<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2045" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/2045?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T05:03:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11947">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/ee0b5508909c6d4aef877e79d6951b9c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dce8e9f77fa09b1dd38878452ec41211</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7574">
                  <text>Point rolls
in playoff
opener

‘Keep Your
Fork’ aids
Meigs runners

SPORTS s 1B

FEATURES s 1C

$
$
$
$
$$$

ADVERTISE HERE AND SAVE $$$$
Starting at $75

Contact your local newspaper rep TODAY!!!!!
60622947

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 45, Volume 49

Sunday, November 15, 2015 s $2

Coaches, players honor ‘56 Forever’

Youth football teams honor Wyatt Barber during championship game
By Lindsay Kriz

in a youth football practice and players
had taken a break from running sprints
when a coach discovered him unconMIDDLEPORT — The Big Bend
scious on the ground. The practice at the
Youth Football League Eastern and
time was a walk-through, not a contact
Meigs third, fourth, ﬁfth and sixth gradpractice, they said.
ers came together at Veterans Memorial
After discovering Barber’s condition,
Stadium — also known as the former
coaches immediately contacted EMS at
Middleport High School football ﬁeld — 7:19 p.m. and performed CPR before he
at 2 p.m. Saturday to play their champiwas transported to the Meigs Emergency
onship games.
Department, where he passed away.
While they may have had a rivalry on
Hunter was contacted and met ofﬁcers at
the ﬁeld, they also came together as one the emergency room.
for a big reason — to honor the late EastAn autopsy revealed that the cause of
ern Eagles player Wyatt Barber.
death was a result of an abnormal left
Barber passed away Nov. 2 during
main coronary artery in his heart, accordpractice
at Eastern Local Schools’ footing to Montgomery County Coroner’s
Photo courtesy of Randy Wright
Randy Wright, of Middleport and Tony Gilkey, of Darwin, used marker paint Friday to create a circle ball ﬁeld. According to the Meigs County
with eagle talons on the field in honor of Wyatt Barber.
See ‘56 FOREVER’ | 6A
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, Barber was participating
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Community
groups collaborate
to provide gifts
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIA COUNTY
— The 2015 Gallia
County Community
Christmas Project has
started its holiday collection season and seeks
to provide presents for
families living in Gallia
County that need help
providing gifts for their
children.
The GCCCP was
created as a way for
everyone in the community to work together,
including all area school
systems, numerous
organizations, churches
and businesses to
provide gifts for these
families in need, while
eliminating duplication
of efforts.
Around 1,400 children living in Gallia
County received Christmas gifts through the
GCCCP in 2014. More
than 1,400 children
have applied for this
year’s project. While
these numbers seem
large, the project volunteers compare the numbers every year with the
number of children that
received school clothing
and supply assistance
from the Gallia County
Department of Job and
Family Services (GCDJFS) for that school
year.

The GCDJFS program is entirely incomebased eligibility and
their numbers this year,
as in years past, are
similar to the number
that have applied for
the Christmas Project.
Applications for the
GCCCP were passed
out in every school district in Gallia County
and at local partnering
agencies, including the
Gallia County Health
Department and the
Gallia County Department of Job and Family
Services.
According to GCDJFS Director Dana
Glassburn, approximately 350 children
still need sponsors this
Christmas. Project
volunteers are seeking
assistance from the
public. Donations are
received from sponsorships and many are
received anonymously.
“School nurses have
been a tremendous help
to the project,” Glassburn said. “Families,
businesses and churches also assist the project
and register individuals
for sponsorships. Many
of our sponsors wish
to remain anonymous
because they aren’t
seeking recognition.
They simply want to
See GIFTS | 6A

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Football: 1B
Soccer: 1B
Baseball: 3B
— FEATURES
Television: 2B
Classified: 5B
Comics: 3C

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

Stuck in cement on Friday the 13th

Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Two Meigs County women drove their Chrysler PT Cruiser into a freshly poured area of cement — despite two posted “Road Closed”
signs — in front of the Meigs County Courthouse on Friday afternoon. The women remained in their partially submerged vehicle until
a tow truck was able to pull them out. Damage looked to be minimal, with the front bumper being slightly torn off the vehicle and the
front wheels covered in cement. As soon as the car was removed construction crews immediately smoothed over the affected area and
continued with their road repairs in the area.

The Jacques Daboni trial moved to Dec. 14
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The jury trial for Jacques Daboni,
originally scheduled to begin Monday, has been tentatively pushed back to 9 a.m. Dec. 14.
Instead, a ﬁnal pre-trial hearing is set for 9 a.m.
Monday according to Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney Colleen Williams.
Daboni is currently facing 12 felony charges, according to Meigs County Assistant Prosecutor Jeremy
Fisher. Daboni faces seven counts of ﬁfth-degree felony trafﬁcking, one count of fourth-degree felony trafﬁcking, one count of second-degree felony trafﬁcking,
one count of ﬁrst-degree felony trafﬁcking, one count
of second-degree felony engaging a pattern of corrupt
behavior, and one count of ﬁrst-degree felony engaging a pattern of corrupt behavior, Fisher said. Three
of the trafﬁcking charges in the ﬁfth degree mention
heroin, with the rest of the trafﬁcking charges listed
simply as “trafﬁcking,” according to court documents.
Daboni’s trial was originally set to begin Oct. 13,
but was postponed to the next day after Daboni fell
in an unofﬁcially disclosed location and was transported to a nearby hospital. During the second day of
trial, Jason Holden, an attorney from Gallipolis, was
Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel appointed as Daboni’s counsel. On his client’s behalf,
Jacques Daboni, 24, sits in a wheelchair during the second day of Holdren requested a mistrial Oct. 14, which was
his trial on Oct. 14. Daboni had fallen during lunchtime the previous granted by Judge Carson Crow.
day, causing his trial, which was ultimately declared a mistrial, to
be postponed a day.

See DABONI | 6A

�LOCAL/AREA

2A Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
CHRISTINA R. FRAZIER
FREDERICK, Pa. —
Christina R. Frazier,
18, of Frederick, New
Hanover Township,
passed away Monday,
Nov. 9, 2015, at her
home.
Born in Dover, Del., she
was the beloved daughter
of Timothy R. Frazier
and Caroline R. (Karr)
Fallers.
Christina was a member of Morning Star Fellowship in Bechtelsville,
Pa., where she would
volunteer with daycare.
She enjoyed music and
decorating and had a
knack for scrapbooking.
She also liked soccer and
martial arts.
Surviving with her parents is her son Brandon
L. Goldy; sisters Holly
R. Frazier and Falisha R.
Frazier; niece Haylee and
nephews Lee Lee and
Logan; stepmother Mary
Beth McDowell; stepfather John Fallers; maternal grandparents the Rev.

HAROLD E. VANPELT

Donald and Delma Karr
and paternal grandmother
Mary Ellis; and aunts and
uncles.
She was preceded in
death by her brother-inlaw Lee Hutson.
A funeral service will
be 11 a.m. Monday, Nov.
16, 2015, at Morning Star
Fellowship, 100 Limekiln
Rd, Bechtelsville, with
Pastor Shaun Olsen ofﬁciating. Visitation will be
9-10:45 a.m. Monday at
the church. Burial will be
private.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations may be made
in Christina’s name to:
Brandon Goldy, P.O. Box
225, Sassamansville, PA
19472.
Catagnus Funeral
Home &amp; Cremation Center Inc., Gilbertsville, Pa.,
is in charge of arrangements.
View obituaries or send
condolences at www.
catagnusfuneralhomes.
com.

IRWIN R. “JAY” LANCE
ANTIQUITY — Irwin
R. “Jay” Lance, II, 88 of,
Racine, the Antiquity
community, passed away
at 1:30 p.m. on Friday,
Nov. 13, 2015 in the St.
Mary’s Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 30, 1927 in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
he was the son of the late
Irwin and Emma Mary
Weber Lance, Sr. He was
a retired grocery store
owner and mail carrier
and he also served his
country in the United
State Navy during World
War II. Jay was a member
of First Baptist Church
of Racine, the PomeroyRacine Lodge # 164
of Free and Accepted
Masons of Ohio. He was
also a member of the
Tuppers Pains Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post #9053,
and a member of both the
Racine Post #602 and the
Pomeroy Drew Webster
Post #39 of the American
Legion.
Jay is survived by
his wife, Mary Ireland
Lance, whom he married on Feb. 2, 1950 in
Pittsburgh, Penn.; a son,
Howard (Gidget) Lance,
of Austin, Texas., daughters, Mary Ann Sciullo,
of Jacksonville, Fla., and
Emily Lance, of Carpen-

ter, Penn.; six grandchildren, Melissa Ferchete,
Lacey Sciullo, Sam (Shayla) Sciullo, Chip (Kim)
Sciullo, Melanie Lance,
and Marissa Lance, seven
great-grandchildren,
Tiana, Ceria, and Jordan
Ferchete, Nicholas, Dillon, Parker and Harper
Sciullo, daughter-in-law,
Patti Walick Lance, of
Pomeroy.
In addition to his parents Jay was preceded
in death by his daughter,
Charlene Cook Lance, on
Aug. 27, 2011, and his
son, Irwin R. “Jay: Lance,
III, on Sept. 5, 2011; and
a sister, Agnes Killmeyer.
Memorial services will
be held at 4 p.m. with a
Masonic funeral service
starting at 3:45 p.m. on
Sunday, Nov. 15, 2015
in the Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine. Pastor
Randy Smith will ofﬁciate. Military Honors
will be provided by the
Racine Post #602 and the
Pomeroy Drew Webster
Post #39 of the American Legion. Interment
will follow in the Letart
Falls Cemetery at the
convenience of the family.
Expressions of sympathy
may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhoms.com.

ley of Crown City; two
grandchildren; three great
grandchildren; two nieces; and four nephews.
Funeral services will
be conducted at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2015 at
Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial will follow
in Crown City Cemetery,
Crown City, Ohio. Visitation will be held from
1-2 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.
17, 2015 at the funeral
home. Condolences may
be expressed to the family
at www.timeformemory.
com/hall.

CROWN CITY — Harold E. VanPelt, 91, of
Crown City, passed away
Friday Nov. 12, 2015 at
home.
He was born Sept. 12,
1924 in Greenbottom,
W.Va. to the late Emit
and Vernie Regina Fulks
VanPelt.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by his wife Wykle
VanPelt; one brother Paul
VanPelt; and two sisters,
Eileen Shockley and
Helen Newman.
He is survived by one
daughter, Linda Whit-

DEATH NOTICES
CURRY
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Shelba Jean Curry,
75, of Chesapeake, died Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015,
at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 15,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be 1-2
p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.
DEAN
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Martha Dean, 69, of
Huntington, died Saturday November 14, 2015.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov.
17, 2015 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery,
Proctorville. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8
p.m. Monday, Nov. 16, 2015 at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory.
KAPP
LEON, W.Va.— Joan Carlotta Kapp, 50, Leon,
died Friday, Nov. 13, 2015. Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 16, 2015, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery in New Haven, W.Va. Friends
may visit the family at the funeral home Sunday
between 4-7 p.m.
NICHOLS
POMEROY — Daythine Kay “Cindy” Nichols,
70, of Pomeroy, died at 1:05 p.m. on Friday, Nov.
13, 2015, in the Ohio State University Wexner
Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio. Arrangements
will be announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Pomeroy.
STEVENS
CHESAPEAKE — Mendy Stevens, 49, of Chesapeake died Friday, Nov. 13, 2015.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Monday, Nov.
16, 2015 at Christ Temple Church. Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation
will be held from 12 to 2 p.m. Monday Nov. 16,
2015 at the church. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is charge of arrangements.
WEBB
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Gary Reuben Webb,
51, of Huntington, died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015 at
St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington. A memorial service will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, Nov.
19, 2015 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, Ohio.

High school
student earns
World Champion
By Anna Patrick
Associated Press

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The walls in Gretchen
Halloran’s room are blue. You have to look closely
to conﬁrm this, though — the paint is obscured by
rows of ribbons tacked up around the space.
The ribbons, in hues of blue and red and yellow,
gaze down on a bookshelf threatening to overﬂow
with trophies. Halloran’s bed is nearby. Close to
the headboard, on the wall, hangs a portrait of a
horse.
“I’m the horse girl,” Halloran said.
The 16-year-old is standing in her room, holding
her newest, most coveted ribbon — the World’s
Champion of Champions. She doesn’t know where
to put it yet. She’s running out of wall space at her
father, Tom, and stepmother, Stacey Halloran’s
home in Charleston. She has even more ribbons
at the home of her mother, Jenny Dascoli, also in
Charleston.
Over her seven-season career, Halloran has won
several blue ribbons as a junior exhibitor showing
in the Show and Country Pleasure divisions. She
recently competed in the World’s Championship
Horse Show, described as “the super bowl of horse
shows,” and won her qualifying class and the ﬁnal
championship class to walk away with a World
Champion title (from the qualiﬁer) and a World’s
Champion of Champions title in the Junior Exhibitor Country Pleasure 14-17 division. Judges for
the English-riding division focus less on the
horse’s high stepping gaits — the trot, walk and
canter — and more on the horse’s smooth performance and good manners.
For her performance, Halloran received the
highest score from the competition’s three judges
in both the qualifying and championship rounds.
The competition was held at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky, during the Kentucky State Fair,
Aug. 22-29.
Halloran’s trainers are Matt and Whitney Shiﬂet
of Matt Shiﬂet Stables in Asheboro, North Carolina. She also trains weekly with Meadow Dream
Farm in Cross Lanes under the guidance of owners Jimmy and Georgia Morrison.
Even world champions have to explain their
sport. Halloran said most of her teachers and
friends don’t understand what it is she does.
“When I come back from a horse show, at school
(they’ll ask) ‘How did your race go?’ And I’m like
‘It’s not a race.’”
To better understand the inner workings of
Halloran’s show division, Country Pleasure, she
shared video footage from her championship competition held Aug. 29 with the Gazette-Mail.
As old-timey, piano-heavy fair music plays,
Halloran and the other 15 contestants enter the
Freedom Hall arena, the ﬂoor is covered in dyedgreen wood shavings, on their ﬁnely groomed Saddlebred horses. Halloran is wearing a light purple
coat with a matching paisley tie. Her black derby
matches her pants, completing her rider’s habit.
She’s atop her dabble grey horse, Jessie Cole.
Following the announcer’s calls over a loud
intercom, the contestants trot, walk and canter
around the perimeter of the arena. To prevent
herself from being lumped in large packs of horses,
she directs Jessie Cole to cut on the inside of a
corner or stay wide when needed.
“The key is to ensure that the judges can see
you. They can’t see you if you’re in a large group
of horses,” Halloran said.
When she’s cantering, it looks slow and controlled.

Blue Man Group director now at Marshall
(USPS 436-840)

Associated Press

Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

CONTACT US

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— When Jesse Nolan
was 2 years old in New
Jersey, his dad Joe would

RO X Y S
Furniture &amp; Flooring

PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

www.roxysfurnitureandﬂooring.com

740-446-4000
31A Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, OH

Med-Lift Lift Chairs

60618604

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

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH

go to work, and his mom,
JoAnn, who was deaf,
would turn off her hearing aids, open the cabinets, and let Jesse pull
out the pots and pans and
laugh and drum joyously
like the Muppets’ Animal.
Well played, mom, well
played.
Fast-forward 30 years
later, and Jesse Nolan is
still making a joyful noise
learning and teaching
rhythms daily in his walk
of life.
A new visiting assistant
professor of music with
the MU College of Arts
and Media, Nolan is one

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department

CRAFT &amp; VENDOR FAIR

Annual Turkey Dinner
Saturday November 21, 2015
5pm $7.00 Each
Meigs Elementary School

Saturday, November 21, 2015
10:00am to 3:00pm
New Life Lutheran Church
900 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
(on the hill behind Kyger Dental &amp; McClure’s restaurant)

The church will be selling food and drinks.
60622259

Advance tickets available at
Rutland Dept. Store-Quality Print
Shop-Pomeroy Flower Shop
or call 740-508-0688

of just more than 100 new
hires at Marshall this fall,
and chances are he’s got
one of the most “colorful”
pasts.
The young educator
and drummer has spent
the past ﬁve years as a
resident music director,
drummer and percussionist with the world famous
Blue Man Group.
In fact, since 2011,
Nolan has chalked up
more than 400 performances with the North
American touring cast of
BMG — more than 250
gigs with the Chicago
and Orlando casts, and an
additional 150 dates with
the avant-garde percussion group aboard Norwegian Epic Cruise Lines
during a European tour of
the Mediterranean.

While Nolan wouldn’t
trade those — or any of
his other national Broadway tour experiences
— for the world, with his
wife Amy expecting their
ﬁrst child in November,
he was praying for the
right chance to exit the
blurred lines of the road,
to simplify their lives
and to get back to where
he once belonged —
immersed in his ﬁrst love
of jazz.
It’s for those reasons
that Nolan, who was with
fellow Marshall music professor Jeff Wolfe during
his schooling at Indiana
University, is diving back
into the classroom at Marshall and hoping to be the
kind of inspirational music
instructor which he says
he was blessed with.

#*/(0�t�#*/(0�t�#*/(0
$1000 COVERALL
EVERY MONDAY – 6:30 pm
Doors open @ 5:30 pm
Joseph Freeman Post 476-American Legion
Wilkesville, Ohio
1-740-669-0047
for more information or directions

EVERYONE WELCOME!!!!

60620635

By Dave Lavender

60623217

Civitas Media, LLC

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Veterans Day
crash sends
two to hospital
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — A Veterans Day crash sent two
people to Cabell Huntington Hospital on Wednesday afternoon, according to the Ohio State Highway
Patrol.
Sgt. Adam C. “AC” Williams, with the Gallia-Meigs
post, said that the crash occurred around 2:30 p.m.
when Kristin Barley, driving a silver 2005 Chevy Equinox, failed to stop at a stop sign at the intersection of
Bradbury Road and State Route 7. Her car was struck
by Zorah Hensley, who was traveling southbound on
SR 7 in a black 2013 Dodge Journey.
Barley had two juvenile passengers in her vehicle,
and Hensley had one. Barley and one of her passengers were lifelighted to Cabell-Huntington Hospital,
Williams said that Barley sustained head and pelvic
injuries but is in stable condition. Hensley was taken
to Meigs Emergency Department and was released
later Wednesday night.
No more information is available at this time.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

Bossard hosts Game
Day on Nov. 21

Sunday, November 15, 2015 3A

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

McCormick Road. All members
are urged to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Health
System’s annual Gallipolis Junior
Women’s Club Wine Event, 7
p.m., Courtside Bar &amp; Grille,
Gallipolis. Portion of proceeds
beneﬁts Holzer Heritage Foundation to purchase rocking chairs
for Gallipolis medical center’s
inpatient OB unit. For more information, call 740-446-5217.

CARD SHOWER

TUESDAY, NOV. 17

Homer J. Halley will celebrate
his 100th birthday on Nov. 27.
Cards may be sent to: 15 Vine St.,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

EVENTS
MONDAY, NOV. 16

PERRY TOWNSHIP —
Creekview Drive and Brushy
Point Road in Perry Township
will be closed periodically the
week of Nov. 16-20 for culvert
replacement.
GALLIPOLIS — The E-Boards
of the American Legion Lafayette
Post 27, Ladies Auxiliary Post
27 and the Sons of the Ameriacn
Legion Squadron 27 will meet at
5 p.m. at the legion post home on
McCormick Road. All E-Board
members of the groups are urged
to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — American
Legion Lafayette Post 27 meet
at 6 p.m. at the legion home on

PERRY TOWNSHIP —
Creekview Drive and Brushy
Point Road in Perry Township
will be closed periodically the
week of Nov. 16-20 for culvert
replacement.
GALLIPOLIS — Stroke Survivors’ Support Group meeting,
12:30-1:30 p.m., at the Gallia
Senior Resource Center, 1165
State Route 160, Gallipolis (next
to Gallia County 911 Center).
Lunch served at noon.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Board of Developmental
Disabilities will meet at 4 p.m. at
the administrative ofﬁces located
at 77 Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS — Free CPR
classes for infants and adults, 5:30
p.m., French 500 Room, HolzerGallipolis. Certiﬁed instructor
available. Call 740-446-5030 to
sign up or for more information.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet at 6

p.m. at the Gallipolis Municipal
Building, 333 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS — VFW post
4464 will serve their annual veterans Thanksgiving dinner in the
post dining hall at 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — The Ladies
American Legion Post 27 will
meet at 6 p.m. the post home on
McCormick Road. All members
are urged to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — Diabetes
Awareness Holiday Survival
Event, 6-8 p.m., Davis Conference
Room ABC, Holzer-Gallipolis.
Tips and tricks shared to help
keep people on track through the
holiday season. Meal and door
prizes provided. Call 740-4465971 to RSVP.
GALLIPOLIS — Breastfeeding
class, 6:30-8:30 p.m., French 500
Room, Holzer-Gallipolis. Successful techniques for breastfeeding
newborns. For more information,
call 740-446-5030.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18

PERRY TOWNSHIP —
Creekview Drive and Brushy
Point Road in Perry Township
will be closed periodically the
week of Nov. 16-20 for culvert
replacement.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County
Rural Water Ofﬁce will close at
2:30 p.m. for in-house training.
Use the drop box at the gate to
leave a payment. The ofﬁcewill
open at 8 a.m. Nov. 19.

Staff Report

&amp; Ladders, Trouble,
Scrabble, Clue, Jenga, as
GALLIPOLIS — Plan
well as card games such
to visit Bossard Library
as Crazy 8’s, Old Maid,
and get your game on.
Go Fish, War and Rummy.
In celebration of
Gamers may also bring
the American Library
in a game from home as
Association’s Internawell.
tional Games Day @
This event is free and
Your Library, the staff of
open to the public. PlayBossard Library invites
ers of all ages and abilithe public to visit for an
ties are welcome. Chilafternoon of gaming fun
dren under 12 should be
between 1-4 p.m. Saturaccompanied by an adult.
day, Nov. 21.
This program, started
Community members
by the American Library
are encouraged to bring
Association, is designed
family and friends to
to celebrate the educathe library to learn new
games or simply play old tional, recreational and
favorites. Bossard Library social value of all types
will offer a wide variety of of games. Libraries from
games including Yahtzee, all over the world and all
seven continents will be
Uno, chess, checkers,
Chinese checkers, Chutes participating this year.

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

SUNDAY, NOV. 15

HEMLOCK GROVE — The Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will host a Day of Thanksgiving at 10 a.m. This
worship service will feature recording artist Andrea Kimble,
grateful testimonies and a brief message by Pastor Diana
Kinder. A traditional Thanksgiving meal will follow. Contact
Pastor Diana Kinder at 7405915960 for more information.

MONDAY, NOV. 16

MIDDLEPORT — Upward Basketball &amp; Cheerleading at Middleport Church of Christ have added an
additional date for sign-ups. The sign up will be at the
Middleport Church of Christ from 6:00-7:30 p.m.

TUESDAY, NOV. 17

SYRACUSE — A snowman painting class will be taught
by Michelle Musser at 6 p.m. at the Syracuse Community
Center. Bring masking tape, brushes, a 16-inch by 18-inch
canvas, slate or board and crackle paint. Prepare a surface by
painting it black, dark brown or burgundy in preparation for
the class. For more information, call 740-992-2365.
REEDSVILLE — The 28th annual Eastern Music Boosters Craft Show will be 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eastern Elementary
School. The Craft show will feature performances by the
Eastern Choir, Handbells, Marching Band and Concert Band.

THURSDAY, NOV. 19

POMEROY — Pomeroy/Racine Lodge, located on
the left, just past Southern Local Schools in Racine,
will hold its monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. This will
be Past Masters night along with elections for the
upcoming year. Refreshments will be served prior to
the opening of the meeting. All Brethren are invited.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will meet at
11:30am at the district ofﬁce, located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet at 6:30p.m. at the Carlton
School in Syracuse. Everyone is welcome.

SATURDAY, NOV. 21

POMEROY —Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the DAR will meet at 1 p.m. in the community room
of Farmers Bank in Pomeroy. Members and guests are
requested to park and enter through the bank’s back
door. Darlene West, docent for the Christian Waldschmidt Homestead, will be presenting the program.

GALLIA CHURCH CALENDAR
REVIVAL

Chapel, First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First
Nov. 19-21, 7 p.m. nightly, Walnut Ridge Church, Ave.
St. Rt. 775, near the Gallia County/Lawrence
SATURDAY, NOV. 21
County line near Lecta. Preaching will be the Rev.
CENTENARY — Holiday Bazaar, 9 a.m. to 2
Brandon Depriest. Singers will be New Zion Church
p.m.,
Centenary United Methodist Church, 2887
Singers on Nov. 19, Pine Grove Church Singers on
Ohio
141.
Crafts, pies, cakes, candies, baked
Nov. 20, and B-MY Witness Singers on Nov. 21.
good, soups and Christmas items. Lunch available
between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
SUNDAY, NOV. 15
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m., Sunday
SUNDAY, NOV. 22
School at 10 a.m., morning worship service at 10:30;
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m., SunPastor Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian Church, 2337
day School at 10 a.m., morning worship service at
Johnson Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740-709-6107.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light” Worship in the Fam- 10:30; Pastor Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian Church,
2337 Johnson Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495 or 740-709ily Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
6107.
Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m.; choir practice, 4:30
ADDISON — Sunday School, 10 a.m., Addison
p.m.; Discipleship 101, 6 p.m.; Teen Worship in the
Freewill
Baptist Church; Sunday evening service at
Family Life Center, 6 p.m., First Church of the Naza6
p.m.
with
Pastor Rick Barcus preaching.
rene, 1110 First Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light” Worship in the
ADDISON — Sunday School, 10 a.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church; Sunday evening service at Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30
a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m.; Choir Practice,
6 p.m. with Pastor Rick Barcus preaching.
MERCERVILLE — Donnie Massie will be preach- 4:30 p.m.; All Church Fellowship in the Family Life
ing at Dickey Chapel Church. Covered by Love will Center, 6 p.m., First Church of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.
be singing. Service will begin at 6 p.m.
MERCERVILLE — Adam Hoosier will be preaching
at Dickey Chapel Church. Service will begin at
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18
6
p.m.
ADDISON — Thanksgiving service, 7 p.m., Addison Freewill Baptist Church.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s Ministries, 6:45 p.m.; WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25
ADDISON — Prayer meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
Youth “Impact 127”, 7 p.m.; Prayer &amp; Praise, 7 p.m.;
Freewill Baptist Church, with the Rev. Truman
Choir Practice, 7 p.m.; First Church of the NazaJohnson preaching.
rene, 1110 First Ave.

THURSDAY, NOV. 19

SUNDAY, NOV. 29

GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.,
Sunday School at 10 a.m., morning worship service at 10:30 with our birthday/anniversary celebration for the month of November following the
service. Pastor Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian
Church, 2337 Johnson Ridge Rd.; 740-446-7495
FRIDAY, NOV. 20
GALLIPOLIS — Prayer Force, 8:45 a.m., Harmon or 740-709-6107.
GALLIPOLIS — Christian Care Circle Ladies
meeting, 10 a.m., Bob Evans in Rio Grande.
“Angels” books available by contacting 740-4460622. All ladies are welcome to attend.

building
foundations?
TIS THE SEASON TO UPGRADE...
and receive an upgraded kitchen/bath!*

Let’s Build It Together®
It’s not just about sticks and bricks. It’s about building foundations for
life’s most amazing moments. It’s that feeling you get when the last box is
unpacked and you realize you’re home. It’s the look on his face when the
cake comes out of the oven. It’s cuddles before bed. It’s the tug on your
sleeve when she wants to stay up for just one more minute. It’s the pride
you feel when you send them off. It’s the joy you experience when you
return home. And that’s why we’re here. To build the home you’ve always
wanted on the land you know and love. Your journey starts now.

BUILD ON YOUR LOT

Homes starting from the $110s!**

Let’s build some foundations.

khov.com/letsbuildittogether
meet our experts AT A LOCATION NEAR YOU.
K. HOVNANIAN HOMES
®

®

Design Studio
Let’s Build It Together

®

southeast columbus / 866.402.1593
9845 Basil-Western Road
Canal Winchester, OH 43110

*See a New Home Sales Consultant for complete details. Maximum
savings of $10,000. Savings will vary by selected home design and
location. K. Hovnanian® Homes®, LLC. reserves the right to limit, modify
or terminate this offer without notice. Offer not valid on previously
written or contingent contracts or in conjunction with any other offer and
may affect maximum ﬁnancing. Offer ends January 3, 2016. **Pricing
subject to change without notice and varies based on building location.
We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement
of equal housing opportunity throughout the Nation. We encourage and
support an afﬁrmative advertising and marketing program in which
there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of
race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or
national origin.
60622950

�E ditorial
4A Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Protecting the
finances of the
Ohioans serving
More than 2,000 Ohioans are deployed overseas
serving in our nation’s military, according to a
recent count.
Not only do these Ohioans put their lives on the
line to defend our nation, but they also often face
signiﬁcant risks to their personal ﬁnances while
they are on deployment.
The challenges include difﬁculty managing
accounts from abroad, identity theft, and being
targeted by predatory lenders. Even
minor credit events, such as a single
missed payment, have the potential
to balloon into major problems that
can threaten their ﬁnancial wellbeing.
Our men and women in uniform
and their families make enough sacSherrod
riﬁces for our country — their credit
Brown
rating shouldn’t be one of them.
Contributing
Since 2012, the Consumer FinanColumnist
cial Protection Bureau has received
hundreds of complaints from servicemembers about credit reporting,
including problems dealing with identity theft or
fraud while overseas.
There are tools out there to protect our troops’
ﬁnances, like Active Duty Alerts and security
freezes. Active Duty Alerts protect members of
the armed forces by requiring that businesses take
extra steps before granting credit in a servicemember’s name. Yet less than one percent of those servicemembers who called the CFPB reported placing an Active Duty Alert on their credit reports
before leaving for a deployment.
Members of our armed forces and their families
can visit www.militaryonesource.mil or call 1-800342-9647 for more information on protecting their
ﬁnances during deployment. Military Source recommends that deployed service members ﬁle an
Active Duty Alert and place a security freeze on
their credit ﬁle.
And servicemembers facing ﬁnancial issues can
contact the CFPB for help. Anyone can submit a
complaint online at www.consumerﬁnance.gov/
complaint. Since 2011, the CFPB has helped more
than 1,300 Ohio servicemembers.
But we must to do more to help our troops
take advantage of these tools, and to address the
unique ﬁnancial challenges they often encounter
when they return home.
Last month, I sent a letter urging the Defense
Department to redouble its efforts to help safeguard servicemembers from ﬁnancial ruin. I
pressed the Department to make sure that servicemembers are aware that Active Duty Alerts, security freezes, and other tools are there to protect
their credit reports and scores.
And earlier this year, I helped reintroduce the
Military Families Credit Reporting Act. This
commonsense legislation would provide servicemembers the opportunity to explain on their
credit reports that late or missed payments were
due to their deployments. It would also help them
keep better track of their credit while they are
deployed.
As a grateful nation, we owe it to our military
men and women, and their families, to help ease
their transition when they come home. They
shouldn’t have to battle creditors because they
were serving our country abroad.
Sherrod Brown is a Democratic U.S. senator who represents Ohio in
the U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

THEIR VIEW

Latest deal: Little cause for celebration
You can understand why
tabs on the Treasury, while
President Obama and constill allowing the government
gressional leaders on both
to pay its bills for spendsides of the aisle sought to
ing that had already been
cast their end-of-October
approved.
budget deal in the best posIt has outlived that reasonsible light. They avoided
able goal. These days, the
a potentially catastrophic
debt ceiling is a political
Lee H.
national default. They
Hamilton pawn, used repeatedly as
reduced the possibility of
Contributing leverage by opposition para government shutdown.
ties to make demands of the
Columnist
And they raised the debt
President. It has driven the
ceiling until March, 2017,
persistent national game of
taking that bargaining chip off the
“chicken” that has so tarnished
table until the next president is in
Congress’s image in recent
the White House.
decades.
For a last-minute, secret backMost political leaders recognize
room deal, that’s not too shabby.
that defaulting on the national
It was bipartisan and took modest
debt — which is what failing to
steps in the direction of political
raise the debt ceiling would cause
stability and ﬁscal responsibility.
— is an inconceivable outcome for
And it was vastly preferable to the a responsible nation. By destroyalternative, which would likely
ing our creditworthiness, it would
have produced a government shut- devastate consumers, taxpayers,
down, the possibility of a default
businesses, retirees who invested
on the national debt, and certain
in government bonds, the ﬁnancial
ﬁscal chaos.
markets, and our ability to conThat’s the good news. The bad
duct normal relations with trading
news is that for all their hard work, partners and foreign governments.
our political leaders indulged in
Moreover, the legislative maneutwo bad habits that they really
vering surrounding each debt ceilneed to kick, because they wreak
ing bill consumes huge amounts of
havoc with effective and efﬁcient
legislative time that is better spent
government and cost taxpayers a
on other matters.
pile of money.
The need to raise the debt ceilFirst, while they gave theming, in other words, no longer
selves some breathing room before reins in spending. Instead, it manthe next time the debt ceiling has
ufactures crises and exacerbates
to be raised, they will nonetheless
tensions within Congress.
have to raise the debt ceiling evenThe second bad habit is equally
tually. They should have abolished pernicious: the budget deal did
it, or at least suspended it.
little to shift Congress from its
The debt limit was instituted
reliance on continuing resoluduring World War I, when Contions. The CR, as it’s known, was
gress handed over to the Treasury
designed to keep government
the ability to sell bonds to fund
operating for a few days or weeks
government needs without getting while congressional negotiators
permission every time. In essence, worked out the budget. In recent
the debt ceiling was a way to keep
decades, though, it has become the

way we fund the government. It’s
hard to ﬁnd a member of Congress
who defends this process, but
most of them end up voting for it.
Continuing resolutions bypass
the appropriations bills written
by specialized committees and
provide a favored few interests
a bonanza. They also keep the
federal government — and hence
state and local agencies that rely
on federal commitments — in
“handcuffs,” as a recent article in
Politico put it. “Under the continuing resolution,” the website noted
after the most recent CR passed at
the end of September, “multi-year
projects…faced new delays. Hiring departments closed. Budget
ofﬁcials began to tally losses as
their typically powerful purchasing
power dwindled. For pretty much
the rest of this year, and perhaps
2016, too, the U.S. government
will effectively be in a state of suspended animation.”
The CR puts the government on
automatic pilot, avoids hundreds
of difﬁcult funding and policy decisions, and has become a substitute
for working hard to pass a budget
by the regular process. It lacks
transparency, sidesteps good budgeting, puts all the power in the
hands of a few congressional leaders, and invites Congress to act in
a crisis mode.
Do you want the Congress to
work better? If so, ask your favorite member to think big and not
lock into a failing system. A good
start would be to kick these two
bad habits.
Lee Hamilton is a Distinguished Scholar, Indiana
University School of Global and International
Studies; and a professor of practice, IU School
of Public and Environmental Affairs. He was a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives
for 34 years.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

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

Today is Sunday, Nov.
15, the 319th day of
2015. There are 46 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 15, 1315, in
the Battle of Morgarten,
Swiss Confederation forces lying in wait attacked
and defeated invading
Austrian troops.
On this date:
In 1777, the Second
Continental Congress
approved the Articles of
Confederation.
In 1806, explorer
Zebulon Pike sighted the
mountaintop now known
as Pikes (cq) Peak in
present-day Colorado.
In 1864, during the
Civil War, Union forces
led by Maj. Gen. William
T. Sherman began their
“March to the Sea” from
Atlanta; the campaign
ended with the capture of

Savannah on Dec. 21.
In 1889, Brazil was
proclaimed a republic as
its emperor, Dom Pedro
II, was overthrown.
In 1935, the Commonwealth of the Philippines
was established as its
new president, Manuel L.
Quezon, took ofﬁce.
In 1939, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt laid
the cornerstone of the
Jefferson Memorial in
Washington, D.C.
In 1942, the naval Battle of Guadalcanal ended
during World War II with
a decisive U.S. victory
over Japanese forces.
In 1959, four members
of the Clutter family of
Holcomb, Kansas, were
found murdered in their
home. (Ex-convicts Richard Hickock and Perry
Smith were later convicted of the killings and
hanged.)

In 1964, Bonanza Air
Lines Flight 114, a Fairchild F-27A, crashed outside of Las Vegas, killing
all 29 people on board.
In 1979, the British
government publicly
identiﬁed Sir Anthony
Blunt as the “fourth man”
of a Soviet spy ring.
Today’s Birthdays:
Judge Joseph Wapner is
96. Actor Ed Asner is 86.
Singer Petula Clark is 83.
Comedian Jack Burns
is 82. Actress Joanna
Barnes is 81. Actor
Yaphet Kotto is 76. Actor
Sam Waterston is 75.
Classical conductor Daniel Barenboim is 73. Pop
singer Frida (ABBA) is
70. Actor Bob Gunton is
70. Former New Mexico
Gov. Bill Richardson
is 68. Actress Beverly
D’Angelo is 64. Directoractor James Widdoes is
62. Rock singer-producer

Mitch Easter is 61. News
correspondent John Roberts is 59. Former “Jay
Leno Show” bandleader
Kevin Eubanks is 58.
Comedian Judy Gold is
53. Actress Rachel True
is 49. Rapper E-40 is
48. Country singer Jack
Ingram is 45. Actor Jay
Harrington is 44. Actor
Jonny Lee Miller is 43.
Actress Sydney Tamiia
Poitier is 42. Christian
rock musician David Carr
(Third Day) is 41. Rock
singer-musician Chad
Kroeger is 41. Rock musician Jesse Sandoval is 41.
Actress Virginie Ledoyen
is 39. Actor Sean Murray
(TV: “NCIS”) is 38. Pop
singer Ace Young (TV:
“American Idol”) is 35.
Golfer Lorena Ochoa is
34. Hip-hop artist B.o.B
is 27. Actress Shailene
Woodley is 24. Actressdancer Emma Dumont is 21.

�LOCAL/STATE/AREA

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 15, 2015 5A

Public records are the people’s records
In 1963 the Ohio legislature
enacted the ﬁrst version of
Ohio’s Public Records Act. The
simple philosophy behind the
act was that public records are
the people’s records.
Over the years, we — the
Ohio Supreme Court — have
reviewed numerous cases dealing with the question of what is
a public record, including one
recently involving Otterbein
University.
The Otterbein campus
is located just outside of
Columbus in the suburb of
Westerville. The school has a
student-run media website —
Otterbein360.com — that primarily covers campus news and
events. It’s the online version of
a student newspaper, Tan and
Cardinal, which is no longer
printed.
In the winter of 2014, Anna
Schiffbauer was a news editor
for Otterbein360.com. On Jan.
16, 2014, Anna mailed a letter
to Larry Banaszak, the chief of
the Otterbein Police Department, requesting criminal
reports of persons (both students and nonstudents) whose
cases had been referred to the
Westerville Mayor’s Court.
On Jan. 22, Anna received an
e-mail from Robert Gatti, Otterbein’s vice president and dean
for student affairs, denying the
records request. Gatti also sent
a denial letter through the mail
that Anna got on Feb. 4. The
letter stated, “As a private university, Otterbein believes we

establish a campus police
are not subject to the
department and appoint
Public Records Act and
members of the campus
therefore do not make
police department to act
our records public.”
as police ofﬁcers.”
A few days later,
The law further
Anna ﬁled an action
states that only those
with us seeking the
persons who have comrecords. The case
Paul E.
pleted a training program
boiled down to this
Pfeifer
question: Is the OtterContributing approved by the Ohio
peace ofﬁcer training
Columnist
bein University police
commission may be
department a public
appointed campus ofﬁofﬁce as deﬁned by the
cers.
Public Records Act?
Under the law, campus police
Under the Act, the term
ofﬁcers are explicitly vested
“public record” is deﬁned
with the same powers and
as “records kept by a public
ofﬁce.” As it’s used in the Act, authority that are vested in a
police ofﬁcer of a municipal
the term “records” includes
corporation or a county sheriff.
any document created by any
Thus, the campus police
public ofﬁce, “which serves to
department in this case is an
document the … activities of
“organized body, ofﬁce, agency,
the ofﬁce.”
institution, or entity estabThe term “public ofﬁce”
includes “any state agency, pub- lished by the laws of this state
lic institution, political subdivi- for the exercise of any function
of government” — just as it is
sion, or other organized body,
stated in the Public Records
ofﬁce, agency, institution, or
Act. And, it exercises a funcentity established by the laws
tion of government — namely,
of this state for the exercise of
the basic police power of
any function of government.”
Thus, if the Otterbein Police enforcing laws and maintaining
the peace within its jurisdicDepartment is a public ofﬁce,
tion.
then it must produce records
Its ofﬁcers therefore have the
that document police activities,
power to search and conﬁscate
such as the criminal reports
property, to detain, search and
requested by Anna.
arrest persons, and to carry
A campus police departdeadly weapons. And it is an
ment for a private college or
entity “established by the laws
university may be established
of this state.” In other words,
only under a section of Ohio
it ﬁts the deﬁnition of “public
law — Title 17 — that states:
“The board of trustees of a pri- ofﬁce” as deﬁned in the Public
Records Act.
vate college or university may

W.Va.’s student
enrollment stabilizing
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — Enrollment at
West Virginia’s public
four-year colleges is showing signs of stabilizing,
according to the Higher
Education Policy Commission.
HEPC Chancellor Paul
Hill said enrollment in
the state’s public colleges
has declined in each of
the past ﬁve years, but a
smaller decline this fall
could indicate efforts
to boost enrollment are
working.
Hill said the commission is working on
increasing the state’s
college-going rate and the
number of state residents
pursuing and earning college degrees.
“We believe that our
enrollment numbers statewide will remain steady
and begin to rise with
market demands,” Hill
said.
The Charleston
Gazette-Mail reports the
head count for West Virginia’s 12 public four-year
colleges is now 64,829.
That’s a less than 1 percent drop from last year.
Vice chancellor for
policy and planning Neal
Holly said enrollment for
students 24 and younger
has been steady, dropping
1.2 percent in the past
ﬁve years. He said the
state’s enrollment decline
is higher among students
25 years and older, dropping 27 percent for that
group since 2010.
Holly said that West
Virginia expects to see
a spike in high school
graduates over the next
ﬁve years. Whether
that translates to more
college-bound students
remains to be seen. The
number of West Virginia
students who attend
college is 55 percent,
compared to the national

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

average of nearly 63 percent.
According to the commission, the number of
students attending public
four-year schools in West
Virginia has dropped 5.3
percent, or nearly 4,000
students, since 2010.
The greatest declines
have occurred among the
state’s smaller schools.
Blueﬁeld State College,
Potomac State College,
Fairmont State University
and West Liberty University had enrollment
declines between 14.2
and 28 percent over the
past ﬁve years, while most
other colleges lost between
1 percent and 9 percent.
The only schools to
increase enrollment
since 2010 were the
West Virginia School of
Osteopathic Medicine in
Lewisburg, West Virginia
State University in Institute and West Virginia
University Institute of
Technology, which is relocating from Montgomery
to Beckley in 2017.
Marshall University’s
fall enrollment increased
2.7 percent, or 257
students, compared to
last year, while West
Virginia State enrollment
increased 11.4 percent, or
more than 300 students.
West Virginia University’s
fall enrollment in Morgantown fell 1 percent compared to last year.

The school’s administrators
argued that the campus police
department is not a public
ofﬁce, because Otterbein University is not a public entity
and the department is a subdivision of the university. They
pointed out that Title 17, which
allows a college to establish a
police department, applies only
to private colleges and universities. They argued that under
Anna’s reasoning, every corporation would be considered a
public ofﬁce because corporations are established under the
same section of the law and
regulated by the state.
However, our court has held
in previous cases that a private
corporation may be considered
a public ofﬁce for purposes
of public records when it performs a governmental function.
For example, in a case from
1998, our court said that an
entity need not be operated by
the state or a political subdivision to be a public ofﬁce under
the law. “The mere fact that the
entity is a private, nonproﬁt
corporation does not preclude
it from being a public ofﬁce.”
In this case, the mere fact
that Otterbein is a private institution does not preclude its
police department from being a
public ofﬁce for purposes of the
Public Records Act. Otterbein’s
police department is “performing a function that is historically a government function.”
The Otterbein University
Police Department is an “orga-

Paul E. Pfeifer is a judge in the Court of
Appeals.

Students decry mistreatment
DAYTON (AP) — More than
60 students and activists have
marched through the Wright State
University campus in southwest
Ohio, squeezing into administrative ofﬁces and demanding that
the president meet with them to
discuss rights for black students.
The protesters said they gathered at the Dayton campus Thursday to support their peers at the
University of Missouri who have
demonstrated recently over black
student rights. They also said
they wanted to raise awareness
of “institutionalized racism” at
Wright State.
The group marched from building to building on campus to

decry “white privilege” and the
“culture of mistreatment” toward
black students, according to the
Dayton Daily News.
The protesters said they want
the administration to address
a set of demands that include
increasing the number of black
students and faculty, and requiring black curriculum.
Wright State President David
Hopkins agreed to meet with the
students next Thursday.
“I feel like he (Hopkins) is
doing what he can. It’s more to
do with him overseeing the way
his staff are dealing and operating with the issues,” said Tristina
Allen, a 21-year-old international

studies major at the school.
Tommy DiMassimo, a fourthyear acting major at Wright
State, said he would like to see
more resources for black student
groups on campus.
According to data from the
U.S. Department of Education,
about 12 percent of Wright State
students are black. That ﬁgure is
higher than most universities in
Ohio.
Administrators at the University of Missouri have been dealing with racial issues that led to
demonstrations by students, a
strike by members of the school’s
football team and the resignation
of two top administrators.

Woman in nursing home overdoses
COLUMBUS (AP) — A
woman found dead in a
southern Ohio nursing
home earlier this year died
of a heroin overdose with
the drug provided by her
husband, who may have
been living in the room
with her, authorities said
Friday.
Timmy Smith, 53, was
being held in Scioto County
Jail on a charge of involuntary manslaughter following his arrest in neighboring Lawrence County a
day earlier, according to
the Scioto County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
The investigation
began May 30 when

the body of Smith’s wife,
Ona Smith, was found at
Heartland Nursing Home in
Portsmouth, about 90 miles
south of Columbus.
Ona Smith, 46, was in
the nursing home recovering from surgery, said Scioto County Prosecutor Mark
Kuhn. Authorities say she
was a heroin addict before
she was admitted and her
husband was apparently
supplying her with drugs.
Her death was not inten-

tional, said Scioto County
Sheriff’s Capt. David Hall.
The nursing home was
“greatly saddened” to learn
of a resident’s death earlier
this year, but under federal
and state laws can’t discuss
individual patients, company spokeswoman Julie
Beckert said.
“Heartland strives to create a secure and home-like
environment and will continue to work to ensure the
health and safety of patients

and residents,” she said.
Nursing home ofﬁcials
were cooperative, Hall said.
Timmy Smith may have
been living with his wife in
the room against nursing
home policy, Kuhn said.
Smith was indicted
Tuesday in Scioto County
on charges of involuntary
manslaughter, corrupting
another with drugs, heroin
trafﬁcking and heroin possession. A hearing was set
for Nov. 18.

s Cash for gold and trade-ins
s Watches are made in the USA
s Artcarved class rings
s All repairs done on-site

Thank you

s Masonic &amp; Eastern Star jewelry

to all of the following donors who contributed to the
Pancake Breakfast held by the Silver Bridge Bruisers Roller
Derby. We truly appreciate it!
Bob Evans, Gallipolis
Laurel Valley Creamery
Silver Bridge Coffee
Jr’s Free Clean Up
McDonalds of Gallipolis
McDonalds of Rio Grande
Burger King
Dairy Queen, Gallipolis
Promise Land Church
Wendy’s, Gallipolis
Subway, Gallipolis
Captain D’s
Long John Silvers
KFC
Buffalo Wild Wings
Wanda Neal

nized body, ofﬁce, agency, institution, or entity established by
the laws of this state for the
exercise of any function of government.”
The administrators made a
lengthy argument regarding
the application of a decision
by our court from 2006 that
established a “functionalequivalency” test for determining whether a private entity is
a public institution. But that
decision was irrelevant to this
case because the Otterbein
Police Department, by the plain
language of the Public Records
Act, is a public ofﬁce.
The department was created for the express purpose
of engaging in one of the most
fundamental functions of government: the enforcement of
criminal laws, which includes
power over citizens as necessary for that enforcement.
Because it meets the deﬁnition of a public ofﬁce for
purposes of the Public Records
Act, we concluded that it must
produce public records upon
request. The Otterbein administrators did not argue that the
requested documents fall under
any exception to the Public
Records Act.
Therefore — by a ﬁve-to-two
vote — we issued a pre-emptory writ ordering the chief of the
Otterbein Police Department,
Larry Banaszak, to produce the
requested documents.

Anna Shope, Independent ItWorks
Brittani Roe
Gallipolis Farmers Market
Stacey Wray, Scentsy
Adalee’s Accessories
Woodland Creations, Jesi McClaskey
Zack and Scotty’s
Baxters
Gallipolis Chapter HOG Club
Erin Cross, Scentsy
Shear Illusions
Bob’s Market
Holly Gillenwater
A&amp;W
Gary and Rosie McClaskey

$25.00 OFF $100 Purchase

25

G ld
ldiggers
digg
gge
gge
g
IN GOLD WE TRUST
ST

$

G

25

Quality
Jewelry
&amp; Repair

304-373-1160

25

25

.00

VALUE

328 Church Street
Ripley, WV 25271

TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS

25

Present coupon at visit. Cannot be combined with other discounts.
In stock items only

s Find us on Facebook: goldiggers.us
s Huge inventory of new &amp;

used jewelry
s Custom make a unique piece –

one of a kind
s Engrave anything – knives,
nameplates for wildlife mounts,
lighters, etc.
s Huge inventory – same-day sizing

Goldiggers
Quality Jewelry &amp; Repair

The event was a great success and we hope all had a great
time. The Bruisers very much appreciate your support

328 Church Street | Ripley, WV

The Bruisers

304-373-1160

60623027

60620366

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA LOCAL BRIEF

Ohio AFSCME
retirees to meet

Resource Center, 1165 State Route 160, in Gallipolis.
AFSCME (Ohio Council 8, OCSEA and OAPSE)
OPERS and SERS public employee retirees and their
spouses are invited to attend the next meeting. NonGALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME Retirees, Gallia and AFSCME members who retired from the city, county,
Jackson Counties, Sub-chapter 102, will hold their next state or school district are also welcome to attend.
meeting at 2 p.m. Nov. 20 at the Gallia County Senior
The group also encourages public employees who plan

‘56 Forever’

event, the Dylan Williams Forever an All
Star Foundation, of Union City, Ind., donated
an automated external deﬁbrillator to the
From Page 1A
BBYFL. According to their Facebook page,
the foundation was founded on July 17, 2013.
Ofﬁce, who performed the autopsy and later
informed Meigs County Coroner Dr. Douglas That year, Williams was hit in the neck area
Hunter and the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce with a baseball during practice and immediately went into cardiac arrest. With no
of the results. No injuries to his body were
AEDs close by to help jump-start his heart,
reported, and the completed ﬁnal autopsy
he passed away. Now, the foundation seeks to
will not be available for four to six weeks.
donate AEDs to any teams that need them.
BBYFL President Sarah Pullins said the
“It’s been a very sad time, but it’s been
championship game was originally scheduled
beautiful how all the communities have come
Nov. 7, but was postponed after Barber’s
passing. On Friday afternoon, Randy Wright, together,” Pullins said. “It’s overwhelming.
of Middleport, and Tony Gilkey, of Darwin,
I’ve even had youth football leagues clear
used marker paint to create a circle on the
across the United States message us and
ﬁeld with eagle talons in honor of Barber.
send their condolences, colleges (too) … he’s
Commissioner and Pastor Randy Smith
made a huge impact on a lot of people.”
led a prayer and observed a moment of
silence during the event. Also, special to the Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
between 2-4 p.m. Nov. 28 at the Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Center, located at 112 E
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. The celebration
is open to the public.

American Legion
Meigs Election Board
Post 39 dues change to hold official count
POMEROY — Notice to members of
American Legion Drew Webster Post, 39
in Pomeroy: effective Jan. 1, 2016, annual
dues will be $30.00. Meetings are held the
lst and 3rd Tuesday each month at 6:30
p.m. and includes a delicious dinner. For
further information call 740-742-286l.

Open House
birthday celebration
POMEROY — The children of Macel
S. Barton, of Reedsville, will be holding
a 90th birthday celebration in her honor

POMEROY — The ofﬁcial count
for the Nov. 3 General Election for the
Meigs County Board of Elections will
be 9 a.m. Nov. 16 at the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.

Food donation
POMEROY — Reed and Baur Insurance
Agency are sponsoring a food drive to help
families in need now through Dec. 16. All
non-perishable items are accepted and can
be dropped off at there ofﬁce located at 220
E. Main St. in Pomeroy.

Gifts

efforts while partnering
with Gallia County Jobs and
Family Services.
From Page 1A
If individuals would like
to
become involved in the
contribute to a worthy
GCCCP
or want to ﬁnd
cause. It’s a community
out
more
about the projcollaboration that brings
ect,
contact
the Body of
out the spirit of the holiday
Christ
Outreach
Ministry
season.”
at
BOCOM4Gallia@gmail.
According to Glassburn,
the Body of Christ Outreach com, as they are tracking
the sponsors for the project.
Ministry serves as the
organizing body for project If individuals are sponsoring

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 55.06
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.81
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 109.20
Big Lots (NYSE) — 41.47
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 39.92
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 39.87
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.64
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.210
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.30
Collins (NYSE) —84.81
DuPont (NYSE) — 67.05
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.38
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 30.26
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 47.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 65.61
Kroger (NYSE) — 36.05
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 90.59
Norfolk So (NYSE) —88.96
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 25.24

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

BBT (NYSE) —37.35
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 19.91
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.06
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.27
Rockwell (NYSE) — 102.64
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.29
Royal Dutch Shell — 48.35
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 22.17
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 56.43
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.43
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.90
Worthington (NYSE) — 29.64
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 13, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

2 PM

36°

55°

46°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

55°
41°
58°
38°
81° in 1955
17° in 1911
(in inches)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
0.47
1.42
41.86
37.26

Today
7:11 a.m.
5:15 p.m.
10:26 a.m.
8:46 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:12 a.m.
5:14 p.m.
11:15 a.m.
9:44 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Nov 19 Nov 25

Last

Dec 3

New

Dec 11

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
1:52a
2:49a
3:47a
4:42a
5:36a
6:27a
7:15a

Minor
8:05a
9:03a
10:00a
10:56a
11:49a
12:15a
1:02a

0

Chillicothe
61/34

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

0

Lucasville
62/38

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
2:18p
3:16p
4:13p
5:09p
6:02p
6:53p
7:42p

Minor
8:31p
9:29p
10:26p
11:22p
---12:40p
1:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
A devastating tornado cut an
18.5-mile-long path through Huntsville, Ala., on Nov. 15, 1989. Twentyone people died, and 463 were
injured. Over 500 buildings were
damaged at a cost of $100 million.

Portsmouth
61/39

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.90 +0.37
Marietta
34 16.73 -0.25
Parkersburg
36 21.96 +1.01
Belleville
35 13.17 +0.72
Racine
41 13.25 +0.04
Point Pleasant
40 25.36 +0.26
Gallipolis
50 13.00 -0.01
Huntington
50 26.55 +0.62
Ashland
52 34.75 +0.23
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.03 +0.39
Portsmouth
50 19.60 +1.70
Maysville
50 34.50 none
Meldahl Dam
51 18.00 +1.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

61°
46°

Belpre
61/35

Athens
61/32

St. Marys
60/37

Parkersburg
61/34

Coolville
60/35

Elizabeth
61/38

Spencer
60/38

Buffalo
60/33
Milton
61/38

Clendenin
61/37

St. Albans
62/37

Huntington
61/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
48/38
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
59/47
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
64/51
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

57°
38°

Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

Marietta
60/37

Murray City
60/33

Ironton
63/37

Ashland
62/34
Grayson
62/39

SATURDAY

59°
42°

Pleasant with times of
clouds and sun

Wilkesville
61/32
POMEROY
Jackson
61/33
61/33
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
61/33
61/33
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
61/35
GALLIPOLIS
61/34
61/33
60/35

South Shore Greenup
63/38
61/38

28

A bit of rain in the
afternoon

FRIDAY

Sun followed by
clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
61/32

Waverly
61/32

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

0 50 100 150 200

Logan
60/33

THURSDAY

68°
50°

Mostly cloudy and
comfortable

Adelphi
61/32

Q: Is there a difference between drifting
snow and blowing snow?

SUN &amp; MOON

Partly sunny and
pleasant

WEDNESDAY

63°
56°

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

A: Yes. Drifting snow is beneath 6 feet;
blowing snow occurs above 6 feet.

Precipitation

TUESDAY

62°
43°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Carson also revealed that Daboni had
two prior attorneys whose services he had
also terminated. His previous attorneys are
From Page 1A
listed as Stephen Paul Ames, of Gahanna,
and Kerry Robert Toy, of Athens. Holdren
Before Holdren was appointed, Daboni’s
said the reason for the mistrial request was
most recent lawyer had been ﬁred the week
because of the deterioration of the relationprior when Byron Lee Potts’ ofﬁce in Colum- ship between Daboni and Potts, his most
bus received a phone call from Daboni’s sister recent lawyer.
on Oct. 9. The sister allegedly told Potts that
Daboni had terminated his services.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

MONDAY

Warmer today with plenty of sunshine. Clear
tonight. High 61° / Low 34°

Dean Wright can be reached at
(740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103.

Daboni

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

children through a school
nurse in any of the school
districts in Gallia County,
they are involved with the
GCCCP.
For more information and
to keep up with the progress
of the project, check out the
Gallia County Community
Christmas Project Facebook
page.

Charleston
63/32

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
50/41

Billings
58/36

Montreal
48/32

Minneapolis
58/46
Chicago
61/42

Denver
62/34

Toronto
57/36
Detroit
62/37

New York
58/48
Washington
61/44

Kansas City
62/47

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
57/43/pc
10/-1/s
61/43/pc
60/48/s
61/39/s
58/36/pc
53/29/sh
56/44/s
63/32/s
62/35/s
58/28/s
61/42/s
62/37/s
62/39/s
61/35/s
62/58/sh
62/34/s
62/47/s
62/37/s
85/75/sh
71/63/c
63/38/s
62/47/pc
69/46/pc
65/49/c
64/51/pc
65/40/s
81/74/sh
58/46/s
65/41/s
70/65/c
58/48/s
57/50/c
81/66/pc
60/45/s
70/52/sh
58/37/s
52/35/pc
61/38/s
61/36/s
68/46/s
58/37/c
59/47/r
48/38/r
61/44/s

Hi/Lo/W
50/29/sh
8/-2/pc
63/52/c
63/49/s
65/41/s
43/26/pc
42/32/pc
57/36/s
66/44/pc
64/42/pc
46/20/r
54/44/c
59/47/c
61/46/s
60/47/pc
73/59/t
48/25/r
56/50/sh
60/47/pc
87/73/pc
77/71/t
57/45/r
60/55/r
56/37/pc
63/60/r
65/44/s
61/51/sh
82/75/sh
52/48/sh
65/56/c
80/70/c
62/44/s
69/50/t
84/67/pc
65/46/s
61/40/pc
60/45/s
52/28/s
66/41/pc
66/39/s
56/50/r
40/22/sn
61/50/s
48/46/r
65/46/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
65/51
Chihuahua
78/55

High
Low

Atlanta
61/43

90° in Marco Island, FL
3° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
114° in Marble Bar, Australia
Low -46° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
71/63
Monterrey
75/63

GOALS

Miami
81/74

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

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

to retire in the near future to attend. Issues that are
important to retirees are discussed each month, including updates on the OPERS medicare connector which
enrollment continues through Dec. 31. The group
meets on the third Friday of each month. The group
welcomes new members in the two-county area. For
more information, call 740-245-0093 or 740-245-5255.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 15, 2015 s Section B

Big Blacks advance
Point Pleasant slices through Applemen, 54-14
By Bryan Walters

a 54-14 thumping of visiting
Musselman in a Class AAA
opening round playoff contest
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
at Ohio Valley Bank Track
— You never can have too
and Field in Mason County.
much history.
Mitchell — who finished
During a regular season in
the night with 203 rushwhich Point Pleasant recording yards on 20 carries —
ed numerous school-bests and churned out four rushing
a handful of state records in
touchdowns in the first half
football, senior Cody Mitchell en route to a 27-6 advantage,
added another feather to the
then added TD runs of 20,
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Big
Blacks’
cap
Friday
night
67 and 8 yards during the
Point Pleasant senior Cody Mitchell (14) runs for a 32 yard touchdown during
the Big Blacks’ 54-14 victory over Musselman, Friday night in Mason County.
by scoring seven times during third period for a sizable
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

47-6 PPHS cushion.
Those seven rushing scores
allowed Mitchell — a verbal
commit to Marshall University — to become the state’s
all-time leader in TDs in a
single playoff contest, surpassing the old mark of six
set in 2012 by Martinsburg’s
Justin Clinton. Mitchell also
had scoring runs of 9, 32, 2
and 14 yards in the first half.
See POINT | 4B

RedStorm men
advance to
KIAC title game
By Randy Payton

Brazil - and sophomore
Joao Paulo Antonio (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) scored just
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
58 seconds apart off of
— Willian Paulino had
feeds from Carroll.
a goal and an assist and
The advantage grew
Danny Carroll added a
to 4-0 when senior Luiz
pair of assists to the lead Filho (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
the University of Rio
scored off an assist by
Grande to a 6-2 win over
Paulino just under 14
Asbury University in the
minutes into the second
semiﬁnal round of the
half and reached 5-0 just
Kentucky Intercollegiate
over 3-1/2 minutes later
Athletic Conference
when junior Heitor de
Men’s Soccer Tournament, Thursday night, at Melo (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
found the net on a direct
Evan E. Davis Field.
kick after an Asbury foul.
The top-ranked and
The Eagles avoided
top-seeded RedStorm
a
shutout
when Jesse
improved to 17-1 with
Peterson scored on a
the victory, earning a
spot in Saturday’s cham- penalty kick with 12:31
left in the contest and
pionship game in the
added another marker
process.
just over four minRio will face 25thutes later when Zack
ranked and secondAndrews scored off an
seeded West Virginia
University-Tech, a 2-0
assist by Craig Moberley.
winner over No. 3 seed
Rio senior Kimathi
Point Park University in Kaumbutho (NaiThursday’s other semirobi, Kenya) set the ﬁnal
ﬁnal tilt, at 7:30 p.m., at score, scoring off of a
Evan E. Davis Field.
feed from sophomore
Asbury ﬁnished 6-13
Isaiah Chapman (Cinwith the loss.
cinnati, OH) with 5:57
Carroll, a sophomore
remaining to play.
from Liverpool, England,
The RedStorm enjoyed
had both of his assists in a 33-11 edge in shots,
the ﬁrst half as the Redincluding 14-8 in shots
Storm built a 3-0 lead at on goal.
the intermission.
Freshman Ben MarRio Grande, which was
tinez (Montpellier,
playing for the ﬁrst time
France) had six saves in
in nearly three weeks,
goal for Rio Grande.
grabbed a 1-0 lead on an
John Burns stopped
unassisted goal by junior
eight
shots in a losing
Pau Delgado Rodriguez
cause
for the Eagles.
(Barcelona, Spain) with
19:37 gone in the conRandy Payton is the Sports
test, before Paulino - a
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
junior from Sao Paulo,
For Ohio Valley Publishing

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 17
Men’s College Basketball
Rio Grande at Cumberlands, 8 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Rio Grande at Cumberlands, 6 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 20
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at River Valley, 7:30
Southern at Wellston, 7:30
Men’s College Basketball
Wright State-Lake at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
OU-Lancaster at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 21
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway Tournament,
TBA
Girls Basketball
Amanda-Clearcreek at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Men’s College Basketball
Bevo Francis Invitational at Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Bevo Francis Invitational at Rio Grande, 3 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Leia Moore signed her letter of intent Wednesday in the RVHS gymnasium, committing to join the Fairmont State
women’s basketball team next year. Sitting in the front row, from left, are Joe Moore, Leia Moore, Lady Raiders head coach Sarah EvansMoore and Lady Raiders assistant coach Ashley Davies. Standing in the back row are River Valley Athletic Director Richard Stephens,
Herb Moore, Jean Moore, Rose Evans, Clyde Evans and RVHS Principal T.R. Edwards.

Moore signs with Fairmont State
By Alex Hawley

special mention nods. Moore was a
ﬁrst team Ohio Valley Conference
selection as a sophomore, when
BIDWELL, Ohio — “I’ve been
she averaged 10.1 points per game.
waiting for this day forever.”
Also as a sophomore, Moore was
The words of River Valley senior named to the Associated Press
Leia Moore just moments before
Southeast District third team,
signing her letter of intent on
while being selected as a District
Wednesday in the RVHS gymna13 special mention. As a freshman,
sium. Moore, who will begin her
Leia was an All-OVC special mensenior season for the Lady Raidtion selection.
ers when the campaign starts on
“Leia’s very happy with her deciNovember 20, signed to Fairmont
sion, and we’re happy with it,”
State University’s women’s basketRVHS head coach Sarah Evansball team.
“Ever since I was little, my mom Moore said of her daughter’s commitment. “As a coach I’m happy to
would always tell stories from
have it out of the way, so that its
when she was playing,” Leia said.
“She started me when I was in ﬁrst not something we have to worry
about, stress about or even think
grade and I’ve loved it ever since.
Being able to play at the next level about during the season. In the
has always been a dream of mine.” ﬁrst workout that I had with Leia
Moore averaged 13.2 points, 7.0 after her commitment, I felt a huge
sense of relief. Knowing that we’ve
rebounds, 2.2 blocks, 2.1 assists
accomplished this makes us all
and 2.0 steals per game, while
leading the Lady Raiders to a 9-13 more at ease.”
Fairmont State is an NCAA Divimark in her junior season.
sion II school that competes in the
As a junior Leia was named to
Mountain East Conference, which
the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division ﬁrst team, and the Associ- was formed in 2013.
“I had a checklist of college
ated Press Southeast District secqualities,” Moore said. “Along with
ond team, while earning All-Ohio
honorable mention and District 13 a good basketball program, every-

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

thing I had on my list was checked
off for Fairmont. It was the best
choice from my point of view.”
The Falcons, who have had
13-straight winning seasons, are
led by the program’s all-time winningest coach Steve McDonald. In
his 15 years as FSU head coach,
McDonald has posted a 299-143
record and has taken the Falcons to
the NCAA Divsion II tournament
four times.
“Leia will have an impact in our
program as a freshman,” McDonald said. “She’s known as an exceptional shooter, but we see many
other qualities in her that we look
for in our players. She’s extremely
smart on the court and off the
court, and has a great desire to succeed. We expect her to contribute
right away.”
Moore, who is currently ranked
ﬁrst in the RVHS class of 2016
with a 4.0 grade point average,
plans on majoring in pre-med or
exercise science. Leia played volleyball for three seasons at River
Valley, before deciding to focus on
basketball full time as a senior.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Gilkey to play softball at West Liberty
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Softball season is
still a few months away,
but one Lady Marauder
already has a destination
for next year.
Meigs senior Katie
Gilkey signed her letter
of intent on Thursday
at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium, committing
to join the West Liberty

softball team in 2017.
“I’ve worked really hard
over the years and my
family has really encouraged me to do the best
that I could do,” said
Katie. “Since I had this
awesome opportunity
I decided to farther my
softball career. It means
the world.”
Gilkey, who has played
for the MHS varsity team
since her freshman season, has helped Meigs to

a 46-20 record and two
sectional championships
in three seasons. As a
second baseman, Gilkey
has earned ﬁrst team TriValley Conference Ohio
Division honors in backto-back seasons.
“I have a short history
with Katie, only coaching her for a year, but
I’ve known her for a long
time and I know how hard
she’s worked,” Meigs head
coach Bryan Swann said.

“This is one of those occasions where she truly has
worked all of her life. She
continued to work through
last season to make herself a better player, and
it paid off. She went to a
recruiting camp and was
voted one of the top-three
athletes in the camp. That
led to offers from various
schools and that’s how she
got where she is.”
See GILKEY | 6B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Rio Grande women fall in KIAC semifinals
By Randy Payton

in the semiﬁnal round of
the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic ConferPITTSBURGH, Pa.
ence Women’s Soccer
— Second-seeded Point
Tournament at Highmark
Park scored a pair of
Stadium.
ﬁrst half goals in a span
The Pioneers improved
of just 1:40 and rode the
to 11-6-2 with the win
momentum to a 3-1 win
and punched their ticket
over the University of Rio to the tourney’s title
Grande, Thursday night, game on Saturday against

For Ohio Valley Publishing

fourth-seeded West Virginia University-Tech,
which upset top-seeded
Asbury University, 1-0, in
Thursday’s other semiﬁnal contest.
Rio Grande, the No. 3
seed and the tourney’s
defending champion,
ﬁnished its season at 8-10
with the loss.

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6

PM

6:30

Point Park snapped a
scoreless tie when Alyson
Joyce buried a shot into
the upper right corner of
the net off an assist by
Abby Magliocca at the
23:14 mark.
The lead grew to 2-0
just 100 seconds later
when Beth Millican
scored on a breakaway,
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Football Night in America (:20) NFL Football Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks Site: CenturyLink Field -3
News
(L)
Seattle, Wash. (L)
Inside
NBC Nightly Football Night in America (:20) NFL Football Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks Site: CenturyLink Field -Edition
News
(L)
Seattle, Wash. (L)
ABC 6 News ABC World America's Funniest Home Once Upon a Time "Birth" Once Upon a Time "The
Quantico "Over" (N)
at 6:00 p.m. News
Videos (N)
(N)
Bear King" (N)
2nd Opinion Saving the
Before Parks Masterpiece "Downton Abbey, Season
Masterpiece Classic "Indian Murder on the Home Front
"Food as
Ocean "Cod
Five" See why old attitudes start to change Summers" Leena and Ian
A serial killer is found
Medicine"
Comeback?"
and Robert is snubbed by the village.
come to Ramu's defense. (N) disguised under the Blitz.
Eyewitness ABC World America's Funniest Home Once Upon a Time "Birth" Once Upon a Time "The
Quantico "Over" (N)
News at 6
News
Videos (N)
(N)
Bear King" (N)
(4:25) NFL Football New England Patriots at 60 Minutes
Madam Secretary "You Say The Good Wife "Driven"
CSI: Cyber
New York Giants Site: MetLife Stadium (L)
You Want a Revolution" (N) (N)
(N)
Rizzoli &amp; Isles "Don't Hate Simps. "Cue BobB "Nice- The
Brooklyn 99 Family Guy Last Man on Eyewitness News
the Player"
Detective"
Capades" (N) Simpsons
(N)
(N)
Earth (N)
PBS
BBC
Antiques
Masterpiece "Downton Abbey, Season
Masterpiece Classic "Indian Murder on the Home Front
NewsHour
Newsnight Roadshow
Five" See why old attitudes start to change Summers" Leena and Ian
A serial killer is found
Weekend (N)
"Charleston" and Robert is snubbed by the village.
come to Ramu's defense. (N) disguised under the Blitz.
(4:25) NFL Football New England Patriots at 60 Minutes
Madam Secretary "You Say The Good Wife "Driven"
CSI: Cyber
New York Giants Site: MetLife Stadium (L)
You Want a Revolution" (N) (N)
(N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Blue Bloods "Samaritan"
Blue Bloods
18 (WGN) Bl. Bloods "Devil's Breath" Bl. Bloods "The Bitter End" Blue Bloods "Pilot"
Sled (N)
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
24 (ROOT) H.S. Football
25 (ESPN) (5:30) Fitness Fitness CrossFit Games
SportsCenter
Poker World Series Site: Rio Las Vegas Hotel &amp; Casino -- Las Vegas, Nev.
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) 30/30 30/30 "One Night in Vegas" 30 for 30 "Chasing Tyson"
NHRA Drag Racing Auto Club Finals
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

(5:00) His Secret Family

A Wife's Nightmare A long-lost daughter comes to live
A Mother Betrayed A woman finds out her husband has a
('15, Dra) Haylie Duff. TV14 with her father and his new wife and son. TVPG
plan to steal her life, including her daughter. (P) (N) TV14
The Hunger Games ('12, Act) Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence. The Capitol
(:15) Sleepy Hollow A turn-of-the-century detective
selects a boy and a girl from the twelve districts to fight to the death. TV14
investigates a series of beheadings in a small village.
Bar Rescue "Second Base, Bar Rescue "Emergency
Bar Rescue "Blowing Royal Bar Rescue "Big Sister's
Bar Rescue "Vulgar Vixens"
Third Strile"
Exit"
Smoke"
Watching"
Thunder
H.Danger
Splitting Adam (2015, Children)
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "Toxic"
NCIS "Legend (Part 1)" 1/2 NCIS "Legend (Part 2)" 2/2 NCIS "Semper Fidelis"
NCIS "Aliyah"
The Hangover ('09, Com) Ed Helms. TVMA
We're the Millers ('13, Com) Jason Sudeikis. TV14
Movie
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Borneo"
A. Bourdain "Istanbul"
Anthony "Charleston" (N) Somebody's Gotta (N)
(5:30)
The Blind Side Sandra Bullock. TV14
The Librarians (N)
Agent X (N)
The Librarians
(3:30) Kill Bill The Walking Dead "Here's Not Here"
The Walking Dead "Now" The Walking Dead "Always Into the Badlands "The
Vol. 2
Accountable" (N)
Fort" (P) (N)
Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: Exposed (N)
Alaska/Frontier (N)
Bush "Block and Tackle"
The First 48 "Terribly
The First 48 "Deadly
The First 48 "For a Quick
The First 48 "Rocky Road/ The First 48 "Cranked"
Wrong/ Settling the Score" Encounter/ Car Trouble"
Buck/ Bloody Sunday"
Something She Said"
TheHunt "Man vs. Animal" North Woods Law
North Woods Law (N)
NWL: Most Wanted (N)
Rugged Justice (N)
Snapped "Marjorie Orbin" Snapped "Joanna Findlay" Snapped "Verina Childs"
Snapped: Killer "Brandi
Snapped "Wendy Cobb"
Hungerford &amp; Robert Lemke"
CSI: Miami "Bad Seed"
CSI: Miami
CSI: Miami "Bone Voyage" CSI "Point of Impact"
CSI: Miami "Kill Clause"
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Kardash "The Last Straw" The Kardashians
The Royals (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
(:35) Reba
(:10) Reba
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Moving Out"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Live Free or Die "Down the Live Free or Die "Forever
Breakthrough "More Than Breakthrough "Decoding
Sleepless Explore the human
Rabbit Hole"
Wild"
Human"
the Brain" (N)
body's crucial need for sleep.
Post Race
NASCAR Victory Lap (L)
Mecum Auto Auctions "Anaheim" (N)
F1 Auto Racing
(4:30) Boxing UFC 193
Insider (N)
UFC Main Event (N)
TUF: McGregor/ Faber
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers "Sweet
American Pickers "The
Hunting Hitler "The Hunt
"Hometown Pickin'"
"Thunderdome"
Homes Alabama"
Superfan"
Begins"
Atlanta "Atlanta Twirls On" Atlanta Social (SP) (N)
Housewives Atlanta "Duking It Out" (N) Après Ski "Cold Feet"
Atlanta
House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne (:25) Payne (:55) Being Mary "Hot Seat"
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
IslandHunter IslandHunter
(4:00)
King Kong An ambitious movie producer
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull ('08, Adv) Harrison Ford.
discovers a giant ape on a mysterious island. TV14
Indiana Jones races to uncover the secrets behind a mysterious crystal skull. TVPG

6

PM

(4:30) Dawn

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

(:45) Face Off Run All Night (2015, Action) Ed Harris, Joel Kinnaman,

9

PM

9:30

The Leftovers (N)

400 (HBO) of the Planet "Cotto/

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

Liam Neeson. A hit man finds his loyalties tested when he's
of the Apes Canelo"
forced to kill the son of his best friend. TV14
Queen of the Damned A vampire's
(:45) Blackhat (2014, Action) Viola Davis, William Mapother, Chris
music awakens an ancient queen, who
Hemsworth. A brilliant convicted hacker is released from prison to help
threatens humans and vampires alike. TVM track down a cybercriminal. TVMA
(5:15) The Salvation ('15,
Homeland "Parabiosis" Saul The Affair Helen makes a
Homeland "Oriole" Carrie
West) Eva Green, Mads
orders a sweep at the
long overdue decision.
reconnects with old friends.
Mikkelsen. TVMA
station.
Saul opens up. (N)

MONDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

6:30

PM

PM

7:30

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

6:30

PM

10:30
Togetherness

Poltergeist ('82, Hor)
Heather O'Rourke, JoBeth
Williams. TV14
The Affair Alison confronts
Noah about his book. (N)

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy EntertainmNews at 6
News
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m.
News
Fortune
Girls "And
2 Broke Girls The Big Bang The Big Bang
the Big Hole"
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
America
Report (N)
events.
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6

10

Getting On
(N)

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Voice "Live Top 12 Performances" The top 12 artists
perform live in front of coaches. (N)
The Voice "Live Top 12 Performances" The top 12 artists
perform live in front of coaches. (N)
Dancing With the Stars (N)
Antiques Roadshow
"Eugene (Hour One)"

Blindspot "Authentic Flirt"
(N)
Blindspot "Authentic Flirt"
(N)
Castle "The Last Seduction"
(N)
Antiques Roadshow "Junk Independent Lens "India's
in the Trunk" 2/2 (N)
Daughter" (N)

Dancing With the Stars (N)
Supergirl "How Does She
Do It?" (N)
Gotham (N)

Castle "The Last Seduction"
(N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
"Defectors" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10

Antiques Roadshow
"Eugene (Hour One)"

Scorpion "US vs. UN vs.
UK" (N)
Minority Report "The
American Dream" (N)
Antiques Roadshow "Junk Independent Lens "India's
in the Trunk" 2/2 (N)
Daughter" (N)

Supergirl "How Does She
Do It?" (N)

Scorpion "US vs. UN vs.
UK" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

NCIS: Los Angeles
"Defectors" (N)

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Men in Black" Funniest Home Videos
NCAA Basketball Harvard vs. Providence
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pirates Ball NCAA Basketball James Madison vs. West Virginia (L)
25 (ESPN) Monday Night Countdown (L)
(:15) NFL Football Houston Texans at Cincinnati Bengals Site: Paul Brown Stadium (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:30) NCAA Basketball Con./Ohio St. (L)
NCAA Basketball Virginia vs. George Washington (L)
NCAA Basketball SD St./Utah (L)
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)

Love at the Christmas Table Two friends who spend
Holiday Switch A woman wonders what her life would be
Home by Christmas
Christmas together realize they are meant to be together. like if she married her high school boyfriend. TVPG
Linda Hamilton. TVPG
Sleepy Hollow (‘99, Hor) Johnny Depp. A turn-of-the-century
Dark Shadows (‘12, Fant) Johnny Depp. A vampire comes to the aid
detective investigates a series of beheadings in a small village. TVMA
of a dysfunctional family living in his ancestral home. TVPG
(5:00)
Four Brothers (‘05, Act)
Law Abiding Citizen (‘09, Cri) Jamie Foxx. A man wages a deadly
Four Brothers (‘05,
Tyrese Gibson, Mark Wahlberg. TV14
war on the justice system after his family's murderers are set free. TVMA Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
Nicky
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
iCarly "iStill Psycho"
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "UnSEALed"
Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Monday Night Raw
Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy American D. American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle "Get a Clue"
Castle
Major Crimes "Blackout"
Major Crimes (N)
Legends (N)
(5:30) On Deadly Ground An oil-rig firefighter is targeted
The Italian Job (‘03, Act) Mark Wahlberg. Thieves plan the heist of
Max
for death after he discovers an illegal operation. TV14
their lives by creating the largest traffic jam in L.A. history. TV14
Payne TVMA
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
St.Outl. "Import This!" (N) Street Outlaws (N)
(:05) Vegas Rat Rods (N)
The First 48 "Insider/
The First 48 "Desperate
The First 48 "Blood Feud" The First 48 "The
Cursed: The Bell Witch
Paradise Lost/ Bad Debt"
Moves"
Passenger/ Death Call"
"Ghosts Interrupted" (N)
Yukon "Mother vs. Nature" Yukon "Stan's Gamble"
Yukon "Winter Takes All" Yukon Men "Dark Days"
Yukon "The Black Wolf"
Snapped "Mary Ann
Snapped "Mandy Smith"
Snapped "Jordan Shaver"
Burlesque Cher. A small town girl falls in love with
burlesque after starting a new job in Los Angeles. TV14
Langley"
CSI: Miami "Speed Kills"
CSI: Miami "Crime Wave" CSI: Miami "Pirated"
CSI: Miami "After the Fall" CSI: Miami "Addiction"
The Royals
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Royals
Bewitched
Facts of Life Facts of Life (:35) FactsLife (:10) FactsLife (:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "Big Shots" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Fearless
World's Biggest Cave
Giant Crystal Cave
How the Earth Changed History "Earthly Elements" (N)

64 (NBCSN) Pro FB Talk Off the Grid
65 (FS1) NASCAR Race Hub (L)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

FLW Outdoors (N)
Fish Roland Bass 2
Eye/ Hunter Deer TV (N) Truck Racing Racer TV
NCAA Basketball UMBC vs. St. John's (L)
NCAA Basketball IUPUI at Marquette (L)
(5:00) Nostradamus: 500
Lost Book of Nostradamus A journalist discovered a book Nostradamus Innovative analysis gives us the chance to
Years Later
that gave new insight into the life of Nostradamus.
finally crack Nostradamus' cryptic code. (N)
(5:30) Atlanta VanderR "Playtime's Over" Vanderpump Rules Social (N)
Vanderpump Rules (N)
Après Ski (N)
The Best Man (‘99, Rom) Nia Long, Taye Diggs. TVMA
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00) Indiana Jones &amp; the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Angels and Demons (‘09, Myst) Ewan McGregor, Tom Hanks. A professor is
called upon to help prevent an attack on the Vatican and solve a murder. TV14

6

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

Hulk (2003,
(:10) Taken 3 (2014, Action) Famke Janssen, Maggie
Action) Nick Nolte, Jennifer Grace, Liam Neeson. An ex-covert operative evades the
Connelly, Eric Bana. TVPG
authorities when he's framed for his wife's murder. TV14
(4:45)
(:25) Lost River A mother is swept into a
The Knick
The Banger dark underworld while her son discovers a
Sisters TVM secret underwater town.
(:05)
Last Vegas (2013, Comedy) Michael Douglas,
Homeland "Oriole" Carrie
Morgan Freeman, Robert De Niro. A group of old friends
reconnects with old friends.
Saul opens up.
throw a bachelor party for their last single friend. TV14
(4:50)

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Latin Explosion: A New (:10)
Horrible Bosses
America (N)
2 (‘14, Com) Charlie Day,
Jason Bateman. TVMA
Walk of Shame An aspiring news
(:40) The
anchor is stranded with no money, phone or Knick
car before an interview. TVMA
The Affair Alison confronts Homeland "Oriole" Carrie
Noah about his book.
reconnects with old friends.
Saul opens up.

with an assist from Leeza
Tokarski.
An unassisted goal by
Noel Hartle with 7:16
left before the intermission pushed the Pioneers’
advantage to 3-0 and,
essentially, sealed the victory.
Rio Grande did get on
the scoreboard just under
eight minutes into the
second half when senior
Kasey Crow (Chillicothe,
OH) found the back of
the net off the rebound of
a shot which ricocheted
off the crossbar, slicing
the deﬁcit to 3-1.
But that’s as close as
the RedStorm could get

the rest of the way.
Erica Roney stopped
ﬁve shots in goal for
Point Park, which enjoyed
a 14-9 edge in shots and
an 8-6 cushion in shots
on goal.
Sophomore Kristin
Garn (Morrow, OH) also
had ﬁve saves in a losing
cause for Rio Grande.
The loss represented
the ﬁnal collegiate contest for ﬁve Rio seniors Crow, Melissa Dickerson,
Taylor Ahrens, Courtney
Young and Rachel Hoffman.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Backups Manziel,
Jones could have
unlikely rematch
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The previous time Landry Jones
and Johnny Manziel played in the same game, Manziel was
a college football supernova and Jones was ﬁnishing off one
of the best careers in Big 12 conference history.
Fast forward nearly three years from that day in Dallas
when Manziel and Texas A&amp;M dismantled Jones and Oklahoma in the 2013 Cotton Bowl and things have changed.
Big time.
Johnny Football has gotten off to a slow start in Cleveland, which may have to reluctantly start Manziel while
veteran Josh McCown nurses a banged up rib.
Jones, meanwhile, has rapidly transformed from seemingly overmatched third-stringer in Pittsburgh to reasonable
replacement as Ben Roethlisberger recovers from a sprained
left foot.
If Roethlisberger isn’t ready in time on Sunday when the
Steelers (5-4) host the Browns (2-7), Jones will have to ﬁnd
a way to replicate his steady relief appearances over the
course of an entire game.
Jones is 2-0 coming off the bench, including putting
together a late ﬁeld goal drive last week against Oakland
after Roethlisberger exited Heinz Field on a cart.
Yet Jones struggled while playing the full 60 minutes in
Kansas City last month, throwing a pair of interceptions in
a dismal 23-13 loss to the Chiefs in his lone NFL start.
Oklahoma’s all-time leading passer labeled it a learning
experience, one he’ll try not to repeat against reeling Cleveland.
“You can’t overthink things,” Jones said. “You just have
to go out there and make plays and make plays inside the
offense. I think in the Kansas City game I was trying to do
too much.”
The way Jones ﬁgures it, his job shouldn’t be that difﬁcult, not with Antonio Brown to throw to and resurgent
DeAngelo Williams lining up behind him.
“I just have to go out there and play,” Jones said. “I can’t
play timid, or worry about the mistakes and the future. I
just have to go out there and cut loose.”
That was never an issue for Manziel in college, not so
much the NFL. The 2012 Heisman Trophy winner could
make his ﬁfth start in a place the Browns haven’t won since
2003 back when Manziel was in middle school.
Some other things to look for as Cleveland looks to give
its season a needed jolt while Pittsburgh attempts to head
into the bye week with some momentum.
IN A RUSH: Pittsburgh’s running game continues to hum
right along even with Le’Veon Bell out for the season with
a right knee injury. Williams ran for 170 yards against the
Raiders, the second-highest total in the league this season.
Heady territory for a 32-year-old the Steelers sprinted to
sign after Williams spent nearly a decade in Carolina.
“I would imagine DeAngelo would be a good ﬁt in whatever circumstance he’s in,” coach Mike Tomlin said. “You
don’t get to do what he’s done, at the level he’s done it, for
so long without having some attractive qualities.”
STOPPING BROWN: With Pro Bowl cornerback Joe
Haden expected to miss his second straight game with his
second concussion this season, the Browns will be more
challenged to defend Brown, who dominated Oakland’s secondary last week for a franchise-record 17 receptions and
284 yards.
“Hopefully, he’s a little worn out, a little dehydrated from
last week,” joked coach Mike Pettine. “He’s a special player.”
Brown’s so tough because the Steelers move him around,
Pettine said.
“They’re creative in how they get him the football,” he
said.
WHAT RIVALRY?: The previous time Cleveland won in
Pittsburgh, Tim Couch was the Browns’ starting quarterback. That was 11 games and roughly 20 quarterbacks ago.
Still, the Steelers remain an unequaled enemy in the eyes
of most Cleveland fans. Though McCown is in his ﬁrst
season with the Browns, but it hasn’t taken him long to
appreciate the disdain many Ohioans have for their blackand-gold wearing neighbors from Pennsylvania.
“A win for our football team is what we need so bad when
you’re in a situation like this,” McCown said. “It’s great for
us, but the added value is the city and how excited people
get when you beat the Steelers. We know how important
that is.”
GETTING HOME: Pittsburgh failed to sack Oakland’s
Derek Carr last Sunday, and Carr responded by throwing
for four touchdowns. Manziel can be slippery if allowed to
escape the pocket. He made a handful of plays on the run in
the ﬁrst half against Cincinnati. It’s a notion not lost on the
Steelers.
“You see a guy hold onto the ball like that, you think you
can get home,” linebacker Arthur Moats said. “You know
he’s going to try and make something happen with his feet,
if he does that, we’ve got to keep him in the pocket and try
to get to him.”

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 15, 2015 3B

URG baseball in NAIA
preseason Top 25
By Randy Payton

ranking since 2009.
Lewis-Clark State boasts an NAIAbest 55 all-time top mentions and owns
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Univerthe NAIA’s longest active streak in the
sity of Rio Grande is ranked No. 25
Top 25 at 147-straight editions.
in the preseason edition of the 2016
No. 2 St. Thomas (Fla.), No. 3
NAIA Baseball Coaches’ Top 25 Poll
Faulkner (Ala.) and No. 17 Northwestannounced Tuesday by the national
ern Ohio were the only other clubs to
ofﬁce.
hold steady from the 2015 Postseason
The RedStorm, which advanced to
Poll.
the NAIA National Tournament last
The Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conyear as the champion of the Kentucky
ference – No. 4 Tabor (Kan.), No. 9
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Oklahoma Wesleyan and No. 20 SterTournament, earned its ﬁrst Top 25
ling (Kan.) – and the Golden State Athranking since the 2011 season.
letic Conference – The Master’s, No. 16
Head coach Brad Warnimont’s club
Westmont (Calif.) and Vanguard – lead
returns six everyday starters and two
all conferences with three programs repstarting pitchers from last year’s 35-win resented each.
squad.
The poll was voted upon by a panel
Defending Avista-NAIA Baseball
of head coaches representing each of
World Series champion Lewis-Clark
the conferences and the Association
State (Idaho) holds the No. 1 rankof Independent Institutions. The ﬁrst
ing. The Warriors, who won an NAIA
regular-season edition will be released
record 17th World Series title a seaon March 15.
son ago, garnered 17 first-place votes
and 467 total points en route to the
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
preseason top spot - their first such
University of Rio Grande.

For Ohio valley Publishing

Kenseth has no regrets
over wrecking Logano
AVONDALE, Ariz.
(AP) — Pushed to his
limit after three races
worth of slights, Matt
Kenseth ﬁrmly believed
he had no choice but to
retaliate against Joey
Logano.
His deliberate wrecking of Logano drew a
two-race suspension from
NASCAR, and Kenseth
said Friday he would have
handled the payback differently had he known
he’d draw such an unprecedented penalty.
But in a telephone
interview with The Associated Press, Kenseth said
he would do it again.
“I really stand by my
actions,” he said. “I feel
like there’s a breaking
point. It wasn’t just about
being mad, it was about
getting this ﬁxed. It was
time to make it stop.”
Logano spun Kenseth
while racing for a win
at Kansas that Kenseth
needed to continue his
championship chances.
Kenseth retaliated two
races later by wrecking
Logano as Logano raced
for a win at Martinsville
Speedway that would
have landed him a berth
in the championship ﬁeld.
Kenseth had returned
to the track down nine
laps after a wreck with
Logano teammate Brad
Keselowski.
“You have to have
respect in the garage
area. If you are going to
go out and try to race for
wins and race for championships, you can’t be a
doormat or next year you
are going to get knocked
out again,” Kenseth said.
“Drivers are going to be
like, ‘Well, he ain’t going
to do nothing. We’ll just
knock him out of the
race and then jack with
him as much as possible
and make sure he’s not
going to make it through
because he’s not going to
retaliate.’
“At some point, in
my opinion, you have to
retaliate.”
His mood upbeat and
his deadpan humor intact
in a 30-minute interview
from North Carolina,
Kenseth accepted responsibility for wrecking
Logano but insisted he
feels no remorse that it
potentially ruined Logano’s title chances.
Instead of winning
Martinsville and earning a spot in next week’s
championship ﬁnale,
Logano is last in the
eight-driver ﬁeld and
must win Sunday at Phoenix International Race-

way to race for the Sprint
Cup title.
Logano’s predicament
is his own fault, Kenseth
believes, because the
young driver could have
put an end to the feud at
any point before Martinsville.
Instead, Kenseth felt
Logano was “arrogant”
and his comments over
the next few weeks only
infuriated Kenseth more.
Kenseth also accused
Logano of “doing everything in his power to try
to aggravate me more”
on track at Talladega the
week after Kansas.
Then, as Kenseth raced
Logano for the lead at
Martinsville, he felt he
was intentionally wrecked
by Logano’s Team Penske
teammate, Brad Keselowski. Had the incident
been an accident, Kenseth said he would have
heard from Keselowski
by now but has not been
contacted by him.
“There’s a right and
wrong way to do things,
and most grown-ups
would have tried to
handle it better,” Kenseth
said. “There’s just dozens of things that could
have stopped it, and Joey
never tried to reconcile
it. I think everyone in the
garage knew it was coming, and you would think
(Logano) would be a little
bit nervous and address
it.”
Kenseth also said NASCAR failed to intervene
and squash the feud.
Kenseth couldn’t recall
a time in his 16-year history that series ofﬁcials
didn’t sit down a pair of
drivers who had on-track
issues, and he felt backed
into having to retaliate
after chairman Brian
France deemed Logano’s
actions at Kansas “quintessential NASCAR.”
“I felt like I was almost
encouraged. I felt like
the comments almost
condoned it, the way
Brian France said Joey
was smart in the way he
strategically eliminated a
threat for the title,” Kenseth said. “I just never
dreamed, ever, that I’d get
suspended for going back
and evening the score.”
Kenseth views his
behavior at Martinsville
to be “parallel” to Jeff
Gordon intentionally
wrecking Clint Bowyer
at Phoenix in 2012. Gordon was ﬁned $100,000
but avoided suspension,
even though the payback
ended Bowyer’s title
hopes.
Danica Patrick was

ﬁned $50,000 for intentionally wrecking David
Gilliland at Martinsville.
But Kenseth earned a
two-race suspension —
because of the stakes
Logano had at the time
— and he doesn’t believe
the disparity in penalties
is fair.
Kenseth will return for
next weekend’s season
ﬁnale at HomesteadMiami Speedway, and
admitted the ﬁrst four
days after the suspension
were “were really hard on
me” and he struggled to
watch Erik Jones drive
his race car. He watched
Sunday’s race at Texas on
television, and is eager
to get back to his Joe
Gibbs Racing team for
the ﬁnale.
When he makes his
return, he vowed to be
more aggressive on the
track than he’s ever been.
“It’s not going to
change how I race, I’m
going to be more ﬁred
up, probably less tolerant, and I’m planning on
from here on out being
a lot more aggressive,”
Kenseth said. “I feel like
sometimes I try too hard
and I need to just let it
be, there are some people
who are just not going to
like me.”
As for the Penske drivers, he added that his
retaliation has likely had
its intended effect:
“If it’s Joey or Brad or
whoever the guy is in
that spot, they need to
think about that before
they lift your rear tires
off the ground at 200
mph and take you out,”
he said. “I think Joey is
going to think about that
the next time. He may do
the same thing, but he’ll
think about that one way
or another, we’re going to
even the score.”

A
D
V
E
R
T
I
S
E
!
60620377

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eight locals named to district soccer teams
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

A total of eight players from the
Ohio Valley Publishing area were
selected to the 2015 Southeast
District Ohio Scholastic Soccer
Coaches Association all-district
teams, as voted on by the coaches
withing the district.
Both Gallia Academy and Ohio
Valley Christian came away with
four selections apiece in their
respective divisions, with each program garnering one ﬁrst team, one
second team and a pair of honorable mention choices.
Starting with the Blue Devils in
Division II, senior Logan Carpenter was a ﬁrst team selection and
senior Zach Johnson was a second
team honoree. Senior Dekota
Metzler and junior Isaiah Lester
were the two honorable mention
representatives for GAHS.
The Defenders had four seniors
chosen to the Division III squads,
with Caleb Burnett earning ﬁrst
team honors while Justin Sizemore
came away with second team accolades. Eric Blevins and Marshall
Hood were the two honorable
mention choices for OVCS.
The OSSCA Team Sportsmanship Awards went to the Waverly
girls and South Webster boys. The
Blue Devils were also one of 13
boys teams to earn the OSSCA
Academic Award for having a team
GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale.
Division I
First Team: Ezra Bukky (Logan).
Second Team: Nathan Kudlapur
(Logan).

Point
From Page 1B

“I have to thank the
guys up front tonight
for the holes they made,

Honorable Mention: Caiden Landis
(Logan), Jeremy Williams (Logan).
Division II
First Team: Dustin Goetz (Athens),
Victor Davis (Athens), Christian
Brown (Chilicothe), Jason Johnson
(Chilicothe), Mitchell Castillo
(Circleville), Thomas Stanley
(Circleville), Nathaniel Castle (Fairfield
Union), Nick Fry (Fairfield Union),
Logan Carpenter (Gallia Academy),
Kobe Curtis (Hillsboro), DJ Brown
(Hillsboro) Quinnton Haislop
(Jackson), Preston Schultz (Logan
Elm), Bowen Boldoser (Logan Elm),
Ben Dehmlow (Marietta), Austin Chen
(Marietta), Blake Pittser (Miami Trace),
Nathan Bragdon (Portsmouth West),
Jake Helton (South Point), Tanner
Cremeans (Unioto), Colten Cantley
(Warren), Seth Hall (Warren), Seth
Hanusik (Washington Court House),
James White (Waverly), Darby Pillow
(Zane Trace).
Player of the Year: Dustin Goetz
(Athens).
Coach of the Year: Nate Cropsey
(Logan Elm).
Second Team: Logan Hoon (Athens),
Finn Kola (Athens), William Krieger
(Chilicothe), Tyler Stanton (Chilicothe),
Sean Wroten (Circleville), Draven
Bass (Circleville), Brandon Moeller
(Fairfield Union), Hayden Price
(Fairfield Union), Zach Johnson (Gallia
Academy), Payton Bell (Hillsboro),
Sheldon Moore (Jackson), Kyle Turner
(Jackson), Johnathan Reisinger
(Logan Elm), Justin Boldoser (Logan
Elm), Justin Hammons (Marietta),
Christian Kendall (Marietta), Tim
Kinzler (Miami Trace), TJ Hoggard
(Portsmouth West), Gage Stephens
(South Point), Ryan Smith (Unioto),
Zach Sullivan (Warren), Michael O’
Callaghan (Washington Court House),
Levi Moore (Waverly) Holden Johnson
(Zane Trace).
Honorable Mention: Aiden Crowl

much like what they’ve
made during the whole
season,” Mitchell said
afterwards. “The lanes
were there and I hit
them. It was a pretty
easy job for me. The
record is nice, but the

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian School senior
Marshall Hood makes a save during
the Defenders’ game against Calvary
on Oct. 9 in Gallipolis, Ohio.

(Athens), Samuel Morales (Athens),
Hudson Ward (Chilicothe), Sean
McCorkle (Chilicothe), Shaun Porter
(Circleville), Jacob Heidish (Circleville),
Taylor Sloan (Fairfield Union), Colin
Groce (Fairfield Union), Isiah Lester
(Gallia Academy), Dakota Metzler
(Gallia Academy), Mackenzie Conlon
(Hillsboro), Chase Colliver (Hillsboro),
Michael Benson (Jackson), Devon
Ball (Jackson), Corbin Betz (Logan
Elm), Dillon Lowell (Logan Elm), John
Mannix (Marietta), Nathan Westfall
(Marietta), Tommy Free (McClain),
Cameron Spangler (McClain), Edik
Liff (Miami Trace), Ethan Conn (Miami
Trace), Jack Cremeans (Portsmouth
West), Brandon Meadows (Portsmouth
West), Merrick Harris (South Point),
Jordan Overstreet (South Point),
Tre Ivey (Unioto), Hunter Maughmer
(Unioto), Elliot Ullman (Warren),
Cole Miller (Warren), Blaise Tayese

win means a lot more.”
The second-seeded Big
Blacks (11-0) scored all
eight of their touchdowns
on the ground while producing 532 rushing yards
on 55 attempts, an average of 9.7 yards per tote.

OPEN
ENROLLMENT
*Seniors (over 65) or on Disability,
help with
Prescription Drug coverage
*Seniors (over 65) or on Disability,
help with their choices between
Advantage Plans or Supplement
(Medigap) Plans.
*Open Enrollment begins
November for the
Affordable Care Act Plans
(Obama Care).
* help clients with individual
health plans,
dental plans and vision plans.

505 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tel: 740-992-9784
Toll Free: 877-992-9784
Fax: 740-992-7980
www.thevaughanagency.com
60623166

(Washington Court House), Jake
Luebbe (Washington Court House),
Tyler Newman (Waverly), Garrett
Stulley (Waverly), Josh Manasco (Zane
Trace), Andrew Stauffer (Zane Trace).
Division III
First Team: Wyatt Sellers (Adena),
Aric Russell (Alexander), Kyle
Howard (Alexander), Michael Norris
(Alexander), Cody Storer (Belpre),
Wesley Stephens (Chesapeake), Brady
Klein (Eastern Brown), Trey Current
(Eastern Brown), Tom Ellison (Fairfield
Leesburg), Ethan Porter (Glenwood),
Noah Scott (Lynchburg-Clay), Devin
Pierson (Lynchburg-Clay), Jacob
Perry (Minford), Eli Reffit (Minford),
Aaron Pertuset (North Adams), Drew
Coppock (North Adams), Caleb
Mills (Northwest), Austin Speer
(Northwest), Caleb Burnett (Ohio
Valley Christian), Brennan Sims
(Peebles), Tyler Knittel (Portsmouth
Clay), Aaron Keyse (Portsmouth Clay),
Judge Williams (St. Joseph), Shane
Zimmerman (South Webster), Drew
Dutiel (South Webster), Hunter Miles
(Southeastern), Bryce Romanello
(Valley), Zack Gahm (Valley), Andre
Wolke (West Union), Ethan McCain
(Wheelersburg), Christian Hughes
(Wheelersburg).
Player of the Year: Ethan McCain
(Wheelersburg).
Coach of the Year: Jon Estep
(Wheelersburg).
Second Team: Michael Newland
(Adena), Trey Nuzum (Alexander),
Joshua Robe (Alexander), Alex Tribe
(Alexander), Josh Davis (Belpre),
Blake Ridenour (Chesapeake),
Mickey Hundley (Eastern Brown),
Jesse Current (Fairfield Leesburg),
Edward McGahan (Glenwood),
Brandon Storer (Lynchburg-Clay),
Wesley Smith (Lynchburg-Clay),
Mason Harris (Minford), Ian Tolle
(Minford), Ben Figgins (North Adams),
Patrick England (North Adams), Ben

Conversely, the 15thseeded Applemen (6-5)
mustered only 261 yards
of total offense, including
a mere 97 rushing yards
on 29 attempts.
In all, the Big Blacks
outgained MHS by a
563-261 overall margin
in total offense despite
ﬁnishing the night minus2 in turnover differential.
Musselman also picked
up its ﬁrst ﬁrst down
of the night with 6:59
remaining in the ﬁrst half.
Point Pleasant —
which is now 6-2 all-time
in playoff contests at OVB
Field — advances to next
weekend’s Class AAA
quarterﬁnal round against
seventh-seeded Huntington (9-2), which defeated
George Washington by a
25-7 count. The day and
time of the game won’t be
determined until Sunday,
but the contest will be
played in Point Pleasant.
Following the game,
ninth-year PPHS coach
Dave Darst was about
as pleased as any coach
would be following a
playoff victory. And, as he
noted, he’s seen quite a
bit of that effort from his
troops this fall.
“What can I say except
this is the way our kids
have played all year long,”
Darst said. “Our offensive
line just did an outstanding job tonight of adjusting to what Musselman
was doing, and our young
quarterback did some
positive things for us in
his ﬁrst playoff game. Our
defense pretty much did
what it has always done
since we’ve been in tripleA, and Cody, Cody just
gave us another outstanding performance like he
does every week.
“It’s just a testament
to the hard work that
these kids have put in at
Point Pleasant, and they
believe in our program.
The kids enjoy playing
the game here, which is
what makes it so special
for us.”
The Applemen came
away with a turnover on
the opening drive of the
game after Robert Glover
intercepted a pass by
Point quarterback Cason
Payne, but the Green and
Red were quickly forced
into a three-and-out on
their ensuing drive.
PPHS followed with
three consecutive scor-

Howard (Northwest), Billy Murphey
(Northwest), Justin Sizemore (Ohio
Valley Christian), Tanner Schmitz
(Peebles), Ethan Newton (Portsmouth
Clay), Peyton Adkins (St. Joseph),
Alek Blevins (South Webster), Trevor
Coriell (South Webster), Travis Arledge
(Southeastern), Aaron Linne (Valley),
Alex Gahm (Valley), Mac Wilson (West
Union), Ethan Pauley (Wheelersburg),
Dolton Wood (Wheelersburg), Alex
Munion (Wheelersburg).
Honorable Mention: Hanna Page
(Adena), Alexis Putnam (Adena),
Christian Touchet (Alexander), Nathan
Goss (Alexander), Kellar Windland
(Belpre), Sheldon Smith (Belpre),
Dalton Nida (Chesapeake), Kolton
Webb (Chesapeake), Kendall Purdy
(Eastern Brown), Joey Balas (Eastern
Brown), Everett Jones (Fairfield
Leesburg), Ryan Matthews (Fairfield
Leesburg), Austin Litz (Glenwood),
Dylan Rawlins (Glenwood), Tyler
Brinkman (Lynchburg-Clay), Bobby
Merry (Lynchburg-Clay), Tanner
Gampy (Minford), Jeremy Fuhrmann
(Minford), Cole Roades (North Adams),
Lee Hesler (North Adams), Tyler
Webb (Northwest), Dylan Amburgey
(Northwest), Eric Blevins (Ohio Valley
Christian), Marshall Hood (Ohio
Valley Christian), Connor Browning
(Peebles), Kalub Smith (Peebles),
Devon Holcomb (Portsmouth Clay),
Jordan Collier (Portsmouth Clay),
Nathan Bragdon (Portsmouth West),
TJ Hoggard (Portsmouth West),
Bradley Rist (St. Joseph), Joey
Bush (St. Joseph), Kahler Rockwell
(South Webster), Dom Holding
(South Webster), Jordan Osborne
(Southeastern), Isiah Dresbach
(Southeastern), Jacob Gibson (Valley),
Adam Friend (Valley), Tyler Swearingen
(West Union), Jacob Miley (West
Union), Zack Jordan (Wheelersburg),
Chance Holbrook (Wheelersburg).

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior John Sommer (12) making a tackle on
Musselman’s Jacob Northcraft (44) during the Big Blacks’ 54-14
win over the Applemen in a Class AAA playoff match-up on Friday
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

ing drives that covered
80, 68 and 38 yards,
which allowed the hosts
to take a 20-0 advantage
8:16 mark of the second
stanza.
Musselman needed 14
offensive plays and gained
a meager 17 yards before
moving the chains for the
ﬁrst time, then Latrell
Warr broke a few PPHS
tackles and rumbled 58
yards to paydirt on the
next play — making it
a 20-6 contest with 6:39
remaining in the half.
The Applemen were
never closer, as Mitchell
capped a 73-yard drive
with his fourth score —
giving the Red, Black and
White a comfortable 27-6
cushion at the break.
The hosts outgained
Musselman by a 269-132
margin in total yards during the ﬁrst half, including a sizable 238-91 edge
on the ground. PPHS
had 13 ﬁrst downs in the
opening 24 minutes, compared to only four by the
guests.
Grant Safford gave
Point its largest lead of
the night at 54-6 after
breaking away on a
44-yard touchdown run
at the 9:31 mark of the
fourth.
Glover capped the scoring with a 66-yard catch
and run on a pass from
Warr, which allowed the
guests to close to within
40 points with 9:13 left in
regulation.
Mitchell also had the
Big Blacks’ lone takeaway
following an interception just before halftime.
Place-kicker Jason
Schultz was also 6-of-8 on
extra-point attempts for
the hosts.
PPHS did not attempt
a punt in the contest and
was ﬂagged four times for
32 yards, while MHS was

penalized ﬁve times for
60 yards and also punted
ﬁve times for an average
of 44 yards. Point Pleasant also claimed a 26-6
overall advantage in ﬁrst
downs.
The Big Blacks had
three back accumulate
over 100 rushing yards
in the triumph. Besides
Mitchell, Safford ﬁnished
the night with 170 yards
on 23 carries and Payne
had 127 yards on eight
attempts. Nathan Bowman and Sheb Harris
also carried the ball twice
apiece for 22 and 10
yards, respectively.
Payne ﬁnished the
night 2-of-5 passing for
31 yards, which included
one interception. Cody
McDaniel had one catch
for 26 yards and Jordan
Cunningham had one
grab for ﬁve yards.
Warr paced Musselman
with 79 rushing yards on
13 carries and also went
9-of-16 passing for 164
yards, which included one
touchdown and one interception. Chance Petry
had a team-high four
catches for 58 yards.
The Big Blacks have
now won a playoff game
in each of the last three
postseasons, with all of
those wins coming at
home. It’s also the ﬁrst
time in program history
that PPHS has had three
straight postseasons with
at least one victory.
Other Class AAA winners from Friday night
included Cabell Midland,
Martinsburg, Huntington
and Brooke. There are a
trio of Class AAA opening round games on the
slate for Saturday as well.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Notices

Yes, we have apples!
Open 8-12 &amp; 1-4

jellies, jams, cider, apple butter

2054 Orpheus Rd
(Co Rd 46)
Thurman Oh
740-286-4584

60623204

Richards Brothers
Fruit Farm

Ferrell
Deer Processing

Full Time STNAs
Part Time STNAs
PRN STNAs
RN UNIT MANAGER
Come join our
incredible team of
caring professionals!
Please apply within or send
Resume
36759 Rocksprings Rd
Pomeroy OH 45769

60622369

LIBRARY PAGE/SHELVER
Bossard Memorial Library
seeks applicants for the
position of Library
Page/Shelver.
12 hours per week; minimum
wage; includes weekend and
evening shifts. Must be a
minimum of sixteen (16) years
of age and pass background
check. Job description and
application available at
Library or online at
www.bossardlibrary.org.
Application must be mailed
and postmarked by Friday,
November 20, 2015 to:
Bossard Library
Attention: Debbie Saunders,
Library Director
7 Spruce Street, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631

P/T GREETING CARD
MERCHANDISER - Distributor
seeks merchҋr help for grocery
retailer in the Pomeroy area.
2-3 hrs/week. Starting at
$8.50/hr, plus 43 cents/mile.
Daytime, weekday hours.
Call, Thursday 11-19-15 from
9:00a.m. to 1pm,
1-614-204-3110

Skinning.Cutting.
Wrapping.Labeling

Medical / Health

60623108

(740) 208-5151
(740) 876-1289
33 Henkle Ave
Gallipolis, OH

NOW HIRING

Mollohan Carpet
Remnants Sales
Carpet &amp; Vinyl
up to 30% off
317 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, Oh 45632
740-446-7444
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Special Notices

The NEAD
Free Alcohol &amp; Drug
Education Consultant
Prevention
call 740-645-6632

Firewood

Gallia Co. 26 acres on
Fairview Rd $49,950 or 5
acres on Davis Rd $11,900.
Meigs Co. Harrisonville 13
acres $30,500 or 7 acres
$21,500 – more
@ www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

Bryant's Farm &amp; Lawn Care
is selling Mulch &amp; Firewood.
Heap Vouchers are
Welcome
Ph. 740-245-5002
740-645-1277

2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$450.00 mo. includes water
540-729-1331

Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport
overlooking Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$550.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953
Sales

Angus Bulls &amp; HeifersHigh EPD's over 40 yrs.
Performance selection,
Top bloodlines,
Priced reasonably,
Call 740)418-0633
www.slaterunangus.com

Help Wanted General

Help Needed In Dining Room
And Kitchen Help.
Apply In Person At Gallipolis
Quality Inn.
"Please No Phone Calls"

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

Reese Excavating
�Dozer  Backhoe
�Trenching  Trucking
 Septic Systems
�Basements
 Land Clearing
 Site Prep  and More!
FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 245-9921

(BMMJQPMJT�0óDF���������������
�����+BDLTPO�1JLF�(BMMJQPMJT �0IJP

ESTATE AUCTION
Saturday, November 21 – 9:00 a.m.
25560 Brimstone Road, Coolville, OH

Located at the Auction House
Rt. 62 N, Mason, WV

Apartments/Townhouses

Terms: Cash or Check w/ID

Auction Conducted by:
Rick Pearson Auction Co #66
Ricky Pearson Jr.
#1955
304-593-5118 and 304-773-5447
See Auctionzip.com for details

Looking
for a unique
gift idea???
We have it!!

Food Available
Sales / Business Development

Now Hiring!

Email resume: aburgett@ovhh.org
Applications available at www.ovhh.org

Auctions

SATURDAY, NOV. 21st 9am

Now Growing.

Qualifications:
t�45/" �$))" �$/" �1$"�
t�&amp;YDFMMFOU�%PDVNFOUBUJPO�4LJMMT�
t�"CMF�UP�XPSL�JOEFQFOEFOUMZ�
t�%FQFOEBCMF�5SBOTQPSUBUJPO���������

60619228

Selling items from various estates - furniture,
glassware, collectibles, and much, much more.
Something for everyone.
* Clean Auction *

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

HIRING
Home Health Aides

"UIFOT�0óDF��������������������
&amp;BTU�4UBUF�4USFFU�"UIFOT �0IJP�

Large or Small Jobs Since 1963

Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St
Ravenswood WV 26164
Part-time, Flexible RN
304-273-9482

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.

Competitive wages and excellent benefits
Excavating

LARGE AUCTION

We are currently seeking new
business development
representatives to grow our
current partnerships and develop
new business, while incorporating
innovative digital media strategies
into clients’ advertising plans.

No-Cap Commission Plan!

DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 50 East/ Rt. 7 towards Coolville, turning north onto
Brimstone Road, go less than 1 mile to farm house up the hill on the right,
watch for signs.

VEHICLES &amp; 4-wheeler
TRACTORS &amp; FARM EQUIPMENT
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
Go to www.shamrock-auctions.com to view the complete ad
with photos or call for ad to be mailed.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks
over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyers
premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash or check payment. All sales
DUH�ÀQDO���)RRG�ZLOO�EH�DYDLODEOH��

Estate of Frances M. Henderson, Athens County Case #20121192
By Linda Williams, Lisa Ritchie &amp; Robert L. Henderson, Administrators
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122
60623241
Real Estate Auction

Real Estate Auction
ONSITE REAL ESTATE AUCTION ALERT!!

Position Requirements
Ability to sell and nurture client
relationships with creative
media solutions
Excellent written and verbal
communication skills
Strong creative, editing and
interpersonal skills
Demonstrated knowledge of
advertising and digital media
solutions

Money To Lend

For Sale
1998 Plymouth Mini Van
2006 Chevy Colorado Truck
740-446-3243

Want To Buy

Auctions

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Automotive

Call

Livestock

Professional Services

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

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

Rentals

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Help Wanted General

JOIN OUR GROWING TEAM OF

BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT
REPRESENTATIVES

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 4:30 PM
506 State Route 7 North, Gallipolis
Riverfront Property!!! Former Baird Brothers
Garage, Baird Wrecking Yard, and Campground
located on the Ohio River and a high traffic area
close to intersection of SR 7 and US 735.
Nearly 3 acres of prime real estate.

Ability to work both independently and as part of a team

Josh Bodimer Auctioneer/Realtor David Wiseman,
Wiseman Real Estate Broker.
Call or Go to www.wisemanrealestate.com
for full terms &amp; conditions of sale.
740-446-3644 or Josh Mobile 740-645-6665

Send your resume today!

Minimum bid $105,000, 3% buyer’s premium added to final price,
$5000 non-refundable down payment day of sale, close within 30 days.
Real Estate sold as is to include all scrap and everything on the property.

careers@mydailytribune.com

825 3rd Ave
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
David Wiseman, Broker
500 SECOND AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

446-3644

Josh Bodimer Auctioneer

60622121

The Village of Middleport is
accepting sealed bids for
purchase of the following
items: 1. a very old Elgin
Pelican Street Sweeper, some
rust, might run; 2. 1987 Ford
truck with dump bed, bad
transmission, very rusty; 3. 3
unrepairable fire hydrants.
these can be sold separately.
Each item requires separate
bid. Sealed bids must be
delivered to the Middleport
Water Department and the
deadline for bids is Nov 9th at
4pm. The Village has the right
to accept or reject any or all
bids. Phone 992-3037 for
more details.
11/15/15-11/17/15-11/18/1511/19/15

Land (Acreage)

60621947

Help Wanted General

60623502

LEGALS

Sunday, November 15, 2015 5B

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

120 dead in Paris attacks, worst since WWII
PARIS (AP) — A series of
attacks targeting young concertgoers, soccer fans and Parisians
enjoying a Friday night out at
popular nightspots killed at least
120 people in the deadliest violence to strike France since World
War II. President Francois Hollande condemned it as terrorism
and pledged that France would
stand ﬁrm against its foes.
The worst carnage was at a
concert hall hosting an American
rock band, where scores of people
were held hostage and attackers
ended the standoff by detonating explosive belts. Police who
stormed the building encountered

a bloody scene of horror inside.
Paris Prosecutor Francois
Molins said as many as ﬁve
attackers were killed, though it
was not clear how many there
were altogether and how many,
if any, were still at large. Other
ofﬁcials said seven attackers
had been killed and that police
were searching for other possible
accomplices.
Authorities said the death toll
could exceed 120 for at least six
sites, including the national stadium and a tight circle of popular
nightspots.
Hollande declared a state of
emergency and announced that

Peterson has NFL
rushing lead at 30
By Dave Campbell
Associated Press

Halfway through his comeback season, Adrian
Peterson has the NFL rushing lead.
After sitting out all but one game in 2014
while the child abuse case against him played
out, Peterson has settled right back in with the
Minnesota Vikings. He’s on pace for 1,516 yards
at age 30, which would be the third-highest total
of his career. If he can hang on to ﬁrst place, he
will be only the third 30-something to take the
rushing title.
The exclusive club consists of Curtis Martin,
with 1,697 yards for the New York Jets in 2004
at age 31, and Marion Motley, with 810 yards
for the Cleveland Browns in 1950 at age 30.
Peterson, cognizant of the midpoint on Minnesota’s schedule, glanced at the leaders earlier
this week.
“To kind of see where I stood,” he said. “So I
feel like I’m in a good position.”
With the Vikings at 6-2, Peterson has bigger
goals than the rushing title. But it’s on his list.
“It would mean a lot. I play this game to be
the best, and of course leading the league in
rushing and ﬁnishing the season that way would
kind of help put a stamp on that as well,” Peterson said.

he was closing the country’s borders, although ofﬁcials later said
they were just re-imposing border
checks that had been removed
after Europe created its free-travel
zone in the 1980s.
Metro lines shut down and
streets emptied on the mild fall
evening as fear spread through
the city, still aching from the horrors of the Charlie Hebdo attack
just 10 months ago.
The attack unfolded with two
suicide bombings and an explosion outside the national stadium
during a soccer match between
the French and German national
teams. Within minutes, accord-

ing to Paris police chief Michel
Cadot, another group of attackers
sprayed cafes outside the concert
hall with machine gunﬁre, then
stormed inside and opened ﬁre on
the panicked audience. As police
closed in, they detonated explosive belts, killing themselves.
Hollande, who had to be evacuated from the stadium when the
bombs went off outside, later
vowed that the nation would stand
ﬁrm and united: “A determined
France, a united France, a France
that joins together and a France
that will not allow itself to be staggered even if today, there is inﬁnite
emotion faced with this disaster,

this tragedy, which is an abomination, because it is barbarism.”
There was no immediate claim
of responsibility for the attacks,
although jihadists on Twitter immediately praised them
and criticized France’s military
operations against Islamic State
extremists.
In addition to the deaths at the
concert hall, dozens were killed
in an attack on a restaurant in the
10th arrondissement and several
other establishments crowded
on a Friday night, police said.
Authorities said at least three
people died when the bombs went
off outside the soccer stadium.

Gilkey
From Page 1B

West Liberty University
is an NCAA Division II
school that completes in
the Mountain East Conference and is located just
north of Wheeling, West
Virginia.
“I really liked their
campus when I visited
them before I committed,” Gilkey said of West
Liberty. “I really liked the
coach and they were the
ﬁrst college to reach out
to me.”
Gilkey, who plans on
majoring in early childhood education at WLU,
will join a West Liberty
squad that has won 58
games over the last four
seasons seasons, under
head coach Jim Bacca.
“Katie is a versatile
type of player that can be
a second baseman, yet
she also possesses enough
speed to allow her to be
an outﬁelder at the collegiate level,” Bacca said.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Katie Gilkey signed her letter of intent to join the West Liberty softball team, Thursday
afternoon at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium. Pictured above, sitting in the front from left, are Julie
Gilkey, Katie Gilkey and Bill Gilkey. Standing in the back row are Meigs Athletic Director Steven Wood,
Lady Marauders head coach Bryan Swann and MHS assistant coach Lisa Rowe.

“We expect Katie to bring
that versatility and speed
to help increase our team
speed offensively as well
as defensively. Because
Katie can hit well she

brings speed to the plate to what we think could be
that makes it difﬁcult for a lot of fun for her on the
the defense to read what
base path.”
she might do. We hope to
help her increase those
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740skills and we look forward 446-2342, ext. 2100.

OPEN ENROLLMENT
THE MUST SEE EVENT OF THE YEAR

*Seniors (over 65) or on
Disability, help with
Prescription Drug coverage

0% FINANCING FOR 75 MONTHS
+ UP TO

$1500

BONUS
CASH

ON SELECT 200, 300/300C
AND TOWN &amp; COUNTRY MODELS+

ELIGIBLE VEHICLES: CHRYSLER 200 (EXCLUDES LX), 300, 300C, TOWN &amp; COUNTRY, JEEP CHEROKEE (EXCLUDES SPORT), DODGE CHARGER (EXCLUDES SCAT
PACK &amp; SRT), GRAND CARAVAN, RAM 1500, FIAT 500 AND ABARTH, 0% APR FINANCING FOR 75 MONTH EQUALS $13.33 PER MONTH PER $1,000 FINANCED
REGARDLESS OF DOWN PAYMENT WHEN FINANCED THROUGH CHRYSLER CAPITAL. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY. OFFER ENDS 11/30/15. ©2015 FCA US
LLC ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHRYSLER, DODGE, JEEP &amp; RAM ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF FCA US LLC,
FIAT IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK USED UNDER LICENSE BY FCA US LLC.

+

We’ve made it easier than ever to get into a luxurious new Chrysler vehicle.
Take advantage of cash offers plus 0% financing
for 75 months plus us to $1,500 bonus cash on Town &amp; Country and
Select 200 or $1,000 Bonus Cash on select 300 models+.
The oﬀer only lasts until November 30th,
so see your dealer before time runs out.

*Seniors (over 65) or on
Disability, help with their
choices between Advantage
Plans or Supplement
(Medigap) Plans.

2015 Jeep
Cherokee
Latitiude
4x4 SUV

Stock Number: 42155600
Engine: 2.4 I4 PZEV M-AIR
(Active Grille Shutters, California
Emissions, Engine Oil Cooler)

*Open Enrollment begins
November for the
Affordable Care Act Plans
(Obama Care).

$24,490
2015 Chrysler
200
Limited Sedan
Stock Number: 42153610
Convenience Group,
Engine: 2.4L 14 MultiAir

$20,350

* help clients with
individual health plans,
dental plans and vision plans.

2016 Ram 1500
Tradesman
Truck Crew Cab

Stock Number: 42160330
Trailer Tow Mirrors &amp; Brake Group,
Popular Equipment Group,
Radio: Uconnect 5.0,
Chrome Appearance Group,
(more packages….)

505 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tel: 740-992-9784
Toll Free: 877-992-9784
Fax: 740-992-7980
www.thevaughanagency.com

$34,000
250 N. Columbus Rd. | Athens, OH 45701

888-675-8554

60623451

All prices include rebates

60623175

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 15, 2015 s Section C

‘Keep Your
Fork’ supports
Meigs runners
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Lorna Hart | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pictured inside Mulberry Country Kitchen’s pantry: Front, Grace Burden, Kelley Weddle, Candi Ohlinger, Josh Salem Ashlelly Deem and
Dylan Watson. Back row, Nancy Thorne, Chris McKean, Bill Neutzling, Peggy Crane and Chris Shouldis.

School donates to Mulberry Kitchen
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Students
from Carleton School and
Meigs Industries were at
Mulberry Community Center on Thursday to drop off
collected food items for the
food pantry and to work on
art projects.
Each month, with the
help of Peggy Crane, students under her supervision at the Carleton School
select a project for the
month; in October the students focused on collecting
potatoes for the Community Center. This month,
they selected a food drive
to help with the Center’s
Thanksgiving needs.
It wasn’t long before
the entire school became
involved, including Meigs
Industries, and it was
decided the two classes
that collected the most
food would be treated
to lunch at the Mulberry
Country Kitchen.
Upon arriving at the Center, Meigs Industries adult
students began unloading
the food items. Many boxes
were carried into the storeroom and the staff of the
Center said they greatly
appreciated the donations.
Then it was time for the
food donation winners,
their teachers and aides
to take a break and have
lunch. After lunch, the
group participated in ongoing art projects directed by
Peggy Crane. Every month,
a different art project is
offered. This month the
project was Thanksgiving
placemats for the Kitchen.
Crane, herself an artist,
offers “Art” every Thursday
at the Center after lunch.
This opportunity is open to
anyone who would like to
participate and she encourages everyone to visit and
grab a brush.
“This is a wonderful
opportunity for the community to be involved with
students from Carleton
School and Meigs Industries,” Crane said. “We
have so many people who
just drop by and participate.”
That afternoon, three
home-schooled students
stopped by to make placemats with the group. Crane
patiently instructs and
encourages each artist.
Some struggle at ﬁrst, but
everyone ﬂourishes under
her supervision, making art
unique to each person.
In art, there is no right
or wrong way to draw a

AT LEFT, art after lunch. AT RIGHT, Bill Neutzling proudly displays his Thanksgiving dinosaur themed
placemat.

Artist Peggy Crane, along with Linda Lukasik, of Mulberry Country Kitchen, view Chris McKean’s
Thanksgiving placemat.

POMEROY — After an automobile accident
claimed the life of Brandi Thomas in 2002, her
family founded the The Brandi Thomas Memorial
Scholarship Fund in her honor.
The scholarships are given each year to two students from Meigs High School.
Brandi participated in track and ﬁeld and cross
county at Meigs High School. Her mother, Cheryl
Thomas, said it was an easy decision for her
daughter to
participate
in both since
FOR
her uncle,
MORE...
Michael KenTo read the full
nedy, would
story of Keep Your
be her coach.
Fork visit www.
Her daughguideposts.org/
ter’s love of
why-do-peopleboth track
say-keep-your-fork. Thomas
and ﬁeld
and cross
county helped with the family’s decision to award
the scholarships to students who have earned two
varsity letters in track and/or cross country. Every
spring, a selection committee decides on one girl
and one boy to receive this scholarship.
Several fundraisers were conducted to start the
scholarship fund, but Kennedy wanted something
that represented Brandi’s love of running, and the
idea of a 5K race was born.
As the family struggled to ﬁnd the right name
for the the race, a teacher who worked with Kennedy sent him a Guidepost article titled, “Keep
Your Fork.”
After reading the article, he said he knew what
the race should be called.
“She just sent me the article because she
thought it would help,” Kennedy said.
What she didn’t know was that it had given him
the inspiration for a name.
He called his sister, Cheryl, and told her. At
ﬁrst, she was asked why Share Your Fork; it
seemed like a strange choice. Kennedy explained
the meaning and she agreed.
The race has become a family affair, with Brandi’s parents Cheryl and John Thomas, grandfather
Ed Kennedy and uncle Mike Kennedy in charge of
preparations for the event. The family begins setting up at 7 a.m. each year.
The race is now in its 14th year, and as a result
of their fundraising efforts, two scholarships, each
$1,500, were awarded in 2015.
“Brandi was a very special young lady who
deserves to be honored every year with this race,”
Mike Kennedy said. “She was an organ donor and
one of our major themes of the event is to encourage our participants to follow suit and ﬁll out an
organ donor card.”
Michael Kennedy is still coaching Meigs cross
country and track and ﬁeld.
“Brandi is always in our thoughts,” he said.
The 5K begins in the Meigs High School parking lot Nov. 28. Entry forms can be obtained at
any Meigs Local School Building, Locker 219 and
Valley Lumber. T-shirts will be given to the ﬁrst
150 entrants. Race day registration will be from
8:30-9:30 a.m. the day of the race. The race begins
at 10 a.m. and participants are asked to arrive at
least 30 minutes before the race begins..
Plaques will be awarded to the top three male
and top three female ﬁnishers. Medals will be
presented for ﬁrst place and ribbons for second
See RUNNERS | 4C

turkey, there is complete
freedom of expression in
the doing. At the art table,
Crane has a gift of bringing
out the artist inside each
person.
In December, the art
projects will involve
Christmas spiders and
snowmen earrings or pendants. Christmas spiders,
you might ask? What is a
Christmas spider?
A Christmas spider is
a European folk tale from
Germany or Ukraine that
explains the origin of tinsel
on Christmas trees. In Germany, Poland and Ukraine,
ﬁnding a spider or a spider’s web on a Christmas
tree is considered good
luck.
So join the group any
Thursday for Art at the
Community Center. All
that is required to participate is your presence.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551.

Chris McKean unloads donations of food items collected by the
group.

Courtesy photo

Brandi Thomas doing what she loved to do.

�LOCAL

2C Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Caregiver Month observed in November
National Family Caregiver
Month is celebrated each year
in November.
What better month could we
express our gratitude for the
90 million family caregivers
nationwide that provide countless hours of care to their loved
ones?
Family caregivers often provide complex medical care,
keep commitments of working
a full-time job, and maintain
relationships with other family members while providing
excellent care for their loved
ones. They often sacriﬁce their
own physical, ﬁnancial and
emotional well-being. They

dedicate themselves to
Tools for Caregivers” is
helping others without
a free educational series
expecting recognipresented by the Area
tion or thanks, but
Agency on Aging Disthat makes them all
trict 7 (AAA7) that is
the more deserving of
designed to provide you
both. Caregivers are
with the tools to take
Pamela
the unsung heroes of
care of yourself while
K. Matura caring for a relative or
our nation.
Contributing friend. It is available to
Our Agency would
like to thank all family Columnist
help family caregivers
caregivers for the selfreduce stress, improve
less acts you do each
self-conﬁdence, commuday. We encourage you to make nicate feelings better, balance
caregiving for yourself a prior- their lives, increase their ability
ity as a caregiver.
to make tough decisions, and
We are happy to have availlocate helpful resources.
able a workshop designed just
Classes consist of six sesfor family caregivers. “Powerful sions held once a week for 90

RIVER VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL
HONOR ROLL
BIDWELL — The
following students have
been named to the River
Valley High School Honor
Roll for the ﬁrst nine
weeks grading period.
NINTH GRADE — Bradley
Bainter, Avery Barcus,
Emily Barker, Jonathan
Bays, Bailey Bennett,
Tyler Blackburn, Jenna
Brammer, Kelsey Brown,
Baylee Browning, Ethan
Browning, Madisyn Burd,
Dalton Burgett, Joseph
Burns, Samantha Burris,
Jacob Campbell, Mattison
Comer, Adrianna Cox,
Mykaila Cox, Tristen Crouse,
Britney Davis, Chasity
Deckard, Katelynn Dement,
Dakota Doss, Destiny
Dotson, Bradyn Eblin, Ian
Eblin, Jacob Edwards,
Layne Fitch, Adrianna
Fox, Cierra Franklin, Cole
Franklin, Shyann Franklin,
Jordan Garrison, Chloe
Gee, Ashley Gilbert, Dakota
Gilbert, Elizabeth Gillman,
Gabral Gilmore, Shawna
Goody, Abigayle Hall,
Madison Harrison, Britani
Hash, Daniel Hatfield, Leah
Higginbotham, Baylee
Hollanbaugh, Rachel Horner,
Sierra Huffman, Logan Hunt,
Gabrielle Johnson, Morgan
Johnson, Josie Jones, Skylar
Jones, Zachary Jones, Kiley
Kingsley, Shali Kiser, Leah
Larson, Destiny Lemley,
Dylan Lemley, Juliann
Lemley, Darian Litchfield,
Brandon Losey-Livingston,
Madison McClure, Seth
McDonald, Destinee
McGuire, Caleb McKnight,
Jonathan Menendez,
Andrew Mershon, Nathan
Michael, Isabella Moore,
Ashley Morris, Myles
Morrison, Shauna Mullins,
Emilee Neekamp, Julia
Nutter, Emily Perry, Bailey
Petrie, Adrianna Powell,
Lyvia Prince, Cierra Roberts,
Jade Roush, Allivia Runyon,
Ciara Sexton, Alyssa Sheets,
James Spaulding, Abigail
Stout, Alexis Stout, Alyssa
Thomas, Mya Trout, Rory
Twyman, Eric Weber, Alex
Williams, Tyler Woodrow,
Susanna Workman, Bethany
Workman.

minutes. Two experienced class
leaders conduct the classes and
provide interactive lessons,
discussions and brainstorming
to help caregivers take the tools
presented and place them in
action. Attendees will receive
a free book, “The Caregiver
Helpbook,” developed speciﬁcally for the class that covers
topics such as hiring in-home
help, helping those with memory issues, making legal and
ﬁnancial decisions, and understanding depression.
“Powerful Tools for Caregivers” will help family caregivers
with ways to: reduce stress;
communicate effectively with

12TH GRADE — Gretchen
Anderson, Ashton Ansel,
Justin Arrowood, James
Bainter, Sarah Boggs, Shelby
10TH GRADE — Nathaniel
Brown, Peyton Browning,
Abbott, Raynna Adkins,
Lindsey Canaday, Catelynn
Jillian Anderson, Benjamin
Carroll, Dwayne Chapman,
Arrowood, Harlei Baird,
Codey Dement, Abbie
Kenzie Baker, William
Eleam, Joseph Facemire,
Baker, Kassie Bates, Alyssa
Austin Farley, Kaeleona
Bennett, Wyatt Bragg,
Franklin, Noelle Gibson,
Sophia Branhman, Bret
Ashley Gilmore, Tabitha
Breer, Devan Brown, Patrick Gosnay, Dylan Greenlee,
Brown, Jenna Burke, Hailey
Alyssa Hayes, Mariah Hurt,
Burris, Briana Cain, Travis
John Jennings, Vladimir
Carpenter, Kaylee Carter,
Kirk, Haleigh McGuire, Ben
Kyle Coen, Hunter Coon,
Moody, Leia Moore, Erin
Hayley Cox, Krista Denney,
Morgan, Jacob Morris, Kirk
Jeremiah Dobbins, Celina
Morrow, Mckenzie Mullins,
Dray, Thomas Edgar, Andrew Chase Nance, Hannah
Eleam, Jackie Farley,
Nutter, Sam Payne, Tianna
Abagayle Ferrell, Noah
Qualls, Brittany Rochford,
Flemings, Carly Gilmore,
Madison Scott, Cheyenne
Ryan Grace, Allison Hale,
Shafer, Lucus Shaffer, Logan
Kaylnn Hall, Logan Harris,
Sheets, Connor Shiflet,
Breanna Harrison, Hannah
Travis Sigman, Courtney
Hawks, Bailey Hollingsworth, Smith, Madison Smith,
Ty Smittle, Hayley Stover,
Katelyn Johnson, Ryan
Katherine Stump, Shyla
Johnson, Trenton Johnson,
Evan Justus, Hannah Kinney, Tackett, Haleigh Thacker,
Haley Kirk, Alyssa Lollathin, Alexandria Truance, Tyler
Twyman, Kristian Walter,
Harrison Luckeydoo, Tyler
Tyler Ward, George Williams,
Mayne, Jarret McCarley,
John Wolfe.
Jared McCarty, Devan

Do your part!
Recycle this newspaper!

Pamela K. Matura is executive director of
the Area Agency on Aging District 7.

Pomeroy perks up for Christmas

McGhee, Amy McGuire,
Ashleigh McGuire, Isabella
Mershon, Sharla Moody,
Kylie Myers, Jaden Neal,
Jacob Oehler, Johnathan
Painter, Justin Patrick, Drew
Penwell, Natosha Rankin,
Leif Ray, Kylie Reagor,
George Rickett, Jessica
Roush, Lynsey Saber, Robert
Schuhl, Kaylee Schultz,
Johnathon Spencer, Gabriel
Stapleton, Zachary Stein,
Caitlin Theiss, Hunter
Thompson, Jill Veith, Kira
Wilson, Austin Young,
Madison Young.
11TH GRADE — Emily
Adkins, Gabrielle Adkins,
Catelynn Aker, Brandon
Barker, Isaiah Beach, Haley
Belville, Sadie Braden,
Jerry Brammer, Marian
Brewer, Christopher Brown,
Brycen Brumfield, Branton
Burd, Katelynn Caldwell,
Abby Campbell, Maggie
Campbell, Ruby Campbell,
Marina Canizares, Kevin
Cline, Abby Coleman,
Sydney Coon, Trey Craycraft,
Jacob Dovenbarger, Robert
Drummond, Jeffrey Ebert,
Javin Evans, Chance
Gillman, Grant Gilmore,
Francesca Girometta,
Savannah Halhill, Madison
Hartley, Beverly Hess,
Leanne Hively, Payton
Hollanbaugh, Scott Hughes,
Shania Hunt, Erin Jackson,
Alexis Jeffers, Brooklyn
Jones, Kenna Justice, Leva
Katkauskaite, Alexis Kiser,
Kaylee Lambert, Jaykob
Mabe, Whyatt Mannon,
Joshua Marcum, Devin
McDonald, Brianna McGuire,
Jennifer Mitchell, Brody
Moles, Jade Mollohan, Allie
Moore, Hollis Morrison,
David Mullins, Dayna Nance,
Braden O’Neil, Chelsea
Pelfrey, Olivia Phoenix,
Ian Polcyn, Mikayla Pope,
Katelyn Prince, Colton
Provens, Matthew Rhodes,
Colton Sigman, Jessica
Steele, Angelique Toler,
Arianna Trout, Destiny
Williams, Karly Williamson,
Bridgett Wray, Garrett
Young, Tequilla Young.

other family members, physicians, and paid help; take care
of yourself; reduce guilt, anger
and depression; help you relax;
make tough decisions; and set
goals and problem-solve.
For more information about
caregiver support services and
programs through the Area
Agency on Aging District 7,
call us at 1-800-582-7277 or
info@aaa7.org. We are ready
to answer any questions or
concerns you may have and
help you ﬁnd resources in your
community to help you in your
caregiving role.

George Wright, of Pomeroy,
has lived in the area all his
life and loves to continue
to help decorate it during
the Christmas season. Also
pictured on the ladder is Mike
Wamsley, of Middleport, and
Alice Wamsley, of Pomeroy.
Not pictured is Nelle Wright,
George’s wife. The festivities
will also serve as decoration
for the Christmas parade the
Sunday after Thanksgiving. The
Pomeroy Merchants declared
the day an open house, with
businesses open from noon
to 4 p.m. according to Susan
Clark-Dingess, of Clark’s
Jewelry Store. After the parade,
Santa will appear at Peoples
Bank in town. Other events
prior to the parade will be Shop
Local Black Friday and Small
Business Saturday.
Lindsay Kriz | Sunday TimesSentinel

GALLIA ACADEMY MIDDLE SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Editor’s note: Due to a glitch
in the school’s computer system,
there was a misprint on the sixth
grade honor roll. The Times-Sentinel is reprinting Gallia Academy Middle School’s ﬁrst nine
weeks honor roll in its entirety.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia Academy Middle School Principal
Craig Wright says the following
students are on the honor roll
for the ﬁrst grading period of the
2015-16 school year.
Sixth Grade
Adkins, Everett; Allen, Trevin;
Armstrong, Korey; Barnette,
Bailey; Beasy, Ashley; Beaver,
Brooklyn; Bickle, Kylea; Black,
Alexandria; Blankenship, John;
Bolin, Connor; Burcham, Leanna;
Burnette, Bailey; Caldwell, Gracee;
Caldwell, MaKenna; Call, Carson;
Chafin, Shawn; Cisco, Walker; Clark,
Makinna; Collins, Arianna; Collins,
Nolan; Cook, Hunter; Cremeans,
Bryant; Darst, Cole; Davies, Iliana;
Davis, Jillian; Dodson, Ilo; Donohue,
Austin; Easton, Brayden; Elliott,
Todd; Erwin, Hunter; Fallon, Emily;
Flinner, Zak; Florence, Kody; Foster,
Jaela; Fraley, Brady; Garnes, Elijah;
Geiser, Caleb; Greenlee, Sydney;
Greer, Rylan; Griffin, Asia; Griffin,
Jonathan; Grimes, Wayne (Aiden);
Hamilton, Claudia; Hammons,
Abigail; Harbour, Darcie; Harrison,
Grant; Harrison, Paige; Hendrickson,
William; Hunter, Brylee; Isbell,
Jacob; James, Mackenzie; Jeffers,
Leah; Johnson, Abigail; Johnson,
Donya; Johnson, Nolan; Justice,
Jerah; Koebel, Zackary; Lane, Olivia;
Lear, Alivia; Little, Reece; Loveday,
Madison; Loveday, Zane; MacFarland,
Laci; Mankin, Levi; Markin, Matthew;
Martin, Samantha; Maynard, Keely;
McConnell, Gabrielle (Gabby);
McCoy, DaKota; McKinney, Keri;
McNeal, Olivia; Miller, Bryson; Miller,
Corey; Miller, Kyla; Mullins, Charles;
Neal, Lane; Nelson, Seth; Nourse,
Grace; Phillips, Braedon (Drake);
Pratt, Olivia; Price, Austin; Price,
Matthew; Queen, Bailee; Ratliff,
Olivia; Reed, Jaden; Reed, Preslee;
Rice, Jalyn; Riddle, Jeremiah; Rife,

Christa; Rodgers, Allyson; Roettker,
Ayden; Rossiter, William (Ty); Russell,
Chasity; Sanders, Kyrsten; Schwall,
Garytt; Scott, Linae; Sellers, Kaleb;
Sisson, James; Smith, Blake; Smith,
Gage; Smith, Zoe; Stapleton, Evan;
Storm, Tresnee; Stover, Destiny;
Stroud, Shane; Swann, Hunter;
Ta, Austin; Taylor, Dalton; Taylor,
Kimberly; Thomas, Taja; Thomas,
Taylor; Tipple, Ethan; Walker, Isaac;
Wallace, Jenna; Warner, Emma;
Watson, Collin; Weaver, Brynna;
White, Bailey; Wilson, Alexanderia;
Wilt, Brody; Wiseman, Alex; Withrow,
Haley; Wood, Jaimie; Woodson,
Daunevyn; Wray, McKenzie; Yarger,
Makenzie
Seventh Grade
Beaver, Jakob; Beckett, Carlie;
Beckett, Collin; Belville, Zachary;
Best, Aurora; Bradley, Jaden;
Brock, Brianna; Bryan, Grantland;
Buchanan, Kendra; Burnett, Braiden;
Burns, Eli; Carpenter, Destiny; Clark,
Kaylie; Clickenger, Hailie; Connelley,
Madisyn; Cox, Aryan; Cox, Cierra;
Cox, Levi; Cox, Tyler; Cremeans, Josie;
Crisenbery, Tristin; Crossen, Matthew;
Curfman, Bryson (Bryce); Davis,
William (Cooper); Devault, Dylan;
DeWitt, Kaleb; Donnet, Melody;
Donohue III, Michael; Duncan, Coen;
Evans, Caroline; Fitzwater, Abigail
(Abby); Fletcher, Shiana; Frye, Zane;
Fulks, Cameron; Gardner, Markeya;
Geiser, Joel; Gomez, Cameron;
Halfhill, Malakai; Hamilton, Brooke;
Hernandez, Nelida; Heskett, Jamie;
Hill, Jacob; Hoover, Hannah; Huffman,
Richard; Johnson, Trenton; Jones,
Tessa; Kimble, Abigail; Little, Evin;
Long, Hannah; Luoma, Ethan; Markin,
Jeremy; Masters, Alisha; Mayes,
Nicholas; Mayo, Kayon; McKean,
Calyn; Miller, Amaya; Minnis, Gene;
Minton, Avery; Mollohan, Ridge;
Moore, Jonah; Moore, Madelyn;
Morris, Kya; Nichols, Logan; Northup,
Charles (CJ); O’Brien, Micah; Odom,
Arron (Chancey); Oesterreicher,
Savannah; Peters, Franklin; Petro,
Madison; Polcyn, Hannah; Pope,
Erin; Powell, Tara; Preece, James
(Tristan); Rardin, Jacob; Rees, Lillian;
Rocchi, Braynt; Rocchi, Madison; Roe,
Colton; Rose, James; Ross, Connor;

Roush, Rita; Scott, Jarrell; Seymour,
Dylan; Siders, Kenneth; Simmers,
Preston; Sipple, Ryelee; Skidmore,
Eric; Stanley, Malerie; Starnes,
Riley; Stewart, Madison; Stout,
Adam; Thivener, Katlin; Thomas,
Grace; Truance, Koren; Vanco,
Noah; Wamsley, Bode; Watts, Sarah;
Whealdon, Ethan; Wilcoxon, Sterling;
Williamson, Kalyn; Young, Bailie.
Eighth Grade
Adams, Chasity; Angel, Brady
(Mason); Armstrong, Rylan; Bailey,
Megan; Barnes, Alex; Beaver,
McKensi; Black, Kayla; Blazer, Elijah;
Blouir, Logan; Bonzo, Isabella (Bella);
Burcham, Marybeth; Caldwell, Colton;
Carter, Bronson; Chapman, Alexis;
Chapman, Donald; Cox, Benjamin
(Ben); Cremeens, Damon; Davies,
Eliza; Davis, Jayla; Davis, Natalie;
Donovsky, Ryan; Evans, Makayland;
Facemire, Taylor; Graham, Hugh
(Hobie); Griffith, Logan; Hall, Evann;
Hamilton, Claire; Harris, Hanah
(Grace); Heskett, Chloe; Hesson,
Kirsten; Hill, Ian; Johnson, Abigail;
Johnson, Brooke; Johnson, Carley;
Johnson, Dallas; Johnson, Noah;
Kingery, Haven; Lambert, Shalyn;
Lee, Devin; Long, Anthony (Tony);
Loveday, Morgan; Loveday, Zachary;
Mankin, Madison; Mankins, Mahela;
Martin, Peri; Martyn, Daniel; Massie,
Alexis; Mayse, Angie; Mcallister,
Bridgett; McCarley, James (Will);
Meadows, Bailey; Meadows, Trenton;
Miller, Brianna; Miller, Sydney;
Montgomery, Kathryn (Morgan);
Mullen, Hayllie; Mullett, Tristan;
Neal, Trace; Nicholas, Lyndsey (Liz);
Owens, Darren; Paugh, Daniel;
Perkins, Kevin; Queen, Carrissa;
Queen, Katie; Roach, Aryana;
Roberts, Cade; Rodgers, Jaci; Rogers,
Elizabeth; Rose, Cole; Russell, Alexis;
Saunders, Luke; Shamblin, Karsyn;
Sheets, Dakota; Skinner, Tessa;
Smith, Grant; Snodgrass, Prestley;
Stinson, Isaiah; Tate, Hannah; Terry,
Gabriel; Thomas, Reece W; Toler,
Andrew; Trout, Joshua; Valadez,
Emmanuel; Valentine, Christopher;
VanSickle, Abby; Walker, Corbin;
Wilcoxon, Justin; Wright, Barbara
(Maddie); Wroblewski, Mark; Yester,
Bishop.

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, November 15, 2015 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

By Hilary Price

11/16

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/16

9
1
8
5
2
4
7
6
3

3
4
5
6
7
8
2
9
1

7
6
2
1
9
3
4
5
8

Everyday price $34.99/mo. All offers require
24-month commitment and credit qualification.

4
8
7
9
6
1
5
3
2

FOR 12
MONTHS

5
3
9
7
4
2
8
1
6

19

$

6
2
1
3
8
5
9
4
7

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

PROMOTIONAL PRICES
START AS LOW AS

1
7
6
8
5
9
3
2
4

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

2
5
3
4
1
7
6
8
9

DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

3
5 7
2
1
3
1
9
8
2
7
1
3
4
5
6
2
5
1
6 9
1
2
4 7
5

8
9
4
2
3
6
1
7
5

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

7

4 9

6

TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

FREE

PREMIUM
CHANNELS!
for 3 months

Call Now and Save.
Ask about Next-Day Installation!

1-800-697-0129

Se Habla Español

™

Offers expire 10/30/15. Restrictions apply. Call for details.

DR_16461_3x3.5

�LOCAL

4C Sunday, November 15, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA ACADEMY HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Masters, Tea McCarley, Justin
McClelland, Kimberly McComas,
Grechen McConnell, Cheyenne
McGuire, Dorthy McGuire, Cadha
McKean, Tabatha McNeal, Ashleigh
Miller, Jayetta Newsome, Samuel
Petrie, Haylee Polinsky, Lane Pullins,
Kenedie Roush, Colton Russell,
Eli Rutherford, Cheyenne Savage,
Bo Saxon, Nicholas Sheets, April
Sherwood, Carlin Short, Wyatt Sipple,
NINTH GRADE — Zachary
McKenzie Skidmore, Sophia Skinner,
Abrahamson, Jenessa Andrews. Elijah Thornthun (Aom) Skulborisutsuk,
Baird, Shane Bays,Steven Beckett,
Bryce Smith, Morgan Stanley, Taylor
Shannon Bowyer, Cody Brumfield,
Staton, Jason Stroud, Alana Sydnor,
Lillian Burns, Austin Burris, Cory Call, Adara Takahashi, Tulasii Thayaparan,
Carter Campbell, Katie Carpenter,
Reece Thomas, Phuong (Trish) Tran,
Blaine Carter, Brendan Carter,
Kyra Traylor, Ashley Turley, Aubrey
Colin Casey, Shayla Casto, Hunter
Unroe, Bailey Walker, Derricka Ward,
Copley, Abigail Cremeans, Sydney
Ashton Webb, Madalyn Williamson,
Crothers, Cole Davis, Alaina Donohue, Jenna Wood, Fanxing (Esther) Yu,
Hannah Downs, Trinity Eggers,
Kathryn Zornes.
Kaden Ehman, Ian Evans, Joshua
Faro, Joshua Fink, Molly Fitzwater,
10TH GRADE — Robert Allen,
Seth Flinner, Elizabeth (Jolyn) Frye,
William Barcus, Dakotah Beaver,
Wyatt Halfhill,Thomas Hamilton,
Ezra Blain, Emma Blankenship,
Derek Henry, Kokora Higa, Elizabeth
Zachary Bokal, Nancy Bowyer,
Hoover, Haley Hughes, Kaitlyn Jarrell, Garrett Burns, Lauren Casey, Cara
Derek Johnson, Arianna Jordan,
Cavender, Tori Church, Michaela
Clary, Corey Clonch, Kobe Cochrane,
Kiesla Kormanik, Chance LaBello,
Mariah Liberatore, Erin Lincoln, Brent Brea Collins, Victoria Corvin, Hailey
Deem, Brock Eutsler, Ahnika Frogale,
Longstreet, Jessie Martin, Brittany

Caleb Greenlee, Kyler Greenlee, Taae
Hamid, Colt Hively, Jolie Jarrett,
Abby Jordan, Sheldon Lawson, Evan
Lincoln, Colin Little, Grace Martin,
Terri Mayse, Jonas McCreedy,
Bryan McQuaid, Nathan Mitchell,
Randall Mollohan, Joey Moody,
Matthew Moreaux, Andrew Mullins,
Straton Page, Alexis Polley, Bethany
Purdum, Benjamin Riddle, Ethan
Rider; Cody Rodgers, Lauren Rose,
Wendell Rossiter, Brianna Sanders,
Justus Sellers, Adam Sickles, Braden
Simms, Dylan Smith, Nacoma
Smith, Cassidy Starnes, John Stout,
Dylan Taylor, Lyndsey Taylor, Kaden
Thomas, Blaine Vance, Bailey Watson,
Morgan Watson, Catherine White,
Michaela Williams, Paris Williams,
Dylan Williamson, Evan Wiseman,
William Woods, Nathan Wright,
Julianna Yates.
11TH GRADE — Emily Adamson,
Dondre’ Armstrong, Elizabeth Blazer;
Mitchell Bolin, Corrine Boyer, Mark
Brown, Jeremy Brumfield, Makenzie
Brumfield, Caitlin Caldwell, Jalea
Caldwell, Ryleigh Caldwell, Colton
Campbell, Sydney Charnock, Allie
Clagg, Debra Collins, Wesley Collins,
Miles Cornwell, Kaleb Crisenbery,

12TH GRADE — Kaci Ager, Alice Allie,
Kylie Angel, Hunter Arthur, Matthew
Bailey, Makenzie Barr, Emerson
(Hunter) Bennett, Samantha Best,
Alexis Bevan, Noah Blain, Andrew
Bokal, Hollie Bostic, Jaeleigh
Brawley, Kirk Carmouche, Logan
Carpenter, Emily Carroll, Koleton
Carter, Hannah Caudill, Whitney
Clagg, Jacklyn Cochran, Josiah
Cox, Pooja Dayal, Peyton Eastman,
Keri Foster, Mackenzie Frum, Eric
Gillespie, Zachary Graham, Dares
Hamid, Dathan Hawkins, Devin
Henry, Austin Hill, Brett Hively, Anna
Holley, Isaiah Holley, Jemeia Hope,
Wesley Jarrell, Aaron Johnson, Hanna
Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Robert
King, Paige Kisor, Tigerlily Labello,
Logan Lovett, Emily Manion, Kalie
Masters, Russell Matthew, Kaetlyn
McCaulla, Dekota Metzler, Dovel(TJ)
Myers, Haley Orsbon, Aleena Peck,
Hayley Petrie, Logan Pratt, Makayla
Price, Justin Reynolds, Brad Ritchie,
Micah Saunders, Brittany Sheets,
Noah Sias, Cassidy Sickels, Bailie
Smith, Clay Smith, Samantha Staton,
Ryan Terry, Varna Thayaparan,
Alex Valadez, Michael Vallee, Drew
VanSickle, Jordan Walker, Eric Ward,
Thomas White, Carlie Winters.

Runners

LIVESTOCK REPORT

From Page 1C

GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of
sales from Nov. 11, 2015.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $185-$265, Heifers, $170-$240; 425525 pounds, Steers, $160-$235, Heifers, $160-$210; 550-625
pounds, Steers, $155-$220, Heifers, $140-$170; 650-725 pounds,
Steers, $120-$170, Heifers, $120-$160; 750-850 pounds, Steers,
$110-$155, Heifers, $110-$140.

through ﬁfth in each of
the following male/female
age groups: 6 to 13; 14
to 17; 18 to 22; 23 to 29;
30 to 39; 40 to 49; 50 to
59 and 60 and older. A
special award will be presented to the winner of
the 14 to 17 age group.
For more information,
contact Mike Kennedy at
740- 992 - 2158, 740- 992
- 7552 or 740- 357 -2723
or visit http://keepyourfork5krun.webs.com.
Walkers are also welcome and donations to
the scholarship fund can
be sent to: The Brandi
Thomas Memorial Scholarship Fund, C/O Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., PO
Box 626, Pomeroy, OH
45769.

Fed Cattle
Choice steers, $113-$126, choice heifers, $113-$120.
Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $73-$90; Medium/Lean, $64-$73; Thin/
Light, $40-$63; Bulls, $90-$109.
Back to Farm
Bred Cows, $685-$1,200; Baby Calves, $170-$375; Goats, $70$215; Hogs, $61; Feeder pigs, $43.
Upcoming specials
Cow sale, Nov. 13, 6 p.m.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Ryan (304) 514-1858, Dewayne at (740) 339-0241,
Stacy (304) 634-0224, or visit the website at www.uproducers.
com.

Emily Dahse, Chandler Danford,
Joshua Davis, Haley Donovsky,
Marlon Drennen, Kimberly Edelmann,
MiKayla Edelmann, Colton Fallon,
Jacob Faro, Grace Ferrell, Tanner
Few, Allison Fredericks, Shane Gibbs,
Joshua Grube, Jacob Hall, Stacy
Haner, Kristen Hannon, Vallery
Holbrook, Sydney Hood, Joshua
Howe, Tyreke Howell, Hunter Jacks,
Allie Johnson, Jordan Johnson,
Kayla Johnson, Sierra Johnson,
Isaiah Lester, Sabrina Manygoats,
Christian Matthew, Hannah
McCormick, Tiffany McCormick,
Allison McGhee, Candace McNeal,
C.McWhorter, Jenna Meadows,
Brenna Mills, Jon Mullen, Elizabeth
Myers, Dylan Nunn, Brooke
Pasquale, Gabriel Peck, Megan
Phillips, Mesa Polcyn, Jacob
Ratliff, Nathanael Riddle, Warren
Riffle, Garrett Rogers, Benjamin
Rutherford, Kirk Saunders, Carly
Shriver, Mckenzie Siders, Austin
Snodgrass, Addison Stanley, Jared
Stevens, Jenelle Stevens, Shane
Stover, Brody Thomas, Joshua
Viars, Mikah Walker, Colton Walters,
Mary Watts, Cameron Whitt, Natalie
Wilcoxon, Jala Williams, Caden Wilt,
Abigail Wood, Madison Workman.

Brandi, left, and her friend, Andrea.

Courtesy photo Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9923155 Ext. 2551

60623291

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia Academy High School Principal Josh
Donley recognizes the following
students for achieving honor
roll for the ﬁrst nine weeks of
the 2015-2016 school year.
The following students have
achieved at least a 3.00 grade
point average or above.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="249">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6692">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="7576">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7575">
              <text>November 15, 2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="202">
      <name>curry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="628">
      <name>dean</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2836">
      <name>fallers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="412">
      <name>frazier</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="537">
      <name>kapp</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="145">
      <name>lance</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1232">
      <name>nichols</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="613">
      <name>stevens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2061">
      <name>vanpelt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1902">
      <name>webb</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
