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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com or www.mydailytribune.com for archive • games • e-edition • polls &amp; more

60427343

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Nybble Café supports
Gallia First initiative
... Page C1

Mostly sunny. High
near 89. Low around
65. ...Page A2

OVP top
5 preview.
... Page B1

Carroll Adams, Jr., 89
Joyce Anderson, 77
Robert Bostwick, 82
John Coulson, 72
Mary Arlene Coy, 72
Carl E. James, 79
Joyce Jarrett, 72

$2.00

SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 24

Alice ‘Hank’ Orr
Kenneth Riffle, 64
Charles Runyon, 63
Kathleen Scott, 107
Emma Shoemaker, 89
William Snyder, 54
Gregory Allan Sullivan, 51

Ritchie arraigned on charges from May standoff
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The elderly man
who was involved in a 27-hour
standoff with law enforcement in
May was arraigned on Friday morning in connection with the standoff.
Eugene W. “Jack” Ritchie, 83, of
long Bottom, was formally charged
with four counts in an indictment
returned by the Meigs County
Grand Jury last this month.
Ritchie is charged with abduction, a felony of the third degree;
inducing panic, a felony of the

fifth degree; aggravated menacing, a misdemeanor of the first
degree; and having weapons
while under disability, a felony of
the third degree.
All four charges stem from
the May 20-21 standoff between
Ritchie and law enforcement
from around the region.
According to a report from
Sheriff Keith Wood at the time
of the standoff, hours of negotiations failed, and officers with the
Athens, Gallia, and Washington
Emergency Response teams and
the Meigs County Sheriff’s of-

fice took steps to remove Ritchie
from his home.
Wood said the officials used
gas to help force Ritchie from the
home at that time. He emphasized
that every effort was exhausted
prior to officers making entry into
the home. Following his arrest
Ritchie was transported to the Appalachian Behavioral Healthcare
Facility in Athens for evaluation.
No one was injured as part of
the standoff which began just
after noon on May 20 when officers from the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office responded to a

dispute call, with the situation
escalating to a standoff status.
Wood said that Deputies Adam
Smith and Joe Barnhart responded to the initial call of a dispute
between Jack Ritchie and his copartner in a vehicle business.
According to the sheriff, the dispute escalated with Ritchie threatening his co-partner with a gun and
then threatening Deputy Smith.
Officers with the Athens, Gallia, and Washington County
Emergency Response Units, the
Washington County Sheriff and
Ohio State Highway Patrol were

Preparing for harvest
Area farms in full swing

on scene throughout the situation
to assist local officers. Several
other agencies from around the
region were also there to assist.
Ritchie was found not to be
indigent, and must hire his
own attorney.
Bond for Ritchie was set at
$250,000 with 10 percent permitted. If Ritchie were to post bond,
a condition of that bond would be
GPS-monitored house arrest.
Pre-trial hearings were set
for 11:30 a.m. on July 8, and
10 a.m. on July 22, with a trial
date set for Aug. 6.

Preparing for
Civil War events
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Improvements and changes at the Buffington Island Memorial Park at Portland in preparation
for the Civil War sesquicentennial observance to be held
July 20-21 were among the topics discussed at a recent
meeting of the Board of Directors of the Buffington Island
Battlefield Preservation Foundation.
Karen Hassel of the Ohio Historical Society met
with the Board of Directors and reported on a proposal
to change the name of the park to “Buffington Island
Battlefield Memorial Park.” She also reported that the
Ohio Historical Society is having the plaques cleaned for
the McCook memorial and that in preparation for next
month’s commemoration, some cleanup and other work
is ongoing at the park.
Some of the historical markers, she added, are being relocated, the abandoned well on the McKelvey property behind
the Indian Mound which is in the park area is being filled in,
and arrangements have been made for tapping into the well
at the community center for water at the park site.
She also noted that planning is going well for the
150th commemoration of the Battle at Buffington Island and reported on planned events to include a a trip
over a portion of Meigs County Heritage Trail, living
history demonstrations, and historical displays at the
Portland Community Center.l
It was suggested that Steve Evans be contacted about a
donation toward the event, that support be solicited from
See EVENTS ‌| A2

Two years later, three
families still grieving
Photos by Alex Hawley and Stephanie Filson

Now that summer is in full swing, the thought of mouth-watering local produce isn’t far from our minds. In just a few
short weeks, local farmers and farmers markets will be offering their bounty to area residents. Right now, however,
farmers are hard at work in the space between planting and harvesting. This time frame includes a lot of hoeing,
‘suckering’ and cultivating in order to offer delicious local produce a little later in the summer.

Questions still
surround deaths,
disappearance
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

MASON COUNTY — “I
can’t stand thinking we’re
going to die not knowing
what happened,” Connie
McCarty of Ashton, mother of the late Tonda McCarty Nelson said.
Tonda, along with her
cousin Ashley (Baird) Crawford, were found murdered
in a shallow grave along
Duncan Creek Rd. near Gallipolis Ferry back in July
2011 — the women were
27 and 26 years old, respectively. Both women were last
seen alive June 16, 2011, the
same night Ashley’s husband, William Jeffrey “Jeff”
Crawford disappeared, as
well. Jeff was 28 at the time
of his disappearance.
The Mason County

Detachment of the West
Virginia State Police have
issued warrants for Jeff’s
arrest for the murders of
the two women. The warrants were issued as a
result of an investigation
which included an eyewitness who claims to have
seen Jeff allegedly kill
Ashley and Tonda. The
eyewitness came forward
on July 28, 2011 — a day
after the bodies of the two
women were identified. At
the time the warrants were
issued, Troopers also said
they were investigating another person or persons of
interest that may have been
involved in the murders.
“I pray the Lord will
open the heavens and
help the police,” Connie
added, saying it’s been a
long two years of waiting
for a break in the case.
Last Sunday on June 16,
the day the trio went missing two years ago, a balloon
launch was held at Pleasant
View Church in Gallipolis
See LATER ‌| A2

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page A2 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

One arrested for drug trafficking in Rutland
Staff Report

Local Stocks

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

RUTLAND — One
person has been arrested on drug charges following a traffic
stop in Rutland on
Thursday evening.
Ryan W. Mossburg,
25, of Parkersburg,
W.Va., was stopped
by law enforcement
for speeding.
During the stop,
the Syracuse K-9
unit indicated drugs
in the vehicle.
According to Rutland Police Chief
Steve Williams, several MDMA (raw
Ecstasy), pills, and
marijuana,
were
found in the vehicles.
Mossburg
is
charged with drug
trafficking and is currently being held in
Photo courtesy of the Syracuse Police Department
Syracuse K-9 Raiza is pictured with items found during a traffic stop on Thursday evening in Rutland.
the Middleport Jail.

Events
From Page A1
the Meigs County Commissioners and local banks, and
that promotion by the local tourism bureau be requested.
Hassel noted that the History Fund Grants, generated
by donations of Ohio Tax refunds, are available to local
history organizations in Ohio.
Open seats on the Board of Trustees were discussed and
President Ed Sharp appointed Jean Hilton to serve the three
year term, 2013-2015. Suggested for other Board seats were
Dr. Carl Denbow of Athens, Jim Mourning of Middleport,
Jim Miracle of Vienna, W. Va. and Bill Reynolds of Marietta.
Contacts with two prospective board members will be made
by Keith Ashley. It was suggested that Al Tonetti take the
position of legislative agent on the board.
It was reported that all of the Heritage Trail signs marking John Hunt Morgan’s trek across Ohio toward Portland
where he hoped to take his men across the Ohio River
into the more friendly territory of what is now West Virginia are now in place.
As for the National Register application to expand the
Buffington Island battle acreage to be including in the
preservation area, Hassel reported that there is nothing
new. The application was filed several months ago and
rejected by many of the owners who felt it was an infringement on their options for use or sale of their property.
The next board meeting will be June 29 at 10 a.m. at the
Museum Annex. It will be followed by a noon meeting of
the 150th Commemoration Committee.

AEP (NYSE) — 43.78
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.40
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) —
84.19
Big Lots (NYSE) — 31.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —
45.69
BorgWarner (NYSE) —
83.26
Century Alum (NASDAQ) —
9.05
Champion (NASDAQ) —
0.27
City Holding (NASDAQ) —
38.68
Collins (NYSE) — 62.84
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.91
US Bank (NYSE) — 35.57
Gen Electric (NYSE) —
23.36
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) —
50.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 51.96
Kroger (NYSE) — 33.77
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 51.51
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.90

OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.24
BBT (NYSE) — 33.68
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.06
Pepsico (NYSE) — 80.13
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.77
Rockwell (NYSE) — 83.85
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —
14.73
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.19
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) —
44.01
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 73.51
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.71
WesBanco (NYSE) — 25.26
Worthington (NYSE) —
32.72
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions for June
21, 2013, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Sunday: A chance of showers
and thunderstorms, mainly after
5 p.m. Mostly sunny, with a high
near 89. Calm wind becoming
south around 5 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Sunday Night: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms,
mainly before 9 p.m. Partly
cloudy, with a low around 65.
Calm wind. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday: A slight chance of
showers between 1 p.m. and 4
p.m., then a chance of showers and
thunderstorms after 4 p.m. Mostly
sunny, with a high near 88. Chance

of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms before 9 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 68. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly
sunny, with a high near 90.
Chance of precipitation is 40
percent.

Wednesday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 71.
Thursday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly
sunny, with a high near 90.
Chance of precipitation is 30
percent.

Tuesday
Night:
Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 71.

Thursday Night: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 71. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.

Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 91. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Friday: A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 81. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.

Later
From Page A1
Ferry to mark the anniversary. Shela Crawford, Jeff’s
mother, attends Pleasant
View Church and helped organize the launch to remember Jeff, Ashley and Tonda
and remember there are still
so many unanswered questions in this case.
Shela and her family
have long maintained they
don’t believe Jeff committed the murders. Shela
said two years later, she’s
not heard from her son nor
has anyone in her family,
including Jeff’s young son
who lives in another state.
Shela can’t stress enough
that her son is among the
missing, and she needs
help to find him. Though
there is no evidence to
support it, the Crawfords
believe Jeff is deceased.
Last Sunday, as over 170
balloons were launched into

the air, prayers were said
and Amazing Grace was
sung. To Shela, Jeff remains
a son, a brother, a father, a
nephew and husband.
“We love him, and we
miss him everyday,” Shela
said about Jeff. “It’s a
nightmare we can’t wake
up from. You don’t realize
things like this happen …
people think it can’t happen to them, but it can.”
“As long as Jeff’s not
found, we’re never going to get answers, ever,”
Connie said.
Both Connie and Ruth
Baird of Southside, Ashley’s mother, said at this
time, they feel Jeff didn’t
commit the murders but
said there was no way to
be 100 percent sure. There
is still so much unanswered. The only thing the
two women are sure of is
their daughters were more

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than victims.
“She was full of life,”
Ruth said about Ashley.
“I’m not saying she was
an angel, she was just …
I can’t describe it,” Ruth
gushed, unable to find
words adequate enough to
do Ashley justice.
Ruth went on to talk
about how she prayed to
have a daughter with big,
brown eyes and how she
got her and had her, at least
for a while; a daughter who
was feisty and loved to ride
four wheelers or just be outside in the world; a daughter who had a family with
parents, brothers, aunts,
uncles, nieces, nephews
and cousins.
“It’s hard to move on
when your heart is broken,
and you can’t fix it,” Ruth
said. “It’s hard to live each
day not knowing what happened to your child.”
Ruth had another setback this year when Ashley’s father, Gary, died suddenly of a heart attack.
“He died with a broken heart grieving,” Ruth
said. “He never got over
it. I’m not over it. Whoever did this wrecked the
whole family.”
The only solace Ruth
and Connie can take is
that whatever happened to
the two girls, they were at
least together at the end.

Submitted photo

A balloon launch at Pleasant View Church in Gallipolis Ferry took place last weekend to
mark the second anniversary of the disappearance of Jeff and Ashley Crawford and Tonda McCarty Nelson. The bodies of Ashley and Tonda were later found and Jeff charged
with their murders. Jeff hasn’t been seen since June 16, 2011 and his family, who believe
he is also deceased, maintains his innocence.

“I feel so unhappy this
time of year,” Connie
said. “It’s worse lately …
I miss my girl.”
Connie said her daughter also wasn’t perfect but
she was more than what
happened to her — describing her as smart, pretty and raised in church.
She made wedding cakes,
created flower arrangements, loved going to the
beach and was even a licensed phlebotomist.
One thing that keeps

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Connie going are Tonda’s
three children of which she
and her husband Johnny
have guardianship. Tonda’s children are currently
12, 9 and 5 years old. Connie says all of them have
memories of their mother
and unfortunately have
had to hear the hard truth
about how Tonda left this
world, at least, what Connie knows of the truth.
“Some days I cry and
cry,” Connie explained.
“It’s been eating me alive
lately. I need to know. I
want to know who caused
my girl and Ashley to lose
their lives. What led up to
it? Who did it? Knowing
won’t bring her back, but
it will help me. It tortures
me to death. I don’t care
how bad it was, I want to
know. If it’s not as bad as
I had thought, it will ease
my mind. It can’t be worse
than I’ve imagined.”
“People get in more

trouble for killing a dog
than anybody’s got for killing two human beings,”
Connie said. “They just
got thrown away (in the
shallow grave) and that’s
it? But that’s not it for us.”
All three mothers have
imagined countless scenarios of what fate their
children met that June
night; all of them still
needing answers and hoping people don’t forget.
“I don’t want people to
forget,” Shela said. “I live
with this 24 hours a day …
it doesn’t go away.”
“I’d like justice for my
daughter,” Ruth said,
though
acknowledging,
nothing will bring her back.
The West Virginia
State Police continue to
actively investigate this
case. Anyone with new
information should call
the WVSP Mason County
Post at 304-675-0850.

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�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Meigs County Community Calendar
Sunday, June 23
REEDSVILLE — Christian artist
Jimmy Dooley will be in concert at
the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene at 10:45 a.m. The church is
located on the corner of Fellowship
Drive and SR 124 near the entrance
to Forked Run State Park. A carry-in
dinner will be held afterwards.
Monday, June 24
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Veterans Services Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at the office located at
117 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
RACINE — The Southern Local
Board of Education will meeting in
regular session at 8 p.m. in the Elementary Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Bethel Worship Center will host its annual American Red Cross Blood Drive from 2-7
p.m. at the church. The blood drive
event will feature several door prizes
to be given away for those who register when they donate blood, or donors can register in advance online at
www.redcrossblood.org.
HARRISONVILLE — Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet at 11
a.m. at the Presbyterian Church.
Blood pressures will be taken after
which a potluck luncheon will be held.
Tuesday, June 25
POMEROY — Dr. Nicholas
Landry will speak from 9 a.m. to
noon at the Mulberry Community
Center. The topic will be the drug
abuse problem in the communities.
POMEROY — Meigs Athletic

Boosters will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the library at Meigs High School. Officers will be elected.
POMEROY — The June meeting of the Meigs County Emergency
Planning Committee (LEPC) will be
held at 11:30 a.m. in the Senior Citizens Center. A discussion on the table top exercise, just completed, will
be on the agenda as well as progress
on the new EOC/911 Center.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Tea Party will hold its regular meeting
at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs Senior Center, 112 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. A
time of prayer will be held from 7:007:15 p.m. for those who would like to
pray for our country and its leaders.
Ed Rake, SE Ohio Director of the Ohio
Liberty Council, will be speaking on
current issues. Terri Blackwood will
be reporting on upcoming events, Dan
Lantz and Craig Wehrung on recent
meetings attended by local Tea Party
members, and Tom Gannaway presenting Constitutional Tidbits. There
will be an open forum. Everyone is welcome. Please come and bring a friend!
Snacks will be served.
Wednesday, June 26
POMEROY — The American Red
Cross will hold a blood drive from
1-6 p.m. at the Mulberry Community
Center on Mulberry Avenue. Walk-ins
welcome or schedule your appointment at 1-800-REDCROSS or online
at www.RedCrossBlood.org (enter
sponsor code: MeigsCommunity).
POMEROY — A community dinner will be held at the New Begin-

nings United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy, 4:30 to 6 p.m. Menu will
be ham loaf, macaroni and cheese,
mixed vegetables and dessert. The
public is invited.

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A3

Gallia County
Community Calendar

Events
Sunday, June 23
PERRY TWP. — Strother and Nellie (Swindler) Houck
reunion, Raccoon Creek County Park at shelter house#5
Friday, June 28
POMEROY — The Jackson Coun- (Bob White). For any questions, call (740) 256-6028.
ty, W.Va. Senior Choir will present a
Tuesday, June 25
concert at 7 p.m., at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church. The pubGALLIPOLIS — Gallia County Veterans Service Comlic is invited. Southern gospel music, mission meeting, 4:30 p.m., Gallia County Veterans SerGaither style, will be featured.
vice Center, 323 Upper River Road, Suite B. The VeterMIDDLEPORT — A free commu- ans Service Commission meets on the second and fourth
nity dinner will be served beginning Tuesday of each month.
at 5 p.m. at the Middleport Church of
GALLIPOLIS — Open Gate Garden Club meeting at
Christ Family Life Center. The menu the home of Kathy Lambert. Program: Flying Flowers by
will include johnny marzetti, salad, Kathy Lambert. Education: Host plants.
rolls and sherbet. There will also be a
free clothing giveaway.
Thursday, June 27
GALLIPOLIS — French 500 Free Clinic, 1-4 p.m., 258
Saturday, June 29
Pinecrest Drive, just off Jackson Pike. The clinic serves
POMEROY — A candle light vigil the uninsured residents of Gallia County between the
and balloon release will be held from ages of 18 and 65.
7-9 p.m. on the Pomeroy Parking
Lot. The event is being held in memSunday, June 30
ory of those lost to drug abuse and in
CHESHIRE
—
Bradbury-Jenkins
reunion, 1 p.m., Old
honor of those in recovery. The event
is organized by R.A.C.E. (Recover- Kyger Baptist Church located on Old Kyger Church Road
ing Addicts Community Educators). off of Stingy Creek Road. A pot-luck meal will be served.
Sunday, June 30
REEDSVILLE — Biram-Hayman
Reunion, 1 p.m. at Shelter House 2 at
Forked Run State Park.
CHESHIRE — Bradbury-Jenkins
reunion, 1 p.m., Old Kyger Baptist
Church located on Old Kyger Church
Road off of Stingy Creek Road. A potluck meal will be served.

Tuesday, July 2
GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Clinic and Holzer Medical Center Retirees, will meet for lunch at noon on Tuesday, July
2. Meeting will be held at the Golden Corral Restaurant.
Saturday, July 6
GALLIPOLIS — GAHS Class of 1954 will meet at 9:30
a.m. for brunch at the Golden Corral. Anyone interested
from other classes or other old friends are welcome to join.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Vacation Bible School
COOLVILLE — Whites
Chapel Wesleyan Church
in Coolville will have
Bible School, June 24-26
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Theme will be HayDay.
The kick-off party will be
at the church on Sunday,
June 23, 6 p.m. For more
information call Bonnie
Putman at 667-6343.
RACINE — Morning Star
United Methodist Church
will hold Vacation Bible
School from 6:30-8 p.m.,
June 25-27. a final practice
and cook out will be held at
6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June
29. The VBS program will
be held at 10 a.m. on Sunday, June 30. For more information contact Randy at
(770) 402-3961 or Patrece
at (740) 416-9282.

Scholarship
Applications
SYRACUSE — Applications for the Carleton
College Scholarships for
Higher Education are
available for legal residents
of the village of Syracuse.
Residents can pick up an
application from Joyce
Sisson, College Road, or
from Gordon Fisher, 1402
Dusky Street. Applications
are due back by June 25,
2013. Legal residents of
Syracuse can qualify for
scholarships awards for a
maximum of two years.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from

9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.
July 4th activities
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Fourth of July
celebration will be held
on Thursday, July 4, with
events beginning at 4
p.m., and concluding at 10
p.m. with fireworks. Donations are currently being
accepted by the Middle-

port Community Association to help expand the
fireworks display.
WILKESVILLE — The
annual Fourth of July parade in Wilkesville will be
held at 11 a.m. on July 4.
Registration is free and be-

gins at 10 a.m. Prizes will
be awarded for various parade categories. For more
information call 669-5646.
Consumer
Confidence Report
MIDDLEPORT — The

Village of Middleport has
mailed its 2012 Consumer Confidence Report.
Anyone not receiving
one may pick it up as the
Public Works office located at 659 Pearl Street in
Middleport.

SUMMER QUARTER
BEGINS JULY 8TH
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“Careers Close To Home”

Gallia County Local Briefs
Historical preservation
board to hold meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Historical Preservation Board will hold a
meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, June
24 at the city’s municipal building, 333
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The meeting
room can be accessed from the entrance
door next to 2 1/2 Alley. On the agenda is the approval of the minutes from
the May 28 meeting, case #1 — Sandra
Darnbrough, 311 Third Avenue, sign,
concerns on any other properties in the
historical district and any other matters brought before the board. For more
information, please call Bev Dunkle at
441-6015 or Brett Bostic at 441-6022.
Local board of education meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County
Local Board of Education will hold a
board meeting at 7 p.m. on Monday,

June 24 at the Gallia County Local
Schools Administrative Office located at
230 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
Rio Valley Stables hosting
‘horse adventure program’
RIO GRANDE — Rio Valley Stables,
located at 635 Farmview Road, will be
hosting a “horse adventure program” this
summer on June 24-28, July 8-12, July
22-26 and August 12-16. The program is
for ages seven and up and teaches basic
horsemanship, safety, handling and care
of horses. Riders will meet every morning from 8 a.m.-12 p.m. Arena riding experience will be for children ages 7-9 and
trail riding experience will be for those attendees ages 10-18. Upon completing the
course, students will receive a certificate.
Pre-registration is required and availability is limited. For more information or to
register call (740) 245-5342.

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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Opinion

For re-enactors, Gettysburg
is the pinnacle of their hobby
Genaro C. Armas,
The Associated Press

GETTYSBURG, Pa. —
The commander of the
Confederate army marched
to the front of the makeshift classroom in jeans
and a dress blue shirt to deliver battle plans to his top
lieutenants, complete with
a PowerPoint presentation
and laser pointer.
Gen. Robert E. Lee
would have been proud,
if not perplexed, in seeing how Brian Gesuero
took charge of the preparations for recreating the
Battle of Gettysburg.
This year’s commemoration has even more significance, given that it’s
the 150th anniversary of
the Civil War, and Gettysburg will represent
the pinnacle of the re-enactment careers of thousands of Civil War buffs.
“This will be special, different than the other ones.
It’s the turning point of the
war,” said Gesuero, 44, a
firefighter from Federalsburg, Md. “This is our one
chance to do it right.”
Actually, the 150th anniversary of Gettysburg is
so big that it’s getting two
separate re-enactments.
A group called the BlueGray Alliance expects more
than 10,000 re-enactors to
take part in its event, June
28-30. This group has also
held large-scale re-enactments, in honor of the Civil War’s 150th anniversary,
at Vicksburg, Shiloh, Twin
Rivers and Wilson’s Mill.
The National Park Service
official events start June 30.
The battle was fought July
1-3, 1863, at locations that
have become legendary to
war buffs, like Devil’s Den,
the Wheatfield and Little
Round Top. Gettysburg was
the bloodiest conflict of the
Civil War, with more than
51,000 casualties.
But the re-enactments
themselves occur on private property, not the actual battlefield.
The Gettysburg Anniversary Committee has more
than 10,000 participants
registered for the second
gathering on July 4-7 on
fields at the Redding Farm
north of town. It’s the

group to which Gesuero,
along with federal counterpart Allen Baldwin,
methodically presented reenactment preparations.
The groups had discussed holding just one reenactment, similar to the
135th anniversary in 1998.
Back then, two events
were eventually combined
into one large battle.
Not this time around.
The topic’s touchy to all
sides, but essentially the
groups couldn’t reconcile
differences over how to
run the events.
The federal commander
for the Blue-Gray Alliance
event, Bob Minton, said
his group is proud to have
secured the Bushey Farm,
the site of the 135th anniversary
re-enactment.
That piece of land contains
a long sloping ridge that
resembles the battleground
for Pickett’s Charge, the famous confrontation on the
final day of the battle.
“It really gave us an opportunity for a wonderful piece of ground,” said
Minton, a Fostoria, Ohio,
resident who works for an
electrical supply company.
Pride is also evident in
the voices of members of
the Gettysburg Anniversary Committee.
Jake Jeanette, of Swansboro, N.C., was assigned
the distinction of depicting
Confederate Gen. Lewis Armistead, who fixed his hat
to the point of his sword in
leading his brigade before
being mortally wounded at
a spot considered the Confederacy’s
northernmost
advance in the war.
“If we can pull these things
off … it’s going to be something to remember,” said
Jeanette, wearing a gray hat
with a yellow “CS” insignia.
Beyond the competitive edge and political
squabbles — much like
many other hobby groups
— are genuinely affable
feelings. Members of each
group wish the others well
and share the same goals
of educating the public
and commemorating the
bloody skirmish.
The re-enactors are
mainly a friendly, chatty
bunch, eager to indoctrinate anyone curious about

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the hobby — especially for
the 150th anniversary.
Ken Janson is traveling
all the way from Chiloquin,
Ore., as captain of a group
that portrays Hurt’s Battery, light artillery from
Alabama during the Civil
War. But this re-enacting
crew is based on the West
Coast, and it’s lugging two
cannons and three horses
with them, too, to take
part in both Gettysburg
events this year.
“I figured driving that far,
we might as well do as much
as we can,” said Janson, a retired teacher who will turn
66 while at Gettysburg.
Janson said he has no
emotional or political allegiance to the Confederacy
any more than he does to
the Union. He’s simply fascinated about the period
and the complex nature of
the war and its aftermath.
“I admit it, I’m just a big
kid and I love making big
noises with cannons,” he
said in a phone interview.
But for him, re-enacting
is more than just about
faux battles. He especially
enjoys the interactions with
visitors to the re-enactor
camps — and yes, the participants will stay in tents,
too, as the real soldiers did.
“Just to get people to think
that (the war) was way more
complicated than what people believed,” he said.
Minton, the federal commander, started getting
involved around the time
that the 1993 movie “Gettysburg” was released. The film,
based on the Pulitzer Prizewinning novel “The Killer
Angels,” by Michael Shaara,
inspired many others like
Minton to get involved, too.
Minton looks forward to
the camaraderie built up
around campfires at night,
exchanging stories and
ideas about the war.
“We all have different areas that interest us. What an
incredible learning tool,” he
said. “If you picture talking
to these people constantly,
it just grows into real, good
friendships … It really makes
an event almost a reunion.”
One in which most participants are wearing wool
clothing, anyway, to match
the authentic uniforms of
the Civil War.

Page A4
Sunday, June 23, 2013

Tony Soprano proves to be more
than a memorable TV character
David Bauder,

AP Television Writer

NEW YORK — James Gandolfini’s portrayal of Tony Soprano represented more
than just a memorable TV character. He
changed the medium, making fellow antiheroes like Walter White and Dexter Morgan
possible and shifting the balance in quality
drama away from broadcast television.
The passage of time since “The Sopranos” ended in 2007 brought all of that
into sharp relief even before Gandolfini’s
death of a heart attack while vacationing
in Italy on Wednesday.
Television characters certainly weren’t
one-dimensional when David Chase cast the
little-known Gandolfini in the lead role of
his series about the personal and work families of a New Jersey crime boss. But there
were limits: Flaws in a TV hero character
had to be affectionate grace notes, like Jim
Rockford’s poor choice of friends or Arnie
Becker’s womanizing on “L.A. Law.”
The unwritten rule: Don’t make your
central character someone viewers will
recoil from. Break the mold and failure
looms. The 1980s comedy “Buffalo Bill”
on NBC was highly regarded but conventional wisdom was that it lasted only a
year because Dabney Coleman’s lead character was such a creep.
It’s possible to even pinpoint the moment that “rule” was wiped off the books.
In the fifth episode of “The Sopranos,”
Tony accompanies his daughter on a trip
to scout out colleges and spies another
mobster who was hiding in the witness
protection program. Tony strangles him.
“There’s no question Tony Soprano was
at the center of ‘The Sopranos,’” said David Bianculli, a longtime TV critic who
teaches television at New Jersey’s Rowan
University. “And there was no question
how flawed and sometimes despicable he
was. But he also had things people could
relate to,” like his tortured relationship
with his mother and emotional issues that
led him to seek psychiatric help.
Draw a direct line from Tony to the serial
killer at the center of Showtime’s “Dexter,”
the chemistry teacher turned drug kingpin
in AMC’s “Breaking Bad,” Jax Teller and
the motorcycle club on FX’s “Sons of Anarchy,” the turncoat hero Nicholas Brody on
“Homeland,” the spies Philip and Elizabeth
Jennings on FX’s “The Americans.”
Keep going.
“I don’t think ‘The Shield’ would have
happened without ‘The Sopranos,’” said
John Landgraf, the FX network’s president
and general manager. He’s not sure a pilot
episode with the lead character, Michael
Chiklis’ Vic Mackey, killing another cop
would have been green-lighted if it hadn’t
been three years after Tony made his debut.
It’s not just psychopaths, either. Don
Draper’s morally compromised advertising
executive on AMC’s “Mad Men” owes its
existence to the television “rule” that Tony
Soprano ended. The characters’ flaws earn
a pass, even devoted support from viewers,
through strong writing and acting.

Notice something else? All of those
characters appear on cable, not broadcast
programs. “The Sopranos” on HBO led
the way, providing the example to other
networks that they could change their appeal and identity by investing in quality
series that create a buzz.
“Cable networks are no different from
broadcast networks,” Bianculli said. “When
they see a success, they want to copy it.”
“The Sopranos” in 1999 was the first
cable series to earn an Emmy nomination
for best television drama, although ABC’s
“The Practice” won. In 2003 both “The
Sopranos” and HBO’s “Six Feet Under”
were nominated, the first time there were
multiple cable nominees for best drama.
“The Sopranos” broke through and won
the Emmy in 2004 and 2007.
Last year five of the six nominees for
that award (including the victorious
“Homeland”) were cable series. The only
broadcast series nominated was PBS’
“Downton Abbey.”
In 13 years, that’s a complete turnaround.
Landgraf was working at NBC back at
the beginning (where they were putting
a pretty good drama named “The West
Wing” on the air) and the success of “The
Sopranos” was noted. Broadcasters were
envious of the freedom cable networks had
to depict sex, language and violence. But
it was the authenticity of the characters on
cable that made the real difference, he said.
Their audiences shrinking and the
stakes higher, the broadcast networks
have generally responded by being less
willing to take chances.
“Insurgents are always willing to take
risks,” Landgraf said. “The incumbents
don’t, because they have a fortified castle to protect.”
“The Sopranos” broke ground with its
structure, too. New story lines popped up
all the time, sometimes dramatic, sometimes banal. Sometimes they were resolved.
Sometimes, like an odd trip to the pine barrens, they were forgotten. Sometimes what
seems to be important turns out to be random and withers away. Like in life itself.
That gave the show’s finale all of its power. Tony’s family gathers for a family dinner,
bonding over onion rings. All of the show’s
unresolved story lines provided the backdrop. The timing — the show’s last supper — offered an edge-of-your-seat tension.
Will there be one grand climax? How many
questions will be answered? Will Tony pay
for his sins by being blown away?
Nah. Nothing much happened. Kind of
like most nights for most people, really.
Ever since that ending there have been periodic reports or hopes that the cast of “The
Sopranos” would gather again for a feature
film. That dream ended Wednesday night
in Rome, just like the shooting death of John
Lennon ended the idea of a Beatles reunion.
That’s not to diminish the work of all of the
other actors in “The Sopranos” cast, just like
we didn’t diminish the contributions of Paul
McCartney, George Harrison or Ringo Starr.
It’s just that without Tony, without
James Gandolfini, what’s the point?

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�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A5

Obituaries
John
Randall Coulson

John Randall Coulson,
72, loving husband, father,
grandfather, brother and
friend, of Coolville, Ohio,
passed away peacefully
with his family at his side,
Friday, June 21, 2013, at his
residence.
He was born February
8, 1941, in Little Hocking,
Ohio, son of the late Everett and Arrena McDaniel
Coulson. He was a member
of Torch Baptist Church and retired from Amoco after 36
years of service.
He is survived by his wife, Marilyn Buckley Coulson;
two daughters and sons-in-law, Joy Ann and Juan Torres
and Kay Sue and Mike Arnold; five grandchildren; two
great-grandchildren; and a brother, Lee Allen Coulson.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
a brother, Charles Arnold Coulson.
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Monday, June 24, 2013,
at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, Ohio, with
Pastor Joe Law officiating. Burial will be in the Torch
Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-6 p.m. on Sunday at
the funeral home.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Carl E. James

Carl E. James, age 79,
of Crown City, passed
away on Thursday, June
20, 2013, at his residence.
Born September 14, 1933,
in Gallia County, he was
the son of the late Frank
and Norma Barcus James.
In addition to his parents,
Carl was preceded by his
wife Jo Ann Call James; by
a son, Bruce James; and
by two brothers, Marlin
and Leo James.
Carl was the third generation of his family to work on
the river; he retired as a river boat captain after 48 years
of service. He was a United States Army Veteran. He was
a member and ordained deacon of Providence Missionary Baptist Church. He also enjoyed farming.
Carl is survived by two sons, Brent (Tami) James of
Crown City, and Brice (Teddi) James of Veto, OH; two
daughters, Carla (Bill) Swisher of Cheshire, and Kristy
(Tim) Huffman of Hamlin, WV; six grandchildren, Gavin
(Kelly) James, Kari James, Lauren (Robert) Elliott,
Jordan Swisher, Lydia James and Lindsey James; three
great-grandchildren, Gabriel Elliott, Makia Miller and
Matthew Miller; one brother, Don (Nancy A.) James of
Gallipolis; and two sisters, Joyce Violand of Crown City,
and Charlotte Beach of Vinton. Also surviving is a sister-

in-law, Nancy K. James Myers of Crown City, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday, June 23,
2013, at the Providence Missionary Baptist Church with
Pastor Troy Delaney officiating. Burial will follow in Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home on Saturday from 6-9 p.m. and
at the Church on Sunday one hour prior to services.
Military Honors will be presented at the cemetery by
members of the National Guard.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Providence Missionary Baptist Church building fund c/o Kim
Dennison 359 Mercerville Road Crown City, Ohio 45623.
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com.

Carroll M. Adams Jr.

Carroll M. Adams Jr., 89, of New Haven, West Virginia,
passed away on June 20, 2013. He was born on October 25,
1923, in Clarksburg, West Virginia, son of the late Carroll M.
Adams Sr. and Doris Wymer Adams. He was a World War
II Army veteran who participated in the campaign in New
Guinea.
Mr. Adams was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Morning Dawn Lodge #7 FAM of Gallipolis, Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks Lodge #107 of Gallipolis, Life Member of Stewart Johnson Post #9926 VFW in Mason, Smith
Capehart Post #140 of the American Legion and he was an
Honorary Kentucky Colonel. He was a Logan High graduate
and a graduate of Ohio University. He was a member of the
Golden Alumni Association and the Ohio Bobcat Club. He
was an accountant and retired from Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Adams is survived by his wife of sixty-two years, Enid
Adams of New Haven; son, Bruce (Marjorie) Adams of Houston, Texas; grandchildren, Michael Adams of West Palm
Beach, Florida and Lori Adams of Huntington, West Virginia;
step grandchildren, Josh Aamodt, Tera (Kossi) Govina and
John Aamodt; great-grandchildren, Chianti Littlejohn, Amari
Felder, Austin Adams, Alexis Aamodt and Kaylee Aamodt.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, June 25,
2013, at the Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven with Pastor Neil Cadle officiating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Cemetery where military funeral honors will be presented by the
American Legion Post 140 and the VFW post 9926. Visiting
hours will be from 6-8 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonfh.com.

Robert ‘Bob’ F. Bostwick

Robert “Bob” F. Bostwick, 82, of Ocala, FL (formerly of
Gallipolis, Ohio), passed away Saturday, March 16, 2013, at
his home.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Army, receiving an honorable
discharge from the armed forces in 1953. During his enlistment, he served in the Korean War. He was retired from Rolling Hills Golf Course, and had spent his retirement spending
time with his family. His hobbies included working in the
yard, flea marketing and gun trading.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Ernestine Bostwick
of Ocala, and his son, Robert W. Bostwick of Boulder, CO.
He is survived by his daughters, Robin Lee and Karen
Brumfield, both of Ocala; a granddaughter, Krystal Kerr of
Lawtey, FL; and four great-grandchildren, Logan, Blake, Alexis and Laela Wyckoff of Ocala, FL.

A graveside service will be held Wednesday, June 26, 2013,
at 1 p.m. at Centenary Cemetery. Rev. James Chapman of
Gallipolis will be officiating the service.

Mary Arlene Coy

Mary Arlene Coy, 72, of Reedsville, Ohio, passed away Saturday, June 22, 2013, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
She was born Feb. 1, 1941, in Reedsville, Ohio, daughter of
the late Ralph and Freda Blake Pullins.
She is survived by three sons, Ronald and Janie, Randall
and Patty and Russell; eight grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; two brothers, Roy Pullins and Ellis English; and five
sisters, Nancy Blake, Emma Ashley, Myla Randolph, Jerry
Jones and Kathie English; and the father of her children, Walter M. Coy.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
her step-father, Ellis English.
Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, June
25, 2013, at the Stewart Cemetery, Hockingport, Ohio.
Friends may call at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home Tuesday, from 10-11 a.m.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

Emma Louise Shoemaker

Emma Louise Shoemaker, 89, of Gallipolis, died Friday
evening, June 21, 2013, at Holzer Senior Care Center. Born
December 14, 1923, in Gallia County, she was the daughter
of the late Herman and Faye Calhoun Harrison. In addition
to her parents, Louise was preceded by her husband, Darrell
Shoemaker, and by two brothers, Merrill ‘Jud’ Harrison and
Harold ‘ Bud’ Harrison.
Louise retired as a supervisor from the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
She is survived by a son, Ed (Jane Ann) Slagle of Gallipolis. two step sons, David (Melinda) Shoemaker of Tennessee, and Robert Shoemaker of Gallipolis. two grandchildren,
Chris (Julie) Slagle and Stacy (Todd) Lawson; two stepgrandchildren, Jenna Shoemaker and Leah Watson; and six
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Tuesday,
June 25, 2013, at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Entombment will follow in the Chapel of Hope at Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral Home on
Monday from 6-8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the charity
of your choice in Louise’s memory.
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halley-wood.
com.
See OBITUARIES ‌| A7

Ain’t It Nifty
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Happy Birthday !

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Page A6 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Immigration tops Racine Grange agenda
RACINE — The ongoing immigration problem in the United
States was the top subject of discussion at a recent meeting of
Racine Grange.
That discussion led to passing
two resolutions to be submitted
to Rep. Bill Johnson and Ohio’s
two senators — one pertaining
to legalizing immigrants and the
other to the financial burden it
places on the country.
It was reported at the meeting that the White House has

acknowledged that despite more
deportation than ever, the flood
across the border has not eased.
Members expressed concerns
about one Congressional plan
that would not first close the
U.S. borders before dealing with
legalizing immigrants.
A resolution was approved to be
sent to Rep. Bill Johnson and Ohio’s
two senators asking that “no reform
of immigration be considered until
the borders are fully closed.”
Continuing in the immigration

theme, members expressed concern about the burden on the finances of the United States with
allowing illegal immigrants to
stay in the country. After some
discussion, another resolution
was passed to “oppose any financial benefits being given to illegal aliens since it rewards their
breaking of law and puts a strain
on the US. finances.”
It was noted during the meeting that the secretary has referred
the current problem of Racine

Grange’s tax exempt status to
U.S. Rep. Johnson. With the huge
number of granges dealing with
this problem, it was suggested that
the Internal Revenue Service may
have targeted granges along with
the Tea Parties to abuse. It was reported that the Ohio State Grange
master is also sending letters to
the entire Ohio Congressional delegation on this very issue.
The community service chairman noted that she had acquired
a supply of mittens, gloves and

hats to be donated to the Ohio
State Grange’s project.
Annual inspection was conducted by Opal Dyer, Meigs
County Jr. Deputy Master. Members conferred the second degree. Star Grange members were
guests for the meeting and joined
Racine for a covered dish dinner.
Olivia Yost will be the Ohio
State Junior Grange camp near
Zanesville later this month.
Mary Kay Yost and John Easterday were reported ill.

Vinton Elementary students
celebrate Right to Read Week

Submitted photo

Thaddeus Rex leads a student writing workshop at Vinton Elementary during Right to Read Week.

VINTON — Vinton Elementary students
celebrated Right to Read Week on May 1317 with the theme “Ice Cream for Reading”
and an enthusiastic love of reading.
Students received ice cream-themed
bookmarkers, pencils and bags. Students
participated in dress-up days, which included school spirit day, crazy sock day,
crazy hat day, read a t-shirt day and dress
like your favorite character day.
During the book fair, students received
two free books to kick-off their summer
reading project. Throughout the year, Vinton Elementary participated in the Pizza
Hut “Book It” program. Students received
a certificate for a free personal pizza as
they met specific reading goals.
The week kicked off with a performance by Thaddeus Rex. After leaving
the Emmy winning PBS Kids show, “The
Friday Zone,” Thaddeus started writing
and performing full-time. He’s since won
more than 20 awards, including a Grand
Prize in The John Lennon Songwriting
Contest and the James Patterson Page
Turner Award. With funny songs, he
showed students how reading stories
inspires creativity and gives them ideas

for writing stories, poems and songs.
He performed for students and parents
during Literacy Family Night on Monday,
May 13. He and the students sang a song
they had written together earlier in the
day during a writers workshop. Teachers
celebrated the evening by giving away a
free book to each child in attendance.
Bossard Library read stories to each
classroom. They shared information on
their fun and exciting summer reading
programs, participation in which is a great
way to help meet the requirements for the
school districts summer reading project.
On Wednesday, Dome Theater — a mobile digital theater featuring educational
programs about Dinosaurs, the Dead Sea,
and Fantasy Worlds — came to the school
for the students to enjoy. Students entered
an inflatable dome and watched an amazing, educational movie that encompassed
the entire dome.
Each classroom presented a reader’s
theater play to other classrooms. Classrooms held reading competitions, coloring contests and writing contests.
Students ended the reading celebration
with ice cream.

Nevada’s governor shows GOP strength in states
CARSON CITY, Nev.
(AP) — When Republican governors in November gathered in Las Vegas
to discuss how to recover
from their party’s latest
electoral drubbing, the
popular GOP governor of
Nevada wasn’t there.
Instead, Brian Sandoval

was in Washington, D.C.,
meeting with Obama administration officials to
seal the deal that made him
the first Republican governor to expand Medicaid
as part of the president’s
health care initiative.
It was part of the pragmatic, centrist, low-key

approach that has kept
Sandoval popular in a
Democratic-trending state
and makes him the heavy
favorite in his re-election
bid next year.
With all the hand-wringing about the future of
the GOP, the party has an
often-overlooked strength:

Popular governors like Sandoval who run most of the
states in the nation, testing
new policies, winning credit for the economic recovery and building records
and expertise for possible
runs at national office.
Partly due to the party’s dominance in the

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2010 election, Republicans hold 30 of the nation’s 50 governorships.
“The larger the electoral
arena, the worse the Republicans seem to do,” said
Eric Herzik, a political science professor at the University of Nevada, Reno,
noting the GOP has lost the
popular vote in five of the
last six presidential elections and blown a number
of high-profile senate races.
“The one electoral arena
that the Republicans have
done fairly well in are the
governorships,” he said.
The 2010 wave ushered
in a number of envelopepushing
conservatives.
Some, like Florida’s Rick
Scott and Pennsylvania’s
Tom Corbett, are longshots for re-election while
others like Wisconsin’s
Scott Walker or Ohio’s John
Kasich have weathered early rough patches and are
now doing well in the polls.
Sandoval offers a contrasting approach.
“He doesn’t get boxed in
or pinned down by labels.
He’s someone who’s willing to set aside traditional
boundaries if it’s going to
solve problems,” said Greg
Ferraro, a longtime Sandoval friend and adviser. “To
me, he’s the kind of Republican that’s going to rebuild
the party.”
Growing numbers of migrants from the coasts and
an expanding immigrant
population have steadily
pushed Nevada into the
Democrats’ column in
presidential elections. But
Sandoval has helped act as
a GOP bulwark at the state
level. He vetoed a bill to expand background checks for
gun purchases, another to
expand the period for voter
registration and nixed a law
to place calorie counts on
chain restaurant menus.
He is so popular that
Democrats have yet to field
a challenger, and most
analysts predict he will be
handily re-elected.
But many of the things
that have endeared Sandoval to Nevada voters
would make him radioactive among the activists
and interest groups who
dominate national Republican politics. He supports
abortion rights. Although
he has refused to approve
new taxes, he has twice
extended what were supposed to be temporary
taxes totaling more than
$620 million.
This month, Sandoval
signed a bill granting cards
that permit driving to people in the country illegally.

“He’s got a nice smile,
a sunny disposition,” said
Chuck Muth, president of
the Nevada conservative
group Citizen Outreach
and one of Sandoval’s critics from the right. “But
that’s not something that’s
going to carry him very far
if he ever gets into a competitive primary.”
Sandoval had previously
served as a state legislator
and Nevada’s attorney general and had a comfortable
position as a federal judge
when he agreed to run for
governor in 2010. The incumbent, Republican Jim
Gibbons, was badly tarred
by a painfully public divorce case that included
allegations of infidelity.
Sandoval ousted him in
the Republican primary
and easily beat Rory Reid,
son of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, in
the general election.
He is one of two Hispanic GOP governors elected
that year, and he co-chairs
a task force with his New
Mexico counterpart, Susana Martinez, to recruit
more Hispanic Republican
candidates. But Sandoval
only won 33 percent of the
Hispanic vote, just three
percentage points higher
than Sharron Angle, the Republican challenger to Senator Reid who campaigned
on her stance against illegal immigration.
Sandoval is a halting public speaker and
cautious politician. He
frustrated many Nevada
Republicans by only giving lukewarm support to
his party’s nominee, Mitt
Romney, in the 2012 presidential elections.
In many states, the governor has unrivalled power and ability to set the
agenda. That’s certainly
true in Nevada, where
the legislature meets for
120 days every two years.
In the 2013 regular session, Sandoval came out
on top, his $6.6 billion
general fund budget proposal left mostly intact
thanks to a GOP minority in both chambers that
kept Democrats from a
two-thirds vote margin
needed to raises taxes.
But Sandoval came under criticism from both
the right and left when
just hours after the June
3 midnight deadline, he
called lawmakers back into
special session to act on
five measures that died in
the final hectic minutes —
including a Clark County
sales tax increase to fund
more police officers.

�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A7

Obituaries
From Page A6

Kenneth
Michael Riffle

Kenneth Michael Riffle,
age 64, of Saint Paris, Ohio,
passed away at 1:58 p.m. on
Thursday, June 20, 2013, in
the Upper Valley Medical
Center, Troy. Born on October 14, 1948, Kenneth
was the son of the late John
B. and Beatrice L. (Young)
Riffle. He is survived by
four children, Jason (Jennifer) Riffle, of Christiansburg, Kristie (Donta)
Medley of St. Paris, Amanda Wolfe and Cathy (Drew)
Schneider, both of Christiansburg.
Kenneth was a loving grandfather to six grandchildren.
Kenneth was a 1968 graduate of Gallia Academy, Gallipolis, Ohio. He served in the U.S Army during the Vietnam War. He was a member of the Vietnam Veterans of
America, Chapter #97, Dayton, Ohio, and a life member
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, post
#9966 of New Carlisle, Ohio. He was formerly employed
by L.T.V Copperweld, Piqua.
Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, June 25,
2013, at 11 a.m. in the Atkins-Shively Funeral Home,
216 S. Springfield St., Saint Paris, Ohio 43072 with Pastor Josh Kespelher of the First Church of God presiding.
Burial will follow in Upper Honey Creek Cemetery with
Military Honors by the Veterans Elite Tribute Squad.
Visitation for family and friends will be held on Monday,
June 24, 2013, from 5-7 p.m. in the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be sent to Vietnam Vet-

erans Memorial Fund, 1023 15th Street NW 2nd Floor,
Washington, D.C., 20005 or Christiansburg Fire Dept.,
P.O. Box 300, Christiansburg, Ohio 45389. Envelopes
will be available in the funeral home.
Condolences to the family may be sent to www.shivelyfuneralhomes.com.

Kathleen Carrie Baily Scott

Kathleen Carrie Baily Scott, 107, passed away Thursday, June 20, 2013, at Overbrook Center in Middleport,
Ohio.
in 1905, and the eldest of six children, in the Forest
Run Community of Meigs County to Anna Catherine
Baer Baily and John Franklin Baily. She graduated from
Pomeroy High School, Class of 1925, and Ohio University with a teaching certificate in 1927. She began her
teaching career in the Forest Run School and later taught
Primary grades in the Meigs Local School District. In
1934, she was married to John Philip Scott, and resided
in Forest Run throughout her life. She was a member
of the Forest Run United Methodist Church, where she
played piano until the age of 105. She was a member
of the Meigs County Retired Teachers Association and
Pomeroy Chapter #186 OES. She enjoyed quilting in her
spare time and attended the Forest Run Quilters group
every Thursday.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Mary
Jane (Roscoe) Wise of Middleport; two granddaughters
and their husbands, Jennifer (Steve) Harrison of Gallipolis, and Susanna (Jeff) Alleman of Covington, Va.; six
great-grandchildren, Megan (Aaron) Lawhon and Laura
(Jake) Frazier, all of Gallipolis, and Sam, Emily, Hannah
and Ben Alleman of Covington, Va.; and two great, greatgrandchildren, Owen Parker Frazier and Rachel Margree
Lawhon, both of Gallipolis. She is also survived by many

Death Notices
Anderson

ginia. Pastor Billy Burdette
will officiate. Burial will be
in the Melton Cemetery,
Elkview. Friends may call
prior to the funeral service
at the funeral home. Local
services were under the
direction of the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.

Jarrett

A memorial service for
Alice ‘Hank’ Orr will be
held Sunday, June 30,
2013, at 1:30 p.m. at
the First Presbyterian
Church in Gallipolis,
Ohio, with Rev. Dr. Tim
Luoma officiating. Music begins at 1 p.m., and
there will be fellowship
following the service.

Joyce Anderson, 77,
of Gallipolis, died Friday
morning, June 21, 2013, at
Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced in Tuesday’s
edition by Waugh-HalleyWood funeral home.
Joyce Jarrett, 72, Gallipolis, died at 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013,
in the Holzer Senior Care
Center. Funeral services
will be conducted at 2
p.m., Sunday, June 23,
2013, in the Hafer Funeral
Home, 50 North Pinch
Road, Elkview, West Vir-

Orr

Runyon

Charles Cecil Runyon,
63, Gallipolis, formerly
of Kermit, West Virginia
died at 9:15 a.m. Thursday, June 20, 2013, in the
Arbors at Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 1 p.m. Sunday,
June 23, 2013, in the Kermit
Freewill Baptist Church.
Rev. Walter Marcum will officiate. Burial will be in the
Runyon Family Cemetery
near Kermit. Friends may
call after 5 p.m., Saturday at
the church.
Arrangements are by the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
Gallipolis and the Phelps
Sons Funeral Home in
Inez, Kentucky.

Sullivan

Gregory Allan Sullivan,
51, of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died Thursday, June 20,
2013, at Cabell Huntington
Hospital with his family
and friends at his side.
Funeral services will be
held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant
on Monday, June 24, 2013,
at 3:30 p.m. with Pastor
Jonathan Pinson officiating. Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens also in point Pleasant. Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home
on Sunday evening, June
23, from 4-8 p.m.

nieces, nephews and cousins.
She is preceded in death by her parents, Anna and John
Baily; her husband John, along with her siblings, Rose
Genheimer, Ann Watson, Bertha Arnold, Altona Marshall, and John Baily.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., on Sunday, June
23, 2013, at the Forest Run United Methodist Church.
Burial will be at Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m., on Saturday, June 22, at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

William Fredrick ‘Bill’ Snyder

William Fredrick “Bill” Snyder, 54, of Pomeroy, Ohio,
passed away on June 20, 2013. Bill was born on November 20, 1958, son of the late Eloise Casto Eblin and Fredrick Matthew Snyder.
He is survived by his wife of twenty-seven years, Kathleen Annette Campbell Snyder and his daughter and sonin-law, Ruth and Matthew Taynor. He is also survived
by his brothers, Kenneth (Carol) Snyder of Middleport,
Ohio and Ronnie (Zella) Snyder of Pikeville, Kentucky;
sisters, Charlotte (Gary) Smith of Chester, Ohio, Barbara
(Terry) Lewis of West Columbia, West Virginia and Marilyn (Terry) Powell of Rutland, Ohio.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by his son, Marty Snyder; infant brother, George Snyder;
and brother, Larry Wayne Snyder.
A memorial service will be held on Monday, June 24,
2013 at 11:00am with Pastor Brenda Barnhart officiating at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Friends and family visiting time will be from 10am to
11am on Monday at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Billboard won’t count Jay-Z,
Samsung 1M downloads
NEW YORK (AP) — Jay-Z’s got 99 problems and the
Billboard chart is one.
Billboard said Friday it will not include the 1 million
album downloads Jay-Z is giving to Galaxy mobile phone
users through a deal with Samsung. Jay-Z announced the
partnership this week. His new album, “Magna Carta
Holy Grail,” will be released July 7, but it will go out to 1
million Samsung users on July 4.
In a letter posted on Billboard’s website, editorial director Bill Werde says it won’t count the downloads because
Samsung ultimately isn’t selling the album on its phones.
He adds that it wasn’t easy turning down Jay-Z’s request
to include the downloads on the Billboard chart.
“The passionate and articulate argument by Jay’s team
that something was for sale and Samsung bought it …
doesn’t mesh with precedent,” Werde wrote.
Werde added that Billboard has adjusted the charts to
reflect how music is being consumed, and that Jay-Z’s request gives the company more to think about.

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page A8 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

FAA moving toward easing electronic device use
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
government is moving toward
easing restrictions on airline passengers using electronic devices
to listen to music, play games,
read books, watch movies and
work during taxiing, takeoffs
and landings.
An industry-labor advisory
committee was supposed to
make recommendations next
month to the Federal Aviation
Administration on easing the
restrictions. But the agency
said in a statement Friday the
deadline has been extended to
September because committee
members asked for extra time
to finish assessing whether it is
safe to lift restrictions.
“The FAA recognizes consumers are intensely interested
in the use of personal electronics aboard aircraft; that is
why we tasked a governmentindustry group to examine the
safety issues and the feasibility
of changing the current restrictions,” the statement said.
The agency is under public
and political pressure to ease
the restrictions as more people
use e-book readers, music and
video players, smartphones and
laptops. Use of electronic devices is prohibited when aircraft

are below 10,000 feet because
of concern they could create
electromagnetic interference
with critical aircraft systems.
But evidence of the potential
interference is murky.
Cellphone calls and Internet
use and transmissions are also
prohibited, and it’s not expected
those restrictions will be lifted.
Using cellphones to make calls
on planes is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. There is concern that making calls from fast-flying planes
might cause technical difficulties
with cellphone reception on the
ground. There is also the potential annoyance factor — whether
passengers will be unhappy if
they have to listen to other passengers yakking on the phone.
The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that a draft report by the advisory committee indicates its 28 members
have reached a consensus that
at least some of the current restrictions should be eased.
“It’s good to see the FAA may
be on the verge of acknowledging what the traveling public has
suspected for years — that current rules are arbitrary and lack
real justification,” Sen. Claire
McCaskill, D-Mo., one of Con-

gress’ more outspoken critics of
the restrictions, said in a statement. She contends that unless
scientific evidence can be presented to justify the restrictions,
they should be lifted.
Edward Pizzarello, the cofounder of frequent flier discussion site MilePoint, says lifting
the restriction is “long overdue.”
“I actually feel like this regulation has been toughest on flight
attendants. Nobody wants to
shut off their phone, and the
flight attendants are always left
to be the bad guys and gals,” said
Pizzarello, 38, of Leesburg, Va.
“I just hope they do the sensible thing and don’t allow people to talk on their cellphones
during flight,” added Pizzarello,
who flies 150,000 to 200,000
miles a year. “There are plenty of
people that don’t have the social
skills necessary to make a phone
call on a plane without annoying
the people around them. Some
things are better left alone.”
“Before the age of tablets, I
used to read a physical newspaper or magazine. Now I can
do that on my iPad. If the FAA
lets me leave my iPad on,then
that’s one less thing I have to
carry,” Pizzarello said.
Airline consultant Robert

Mann said the biggest benefit
would come on short flights,
where passengers would have
much more time to use the devices since they are above 10,000
feet for a shorter period of time.
That would ultimately give the
airlines more time to sell stuff —
whether that’s Wi-Fi or movies
and TV shows on demand.
Henry Harteveldt, an analyst
with Hudson Crossing, said airlines would only profit if the FAA
also amended the rules to allow
passengers to access the internet
earlier — something that is not
being suggested.
“Unless the FAA is considering relaxing the rules on Wi-Fi
access, this is not about making
money. This is about keeping the
passenger entertained,” he said.
“It’ll be nice not to have to
power down and wait, but it
never really bothered me. As
long as they don’t allow calls I’ll
be happy,” said Ian Petchenik,
28, a Chicago-based consultant
and frequent flier.
“If they change the rule, it
would make my job a whole lot
easier,” said Heather Poole, a
flight attendant for a major U.S.
airline, blogger and author of the
novel “Cruising Attitude.”
Poole said there is a lot of pres-

sure for airlines to have on-time
departures. Flight attendants are
dealing with an “out-of-control”
carry-on bag situation and then
have to spend their time enforcing the electronics rule.
“These days, it takes at least
five reminders to get people to
turn off their electronics, and
even then, it doesn’t always
work,” Poole said. “I think some
passengers believe they’re the
only ones using their devices,
but it’s more like half the airplane
doesn’t want to turn it off.”
Poole said her role as enforcer
during boarding sets the tone of
the rest of the flight.
“We take off, and everyone is
left thinking about how miserable they are for the next four
hours,” she said.
On a recent flight that had
really bad turbulence, a business class passenger wearing
noise-canceling
headphones
missed the captain’s announcement to stay seated.
“Takeoff and landing is when
passengers need to be most
aware of their surroundings in
case — God forbid — we have
to evacuate,” Poole said. “I don’t
see that guy, or any of the ones
like him, reacting very quickly.”

Border security amendment offered in Senate
WASHINGTON (AP)
— An agreement to vastly
increase fencing, patrols
and high-tech monitoring
along the U.S.-Mexico border was formally unveiled
in the Senate Friday, providing powerful momentum to a far-reaching immigration bill backed by
the White House.
With the border security
amendment finalized, the
immigration
legislation
immediately picked up an
additional likely Republican supporter: Sen. Lisa
Murkowski of Alaska, who
signed on as a co-sponsor
of the amendment.
“This amendment will
put to rest any remaining
credible concerns about
the border, about border
security,” Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.,
said on the Senate floor as
he filed the measure and announced procedural steps to
bring it to a vote early next
week. “The opposition of a
small group is not going to
stop this bill from moving
forward,” Reid said.

The deal doubling Border Patrol agents and adding hundreds of miles of
fencing along the Southwest border had already
won support from four
other undecided Republican senators who are now
likely to back the immigration bill when it comes
to a final vote next week.
The legislation opening
the door to citizenship
for millions now appears
within reach of securing
the broad bipartisan majority that its authors say
is needed to ensure serious
consideration by the GOPcontrolled House.
However, the outcome
there remains far from
certain because many
conservatives are opposed
to offering citizenship to
people who came to this
country illegally.
“We really have tried to
secure the border in a way
that we hope can get bipartisan support and that
Americans want,” Sen.
John Hoeven, R-N.D., an
author of the amendment,

told The Associated Press
in a phone interview Friday. “We’re hopeful to have
a good bipartisan majority.”
Sen. John McCain, RAriz., said on Fox News
Channel Friday that “if
there’s anyone who still
will argue that the border
is not secure after this,
then border security is not
their reason for opposing
a path to citizenship for
the people who are in this
country illegally.”
“Is it more than I would
have recommended? Honestly, yes,” McCain said.
“But we’ve got to give people confidence.”
Hoeven developed the
amendment along with Republican Sen. Bob Corker
of Tennessee, in consultation with McCain, Sens.
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.,
Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.,
and other members of the
so-called Gang of Eight
senators who wrote the immigration bill. It prevents
immigrants now here illegally from attaining permanent resident status until a

series of steps have been
taken to secure the border.
These include doubling
the Border Patrol with
20,000 new agents, 18
new unmanned surveillance drones, 350 miles of
new pedestrian fencing to
add to 350 miles already
in place and an array of
fixed and mobile devices to
maintain vigilance, including high-tech tools such as
infrared ground sensors
and airborne radar.
The new provisions
would be put in place over a
decade, in line with the 10year path to a permanent
resident green card that the
bill sets out for immigrants
here illegally. During that
time, the immigrants could
live and work legally in a
provisional status.
Hoeven said the 10-year
cost of the border security
amendment included $25
billion for the additional
Border Patrol agents, $3
billion for fencing and $3.2
billion for other measures.
It’s “border security on
steroids,” said Corker, who

along with Hoeven had
been uncommitted on the
immigration bill. Both are
now prepared to support
it, assuming their amendment is adopted. Sens.
Dean Heller, R-Nev., and
Mark Kirk, R-Ill., also announced their support for
the deal Thursday.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said the
border deal “would constitute a breakthrough”
on immigration. “We’re
pleased that Republicans
and Democrats continue
to work together toward
comprehensive immigration reform,” he said.
The deal on border security came together quickly
over the past several days
after talks had bogged
down over Republicans’
insistence that green cards
be made conditional on
catching or turning back
90 percent of would-be
border crossers. Schumer, other Democrats and
Obama himself rejected
this trigger, which they
feared could delay the path

to citizenship for years.
Obama made his objections known in a phone
call to Schumer from Air
Force One during his trip
to Europe for the Group of
Eight summit earlier in the
week, according to a Senate aide who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
The breakthrough came
when the Congressional
Budget Office released a report Tuesday finding that
the bill would cut billions
of dollars from the deficit.
Schumer’s top immigration aide, Leon Fresco, had
the idea of devoting some
of those billions to a dramatic border buildup.
Graham, who helped
run interference between
Corker and Hoeven and
Democrats in the group,
said that with the budget
office finding in hand, he
sat down with Schumer
and Corker and said,
“OK, let’s go big.”
The idea immediately
appealed to the left and
the right.

Obama to meet with privacy, civil liberties board
grams to ensure that privacy concerns are taken into account.
The president is also tasking
the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, to consider declassifying more details
about the government’s collection of U.S. phone and Internet
records. Obama is specifically
asking Clapper to review possible declassification of opinions
from the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, which ap-

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lifted some of the secrecy surrounding the programs following
disclosures earlier this month
about their existence by former
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the legal opinions from the highly secretive court remain private.
The privacy board was created
in 2004 but has operated fitfully
ever since, given congressional
infighting and at times, censorship
by government lawyers. The board
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term and only became fully functional in May, before the NSA programs became public.
The board’s chairman, David
Medine, said the five-member
group has a “broad range of questions” to ask about the NSA’s
widespread collection programs.
The board was given a classified
briefing on the programs last
week and plans to release a report eventually with recommendations for the government.

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proves the surveillance efforts.
Obama’s meeting with the board
was taking place Friday afternoon,
but the White House wasn’t planning to allow press coverage.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said the meeting would take
place in the White House Situation Room “to allow for the discussion of classified matters.”
“It’s certainly more than a get-toknow-you session,” Carney said.
The government has already

60422631

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is holding
his first meeting with a privacy
and civil liberties board Friday
as he seeks to make good on his
pledge to have a public discussion about secretive government
surveillance programs.
Obama has said the little-known
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board will play a key role in
that effort. The federal oversight
board reviews anti-terror pro-

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�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page A9

Netflix cuts its original TV deal with DreamWorks
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Netflix announced a deal on Monday
to air television programming
from Dreamworks Animation in
what the company described as
its biggest transaction ever for
original first-run content.
Though financial details
were not disclosed, Netflix
Inc. said the agreement includes more than 300 hours of
new TV episodes in a multiyear deal starting in 2014.
The transaction is a major
coup for both companies. It
helps Netflix compete with pay
TV channels such as HBO and
Showtime, and it gives Dreamworks a potentially lucrative
outlet for its shows as it tries to
shed its reliance on two or three
big-budget movies each year.
“This is arguably a groundbreaking deal,” said Tuna Amobi, a Standard &amp; Poor’s equity
analyst who covers both Netflix
and DreamWorks Animation.
While concerns remain about
how much the deal will cost Netflix in the end, the company said
it is a global deal that will allow it
to debut the original series in the
40 countries where Netflix oper-

ates. That could help spread the
costs over more territories and
more subscribers if Netflix continues to grow overseas.
“The big question is if this
is going to be an international
catalyst in terms of subscriber
growth,” Amobi said.
Investors hailed the deal as
a win-win. Netflix shares rose
$15.70, or 7.3 percent, to close at
$229.69 on Monday, while DreamWorks shares rose 92 cents, or 4
percent, to close at $23.73.
As part of the arrangement,
Netflix Inc. doubled down on
original children’s programming,
hoping to strengthen its push to
become a family entertainment
brand. The new content should
ease some of the pain of losing
a range of kids shows from Viacom Inc.’s Nickelodeon network,
including future episodes of
“Dora the Explorer,” which Amazon.com Inc. snapped up for its
streaming service in early June.
The deal suggests DreamWorks will significantly ramp up
its production of TV shows. Currently, it only produces “Dragons: Riders of Berk” for Cartoon
Network, which completed a run

of 20 episodes at 23 minutes
each — less than 8 hours of content in all — in March.
A second season of “Dragons”
is set for release in the fall, and
Netflix had already contracted
with DreamWorks for a series
based on its upcoming film,
“Turbo.” But the deal suggests
that several new series will have
to debut each year to fulfill the
industry standard deal length of
five to seven years.
New series will be based on
characters either from future film
hits, past franchises like “Shrek,”
or even older hits, including
the hundreds of characters like
“Casper the Friendly Ghost,”
which DreamWorks acquired
when it bought Classic Media
last July for $155 million.
The new DreamWorks shows
aren’t likely to tread on ground
already covered under its existing TV shows, according to
DreamWorks spokeswoman Allison Rawlings.
DreamWorks already licenses characters from “Kung
Fu Panda,” ”Madagascar”
and “Monsters vs. Aliens” to
Viacom’s Nickelodeon, which

has been producing original
animated TV shows based on
those movies since 2008.
The multi-year agreement tops
the undisclosed amount Netflix
spent on “House of Cards,” the
political drama starring Kevin
Spacey that debuted to rave reviews on Netflix in February.
Netflix has been adding original programming to its roster
of older movies and TV show
reruns, and is set to launch the
Jenji Kohan-created “Orange Is
the New Black” next month. The
company has said that for the
next several years, it will contain original content spending to
within 10 percent of its $2 billion
in annual content costs.
Netflix’s increased focus on
children’s programming is seen
as a departure from the tactics
of traditional premium pay TV
channels such as HBO, Starz and
Showtime, whose original shows
tend to be tailored to adults. It
also ramps up the competition
for children viewers with Amazon, which said last month it will
produce three new original kids
shows for members of its Amazon Prime subscription plan.

Netflix has said it has 29.2
million streaming video subscribers in the U.S. and 7.1 million internationally as of the end
of March. Those figures are up
5.8 million and 4.1 million respectively from a year ago.
In December, Netflix announced it will offer Disney movies, starting with films released
in 2016. It declined to make a
similar deal for the rights to
Sony movies starting in 2016,
which was kept by Starz.
Investor reaction wasn’t uniformly positive. Analyst Rich
Tullo of brokerage Albert Fried
&amp; Co. said he doubts that
DreamWorks has the capacity to
produce more than one or two
new series a year.
“It’s physically impossible without this content being spread out
over 10 years,” he said.
Hit TV shows aren’t guaranteed, and it’s not clear that this
will make up for Netflix’s loss of
Nickelodeon content, he said.
“Are they going to lose 2 million subscribers off losing Nickelodeon content? That’s possible
too,” he said.

New, intense ride opens at Universal Studios
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)
— Within an hour of the
new Transformers ride
opening at Universal Studios on Thursday, hundreds of people stood in
the sweltering Florida heat
to experience the intense,
3-D thrill ride.
Transformers: The Ride3D is Universal Orlando’s
latest, hyper-real offering to
park visitors. For those who
like dazzling special effects,
gut-wrenching drops and
battling robots, the ride will
not be a disappointment.
The new attraction
opened following an elaborate ceremony featuring
pyrotechnics, a specially
created
“Transformers”
song by the band Cheap

Trick and a flyover by a
formation of private jets
— an experience that one
blogger described as having “rocked our faces off!”
Hundreds of fans cheered
the film’s “stars” — imposing, robotic looking creatures named Bumblebee
and Optimus Prime — as
they walked the red carpet
past the new attraction.
Steven Spielberg, the executive producer of the “Transformers” films, also walked
the red carpet but declined
to give media interviews.
The ride is an interactive, “larger than life
battle” between the action
film franchise’s main characters — the Autobots and
Decepticons. It uses flight

simulator
technology,
along with movie screens,
wind, heat and smoke to
make the riders feel immersed in the experience.
Riders don 3-D glasses before entering the car.
The experience seems
longer than most theme
park rides, stopping at various simulated battles with
spiky gears and tires and
shards of glass swirling
around the riders. At several
points, the car takes simulated plunges several stories
down skyscraper exteriors in an urban landscape.
Theme park enthusiasts
will recognize a similarity
between the Transformers
ride and Universal’s The
Amazing Adventures of Spi-

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in California and Universal
Studios Singapore. But
Mark Woodbury, president of Universal Creative,
said that the Orlando ride
has been “tweaked” and is
even more realistic than
the earlier versions.

“Each time we do it, it
evolves a little bit,” said
Woodbury. “It breaks a lot
of new ground in the level of
the immersion, it’s hyper-realistic, in terms of what the
environment looks like and
the characters look like.”

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der-Man experience; both
rides use a track and platform to move fans around to
different “scenes.”
“You really feel that
you’re a part of it,” said
Tom Williams, chairman
and CEO of Universal
Parks and Resorts. “You’re
not a bystander off to one
side. You’re in the middle
of the action.”
To be sure, it is a lot of
action — possibly too much
for small children or sensitive adults. There is a height
requirement — 40 inches to
ride with an accompanying
adult and 48 inches if the
child wants to ride solo.
Universal has similar
rides at its parks at Universal Studios Hollywood

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60428534

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page A10 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Teen shot in Cincinnati dies; Ky. man charged
CINCINNATI (AP) —
Authorities say a 15-yearold boy has died after
being shot in downtown
Cincinnati just as fans

were leaving a Reds baseball game nearby.
Police say D’Maris Glover died Thursday. He and
two other victims had been

shot Wednesday night at a
bridge connecting downtown Cincinnati with
northern Kentucky.
Court records show

21-year-old Joe Wright of
Dayton, Ky., was initially
charged with three felony
assault counts. Police say
they expect additional

charges after Glover’s death.
Police have said Glover
was shot with two other people while riding in a vehicle.
Authorities have said

the other victims are expected to recover.
Wright’s attorney did
not immediately return a
call to his office Friday.

Mass. man who ordered tie gets SS numbers instead
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
With a little more than two weeks
to go before their wedding, Emily Dreyfuss’ fiance ordered a
tie and pocket square from Gap
chain Banana Republic’s website
to go with his Navy blue suit.
What the couple got in the mail
instead on Thursday would make
an identity thief giddy: the confidential files of about 20 former
employees, including Social Security numbers and W4 tax forms.
“We totally laughed,” Dreyfuss, 29, said on Friday from her
home in Cambridge, Mass.
She had misgivings about the

package as soon as it arrived. It
was really heavy and didn’t say
Banana Republic, but Gap Inc.
She and her fiancee have been
buying each other presents, and
she thought it may have been a
really heavy piece of clothing with
catalogs, said Dreyfuss, the daughter of actor Richard Dreyfuss.
When he opened the package,
inside were three folders sealed
with tape and labeled “HR Administration.” They contained tax and
Social Security information as well
as handwritten resignation letters,
doctors’ notes and salary information — seemingly the employees’

entire record at the company. The
employees were sales support associates and at least one made $9
an hour, Dreyfuss said.
The resignation letters were
mostly from March and addressed formally to “Ms.” and
then the person’s first name.
They were polite and positive,
expressing thanks for the chance
to work for the company and
learning so much. Some ended
by saying, “God Bless.”
Dreyfuss, who runs the home
page and also writes for technology website, CNET, said she
didn’t look through everything.

“I got a queasy feeling and
felt like I should stop looking at
this,” she said.
San Francisco-based Gap
Inc. blamed the mix-up on a
human mistake.
“We’re taking immediate action to evaluate and strengthen
our processes to prevent mismailings in the future and apologize for the error,” spokeswoman
Edie Kissko said in a statement.
Dreyfuss said a Banana Republic representative has since
responded to a tweet about the
mix-up and apologized for what
he called a “horrible mistake.”

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He said clothing and confidential information is sent out
in the same gray bag, and the
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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sports

SUNDAY,
JUNE 23, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

Capehart golf league competes in Meigs County
Staff Report
POMEROY, Ohio — The Meigs
County Golf Course hosted the
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior
Golf League on Thursday morning.
The course was green and lush while
the day was made for golf. Mother
Nature made up for last week’s thunder storms which postponed play at
the Cliffside course in Gallipolis. The
young men and women were given
sunny skies and warm temperatures.
Competition for the various age
group championships intensified. It
was obvious that the youngsters had
been doing their homework as the
scores improved on the short, but
challenging course.
The 10-and-under age group had
its first participants of the season.

Laith Hamid turned in a fine 43 to
win the 10 available points. Landon and Logan McGee tied for second thereby splitting the second
and third place points with each
earning 7 points.
For the second tournament in a
row, Jasiah Brewer came out on top
shooting a 44 to win 10 points in the
11-12 age group. Wyatt Nicholson
finished with a 47 to earn the second place 8 points. Gabe Gilmore’s
54 strokes gave him third place and
six points. A newcomer to the action this week was Nicholas Durst
whose fourth place finished earned
him four points. Jasiah now has a
four-point lead over Wyatt. Gabe’s
eight accumulated points gives him
third place with a shot of catching
the two leaders.

Morgan Miller was the top girl in
this group winning for the second
week in a row. Her score of 50 gave
her 10 points and an accumulated
total of 20 for the two tournaments
played thus far.
The standings in the 13-14 age
group tighten up this week. Jonah
Hoback won the 10 first place points
posting a 44 for the day. Jonah has
now accumulated 18 points. Jacob
Bryant’s score of 50 gives him the
eight second place points and an accumulated total of 10 for the season.
Grant Gilmore score of 60 earned
him six points for the day.
Grant’s accumulated total of 12
points places him currently in second place for the season. A threeSee GOLF ‌| B3

Bill Ingram | Palm Beach Post | MCT photo

The Miami Heat’s Shane Battier (31) bring down a rebound
against the San Antonio Spurs in the first quarter of Game 7
of the NBA Finals on Thursday, June 20.

A test of ‘perseverance’
brings Heat another title
MIAMI (AP) — Even after the confetti fell and the
champagne spilled, in the
early moments of a Game 7
celebration, LeBron James
couldn’t forget Game 6.
The championship the
Miami Heat won Thursday
was almost lost two nights
earlier. So when James
remembers his second
straight title, the save goes
right along with the win.
“To be able to win that
game and force a Game 7
is a true test of our, I guess,
perseverance,” James said,
“and us being able to handle adversity through everything. It meant a lot for
us to be able to do that and
force a Game 7 and being
able to close out at home.”
Doing it that way, following a stunning comeback
with a stirring victory, cemented a place with the
NBA’s giants for this Miami team and its leader.
“Last year when I was
sitting up here with my
first championship, I said
it was the toughest thing
I had ever done,” James
said. “This year, I’ll tell last

year he’s absolutely wrong.
This was the toughest
championship right here
between the two.”
And the San Antonio
Spurs will always know it’s
a title they let slip away.
James scored 37 points
and grabbed 12 rebounds
in a 95-88 victory Thursday
night in a tense game that
was tight until Miami pulled
away in the final minute.
Capping their best season in franchise history
— and perhaps the threesuperstar system they used
to build it — the Heat ran
off with the second straight
thriller in the NBA’s first
championship series to go
the distance since 2010.
Two nights after his
Game 6 save when the Heat
were almost eliminated,
James continued his unparalleled run through the
basketball world, with two
titles and an Olympic gold
medal in the last 12 months.
“I work on my game a
lot throughout the offseason,” said James, who
was MVP for the second
See HEAT ‌| B2

OVP Sports Briefs
Wahama HOF nominations
MASON, W.Va. — A reminder that nominations for
the 2013 Wahama High School Athletic Hall of Fame
will conclude on Monday, July 1. Potential candidates,
including athletes, former coaches or WHS athletic
boosters, will be considered for induction provided
they are nominated on the nomination form that can
be obtained from any Hall of Fame Board of Trustee
member or by visiting the Wahama High School web
site and visiting the sports or forms link.
The completed nomination forms may be submitted
prior to the July 1 deadline to any WHS Athletic Hall
of Fame Board of Trustee member or by mail to Kenny
Greene, P.O. Box 131, 84 Greenfield Drive, Hartford,
WV 25247; Ralph Sayre, P.O. Box 475, 124 Howard
Street, New Haven, WV 25265; or Gary Clark, P.O. Box
704 New Haven, WV 25265.
The Wahama Athletic Hall of Fame Board of Trustees will be conducting a meeting on Tuesday, July 2
at 6 p.m. at the Riverside Golf Course to begin the
2013 selection process. All Board of Trustee members
as well as anyone wishing to participate in the Hall of
Fame procedures are urged to attend.
Gallia Academy all-comer meets
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy High School
will be hosting two all-comer track meets. These meets
will be open to all ages and the first meet will be Saturday,
July 13, with registration beginning at 9 a.m. and events
starting at 11 a.m. There is also a meet scheduled for August 10 at 11a.m. There is a fee for competitors and spectators and volunteers are still needed. Heats will be combined if needed, but winners will be determined by age
groups. Competitors must check in with the clerk at the
second call prior to their event start. Competitors must
have your own implements for shot and discus and must
have experience throwing the discus or on the pole vault.
We will not allow the novice vaulters or disc thrower to
throw or jump for safety reasons. Parents please supervise your kids, you are the coach for the day and please
ensure they make it to their events on time.We will not
enforce limits on the number of events you may enter, but
please monitor number for the smaller kids.To volunteer,
for more information or if you have any questions please
call (740) 645-7316 or email ff1023@att.net
O.O. McIntyre Park coed softball
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The O.O. McIntyre Park District is now accepting registrations for the Coed Softball
League. There is a limit of eight teams for the league,
with a format that will consist of six men and four womSee BRIEFS ‌| B2

Photos by Bryan Walters | Point Pleasant Register

South Gallia girls basketball coach Brett Bostic, to the right of number 20, talks with his troops during a timeout in
the Division IV district championship game against Eastern at the Ohio University Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.

A look back at the 2012-13 year in local sports
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

The school year is over, and
so are the games — but the
memories will always remain.
As the 2012-13 school year
comes to an end, it is a time
for young student-athletes to
recover from a season full of
academic learning and sports
competition. It is also a time
for reflection on all the wonderful accomplishments that
a said individual or team may
have achieved throughout the
course of the last 10 months.
In looking back at the fall,
winter and sports campaigns
within the Ohio Valley Publishing area, the 2012-13 sports
year was very productive for
the tri-county region.
And — in what has become an annual tradition
here at OVP — it is time to
reflect on some of those major accomplishments with a
recap of the top stories to
come out of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties.
This year, we will be focusing on the Top-5 stories to
come out of the OVP area by
recapping a story each day
starting next week. The fifthbest story of the year will run
on Tuesday and continue on
towards the top story of 2013,
which will run in the weekend
sports editions of the Point
Pleasant Register and The
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
But before we dive into those
Top-5 stories, here’s a brief look
at some of the major accomSee LOOK |‌ B3

Gallia Academy junior second baseman Gage Childers applies a successful tag
to a Waverly baserunner during a steal attempt in a Division II district final at
Bob Wren Stadium in Athens, Ohio.

Bradshaw wins 7th West Virginia Open title
VIENNA, W.Va. (AP)
— Starting the final round
with a three-shot lead at the
West Virginia Open on Friday, David Bradshaw gave
the rest of the field little
chance to catch him.
Bradshaw shot a 5-underpar 67 to beat Hurricane
amateur Sam O’Dell by
four strokes at Parkersburg
Country Club.
Bradshaw finished at
11 under, pulling away
with birdies on three of
the final four holes.
O’Dell also shot 67 and
finished at 7 under. Charleston pro Christian Brand and
Morgantown pro Bob Friend
tied for third at 3 under.

Brand shot 69 and Friend
had a 70 Friday.
Bradshaw earned his seventh Open championship
in 10 years. The late Sam
Snead is the standard bearer
with 17 state Open wins.
Bradshaw put up his sixth
consecutive under-par round
in the Open. The Harpers
Ferry native had three bogeys during the tournament.
It was both his best ever
finishing score in relation
to par at the Open and his
largest victory margin. All of
Bradshaw’s six previous wins
either were by one stroke or
came in a playoff.
O’Dell, who was in the
final group with Woodward

and Bradshaw, made backto-back birdies while Bradshaw bogeyed the fifth hole,
and suddenly the lead was
reduced to one stroke.
Bradshaw regained momentum with an eagle at the
par-5 sixth and a birdie at No.
9 to move to 8 under. The
lead stayed at two strokes or
better on the back nine.
Parkersburg’s
Kenneth
Hess and Charleston’s
Bosten Miller tied for fifth at
2 under. Charleston’s Philip
Reale was seventh at 1 under.
Recent high school graduate Woody Woodward started the day in second place.
But the Bridgeport amateur
made triple bogey at the

par-3 second hole to fall six
strokes back and was never
again a threat. He finished
eighth at even par.
Local golfers that made
the cut were Trent Roush,
who finished five over par
with rounds of 72, 74 and 75,
Mitch Roush, who finished
10 over par with rounds of
77, 73 and 76, and Ty Roush
who finished 13 over par
with rounds of 79, 74 and 76.
VIENNA, W.Va. (AP)
— Final scores at the West
Virginia Open played on the
6,895-yard, par-72 Parkersburg Country Club:
See OPEN ‌| B3

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page B2 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Heat
From Page B1
straight finals. “I put a lot of
work into it and to be able to
come out here and (have) the
results happen out on the floor
is the ultimate. The ultimate.
I’m at a loss for words.”
He made five 3-pointers, defended Tony Parker when he had to,
and did everything else that could
ever be expected from the best
player in the game.
The Heat became the NBA’s
first repeat champions since the
Lakers in 2009-10, and the first
team to beat the Spurs in the
NBA Finals.
“It took everything we had
as a team,” Dwyane Wade said.
“Credit to the San Antonio Spurs,
they’re an unbelievable team, an
unbelievable franchise. This is the
hardest series we ever had to play.
But we’re a resilient team and we
did whatever it took.”
Players and coaches hugged
afterward — their respect for

each other was obvious from
the opening tipoff of Game 1
through the final buzzer.
A whisker away from a fifth title two nights earlier, the Spurs
couldn’t find a way to win it all
in what was perhaps the last
shot for Tim Duncan, Parker
and Manu Ginobili to grab another ring together.
“In my case I still have Game 6
in my head,” Ginobili said. “Today
we played an OK game, they just
made more shots than us. LeBron got hot. Shane (Battier), too.
Those things can happen. But being so close and feeling that you
are about to grab that trophy, and
seeing it vanish is very hard.”
They were trying to become
the first team to win a Game 7
on the road since Washington
beat Seattle in 1978, but those
old guys ran out of gas just before the finish.
Fans stood, clapped and
danced as the clock ticked down,
when every score was answered

by another score, each stop followed by a better stop. The Heat
pushed their lead to six points a
few times midway through the
fourth but San Antonio kept
coming back.
Duncan had 24 points and
12 rebounds for the Spurs, but
missed a shot and follow attempt
right under the basket with
about 50 seconds left and the
Spurs trailing by two.
James followed with a jumper — the shot the Spurs were
daring him to take earlier in
the series — to make it 92-88,
sending San Antonio to a timeout as Glenn Frey’s “The Heat
Is On” blared over the arena’s
sound system.
He then came up with a steal
and made two free throws for a
six-point lead, and after Ginobili
missed, James stalked toward
the sideline, knowing it was over
and that he was, once again, the
last one standing.
Wade had 23 points and 10

rebounds for the Heat, who overcame a scoreless Chris Bosh by
getting six 3-pointers and 18
points from Battier.
“It was a great series and we all
felt that,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “I don’t know if ‘enjoy’ is
the right word, but in all honesty,
even in defeat, I’m starting to enjoy what our group accomplished
already, when you look back. And
you need to do that, to put it in
perspective. So it’s no fun to lose,
but we lost to a better team.
“And you can live with that
as long as you’ve given your
best, and I think we have.”
Streamers fell from the arena
ceiling onto the fans for the second straight year, but this one
meant so much more. A narrow
escape in Game 6 was still fresh
in everyone’s mind.
They were down 10 in the
fourth quarter of that one before James led the charge back,
finishing with a triple-double

in Miami’s 103-100 overtime
victory. This one was nearly as
tight, neither team leading by
more than seven and the game
tied 11 times.
Kawhi Leonard had 19
points and 16 rebounds for the
Spurs, who had been 4 for 4 in
the championship round. Ginobili had 18 points but Parker managed just 10 points on
3-of-12 shooting.
“Just give credit to the Miami
Heat. LeBron was unbelievable.
Dwyane was great. I just think
they found a way to get it done,”
Duncan said. “We stayed in the
game. We gave ourselves opportunities to win the game, we just
couldn’t turn that corner.”
The Heat and coach Erik
Spoelstra collected the Larry
O’Brien trophy again from Commissioner David Stern, presiding
over his last NBA Finals before
retiring next February.

Briefs
en per squad. Games will
be played on Tuesday and/
or Thursday evenings beginning July 2.
There is an entry fee
for each team and the
deadline for registration is
Monday, July 1. For more
information, contact Mark
Danner at (740) 4464612, extension 255.
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
The Cliffside Golf Club will

be hosting the fifth annual
Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside
golf tournament for golfers
ages 9-18 on Thursday, July
11, at 1 p.m. The competitors will be divided into age
groups of 9-10, 11-12, -1315 and 16-18 and there is a
fee. Awards will be presented to the top three golfers
in each age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole
sponsors and volunteers
are needed. To enter please
contact the clubhouse at
(740) 446-4653 or Ed Caudill at (740) 245-5919 or
(740) 645-4381.

YOU’RE BUSY.
WE’RE READY.

60428606

Call 740-992-3381 today.

2013 Capehart
Tri-County Junior
Golf League
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The 2013 Frank
Capehart Tri-County junior
golf league has begun. Play
is open to boys and girls for
the following age groups:
10-under, 11-12, 13-14, 1516 and 17-18. Registration
for play is between 8:30 a.m.
and 8:50 a.m. and play begins at 9 a.m. There is a fee
but lunch is included. The
golf league will play on June
27 at Riverside Golf Club
and the final week will be
July 1 at Hidden Valley Golf
Course. For additional information contact Jeff Slone
(740) 256-6160, Jan Haddox (304) 675-3388 or Bob
Blessing (304) 675-6135.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
– The University of Rio
Grande women’s basketball program will conduct its 2013 overnight

instructional camp, July
7-10, on the URG campus. The camp, which
will utilize both the Newt
Oliver Arena and the auxiliary gymnasium in the
Lyne Center, is open to
girls in grades 4-12.
Campers will be under
24-hour supervision of
the Rio Grande coaching
staff and a talented group
of counselors comprised
of college and high school
coaches and players. Certified athletic trainers will
also be on site. Campers
will receive daily instruction in three specific areas
– shooting, post play and
defense. Daily schedules
will include evaluation of
shooting form, individual
and group shooting drills,
instruction in post moves,
instruction of post defense
and rebounding and daily
drills on team and individual defensive techniques.
A number of individual
and team awards will also
be presented on the final

day of the camp. There is
a fee involved, which includes lodging, meals, a
camp T-shirt, a certificate
of participation and use
of the Lyne Center swimming pool. A camp store
will also be available
throughout the week, allowing campers the opportunity to purchase
drinks, snacks, pizza and
Rio Grande apparel.
To register, or for more
information, visit the
women’s basketball page
at
www.rioredstorm.
com, e-mail Rio Grande
head coach David Smalley at dsmalley@rio.edu,
or contact the basketball
office by phone at 740245-7491 or 1-800-2827201, ext. 7491.
Alexander Spartans
Golf Scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The
22nd annual Alexander
Spartans Golf Scramble
will be held at 8 a.m. Saturday, July 20, at the Riv-

erside Golf Club in Mason County. All proceeds
will benefit the Alexander High School Boys
Basketball Program.
There is an entry fee per
golfer (includes Green Fee,
Cart, Food, Beverages, and
Prizes). Teams consist of
4 people (form your own
team and 40 handicap
minimum).
First-place
receives $500 per team,
second-place receives $300
per team and third place
receives $100 per team.
To register or if additional information is
needed, please contact Jim
Kearns at jkearns@alexanderschools.org or (740)
591-8153 or Jordan Hill
at jhill@alexanderschools.
org or (740) 416-0728.
Entry fees may be paid
at the golf course on the
day of the event or mailed
to Alexander Boys Basketball c/o Jim Kearns,
11474 Pleasanton Road,
Athens, OH 45701.

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From Page B1

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60423173

�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Open

Golf

From Page B1

From Page B1

shoot a 40 for the day earning the
six third place points. Jacob Hoback played consistent golf, shot
42 and earned four points with the
fourth place finish.
The following golfers all earned
two points for their participation:
Mitchell Metts, Cuyler Mills, Ethan
Swain, Nathan Redman, Derik Hill,
Logan Rosier, Cliff Chapman, and
Chris Brumfield.
The accumulated point leaders in
this group are Dakota Sisk 20, Jordan Howell 15, Nathan Redman 9,
Jacob Hoback 8 and Gus Slone 6.
The 18-19 year old age group
had only 1 player. Alyssa Clements
who shot a fine 44 to win first
place and 10 points.
The league play will continue

way tie for fourth place developed
when Brandon Bryant, Aaron Carr
and Colton Blaken all shot a 61 for
the day. Each of them earned three
points. Jacob is now first in this
group; Grant is second. Jacob is tied
for third with Matthew Martin who
did not play this week.
The popular 15-17 year old age
group provided some excellent scoring and strong competition. Dakota
Sisk’s score of 37 earned him first
place, 10 points and medalist honors
for the day. Jordan Howell provided
some stiff competition for Dakota.
Jordan shot 38 for the day to win
eight points and second place.
Gus Slone has some problems the
last two holes, but still managed to

next week with 2 tournaments. The
first stop will be at the Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis, Ohio on Wednesday, June 26. This is a make-up tournament for the one that was rained
out last week. All players that previously paid their entry fee will not be
charged for this tournament. Those
that did not play will have to pay the
normal fee, but are most welcome to
join the tournament. Points will be
earned as usual. Lunch will not be
served as it was provided last week.
The second tournament next week
will be on Thursday, June 27, at the
Riverside Golf Course in Mason,
West Virginia. Registration begins
on both days at 8:30 a.m. with play
beginning at 9 a.m.. Lunch will be
served at the Riverside Tournament.

Look
From Page B1
plishments from the area
that just missed the cut.
There were a total of 14
league championships for
teams within the tri-county
area, which included Meigs
golf, River Valley volleyball, Eastern volleyball,
Eastern girls cross country,
Wahama football, Gallia
Academy football, Eastern
girls basketball, Southern
baseball, Gallia Academy
baseball, Wahama softball,
Eastern softball, Gallia
Academy tennis, Gallia
Academy girls track and
Eastern girls track.
The Gallia Academy
girls track team won an incredible 18th consecutive
district championship and
scored at least one point
at the state track meet for
a 17th straight postseason. GAHS also received
a perfect 17-0 regular season from its tennis team,
which is a new school record for the program.
Speaking of school records, the Gallia Academy
baseball program set a new
standard of excellence with
a 25-4 overall mark while

earning its third straight
outright SEOAL championship. The River Valley softball team also posted a 1611 overall record, which is
believed to be the only winning record that the Lady
Raiders have ever produced
on the diamond.
There were 18 local wrestlers that advanced on to
their respective state tournaments, with 10 of those
grapplers coming away
with podium finishes. Point
Pleasant led the way with
five podium finishes, while
Wahama added four and
Gallia Academy had one.
The South Gallia girls
basketball team made its debut at the Ohio University
Convocation Center while
playing in the program’s second-ever district championship game. The Lady Rebels
were upended by eventualstate qualifier Eastern, but
SGHS represented both itself and its community with
flying colors.
Also, five basketball
players from the OVP area
eclipsed the 1,000-point
plateau for their careers
this winter — four of whom
were seniors. Andrea Por-

ter and Dillon McCarty
both accomplished the feat
for Point Pleasant, while
Cady Gilmore of River Valley and Madison Crank of
Ohio Valley Christian each
reached quadruple digits
for their respective squads.
Jenna Burdette also
eclipsed 1,000 points this
winter as a junior for Eastern. Both Burdette and
McCarty also ended the
2013 campaign as their respective school leaders for
career points.
Ohio Valley Christian
qualified for the OCSAA Final Four in three of the four
sports it competes in, with
the lone exception being volleyball. Soccer and both basketball programs advanced

to Circleville for the state
semifinals, but only the Lady
Defenders managed to reach
the state title game.
Finally,
three
Ohio
schools opened new athletic facilities for football and
track — Meigs, River Valley and South Gallia. Both
the Raiders and the Rebels
christened their new homes
with gridiron wins in Week
9 last fall, while the Marauders are still looking for
their first win away from
Bob Roberts Field.
The Top-5 sports stories of the 2012-13 school
year will begin with story
number five in the Tuesday
sports editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, The
Daily Sentinel and Point
Pleasant Register.

Largest Selection, Over 225 Knives on Display

60421792

David Bradshaw, Harpers Ferry 69-69-67 — 205
Sam O’Dell, Hurricane 71-71-67 — 209
Bob Friend, Pittsburgh, Pa. 70-73-70 — 213
Christian Brand, Charleston 73-71-69 — 213
Kenneth Hess, Parkersburg 72-73-69 — 214
Bosten Miller, Charleston 75-70-69 — 214
Philip Reale II, Charleston 72-73-70 — 215
Woody Woodward, Bridgeport 74-67-75 — 216
Bryan Myers, Wheeling 75-74-68 — 217
Brian Anania, Hurricane 75-70-73 — 218
Scott Bibbee, Vienna 72-71-75 — 218
Duke Erwin, Charleston 76-71-71 — 218
Justin Caroli, Stonewood 78-71-70 — 219
John Ross, Bramwell 71-72-76 — 219
Ken Lacy, Man 73-72-74 — 219
Jason Martin, Wheeling 74-74-72 — 220
Tad Tomblin, Alum Creek 75-73-73 — 221
Trent Roush, Mason 72-74-75 — 221
Jeremy Rogers, Buckhannon 74-76-72 — 222
Alan H. Cooke, Vienna 73-72-77 — 222
Josh Webb, Washington 77-71-74 — 222
Christopher McGinnis, Waynesburg, Pa. 70-75-77 — 222
Chris Barlament, Vienna 74-75-73 — 222
Jess Ferrell, Fairmont 74-75-74 — 223
Brad Westfall, Grafton 74-75-74 — 223
Matthew Moore, Elizabeth 76-75-72 — 223
Cory Hoshor, Buffalo 78-73-72 — 223
John Kingora, Morgantown 76-74-74 — 224
Rick Ellison, Huntington 75-74-75 — 224
Jay Woodward, Fairmont 77-72-76 — 225
Scott Davis, Hurricane 70-76-79 — 225
Brian McPherson, Belpre, Ohio 77-75-73 — 225
Jason Robinson, Charles Town 76-74-75 — 225
Steve Ross, Huntington 79-72-74 — 225
Joey Seabright, Wheeling 73-78-74 — 225
Hunter O’Neal, Bluefield, Va. 74-74-77 — 225
Mike Keiffer, Scott Depot 79-73-74 — 226
Mitch Roush, Mason 77-73-76 — 226
Cole Hand, Wheeling 72-76-78 — 226
Steve Fox, Huntington 77-75-74 — 226
Grant Humphrey, Poca 77-75-75 — 227
Pete Kurelac III, Moundsville 76-75-76 — 227
Steve Hussey, Washington 76-76-75 — 227
Alasdair Forsythe, Elkins 77-76-74 — 227
Evan Muscari, Pineville 78-74-76 — 228
Mike Rogers, Buckhannon 78-75-75 — 228
Ty Roush, Mason 79-74-76 — 229
Will Evans, Charleston 76-77-76 — 229
Tyler Boulware, Morgantown 77-74-78 — 229
Jeff Bryant, St Albans 78-74-78 — 230
George Hamrick, Red House 76-73-81 — 230
Winston Canada, Beckley 79-73-78 — 230
Ryan Dean, Morgantown 76-75-79 — 230
Joshua Wolfe, Elkview 78-75-77 — 230
Carl Roncaglione, Charleston 75-77-80 — 232
Chris Williams, Scott Depot 78-75-80 — 233
Brandon Tinney, Hurricane 78-74-82 — 234
Tyler D. Franklin, Charleston 79-73-83 — 235
Ian Patrick, Huntington 69-77-90 — 236
Steve Thacker, Huntington 77-76-83 — 236
Robert Jones, St Albans 75-76-86 — 237
Phillip Butcher, Chesapeake, Ohio 80-72-86 — 238

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B3

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page B4 • Sunday Times Sentinel

2013 Mason Co. football schedules
4 at Southern
11 vs. Federal Hocking
18 at South Gallia
November
1 vs. Miller
8 at Buffalo

Point Pleasant Big Blacks
August
30 vs. Lincoln County
September
6 vs. Ripley
20 at Logan
27 vs. Winfield
October
4 at Brooke
11 vs. Oak Hill
18 vs. Ravenswood
25 at Shady Spring
November
2 vs. Oak Glen, 1:30
9 vs. Lewis County, 1:30

Shaylin Logan becomes
latest URG track signee

Hannan Wildcats
August
30 at Valley Wetzel
September
7 at Hundred, 6 p.m.
13 at Federal Hocking
20 at Sherman
October
4 vs. Miller
11 vs. Twin Valley
18 at Gilmer County
25 vs. Midland Trail
November
1 vs. Montcalm
9 vs. Hundred 1 p.m.

Wahama White Falcons
August
30 vs. Fayetteville
September
6 vs. Trimble
13 at Eastern
20 at Belpre
27 vs. Waterford
October

Submitted Photo

* — All games begin at 7:30 p.m. unless
noted

2013 Meigs Co. football schedules
Meigs Marauders
August
30 at Coal Grove
September
6 at Fairland
13 vs. River Valley
20 vs. Trimble
27 at Warren
October
4 vs. Nelsonville-York
11 vs. Vinton County
18 at Wellston

Sunday, June 23, 2013

25 at Athens
November
1 vs. Alexander

October
4 vs. Belpre
11 at Trimble
18 vs. Doddridge County
25 vs. Federal Hocking
November
2 at Southern

Eastern Eagles
August
30 at Symmes Valley
September
6 at Miller
13 vs. Wahama
20 vs. Waterford
27 at South Gallia

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Southern Tornadoes
August
30 at River Valley
September
6 at South Gallia
13 vs. Belpre
20 at Federal Hocking
27 vs. Symmes Valley
October
4 vs. Wahama
11 at Miller
18 vs. Waterford
25 at Trimble
November
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Gallia Academy High School’s Shaylin Loganhas signed to join the University of Rio
Grnade’ track and field team for the 2014 season. “I’m very excited to run for Rio
Grande,” Logan said. “Having this kind of opportunity has been a goal of mine since
probably around the seventh grade.” Logan is a four-time All-Southeastern Ohio Athletic League selection. The chance to run with some of his high school teammates
– as well as a chat with some of the RedStorm’s current runners – helped Logan
reach his decision to come to Rio. “I talked to the people who were already there and
I asked around to some people who are going there,” he said. “It was a good fit for
me.” Logan, who plans to major in Physical Therapy, is the son of Kimberly Hudson of
Gallipolis. Pitcured is Shaylin Logan as he signs to continue his track &amp; field career
at the University of Rio Grande as his mother, Kimberly Hudson, looks on.

2013 Gallia Co. football schedules
Gallia
Academy Blue Devils
August
30 vs. Athens
September
6 vs. Rock Hill
13 vs. Fairland
20 vs. Marietta
27 at Vinton County
October
4 at Belfry
11 at Portsmouth
18 vs. Warren
25 vs. Logan
November
1 at Jackson

River Valley Raiders
August
30 vs. Southern
September
6 vs. Adena
13 at Meigs
20 at Nelsonville-York
27 vs. Alexander
October
4 vs. Chesapeake
11 vs. Coal Grove
18 at Rock Hill
25 at South Point
November
1 at Fairland

30 at Sciotoville East
September
6 vs. Southern
13 at Trimble
20 at Miller
27 vs. Eastern
October
4 vs. Federal Hocking
11 at Belpre
18 vs. Wahama
25 at Waterford
November
1 vs. Van

South Gallia Rebels
August

* — All games are scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m.

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�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B5

GAHS honors athletes at 2013 Spring Sports Banquet
Special to OVP

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Numerous awards were
presented at the Gallia
Academy High School
2013
Spring
Sports
Awards recently held at
Gallia Academy High
School. In all, 120 studentathletes were recognized
for their efforts athletically
and academically during
the Spring season.
Brent Simms, Athletic
Director and Master of
Ceremony, welcomed everyone and introduced
each of the following
coaches who gave season
comments and introduced
their team members and
assistant coaches.
Varsity Baseball Coach
Rich Corvin gave season
comments and introduced
Assistant Coach Corey
Luce, Junior Varsity Baseball Coach Scott Stanley,
Varsity Volunteer Steve
Slone, Junior Varsity Volunteer Craig Sanders and
Junior Varsity team members: Matt Bailey, Zach
Graham, Dathan Hawkins,
Austin Hill, Isaiah Holley, Marcus Moore, Jason
Sayre, Anthony Sipple,
Justin Sizemore, Clay
Smith, Ryan Terry, Eric
Sheets, Alex White and
Samuel Hemphill.
Coach Corvin then introduced Varsity Baseball team members: Kole
Carter, Eric Ward, Seth
Wills, Gage Childers,
Gus Graham, Alex Greer,
Griffin Stanley, Ty Warnimont, Justin Bailey, Jimmy
Clagg, Brady Curry, Bobby
Dunlap, John Faro and
Cody Russell.
Coach
Corvin
was
named 2013 SEOAL and
District Coach of the Year
and Ty Warnimont was
named the SEOAL Baseball MVP.
Junior Varsity Softball

Coach Brad Harris introduced Varsity Softball
Coach Jim Niday and
Varsity Assistant Softball
Coach Jerry Frazier and
team members: Aleena
Peck, Bailie Smith, Sami
Staton, Jessica Harold,
Alisha Thomas, Hannah
Roach, Keirstin Stanley,
Makenzie Barr, Kendra
Barnes, Madison Burnes,
Micah Curfman, Chelsey
Slone, Alexandrea Brumfield, Violet Pelfrey, Kassie
Shriver, Maggie Westfall, Megan Cochran and
Meghan Thacker.
Tennis Coach Alex Penrod introduced Varsity
Volunteer Randy Christian and team members:
Pooja Dayal, Emma Lyles,
Marina Ortego-Carrascal,
Adriana Wilcoxin, Connor
Christian, Aaron Fairchild,
Meghan McDaniel, Sean
Saltzgaber, Joseph Sebastian, Varun Sharma, Colby
Caldwell, Michaela Flannery, Tyler Stewart, Tjaye
McCalla, Riley Nibert and
Zachary Stewart.
It was also noted that
Sean
Saltzgaber
was
named 2013 SEOAL Tennis MVP, Alex Penrod
was named SEOAL Coach
of the Year and this was
the first undefeated tennis team in school history
which finished 17-0.
Girls Varsity Track
Coach Todd May introduced Assistant Varsity
Track Coach Nate Hall,
Volunteer Varsity Assistant Doug Tawney and
Cheryl Greenlee and the
Girls Varsity team members: Brittany Angel, Kylie
Angel, Ashlee Huffman,
Samantha Morrissey, Sydney Rose, Cassidy Sickels,
Varna Thayaparan, Kathleen Allen, Alexia Combs,
Kim Faro, Jennifer Loscar,
Kaitlyn Saunders, Rylee
Stevens, Aliza Warner,
Haleigh Caldwell, Elizabeth Holley, Madison Hol-

Submitted photo

Pictured are the 2013 Spring Scholar Athletes from Gallia Academy High School. They are Matt Bailey, Marcus Moore, Anthony
Sipple, Clay Smith, Alex White, Samuel Hemphill, Kole Carter, Eric Ward, Griffin Stanley, Ty Warnimont, Justin Bailey, Jimmy
Clagg, Brady Curry, Bobby Dunlap, John Faro, Cody Russell, Aleena Peck, Bailie Smith, Jessica Harold, Alisha Thomas, Hannah
Roach, Keirstin Stanley, Makenzie Barr, Kendra Barnes, Madison Burnes, Micah Curfman, Chelsey Slone, Alexandrea Brumfield, Violet Pelfrey, Kassie Shriver, Maggie Westfall, Pooja Dayal, Emma Lyles, Marina Ortego-Carrascal, Adriana Wilcoxin,
Connor Christian, Meghan McDaniel, Sean Saltzgaber, Joseph Sebastian, Varun Sharma, Colby Caldwell, Michaela Flannery,
Tyler Stewart, Tjaye McCalla, Riley Nibert, Zach Stewart, Brittany Angel, Ashlee Huffman, Samantha Morrissey, Sydney Rose,
Cassidy Sickels, Varna Thayaparan, Kathleen Allen, Alexia Combs, Kim Faro, Jennifer Loscar, Aliza Warner, Haleigh Caldwell,
Elizabeth Holley, Madison Holley, Taylor Queen, Brooke Rider, Hannah Watts, Andrea Edelmann, Morgan Foster, Hanna Loveday,
Naomi Sebastian, Breanna West, Abby Wiseman, Logan Carpenter, Josiah Cox, Atticus Davies, Devin Henry, Dekota Metzler,
Alex Valadez, Michael Vallee, Drew Vansickle, Tony Fairchild, Blake Wilson, Logan Allison, Wade Jarrell, Ryan Vallee, Winston
Wade, Mark Allen, Caleb Campbell, Joel Craft, Shaylin Logan and Jeremy Wilson.

ley, Taylor Queen, Brooke
Rider, Hannah Watts, Madelynn Dennison, Andrea
Edelmann, Morgan Foster,
Hanna Loveday, Naomi Sebastian, Breanna West and
Abby Wiseman.
It was also noted that
the girls track team was
SEOAL and District champions, Hannah Watts finished 7th in the OHSAA
State 400 Meter Dash
and Todd May was named
SEOAL Coach of the Year.
Boys Varsity Track
Coach Paul Close introduced Volunteer Mark Allen and team members: Logan Carpenter, Josiah Cox,
Atticus Davies, Levi Chase
Halley, Devin Henry, Wes
Jarrell, Scott Mash, Deko-

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ta Metzler, Alex Valadez,
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Griffon McKinniss, Quenton McKinniss, Ryan Vallee, Winston Wade, Mark
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Joel Craft, Shaylin Logan,
Joshua Radvanyi and Jeremy Wilson.
All SEOAL was awarded
to: Gage Childers, Gus Graham, Ty Warnimont, Justin
Bailey, Jimmy Clagg, John
Faro, Cody Russell, Kendra
Barnes, Chelsey Slone, Violet Pelfrey, Maggie Westfall,
Adriana Wilcoxin, Connor

Christian, Sean Saltzgaber,
Varun Sharma, Tjaye McCalla, Riley Nibert, Zachary
Stewart, Haleigh Caldwell,
Madison Holley, Taylor
Queen, Hannah Watts, Breanna West, Abby Wiseman
and Jacob Click.
GAHS Scholar Athlete

Awards were presented
to: Matt Bailey, Marcus
Moore, Anthony Sipple,
Clay Smith, Alex White,
Samuel Hemphill, Kole
Carter, Eric Ward, Griffin
Stanley, Ty Warnimont,
See BANQUET ‌| B8

THE AWARD WINNING

Buckeye Hills
Career Center
740-245-5334
buckeyehills.net

60418590

Jim Craft

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Athens 589-3181

90 Jackson Pike
280 Pattonsville Rd
Gallipolis 446-5226 Jackson 395-8870

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Mon-Thurs 9am-5pm; Fri 9am-5:30pm; Sat 9am-4:30pm

60343007
60426405

�Page B6 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Goodell tells Ohio group NFL is leading on safety
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
NFL commissioner said Friday
that the league accepts and is
taking a leadership role in improving sports safety at all levels.
Roger Goodell spoke Friday
morning to the National PTA
convention. The Parent Teacher
Association has urged its members to seek improved headinjury reporting and training in
schools, and Goodell said they
should push for properly trained
coaches and safe equipment.

“It is our job to lead the way,”
Goodell said, adding that the NFL
is in the position to have a wide impact and takes that responsibility.
“We recognize that role. We
recognize that people watch
our athletes on the field, watch
everything we do. And we have
to do what we can to make our
game safer, so that every other
game … every other sport, is
played safely,” he said.
The National Football League
is facing a federal lawsuit over

concussion-related injuries by
thousands of former players,
and concerns about head injuries have caused some parents to
hesitate to allow their children to
play football. President Barack
Obama has said he would have
to think “long and hard” about
letting a son play football.
Goodell said the NFL has taken
actions to improve safety with
rules against “dangerous techniques,” more protective equipment, and research such as a $60

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He and other speakers Friday
emphasized the benefits of playing sports for young children.
They said sports participation
helps children get healthy activity, usually results in better
school performance, and develops attributes such a discipline
and teamwork that will help them

Gallia2147Auto
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Jackson Pike

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throughout life. Goodell said the
NFL will partner with the PTA in
a program this fall called “Back to
Sports” promoting youth health,
fitness and safety.
LaVar Arrington, a former
Redskins All-Pro linebacker,
told the convention that football “has shaped and molded me
in so many ways.” He promotes
an initiative by USA Football
called Heads Up Football that
teaches techniques for young
players to avoid head contact.

Trade
In’s
Welcome

446-0724

2012 Mitsubishi Eclipse

SUMMER
SAVINGS!

Spyder Convertible, SHARP!
Factory Warranty!

17,500

$

OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
2013 Ford Escape SEL

AWD, 2.0 Eco Boost,
Leather Heated Seats,
Sync Radio, Factory Warranty!

26,500

$

• Locally Owned and
Operated
• Oxygen, CPAP/
BIPAP
• Free Delivery &amp;
Training
• Serving the Tri-County
Area
• Ask for us by name
• Always taking new
patients

2012 Chrysler 300

Limited, Leather Heated Seats
Factory Warranty!

22,900

$

2012 Chevy Captiva

2013 Ford Explorer

Sport Factory Warranty!
( Only 17,000 Miles! )

XLT, 4x4, Leather Heated Seats,
Factory Warranty!

$

17,900

28,800

$

2012 Ford Fusion SE
Factory Warranty!

14,900

$

2008 Hyundai Sonata
SE, V-6 (only 45,000 Miles)

9,900

$

CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS•CARS
2013
2012
2012
2012
2012
2012
2012
2012
2012
2011
2011
2011
2011
2010
2010
2007

Hyundai Sonata, Factory Warranty!
Hyundai Sonata, Factory Warranty!
Nissan Altima, Factory Warranty!
Chrysler 200, Silver, Factory Warranty!
Chevy Malibu, LTZ, Loaded, Leather Seats, Bose Sound, Sun Roof, Factory Warranty!
Dodge Journey SXT AWD, 3rd Seat, Factory Warranty!
Mazda 3 GAS SAVER! Skyactiv, Factory Warranty!
Chevy Cruze LT XM Radio, OnStar Factory Warranty!
Ford Fusion SEL, V-6, Leather Heated Seats, Factory Warranty!
Volkswagen Jetta, White ,Factory Warranty!
Chevy Malibu, LT, Sun Roof, Factory Warranty!
Buick Lucerne, CXL, Leather Seats, Factory Warranty!
Ford Fusion, SE
Subaru Impreza, AWD, Sun Roof, Factory Warranty! (1 owner)
Dodge Caliber, SXT
Buick Lacrosse, CXL, Leather Seats
(1 owner)

$15,900
$14,900
$15,000
$14,400
$17,500
$20,500
$15,400
$14,700
$17,400
$14,300
$13,900
$19,900
$12,400
$13,900
$10,500
$8,900

2013 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Factory Warranty!
2012 Dodge Quad Cab, SLT, 4x4, Only 21,000 miles Factory Warranty!
2012 Dodge Grand Caravan, Crew, Power Doors &amp; Seats Factory Warranty!
2012 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Power Seat, Doors, Lift Gate Factory Warranty!
2012 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Power Seat, Doors, Lift Gate Factory Warranty!
2012 Nissan Murano, AWD, Factory Warranty!
2012 Chevy Crew Cab LT, 4x4 Factory Warranty!
2011 Toyota Sienna, LE, V-6, Factory Warranty!
2011 Nissan Murano, AWD
( Only 26,000 Miles )
2010 Chevy Traverse LT, AWD Factory Warranty!
2010 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Power Seat, Dual Doors, Lift Gate
2010 Ford Edge SEL, AWD
2008 Buick Enclave DVD, Sunroof, Bose Sound
2007 Ford Explorer, XLT, Leather, 4x4, Sun Roof, 3rd Row Seat
2005 Buick Ranier, AWD, Loaded Sunroof, Leather Heated Seats, Bose Sound
2005 Chevy Equinox, AWD
2005 Chrysler Town &amp; Country Limited, Navigation, DVD, Sunroof, Loaded Extra Clean!

70 Pine Street
740-446-0007
Gallipolis, OH
Family Oxygen is a JCAHO Accredited
24 Hour Emergency Service
www.familyoxygenonline.com
60426514

$20,500
$23,900
$19,500
$19,700
$18,300
$23,600
$25,500
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60426429

60421560

�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B7

Help Wanted General

Repairs

Sentinel
Transportation, LLC

Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL SERVICES

Private carrier for E I Dupont

60425035

Needs Experienced LEAD MECHANIC
for our Belle, WV Terminal
(Must live within a reasonable driving distance of Belle,
WV &amp; hold a current CDL w/HazMat endorsement)
• COMPETITIVE PAY!
(Get Paid for Your Experience
&amp; ASE Certiﬁcations!)
• PAID HOLIDAYS &amp; PAID VACATION!
• MEDICAL, DENTAL, VISION
&amp; LIFE INSURANCE
• RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN
• COMPANY MATCHED 401K
• OVERTIME
Call: 304-949-6234
Ask for Keith Porter
www.sentineltrans.com
Must pass DOT physical, drug screen &amp;
criminal background check. EOE/MF

Money To Lend

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Entertainment
Excavating

Reese
Excavating

Backhoe-Trenching-Trucking
Septic Systems-Basements
Land Clearning-Site Prep and
More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Professional Services

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

Auctions
SERVICES

• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available

Business Consulting

Gary Stanley

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Remodels, Rooﬁng, Interior/
Exterior Painting, and much more!
FREE ESTIMATES!
Bruce Young

FINANCIAL SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT

740-645-8025

Full-time, Nights

STNAs

Full-time &amp; Part-time,
All Shifts

Help Wanted General

Please leave a message

Competitive wages
&amp; beneﬁts!

PT/FT
Position available
for Clinic Assistant.
Applications may be
picked up
M-F 8-4
@ PVH Ste-112.
304-675-1244

Apply:

Abbyshire Place
311 Buckridge Rd.
Bidwell, OH 45614

60424213

Bob Donnet

678-378-3244

Notices

LPN

Home Weekends.
Pay up to .40 cpm.
Chromed out trucks
w/APUʼs
70% Drop &amp; Hook
CDL-A, 6mos Exp.
877-704-3773

740-591-8044

D&amp;Y Carpentry

Help Wanted General

Drivers:

60419955

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

www.applyatvhc.com

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Drivers:

EOE

$1000 Sign-On Bonus!
Dedicated Zanesville
Account! Great Pay,
Benefits, Miles,
Weekly Home-Time
&amp; More!
1-888-567-3109

SERVICES
60427717

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

Sewer &amp; Waterline Repair
Call:
304-675-3824
304-593-1991

Auctions

EVENING AUCTION

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)

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General
"Hiring Direct Care Staff for individuals with developmental
disabilities. If interested please
call 740-853-0526 or apply in
person from 10a-3p at 352 2nd
Ave Gallipolis, OH (BTS Building)"
Fiscal Officer needed To
start Sept 1, 2013 ; knowledge in accounting a
must;UAN
system,computor,printers,fax,fil
ing,payroll,human
resources,OPERS,monthly
procedures such as bill payments, taxes,and yearly procedures. Work with Gallia Co.
Auditor, Auditor of State of
Ohio offices, IRS, etc.
HELP WANTED: Fruth Pharmacy is seeking a Store Manager, 5-7 yrs. management experience preferred, strong customer service skills, strong
computer skills, merchandising experience, benefits
available, pay commensurate
with experience. Email resume with Store Manager in
subject line to
dgatewood@fruthpharmacy.co
m
MAINTENANCE DEPARTMENT : Part Time help for
training then work at least two
2days a week alone. Will be
required to understand and
handl3 all machinery.
Mowing,weed eating,trash removal,painting,etc. Please
Send Resume only if you are
interested.
Management / Supervisory
WANTED:
Direct supervision employees
to oversee male youth in a
staff secure residential environment. Must pass physical
training requirement, background check and drug screening. Pay based on experience.
Call 740-379-9083, Monday
through Friday from 9:00AM to
3:00PM to request an application.
EDUCATION
REAL ESTATE SALES

Auctions

206 Broad Street, Thurman, OH

Houses For Sale

Thursday, June 27, 4:00 p.m.

FARM &amp; HOUSE 4-SALE:
DW on perm. foundation. 38
acres, 2 barns, 2 bldgs. 192
Buffalo Dr., off Wilding Rd.
Rvnswd. 304-373-5278
$189.9

DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 32, turn south on Rt. 35, go 13.5 miles, turn on Rt. 279 (Centerville Road), then turn
right onto Ruff Street, then Broad Street, watch for signs.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: antique sofa w/ornate wood trim, hurricane style lamp, 3-flatwall cabinets
(2-w/glass doors, 1-no doors), oak swivel desk chair, oak teacher’s desk, drop leaf kitchen table, old chairs,
2-unique end tables made from wood log, 5-tier knick knack shelf, metal trunk, old fence gate, 2-wood wagon
wheels, push plow, 6-lanterns, 2-Auto-Lite carbide lights, 3-kerosene lamps, granite pans, cast iron kettle for
flowers, sad iron, 5 gallon crock, crock jars, jugs &amp; bowls, salt jar, teapots, chamber pot w/handle &amp; lid, ironstone
urinal, wash board, assorted tin decorator pieces, 25+ cookbooks, 10-canes, 50-Longsberger baskets &amp; several
Longaberger pottery pieces, 30+ pottery pitchers, sterling silver tea set, 12+Boyd bears, knick knacks (Occupied
Japan, Germany, Holland), Russ Berrie &amp; Co. rabbit figures, coal figure, china head doll, large ornate frame,
2-mounted turkeys, turkey tail feathers &amp; quail, old linens, hat boxes &amp; old hats, some vintage clothing, Fairloom
adjustable dress form, collection of hat pins, needlepoint purse, old photo album, Indian statue, bird cage, small
radio flyer wagon,

Trailer lot for rent, $175 mo, incd water, 33533 Bailey Run
Rd, 252-564-4805

HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: 2-curio cabinets, small wall curio cabinet, newer oak pedestal dining table,
4-oak pressback chairs, oak 2-dr.filing cabinet, deacon’s bench, entertainment units, 2-wing back chairs, oak
bedroom set, oak bed frame, 4-poster bed, 2-night stand tables, lamps, Patio chairs, Christmas decorations,
3-window air conditioners,

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

Lots

REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses

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

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: Troy Bilt push mower, ammo reloading equipment, Mossy Oak Camo storage
cabinet, 2-wood storage cabinets, large metal 2-door storage cabinet, and lots of other miscellaneous items.
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 payment. All
sales are final. Food will be available.
OWNER: Larry Smith

60425403

Auctions

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
Kerry Sheridan Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

60428370

Auctions

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, June 29 – 10:00 a.m.
21 Utah Place, Athens, OH

DIRECTIONS: Exit onto East State Street from Rt. 33 or 50/32 in Athens, turn east and exit at 2nd street to left onto
Utah Place, watch for signs.
VEHICLE: 1999 Toyota Camry XLE/V6, 215K miles (new timing belt &amp; water pump &amp; new front/rear struts) runs
excellent, sold w/owner’s consent,
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: beautiful mid-late 1800s cherry Eastlake dining table w/6 leaves, 6-walnut
needlepoint ornate dining chairs, walnut dresser w/glove boxes/marble inset &amp; mirror, cherry drop leaf table w/rope
turned legs, gateleg drop leaf dining table &amp; lamp table, tea cart, oak lamp table, sideboard cabinet, 1-drawer night
stand table, spindle double bed, ornate framed mirror, sewing rocker, oak swivel desk chair, oak school teacher’s desk,
older desk, harp back chair, unusual straight chair, 2-cane seat straight chairs, linens, several metal circus print serving
trays, kraut cutters, cast iron pans, rug beater, old metal trunk, wood blanket chest, FP school house, ET ceramic bank,
some Star Wars &amp; He-Man toys, several older model cars many in orig, boxes, lots of older board games, pendants from
vacation sites, 150+ 1970s record albums, 3-1963-65 Life magazines &amp; newspaper clippins w/JFK info, 1962 Arena,
1965 &amp; 66 Xavier Univ. The Musketeer, John B. Owens mantel clock, anniversary clock, bugle horn, many framed
prints, vintage clothing, hat box &amp; hats, few pieces costume jewelry, Ezra Brooks decanter, hand sewn comforter &amp;
2-quilts, and other items,
GLASSWARE: Haviland China collection – 125+ pieces/sets including: Fleur Saxe, Sandoz, Bracquemond Seasons
Commemorative Set, Jardin Bleu, Schleiger, Saxon, St. Cloud, Rosalinde, Prolongeau, Vermicelli, Carnot, Torse,
Japonisme, Montmery, and more, 3-Lincoln commemorative cups/saucers, Martha Washington commemorative plate,
Queen Elizabeth II Cornation 1953 collector plate &amp; cup/saucer, 7-Capodimonte flowers, Nesting hens, several carnival
pieces, 3-Fenton slippers, several Fenton vases, Set of ruby glasses, Etched Stemware, Germany pitcher/platter/powder
box, Germany beer steins, Miniature tea set, Silver tea set, lazy susan &amp; condiment set, brass tea pot, several crocks &amp;
jugs, 3-glass paper weights, lots of glassware,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; Miscellaneous: Thomasville Dining Table w/6chairs &amp; matching china cabinet,
large curio cabinet, Floral sofa, 2-wing back chairs, upholstered arm chair, end tables, marble top coffee table, brass
candlesticks, recliner, loveseat, end tables, lamps, maple child’s rocking chair, console stereo, Willet solid maple
Lancaster County bedroom set, Blonde bedroom set w/single bed, hospital bed, blankets, etc., vanity stool, older sewing
machine in cabinet, steelcase desk &amp; chair, maple drop leaf kitchen table w/chairs, card table, kitchen dishes, pots/pans
&amp; small appliances, hand crank ice cream freezer, Bissell ProHeat Floor Cleaner, glass top patio table/chairs, 2-wood
step ladders, and other miscellaneous items.
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 payment. All sales are final. Food will be
available.

PORTLAND, OHIO
SAT. JUNE 29 @10 AM

DIRECTIONS: FROM POMEROY FOLLOW
RT. 33 EAST TO RAVENSWOOD, WV
BRIDGE, THEN TURN RIGHT ONTO RT. 338A
AND GO 2 MILES TO SALES SITE. SELLING
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE THOMAS SAYRE.
EXECUTOR DEWAIN SAYRE.
Farmall super C; 300, Ser. # 2075, NOTEthese tractors are ready to work on farm
or great to restore; JD 7' transport disc; 6'
pull brush hog; McCormick pull combine;
McCormick 2 row corn planter; 3 bottom
pull plows; McCormick rear mounted
mower; planter for Farmall C; (2) new rolls
of 4' woven wire; Huskee 14 HP 42” cut
riding mower; Craftsman 42” mower; two
platform scales; concrete mixer; push lawn
mower; Maytag gas engine; wood fence
posts; two hay rakes; front tine roto-tiller;
hog feeder; two cattle stanchion; single
axle farm trailer; 14' metal boat; potato
grader; seed cleaner; stock tank; chicken
coop; chicken feeders; screw jack; wood
barrel; gal. Glass jugs; wall mounted drill;
glass chicken waterers; hand tools; power
tools; gas cans; large rachet binder; misc.
lumber; sow hasp; seed cleaner; antique
seed potato cutter; (2) antique corn
shovels; antique wood rake; metal sprinkle
can; woven wire stretcher; antique
sprayer; small advertising thermometer
from Racine, Ohio; old advertising cans
plus more.
Consigned by neighbor: Land Pride 6 ft.
ﬁnishing mower; Int. 8 ft. wheel disc, good
condition; 3pt/ 4.5 cultivator; Lincoln 225
Welder.
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK DAY OF SALE
WITH POSITIVE ID
AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER #334
Licensed and bonded in West Virginia and Ohio
Phone (304) 273-3447 or cell (304) 532-0062
Pictures at auctionzip.com ID#4708

60428434

60428368

Estate of Leo Walker, Athens County Case #20131093
William Walker, Executor
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

FARM AUCTION

3 BR-home in town. Applications available at Wiseman
Real Estate. Call 446-3644 for
more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Beautiful - 1400 sq ft. 2 bdrm.
apt. Gallipolis, w/d &amp; d -washer $700.00/mo. Parking, No
pets 740-591-5174
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Furnished - 2bdrm. Apt.
$450.00/mo. Incl. w/s/g Racine,Ohio No Pets 740-5915174
Ideal downtown location for
single or professional couple.
Newly renovated, 2 bedrooms,
1 1/2 baths, spacious living
and dining area, kitchen with
appliances included and laundry with w/d hookup. No
smoking or pets. Deposit and
references required. Call 740446-7654

Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 BR apts,
some with utilities pd, no pets,
dep &amp; ref, 740-992-0165
Nice 2 Bdrm Apartment for
Rent on State Route 588 $525mo. plus Sec.Dep, Water
&amp; Garbage,No Pets Ph : 419359-1768
Houses For Rent
1BR, No pets, Syracuse Oh.
350mo, 350 dep. 304-6755332, 740-591-0265

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page B8 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Banquet
From Page B5
Justin
Bailey,
Jimmy
Clagg, Brady Curry, Bobby
Dunlap, John Faro, Cody
Russell, Aleena Peck, Bailie Smith, Jessica Harold,
Alisha Thomas, Hannah
Roach, Keirstin Stanley,
Makenzie Barr, Kendra
Barnes, Madison Burnes,
Micah Curfman, Chelsey
Slone, Alexandrea Brumfield, Violet Pelfrey, Kassie
Shriver, Maggie Westfall,
Pooja Dayal, Emma Lyles,
Marina Ortego-Carrascal,
Adriana Wilcoxin, Connor
Christian, Meghan McDaniel, Sean Saltzgaber,
Joseph Sebastian, Varun
Sharma, Colby Caldwell,
Michaela Flannery, Tyler
Stewart, Tjaye McCalla,
Riley Nibert, Zach Stewart, Brittany Angel, Ashlee
Huffman, Samantha Morrissey, Sydney Rose, Cassidy Sickels, Varna Thayaparan, Kathleen Allen,
Alexia Combs, Kim Faro,
Jennifer Loscar, Aliza
Warner, Haleigh Caldwell,
Elizabeth Holley, Madison Holley, Taylor Queen,
Brooke Rider, Hannah
Watts, Andrea Edelmann,
Morgan Foster, Hanna
Loveday, Naomi Sebastian,

Breanna West, Abby Wiseman, Logan Carpenter, Josiah Cox, Atticus Davies,
Devin Henry, Dekota Metzler, Alex Valadez, Michael
Vallee, Drew Vansickle,
Tony Fairchild, Blake
Wilson, Logan Allison,
Wade Jarrell, Ryan Vallee,
Winston Wade, Mark Allen, Caleb Campbell, Joel
Craft, Shaylin Logan and
Jeremy Wilson.
All SEOAL Academic
Awards were presented to:
Alex White, Kole Carter,
Griffin Stanley, Jimmy
Clagg, Bobby Dunlap, John
Faro, Cody Russell, Kendra
Barnes, Madison Burnes,
Micah Curfman, Chelsey
Slone, Alexandrea Brumfield, Maggie Westfall,
Adriana Wilcoxin, Connor
Christian, Sean Saltzgaber,
Joseph Sebastian, Varun
Sharma, Tjaye McCalla,
Riley Nibert, Zach Stewart, Sydney Rose, Cassidy
Sickels, Varna Thayaparan,
Kathleen Allen, Aliza Warner, Haleigh Caldwell, Elizabeth Holley, Madison Holley, Taylor Queen, Brooke
Rider, Hannah Watts, Andrea Edelmann, Morgan
Foster, Naomi Sebastian,
Breanna West, Abby Wiseman, Logan Carpenter, Jo-

Houses For Rent
2BR, 1BA, on Farm
$600/month with utility allowance, 540-729-1331

3 Bdrm home, 2 bath, basement,garage,on lg lot, central
air , $750mo. dep &amp; 1 yr. lease
740-446-0885
Brand New Spacious 1 Bdrm
house. Custom Kitchen, ,located near Gallipolis 1 yr lease
&amp; dep. 740-446-0885

siah Cox, Atticus Davies,
Devin Henry, Dekota Metzler, Alex Valadez, Michael
Vallee, Blake Wilson, Logan Allison, Wade Jarrell,
Ryan Vallee, Mark Allen
and Caleb Campbell.
Girls Spring Sports
Scholastic Award – Riley Nibert, Boys Spring
Sports Scholastic Award
– Zach Stewart, Co-Most
Valuable Baseball Players –
Ty Warnimont and Jimmy

Houses For Rent
FOR RENT OR SALE: 2BR
House. 450mo + dep. Needs
some work. 304-812-5448
FOR RENT: 3BR 1BA house.
Lg. fenced back yard. Attached garage. 750 mo. + dep.
304-892-4325, 304-531-1197
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127

Clagg, Most Valuable Softball Player- Violet Pelfrey,
Most Valuable Tennis Player – 2013 Tennis Team,
Boys Track Most Valuable
Runner – Logan Allison,
Girls Track Most Valuable
Runner - Hannah Watts.
Trophy awards were presented by GAHS Principal
Tim Massie for Future
Farmers of America and
for Norris Northup Dodge,
GAHS Assistant Principal

Call

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

RESORT PROPERTY

Miscellaneous

ANIMALS

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

Pets
FREE: to good home. 6 fluffy
kittens. 2 calico, 2 black, 2
white &amp; black. Litter trained.
304-675-8910
AGRICULTURE

Help Wanted General

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

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

AUTOMOTIVE

PART-TIME FACULTY

The University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
invites applications for part-time, non-tenure track faculty
positions for following terms and disciplines.
IMMEDIATE OPENING for Summer II Term
(beginning July 8, 2013):
• Speech Communications

Upholstery

Autos for Sale
85 Corvette $10,000 Ex. Cond.
06 Suz. Blvd Motorcycle 1500
Series $5500. 304-743-6123
Boats &amp; Marinas

SNODGRASS UPHOLSTERY,
we help you to recover you
investments. Racine, OH
740-949-2202

FOR SALE: Bass Tracker Pro
Team 185 Silver Ann Edition
w/75hp Mercury Mtr, Fish Finder, Trolling Mtr, Ex Cond
$9500. Call 9-6 740-446-9340

Positions available Fall Semester
(beginning August 26, 2013):
• Speech Communications
• Developmental Math
• Business Management
• Finance
• Nursing Clinical Faculty

RELIGION PAGE
OBITUARIES

Help Wanted General

Program Coordinator
The Program Coordinator for sexual assault
outreach service to Meigs and Perry counties will
establish outreach, advocacy and support services
for victims and survivors of sexual assault in those
counties. Establish relationships with already existing
agencies to facilitate effective and efﬁcient response
services that respect victim's rights, raise community
awareness and ensure proper resource and referral
services. Bachelor's Degree, Licensure and/or at
least three years of experience in a related ﬁeld.

Applicants must possess a Master’s degree and
be available for day and/or evening classes.
Prior teaching experience preferred.

All applicants must submit a letter of interest
(indicating areas of teaching interest) and resume
including the names of three references to:
Mr. Chris Nourse, Director of Human Resources
P.O. Box 500,
University of Rio Grande,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
E-mail: cnourse@rio.edu
Fax: 740-245-7972

For more information and how to apply go to:

Official transcripts and background checks required prior to hire.
AA/EOE

60427980

intendent Roger D. Mace
and the Board of Education
for their efforts to make the
athletic and academic programs at Gallia Academy
High School the finest in
Southeastern Ohio.
In addition, special
thanks were given to Lori
Ward, Athletic Trainer,
Andy Hout, Maintenance
Supervisor, GAHS Athletic
Boosters and all of the student-athletes’ parents.

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Josh Donley for the Gallipolis City School District
Academic Boosters Club,
GAHS Athletic Director Brent Simms for The
Coach’s Corner and Abby
Wiseman for The Wiseman Agency.
Acknowledgements
Maintenance and Custodial Staff, Athletic Director Brent Simms, Principal
Tim Massie, Assistant Principal Josh Donley, Super-

Please visit us online
at
www.mydailyregister.com

2BR, house for Rent in
Kanauga, $500/month,
$500/Deposit. plus utilities, No
Pets 740-441-2707

Submitted photo

Pictured are the 2013 Spring Special Award-winners from Gallia Academy High School. They are Riley Nibert, Zach Stewart, Ty
Warnimont, Jimmy Clagg, Violet Pelfrey, Logan Allison, Hannah Watts and the 2013 Tennis Team.

https://www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/postings/6640
Ohio University is committed to creating a respectful
and inclusive educational and workplace environment.
Ohio University is an equal access/equal opportunity
60428425
and afﬁrmative action institution.
Entertainment

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SUNDAY, JUNE 23
7

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America's Got Talent Judges Howie Mandel, Mel B,
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America's Got Talent Judges Howie Mandel, Mel B,
Heidi Klum, and Howard Stern continue with auditions.
Home Videos A family gift Celebrity Wife Swap (N)
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�� Paul Blart: Mall Cop ('09, Com) Kevin James.
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(:15) �� Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Harrison Ford.
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�� The Karate Kid Part III ('89, Act) Pat Morita, Ralph Macchio.
(:35) Friends
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Burn "Down Range"
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Inside Man
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(3:00) Racing TNT Preview /(:45) The Hero (:45) ���� Red ('10, Act) Mary-Louise Parker, Bruce Willis.
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Skywire With Nik Wallenda
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CSI: Miami "Collision"
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�� Maid in Manhattan ('02, Com) Jennifer Lopez.
The Kardashians (N)
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(5:00) My Soul to Take
�� Underworld: Rise of the Lycans Michael Sheen.
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(5:30) Chronicle
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(:15) �� Reality Bites ('94, Dra) Winona Ryder.
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Dexter "Helter Skelter"
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Nurse Jackie The Borgias

�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page B9

Youth leagues try to rein in ‘bad news parents’
BUFFALO GROVE, Ill. (AP)
— No parent here has rushed
onto a playing field to jump a
referee who made an unpopular
call. No adult has gotten angry
and slugged or pushed a coach or
a young player, as has happened
elsewhere. Nor have there been
any of those embarrassing sideline brawls you sometimes see
posted on online video sites.
At least nobody’s admitting to it.
Still, parent behavior in this
quiet suburb north of Chicago
has been questionable enough to

cause the park district officials
to post new signs at ball fields
with what you might call … a few
gentle reminders.
“This is a game being played
by children,” the signs in the Buffalo Grove Park District begin,
with the words “game” and “children” highlighted in bold letters.
“If they win or lose every game
of the season, it will not impact
what college they attend or their
future potential income..”
The campaign, which began
this month, is relatively low-key.

You might not even notice the
small blue signs if you weren’t
standing right by them. But they
speak to a growing movement in
youth sports — aimed at reining
in parents who, many say, are too
involved, too competitive and in
need of a little perspective.
“I just want to get back to what
I was brought up with as a child
— and that’s, ‘Let the kids play,’”
says Dan Schimmel, the park district’s executive director.
Elsewhere, some youth sports
leagues are requiring parents to

sign codes of conduct or recite
pledges before games, promising in front of their children that
they’ll behave. If they slip up,
they might be pulled aside for a
conversation or kicked out of a
game if a warning does no good.
Other leagues occasionally
have “silent” games, where parents and sometimes even coaches can only offer encouragement
or cheer and clap, but can’t direct
the young players or say or shout
anything too negative.
Buffalo Grove officials say

some have questioned whether
this is just another attempt to
coddle children. Some wonder:
Shouldn’t a young player learn
to take criticism? And what’s
wrong with a little competition, anyway?
But this, say coaches, leagues
and even some parents and kids,
is about parent behavior that increasingly goes way over the line
and interferes with a kid’s ability
to enjoy something that’s supposed to be fun.

Welcome
Steven Miller, M.D.
Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon

Joining
Parkersburg
Orthopedic Associates
Interests include:
• General Orthopedics
• Joint Replacement
• Sports Medicine
• Hand and Wrist Surgery
• Foot and Ankle Surgery
• Fracture for All Ages
Specializes in the treatment of bone and joint disorders, injuries,
fractures and arthritis. Dr. Miller also treats sports injuries, children’s
injuries, work-related injuries and some nerve-compression conditions
such as carpal tunnel syndrome.

To schedule an appointment:
(304) 485-8040
www.orthodoc.aaos.org/drmiller
60426886

60428594

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Full House
Full House
The Nanny The Nanny Friends
(:35) Friends
NCIS "Honor Code"
NCIS "Under Covers"
WWE Monday Night Raw
(:05) Gracelnd "Heat Run"
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy BlackBox
Family Guy Conan (N)
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Castle "Sucker Punch"
Castle "The Third Man"
Major Crimes
Major Crimes
KingMax. "Wild Card" (N) Major Crimes
(2:30) �� Wyatt Earp
��� El Dorado (1967, Western) Robert Mitchum, James Caan, John Wayne.
�� Cahill, U.S. Marshal ('73, West) John Wayne.
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Street Outlaws
Fast N' Loud
Criminal Mind "Epilogue" C.Minds "Dorado Falls"
Crim. Minds "A Thin Line" The Glades (N)
Longmire (N)
Longmire "Party's Over"
(5:00) To Be Announced
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Wildman
Catches
Catches
Top Hooker
Wildman
Wildman
Law &amp; O: CI "Amends"
Law &amp; Order: C.I. "Smile" Snapped "Rachel Wade"
Snapped "Exondia Salado" Snapped "Michelle Knotek" Snapped "Amy Bishop"
Charmed
Charmed "Bite Me"
CSI "To Kill a Predator"
CSI:Miami "Tunnel Vision" CSI: Miami
CSI "Down to the Wire"
Movie
Will &amp; Kate E! News
The Soup
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
'Til Death
'Til Death
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
(:35) Queens
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa.
BrainGa. "Pay Attention!" BrainGa.
BrainGa.
Crossover
Crossover
NHL Live! "Special" (L)
�� White Men Can't Jump ('92, Com) Wesley Snipes. Tour de France Preview
NHL Live!
Octane
NASCAR Race Hub
Pass Time
Pass Time
Pinks! "Budds Creek"
R U Faster
R U Faster
Dumbest
Dumbest
Pinks! "Budds Creek"
Pickers "Cheap Pick"
Pickers "Pinch Picker"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars American Pickers
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Restoration Restoration
Newlyweds First Year
Orange County Social (N) The Real Housewives "100th Episode Special" (N)
Newlyweds First Year (N) Watch (N)
Housewives
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (N)
�� Waist Deep ('06, Act) Tyrese Gibson.
�� You Got Served ('04, Dra) Omarion.
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love/List "Duplex Dilema" Love It or List It (N)
HouseH (N) House (N)
Love It or List It
�� The Ruins ('08, Hor) Jena Malone.
Defiance
Defiance
Warehouse 13
Defiance
(5:15) Thunderstruck
Trouble With the Curve ('12, Dra) Clint Eastwood.
Miss You Can Do It (N)
(:15) Transit ('12, Thril) James Caviezel.
(:45) TruBlood
(:05) Anchorman: The Legend of Ron ... (:45) ��� Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
�� Primal Fear ('96, Susp) Richard Gere.
(:15) Liberal Arts ('12, Com) Josh Radnor.
���� People Like Us ('12, Dra) Chris Pine.
About Cherry ('12, Dra) Ashley Hinshaw. Movie

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page B10 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

LBJ’s ‘Decision’ looks smart in hindsight
Jim Litke

The Associated Press

Chris Bosh told those
Heat fans who had left Game
6 early to stay home, and

judging strictly by his line in
Game 7, he barely bothered
to show up himself.
Fortunately, LeBron James
and Dwyane Wade did.
“The vision that I had

when I decided to come
here is all coming true,”
James said after the Heat
beat the Spurs 95-88 in
Game 7 on Thursday night
to capture a second straight

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NBA title in their third consecutive Finals appearance.
And he’s right.
James was already the
best player in the game
when he made “The Decision” nearly three years ago,
a move that the rest of the
basketball world pounced
on as a sign of weakness,
a tacit admission that he
couldn’t win a championship all by himself.
James was right on that
score, too.
Bosh, always destined
to be third among The Big
Three, wasn’t much help on
this night, contributing zero
points on 0-for-5 shooting
with seven rebounds. But
Wade stepped up, despite a
shaky knee, and Shane Battier had a career shooting
night when it counted.
Wade surrendered his
lead-dog role with the
Heat to recruit James in
2010, but took over during a rocky stretch in the
second quarter and proved
he could still be the man
when it mattered. He finished with 23 points and
10 rebounds.
David Santiago | El Nuevo Herald | MCT photo
Battier, perhaps the most The Miami Heat’s LeBron James gives a thumbs up before the
cerebral guy in the NBA, start of Game 7 of the NBA Finals against the San Antonio
snapped out of a poor- Spurs on Thursday, June 20.
shooting streak to make 6
of 8 attempts from beyond
the arc, and cracked af- lem. Even if those long and to, because the good lord
terward, “It’s better to be mid-range jumpers were has blessed me with a team
timely than good.”
not among his strengths that’s allowed me to grab
The Heat still look like before this season began.
onto his coattails, for as long
a chemistry experiment-in“I put a lot of work into as they want to be together.”
progress some nights, a col- my game over the offseaOne storyline that underlection of Type-A person- son and to come out here pinned the Finals, but didn’t
alities waiting for their cue and see the results happen warrant much discussion
to take over. James was re- on the floor,” he said, “is until the trophy presentaluctant to do so at first, be- the ultimate.”
tion began, was the impendcause his personality — as
Amid all the celebrating, ing retirement of NBA comhas been endlessly dissected — reflects Magic John- Heat president Pat Riley missioner David Stern.
Stern couldn’t help patting
son’s pass-first demeanor said he would do his best
to
bring
everybody
back,
himself
on the back, noting
more than Michael Jordan’s
perhaps because he still that the Finals were being
shoot-always attitude.
But as James reminded owns the trademark to the broadcast in 217 countries
everyone at the end of both term “Three-peat” dating and 47 different languages
Game 6, when the Spurs to his days as coach of the after his 30 years of promoting the game worldwide.
first dared him to drive Los Angeles Lakers.
“I just want this thing to You have to wonder, though,
the ball to the basket, then
Game 7, when his defender keep going. I’m at an age whether secretly he wasn’t
laid back and dared James right now where I’m ready hoping to hand over the
to shoot from the perim- to, you know, fly off some- hardware to the Spurs at
eter, scoring is not a prob- where. But I’m not going least one more time.

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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY,
JUNE 23, 2013

Along the River

C1

Nybble Café changing it up, going local
Stephanie Filson

Managing Editor
sfilson@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — At
last year’s Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce
Banquet, keynote speaker
and Ohio Valley Bank
President and CEO Tom
Wiseman challenged the
room to put ‘Gallia First’
— in other words, support
local businesses by making local purchases and
using local services when
available. Nybble Café, a
locally owned and operated restaurant, located on
Court Street in Gallipolis,
is stepping up, listening to
their customers … and going almost entirely local in
the process.
As part of an overall redesign of the café, Nybble
has brought on head chef
Chris Hull, formerly employed at Cutler’s in the
Ohio University Inn. The
menu has been revamped
according to the expressed
desires of customers, and
several breakfast items
have been added.
Another very visible expansion of Nybble will be
the introduction of coffee.
There will be a variety of
coffee drinks offered starting at 7 a.m. — but not just
any coffee.
“All of our coffee beans
come from Silver Bridge
Coffee here in Gallia County,” said Brian
Ratliff, BTS executive
vice president.
Ratliff said despite this
internal expansion, Nybble’s footprint will remain

the same, with the new
‘Java Lounge’ being located in the already open
space inside the café.
According to Ratliff
buying local is a primary
goal of Nybble’s management.
“Supporting Gallia small
businesses is extremely important to us,” said Ratliff.
“We want to support them
as well as we want other
businesses and individuals
to support us. So, everything that is possible, we
are sourcing from Gallia
County.”
Ratliff said he’s excited
about the changes to Nybble
and to downtown Gallipolis.
I’m most excited about
bringing a restaurant centered around fresh, new
ideas to Gallia County,” said
Ratliff. “I think people will
really respond well to it.”
Ratliff said management
has listened to the feedback of Nybble customers
to make improvements to
the business.
“A lot of the things we
were messing up before,
we’ve changed,” said Ratliff
humbly. “We’ve streamlined
our processes and brought
on more manpower in order to be more efficient.”
Ratliff said orders take
an average of nine minutes from order to customer. He also said the
restaurant will begin delivering locally.
“If there are any other local vendors out there that
make certain products —
chocolate, homemade potato chips — that are sell-

Nybble Café features locally grown foods, locally roasted coffee and local artists.

ing them and we just don’t
know about them yet, we
want to know about them,”
said Ratliff.
Ratliff said the restaurant
is moving more toward local
produce, as well as possibly
starting a restaurant-owned
rooftop garden.
Ratliff himself was
born and raised in Gallia County but eventually
moved out of the area to
find work.
His education and career
took him to Michigan, New
York, North Carolina and

Maryland before bringing
him back home to Gallia
County. As vice president
of BTS Software Solutions
and manager of the many
BTS-related projects currently under way in Gallipolis, he and his family
were afforded the chance
to move back home.
He said his goal is to
make it so that other local
residents can apply their
talent locally instead of being forced to leave the area.
“We’ve seen tremendous success with BTS,

Photos courtesy Nybble Café Facebook page

and it excites me to bring
back the possibility that
someone else won’t have
to leave Gallia County,”
said Ratliff.
“We are going to continue to work as hard as
we possibly can to make
stuff happen, but the fact
is this is a business and
there are no guarantees,
no promises,” said Ratliff.
“The one thing I can promise is that as long as I’m a
BTS employee, as long as
I have a spot in this community, I am going to put

tremendous time, effort,
money and other resources
into bringing these types
of businesses to Gallipolis
and around Gallia County.”
Beginning
Monday,
Nybble Café will be open
from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and
will serve during weekend
hours, as well. Ratliff said
plans were in the works
to possibly have a Sunday
brunch menu in the near
future. As always, Nybble
provides free wifi service
throughout the restaurant.

Nybble features a wide array of dishes including flatbread pizzas.

ABOVE, Nybble featured local meats during the recent Ohio River Live concert event held on Court
Street in Gallipolis. AT LEFT, Nybble offers healthy meal options like wraps and asparagus spears.

AT LEFT, Nybble Café is reinventing itself starting Monday with a reconstructed menu that will include locally roasted coffee and delectable local bakery and other breakfast menu
items. CENTER, Nybble features local artists, like Niles Elliott, pictured, on Wednesday Open Mic Nights. Additional entertainment possibilities are being considered. AT RIGHT,
Nybble features a bright café setting with ever-changing local art exhibited on the walls.

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page C2 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Special Needs Parenting: I did NOT sign-up for this!

The house of guilt no more!
Jodi Hobbs,

Mother, home educator
and advocate for two
special needs/autistic children

Life has not been easy
for my Asperger/ADHD/
B i p o l a r /A s t h m a / PA N DAS Syndrome son lately.
Therefore, life has been
miserable for the rest of us,
too. I made the mistake of
overestimating how much
change he could take and
still be himself. Connor
had outpatient surgery
about 10 days ago. It was
a nervous, nauseous, uncomfortable experience as
I sat in the special surgery
waiting room with my estranged husband — one I
hope to never repeat again.
Connor manipulated the
staff in a way only he can
and was wheeled out to the
car with his scrubs, socks
and two hospital blankets
he really liked. After the
morphine wore off, things
got a little rocky – but I
treated his pain, kept him
on his meal and sleep
schedule and did my best
to keep him entertained
during his bed rest. He
wasn’t quite himself, but
we didn’t have any major
problems. Connor had one
school lesson to complete
after his surgery and then
he was done for the year.
Again, behavior got more
out of hand.
About a week after his
father left town for an extended business trip, I had
complete and utter chaos

on my hands. Aggression,
throwing household items
at his sister and worse. On
one particularly bad morning for both children, I decided to try a special outing
on a beggar’s budget. We
went out to eat, but Aurora (Bipolar/LHON/ADD/
OCD/Anxiety) and myself
only ordered pie and water.
Connor ate a full meal and
seemed pleased. We went
on to the Dollar Store,
where each child got a five
dollar limit. I thought I
had taken a potentially bad
situation and out-fooled it.
Connor feel asleep in the
car and awoke to climb
out and carry his Dollar
Store loot into the house.
The children were playing
legos when a neighborhood
girl knocked on the door
and asked if the children
could play. I’ll abbreviate
a long story: the children
proceeded to let the two
service-dogs-in-training out
the front door four times.
FOUR. Every time I got
them corralled and back in
the house – they’d open the
door and back out they’d
run. No comments on my
dog training abilities at this
point either. Those dogs
are a work in progress.
After all that, the children
had to remain in the house
and help clean up. Connor
grew increasingly agitated
and finally grabbed a glass
drinking jar from the dishwasher, shattering it on the
wooden floor. I made him
clean up his own mess, but

like any 10-year-old boy
– he missed a lot of glass.
Millions of tiny shards remained to get in the feet
of three people and two
service-dogs-in-training. I
cleaned more when I woke
in the middle of the night
and Connor awoke an hour
later to vacuum and mop
more. He seemed more
calm, and we talked about
how he could have expressed his anger instead:
beating his pillow/mattress,
squeezing his therapy putty
or twisting his pool noodle.
But still, I feel like the one
who really is at fault here is
myself. I didn’t heed repeated advice about too much
change in an autistic’s life.
I didn’t see the signs of the
clear domino effect and just
maybe I was guilty of something even worse. Guilty
of not wanting to hear “if
you’d only discipline that
child” or “a few good beatings would fix him”. Guilty
of wanting a normal life for
just a few seconds that I
failed my child.
This is the House of
Guilt, no more. My son is
autistic – get over it. For
both the autism community and the neurotypical
world it’s time to ‘get a new
attitude’. For all our bandstanding and blogging, I
see (myself included) far
too much of parents and
caregivers ignoring the
obvious recommendations
for their child/loved one because it’s easy or they don’t
wish to be embarrassed.

I need to remember that
no one “normal” was ever
famous for inventions/politics/medicine/history/etc.
All of them were known for
having abnormal qualities
to their personalities and
many clearly fit the autistic
profile. I need to remember
that there is a company currently hiring only autistic
people. I need to remember
every time my son asks me
for the millionth time to
drive him to Radio Shack

(love those gift cards!)
for conductors and transistors, that one day he’s
going to build something
so important the world is
going to stop for just a moment and thank him. We
are not a house of normal
people. I’ve met a lot of our
neighbors and thousands of
people in my life through
school, work, and community service – why anyone
would want to be normal is
beyond me.

The author blogs at www.
throughthehardtimesandthegood.
blogspot.com and can be reached
at
snp.ididnotsignupforthis@
gmail.com. Her Facebook page is
I did not sign up for this special
needs parenting. Join her on Twitter at @JhobbsSaunders. Her work
can also be found under the special needs parenting section on
www.dandelionmoms.com. Also,
go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and www.mydailytribune.com to
read the full-length article complete with links to valuable special
needs resources.

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Feeder Cattle
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Steers, $88-$138, Heifers, $85-$126; 650725 pounds, Steers, $85-$130, Heifers,
$85-$125; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $85$125, Heifers, $85-$115.
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $72-$85.50; Medium/Lean, $64-$71; Thin/Light, $50-$63; Bulls,
$80-$104.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $675-$1,385; Bred Cows,
$740-$1,175; Baby Calves, $125-$285;
Goats, $16-$95; Lambs, $108-$124.50;
Hogs, $63.
Upcoming Specials
6/26/13 — Next sale, 10 a.m. Replacement brood cow sale, 12:30 p.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy
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Mark at (740) 645-5708, or visit the website
at www.uproducers.com.

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CC

anaday

areas near pastures. Control starts with
keeping it mowed down.
However even mowed off plants produce
seeds to spread this weed. Spot spraying
with dicamba or Crossbow is quite effective in grass hat fields and marginal land.
In alfalfa fields, pre-emergent chemicals
such as Butryrac 200, Pursuit Eptam and
Prowl H2O work well. In mixed pasture or
hayfields, farmers need to kill patches of
the spiny pigweed and reseed to grasses
for more effective control.
***
Are you ready for homegrown fruit and
vegetables?
The local Farmers Markets are quickly
growing in size as more vendors have produce ready to sell. Several growers have
been using high tunnels (unheated greenhouses) technology to harvest 2- 4 weeks
ahead of schedule. Sweet corn grown under plastic has just started to appear in the
markets. Bare ground corn plantings will
soon follow. Blueberries, black raspberries, cherries and the last of the strawberries can be seen. Check out the lettuces,
spinach, herbs and Swiss chard. There appears to be good supplies of squash and
cucumbers. There is still time to purchase
and plant annuals and perennials. Check
out the local newspapers and chamber of
commerce for listings of places and times.

60422669

Summer
has
begun!
traps away from the plants
The Japanese beetles have
you want to protect. Carbaemerged from their ten
ryl and pyrethroids can be
month home in the soil and
sprayed as a preventative
are they hungry!
spray on susceptible plant
The adults feed on the
variety leaves. Grub control
leaves of over 400 plant speworks best when the grubs
cies (favorites are roses, Virare smaller in size (mid July
ginia creeper vine, red leafed
– August) and feeding near
plants). The adults will eat
the surface of turfgrass roots.
for six to eight weeks before
Apply Imidacloprid (Merit)
dying. However, before they
or halofenozide (MACH2) in
die they mate and the female
June and early July.
lays her eggs near the root
Japanese Beetles (Popillia
system of grasses. The imjaponica) arrived in the UnitHal Kneen
mature grubs prefer the root
ed States in the New Jersey in
Extension Corner
system of Kentucky blue
1916 from Japan. In the mid
grass, perennial ryegrass,
1970’s they had not yet mitall fescues and bentgrass.
grated to Chillicothe Ohio,
If we have a dry August many of the however now they are found close to the
grubs will die due to desiccation. In wet Mississippi River. Want further informayears, active soil reservoirs of Bacillus pa- tion? Check out OSU Extension factsheets
pillae (Milky spore disease) and entomo- 2001, ‘Control of Japanese Beetle Adults
pathogenic nematodes (Heterorhabditis) and Grubs in the Home Lawn’ on our webnumbers can reduce beetle grub develop- site www.ohioline.osu.edu.
ment. The bacteria and nematodes need
***
to be applied when ground is moist and
If you are baling hay or pulling weeds
followed up with additional irrigations of from the garden be on the lookout for Spiny
water to keep the parasitic creatures alive. Pigweed (Amaranthus spinosus). Unlike
Just remember Japanese beetles can the rest of the pigweed family of weeds,
fly several miles. Male Japanese beetles this weed has thorns along its stem! The
can be attracted to beetle traps. The traps characteristic two thorns, one on each side
trick the male beetles into thinking that of its female flower cluster are almost one
female beetles are there by using female half inch in length. The plant can grow to
sex pheromones lures. What a surprise five feet tall. In the past fifteen years this
when they arrive and no females are close southern weed has become a major probby. Traps need to be emptied daily. Place lem in overgrazed pasture and neglected

�Sunday, June 23, 2013

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times Sentinel • Page C3

Sunday, June 23, 2013

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
June 24, 2013:
This year you will experience
intense emotions. Learning to deal
with your feelings will be for the better. Trust your gut instinct, and your
choices will be excellent. You are in
a year where you are initiating a new
beginning in some areas of your life. If
you are single, in the next few months,
you could meet several potential suitors whom you easily could consider
dating. If you are attached, as a couple
you will fulfill a goal. You also might
start acting like newfound lovers again.
CAPRICORN comes through for you,
even though you often have opposing
views.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH You might find that misunderstandings and overindulgences
mark the day. What you are witnessing is a case of “Monday-itis.” Treat
each issue individually, and do not
get caught up in others’ differences.
Tonight: Run home, kick back and put
your feet up. You deserve a timeout.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH Your efforts could trigger
someone’s sensitive side. You can
handle this emotional frenzy. Confirm
what you say and hear, and make
sure that everyone agrees on meeting
times and places. If ever there could
be a slip-up, it would be now. Tonight:
Do something just for you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You might think that one
idea is better than another, but soon
you could change your mind again.
You seem to be everywhere all at
once. You’ll find the right path, as you
want to avoid creating any uproar. If
you are sure about what you want, go
for it. Tonight: With a close friend.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You feel one way, yet a
partner could feel differently. You
might be putting too much emphasis
on what others expect from you. Test
the waters before you make a judgment like that. You could be projecting
your thoughts rather than reflecting
reality. Tonight: Listen to an offer.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH Your efficiency will be tested,
and the nature of the day could be
determined by several unexpected
decisions. Remain confident; confirm
all messages and meetings. You need
to be sure that everyone is on the
same page. Tonight: Relax at home.
Snooze a bit, if you can.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You need to know more of
what is expected from you. Perhaps
an unexpected comment in a meeting
could point to the right direction. Your
sense of humor emerges with a friend
who tends to be joyful. You will gain a
new perspective as a result. Tonight:
Where you want to be.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Understanding evolves to a
new level if you can step back and
remain uninvolved. You might be confused, as someone close to you could
be sending you mixed messages.
Try reiterating what you are hearing.
You might not have all the answers.
Tonight: Happy at home.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You might want to understand exactly what is motivating you
and causing so much change. Realize
what is needed in order for you to
change direction. Honor a possibility
that comes from a new connection. Be
direct in your dealings. Tonight: Talk
up a storm.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You could be tired of
encountering complications, yet you’re
full of energy. This is a dangerous
combination, because if you do not
manage your frustration and find a
solution, you could become volatile. It
is important to express your feelings.
Tonight: Reach out to a friend.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHHH You are more in control than it appears, as chaos swirls
around you. Continue on your chosen
path, and be sure to jump over any
obstacles in your way. Communication
might be needed, but it could be difficult at the moment. Tonight: All smiles
— the day has ended!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH You might want to find out
what is motivating others. If you feel
confused by what is happening, know
that you are not alone. Be careful
with your funds and loved ones. What
they feel they are offering might not
be all that valuable to you. Tonight:
Togetherness works.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You are sure of what
you want and where you are going.
Distraction will be your middle name,
if you’re not careful. Misunderstanding
might happen out of the blue, so try to
confirm what you are hearing. Reach
out to a close friend for feedback.
Tonight: Do only what you must.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page C4 • Sunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Griggs recognized by the United States Achievement Academy
The United States
Achievement
Academy recently announced

that Dakota Griggs of
Coolville, Ohio, has been
recognized for academic

achievement as a United
States National Honor
Student Award winner.

Griggs, who attends Federal Hocking High School,
will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy’s Official Yearbook which
is published nationally.
“Recognizing and supporting our youth is more
important than ever before in America’s history.
Certainly, United States
Achievement
Academy
winners should be congratulated and appreciated for their dedication
to excellence and achievement,” said Dr. George
Stevens, Founder of the

United States Achievement Academy.
The USAA National
Honor Student Awards
provide honor students
with many benefits and
services and is a great
tribute to a student’s dedication, talkent, and ability.
Griggs is the sone of
Kevin and Janet Griggs
of Coolville, Ohio. He is
the grandson of Benjamin (Buck) and Barbara
Buchanan of Reedsville,
Ohio, and the late Jerry
and Florence Griggs of
Dakota Griggs
Parkersburg, W.Va.

Submitted photos

AT LEFT, recognized at this year’s Cheshire High School Alumni Reunion was alumni couple
Cloyce and Martha Mulford Swisher, pictured. AT RIGHT, Recognized at this year’s Cheshire
High School Alumni Reunion was alumni couple Bill and Charlene Ward Darst, pictured.

Cheshire High School Alumni
hold their 2013 reunion
CHESHIRE — On May
25, forty-four alumni and
guests celebrated their
20th year meeting at
Cheshire High School.
After classes were called
and grace was given, dinner was served at 6 p.m.
Later during the program,
all alumni present from
1931-1956 classes were
introduced and asked to
share information about
their classes.
The highlight of our
recognitions was having
our oldest living alumnus, 100 years young,
John W. Rife, from Lancaster, Ohio, class of
1931, and 10 of his family
members. This year, Mr.
Rife, wanted to attend
his 82nd year of gradu-

Attending the 2013 Cheshire Alumni Banquet this year was
John W. Rife, I, age 100, class of 1931. He is pictured along
with his son, John W. Rife, II., right, John W. Rife, III, center, and
one-year-old John W. Rife, IV, right.

ation and celebrate with
family, fellow alumni and
friends. He shared infor-

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mation about his class.
There were 20 graduates
in his class. One other
living graduate, Mrs.
Pauline Fife Shaver, was
unable to attend due to
health reasons
Members from the 60th
year 1953 class were:
Jacky Coughenour, Arthur
Rupe, Jr., Donald Scott
and Cloyce Swisher. Representing the last Cheshire
High School graduating
class of 1956 were: Jim
Bradbury, Martha Swisher
and Bob Waugh.
Other special recognitions were: the alumnus
traveling the farthest,
Bob Swisher from Lake
City, Tenn.; Cheshire
teachers and all teachers
present; alumni couples,
Bill and Charlene Ward
Darst and Cloyce and
Martha Mulford Swisher.
Mr. Rife and his family,
representing four generations, received recognition for having the most
family members present:
his daughter and son-inlaw, Sharma and Vince
Deneui, from Arvada,
Colorado; his son, John
Rife, II, and daughter-inlaw, Annie Rife; grandsons, Max Rife and Sarah
McKeown, John Rife III
and wife, Laren, and their
young son, John Rife IV,
all from London, England, and his niece, Elva
Williams Davis from Gallipolis, Ohio.
All those from special recognition classes, and special
recognition categories were
presented flowers.
Special door prizes
CHS shirts and paperweights and Bob Evans
certificates were drawn.
After the singing of the
alma mater, a moment
of silent prayer was observed in memory of our
deceased alumni. Betty
Mathews Clark dismissed
the meeting with a closing prayer.
The CHS Alumni Committee thanks all alumni
and guests who attended
and all other local alumni
members who assisted in
setting up and preparing
for the reunion
The 2014 reunion will
be held on the Saturday
before Memorial Day.

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