with qualifying is going to
and four 1.5-mile tracks.
give our fans an outstandThe season will open
ing afternoon of NASCAR
Feb. 18 with the showaction,” said Chip Wile,
case Daytona 500, but
Daytona International
Daytona International
Speedway president.
Speedway is also restor-

CLEVELAND (AP) —
Kyrie Irving gritted his
teeth, tightened up his
left sneaker and hopped
to his feet.
The pain couldn’t stop
him.
The Celtics couldn’t
either.
Irving took over in the
second half and ﬁnished
with 42 points despite
playing on a tender ankle,
LeBron James added 34
and the Cleveland Cavaliers moved within one
win of an almost inevitable third date in the NBA
Finals with Golden State
by rallying to beat Boston
112-99 on Tuesday night
in Game 4 of the Eastern
Conference ﬁnals.
With James in foul
trouble, Irving was forced
to do more than ever and
he delivered, scoring 19
in less than ﬁve minutes
and 33 in a 19-minute
stretch.
“The kid is special,”
James said. “I was happy
to sit back and watch
him. He was born for
these moments.”
The defending NBA
champions, who shot
71-percent in the second
half, opened a 3-1 lead in
the series and can wrap
up their third straight
conference title — and a
“three-match” against the
Warriors — with a win
in Game 5 on Thursday
night in Boston.
But if Games 3 and
4 are any indication, it
won’t be easy.
Fighting to keep their
season alive, the Celtics aren’t giving an inch
despite playing without
All-Star guard Isaiah
Thomas, who may need
surgery on a hip injury.
The Cavs, meanwhile,
wouldn’t be on the cusp

of the Finals without
Irving.
With Cleveland in
jeopardy of dropping its
second game in a row
after James followed an
11-point Game 3 debacle
by picking up four ﬁrsthalf fouls, Irving put on
a breathtaking one-man
show.
Freezing Boston
defenders with his
dribble and driving to
the basket whenever he
wanted, Irving made six
layups, two 3-pointers
and a free throw in a dizzying span of 4:48.
He capped his blistering 19-point outburst
with a three in the ﬁnal
second of the quarter and
celebrated at mid-court
by pretending to put
two pistols back in his
holster.
“He saw Bron went out
and he wanted to put the
team on his shoulders,”
Cavs coach Tyronn Lue
said. “He did that.”
Irving said he was driven by the thought of the
Cavs seeing their series
lead vanish.
“In the back of my
mind, I thought, ‘They
can’t tie up the series,’”
he said. “We can’t go
back to Boston tied 2-2.
We needed everything
tonight.”
Irving put a scare into
the Cavs and their fans
when he stepped on
Terry Rozier’s foot and
rolled his ankle.
He stayed on the ﬂoor
for a few moments before
sitting up and re-tying his
sneaker.
Nothing was keeping
him out.
“It was one of those
games we had to ﬁght
through and we had to
earn it,” he said.

Baseball

(Sr).

Celtics coach Brad
Stevens was disappointed
with his team’s defense
on Irving, who was able
to spread the ﬂoor while
surrounded by shooters.
“There’s choices,” Stevens said. “I’m not sure
there are good choices.
When he gets going like
that, he’s tough to stop.
The ones we gotta look
at are the ones he got at
the rim.”
Kevin Love added 17
points and 17 rebounds
for the Cavs, now 11-1 in
the postseason.
Avery Bradley scored
19 and Jae Crowder 18
for Boston.
ANKLE GRAB
Irving did not show
any noticeable limp following the game as he
walked down the hallway,
stopping to hug and kiss
friends and family following his performance.
Irving, who has had
a history of injuries,
said he’s rolled his ankle
enough times to know
when it’s serious.
“My adrenaline is still
going,” he said. “I’m pretty sure I’ll be sore when I
get home.”
BOSTON BOUND
Crowder and the Celtics are looking forward to
going home and redeeming themselves after the
blowout losses in Games
1 and 2.
“I feel like we’re
humble enough to know
we haven’t played well at
home,” he said. “We want
to give our home crowd a
better outing than we put
out the past two games.”
FOUL TROUBLE
Lue paused for several
seconds before respond-

Brian Smith, Huntington (Sr); Jake Dawson,
Division III East
Adena (Sr); Garrett
Hurd, Portsmouth West
From page 6
FIRST TEAM
(So); Bryant Lung,
SECOND TEAM
Daniel Rutherford,
North Adams (Jr); Drake
Clayton Howell, VinCoal Grove (Sr); Chace Stanforth, Paint Valton County (Jr); Nick
Harris, Alexander
ley (Sr); Gunnar Free,
Haller, Chillicothe (Sr);
(Sr); Shane Spriggs,
Adena (Sr); Zane Barker,
Chase Weihl, Warren
Oak Hill (Sr); Cole
Piketon (Jr); Kevin
(Sr); Trenton Dawson,
Darnell, Wheelersburg Schmidt, Eastern Brown
Marietta (Sr); Brody
(Sr); Casey McComas, (Sr).
Rodgers, Athens (Sr);
Player of the Year:
John Stout, Gallia Acad- Chesapeake (Sr); Dane
Wilson,
Ironton
(Sr);
Tyler Armentrout,
emy (Jr).
Reece Robson, Nelson- Westfall.
ville-York (So); Kaden
Coach of the Year:
HONORABLE MENTION
Coleman,
Wheelersburg
Ron Allen, Zane Trace.
Jeffrey Harper, Vinton
(Sr);
Logan
Wade,
County (Jr); Bryce Hall,
SECOND TEAM
South Point (Sr); TanJackson (SR); Andy
Marty Knittel, Portsner
Popp,
Southeastern
Kostival, Athens (Sr);
mouth
West (Jr); Josh
(Sr);
Colby
Lewis,
Casey White, Unioto
Wolfe,
Lunchburg
Clay
Roack
Hill
(Jr);
Xander
(Sr); Brandon Neville,
(So);
Jesse
Jones,
LucasCarmichael,
WheelersMarietta (Sr).
ville Valley (So); Austin
burg (Jr).
Nunemaker, Westfall
Player of the Year:
Division II North
(Jr); Jay Riley, Paint ValDaniel Rutherford,
ley (Sr); Elijah Young,
Coal
Grove.
FIRST TEAM
North Adams (So); Eric
Coach
of
the
Year:
Hunter Hardy, SheriCook, Minford (Sr);
Michael
Estep,
dan (Sr); Brady Wallace,
Bricen Hess, Lynchburg
Wheelersburg.
Miami Trace (Sr); Alex
Clay (Sr); Elijah McClosRitton, Fairﬁeld Union
SECOND
TEAM
key, Huntington (So).
(Sr); Cayse Cameron,
Noah Henry, Wellston
Hillsboro (Sr); Collin
HONORABLE MENTION
(Sr); Chase McKnight,
Clark, Logan Elm (Sr);
Janson Kramer, West
Gage Sisek, Logan (Sr); Coal Grove (Sr); Kaleb
Union
(Sr); Macky
Coleman,
Wheelersburg
Garret Gray, Circleville
McDonald,
Paint Valley
(Sr);
Jeb
Jones,
Coal
(So); Brian Wilson,
(So);
Jeremy
Lambert,
Grove
(Jr);
Hunter
Washington CH (Sr);
Zane
Trace
(Fr);
Matt
Whalon,
Wellston
(Sr);
Mike Gittings, Sheridan
Gullett,
Minford
(Sr);
Austin
Ragan,
River
Val(Sr); Bradley Wolfe,
ley (Sr); Hunter Dobbs, Luke Lindamood, MinFairﬁeld Union (Sr).
ford (So).
Nelsonville-York (Sr);
Player of the Year:
Jordan Colburn, AlexanHunter Hardy, Sherider (Sr); Jonathan Hen- Division IV East
dan.
line, South Point (Jr).
Coach of the Year:
FIRST TEAM
Doug Fisher, Sheridan.
Austin Coleman,
HONORABLE MENTION
Eastern
(Jr); Isaac HuffDylan
Raines,
Fairland
SECOND TEAM
man, Waterford (Sr);
(Sr); Kyle Kleinman,
Hobey Karr, Logan
Alek Blevins, South
Ironton (Sr); Carson
Elm (Sr); Trent HarWebster (Sr); Trey
Stalfer, Southeastern
ris, Miami Trace (Sr);
(Jr); Tanner Hall, South Pickens, Southern (Sr);
Cymon Rooker, Logan
Clay Hayes, Waterford
Point (Sr); Landon
(Jr); Hunter Chain,
(Sr); Chayden Renfroe,
Smith, Rock Hill (So).
Hillsboro (Sr); Reece
Symmes Valley (Sr);
Trowbridge, Sheridan
Bradley Gee, South
Division
III
West
(Sr); Connor Chrisman,
Webster (Sr); Ryan
Washington CH (Sr).
FIRST TEAM
Richards, Trimble (Sr);
Tyler Armentrout,
Bailey Sprague, Belpre
HONORABLE MENTION
Westfall (Sr); Jeremy
(Sr); Cole Geil, Miller
Brandon Burroughs,
Brooks, Zane Trace (Sr); (Sr).
Circleville (Sr), Jarett
Payton, Washington CH Jacob McCaleb, Minford
Player of the Year:
(Sr); Skyler McDonald,
(Sr); Isaac Beam, Zane
Austin Coleman, EastMiami Trace (Sr); Cody Trace (Jr); Ryan Wilern.
Anderson, Logan Elm
liams, Portsmouth (Sr);
Coach of the Year:

ing to a question about
the third and fourth fouls
called on James, who
was whistled for barely
touching Marcus Smart
on a jumper and then was
called for a charge.
“They called them,” he
said of the ofﬁcials. “We
had to do what we had
to do.”
TIP-INS
Celtics: Thomas spoke
to coach Brad Stevens
and told him that he has
visited one hip specialist
and plans to see more
before it’s decided if he
needs surgery. Thomas
initially injured his hip
in March and played the
ﬁnal two months of the
regular season before
aggravating it during the
playoffs. … Stevens started Kelly Olynyk, who
had 15 points. … Before
the playoffs began, the
Celtics were 22-5 at home
since Jan. 1. They’re 5-4
in the postseason so far.
Cavaliers: The 42
points were a career
playoff-high for Irving,
who scored 41 in Game
5 of last year’s Finals.
… Cleveland improved
to 35-5 against Eastern
teams in the playoffs
since 2015. … J.R. Smith
and his wife, Jewel,
brought their daughter
home after more than
ﬁve months in the hospital following her premature birth. Smith posted
photos on his Instagram
account of the couple
leaving Hillcrest Hospital with their baby in a
stroller. “We Walked In
Together We Walked Out
Together!!” Smith wrote.
… Deron Williams played
18 minutes after sustaining a shoulder “stinger”
in Game 3.

Ryan McClintic,
South Webster.
SECOND TEAM
Parker Clemmons,
Pike Eastern (So);
Dalton Tomlison, Pike
Eastern (Jr); John Little,
Eastern (Sr); Trevor
Coriell, South Webster
(Sr); Kamron Curry,
Trimble (Sr); Ethen
Richmond, Eastern (Jr).
HONORABLE MENTION
Chase Kemper, South
Gallia (So); Dillon Wilfong, Federal Hocking
(Sr); Clay Martin, Pike
Eastern (Sr); Jordan
Welch, Waterford (Sr).
Division IV West
FIRST TEAM
Brody Riffe, Portsmouth Clay (Sr);
Traeten Hamilton,
Whiteoak (So); Trevor
Carver, Green (Sr);
Drew Cassidy, Portsmouth Notre Dame (Jr);
Tanner Kimbler, Green;
Colton Thornburg, Manchester; Drew Lowe,
Portsmouth East (Sr);
Trever Yeager, Whiteoak
(Jr); Tayte Carver,
Green; Tyler Speas,
Portsmouth Notre Dame
(Jr).
Player of the Year:
Brody Rifﬂe, Portsmouth Clay.
Coach of the Year:
Dan McDavid, Green.
SECOND TEAM
Caleb West, Whiteoak;
Zac McGraw, Ironton
St. Joe; C.J. Corns,
Portsmouth Notre Dame
(Jr); Drew Hadsell,
Portsmouth Clay (Sr);
Sam Kayser, Portsmouth
Notre Dame (Sr); Bryan
Young, Manchester.
HONORABLE MENTION
Shane Tackett, Western; Cole Gilliland,
Portsmouth Clay (Sr);
Tyler Darnell, Green;
Tyler Winston, Portsmouth East.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, May 25, 2017

Daily Sentinel

NBA announces 2019 All-Star game will held in Charlotte
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
— The NBA All-Star game is
headed back to Charlotte in
2019, a couple of years later
than anticipated.
The NBA announced that the
All-Star weekend will be held
Feb. 15-17 in Charlotte and
the game will be played at the
Spectrum Center, home of the
Charlotte Hornets.
The league had selected
Charlotte to host the 2017 AllStar game, but later moved the
game to New Orleans because
of the state law restricting the
rights of LGBT people. However, a compromise was struck
in March to partially erase the
impact of the House Bill 2 law
limiting anti-discrimination
protections for lesbians, gays,
bisexual and transgender
people.
“While we understand the
concerns of those who say the
repeal of HB2 did not go far
enough, we believe the recent
legislation eliminates the most

egregious aspects of the prior
law,” NBA Commissioner
Adam Silver said in a release.
“Additionally, it allows us to
work with the leadership of the
Hornets organization to apply
a set of equality principles to
ensure that every All-Star event
will proceed with open access
and anti-discrimination policies.
“All venues, hotels and businesses we work with during
All-Star will adhere to these
policies as well.”
Despite Silver’s intentions,
the Equality NC and the
Human Rights Campaign has
concerns that no protections
for non-discrimination policies
for the LGBTQ community
have been put in place by the
Charlotte or the state.
“North Carolina’s discriminatory law prohibits the city of
Charlotte from implementing
non-discrimination protections for LGBTQ residents and
visitors attending the All-Star

Game. Nothing has changed
that fact,” said HRC senior vice
president for policy and political affairs JoDee Winterhof.
The NBA is the latest sports
entity to return events to North
Carolina; the NCAA and the
Atlantic Coast Conference also
are bringing events back to the
state after changes were made
to the law.
The now-repealed House Bill
2 required transgender people
to use restrooms corresponding
to the sex on their birth certiﬁcates in many public buildings.
That’s been dropped, but LGBT
advocates have denounced the
replacement law because state
ofﬁcials took no action barring
sexual identity and gender discrimination in workplaces, restaurants and hotels and instead
prohibited local governments
from acting on their own.
Hornets owner and longtime
NBA great Michael Jordan said
in a release he is “thrilled” the
game is coming back to Char-

lotte.
“We want to thank Commissioner Silver for his leadership
throughout this process and
for the decision to bring NBA
All-Star back to Buzz City,”
Jordan said in the release.
“All-Star Weekend is an international event that will provide
a tremendous economic impact
to our community while showcasing our city, our franchise
and our passionate Hornets
fan base to people around the
world.”
Jordan asked Silver to keep
the city in mind for 2019 after
the league moved the 2017
game — hopeful the HB2 law
would eventually be repealed.
Silver honored that request.
Hornets COO and president
Fred Whitﬁeld represented the
Hornets and Spectrum Center
in doing whatever he could
to help facilitate a resolution,
spending time meeting with
legislatures and other business
leaders in North Carolina.

“From the very beginning
I was in engaged to see if we
could not only save the 2019
All-Star game, but the NCAA
(basketball) regionals and the
ACC Tournament, as well as
concerts and events in the
building,” Whitﬁeld said. “We
are operators of the building
and we felt like we had to get
engaged to assist to get some
resolution.”
Even as talks to repeal HB2
stalled at times, the Hornets
continued to move forward
with the league’s request to
upgrade the arena.
The $41 million renovation
— $33.5 million of which came
from the City of Charlotte —
is almost complete, and has
included a new scoreboard,
new ﬂoor and renovations to
suites and hospitality areas,
among other upgrades.
Charlotte previously hosted
the All-Star game in 1991 at
the Charlotte Coliseum, which
has since been demolished.

Notices

Money To Lend

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted General

Small Engine Mechanic:
F/T Position w/benefits

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)

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

Employment Opportunity

t���BOE���4USPLF�
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t�4BMBSZ�%FQFOEFOU�
PO�4LJMM�-FWFM�

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

This is full time hourly position. If interested-send resume to
Julia Schultz at jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals.

Help Wanted General
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4FOE�3FTVNF�UP
D�P�5IF�%BJMZ�4FOUJOFM�
����8���OE�4U���
1PNFSPZ �0)������

Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist with
inside sales experience at the Point Pleasant location.

Want To Buy

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.

Liquid Asphalt Drivers Needed.
Must be at least 21 years old.
Have a clean MVR. Class A
CDL, with Tanker Endorsement and Hazemat with TWIC.
1-800-598-6122
For Sale By Owner
Two Bedroom House,
$400/ mo. Security Deposit
and references required.
Call (304) 593-6618
For Sale by owner and or rent
Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Yard Sale
Huge Yard Sale
Fri-Sat May 26-27
123 Hillside Rd
5 1/2 miles out 141
Ripleyҋs on Sale
May 26 &amp; 27, 8 am – 5 pm
Jackson Cty Courthouse
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Help Wanted General

Echoing Meadows Residential Center a non-profit Christian
organization and equal opportunity employer is accepting applications for full time afternoon RN supervisor. This position
provides developmentally disabled individuals with nursing
services and administering medications and treatments in
accordance with physicians' orders and within state licensure
regulations. Must be able to supervise direct care staff. This
position is offered with medical, dental, vision and retirement
benefits.
Applicants must pass pre-employment screening including but
not limited to drug screen and criminal background checks.
Apply in person at Echoing Meadows, 319 W Union Street,
Athens, Ohio. Phone 740-594-3541.

Direct Care Needed in Jackson County
Professionals are needed to provide companionship for
individuals with intellectual/developmental disabilities. Direct
Care Professionals provide the care that is essential to quality
of life, as well as quality of care for disabled individuals.
Part time positions available.

Houses For Rent

No previous experience required, on the job training is provided.

Farm Equipment

Submit resumes to: Westbrook Health Services
Attn: Human Resources
2121 7th Street
Parkersburg, WV 26101
OR
eoates@westbrookhealth.com

2009 MAHINDRA TRACTOR,
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$11,000.00 304-895-3971

Help Wanted General

PASS TIME
IN LINE.
READ THE
NEWSPAPER.

LEGALS

Portable Source Relocation Approval
Shelly Co.-Smith Concrete (CS Johnson)
ID #: REL03792
Date of Action: 05/15/2017
The equipment for this operation, Ready-Mix Concrete Manufacturing, has been approved to move to 49947 State Route 124
Racine, Ohio 45771.
In the director's judgment the portable source will have an acceptable environmental impact. All questions, requests for pertinent information and documentation concerning this action
must be directed to Jessica Dingman at Ohio EPA DAPC,
Southeast District Office, 2195 Front Street, Logan, OH 43138
or (740)385-8501.
5/25/17

TM

Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center
has openings for Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical
Nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants.
Must have WV license. Must be able to work 12 hour
shifts. Contact Candace Moore, Asst. Director of
Nursing at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center at (304) 675-5236, or fax to (304) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at www. pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/V/F

60720489

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

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Help Wanted General

Upstairs apt. for rent
2 bdrm 1 bth water pd.
475.00 sec dep 475.00 rent
740-446-3481

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

 Prior customer service experience preferred
 Self-motivated and able to work independently
 Excellent communication skills
 Professional, articulate voice
 Ability to multi-task in several computer applications while
holding a conversation with a customer
 Type 30 words per minute
 Enjoy working in a fast-paced environment while maintaining a
professional attitude
 Answer customer inquiries and provide appropriate technical
and/or product related information
 Contact customers to follow up on customer issues or order
information
 Independently resolve customer support issues and escalate
when necessary
 Document all contacts, actions, and responses in customer
database
 Maintain working knowledge of products and services
 Strong mathematical skills
 Excellent written and verbal communication skills
 Strong organizational, problem solving and analytical skills
 Commitment to excellence and high standards with close
attention to detail
 Ability to work independently and as a part of a team
 Ability to work well under pressure and diffuse difficult
situations
 Ability to handle multiple projects

In Print. Online. In Touch.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, May 25, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, May 25, 2017

NFL cuts OT to 10 minutes and
opens up end zone celebrations
CHICAGO (AP) —
NFL owners cut the
overtime period from 15
minutes to 10 minutes
during the regular season, but also gave players plenty of leeway to
celebrate after a touchdown.
The two moves are
expected to result in
more tie games and
much more elaborate
end zone dance parties.
“I always planned all
my celebrations,” said
Denver’s Emmanuel
Sanders, already known
for his ﬂamboyant TD
celebrations, including
one that drew a ﬁne last
season. “Now I can go a
little overboard without
getting cussed out by the
head coach.”
At their regularly
scheduled spring meeting Tuesday, the owners
also decided to shift
the 2021 Super Bowl to
Tampa from Los Angeles, where construction
delays have pushed back
the expected opening
of the new home for the
Rams and Chargers.
Those teams will now
host the league’s showcase event in 2022.
Also approved at
the meeting was the
Oakland Raiders lease
for a stadium in Las
Vegas, where the team
is expected to play the
2020 season.
For all the maneuvering, end zone celebration
talk generated the most
buzz.
After years of limiting how — and how
much — players could
celebrate following
touchdowns, the league

decided to loosen up its
rules, allowing players
to again use the football
as a prop, celebrate as a
group and roll around or
ﬂap their arms like snow
angels on the ground
again if they choose.
Even Commissioner
Roger Goodell said he
was looking forward
to seeing what players
would do with their newfound freedom of expression.
Asked whether he celebrated the new guidelines approved at Tuesday’s spring meetings,
Goodell just laughed.
“I did,” he said. “I
can’t tell you how.”
The shorter overtime
period will be used in
the preseason and regular season.
Playoff games will
also use 10-minute time
blocks in overtime, but
won’t end in ties.
Coaches’ concerns that
too many players were
exhausted and risking
injuries at the end of the
extra period was the key
factor in the decision.
Research suggests the
number of games that
will go into overtime and
end up tied will climb
slightly.
Over the past ﬁve
years, with the 15-minute period in use, the
league has averaged
about one tie game each
season.
Projections show that
could climb to three.
“We don’t think it
will lead to more ties,”
Goodell said.
He noted a number
of coaches said they
expect a more aggressive

approach to scoring with
the shorter extra period.
Rams owner Stan
Kroenke said he welcomed the decision
to delay awarding the
Super Bowl to Los Angeles by a year.
“We want to be sure
that we do everything
right, 100 percent,” he
said after the meetings.
“To have the Super
Bowl, that’s the important thing.”
Unusually wet weather
had already caused signiﬁcant construction
delays at the $2.6 billion
football stadium in Inglewood, California.
Tampa originally ﬁnished as runner-up in
the bidding for 2020 —
one reason why owners
backed the move unanimously.
The NFL also would
have had to waive a rule
that prohibits a Super
Bowl being played at a
stadium before it has
hosted two full regular
seasons.
Goodell said the moniker “No Fun League”
had been thrown around
since he was an intern in
the league ofﬁce.
The league, however,
will continue to penalize
any celebration deemed
offensive or in bad taste,
including those that
embarrass opponents or
mimic the use of weapons.
If celebrations are
deemed a violation by
on-ﬁeld ofﬁcials, players
could still be penalized
under existing unsportsmanlike conduct and
taunting violations, as
well as ﬁned.

Farmers Bank
&amp; SecurLOCK Equip
Presents

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GAHS youth
basketball camp

Southern football
golf scramble

CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy basketball staff will be conducting a youth basketball camp for
students entering grades 3-8 from noon
until 2 p.m. on Monday, June 5, through
Wednesday, June 7, at the GAHS gymnasium.
Camp participants will be instructed
by the Gallia Academy basketball staff
and players, and the cost of the camp is
$45 per camper and $30 for each additional student. Students can register
the ﬁrst day of camp.
All campers will receive a t-shirt.
Water will be provided, but a water
bottle is recommended.
For questions or to register, please
contact GAHS coach Gary Harrison at
740-441-7856.

MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team will hold a golf scramble on
Saturday, June 10, at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason County. The format
will be a four-man scramble, bring your
own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap of 40+ and only one player can be
under 10. Price is $65 per person and
includes golf, mulligan, cart, lunch and
beverages. Prizes include club house
credit for the top three teams, among
other cash prizes.
There will also be a skins game at a
cost of $20 per team.
The tournament will begin with a
shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. For more
information, contact Southern football
coach Mike Chancey at 740-591-8644.

Meigs football
helmet fittings

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — Meigs High
School will have football helmet ﬁttings
on Tuesday, May 30, at the high school
ﬁeld house. The high school players
begin ﬁttings at 4 p.m., followed by the
middle school players start at 6 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The
schedule for the 2017 Frank Capehart
Tri-County Junior Golf League has been
released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on Monday,
June 12, at the Hidden Valley Golf
Course in Point Pleasant. Age groups
for both young ladies and young men
are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16,
and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses
and dates of play are as follows: Monday, June 19, at Meigs County Golf
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia
Course in Pomeroy; Monday, June 26,
Academy Blue Angels volleyball teams
at Riverside Golf Course in Mason;
will be holding a volleyball camp for
Wednesday, July 5, at Cliffside Golf
girls entering grades 3-8 this coming
Course in Gallipolis; and Monday, July
fall. The camp will run from Monday,
July 10 through Wednesday, July 12 and 10, at Meigs County Golf Course in
be from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. in the Gallia Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $10
Academy High School gymnasium.
per
player. A small lunch is included
Players will practice volleyball skills,
with
the fee and will be served at the
work on volleyball fundamentals, and
conclusion of play each week. Registraplay volleyball games. The camp will
tion begins at 8:30 a.m. with play startconclude on Wednesday with athletes
ing at 9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at
participating in game play from 6:30-8
740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304-675p.m. Parents and spectators are wel3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675-6135 if
come.
The cost is $60 per athlete, and each you can contribute or have questions
concerning the tour.
athlete will receive a camp t-shirt.
Registrations may be picked up at the
GAHS Ofﬁce Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-3
p.m. and from some local businesses.
Players may also register at 5:30 p.m.
Monday, July 10, outside of the GAHS
gymnasium.
Athletes who come without a parent
POMEROY, Ohio — The Meigs
need to have the liability form signed
County Golf Course is seeking male
by a parent in order to participate. For
and female golfers for the Meigs Senior
more information, contact varsity head League, age 50-plus. Senior Golf Scramcoach Janice Rosier at Janice-rosier@
ble, 9 a.m. Fridays. Red Tee Scramble,
att.net
9 a.m. Wednesdays. Ladies outing, 10
a.m. Tuesdays.

GAHS Blue Angel
Volleyball Camp

Meigs County Golf
Course Senior League

Customer
Appreciation Day!
May 26th
@ Pomeroy Retail
Branch
11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

Free Food
Great Fun
Chance to Win $100
Cold Hard Cash!

Gallipolis Lions
golf scramble
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis
Lions Club will hold its 19th annual golf
outing on Saturday, June 10, at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallia County. The event
will be held in a four-man scramble
format and will have a shotgun start
time of 8:30 a.m. Individual golfers will
be paired together based on A-B-C-D
handicap.
The individual cost of the event is
$50 for a Cliffside member and $60
for a non-member. Cost includes green
fees, cart, lunch and beverages. There
will be prizes of $1,000, $600 and $400
for the top-three ﬁnishing teams, as
well as a skills game or a $50,000 prize
for a hole-in-one.
Also, the top ﬁve players that end up
closest to the pin on a designated hole
will be eligible for a shot at $1 million
with a hole-in-one. There will also be an
auction at the conclusion of the event.
For more information, contact Rick
Howell at 740-446-4624 or at 740-6459036.

Gallia County youth
track and field
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy track and ﬁeld program will
be putting together a youth track and
ﬁeld team for all Gallia County kids in
grades 1-6 every Monday and Thursday
from June 12 through July 13 at the
GAHS track on the grounds of the Eastman Athletic Complex.
The bi-weekly event will start at 6:30
p.m. and run through 8 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays, with instruction
being provided by the current GAHS
track coach Paul Close.
The cost will be $70 per participant,
which includes the team and uniform
fees. Signup form and fees are due by
Monday, May 29. Make checks payable
to Gallipolis Boosters.
To register, contact Paul Close by
email at ff1023@att.net and he will
send you a registration form. For more
information, contact Paul Close at 740645-7316.

LeBron locked in for Game 4
after being locked out in Game 3

93.1 The Wolf - Live Remote

60721966

INDEPENDENCE,
Ohio (AP) — LeBron
James had that look —
faraway, yet focused.
The Boston Celtics
have his undivided attention.
Following one of the
worst postseason games
of his career, James provided a candid review
of his performance after
breaking down ﬁlm of
Game 3 in the Eastern
Conference ﬁnals.
“It wasn’t tough to
watch,” he said as the
Cavaliers prepared for

Tuesday night’s Game 4.
“We had opportunities. It
is what it is. They played
a hell of a game and they
took it to us and we
weren’t able to stop the
runs that they made.
“Some of the plays that
we made, some of the
plays that I made, I was
like, ‘What are we doing?’
or ‘What could I have
done better?’ But you
ﬁgure out the next game
and go forward.”
James scored just 11
points and committed
six turnovers in Game 3

on Sunday night, when
the Celtics overcame a
21-point deﬁcit in the
third quarter to pull off
an upset the odds makers in Las Vegas said was
the biggest in the NBA
playoffs over the past 20
years.
It was the fourth-lowest
point total for James in
210 career playoff games.
The point total was
stunning considering it
broke James’ streak of
scoring at least 30 points
in eight straight playoff
games.

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