New Housing Policy Requires Campus Residency
Transcription
New Housing Policy Requires Campus Residency
Rio WBB Takes Part in Initiative — Page 16 Signals Rio Appoints Sax as New Provost and VP Academic Affairs — Page 2 University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014 Rio Graduate Robert Gordon Named To MLK Holiday Commission — Page 7 Number 7 New Housing Policy Requires Campus Residency By DANIEL FRASER Signals Staff Writer The University of Rio Grande has adopted a new housing plan for incoming freshman for the Fall 2014 semester. The policy applies to incoming freshmen who live more than 50 miles from campus. Dean of Students Aaron Quinn said the new plan will be as follows: With some exceptions, all full-time students under the age of 23 will live in an on-campus housing unit for a total of four semesters. Exceptions to this new plan include: Married Students; Single Parent (with custody of child); Establish permanent residency within 50 road miles of campus. Quinn said, “An apartment is a rental and not a permanent address. The home must be purchased or owned by the student’s family. Any ‘extenuating circumstances’ (i.e. veterans) will be reviewed on a case by case basis by my office… ” Thomas Mansmester. Exceptions to this perger, Director If on-campus apartof Admissions, were built, the new policy include: ments says “I believe requirements could Married Students; that this change parallel other institu Over the age of 23; will be a great tions which require a Single Parent (with custoimprovement for longer stay on campus. dy of child); campus life and The new plan will not Established permanent retention.” Mansaffect current students residency within 50 road perger also said and the housing cost miles of campus. that the new will not be any differhousing plan has ent than usual; the cost shown no negative impact on the is voted on annually by the Board of number of applicants for the fall seTrustees. Rio Enactus Team Prepares For Nationals Exposition TM By BECCA STEINER Signals Staff Writer The Rio Grande Enactus Team is in the midst of preparing for the Nationals Competition which is to be held April 1-3 in Cincinnati. They have been working on their projects since late August and have completed the goals that were set for them. Mrs. Carol Smith, Director of the Loren M. Berry Center, leads the group and projects. So far this year, the Enactus team has collected 9,342 pounds (and counting) of nonperishable food for Vinton Baptist Food Pantry,. Enactus is finishing up its main project Campbell’s “Let’s CAN Hunger”, along with other projects such as the American Free Enterprise and Leadership Conference (held the third week of June for all Ohio high school students) and local food drives done here on campus and at local elementary schools. Smith says, "We have had a very successful year. We received a small grant from the Campbell's corporation to assist with local food drives to assist the Vinton Baptist Food Pantry. We have donated 9,342 pounds of food which amounts to approximately 21% of the food donated to the food pantry. We have just begun preparations for the Enactus National Exposition in Cincinnati, Apr. 1, 2, 3. It is a very busy but exciting time for our team!" Enactus is currently in a partnership with SODEXO and the Pure American Girl Pageant system. The team currently has 11 members, but we are always recruiting anyone who would be interested in See Related Story on Page 3 joining, said Smith. To read more about the Campbell’s ENACTUS TEAM MEMBERS unloading a van after a successful food Let’s CAN Hunger Project visit: drive at a local elementary school. Members, left to right: Matt Akers, http://www.letscanhunger.com/ Stephanie Cartmell, Brooke Wolni, and Paris Morris. University Adopts New Policy for Incomplete Grades Compiled By BECCA STEINER Signals Staff Writer The University of Rio Grande Faculty Assembly has approved a new policy regarding incomplete grades; it was adopted and went into effect on February 12. The new university policy establishes a more comprehensive procedure for both requesting an incomplete and having the incomplete become a letter grade. The new policy is as follows: Policies: Incompletes will only be granted for extenuating circumstances, such as illness, accident, etc. which will prevent the student from completing the course; an incomplete grade can- not be given to avoid a failing grade in the course. Appropriate documentation (i.e. medical) must accompany the Incomplete Grade Request. Students must have completed at least 75 percent of the course with a passing grade when requesting an incomplete. The student must request an incomplete from the instructor. It is the responsibility of the student to make up incomplete work. The instructor must complete the Incomplete Grade Request form and submit to the Registrar’s Office. Requests must include a valid reason why the work cannot be completed, a list of assignments to com- plete, a schedule for when the work will be completed, and the grade to be assigned if the work is not completed. Assignments should be completed as soon as possible, preferably within a few weeks. An incomplete grade is not part of a student’s GPA, nor is it a passing grade to be considered for academic standing, federal financial aid eligibility, academic eligibility, or other purposes. Students cannot move on in a course sequence if a prerequisite has an incomplete grade (i.e. students cannot move on to ENG 11203 with an incomplete in ENG 11103). The faculty member, in consulta- tion with the Registrar, can make an exception to the incomplete grade request process if extenuating circumstances warrant such an exception. Fee: $65; An academic Dean or the Registrar can choose to waive the incomplete grade fee. Instructions For Students Take the appropriate form to the instructor. Submit one form for each incomplete requested. If the student is requesting multiple incompletes from one instructor, he/ she may put all the requests for that instructor on one form. Courses taught by a different instructor will require additional forms. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 2 Campus News Rio Offers Full Tuition Chemistry Scholarship Compiled By DANIEL FRASER Signals Staff Writer High school students looking to pursue a degree in chemistry have the opportunity to earn the Rio Grande Chemistry Academic Excellence Award, a four-year, full tuition scholarship. Rio’s chemistry scholarship is open to any student enrolling for the fall of 2014 who plans to major in chemistry. Applications must include a 200- word essay, letters of recommendation, and high school transcripts. The deadline to apply is March 1. The Chemistry Scholarship Committee reviews all applications and extends requests for interviews to finalists. First place is a four-year, full-tuition scholarship to major in Chemistry at Rio Grande. Second and third place earns a four-year, partial-tuition scholarship. Why choose chemistry? Firstly, the STEM fields (fields that study science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) are very popular in today’s society. The University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College’s commitment to STEM is evident throughout its curriculum. “The field of chemistry offers a wide range of career options after graduation, including immediate employment, graduate school, pharmacy school or medical school,” said Dr. John Means, an assistant professor in the Rio Grande School of Sciences. “The chance to win a full-tuition scholarship to help a student launch into one of these career paths is a fantastic opportunity.” According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the annual salary for a chemist ranges from $41,080 to $120,600 with a median salary of $71,770. Sax Appointed As Provost & VP Academic Affairs institution’s mission,” the statement continues. “Reporting to the Provost are the acachief academic ofdemic deans of the ficer. He currently three colleges, the serves as Dean of InDean of Students and struction and Chief Acmultiple department ademic Officer at the heads. The Provost University of New will provide vital, creaMexico-Valencia Camtive, and adaptable viDR. RICHARD SAX pus in Los Lunas, New has been appointed Prov- sion and leadership for Mexico.” ost and Vice President of all academic divisions, According to the Academic Affairs at the departments, and prostatement released by grams and services that University of Rio Nourse, Sax received a Grande/Rio Grande support them.” Bachelor of Arts in “Dr. Danley is excitCommunity College. English from Haverford ed to welcome Dr. Sax College, a Master of within her senior leadArts in English Language & Litera- ership team and expresses her gratiture and a Doctorate of Philosophy in tude to the search committee and all English Language& Literature from members of the college community the University of Michigan. for their cooperation and support “In his role as Provost and Vice throughout the search process,” the President of Academic Affairs, Sax statement concludes. will provide leadership in the development, assessment, budgeting and oversight of all academic initiatives, and vision, coordination, accountability, and advocacy for the academic division in support of the Appointment Effective On July 1 From University E-mail Statement proven commitment to intellectual Dr. Richard Sax has been appoint- pursuits in both the private liberal ed Provost and Vice President of Ac- arts education and public community ademic Affairs at college settings the University of “In his role as Provost made him a strong Rio Grande/Rio fit for the position.” and Vice President of Grande Communi“This, coupled ty College. The extremely proAcademic Affairs, Sax with appointment was ductive reports from announced Februwill provide leadership those he worked ary 24 in a statewith at other instituin the development, asment released by J. tions, helped make Chris Nourse, Rio sessment, budgeting and the decision final,” Grande’s Director the statement continoversight of all academic of Human Reued. sources. He will officially initiatives, and vision, “Dr. Sax was begin the position selected after an coordination, accounta- effective July 1, extensive national 2014. search that includ- bility, and advocacy for “Dr. Sax comes to ed a rigorous vet- the academic division in Rio with a proven ting and interview record of academic support of the instituprocess by internal leadership experiand external stakeence having served tion’s mission.” holders of the Uniin positions of inversity,” the statement, written on creasing responsibility and complexibehalf of President Barbara Gellman- ty over a course of nearly 25 years,” Danley, said. the statement added. “This includes “In the end, Sax’s genuine enthusi- serving as Honors Program Director, asm for Rio, strong record of acaEnglish Department Chair, twice as demic leadership experience, and an academic dean, and twice as a 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, William Jeffreys, Cydnie Few, Christian Forgey, Daniel Fraser, Ernest Phillips, Emily Rorrer, and Becca Steiner. 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. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 3 Rio Enactus Students Fight Hunger In Southeastern Ohio The number of Shannon Johnson, families and inMichael Memory, dividuals in need Austin Short, Becca of food assisSteiner, Skylar tance has inThompson, Brooke creased signifiWolni and President cantly throughand Project Leader out southeastern Paris Morris. Carol Ohio within in Smith, director of the last year. the Loren M. Berry At the Vinton Center for Economic Baptist Food Education at Rio Pantry in Gallia Grande, is the EnacCounty, 8,130 tus advisor. people were Since 2008, the served in 2013 Rio Grande chapter with 43,980 of Enactus has orgapounds of food. nized an annual food Up from 6,000 drive to benefit local served in 2012, pantries. Enactus the pantry relies partnered with THE VINTON BAPTIST FOOD PANTRY, located at 11818 State entirely on volCampbell’s in 2009 Road 16 in Vinton, is open Mondays from 5 to 6:30 p.m. unteerism and for the Let’s Can donations. Hunger campaign, While numerous donations and vol- we do,” West said. “It would just be and has continued to do so each year unteers contribute, Vinton Baptist impossible.” since. Food Pantry Director David West Enactus, formerly known as SIFE, This year’s campaign began in Ocinsisted the efforts would not be pos- is an international collegiate organi- tober and has raised 9,342 pounds of sible without the support of Enactus zation that applies business concepts food to date for the Vinton Baptist students from the University of Rio to develop community outreach pro- Food Pantry. The program, which Grande/ Rio Grande Community jects transforms lives and shape a runs through March, consists of College. better, more sustainable world. drives on the Rio Grande Campus, “If it weren’t for the students there Rio Grande Enactus members inRio Grande Elementary, Vinton Eleand throughout the county, we clude Matt Akers, Cody Bennett, mentary and the Miss Heart of wouldn’t be able to do a lot of what Stephanie Cartmell, Aryn Gritter, Christmas pageant. SODEXO Food Campus Dates Of Note… Spring Break will be held from Monday, March 10, through Friday March 14. Second 8-week classes begin on Monday, March 17. Midterm Grades Available on Student Space Thursday March 20. Registration for Summer and Fall terms begins Monday, April 7. Good Friday! Campus is Closed Friday, April 18. Last Day to Drop or Withdraw from a class is Friday, April 25. Last Day of Regular Classes is Friday, May 2. Final Exam Week will be held Monday, May 5, through Thursday, May 8. Last Day to Remove an Incomplete for Fall ’03 is Thursday, May 8. Service also supports the food drive by offering one free pizza party at each elementary for the classroom that raises the most donations. “The URG Enactus team promotes awareness of food insecurity in our community and helps stock the shelves of our local food pantry so that people in need can obtain food for their families,” Smith said. “We also provide information and workshops to empower people in need to break the cycle of hunger.” The Vinton Baptist Food Pantry, located at 11818 State Road 16 in Vinton, is open Mondays from 5 to 6:30 p.m. “We have had a very successful year. We received a small grant from the Campbell's corporation to assist with local food drives to assist the Vinton Baptist Food Pantry. We have donated 9,342 pounds of food which amounts to approximately 21% of the food donated to the food pantry." —Carol Smith, Director of the Berry Center Commencement, Saturday, May 10, at 1:00 p.m. Summer I and 10-Week Terms Begins Monday, June 2. Last Day to Add/Drop/Withdraw with a Refund for Summer I and 10-Week is Tuesday, June 3. Last Day to Drop or Withdraw for Summer I is Thursday, June 19. Summer I Term Ends Thursday, July 3. Summer II Term Begins Monday, July 7. Last Day to Add/Drop/Withdraw with a Refund for Summer II Term is Tuesday, July 8. Last Day to Drop or Withdraw for Summer 10-Week and Summer II is Thursday, July 24. End of Summer 10-Week and Summer II on August 7. Upcoming Welsh Events and News Rio Grande Enactus Team Looking Annual St. David’s Day Luncheon-Saturday, March 1, 2014 for New Members! — Mark the date now for this annual event to honor the patron saint of Wales, Dewi Sant. Welsh author Eirian Jones will be our featured speaker this year. Eirian has recently completed a book on Mynydd Bach-It’s History, which will be particularly interesting since many of the Welsh who settled in southeastern Ohio came from this area of Wales. The book was launched at Blaenpennal Chapel recently and has received wonderful reviews. More information will be coming out later on this event. 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 Welsh Heritage Days — May 17 & 18, 2014 at Bob Evans FarmWork 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 800-282-7201, ext. 7186 for more information. 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 March 2014; Number 7 Page 4 Registrar Announces Fall Merit And Dean's Lists RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The Office of the Registrar has released the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College fall semester 2013 Merit List and Dean's List. Students named to Rio Grande’s Merit List must be enrolled full time, complete all courses with a minimum of 12 credit hours and earn a 3.5-3.74 grade point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale. Rio Merit List honorees include Caleb Acord, Abigail Adams, Bailey Adkins, Harley Adler, Taylor Allen, Sharday Baines, Chelsea Barnes, Jeremy Bartley, Patrece Beegle, Amber Beidleman, Andrew Bennett, Tyler Black, Joshua Bock, Amanda Boster, Danielle Brannon, Hannah Brindle, Chelsea Brown, Ginger Brown, Kayla Browning, Stephen Brumfield, Lauren Burke, Jessica Burns, Bruno Casci, Cindy Conley, Tami Conrad, Chase Cook, Carrie Coriell, Tina Corwin, Cody Crawford, Jenna Crawford, Jaymee Cremeens, Larissa Cunningham, Rachelle Current, Natalie Davis, Rebecca Davis, Scarlet Denney, Jonathan Dodson, Jacob Dotson, Kayla Dowell, Megan Dunfee, Kristen Eblin, Steven Elliott, Cydnie Few, Joy Finley, Carlos Flores Alvarado, Eric Ford, Morgan Foster, Kody Fox, Karla Garn, Jocelyn George, Megan Giffin, Katie Glover, Lindsay Golden, Samantha Graham, Heather Graman, Kelsey Griffith, Erin Hale, Kelsey Hamilton, Rachel Hannon, Brooklyn Harless, Heidi Hemming, Jennifer Herzog, Max Hill, Leanne Hittle, Garry Huddleston, Caroline Hudson, Amber Huntzinger, Jordan Jenkins, Cassandra Johnson, Maria Johnson, Timothy Jones, Andrea Journey, Ernest Karikari, Jason Kelley, Emily Kinnan, Derek Klein, Cody Lee, Evan Legg, Kirstin Leonard, Hope Leopold, Riley Lightle, Rebecca Lipscomb, Taylor Long, Lesa Lookado, Jaclyn Lowe, Floyd Lowry, Myrriah Mace, Shelby Malone, Cody Mattox, Sheyan McGrath, Amy McKay, Carolyn Meek, Cailin Michael, Amanda Miller, Paul Miller, Leslie Mitchell, April Montgomery, Venessa Montgomery, Sara Moon, Paris Morris, Ethan Moss, Macyn Nance, Darian Napier, Chloe Nared, Jacquelyn Nitz, Brian Northup, Jessica Northup, Nicole Ogg, Kathryn Oshel, Mikhayla Oshel, Elizabeth Ours, Maria Ovalle, Michael Parcell, Courtney Parsons, William Paulino, Jayne Peck, Sylvia Perry, Jordan Pickens, Julie Polcyn, Cheyenne Potter, Shaina Prince, Karen Proffitt, Silas Pulliam, James Raynard, Megan Raynard, Kendra Reed, Clark Rice, Cody Riffle, Matthew Rinehart, Caitlin Roach, Tracy Roberts, Kimberly Rollins, Faith Rushing, Kayla Sanders, Shelby Sanders, Jessica Saunders, Merrit Scott, Nicholas Sharp, Tammy Sharp, Robin Shaw, Michelle Sheets, Jessica Shelton, Shane Shepherd, Allie Short, Blair Simpson, Madeline Smith, Taylor Smith, Igor Souza de Freitas, Katrina Sowers, Christopher Spurlock, David Steele Jr., Elizabeth Tackett, Luke Taylor, Morgan Van Bibber, Brianna Wachs, Mykah Walter, Breeanna Warner, Jeffrey Wells, Jennifer Williams, Justin Williams, Michael Williams, Molly Williams, Jessica Willis, Elisabeth Wolfe, Jesse Woodyard, Luke Workman, Sharon Wright, Stephen Yoczik, Kyle Young and Connor Zingarelli. Students named to the Dean’s List must be enrolled full time, complete all courses with a minimum of 12 credit hours and earn at least a 3.75 GPA on a 4.0 scale. Rio Dean’s List honorees include Sonya Adams, Halley Alberts, Michael Anderson, Velma Anderson, Isaac Andrews, Patricio Arce Aviles, Charlene Arrowood, Kevin Arroyo, Abigail Atkins, David Bakenhaster, Tiffany Barnes, Charles Barrett, Melinda Barry, Henry Baxter, Wendelyn Belcher, Brittany Beman, Cody Bennett, Jerri Bentley, Joseph Bevens, Darsha Bitanga, Logan Black, Matthew Blair, Sarah Blodgett, Natalie Boggs, Olivia Boone, Kimberly Bowman, Jordan Brewer, Megan Broderick, Destiny Brown, Christopher Brumfield, Daniel Buckley, Emily Ann Burnham, Jessica Butcher, Cody Call, Stephanie Campbell, Kelcie Carter, Alfred Caudill, Garnet Chapman, Noah Chasteen, Nathanael Chilcote, Danni Christman, Maggie Clagg, Audra Clark, Tonya Clark, Paige Cline, Kimberly Coey, Becky Cogar, Rebecca Conley, Brian Conn, Lisa Copley, McKenzie Coriell, Lisa Cox, Kali Cunningham, Shelbie Davies, Alexandria Davis, Michael Davis, Renee Davis, Kassandra Day, Ludovic Delapeyre, Jessica Delong, Ashli Dexter, Melissa Dickerson, Cheyenne Doczi, Amanda Dowell, Erica Dowell, Seleena Dowell, Austin Drewyor, Crystal Duncan, Tayler Duncan, Tyler Duncan, Cheyene Dunn, Andrea Edelmann, Alexandria Ellis, Thaddaeus Ellis, Kimberly Faro, Kacy Fink, Delilah Fish, Jazzman Fish, Katelyn Fisher, Hayden Flinner, Thomas Foust, Erika Fox, Harley Fox, Daniel Fraser, Katelyn Fuller, Morgan Gilliland, Joseph Gilliland Jr., Gaitlin Gilmore, Bonita Glasgow, Katie Godeaux, Joshua Goodall, Travis Graf, Breanna Grahame, Danielle Gruber, Lane Hagar, Jonna Haislop, Miranda Hammond, Samantha Hammond, Alina Hamner, Katelyn Haney, Dayton Hardway, Jalen Harris, Jamie Harrison, Taylor Hartley, Erin Heil, Dawn Helton, Carli Henman, Philip Hertz, Elizabeth Herzog, Rachel Hoffman, Adam Hollingshead, Talisha Holloway, Kyra Howell, Kimberly Hurt, Rebecca Hutchinson, Shannon Hutchinson, Cody Hysell, Hannah Hysell, Andrea Iannarelli, Shane Ingles, Luis Jimenez Alvarado, Adam Johnson, Amanda Johnson, Auroarah Johnson, Jonna Johnson, Lisa Johnson, Adam Jones, Jason Jones, Amelia King, Kristopher Kleski, Alexandria Kuhn, Amber Lambert, Emilie Lance, Derek Lawhorn, Colby Lee, Stephanie Legg, Summer Lehew, Hristian Lenkov, Katelynn Leonard, Austin Little, Kayla Love, Emma Lyles, Michael MacKnight, Marcus Makuch, Kevin Malone, Alyxandra Manring, Elizabeth Massie, Carrie Mathes, Dale Mattox, Ranjit Mavi, Bridget McCarley, Caleb McClanahan, Gwendolyn McCoy, Tanisha McKinney, Carmen McTurner, Michelle Meeks, Molly Meeks, Brittney Meldau, Jack Mercer, Dava Mershon, Grant Millard, Andrew Moffett, Kathleen Moore, Ashley Morgan, Melissa Morris, Edward Mussi, Halee Myers, Marren Newsom, Kaitlyn Noll, Aaron Oehler, Madison Oiler, Kiana Osborne, Tina Parsons, Kaleb Patten, Laura Patton, Kyle Phillips, Tyler Phillips, Brittany Piccone, Shelby Pickens, John Polycn, Kelsea Porter, Carley Potter, Tiffany Qualls, Callyn Ratcliff, Kathy Raynard, Rachael Reynolds, Sean Riley, Jose Roberts, Kristen Rollins, Kyle Rollins, Gwendolyn Rose, Clifford Roseberry, Renee Roseberry, Stephanie Roush, Tracy Russell, Elizabeth Rutter, Garrison Salisbury, Benjamin Schlater, Mary Schramm, Aaron Scott, Kyle Scott, Joseph Sebastian, Whitney Shain, Varun Sharma, Maria Sharp, Loretta Shepherd, Emilie Sigler, Heather Simpkins, John Sipple, Ana Smith, Crystal Smith, Racquel Smith, Madison Spohn, Sara Stacy, Becca Steiner, Hanna Stitt, Kelsey Strang, Taryn Strawser, Erin Sturgill, Jon Summers, Kyrie Swann, Sarah Sydnor, Romain Terzian, Heather Thacker, Megan Thomas, Braxton Thorla, Grant Trimble, Kent Trout, Josi Vanmeter, Emma Waits, Brittany Walk, Kaylee Walk, Jessica Walker, James Wallace, Tia Wallace, James Ward, Keyana Ward, Robert Warner, Timothy Warner, Alexandrea Warren, Mary Waugh, Whitney Weddle, Roberta White, Renee Whitley, Michelle Willard, Christopher Williams, Kaitlyn Williams, Zachary Williams, Austin Wilson, Andrea Wines, Kelli Wolfe, Victoria Wolfe, Jillian Wooldridge, Erin Wright, Courtney Young, Tiffany Zahran and Ashley Zielinski. Rio Grande Hosts Annual High School Art Exhibit Exhibition Provides Showcase For HS Juniors, Seniors RIO GRANDE, Ohio – The Fourth annual High School Juried Art Exhibition hosted by the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College closed Thursday at the Esther Allen Greer Museum. The exhibition provided a showcase for high school juniors and seniors within 150 miles of Rio Grande. Each art teacher from public and private schools was allowed to submit up to 10 pieces for consideration. Thirty-two total pieces were exhibited representing six regional high schools: Fairland High School, Jackson High School, Oak Hill High School, Ravenswood (W.V.) High School, River Valley High School and South Webster High School. “Each year I walk away from this exhibit very impressed with the “Each year I walk away from this exhibit very impressed with the artistic artistic talents produced throughout talents produced throughout our reour region,” Greer gion … The talent on display is truly Museum Director inspirational.” Greer Museum James Allen said. Director James Allen “The talent on display is truly inspi- rational. It’s always a joy for the Fine Arts Department at Rio Grande to host this exhibit and celebrate our future.” Best In Show honors went to a pair of high school seniors, with each awarded a $500 Rio Grande scholarship. Jackson High’s Rachel Green won for her pencil/ GREER MUSEUM guests view " Petal Excolored pencil work titled plosion,"one of two Best In Show honorees “Art From the Heart,” while at the fourth annual High School Juried Art South Webster High’s Taylor Exhibition hosted by Rio Grande. South Schonkwiler won for her Webster High School senior Taylor Schonkmixed media work titled wiler was the artist. “Petal Explosion.” For more information about the High School Juried Art Exhibitact Allen at [email protected] or 740tion, including next year’s event, con- 709-6214. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 5 Rio Alum Serves As Executive Director Gallia Chamber Of Commerce Source: Tower Times RIO GRANDE – From small business owner to now executive director of the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, Michelle Miller is determined to see our community’s business landscape flourish and continue to blossom new opportunities for growth. Since she took on her new chamber role in November, Miller has been busy finalizing standing plans with the chamber board, including the rollout of a new tiered membership structure aimed at better catering to all businesses types — from smallest to largest, with small spending budgets to large ones. “Having owned my business, I know the very unique challenges small business owners face,” said Miller, who earned degrees from the University of Rio Grande in theater and English and studied business. “We kind of lost an understanding, that by helping local business, it helps an ecosystem.” In October 2011, the Alpha Mu Beta sorority alumnae founded and launched galliaherald.com, an online news site known as the Gallia Hometown Herald. While her local news outlet quickly rose to success, her growth as a business leader has been years in the making, both in the professional and educational settings. Earlier that year, while working as an administrative assistant at the chamber for then executive director Lorie Neal, Miller felt an urge to re- turn to the University of Rio Grande parts of the country. for a third time. Having worked Through the program and with the closely with businesses in that posi- guidance of professors, Miller says tion for two years and with the cham- she was able to “pick apart” her idea ber’s support, she decided to pursue to determine if it was viable. She was her Master’s in Business Administra- then empowered to take a website she tion. had started in her “Michelle is an excellent home and provide valIt became apparent during her studies at example of the impact a Rio uable information to Grande education can Rio that, while she the community, even have,” said Annette Ward, reaching readers as far eventually wanted to director of Alumni Rela- away as Florida and start a business, it was her business pro- tions. “She has been able to California. ject idea that was des- navigate and find success in Miller forged strong personal and professional business relationships tined to become a rearenas due, in part, to her locally, and before ality. “It was one of those studies here as an under- being appointed as the moments to try it and graduate and graduate stu- chamber’s executive dent. Alumni of Rio Grande, director in November, do it,” said Miller, who stopped short of like Michelle, are well posi- sold her news site to tioned to meet their goals Carrie Gloeckner, completing her deand dreams.” gree to fully invest owner and founder of her time in both the the Meigs IndependGallia Hometown Herald and tend to ent Press. Gloeckner, also an alumna her young family’s needs. “I had of the Rio, plans to keep the publicaserved as a reporter for the local tions separate entities. newspaper for a couple of years, and “Michelle is an excellent example I liked that world, that job. It was a of the impact a Rio Grande education skill set that I already somewhat can have,” said Annette Ward, direchad.” tor of Alumni Relations. “She has Miller readily acknowledges how been able to navigate and find sucvaluable Rio’s MBA program was in cess in personal and professional areher journey to achieve business suc- nas due, in part, to her studies here as cess. an undergraduate and graduate stu“If it wasn’t for that program, I dent. Alumni of Rio Grande, like would have never started it,” Miller Michelle, are well positioned to meet said of galliaherald.com, which under their goals and dreams.” her watch, averaged 5,000 views a Kyla Carpenter, the chamber day from local readers, as well as board’s immediate past president, is from many people who once lived confident in the board’s decision to locally and moved away to different appoint Miller to what is viewed as a crucial position in the community. “Her experience as a small business owner will serve our members well, providing valuable insight into “HAVING OWNED the unique MY BUSINESS, I needs of know the very unique our business com- challenges small business owners face,” said munity,” Carpenter Michelle Miller, who said. “We earned degrees from are excited the University of Rio Grande in theater and to learn English and studied about Michelle’s business. innovative ideas to enrich the chamber’s value for our membership.” Lorie Neal, also a Rio alumna, served as chamber executive director for 12 years before she unexpectedly passed away at the age of 40 in September. Miller, née Morris, is a native of Jackson County, Ohio. She earned her associate’s in Technical Theater and bachelor’s in English Literature in 1998 and 2006, respectively. Her husband Tim Miller works for Gallia County. They have two children, son Trent, 15, and daughter Sydney, 11. THE JANUARY/FEBRUARY 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. The publication also features an “Alumni Update” (see above). Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 6 Signals Special Report Rio Music Offers Full Slate Of Entertainment Spring Semester Compiled By Emily Rorrer Signals Staff Writer SONGS FOR A NEW WORLD March 28-29 A musical revue, written by Jason Robert Brown will be performed at the University of Rio Grande on March 28 and 29 at 8 p.m. in the fine arts auditorium. General admission $10 Students and senior citizens $5 The project is funded through the ImagineArts grant and will involve voice students from the John Berry School of Fine and Performing Arts as well as high school students that study privately with URG’s Adjunct voice professor, Valerie Tanner. The evening will consist of solos, duets and ensemble selections. URG students include: Aryn Gritter, Andy Knipp, Ally Waddell, Brooke Wolni and Stephanie Cartmell. High School singers will include: Makenzie Moorman (Piketon), Katelyn Beaver (Ohio Valley Christian), Michael Hambrick, Jennifer Prewitt and Rachel McCambridge (Waverly) This event is a collection of songs that focus on a theme of overcoming challenges that change the course of everyday life. This is a family friendly show with many different styles of music. RIO GRANDE CONCERTS often combine the Symphonic Band and Masterworks Chorale in a larger work that features both vocal and instrumental soloist, as well as the combined ensemble. 20TH ANNIVERSARY JAZZENSEMBLE REUNION CONCERT -- April 22 April 22 at 8p.m. in the Fine Arts Auditorium, the School of Fine Arts will celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the founding of the University of Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble. The concert is free and open to the public. Dr. Chris Kenney started the ensemble in the fall of 1993. Many of those former students will reunite, along with current Rio student's, for an evening of memories and Jazz. Dr. Kenney has selected some of the favorite songs that the Ensemble has performed over the last two decades and arCHRISTOPHER KENNEY, ranged them for Associate Professor of Music a large jazz ensemble. The show will open with members of that first ensemble from 1993 performing the very first song that was played on that first concert. SYMPHONIC BAND CONCERT -- April 17 The University of Rio Grande Symphonic Band will perform their Annual Spring Concert April 17 at 8 p.m. at the John W. Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center. The Symphonic Band is made up of several area community members as well as instrumental music majors at the University. Approximately forty five performers will take part in this semester’s concert. This year’s concert will feature the music of Mr. Samuel Hazo and will include many styles and genres of contemporary band literature. Mr. Hazo became the first composer in history to be awarded the winner of both composition contests sponsored by the National Band Association (William D. Revelli in 2003 and Merrill Jones in 2001). His compositions range from contemporary fast moving rhythmical pieces to slower ballads in many multicultural styles. This concert will feature one of his newest compositions entitled ROCK ENSEMBLE CONCERT-- April 25 “Today is the Gift.” April 25 at 8: p.m. in the Fine Arts Auditorium, Many percussion instruments will be featured Tyler James Phillips, Ally Waddell, Skyler on this African tribal piece. Thompson, Andy Milliken, Brooke Wolni, Jeremy Martin, Terry Byers and Dr. Chris Kenney take the stage to perform a mix of their favorite songs. The concert is free and open to the public. Music inspired by the Foo Fighters, Stealers Wheel, Asking Alexandria, Bread, 3 Doors Down, Traffic, the Violent Femmes, Bill Withers, Heart, GARY STEWART, Symphonic Band Director and Modest Mouse. MASTERWORKS CHORALE SPRING CONCERT -- April 27 April 27 at 3 p.m. at the Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center Alphus Christensen Theatre the Masterworks Chorale will be partnering with the Steel Drum Band from West Union High School to perform Glenn McClure's St. Francis in the Americas: A Caribbean Mass. This major work is for chorus, steel drum ensemble, percussion, and vocal soloists. For the percussion and vocal soloists, the Masterworks Chorale is also collaborating with the University of Rio Grande's percussion studio, led by Levi Billiter, and voice studio, instructed by Valerie Tanner. The musical work features lively, Latin rhythms, combined with the traditional mass texts and original Spanish poetry by St. Francis of Assisi. GRANDE CHORALE SPRING CONCERT -- May 2 May 2 at 8 p.m. at the Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center Alphus Christensen Theatre the Grande Chorale will perform a selection of vocal jazz works. A variety of jazz styles will be featured, including swing, salsa, bossa nova, and ballads. Audience members 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." Grande Chorale – Spring 2014 Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Signals Feature Page 7 Continued Next Page Black History Month: A Celebration Of Achievement Compiled By The Signals Staff Primary Source: http://www.history.com/topics/black-history-month Black History Month, or National African American History Month, is an annual celebration of achievements by black Americans and a time for recognizing the central role of African Americans in U.S. history. The event grew out of “Negro History Week,” the brainchild of noted historian Carter G. Woodson and other prominent African Americans. Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Commission Rio Graduate Receives Gubernatorial Appointment Gordon Serves On Ohio Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Commission violence and annually honors Ohio’s Compiled by the Signals Staff citizens who work to promote diverA Rio Grande graduate will be sity and eliminate discrimination working throughout this year and next to help carry on Dr. Martin Lu- through nonviolent methods. Each year, the commisther King’s work in sion presents Ohio to secure equal awards to Ohioans rights for all Amerito celebrate the life cans through nonvioof Dr. King, whose lent actions. teachings encourIn January, Gov. age nonviolent acJohn Kasich antions to secure nounced the appointequal rights for all ment of Robert GorAmericans. don, of Gallipolis, to “It is indeed an the Martin Luther honor to be chosen King Jr. Holiday on the Ohio Martin Commission. GorLuther King Jr. don will serve on the Holiday Commiscommission for the sion,” Gordon said. term that began Jan. “I am humbled to 7 and ends Dec. 30, “It is indeed an honor to be represent this re2015. chosen on the Ohio Martin gion as the only Gordon holds a member from Luther King Jr. Holiday bachelor's degree in Communications Commission … I am humbled southeastern Ohio. with an emphasis on to represent this region as the I additionally rePublic Relations only member from southeast- spect the opporfrom the University ern Ohio. I additionally re- tunity to recognize of Rio Grande. He is spect the opportunity to rec- residents throughout Ohio who work also a Certified Pubognize residents throughout to keep Dr. King’s lic Manager (CPM). Ohio who work to keep Dr. dream vibrant and Gordon has been with the Voinovich King’s dream vibrant and fos- foster his philosoter his philosophy of nonvio- phy of nonviolent School of Leaderlent social change.” social change.” ship and Public AfRobert Gordon In addition to fairs at Ohio Univerparticipating in the sity since 2005. He commission’s annual ceremony that provides technical and operational assistance to various public and non- was held this year on Jan. 16 in downtown Columbus, Gordon recentprofit projects through the effective use of data, research and facilitation ly contributed to the Gallia County skills. Gordon also assists with pro- Martin Luther King Jr. Day Program sponsored by the Southeastern Ohio ject development on behalf of the Voinovich School through the Gover- Branch of the NAACP. Gordon is an avid collector of Afrinor's Office of Appalachia. can American memorabilia. In celeGordon previously served as the Southeast Regional Site Manager for bration of Black History Month, he will exhibit his collection at the the Ohio Certified Public Manager French Art Colony. He titled the exProgram through the Voinovich hibit “Footsteps through Heritage.” School. The Ohio Dr. Martin Luther King Gordon also will be the “Lest We Forget” speaker on the last Saturday Jr. Holiday Commission was estabof February for the Gallia County lished in 1985 by executive order. The commission is a statewide advo- Black History Month Program at cate of Dr. King’s principles of non- Paint Creek Baptist Church. The Ohio Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Commission was established in 1985 by Executive Order. Today the Equal Opportunity Division provides administrative support to the commission. The commission is a statewide advocate of Dr. King's principles of nonviolence and annually honors Ohio's citizens who work to promote diversity and eliminate discrimination through nonviolent methods. Each year, the Commission presents awards to Ohioans to celebrate the life of Dr. King, whose teachings encourage nonviolent actions to secure equal rights for all Americans. The commemorative celebration held each January in downtown Columbus. The Commission strives to carry our Dr. King's dream of service to others throughout the entire year through various events. Robert Gordon said it was with respect that he asked Gallia County Commissioner Harold Montgomery to execute his oath last month as Montgomery was on the county commission when Gordon previously served as executive director of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs TASC program. Gordon further noted that Martin Luther King Jr. will also be one of the featured scholar presentations during the Ohio Humanities Council Chautauqua to be held this year from July 17-21 in Gallipolis. “My history with social service and public service within the region has conditioned my awareness for preserving the past accomplishments and striving to overcome the remaining challenges,” Gordon said. “We are all called to serve.” Gordon is believed to be the first commission member from Gallia County. He said Gallia County has a significant history of recognizing the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. through its annual community-wide program sponsored each year by the Southeastern Ohio Branch of the NAACP. Gordon said it was with respect that he asked Gallia County Commissioner Harold Montgomery to execute his oath last month as Montgomery was on the county commission when Gor- don previously served as executive director of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs TASC program. He was sworn in later in the month on the state level at the February Ohio Commission meeting. Locally, Gordon has also held positions with Woodland Centers Inc. and the city of Gallipolis as city manager. He has been privileged to represent the communities of Appalachian Ohio on various civic and professional boards/committees, most recently the Ohio Humanities board of directors, where he currently serves as finance chair. Gordon’s maternal family’s “Journey Story” will be featured in an upcoming issue of the Ohio Humanities Pathways magazine. In the past, Gordon also served as president of the annual Emancipation Day Celebration Inc. He also cofounded the Emancipation Proclamation Scholarship Fund that continues to enhance educational attainment by area youth of African American heritage. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 8 Signals Feature Black History Month: A Celebration Of Achievement Multicultural Affairs Coordinator: Black History Month Is For All Americans The Coordinator of Multicultural Affairs at the University of Rio Grande has been issuing a number of email profiles of individuals who have played a role in starting and preserving Black History Month. “We would like to recognize several individuals who participated in the history of America,” Meau Jones said in a stateMeau Jones ment accompanying the profiles. “We would also like to take this opportunity to share that Black history month, is not only for African Americans; but for all ‘AMERICANS’.” “These same Americans shared blood, sweat, and tears in the pursuit of happiness and equality that we strive to keep in our daily lives,” Jones added. “This month I would like to take time to share some important individuals. Each of these individuals played a role in starting and preserving Black History Month. I’m going to identify some that I hope you will recognize and enjoy.” Zora Neale Hurston Born in Alabama on January 7, 1891, Zora Neale Hurston spent her early adulthood studying at various universities and collecting folklore from the South, the Caribbean and Latin America. She published her findings in Mules and Men. Hurston was a fixture of Zora Neale Hurston the Harlem Renaissance, rubbing shoulders with many of its famous writers. In 1937, she published her masterwork of fiction, Their Eyes Were Watching God. Hurston died in Florida in 1960. Living in Harlem in the 1920s, Hurston befriended the likes of Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen, among several others. Her apartment, according to some accounts, was a popular spot for social gatherings. Around this time, Hurston experienced a few early literary successes, including placing in short-story and playwriting contests in Opportunity magazine. Hurston released her first novel, Jonah's Gourd Vine, in 1934. Two years later, she received a Guggenheim fellowship, which allowed her to work on what would become her most famous work: Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937). She wrote the novel while traveling in Reconstruction era. Williams Haiti, where she also studied local set up his own practice in voodoo practices. Chicago’s Southside and taught anatomy at his alma Granville T. Woods Granville T. Woods was born in Co- mater, also becoming the lumbus, Ohio, on April 23, 1856, to first African-American phyfree African-Americans. He held var- sician to work for the city’s “We would like to recognize several ious engineering and industrial jobs street railway system. Wilbefore establishing a company to de- liams—who was called Dr. individuals who participated in the velop elecDan by pahistory of America,” trical appatients—also “We would also like to take this opratus.. adopted steriliportunity to share that Black history Known as zation proce"Black Eddures for his of- month, is not only for African Ameriison," he fice informed by cans; but for all ‘AMERICANS’.” registered the recent findnearly 60 ings on germ Meau Jones patents in transmission and Coordinator of his lifeprevention from Multicultural Affairs time, inLouis Pasteur Granville T. Woods cluding a and Joseph Listelephone transmitter, a trolley wheel ter. Due to the discrimination of the she became one of the first black and the multiplex telegraph (over day, African-American citizens were members of the Nurses Associated which he defeated a lawsuit by still barred from being admitted to Alumnae of the United States and Thomas Edison). Woods died in hospitals and black doctors were re- Canada (later 1910. Living in Cincinnati, Woods fused staff positions. Firmly believ- renamed the eventually set up his own company ing this needed to change, in May American to develop, manufacture and sell 1891; Williams opened Provident Nurses Assoelectrical apparatus, and in 1889, he Hospital and Training School for ciation), as filed his first patent for an improved Nurses, the nation’s first hospital well as a steam boiler furnace. His later pawith a nursing and intern program member of tents were mainly for electrical dethat had a racially integrated staff. the newly vices, including his second invention, The facility, where Williams worked founded Naan improved telephone transmitter. as a surgeon, was publicly champitional AssociMary Mahoney The patent for his device, which oned by famed abolitionist and writer ation of Colcombined the telephone and teleFrederick Douglass. In 1893, Wilored Graduate Nurses. graph, was bought by Alexander Gra- liams continued to make history Percy Julian ham Bell, and the payment freed when he operated on James Cornish, Born to former slaves in Alabama in Woods to devote himself to his own a man with a severe stab wound to 1899, pioneering chemist Percy Julresearch. One of his most important his chest who was brought to Provi- ian was not allowed to attend high inventions was the "troller," a dent. Without the benefits of a blood school but went on to earn his Ph.D. grooved metal wheel that allowed transfusion or modern surgical proce- His research at academic and corpostreet cars (later known as "trolleys") dures, Williams successfully sutured rate institutions led to the chemical to collect electric power from over- Cornish’s pericardium (the membra- synthesis of drugs to treat glaucoma head wires. Woods's next most imnous sac enclosing the heart), becom- and arthritis, and although his race portant invention was the power pick ing the first person to perform open- presented challenges at every turn, he -up device in 1901, which is the basis heart surgery. is regarded as one of the most influof the so-called "third rail" currently ential chemists in Mary Mahoney used by electric-powered transit sys- Mary Mahoney was born on May 7, American history. tems. From 1902 to 1905, he re1845 (some sources say April 16), in After college, Julian ceived patents for an improved airBoston, Massachusetts. She was ad- accepted a position brake system. mitted to the nursing school of the as a chemistry inNew England Hospital for Women structor at Fisk UniDaniel Hale Williams Daniel Hale Williams III was born on and Children, and became the first versity. He left in January 18, 1856, in Hollidaysburg, black woman to complete nurse's 1923 when he rePercy Julian Pennsylvania, to Sarah Price Wiltraining in 1879. She was also one of ceived a scholarship liams and Daniel Hale Williams II. the first black members of the Ameri- to attend Harvard The couple had several children, with can Nurses Association, and has been University to finish his master’s dethe elder credited as one of the first women to gree, though the university would not Daniel H. register to vote in Boston following allow him to pursue his doctorate. He Williams inthe ratification of the 19th Amendtraveled for several years, teaching at heriting a barment in 1920. Mahoney was inducted black colleges, before obtaining his ber business. into the Nursing Hall of Fame in Ph.D. at the University of Vienna in He also 1976 and received induction into the Austria in 1931. With his doctorate worked with National Women's Hall of Fame in in hand, he returned to DePauw to the Equal 1993. She died in Boston on January continue his research. In 1935 he Rights 4, 1926, at the age of 80. Mary Ma- earned international acclaim by synLeague, a honey made history when she bethesizing physostigmine from the Daniel Hale Williams black civil came the first black woman to com- calabar bean to create a drug treatrights organization active during the plete nurse's training. Subsequently, ment for glaucoma. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 9 Entertainment A Classic Film For Black History Month ‘Lilies of the Field’: Sidney Poitier’s Best Actor Award Remains A Moment In Cinematic History “Lilies of the Field,” released in 1963, is the type of film the movie trade papers used to call “heartwarming”: A wandering ex-G.I. stops by a farm being run by five German nuns and agrees to help them out with various and sundry tasks and chores. At their insistence, he stays on to build a chapel for them, and the nuns are sure that he is a miracle sent from God. By CYDNIE FEW Signals Staff Writer “Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin. And yet I say unto you that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” “Lilies of the Field” was released in 1963; it was produced and directed by Ralph Nelson. This classic film stars Sidney Poitier and Lilia Skala. Sidney Poitier became the first African American to win an Academy Award for best actor in this film. Lilia Skala, was nominated for best supporting actress. The film gets its title from Matthew 6:27-33, which is part of the Sermon on the Mount. This film is very powerful and is a great representation of black history month. Sidney PoiCinema tier plays Homer By Cydnie Smith; he is a wanderer; a man with no apparent home or family connections; he happens to be a very good carpenter/handyman. On his way through the Arizona dessert, he stops to get water for his overheated car. While getting water, he sees sev- eral women who look like nuns, working on a fence. The women introduce themselves and we find out they are German refugees who escaped Nazi Germany by walking across Europe. Lilia Skala plays the part of the mother superior of the small convent of nuns; she is called Mother Maria. She can Truly a labor of love of speak only director/producer/actor a little Ralph Nelson, “Lilies” English. squeaked by on a budg- The nuns et of $450,000, a shoot- convince ing schedule of four- him to fix teen days, and some the roof of serious salary negotia- their rustic tions with the film's and ram star. But what a payoff: shackled it was nominated for dwelling; four Academy Awards, he enthuincluding Best Picture. siastically Moreover, “Lilies of the does so. Field” achieved motion He spends picture history as Sid- the night ney Poitier was award- sleeping ed the Best Actor Os- outside car, marking the first the isolattime in history an Acad- ed conemy Award was award- vent ased to a black man. suming he will be paid in the morning. In the morning after breakfast, Homer tries to convince the head nun that he should be paid for his effort by using a quote from Luke 10:7, which says "The laborer is worthy of his hire." Mother Maria asks him to read a Bible verse from the Sermon on the Mount: “Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin. And yet I say unto you that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” Out of the kindness of his heart he stays another day to help the nuns with other small tasks. When Homer shows off his handyman skills, the nuns begin to think he is a gift from God to build a chapel for their religious community. On Sunday, mother Maria has Homer drive her and the nuns to the Catholic Mass held at a mobile church and conducted by a traveling priest. As they walk to the altar, which is a homemade dais set on the back of a truck, Homer decides not to go because he is Baptist. Instead he goes into a small restaurant for breakfast. There he learns about the hardships the nuns have suffered; they are refugees who have settled in America after the devastation of World War II. AS THE FILM PROGRESSES, Homer takes both the nuns and the Homer stays, gets a construction of the chapel into his heart – the chapel becomes his project; part-time job with (Continued one he wants to complete by himself. On Page 9) DUELING BIBLICAL PASSAGES — Homer tries to convince the Mother Superior that he should be paid for his effort by using a quote from Luke 10:7, which reads, “The laborer is worthy of his hire.” Mother Maria counters by asking him to read a Bible verse from the Sermon on the Mount: “Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin. And yet I say unto you that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” Scenes From “Lilies of the Field” Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 10 Entertainment A Classic Film For Black History Month ‘Lilies of the Field’: Sidney Poitier’s Best Actor Award Remains A Moment In Cinematic History AT THEIR LAST ENGLISH LESSON, Homer tricks Mother Maria into saying “Thank You.” He quietly leaves while leading the nuns in singing the song, “Amen.” We hear his car start; Mother Maria’s face goes blank; Homer drives away into the night. Sidney Poitier: A Filmography A native of Cat Island, The Bahamas, (though born in Miami during a mainland visit by his parents), Poitier grew up in poverty as the son of a dirt farmer. He had little formal education and at the age of 15 was sent to Miami to live with his brother, in order to forestall a growing tendency toward delinquency. A determination to find and create opportunities for African Americans was born in him because of the poor treatment he received on the streets of Miami. At 18, he went to New York, did menial jobs and slept in a bus terminal toilet. A brief stint in the Army as a worker at a veteran's hospital was followed by more menial jobs in Harlem. An impulsive audition at the American Negro Theatre was rejected so forcefully that Poitier dedicated the next six months to overcoming his accent and performance ineptness. On his second try, he was accepted. He was spotted in a rehearsal and given a bit part in a Broadway production of "Lysistrata," for which he got excellent reviews. By the end of 1949, he was having to choose between leading roles on stage and an offer to work for Darryl F. Zanuck in the film “No Way Out” (1950). COMPLETE FILMOGRAPHY* Cast (feature film) 10. Moms Mabley: I Got Somethin' to Tell You (2013) 11. Sing Your Song (2011) 12. Tell Them Who You Are (2004) as Cast. 13. Last Brickmaker in America, The (2001) as Henry Cobb. 14. Simple Life of Noah Dearborn, The (1999) as Noah Dearborn. 15. Free of Eden (1999) as Will Cleamons. 16. David and Lisa (1998) as Dr Jack Miller. 17. Jackal, The (1997) as Carter Preston--Fbi (Continued From Page 8) IN THE 1963 BEST ACTOR OSCAR a construction business, and be- RACE, Sidney Poitier did not think he gins building the chapel. While would win, and did working the job and building the not prepare an acchapel, he still has time to help ceptance speech, the nuns learn English. The nuns but rather, focused start to write letters asking for his efforts on money and supplies; sadly all maintaining a the requests are denied. graceful loser’s As the film progresses, Homer expression when takes both the nuns and the conthe cameras invaristruction of the chapel into his ably turned upon heart – the chapel becomes his him for his reaction. When presenter project; one he wants to comAnne Bancroft announced Poitier as the plete by himself. winner, the actor flew up to the stage in To help him and the nuns, hysterical exhilaration, and in a daze, however, people from around began an impromptu speech he had the community begin donating whimsically thought up just moments building materials and try to before: “It has been a long journey to help with the building. At first this moment . . ." Homer wants no help, but as the work continues, he gradually comes building; he knows his job is done. to accept the idea that the chapel be- At their last English lesson, Homer longs to the community and the nuns. tricks Mother Maria into saying Homer becomes what he has always “Thank You.” He quietly leaves wanted to be: a contractor directing while leading the nuns in singing the the construction of an important song, “Amen.” We hear his car start; building. Mother Maria’s face goes blank, but Finally, the chapel is completed. she continues to sing. Homer drives Homer puts the final touches on the away into the night. Deputy Director. 18. Mandela and de Klerk (1997) as Nelson Mandela. 19. To Sir With Love II (1996) as Mark Thackeray. 20. Wild Bill: Hollywood Maverick (1995) as Himself. 21. Century Of Cinema, A (1994) 22. World Beat (1993) 23. Sneakers (1992) as Crease. 24. Shoot To Kill (1988) as Warren Stantin. 25. Little Nikita (1988) as Roy Parmenter. 26. The Spencer Tracy Legacy (1987) 27. Piece Of The Action, A (1977) as Manny Durrell. 28. Let's Do It Again (1975) as Clyde Williams. 29. The Wilby Conspiracy (1975) as Shack Twala. 30. Uptown Saturday Night (1974) as Steve Jackson. 31. Warm December, A (1973) as Dr Younger. 32. Buck and the Preacher (1972) as Buck . 33. The Organization (1971) as [Lt.] Virgil Tibbs . 34. Brother John (1971) as John Kane . 35. They Call Me MISTER Tibbs (1970) as Virgil Tibbs . 36. King: A Filmed Record ... Montgomery to Memphis (1970) as . 37. The Lost Man (1969) as Jason Higgs . 38. For Love of Ivy (1968) as Jack Parks . 39. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) as John Prentice . 40. In the Heat of the Night (1967) as Virgil Tibbs . 41. To Sir, With Love (1967) as Mark Thacker- ay . 42. Duel at Diablo (1966) as Toller . 43. A Patch of Blue (1965) as Gordon Ralfe . 44. The Bedford Incident (1965) as Ben Munceford . 45. The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) as Simon of Cyrene . 46. The Slender Thread (1965) as Alan Newell . 47. The Long Ships (1964) as El Mansuh . 48. Lilies of the Field (1963) as Homer Smith . 49. Pressure Point (1962) as Doctor . 50. A Raisin in the Sun (1961) as Walter Lee Younger . 51. Paris Blues (1961) as Eddie Cook . 52. All the Young Men (1960) as [Sgt. Eddie] Towler . 53. Virgin Island (1960) as Marcus. 54. Porgy and Bess (1959) as Porgy . 55. The Defiant Ones (1958) as Noah Cullen . 56. The Mark of the Hawk (1958) as Obam . 57. Band of Angels (1957) as RauRu . 58. Edge of the City (1957) as Tommy Tyler . 59. Something of Value (1957) as Kimani . 60. Good-Bye, My Lady (1956) as Gates . 61. Blackboard Jungle (1955) as Gregory W. Miller . 62. Go Man Go (1954) as Inman Jackson . 63. Red Ball Express (1952) as [Corp. Andrew] Robertson . 64. Cry, the Beloved Country (1952) 65. No Way Out (1950) as Dr. Luther Brooks . (1993) *Does Not Include nine films directed by Poitier. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 11 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 WD Returns With More Bangs … And Lots Of Whimpers Characters Face Life After Prison The tagline for the second half of Season Four of AMC’s The Walking Dead may be “Don’t look back,” but the first two episodes after the half season premiere prove that looking forward into the season will provide the normal gamut of excitement, action, and questions left unanswered. When Season Four left off, the group, led by Rick Grimes, made up of a few survivors from the “Atlanta Group,” Greene farm folk, survivors from Woodbury, and various other ragtag survivors By Taryn Strawser who had Signals Staff Writer been picked up, was in disarray. Phillip Blake, aka The Governor had stormed up to the prison gates with guns blazing — literarily. The patriarch of the group, loving and kind Hershel Green, suffered at the hands of Blake, receiving a slice to the neck via Michonne’s katana before being beheaded. An all-out war ensued and the group split, leaving viewers wondering who had died and who had made it out. The first episode of the season, “After” focused on fan favorites, Michonne, Rick, and his son Carl. Michonne hid close by the prison and the opening scene shows her walking among its ruins. Mimicking a Walker herself, due to shock and grief, she stumbles upon two remains. Her enemy Phillip Blake is seen dead after being stabbed by her, then shot in the head by girlfriend Lily Caul. In a scene that upset many viewers, Michonne finds Hershel’s reanimated Walker head — the eyes glassy, the mouth agape and searching for a fresh kill. Michonne quickly runs the head through, ending Hershel’s plight once and for all. The scene switches to main character Rick and his son Carl. Rick, after a life threatening fight with Blake, is severely injured, hobbling around, speaking with a voice that sounds like his mouth is viewers were happy to see the infant alive after full of cotton (interestingly enough a behind the seeing a questionable amount of blood left in her scenes interview revealed the actor who plays Rick car seat. was fitted with a bite plate to stuff his jaw and Although viewers were excited about Baby Judy simulate swollen trauma). (also known as Lil A**kicker) being alive, Lizzy Carl, after years of being taken MICHONNE FINDS Hershel’s reanimated Walker care of by his dad, switches to the head — the eyes caretaker. Carl helps his dad by killing Walkers and finding Tortilla glassy, the mouth chips and various other foods. The agape and searching duo finally stumbles into an aban- for a fresh kill. Midoned house where Rick, succumb- chonne quickly runs ing to his injuries, passes out cold the head through, on the couch. Hormonal Carl yells at his uncon- ending Hershel’s scious father, discussing how Rick plight once and for all. took Shane from him, didn’t help save his mother and baby sister. Carl finally ven- seemed to be hateful towards the little one. Lizzy tures out on his own, taking on three Walkers who is truly a nutcase, she mutilated a trio of baby bunend up in a dead pile on him. He finds solace in nies found in a log, shows anger and aggression another abandoned house where he is confronted, towards her younger sister, and begins to suffocate and almost bitten, by a rogue Walker. Baby Judy because she is crying while Walkers are Giving the Walker his shoe, Carl escapes, and near and Tyreese is away helping another group. celebrates his triumph by eating 112 ounces of Lucky for the baby, one of the members of the pudding on the roof of the house. other group is Carol. In a moment awkward for Meanwhile, knowing viewers, Ty Michonne sleeps grabs Carol up in a large and enters a hug not realizing that she dream sequences has confessed to killing where viewers his friend Karen. The finally get a group meeting back up glimpse into her leads to a lot of quespast life. She had tions: Will Ty find out a baby son, and what Carol did and will her two “pets” he forgive her? Will Lizwere her lover zy finally lose it and risk Mike and his the safety of the group? friend. Although Comic book readers may CARL ESCAPES A Zombie attack, and celebrates his notice that the Lizzy/ the sequence is a triumph by eating 112 ounces of pudding on the roof of Mikka characters closely little odd, the a house. general idea is mimic twins Ben and Bilthat something ly from the graphic novhappened in which Michonne survived while all of el. A very controversial issue arises between the those around her died. She awakes with a start as twins in the comics, leaving readers turned viewers her son vanishes from her arms and Mike and his questioning if the television show will dare to venfriend take on their former pet forms. ture down the dark path Kirkman laid out in the Michonne, clearly shaken by the dream, ends up graphic novels. slaughtering a small passel of Walkers, including Bob, Sasha, and Maggie Greene are found; they one that looks like her. She eventually tracks and seem to be getting along but Maggie is adamant meets up with Carl and Rick. Carl comes back to about searching for her husband Glenn. Glenn was their new haven, believes Rick has died and turned last seen on a bus. When the trio finds the bus, into a Walker based on his awakening moans, and they open it and kill all the Walkers inside — prepares to shoot him. Going back on his rant, Carl wondering if they will find Glenn among the dead. collapses into sobs as he realizes he would rather Meanwhile, Glenn is very much alive and finds be devoured by his father then forced to shoot him former Blake follower Tara. Tara seems remorselike he had to shoot his mother. Carl and Rick ful about siding unknowingly with a killer, and make up, he confesses to the pudding binge, and Glenn learns about his father-in-law’s death. Tired Rick answers Michonne’s knock on the door, tell- and still ill, Glenn passes out and leaves the Walking Carl, “It’s for you.” er killing to Tara. She’s not alone however, as an The next episode, “Inmates” helped viewers an- army jeep joins her. It contains three characters, swer a lot of unsolved questions. Viewers find out new to the show but favorites in the comics: EuALTHOUGH VIEWERS were excited about gene Porter, Rosita Espinosia, and Sargent AbraBaby Judy (also known as Lil A**kicker) being that Beth Greene and Darryl Dixon are roaming through the woods together. The two seem at odds ham Ford. How these three play into everything alive, Lizzy seemed to be hateful towards the little one. Lizzy is truly a nutcase: she mutilated — Beth an optimist and Darryl a pessimist. How- will be interesting to see. a trio of baby bunnies found in a log, shows an- ever, viewers can’t help but wonder if a romance is Overall, the two newest episodes are chalk-full ger and aggression towards her younger sister, going to brew between the two. The next group to of information but as always, Season Four will be full of awesomeness, suspense, and of course, and begins to suffocate Baby Judy because she show are sisters Lizzy and Mikka who have met up with Tyreese and Baby Judith Grimes. Most Walkers. is crying while Walkers are near. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 12 Signals Sports/Athletics Rio Baseball Splits Season-Opening Double-Header Rio Grande Sports Information MOBILE, Ala. - The University of Rio Grande baseball team rallied for three runs in the seventh and final inning of game two and salvaged a split of its season-opening double-header against Martin Methodist (Tenn.), Saturday, Feb. 1, at Spring Hill College's Stan Galle Field. The RedStorm coughed up a fourth inning lead in the opener, dropping a 4-3 decision, but used their three-run uprising to post a 5-2 win in the nightcap. Junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto Rico) and sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) collected three hits in the twinbill, while juniors Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada), Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) and Anthony Knittel (Portsmouth, OH) and freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, P.R.) all had two hits each on the day. Knittel started and took the loss in the opener, while senior Mike Deitsch (Cincinnat, OH) earned the win and senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) notched a save in game two. In the game two victory, Rio Grande jumped to a 1-0 lead in the first inning on a run-scoring single by Findley and - after the Redhawks tied the game in the home second - the RedStorm regained a one-run advantage thanks to a leadoff home run by Jimenez in the fifth. Martin Methodist (2-2) tied the game again in the bottom of the fifth, but Rio mounted what proved to be its game-winning rally in the top of the seventh. Knittel and Jimenez began the inning with con- secutive singles and junior Luke Taylor (Pedro, OH) bunted both runners into scoring position, setting the stage for a two-run single to left by sophomore Austin Hall (Wheelersburg, OH). Arroyo accounted for the final run of the frame with a two-out double to deep right when scored sophomore Tyler Noel (Portsmouth, OH), who came on to run for Hall. Deitsch, who scattered five hits and a walk while striking out five over the first six innings, gave way to Steele, who closed the door on the Redhawks in the seventh by retiring the side in order, including the final two outs of the day by strikeout. Arroyo finished 3-for-4, while Jimenez had two hits and scored twice in the victory. Brodie Jeffery had two hits, while Caleb Lindsey doubled and Blake Truett drove home a run in the loss for Martin Methodist. Clay Brown started and took the loss for the RedHawks, allowing nine of Rio's 10 hits and all five runs in 6-1/3 innings. Rio Grande also grabbed an early lead in game one thanks to a two-out first inning home run by Ford. After MMC tied the game in the third, the RedStorm regained the lead in the home fourth when Tamane opened the inning with a single to left and eventually rode home on a two-out double by Knittel. The Redhawks took control, though, with three runs in the fifth and never looked back. Rio did draw to within a run in the sixth when Ford and Findley reached on one-out singles and a two-out throwing error allowed Ford to score. The RedStorm also threatened in the seventh when Taylor led off with a single and moved to third thanks to a throwing error on a sacrifice bunt attempt by Hall. However, one out later, Taylor was thrown out at the plate trying to SOPHOMORE score on a bunt by ArCHRIS FORD had three royo as Noel - who was hits, including a home running for Hall - adrun, in Rio's doublevanced into scoring poheader split on Satursition, but Tamane flied day, Feb. 1. out to right-center to end the game. Ford had two hits and scored twice in the loss, while Knittel suffered the setback on the hill after allowing three hits, five walks and all four runs in 4-2/3 innings. Jeffery had two hits and two RBI for MMC, while Blake Beavers allowed six hits and a pair of walks while fanning six in a complete game victory. "Overall, I thought our guys played pretty well considering we'd only been outside two times prior to today," said Rio Grande head coach Brad Warnimont. "We did a decent job at the plate, our pitchers threw the ball well, we only made one error in two games - I really couldn't complain." Rio Grande RedStorm Women Upend No. 21 Cumberland By KERRY GIBBS Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The longawaited upset of the 2013-14 season for head coach David Smalley and the University of Rio Grande women's basketball came to fruition on Saturday, Feb. 1, as the RedStorm defeated No.21 Cumberlands, 88-81, in Mid-South Conference action at the Newt Oliver Arena. The win snapped a four-game losing streak for Rio, which improved to 15-8 overall and 4-7 in league play. The victory also marked the first win in six tries against ranked opponents this season. "We had the upset against Georgetown and let it slip through our hands," Smalley said, referring to Thursday's five-point loss to the No. 6 Tigers - a game in which the RedStorm blew a 21-point halftime lead. "I think we took another big step tonight as a squad. “We really stepped up the intensity down the stretch and manage the ball well on offense. Cumberlands is a very powerful and explosive team and we just kept matching up with them and knocking down buckets when we needed them. “””We needed something like the Georgetown loss to make us mature a bit and I think that really helped us tonight." Cumberlands jumped out to its largest lead of the game at 19-13 with just under 12 minutes remaining in the first half, but the RedStorm would counter with an 11-4 run in a span of just over 31/2 minutes thanks to scoring efforts SOPHOMORE SARAH BONAR had from five dif19 points and seven ferent players. The remainrebounds in the Febder of the half ruary 1 victory. would go back and forth and eventually end with the Patriots owning a 46-42 advantage at the intermission. Rio Grande, which had won just three times in the previous nine games when it trailed at halftime, emerged from the lockerroom with energy and embarked on a 17-6 run over the first 7-1/2 minutes to take a 59-52 lead. While the run proved to be an impressive offensive output, it was the Rio Grande defense that buckled down and allowed just one Cumberlands field goal over the course of the first eight minutes of the second half. "Cumberlands really just came out in the second half and turned the ball over," Smalley said. "Some were unforced, but I'd like to think our de- fense played a part in that. I don't know if Cumberlands expended too much energy against Shawnee State on Thursday night or not, but our defense just blanketed them in the second half. I can't say enough about how proud I am of this team right now." Cumberlands did not go away quietly down the stretch of the game, though, as they pulled within one field goal five different times. The RedStorm responded each time, though, with a bucket of their own and relied on their interior play, as freshman forward Alexis Payne (Deep Water, WV) recorded eight of her 14 points in the final 7-1/2 minutes of the contest. Leading 78-75 with two minutes remaining, the RedStorm administered a dagger to the Patriots in the form of a 7-0 run which produced an 85-75 lead with just over a minute left and allowed Smalley to breathe a sigh of relief. "We all took big steps tonight," Smalley said. "It was really just a great team win over a great basketball team. Sarah Bonar, who didn't feel the greatest for the second consecutive game, really came up big for us." Shooting-wise, the RedStorm connected on 49 percent of its tries from the field overall (30 of 61), 35 percent from beyond the three-point arc (6 of 17) and 68 percent from the free throw stripe (22 of 32). Cumberlands, which slipped to 147 overall and 8-3 in the MSC, shot 34 percent overall (24 of 69), 34 percent from three-point range (8 of 23) and 86 percent (25 of 29) from the free throw line. Rio Grande was able to hold the Patriots to just 28 percent from the field in the second half, including a stone-cold 14 percent from threepoint range. The RedStorm also enjoyed a 4541 edge in rebounding and committed one less turnover (16) than their guests. Junior guard Brianna Thomas (Maplewood, NJ) fell one point short of her career-high by finishing with 32 points, nine assists and five rebounds, while sophomore forward Sarah Bonar (Hartford, OH) contributed with a 19-point, seven-rebound effort. Payne finished with 14 points, while freshman forward Brooke Marcum (Vinton, OH) grabbed a teamhigh nine rebounds and sophomore forward Harley Adler (Burton, OH) swatted away six shots. Leading Cumberlands was a quartet of double-digit scorers led by Jill Herman with 24 points, seven rebounds and five assists. Jackie Alexander netted 18 points, while Julie Haye and Brooke Forsythe rounded out the double-digit scoring with 16 and 14 points, respectively. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 13 Rio Grande Men Outlast Patriots In Overtime At Home Rio men outlast Patriots in OT Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Junior forward Josh Reagan had a team-high 35 points and nine rebounds to lead the University of Rio Grande past the University of the Cumberlands, 9996 in overtime, Saturday, Feb. 1, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at the Newt Oliver Arena. The RedStorm, who are ranked No. 14 at that time in the latest NAIA Division I coaches poll, improved to 15-7 overall and 8-3 in the MSC with the win - their third straight against the Patriots over the past two seasons. The victory also secured Rio Grande's first winning season since the 2008-09 campaign when it finished 20-11 in the now-defunct NAIA Division II America Mideast Conference. Cumberlands dropped to 13-8 overall and 5-6 in league play with the loss. Freshman forward Bilal Young (Cleveland, OH) added 17 points in the winning effort for Rio Grande, while senior guard Jermaine Warmack (Orange, N.J.) and sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH) finished with 11 points apiece. Warmack also had a team-high five assists. The Patriots were led in the loss by R.J. Scott, who had a game-high 36 points and seven rebounds to go along with a team-high eight rebounds. Tony Bradley had 15 points and Shaquille Lowery finished with 14 points and seven assists in a losing cause for UC, while Steve Goins chipped in with 11 points. After the previous two meetings in the series were decided in double overtime and on a free throw with no time remaining, Saturday's get together produced 11 ties and nine lead changes. Rio Grande led by as many as 13 points with just over two minutes remaining in the first half, Thomas named MSC Player of the Week but the Patriots closed the gap to eight by halftime and finished the comeback when a threepointer by Scott with 6:30 remaining in regulation gave the FRESHMAN BILAL YOUNG had 17 visitors a 68points and seven re- 66 advantage. A back-andbounds in the Februforth exchange ary 1 overtime victoensued down the home stretch, with five of the 11 ties and four of the nine lead changes taking place in the final 5:29. Rio led by as many as four points as late as 1:42 left to play, but a three -pointer by UC's Michael Dow with 1:27 remaining and a jumper in the lane by Taylor Gover with 52 sec- onds showing sent the Patriots back in front, 80-79. The RedStorm regained the advantage on a pair of free throws by Joiner with 34 seconds left, but a three-pointer by Scott with eight seconds remaining gave UC an 83-81 edge. Warmack sent the game to overtime by going coast-to-coast following Scott's go-ahead trifecta and scoring on a layup with two seconds left to knot the tally at 83-all. Scott canned one of two free throws just 15 seconds into the extra session to give the Patriots a onepoint lead, but Reagan - a native of Cleveland, Ohio - scored on a layup just 19 seconds later to give Rio Grande a lead it would never relinquish. The RedStorm twice led by as many as five points in the overtime and UC closed to within a point on three occasions, but the Patriots never managed to re-tie the game or get the lead back. Baseball Swept By Crusaders Rio Grande Sports Information DAYTON, Tenn. - The University of Rio Grande baseball team wrapped COLUMBIA, Ky. - University of Rio Grande junup a tough weekend road trip on Saturday, Feb. 8, dropping a doubleheader ior Brianna Thomas is the Mid-South Conference to Madonna (Mich.) University at Bryan College's Lions Field. Women's Basketball Player of the Week, conference The RedStorm slipped to 2-6 on the young season after falling 7-1 to the officials announced on Monday, Feb. 3. Crusaders in the opening game of the twinbill and 4-3 in the nightcap. The weekly award was Thomas' second this season. Madonna improved to 3-1 with the sweep. She also earned the award on Jan. 13. Rio Grande managed just two hits in the opening game loss, as the CruThe Maplewood, N.J., guard averaged 25.5 points, saders bolted to a four-run first inning lead and never looked back. 3.5 rebounds and 6.5 assists while helping Rio In game two, the RedStorm erased an early 2-0 deficit with two runs in the Grande to a 1-1 record during the week against a pair Brianna Thomas first inning and a go-ahead marker in the second inning, but Madonna scored of nationally ranked teams. twice in the third inning to regain the advantage and held on the rest of the Thomas scored 19 points, dished out four assists and recorded six steals in way. a 78-73 loss to No. 6 Georgetown (Ky.) on Thursday. She connected on Junior left-hander Anthony Knittel (West Portsmouth, OH) started and eight of her 15 shots from the field, including 2-for-5 from beyond the 3took the loss in game one, suffering his second setback in as many decisions point arc in the near upset - Georgetown overcame a 21-point halftime defi- this season. cit to claim the win. Sophomore southpaw Kyle Miller (Wilmington, OH) took the loss in game On February 1, Thomas led the RedStorm to an 88-81 upset of No. 21two, also dropping to 0-2 on the season after finishing 9-1 on the hill as a ranked Cumberlands (Ky.). She finished the game with 32 points, five refreshman. bounds and nine assists. Thomas hit 11 of her 17 shots, including 4-for-8 Junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) had three hits in the from 3-point range in the win. She was also a perfect 6-for-6 from the chari- doubleheader, including two in game two, while junior Luke Taylor (Pedro, ty line. OH) also had two hits - including double - and drove in a run in game two. Rio Baseball Swept By Spring Hill In Season-Opening Road Trip Rio Grande Sports Information MOBILE, Ala. - The University of Rio Grande baseball team saw their season-opening weekend road trip to the deep south end in disappointing fashion on Sunday, Feb. 2, as the RedStorm dropped both ends of a doubleheader to Spring Hill College at historic Stan Galle Field. The Badgers got a two-run, walk-off home run to post a 6-4 win in the opener and cruised to a 7-1 win in the nightcap. The sweep saw Rio JUNIOR ANTHONY Grande finish the weekKNITTEL had two hits, end at 1-3. including a double, and Juniors Grant Tamane an RBI in February 2 (Pickering, Ontario, losses to Spring Hill. Canada) and Anthony Knittel (Portsmouth, OH) had two hits and a run batted in each in the game one loss, while freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) also had two hits in three times at the plate. No other RedStorm player managed more than one hit in the twinbill. Sophomore left-hander Kyle Miller (Wilmington, OH) started and took the loss in the opener, while senior Eric Ford (Chagrin Falls, OH) – making his debut after missing all of the 2013 campaign as a result of injury – suffered the setback in game two. Spring Hill (3-1) jumped to a 4-0 lead after three innings in game one, but Rio came off the mat to tie the game with single runs in the fourth and fifth innings and two runs in the sixth. The RedStorm's fourth inning run was the result of a one-out walk to sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) and a two-out double to right by Knittel, while the fifth inning marker came about when junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, P.R.) reached on a two-out error, stole second and rode home on a single to center by Tamane. Rio completed the comeback in the top of the sixth. Junior Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) was hit by a pitch to open the inning before consecutive singles by Knittel and Jimenez loaded the bases. Sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) was then hit by a pitch to force home freshman Dominic Tiberi (Dublin, OH), who was running for Findley. One out later, Knittel scored the tying run on a throwing error, but the inning ended moments later when Arroyo bounced into a 5-2-3 doubleplay. The Badgers ended things in their final at bat in the seventh, though, when Willie Floros – who committed the error that allowed Rio to score the tying run in the sixth – was hit by a pitch with one out and Roy Moulder followed by hammering the first pitch he saw over the fence in left for a gamewinning home run. Miller allowed nine hits and all five earned runs in the complete game loss. He also walked one and struck out two while surrendering two wild pitches and hitting three batters. Moulder finished with three RBIs for the Badgers, while Mykol Sostarich, Kyle Freeman and Andy Robbins all had two hits each in the win. Keller Douglas, the third of three pitchers for Spring Hill, picked up the win. In the nightcap, Spring Hill scored twice in the third inning and four times in the fifth en route to an easy victory. Rio Grande was limited to just three singles in the loss and scored its only run when sophomore Jonathan Schob (Decatur, OH) was hit by a pitch with one out and the bases loaded in the top of the sixth. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 14 Rio RedStorm Women End Losing Slide Rio Grande Sports Information ST. CATHARINE, Ky. - Led by Brianna Thomas, a quartet of doubledigit scorers paced the University of Rio Grande women's basketball team to a 92-80 victory against St. Catharine College, Saturday, Feb. 16, in Mid-South Conference action at Lourdes Hall. The win was the first road triumph for the RedStorm in Mid-South Conference play since an 80-69 triumph at Pikeville on February 16, 2012. The victory also improved Rio's record to 16-10 on the season and 5-9 in conference play, while the Patriots dropped to 4-18 overall and 1-14 in the MSC. The win also kept Rio Grande in contention for a spot in the upcoming conference tournament, although the RedStorm failed to gain any ground in the MSC standings thanks to wins by Shawnee State, Pikeville and Bluefield. "The gorilla on our back had become King Kong on steroids," said Rio Grande head coach David Smalley. "We hadn't gotten a road win in this league in almost two full seasons and finally got that done against a scrappy and hungry St. Catharine squad. We played well and executed throughout. We did a very smart thing and our players understood we had to pound the ball inside and that was the big difference in the game." St. Catharine's only lead of the game came after guard Heather Sandlin buried a three-pointer to get the scoring started for both teams on the afternoon. The RedStorm responded by rattling off eight consecutive points, including back-to-back three-pointers from freshman guard Kaylyn Gambill (Ashland, KY). The Rio advantage hovered around 10 points for most of the first half until the combination of the bench play from sophomore forwards Ciara Herring (Cleveland, OH) and Harley Adler (Burton, OH) contributed to a 6 -0 RedStorm run which ballooned the lead to 38-24 with 1:31 left in the half. The scrappy Patriots scored six of the final eight points of the half to pull within 40-30 at the intermission, but the RedStorm parlayed Thomas' quickness in transition and their height advantage into a 15-4 run to open the second half. Rio Grande's bigs were the story of the rest of the afternoon, as freshmen Alexis Payne (Deep Water, WV) and Brooke Marcum (Vinton, OH) converted on nearly everything they threw toward the basket on the inside and, if there was a missed basket to collect, created second chances by owning the offensive glass. Although some timely threepointers by St. Catherine would keep the Patriots within shouting distance, they never got any closer than 12 points. St. Catharine Patriots Pull Away, Top RedStorm Rio Grande Sports Information ST. CATHARINE, Ky. - Host St. Catharine College nearly coughed up a 15-point second half lead, but pulled away down the stretch to defeat the University of Rio Grande, 78-63, Saturday, Feb. 15, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at Lourdes Hall. The Patriots improved to 16-9 overall and 9-6 in the MSC, avenging an earlier loss to the RedStorm and pulling to within a half-game of Rio Grande and Georgetown in the league standings. Rio, ranked No. 15 in the most recent NAIA Division I coaches poll, suffered its first winless weekend of the season in conference play, dropping to 16-9 overall and 9-5 in the league. St. Catharine opened up a 46-31 advantage with 15:44 left to play on a pair of free throws by William Tolefree and appeared headed toward an easy win, but Rio Grande refused to go away quietly and methodically chipped away at the defict, pull- ing as close as 62-60 after a three-pointer by sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH) with 2:52 remaining. The Patriots survived, though, by scoring the next seven points and, after a three-pointer by Rio sophomore forward Phillip Hertz (Rungsted Kyst, Denmark) with 1:10 left made it 69-63, closed the contest on a 9-0 run. Omar Skinner scored a game-high 24 points to lead St. Catharine. Campbellsville Tigers Rally, Upend RedStorm Men Rio Grande Sports Information CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. Campbellsville University's Darius Clement scored 13 of his team-high 23 points during a 16-0 run, as the host Tigers erased a 14-point second half deficit and knocked off 15thranked University of Rio Grande, 8380, Thursday, Feb. 14, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at the Powell Athletic Center. Campbellsville (13-10 overall, 8-6 MSC), which also received votes in this week's NAIA Division I coaches' poll, won for the fifth straight time and the sixth time in seven outings. Rio Grande slipped to 16-8 overall and 9-4 in league play with the loss. "A team in their building - you give them open looks like that and they get hot, then they get some confidence," Rio Grande head coach Ken French said of the Tigers. "I told the guys in a timeout that they were coming. The same thing happened when we played them at our place. But we didn't play with any poise or composure down the stretch." The RedStorm appeared to have things well in hand, using a 17-5 run to open up a 68-54 advantage following a bucket by freshman forward Jalen Harris with 7:19 left in the game. But the Tigers roared back behind Clement, who had scored just two points in the opening half. The Bowling Green, Ky. junior nailed a quartet of field goals - including a three-pointer - and was 4-for-4 at the free throw line over the next four minutes as CU reeled off 16 consecutive points to take their first lead since 21-19 at the 10:46 mark of the opening half. Jordan Meyers' three-pointer was the only basket not scored by Clement during the game-changing run, but it was a jumper from the free throw line by Clement with 3:27 left in the game which put the Tigers in front, 70-68. As things turned out, it was a lead they would never relinquish. Rio Grande tied the game three more times - at 70-, 73- and 75-all but never managed to regain the ad- vantage. After Rio's final tie of 75-75 following a pair of free throws by sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH) with 1:16 remaining, Clement canned another jumper with 56 seconds left to send CU in front to stay. The RedStorm pulled to within one point three different times in the final 34 seconds, but Clement hit two free throws with 2.2 seconds left to make it 83-80 and Rio junior forward Josh Reagan (Cleveland, OH) missed on off-balance, would-be game-tying three-pointer as time expired to wrap things up. "He played well," French said of Clement, who also handed out six assists and had two steals. Campbellsville Tigers Maul Rio RedStorm Women Rio Grande Sports Information CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. - The University of Rio Grande women's basketball team suffered a crushing defeat on the road Thursday, Feb. 13, as No. 4 Campbellsville University cruised by the RedStorm, 83-47, at the Powell Athletic Center. The loss dropped Rio Grande to 15 -10 on the season and 4-9 in MidSouth Conference play, while the Tigers improved to 23-2 overall and 131 in the conference. "I thought both teams came out a little flat, but then we had that stretch where we couldn't score and it got away from us," said Rio Grande head coach David Smalley. "Their length gave us some problems, even after we brought some bigger guys into practice this week to try and simulate their zone, but when you get in the heat of the moment you sometime forget what you worked on. We floated some passes, we took some bad shots, we couldn't shoot free throws - they beat us in every phase." The RedStorm actually enjoyed a 9 -6 lead with 14:45 left in the first half courtesy of a three-pointer by freshman guard Kaylyn Gambill (Ashland, KY), but it turned out to be the punch in the face that would wake the Tigers up. Head coach Ginger Colvin's team fired off a 20-0 run over the next nine minutes to take a 26-9 advantage and never looked back. Campbellsville eventually settled for a 44-21 lead at the half and things got no better for the RedStorm after the break. The Tigers flexed their muscles throughout the final 20 minutes and provided full-court pressure up until the waning minutes to cause havoc against the inexperienced guard play of the RedStorm. The 36-point final margin was Rio's largest deficit of the night. The RedStorm finished the contest shooting a season-low 28 percent from the field (17 of 61), 23 percent from beyond the arc (3 of 13) and a season-low 42 percent from the foul line (10 of 24). The 47 points also represented a season-low for URG. Campbellsville, which shot 45 percent (30 of 67) overall, 36-percent (5 of 14) from three-point range and 67 percent (18 of 27) from the free throw line, also forced Rio Grande into a season-high 31 turnovers. "We couldn't throw the ball in the ocean tonight and it didn't matter where we were shooting it from," said Smalley. "We didn't answer the call. Campbellsville can make you look bad, though. They can lock you up, they're deep - I think, by far, that they're the best team in our league." Owning one of the best defenses in the nation, the Tigers forced Rio Grande to commit a season-high 31 turnovers compared to 17 of their own. Campbellsville recorded 19 steals in the victory and allowed just five Rio Grande assists to occur. Perhaps the only bright spot for Smalley's squad was a 48-46 edge in rebounding, including 19 offensive rebounds. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 15 Rio Baseball Divides Pair With Bryan College Lions DAYTON, TN - The University of Rio Grande baseball team saw its second lengthy road trip south in as many weekends finish in a split on Friday, Feb. 7, as the RedStorm dropped the first game of a doubleheader against Bryan College, but managed to take the second one from the Lions at Senter Field. The Lions used a three-run sixth inning to break a 1-1 tie and take the opening game 41, while the RedStorm plated three runs in the first inning of the nightcap en route to a 4 -2 victory. The split moved Rio Grande's record to 2-4 on the season, while Bryan's record now stands at 2-3. Senior right-hander Michael Deitsch (Cincinnati, OH) suffered the loss in game one, while senior righthander David Steele (Kettering, OH) picked up the victory in game two. Senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) and junior Anthony Knittel (Portsmouth, OH) picked up four hits and one RBI apiece in the twin bill, while junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) collected two hits and scored a run. No other RedStorm player had more than one hit. Batting in the leadoff spot for the RedStorm, Makuch belted the fourth pitch thrown in game one out of the yard for his first career homerun in his first career at-bat for Rio Grande. Immediately following the solo shot, Tamane and Knittel hit back to back singles to put the heat on the Lion pitching in the early going. The Lions would quickly cool off the Rio bats by forcing a fielder's choice in the next at-bat, then striking out and grounding out the heart of the RedStorm lineup to kill the threat and leave the bases loaded. The Rio lead would be short-lived when Bryan second baseman Cody Rhinehart would blast a solo homer of his own on a 1-2 count in the bottom of the second to knot things up at 1-1. The game would stay dead Bears Hold Off RedStorm Women Rio Grande Sports Information PORTSMOUTH, OH - The University of Rio Grande women's basketball team suffered a tough road loss on Saturday, Feb. 8, falling to arch-rival Shawnee State, 76-70, at the Frank and Janis Waller Gymnasium. The RedStorm dropped to 15-9 on the year and 4-8 in Mid-South Conference play, while the Bears improved to 12-11 overall and 5-7 in conference play. With a Bluefield victory on Saturday afternoon, Rio Grande currently finds itself on the outside looking in for an invite to the conference tournament as they sit in the ninth spot in the standings. "We had absolutely no leadership tonight," Rio head coach David Smalley said. “It was really stagnant out there on offense tonight and we were soft in the paint tonight. There's really no other way to put it. When you're on the road, you have to have the energy and leadership to prevail." The first eight minutes of the contest was a back-and-forth affair with the lead changing hands six times. The RedStorm gained a 12-11 advantage at the 11:55 mark after a basket from junior guard Brianna Thomas (Maplewood, NJ). Shawnee State reeled off 20 of the next 28 points to take a 31-20 lead with 5:42 left in the half, but Rio Grande gained only one point on that advantage by intermission and went to the break down 39-29. Perhaps the story of the first half was the Bears' owning a 29-14 rebounding advantage at the intermission, including 12 offensive rebounds as a team. Compounding with the rebounding margin was Rio Grande's inability to hit free throws in the first half (8 of 15). Rio Finishes Sweep Of Shawnee Rio Grande Sports Information PORTSMOUTH, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande used a second half scoring spurt to pull away from rival Shawnee State and the RedStorm held on down the stretch to post a 73-63 win over the Bears, Saturday, Feb. 8, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at Waller Gymnasium. Rio Grande, ranked 19th in the latest NAIA Division I coaches poll, won for the ninth time in 11 games and improved to 16-7 overall and 9-3 in league play. The RedStorm also won for the third consecutive time against Shawnee State, completing the regular season sweep of the Bears. Phillip Hertz Shawnee fell to 8-15 overall and 2-10 in the MSC with the loss. Rio led just 51-48 following a three-pointer by Shawnee's Andrew Bendolph with 9:14 left in the contest, but the RedStorm proceeded to reel off 13 of the game's next 18 points over the next five minutes to take an 11-point advantage. The RedStorm's game-changing second half surge came on the heels of a roughand-tumble opening stanza that ended in a 29-29 deadlock. Rio shot just 28 percent from the field (7-for-25) in the first half and didn't reach double-digits in scoring until nearly 13 minutes were gone. By that time, Shawnee State had built an eight-point lead. The RedStorm methodically chipped away at the deficit, though, and eventually tied the game at 25-25 on a bucket by junior guard Evan Legg (Piketon, OH) with 3:05 left before the intermission. Shawnee State opened the second half strong and took a 37-32 lead on a Mark Bryant three-pointer with 17:54 remaining in the game, but Rio responded with a 10 -2 run of its own and took its first lead of the day - 42-39 - on a three-pointer by senior guard Ricky Tisdale (Bolivar, TN) with 13:27 left to play. It was a lead the RedStorm never relinquished. -locked until the bottom of the sixth inning when the Lions reached base the first two times to the plate courtesy of a single and a double and MARCUS then scored on the third batter MAKUCH of the inning due in part to a sacrifice fly. Bryan tacked on two more runs in the inning before retiring the RedStorm in order in the seventh to nail down the victory. Deitsch gave up four earned runs on eight hits and notched a strikeout in six innings of work. The Lions saw four different players record an RBI, while pitcher LJ Rowden went the distance on the mound, allowing just six hits and one earned run. In the nightcap game, Rio Grande saw its first three batters - Makuch, Tamane, and Knittel - reach base thanks to two walks and a hit batsman. Sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) came to the dish and reached second base next thanks in part to a throwing error on the shortstop, as Makuch and Tamane both scored and Knittel advanced to third. Moments later, a groundout by freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) scored Knittel to make it 3-0. Rio Trio Takes First At Cedarville Rio Grande Sports Information CEDARVILLE, Ohio - Lauren Rhoads took top honors in the women's weight throw, while Issac Andrews and Kyle Sanborn placed first in the men's shot put and 800meter at the February 7 and 8 Cedarville University Invitational hosted by Cedarville University. Rhoads, a sophomore from Waverly, Ohio, recorded a throw of 14.54 meters to earn first place in the event. Andrews, a freshman from Nelsonville, Ohio, tossed 13.76 meters to finish at the top in his event, while Sanborn, a sophomore from Dover, Ohio, ran 800 meters in 1:58.13. The RedStorm had nine other top-five finishes at the event: freshman Lauren Stacy (Bethel, OH), who placed second in the womLAUREN en's weight throw with a toss of 14.07 metersRHOADS -less than half a meter behind her teammate Rhoads--and 3rd in the women's shot put with a throw of 11.38 meters; senior Kaleb Kimber (Salisbury, NC), who finished third in the men's high jump with a leap of 1.89 meters; freshman Nate Kosnich (Pickerington, OH), who finished third in the men's 55-meter hurdles with a time of 7.96; freshman Chantal Higgin (Delaware, OH), who finished third in the women's 200-meter fourth in both the women's shot put with a throw of 11.25 meters and the women's weight throw with a toss of 13 meters; freshman Clarrisa Johnson (Hillsboro, OH), who finished fourth in the women's 400-meter dash with a time of 63.69; and freshman Charlie Ronan (Cincinnati, OH), who placed fifth in the men's 200-meter dash with a time of 23.51. Other finishers for Rio Grande included freshman Austin Moore (Swedesboro, NJ), who finished sixth in the men's 55-meter hurdles with a time of 8.43 and seventh in the men's 400-meter dash with a time of 53.65; freshman Alex Nichols (Pickerington, OH), who finished sixth in the men's weight throw with a toss of 11.15 meters; freshman Alex Ellis (Ona, WV), who was seventh in the women's 800-meter run with a time of 2:34.24; freshman Katie Glover (Ashville, OH), who placed eighth in the women's 800meter run with a time of 2:36.74; senior Joe Taranto (Pickerington, OH), who finished ninth in the men's 800-meter run with a time of 2:02.21; junior Brittany Piccone (Crooksville, OH), who finished 10th in the women's 3000-meter run with a time of 11:53.19; and freshman McKenzie Coriell (Lucasville, OH), who finished 10th in the women's long jump with a leap of 4.41 meters. Both the RedStorm women and men placed sixth out of 11 teams. Cedarville, Lindsey Wilson and Campbellsville filled the top three spots in the women's team standings, while Cedarville, Wilmington and the University of the Cumberlands took top honors on the men's side. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 16 RedStorm Women Knock Off Bluefield Rams Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Sarah Bonar poured in 30 points, while teammate Brianna Thomas added 21 points of her own to lead the University of Rio Grande past Bluefield (Va.) College, 93-79, Thursday, Feb. 20, in Mid-South Conference women's basketball action. The RedStorm improved to 17-10 overall and 6-9 in league play, forging a three-way tie for sixth place in the MSC standings with Bluefield and the University of Pikeville in the process. The Rams slipped to 12-12 overall and 6-9 in the MSC with the loss. Freshman forward Alexis Payne (Deep Water, WV) also added 16 points in the winning effort for Rio, while freshman forward Brooke Marcum (Vinton, OH) netted 10 points. The RedStorm trailed by as many as six points with 12:26 remaining in the first half and were still staring at a 26-25 deficit following a pair of free throws by Bluefield's Janee Simmons with 6:08 left before the intermission when Thomas and Bonar lit the fire on a game-changing run. Thomas, a junior guard from Maplewood, NJ, had nine points and Bonar - a sophomore forward from Hartford, Ohio - tallied six points of her own in a 22-3 Rio run over the next 5-1/2 minutes as the RedStorm built an 18-point advantage. Rio's lead twice reached as many as 22 points in the second half, although Bluefield methodically chipped away at the deficit and pulled as close as 10 points, 82-72, following a pair of Alexis Grant free throws with 3:16 remaining. But that's as close as the Rams would get. Asia Wheeler, who had 18 points and a game-high nine rebounds in a losing cause for BC, fouled out just seven seconds later and was assessed a technical foul while leaving the floor and Rio responded with six straight points - four by Bonar and two by Payne and all from the free throw line - to put the win on ice. The Rams got no closer than 13 points the rest of the way. The two teams were whistled for 62 combined fouls and teamed to shoot a staggering 92 free throws - 53 of which were attempted by the Red- Storm. Marcum and freshman guard Sharday Baines (East Cleveland, OH) had five rebounds each to lead Rio Grande, which shot 62.5 percent in the second half (10-for-16) and 55.3 percent for the game (26-for-47). Baines also had four assists and Thomas finished with a team-high four steals. In addition to Wheeler, the Rams had three other players reach double figures. Teqa McNeal had a teamhigh 23 points, while Grant finished with 12 and Monique Robson netted 10. BC outrebounded Rio, 34-30, and shot 45.1 percent from the floor (23for-51), but hurt its own cause with 23 turnovers. Bluefield Rallies Late, Nips Rio RedStorm Men Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Alex Lubsey and Andrew Wilson spearheaded a 12-3 game-ending run as Bluefield (Va.) College rallied in the final three minutes to post a 78-73 win over the University of Rio Grande, Thursday, Feb. 20, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at the Newt Oliver Arena. The Rams, who avenged an earlier loss to the RedStorm, improved to 13-10 overall and 6-9 in the MSC. Rio Grande, which was ranked 19th in the latest NAIA Division I coaches poll, suffered its third straight loss in falling to 16-10 overall and 9-6 in the league. The RedStorm also failed to capitalize on an opportunity to move into second place after Georgetown suffered a loss to Lindsey Wilson, sliding to fourth place instead based on St. Catharine's triple overtime win over Campbellsville. Rio Grande, which had trailed just twice - for all of 24 seconds - appeared to be zeroing on a victory when junior forward Josh Reagan (Cleveland, OH) canned a pair of free throws with 3:09 remaining to give the RedStorm a 70-66 advantage. The Rams responded by scoring 12 of the game's final 15 points, with Lubsey accounting for half of BC's points during the spurt, including a breakaway two-handed dunk with 1:28 remaining which gave Bluefield the lead for good, 72-70. Lubsey finished with a team-high 19 points. Wilson had five of the remaining six points in the spurt, including a three-pointer that followed Lubsey's go-ahead dunk with 35.9 seconds left and gave BC what proved to be its largest lead of the night, 75-70. Wilson finished with 16 points. Rio Grande senior guard Ricky Tisdale (Bolivar, TN) countered Wilson's trifecta with one of his own with 28.2 seconds left, but Lubsey scored again with 18.2 seconds left to make it a two-possession game and Josh Nesbit hit one of two free throws with 8.4 seconds left to set the final score. Nesbit also netted 16 points - 13 of which came in the second half - and Kearsten Marion added 10 points for Bluefield. Both also had three steals. Devin Page added 11 rebounds for the Rams, who shot 51.5 percent in the second half (17-for-33) and 50.8 percent for the game (31-for61), while committing just nine turnovers. Reagan had a game-high 24 points in the loss for Rio, while sophomore forward Phillip Hertz (Rungsted Kyst, Denmark) had 19 JUNIOR JOSH points and a team-best six rebounds. Senior guard Jer- REAGAN had a game-high 24 maine Warmack (Orange, points in ThursNJ) also had a game-high day, Feb. 20, loss eight assists in the loss. The RedStorm shot a very to Bluefield. respectable 46.3 percent (25for-54) for the game, but committed 17 turnovers and was outrebounded, 36-27. Rio WBB Takes Part In "Play 4Kay" Initiative Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande women's basketball program will participated in the "Play 4Kay" Breast Cancer Awareness initiative on Thursday night, Feb. 20, when the RedStorm entertained Bluefield (Va.) College in a key Mid-South Conference matchup. Tipoff was at 6 p.m. at the Newt Oliver Arena. The "Play 4Kay" initiative, formerly known as WBCA Pink Zone, is an opportunity for a nation of coaches to raise breast cancer awareness and funds for research on the court, across campuses, in communities and beyond. Since its inception in 2007, the Play 4Kay initiative has raised over $2.8 million to support women's cancer research. The event was re-named to honor the memory of Kay Yow, former North Carolina State University head women's basketball coach, who was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 1987, and passed away on January 24, 2009, after facing her third bout with the disease. Rio Grande ElIn conjunction Since its inception in 2007, the ementary School with the initiais also participatPlay 4Kay tive, staff and ing in its own initiative faculty at the "Penny War," University of Rio has raised with the winning Grande particiclassroom earning over $2.8 pated in a "Penny million to free admission to War" during the the game. support week leading up A number of women's cancer research. to the game. area businesses, Pennies count individuals, civic as one positive point each, but silver organizations and athletic teams coins and paper money count served as participating sponsors for AGAINST the office, which is where the event. the competition begins. Participants The list includes: can "bomb" their competitors' jar by * Zeta Theta Chi sold handmade placing silver coins and paper money pink ribbons for $1 and decorated the into it. For example, if an office ap- gym; pears to have accumulated a large * Rio Grande Bookstore donated number of pennies, a participant can 20 shirts which sold for $10 a piece "bomb" that jar by putting a quarter at the game; into the jar and the office's points will * Rio Grande Women's Basketball decrease by 25, a dollar will reduce raffled off a pink and white baskettheir points by 100, etc. ball signed by all of the RedStorm The office with the most points players; will be the winner and will receive * Sodexo donated pink desserts two free pizzas from Zack and Scot- sold at the game; ty's. * Phyllis Mason and Carolyn Ber- ry donated money to sponsor luminaries which were sold for $5 each in honor of someone or in remembrance of someone. * Zack and Scotty's donated coupons for two free pizzas which went to the winner of the Penny War held at the university; * Subway donated four coupons for a free six-inch sub raffled off at the game; * Ohio Valley Bank donated $50 to the fundraiser; * Honey Creek BBQ donated a tshirt which was raffled off; * Rio Grande Softball donated their half of the 50/50 sale normally conducted at every Rio basketball game. * Bob Evans Restaurant donated 15 percent of its sales from 11 a.m.-9 p.m. on Thursday, Feb.20, at its Rio Grande location to the fundraiser. In addition, the Rio Grande athletic department donated half of the gate receipts to the cause. All proceeds from the event will benefit Holzer Center for Cancer Care in Gallipolis. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 17 Rio's Harley Adler Sets Record In Win Over UPike Records 11 Blocks During Parent Appreciation Day Game in Lebanon, Tenn. Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - Shattering "We didn't play very well in the two school records which had stood first half and I really think both teams for over 23 years and tying another, missed golden opportunities to pull Harley Adler recorded 11 blocks to away," said Rio Grande head coach go along with her 11 points and a David Smalley. "I really shouldn't be team-high eight rebounds as the Uni- surprised, I guess, due to this Thursversity of Rio Grande women's bas- day-Saturday format the conference ketball team posted a thrilling 81-78 has laid out for us. I'm so proud of Parent Appreciation Day win over my team for not giving up, though, the University of Pikeville, Saturday, and holding their composure. Maybe Feb.22, at Newt Oliver Arena. we got lucky or maybe it's because Adler, a sophomore forward from we were playing at home, but it Burton, Ohio, swatted her way into doesn't matter to me. We got the win the record books by breaking Ann and we deserved the win." Barnitz' record of seven blocks in a The RedStorm jumped out to a 6-3 single game which was set on Janu- lead at the 16:05 mark in the opening ary 31, 1991, against Wilmington half after back-to-back buckets from College. freshman forward Alexis Payne Adler now has 54 blocks this sea- (Deep Water, WV) but saw their lead son, tying her quickly evapwith Barnitz for “We didn't play very well in the orate as the the most in a first half and I really think both Bears ensued single season in teams missed golden opportunities on a 10-0 run program histocapped off by to pull away … I really shouldn't be ry. buckets from surprised, I guess, due to this More imCallisha JohnThursday-Saturday format the con- son and Khaportantly, though, the vic- ference has laid out for us. I'm so lilah Quigley tory - coupled proud of my team for not giving up, to take a 13-6 with a Bluefield though, and holding their compo- advantage of College loss to their own Shawnee State - sure. Maybe we got lucky or maybe with 13:42 it's because we were playing at allowed the left in the first home, but it doesn't matter to me. half. RedStorm (1810 overall, 7-9 We got the win and we deserved the Rio Grande Mid-South Conbattled win." ference) to Rio Grande throughout stand alone in head coach the remainder sixth place in David Smalley of the half to the MSC standtake the lead ings. back, using a 16-4 run late in the Pikeville (12-16 overall, 6-10 stanza to take a 34-29 cushion with MSC) fell into a tie for seventh place 3:37 left until halftime. with Bluefield with the defeat. Sophomore forward Sarah Bonar The top eight teams qualify for the (Hartford, OH) provided most of the MSC tournament, which begins in firepower through the run, scoring two weeks at Cumberland University nine of the 16 points Rio used to seize the lead. Pikeville would not lay down, however, and used a couple of Quigley baskets inside the final minute of the half to send both teams to the locker room deadlocked at 39-39. The second half started out much like a prize fight, with Rio Grande going on a 7-0 run after an opening Pikeville three-pointer to take a 4639 advantage with 17:39 left in the contest. The Bears would answer back with a 9-0 run over the next 3-1/2 minutes and regained the lead at 51-46 with 15:32 remaining. Rio rebounded, though, and went in front, 60-58, after a bucket by junior guard Brianna Thomas (Maplewood, NJ) with 10:26 left in the game, but the Bears refused to go away quietly and remained within five points of a tie going into the waning minutes of the game. UPike eventually did regain the lead - twice, in fact - at 72-71 on a three-pointer by Johnson with 5:00 remaining and 74-73 on a Johnson jumper just over a minute later, but a runner in the lane by Thomas with 3:42 left put Rio Grande back in front, 75-74. It was a lead that the RedStorm wouldn't surrender. The Bears twice got back to within a point, but a pair of baskets by Bonar and two free throws by Thomas with 9.1 seconds remaining sealed the win. Pikeville missed a would-be gametying three-pointer by Johnson as time expired. "We're still in control of our destiny," Smalley said. "We have a tough road trip coming up in which anything could happen. There's so many scenarios that could play out but that's the furthest thing from my HARLEY ADLER, a sophomore forward from Burton, Ohio, swatted her way into the record books by breaking Ann Barnitz' record of seven blocks in a single game which was set on January 31, 1991, against Wilmington College. mind right now. The focus for us needs to be taking care of business one game at a time on this upcoming road trip." Shooting-wise, Rio Grande finished hitting 48 percent of shots from the field (30 of 63), 50 percent from three-point range (2 of 4) and 68 percent from the free throw line (19 of 28). Pikeville shot just 35 percent from the floor overall (25 of 71), 40 percent from distance (8 of 20) and 65 percent (20 of 31) at the charity stripe. In addition to Adler, four other RedStorm players reached the double -digit plateau in scoring. Bonar led all scorers with 21 points to go along with five rebounds and four steals, while Thomas had 20 points, seven steals and a team-high four assists. Freshmen Brooked Marcum (Vinton, OH) and Sharday Baines (East Cleveland, OH) rounded out the scoring with 10 points apiece. The Bears were led by Johnson's 19 points, while Quigley netted 18 points and recorded team-highs in both rebounds (10) and assists (4). Pikeville Bears Extend RedStorm's Basketball Woes Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The University of Pikeville bolted to a 24point halftime lead and never looked back, cruising to a 111-91 win over the University of Rio Grande and spoiling Senior Day activities, Saturday, Feb. 22, at the Newt Oliver Arena. The second-ranked Bears, who have already clinched the Mid-South Conference regular season championship, improved to 25-2 overall and 15 -1 in the MSC. Rio Grande, which was ranked 19th this week, suffered its fourth consecutive setback in slipping to 1611 overall and 9-7 in league play. The RedStorm trailed just 33-28 following a bucket by freshman forward Bilal Young (Cleveland, OH) with 8:12 left in the first half, but UPike reeled off 22 of the game's next 25 points over the next 6-1/2 minutes to blow the game open. The Bears extended their gaudy advantage at the intermission to as many as 34 points, 73-39, after a conventional three-point play by Bruce Reed with 16:37 remaining in the contest and Rio Grande got no closer than 19 points the rest of the way. A physical - and oft-times adversarial- affair, the game included three technical fouls, two intentional fouls and the ejections of two its highprofile standouts - Pikeville's Chris Cantino and Rio Grande's Josh Regan. Cantino was tossed with 8:45 remaining in the first half when he shoved Reagan in the back of the head after the two teams had been warned to control their emotions just moments earlier. Ironically, the Bears began their game-changing run less than a minute after Cantino's depature. Reagan, who was assessed a technical foul a little over a minute before Cantino was ejected, got his own ticket for an early exit when he received a second technical foul as the teams were leaving the floor at halftime. Pikeville shot 55.8 percent for the game (43-for77), including a sizzling 60 percent (24-for-40) SENIOR RICKY in the first half. TISDALE scored The Bears also a career-high 20 enjoyed a whoppoints in the Feb- ping 52-29 edge ruary 22 111-91 in rebounding. Rio Grande loss to Pikeville. connected on 11 three-point goals and shot nearly 55 percent from the floor in the second half (17-for-31), but the outcome had been decided by that point. Josh Whitaker had game-high 26 points - 13 in each half - to go along with six assists for UPike, while Keala King added 21 points and Reed finished with 19. Kenny Manigault (11 pts.) and Elisha Justice (10 pts.) also reached double figures for the Bears, while Justice also had a game-high seven assists and Michael Eneh added a game -high nine rebounds in a reserve role. Sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH) topped a trio of double-digit scorers for Rio with 21 points, while senior guard Ricky Tisdale (Bolivar, TN) netted a careerhigh 20 points and Young finished with 14 points. Senior guard Jermaine Warmack (Orange, NJ), who along with Tisdale was honored in pre-game ceremonies, had a team-high five assists and three steals in a losing cause for the RedStorm and junior center Sterling Smoak (San Antonio, TX) pulled down a team-high four rebounds. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 18 RedStorm Baseball Divides Pair With Harriers Rio Grande Sports Information CHILLICOTHE, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande rallied from a pair of early deficits, scoring 13 unanswered runs to post a 14-6 game two win over Miami-Hamilton and earning a doubleheader split with the Harriers, Friday, Feb. 21, at VA Memorial Stadium. The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for the RedStorm (3-7), who suffered a 7-1 loss in the opening game. Freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico) had three hits and two runs batted in off the bench in the nightcap, while senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) had two hits and two RBIs and sophomore Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) drove in a pair of runs. Freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH) and sophomore Austin Hall (Wheelersburg, OH) also had two hits apiece in the winning effort. Senior Michael Deitsch (Cincinnati, OH) survived a rocky first inning to earn his second win in three decisions. After allowing five hits and as many runs in the opening frame, the right-hander checked the Harriers (1-1) on one run and three hits over the next five innings. Deitsch, whose only walk came in the five-run first, also finished with 10 strikeouts. In the opening game of the twinbill, MiamiHamilton scored twice in the opening inning and added single markers in the second and third innings en route to an easy victory. Hall had two of the RedStorm's four hits in the loss, while Makuch added a double and junior Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) drove in the only run of the contest for Rio. Senior right-hander David Steele (Kettering, OH) started and took the loss for the RedStorm, allowing four runs and six hits in just 2-2/3 innings on the hill. Miami-Hamilton grabbed its first inning lead thanks to a two-out, two-run triple by Tyler Burdine and extended the lead to 4-0 on an RBI single by Ryan Griffis in the second inning and an errant pickoff throw in the third. Rio Grande, which failed to score despite three errors by the Harriers in the second inning, did get on the scoreboard in the third when Hall led off with a single, junior courtesy runner Luke Taylor (Pedro, OH) moved to third on a groundout and a passed ball and scored on a groundout to short by Tamane. The RedStorm failed to dent the plate the rest of the way, although they did manage to put a runner in scoring position with two outs in each of the final four innings. Miami-Hamilton got the run back in the fifth off junior reliever Ryan Christophel (Cincinnati, OH) thanks to an RBI double by Jon Lasota and closed out the scoring in the seventh on a two-run home run by Mitch Durbin. The Harriers also started well in game two with the five-run first against Deitsch. Cody Liming's two-run double highlighted the outburst, while Durbin and Braden Burdine added RBI singles. Rio Grande erased the deficit in the second inning, though, parlaying four hits and three MU-H errors into five runs - all of which were scored with two outs. Lewis got the inning going with a one-out triple to right-center and Hall brought him home with a groundout to third. Taylor then reached on an error, stole second and scored on single to center by Makuch to make it 5-2. Makuch, who advanced to second on the throw home, scored moments later when Tamane's routine fly to right was dropped for an error. Junior Anthony Knittel (Portmouth, OH) plated Tamane with a double and then scored the tying run himself when junior Kyle Findley's (Cincinnati, OH) flyball to center was dropped. Miami-Hamilton regained the lead in the third when Liming doubled with two outs, Jake Wagner reached on an error and Braden Burdine had a runscoring single, but the RedStorm closed with nine unanswered markers to win going away. An RBI double by Tamane and another error brought home to runs in the bottom of the third, while a sacrifice fly by Finley and Yates' two-run triple highlighted a four-run fifth inning to make it 11-6. The final three Rio runs came in the eighth on a two-run double by Jimenez and a Makuch sacrifice fly. Johnson sets new Rio women's indoor record; Sanborn Takes Top Honors In 800-meter Run Rio Grande Sports Information BEXLEY, Ohio - Clarissa Johnson rewrote the Rio Grande record books and Kyle Sanborn took top honors in the men's 800-meter run, as the RedStorm track and field team put together an impressive showing at the Capital Classic hosted by Capital University on Saturday, Feb. 22. Johnson, a freshman from Hillsboro, Ohio, placed second in the women's 500meter run with a time of 1:21.16, breaking the previous school indoor record of 1:22.49 set by Clarissa Johnson Leslie Bales in 1998. Sanborn, a sophomore from Dover, OH, registered a time of 1:57.66 en route to his top honor. One other first place finish was accomplished for the RedStorm, as the freshman quartet of Austin Wilson (Gallipolis, OH), Charlie Ronan (Cincinnati, OH), Austin Moore (Swedesboro, NJ) and Nate Kosnich (Pickerington, OH) took top honors in the men's 4x200-meter relay with a time of 1:33.69. Team races seemed to be Rio's specialty on Saturday, as the men finished second in both the 4x400-meter relay and the distance medley with times of 3:32.01 and 11:10.63, respectively. The 4x400 team was a combination of Moore, Sanborn, senior Joe Taranto (Pickerington, OH) and freshman Floyd Lowry (St. Paris, OH), while the distance medley team consisted of Lowry, Taranto, freshman Dallas Guy (Buffalo, OH) and sophomore Jerrele Lyles (Dublin, OH). Rio Grande had eight other top- Team races seemed to be Rio's specialty on February 22, as the men finished second in both the 4x400-meter relay and the distance medley with times of 3:32.01 and 11:10.63, respectively. five finishes at the event: Taranto, who fin- The Rio ished second in Grande men the men's 1000 finished the day -meter run with at second place a time of out of 13 teams, 2:35.95; Ronan, who finishing just placed third in 13 points bethe men's 200hind winner meter dash with a time of Wilmington 23.22; senior College. Kaleb Kimber The RedStorm (Salisbury, women finished NC), who finsihed third in the eighth out of 14 men's high teams. jump with a leap of 1.88 meters; freshman Lauren Stacey (Bethel, OH), who placed third in the women's weight throw with a toss of 13.7 meters; sophomore Lauren Rhoads (Waverly, OH), who finished fourth in the women's weight throw with a toss of 13.50 meters; Wilson, who placed fourth in the men's 60meter dash with a time of 7.1 second. Wilson also finished fifth in the men's 200-meter dash with a time of 23.45; and sophomore Carrie Coriell (Lucasville, OH), who placed fifth in the women's shot put with a toss of 11.19 meters. Other notable finishes for Rio Grandes included Stacey also placed sixth in the women's shot put with a throw of 10.98 meters; Moore, who placed sixth in the men's 400-meter dash with a time of 52.58; freshman Nate Goodhart (Kent, OH), who finished sixth in the men's 5000meter run with a time of 16:26.48; Guy, who placed seventh in the men's one-mile run with a time of 9:25.25; freshman Blake Freed Kyle Sanborn (Uhrichsville, OH), who finished seventh in the men's 5000-meter run with a time of 16:27.65; and freshman McKenzie Coriell (Lucasville, OH), who placed seventh in the women's long jump with a jump of 4.73 meters. The Rio Grande men finished the day at second place out of 13 teams, finishing just 13 points behind winner Wilmington College. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 19 RedStorm Baseball Rallies To Upend Golden Knights Rio Grande Sports Information BECKLEY, W.Va. - Anthony Knittel collected two hits at the plate and struck out six in three innings of work from the mound, as the University of Rio Grande notched a 6-5 come-from-behind victory over Gannon (Pa.) University, February 25, in non-conference baseball action at Linda K. Epling Stadium. The RedStorm improved to 4-7 with the win, while Gannon - which defeated West Virginia University Tech, 3-0, earlier in the day - slipped to 1-1. "I thought our pitching staff threw the ball very well today," said Rio Grande assistant coach Zach Dumler, who was part of the three-man coach-bycommittee filling in for Rio head coach Brad Warnimont, who became ill prior to game and didn't make the trip. "We were really pounding the zone out there and allowing the defense to work. The hitters seemed to be a little more aggressive and really kept the momentum going later in the ballgame when we needed them." Ryan Chapman, another member of Rio's trio of coaches, said it was refreshing to receive quality innings out of the litany of hurlers that the RedStorm sent to the hill. "We were trying to get everybody worked in today on the mound considering we are supposed to open up conference play this Friday," said Chapman. "I was pleased with the way the ball was delivered off the mound and feel confident going into the Shawnee State series." Knittel, a junior left-hander and designated hitter from Portsmouth, Ohio, walked just one in those three innings of work and was charged with just one earned run. Five of the first six outs Knittel recorded were via strikeout. Junior first baseman Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH) was the only other Rio player to record two hits and also produced what proved to be the game -winning run batted in. Freshman third baseman Luis Jimenez added a two-run triple to the winning effort, while sophomore Chris Ford (Athens, OH) also drove in a run. Ryan Christophel, a junior lefty from Cincinnati, Ohio, picked up the win for Rio in his first decision of the season, while senior right-hander Eric Ford (Chagrin Falls, OH) recorded his second save of the season after closing the door on the Golden Knights in the ninth inning. Gannon starter Matt Tobin was tabbed with the loss in his season debut. The Golden Knights enjoyed a commanding 4-0 lead entering the home half of the fourth inning and Tobin had retired the first nine Rio batters he faced in order. But things changed quickly, when senior center fielder Marcus Makuch (Baltimore, OH) smacked a single to shallow right to start off the inning, junior second baseman Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) followed with an infield single and Knittel moved both runners into scoring position with a flyball to deep center. Makuch stole home as part of a delayed doublesteal attempt and, after a single by Findley, Tamane scored on a base hit by Chris Ford to make it 4-2. Sophomore catcher Austin Hall (Wheelersburg, OH) then forced Ford with a grounder to second, but Jimenez followed with a game-tying triple to left-center which knotted the score at 4-4. Findley tacked on his go-ahead single in the bottom of the fifth to give the RedStorm the lead for good, as Rio rode the scoreless relief work of junior Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH), freshmen Trent Downs (Chillicothe, OH) and Brandon Stevens (Louisa, KY) and Ford to nail down the victory. Blue Raiders Roll Past RedStorm Ladies Basketball Rio Grande Sports Information COLUMBIA, Ky. - Host Lindsey Wilson College bolted to a 22-point first half lead and never looked back, cruising to a 110-80 win over the University of Rio Grande, Thursday, Feb. 27, in Mid-South Conference women's basketball action at the Biggers Sports Center. The 110 points represented a season-high for the Blue Raiders (19-10 overall, 9-8 MSC), who had six players finish in double figures and another tally nine points. Lindsey Wilson also nailed down no worse than the No. 5 seed in next week's MSC Tournament and can earn the No. 4 seed with a win over Shawnee State in Saturday's regular season finale. Despite the loss, Rio Grande (1811, 7-10 MSC) secured a berth in the tourney as well as a result of Shawnee State's 77-74 win over Cumberland University on Thursday night. The RedStorm can claim the No. 6 seed with a win at Cumberland University on Saturday afternoon. A loss would likely mean a fall to the seventh seed and a meeting with No. 2 seed Georgetown College. Rio Grande trailed just 16-11 following a bucket by freshman forward Audra Clark (St. Marys, WV) with 11:48 left in the first half, but the Blue Raiders went on a 24-7 run over the next 5-1/2 minutes and bolted to a 40-18 after a three-pointer by Tara Arnold with 6:09 remaining before the break. Lindsey Wilson settled for a 16point halftime lead and watched its lead hover between 16 and 21 points over the course of the first seven minutes of the second half, but the RedStorm appeared poised to make things interesting when a threepointer by freshman guard Sharday Baines (East Cleveland, OH) with 11:07 left to play pulled Rio within 12 points at 71-59. However, that's as close as the RedStorm would get. The Blue Raiders reeled off 11 straight points in a span of just over three minutes to push the lead back to 23 points and any FRESHMAN hopes of a Rio BROOKE MARcomeback CUM had eight were officially points, seven relaid to rest. bounds and two The 30blocked shots in the point margin February 27 loss to of victory Lindsey Wilson. matched Lindsey Wilson's largest lead of the contest. Arnold scored a career-high 25 points to lead the Blue Raiders, who shot 65.2 percent in the second half (15-for-23) and 56.9 percent for the game (33-for-58). She also had seven rebounds and shared team honors with three steals. Bre Elder had 18 points and a game-high four assists, while Chanel Roberts and Candance Foster had 14 points each and Jamie Cummings finished with 12 points and a gamehigh eight rebounds. Keosha Wisener also netted 11 points for LWC, which hit 10 threepointers and 34 of its 41 free throw attempts while enjoying a 40-31 edge in rebounding. Sophomore forward Sarah Bonar (Hartford, OH) had 17 points and was the only double-digit scorer for Rio Grande, which finished 5-for-27 from three-point range (18.5%) and committed 17 turnovers. Bonar also had a team-high three assists, while freshman center Brooke Marcum (Vinton, OH) had eight points to go along with her team-high seven rebounds, two blocked shots and two steals. Lindsey Wilson Takes Down Rio Men In Conference Play Rio Grande Sports Information COLUMBIA, Ky. - Daronte' Clark scored 10 of his team-high 16 points in a 13-0 first half scoring spurt which sparked Lindsey Wilson College to what became a 91-75 win over the University of Rio Grande, February 27, in Mid-South Conference men's basketball action at the Biggers Sports Center. The Blue Raiders, who won for the third time in four games on the heels of a five-game losing streak, improved to 15-14 overall and 6-11 in league play with the victory. Head coach Paul Peck's club also secured a spot next week's MSC Tournament with the win regardless of the outcome of Saturday's regular season finale against Shawnee State. Rio Grande, which saw its losing streak reach a season-high five games, slipped to 16-12 overall and 9-8 inside the conference. The RedStorm, who dropped out of the NAIA Division I Top 25 earlier this week for the first time in more than a month, can finish no lower than the No. 6 seed. However, the RedStorm could also end up as part of a complicated four-way tie for third place with a win over Cumberland University on Saturday, coupled with a Campbellsville win over Bluefield and a St. Catharine loss to Pikeville. Behind a quick start by sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH), who scored all of Rio Grande's first 13 points, the RedStorm enjoyed a one-point lead with 13:31 left in the first half, but Clark nailed consecutive three-pointers to kickstart the game-changing run and give Lindsey Wilson a lead it would never relinquish. Rio twice closed to within seven points inside the final six minutes of the opening stanza, but the Blue Raiders eventually enjoyed an 18-point halftime lead and extended their cushion to as many as 23 points inside the opening minute of the second half. A 9-0 run by the RedStorm sliced the deficit to 50-36 after freshman forward Bilal Young (Cleveland, OH) hit one of two free throws with 16:32 left to play, but that's as close as they got the rest of the night. Tyrie Orosco led five other Lindsey Wilson players in double figures with 15 points and a game-high nine rebounds, while D'on Hall added 14 points. Both players also had three steals. The Blue Raiders also got 12 points from Tony Horne and a 10-point, eight-assist, seven-rebound performance from Keshaun Mayfield. Rio Grande, which is playing both ends of the road swing without the services of its leading scorer, junior forward Josh Reagan (Cleveland, OH), following his ejection from last Saturday's loss to Pikeville, equaled a season-high with 12 threepoint goals. However, the RedStorm were an uncharacteristic 13-of-20 from the free throw line, while also being outrebounded 42-29 and committing 20 turnovers. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 20 RedStorm Softball Earns Opening Day Split Rio Grande Sports Information RIO GRANDE, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande softball team began its 2014 campaign by earning a split of its February 28 doubleheader at Rio Softball Park against Mid-South Conference foe Cumberland University. The RedStorm bounced back from a 4-1 open- RIO'S CHEYENNE HAMAKER had three hits and two RBIs in the February 28 doubleheader split. Bears Rally To Nip RedStorm Rio Grande Sports Information PORTSMOUTH, Ohio Daniel Katayama's one-out single in the bottom of the 10th inning plated teammate Brady Page with the winning run and lifted Shawnee State University to a 3-2 win over the University of Rio Grande, Friday, Feb. 28, in Mid-South Conference baseball action at Branch Rickey Park in Portsmouth. Katayama's gamewinning hit capped the Bears' rally from a 2-0 first inning deficit and gave Shawnee State (8-7 overall, 1-0 MSC) the victory in the conference opener for both teams. Rio Grande, which had a two-game winning streak snapped, slipped to 4-8 overall and 0-1 in league play with the loss. Brady Hightchew opened the home 10th by reaching on an error, but was quickly forced out at second on Brady Page's fielder's choice grounder to third. Dalton Tinsley followed with a single to right which moved to third and, on the same play, advanced into scoring position on the throw to third. Katayama, Shawnee's leading hitter average-wise this season, then hit a 1-0 pitch from Rio Grande senior reliever Eric Ford (Chagrin Falls, OH) into shallow right field to score Page with the winning run. ing game loss by posting a 4-3 win in game two. Head coach Kristen Bradshaw sent two freshmen arms to the pitcher's circle on the afternoon and, in return, received two seven-inning performances. Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) limited the Birddawgs to just one run over the first six innings of the opener, but surrendered three runs in the seventh en route to being tagged with the loss. She surrendered nine hits and struck out two batters in her complete game effort and three of the four runs allowed were earned. Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) managed to hold on for the win in game two, allowing three runs on five hits and walking just one batter in a complete game effort. Freshman shortstop Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) led the offensive charge for Rio on the afternoon by collecting three hits in six at-bats and driving in a pair of runs. She also scored two runs and swiped the only two bases on the day for the RedStorm. Sophomore first baseman Ariel Roder (Parma Heights, OH) plated a run in the doubleheader and was the only other Rio player to collect more than one hit on the day. Shanea Long, a freshman third baseman from Wellston, Ohio, recorded the only extra-base hit for the RedStorm with a double in game two. Cumberland took a 1-0 first inning lead in the opener on an RBI hit by Jessica Roper, but Rio Grande countered with equalizer on a run-scoring single by Roder in the home half of the fourth. The Birddawgs went in front to stay, however, with three runs in the top of the seventh courtesy of pair of singles and a sacrifice fly. Rio Grande went down in order in the bottom of the seventh. The Birddawgs also struck first in the opening inning of game two, but Rio answered the score a bit quicker when Jones delivered a two-out, gametying RBI single in the bottom half of the frame. The two teams exchanged runs again in third inning before the RedStorm moved in front to stay thanks to a two-out, two-run single by Hamaker. Cumberland (8-2, 1-1 MSC) did push across a sixth inning marker to slice the deficit in half, but Bise retired the side in order in the seventh to nail down Rio's first win of the season. Reuse, Reduce and Recycle With the concern for green house gases, climate change, energy prices, overflowing landfills and the overall wellbeing of our planet; Rio Grande is working diligently to help reduce our footprint upon this planet. The Rio Goes Green program has been developing ideas and implementing local programs that can change and will better serve present & future generations of our campus community. Of course we need your help in this endeavor. Here are ways in which you can help: Participate in recycling by properly disposing of both paper & plastics. Find the nearest bins and pitch in. Always keep in mind that recycling is the last step in the loop of the 3 R’s (Reuse, Reduce and Recycling); so always try to implement the first two steps before recycling. Turn off lights & electronics in rooms which are unoccuHere are some of the ways in which the pied. Energy isSpring wastedBreaks whenever its used and no one is10, 2014 Begins: Monday, March Go Green program has been contribthere to benefit. Friday, March 14, 2014 uting: Adjust the heating & cooling on weekends and holiday Don’t forget this is the week! To take a Break! Recycling Program periods. Especially, turning off computers in labs will contribute two ways: once for the electricity saved on the Energy Management Program unused computer and secondly for saving on the cooling Trayeless Food Services (Sodexo) costs. Four Day Summer Work Week Unplug chargers and electronics which have a "vampire" draw on current even when not being turned Bike Racks on. Plastic Recycling Facts: Two and half million plastic bottles are used every hour in the US with just a quarter of them being recycled. A plastic bag that is not biodegradable can take up to 400 years to be broken down. In the US every year 25 million of Styrofoam cups are thrown away with the majority not being recycled. Glass Recycling Facts: Glass can keep getting recycled for 40 centuries before it starts to be broken down and the US only recycles a third of the glass bottles yearly. Paper Recycling Facts: When a tree is cut down only a quarter of it (25%) will actually turn into it paper the rest will be used for other purposes. The average paper consumption for Americans is about 700 pounds each year which is more than 6 times the global average (it is estimated at 110 pounds.) If we want convert the annual consumption of Americans to a lifetime consumption of trees then that would translate to an average of 465 trees. If we all recycle our share of paper we will save around 100 million tons of wood and if all the newspapers that would translate into 250 million of trees a year. Aluminum Recycling Facts: Around 80 billion of aluminum beverage cans are used each year which is the most common use of aluminum. When an aluminum can is thrown it will not break down even after 500 years. The amount of aluminum thrown away each year is enough to rebuild our commercial airplane fleet by four times.. More than half of the aluminum cans that are produce get recycled.. The value of an empty aluminum can is one cent. Rio Grande, Ohio March 2014; Number 7 Page 21 Cumberland Deals Rio Men Sixth Straight Loss Rio Grande Sports Information LEBANON, Tenn. - The University of Rio Grande men's basketball team fell behind 9-0 in the opening 41/2 minutes and never recovered, dropping a 73-66 decision to Cumberland University in the regular season finale for both teams, Saturday March 1, in Mid-South Conference action at the Dallas Floyd Recreation Center. The Bulldogs, who had lost eight straight games prior to a win over Shawnee State on Thursday night, finished 14-13 overall and 6-12 in the MSC while completing a season sweep of the RedStorm in the process. Rio Grande slipped to 16-13 overall and 9-9 in league play with its sixth straight setback. The RedStorm finished in a tie for fifth place with Campbellsville and received the No. 5 seed in the upcoming MSC Tournament based on the league's tiebreaker procedure. Head coach Ken French's squad will return to Cumberland University to meet No. 4 seed St. Catharine in the quarterfinal round on Thursday, at 5 p.m. EST. In Saturday's loss to the Bulldogs, Rio went scoreless until a jumper by sophomore forward Phillip Hertz (Rungsted Kyst, Denmark) just over seven minutes into the contest. Cumberland led by no less than seven points at any stage of the first half and enjoyed a 14-point cushion at the intermission. The Bulldogs opened up their largest lead of the day at 16 points, 53- 37, after Moritz Dern hit one of two free throw attempts with 10:13 left in the contest and maintained a double-digit advantage until a layup by Rio senior Jermaine Warmack SENIOR JER(Orange, NJ) MAINE WARgot the RedMACK had 26 Storm within points and three steals in the March eight, 62-54, with 4:11 re1 loss to Cumbermaining. land Rio Grande kept things interesting the rest of the way, even pulling as close as five points, 71-66, after a three-pointer by Warmack with 37.9 seconds left, but the RedStorm couldn't finish off the comeback. Lester Gude, one of Cumberland's five senior starters playing their final collegiate contest, scored a careerhigh 23 points to lead the Bulldogs in the win. Josh Wilkerson added 16 points and Lamar Brinkley finished with 12 points and a game-high 14 rebounds for CU, which shot 58 percent in the first half (14-for-24) and 51.9 percent (27-for-52) for the game. Warmack scored a game-high 26 points and had a game-high three steals for Rio Grande, while sophomore guard D.D. Joiner (Columbus, OH) tallied 12 points and a team-best six rebounds. RedStorm Women Fall To Bulldogs In Regular Season Finale Rio Grande Sports Information LEBANON, Tenn. - Seniors TaCouya Allen and Casie Cowan closed out their collegiate careers in grand style by scoring 33 points each and leading Cumberland University to an 84-66 Senior Day win over the University of Rio Grande, March 1, in MidSouth Conference women's basketball action at the Dallas Floyd Recreation Center. The Bulldogs finished their season at 10-16 overall and 612 in conference play. Two of their six conference wins came at the expense of Rio Grande. The RedStorm, who suffered their second straight loss, closed out regular season play at 18-12 overall and 7-11 in the league. The loss left Rio Grande in a three-way tie for sixth place in the final league standings. After the league's tiebreaker procedure was applied, the RedStorm received the No. 7 seed in the next week's MSC Tournament, which will also take place at Cumberland University. Allen, who finished 11-for14 from the field and a perfect 8-for-8 from the free throw line, also had a teamand game-high 13 rebounds to go along with five assists and three steals. Cowan had four threepointers among her 12 field goals and also had a gamehigh five steals to go along with three assists. Calamity Jane Coley added 12 points in the win for Cumberland, which shot 50 percent from the field overall (30 -for-60), while also outrebounding the RedStorm, 3938, and serving as the beneficiary of 18 Rio turnovers. Rio Grande led just twice in the contest - both times inside the game's first 3-1/2 minutes. The game's turning point came after Rio had tied the game at 12-12 on a jumper by freshman forward Audra Clark (St. Marys, WV) with 13:13 remaining in the first half. The RedStorm proceeded to go scoreless over the next five minutes, while the Bulldogs reeled off 12 consecutive points to take a lead they would never relinquish. Cumberland, which outscored its guest 40-16 in the paint and 27-17 off of turnovers, led by 14 points at the half and extended its advantage to as many as 22 points with just under 15 minutes to play in their home game. Rio Grande refused to go away quietly, though, and twice pulled to within nine points - the second of which came at 70-61 after a bucket by freshman forward Brooke Marcum (Vinton, OH) with 4:16 remaining. However, the Bulldogs reeled off nine straight points over the next 2-1/2 minutes to push the lead back out to 18 points and seal the victory over the RedStorms. Rio Grande had two players reach double figures in scoring. Junior guard Brianna Thomas (Maplewood, NJ) had 16 points to go along with seven assists and a pair of steals, while Marcum had 11 points and tied Allen for game-high honors with 13 rebounds. Thomas and Marcum were a combined 9-for-18 from the field, while the remainder of the RedStorm were a combined 14-for-45. Shawnee State Bears Complete Sweep Of Rio Baseball Rio Grande Sports Information PORTSMOUTH, Ohio - The University of Rio Grande baseball team finished up a disappointing weekend in Portsmouth, as they dropped both games of March 1 doubleheader against Shawnee State at Branch Rickey Park. Shawnee took the opening game 53 and posted a 5-4 triumph in the nightcap. After taking game one 3-2 in 10 innings on Friday, Feb. 28, the doubleheader sweep gave the Bears a series sweep over the RedStorm. Rio Grande now begins 0-3 in Mid -South Conference play and falls to 4 -10 overall on the season, while Shawnee State improves to 10-7 overall and 3-0 in MSC action. Sophomore right fielder Chris Ford (Athens, OH) led Rio Grande from the plate on the day compiling three hits and an RBI over the two games. Credited with the loss in game one was senior right-hander David Steele (Kettering, OH), who fell to 1-2 on the young season after going 6-2/3 innings and giving up five runs on nine hits while striking out seven. The game two loss was tagged one junior lefty Anthony Knittel take a commanding 5-1 advantage. (Portsmouth, OH), who surrendered Rio would tack on one run in the one hit and one run final two innings, in one inning of Shawnee took the open- but the deficit work. ing game 5-3 and posted a 5 proved to be too Rio saw just one much as the Bears baserunner and no -4 triumph in the nightcap. were able to close hits through 4-2/3 the door in the top innings in game one before Ford of the ninth. notched a two-out single. The success The RedStorm also found themwould be short-lived, however, as selves in a 2-0 hole in game two Ford would be caught stealing just heading into the top of the fourth inthree pitches into the following atning after watching Shawnee State bat, ensuring Shawnee's 1-0 lead plate runs in the first and third inwould stay entact for at least another nings. inning. Following a pair of one-out singles The Bears maintained that same by Ford and junior first baseman lead entering the top of the seventh Kyle Findley (Cincinnati, OH), a inning as senior center fielder Marcus wild pitch by Shawnee's Cody StrayMakuch (Baltimore, OH) stepped up er would advance both RedStorm to the plate. On a 2-2 count, Makuch players 90 feet. Freshman third basewould drive the pitch over the right man Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerfield wall to knot things up at one to Rico) would then hit a sacrifice fly apiece and represent one of just two to plate Findley followed by a single extra base hits Rio would record on down the left field line by freshman the day. shortstop Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Once again, though, the Rio sucPuerto Rico) which scored Findley to cess would be short-lived after the tie the game up at two runs apiece. Bears would respond with four runs The Bears would once again turn in the bottom half of the inning to up the heat on the RedStorm and score two runs in the sixth inning and leaving Rio Grande in a two-run hole going into their last at-bat. With one out, sophomore catcher Austin Hall (Wheelersburg, OH) would reach base via a hit by pitch. After a Flores base hit, a single to right field by junior second baseman Grant Tamane (Pickering, Ontario, Canada) scored Hall from second base to cut the Shawnee lead in half. Two batters later, with the bases loaded and still just one out, Kyle Findley would single home the gametying run in Flores and nearly the goahead run, but the Bears were able to throw pinch-runner Tyler Noel, a sophomore from Portsmouth, Ohio, at the plate for the second out of the inning. Ford would ground out in the next at-bat to end the inning for Rio with the score tied at four apiece. For the second time in as many days, however, the Bears were able to win in walkoff fashion - this time on a bases-load hit by Daniel Katayama - to dash the RedStorm's hopes of picking up a game in the series and leaving them headed back to the Farm empty-handed.