Signals April/May 2014 - University of Rio Grande
Transcription
Signals April/May 2014 - University of Rio Grande
In Review — Pages 35 — 42 2013-2014: The Year Rio Baseball Tops Ohio University In Close Game — Page 28 Rio Grande, Ohio Signals Rio Student Accepted Into Mayo Clinic’s Radiation Therapy School — Page 4 University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College April/May 2014 Number 9 Justice French To Address Rio’s 2014 Graduates Commencement Ceremonies Scheduled For Saturday, May 10 By BECCA STEINER Signals Editor “Don’t be afraid … In the long run, a mistake is a learning experience,” this is a message Ohio Supreme Court Justice Judith French says is important for students to understand. Justice French, who will serve as Ohio Supreme Court commenceJustice Judith French ment speaker for the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College graduation exercises on Saturday, May 10, became a justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio on January 13, 2013. “I was very excited to say yes when (University President) Dr. Danley asked if I would be the commencement speaker for this year,” Justice French said in a telephone interview. Commencement exercises are scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. on the campus green. The daughter of a school teacher, Justice French said she appreciates her Ohio roots and education, and is committed to being a part of civic education in Ohio. For the past two decades, Justice French has dedicated her career to public service. In that time, she has served the State of Ohio as a lawyer for a state agency, an assistant attorney general, counsel to the Governor, and, now, as a supreme court justice. “Don’t be afraid, I regret all of the times that I was afraid and didn’t do something. In the long run a mistake is a learning experience,” Justice French said in summarizing the knowledge she has gained from her 2014 Commencement Information — Page 43 File Photo: 2013 Rio Grande Commencement THE UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE and Rio Grande Community College 2014 commencement is scheduled for Saturday, May 10, at 1 p.m. on the campus green. Ohio Supreme Court Justice Judith French will serve as commencement speaker. years of public service. Having learned from so many talented teachers and professors, Justice French said she is dedicated to serving as a resource to them and their students. As an attorney, she served as a tutor and mentor in the Columbus Public Schools. As a justice, she speaks frequently to students from around Ohio, particularly those studying the (Continued On Page 2) Dr. Richard Sax: ‘We Are Here For The Students’ New Provost, Vice President Of Academic Affairs Discusses His Views Of Higher Education By BECCA STEINER Signals Editor “We are here for the students,” Rio Grande’s new Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs said in a recent interview. “The institution is Dr. Richard Sax Educational Degrees BA, Haverford College; MA, PhD. The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Biographical Statement Dr. Sax has served as Dean of the College of Arts & Humanities at Madonna University, Dean of the School of Arts, Humanities, & Social Sciences at Fort Lewis College, and as Vice President of Academic Affairs & Dean of the College at Lake Erie College. He comes to Rio Grande from the University of New Mexico, where he serves as Dean of Instruction and Chief Academic Officer at the UNW-Valencia Campus in Los Lunas, New Mexico. here for the students.” Dr. Richard Sax, whose appointment to his new post was announced in late February, is scheduled to start on July 7. During an April 9 telephone interview, Dr. Sax said he viewed academic administration as, “… extremely important, just as important as working collaboratively with others.” Dr. Sax became aware of the position at The University of Rio Grande through a higher education weekly newsletter. “I have worked at four institutions in the last 30 years,” he said. One goal Dr. Sax said he would like to accomplish at Rio Grande is to raise the overall morale of the academic body: students, faculty, staff and administration.” He also said “I would like to help accomplish the goal of having a sustainable enrollment rate … and graduation rate, as well.” Dr. Sax described himself as being, “…like Atticus Finch from To Kill A Mockingbird.” Referencing a scene in the book in which Finch is spat upon, he said, “It is good to be like Atticus Finch, wipe it [the problem] off and do the right thing.” Upon his arrival in July, Dr. Sax said he will have an “Open Office/ Door Policy,”: if the door is open, you may stop in and speak to him, or ask him a question. Although, the protocols in the student handbook need to be followed, he said, “If I am there, I will listen.” Dr. Sax said he is “not the boss of you, but a leader among equals.” He also proposed several initiatives to help boost student morale on campus, including: Have end of term Student To Professor evaluations; Have an active student government; Make sure the leaders of each organization speak with one another so that the groups may all work together. “We are a tribe that works together,” said Dr. Sax, “my fascination for the institution goes back to Oxford and Cambridge, and it is incredible to be a part of the fascinating operation. “Sharing experiences is important. When I was in high school, my buddy and I loved going to political campaigns, setting up for events in order to know all that was going on. “When I got to college I fell in love with literature, and since then I have wanted to take part in institutions of higher education and be a leader among equals.” “Dr. Sax comes to Rio with a proven record of academic leadership experience having served in positions of increasing responsibility and complexity over a course of nearly 25 years,” a statement issued by Rio Grande’s Human Resource Department said in announcing his appointment. “This includes serving as Honors Program Director, English Department Chair, twice as an academic dean, and twice as a chief academic officer. He currently serves as Dean of Instruction and Chief Academic Officer at the University of New Mexico-Valencia Campus in Los Lunas, New Mexico.” Sax received a Bachelor of Arts in English from Haverford College, a Master of Arts in English Language & Literature and a Doctorate of Philosophy in English Language& Literature from the University of Michigan. In his role as Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs, Sax will provide leadership in the development, assessment, budgeting and oversight of all academic initiatives. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 2 Campus News Justice French To Address Rio’s 2014 Graduates (Continued From Page 1) Ohio judicial system. During her first year as justice on Ohio’s highest court, she has participated in hundreds of decisions. She also found time to travel the State of Ohio, visiting all 88 counties. With a history of public service, Justice French is committed to serving as a resource for the people of Ohio. A History of Public Service In 1993, Justice French joined the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency as deputy director for legal affairs. From 1997 to 2002, she worked for Attorney General Betty Montgomery as an assistant attorney general, and later as chief counsel. During her time in the Attorney General’s Office, Justice French argued two cases before the United States Supreme Court. One of those cases was the Cleveland School Vouchers case, in which she served as lead counsel. Her successful presentation of the state’s position helped ensure equitable educational opportunities for every Ohio student. From 2002 to 2004, Justice French served as chief legal counsel to Governor Bob Taft. In that role, she served as the chair of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Task Force, which made recommendations to the legislature for making Ohio’s sex-offender laws more effective. In 2004, Justice French was elected as a judge on the Tenth District Court of Appeals, which hears appeals from Franklin County courts and state administrative agencies. While a judge on the court of appeals for eight years, she authored more than 800 legal opinions. In December 2012, Governor John Kasich appointed her to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court of Ohio. She became the 155th justice of the Ohio Supreme Court on January 1, 2013. A Wide Breadth of Legal Experience Although her two decades of public service are critical to her understanding of state laws and the Ohio judicial system, Justice French said she also has the benefit of experience in the corporate and private-practice arenas. Madog Fellow Presents ‘The Art of Seeing Wales’ University News Service RIO GRANDE – The Madog Center for Welsh Studies’ annual fellowship presentation was held Thursday, April 17, at the University of Rio Grande. “The Art of Seeing Wales” by Dr. Robert Hopkins II, an associate professor of biology at Rio Grande, is a lecture on the remarkable flora and fauna of Wales, from the mountains of Snowdonia in the north to the waterfalls of Brecon Beacons towards the south. The aim is to help increase one’s ability to appreciate the landscapes of this beautiful country more deeply and holistically,” Madog Center Director Jeanne Jindra said. “Dr. Hopkins has worked extensively with biology experts in Wales over the past year to bring authenticity to his research on the natural flora and fauna of the country.” Dr. Hopkins is the 11th Madog Faculty Fellow. The fellowship was developed in 2003 with the aim of involving full-time Rio Grande faculty in Welsh-related research. As the 2013-14 Madog Faculty Fellow, Dr. Hopkins presented his full research paper – “Biodiversity Conservation in Wales, UK: DNA Barcoding Applications and Implications” – during the Association of Southeastern conference Biologists in South CaroliDr. Robert Hopkins II na earlier in Associate Professor April. Of Biology At Rio Grande She began her career as an attorney with the Columbus law firm of Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur, specializing in environmental law. Justice French also served as in-house counsel for a large manufacturing company. In 2004, Justice French was recognized as a “Super Lawyer.” A Commitment OHIO GOVERNOR JOHN KASICH, right, apto Education pointed Justice French to fill a vacancy on the SuJustice French grew preme Court of Ohio in December 2012. She beup in Sebring, Ohio, a came the 155th justice of the Ohio Supreme Court small town in Mahon- on January 1, 2013. ing County. She graduated from Sebring McKinley High ies), and a J.D., with honors. She curSchool in 1980, when she started her rently serves her alma mater as a undergraduate studies at The Ohio member of the Moritz College of State University. Law National Council. She received three degrees from Justice Judi French currently resides OSU: a B.A. in political science, an in Grandview Heights, near ColumM.A. in history (with a concentration bus, with her husband and two chilin military history and strategic stud- dren. “The Art of Seeing Wales” Source: University News Service From the mountains of Snowdonia in the north to the waterfalls of Brecon Beacons towards the south, many are familiar with the inspiring Welsh landscapes. Lesser known perhaps are the individual species which fill those spaces. The appreciation of a sweeping landscape often comes at the expense of observational acuity and regard for detail. Instead of the failure to see the forest for the trees we have a case where we fail to see the trees for the forest. The April 17 lecture and exhibition, “The Art of Seeing Wales,” was a brief examination of some of the remarkable flora and fauna of Wales. The overarching aim was to help increase one’s ability to appreciate the landscapes of Wales more deeply and holistically. Thus, is the art of seeing Wales. Dr. Robert Hopkins II is an Assistant Professor of Biology at URG and has taught a variety of courses since joining the university in 2009. He teaches primarily for the Wildlife and Fish Conservation and Management major and feels blessed to live and work in southern Ohio. He holds a Ph.D. in Zoology from Southern Illinois University, an MS in Biology from Morehead State University, and a BS in Environmental Science also from Morehead. Signals The Signals is a joint production of JRN 22703/32703 (Student Newspaper) and JRN 34402 (Desktop Publishing). Participating students include: Karen Proffitt, Grant Tamane, Cydnie Few, Daniel Fraser, Ernest Phillips, Emily Rorrer. The Signals will be distributed regularly throughout the 2014 Spring Semester. Story ideas may be submitted directly to students or through course instructor Larry Ewing. Becca Steiner serves as the editor of the Signals . Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 3 Rio Hires AGB Search University Announces Presidential Review Committee Source: Eric McKinney, Director Marketing & Communications RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The University of Rio Grande has hired AGB Search to coordinate the national search for its 22nd president. Founded by the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges in 2010, AGB Search has assisted more than 215 searches at more than 157 institutions. “The Association of Governing Boards is one of the most respected institutions in higher education,” said Jack Finch, chair of the University of Rio Grande Board of Trustees. “Hiring AGB Search grants Rio Grande access to a robust network of resources to ensure our presidential search produces the right candidate to lead Rio Grande.” Finch co-chairs the joint Presidential Search Commission along with Rio Grande Community College Board of Trustees Chair Shawn Saunders. The commission is tasked with providing oversight and direction for the national search and transition. Rio Grande’s 22nd president will follow President Dr. Barbara Gellman-Danley, who has been appointed president of the Higher Learning Commission effective July 7. The HLC is a nonprofit regional accrediting agency that accredits more than 1,000 colleges and universities with a home base in one of 19 states stretching from West Virginia to Arizona. AGB Search’s primary responsibil- ity in Rio Grande’s presidential search is to identify and recruit quality candidates from an inclusive and diverse network that is the result of more than 92 years of AGB service to board members and administrators throughout the landscape of higher education. AGB Search also will provide support for a successful transition of leadership at Rio Grande following the hire of its 22nd president. Dr. Loren J. Anderson will serve as Rio Grande’s AGB Search consultant. Dr. Anderson completed 20 years as president of Pacific Lutheran University in 2012 and has 40 years of experience in higher education to draw from in assisting Rio Grande with its presidential search. “It’s an honor for me to work with the Presidential Search Commission at Rio Grande,” Dr. Anderson said. “The University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College represent a partnership that is unique in higher education that provides a vital and essential educational resource.” Dr. Anderson met with Rio Grande administrators, faculty, staff, students, trustees and community stakeholders throughout Monday and Tuesday in order to develop a formal presidential search profile. Once finalized by the Presidential Search Commission, the search will officially launch through national advertisement and promotion in leading higher education trade publications and the extensive networks affiliated with Campus News Brief... Rio Grande Blood Drive Yields 47 Units Forty-seven units of blood were donated during Rio Grande’s blood drive on April 16, according to a statement released by Marlene Childers, Director of Health Services. “When using Component Therapy, each one of those units are manufactured into three life-saving blood products,” Childers said. “Because of your efforts, enough blood product was collected to save 141 lives.” “Thanks again for all your support and many thanks to all who volunteered during the blood drive,” Childers concluded. “We could not be successful without you.” Upcoming Welsh Events and News Welsh Heritage Days — May 17 & 18, 2014 at Bob Evans Farm- Work continues between the Madog Center and Bob Evans Farm on the revival of Welsh Heritage Days for spring 2014. The central focus will be on an Eisteddfod and the guidebook for competitions will be available in January. Contact the Madog Center at 800-2827201, ext. 7186 for more information. AGB and Dr. Anderson. “The Association of May will be devoted to Governing Boards is one the building of an extensive candidate pool, with of the most respected instievaluation of applications tutions in higher educato begin in early June by tion … Hiring AGB the Presidential Review Search grants Rio Grande Committee. Finalists will access to a robust network be brought to campus in of resources to ensure our mid-July for final inter- presidential search proviews. duces the right candidate Presidential Review to lead Rio Grande.” Committee members include: URG Board mem—Jack Finch, Chair, University of ber, Gallia County CoroRio Grande Board of Trustees ner and co-chair Dr. Daniel H. Whitely; RGCC Board memKyger Dental’s Timothy V. Kyger, ber, Farmers Bank & Savings Co. DDS. President and co-chair Paul Reed; “This is an exciting time for Rio URG Board member and Information Grande with a wealth of promising Investors Group Managing Director opportunities lurking on the horizon,” Ronald K. Glover; URG Board mem- said Saunders, chair of the RGCC ber and Sullivan University System Board and co-chair of the Presidential Senior Vice President/Chief Operat- Search Commission. “The level of ing Officer Thomas F. Davisson; engagement and commitment from RGCC Board member and Adelmann the entire Rio Grande community has & Clark, Inc. President Andrew been a pleasure to witness as we Adelmann; RGCC Board member begin this national search for our and Atomic Credit Union Chief Op- 22nd president. These next few erating Officer and General Councel months will shape the future of Rio Aaron C. Michael; Rio Grande Chief Grande and our region.” Financial Officer and Vice President As president of the university, the of Finance Tim Pruett; Rio Grande 22nd president also will preside over Executive Vice President/Vice Presi- Rio Grande Community College. The dent of Institutional Advancement partnership provides students profesPaul Harrison; Rio Grande Commu- sional networking and philanthropic nity College Vice President of Adengagement opportunities through ministration Rebecca Long; Rio improved student convenience with Grande College of Health and Behav- centers in Meigs and Vinton Counioral Sciences Dean Dr. Donna ties, while granting students from Mitchell; Rio Grande Associate Pro- Ohio, and select counties in Kenfessor Dr. Jacob White; Rio Grande tucky, with state supported tuition. Professor Dr. Ray Matura; Rio For media inquiries please contact Grande Assistant Professor Jason Eric McKinney, Director of MarketWinters; Rio Grande Student Senate ing & Communications, at emckinPresident Samantha Hammond; and [email protected] or 740-245-7225. Rio Grande Enactus Team Looking for New Members! Meetings are Fridays at 11:30 AM in the Meeting Room of the Berry Center (Up the stairs and to the right). Advisor is Mrs. Carol Smith, who is also the Director of the Berry Center. en•act•us A community of student, academic and business leaders committed to using the power of entrepreneurial action to transform lives and shape a better more sustainable world. entrepreneurial—having the perspective to see an opportunity and the talent to create value from that opportunity; action—the willingness to do something and the commitment to see it through even when the outcome is not guaranteed; us—a group of people who see themselves connected in some important way; individuals that are part of a greater whole. Feel free to stop by for a meeting any Friday at 11:30 in the Meeting Room of the Berry Center Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Rio RAD Student Accepted Into Mayo Clinic’s Radiation Therapy School By Stephanie Campbell Signals News Staff Emily Burnham, a second year RAD student, has been accepted into the Mayo Clinic’s Radiation Therapy School in Rochester, Minnesota. She is one of only seven selected from a nationwide pool of more than 140 applicants. Burnham will graduate in May from The University of Rio Grande with an Associate’s Degree in Applied Sciences. Burnham feels that what she has learned from the University of Rio Grande has prepared her for the once in a lifetime journey that she will soon embark upon. Burnham will begin her journey at the Mayo Clinic in the Fall; she is scheduled to complete the program in August 2015. Burnham is 21 years old and was born and raised in Montana. When asked what sparked her interest in radiation therapy, she said, “When I was in high school my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer. Emily Burnham The people in the hospital and cancer center were nice, supportive and caring. It sort of inspired me.” Burnham said that therapy was not her original choice. The overwhelming support and encouragement she has received from her instructors, Chris Barker and Tracy Boggs, has proven to be essential in her pursuit to further herself in her field. Emily is not sure where she wants to be upon completion of the Mayo Clinic program; however, she is extremely optimistic about her future. Mayo Clinic ‘Pools Resources’ Of Knowledge, Skills In Medicine The Mayo Clinic developed gradually from the medical practice of a pioneer doctor, Dr. William Worrall Mayo, who settled in Rochester, Minn., in 1863. His dedication to medicine became a family tradition when his sons, Drs. William James Mayo and Charles Horace Mayo, joined his practice in 1883 and 1888, respectively. From the beginning, innovation was their standard and they shared a pioneering zeal for medicine. As the demand for their services increased, they asked other doctors and basic science researchers to join them in the world's first private integrated group practice. Although the Mayo doctors were initially viewed as unconventional for practicing medicine through this teamwork approach, the benefits of a private group practice were undeniable. As the success of their method of practice became evident, so did its acceptance. Patients discovered the advantages to a "pooled resource" of knowledge and skills among doctors. In fact, the group practice concept that the Mayo family originated has influenced the structure and function of medical practice throughout the world. Along with its recognition as a model for integrated group practice, "the Mayos' Clinic" developed a reputation for excellence in individual patient care. Doctors and students came from around the world to learn new techniques from the Mayo doctors, and patients came from around the world for diagnosis and treatment. What attracted them was not only technologically advanced medicine, but also the caring attitude of the doctors. Through the years, Mayo Clinic has nurtured and developed its founders' style of working together as a team. Shared responsibility and consensus still provide the framework for decision making at Mayo. That teamwork in medicine is carried out today by more than 55,000 doctors, nurses, scientists, students and allied health staff at Mayo Clinic locations in the Midwest, Arizona and Florida. Page 4 Rio’s New Block Scheduling Begins Fall Semester 2014 By Emily Rorrer Signals News Staff Starting fall of 2014, the University of Rio Grande will be implementing the block schedule for all traditional and hybrid classes. Classes will be offered with approximately half of the courses on Mondays and Wednesdays, and the other half on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and any remaining classes will occur on Fridays. Laboratory and studio classes can be offered Monday through Friday as long as they abide to the block schedule start times, and curtail overlapping blocks. Clinicals are not required to follow these time blocks. With the changes made to each class period within the new block schedule, the total duration of the semester at Rio has been reduced to 15 weeks (14 weeks instruction and 1 week of exams). This also allows for a new winter or “J” term January 2 – 23. Rio will continue to offer compressed terms, about 7 weeks long, per semester for some classes in certain programs. Summer terms and classes will not be effected by Rio’s new block schedule. Scheduling policies, days and times, will continue to be the same for the 10 week summer term. What are the Advantages? A consistent meeting time from Monday to Thursday is one advantage students can expect from the new block schedule. Some other forecast advantages are as follows: Fridays are open for clinical experiences and/or extended student activities Athletics have Fridays to travel without missing classes Commuter/working students have the option of scheduling classes on two days a week (Monday – Wednesday or Tuesday – Thursday) More attractive and manageable scheduling for working adults. The new block schedule also encourages and allows more interaction with peers and instructors, and also opens up Friday morning for meetings and joint office hours in schools or departments. Block Scheduling at Rio and Elsewhere The new block schedule that Rio is implementing this coming year is not a typical block schedule. Block scheduling is usually found in schools K through twelfth grade. There are very few universities and colleges that run on a traditional Sample Time Block (Monday through Thursday) Block 1 8:00 – 9:50 am Block 2 10:00 – 11:20 am Block 3 11:30 am – 12:50 pm Block 4 1:00 – 2:20 pm Block 5 2:30 – 3:50 pm Block 6 4:00 – 5:50 pm Block 7 6:00 – 7:50 pm Block 8 8:00 – 9:50 pm Friday blocks are two hours ach, beginning at 8:00 am and ending at 9:50 pm. block schedule. Those that do, focus more time and energy in a specific area. For example Colorado College offers four blocks a semester, eight blocks a year, totaling in thirty-two blocks for students graduating from Colorado College. Students spend intensive three and a half week blocks on one course at a time during these blocks. Rio Grande’s block schedule has been modified to better suit the unique student body. Ideally, the block schedule will make it possible for those post-traditional, or working students, or those with families, to have two-day school weeks. This schedule can give those students more available time outside of class to work, or commit to other opportunities. Because there will be fewer course sections offered, it could be difficult for students to schedule for certain classes or Gen Eds. More hybrid and online classes could lessen the difficulty of scheduling, and offered self-disciplined students to complete their coursework in a manner that best suits them. J – Term The new January Term, or “J-Term” will provide many students with the opportunity to get ahead in their collegiate course work. Students that perhaps failed a course might have some opportunity to take a course over during the concentrated 3 – week term. In the future this term could be a good opportunity for some departments to offer intensive and more discipline specific courses. New Schedule a Learning Process RGCC/URG’s new block schedule will be a learning process for faculty and students alike. Rio’s faculty is still figuring out the linguistics of this new schedule. While there are high hopes for the new J – term, adjusting to the block schedule might take some time. The changes that are made have the objective to better catering to the needs of RGCC/URG’s very unique and diverse Veteran Rio Grande Professors Retire Two veteran professors in the School of Liberal Studies are retiring at the end of the current academic year. Retiring are Dr. Joanne Ford, Assistant Professor of English, and Ellen Brasel, Assistant Professor of History. Ford came to Rio Grande in 1974. She earned her B.A. (1968) and M.A. (1969) at Ohio University. She completed her doctoral studies at Ohio University in 1996. Brasel, who graduated from the University of Rio Grande with a B.S. degree in 1993, earned her M.A. from Ohio University in 1997. A retirement party honoring both professors was held on Wednesday, April 30. Fellow faculty and former students attended to pay tribute to the two retirees. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 5 Signals Feature Career Fair Links Students With Prospective Employers The annual Rio Career Fair was held Monday, March 31, in Bob Evans Farms Hall at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College. Designed for graduating Rio Grande seniors and alumni, the career fair was free and open to the public. A total of 33 prospective employers participated in the event that was sponsored by the New Student Advising Office, Testing and Career Services. Approximately 200 students attended the Rio Career Fair Day. “THE RIO GRANDE EXPERIENCE extends well beyond the classroom,” said Susan Haft, (above far right) Director of the New Student Advising Office, Testing & Career Services at Rio Grande. “Career services are an essential part of what we offer our students and alumni. The annual Rio Grande Career Fair is a significant event in that it helps extend and strengthen the professional networks that benefit our students and graduates. It also provides local and regional employers direct access to a large pool of qualified employees.” Susan Haft On The Benefits Of Career Fairs “Career fairs are excellent opportunities for students to have a number of possible employment fields an employers represented in one place, and in a convenient location. “Sometimes it’s easier for first time job seekers to have the benefit of other people being present – courage in numbers, and less intimidating! Students are exposed to businesses and companies that they might not be otherwise. “Arrangements for student participants are often made in advance, as in the case of our student teachers, and allow for students to interview with multiple employers within a short period of time. “Pre-career services such as resume reviews and tips on attire are available to students through campus offices. Career fairs are also beneficial to the University in terms of networking and foster good community relations.” Haft’s Pointers For Follow-Up After The Career Fair Do whatever the employer asked you to do; submit an online application, submit resume elec- tronically, etc. If your conversation at the fair went well, send a note of thanks to the employer for their time and consideration during the fair. If further opportunities present themselves with a particular employer, do your research about the employer, so that at your next meeting you will be more knowledgeable about them. RIO GRANDE STUDENT CYDNIE FEW, (above, left) talks with a representative of Avon during the March 31 job fair. A total of 33 prospective employers participated in the 2014 edition of the annual event, which was hosted by Rio’s New Student Advising Office, Testing and Career Services Department. Photos and Copy by Karen Proffitt, Signals Staff Writer Graduating students lined up to do final graduation registration for 2014 (below, left). Students completing degree requirements on or before August 7, 2014, visited the Grande Finale on Monday, March 31. The registration was held in conjunction with the job fair in Bob Evans Farms Hall. During the registration, students were afforded the opportunity to meet with Rio’s Business Office, Financial Aid Office, Office of the Registrar, Community College Office, and Alumni Office. The event was provided as a service to the graduates, so they might meet with the offices in one location to ensure all of their information was accurate, as well as being advised on what to expect after graduation. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 6 Grande Chorale To Perform Annual Spring Concert May 2 RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The Grande Chorale, one of the premiere musical ensembles at the University of Rio Grande, will perform its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. on Friday, May 2, at the Berry Fine & Performing Arts Center. The concert, free and open to the public, will feature a variety of jazz styles including swing, salsa, bossa nova and ballads. “The Grande Chorale will perform a selection of vocal jazz works that will entertain and educate the audience,” Grande Chorale Director Dr. Sarin Williams said. “Listeners may know some familiar tunes such as ‘Do Nothin’ Till You Hear From Me,’ ‘Moon River’ and ‘I’ve Got the World on a String.’ Everyone should know at least one tune from this concert, and will leave wanting to dance the night away.” Grande Chorale members include sopranos Aryn Gritter and Ally Waddell; altos Brooke Wolni, Chloe Nared and Stephanie Cartmell; tenors Matthew Rhinehart and Andy Knipp; and bass Jordan Lombardo. GRANDE CHORALE MEMBERS include Skyler Thompson plays persopranos Aryn Gritter and Ally Waddell; altos cussion with accompanist SaBrooke Wolni, Chloe Nared and Stephanie Cartbrina Hurt. mell; tenors Matthew Rhinehart and Andy The spring concert will mark Knipp; and bass Jordan Lombardo. Skyler the final Grande Chorale perThompson plays percussion with accompanist formance for Thompson and Sabrina Hurt. Cartmell. Thompson is scheduled to graduate later this May, while Cartmell is moving on to beauty school. “We wish them all the best in their future endeavors,” Dr. Williams said. “They will be greatly missed here at the University of Rio Grande.” Follow the link below to view a copy of Davis Library's most recent newsletter, Ex Libris et Altera, Vol. 12, No. 2, Spring 2014. http://www.rio.edu/library/documents/ ExLibrisEtAlSpring2014.pdf THE March EDITION of “Tower & Times” is now available at the University’s main webpage (www.rio.edu). In edition to the President’s update of campus events, the online publication features articles on RedStorm Athletics and Campus Life. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 7 Masterworks Chorale Performs Renowned Caribbean Mass RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The renowned work of composer Glenn McClure will took center stage on Sunday, April 27, as the University of Rio Grande’s Masterworks Chorale performed “St. Francis in the MASTERWORKS Americas: A Chorale Director Dr. Caribbean Sarin Williams Mass.” The spring concert, which was free and open to the public, was held in conjunction with the Rio Grande vocal and percussion departments. The performance was held in the Berry Fine & Performance Arts Center on campus. “This will be an event not to be missed,” Masterworks Chorale Director Dr. Sarin Williams said prior to the event. “The work features lively, Latin rhythms, combined with the traditional mass texts and original Spanish poetry by St. Francis of Assisi.” The Masterworks Chorale is a regional chorus comprised of both Rio Grande students and community members under the direction of Dr. Williams and accompanist Mary Billman. Chorale members include THE MASTERWORKS CHORALE is a from the choral repertoire, including larger Kathryn Campbell, regional chorus comprised of 40-60 Univer- works such as Haydn's Lord Nelson Mass Stephanie Cartmell, sity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community (Mass No. 11 in D Minor) and smaller colMary Jane Getty, Aryn College students and community memlections of pieces, like traditional spirituals Gritter, Marlene Hoff- bers. This group performs standard works and musical theater compilations. man, Evelyn Kirkhart, Andy Knipp, Jordan Lombardo, Alva from Gritter, Knipp, Waddell and ious Continental Harmony CommisMcCoy, Vinton Rankin, Nickie Wolni. sion by the American Composers FoSmith, Ally Waddell, Duane Will and “St. Francis in the Americas: A rum. Brooke Wolni. Caribbean Mass” has been performed “With this major work we will Levi Billiter led Rio Grande perin New York City’s famed Carnegie bring the flavors of the Caribbean to cussion students Skyler Thompson Hall with McClure’s works persoutheastern Ohio,” Dr. Williams and Allen Hudson. The concert also formed all over the world. The com- said. “I am proud to offer such an unincluded vocal performances, under poser and arts integration consultant usual work at the University of Rio the instruction of Valerie Tanner, is a two-time recipient of the prestig- Grande.” Rich History Of Rio Jazz Ensemble On Display During Reunion Concert RIO GRANDE, Ohio – For 20 years the University of Rio Grande’s Jazz Ensemble has entertained the musical palates of southeastern Ohio and the region. That rich history and tradition was celebrated on April 22 with the 20th Anniversary Jazz Ensemble Reunion Concert. The current five-member Jazz Ensemble was joined by nearly 20 Rio alumni for a memorable performance under the direction of Dr. Chris Kenney. Free and open to the public, the concert was held in the Berry Fine & Performance Arts Center . “The audience will hear an evening of great jazz, performed by many generations of Rio students,” Dr. Kenney said prior to the concert. “This is the first time that members of the Jazz Ensemble has gotten together for a reunion.” The Jazz Ensemble consists of Rio students Jacob Hocker (trumpet), Jordan Lombardo (bass), Andy Milliken (guitar), Matthew Rinehart (trombone) and Skyler Thompson (drums). Dr. Kenney formed the Jazz Ensemble when he joined the Rio faculty in the fall of 1993, and the April 22 reunion opened with the first song the ensemble ever performed, Blue Train by John Coltrane. “A lot of alumni are really excited,” said Kristin Coen, a saxophone player on the Jazz Ensemble from 2001 to 2005 who performed at the reunion. “The pieces that we’re playing are iconic in American music history. The concert will be a great event for the campus and entire community.” Coen works as the band director for Huntington Local Schools in Chillicothe. The reunion featured other songs performed throughout the years by the ensemble including Fables of Faubus by Charles Mingus, In Walked Bud by Thelonious Monk, Tin Tin Deo by Gill Fuller, original compositions by Dr. Kenney and more. Ensemble alumni schedule to perform included Justine Baker (saxophone and flute, 2008-2013), Andy Boyer (saxophone, 2002-05), Jimmy Caudill (trombone, 2000-03), Jay Godeaux (bass, 2005-06), Sabrina Hurt (piano, 1998-06), John Jackson (drums, 1994-95), Michelle Miller (trombone and piano, 1997-98), Amy Ryan (saxophone, 1993-95), Bobby Sandlin (drums, 2008-09), Christian Scott (piano, 1994-95), Andy Sigman (trombone, 1995-99), Sonja Thompson (saxophone, 1997-98), Matthew West (trombone and guitar, 2006-10), THE RIO JAZZ ENSEMBLE is made up of University Matt Willis students and community members. (drums, 199394), Marilyn Wills (piano, 1996-98), their experiences from the past,” senChris Wyscarver (drums, 1996-2000) ior Skyler Thompson said prior to the and Coen. event. “I think opening with the first “I’m looking forward to the conjazz piece that they did (in 1993) will cert. It’s nice to get to perform with be pretty neat. I think the audience all the old jazz people and get to hear will really enjoy that.” Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 8 Rio’s BSN, Community Health Students Host 16th Annual Health Fair ROCK ENSEMBLE MEMBERS included: Tyler James Phillips, guitar and vocals; Ally Waddell, keyboard and vocals; Skyler Thompson, drums; Andy Milliken, guitar and vocals; Brooke Wolni, vocals; Jeremy Martin, bass; and Terry Byers, guitar. Dr. Kenney (guitar/vocals) also performs with the ensemble. Rock Ensemble Performs April 25 RIO GRANDE, Ohio – Rock enthusiasts were invited to attend the spring concert for the University of Rio Grande Rock Ensemble on Friday, April 25. The concert was held in the Berry Fine & Performing Arts Center on the Rio Grande campus. Admission was free and open to the public. “The students have selected the songs, sharing their diverse influences,” Rock Ensemble Director Dr. Chris Kenney said prior to the event. “The audience will hear an eclectic blend of the old and the new, of folk and Indie, of gentle and hard edged.” Rock Ensemble members included: Tyler James Phillips, guitar and vocals; Ally Waddell, keyboard and vocals; Skyler Thompson, drums; Andy Milliken, guitar and vocals; Brooke Wolni, vocals; Jeremy Martin, bass; and Terry Byers, guitar. Dr. Kenney (guitar/vocals) also performs with the ensemble. The concert included popular songs from Cream, The Pixies, Stealers Wheel, Asking Alexandria, Bread, 3 Doors Down, Traffic, Violent Femmes, Bill Withers, Heart and Modest Mouse. THE RIO ROCK ENSEMBLE is a student ensemble consisting of guitars, bass, drums, keyboards, and vocalists and specializing in classic rock music. An audition is required. The ensemble will perform in two concerts on campus each year, in addition to performances off campus at area schools, fundraising benefits, and other community events. RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The 16th annual Rio Health Fair hosted by the University of Rio Grande was held on Tuesday, April 15. Since the inaugural Health Fair in 1999, Rio Grande and its Nursing students have provided a variety of free screenings, information and door prizes through partnerships with local vendors to help insure “I believe the Rio the continued good health of Health Fair prothe region. vides an excellent The 2014 Rio Health Fair service to students, was held from 10 a.m. to 2 faculty and staff, as p.m., on April 15, in Conferwell as to the comence Room C of the Davis munity … I am very University Center located on proud to see our stuthe Rio Grande campus. dents working to“Monitoring your personal gether to foster optihealth is very important, and mum health for all this event gives everyone conwho attend.” venient access to screenings and information that leads to DR. DONNA MITCHELL, Dean, improved quality of life,” said Health & Behavioral Amy McKenzie, a senior Sciences, School of Allied Health Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) student at Rio Grande. “It’s amazing to see how the community and university come together each year to create an event that truly benefits everyone.” Free screenings offered at the Health Fair included total cholesterol, nonfasting blood glucose and blood pressure. Also available free to fair attendees were Zumba lessons from Deb Adkins and massages from Mark Hasseman of The Kneaded Touch Massage Therapist. Attendees were also eligible for a variety of door prizes ranging from tickets to Kings Island and the Cincinnati Zoo to restaurant gift cards, 31 bags, a blood pressure cuff, glucometers, gas cards and much more. More than 30 door prizes were awarded during the fair. The Health Fair was hosted by Rio’s BSN and Community Health students. For the BSN students, it served as the culmination of their senior capstone course. “I think it gives us a good perspective. It’s a different kind of nursing,” McKenzie said. “A lot of it is about management, coming together as a group and working effectively. I think it’s made me a better nurse, and increased my awareness of caring for a community as a whole rather than just taking care of one patient.” Outside vendors scheduled to participate included: Abbyshire Place, Arbors at Gallipolis, Area Agen“Monitoring your per- cy on Aging, Beauti Control, Diles Hearing, Edgewood sonal health is very im- Manor, FACTS Drug PrevenFamily Oxygen and Medportant, and this event tion, ical Equipment, Family Senior gives everyone conven- Care Jackson, Gallia County Department and WIC, ient access to screenings Health Gallia Jackson Meigs Board of and information that Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health, Genesis Oxyleads to improved quality gen, Holzer Center for Cancer Holzer Geri-Psych Unit, of life … It’s amazing to Care, Holzer Home Care, Holzer see how the community Wellness Program, Kneaded Massage, Medi Home and university come to- Touch Care, Paramount Beauty gether each year to create School, Planned Parenthood, Social Security Adan event that truly bene- ResCare, ministration, Southern Ohio fits everyone.” Medical Center Wellness and Nutrition, University of Rio Grande Health Services, UniAmy McKenzie, a senior Bachelor versity of Rio Grande Nursing of Science in Nursing (BSN) students, University of Rio student at Rio Grande. Grande Psychology Club, Veteran’s Services Office of Jackson, Walmart Vision Center, the YMCA and more. “I believe the Rio Health Fair provides an excellent service to students, faculty and staff, as well as to the community,” said Dr. Donna Mitchell, College of Health & Behavioral Sciences Dean. “I am very proud to see our students working together to foster optimum health for all who attend.” Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 9 Graduating Classes Of Allied Health Students 2014 Diagnostic Medical Sonography Graduation, Pinning DMS STUDENTS — Front Row, Left to Right: Jodi Simmons, Molly Williams, Jillian Wooldridge, Elizabeth Tackett, Luke Taylor, Jeremy Bartley; Back Row, Left to Right: Taylor Long, Kelsey Griffith, Abigail Adams, Olivia Boone, Emilie Sigler, Kari Eisnaugle; Not Pictured: Danielle Brannon; Bachelor Graduates Not Pictured: Renee Davis, Shelby Malone, Amy Martin, Katelyn Fisher, Kristen Eblin. The pinning ceremony for Diagnostic Medical Sonography graduates will be held in August. The students will walk with Rio Grande’s 2014 graduating class on May 10. The pinning ceremony comes in August at the end of summer school when the students do their last clinical rotation. Their pinning ceremony will be held on Friday, August 1, at 6:30 p.m., in the Davis University Center, Conference Room C. Radiologic Technology Graduates (Right) RAD's Pinning Ceremony will be held Tuesday, May 6, at 6:30 p.m., in Bob Evans Farms Hall, Room 118; RAD students: Front Row, Left to Right: Heather Graman, Tia Wallace, Amanda Williams, Jocelyn George; Back Row-Left to Right: Emily Burnham, Ginger Brown, Robert Ray, Jared Bartley. Respiratory Therapy Graduates (Below) RCP's pinning will be held on Wednesday, May 7, at 6:00 p.m., in Bob Evans Farms Hall, Room 111. RCP Students: Front Row, Left to Right: Krystal Hively, Shameca Armstrong, Jessie Nixten; Back Row, Left to Right: Chris Scherfel, Justin Collins, Alisha VanAtta, Whitney Patrick, John Mount, Corey Hutton. “Rio Grande students enjoy an educational experience that is both challenging and invigorating … Our graduates are highly sought after by Allied Health employers in a field that is very much in demand and extremely rewarding on so many levels.” —Vicki Crabtree, Chair, School of Allied Health The Pinning Ceremony for 2014 ADN and BSN students will be held on Friday, May 9, at 7:00 p.m., in the Fine Arts Auditorium. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 10 Signals Special Report Students Walk For Cystic Fibrosis First And Second Year Respiratory Students From Buckeye Hills, Rio Grande Sponsor Event First and second year Respiratory Therapy students from Buckeye Hills Career Center, Rio Grande Community College, and The University of Rio Grande sponsored a Cystic Fibrosis Walk on Sunday March 30,at the Gallipolis City Park. In the 1950s, few children with cystic fi- brosis lived to attend elementary school. Today, advances in research and medical treatments have further enhanced and extended life for children and adults with CF. Many people with the disease can now expect to live into their 30s, 40s and beyond.” Respiratory students at the Cystic Fibrosis Walk while working registering the walkers Krystal Hively (second year student) and Megan Hayslip (first year student). Shane Collins, second year Respiratory student, grilling at the food station during the Cystic Fibrosis Walk at Gallipolis City Park. Shameca Armstrong, a second year Respiratory student, working a station during the sunny spring day during the Cystic Fibrosis Walk at Gallipolis City Park. “What Is Cystic Fibrosis? Cystic fibrosis is an inherited chronic disease that affects the lungs and digestive system of about 30,000 children and adults in the United States (70,000 worldwide). A defective gene and its protein product cause the body to produce unusually thick, sticky mucus that: · clogs the lungs and leads to life-threatening lung infections; and · obstructs the pancreas and stops natural enzymes from helping the body break down and absorb food. The first and second year students attending Mark Rinehart and Buckeye Hills Career Melinda Clonch, both first year Res- Center, Rio Grande Community College, and the piratory students University of Rio Grande working at the in the Respiratory Therafood station during py program sponsored the the Cystic Fibrosis Cystic Fibrosis walk on Walk. Sunday March 30, 2014. Marty Arms and Bethany Lidel, both first year Respiratory students, painted faces during the Cystic Fibrosis Walk. Above: Miranda Holter, a first year Respiratory student, working at the Bounce House station at Gallipolis City Park during the Cystic Fibrosis Walk, sponsored by the Respiratory students. At Right: Alisha VanAtta, Whitney Patrick and Corey Hutton, all second year Respiratory students, working at every station during the Cystic Fibrosis Walk at Gallipolis City Park. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 11 Signals Feature www.ted.com: Ideas Worth Spreading In Short, Powerful Talks TED began in 1984 as a conference where Technology, Entertainment and Design converged, and today covers almost all topics — from science to business to global issues — in more than 100 languages. Meanwhile, independently run TEDx events help share ideas in communities around the world. TED (Technology, Entertainment, The TED main conference is held Design) is a global community, wel- annually in Vancouver, British Cocoming people from every discipline lumbia and its companion TEDActive and culture who seek a deeper under- is held in Whistler. In 2014, both standing of the conferences world. moved to British A Website Students “We believe Columbia from May Actually Find Useful passionately in Long Beach and the power of Palm Springs, ideas to change attitudes, lives and, California respectively. ultimately, the world,” the TED webTED events are also held throughsite proclaims. out North America and in Europe and “On TED.com, we're building a Asia, offering live streaming of the clearinghouse of free knowledge talks. They address a wide range of from the world's most inspired think- topics within the research and pracers — and a community of curious tice of science and culture, often souls to engage with ideas and each through storytelling. The speakers are other, both online and at TED and given a maximum of 18 minutes to TEDx events around the world, all present their ideas in the most innoyear long.” vative and engaging ways they can. TED was founded in 1984 as a one- Past presenters include Bill Clinton, off event. The annual conference be- Jane Goodall, Malcolm Gladwell, Al gan in 1990, in Monterey, California. Gore, Gordon Brown, Richard Daw[4] TED's early emphasis was technol- kins, Bill Gates, Bono, Google ogy and design, consistent with its founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, origins in the Silicon Valley. and many Nobel Prize winners. AS OF JANUARY 2014, over 1,600 talks are available free online. By January 2009 they had been viewed 50 million times. In June 2011, the viewing figure stood at more than 500 million, and on Tuesday, November 13, 2012, TED Talks had been watched one billion times worldwide, reflecting a still growing global audience. TED's current curator is the British former computer journalist and magazine publisher Chris Anderson. Since June 2006, the talks have been offered for free viewing online, under Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivs Creative Commons license, through TED.com. As of January 2014, over 1,600 talks are available free online. By January 2009 they had been viewed 50 million times. A Ted.Com Example: The Psychology Of Evil other nations in the middle of war. In an experiment with the United States military on the night shift of Tier 1-A, the interrogation hold. The soldiers were told to do whatever they wanted and Zimbardo shows many graphic and disturbing images of how the people were treated. Zimbardo is wellknown for his psychological studies of how people can become “evil” when given the right amount of power – and, this experiment is no different. He then refers back to Milgram’s study of good, normal people giving other normal people a “lethal electric shock.” Zimbardo talks about the Lucifer Affect when he speaks about the incident in the Guyana jungle in 1978 when Pastor Jim Jones convinced a group of people to commit mass suicide. Zimbardo then PHILIP ZIMBARDO is well-known for his psychological studies of how people speaks about his can become “evil” when given the right amount of power. He discusses his own own 1971, Pris1971 Prisoner and Guard experiment. By Daniel Fraser Signals Staff Writer In this video lecture, https://www.ted.com/talks/ philip_zimbardo_on_the_psychology_of_evil, famous psychologist Philip Zimbardo, well known for his Stanford Prison Experiment in 1971, speaks about the dif“If you give people ferences between good and evil. power without overZimbardo explains sight, it's a prethat evil is the exercise of power: to in- scription for tentionally harm peo- abuse.” ple psychologically, – Philip Zimbardo to hurt people physically, to destroy people mortally, and to commit crimes against humanity. Zimbardo continues his discussion by giving an example of how the U.S. army treats people from oner and Guard experiment. Zimbardo ends his discussion on a positive note saying that heroes can be made in the same way that villains are. “The key to her- “And more importantly, that line between good and evil -oism is two things. A: you've which privileged people like to got to act when think is fixed and impermeaother people are ble, with them on the good passive. B: you side, and the others on the bad have to act socio side -- I knew that line was -centrically, not movable, and it was permeaegocentrically.” ble.” He tells the – Philip Zimbardo audience that we may only be given one chance to be a hero, whether we take it or not is up to us, but if we don’t, we will always remember the time when we COULD have been a hero, but chose to follow evil. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 12 Signals Feature FIRE Works To Protect Student Rights On Campuses Organization Focuses On Free Speech, Legal Equality, Due Process, Religious Liberty, Sanctity Of Conscience cannot happen properly when students or faculty members fear punishment for expressing views that might be unpopular with the public at large or disfavored by university administrators.” “Nevertheless, freedom of speech is under contin- THE CORE MISSION of FIRE is to protect the unprotected and educate the public uous threats at many of and communities of concerned Americans about the threats to these rights on AmeriAmerica’s campuses, ca’s campuses --- and educate students about the means to preserve them. pushed aside in favor of politics, comfort, or simply a desire those individuals facing rights viola- Americans can be secured only to avoid controversy. tions, but also for the millions of oth- through the establishment of fair proAs a result, speech codes dictating er students affected by the culture of cedures and with a consciousness that what may or may not be said, “free censorship within our institutions of all are equal in the eyes of the law. speech zones” confining free speech higher education. Yet on many campuses, the group to tiny areas of campus, and adminisIn addition to the defense of specif- alleges, the accused face “kangaroo trative attempts to punish or repress ic individuals and groups, FIRE courts” that lack fair procedures, in speech on a case-by-case basis are works across the nation and in all which the political viewpoint or insticommon today in academia,” organi- forms of media to empower campus tutional interests of the “judges” zation argues. activists, reform restrictive policies, greatly affect the outcomes of trials. Fire states, “The First Amendment and inform the public about the state The accused are often charged with to the United States Constitution is of rights on our campuses. no specific offense, given no right to the part of the Bill of Rights that exReligious liberty protects the right face their accusers, and sentenced pressly prohibits the United States to follow the faith of ones choice or with no regard for fairness or conCongress from making laws to follow no faith at all. According to sistency. “respecting an establishment of reli- the FIRE, “Religious liberty is a corA generation of students is being gion,” prohibiting the free exercise of nerstone of our nation and is the very taught the wrong lessons about jusreligion, infringing freedom of first freedom guaranteed to Ameritice and facing the ruinous consespeech, infringing freedom of the cans by the Bill of Rights.” quences for their personal, academic, press, limiting the right to peaceably Yet on many college and university and professional lives as a result. Stuassemble, or limiting the right to peti- campuses, the right to associate on dents must come to know that justice tion the government for a redress of the basis of religious belief and even means more than merely the enforcegrievances.” the right to express those beliefs is ment of the will of the powerful and The Fourteenth Amendment lets the under attack. the suppression of the views of the protections of the First Amendment Under the guise of powerless. extend to state governments and pub- “nondiscrimination” policies, reliFreedom of conscience means the lic university campuses. gious groups are often told that they right to be free to think and believe as FIRE says it defends the fundamen- may not choose the membership or one will without the imposition of tal rights of tens of thousands of stu- leadership of their groups using reli- official coercive power over those dents and faculty members on the na- gious criteria. beliefs. tion’s Other students who merely express Liberty cannot exist when people campuses religious beliefs in public are conare forced to conform their thoughts while demned and even punished for “hate and expression to an official viewsimulta- speech” or “intolerance.” FIRE’s cas- point, FIRE asserts. Differences of neously es dealing with religious liberty dis- opinion are the natural byproducts of reaching play our commitment to defending a vibrant, free society. millions America’s religious pluralism by pro- At many of the nation’s colleges on and tecting students’ rights to express and universities, however, students off cam- their views and to associate around are expected to share a single viewpus shared beliefs. point on hotly debated matters like through The right to due process refers to the meaning and significance of dieducation the idea that governmental authorities versity, the definition of social jusand out- must provide fair, unbiased, and equi- tice, and the impermissibility of “hate reach. In table procedures when determining a speech.” case after person’s guilt or innocence. The same Mandatory “diversity training,” in case, principle applies to judicial hearings which students are instructed in an FIRE on college campuses. Those campus- officially-approved ideology, is combrings es must provide fair and consistent mon. Foundation for Individual about fa- procedures for the accuser and the Rights in Education states “Some inaccused, if they care about the justice stitutions have enacted policies that THE ORGANIZATION ASSERTS that freedom of speech is a vorable resoluand accuracy of their findings. require students to speak and even fundamental American freedom and a human right, and there’s tions not FIRE explains to students that his- share approved attitudes on these no place that this right should be more valued and protected only for tory has taught that the rights of all matters or face disciplinary charges.” than America’s colleges and universities. Compiled By Cydnie Few Signals Staff Writer The mission of Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is to defend and sustain individual rights at America’s colleges and universities, according to the FIRE website. The foundation asserts, “These rights include freedom of speech, legal equality, due process, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience— the essential qualities of individual liberty and dignity.” The core mission of FIRE is to protect the unprotected and educate the public and communities of concerned Americans about the threats to these rights on America’s campuses --- and educate students about the means to preserve them. University of Pennsylvania professor Alan Charles Kors and Boston civil liberties attorney Harvey Silverglate founded FIRE in 1999. They decided develop their mission after the overwhelming response to their 1998 book, “The Shadow University: The Betrayal Of Liberty On America’s Campuses.” The organization asserts that freedom of speech is a fundamental American freedom and a human right, and there’s no place that this right should be more valued and protected than America’s colleges and universities. “A university exists to educate students, and does so by acting as a ‘marketplace of ideas’ where ideas strive.” According to FIRE, “The intellectual vitality of a university depends on this competition —something that Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 13 Signals State/National College News Sexual Assault Task Force Issues Recommendations To Colleges, Universities Rory Gerberg, a graduate student Source: WhiteHouse.Gov A White House task force on sexu- and advocate at Harvard University, al assault recommended actions Tues- said that while the task force recomday, April 29, that colleges and uni- mendations will play a central role in versities should take to protect vicdetermining how universities deal tims and inform the public about the with sexual assaults, they only go so magnitude of the far. problem, such as "As students, it A new website, notalone.gov, will be our reidentifying confidential victim's ad- will post enforcement actions sponsibility to vocates and conand offers information to vic- put pressure on ducting surveys to tims about how to seek local our university better gauge the help and information about administrations frequency of sexual to ensure these filing a complaint. assault on their recommendacampuses. tions are put into The recommendapractice," Gertions stem from a 90-day review by berg said. the task force that President Barack Molly Corbett Broad, president of Obama created after his administra- the American Council on Education, tion heard complaints about the poor said her organization representing treatment of campus rape victims and college and university presidents welthe hidden nature of such crimes. comed the chance to collaborate with The task force also promised great- the government on handling sexual er transparency. A new website, no- assaults, "which the task force notes talone.gov, will post enforcement ac- is a 'complicated, multidimensional tions and offers information to vicproblem with no easy or quick solutims about how to seek local help and tions." information about filing a complaint. Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, president "Colleges and universities can no at Kalamazoo College in Michigan longer turn a blind eye or pretend that and the immediate past chair of the rape and sexual assault doesn't occur National Association of Independent on their campus," Vice President Joe Colleges and Universities, said there's Biden said in announcing the results room for improvement in how colof the task force's work. lege campuses and communities hanAdvocates praised the rare, highdle sexual assault cases. She said colprofile attention being given to the lege presidents will have to review issue, even as they acknowledged that the recommendations to determine much of the action required will still what works best in their particular need to come from college adminis- situation. trators. "If you ask a president what keeps Lisa Maatz, vice president for gov- them up at night, more than anything ernment affairs with the American it's the safety of our students," Wilson Association of University Women, -Oyelaran said. said the "smart schools" will take the On the same day, the Education Derecommendations and adopt them. partment issued "questions and an- swers" that spelled out to colleges and universities and K-12 schools how to handle circumstances under Title IX, which prohibits gender discrimination at schools that receive federal funds. The 1972 Title IX law is better PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA signs a memorandum known for creating a task force to respond to campus rapes during an guaranteeing event for the Council on Women and Girls in the East girls equal access to sports, Room of the White House in Washington. The Obama adbut it also reg- ministration is taking steps to help colleges and universiulates institu- ties measure the magnitude of sexual assaults on their tions' handling campuses and provide better protections for victims. A of sexual vio- White House task force on sexual assault recommended in a report released April 29 that schools identify trained, lence and inconfidential victim's advocates. creasingly is being used by victims who say their —Straight, gay, lesbian, bisexual school failed to protect them. and transgender students are all proAmong the directives: tected and a school must resolve —A victim's sexual history cannot "same sex" violence in the same way be brought up in a judicial hearing it does for all such complaints. unless it involves the alleged perpeIn its report, the task force said the trator and that those working in onJustice Department will help develop campus sexual assault centers can training programs in trauma care for generally talk to a survivor in confi- college officers and assess different dence. models for schools to use to adjudi—A school is required to process cate such cases, since some sexual complaints of alleged sexual violence assault survivors are wary of a legal that happened off campus to deterprocess that can expose them to pomine whether it occurred in the con- tentially painful or embarrassing text of an education-related activity. questions by students or staff. —In a K-12 setting, when a school While 1 in 5 female students is aslearns that a teacher or other employ- saulted, the White House said the reee has sexually harassed a student, it view was also about protecting male is responsible for taking "prompt and victims and engaging men in discuseffective" steps. sions about preventing such assaults. Cedarville Dumps Adjunct For ‘Electile Dysfunction’ Campaign Ad Speaker, accusing him of not Full text of the Winteregg ad against Speaker John Boehner Source: Internet Web Sites A cleverly raunchy web ad progoing far enough to stymie Voiceover: "You make a great team. It's been that way since the duced by Speaker of the House John President Barack Obama or day you met. But your electile dysfunction? It could be a question of Boehner's conservaeven stand blood flow." Statement from Cedarville: tive challenger J.D. up to the "Sometimes when a politician has been in DC too long, it goes to " “ J.D. Winteregg has been an adWinteregg has cost more mod- his head, and he just can't seem to get the job done. junct professor of French for the erate memhim his teaching "Used on a daily basis, Winteregg in Congress will help you every past three years. He instructed bers of his job. time the moment is right to have your voice heard at the federal levone online class each semester own party. Winteregg, 32, el. When using Winteregg, it's important to note that the borders but last week concluded his has lost his position It casts will be secured, Second Amendment rights protected, Obamacare Winteregg teaching responsibilities. He is Boehner as as an adjunct and Planned Parenthood will be defunded, and common sense will be French instructor at not scheduled to teach any future a Washing- used in solving the nation's problems. classes at Cedarville University. ton insider Cedarville Univer"Other signs of electile dysfunction may include extreme skin discoloration, the Cedarville University does not who has sity, a small Chrisinability to punch oneself out of a wet paper bag, or maintain a spine in the face of tian school 25 miles engage in partisan politics and gone soft liberal opposition... smoking, and golf. holds a high regard for display- on his valeast of Dayton, "If you have a Boehner lasting longer than 23 years, seek immediate medical ating Christian values in the com- ues after Ohio, over a viral tention. Winteregg, because Boehner shouldn't count his chickens before they munity. When faculty or staff too much attack ad that parohatch." dies a Cialis erectile members participate in political time in Boehner: "It's boner." conversations, interviews, adver- D.C., and dysfunction mediWinteregg: "I'm J.D. Winteregg, and I approve this message. But I don't golf." cation commercial. tisements, or endorsements, they even pokes The video, "When are doing so as individual citi- fun at the zens. Mr. Winteregg in his recent speaker's last name tion. the Moment is Mark Weinstein. political campaign video did not Right," was warmly and his notoriously "Cedarville University does not enThe primary election pitting Winrepresent the views or values of bold tan. received by a tea gage in partisan politics and holds a teregg against Boehner is scheduled Cedarville University." party wing of the A Cedarville high regard for displaying Christian for May 6. Boehner, who became GOP that has been University spokes- values in the community," said Cespeaker in 2011, has represented the deeply critical of Boehner's tenure as man confirmed Winteregg's termina- darville public relations director Ohio 8th since 1991. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 14 Signals Special Report Related Stories Next Page The University of Rio Grande’s Theatre Department presented Rio Grande in Retrospect: A TalkRock Evening with Abbie Hoffman & the Rio Grande 41, a student project written and directed by Luke Lawrence that explores Vietnam War protests and other student/ campus demonstrations during the late 1960s. Davis Library Trips Back To 1969 Program Focuses On Student Activism, Protest At Rio Grande Source: Amy Wilson, Davis Library Reference Outreach Specialist In keeping with the year’s National Library Week (NLW) theme Lives Change @ Your Library, the Friends of the Davis Library presented a speTHE FRIENDS of the Davis Li- cial event that exambrary presented a special event that examined certain life chang- ined certain ing moments and activism during life changthe Vietnam era of the late 1960s. ing moments and activism during the Vietnam era of the late 1960s — Steve Free, Vietnam War veteran and awardwinning singersongwritermusician, performed a tribute to the legendary Pete Seeger, whose work playing and collecting folk music from around the world influenced the development of Rock ’n Roll, as well as the American folk music revival of the 1960s. those decisions to support and go to war, as well as those choices to challenge the system through protest. On Saturday, April 12, on the Davis Library’s Main Floor, Steve Free, Vietnam War veteran and award-winning singer-songwriter-musician, performed a tribute to the legendary Pete Seeger, whose work playing and collecting folk music from around the world (including Appalachia) influenced the development of Rock ’n Roll, as well as the American folk music revival of the 1960s, which is associated with both the civil rights and anti-war movements taking place at that time. Following the musical program, the University of Rio Grande’s Theatre Department presented Rio Grande in Retrospect: A Talk-Rock Evening with Abbie Hoffman & the Rio Grande 41, a student project written and directed by Luke Lawrence that explores Vietnam War protests and other student/campus demonstrations during the late 1960s. Abbie Hoffman, famous political activist and author of Steal this Book and Woodstock Nation: A TalkRock Album, visited Rio Grande in 1969 and helped students stage protests outside Davis Library. This NLW event is part of Our War, an oral history project examining the impact of the Vietnam War on the local Ohio Appalachian region. Remembrances from veterans, Rio Grande alumni and members of the community are being collected and preserved. Started in fall 2013, the project will be included on the Ohio River Tales (ohiorivertales.rio.edu) site. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 15 Signals Special Report Davis Library Trips Back To 1969: The Key Players Program Focuses On Student Activism, Protest At Rio Grande Abbie Hoffman: More than 40 years ago, social activist and politician Abbie Hoffman paid a visit to the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College to meet with students and faculty. Hoffman was a prominent national figure in the 1960s and 1970s, and now a Rio Grande student has researched Hoffman’s visit to campus and has created a theatrical production based on the visit. Lucas Lawrence, a sophomore from PatriAbbot Howard Hoffman ot, worked on the proBorn: Nov. 30, 1936 ject with Greg Miller, Died: April 12, 1989 Ph.D., director of culOccupation: Writer, tural advancement at Activist, Psychologist, Rio Grande. Speaker. In 1969, Hoffman was in Ohio for a student rally at Antioch College, Miller explained. Some Rio Grande students attended the rally, and then invited the social activist back to Rio Grande. Hoffman agreed to come to campus with the students, and then spent the night at Rio Grande. Lawrence has read about Hoffman’s visit to campus, and he consulted with alumni and area residents who met Hoffman during his time at Rio Grande. His goal was to get a sense of what students, faculty and area residents thought of Hoffman during his time on campus. Armed with the information he gathered, Lawrence turned the stories from alumni and area residents into a theatrical production. The University of Rio Grande’s Theatre Department presented Rio Grande in Retrospect: A TalkRock Evening with Abbie Hoffman & the Rio Grande 41, on April 12. The visit to campus made an impression on Hoffman, as he mentions it in his book, “Woodstock Nation,” and it likely made an impression on several Rio Grande alumni and area residents. Rio Grande has recently been able to successfully create several other theatrical productions in this manner. The show, “That Was Bob,” for example, is based on stories from family members and friends of the late Bob Evans. Hoffman Quotes: “The only way to support a revolution is to make your own.” “I believe in compulsory cannibalism. If people were forced to eat what they killed, there would be no more wars.” “Sacred cows make the tastiest hamburgers.” “Every rock or molotov cocktail thrown should make a very obvious political point. Random violence produces random propaganda results. Why waste even a rock?” Steve Free: Steve Free is an internationally acclaimed award winning singer/songwriter/recording artist. On Saturday, April 12, on the Davis Library’s Main Floor, Steve Free, Vietnam War veteran and award-winning singer-songwriter-musician, performed a tribute to the legendary Pete Seeger, whose work playing and collecting folk music from around the world (including Appalachia) influenced the development of Rock ’n Roll, as well as the American folk music revival of the 1960s, which is associated with both the civil rights and antiwar movements taking place at that time. The winner of numerous Music Steve Free Industry Awards including 9 ASCAP AWARDS, a Platinum Record and a GRAMMY nomination he has charted over 30 Pete Seeger’s contribution to folk music, both in terms of its revival and survival, cannot songs on the National & International, Americana, Country & Billboard Charts, including 15 #1 songs, be overstated. With the possi- while remaining one of Music's Top Folk Artist both in the U.S and in Europe. ble exception In 1996 he was named International Independent of Woody Guthrie, Seeger Recording Artist of the Year; in 2008 he won the Governor’s Award as the #1 Artist in his home state is the greatest of Ohio and in 2009 was honored by The Kentucky influence on State Senate for his musical contributions to Appalafolk music of the last century. chia. He is an Ohio Arts Council and Midwest Arts Born in New Council “Ohio Artist On Tour.” York City, he In 2000 he received a lifetime achievement award was the son of PETE SEEGER: banjo, from Airplay International in Nashville for his decmusicologist guitar, mandolin, vocals; ades of international airplay. May 3, 1919 – Jan. 27, 2014 Charles Seeger. His song ‘SEIGE AT LUCASVILLE’, about the He took up the banjo in his teens and in 1938, at the age of 19, 1993 Ohio prison riot was filmed by CBS TV's 48 assisted noted folk archivist and field recorder Hours in 1996 and his song OUR HOMETOWN is featured in the PBS Documentary ‘BEYOND Alan Lomax on his song-collecting trips THESE WALLS.’ through the American South. In 2009 he was honored by being named an OffiHe soon began performing on banjo, guitar and vocals. In 1940, he formed a highly politi- cial “Ohio Treasure.” To date in 2014, he has performed on PBS, NPR cized folk trio, the Almanac Singers, which and THE NASHVILLE NETWORK and been fearecorded union songs and antiwar anthems. tured in The AFM International Magazine, GTE MuThey toured the country, performing at union sic Magazine in Nashville and numerous other music halls for gas money, and recorded three alindustry magazines and newspaper articles. bums. Woody Guthrie joined in 1941. The Almanac Singers broke up with the advent of World War II. After a short stint in the army, Seeger formed the Weavers in 1948: a popular concert attraction who were at one point America’s favorite singing group. During the communist witch-hunts of the early Fifties, however, the Weavers were blacklisted, resulting in canceled concert dates and the loss of their recording contract with Decca Records. Under congressional subpoena to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Seeger asserted his First Amendment rights, scolding the committee, “I am not going to answer any questions as to my associations, my philosophical or my religious beliefs, or how I voted in any election or any of these private affairs. I think these are very improper questions for any American to be www.stevefree.com asked.” Pete Seeger Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 16 Entertainment Is That An Ark I See? Crowe Portrays Noah As An action Hero “My father said that one day, if man continued in his ways, the Creator would annihilate this world...” On the way to see Methuselah, they come across a place where people had been killed and their belongings scavThe 2014 film Noah is an amazingly enged through. This is where they inspirational film. Directed by Darren meet and take in a little girl named Aronofsky, Noah is based (some ar- Ila, who was so badly hurt that she gue too loosely based) on the Biblical was not going to able to bear chilaccount of the building of Noahs Ark. dren. After taking Ila in, Noah and his This action packed drama stars sever- family are chased by Tubal-Cain’s army. al well-known actors. The legendary Russell Crowe plays the part of Noah; “Noah” is a mod- They run through a Jennifer Connelly portrays Nammeh, ern blockbuster, dark rocky who is Noahs wife. The remaining chock full of the place cast members include Ray Winstone, visual effects audi- where the Logan Lerman, and Emma Watson. ences expect from fallen anThe movie opens with Noah as a young boy watching the killing of his modern block- gels father by a man named Tubal-Cain, busters: flash-cut known as who is played by Winstone. The film nightmares and the Watchers then moves years ahead and introduchallucinations, take them es the adult prophecies and old in. The Noah with wise men, predic- Watchers his wife, and their three tions of apocalypse were sons named and a savior's rise, forced by Shem, Ham, computer- the Creator to live and Japheth. generated mon- on Earth Noah starts sters with ga- as stone to have lumphing feet and creatures, weird, but deep voices, because very vivid dreams; bebrawny men they disocause of this punching and stab- beyed the Cinema he takes his bing each other. Creator and befamily on a By Cydnie cause they journey to helped humans after they had been visit his banned form the Garden of Eden. Hugrandfather, Methuselah. mans tied to kill and enslave the Watchers, but thanks to Methuselah they escaped. Methuselah gives Noah a seed from the Garden of Eden, and Noah plants it in the ground. Moments later a forest grows; a stream of water that extends over the world appears. Noah is proud to tell everyone that the trees are going to be used for the wood to build an ark. Noah and his family, supported by the Watchers, start on the ark right away. Eight years later the ark is almost fully completed. Two pairs of different animals came to the ark each day. The animals are put to sleep by incense that Noah makes. Later, Noah tries to find three wives for his sons at a nearby camp where people are trying to survive with limited amount of food. Seeing this, Noah is now “NOAH” is writer-director Darren Ar- truly convinced that the Creator onofksy's interpretation of the story of wants all the humans gone, beNoah and the flood. He's made a few yond nonexistence. As this is gochanges. ing on, Nammeh asks MethuseBy CYDNIE FEW Signals Staff Writer HE NEW MOVIE " “Noah,” director Darren Aronofsky's $130 million epic retelling of the story of Noah's Ark and the Great Flood, carries this advisory: " While artistic license has been taken, we believe that this film is true to the essence, values and integrity of a story that is a cornerstone of faith for millions of people worldwide." lah for a favor. Ila is given the gift to bear children by Methuselah. TubalCain and the people start to run towards the ark but the Watchers fight them off. The Watches soon die but they fly to Heaven for helping and sacrificing their lives. The flood washes over everyone, however, Tubal-Cain has made it on the ark by breaking into it, Ham discovers him and is friendly. Ila finds out that she is pregnant, and months later the rain stops. Noah finds out and goes mad; he says that if the child is a boy, he can live but if the child is a girl, he will have to kill her to please the Creator’s wishes. When Ila delivers, she gives birth to twin girls. Tubal-Cain tries to attack Noah, but the ark hits a mountain and TubalCain dies. Noah then searches for Ila and the twin babies. Just as he is about to kill them, he feels love for them and spares their lives. When they finally find land, Ham goes off on his own. Noah blesses the family as the new beginning of the human race. They see a rainbow in the sky that covers the whole Earth. The rainbow represents the Creators promise to never destroy the human race with a flood again. This film was very inspirational. I rate this movie a 5 out of 5 stars. The special effects were amazing. Seeing the ark take on the deadly waves had me on the edge of my seat. One thing that caught my attention in this movie was that they never once used the word God. They always said Creator. Even if a person is not religious, this movie has value. RAY WINSTONE plays Noah's nemesis, Tubal-Cain, a descendant of Cain, in “Noah.” THE MOVIE'S ARK was built to the dimensions specified in the Bible. Rio Grande, Ohio Signals Summer 2014 Movie Preview April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 17 Entertainment Buckets Of Blockbusters Rain Down In Theaters This Summer It's that magical time of year again, When Hollywood lets their buckets of blockbusters rain down upon us in all of their glory. Some 50 major films will hit theaters between now and Labor Day; and this year, there's truly a mix with superheroes, revivals, comedies and sequels in store. This season brings superhero blockbusters, animated sequels and even a musical from Clint Eastwood. To help sort out which movies should be on your list over the summer, the Signals staff has previewed some of 2014's must-see summer flicks. And, fittingly, it all begins with a superhero... The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (May 2) Andrew Garfield’s sophomore adventure as the Marvel Comics web-slinger finds Peter Parker facing Electro (Jamie Foxx), while Gwen (Emma Stone) swoons and Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan) gets green (as in, Goblin) with envy. Marc Webb again directs. In this age of superheroes, Spidey is still one of the biggies. Chef (May 9) Over the course of his career, Jon Favreau has alternated passion projects (“Made”) with moneymakers (“Iron Man”). This dramedy has a new ingredient, with Favreau not only writing and directing but starring as a chef who leaves his highprofile restaurant gig for a food truck. Robert Downey Jr., Sofia Vergara and Dustin Hoffman co -star. Neighbors (May 9) In a bit of unexpected casting, Seth Rogen is the responsible suburban dad who — along with wife Rose Byrne — goes ballistic when a hard-partying fraternity moves in across the street. When the frat president (Zac Efron) ups the volume, the battle begins. Directed by Nicholas Stoller (“Get Him to the Greek”). Devil’s Knot (May 9) Atom Egoyan’s dramatization of the “West Memphis Three” case — memorably captured in the “Paradise Lost” documentaries — stars Reese Witherspoon as the mother of a boy killed in 1993; the subsequent arrest and conviction of three teens led to discussions of innocence, guilt and trumpedup evidence. Colin Firth is a private investigator, and Dane DeHaan is one of the young suspects. Godzilla (May 16) Here comes the giant reptile again, stompin’ and chompin’ up cities (San Francisco and New York are on the menu) and again with the world’s worst halitosis. The surprisingly game cast includes Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, David Strathairn and Juliette Binoche. Geez, we’d watch those people in a movie that didn't have Godzilla. The Immigrant (May 16) In the 1920s, a Polish woman (Marion Cotillard) moves to New York to make a better life for herself and her sister — only to have their fortunes changed by a mysterious stranger (Joaquin Phoenix). Can a dashing stage magician (Jeremy Renner) save them? Don’t dashing stage magicians always save people? Million Dollar Arm (May 16) Based-in-truth inspirational sports dramas rarely come with surprises. But director Craig Gillespie (“Lars and the Real Girl”) favors the off-kilter, and it’s unlikely his lead, Jon Hamm, would sign up for generic warm and fuzzies. Hamm plays a desperate agent who heads to India in search of the next great baseball pitcher — by scouting cricket players. Naturally, everyone thinks he’s a madman. X-Men: Days of Future Past (May 23) More than a decade after “X-Men 2,” original series director Bryan Singer returns to one of the most reliable superhero franchises of this century. Almost everyone else is back, too, since the original cast is connecting with their earlier selves: Old Xavier (Patrick Stewart) sends Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) through time to find young Xavier (James McAvoy). Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, Ian McKellen and Halle Berry also suit up. X-cellent. Blended (May 23) Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore reunite as single parents who have to share a suite with their various kids at an African resort. Uh-oh, this sounds suspiciously like a vacation the studio paid for. Maleficent (May 30) Angelina Jolie in that witchy head garb is enough to bring us to this one, the Sleeping Beauty story told from the point of view of the villainness. We see her backstory, of course, and hopefully the way she got the ability to turn into a dragon. Elle Fanning is the dozing honey, Aurora. A Million Ways to Die in the West (May 30) Exactly 40 years after Mel Brooks’ “Blazing Saddles,” Seth MacFarlane (“Ted”) upends the Western once again. The writer-director-producerstar plays a laid-back frontiersman who goes up against a tough gunslinger (Liam Neeson) just to impress the women in his life (Charlize Theron, Amanda Seyfried). And yes, there’s a campfire scene. Don’t like that? Tough beans. Edge of Tomorrow (June 6) Tom Cruise fights aliens — yes, again — only this time, he’s Earth’s fiercest defender in the future, and he keeps dying over and over again as a glitch in a time-travel loop sends him back to the same day. Emily Blunt co-stars. Maybe he can remake “Vanilla Sky” while he’s going back in time. The Fault in Our Stars (June 6) How do you tell a sad story based on a bestselling young adult novel? First you hire Shailene Woodley, who’s just coming off her “Divergent” success, to play a teenage cancer patient. Then you cast her “Divergent” co-star Ansel Elgort as the boy who insists on falling madly in love with her. Tissues recommended. How to Train Your Dragon 2 (June 13) The sequel to the 2010 animated smash, again adapted from Cressida Cowell’s terrifically flavorful kids’ book series, finds an older Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) eager to prove himself worthy of his Viking ancestors and fight for peace in his kingdom. His best ally is again his dragon, Toothless, silent but stalwart as ever. Jimi: All Is By My Side (June 13) OutKast’s Andre Benjamin plays the great Jimi Hendrix in this biopic from writer-director John Ridley, a newly minted Oscar-winner for his script of “12 Years a Slave.” Set in the mid-to-late ’60s, it co-stars Imogen Poots and Hayley Atwell. As Jimi might say, are you experienced? Lullaby (June 13) A young guy (Garrett Hedlund) hears his dad (Richard Jenkins) is taking himself off life support in two days. Father and son attempt to reconnect, as an old love (Amy Adams) comes back into the picture. Jennifer Hudson co-stars. 22 Jump Street (June 13) It’s been a very good year for directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, thanks to the hundreds of millions their “Lego Movie” has already pulled in. Presumably, they’ll bring their sense of snarky silliness to the “21 Jump Street” sequel, too. Undercover buds Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill have graduated to college, but they’re no smarter than they were in high school. But who is? Think Like a Man Too (June 20) Steve Harvey’s nonfiction couples’ chronicle, turned into a hit comedy, begets a sequel. Here, the whole gang (including Michael Ealy, Meagan Good, Jerry Ferrara, Taraji P. Henson and Gabrielle Union) go to Vegas for a wedding. If they made a comedy from a Suze Orman money advice book, we’d be there. Jersey Boys (June 20) Though it shouldn’t really be opening the week after Father’s Day, you can still bring Dad to director Clint Eastwood’s musical biopic of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. Bonus: Even if you take the whole family, it’ll cost less than a single ticket to the popular Broadway show on which the movie is based. (Continued On Page 18) Rio Grande, Ohio Signals Summer 2014 Movie Preview April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 18 Entertainment Buckets Of Blockbusters Rain Down In Theaters This Summer (Continued From Page 17) Third Person (June 20) Liam Neeson, Olivia Wilde, Mila Kunis, James Franco and Adrien Brody are lovers and fighters whose stories play out in New York, Paris and Rome in this movie of interconnected couples. Written and directed by Paul Haggis (“Crash”). Transformers: Age of Extinction (June 27) The title almost sounds like a tease, but as long as Michael Bay keeps raking in the money, Transformers will never die. At least Bay has replaced Shia LaBeouf with Mark Wahlberg, and the robotic Rosie Huntington-Whiteley with up-and-comer Nicola Peltz. As father and daughter, they reignite the war between the Autobots and Decepticons. No ! Things were going so well! Snowpiercer (June 27) In a desolate sci-fi future, a failed globalwarming remedy kills most life on Earth (we bet cockroaches survive, though). The world’s last people travel around on a perpetual-motion train called Snowpiercer, though everything starts to drive them mad — especially that whole worldending thing. Chris Evans, Tilda Swinton and Ed Harris star. Deliver Us From Evil (July 2) A series of supernatural crimes is plaguing Gotham. Who ya gonna call? How about a New York cop (Eric Bana) and an unorthodox priest (Edgar Ramirez). Based on the real-life cases of officer Ralph Sarchie. Olivia Munn co-stars as a woman who ain’t afraid of no ghost. Earth to Echo (July 2) A family adventure about three kids who pick up an odd transmission on their cellphones. Wouldn't you know, it's from a stranded alien. Let's hope these guys saw "E.T.," or at least have iPhone 5's. Tammy (July 2) Melissa McCarthy is out to prove again that what she comes up with, audiences love. Here, she’s a waitress who finds her husband with another woman, ruins her car and gets fired from her job. She decides to stop her run of bad luck by taking her cranky grandma (Susan Sarandon) on a road trip. Written by McCarthy and her husband, Ben Falcone, who also directed. Begin Again (July 4) Known by the more evocative title “Can a Song Save Your Life?” when it was shown at Sundance, this rom-dramedy with music stars Keira Knightley and Mark Ruffalo as singer-songwriters who find their hearts are in tune when they meet in the East Village. Directed by John Carney (“Once”). With Hailee Steinfeld and Catherine Keener. Life Itself (July 4) This documentary about the late film critic and man for all seasons Roger Ebert is for lovers of film and lovers of life. Director Steve James (“Hoop Dreams”) filmed Ebert as cancer was ravaging his body, but as the movie shows, his mind and spirit were as strong as ever. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (July 11) Those damned smarty apes are back, walking upright and emerging as the heroes of this successfully rebooted franchise. Andy Serkis is again chimp leader Caesar. These flicks have somehow found the Forbidden Zone of quality and boxoffice primacy. And So It Goes... (July 11) Rob Reiner’s recent résumé has not unfolded as we’d have liked, coming from the director of “The Princess Bride” and “When Harry Met Sally.” But we’re betting he’s back in fine form for this comedy about an obnoxious realtor (Michael Douglas) who needs help (from Diane Keaton) when he gets stuck with his precocious granddaughter. Boyhood (July 11) One of the big hits of this year’s Sundance was director Richard Linklater’s unique coming-of-age drama about 12 years in the life of a Texas youth (newcomer Ellar Coltrane). Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette play his parents. Actually filmed with the same actors over a dozen years, with emotionally epic results. A Long Way Down (July 11) Pierce Brosnan, Imogen Poots, Toni Collette and Aaron Paul meet cute on a London rooftop on New Year’s Eve: they’re all intent on committing suicide. With that plan called off, they agree to give life another shot for a few weeks. From a Nick Hornby novel. Rosamund Pike, who’ll play the titular “Gone Girl” this fall, co-stars. The Purge: Anarchy (July 18) The lickety-split-here-it-is sequel to last year’s future-set horror thriller finds the neighborhood killing spree happening without Ethan Hawke, star of the last one. Planes: Fire & Rescue (July 18) Rather than being grounded by dismal reviews, last summer’s animated comedy “Planes” made good money — which, of course, is the signal of soaring success in Hollywood. So Dane Cook returns to voice Dusty, the crop duster ready to prove himself as an aerial firefighter. Take off! Jupiter Ascending (July 18) Andy and Lana Wachowski follow up their trippy “Cloud Atlas” with this sci-fi about a woman (Mila Kunis) who discovers she’s a warrior from beyond the stars. Channing Tatum co-stars. Wish I Was Here (July 18) A thirtysomething dad (director Zach Braff) is at a crossroads with family, friends and career. Kate Hudson is his patient wife, and Mandy Patinkin his cranky dad in this Kickstarter-funded flick, Braff’s followup to 2004’s “Garden State.” Hercules (July 25) Brett Ratner hasn’t directed a feature film since 2011’s “Tower Heist,” an uneven callback to ’80s action comedies. And Hercules has already buckled at the box office this year, in Renny Harlin’s January flop, “The Legend of Hercules,” starring Kellan Lutz. But this one stars Duane (The Rock) Johnson, a man with the gift of making Hercules look like Hamlet. Sex Tape (July 25) After 10 years together, a couple with kids (Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz) tries to get zesty again by making their own sex tape. Guess what happens? Yup, it gets seen by other people. Hate it when that happens. Step Up: All In (July 25) The “Step Up” series has delivered diminishing returns with each effort, and this is director Trish Sie’s first time on the floor. At least she has an advantage in the concept: “All-stars” from the other films are reuniting for a battle in Vegas. It’s always nice to see Adam Sevani’s amusing Moose, but we won’t be all in until this franchise secures a cameo from its original all-star, Channing Tatum. Get on Up (Aug. 1) The colorful, musical life of the Godfather of Soul, James Brown, comes to the screen. Chadwick Boseman (“42”) stars, with Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer and Jill Scott co- MARK WAHLBERG takes over as the hero in “Transformers: Age of Extinction,” coming in " June. starring. Tate Taylor (“The Help”) directs. Please, please, please let it be good. What If (Aug. 1) Medical school dropout Daniel Radcliffe and animator Zoe Kazan cross paths and fall in love in this romantic comedy. Because when a doc and a cartoonist fall in love, it can only be funny. We wish them luck, but only one of them seems to have a promising profession. Guardians of the Galaxy (Aug. 1) It’s about time daringly deranged director James Gunn (“Super,” “Movie 43”) got a superhero-size project to call his own. This offbeat Marvel adaptation — in which Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Vin Diesel and a raccoon voiced by Bradley Cooper protect the universe — sounds perfect. It features a surly, heroic raccoon. How could it go wrong? Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Aug. 7) The Turtles return in this live-action adventure, which brings us back to their beginnings with stars Megan Fox and Will Arnett. How did they get so big? Why are they so good at fighting? Will 21stcentury kids even care? What do we do with all those old trading cards? The Two Faces of January (Aug. 8) Kirsten Dunst and Viggo Mortensen are a wealthy American couple traveling through Greece in the 1960s. Oscar Isaac is the con artist who gloms on to them in this version of a Patricia Highsmith novel. Lucy (Aug. 8) Scarlett Johansson is pregnant now, but before having to stay away from action flicks, she made this adventure thriller with director Luc Besson. ScarJo plays a woman working as a drug mule who's captured but turns the tables on her tormentors when she develops powers — thanks to the drugs inside her body. Morgan Freeman co-stars. The Giver (Aug. 15) Hollywood’s love of dystopian dramas continues with this adaptation of Lois Lowry’s novel about a boy (Brenton Thwaites) who must learn all of history’s secrets from an old recluse (Jeff Bridges) with the memory of mankind. Meryl Streep and Katie Holmes co-star. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 19 (Yet To Be Titled) Scheduled Release Date: December 18, 2015 Fans Eagerly Await Next ‘Star Wars’ Installment Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Compiled By The Signals Staff Jedi." Primary Source: starwars.com The screenplay for the upcoming No sooner had production begun Episode VII, according to the saga's of the latest installment, Episode official Web site, begins 30 years VII, than "Star Wars" fever started after the end of spreading like a "Return of the Jedi" plague, with reports and features "a trio of of its similarity to the new young leads original George Lualong with some very cas trilogy, rumors of familiar faces," which new adventures and subtly supports ruexotic locations. mors about the apDisney and Lupearance of some of casfilm have divulged little official STAR WARS: Episode VII the original stars THE SCREENPLAY for the upcoming Episode VII, according to the Harrison Ford (Hans information and will be directed by J.J. some that was even a Abrams (Super 8, Mission: Solo), Mark Hamill saga's official Web site, begins 30 years after the end of “Return of the Jedi” and features “a trio of new young leads along with some very famil(Luke Skywalker) little deceptive. Impossible III, Star Trek) iar faces.” and Carrie Fisher In March they an- and is being scripted by (Princess Leia). nounced that the Abrams and Lawrence Abu Dhabi will shoot of "Star Wars: Kasdan (Raiders of the substitute Tunisia as Episode VII," diWhy Is May The 4th Called Star Wars Day? Lost Ark, The Empire the chosen location rected by J.J. Strikes Back, Return of the Abrams, would begin Jedi). Lucasfilm president for recreating Luke Say "May the 4th Be With You" out loud Skywalker's native at London's Pinand you'll hear the pun that Star Wars fans Kathleen Kennedy, J.J. home planet, Taewood Studios in worldwide have turned into a rallying cry to Abrams, and Bryan Burk May, but on April 2 are producing, with Tom- tooine. proclaim their love of the saga. Adam Driver, the president of Dis- my Harper (Mission: ImIt's the worldwide day to say "May the known for his role in ney Studios, Alan Force be with you" to all, and celebrate the possible - Ghost Protocol, Horn, said the work Jack Ryan, Star Trek Into the HBO series beloved Star Wars story that binds their gal"Girls," will be the had already begun. axy together. Darkness) and Jason new villain of the Horn also said in One of the earliest known records of "May McGatlin (Tintin, War of piece, Variety reportan interview with the 4th" used in popular culture is in 1979, as the Worlds) serving as exed. The Hollywood Re- ecutive producers. John described here by author Alan Arnold while While Disney has porter that they still Williams is returning to he was chronicling the making of The Empire not officially conhadn't completed Strikes Back for Lucasfilm: score Star Wars: Episode firmed that Driver casting due to delays VII. Friday, May 4: “Margaret Thatcher has will actually be the in finishing the won the election and become Britain's first woman prime minister. villain, the producscreenplay, written To celebrate their victory her party took a half page of advertising tion company has officially anby Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan, space in the London Evening News. This message, referring to the day who created "Star Wars: Episode V - nounced that the premiere is schedof victory, was 'May the Fourth Be With You, Maggie. CongratulaThe Empire Strikes Back" and "Star uled for Dec. 18, 2015. tions,' further proof of the extent to which Star Wars has influenced us all." “Once the Internet allowed Star Wars fans around the world to connect with one another, May the 4th soon became a grassroots tradition each year, with fans online and offline proclaiming it "Star Wars Day." While the idea of May the 4th did not start with Lucasfilm, the film company that created Star Wars has fully embraced the spirit of fandom that makes the day so special. The official blog at StarWars.com as well as the official Star Wars social media channels on Twitter and Facebook help spread the word and showcase fan activity. Official Star Wars partners have offered sales, giveaways and ex“MAY THE FOURTH BE WITH YOU” is clusives, and have hosted parties and other activities to mark the day. a rallying cry issued by Star Wars fans May the 4th kicks off a season of celebration, particularly since the around the globe. This pun on “May the month of May has always been important to Star Wars fans. The six Force be With You” has led to fans around the universe celebrating May 4 as Star live-action movies of the Star Wars saga debuted in May (starting Wars Day. Star Wars is an American epic with the original Star Wars on May 25, 1977) and this year, May 25 space opera film series created by George marks the 30th anniversary of Return of the Jedi. The month of May Lucas, right. The first film in the series was includes George Lucas' birthday (May 14, 1944), and has been the originally released on May 25, 1977, and traditional start date of the popular Star Wars Weekends at Walt Disbecame a worldwide pop culture phenomenon. It was followed by two sequels, released at three-year intervals. The original ney World Resort (this year, the fun begins on May 14). series, which introduced viewers to such iconic characters as Darth Vader, above, With the exciting launch of a new trilogy of movies beginning with was then followed by a sequence of three prequels. Since the phrase "May the Force Star Wars: Episode VII coming in the near future, this day to celebe with you" is a famous quote often spoken in the Star Wars films, fans commonly brate the saga and its amazing fans is certain to become even bigger say "May the fourth be with you" on this day. The as-yet-to-be titled Star Wars VII each year. is currently in production. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 20 Entertainment Walking Weekly SPOILER ALERT: This article may contain spoilers for readers who have not watched the most recent season. By Taryn Strawser, Signals Staff Writer Before Being Trapped At Terminus Rick Takes A Bite Out Of Season Finale Season four of AMC’s The Walking Dead may have started off with a whimper, or rather a soft Walker moan, but it ended like the final sound a Walker hears—with a bang! Many viewers were restless with this half of the season. A lot of background information was offered. The third episode of Season Four Part II was entitled “Claimed.” The episode had viewers’ hearts racing from start to finish. Viewers see that Michonne has reconnected with Rick and Carl. Michonne and By Taryn Strawser Carl leave Signals Staff Writer Rick to hunt for supplies. The two, already known to share information back and forth, strike up an unlikely bond. One laughable moment between the two occurs when Michonne makes a tower of “Crazy Cheese” (spray cheese) in her mouth to cheer Carl up. Although it does not work, it does serve as a gateway for discussion. Michonne used to do things such as that to make her young son laugh. As Carl and Michonne clear a house, she answers one question per room. Finally, viewers find out that Michonne had a two-year-old son named Andre. His father was one of her “pets.” Viewers also learn that Michonne was one of the few survivors of her group even though her lover saw her as a weakling. The trip ends with a gruesome discovery: Michonne stumbles through a passage way of rooms to find a bright pink, butterfly and rainbow themed room complete with the non-reanimated corpse of a young girl. This scene was truly gut-wrenching and when combined with the story of Michonne’s son, serves as a reminder that the Zombie Apocalypse effected everyone, even small children. Meanwhile, Rick finds himself in quite the conundrum. The house the trio was staying at is overran by a group of gruff men. Rick, still weakened after his fight with the Governor, is forced to hide under a bed to avoid confrontation. However, in classic Rick Grimes fashion, confrontation cannot be avoided for long. He hides under the bed for an extended amount of time, but never safe, he is spotted by a member of the group. A fight breaks out between two group members over who can nap on the bed above Rick. One group member states he “claimed” the bed and a fight breaks out. The loser ends up on the floor, eye to eye with Rick but is knocked unconscious before he can squeal. Rick finally ninja crawls out from under the bed. He looks for an escape route; when in doubt, look for a bathroom way out! Seeing as nothing can be easy in TWD, Rick walks in on an occupied bathroom. The innocent bathroom goer is suffocated on the john. Before escaping out of the window, Rick cracks the door to insure an instant “Walker Bomb.” After reaching the outside and wondering how he will sneak past the main leader of the pack, Rick hears screams, a sign of Walker Bomb success. He spots Michonne and Carl up DARYL AND BETH get ripthe road and the trio takes off. roaring drunk, swap stories, Also in this episode, Glenn wakes up and flirt. The sexual tension in a truck with Tara. He meets Sargent in this episode is at an all-time Abraham Ford, Rosita, and Dr. Eugene high; especially when Beth Porter. Glenn and the new trio finds out croons, “You’re going to miss that they have different plans for where me when I’m gone Daryl Dixthey should go from the prison. Natural- on.” The two decide to torch ly, Glenn is on the search for his wife the house and the moonshine. Maggie and refuses to give up on her. Flipping the bird at the small The new trio is trying to get to Washshack they walk away, leaving ington, D.C. Dr. Porter supposedly a pile of smoke and ash knows what caused the end of the (where could that go wrong?). world. He has the knowledge needed about the disease. Abraham Ford is bound and de- teach her how to shoot his crossbow. She sees it as termined to deliver the mullet clad scientist safety. unnecessary torture and stabs the Walker. A verbal The next episode (4.12) is the only episode thus dispute follows in which Beth yells that she knows far to center around only two characters. Naturally, when he looks at her he sees “just another dead if the showrunner had to pick any two characters girl.” He breaks down about not being able to save to focus on, one would have to be the infamous, Hershel or keep the group together. Beth rushes to sexy rebel, Daryl Dixon. The other character is his hold him from behind. comrade Beth Greene. Beth and Daryl have been Many tears later, the two get rip-roaring drunk, traveling together since the prison attack. Daryl, swap stories, and flirt. The sexual tension in this hardened by life is on edge with Beth who is deepisode is at an all-time high; especially when pressed by the recent death of her father. Beth croons, “You’re going to miss me when I’m The episode starts in an intimate space. The duo gone Daryl Dixon.” The two decide to torch the are forced to hide from a mini-herd of Walkers by house and the moonshine. Flipping the bird at the jumping in the trunk of a car and spending the small shack they walk away, leaving a pile of night. After safety rises up with the sun, they are smoke and ash (where could that go wrong?). on their way. They stumble upon a formerly ritzy The next episode, “Alone,” opens with a flashcountry club where Beth changes out of her grimy back of Bob. Viewers see what he was like before clothes into a sweet white sweater and yellow top. meeting up with the prison group—he was a loneA vision of innocence, the first words out of Beth’s mouth ly alcoholic. The episode is a filler with the main is that she wants to experience her first alcoholic drink. action taking place between Bob, Sasha, and MagShe finds a half bottle of Peach Schnapps and sits down gie. After an epic, albeit scary fog scene, the trio for a drink. Daryl decides to smash it on the floor and find becomes a pair as Maggie leaves to find Glenn. her a real drink. She leaves a trail of Walkers in her wake, using One mini-herd and one ruined sweater later, Dar- Walker blood to write notes to her husband (all yl and Beth stumble upon an abandoned shack reading “GLENN MEET AT TERMINUS MAGstyle house. The house is GIE”). The group meets back up and Sasha and complete with a moonshine Bob share an awkward kiss. Also, Beth and Daryl distillery. The duo plays a kindle the small embers of a romance at an abangame of “Never Have I Ev- doned funeral home. Daryl cares an injured Beth, er…” Beth insults Daryl by who’s foot was caught in a bear trap, into the assuming he has been in home and shows a strong interest in her until anjail. He calls her out on it, other mini-herd attacks and causes them to sepaadding that at least he had rate. Beth is taken or driving off in a car. Daryl never slit his wrists for at- chases her but eventually collapses in a heap only tention which is exactly to be found by—who else?—the “Claimers.” what she did in Season The next episode, “The Grove” is the most conTwo. troversial episode to date, yet is clearly one of the About the time the insults best episodes ever written. Although a whole artiLIZZIE DOESN’T WANT TO KILL the Walkers because she thinks cle in itself could be dedicated to this episode that they are sick people. She is obsessed with playing with them, claim- start flying, a Walker is heard outside. Daryl roughalone, a summary will suffice. ing them to be her friends. ly grabs Beth and attempt to (Continued On Page 21) Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 21 Entertainment Walking Weekly SPOILER ALERT: This article may contain spoilers for readers who have not watched the most recent season. By Taryn Strawser, Signals Staff Writer Before Being Trapped At Terminus Rick Takes A Bite Out Of Season Finale to shoot Carol because she wants Mi(Continued From Page 20) The grove is a place found by the ka to reanimate. Carol assures her last of the prison group: Tyreese, that she will stay with Mika until she Carol, Lizzie, Mika, and Baby Judith. comes back and will tie her up with After wandering around for many her shoelaces. She convinces Lizzie days, and discussing how differently to leave the baby alone stating that it the two sisters are, the is stupid to kill her group finds a small because she can’t cabin with pecan trees. even walk yet so This where everything she would not techfalls apart. Carol disnically be a Walkcovers that Mika is not er. willing to kill. She beTy and Carol delieves in the good in bate about what to everyone, even Walkdo with Lizzie. She ers. Lizzie on the other admitted to Ty that RICK, WITH A GUN to his hand doesn’t want to she mutilated sevhead watches in terror as a kill the Walkers beeral animals includman is about to rape Carl. All cause she thinks that ing the rat seen straight from the comics— they are sick people. flayed at the prison Rick does the unthinkable. She is obsessed with and she also fed the He rips out the leader of the playing with them, Walkers mice at the Claimers’ throat with his claiming them to be her prison which cause teeth. friends. many pile ups. CarIt is apparent Lizzie is not mentally ol decides to run away with her. She stable. Mika has to tell her to “look at takes Lizzie for a walk and changes the flowers” to calm herself down. her mind. Realizing that Lizzie is a She contemplates letting a Walker danger and would never be allowed bite her, plays chase with a female to be around others, she urges her in a Walker then screams when Carol Of Mice and Men moment to “look at kills the Walker to save her. She says the flowers” before fatally shooting something about knowing what she her in the head. After burying both needs to do, after that incident. small girls, Ty (who now knows and Writers pushed the limit when they accepts that Carol killed a suffering decided to go through with the next Karen while the virus was spreading scene. Taken straight from Ben and at the prison), Carol and the baby set Billy in the comics, when Tyreese out in hopes of refuge. and Carol leave the three girls, Lizzie “Us” served as another filler epidoes the unthinkable. She murders sode. Daryl tries to adjust to life with her little sister. Bloody and not apolo- the “Claimers” who fight and kill getic she is excited because her sister over anything. Glenn and Tara break will soon be back because she did not away from Abraham, Rosita, and Eustab her in the head. She was getting gene in order to find Maggie. They ready to do the same to Baby Judy end up stuck in rubble with Walkers. when the adults arrived. Carol calmly When all hope is lost, Maggie, along talks Lizzie down. Lizzie threatened with Sasha, Bob, and the other three How Does Carol’s Garden Grow? IF VIEWERS THOUGHT CAROL had a zero-tolerance attitude when she killed and burned two bodies back at the prison to stop the spread of a deadly virus, in the episode “The Grove,” she went truly sub-zero. The insanity began when Lizzy stabbed and killed her sister Mika to prove that she would come back to life, leaving Carol to knife Mika’s brain to stop her from coming back as a zombie. She and Tyrese then had to decide what to do with Lizzie, with Carol saying, “We can’t sleep with her and Judith under the same roof. She can’t be around other people.” With that, Carol walked Lizzie outside, told her to “look at the flowers,” and then put a bullet in her brain. Analysis of the episode exploded on the Internet, with some fans adding their own interpretations of “Carol’s Garden.” save the two. The group manages to make their way to Terminus. They are welcomed by a woman grilling meat. The grilling of the meat should have been the first sign of what was to come at Terminus. In THE SEASON ENDS with the group (save for Ty, Carthe Season Fiol, and Baby) being reunited in a locked train cargo car nale, “A,” two simply marked “A.” Rick vows that they have messed with major events the wrong group. occur. The Claimers face off with Rick. In antoes of the eaten. other controversial scene, Daryl is The season ends with the group being beat up and Michonne is held (save for Ty, Carol, and Baby) being captive while Rick, with a gun to his reunited in a locked train cargo car head watches in terror as a man is simply marked “A.” Rick vows that about to rape Carl. All straight from they have messed with the wrong the comics—Rick does the unthinka- group. ble. He rips out the leader of the Many questions arise from the seaClaimers’ throat with his teeth. (Fun son. Where is Beth? If she is alive fact: the ripped throat was raw, will she get with Daryl? What will bloody chicken that Andrew Lincoln Carol think of that? Who else did the bit several times to provide accuraTerminus townspeople eat? This cancy). After killing the others and tor- not be answered by the graphic novturing Carl’s attacker, the foursome els. Although cannibals are menhead to Terminus. tioned (cannibals who, by the way, Terminus turns out to be another started by eating their own children), bad seed like Woodbury. Quickly they only both one character for a picked up on by Rick, viewers learn short amount of time before realizing that the residents of Terminus are in a they are eating tainted meat and are creepy cult. They promise sanctuary killed by Rick. Also, how will the then cannibalize those who enter the group escape the box? Is the Ricktacompound. During a chase scene, it is torship back? easy to see the half eaten bodies Breathless fans anxiously await an(hence the meat on the grill—who swers and count down the days to the many, sadly believe to be Beth) and Season Five premiere in October. As the sacrifice room filled with cult always, The Walking Dead does not sayings, and the names and memen- disappoint. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 22 Signals Sports/Athletics RedStorm Divides Pair With No. 23 Campbellsville Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande upended No. 23 Campbellsville University in the first of two games on Monday, March 31, but the Tigers roared back in the nightcap to earn a split of the Mid-South Conference twinbill with the RedStorm at Rio Softball Park. Rio ran its winning streak to five straight with a 2-1 triumph in the opener, but failed in its attempt to forge a tie with Campbellsville for second place in the MSC standings as the Tigers pulled away for a mercy rule-shortened 8-0 victory in game two. The split left the RedStorm at 15-8 overall and 10-6 in league play. Campbellsville ended the day at 25-9 overall and 12-4 inside the conference. Game one proved to be a pitcher's duel between Rio freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) and Campbellsville's Victoria Decker. Both allowed just five hits. The Tigers took a 1-0 lead in the top of the fifth, taking advantage of the game's only errors to push across an unearned run. Alyssa Barker led off with a single to right and, one out later, moved to second on an opposite field single to left by Kristin Benton. Both runners moved up when Shelby Ray's grounder to third was errored and, on the same play, the throw from first to third trying to catch Barker straying off the third base bag was wild, allowing Barker to score the game's first run. Jones escaped any further damage by retiring Heather Oakley on a grounder back to the circle and Sara Paragon on a grounder to second base. Rio, which had been limited to just one hit and only two baserunners through the first four innings, wasted little time in rebounding from the deficit, though. Junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) led off the home fifth with a single to center, moved to second on a groundout to third by sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) and scored on a triple to left by freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH). One out later, freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) singled to left to plate Kuhn with the go-ahead marker. Jones kept the Tigers scoreless over the final two innings to nail down the win. Sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) added a double in the victory for Rio, while Jones pushed her record to 9-5. Adrean Jordan had two hits in the loss, while Decker suffered her fifth loss in 15 decisions. The nightcap was also a pitcher's duel between Jones and Campbellsville's Taylor Wroe for four innings, but the CampbellsvilleTigers turned things ugly by erupting for five runs in the fifth inning and two sixth inning markers to get a lopsided win. Wroe retired the first 11 batters she faced until Rollins broke up her bid for a perfect game with a two-out single to left in the fourth inning. The RedStorm had just one other baserunner in the game - sophomore Ariel Roder (Parma Heights, OH), who was hit by a pitch to lead off the home fifth inning. Campbellsville scored what proved to be the only run it would need in the third inning when Brittany Rippy reached on a one-out error, moved to second on a wild pitch and scored on a single to left-center by Kristin Benton. Campbellsville lowered the boom by hitting five runs in the fifth, highlighted by a two-run double RIO'S JENNA JONES by Barker, before throws a pitch in the closing out the scorMarch 31 opening game ing in the sixth inning win over No. 23 Campon a two-run single bellsville. by Paragon. Oakley finished 3for-4 with two runs scored, while Paragon had two hits and three RBIs to lead CU offensively. Ray also had two hits and two runs scored. Wroe struck out eight en route to her 10th win in 11 decisions. Jones fell to 9-6 on the season for Rio, allowing eight hits and six runs - four of which were earned - and striking out four in 4-2/3 innings. St. Catharine College Completes Series Sweep Of Rio Baseball all and 3-12 in the conference. Nine of the RedStorm's 12 losses in league play have been by two runs or less. St. Catharine jumped to a 1-0 lead in the second inning of Sunday's opener on an RBI single by Drew Kissel, but Rio tied the game in the home fifth on a two-out, bases-loaded infield single to shortstop by junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico). The deadlock didn't last long, though, as the Patriots scored the goahead markers in the top of the sixth without the benefit of a hit. Pinch-hitter Dominique Guevara drew a leadoff walk from Rio senior reliever Mike Deitsch (Cincinnati, OH) and moved to second when Ty Broady's sacrifice bunt attempt to first base was errored. Harold Diaz bunted both runners into scoring position before Deitsch retired Kissel on a grounder to third for a big second out, but Alfredo Bohorquez' apparent inningending grounder RIO'S CHRIS FORD connects for a second inning sin- to second was gle in the March 30 game two loss to St. Catharine. errored and both Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Visiting St. Catharine College completed a series sweep of the University of Rio Grande, rallying for a game one win and hanging on late for a victory in game two of the March 30 Mid-South Conference baseball doubleheader at Bob Evans Field. The Patriots pushed across a pair of unearned runs in the sixth inning of the opener for a 3-1 win before posting a 3-2 triumph in the nightcap. SCC improved to 16-14 overall and 10-5 in the MSC with the wins. Rio Grande slipped to 13-20 over- runners scored to make it 3-1. Rio stranded a runner in scoring position in the home sixth and brought the would-be tying run to the plate with one out in the bottom of the ninth, but could not dent the plate. Andrew Nelson picked up his second win in five decisions for SCC, allowing five hits and a run in six innings. He also walked two and fanned nine. Jake McCoy earned his second save in as many games and his sixth of the season by tossing a scoreless ninth inning for the Patriots. Deitsch was the hard-luck loser for Rio, despite allowing just one hit and the two unearned runs in 4-2/3 innings. The RedStorm outhit the Patriots, 6 -4, in the opening game loss. In the seven-inning nightcap, SCC took a 2-0 lead in the third inning thanks to an RBI double by Nick Rosso and a run-scoring single by Adrian Garcia and extended its cushion to 3-0 in the fifth when Garica scored from second base on a two-out single off the bat of Guevara. Rio started the road back in the home fifth thanks to a trio of errors by the Patriots. Sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) and freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) reached on consecutive errors to begin the frame and Yates scored thanks to a throwing error on freshman Clark Rice's (Louisa, KY) subsequent sacrifice bunt attempt to make it 3-1. The comeback short-circuited when Jimenez was thrown out at the plate trying to score on a bunt by Arroyo, junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) forced Arroyo at second with a grounder to second and sophomore Jonathan Schob (Decatur, OH) struck out looking. The RedStorm made it 3-2 in the sixth when senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) singled to center with two outs, moved to second on a wild pitch and rode home on a single to left by Yates, who was then thrown out at second trying to advance into scoring position on the throw to the plate. Rio did put a runner on base in the seventh when Arroyo reached on a two-out error, but SCC starter Steven Borkowski wrapped up his complete game effort by retiring Tamane on a game-ending flyball to center. Borkowski improved to 5-2 on the season, allowing five hits and just one earned run in his seven innings on the mound. He did not walk a batter and struck out four. Garcia finished 2-for-3 with a double and a run batted in, while Rosso also had a double and an RBI for the Patriots. Senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) pitched well enough to win, but suffered his fourth loss in seven decisions. The right-hander allowed seven hits and three runs - all earned - while walking two and fanning eight over six innings. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 23 Patriots Rally Early, Hold Off Rio Late For Win Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Alfredo Bohorquez had three hits and scored a pair of runs, while four others had two hits and two RBIs each as St. Catharine College rallied from an early four-run deficit to defeat the University of Rio Grande, 9-6, Saturday morning, March 29, in MidSouth Conference baseball action at Bob Evans Field. The Patriots evened their overall record at 14-14 with the win, improving to 8-5 in league play in the process. Rio Grande saw a modest threegame win streak snapped, falling to 13-18 overall and 3-10 in the MSC. The RedStorm jumped on SCC starter John Werner for four first inning runs, but the Patriots tied the game in the second, took the lead with two runs in the fourth and extended their advantage with three runs in the eighth inning. St. Catharine banged out 15 hits against Rio's southpaw duo of sophomore starter Kyle Miller (Wilmington, OH) and junior reliever Ryan Christophel (Cincinnati, OH). In addition to Bohorquez' multi-hit effort, the Patriots also got two hits each from Francisco Gonzalez, Nick Rosso, Adrian Garcia, Drew Kissel and Eric Standafer. Four members of the two-hit qunitet - Gonzalez, Rosso, Garica and Kissel - also drove in two runs each. Sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) led Rio Grande's 12-hit offensive attack, collecting a career-high four hits in as many official at bats. He was also hit by a pitch. Fellow sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) had a pair of doubles and drove in two runs, while junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico) and senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) both had two hits and one RBI. Makuch had an RBI double, junior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) added a run-scoring single and Yates had a two-run double as the RedStorm parlayed four hits and a pair of walks into a 4-0 first inning lead. SCC answered with four runs of its own against Miller in the second thanks to three hits and three walks. Kissel and Gonzalez both had tworun singles in the frame. The Patriots took the lead for good in the fourth on a two -out RBI single by Rosso and a subsquent runscoring single RIO SECOND BASEMAN GRANT TAMANE applies a by Garcia. Rio Grande tag to St. Catharine's Drew Kissel during the Saturday, closed to with- March 29, game. in 6-5 in the sixth inning when Yates led off with Christophel in the eighth inning. a double and rode home on a two-out Rosso and Garcia had RBI singles bloop single to right-center by Arand Ty Broady plated the final run of royo but, as a steady rain began to the frame on a slow-rolling grounder fall, SCC pulled away for good with to second which saw Garcia score all three insurance markers against the way from second base. RedStorm Softball Takes Two From WVU Tech At Warriors’ Field Rio Grande Sports Information BELLE, W.Va. - Jenna Jones had four hits and drove in three runs, while Jessi Robinson added three hits and two RBIs and Kim Rollins knocked in three runs to lead the University of Rio Grande in a doubleheader sweep of West Virginia University Tech, Tuesday, April 1, in non-conference softball action at Riverside High School's Warriors' Field. The RedStorm pushed across three runs in the seventh inning to post a 5-2 opening game win over the Golden Bears, while using three big innings in the nightcap to record a 10-1 victory. Rio Grande improved its overall mark to 17-8 with the sweep. WVU Tech saw its record dip to 2-14 as a result of the two losses. Freshman Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) earned the win in the pitcher's circle in both the games - the first in relief and the second as the starter - to improve to 8-2. The right-hander allowed three hits in 2-2/3 innings of scoreless relief in game one, while surrendering three hits and an unearned run over four innings in the back end of the twinbill. Rio took a 2-0 lead in the opener with single runs in the first and third innings. Jones, a freshman from Lancaster, Ohio, drove home the first inning run with a groundout, while the third inning marker crossed on a throwing error. Tech knotted the score at 2 -2 in the bottom of the third against Rio freshman starter Katie Noll (Loveland, OH) when Emily Geldbach led off with a single and rode home on Megan Blythe's home run to left field, but the RedStorm rallied with three runs in their final at bat to get the win. Freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) reached on a one-out double to left-center and moved to third on a single to center by Robinson, a junior from Wilmington, Ohio. Robinson then stole second before Rollins, a sophomore from Cincinnati, Ohio, plated Hamaker with the go-ahead run on a single to left-center. Jones followed with a bunt single to bring home Robinson and Rollins eventually came around to score as sophomore teammate Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) reached on a passed ball while striking out. Mackenzie Wilson went the distance in a losing cause for the Golden Bears and finished with a career-high 11 strikeouts. The game two win came a bit easier for the RedStorm, who scored 10 unanswered markers after spotting Tech a 1-0 first inning lead. The Golden Bears grabbed their early advantage when Geldbach reached on a twoout error, stole second and scored on a single to center by Ashley Boggs. Rio answered in resounding fashion, though, scoring three times in both the second and third innings before closing out the day with a fourrun seventh inning uprising. Hamaker had a run-scoring single and Robinson had a two-run single in the second inning, while Jones had a solo home run and freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) had a run-scoring groundout in the third. The seventh inning explosion was the product of three Rio hits, four walks, two Tech errors and a passed ball. Two of the four runs scored on a throwing error, while the other two crossed as a result of a double to leftcenter by Rollins. Jones, who had three of her four hits on the day in game two, also tossed three innings of two-hit scoreless relief. She struck out six in the process. Rio Grande also got two hits in the nightcap from freshman Brittany Walk (Unionville Center, OH). Blythe had two of Tech's five hits in the game. Boggs, the first of three pitchers for the Golden Bears, suffered the loss. RedStorm Baseball Shuts Down Ohio Christian University In Sweep Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - University of Rio Grande pitching limited Ohio Christian University to just one run and five hits over the course of two games and the RedStorm rolled to a doubleheader sweep of the Trailblazers, 9-0 and 4-1, in nonconference baseball action, Tuesday, April 1, at Bob Evans Field. Rio Grande, which ended a three-game losing slide with the victories, upped its season record to 15-20. Ohio Christian slipped to 1-17. A quartet of Rio pitchers - two in each game also combined for 23 strikeouts on the day. Sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) and junior Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH) teamed on a two-hit shutout in the opener. Yates allowed one hit and a pair of walks while striking out a career-high nine over five innings for his third win in four decisions. Offensively, senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) had three hits - including a triple - and drove in a pair of runs, while fellow senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) took advantage of a rare nonpitching start by going 3-for-3 with a double. Junior Grant Tamane added a double and two runs scored to the winning effort, while junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico) drove in a run and also scored twice. In game two, the freshman duo of Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) and Trent Downs (Kingston, OH) authored a three-hitter. Lewis, who was making just his second pitching appearance of the season, allowed three hits and a run while walking one and striking out 11 en route to his first collegiate decision. Downs earned his first save by retiring the Trailblazers in order in the seventh. Tamane's 2-for-3 showing was the only multihit performance for the RedStorm in the nightcap. Rio Grande grabbed the lead in the opener thanks to a two-out, RBI triple in the third inning by Makuch and extended its advantage to 3-0 in the fourth thanks to a throwing error and a sacrifice fly by freshman Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico). The lead reached 5-0 in the fifth as a result of another throwing error and a run-scoring single by Makuch, while a four-run sixth inning set the final score. Junior Anthony Knittel (Portsmouth, OH) had a sacrifice fly and sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) delivered an RBI single in the sixth. A run-scoring single by freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) gave Rio a 1-0 lead in the second inning of game two, while sacrifice flies by Makuch and Steele extended the cushion in the third. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 24 RedStorm Baseball Blasts Bluefield College 12-0 Rio Grande Sports Information BLUEFIELD, Va. - Marcus Makuch had two hits and drove in five runs, while David Steele flirted with perfection in a masterful pitching performance as the University of Rio Grande routed Bluefield (Va.) College, 12-0, in a mercy rule-shortened Mid-South Conference game, Saturday, April 5, at chilly Bowen Field. The RedStorm improved to 16-20 overall and 4-12 in league play with their third straight win, snapping a seven-game MSC losing streak in the process. Bluefield slipped to 22-11 overall and 6-9 in the conference. Makuch, a senior from Baltimore, Ohio, had a two-run single for Rio in the third inning and delivered a threerun double in what finished as a sixrun fifth inning uprising. Steele, a senior right-hander from Kettering, Ohio, allowed just one baserunner in a complete game effort - a fluke infield single by Tyler Timmer in the home half of the third. "David should have had a perfect game," said Rio Grande head coach Brad Warnimont. "It was a popup between the plate and the mound and there was a little miscommunication as to who was going to get it. The ball hit the front slope of the mound and had some english on it. It started and rolling toward the foul line and, just before it got there, David picked it up and tried to make a play. Had he let it go, it probably would've gone foul. He was really upset with himself after the game. He threw the ball very well." Steele finished with four strikeouts in evening his record at 4-4. Rio also got two hits, three runs scored and a run batted in from sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH), while freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) drove in a pair of runs. Zac Russell-Myers started and took the loss for the Rams. Rio Grande scored what proved to be the only run it would need in the second inning when Ford reached on a one-out walk, moved to third on a single by sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) and flyout by Jimenez and then stole home as part of a double-steal with Yates. The lead reached 3-0 in the third. Freshman Clark Rice (Louisa, KY) led off with double and was replaced by senior courtesy runner Eric Ford (Chagrin Falls, OH), who moved to third when junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico) reached on a bunt single. Arroyo reached scoring position as a result of defensive indifference and, one out later, Makuch brought both runners home with a single to rightcenter. It was the fifth inning, though, when the RedStorm lowered the boom on Russell-Myers and the Rams. Rice got things going with a walk and was once again replaced by Ford, who moved to third when Arroyo was hit by a pitch and junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) reached on an infield single. Makuch then lined an 0-2 pitch down the left field line to clear the bases and make it 6-0. One out later, a single by Chris Ford allowed Makuch to score and, after Yates was hit by a pitch and a passed ball, Jimenez singled to right-center to plate both runners and make it 9-0. Rio set itself up for the mercy rule win by pushing across three more runs in the seventh inning. Junior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) led off with a walk and was replaced at first base by freshman pinchrunner Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico), who promptly moved to second on a single SENIOR DAVID STEELE tossed a to right by one-hit shutout in Chris Ford. the April 5 win at Flores Bluefield. scored when Yates' grounder to second was errored and Ford crossed home when Jimenez hit a grounder to first base that was also errored. Yates scored the final run of the contest when freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) grounded into a double-play. RedStorm Softball Divides Two With Shawnee State University Rio Grande Sports Information WEST PORTSMOUTH, Ohio - Tiffany Bise threw the first shutout of her collegiate career and Kim Rollins cracked a solo home run to lead the University of Rio Grande to a game two win and a doubleheader split with rival Shawnee State University, Saturday, April 5, in Mid-South Conference softball action at Boone Coleman Field. FRESHMAN TIFFANY BISE Rio's 3tossed her first collegiate shutout in 0 victory the April 5 split with Shawnee. State. in game two came on the heels of a dramatic 1-0 win by the Bears in the opener of the twinbill. The split - Rio's second in as many meetings with Shawnee State this season - left head coach Kristen Bradshaw's RedStorm at 18-9 overall and 11-7 in the MSC. Shawnee State finished the day at 18-11 overall and 10-8 in league play. Bise, a freshman from Circleville, Ohio, blanked the Shawnee State Bears on just four hits and 76 pitches. She also issued a pair of walks and didn't record a strikeout in improving to 9-2 for the season. Rollins, a sophomore from Cincinnati, Ohio, hit her club-best seventh home run of the season in the top of the third inning, lining a 1-0 pitch from Shawnee starter Miranda Pauley over the fence in the left-center to extend the RedStorm lead to 2-0. Rio had pushed across a second inning marker against Pauley when freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) led off with a single and eventually rode home on a two-out single to center by freshman Shaena Long (Wellston, OH). The RedStorm added their final run of the day in the sixth when Jones led off with a single, was bunted into scoring position and scored when junior Haley Gwin's (Troy, OH) grounder up the mid- dle got off the glove of a diving Kirsti Yates, the Shawnee State shortstop. Jones and freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) had two hits each in the win for Rio Grande. Hannah Foster had two of Shawnee State's four hits and Abby Barrett added a double in a losing cause. Pauley went the distance in the loss for the Bears, dropping to 8-3 on the season. The opening game was a pitcher's duel between Jones and Shawnee State's Allie Chapman. Chapman (10-6) walked three and allowed only a pair of singles by freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH), while striking out three. Jones (9-7) walked seven, but allowed just five hits and struck out three. She worked out of basesloaded jams in each of the first two innings and stranded two runners in the Shawnee sixth, but the Bears managed to push across the game-winning run in their final at bat. Holly Brabson led off with walk, moved to second on a groundout and took third on a wild pitch before Hannah Dittoe grounded a single to center to plate the game-winner. Yates had two hits, including a double, in the win for SSU. Bluefield Rams Tough On Redstorm Baseball In Doubleheader Sweep Rio Grande Sports Information BLUEFIELD, Va. - For the University of Rio Grande baseball team, the April 6 doubleheader against Bluefield (Va.) College turned out to be far from the optimum follow-up showing to, arguably, the club's biggest win of the season. The homestanding Rams rallied late to win game one and then never trailed in game two, sweeping the RedStorm, 5-4 and 5-2, in Mid-South Conference action at sunny Bowen Field Rio Grande, which posted a 120 mercy rule-shortened win in the series opener on Saturday night, slipped to 16-22 overall and 4-14 in league play with the losses. Head coach Brad Warnimont's team finds itself 2-1/2 games out of eighth place in the league with only nine conference contests remaining. The top eight teams in the 10-team league qualify for the post-season tournament in early May. Bluefield, which improved to 2411 overall and 8-9 in the MSC, currently sits in seventh place in the conference standings, two games ahead of the University of the Cumberlands and the University of Pikeville. However, the league's near top-tobottom logjam has the Rams just two games behind Campbellsville University and Shawnee State University, who are tied for second behind current leader Georgetown College. In game one, Rio Grande rallied from a 3-1 first inning deficit only to watch the Rams score twice in the bottom of the ninth for the win. Rio took a 1-0 lead in the first on consecutive two-out singles by junior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH), senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) and sophomore Chris Ford, but Bluefield countered with an RBI double by Jakob Schober and run-scoring singles by Jacob Wright and Sawyer McLamb to go in front. The RedStorm mounted a rally of their own, though, scoring single runs in the second, fourth and fifth innings to take the lead. Senior Marcus Makuch singled home the second inning run, while freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) had an RBI single in the fourth and Steele plated the goahead run with a fifth inning groundout. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 25 Wilson Leads RedStorm At Wittenberg Invitational Rio Grande Sports Information SPRINGFIELD, Ohio - Freshman Austin Wilson had a pair of top five finishes, while fellow freshman Dallas Guy set a new personal record with a second place finish of his own to lead the University of Rio Grande track & field team at the April 5 Wittenberg University Invitational. Wilson, a native of Gallipolis, Ohio and a transfer from Coastal Carolina, took second place in the men's 100m dash with a time of 11.11, while also placing fifth in the 200m dash after crossing the finish line in 22.89. Guy, a native of Buffalo, Ohio, shaved nearly a minute off of his previous personal best in the men's 5,000m run, finishing in second place with a time of 15:56.38. Guy was among 14 Rio Grande athletes who established new personal-best efforts during the meet. The group also included freshman Nate Kosnich (Pickerington, OH), who placed third in the men's 110m hurdles with a time of 15.09; freshman Clint Campbell (Malta, OH), who was third in the men's 400m hurdles with a showing of 56.86; freshmen Nate Goodhart (Kent, OH) and Blake Freed (Uhrichsville, OH), who placed third and fourth, respectively, in the men's 3,000m Steeplechase with times of 10:48.50 and 10:54.98; freshman Andrea Edelmann (Gallipolis, OH), who recorded a third-place finish in the women's triple jump with an effort of 31-10.75 and who placed 12th in the women's 100m hurdles with a time of 17.68; freshman Matt Engstrom (Dover, OH), who was fifth in the men's 5,000m run after finishing in 16:28.15; freshman Alex Nichols (Pickerington, OH), who was fifth in the men's discus with a toss of 12901; freshman Floyd Lowry (St. Paris, OH), who took seventh place in both the men's 110m high hurdles and 400m hurdles with times of 16.18 and 58.65, respectively; senior Mary Beth Schramm (Marietta, OH), who was eighth in the women's hammer throw with a heave of 139-05; sophomore Tim Warner (Pomeroy, OH), who was 12th in the men's 400m dash after finishing in 53.98; freshman Katie Glover (Ashville, OH), who took 12th place in the women's 1,500m run with a time of 5:24.23; freshman Lane Hagar (Hilliard, OH), who was 12th in the men's 1,500m run after crossing in a time of 4:22.72; and freshman Issac Andrews (Nelsonville, OH), who was 12th in the men's discus with a toss of 108-09 and 15th in the men's hammer throw with a heave of 84-06. Rio Grande also had a number of other top 15 finishes on both the men's and women's side of things. Among the men's high finishers for the RedStorm was senior Kaleb Kimber (Salisbury, NC), who placed third in the high jump with an effort of 6-00.75; sophomore Kyle Sanborn (Dover, OH), who finished third in the 1,500m run with a time of 4:10.84; Andrews, who was fifth in the shot put with a throw of 41-10.50; sophomore Andrew Lawrence (Gallipolis, OH), who was fifth in the javelin throw with a toss of 94-07 and 13th in the discus with an effort of 97 -08; freshman Charlie Ronan (Cincinnati, OH), who placed sixth in the 100m dash and ninth in the 200m dash with times of 11.38 and 23.27, respectively; Lowry, who was seventh in the javelin throw with a heave of 80-11; freshman Brandon RIO'S AUSRay (Columbus, TIN WILSON OH), who was had a pair of top seventh in the tri- five finishes in ple jump with a the April 5 Witleap of 37-09.50; tenberg Invitafreshman David tional. Bakenhaster (Frankfort, OH), who was 10th in the long jump with a leap of 17-05.50; Nichols, who placed 12th in the hammer throw with an effort of 115-10; and freshman Aaron Evancho (Mt. Perry, OH), who placed 14th in the 400m dash with a time of 54.85. Two men's relay teams also finished in the top six. The 4x100 relay, comprised of Wilson, Ronan, Lowry and Kosnich, placed fourth with a time of 44.24, while the 4x400 relay team - featuring Warner, Evancho, Sanborn and sophomore Jerrele Lyles (Dublin, OH) - was sixth in a time of 3:34.40. Rio's top showings on the women's side included junior Allison Keeney (Cincinnati, OH), who took fourth place in the high jump at 4-04.00; freshman Lauren Stacy (Bethel, OH), who was fourth in the discus at 11802, seventh in the shot put with a toss of 35-07.75 and 10th in the hammer throw with an effort of 127-02; freshman Alex Ellis (Ona, WV), who was fifth in the 800m run with a time of 2:32.62; freshman Clarissa Johnson (Hillsboro, OH), who was fifth in the long jump with a leap of 14-08.50 and sixth in the 400m hurdles with a time of 1:11.12; freshman Chantal Higgin (Delaware, OH), who was sixth in the 100m dash and ninth in the 200m dash with times of 13.52 and 27.03, respectively; junior Brittany Piccone (Crooksville, OH), who was sixth in the 5,000m run with a time of 21:03.21; sophomore Ciara Herring (Cleveland, OH), who placed sixth in the shot put with a toss of 3600.00; sophomore Carrie Coriell (Lucasville, OH), who was sixth in the discus at 111-08, ninth in the shot put with a toss of 35-04.50 and ninth in the hammer throw with an effort of 128-05; junior Renee Davis (Amsterdam, OH), who was 10th in the 400m hurdles with a time of 1:14.27; freshman Lindsey Golden (Milford, OH), who was 10th in the 800m run after crossing the finish line in 2:49.62; and sophomore Lauren Rhoads (Waverly, OH), who placed 10th in the shot put at 3008.25 and 11th in the both the hammer throw and discus with heaves of 118-11 and 85-08, respectively. The women's 4x100 relay, which included Davis, Johnson and Higgin, placed fifth with a time of 54.23. As a team, the Rio Grande men finished fourth with 94 points and the women were fifth with 53 points. Tiffin University won both team divisions, while Otterbein and Wittenberg finished ahead of the Rio men and the trio of Wittenberg, Otterbein and Ohio Dominican also outscored the RedStorm women. RedStorm Baseball Shakes Slow Start, Routs Cougars RIO GRANDE'S KIRK YATES had three hits and drove in three runs in the April 8 win over OULancaster. Rio Grande Sports Information LANCASTER, Ohio - Kirk Yates had three hits and drove in three runs, while teammate Kevin Arroyo added two hits and four RBIs to lead the University of Rio Grande in a 16-3 mercy rule-shortened win over Ohio University-Lancaster, Tuesday, April 9, in non-conference baseball action at Beavers Field. Senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) and freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) also had two RBIs each for the RedStorm, who improved to 17-22 for the season. The Cougars dropped to 7-6 with the loss. Rio Grande scored 16 unanswered runs - four in both the fourth and sixth innings and eight in the seventh - after OU-L bolted to a 3-0 just five batters into the contest. Drew Wollenberg reached on a one -out infield single against Rio sophomore starter Kyle Miller (Wilmington, OH) and moved to second when Ben Kerr drew a walk, setting the stage for a two-run double along the right field line by Dalton McKee. McKee was thrown out at third on the same play trying to stretch his run-scoring hit into a tri- ple. Luis Mejia followed with a rocket over the fence in left to give the Cougars a 3-0 lead. But from that point on, it was all Rio Grande. Miller, who collected his third win in seven decisions, limited OU-L to just two hits and three total baserunners over his final 5-2/3 innings of work and junior right-hander Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH) worked a perfect seventh inning to wrap things up. Meanwhile, after being no-hit for 3 -1/3 innings by OU-L starter Mitch Harding, the RedStorm began their comeback in the fourth. Junior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) struck out to begin the inning, but reached base safely on a throwing error after a dropped third strike. He scored moments later after a trio of wild pitches by Harding. Senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) then reached on a walk and, one out later, moved to third following a single by Yates - Rio's first of the game - and a walk to Jimenez. Harding was lifted in favor of former Rio Grande pitcher Donson Dearth, who promptly uncorked a wild pitch of his own to make it 3-2. One out later, freshman Clark Rice (Louisa, KY) was hit by a pitch to reload the bases and Arroyo followed with a single to left to score Yates and Jimenez and give Rio a 4-3 lead. The RedStorm tacked on four more runs in the sixth - all of the unearned variety - thanks to three hits and as many Cougar errors. Jimenez began the inning with bunt that Dearth bobbled for an error, moved to second on a bloop single to right by freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) and scored when Dearth threw wildly past first base on a sacrifice bunt attempt by Rice. Freshman Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) came on to run for Rice and immediately stole second base, setting the stage for a two-run double to right-center by Makuch, who scored himself two batters later on a single to right by Steele, extending the lead to 8-3. Rio Grande then puts itself in position for the run-rule victory by exploding for eight runs in the seventh. Yates, a sophomore from Chillicothe, Ohio, greeted reliever Matt Leckrone with a home run to right-center to make it 9-3. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 26 Jones Leads Rio RedStorm To Split With Jackets Rio Grande Sports Information INSTITUTE, W.Va. - Jenna Jones clubbed a two-run eighth inning home run to lift the University of Rio Grande to a game two win and a doubleheader split with West Virginia State University, Wednesday, April 9, in nonconference softball action at Lady Jackets Field. Rio's 6-4 extra innings win in the nightcap came on the heels of the Yellow Jackets rallying from an early 4-0 deficit to post a 13-5 mercy rule-shortened victory in the opener. The split left the RedStorm's overall record at 1910, while WVSU - a member of the NCAA Division II Mountain East Conference finished the day at 19-17. Jones' game-winning blast in game two put Rio in front to stay after it had coughed up leads of 2-0 and 4-3 late in the contest. The RedStorm took a 1-0 lead in the second inning when Jones - a freshman from Lancaster, Ohio - led off with a double and eventually scored on a two-out passed ball. The lead reached 2-0 in the fifth when junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) led off with a double and scored on a two-out single by fresh- man Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH), but the Jackets rallied in the home half of the fifth to take the lead. Victoria Crawford had a two-run double to tie the game and eventually scored the go-ahead marker on a fielder's choice grounder to second by Mattie Best. Jones hit a two-out home run in the sixth to tie the game and Gwin homered with one out in the top of the seventh to give Rio the lead back, but WVSU tied the game again in the bottom of the seventh thanks to an error and the contest headed to extra innings. Sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) doubled to right-center with one out in the eighth, setting the stage for a mammoth home run to left-center by Jones - her fourth homer of the season to give Rio the lead for good. But the win didn't come without some tense moments in the home half of the eighth. Kelsey Martin and Sydney Kaplan opened the frame with consecutive singles, but both were ruled out moments later on Dee Dee Loftis' groundball to shortstop when Martin was called for interfering with Hamaker's ability to field the ball. Jones then induced Anna Eggleston to groundout to second for the game's final out. Jones finished 3-for-4 at the plate with three runs scored and three RBIs, while Hamaker and Gwin each had two hits and drove in a run. Freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH) added a double to the winning effort. Jones improved to 10-7 in the pitcher's circle with the win, allowing 11 hits and four runs - three of which were earned - while striking out three. Crawford had two hits and the two RBIs, while Best had two hits and drove in a run and Hannah Griffith added a triple in a losing cause for the Yellow Jackets. Eggleston suffered the loss in the circle for WVSU, allowing nine hits and six runs - five earned - while walking one and fanning four. In the opener, Rio Grande grabbed a 4-0 second inning lead, but watched as the Yellow Jackets rallied and closed the game with 10 unanswered runs to win going away. Hamaker opened the contest with her first collegiate home run before adding a run -scoring single in the RedStorm's three-run second inning. Junior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) also had an RBI single in the frame. Ronan Leads RedStorm At All-Ohio Championships Rio Grande Sports Information CINCINNATI, Ohio - Charlie Ronan had a pair of top 15 finishes, while Kyle Sanborn had a sixth place finish to lead the University of Rio Grande at the AllOhio Track & Field Championships hosted by the University of Cincinnati. Ronan, a freshman from Cincinnati, Ohio, placed 11th in the men's 100m dash with a time of 11.01 and was 15th in the 200m dash with a time of 22.92. Sanborn, a sophomore from Dover, Ohio, took sixth in the men's 800m run after crossing the finish line in 1:55.37. Rio Grande, which finished 14th in the men's team competition, also got a seventh place finish from freshman Brandon Ray (Columbus, OH) in the men's triple jump with a leap of 11.79m and a seventh place showing in the men's 4x400 relay with a time of 3:40.23. RIO'S CHARLIE The foursome was comprised of Sanborn, sophomore Tim RONAN had a pair Warner (Pomeroy, OH), freshman Aaron Evancho of top 15 finishes at (Zanesville, OH) and freshman Adrian Shields (Fleming, the All-Ohio OH). Championships. Other top 15 showings for the RedStorm were provided by senior Kaleb Kimber (Salisbury, NC), who was 10th in the men's high jump with a leap of 1.89m; freshman Issac Andrews (Nelsonville, OH), who was 12th in the men's shot put with a toss of 13.38m; and freshman Austin Wilson (Gallipolis, OH), who was 13th in the men's 100m dash with a time of 11.19. Rio also got a 12th place finish from its women's 4x400 relay team, who finished in 4:24.62. The quartet included freshman Shelby Pickens (Racine, OH), freshman Katie Glover (Ashville, OH), freshman Alex Ellis (Ona, WV) and freshman Clarrisa Johnson (Hillsboro, OH). Akron won the men's team title with 205 points, with Cincinnati (138) and Miami -Ohio (129.5) rounding out the top three. Akron also won the women's title with 199 points, with Cincinnati (109.5) and Miami-Ohio (97) completing the top three. WVSU parlayed three hits and three Rio errors into a trio of unearned runs in the home second and, after the RedStorm got one of RIO'S JENNA JONES watches the flight of her the runs eighth inning home run in the April 9 game two back on a win at WV State. two-out run-scoring infield single by - all earned - while walking Gwin in the top of the third, one and striking out five. Best clubbed a leadoff home Hamaker had three hits to run in the bottom half of the go along with her two runs inning to get the Jackets batted in, while Robinson within 5-4. finished 2-for-4 with an RBI WVSU took the lead for in a losing cause. good by scoring five times in Freshman starter Katie the fourth inning before inNoll (Loveland, OH), who voking the eight-run mercy retired the first five batters rule with two runs in both the she faced in the game, suffifth and sixth innings. fered the loss in her first colKaplan had three hits, in- legiate decision. The rightcluding two doubles, and hander allowed nine hits and drove in two runs to lead the nine runs - only two of which Yellow Jackets, while Sabri- were earned - while walking na Schouten, Best and Loftis one and striking out one in 3all had two hits and two RBIs 1/3 innings. in the victory. Crawford also Fellow freshman Tiffany finished 3-for-3 with a trio of Bise (Circleville, OH) tossed stolen bases. Eggleton earned the final 2-1/3 innings, allowthe win in the circle, surren- ing seven hits and four runs dering nine hits and five runs in the process. Late Rally By RedStorm Falls Short Rio Grande Sports Information CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. - Campbellsville University methodically built a four-run lead and then held off a late rally by the University of Rio Grande for a 4-3 win, Saturday, April 12, in MidSouth Conference baseball action at HIG Field. The Tigers, who eliminated Rio Grande from last year's MSC Tournament, won for the sixth straight time and improved to 22-14 overall and 11-7 in the MSC. The RedStorm slipped to 17-23 overall and 4-15 in league play with the loss - their 11th setback by two runs or less among the 15 conference losses. Campbellsville scored single markers in the second, third, fifth and eighth innings to back a solid pitching performance from starter Brett DeRooy, who took a five-hit shutout into the ninth inning. Rio Grande shaved the deficit to one in the ninth by scoring three times on five hits, but T.R. Dunne came on to record the final out for his second save of the season. Jaime Valle had a run-scoring single in the second inning and a throwing error in the third gave the Tigers a 2-0 lead, before Alex Kline added an RBI single in the sixth and Steve Ferraro plated what proved to be a big insurance run with a pinch-hit single in the home half of the eighth. Rio more than made it interesting in the ninth. Sophomores Chris Ford (Athens, OH) and Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) opened the inning with back-to-back singles and both scored on a double by freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico), who was thrown out at third trying to stretch the hit into a triple. Freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) followed with a single to right-center and, one out later, moved to second on a single by junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico). DeRooy was lifted in favor of Dunne, who surrendered a grounder to third off the bat of junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) which was errored, with Lewis scoring and Arroyo and Tamane ending up at third and second, respectively. Dunne then struck out senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) to end both the threat and the game. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 27 RedStorm Softball Rebounds, Splits With Patriots Rio Grande Sports Information ST. CATHARINE, Ky. - Jenna Jones tossed a complete game fivehitter and Kim Rollins drove in a pair of runs to lead the University of Rio Grande to a game two win and a doubleheader split St. Catharine College, Saturday, April 12, in Mid-South Conference softball action at Salt River Electric Field. The RedStorm posted a 5-2 win in the back end of the twinbill after the Patriots posted a 7-2 victory in the opener. The two teams also divided their doubleheader in Rio Grande in March. The split left Rio Grande at 20-11 overall and 12-8 in the MSC, while St. Catharine finished the day at 1221 overall and 8-16 in league play. Jones, a freshman from Lancaster, and Hamaker both scored two runs Ohio, allowed just a first inning RBI each. single by Taylor Steff and a solo Cammuse had two hits in the loss home run by Krystal for the Patriots, Cammuse en route to The RedStorm post- while Brittany her 11th win in 19 deMcKee started and ed a 5-2 win in the took the loss inside cisions. The righthander walked one back end of the the pitcher's circle. and struck out three, In the opener, St. twinbill after the Pawhile helping her own Catharine took a 1-0 cause at the plate with triots posted a 7-2 vic- lead in the second a fifth inning sacrifice tory in the opener. inning thanks to an fly. RBI double by Rollins, a sophomore from Cincin- McKee, before adding two runs in nati, Ohio, sealed the win with a two- the third inning and four runs in the run double in the seventh inning, sixth on a Brandi Hood grand slam while freshman Cheyenne Hamaker home run. (Hilliard, OH) and junior Haley Gwin Rio Grande, which managed just (Troy, OH) added two hits each. Jun- one hit off of Cammuse through the ior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) first six innings, avoided a shutout in the seventh when Jones doubled, moved to third on a passed ball and scored on a throwing error. Two outs later, Gwin hit her third home run of the year. McKee had a pair of doubles to FRESHMAN the St. Catharine CHEYENNE offensive attack. HAMAKER had Cammuse im- two hits and two proved to 4-9 runs scored in with the victory, the April 12 while Jones start- game two win. ed and went the distance in the loss for the RedStorm. Campbellsville Lady Tigers sweep RedStorm Softball Rio Grande Sports Information CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. - Victoria Decker tossed a two-hit shutout in game one, while Kristin Benton went 3-for-3 with a pair of home runs in the nightcap to lead Campbellsville University to a doubleheader sweep of the University of Rio Grande, Sunday, April 13, in Mid-South Conference softball action at Veterans Memorial Park. The Lady Tigers ran their overall record to 3115 and improved to 18-10 in conference play with victories of 6-0 and 10-4. The RedStorm, who were swept for the first time in league play this season, dropped to 20-13 overall and 12-10 in the MSC. In the opening game, Decker allowed just a single by freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) and a double by freshman Shanea Long (Wellston, OH) in a complete game effort. She did not walk a batter and recorded four strikeouts en route to her 12th win against eight losses. The Lady Tigers scored twice in the first inning against Jones, before adding a single run in the third and three more markers in the fourth to blow the game open. Only two of the six runs allowed by Jones in her 4-1/3 inning stint in the circle were earned as a result of five Rio Grande errors. Adrean Jordan had two hits to lead CU, while Shelby Ray, Heather Oakley, Sara Paragon and Erin Benton all drove in one run each. In game two, Oakley gave the Lady Tigers a 2-0 lead with a two-run first inning home run before Rio tied the game in the second on a two-run home run by junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH). Campbellsville pulled away, though, with two more runs in both the second and third innings and a single run in the fourth to take a 7-2 lead. Benton's first home run accounted for the fourth inning run. The RedStorm closed the gap to 7-4 in the sixth on a two-run homer by sophomore Ariel Roder (Parma Heights, OH), but the Tigers set the final score with three runs in the home sixth. Benton's second circuit-clout and a home run by Brittany Rippy highlighted the threerun sixth. Gwin finished with two hits and sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) added a double, while freshman Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) started and took the loss for Rio Grande. In addition to her three hits and two RBIs, Benton also scored four times for the TiJUNIOR HAgers. Oakley and Markie Smith LEY GWIN had a added two hits and two RBIs two-run home run in the April 13 loss each in the winning effort, at Campbellsville. while Jordan also had two hits. Taylor Wroe earned her 13th win in 15 decisions despite allowing five hits and all four runs in 5-1/3 innings in the circle. She also walked two and struck out seven. Campbellsville Tigers Complete Sweep of Rio Baseball Rio Grande Sports Information CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. - A season of "close, but no cigar" finishes for the University of Rio Grande baseball team continued on Sunday, April 13. The snakebitten RedStorm were swept by host Campbellsville University, 4 -3 in 11 innings and 5-2, in MidSouth Conference play at HIG Field. JUNIOR KEVIN Rio finished the ARROYO had day at 17-25 overtwo hits in both all and 4-17 in the ends of the April MSC after the two 13 DH loss at losses. Of the 17 Campbellsville. league setbacks, 12 have been by two runs or less and eight have been by one run - including three in extra innings. Campbellsville ran its winning streak to eight straight with the sweep, upping its record to 24-14 overall and 13-7 in the MSC in the Tiger pitching. process. The RedStorm took a 1-0 lead in The Tigers pushed across the game the first inning and tied the game at 2 -winner in the home half of the 11th -2 in the sixth before going in front inning on a two-out again with a run in RBI single by Jacob the 10th inning. The snake-bitten RedRussell off of Rio CU tied the game sophomore reliever in the home 10th Storm were swept by host Kyle Miller and scored the game Campbellsville University, -winner one inning (Wilmington, OH), who came on in the 4-3 in 11 innings and 5-2, later. 10th inning when senSophomore Kirk in Mid-South Conference ior starter David Yates (Chillicothe, play at HIG Field. Rio OH) and freshman Steele (Kettering, OH) was lifted. finished the day at 17-25 Luis Jimenez Russell finished (Salinas, Puerto Rioverall and 4-17 in the co) drove in runs, with three of CU's 11 hits, while teammates MSC after the two losses. while Miller sufCarlos Torres, Alex fered his fifth loss in Kline and Ricky eight decisions for McColloch all had two hits each. Rio. Torres, McColloch and Jaime Valle Steele scattered nine hits and two also drove in one run each. walks over 9-1/3 innings. He was Rio Grande had just five hits, incharged with three of the runs scored cluding two each by junior Kevin Ar- by the Tigers and also struck out royo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico) and eight. senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, T.R. Dunne, the last of three CU OH), but failed to take advantage of pitchers, got the win to improve to 4six CU errors and a total of four hit 0 on the season. batsmen and three walks issued by In the seven-inning nightcap, the Tigers snapped a scoreless tie with a pair of fourth inning runs and blew the game open with three fifth inning markers against Rio senior starter Eric Ford (Chagrin Falls, OH). The RedStorm made things interesting down the stretch, scoring twice and leaving the bases loaded in the sixth inning and leaving runners at second and third in the seventh inning. Junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) had a sacrifice fly and Jimenez added a run-scoring single in the sixth for Rio. Arroyo finished 2-for-3 for the RedStorm, who had just six hits as a team. Ford slipped to 0-6 with the loss, allowing seven hits and five runs - three earned - in 4-2/3 innings of work. Valle finished 2-for-2 with two RBIs to lead Campbellsville, while Ryan Squires also had two hits and drove in a run. Allen Hewey improved to 5-1 for the Tigers, allowing two hits and two runs over 5-1/3 innings. Alex Kline worked a scoreless seventh for his second save. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 28 Rio Softball Blanks Cumberlands In Doubleheader Sweep at Rio Softball Park. The RedStorm collected wins by scores of 4-0 and 5-0, improving to 22-13 overall and 14-10 in the MSC. The Patriots finished the day at 1322 overall and 10-12 in league play. Jones, a freshman from Lancaster, Ohio, allowed just a one-out single in the second inning to UC's Tori Poma en route to her 12th win in 21 decisions. She walked two and struck out six. Bise, a freshman from Circleville, Ohio, surrendered a oneout infield single to Missy Buchanan in the first inning and a leadoff single to Mary Beth Hogue in the sixth inRIO'S ALEX KUHN connects for an RBI single in the ning of game fifth inning of the April 16 game two win over Cumbertwo. She lands. walked one Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Jenna Jones tossed a one-hit shutout and teammate Tiffany Bise followed up with a two-hit shutout of her own as the University of Rio Grande swept a doubleheader from the University of the Cumberlands, Wednesday, April 16, in Mid-South Conference softball and struck out three, while improving to 10-3 on the season. Cumberlands had just two runners advance as far as second base in both games. Offensively, Rio Grande inflicted all the damage that it needed to in the first inning of game one. Junior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) reached on a oneout single, moved to second on a single by sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) and scored on a double to left by Jones. Sophomore Ariel Roder (Parma Heights, OH) followed with a two-run double to left-center to make it 3-0. The RedStorm tacked on an insurance run in the sixth when Jones reached on a one-out walk and scored on a two-out double by junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH). Jones finished 2-for-2 in the victory. Nichol Chesley started and took the loss for UC, allowing seven hits and a walk while striking out five. In game two, Rio Grande pushed across single markers in the second and third innings before blowing things open with three runs in the fifth. Freshman Shaena Long (Wellston, OH) plated the second inning run with a two-out single which scored Gwin, who had reached on a one-out single. Rollins had a two-out RBI single in the third to score freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH), who had reached via a fielder's choice earlier in the inning. The three-run fifth inning uprising began with a one-out single by Robinson, who scored moments later on a double to left-center by Rollins. Jones followed with a single which moved Rollins to third and, when the throw to second on Jones' subsequent steal attempt of second was dropped for an error, Rollins raced home to make it 4-0. Jones also stole third and scored on a two-out single by freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH). Rollins and Gwin both finished 2for-3 in the victory. Ashleigh Hopf started and took the loss for the Patriots, allowing all nine Rio hits and the five runs - four earned - over five innings. She did not walk a batter and fanned three. RedStorm Baseball Tops Ohio University In Close Game opponent, no less. Anthony Knittel and Mike Deitsch combined on a two-hit shutout and the RedStorm pushed across a pair of sixth inning runs en route to a 2-0 win over Ohio University, Wednesday, April 16, at Bob Wren Stadium. Rio Grande improved to 18-25 with the victory, just its sixth of the year in 22 games decided by two runs or less. Ohio, a member of the MidAmerican Conference, slipped to 5-28 with JUNIOR ANTHONY KNITTEL allowed just two hits over 8- an 11th 1/3 innings in the April 16 win at Ohio U. straight Rio Grande Sports Information ATHENS, Ohio - After finding themselves on the short end of so many narrow losses this season, the University of Rio Grande finally found a way to emerge victorious in a close game. And against an NCAA Division I loss. The Bobcats also remained winless in 11 outings at home this season. Knittel, a junior left-hander from Portsmouth, Ohio, authored his best performance in a Rio uniform, taking a one-hitter into the bottom of the ninth. The Bobcats picked up their second hit of the contest on a one-out single by Jake Madsen, prompting Rio head coach Brad Warnimont to lift Knittel in favor of Deitsch, a senior from Cincinnati, Ohio. Deitsch induced John Adryan to hit into a fielder's choice grounder to second, which forced Madsen, before surrendering a walk to Tyler Wells that put the tying runs on base and brought the potential game-winning run to the plate. The threat - and the game - ended, though, when Deitsch struck out Austin Rieman looking for the final out and his second save of the season. Knittel evened his record at 3-3, allowing four walks in addition to the two hits in his 8-1/3 innings. He struck out two. In the second, Adryan opened the inning with a walk and, one out later, Rieman drew a free pass as well. However, Adryan was thrown out at third on the front end of a double steal attempt and, after Knittel issued his third walk of the inning to Garrett Black, Anthony Winters popped out to first base to end the inning. Rio Grande, which had left runners in scoring position in the first, third and fifth innings, finally scored a breakthrough in the sixth inning by pushing across both of its runs against Ohio starter Gerry Salisbury. Sophomore Chris Ford, who was making a return to his hometown, slapped a two-out double to right and scored on a single to left by freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico). Freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) followed with a single that sent Jimenez to third and, after Lewis stole second, Salisbury was called for a balk to force home the second run. Rio Win Over Ohio University First Ever Victory Against Division I Foe — Perhaps RIO GRANDE'S LUIS JIMINEZ is tagged out at home in the 8th inning of the April 16 win over Ohio University. Source: Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio -- Head coach Brad Warnimont's club posted a 2-0 win at NCAA Division I Ohio University on Wednesday, April 16 – the program's first win against a Division I opponent during the veteran head coach's tenure and, perhaps, the school's first-ever win against Division I foe. Unfortunately, full-season records in the Rio Grande Sports Information office go back only as far as 1997, so whether the April 16 shutout of the Bobcats was, in fact, the school's first over an opponent from the ranks of the NCAA's top division remains unclear. What is clear, though, is that the victory was the first non-loss against an NCAA Division I foe since March 1, 2000, when the then-Redmen, ironically, battled Ohio University to a 16-16 tie in Athens. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 29 Jones’ No-Hitter Fuels Doubleheader Sweep Of Bluefield Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Simply being good on Good Friday was not good enough for the University of Rio Grande's Jenna Jones. The freshman righthander from Lancaster, Ohio, was, for lack of a better term, great inside the pitcher's circle. Jones fired the second nohitter of her collegiate career to fuel a game one win and spark the RIO GRANDE'S JENNA JONES RedStorm's fires a pitch during her game one doubleheadno-hitter on April 18 vs. Bluefield. er sweep of Bluefield (Va.) College in Mid-South Conference action at a sunsplashed Rio Softball Park on April 18. Rio Grande, which won the opener 4-0 before posting an 11-4 triumph in the nightcap, improved to 24-13 overall and 16-10 in league play with the victories. Bluefield, which saw its losing streak reach 17 straight games by day's end, dropped to 3-41 overall and 1-29 in the MSC. Jones, who lost a no-hit bid against the Rams on March 22 with two outs in the seventh inning, retired the final 16 batters she faced on Friday. She allowed only a two-out walk in each of the first two innings, while BC's only other baserunner also reached in the second inning as a result of an error. Jones had previously no-hit the University of Pikeville on March 21 - Rio's first no-hitter in nearly five years. The RedStorm backed up Jones' pitching performance by scoring once in the third inning, twice in the fourth and once more in the sixth against Bluefield starter Ali Bartley. Freshman Brittany Walk (Unionville Center, OH) reached on a three-base error to start the third inning and scored moments later on a Bartley wild pitch, while freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH) had an RBI triple and freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) followed with a run-scoring single in the fourth. Jenkins added a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning for the game's final run. Kuhn finished 2-for-3 in the win, while sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) added a dou- ble in the winning effort. Bartley (0-5) allowed just six hits and three earned runs while striking out two in the loss for the Rams. In the nightcap, Rio Grande spotted BC a 2-0 first inning lead before roaring back with three runs in the third inning and five runs in the fifth to open up a 9-2 advantage. Kuhn had a two-run triple to highlight the threerun third, while junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) had a run-scoring triple and Kuhn followed with an RBI single to kickstart the five-run fifth. The Rams, who parlayed two hits and three Rio errors into their two first inning runs, scored twice more in the sixth to pull within 9-4, but the RedStorm got the runs back in the bottom of the frame on sacrifice flies by Gwin and Kuhn. Kuhn finished 3-for-3 with four RBIs, while Gwin had two hits and knocked in three runs. Jones also had three hits, including a double, while Jenkins finished 2-for-4 and freshman Shanea Long (Wellston, OH) had a pair of RBIs. Freshman Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) earned her 11th win in 14 decisions, allowing six hits and two earned runs over 5-2/3 innings. Anna Davis went the distance in the circle for BC, slipping to 1-10 on the season. Morgan Stephens had two hits and drove in a run for the Rams, while Kasey Holcomb also had two hits and Madison Fielder drove in a run in the loss. RedStorm Baseball Upends Lindsey Wilson Blue Raiders, 2-1 Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Senior Mike Deitsch's final appearance on the mound at Bob Evans Field is one he won't forget anytime soon. The right-hander from Cincinnati, Ohio limited visiting Lindsey Wilson College to just one run over 7-2/3 innings and fellow senior David Steele recorded the final four outs to give the University of Rio Grande a 2-1 win over the Blue Raiders, Friday, April 18, in Mid-South Conference baseball action. The RedStorm, who won for the second straight time, improved to 1925 overall and 5-17 in conference play, keeping their faint post-season hopes afloat in the process. Lindsey Wilson slipped to 25-23 overall and 11-10 in the MSC with the loss. "Our senior pitchers threw extremely well and we played great defense behind them," said Rio head coach Brad Warnimont. "We needed Mike and David to step up and that's exactly what they did. This time of year, every game means something." And then some. Despite the win, the magic number to eliminate the RedStorm from the MSC tourney dropped to four after the University of the Cumberlands scratched out a 3-2 win over St. Catharine. In order to reach the post-season, Rio Grande needs to pass Cumber- lands and the University of Pikeville, who were tied with each other for the eighth and the final tournament berth at day's beginning. While the Patriots posted their one-run win, the Bears were the victim of a ninth inning walkoff win at Shawnee State. Regardless of what happened elsewhere, Rio Grande took care of business on its end thanks to its duo of senior hurlers. Deitsch, who recorded the final two outs for a save in Wednesday night's win over NCAA Division I Ohio University, scattered seven singles over his 7-2/3 innings of work, but was constantly forced to wiggle out of trouble as a result of four walks and a career-high five hit batsmen. The win was the third in eight decisions for Deitsch this season. Steele, a right-hander from Kettering, Ohio, came on to record the final out in the eighth inning and strand a pair of runners on base. He issued a leadoff walk to pinch-hitter Nick Hoffman in the ninth, but coaxed Kory weeks to ground into a 4-6-3 double-play and Michael Rosario to fly out to center to seal the win and notch his second save. Lindsey Wilson stranded a seasonhigh 16 runners on base, including eight in scoring position. Still, it was the Blue Raiders who drew first blood by using the speed of Derek Shugart to push across a third inning run. Shugart and Mitchell Osnowitz began the inning with consecutive singles and Jeandro Andino reached moments later when Deitsch's throw to third on his sacrifice bunt attempt was late in an effort to retire SENIOR MIKE DEITSCH allowed just one run over 7Shugart. 2/3 innings in the April 18 2-1 win over Lindsey Wilson. One out later, Jordan Berry hit a popup that jun- OH) then bunted both runners into ior second baseman Grant Tamane scoring position and both scored (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) manwhen sophomore Kirk aged to track down with a nice over- Yates' (Chillicothe, OH) grounder to the-shoulder catch in shallow rightshortstop was misplayed for an error. center field, but Shugart took adAside from the two runners who vantage of his speed and Tamane's scored in the fourth, though, Rio momentum taking him away from the Grande advanced just one other runinfield to tag from third and beat the ner beyond first base the rest of the throw home. day - freshman Carlos Flores Rio Grande, which managed just (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico), who led four hits on the afternoon against off the home eighth with a single and LWC starter England Smith, rewas bunted into scoring position bebounded to erase the deficit in the fore being stranded. bottom of the fourth. Smith was the hard-luck loser for Junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, the Blue Raiders, allowing the four Puerto Rico) led off with a single and hits and the two unearned runs in a promptly moved to second when complete game effort. He did not Smith errored Tamane's subsequent walk a batter and struck out five. bunt attempt. Osnowitz and Andino both had two Senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, hits in a losing cause for LWC. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 30 Baseball Splits Nail-Biters With Lindsey Wilson College Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Grant Tamane drove in three runs, including the game-winner with a oneout squeeze bunt in the bottom of the seventh inning, to give the University of Rio Grande a 6-5 game two victory and doubleheader split with Lindsey Wilson College, Saturday, April 19, in Mid-South Conference baseball action at Bob Evans Field. The dramatic win came after the Blue Raiders rallied to win the opener, 7-6 in 12 innings. Rio Grande finished the day at 20-26 overall and 6-18 in the MSC, keeping its slim post-season hopes alive in the process. In order to reach the MSC Tournament, the RedStorm would need a sweep of Cumberland University next weekend in Lebanon, Tenn., as well as a Lindsey Wilson sweep of the University of the Cumberlands and a sweep by Georgetown College over the University of Pikeville. "We know we have to have a lot of things happen in order for us to make it, but we're still alive. There's breath in the body," said Rio Grande head coach Brad Warnimont. "Our guys battled all day long. They deserve a lot of credit." The split, coupled with a 2-1 win on Friday, gave Rio its second MSC series win this season. All three games were decided by just one run. Through the first six innings of the seven-inning nightcap, a dramatic finish was nowhere in the script, but Lindsey Wilson (26-24, 12-11 MSC) rallied to scored four times in its final at bat to knot the score at 5-5. In the home half of the seventh, freshman Daulton Kenyon (West Portsmouth, OH) reached on a single, moved to second on a wild pitch by LWC reliever Keith Patton and moved to third on a bloop single by junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico), who took second on the throw toward home. Mitchell Osnowitz was then brought on to face Tamane, a junior from Pickering, Ontario Canada. Tamane put down a bunt in front of the plate which Osnowitz fielded and tried to flip to catcher Russ Morse, but Morse couldn't handle the flip cleanly as Kenyon slid in safely with the gamewinning run. The Blue Raiders actually took a 1 -0 lead in the first inning on an RBI double by Osnowitz, but Rio countered with three runs in the third two of which scored on a single by Tamane - to take a two-run lead. The RedStorm extended their cushion to 5-1 thanks to a two-run single by freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) in the sixth, but LWC parlayed three hits, two walks, an error and a wild pitch into four seventh inning runs and set the stage for the dramatic finish. Arroyo and Jimenez both had two hits in the win for Rio Grande, while sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) - the last of the RedStorm's RIO'S KEVIN ARROYO forces out Lindsey Wilson's Jorthree pitchers - earned his fourth win dan Berry during the April 19 DH split. in five decisions. Jacob Roberts had two hits in a losing cause for LWC reliever Jason Turner retired the side in the Blue Raiders and Patton suffered his third loss order in the bottom of the inning to wrap up the in four decisions. victory. Game one was a near four-hour marathon which Derek Shugart and Jordan Berry had three hits saw both teams surrender the lead early on. each for the Blue Radiers, while Osnowitz, AndiRio jumped to a 1-0 first inning lead with an no and Bautista all finished with two hits each. unearned run that crossed as a result of a sacrifice Turner improved to 6-4, allowing just two hits fly by senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH), over 6-2/3 shutout innings in relief of starter Scott but the Blue Raiders struck for four runs in the Sebald. third - three of which scored on a two-out home Arroyo and Ford had three hits each for Rio run by Jeandro Andino - to take their first lead. Grande, while Yates and Lewis both had two hits. The RedStorm started the road back in the home Junior Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH) took third when sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) the loss, despite pitching well in relief of senior scored on a double by Yates to make it 4-2. A run- starter David Steele (Kettering, OH). scoring double by freshman Carlos Flores Hutchison allowed four hits and the one run, (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) and an RBI groundout while walking three and fanning two in four inby Tamane in the fourth tied the game at 4-4. nings of work. Rio then regained the lead in the fifth thanks to "Hutch threw the ball well. You can't fault what a two-run single by freshman Daryin Lewis he did on the mound. We just came up short," (Circleville, OH), but Lindsey Wilson would Warnimont said. eventually tie the game at 6-6 on solo home runs "In the second game, you can't overlook the sinby Alex Bautista in the sixth and eighth innings. gle in the seventh by Kenyon, the bunt that Grant The game stayed deadlocked until the Lindsey put down or the job that Yates did to get us out of Wilson 12th when Bautista led off with a walk, the jam in the top of the seventh. We had different moved to second on a sacrifice bunt and scored guys step up. Everybody battled. It was an emowhen Trey Davis' grounder to shortstop was ertional day, no doubt. But we're still alive and that's rored. all we can ask for." Walk-Off Hit Gives Rio Softball Sweep Of U. Of Pikeville Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Freshman Alex Kuhn delivered a two-out, game-winning single in the bottom half of the seventh inning to lift the University of Rio Grande to a 4-3 game two win and a doubleheader sweep of the University of Pikeville, Saturday, April 19, in Mid-South Conference action at Rio Softball Park. The RedStorm parlayed two early runs and a strong pitching performance by freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) into a 3-1 opening game triFRESHMAN ALEX umph. Rio Grande, which KUHN'S two-out, sevhas now won each of enth inning single gave Rio a game two win on the first six games on its final homestand of the Saturday, April 19. season, improved to 2613 overall and 18-10 in league play. Pikeville, which entered the weekend hoping to overtake St. Catharine College for the eighth and final spot in the upcoming MSC Tournament, slipped to 13-26 overall and 9-21 in the MSC. The sweep, coupled with two losses at Shawnee State on Friday, April 18, leaves the Bears two games behind the Patriots. Rio Grande was forced to rally from a 3-1 deficit in game two in order to complete the sweep. Freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) had a game-tying, two-run single in the bottom of the fourth inning to knot the score at 3-3 and that's how things stayed until the home half of the seventh. Miranda Owens, who came on in relief of starter Sydney Morris in the fourth inning, retired each of the first two batters routinely before issuing back-to-back walks to Jones and junior Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) and throwing a wild pitch that put both runners in scoring position. Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH) followed with her heroics moments later, lining a 1-0 pitch into center field and scoring Jones with the game-winner. Both teams scored in the first inning thanks to sacrifice flies - by Pikeville's Hollie Hinkle and Rio Grande sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) - before the Bears got an RBI triple by Taylor Weeks in the third and scored on a wild pitch by Rio starter Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) to take a 3-1 lead. After the RedStorm tied the game in the fourth, both teams coughed up opportunities to retake the lead. Pikeville left the bases loaded in both the fifth and seventh innings, while Rio left a pair of runners on in the fifth. Kuhn finished 2-for-4 in the win and was one of four RedStorm players to record two hits. Jones, Gwin and freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) also had two hits each and all had a double. Jones earned the win as the pitcher after coming into to record the final two outs in the top of the seventh, running her season mark to 15-9. Emily Castle had four hits, including a double, while Weeks had two hits and an RBI in the loss for UPike. In the opener, Rio Grande scored twice in the second inning and added another run in the fifth to take a 3-0 lead. Jenkins and sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) had run-scoring hits in the second and Rollins added an RBI hit in the fifth. UPike had just two baserunners in the first three innings against Jones - one thanks to an error and the other as a result of a hit batsman - but mounted a bit more of threat in the fourth. Castle ended up at second base after her apparent inning-ending routine flyball to right was dropped for an error. Sara Browning followed with a single to right - the Bears' first hit of the game but Castle was ruled out at the plate in a controversial call trying to score on the hit. UPike did score on a Courtney Morgan fielder's choice in the sixth, but left runners at second and third base as the inning ended. Jones surrendered a two-out infield single to Kayla Brown in the seventh, but struck out Brandi Jo Howard to seal the win. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 31 RedStorm Softball Splits With Lindsey Wilson Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - University of Rio Grande freshman pitcher Jenna Jones limited Lindsey Wilson's potent offense to just one run and the RedStorm rallied to post a 2-1 win over the eighth-ranked Blue Raiders, Monday, April 21, in Mid-South Conference softball action at Rio Softball Park. Lindsey Wilson rebounded to post a 6-1 triumph in game two, snapping Rio's seven-game win streak. The game one victory, which marked just the second time all season that LWC had been limited to one run or less, was also the RedStorm's first-ever win over the Blue Raiders in 13 all-time meetings. The split left Rio Grande with a 27-14 record overall and a 19-11 mark in the MSC, while Lindsey Wilson finished the day at 38-6 overall and 244 in league play. Jones, a right-hander from Lancaster, Ohio, scattered five hits - four singles and a double - in a complete game effort and did not walk a batter. She struck out two en route to her 16th win in 25 decisions. The lone run scored by the Blue Raiders came in the top of the fourth inning when Amanda Trampe led off with a single and, one out later, scored all the way from first base on a double to left by Abbi Goedde. Rio Grande, which stranded a pair of runners in the first and one runner in both the second and third innings, finally scored a breakthrough against LWC starter Casey Bryan in the bottom of the fourth. Sophomore Mattie Lanham reached on a oneout walk and, one out later, scored from first on a double to deep right-center by freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) - the first hit of the day for the RedStorm - to tie the game at 1-1. Freshman pinch -hitter Shanea Long (Wellston, OH) followed with a hard grounder that stayed under the glove of LWC shortstop Madison Scott and went into leftcenter for a single which allowed Jenkins to score the go-ahead run. The Blue Raiders were retired in order in the fifth and managed just a one-out infield single by Trampe in the sixth, but they did make things a bit interesting in the seventh. Travatia Bowden was hit by a pitch to begin the inning and moved to third on a pair of groundouts, but Jones induced Andrea Whelan to pop weakly to second for the game's final out. Bryan suffered just her third loss in 21 decisions, despite allowing just three hits in a complete game effort. The freshman did issue a season-high four walks, but also had a season-high 12 strikeouts. Game two was a showcase for Lindsey Wilson pitcher Jordan Hood. Hood, a junior right-hander and the MSC Pitcher of the Year in 2013, took a perfect game into the fifth inning and finished with a complete-game two-hitter. She walked just one and fanned 12. Hood also starred at the plate, going 3-for-4 with a solo home run and two runs scored. Scott also had four hits in the victory, while Kristina Krupinski and Brittney Graves both had two hits and an RBI and Goedde added a double. Hood's home run gave the Blue Raiders a 1-0 second inning lead, before run -scoring hits by Scott and Krupinski in the fourth and and RBI hit by Graves in the fifth extended the lead to 4-0. Jones coaxed a leadoff walk from Hood in the fifth to end the perfect game and, one out later, FRESHMAN KARI Lanham singled to JENKINS had a key RBI left to end the no-hit double in the Monday, bit and send Jones to April 21, game one win second. Freshman over Lindsey Wilson. Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH) followed with a single to center to plate Jones, but the rally died shortly thereafter when Hood fanned both Jenkins and Long. Lindsey Wilson tacked on a pair of insurance runs in the seventh thanks to an RBI double by Goedde and an error. Freshman starter Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) suffered her fourth loss in 15 decisions for Rio, allowing four hits - including the Hood home run in two innings of work. Rio Grande Freshman Jenna Jones Honored By MSC Again Mid-South Conference COLUMBIA, Ky. - University of Rio Grande freshman Jenna Jones is the MidSouth Conference Softball Pitcher of the Week and Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) junior Kristina Krupinski is the MSC Player of the Week, conference officials announced on Monday, April 21. The weekly honor is the third of the season for Jones. She also earned the award on March 10 and March 24. Krupinski earns her first weekly honor of the season and second of her career. She was player of the week as well on Feb. 25, 2013. Jones posted a 4-0 record the previous week, including hurling her second no-hitter of the season to earn the MidSouth's top weekly pitching honor. The Lancaster, Ohio, native, finished last week with three complete games while allowing just one run and four hits in 21-2/3 innings. Jones began the week with a one-hit shutout in a 4-0 win over Cumberlands. She struck out six in the win while issuing a pair of walks. In her next outing, Jones nohit Bluefield (Va.) in a 4-0 win over the Rams. She concluded the game with three strikeouts in the win. Jones recorded both wins in a sweep of Pikeville (Ky.). She allowed one run on three hits in a 3-1 complete-game win in the first game of the doubleheader and picked up the win in relief as the RedStorm beat the Bears 4-3 for the sweep. Jones -- who pitched out of a bases loaded jam in the seventh -- threw a scoreless two-thirds of an inning to preserve the 3-3 tie. The RedStorm scored in the bottom of the seventh to give Jones her 15th win of the season. Jones ranks third in the Mid-South in wins, fourth in opponent's batting average (.212), sixth in strikeouts (103) and eighth in ERA (2.38). Nationally, Jones' wins ranks 28th in the NAIA. Krupinski posted a .455 batting average with three home runs and seven RBIs to earn the conference's player of the week honor. She helped the No. 8-ranked Blue Raiders to a 4-0 week. The Elizabethtown, Ky., first baseman began her week with a 2-for-4 performance in the first game of a doubleheader with Georgetown (Ky.). She hit a seventhinning grand slam to help the Blue Raiders win in comefrom-behind fashion. Krupinski added a two-run home run in the second game in a 4-1 win. Against Cumberlands (Ky.), Krupinski hit a solo home run in the first game of the doubleheader to become the program's all-time home run leader with 36 career homers. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 32 RedStorm Baseball Rolls Over Miami Harriers Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande backed up a trio of two-run innings with a pair of three-run frames and cruised to a 123 win over visiting Miami University -Hamilton, Tuesday, April 22, in nonconference baseball action at Bob Evans Field. The RedStorm, who had divided a doubleheader with Harriers in Chillicothe back in early March, won for the fourth time in their last five outings and improved to 21-26 on the season. Miami-Hamilton, which had won five of its previous six outings entering play on Tuesday, slipped to 24-14 with the loss. Sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) had two hits and drove in three runs to lead the Rio offensive attack, while junior Anthony Knittel (Portsmouth, OH) had two hits and two RBIs and sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) also knocked in a pair of runs. Junior Ryan Christophel (Cincinnati, OH), the second of five RedStorm pitchers earned the win his third in four decisions this season. The left-hander allowed one hit and run over three innings. Daniel Franschetti had two hits and drove in a run for the Harriers, while Ryan Griffis also had two hits and Heath Stricker drove in two runs. Chris Ticherich started and took the loss for Miami-Hamilton, allowing six hits and seven runs - only three of which were earned - in 5-2/3 innings. He walked two and struck out three. Six of Rio Grande's 12 runs were unearned as the result of four errors by the Harriers. Rio Grande jumped to a 2-0 first inning lead on a run-scoring double by senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) and a subsequent RBI single by Yates, but MU-H grabbed a lead of its own with two runs in the second inning and another marker in the third. Stricker had a tworun bases loaded single off of Knittel, the starter for Rio Grande, in the second inning and Franschetti had an RBI hit off of Christophel in the third, but that was the extent of the offensive output for the visitors. Rio Grande regained the lead with three unearned runs in the bottom of the third, two of which scored directly RIO GRANDE'S GRANT TAMANE dives back on errors and the other on a groundout by Ford. into first base during the April 22 12-3 win over The RedStorm then Miami-Hamilton. tacked on two runs in both the sixth and seventh innings. came against MU-H relievers Tyler Freshman Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Stansbury and Grant Ballou in the Puerto Rico) drove in one of the sixth eighth. Yates and Ford were both hit inning markers with a fielder's choice by pitches with two outs and the bagrounder to second, while Knittel had ses loaded to force in runs and Knittel an RBI single in the seventh. drew a bases-loaded walk to plate the The final three runs of the game final run of the day. Cumberland Dashes Rio Baseball’s MSC Tournament Hopes Rio Grande Sports Information LEBANON, Tenn. - Cumberland University scored in its each of its first four at bats, bolting to an 8-0 lead and never looking back en route to an 11-3 win over the University of Rio Grande, Friday, April 25, in Mid-South Conference baseball action at Ernest L. Stockton Stadium. The loss officially extinguished any post-season hopes for the RedStorm, who slipped to 21-27 overall and 6-19 in the MSC. Rio Grande needed a sweep of the weekend series, in addition to a sweep of the University of the Cumberlands by Lindsey Wilson in order to reach the upcoming MSC Tournament. But, even had the RedStorm won on Friday, they would've been eliminated thanks to Cumberlands' win at Lindsey Wilson. Cumberland improved to 33-17 overall and 15-9 in league play with the victory. The Bulldogs, who banged out 20 hits, scored single runs in each of the first two innings before blowing things wide open with a four-run third and a two-run fourth inning. Rio Grande got two of the runs back in the fifth inning, but saw its hopes of a comeback dashed shortly thereafter when CU countered with three more runs in the sixth. Justin Byrd finished 4 -for-4 with a home run and two runs batted in for the Bulldogs, while Ricky Coleman and Richie Seaton both had three hits and two RBIs in the winning effort. Coleman also hit a home run. Cumberland also got two hits and three RBIs from Josciel Veras and Chris Hall finished 3-for-4. Anthony Gomez, the reigning MSC Pitcher of the Year, improved to 5-2 on the season after allowing four hits and two runs - one earned - with a walk and nine strikeouts over seven innings. Freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) had a double and junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) had the lone run batted in for Rio Grande, which managed just five hits as a team. Georgetown Tigers Blank Rio En Route To DH Sweep Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio Visiting Georgetown College limited the University of Rio Grande to just one run and five hits en route to a doubleheader sweep of the RedStorm, 1-0 and 4-1, Wednesday, April 23, in Mid-South Conference action at Rio Softball Park. Rio Grande, which was playing the final home games of its 2014 scheduled, suffered just its second sweep of the year in MSC play this season in falling to 27-16 overall and 19-13 in league play. The Tigers, who received votes in the latest NAIA Top 25 coaches poll, improved to 28-12 overall and 23-9 in the conference. The opening game was a pitcher's duel between Rio freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) and Georgetown's Kayla Williams. Jones allowed just three hits and an unearned run, while walking one and striking out six in a complete game effort. Williams also went the distance in a four-hit shutout effort. She walked one and struck out 10 en route to her 11th win of the season in 17 decisions. The game's lone run scored in the top of the fifth when Sandy Young reached on an error to begin the inning, stole second and moved to third on a groundout. After another groundout and a walk to Rachel Simms, Young raced home on a passed ball. Rio Grande, which didn't have a baserunner until sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) reached on a two-out single in the fourth, left runners at first base in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings and also managed one final scoring chance in the seventh. Jones led off with walk and moved to second on a one-out single to center by freshman Alex Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH). Sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) followed with a blast to left-center which appeared ticketed for a game-tying extra-base hit, but Georgetown's Emily Snow made a dazzling running catch in the gap for the second out and freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) grounded to second to end the game. Young had two of the Tigers' three hits, while Chelsea Riney had the other with a leadoff double in the sixth. Game two saw GC push across an unearned run in the first inning and three third inning markers against Jones to open up a comfortable lead, but the Tigers had to sweat out the final two innings to nail down the win. Georgetown scored its first inning run when Riney led off with a single to center, was bunted into scoring position, stole third and scored on a throwing error. The three third inning runs crossed on a double by Ashley Coppage, a single by Young and an RBI single by Cassidy Taylor. Rio Grande again was held hitless by GC starter Jessica Claxton until mounting a sixth inning rally. Jenkins reached on an error to begin the inning and, one out later, was forced out at second on freshman Cheyenne Hamaker's (Hilliard, OH) grounder to shortstop. Hamaker then stole second and scored on a bloop single to left by junior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH). Rollins followed with a walk to bring Jones - representing the tying run - to the plate, but she popped out to third to end the threat. The RedStorm also threatened against reliever Sydney Goyette in the bottom of the seventh when Lanham and Jenkins reached on consecutive two-out errors to bring up freshman Shanea Long (Wellston, OH) representing the tying run, but Goyette induced Long into a gameending popout to shortstop. Young finished 3-for-4 in the win for the Tigers, while Riney, Coppage and Taylor all had two hits. Claxton allowed the one hit and the unearned run over six innings, while walking three and striking out nine for her 14th win in 18 decisions. JUNIOR JESSI ROBINSON had Rio Grande's only hit in the Wednesday, April 23, game two loss to Georgetown. Goyette was credited with her second save. Jones allowed seven hits and four runs - three earned in 2-1/3 innings. She took the loss in both games and stands at 16-11 for the season. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 33 RedStorm Softball Earns Second Split With Lindsey Rio Grande Sports Information COLUMBIA, Ky. - It took 13 alltime meetings before the University of Rio Grande softball team finally earned its first win over Lindsey Wilson College on Monday, April 21. Win number two against the eighth -ranked Blue Raiders didn't take nearly as long. Sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) clubbed a pair of home runs and drove in four runs, while junior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) had three hits and two RBIs to lead Rio in a 7-4 game one victory over LWC, Friday, April 25, in Mid-South Conference action at Lindsey Wilson Park. The Blue Raiders held on down the stretch for an 8-4 triumph in the nightcap. Rio Grande finished the day at 2817 overall and 20-14 in the MSC, while Lindsey Wilson closed the afternoon at 41-7 overall and 27-5 in league play. Rollins snapped a scoreless tie in the fourth inning of the opener, clubbing a 3-1 offering from LWC starter Casey Bryan over the center field fence for a 2-0 lead. The blast also scored Robinson, who had reached on a one-out single. The Blue Raiders got one of the runs back in the bottom of the inning thanks to a fielder's choice grounder off the bat of Savannah Madison, but the RedStorm erupted for four more runs in the fifth. Robinson had a two-out single to score sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) and, on the same play, a throwing error allowed freshman Brittany Walk (Unionville Center, OH) to score as well. Robinson stole second and Rollins followed with her second home run of the game on the next pitch to make it 6-1. Lindsey Wilson made it interesting with three runs in the home half of the sixth thanks to run-scoring hits by Brittney Graves and Madison Scott and an RBI groundout by Kristina Krupinski, but Rio got one of the runs back in the top of the seventh on an RBI single by Robinson. Freshman pitcher Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) retired the side in order in the seventh to nail down the win. Jones improved to 1711, allowing eight hits and the four runs in a complete game effort. She walked two and struck SOPHOMORE out five. KIM ROLLINS hit Abbie three home runs in Goedde had the Friday, April 25, two hits for DH split with LindLindsey Wil- sey Wilson. son, while Andrea Whelan and Travatia Bowden each had a double in a losing cause. Bryan suffered her fourth loss in 23 decisions - and her second in five days to the RedStorm - after allowing four hits and six runs, two of which were earned, with two walks and eight strikeouts over five innings. In the nightcap, the host Blue Raiders scored twice in the third inning and three times in the fifth to take a 5-0 lead before Rio rallied to score four times in the sixth inning and draw within a run. LWC mounted its own rally in the home sixth, scoring three more times to seal the win. Krupinski had two hits, including a home run, and drove in two runs to lead the Blue Raiders, while Bailey Mize homered and drove in three runs and Amanda Trampe had a tworun home run. Ashley Evans also had two hits and pitcher Jordan Hood helped her own cause with a double. Hood allowed three hits and four runs - three earned - with a walk and 10 strikeouts in a complete game effort. Rio Grande's four-run sixth inning rally was the result of a pair of tworun home runs - one by Rollins and the other by freshman Shanea Long (Wellston, OH). Jones had a double for the RedStorm's other hit. Freshman Katie Noll (Loveland, OH) started and took the loss for Rio, surrendering five hits and five runs four earned - with three walks over 41/3 innings. RedStorm Softball Splits Twin Bill With Cumberland Bulldogs Rio Grande Sports Information LEBANON, Tenn. - Haley Gwin hit a grand slam home run to highlight a five-run fifth inning rally and help the University of Rio Grande to a 6-3 game two win and a doubleheader split with Cumberland University, Saturday, April 26, in Mid-South Conference softball action at Cumberland Softball Park. The Bulldogs scored three times in their final at bat to win the opening game of the twinbill, 5-4. Rio Grande finished the regular season at 29-18 overall and 21-15 in league play, tying Cumberland (35-18, 2115 MSC) for fourth place in the final conference standings. The RedStorm earned the No. 4 seed based on a tiebreaker and will face the Bulldogs again in the opening round of the MSC Tourna- ment on Wednesday, at 10:30 a.m., at Millenium Park in Danville, Ky. Gwin's home run, her fifth of the season, allowed Rio to erase a 2-1 deficit entering the fifth inning. Freshman Shanea Long (Wellston, OH) reached on a one-out walk and, one out later, a walk to junior Jessi Robinson (Wilmington, OH) and a single by sophomore Kim Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) loaded the bases. Freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) drew another walk from CU starter Jessica Lozano to force home the tying run before Gwin, a junior from Troy, Ohio launched a 1-2 pitch over the fence in leftcenter to give the RedStorm the lead. The Bulldogs got a two-out home run by Jessica Roper in the bottom of the inning, but could get no closer the rest of the way. Freshman Katie Noll (Loveland, OH) earned her first collegiate win in relief for Rio, allowing four hits including the Roper home run - over five innings. She did not walk a batter and struck out one. Gwin finished 2-for-4 in the victory, while Jones added a run-scoring double in the first inning and Long had a double of her own. Roper accounted for all but two of Cumberland's five hits. In addition to the home run, she also had a double and the team's lone run batted in. Tessa Tomaselli also had a double in the loss, while Lozano suffered her fifth loss in 14 decisions, allowing six hits and as many runs - only one of which was earned over 4-2/3 innings. In the opener, Rio Grande rallied from a early 2-1 deficit by scoring three times in the fourth inning, but the Bulldogs scored three times in their final at bat to get the win. Jones had a run-scoring single in the first to give Rio the early lead before a tworun single in the home third by Emily Nicholson put the Bulldogs in front, 2-1. Rollins had a sacrifice fly and two more runs scored on a throwing error in the RedStorm's three-run fourth and Rio maintained its two-run cushion heading into the bottom of the seventh. Sarah Murray led off the inning and was hit by a pitch. She stole second and third before pinch-hitter Katelynn Stoll drew a one-out walk. A groundout advanced Stoll into scoring position. An infield single by Shawnee Kirk plated Murray and moved Stoll to third before Roper lined a single to left which scored Stoll with the game-tying run. A throwing error on the same play allowed Roper to advance to second and wild pitch while Nicholson was striking out for what would've been the final out of the inning allowed Kirk to scamper home with the winning marker. Roper finished 2-for-2 in the winning effort, while Courtney Maynard went the distance in the circle to get her 19th win in 28 decisions. Jones, Long and freshman Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) all had two hits in the loss for Rio Grande. Long's hits were both doubles and Jones also had a two-base hit. Jones was the losing pitcher as well, allowing five hits and five runs - four earned in 6-2/3 innings. She also walked four, hit a batter and tossed four wild pitches in falling to 17-12 on the season. Cumberland University Completes Sweep Of RedStorm Baseball Rio Grande Sports Information LEBANON, Tenn. - The Mid-South Conference swansong for the University of Rio Grande baseball team ended in the same fashion as many of their preceding outings did this season - in frustration. Cumberland University finished off a weekend series sweep by posting a pair of walkoff wins over the RedStorm, 7-6 and 8-7, Saturday, April 26, at Ernest L. Stockton Stadium. Rio Grande, which is leaving the MSC for the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (KIAC) next season, finished the day at 21-29 overall and closed the MSC portion of their season at 6-21. The Bulldogs improved to 35-17 overall and 179 in the conference Josciel Veras was the biggest thorn in the side of the RedStorm on the day, collecting two hits in each game and driving in the winning run in both contests. His bases-loaded single in the bottom of the ninth inning plate the game-winner in the opener, while one-out single to center in the bottom of the seventh inning produced the game two victory. Rio Grande cut a 4-1 deficit in the opener down to one run after a two-run double by senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) in the top of the eighth inning. The Bulldogs got both of the runs back in the bottom of the inning, but the RedStorm rallied again and tied the game at 6-6 on a two-out, threerun home run by freshman Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) in the ninth inning. Ricky Coleman led off the Cumberland ninth with a walk, stole second and moved to third on a single by Sam Lind. Brady North was intentionally walked to load the bases and set the stage for Veras, who lined a 1 -2 pitch by Rio junior reliever Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH) back up the middle to score Coleman with the winning run. Coleman, Lind and Veras all had two hits in the win for CU, while Lind and Bryan Haney drove in two runs each. Jake Collier went the distance on the mound to get his sixth win in nine decisions. Flores finished with a career-high four hits in as many at bats for Rio Grande, while freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) had two hits and sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) hit a leadoff home run in the second inning. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 34 Rio Men 3rd In Conference; Kosnich Named Top MSC Freshman Rio Grande Sports Information WILLIAMSBURG, Ky. - Freshman Nate Kosnich took first place in the 110-meter hurdles and third place in the 400-meter hurdles to help the University of Rio Grande men's track & field team to a third place finish at the MidKosnich, a native South Conference of Pickerington, ChampionOhio, crossed the ships, Saturday, finish line in 15.02 April 26, at to take top honors the Univerin the 110 hurdles sity of the Cumberand posted a time lands. Kosnich, of 57.07 in the 400 a native of hurdles. He was alPickeringso a member of the ton, Ohio, RedStorm's 4x100 crossed the finish line and 4x400 relay in 15.02 to teams, which take top placed third and honors in the 110 fourth, respectively. hurdles and posted a time of 57.07 in the 400 hurdles. He was also a member of the RedStorm's 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams, which placed third and fourth, respectively. By virtue of his 18.75 points scored in the meet, Kosnich earned the league's Freshman of the Year award. He edged out fellow freshman Austin Wilson (Gallipolis, OH), who tallied 15.75 points, for Rio's highpoint honor. Wilson, also a member of the 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams, took fourth in the 100-meter dash finals with a time of 11.04, while placing fifth in both the 200-meter dash (22.79) and javelin throw (131-01). Rio Grande finished with 126 points as a team. Host Cumberlands took top honors with 233 points, while Lindsey Wilson College was second at 132. Shawnee State University finished behind Rio in fourth place with 123 points and Georgetown College was fifth at 122.50. Rio Grande also received double-figure point outings from senior Kaleb Kimber (Salisbury, N.C.) and the freshman duo of Alex Nichols (Pickerington, OH) and Floyd Lowry (St. Paris, OH). Kimber and Nichols both tallied 13 points, while Lowry had 10.5 points. Kimber was third in the triple jump (42-7.50), fifth in the high jump (65.0) and sixth in the long jump (211.25), while Nichols took fourth place in the discus throw (136-05) and fifth in both the shot put (42-0) and hammer throw (123-02). Lowry, another member of the 4x100 relay team, was third in the 110 hurdles (15.94) and sixth in the 400 hurdles (59.58). Among the others who scored six points or more for the RedStorm were sophomore Kyle Sanborn (Dover, OH), who was third in the 1,500-meter run (4:01.64) and eighth in the 800-meter run (2:00.89); freshman Charlie Ronan (Cincinnati, OH), a member of the 4x100 and 4x400 relay teams, who placed sixth in the 200-meter dash (23.25) and seventh in the 100 (11.15); freshman Issac Andrews (Nelsonville, OH), who was third in the shot put (45-0.5), eighth in the discus (120-0) and 10th in the hammer throw (95-11); freshman Brandon Ray (Columbus, OH), who was third in the pole vault (11RIO GRANDE'S NATE KOSNICH won the 11.75); freshman Dallas 110m hurdles and was named MSC FreshGuy (Buffalo, OH), who man of the Year on Saturday, April 26 took fourth in the 5,000 (16:10.92); and freshman Blake sophomore Matt Engstrom (Dover, Freed (Uhrichsville, OH), who was OH), who took seventh in the 3,000fifth in the 5,000-meter race walk meter steeplechase (10:35.60); fresh(35:47.27) and seventh in the 10,000- man Aaron Evancho (Zanesville, meter run (34:58.63). OH), who was 10th in the 800 Rio also got top 10 finishes from (2:02.90); and freshman David Bankfreshman Nate Goodhart (Kent, OH), enhaster (Frankfort, OH), who placed who was sixth in the 10,000 10th in the 400 (54.49). (34:53.98); sophomore Jerrele Lyles The 4x100 relay team (Wilson, Ro(Dublin, OH), who was seventh in the nan, Lowry, Kosnich) took third with 800 (2:00.00); freshman Lane Hagar a time of 43.47, while the 4x400 team (Hilliard, OH), who placed seventh in (Kosnich, Sanborn, Wilson, Ronan) the 5,000 (17:00.78); sophomore Tim was fourth at 3:36.60 and the 4x800 Warner (Pomeroy, OH), who was squad (Lyles, Evancho, Hagar, Guy) seventh in the 400 hurdles (59.89); took fifth in 8:23.93. RedStorm Women Track & Field Place 4th At MSC Championships Rio Grande Sports Information WILLIAMSBURG, Ky. - Sophomore Carrie Coriell took top honors in the javelin throw and added a trio of fourth place finishes to help the University of Rio Grande women's track & field team to a fourth place finish at the late April Coriell, a na- weekend MidSouth Confertive of Lucasville, ence ChampiOhio and a Mar- onships hosted by the Unishall University versity of the transfer, edged Cumberlands. Coriell, a her senior teamnative of Lumate, Mary Beth casville, Ohio Schramm and a Marshall Univer(Marietta, OH), sity transfer, with a toss of 98- edged her 03 - five inches senior teammate, Mary longer than Beth Schramm's throw Schramm of 97-10. (Marietta, OH), with a toss of 98-03 five inches longer than Schramm's throw of 9710. Coriell also grabbed fourth place in the shot put (39-0.5), discus (122-09) and hammer throw (131-02) en route to a team-high 25 points. Freshman Lauren Stacey (Bethel, OH) was a close second for the honor, tallying 23 points for the RedStorm. Stacey took second place in both the discus (127-08) and hammer (142 -03), while placing fifth in the shot put (38-8.75) and sixth in the javelin (83-05). Rio Grande finished with 127 points as a team, while Lindsey Wilson (185), Cumberlands (174) and Campbellsville (141) filled the top three positions. Georgetown rounded out the top five with 120 points. Rio Grande also received doublefigure point outings from freshman Chantal Higgin (Delaware, OH), Schramm, junior Renee Davis (Amsterdam, OH) and freshman Clarissa Johnson (Hillsboro, OH). Higgin totaled 14.25 points, while Schramm had 14 points, Davis finished with 10.5 points and Johnson tallied 10.25 points. Higgin finished second in the 200meter dash (27.16) and fourth in the 100 (12.92), while Schramm was third in the hammer throw (135-10) and ninth in the discus (95-06), in addition to her second place showing in the javelin. Davis was fourth in the 400-meter hurdles (1:13.20) and sixth in the 100 hurdles (17.17), while Johnson was third in the 400 hurdles (1:10.16) and sixth in the 400-meter dash (1:02.47). Among the other top finishers for the RedStorm were freshman Nikki Worsham (Beavercreek, OH), who was fourth in the 5,000-meter race walk (30:00.64); freshman McKenzie Coriell (Lucasville, OH), who was eighth in both the long jump (14- RIO SOPHOMORE CARRIE CORIELL won the javelin throw at the Saturday, April 26, MSC Championships. 10.75) and triple jump (28-05); freshman Alex Ellis (Ona, WV), who was seventh in the 800-meter run (2:29.25); freshman Randi Wray (Bidwell, OH), who was fifth in the pole vault (7-06); junior Allison Keeney (Cincinnati, OH), who placed sixth in the heptathlon (2070 pts.); junior Rachel Hoffman (Franklin, OH), who was seventh in the heptathlon (2050 pts.) and 10th in the high jump (4-03.25); freshman Shelby Pickens (Racine, OH), who was eighth in both the 100 hurdles (18.16) and 400 hurdles (1:15.48) and ninth in the 400-meter dash (1:07.31); junior Brittany Piccone (Crooksville, OH), who was 10th in the 5,000meter run (21:20.35); junior Shameca Armstrong (Cincinnati, OH), who was 10th in the long jump (14-0.5); and freshman Alicia Ferrell (Bidwell, OH), who was 10th in the high jump (4-03.25). The 4x100 relay team (Higgin, McKenzie Coriell, Armstrong, Davis) took fourth with a time of 52.59, while the 4x400 team (McKenzie Coriell, Johnson, Ellis, Davis) was fourth at 4:23.63 and the 4x800 squad - comprised of Ellis, freshman Katie Glover (Ashville, OH), Piccone and freshman Lindsay Golden (Milford, OH) placed fourth in 10:47.34. Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 35 #1 September 2013 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 36 #2 October 2013 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 37 #3 November 2013 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 38 #4 November 2013 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 39 #5 December 2013 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 40 #6 February 2014 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 41 #7 March 2014 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Signals: The Year In Review Page 42 #8 March 2014 Rio Grande, Ohio April/May 2014; Number 9 Page 43 Rio’s 138th Commencement Honors 391 2014 Graduates Source: University News Service The 138th Commencement will honor 391 graduates that have earned 413 degrees – 219 Associate’s Degrees, 158 Bachelor’s Degrees and 36 Master’s Degrees. Two graduates – Mark Anthony Bentley and Cody J. McNeely – each will receive four degrees. Each earned their Bachelor of Science in Industrial Technology, Associate in Technical Science in Industrial Automation and Associate of Applied Science in Plant Maintenance Technology. Bentley also earned an Associate of Technical Science in Power Plant Mechanical Maintenance, while McNeely earned an Associate in Technical Science in Welding. The graduates also will feature award-winning artist Kayla Malone, published author Jordan Pickens and Mayo Clinicbound Emily Burnham. Malone was one of six Ohio seniors honored at the seventh annual Awards for Excellence in the Visual Arts hosted by the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio (AICUO). It was the second consecutive year a Rio art student was honored. Malone’s work will be featured in a walking exhibition as part of Gallery Hop on May 3 in the Short North District in Columbus. Pickens is another accomplished senior who will walk across the stage at commencement. The Integrated Social Studies Education senior coauthored “Meigs County” with professor emeritus Ivan Tribe, Ph.D. The book is among Arcadia Publishing’s popular Images of America series and brings the rich history of Meigs County to life through more than 200 vintage images and captions. “I transferred to Rio Grande because of the outstanding Education program, but I never imagined I’d be a published author before I earned my cap and gown,” Pickens said. Burnham also credits Rio for helping her to realize, and attain her dream. The Radiologic Technology student from Montana was accepted to the prestigious Radiologic Therapy program at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota beginning this fall. “I don’t think I would’ve ended up at Mayo if I didn’t come to Rio,” Burnham said. “The faculty got to know me and “We are always proud of our graduates, and what I would be good at. At everyone looks forward to a wonderful day.” Rio Grande President a bigger Barbara Gellman-Danley, Ph.D. school I probably would’ve just settled.” The 2014 Class is filled with similar stories throughout each of Rio’s academic programs. With friends and family there to share in the celebration, May 10 promises to be another day filled with rich tradition and Rio pride. “We are always proud of our graduates, and everyone looks forward to a wonderful day,” said President Barbara Gellman-Danley, Ph.D. “I approach this commencement with mixed emotions, as it will be my last at Rio Grande. Just as our graduates, I close one door and walk through to a new journey. It’s been a great honor to serve Rio.” President Gellman-Danley has been appointed president of the Higher Learning Commission, effective July 7. The HLC is a nonprofit regional accrediting agency that accredits more than 1,000 colleges and universities with a home base in one of 19 states stretching from West Virginia to Arizona. Rio Grande has hired AGB Search to coordinate a national search for its 22nd president. Founded by the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges in 2010, AGB Search has assisted more than 215 searches at more than 157 institutions.