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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM OR WWW.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Fall beauty... C1

OBITUARIES

Mostly sunny. High
of 62. Low of 41
... Page A2

Week 8 high school
football action
... B1

William Barnett, 74
Janet Bush
Wilmarine Hill, 71
Bradley Patterson, 24
Virginia Robinson, 91

$2.00

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 41

Dorothy Sheets, 92
Gregory Weethee, 44
Lenora Whitley, 86
Yvonne Wilson

Loans let city sewer project plan upgrades
Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — With improvements currently being
completed to the headworks at
the Gallipolis Water Pollution
Control Facility, the City of Gallipolis has recently acquired an
additional low-interest loan to
help plan and design upgrades to
the aging plant that will soon be
taking on additional waste from
the Kanauga-Addison (K-A) and

Green Township sewer projects.
According to Gallipolis City
Manager Randy Finney, the
$500,000 loan recently issued
by the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency will help
cover a portion of the design
for the upgrade that will essentially take the plant from
processing 1.3 million gallons a
day to two million gallons a day
— an expansion that will be
sufficient for the expected additional sewage flows from the

K-A Sewer and Green Township
sewer extension projects.
“Basically, our plant, it’s been
25 years since its been upgraded,
all the equipment is outdated.
We are trying to get it so we can
actually buy parts for it, and get
it updated before we have some
major problems,” Finney said. “It
is recommended every 25 years
to do upgrades to the plants.”
According to Finney, the
one-percent interest Ohio EPA
loan will have a total life of 20

years, and, while the loan will
not cover the entire cost for the
estimated $950,000 for design
work for the upgrade, the city
has already submitted documentation requesting an additional low-interest loan for the
remaining cost of the project.
The City of Gallipolis is currently already performing upgrades
to the headworks portion of the
water pollution control facility,
as that portion of the facility was
badly in need of repair, and, thus,

that project was expedited.
“What we are doing right now
is the upgrade to the headworks,
which is the front end of it. We
had so many issues with that.
Our system was actually down in
the headworks, we are manually
doing all the work now,” Finney
said. “It would have normally
been done as part of the whole
project, but since we had the issues with it, we went ahead and
See LOANS | A2

Point Pleasant
to be featured in
national magazine
POINT PLEASANT — Point Pleasant will be featured
in one of West Virginia’s premiere magazines which is
sold in 25 states as well as Canada and celebrates life in
the Mountain State.
On Friday, Laura Rote, managing editor and Elizabeth
Roth, photographer, for WV Living Magazine, were being given the grand tour of downtown Point Pleasant by
Main Street Point Pleasant Director Charles Humphreys.
Life in downtown Point Pleasant will be featured in the
magazine’s Fall 2014 edition - Rote and Roth were in town
to get seasonal photos well in advance of the issue.
Rote said the fall issue is known as a premiere, double
issue and the story on Point Pleasant will be a featurestyle article in nature, showcasing life, culture and recreSee MAGAZINE | A2

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Jim and Becky Anderson are in the process of liquidating merchandise in preparation for closing Andersons.

Marking the end of a business era
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — When Jim and Becky Anderson
close the doors to their furniture and appliance business sometime in the next few weeks, it will mark
the end of 129 years of five generations of the Jacob
Elberfeld family to have a merchandising business in
downtown Pomeroy.
Jim, son of the late Mary Elberfeld Anderson Morris, is the great-great-grandson of Jacob Elberfeld I,
founder of Elberfelds in 1884. Jacob came to Meigs
County from Bavaria in the late 1850s, worked for a
long time in the coal mines, attended the Pomeroy
Academy, and then got a job as a clerk in a store
where he worked for a number of years before going
into business for himself.
His first store was located in the lower block of
Pomeroy. After the death of Jacob Elberfeld I in 1887,
his son Jacob Bauer Elberfeld continued the busi-

A window display tells the story of the Elberfeld family businesses. Shown here is the founder’s son, Jacob
Bauer Elberfeld, left, and his son, Alfred, who managed
Elberfelds until his death in 1973.

Beth Sergent | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Representatives from WV Living Magazine, Laura Rote and
Elizabeth Roth, get the grand tour of downtown Point Pleasant from Main Street Point Pleasant Director Charles Humphreys. Point Pleasant will be featured in the magazine’s Fall
2014 edition which reaches national audiences.

Commissioners sign Character Counts proclamation
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners approved a proclamation on Thursday
to recognize Character
Counts week, Oct. 20-26.
Russ
Fields,
Julie
Mayer, Kim Wolfe, Emily
Hill and Josie Jarrell presented the proclamation
to the commissioners,
stating that Character
Counts Week was being
observed the week of
Oct. 20-26 in the Meigs
Local School District.
Activities for the week
were coordinated by the
Meigs Local after school
programs, funded by the
21st Century Grant. Student activities included
character color days,
random act of kindness
day, poster and essay
contests, and a coat and
canned food drive. The
high school and middle
school will also be conducting a park beautification project at Dave Diles

Park and a tennis shoe
recycling program.
The Character Counts
program is administered
by the non-profit organization Josephson Institute to teach character
education. The six pillars
of character referred to in
the program are trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring,
and citizenship.
The program reaches
more than 7 million
young people daily and
offers support, development, training programs,
e-newsletters,
resources, products, and
free consultation.
Character Counts Week
is a time to emphasize
the importance of striving for good character all
the time to emphasize the
importance of striving
for good character at all
times, in every situation.
The
proclamation
approved by the commissioners
proclaimed
Oct. 20-26 as Character
Counts Week in Meigs

County and encouraged
the community to set
a good example for the
youth by exemplifying
the six pillars of character
throughout the week and
in their everyday lives.
This is the second
consecutive year the
commissioners have approved a proclamation
for the week.
Also approved during
Thursday’s regular meeting were three resolutions
presented by Meigs County Department of Job and
Family Services Director
Chris Shank.
The first resolution
was to approve the hiring of Lori Hatfield as
an Eligibility Referral
Specialist 2.
A resolution was also
approved for maintenance
Sarah Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel
agreements with ECHO Meigs County Commissioners (front, from left) Mike Bartrum, Randy Smith and Tim Ihle sign
24 for telephone in the a proclamation naming Oct. 20-26 as Character Counts week in Meigs County. Also pictured
amount of $3,945.60 and are Meigs Local social workers and after-school program organizers Julie Mayer, Russ Fields,
Northwoods for digital Emily Hill, Kim Wolfe, and Josie Jarrell.
imaging in the amount of
three Meigs County Comagency to be closed for approved as presented.
$57,778.66.
Attending the meet- missioners, clerk Gloria
The final resolution the annual training.
Minutes from last week’s ing in addition to those Kloes, and Del Pullins
approved an in-service
day for Dec. 6 with the meeting and bills were also mentioned above were all who gave the invocation.

�Page A2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 62. Southwest
wind 6 to 11 mph.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 41.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 67.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 42.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 57.
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 33.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 56.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 35.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 56.

"@42=îDE@4&lt;D
AEP (NYSE) — 44.82
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.08
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 91.52
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 58.86
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 105.66
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.50
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.25
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.92
Collins (NYSE) — 70.54
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.62
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.92
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.55
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 65.75
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.30
Kroger (NYSE) — 42.38
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 59.23
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 79.89
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.17
BBT (NYSE) — 33.60
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.80
Pepsico (NYSE) — 83.01
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.32
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.42
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.20
Royal Dutch Shell — 66.94
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 56.39
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.71
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.59
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.57
Worthington (NYSE) — 39.90
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions for October 18, 2013, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Ohio officer gets probation
in smuggling case
CINCINNATI (AP) — A former Ohio police officer
who once received a medal of valor for rescuing a woman
from a burning home avoided jail time Friday and was
sentenced to probation stemming from his connection to
a marijuana smuggling operation.
Bryon Roos, formerly an officer in the Cincinnati suburb of North College Hill, admitted to depositing money
meant to avoid bank reporting requirements as part of the
operation that involved at least 10 other men.
In exchange for his guilty plea in February, prosecutors
dropped more serious charges of marijuana importation
and exportation and conspiracy to distribute marijuana.
Roos was sentenced to two and half years of probation,
including six months of home confinement, and ordered
to pay a $5 million fine.
Other men charged in the scheme received sentences
ranging from four to 14 years in prison.
Henry Sirkin, Roos’ attorney, said his client is extremely remorseful and is now a stay-at-home dad focusing on
his 4-month-old son.

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Sunday, October 20, 2013

�2==:2î�@F?EJî�@&gt;&gt;F?:EJî�2=6?52C
Card showers

Loeta Abblett will turn 95 on
October 26. Please send cards to:
Loeta Abblet, C/O Ronald Keenan,
471 Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Dorothy Haner will be celebrating
her 90th birthday on October 31.
Cards can be sent to her home address at: 17 Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Events
Monday, October 21

GALLIPOLIS — Look Good Feel
Better, sponsored by the American

Cancer Society, will be held at 6
p.m. at the Cancer Resource Center in the Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, 170 Jackson Pike. This free
program is for women with cancer
who are dealing with radiation and/
or chemotherapy treatments. They
will be given advice on how to care
for their skin and other helpful tips
to give them self confidence. Please
call before 10 a.m. Monday (740)
441-3909 for an appointment.
VINTON — Modern Woodmen
of America will hold a Family Life
Dinner at 6 p.m. at the Vinton Baptist Church, 11821 Ohio 160. Dinner will be provided by the Field of

Hope committee. A program will
be given on Life in Israel Today by
Peter and Betsy Martindale. The
public is welcome.

Friday, October 25

GALLIPOLIS — Special meeting
of the O. O. McIntyre Park District
Board, 11 a.m., Park District Office,
18 Locust Street, Gallipolis.

Tuesday, November 5

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Clinic
and Holzer Medical Center retirees
will meet for lunch at 12 p.m. at
Pizza Hut.

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Monday, Oct. 21

LETART — Letart Township
Trustees will meet at 5 p.m. in the
Letart Township Building.

Tuesday, Oct. 22

POMEROY — The Meigs County

Emergency Planning Committee
(LEPC) will meet at 11:30 a.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center. Lunch
will be available.

Wednesday, Oct. 23

POMEROY — The Meigs Coun-

ty Republican Party Bean Dinner
will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center.
Representatives are expected to
be in attendance to represent several state officials.

Ex-House Speaker Tom Foley dies at 84
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Tall and courtly, Tom
Foley served 30 years in
the House when partisan
confrontation was less
rancorous than today and
Democrats had dominated
for decades. He crowned
his long political career by
becoming speaker, only to
be toppled when Republicans seized control of
Congress in 1994, turned
out by angry voters with
little taste for incumbents.
Foley, the first speaker
to be booted from office
by his constituents since
the Civil War, died Friday
at the age of 84 of complications from a stroke,
according to his wife,
Heather.
She said he had suffered
a stroke last December
and was hospitalized in
May with pneumonia.
He returned home after a
week and had been on hospice care there ever since,
she said.

“Foley was very much
a believer that the perfect
should not get in the way
of the achievable,” Ms.
Foley wrote in a 10-page
obituary of her husband.
She said he believed that
“half of something was
better than none.”
“There was always another day and another
Congress to move forward
and get the other half
done,” she wrote.
“America has lost a legend of the United States
Congress,”
President
Barack Obama said in a
statement Friday, adding,
“Tom’s
straightforward
approach helped him find
common ground with
members of both parties.”
Foley, who grew up in
a politically active family
in Spokane, Wash., represented that agricultureheavy area for 15 terms
in the House, including
more than five years in the
speaker’s chair.

In that job, he was third
in line of succession to the
presidency and was the
first speaker from west of
the Rocky Mountains.
Though the politics of
Foley’s era was less sharpedged than today, it was
not without hardball. As
he became speaker in June
1989, a Republican National Committee memo was
circulated called, “Tom
Foley. Out of the Liberal
Closet,” that said Foley’s
voting record was as liberal
as that of openly gay Rep.
Barney Frank, D-Mass.
Some lawmakers took
the memo as hinting that
Foley was gay, which he
denied. The White House
said then-President George
H.W. Bush was “disgusted”
by the incident, and Foley
said he considered the episode closed.
As speaker, he was an
active negotiator in the
1990 budget talks that
led to Bush breaking his

pledge to never raise taxes, which played a role in
Bush’s 1992 defeat. Even
so, Bush released a statement Friday lauding Foley.
“Tom never got personal or burned bridges,” said
Bush. “We didn’t agree on
every issue, but on key issues we managed to put
the good of the country
ahead of politics.”
Foley also let the House
vote on a resolution authorizing Bush to use
force against Iraq for its
1990 invasion of Kuwait,
despite “strong personal
reservations and the strenuous objections of a good
many” Democrats, Bob
Michel, an Illinois Republican who was House minority leader at the time,
recalled Friday.
“But he granted our request for a vote because
it was the right thing to
do. He was that kind of
leader,” Michel said in a
statement.

among other destinations.
“Amazing,” Humphreys
said about the opportunity
the feature could bring
Point Pleasant. “This will
be amazing in terms of
getting the word out about
the community.”
WV Living Magazine
is part of New South Media, Inc., a Morgantownbased media company
which also produces the
publications WV Weddings Magazine, WV
Living Morgantown, WV

Living Outdoors, Explore and The Ultimate
Sports and Travel Guide
to the Big 12. Founded in
2008 by Nikki Bowman,
New South Media, Inc.
is a multimedia company
that publishes regional
lifestyle and travel magazines for a national audience, which means Point
Pleasant will reach readers around the country.
These publications are
also available as digital
applications on Apple,

Kindle, and Google platforms which means the
feature on Point Pleasant
in Fall 2014 will be easy to
access for those not near a
newsstand which sells the
actual magazine.
The edition featuring
Point Pleasant should be
available in September
2014 with portions of it
available online at wvliving.com around this
time as well. Print editions are on sale locally
in Huntington.

Magazine
From Page A1
ation in the fall months.
While walking along
their tour, both women
said they were especially
impressed with Riverfront
Park as well as the Point
Pleasant River Museum,

MY TOWN
MY TOWN IS THE PLACE WHERE
MY HOUSE IS FOUND,
BUSINESS IS LOCATED, AND
WHERE MY VOTE IS CAST.
IT IS WHERE MY CHILDREN ARE
EDUCATED, AND WHERE MY LIFE IS.
MY TOWN HAS A RIGHT TO MY
CIVIC LOYALTY,
IT SUPPORTS ME AND I SHOULD SUPPORT IT.
MY TOWN WANTS MY CITIZENSHIP,
NOT MY PARTISANSHIP.
MY FRIENDLINESS NOT MY DISSENSIONS.
MY SYMPATHY, NOT MY CRITICISM.
MY INTELLIGENCE NOT MY INDIFFERENCE.
MY TOWN SUPPLIES ME WITH PROTECTION,
TRADE, FRIENDS, EDUCATION,
SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, AND THE RIGHT TO
FREE MORAL CITIZENSHIP.
IT HAS SOME THINGS BETTER
THAN OTHERS.
THE BEST THINGS I SHOULD SEE TO
MAKE BETTER.
THE WORST THINGS I SHOULD HELP TO
SUPPRESS.
TAKE IT ALL-IN-ALL,
IT IS MY TOWN
AND IT IS ENTITLED TO THE BEST THERE IS
IN ME.
SUBMITTED BY: E. RODERICK
60458711

Loans
From Page A1
did it in advance to get it done. They would
have tied in together if we didn’t have a
maintenance issue with [the headworks].”
A bid for the construction of the headworks facility improvement project was
awarded by the Gallipolis City Commission last month to Doll Layman, LLC, of
Tipp City, Ohio, after they presented the
lowest and most responsible bid for the
project in the amount of $1,170,000.
Finney reported that the funding for this
headworks project also came from low-interest loans from the Ohio Water Development Authority (OWDA), and plans are to
finish that project by as early as next summer, with the scheduled design upgrades
to begin soon thereafter.
“The headworks project is going on now.
We are bringing in equipment as we speak,
and we plan on having it done — we don’t
have a final schedule for it finished yet —
but we’re looking at July of next year before
it is finished. Then we will start, hopefully,
on the upgrade to the plant by June of next
year. We should be able to go out to bid at
that time,” Finney said.
The city manager also discussed funding these multi-million dollar improvements to the water pollution control facility and whether the projects will adversely
affect the city’s coffers.
“Actually it’s very well planned out. The
city did the Ameresco loan several years
ago and that’s going to be paid off at about
the time that this loan will start being paid
on, so we shouldn’t see too much of an affect for the city’s residents at that time;
and, once the Green project comes online,
that will help defray some of the cost of
this also. The revenue we get from that
will help fund this,” he said.
Finney further reported that, with the
Kanauga-Addison and Green Township

sewer projects, the county will be responsible for the system and billing customers,
while the city will meter the waste coming
into town and charge the county a bulk rate.
According to Gallia County Administrator Karen Sprague, the K-A sewer is still
under reconstruction.
Southern Ohio Trenching and Excavating is finishing up on Georges Creek Road
and the company still has cleanup work to
do, including seeding and mulching, paving and concrete work.
Those portions of Georges Creek Road
that are currently being reconstructed will
reportedly be tested after 30 days, and, if
those areas pass, connection notices will
be sent out to those residents in this final
area. All other areas have received their
connection notices.
Sprague further reported that the Gallia
County Board of Commissioners is hopeful that the K-A Sewer Project will be 100
percent complete by the end of October.
The commission is also still working to
obtain funding for the Green Sewer Project, according to Sprague, as they submitted an application for Ohio Public Works
Commission (OPWC) funding on Friday
and are still in hopes to receive Appalachian Regional Commission funding before putting the project out to bid.
Sprague reported that if funding
through the OPWC is approved by early
July of next year, then the Green Sewer
Project phase one could go out to bid as
early as August 2014.
Once construction on the Green Sewer
Project begins, it is expected to take 24
months for the entire project to be finished.
In addition, Sprague reported that, for
interested individuals, there will be public
meeting in regard to the phase one of the
Green Sewer at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, October 22 at the Green Elementary School.

�Sunday, October 20, 2013

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Gallia County Garden
Clubs meeting

GALLIPOLIS — A countywide meeting of the Gallia
County Garden Clubs will
be held at 7 p.m. (note time
change) on Monday, October
21 at the C.H. McKenzie Building. Margaret Reid will be the
presenter on the topic of beekeeping and honey production.

Look Good Feel
Better scheduled

GALLIPOLIS — Look Good
Feel Better, sponsored by the
American Cancer Society, will
be held at 6 p.m. on Monday,
October 21 at the Cancer Resource Center in the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care, 170
Jackson Pike. This free program is for women with cancer
who are dealing with radiation
and/or chemotherapy treatments. They will be given advice on how to care for their
skin and other helpful tips
to give them self confidence.
Please call (740) 441-3909 before 10 a.m. on Monday for an
appointment.

City leaf pickup
schedule

GALLIPOLIS — The City
of Gallipolis has established
a weekly leaf pickup schedule
beginning on Monday, October
21. The schedule should eliminate any questions concerning
when leaves will be picked up.
It is the city’s hope that this

schedule will give residents
uniform service: Monday —
All cross streets and Fifth Avenue; Tuesday — First Avenue
and Second Avenue; Wednesday — Garfield Avenue, Ohio
141, Ohio 588, including Halliday Heights, Garfield Heights,
Holcomb Hill, Evans Heights,
Hedgewood Drive, Oakwood
Drive and Highpoint Drive;
Thursday — Third Avenue and
Fourth Avenue; Friday — Eastern Avenue and Maple Shade
Area.

Road closed for
slip repair

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia
County Engineer Brett A.
Boothe has announced that
Kriner Road will be closed for
a slip repair on October 23 at
7 a.m. until further notice. The
closure will be located between
Neighborhood Road and Parish Drive. Residents are asked
to use other county roads as a
detour.

Bidwell’s Halloween
parade slated

BIDWELL — Bidwell’s 20th
Halloween Parade will be held
on Saturday, October 26. Participants should line up at 3:30
p.m. at River Valley Middle
School. The parade will begin
at 4 p.m. Walking units are welcome, but it is suggested that
participants ride in a moving
vehicle until reaching Bidwell,
or join the parade lineup in
Bidwell. For more information,

call 388-8547 or 388-8214.

Historical preservation
board meeting

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Historical Preservation
Board will hold a meeting on
Monday, October 28 at 5:30
p.m. at the City’s Municipal
Building, 333 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio. The meeting
room can be accessed from
the entrance door next to 2
½ Alley. On the agenda is the
approval of the minutes from
the August 26 meeting, and
the September 23 meeting.
No cases are scheduled at this
time. Concerns on any other
properties in the historical
district and any other matters
may brought before the board.
For more information, please
call Bev Dunkle at 441.6015 or
Brett Bostic at 441.6022.

Gallia-Vinton ESC
to host class

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center will be holding a
Christmas ball making class
at the Washington Elementary School at 6 p.m. on October 29. The participants
will be making one ball to
take home and two to donate
to the city. All supplies will
be provided. Those who are
interested should contact
Rashel Fallon at (740) 2450593. The classes will be limited to 20 adults per night.

Economic
development
strategy report
available for review

WAVERLY, Ohio — The
Ohio Valley Regional Development Commission has completed a draft Annual Comprehensive Economic Development
Strategy (CEDS) Performance
Report. A thirty-day comment
period commences on Tuesday, October 1, 2013, and will
end Wednesday, October 30,
2013. The CEDS Performance
Report documents OVRDC’s
progress on the goals and objectives identified in the 2012
revised CEDS. OVRDC’s 12
county region includes, Fayette, Highland, Clermont,
Ross, Pike, Brown, Adams,
Scioto, Vinton, Jackson, Lawrence and Gallia. Anyone desiring to review the document
may do so at the Ohio Valley
Regional Development Commission’s office located at: 73
Progress Drive, Waverly, Ohio
45690 from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., Monday through Friday,
or on the web at www.ovrdc.
org. Further information may
be obtained by contacting
Kara Willis or Jason Gillow at
(740) 947-2853 or toll-free in
Ohio (800) 223-7491.

Crown City
trick-or-treat set

CROWN CITY — The official Trick or Treat Night for
Crown City will be from 5:30

to 7 p.m. on Oct. 31.

Meeting canceled
on Election Day

PORTER — The November meeting of the Springfield
Township Crime Watch will not
be meeting due to it falling on
Election Day, November 5, 2013.
The next meeting will be held on
December 3, 2013, at the fire department in Porter at 6 p.m.

Buckeye Hills advisory
committees to meet

RIO GRANDE — The Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District will hold
its annual Advisory Committee
meeting on Thursday, November 7, 2013. Dinner will begin
at 6:30 p.m. in the cafeteria on
the Buckeye Hills campus.
Currently,
32
Advisory
Committees serve as a communication channel between
the school and occupational
groups in the community.
Each committee consists of
six members who advise on
the type of skills, knowledge,
and attitudes that are needed
to prepare secondary and
adult students to enter into a
specific occupation. Members
serve a three-year term and
represent some 200 businesses, industries, and government
agencies in Gallia, Jackson and
Vinton counties.
Additional information may
be obtained by phoning the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD at
740-245-5334.

#6:8Dî�@F?EJî"@42=î�C:67D
Rutland Trick or
Treat

RUTLAND — Rutland
will have trick or treat
night from 6 to 7 p.m. on
Oct. 31.

Republican Party
Ladies meeting

SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet
at 6:30 p.m.on Oct. 24 at
Carleton School. Refreshments. All women welcome.

Meigs Historical
Society annual
meeting

POMEROY — The annual meeting of the Meigs
County Historical Society
will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs County
Museum Annex. The program for the meeting will
be a video “Meigs County
Memories,”
produced
Heritage Sunday, 1998,
at the museum by Charlie
Mankin. There are 17 people sharing their memories
with only six surviving.
The public is invited.

Halloween movie

MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Community
Association will show a
Halloween movie at 7 p.m.
on Oct. 25 in the Middleport Village Hall auditorium. The movie is free and
there will be free snacks
and drinks at the show.

Intergenerational
Dance coming

RIO GRANDE — The
13th annual intergenerational dance will be held

from 7 to 9 p.m. on Friday,
Oct. 25 at the Lyne Center
Lower Gym, University of
Rio Grande/Community
College. Families, kids and
grandparents are invited
and there will be a prize for
the family with the most
generations in attendance.
Costumes are optional for
the contest. There will be
free food, games, prizes,
and fun for all ages.

Grazing School

POMEROY — Meigs
SWCD will be hosting a
Grazing School from 6-9
p.m., Tuesday, October 29
and Thursday, October 31,
and 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday November 2. The Tuesday and Thursday sessions
will be held at the Kountry
Resort Campground meeting hall. The Saturday
session will be an outside
pasture walk at a local
farm. Must attend all three
days to receive certificate
of completion and EQIP
points. Cost of $40 per person (one per farm) includes
the course materials a “Pastures for Profit” 3 ring
notebook, pasture stick
and refreshments each session. Additional registrants
from the same farm are $10
each and includes refreshments each session. Send
RSVP to Meigs SWCD, 113
East Memorial Dr. Suite D,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 or call
(740) 992-4282 or email
steve.jenkins@oh.nacdnet.
net. Please RSVP by October 23, 2013.

Immunization/Flu
Shot Clinic
POMEROY

—

The

Meigs County Health Department will conduct a
childhood/adolescent immunization clinic and flu
shot clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday
at the health department.
High dose flu vaccines are
also available for those
age 65 and older. Please
bring children’s shot records. Also, bring medical cards/insurance for flu
and pneumonia vaccines
otherwise there will be a
fee associated.

Benefit Walk

POMEROY — A benefit
walk will be held from 1-3
p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 19
on the Pomeroy Parking
Lot for Teresa TrussellMohler who is battling
breast cancer. Bracelets,
pins and t-shirts will also
be available for sale during
the event. The organizers
are also planning to honor
those who have survived
breast cancer or who have
been lost to the disease.
For more information or to
have names of survivors or
those who have lost their
battle included in the event
please call (740) 416-0376.
All money will go to help
Teresa with expenses during her battle.

First Aid Training

POMEROY — A CPR
first aid training class will
be held at the Mulberry
Community Center, Meigs
Cooperative Parish on
Saturday, Oct. 26, from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. There is
no charge for the course,
although donations will
be taken, according to

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RICE’S FURNITURE

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Faith Community Nursing.
The course is open to the
public and since space is
limited, early registration
is encouraged. For more
information or to register
call 992-5836. If the call is
not answered just leave a
name and telephone number for a return call. The

deadline to register is Oct.
24. Lunch will be provided
to those taking the course.
Funding is provided from a
Sisters of St. Joseph Charitable Grant.

Christmas Craft
Show

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. —
A Christmas Craft Show

will be held from 1- a.m. to
3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
2 at the New Haven Fire
Station. The craft show is
hosted by the New Haven
Fire Department Ladies
Auxiliary. Santa Clause
will be at the fire station at
1 p.m. that day. For more
information contact Shelby
Duncan at (304) 882-2814.

STOREWIDE SALES EVENT
OCTOBER 21ST!
DAILY SALES THROUGHOUT
ENTIRE MONTH OF OCTOBER!
CELEBRATING
17 YEARS OF BUSINESS
Drawings, raffles, markdowns and much more!
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2036 Jackson Pike

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Mon-Sat 10am-9pm

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�OPINION

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Butler’s ‘Common Core’ concerns
Del. Jim Butler (R)
I just returned from the September legislative interim meetings. For those who are not
familiar with “sessions” this is
a brief explanation. The West
Virginia legislature is a part time
legislature. Most of us have to
keep our “regular” jobs to maintain our home lives. I happen to
be a local excavating contractor.
Normally state legislators have
a 60 day regular session from
mid-January to mid-March. That
means that we are at the Capitol
every day for that period, like a
full time job. The regular session
is where we actually discuss and
vote on bills. For the rest of the
year we attend interim sessions
which are usually three days a
month to study proposed legislation, hear reports pertaining to
state issues etc. We are preparing for the next regular session.
In the House of Delegates I
am on three committees: Natural Resources, Transportation,
and Education. For the months
of June, July, and August the issues that have taken a lot of my
attention have been the issue of
funding road construction and
repairs, and a new education
“method” called Common Core.
The first issue mentioned has
received some local coverage so
I will focus on Common Core for
this article.
The West Virginia Board of
Education calls it West Virginia
Next Generation Standards, and
we are implementing it now. If
you have tried to help your kids
do homework you may have
gotten an introduction. This is
a very complex issue and even
the teachers that I have spoken
to know little about it. Unfortunately teachers are very familiar
with guidelines and standards
that change every few years. I
cannot count the times that I
have been told that “about the
time they learn the new system;
the state abandons it and implements a new one.” I am concerned for them, the teachers,
and I am especially concerned
for our children. In this article I
would like to explain some of the
things that I have learned about
Common Core in the last few
weeks. I attended a conference at
the University of Notre Dame to
learn more about it from college
professors who were actually on
the Validation Committee for
common core standards. There
are books being written on this
subject, and experts in the field
of creating curriculum standards
have written long commentaries
on this subject, so this is very
brief. I encourage anyone interested to do your own research.
The most troubling report
that I have heard is the opinion of

child psychologists who say that
common core standards will actually be harmful to our children
in the early grades. They explain
that authors of the common core
standards are introducing material at a developmentally inappropriate age. This may stress
the children, frustrate them and
even cause behavior problems.
In addition it could cause them
to “tune out,” affecting their
ability to learn throughout their
lives. The child psychologist
that I heard at Notre Dame, Dr.
Megan Koschnick, backed those
assertions up and pointed out
that no early childhood experts
were included when standards
were developed. She says that
“It is not even apparent that the
individual standards were tied
to any research.”
We have also been told by
proponents of Common Core
that the standards are higher;
that our children will be better
prepared for college. Dr. James
Milgram, a professor of mathematics at Stanford University
disagrees. He has testified, and
has written, that the standards
are not good enough. I was
blown away when I heard that
geometry is being taught without proofs. He points out that
in Common Core there is no
requirement for calculus, trigonometry, or geometry. Algebra
2 is the new standard and that
does not prepare students for
college, or even courses relevant
to today’s needs in high school
curriculum. He says that American students will not be able to
meet the requirements to get
into top level colleges. Regarding the new standards in elementary school math, he is not
a fan of the emphasis on what
we may call “new math.” Dr.
Milgram was the only mathematician on the Validation Committee and he refused to sign off on
it. As evidence, one of the lead
writers of Common Core math,
Professor Jason Zimba said “the
concept of college readiness is
minimal and focused on nonselective colleges.”
Dr. Sandra Stotsky, who developed standards and curriculum for Massachusetts when
they catapulted to the top of
international rankings also testified, and wrote, that English and
language arts standards are not
adequate. She is troubled by the
fact that we are abandoning long
accepted classic literature, such
as “Charlotte’s Web,” “To Kill a
Mocking Bird,” or Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein,” and substituting it with informational text
such as magazines, text books,
instruction manuals etc. She explained that “the more you read
great literature the better you
learn to write great literature.”

Sunday Times-Sentinel
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Instead we are starting kids off
with no solid basis for good writing. As the only expert on K-12
English language arts standards
by virtue of her previous work
she also refused to sign off on
Common Core Standards. Another presentation from a history professor, Terrence Moore,
pointed out that the claim of
reading the Bill of Rights, for
example, did direct that parts
of the bill of rights be read. Interestingly the 2nd and 10th
amendments were not included.
In other examples actual reading required of the student was
minimal. The emphasis was
placed on how the student felt
about a couple of passages from
a novel, or what their opinion
was, rather than actual reading
and comprehending.
These standards may also be
problematic for teachers considering that they are evaluated on
the performance of students. If
the experts in child psychology
are correct; students who cannot cope with inappropriate demands will not test well. Many
teachers are aware of this reality which is why even teachers
unions, in some cases, are opposed to Common Core.
An example is in Florida
where a self-proclaimed left
wing teachers union is fighting
it. In fact on Sept. 23 Florida
announced that they are backing off from the Common Core
testing system; and they were
the money manager for their
group of states. Other states are
also re-evaluating their position
concerning the new standards.
While at Notre Dame I spoke
with state legislators from Indiana and Michigan about their
efforts.
Data protection is also a concern; data being private information on our children. I have
been assured that information
will not be shared or released,
but many in the legislature are
seeking more clarification on
this. Lines taken directly from
the application for funds to create West Virginia’s data managing system raise questions for
me. One quote “Changing rules
under FERPA (Federal Educational Rights and Privacy Act),
demands for data at the state
and federal levels, and open access to data require a thorough
analysis of legal requirements
and public documentation.”
I know from earlier research
that FERPA protections have
already been weakened, and
considering the events in the
news recently concerning data
collection it is wise to be concerned. There are many other
references to data sharing and
privacy; again we are seeking
clarification.

Page A4
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2013

Letters to the Editor:
Mandatory school
fundraisers single out
struggling families

Dear Editor,
A note was sent home with my fifth
grade daughter from Meigs Intermediate School Tuesday night that has my
family very upset. It says that if she
doesn’t sell fundraisers then she won’t
be included in any field trips unless she
pays for herself. She said her teacher explained that each child should have no
problem selling at least $100 if he/she
wants to be included. She was heartbroken. The teacher explained that you
can at least buy a $5 knife if nothing
else. Hannah knows we don’t even have
$5 right now and was extremely upset.
Hannah has tried and tried to sell
stuff. We live far out in the country and
have no neighbors that she knows or
that would be willing to buy from her.
My family members are all on a very
limited income or have their own children to buy from. My husband took the
last fundraiser to work with him, and
the one other employee (he works at a
small company that only employs two
people) couldn’t afford to buy any, and
his boss has his own kid to buy from.
My husband is just getting back to
work after being laid off most of the
summer and fall. We are on a very very
limited income. We try to buy the $1
raffle tickets and the 50-cent tattoos
that benefit breast cancer research
when we can, but we count every penny just to do that. We are barely able
to purchase school pictures and other
school things. We cannot buy anything
from the fundraisers, and no one our
child knows can either. So this means
that our child will be (according to the
note) left out of all field trips, because I
know we can’t pay for them.
This is very very upsetting to her.
She is a good girl and tries so hard in
school, and she is being singled out
and left out of field trips because we
are struggling financially right now. So
the message she just got today in class
is that if you are poor then you are left
behind. SAD!!!!!
We struggle to give our children all
the advantages they need to excel in
school like Internet, etc., but fundraisers are not in our budget. We hope my
husband’s hours pick up soon, but that
will be spent on Christmas not on fundraisers. We are happy to donate a little
at a time or take up money from family
members for field trips a little at a time
where 100 percent of the funds goes to
the field trips not to make a company
richer (perhaps a change drive like we
did a few years ago for Emi’s park).
Last year my husband’s hours were
great and when asked to send in money
for field trips, we sent in double and
asked they use it for someone who
couldn’t afford it. Our children also
took up donations for a family in need
for Christmas. Now this year in our
year of very little, no one wants to help
our kids. Great lesson to teach the kids
at a young age. Way to go promoting
poverty Meigs Intermediate fifth grade

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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

staff. Shame on you.
P.S. Last year our son was in first
grade. They planned a circus trip which
was pricey. The kids were sooo excited.
The teachers sent home a note saying
please try your best to sell the fundraising items. If we do not meet our goal
the children will all have to pay an equal
fee each to attend but no child will be
left out because of inability to pay.
THANKS! We sent in double! See the
lesson is with a little humbleness and
humanity and sincere love for the children you can get the desired outcome
without teacher bullying! I believe the
first grade teachers have a lot to teach
the fifth grade teachers!
Robin Erwin,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Local resident impressed
with another Battle Days
Dear Editor,
I would like to applaud the efforts of
the Battle Days Memorial Committee
for a wonderful weekend of educational
fun and history for the citizens of Point
Pleasant.
I have been a resident of the city for
many years now, and I have been to Battle Days many times. I am so amazed at
the planning that went into the celebration and memorial of the battle and the
new and different ways the event was
portrayed to the general public. The
committee took an old story, and told it
in a new and different way that was so
fresh and new.
The “Theater in the Round” was a
great experience, and I hope they do
it again next year. I also wanted to express my appreciation to the committee for donating all the straw bales they
purchased to use for the celebration to
our local animal shelter. Not only did
they give to the public this weekend
a wealth of knowledge and entertainment, they will also continue to give
back to the community by helping our
shelter care for our furry friends who
cannot take care of themselves.
Wonderful people! Wonderful community service, and I, for one, thank
you!
Cathy Neville,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Out-of-towners loved
visit to Gallipolis

Dear Editor,
My husband and I are truck drivers.
We drove through your charming town
this morning. I really enjoyed your
beautiful flowers. We loved the little
park in the middle of town along the
river. What a wonderful place to just
sit and read a book. We have traveled
through hundreds of cities this year and
Gallipolis Ohio takes first place. I hope
to return to walk through your lovely
town. Once again the flowers are awesome.
Rhonda Tiller,
Dandridge, TN

Sunday Times Sentinel

Ohio Valley
Newspapers
200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Phone (304) 675-1333
Fax (304) 675-5234

www.mydailysentinel.com or
www.mydailytribune.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Sunday, October 20, 2013

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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

�62E9î$@E:46D

JANET DEE BUSH
Janet Dee Bush of Racine, Ohio, passed away
on Thursday, October
17, 2013, at the Riverside
Methodist Hospital. She
was born on January 21,
1941, in Syracuse, Ohio
daughter of the late Dana
and Martha Ables.
She was the former secretary at Minersville United Methodist Church and
an administrative assistant
at a Speech and Hearing
Clinic.
She is survived by her
husband, Louis Bush; children, Sheryl (Bill) Roush
and Shawn (Mandy) Bush;
grandchildren, Derek (Molly) Roush, Mandy Roush,
Haileigh Bush and Brayden
Bush; brother, Rick (Pam)

Ables; sisters, Diane (Clifford) Murray and Lori (Jr)
Phillips; and several nieces
and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her brother,
James Keith Ables and her
sister, Patricia Bentz.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. on Monday, October 21, 2013 at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastor Rob Combs
officiating. Burial will follow at Gilmore Cemetery.
Visiting hours will be from
7-9 p.m. on Sunday at the
funeral home.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

YVONNE WILSON
Yvonne Wilson of Middleport, Ohio went home
to be with the Lord on Friday, October 18, 2013. She
was born on January 24,
1938, in Pomeroy, Ohio to
the late Harley and Dorothy (Call) Gilmore. She
loved to play bingo and
she was a member of the
Eastern Star Chapter 186
of Pomeroy, Ohio.
She is survived by her
husband, Charles D. Wilson; son, Charles Edwin
“Eddie” Wilson and his
fiancé, Sue Manley; grandson, Harley Edwin (Stacy)
Wilson; great grandson,
Derrick Wilson; brothers
and sisters-in-law, Lawrence (Cora) Lee, Franklin
(Ida) Martin, Rachel Craig,
Wm. Soltesz, and Betty
Wilson; special friend,
Sherry Weaver; and several
nieces, nephews, cousins

and friends too numerous
to name.
She is preceded in death
by her parents, father and
mother-in-law, Howard and
Rachel A. Wilson; brothers and sisters-in-law, Carl
H. Wilson, Shirley Wilson,
Paul H. Wilson and Bertha L. Soltesz; and cousin,
Mary Ann Call.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Sunday,
October 20, 2013, at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow at the
Meigs Memory Gardens.
Visitation for family and
friends will be held two
hours prior to the funeral
service. An Eastern Star
service will be conducted
at 12:45 p.m.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

)62D@?î@7î
F?46CE2:?EJî
7@CîDE@C6D
NEW YORK (AP) — Will Washington be the Grinch who
stole Christmas?
After weeks of bickering between Congress and the White
House, President Barack Obama on Wednesday signed into
law a plan that ended a partial 16-day government shutdown
and suspended the nation’s debt limit until early next year.
But the measure, which comes just weeks ahead of
the holiday shopping season, only temporarily averts
a potential default on U.S. debt that could send the nation into a recession.
Retailers hope that short-term uncertainty won’t stop
Americans from spending during the busiest shopping period of the year, but they’re fearful that it will.
“I am not nervous, but I am mindful,” said Jay Stein,
chairman of Stein Mart, a 300-store chain that sells
home goods and clothing. “The biggest enemy of consumer confidence is uncertainty.”
Retailers and industry watchers say Washington gridlock
already has caused shoppers to hold back on purchases.
The number of people going into stores nationwide
dropped 7.5 percent for the week that ended Oct. 5 and 7.1
percent during the following week compared with a year
ago, according to ShopperTrak, which measures foot traffic
at 40,000 retail outlets across the country.
Men’s clothier Jos. A. Bank Clothiers and furniture chain
Ethan Allen said their customers cut back in recent weeks.
And auto sales, which had been strong, trailed off last week,
with experts blaming Washington lawmakers.

A man of God keeps watch over us,
He does it so humbly and without a fuss.
He stands in the background
and lovingly keeps watch,
Praying for our souls and that
trials will not botch.
How do we thank him for his love
and concern,
He worries for sinners that their souls
may not burn.
He shows us the way with gentle hands,
Trusting God's Word on which he stands.
Glory to God for the blessings HE gives.
For the message confirmed,

BARNETT
William Richard Barnett,
74, of Rutland, Ohio, died
on Thursday, October 17,
2013, at his residence. Funeral services will be held at

noon on Monday, October
21, 2013, at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in
Middleport. Visitation will
be held one hour prior the
funeral service.

HILL
Wilmarine Hill, 71, of
West Columbia, W.Va.,
died on October 19, 2013.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, October 23, 2013, at
the Deal Funeral Home in

Point Pleasant, W.Va. Following the service, she will
be entombed in the Ohio
Valley Memorial Gardens
in Gallipolis, Ohio. Friends
may visit the family from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday at the funeral home.

PATTERSON
Bradley Patterson, 24,
of Racine, Ohio, died on
October 17, 2013, at the
Emmogene Dolan Hospice
House in Huntington, W.Va.
Services will be held at 4
p.m. on Sunday, October
20, 2013, at the Anderson

McDnaiel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Visitation will be
held from 6-8 p.m. on Saturday, October 19, 2013, at
the funeral home. In lieu of
flowers donations may be
made in Bradley’s name to
the funeral home.

ROBINSON
GALLIPOLIS — Virginia M. Robinson, 91, of
Gallipolis, died Thursday,
October 17, 2013, at Holzer Senior Care Center.
A memorial service will

be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, October 26, 2013,
at the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens, Chapel of Hope
with Pastor Gene Harmon
officiating. Willis Funeral
Home is assisting the family.

SHEETS
Dorothy E. Sheets, 92,
Rio Grande, Ohio, died at
her home on Friday, October 18, 2013. Funeral Services will be held 11 a.m.,
Wednesday, October 23,
2013, at McCoy-Moore Fu-

neral Home, Vinton, Ohio
with Rev. Dan Lamphier
officiating. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Friends may call from
4-7 p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home.

WEETHEE
Gregory Scott Weethee,
44, of Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va., passed away on October 18, 2013 at his home.
Funeral services will be
held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., on Monday, October
21, 2013, at 2 p.m., with
Rev. James Weethee officiating. Burial will follow the

service in the Apple Grove
Memorial Gardens in Apple Grove, W.Va. Friends
may visit the family at the
funeral home from noon
- 2 p.m., prior to the service. A full obituary will be
posted at www.dealfh.com
on Saturday, and will run in
the Tuesday edition of the
Point Pleasant Register.

WHITLEY
Lenora Mae Whitley, 86,
of Mesa, Arizona, formerly of South Point, Ohio,
died Monday, October 14,
2013, in Caterina’s Care
Home, Mesa, Az. Funeral
service will be conducted
at 2 p.m., Monday, October

21, 2013, at Hall Funeral
Home, Proctorville, Ohio,
by Pastor Jerry Galloway.
Entombment will follow at
Highland Memorial Gardens, South Point, Ohio.
Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service at
Hall Funeral Home.

NJ court agrees to allow same-sex
marriages starting this Monday
(AP) — Same-sex marriages will
begin within days in New Jersey
after the state’s highest court ruled
unanimously Friday to uphold a
lower-court order that gay weddings
must start Monday and to deny a
delay that was sought by Gov. Chris
Christie’s administration.
“The state has advanced a number of arguments, but none of
them overcome this reality: Samesex couples who cannot marry are
not treated equally under the law
today,” the court said in an opinion by Chief Justice Stuart Rabner.
“The harm to them is real, not abstract or speculative.”
A judge on the lower court had
ruled last month that New Jersey
must recognize same-sex marriage
and set Monday as the date to allow gay weddings. Christie, a Republican who is considered a possible 2016 presidential candidate,
appealed the decision and asked
for the start date to be put on hold
while the state appeals.
A spokesman for Christie said
that he will comply with the ruling,
though he doesn’t like it.
“While the governor firmly
believes that this determination
should be made by all the people
of the State of New Jersey, he
has instructed the Department
of Health to cooperate with all
municipalities in effectuating
the order,” spokesman Michael
Drewniak said in a statement.
The ruling puts New Jersey on
the cusp of becoming the 14th
state — and the third most pop-

ulous among them — to allow
same-sex marriage. The advocacy
group Freedom to Marry said that
as of Monday one-third of Americans will live in a place where
same-sex marriage is legal.
It’s being debated elsewhere,
too. Oregon has begun recognizing
same-sex weddings performed out
of state, and it is likely that voters
will get a chance next year to repeal the state’s constitutional ban
on gay marriage. The legislature
in Hawaii also soon could take up
a bill to legalize same-sex unions,
while a similar measure has passed
the Illinois Senate but not the
House. Lawsuits challenging gay
marriage bans also are pending in
several states, including Michigan,
Pennsylvania and Virginia.
New Jersey’s top court agreed
last week to take up the appeal of
the lower-court ruling by Judge
Mary Jacobson. Oral arguments
are expected Jan. 6 or 7.
In Friday’s opinion, Rabner
wrote that the state has not
shown that it is likely to prevail
in the case, though it did present
some reasons not to marriage to
move forward now.
“But when a party presents a
clear case of unequal treatment,
and asks the court to vindicate
constitutionally protected rights,
a court may not sidestep its obligation to rule for an indefinite
amount of time,” he wrote. “Under
these circumstances, courts do not
have the option to defer.”
Rabner also rejected the state’s

argument that it was in the public
interest not to allow marriages until the court has had more time to
rule fully on the issue.
“What is the public’s interest in
a case like this?” he wrote. “Like
Judge Jacobson, we can find no
public interest in depriving a
group of New Jersey residents
of their constitutional right to
equal protection while the appeals process unfolds.”
For those opposed to gay marriage, denying the request to delay
was troubling. “In what universe
does it make sense to let the question at hand be answered before
it’s asked or argued?” Len Deo,
president of the New Jersey Family Policy Council, said in a letter
Friday to his members.
On Thursday, some communities started accepting applications
for marriage licenses from samesex couples so that they would
pass the 72-hour waiting period by
12:01 a.m. Monday.
Several communities, including Asbury Park and Lambertville, are holding ceremonies for
multiple couples then.
Meanwhile, the gay rights
group Garden State Equality said
it was lining up judges who could
waive the 72-hour waiting period. Also, the state’s marriage law
says there is no waiting period
for couples already married to reaffirm their vows. Some couples
wed in New York or other places
that already recognize gay marriages are expected to do that.

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JESUS ETERNALLY LIVES.
Mickey Maynard gives us the knowledge we need,
That we might go forward in the world and plant
HIS seed.
Thank You Mickey &amp; Ann Maynard for your sacrifices
to teach us God's Plan.
For the courage and strength to go on and on at length.

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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page A6 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Six killed, officer hurt in crash near Ohio capital
UPPER ARLINGTON, Ohio
(AP) — A police cruiser responding to a robbery report
with its lights flashing and
siren blaring struck a car at
an intersection just northwest
of Ohio’s capital early Friday,
killing six members of a family and injuring an officer, officials said.
Police said dash-camera video from the cruiser shows the
victims’ Toyota Corolla had a
red light when it entered the
intersection and came to a
complete stop just before the
crash.
The officer from the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington
was responding to a reported
armed robbery at a fast-food
restaurant when the crash oc-

curred around 1:30 a.m. at a
large intersection with traffic
lights, investigators said.
The cruiser was one of an
unspecified number of police
cars responding to the robbery, all with their lights on
and sirens activated, said Upper Arlington police officer
and spokeswoman Heather
Galli.
A Columbus man was driving the other car, with his wife
in the front passenger seat and
four daughters, including a
toddler, in the back seat, said
Chief Robert Oppenheimer of
Perry Township police. None
was wearing a seatbelt, and
the youngest daughter was not
in a child restraint, he said.
“That car was just totaled,

and they probably died instantly,” Oppenheimer said.
Oppenheimer
identified
them as driver Eid Badi Shahad, 39; Entisar W. Hameed,
31; Shuaa Badi, 16; Amna
Badi, 14; Ekbal Badi, 12; and
Lina Badi, 2.
Franklin County coroner Jan
Gorniak said an autopsy could
be performed on the driver as
soon as Friday. She said autopsies won’t be performed on
the passengers because of religious objections.
A small shopping center sits
on one side of the intersection, with a park and river on
the other side. The intersection is frequently busy during
the day, with hundreds of cars
passing through it.

The officer, who had been
traveling alone, was being
treated for a serious head injury at a hospital but was in
stable condition, said Jason
Pappas, head of the local police union.
Upper Arlington police identified the officer as Shawn
Paynter, who joined the department five years ago and
had been on the overnight
shift about a year.
Oppenheimer said the officer was in shock after learning
about the deaths, and he had
not been interviewed by investigators by midday Friday.
That was expected to happen
later with his attorney present.
Oppenheimer said a Columbus police accident investi-

gation team pulled the dashcamera video from the cruiser.
He said the footage shows the
cruiser entering the intersection just as the light was turning from green to yellow.
The victims’ car entered on
a red light, Oppenheimer said,
and then came to a complete
stop in the middle of the intersection before it was hit.
“One could speculate that
he may have realized he ran
the red light and was going to
back up,” Oppenheimer said.
“Or he saw the cruiser coming
… and he froze. We can only
speculate, because we’ll probably never know.”

�:?@D2FCî7@DD:=î5@?2E65î
Prosecutor seeks maximum E@î�C62E:@?î#FD6F&gt;
for Ohio DUI confessor
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The
Ohio man who confessed in a YouTube video that he killed a man while
driving drunk knew he was prone to
blackouts after heavy drinking but
chose to drive the night of the accident anyway, a prosecutor said Friday.
A maximum sentence is being
sought for defendant Matthew Cordle, Franklin County Prosecutor Ron
O’Brien said in a court filing. O’Brien
has said he believes Cordle’s confession was sincere, but in addition to
asking for the maximum, he wrote
about how recent convictions of drunk
drivers who killed people in accidents
show a pattern of tough sentences.
Thirteen recent convictions for aggravated vehicular homicide in central Ohio, almost all of them involving
drunken or drugged drivers, resulted
in an average prison term of almost
eight years, O’Brien said.
Cordle, 22, of Dublin in suburban
Columbus, pleaded guilty last month
to aggravated vehicular homicide and
driving a vehicle under the influence
of alcohol in the June death of Vincent
Canzani, who was from another Columbus suburb. Cordle’s blood-alcohol
content was more than twice the legal
limit of 0.08.
Cordle made a 3 ½-minute YouTube
video that has been viewed more than
2.2 million times in which he confessed to Canzani’s death. “I killed a
man,” a voice says as it opens with a
blurred image of Cordle, who then describes a night of drinking that ended
with the accident.
The prosecutor likened Cordle’s
vehicle to a 3-ton weapon and rejected Cordle’s characterization of

PETERSBURG,
Ky.
(AP) — A Kentucky museum that tells a Bible-based
history of the world says it
has acquired the fossil of
a large dinosaur predator
similar to a Tyrannosaurus
rex that offers evidence of
the Old Testament worldwide flood.
The museum said in a
written statement Friday
that the Allosaurus probably stood about 10 feet tall
and 30 feet long, and was
a meat-eater. The skeleton,
nicknamed “Ebenezer,” includes a skull with 53 teeth
and will go on display in an
exhibit next year.
“For decades I’ve walked
through many leading
secular museums, like the
Smithsonian in Washington, and have seen their
impressive dinosaur skeletons, but they were used
for evolution,” said Ken
Ham, co-founder of the
Answers in Genesis ministry, which operates the
museum. “Now we have
one of that class for our
museum.”
The museum’s religious
exhibits are often at odds
with evolution science,
which asserts that the
earth is billions of years old
and the age of dinosaurs
and humans was separated
by tens of millions of years.
The well-preserved condition of the Allosaurus is
evidence that it died during a worldwide flood as
described in the Bible’s

the crash as an accident.
The wreck “was the result of intentional, repeated, and deliberate decision making by Cordle to get drunk
and drive that 3-ton weapon on our
roadways where every man, woman
and child was a target of a ticking
time bomb,” O’Brien said.
O’Brien also cites Cordle’s refusal to submit to a blood-alcohol test
after the accident as justifying the
maximum.
Sentencing is scheduled for
Wednesday.
Cordle told his lawyers not to fight
the charge against him and pleaded
guilty in near record time just a few
days after he was indicted.
Cordle faces 8 ½ years in prison, a
$15,000 fine and the loss of driving
privileges for life.
In recognition of Cordle’s video
confession and his remorse, O’Brien
is asking that the six-month maximum
for the DUI conviction run at the
same time as an eight-year sentence
for causing the 61-year-old Canzani’s
death.
Cordle’s lawyers are seeking a sentence much lower than the maximum,
though they didn’t request a specific
length in their filing this week.
They say a lower sentence would
send a message about the importance
of taking responsibility for causing a
tragedy.
In the video, Cordle acknowledges
his confession hands “the prosecution
everything they need to put me away
for a very long time.”
He says he’s willing to take that sentence to pass on the message not to
drink and drive.

Old Testament, Andrew cal Society, said in an
Snelling, a geologist at the email Friday.
Creation Museum, said in
“Real vertebrate palethe statement.
ontologists study the surSnelling said
rounding sedithe fossil’s inments and the
tact skeleton “For decades
geological conis proof of an
text of their
e x t r e m e l y I’ve walked
finds,” he addrapid burial,
ed. “Of course
through
“which is a
since
the
confirmation many leading
Creation Muof the global
seum doesn’t
catastrophe of secular
do scientific
a flood a few
research, all
museums,
thousand years
(it) really has
ago.”
like the
done is obtain
Similar fosa nice display
sils are on Smithsonian
trophy.”
display at the
Phelps said
University of in Washington,
he was conW y o m i n g ’ s and have
cerned the muGeology Museum would
seum and at seen their
not let vertethe Museum
brate paleonimpressive
of the Rockies
tologists study
in Montana. dinosaur
the specimen.
The Wyoming
The
CreMuseum says skeletons,
ation
Muthe Allosaurus
seum’s fossil
was the most but they
was donated
common large
were used for by the Elizacarnivore in
beth
Streb
North America evolution.”
Peroutka
during the late
Fo u n d at i o n
Jurassic period
—Ken Ham of Maryland.
about 150 milCo-founder of The foundalion years ago.
the Answers in tion bought
“The CreGenesis ministry the
bones
ation Museum
about
10
has asserted
years ago and
the specimen
to be evidence of Noah’s they have slowly been reflood without any ac- stored over time.
tual research,” said Dan
The Creation Museum
Phelps, president of the said the new exhibit would
Kentucky Paleontologi- be ready by Memorial Day.

%9:@î8@G6C?@CîZ@AE:&gt;:DE:4[î@?î#65:42:5î6IA2?D:@?
at the Cleveland Clinic,
using one of the nation’s
best known hospitals to
make his pitch. He was
joined by advocates who
support expansion.
Kasich asked why people
seemed cold-hearted when
it comes to providing
health care for the poor.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register &amp; Daily Sentinel

Sponsored By: Farmers Bank

“It’s probably because
they do not understand
the problem because they
have not walked in somebody’s shoes,” he said.
He told the audience
to imagine a scenario
some people face when
they walk into an emergency room with no
health insurance. “Or
worse than that, you
wake up in the morning
and you see your daughter has a problem and
you have no way to help

her out,” he said.
The
seven-member
state Controlling Board
is scheduled to vote next
week on Kasich’s request
to authorize spending
federal money on the
newly eligible Medicaid
enrollees in the state.
“Folks, we have a vote
on Monday. Say your
prayers this weekend.
I’m optimistic about
this,” he said at the
Clinic, where he barely
mentioned the vote

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sion for the first three
years, then 90 percent
after that — still well
above Ohio’s current
level of 64 percent.
Ohio recently got approval from the federal
government to extend
its Medicaid eligibility.
But Kasich’s administration needs legislators
to sign off on spending
federal dollars on the
estimated 366,000 residents who will be newly
eligible. For that approval, Kasich turned to
the Controlling Board,
which handles certain
adjustments to the state
budget.
The Kasich administration has asked for the authority to spend $561.7
million in federal funds
this budget year and almost $2 billion next year
to cover the new Medicaid population.

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while talking about how
health care coverage affects people.
The Controlling Board
includes two Democrats
and a Kasich appointee
who are expected to favor the request. That
leaves the governor in
search of a single vote
among his fellow Republicans.
The GOP-controlled
Legislature so far has resisted Medicaid expansion, which is one of the
key components of President Barack Obama’s
landmark health care
overhaul.
Republican
lawmakers have cited concerns
about increasing the
national debt and fears
that the money from
Washington could be cut
off.
The federal government would pay the entire cost of the expan-

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CLEVELAND (AP) —
Gov. John Kasich said
Friday that he’s feeling
optimistic ahead of a
legislative panel’s vote
on funding an extension
of the Medicaid health
program to cover more
low-income Ohioans.
The Republican spoke

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUNDAY,
OCTOBER 20, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS

INSIDE
Eastern bitten
by Bulldogs,
15-6 ... Page B2

Southern blanks Wildcats on Homecoming, 33-0
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Southern
scored early in the opening quarter of play Friday
evening and never looked
back as the Tornadoes held
visiting Waterford (2-6, 1-5
TVC Hocking) scoreless
in a 33-0 Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
football contest at Roger
Lee Adams Memorial Stadium on Homecoming.
The Tornadoes (7-1, 5-1
TVC Hocking) received
the opening kickoff after
Waterford won the toss and
Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel
Gallia Academy junior Josh Johnson sacks Warren quar- deferred to the second half.
terback Austin Klintworth (12) during the Warriors 31-21 Southern took just more
than two minutes of play
victory in Gallipolis.
to go 60 yards. Junior quar-

terback Tristen Wolfe completed a 23 yard pass to Zac
Beegle for the touchdown
and the 6-0 lead after the
missed extra point.
After holding Waterford on their first possession, Southern took over
at the Wildcats 48 yard
line to begin their second
possession. Tyler Barton
would add his first score
of the night on a 14 yard
touchdown run with 4:52
remaining in the first quarter. Trenton Deem added
the extra point kick to give
Southern the 13-0 lead.
Waterford was ago forced
to punt on their next drive,
but the Tornadoes were unable to score on the resulting possession. Southern
turned the ball over on

downs inside the Waterford
15 yard line. After another
Waterford punt Southern
took possession at their
own 34 yard line.
Barton added his second
touchdown of the game on
a five yard run with 3:42
remaining in the first half.
On their next possession, Deem and Beegle
connected for a 32 yard
touchdown strike to give
Southern the 26-0 lead going into halftime.
Southern gained 14
first downs in the opening half, while Waterford
had just three.
Waterford dominated the
time of possession in the
third quarter, having the
ball on two separate occasions for just over 10 min-

utes of play. The Wildcats
advanced to the Southern
23 yard line, before throwing an interception by
Southern’s Colten Walters
on a third down play from
the Southern 28 yard line.
Neither team would
score in the remainder of
the third quarter.
Barton added his third
touchdown of the night on
a 34 yard run with 8:40 remaining in the game.
After a Waterford punt,
Southern’s junior varsity
players took to the field for
the final drive.
Jaylen Blanks ran the
ball consistently on the
drive, taking the ball to the
end zone on three separate
See SOUTHERN | B2

Warren baffles
Blue Devils, 31-21
J.P. Davis

Special to OVP

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — It
was a battle in the trenches,
as Warren’s Jared Isner ran
for a total of 149 yards and
two touchdowns to help the
Warriors defeat the Blue
Devils 31-21 on Homecoming Night at Memorial Field
in Gallia County.
The Warren Warriors (35, 1-1 SEOAL) came out
of the gates on their first
offensive drive with a 29yard touchdown pass from
Austin Klintworth to Dave
Ryan and a PAT by Alex
Miller, giving the Warriors a
7-0 lead. Warren held Gallia
Academy (5-3, 1-1) scoreless in the first quarter.
At the 9:53 mark of the
second quarter, Wade Jarrell
of GAHS connected on a 31
touchdown pass to Logan
Allison and a PAT by Dylan
Saunders brought the Blue
Devils back into the game
with a tied score of 7-7.
With 7:31 left in the second quarter, Jared Isner of
WHS rushed for a 15-yard
touchdown and a PAT by
Alex Miller gave the Warriors the lead of 14-7.
With 3:24 remaining in
the first half, Wade Jarrell
rushed for a 38-yard touchdown run and a PAT by
Dylan Saunders brought
the game to a 14-14 tie at
the end of the first half.
At the 9:36 mark of the
third quarter, Warren’s Alex
Miller made a 37-yard field
goal, bringing the Warriors
back into the lead at 17-14.
Logan Allison of the
Blue Devils returned an
85-yard kickoff touchdown
and a PAT by Dylan Saunders gave GAHS its first
and only lead of the game
at 21-17 with 9:20 remaining in the third quarter.
With 6:51 left in the
third quarter, Jared Isner of
WHS rushed for a one-yard
touchdown run and a PAT
by Alex Miller gave Warren
the lead at the end of the
third quarter of 24-21.
With 4:17 remaining in
the game, Austin Klintworth
connected to Cole Wigal for
a six-yard touchdown pass
and a PAT by Alex Miller
gave Warren the final score
of the game at 31-21.
Wade Jarrell led the Blue
Devils in passing with
9-for-28 for 182 yards, one

touchdown and three interceptions. Jarrell also led
GAHS in rushing with 11
carries for 98 yards.
Eric Ward had two carries
for seven yards. Eli Miller
had two carries for two
yards. Logan Allison had one
carry for negative one yard.
Logan Allison led Gallia
Academy in receptions with
two receptions for 83 yards
and one touchdown. Reid
Eastman had two receptions for 25 yards. Wes Jarrell had three receptions for
31 yards. Seth Atkins had
one reception for 35 yards.
Payton Holley had one reception for eight yards.
Logan Allison had a total
of 132 kickoff and return
yards and one touchdown.
Dylan Saunders was 3-for-4
in PATs. GAHS had a team
total of 11 first downs and
106 rushing yards to go along
with 182 receiving yards.
GAHS also had five penalties
for 50 yards and a total time
of possession of 12:57.
Austin Klintworth led the
Warriors in passing with
10-for-16 with 135 yards
and two touchdowns. Andy
Farnsworth was 1-for-1 with
24 passing yards.
Jared Isner led WHS in
rushing with 24 carries for
149 yards and two touchdowns. Austin Klintworth
had 14 carries for 75 yards.
Aaron Sealey had 11 carries for 47 yards. Jake
Scott had six carries for 23
yards. Jake Powell had four
carries for five yards.
Cole Wigal led Warren in
receiving with four receptions for 82 yards and one
touchdown. Dave Ryan had
one reception for 29 yards
and one touchdown. Jared
Isner had two receptions
for seven yards. Jake Powell had one reception for 20
yards. Jake Scott had two
receptions for seven yards.
Collin Welch had one reception for six yards.
Alex Miller was 4-for-4
in PATs and made a 37yard field goal. WHS had a
team total of 24 first downs
and 299 rushing yards to
go along with 159 receiving yards. Warren had a
total of five penalties for
30 yards and a total time of
possession with 33:03.
Gallia Academy returns
to action on Friday in a
Week 9 SEOAL matchup
when it hosts the Logan
Chieftains on Senior Night.

OVP Sports Schedule
Sunday, Oct. 20
College Soccer
Cumberland at URG men, 3 p.m.
Cumberland at URG women, 5 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 21
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 6 p.m.

Photo submitted by Dave Harris

Meigs halfback Michael Davis (left) follows the block of Andrew Burt (center) during the Marauders 40-7 victory over Wellston.

Marauders waylay Wellston, 40-7
Dave Harris
Special to OVP

WELLSTON, Ohio — Meigs
broke open a close game by outscoring host Wellston 26-0 in the second
half and went on to defeat the Golden Rockets 40-7 Friday night at Jackson County. The win is the fourth in
a row for the Marauders.
Meigs (6-2, 3-0 TVC Ohio) on
offense rolled up 497 yards of total offense including 293 in the air
from the quarterback combination of Cody Bartrum and Kaileb
Sheets. The Marauder defense
held the Golden Rockets (3-5,
1-2) to 192 yards of total offense.
Both teams were hampered by
poor field conditions due to this
week’s rain as both teams had
trouble with their footing on the
damp turf.
Meigs received the opening
kickoff and it didn’t take long to
hit pay dirt. On the games first
play Sheets took a handoff and
pulled up and hit a wide open Michael Davis for 54 yards and the
score. Ty Phelps added the extra
points and before the fans could
settle in their seats the Marauders
were on top 7-0.
The Golden Rockets tied the
game at 7, with 5:35 left in the first
period when Jake Waldron pulled
in a 35 yard pass from Braydon
Womeldorf for the score. Brandon
Kennard’s extra points kick was
good and the game was tied at 7.
The Marauders came right back
however just over a minute later
when Michael Davis scored the second of his four touchdowns for the

on the next play. On that play the
same Wellston player was flagged
for two more unsportsmanlike
penalties and was ejected from the
contest. The extra points were no
good but the Marauders was on
top 26-7 with 5:36 left in the third.
Meigs increased the lead to
34-7 when Davis scored his fourth
touchdown of the night this time
from 24 yards out, Bartrum hit
Phelps in the corner of the end
zone for the extra points. Meigs
scored their final touchdown of
the night with the junior varsity
in the game when Nick Combs
bowled over from seven yards out
with 4:50 left to make the final
40-7 in favor of the Marauders.
Davis led the Marauders with
63 yards in 15 tries, Sheets added
58 in just four carries, and Trae
Hood added 53 in six carries and
Lane Acree 20 in three tries. Bartrum was 11 of 21 in the air for
182 yards, Sheets was a perfect
four for four for 117 yards. Sheets
for good measure caught four
passes for 82 yards, Davis caught
five for 75, and Jones added three
for 72 and Phelps three for 49.
Nick Cox led the Rockets with
91 in 25 carries; Michael Downer
added 29 in eight carries. Womeldorf was three of 11 in the air for
68 yards. Skyler Peters caught two
for 33 and Waldron one for 35.
Meigs will travel to Ratter Field
to play the powerful Athens Bulldogs next Friday night with a
TVC championship on the line.
Wellston will travel to Alexander.

White Falcons swoop by South Gallia, 46-28
Gary Clark

Special to OVP

MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— Kane Roush scored four
touchdowns while running
for 258 yards in 20 carries
Friday evening to lead the
visiting Wahama White
Falcons past a stubborn
Wednesday, Oct. 23
South Gallia Rebel eleven
Volleyball
River Valley-Meigs winner vs. Westfall-Valley winner at by a 46-28 margin in a TriValley Conference Hocking
Waverly HS, 6 p.m.
Division outing.
The speedy White FalThursday, Oct. 24
con running back topped
Volleyball
the 1000 yard rushing
Eastern vs. Paint Valley at Jackson HS, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 22
Boys Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Pike Christian, 5 p.m.
College Soccer
URG women at WVU Tech, 6 p.m.

night from four yards out. Phelps
against added the extra points and
Meigs held a 14-7 lead at the 4:14
mark of the first period. That score
was set up when Bartrum hit Damon Jones for a 39 yard gain to the
Wellston six. There it took Davis
two carries to score.
Both teams had several chances
to score in the second period, but
neither did and the two teams
went into the locker room with
Meigs on top 14-7. Wellston had a
golden opportunity in the second
period putting together a 17 yard
drive to the Marauder six, but
Womeldorf was stooped for no
gain on fourth and two at the six
to end the threat.
The Marauders forced a three
and out on the third periods opening drive and forced a punt taking
over at the Golden Rocket nine.
After Davis picked up six yards
on two straight carries, Sheets
broke loose for 42 yards to the
Rocket 37. Two plays later Sheets
hit Phelps who broke a tackle
and went down the left sidelines
37 yards for the score. The run
was no good for the extra points
but the Marauders gained a little
breathing room with a 20-7 lead
with 8:14 left in the third.
Once again the Marauder defense forced a three and out and
took over at the 16 after a Wellston
punt. On second down Bartrum
hit Sheets over the middle and
Kaileb went 76 yards before being
tackled at the 10. A Wellston unsportsmanlike like conduct penalty
moved it have the distance to the
five and Davis took it in for the six

mark with his 258 yard effort while also becoming
the All-Time career rushing leader at the Bend Area
School. Roush scored three
rushing touchdowns covering 20, 37 and 53 yards in
addition to hauling in a 59
yard reception on a Hunter
Bradley pass. Colton Neal
totaled 133 yards on the
ground for Wahama (7-1,
6-1 TVC Hocking) while
scoring one touchdown
and adding four point after
conversion runs.
Despite the Mason

County team tallying 470
yards of total offense the
Rebels (4-4, 3-4) staged a
huge battle against their
TVC rivals. Jacob White
gave the White Falcon defense fits the entire game
with White finishing the
contest with an impressive
three touchdowns and 187
yards rushing in 17 carries
for the Rebels.
The win was the sixth
straight for Wahama as
they improve to 7-1 overall
on the 2013 campaign and
6-1 in conference action.

South Gallia dropped its
second straight outing and
falls to 4-4 on the year and
3-4 in league play.
The contest and the play
of the Rebels created a
football outing that ended
up being much closer than
anticipated. South Gallia
gained the early lead with
3:19 to play in the opening quarter by traveling 79
yards in 10 plays. White
set the stage of the entire
evening by breaking tackle
See FALCONS | B2

�Page B2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday, October 20, 2013

�2DE6C?î3:EE6?î3Jî�F==5@8D�î ���
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS
PLAINS,
Ohio — As Bulldogs are
aware, flying is for the birds.
Doddridge
County
rushed 53 times for 189
yards and put together
a pair of lengthy scoring
drives over the middle
quarters Friday night en
route to a 15-6 victory
over host Eastern in a
Week 8 non-conference
football contest at East
Shade River Stadium in
Meigs County.
The visiting Bulldogs (62) outgained the Eagles by
a 235-168 overall margin
in total yardage, thanks
in large part to a ground
game that continually ate
up yardage from the opening kickoff. As a result,
DCHS executed 18 more
offensive plays in the triumph — despite throwing
nine fewer passes.
EHS (2-6) — which
dropped its fourth straight
decision — joined Doddridge County in completing
five passes in the contest,
but the hosts gained only
one more yard (47-46) for all
of their extra aerial efforts.
The Eagles finished the
night with 121 rushing yards
on 26 attempts and also committed the only turnover of
the game on an interception
just before halftime.
Eastern kept 1,000-yard
rusher Wyatt Ford in check
for the most part, but the
junior running back still
managed to produce 153
yards on the ground with
34 carries — despite having only two runs for 10
yards or more. Ford’s

only touchdown, however,
proved to be the proverbial
nail in the Eastern coffin.
Leading 8-0 and starting their opening drive of
the second half, Doddridge
County capped a 12-play,
44-yard drive in style at
the 5:25 mark when Ford
plunged in from two yards
out — allowing the guests
to take a 14-0 advantage.
A successful Isaac Britton
PAT kick followed, giving
DCHS a 15-0 lead.
Both teams traded a
pair of possessions, and
Eastern took over at the
Bulldogs’ 43 with 7:07
left in regulation. Facing a
4th-and-4 at the 37, Zack
Scowden rumbled 37 yards
to paydirt — allowing the
hosts to cap a four-play, 43yard scoring drive at the
5:33 mark of the fourth.
DCHS followed with a
10-play drive that ate up
more than five minutes
before stalling due to a
loss of downs, and Eastern took over possession
at its own 35 with 32.2
seconds left. EHS managed to get the ball to the
Bulldogs’ 46 before time
ultimately expired.
Both teams traded possessions that ended in a
loss of down to start the
game, but the Bulldogs
broke through on their
second possession after
putting together a 15-play,
70-yard scoring drive between the quarters. Brandon Stewart marched in
from 11 yards out at the
8:01 mark for a 6-0 edge,
then Jarrod Sandy tacked
on a 2-point run for the
early 8-0 cushion.
Stewart also came away

Bryan Walters | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Doddridge County running back Brandon Stewart is stood up short of the goal line by Eastern defenders Tyler Barber, left, and
Jett Facemyer, right, during the second half of Friday night’s Week 8 football contest in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

with the only takeaway
after picking off a Dylan
Bresciani pass with 31
seconds left in the first
half, preserving an 8-0
lead at the break.
Doddridge County managed an 8-6 lead in first
downs and a slim 112-92
edge in total yards during
the first half, which included a 90-51 cushion in
the rushing department.
Eastern did hold a 41-22
lead in passing yards at
the intermission.
The Bulldogs finished

the night with a 17-9 advantage in first downs and
were flagged only three
times for 15 yards. EHS,
conversely, was penalized
twice for 20 yards.
Scowden led the Eastern rushing attack with
63 yards on 11 carries, followed by Bresciani with
15 yards on six totes and
Zach Browning with 14
yards on four tries. Chase
Cook chipped in 17 yards
on three attempts and Tyler Barber rounded things
out on the ground with 12

yards on two carries.
Bresciani finished the
night 5-of-16 passing for
47 yards with an interception. Cook was also 0-for-1
passing for the Eagles.
Snowden led the receivers with 18 yards on two
catches. Barber, Daschle
Facemyer and Bradley
Colburn each had a catch
for 16 yards, 10 yards and
three yards, respectively.
Stewart followed Ford
with 26 rushing yards on
nine totes, while Sandy
and David Lipscomb each

had five rushing yards on
five carries apiece. Lipscomb was also 5-of-8 passing for 46 yards.
Sandy led the wideouts
with three catches for 32
yards, while Josh Briggs
and Ford added a catch
apiece for 12 and two
yards, respectively.
Eastern returns to TVC
Hocking action Friday
night when it hosts Federal Hocking on Senior
Night in a Week 9 football
clash at East Shade River
Stadium at 7:30 p.m.

(@4&lt;î�:==î(65&gt;6?îC2==JîA2DEî(:G6Cî,2==6J�î ��
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PEDRO, Ohio — Rock Hill
undoubtedly subscribes to the
theory that you should save
your best for last.
The River Valley football
team led 24-13 early in the
fourth quarter but the Redmen
answered with a 26-to-7 run to
win the Ohio Valley Conference
game 39-31, Friday night in
Lawrence County.
The Raiders (1-7, 0-3) got
on the board first with 27 yard
field goal by Devin McDonald
at the 3:17 mark of the first
quarter. RVHS got on the board
again at the 4:50 mark of the
second quarter with a five yard
touchdown pass from Dayton

Hardway to Austin Bradley.
McDonald added the point after and RVHS led 10-0.
With just under a minute left
until halftime River Valley junior
Dustin Bickers ran in a threeyard touchdown and, after the
McDonald extra point, put the
Raiders up 17-0 at halftime.
It was a different game after
halftime, as the Redmen Rattled
off two scores, the first on a Jonah Cox one-yard touchdown
run and the second on a 19-yard
touchdown pass from Gabe Marzicola to Austin Collins. Jake
Malone was 1-of-2 on extrapoints and RVHS led 17-13.
Austin Bradley punched in a
one yard touchdown and McDonald hit the point after to
expand the RVHS lead to 24-13

with 9:35 remaining in the game.
That’s when the Redmen took
over, Jonah Cox ran a one-yard
touchdown, Marzicola ran a twoyard touchdown and an 18-yard
touchdown and finally Chance
Blankenship ran a five-yard
touchdown to put Rock Hill up
39-24 with 1:58 remaining.
Hardway completed a 25-yard
touchdown pass to Bickers with
:33 seconds left and McDonald
hit the extra-point to pull the
Raiders within one score. RVHS
failed to score again and fell to
Rock Hill 39-31.
Dayton Hardway was 26-of-49
passing for 371 yards, two touchdowns and four interceptions.
Austin Bradley led all receivers with 196 yards on 13 receptions and a score. Kirk Morrow

Southern
From Page B1
occasions, with each being called
back on penalties.
While it cannot be confirmed officially, it was announced at the conclusion of the contest that Southern
is headed for the postseason for the
first time in school history.
The Tornadoes gained 417 yards
of total offense in the game to just
99 yards for Waterford.
Barton lead the Tornadoes
with 19 carries for 190 yards and
three scores in the game. Blanks
added 55 yards on seven carries
and Wolfe had 31 yards on five
carries. Also contributing on the
ground were Ryan Billingsley 3-7,
Kody Greene 1-6, Paul Ramthun
1-2, Chandler Blankenship 1-1,
Colten Holbrook 1-(-2), and Blake
Johnson 2-(-9).
Wolfe had 10 completions on 15
passing attempts totaling 136 yards.
Trenton Deem lead the Southern

receivers with five catches for 69
yards. Beegle added 57 yards on
four catches and Paul Ramthun had
one catch for 10 yards.
For Waterford, Isaac Huffman
lead the team with 33 yards on 11
carries and 39 yards passing. Also
contributing on the grounds were
Jaret McCutcheon 7-17, Austin
Lang 12-11, Dalton Ball 1-0, and
Tyler McCutcheon 1-(-1). Waterford
receivers were Ball with 34 yards
on four catches, Tyler McCutcheon
with nine yards and Jaret McCutcheon with a negative four yards.
Southern was called for a dozen
penalties totaling 105 yards in the
game, while Waterford committed
six penalties for 55 yards.
The Tornadoes will travel to
Trimble next week to face the unbeaten Tomcats in a TVC Hocking
contest. Waterford will host the 4-4
South Gallia Rebels in the home finale for the Wildcats.

had nine catches for 133 yards.
Bickers caught one pass for 25
yards and a score, while Tyler
Twyman caught two passes for
10 yards and Mark Wray had
one catch for seven yards.
On the ground Justin Arrowood ran 10 times for 49 yards,
Bradley had three yards and a
score on four attempts. Bickers had one three yard run for
a touchdown, Wray ran twice
for two yards and Hardway was
stopped for negative five yards
on his lone carry.
Marzicola was 5-of-9 passing
for 108 yards with a touchdown,
while Collins had three receptions for 79 yards and a score.
Drew McClaskey had two catches for 29 yards.
Jonah Cox was the games

leading rusher with 150 yards
and two touchdowns on 21 carries, followed by Chance Blankenship with 119 yards and a
score on 17 carries. Marzicola
ran nine times for 56 yards and
two scores and Jordan Hairston
had six yards on one carry.
The River Valley held a 20-to18 advantage in first downs but
RHHS held a 437-to-423 advantage in total yards. RVHS was
penalized 11 times for 80 yards,
while Rock Hill was flagged nine
times for 95 yards.
Rock Hill has now defeated
River Valley five straight times
and Redmen’s last three wins
have came against RVHS.
River Valley will travel to
South Point next Friday, while
Rock Hill will travel to Fairland.

-66&lt;î�î%9:@î�@@E32==î)4@C6D
Athens 48, McArthur Vinton County 12
Caldwell 20, Beverly Ft. Frye 19
Chillicothe 49, Hillsboro 0
Chillicothe Unioto 63, Piketon 28
Chillicothe Zane Trace 52, Chillicothe
Huntington 32
Circleville 26, Circleville Logan Elm 14
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 70, Washington
C.H. 0
Cols. Hartley 54, Ironton 0
Crooksville 55, McConnelsville Morgan 0
Fairfield Christian 62, Millersport 14
Frankfort Adena 25, Bainbridge Paint Valley
24
Glouster Trimble 54, Belpre 0
Ironton Rock Hill 39, Bidwell River
Valley 31
Jackson 26, Portsmouth 19
Lancaster 33, Reynoldsburg 21
Lore City Buckeye Trail 53, Zanesville W.
Muskingum 28

Lucasville Valley 52, McDermott Scioto NW 12
Nelsonville-York 28, Albany Alexander 14
New Philadelphia 62, Marietta 16
Oak Hill 26, Willow Wood Symmes Valley 7
Pomeroy Meigs 40, Wellston 7
Portsmouth Notre Dame 50, Franklin Furnace Green 6
Portsmouth W. 27, Waverly 21
Proctorville Fairland 44, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 27
Racine Southern 33, Waterford 0
S. Point 19, Chesapeake 7
Stewart Federal Hocking 48, Corning Miller
20
Vincent Warren 31, Gallipolis Gallia 21
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 42, Greenfield McClain 6
Wheelersburg 42, Minford 13
Williamsport Westfall 47, Southeastern 41,
OT
Zanesville 58, Logan 13

Falcons
From Page B1
after tackle throughout the drive
and capped the scoring series
with a seven yard run. The conversion attempt was unsuccessful
giving South Gallia a 6-0 edge.
Wahama answered the Rebels
first score on their next possession
when Hunter Bradley found Roush
on a 59 yard scoring pass to even
the count at 6-6 on the final play
of the first period. Colton Neal
scored the first of four conversion
runs following the touchdown to
stake Wahama to an 8-6 lead.
Again South Gallia came back
to regain the advantage behind
another long scoring drive spearheaded by White and Ethan
Spurlock. Landon Hutchinson
concluded the 54 yard, eight play

drive, with a 10 yard run to put the
Rebels back in front. Hutchinson
tossed a successful PAT pass to
Mikey Wheeler to give South Gallia a 14-8 edge with 7:58 remaining in the half.
Wahama would rally back in the
final minutes of the second quarter
by denting the end zone twice before the intermission break. Roush
evened the score with a 20 yard run
at the 6:08 mark with Bradley tacking on the point after run to give
WHS the lead for good at 16-14.
Roush would add a 37 yard run and
Neal the two-point conversion run
with 1:04 to play to stake Wahama
to a 24-14 lead at the half.
The White Falcons extended
its advantage to 38-14 with two
additional scores during third

quarter action. Bradley reached
paydirt from four yards out at
the 7:26 mark with Roush adding
a 53 yard run with 1:56 remaining in the stanza. Neal added
another two-point conversion
run following the Falcons second
touchdown run of the quarter.
The Rebels kept battling back
with White adding another
South Gallia score on a 50 yard
run with 1:08 left in the period.
Dakota Wroten added the conversion run to pull the hosts to
within a two possession game.
Neal concluded the Falcons
scoring on the night early in the
final quarter after going into the
end zone from two yards away.
The senior running back also added the extra point run to push the

Falcons lead to 46-22 with 9:49
left in the contest. White ended
the Rebel scoring by capping off
another fine drive with a six yard
run with 5:29 to play in the game.
The PAT pass failed with the final
score showing the Falcons with a
hard fought 46-28 count.
Wahama totaled 21 first downs
on the night and 470 yards in total
offense. WHS had 409 yards on
the ground and 61 yards through
the air. Roush’s 258 yards in 20 carries was the game’s leading rusher
with Neal adding 133 yards in 17
carries for the visitors. Bradley
connected on two of seven passes
on the evening for 61 yards and a
59 yard touchdown toss to Roush.
South Gallia enjoyed an uncommon 326 yards in total offense

against the White Falcons with
White leading the way with 187
yards of the Rebels 271 yard rushing total. Ethan Spurlock ran for
38 yards in 11 carries for South
Gallia in addition to completing
one of four passes for 32 yards.
Landon Hutchinson picked up 28
yards rushing and connected on
one of three aerials for 23 yards
with Kane Hutchinson grabbing
one pass for 32 yards and Mikey
Wheeler one for 23 yards.
Wahama will enjoy an open date
on its grid schedule next week before finishing the year with a home
date against Miller and an away
contest at rival Buffalo. South Gallia travels to Waterford next week
before closing out the season at
home against Van.

�Sunday, October 20, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

"25Jî�28=6DîH:?î �E9îDEC2:89EîD64E:@?2=
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — It
started when most of this year’s seniors were being born.
The Eastern volleyball team captured its 18th consecutive district
berth Thursday night following a
25-12, 25-8, 25-20 victory over visiting South Gallia in a Division IV
sectional final at the Eagle’s Nest in
Meigs County.
The third-seeded Lady Eagles
(20-3) — who began their current
sectional title streak in 1996 — never trailed in the first two games en
route to double-digits wins, but the
Lady Rebels (10-13) didn’t go quietly
in the decisive third contest.
Sixth-seeded South Gallia battled
through nine ties and 10 lead changes in Game 3, and last led down the
stretch at 19-18. After both teams
were deadlocked at 20, EHS reeled
off five consecutive points — allowing the hosts to advance to the district tournament.
Eastern will face seventh-seeded
Paint Valley on Thursday, Oct. 24, in
the second of two district semifinal
matches to be held at Jackson High
School. top-seeded Pike Eastern will
face Portsmouth Clay in the first
semifinal at 6 p.m.

The Lady Eagles stormed out to an
early 15-8 lead and extended that edge
out to 19-12 before scoring the final
six points of Game 1 for a 13-point decision. EHS followed with leads of 4-0
and 17-5 before closing Game 2 on an
8-3 charge to secure its biggest lead of
the night of 17 points.
Both teams led by as many as three
points before the final tie at 20-all in
Game 3, but the host scored the final
five points to secure the 3-0 match
decision. The Lady Eagles also defeated SGHS in straight games both
times during the regular season.
Maddie Rigsby led the service
attack with 13 points, followed by
Jordan Parker with 12 points and
Lindsay Wolfe with 11 points. Katie Keller was next with six service
points, while Erin Swatzel and Kelsey
Johnson respectively chipped in four
and three points.
Parker had a team-high six aces, all of
which came in Game 1. Rigsby added
three service aces, while Keller, Johnson
and Wolfe also had an ace apiece.
Rigsby led the net attack with
eight kills, followed by Parker with
seven kills and Swatzel with six kills.
Johnson and Keller also added three
kills and two kills, respectively, for
the victors. Parker led the hosts with
three blocks, while Swatzel chipped
in two blocks. Rigsby and Johnson

OVCS outlasts
Spartans in tourney
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — At the end of the
night, you only have to win by one.
Marshall Hood broke a 3-all tie in an overtime
shootout, allowing host Ohio Valley Christian to
claim victory Thursday night during an OCSAA
regional tournament contest against Bellefontaine Calvary Christian in the Old French City.
The Defenders (7-8-1) never trailed in regulation and twice established leads of two goals,
but the visiting Spartans rallied back from both
of those deficits to knot the game up at five after
80 minutes of regulation.
Both teams resorted to a best-of-5 in penalty
kicks, which led to a 3-all tie after the first round
through. The tiebreaker went to sudden death,
and BCC missed its first two chances while
OVCS came up short on its first extra try.
Hood came out of net to take the Defenders’
final penalty shot, and the sophomore netted the
final shot — allowing OVCS to advance to the
next round of the regional tournament.
The Defenders outshot the guests by a 28-17
overall margin, which included a slim 17-16 edge
in shots on goal. The hosts also claimed a 6-2
advantage in corner kicks.
OVCS stormed out to an early lead in the sixth
minute after T.G. Miller netted an unassisted goal
for a 1-0 edge, then Miller scored on a pass from
Justin Beaver in the 27th minute for a 2-0 cushion.
Calvary countered with a goal just seconds
later when Ian McGillis scored on an unassisted
shot in the 27th minute, allowing the guests to
pull to within 2-1 at the intermission.
Dan Solmonowicz started the second half scoring with an unassisted goal in the 42nd minute,
allowing the Spartans to tie the match at two.
Miller recorded a hat trick in the 62nd minute
after netting a pass from Evan Bowman, giving
OVCS a 3-2 edge. Solmonowicz, however, countered with a goal in the 65th minute for a 3-3 tie.
Danny Reed recaptured the lead for the Defenders in the 67th minute after netting a pass
from Miller, making it a 4-3 contest. Phil Hollingshead extended that lead to 5-3 after netting
a 20-yard shot in the 71st minute.
Solmonowicz reached his hat trick in the 74th
minute with an unassisted goal, then netted his
fourth score of the night in the 79th minute —
which tied the game at five at the end of regulation.
Besides the game-winning goal, Hood also
made 11 saves in net for the victors. Scott Brunson
stopped 12 shots in net for Calvary Christian.

also added a block each.
Wolfe led the passing attack with
25 assists, while Parker paced the defense with 22 digs. Paige Cline contributed 19 digs to the winning cause,
while Rigsby added 18 digs for EHS.
Bailie Corbin paced the SGHS service attack with six points, followed
by Sara Bailey with five points and a
team-high two aces. Alicia Hornsby
was next with four points and an ace,
while Shelby Sanders and Courtney
Haner respectively chipped in two
points and one point. Katie Bostic
also had one point and one ace as
well for the Lady Rebels.
Brynn Adams led the net attack
with five kills and five blocks, while
Haner chipped in four kills and three
blocks. Rachel Johnson contributed
two kills, while the trio of Bailey,
Bostic and Mariah Hineman each
added a kill apiece.
South Gallia’s last sectional title
in volleyball came in 2011. It was
the final volleyball match for seniors
Rachel Johnson, Brynn Adams, Alicia Hornsby and Bailie Corbin in the
Red and Gold.
The Lady Eagles have advanced
to regionals eight times in their 17
previous trips to the district tournament, including six of the last eight
postseasons. Eastern also qualified
for the D-4 state tournament in 2011.

Bryan Walters | Sunday Times-Sentinel

South Gallia’s Sara Bailey (24) tips a ball over the outstretched arms of Eastern blockers Jordan Parker, left, and
Kelsey Johnson, middle, during Game 2 of Thursday night’s
Division IV volleyball sectional final in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

"25Jî*@&gt;42EDî4=2HîA2DEî)@FE96C?
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GLOUSTER, Ohio — It’s not how
you start but rather how you finish
that’s important.
After the opening game in Thursday night’s sectional final match in
Athens County, the Southern volleyball team looked to have a clear edge.
However, the Lady Tomcats rallied
back to win the next three games and
the sectional title.
Southern (11-11) jumped out to
10-1 lead in the opening game and
continued on to the 25-14 victory.
The Lady Tornadoes kept the momentum going in the second game
and led 11-9. The Lady Tomcats
had an answer however, and they
evened the match with a 25-16 victory in game two.
Trimble won the third game in
convincing fashion by a count of
25-13 with a pair of five point runs.
Southern kept the fourth game
close most of the way but seven
consecutive points by Trimble
sealed the game to a 25-15 count
and the sectional crown.
Senior Katie Jenkins led the Purple and Gold with 15 points, followed
by Celestia Hendrix with eight, Hannah Hill with five and Ali Deem with
two. Marlee Maynard and Madison
Maynard each had one point in the
game. Celestia Hendrix and Hannah
Hill had the lone ace’s for Southern.
Trimble was led by libero Trista
Lackey with 19 points, followed by
Nikki Kish with 10. Lauren Riley
and Morgan Murphy each finished
with seven points, Tia Savage had
five, while Tori Null marked four in
the victory. Null had a a match-best
three aces, followed by Savage with
two and the duo of Riley and Murphy
with one apiece.
The SHS net attack was led by
Hendrix with nine kills, followed by
Jansen Wolfe and Jordan Huddleston
with seven each. Madison Maynard
had three kills, Darien Diddle had
two, while Katie Jenkins, Marlee
Maynard and Hannah Hill each had
one kill in the setback. Jenkins led
the Purple and Gold with 15 assists,
followed by Marlee Maynard with six
and Wolfe with one.
Savage led the Red and Silver
with 16 kills, followed by Kish with

Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Southern’s Darien Diddle (13) and Jansen Wolfe (7) attempt to block Trimble’s leading attacker Tia Savage during the Lady Tomcats victory, Thursday night in Glouster.

12 and Murphy with nine. Bailey
Bickley marked four kills, Tori Null
had two, while Trista Lackey finished with one kill in the win. Null
was the Lady Tomcats’ leading setter with 16 assists.
Southern’s defense was charged
by Jansen Wolfe with seven blocks,
followed by Madison Maynard with
three and Baylee Hupp with one.

Deem finished with a game-high 19
digs, while Haley Hill had nine and
Hannah Hill marked six.
The THS defense was led by
Kish with three blocks and Riley
with three digs.
Southern has now gone eight seasons without a sectional title; surpassing the longest drought in school
history which was seven seasons.

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Poachers were my Prey: 18 Years as an Undercover Wildlife Officer

Meigs Youth Basketball League
POMEROY, Ohio — Meigs varsity boys basketball
coach David Kight, along with the boys and girls basketball programs, would like to invite the parents of any boy
or girl in grades 3-6 interested in playing basketball this
season to the Intermediate/Primary School at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 22, in the gymnasium. Coach Kight will
talk about the Meigs Marauders Youth Basketball League
that is entering its second season. The Youth League is
designed to get athletes, parents and the community involved in and build excited about the game of basketball.
The Youth League will provide a place for athletes to go
and to get an opportunity to learn, play and enjoy the
game of basketball as well as becoming a part of our basketball family here at Meigs High School. Also, there will
be sign-ups for anyone interested in playing in the Meigs
League or the Hocking Valley League this year.

Jim Freeman
In The Open

“Poachers Were My Prey: Eighteen
Years as an Undercover Wildlife Officer” is R.T. Stewart’s first-person narrative as told by Chip Gross. If you have
read the Wild Ohio publication of the
Ohio Division of Wildlife for any length
of time, you are probably familiar with
Chip’s stories and photographs.
Chip, who is also retired from the
Ohio Division of Wildlife, even injects
himself into the book a time or two,
but the subject and hero of the book is
clearly Meigs County native son R.T.
R.T. in his book paints a graphic
image of the personalities behind
poaching, and dispels any thoughts
that it is somehow a victimless crime
or just guys “trying to put some meat
on their table.”
Poachers are not some sort of Robin Hoods taking from the rich and
giving to the poor; they endanger the

lives of other people through their
recklessness, stealing from legitimate sportsmen and give a black eye
to legitimate hunters and anglers.
As a young newspaper reporter
working for the Ohio Valley Publishing Company back in the 1990s, and as
outdoorsman as well, I took great personal interest in one story that I covered – the arrest, trial and conviction
of Michael Barker of Charleston, W.Va.
Barker was a notorious poacher
with convictions dating back to
1974, and in 1994 was the subject of
a poaching investigation by the Ohio
Division of Wildlife. That fall he
was arrested by then-Meigs County
Wildlife Officer Keith Wood and
Special Deputy Dana Aldridge (both
friends of mine) following a long car
chase that ended, ironically enough,
when Barker’s car struck a deer, and
a scuffle that ultimately resulted
in Barker receiving an 18-month
prison term on a variety of criminal

charges related to the poaching and
the chase and struggle.
West Virginia game officials also
seized dozens of trophy deer heads
and four full-body mounts from
Barker’s home. I remember taking
a photograph for the paper of Wood
and Aldridge standing in the back of
a pickup truck with a standing fullbody mounted deer.
At that time I didn’t know the full
story behind the arrest, and its role in
what was called, appropriately enough,
Operation Ego. Poachers Were My
Prey helped fill in some of the gaps.
Poachers come from varying socioeconomic classes and are motivated
by profit, the fun of killing and for
bragging rights, or in Barker’s case
a lust for large antlers or “hornography,” as it was called in the book.
These are not good guys, and they
don’t have any respect for laws and

Knight records 13th ace at Riverside
MASON, W.Va. — Rick Knight of Pinehurst (N.C.) recorded the 13th hole-in-one of the year at Riverside Golf
Course on Monday, Oct. 14. While visiting with firends
and family, Knight recorded his ace using a driver on the
209-yard 11th hole. It was the first hole-in-one of Knight’s
golfing career and was witnessed by Kenny Pridemore
and Kenny Williams, both of Point Pleasant. Knight is a
See REVIEW | B6 member of the Pinehurst National Club.

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

60452106

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Special Notices

“NEED A LIFT”
MEDICAL APPOINTMENT
TRANSPORTATION SERVICES
Medicaid/Insurance
Approval is Required

740-709-0177
740-612-5953

60454916

Business Consulting

RICKY’S TREE SERVICE
Complete Tree Care

740-612-5128
Professional Services

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

60451794

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
Child/Elderly Care
Wanted
Mature Person
to help Part Time,
with Elderly Gentleman.
Experience a Must,
CNA License preferred.
Please Contact
740-612-5993

Auctions

Auctions

AUCTION
Oct. 23rd, 2013 4pm

PUBLIC AUCTION
OCTOBER 26, 2013, 10:00 AM

1555 NYE Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WATER STREET SYRACUSE, OHIO 45779
LOOK FOR RED, WHITE, &amp; BLUE POLE BARN

We will be selling contents of Garage
for Gene Goodwin
Tools - Furniture - Jet Ski - Boat Antiques - Collectibles
auctionzip.com - A MUST SEE!

WE WILL BE SELLING ANTIQUES, COLLECTABLES,
AND HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ALONG WITH ALOT
OF TOOLS, LONGABERGER BASKETS, A 10’ JOHN
BOAT, STONEWARE CROCKS AND OIL LAMPS,
MASONIC BOOKS FROM GALLIPOLIS, OH
WWW.AUCTIONZIP.COM/AUCTIONEER/5548 FOR PHOTOS

CAPT. BILLY R. GOBLE JR. AUCTIONEER 740-416-4696
SMOKE ‘EM IF YOU GOT ‘EM BBQ WILL BE SELLING FOOD!
WELCOME FROM THE STAFF KATHY, VIRGAL, RHONDA,
STEVE, ARNIE, AND OUR NEWEST NUT DAMON.
DON’T FORGET TO PAY THE LADYS!!!!!
BRING YOUR OWN CHAIR!

Terms cash or good check!
BILLY R. GOBLE, JR., AUCTIONEER
Phone: 740-416-4696
Web: www.auctionzip.com/5548

60458585

Auctions
Special Notices

EASTERN HS AUCTION

JOB FAIR
Meet Job
Recruiters,
Employment
Representatives
&amp;
Post Secondary
Educational
Institutions

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013
@ 10:00 A.M.
LOCATED AT EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL,
ALONG ROUTE 7 N, 10 MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OH.
SELLING THE FOLLOWING ITEMS:

Bring your resume
and be prepared
MEIGS COUNTY
for interviews

October 24, 2013
10 AM - 2 PM

Dress to
impress

FAMILY LIFE CENTER
437 MAIN STREET MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CALL MEIGS ONE STOP FOR MORE
INFO AT (740) 992-2117, EXT 161
60458780

TOOLS: Routers; Plans; Lathe Tools; Hammers; Soldering Irons; Tools;
Files; Handsaws; Paint Sprayer; Sanding Belts; Cut off Grinder Wheels;
Saw Blades; Band Saw Blades; Sanding Pads; Glue; Stains; Varnishes;
Dowel Rods; Blue Print Cabinet; Lamp Parts; Electrical Boxes; Vermont
American Saw Table(new in box); Portable Saw and Router Guide (new
in box); Boxes of Lowmark 1000 Berk-tek Internet Wire; 2 Room Dividers
w/Storage; Office Desks; Rolling Carts; Windows; Florescent Lights;
TV's; Folding Tables; Steel Beams; Fencing; Computers; Floor Scrubber;
Sears Craftsman Dust Collector 1 HP; Sears Craftsman 12" Wood Lathe
1/2 HP; Sears Craftsman Wood Shape Table 1/2 HP; Yates American
Jointer; Grizzly Wood Lathe 1/2 HP; Woodtek 15" Planer; Woodtek 13"
Belt Sander 3 HP; Reliant 26" Scroll Saw 1/8 HP; Reliant 14" Band Saw
1 HP; Delta 13" Scroll Saw 0.9 AMP; 2 Twentieth Century ARC Welders
250 AMP; Lumber (Maple, Oak, Cherry, Walnut, Cedar, Poplar); Wood
Clamps; 3 Work Tables w/Vices on Corner; and other misc. items.

Auctions

Terms: Cash or Check w/ valid ID.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures

EVENING AUCTION
Tuesday, October 22 – 4:00 p.m.
4242 North Torch Road, Coolville, OH

Excavating

Reese

Excavating

60455455

Backhoe–Trenching–Trucking
Septic Systems–Basements
Land Clearing–Site Prep
Dozer – and More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921
LEGALS

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
John Todd Taylor
Plaintiff
v.
Jenifer Noelle Taylor (fka
Gould, Harris, Taylor, Walker)
Defendant
Case No. 03DR96
To: Jenifer Noelle Taylor,
whose last known address was
24 Chilliothe Road, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631, you are hereby
notified that you have been
named a Defendant, in a legal
Complaint for Modification of
Custody, entitled, John Todd
Taylor, Plaintiff vs. Jenifer
Noelle Taylor (fka Gould, Harris, Taylor, Walker), Defendant.
This action has been assigned
case number 03DR96 and is
pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Gallia County,
Ohio. The relief being sought is
an order naming the Plaintiff
residential parent and legal
custodian of the minor children, setting a reasonable
amount of support for said children and other relief as the
Court deems as being just and
equitable.

Auctions

DIRECTIONS: From Athens Rt. 50/32 east, past Coolville towards Belpre approximately 21 miles or from Parkersburg Rt. 50/32 west
approximately 11 miles, turn north (across from Roadside Rest area) onto Torch Road (Co. Rd. 63) go less than 1 mile, turn left onto N.
Torch Road, .3 mile across from Ferndale Park, turn right back long lane bearing left, watch for signs.

CORCORAN�ABSOLUTE�FARM�EQUIPMENT�AUCTION�
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd 2013 * 10 AM

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Oak hall seat w/mirror, Oak wardrobe cabinet, Hoosier style kitchen cabinet, old dining table w/
drop leaves, set of California Pottery dishes, New England shelf clock, Seth Thomas shelf clock, Dietz No. 2 Simplex lantern,
2-paper mache rabbits, 50+ record albums, 2-Lladro figurines 1985, 2-milk cans, old table top fan, kerosene lamps (1-green
depression base), tall Viking vase, assorted glassware, 2-sets of Pyrex mixing bowls, 1-set of crock mixing bowls, 22-various
matchbox holders (1-Dr. H.C. Hupp Dentist, Caldwell, OH), alabaster fruit, some old baskets &amp; Native American baskets,
assorted stuffed bears, Playskool children’s desk, some older children’s books, 1929 set of Hardy Boys Mystery, set of Bobbsey
Twins books, 1948 Claire Bee Chip Hilton books, cook books, older framed prints, Nascar Dale Earnhardt Jr. dye cast cars in
orig. boxes and other memorabilia including 5 books full of Nascar trading cards, Sam Bass posters of Dale Earnhardt Sr. &amp;
Jr., Santa Rosa Folk Guitar in case signed by Oak Ridge Boys &amp; Neil McCoy, costume jewelry, 18”x18” box full of marbles, old
wood carpenter’s tool box, signed &amp; dated hand carved decoy ducks from North Carolina,

Auction conducted onsite at 1960 Kellenberger Rd., Chillicothe, OH 45601
Equipment inspection held Friday, Nov. 1st * 8 am - 5 pm
FARM EQUIP. * LIVESTOCK EQUIP. * PLANTING EQUIP.
TILLAGE EQUIP. * GRAIN TRUCK * HAY EQUIP. * WAGONS
Tractor/Combine: JD 7800 - 93’ Model, w/ apx. 5,666 hrs; duals/weights
Tractor; JD 9410 Combine 98’ Model w/ apx. 1,483 hrs engine/1,041 separator
hrs.; JD 922 F-2002 Grain Platform; JD 643 Corn Head with rake option.
Grain Truck: Ford F-600 Grain Truck apx. 16’ bed, showing 65,823 mi.
Planting/Tillage: JD 7200 Corn Planter 8-30” row apx. 88’ model; JD 750
Grain Drill 15’ w/grass seed box/markers apx. 98’ model; 3 point hitch
Worksaver grass seeder; Case IH Disc 496 Tandem Disc harrow w/rake like
new blades 91’ model; JD 1450 plow 5-18” w/ rake; JD Chisel Plow 9 shank
89’ model; JD #400 Rotary Hoe 8 row w/transport 79’ model; IH Subsoiler
#10 83’ model; Harrigator 76’ model. Hay Equipment/Wagons: NH 855
Round Baler 91’ w/net wrap; JD 348 square baler wire tie; NH Disc Bine
1432 , 13’, center pivot 07’ model; (2) JD 670 Hay rakes; Pivot Tongue Rake
hitch 96’; NH 6 basket #169 Hay tedder digidrive; Round bale mover 2 wheels
-11 bale; Round Bale Mover 4 wheels-5 bales; Bale Mover 3 pt.; Hay wagon
NH 14’; NH 16’ Hay wagon; Case 16’ hay wagon; J&amp;M 18’ hay wagon; Hay
Conveyor apx. 47’ elect. Motor/dolly cart; Hay Conveyor 27’6” elect. Motor;
Hay conveyor apx. 23’9” w/elect. Motor; Hay conveyor 18’10” w/elect. Motor; J&amp;M 350-2D gravity bed wagon 13 ton run gear 83’ model; J&amp;M 385-5D
gravity bed wagon 13 ton run gear w/tarp; Killbros gravity bed wagon apx. 16’
auger w/down spout #350-10 run gear; Killbros #350-10 gravity bed wagon w/
run gear; (2) Gravity Bed wagons no running gears. Livestock Equipment:
JD manure spreader 450 w/ push, lift gate apx. 90’ model; Feed Bin apx. 4 ton
w/gate no top; Cattle Feeder 10’ Smidley Steer Stauffer; (2) Smidley Steer
Stauffer; (3) plastic feed bunks; (8) apx. 8’ concrete feed bunks; (10) 8’ concrete feed bunks; Patz #150 Drag feeder apx. 77’; Patz H 98-B unloader 18’
w/7.5 HP; Elevator from silo apx. 20’; Bulk bin 4 ton no auger; Yetter Grain
Cleaner; grain bin fan; electric poles; guard rail; silo unloader. Miscellaneous:
2012 like new Westfield auger power take off, 80-61-8’; Shaver HD-10’ post
driver; Ford-Danhausser post hole digger; Howe #57 apx. 1000 lb. sealer
weigh buggy; Apx. 12’ by 8’ trailer wire sides/ramps; utility trailer; Hydraulic
dump bed; pickup fuel tank hand pump; fuel tank on skids elect. Pump apx.
300 gal.; tractor dual tire changer model 51. Terms: Cash/Check paid in full
day of sale; Removal day of sale; All merchandise sold As-Is where is no
warranties or guarantees expressed/implied. Owner: Mr. Andrew Corcoran call
for more info/details 740.642.2375. Give us a call or check out our website for
a free brochure. This is a super clean fleet of equipment.

HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: 2-newer 4-stack barrister style bookcase units, California King Sleep Comfort Bed w/bookcase
headboard &amp; drawers under mattress, hand painted entertainment cabinet, curio cabinet, painted 7 ft. tall cupboard, Ethan
Allen large pine china hutch, pine trestle table w/bench, miscellaneous dishes (Pfalzgraf “The Village”), pots &amp; pans, new
Farberware broiler/rotisserie, 2-section bookcase units, lots of knick knacks, upholstered glider loveseat sofa, computer desk,
Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer, shelving units, Christmas decorations, some fabric,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: Health Star 2-person Sauna Room, rope hammock w/frame, outdoor patio umbrella, 12-pieces of
colored stained glass-some large, Western saddle, lots of assorted ceramic tile squares, set of left hand golf clubs, Pelonis oil
fueled room heater, wood burner stove, tool cabinet full of hammers/screwdrivers/wrenches/etc., miscellaneous hand tools,
long handled yard/garden tools, Stihl brush cutter/weed eater, new tailgate pop-up tent, 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/check payment. All sales are final. Food provided by the
LIFT Ladies Group, The Bridge Baptist Church, Little Hocking, OH.

OWNER: Louverna Tomer
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

60457277

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60453324

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The Mason County Career
Center is accepting sealed
bids for the following equipment:
1.Mazak 20/50 Vertical Machine Center, used 1987 model, in working condition, minimum bid: $6,000.00
2.Bridgeport Vertical Milling
Machine, used, has DRO, in
working condition, minimum
bid: $600.00
Viewing of equipment on October 18, 2013 from 8 to 3 at
MCCC, 281 Scenic Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550. NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Pictures are available on the
Mason County Career Web
Site
at:http://www.edline.net/pages/
Mason_County_VTC. Equipment is being sold as is, and
where is. It is up to the buyer
to pay in full within 5 days of
opening bids, and remove
equipment from the Mason
County Career Center Shop
Room by November 4, 2013,
or funds will be forfeited and
equipment rebidded. Send
sealed bids to Mason County
Board of Education ATTN:
Gary Hendricks/Equipment
Bid, 1200 Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550 by October 23, 2013. Opening of bids
will be October 24, 2013.
10/9/13

The Mason County Career
Center is accepting sealed
bids for the following equipment:
1.Mazak 20/50 Vertical Machine Center, used 1987 model, in working condition, minimum bid: $6,000.00
2.Bridgeport Vertical Milling
Machine, used, has DRO, in
working condition, minimum
bid: $600.00
Viewing of equipment on October 18, 2013 from 8 to 3 at
MCCC, 281 Scenic Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550. NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Pictures are available on the
Mason County Career Web
Site
at:http://www.edline.net/pages/
Mason_County_VTC. Equipment is being sold as is, and
where is. It is up to the buyer
to pay in full within 5 days of
opening bids, and remove
equipment from the Mason
County Career Center Shop
Room by November 4, 2013,
or funds will be forfeited and
equipment rebidded. Send
sealed bids to Mason County
Board of Education
LEGALSATTN:
Gary Hendricks/Equipment
Bid, 1200 Main Street, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550 by October 23, 2013. Opening of bids
will be October 24, 2013.
10/9/13

60458592

Notices

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
John Todd Taylor
Plaintiff
v.
Jenifer Noelle Taylor (fka
Gould, Harris, Taylor, Walker)
Defendant
Case No. 03DR96
To: Jenifer Noelle Taylor,
whose last known address was
24 Chilliothe Road, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631, you are hereby
notified that you have been
named a Defendant, in a legal
Complaint for Modification of
Custody, entitled, John Todd
Taylor, Plaintiff vs. Jenifer
Noelle Taylor (fka Gould, Harris, Taylor, Walker), Defendant.
This action has been assigned
case number 03DR96 and is
pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Gallia County,
Ohio. The relief being sought is
an order naming the Plaintiff
residential parent
and legal
LEGALS
custodian of the minor children, setting a reasonable
amount of support for said children and other relief as the
Court deems as being just and
equitable.
You are required to answer the
Complaint within 28 days after
the last publication of this notice which will be published
once a week for three successive weeks on November 3,
2013and the 28 days for answer or otherwise respond as
required by the Ohio Rules of
Civil Procedure, a divorce will
be granted from you to Heather Mable Matheny, and such
other relief as the Court deems
just and equitable.
Dated: October 14, 2013
Noreen Saunders
Clerk of Courts
Gallia County, Ohio
Richard H. Hedges, Reg. No.
0064988
Attorney for Plaintiff
Law Offices of Richard H.
Hedges
537 Second Ave.
Gallipolis Ohio 45631
740-446-4970
10/20,10/27, 11/3

Sunday, October 20, 2013

60458804

Page B4 LîSunday Times Sentinel

�

STANLEY &amp; SON, INC.

740.775.3330 * www.stanleyandson.com

60454973

�Sunday, October 20, 2013

Notices

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Sales

GUN &amp; KNIFE SHOW
CHILLICOTHE
Oct 26, 9-5 &amp; Oct 27, 9-3
Ross Co. Fairgrounds
344 Fairgrounds Rd.
Adm$5 6' TBLS $35
Front Sight Promotions, LLC
740-667-0412
www.ohiogunshows.net
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.

Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

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.

Houses For Rent

Gospel Sing, Food &amp; Auction
at the Hartford Comm Ctr, Oct
26th, 12-?. We will be accepting items, for the Auction to
help support the 24th Annual
Bend Area Gospel Jublilee,
June 2-7th 2014. 304-8822049.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Health

Ohio Valley Home
Health accepting applications for STNA,
CNA, PCA, CHHA.
Apply at 1480 Jackson Pike Gallipolis
OH, email resume to
aburgett@ovhh.org or
Phone 740-441-1393

EDUCATION

3BR, $750 Mo + Utilities &amp; Deposit. 6mi. from Toyota Plant &amp;
17mi to Pt. Pleasant. w/References 304-415-2142

REAL ESTATE SALES

Ranch Style 3 Bdrm / 2 bath
home on 1.95 acres ( In Country) located at 953 Corn Rd
(Vinton) Full basement &amp; Sm.
Barn 740-332-1900 or 740412-7383
Houses For Sale
2-Homes 2-acres Nice - Harrisonville area asking $60,000
call 1-740-742-7010
4 Bdrm &amp; 2 bath Home - 1 acre
asking $68,500 located on Bulaville Rd, Gallipolis,Oh 740367-0641
Want To Buy
WANT TO BUY ripe Pawpaw's
- $1.00 lb -Black walnuts starting Oct 1st. 740-698-6060

FINANCIAL SERVICES

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

Food Services
Taking Applications at all McClure Restaurant locations,
Middleport, Pomeroy, Gallipolis &amp; McArthur. Full &amp; Part time
Help Wanted General

ANIMALS

CLUB CALVES FOR SALE Sires: Heatwave, I-80 Call 740645-4833 or 740-645-2707

3-Bdrm - 2 Full baths - Close
to Hospital - NO PETS-Central
AC must have references
$1,000 deposit &amp; $1,000 rent
call 446-3481

Professional Services

EMPLOYMENT

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

1BR, furnished Apt. very clean,
W/D. Private, w/off street parking, NON-Smoker. NO PETS
304-675-1386

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

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)

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Livestock

For Sale By Owner
SERVICES

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

5 Bdrm - 3 1/2 bath Ranch Close to Hospital - Central AC,
Pool, Large Garage, $1,000
sec. deposit $1,000 Rent - NO
PETS - Must have references
Call 740-446-3481

AGRICULTURE

5 Gravity Bed Wagons in good
cond. call 740-245-9491 or
740-853-2117. NOT AFTER
9PM
Garden &amp; Produce
We buy Black Walnuts, starting price $13 per 100lbs. after
hulling. Bring your Black Walnuts to: Patriot Produce, 62 Village St. Patriot OH 45658.
Open Monday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. From Oct 2 to Nov 4
AUTOMOTIVE

Trucks/SUVs/Vans

Land (Acreage)
Gallia Co. 22 acres in Vinton
$34,900 or 51 acres off SR218
$66,500!
Meigs Co. Danville 15 acres
$24,500 - more @ www.brunerland.com or
call 740-441-1492, we gladly
finance!

98 Chevy Tahoe, 4 Wheel
Drive, V8, leather seats, High
Miles. $4,000 O.B.O 740-2455146 or 740-645-7034
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

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

Rentals
2BR Mobile Home in Middleport. $325/mo+$325 dep. 1 yr
lease. No Pets. No calls after
9PM. 740-992-5097.
3-Bdrm Mobile Home - Addiville School Dist. Deposit &amp;
References $575.00 call 740367-0632
Trash,Water,Gas pd.

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
One Bedroom Apartment
downtown $400 plus deposit
Call 740-446-4383 or 740-2566637
Recently updated - 2 Bdrm &amp; 1
1/2 bath Townhouse located at
Tara Apt. $480/mo and $480
deposit, 1 year lease, background check &amp; $40 application fee. Water, Garbage, sewer pd. 304-419-7368

Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

ANNUITY.COM
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Retirement
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CALL for FREE copy of our
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companies! 800-423-0676

Want To Buy

CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
your prescription and free
shipping.

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

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524

Jones Tree Service: Complete
Tree Care, Insured 740-3670266 or 740-339-3366

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Tree Service

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping.
Nationwide Service.
$29.95/Month CALL Medical
Guardian Today
855-850-9105

Farm Equipment

Small 2 Bdrm house near Rio
Grande - nice area - 2 other
larger 3 Bdrm homes very
nice available Nov 1st. 1 is
near Holzer Hospital call 740)
441-5150 or 740-379-2923

Miscellaneous

MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386
OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE
Burgers - The Family Value
Combo - Only $39.99.
ORDER Today
1-888-721-9573,
use code 48643XMD - or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9
READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-InternetDigital Phone-Satellite. You've
Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.
888-929-9254
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST
FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION
Providing Free Mammograms
&amp; Breast Cancer Info
888-928-2362

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

PART-TIME PASSPORT
CASE MANAGER

COMPLIANCE SPECIALIST/
CLIENT RIGHTS OFFICER

Are you that special person who has a strong desire to assist
older adults remain independent in their own homes? The
Area Agency on Aging District 7, Inc. is seeking a highly
motivated, independent person to provide management of
in-home supportive services for the older adult and their
informal supports/family so they may continue living independently in the community.

Woodland Centers, Inc., a community
behavioral health agency serving Gallia,
Jackson, and Meigs counties in Southeastern
Ohio for 35 years is accepting applications
for the position of a Compliance Specialist
at our Gallia County clinic. Applicants must
possess a high school diploma; college
degree in business, social work, health care
administration preferred and 2-4 years related
experience in health care settings, including
familiarity with certifications and accreditation
preparation, credentialing and EAPS and HIPAA
compliance. The applicant will develop and
maintains credentialing for clinical staff, serve
as the agency’s Client Rights Officer, serves as
the secretary for Risk Management and writes/
prepares related reports for grants.

A 20-hour per week position based in Rio Grande that requires
a Licensed Social Worker or a Registered Nurse who can work
independently coordinating a care plan with the consumer’s
family, physicians and service providers and to implement and
monitor services to meet consumer’s in-home service needs.
Home visits and travel required.

Send Resume, Proof of Licensure, and References to:
Human Resources
Area Agency on Aging District 7, Inc.
F32 URG, P. O. Box 500
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
fax: (740) 245-0029; e-mail: jshong@aaa7.org
Will accept resumes until position filled.
EEO/AA Employer

60458097

60456912

Health, dental, vision plans, 401K, ample leave time, life
insurance, CEU’s provided, travel required with reimbursement at IRS rate.

Interested applicants should apply stopping in
office for application or by e-mailing resumes
to cbush@woodlandcenters.org, or mailing
resumes to Human Resources Department
Woodland Centers, Inc. 3086 State Route
160 Gallipolis, OH 45631. Woodland
Centers, Inc is an AA/EOE.

60458423

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Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
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(6:00) ! !!!! The Women of Brewster Place (‘89, Dra) Oprah Winfrey. TV14
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Anthony Bourdain "Sicily"
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Eric &amp; Jessie Eric &amp; Jessie The Kardashians
Eric &amp; Jessie Kardash "More to the Story"
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SportsCenter TVG
Countdown
MLS Soccer San Jose vs Los Angeles (L) TVG
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Baseball T.
30 for 30 "No Mas" TVG
30/30 "One Night in Vegas"
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(5:30) ! !!! Toy Story of
! !!! The Addams Family (‘91, Com) Anjelica Huston. A ! !! Addams Family Values (‘93, Com) Anjelica Huston.
Monsters, Inc. TERROR!
greedy lawyer tries to plunder the family's fortune. TVPG
The family must save Uncle Fester from a gold digger. TVPG
Halloween Wars "Twisted
Guy's Grocery Games "Wild
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Witches of East End "Today I ! !! The Ugly Truth (‘09,
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�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page B6 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, October 20, 2013

PPHS holds off Red Devils, 31-21 on homecoming
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Not in
normal fashion but the Big Blacks continue to roll.
The Point Pleasant football team gave
up over 300 yards for the first time this
season but the Big Blacks remain unbeaten with a 31-21 victory over Ravenswood
at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field on
Homecoming night.
PPHS (7-0) got on the board first with an
11 yard touchdown run by sophomore Cody
Mitchell at the 3:33 mark of the first quarter. Colin Peal added the extra point and
put Point Pleasant up 7-0. Mitchell added
another touchdown with a five yard run at
the 9:22 mark of the second period and after
a Peal extra-point the Big Blacks led 14-0.
Ravenswood (4-3) senior Devon Crews
pulled the Red Devils closer with a 46 yard
touchdown run at the 3:27 mark of the second quarter. Nathan Cunningham added the
point after and Ravenswood trailed 14-7.
The Big Blacks answered with a 35
yard touchdown pass from Aden Yates to
Chase Walton with 3:27 remaining in the
first half. Peal added the extra-point and
PPHS led 21-7. That touchdown tied Walton with Paul Bennett for the PPHS alltime touchdown record at 35 scores.
With just four seconds Colin Peal hit
a 27 yard field goal, which set up by an
Austen Toler interception, to put PPHS
up 24-7 at halftime.
After the break Cody McDaniel put the
Big Blacks on the board again with a eight
yard scoring run at the 6:09 mark of the
third period. Peal added the extra point
and PPHS led 31-7.
The Red Devils answered less than a
minute later when Heath Burgess broke a
68 yard touchdown run and Cunningham
added the point after to pull RHS within
16 points. Rhys Jelich added another RHS
touchdown at the 8:15 mark of the fourth

period on a one yard run. Cunningham
added the point after and Ravenswood
trailed 31-21. The Big Black defense shut
down the Red Devils for the rest of the
game to hold on for the 10 point victory.
The Big Blacks were led by quarterback
Aden Yates, who was 15-of-18 with 143
yards and a touchdown.
Cody Mitchell ran 19 times for 91 yards
and two scores, Chase Walton had 64
yards on 17 carries, while Yates had 32
yards on eight carries. Gage Buskirk had
two carries and 19 yards, Cody Marcum
ran twice for 17 yards, Austen Toler had
three carries for 12 yards with a score and
Cody McDaniel ran once for eight yards.
Walton had seven catches for 84
yards with a score, Mitchell caught five
passes for 42 yards, Buskirk had two receptions for 12 yards and Toler caught
one pass for five yards.
Heath Burgess was 5-of-12 passing for
Ravenswood with 82 yards and two interceptions.
Devon Crews became the first player to
run for over 100 yards against PPHS this
season, gaining 127 yards on 20 carries
and a score. Burgess had 66 yards and a
score on five carries, Rhys Jelich had 22
yards and a score on eight carries and
Benjamin Johnson carried the ball once
for four yards.
Thomas Sturm caught two passes for 33
yards, Jelich had two grabs for 23 yards and
Issac Crow caught one pass for 26 yards.
The Big Blacks held a 389-to-301 advantage in total yards, a 23-to-10 advantage in
first downs and a 70-to-46 advantage in plays
ran. PPHS was penalized eight times for 52
yards, while RHS was setback twice for 20
yards. There was one punt by each team.
And then there were two. The Point
Pleasant Big Blacks and the Hutington
Highlanders are now the only two undefeated teams in Class AAA, as George
Alex Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel
Washington fell to Cabell Midland 49-40 Point Pleasant senior Gage Buskirk pulls in a pass infront of Ravenswood senior DeDevon
Friday night.
Crews (22) during the Big Blacks 31-21 victory at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field.

-66&lt;î�î- ,2 î�@@E32==î)4@C6D
PREP FOOTBALL
Bishop Donahue 48, Paden City 6
Bluefield 61, Westside 0
Brooke 41, Parkersburg South 28
Cabell Midland 49, George Washington
40
Capital 34, Woodrow Wilson 0
Clay-Battelle 40, Cameron 20
Clear Spring, Md. 28, Berkeley Springs
26
Covington, Va. 31, Pendleton County 12
Doddridge County 15, Reedsville Eastern, Ohio 6
E. Liverpool, Ohio 27, Oak Glen 0
Fairmont Senior 52, Braxton County 6
Gilmer County 64, Hannan 8

Grafton 14, Liberty Harrison 14, 3OT,
(tie)
Greenbrier West 61, Webster County 18
Hampshire 49, Spring Mills 7
Hancock, Md. 52, Hundred 0
Huntington 55, Parkersburg 14
Hurricane 69, St. Albans 16
James Monroe 52, Mount View 22
Keyser 47, Jefferson 41
Liberty Raleigh 34, Independence 18
Logan 48, Greenbrier East 21
Man 36, Sherman 6
Martinsburg 76, Hedgesville 0
Midland Trail 34, Montcalm 26
Mingo Central 20, Chapmanville 14
Moorefield 16, East Hardy 6

Morgantown 44, Musselman 20
New Matamoras Frontier, Ohio 27, Valley Wetzel 12
Nicholas County 44, Lincoln County 0
Oak Hill 27, Lewis County 17
Philip Barbour 39, Buckhannon-Upshur
29
PikeView 32, River View 20
Pocahontas County 48, Tygarts Valley 14
Point Pleasant 31, Ravenswood 21
Preston 56, East Fairmont 39
Roane County 56, Calhoun County 12
Robert C. Byrd 21, North Marion 3
Sissonville 31, Clay County 19
South Charleston 34, Winfield 8
Spring Valley 48, Nitro 21

St. Marys 11, Magnolia 9
Summers County 39, Meadow Bridge 32
Tolsia 14, Scott 13
Tug Valley 44, Van 38, OT
Tyler Consolidated 39, South Harrison
12
University 38, John Marshall 9
Valley Fayette 38, Parkersburg Catholic
15
Wahama 46, Crown City S. Gallia, Ohio
28
Washington 26, Frankfort 6
Wayne 53, Herbert Hoover 20
Wheeling Park 41, Elkins 13
Williamstown 20, Wirt County 7
Wyoming East 27, Shady Spring 6

Review
From Page B3
regulations. Rules are meant to
be followed by the other guys
and don’t apply to them – and in
many cases they were involved
in illegal drug use or trafficking
or other illegal activities including theft (boat motors, all-terrain
vehicles, hunting equipment and
even goose decoys from peoples’
yards) and even an illegal tiredumping scam – and who isn’t
frustrated by that?

The most nauseating part of
the book to me was a description
of deer carcasses waiting to be
processed for eventual use in Chinese restaurants with the assumption that unwitting people would
eventually eat them as sweet and
sour pork or in other entrees.
Although it is refreshing to
know that investigators are out
there protecting wildlife, parts
of the book also read like a howto manual instructing poachers
on how NOT to get caught, and

describes the traits possessed by
those poachers who were difficult or impossible to catch.
These guys actually like to brag
on their abilities to overharvest or
illegally kill game, and it seems like
one of RT’s favorite tactics was to
simply get the conversation rolling
and let the subjects of the investigation roll it from there. In several
instances he was able to openly
videotape the poachers who wanted their acts recorded, presumably
so they could show the videos to

their friends or watch them later.
Once I picked the book up I
found myself unable to put it
back down, eager to read about
R.T.’s continuing exploits. Parts
of the book smack of braggadocio, but as Yogi Berra reportedly
said, “It’s not bragging if you
can do it.” With his outgoing,
larger-than-life personality and
night-owl tendencies, it is easy
to see how R.T. could make
contact and eventually gain the
trust of these poachers.

Poachers Were My Prey is a
must-read for all outdoorsmen,
but is written in a simple, easyto-understand style that should
appeal to non-sportsmen as well.
It is available for purchase online
for Kindle, paperback or audiobook for less than $20.
Jim Freeman is wildlife specialist for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District
and a long-time contributor to the Sunday
Times-Sentinel. He can be contacted weekdays at 740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

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(8.1)

FOX

!(#'% (11.1)

CBS

!)!*% (13.1)

NBC

!+#,% (15.1)

PBS

!)-.% (20.1)
CABLE

A&amp;E
AMC
APL
BET
BRAVO
CMT
CNN
COMC
DISC
DISN
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

OCTOBER 21, 2013
8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

Tonight
Show (N)
Entertain(:35) Jimmy
ment Tonight
Kimmel (N)
Modern Fam
The Big Bang Bones "The Woman in White" Sleepy Hollow "Pilot" TV14
The Arsenio
"Hawaii"
Theory
(N) TV14
Hall Show
13 News at
Inside Edition Met Your
Girls "And the The Big Bang Mom (N)
Hostages "Truth and
(:35) David
7:00 p.m.
Mother (N)
Cronuts" (N)
Theory
Consequences" (N) TV14
Letterman
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
The Voice "The Battles" The coaches are helped by industry The Blacklist "The Courier"
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
Fortune
professionals. (N) TVPG
(N) TV14
Eleven
Show (N)
PBS NewsHour TVG
Antiques Roadshow "Miami
John Glenn: A Life of Service Independent Lens "The Waiting Room/ Let
My
Beach (Hour One)" TVG
Me Down Easy" (N) TVPG
Generation
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7 PM

Jeopardy!

7:30

The Voice "The Battles" The coaches are helped by industry
professionals. (N) TVPG
Dancing With the Stars (N) TVPG

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Blacklist "The Courier"
(N) TV14
Castle "Time Will Tell" (N)
TVPG
Eyewitness News TVG

10 PM

10:30

WSAZ News
Tonight
Eyewitness
News 11
Modern "Baby
on Board"
13 News

11 PM

(:35)

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars
(5:30) ! !! House of Wax
! !!!! Halloween ('78, Hor) Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald
! !! Halloween 2 ('81, Hor) Jamie Lee Curtis. A doctor
('05, Hor) TVMA
Pleasence. An escaped killer terrorises three teen girls. TV14 tries to locate Michael Myers before he kills. TVM
North Woods Law: On the
North Woods Law "Turkey
North Woods Law
Alaska Wildlife Troopers
North Woods Law "Turkey
Hunt "Maine Freeze" TVPG
Dogs" TVPG
"Something's Afowl" TVPG
TVPG
Dogs" TVPG
(6:) 106&amp;Park ! !!! Bad Boys ('95, Act) Will Smith. TVMA
! !! Big Momma's House ('00, Com) Martin Lawrence. TVPG
I Dream of Nene: The
I Dream of Nene: The
Housewives NJ "Housewives
House Miami "The Black
Watch What
Miami "The
"Cancel the Wedding!"
"Spilling the Tea Party"
Tell All" Pt. 2 of 2 TV14
Sheep" (N) TV14
Happens (N)
Black Sheep"
Reba
Reba
! !! We Are Marshall ('07, Spt) Matthew McConaughey. TVPG
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
AC360 Later
OutFront
The Colbert
The Daily
Futurama
Futurama
South Park
South Park
Brickleberry
South Park
The Daily
The Colbert
Report
Show
"Calculon 2.0"
"The Snuke"
Show (N)
Report (N)
FastLoud "Cool Customline"
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud (N)
BarHunt. (N)
BarHunt. (N)
Fast N' Loud
Austin and
GoodLuck "Le Jessie
! !! Twitches ('05, Fam) Tia Mowry. TVG
(:10) Jessie
(:35) Dog With Austin and
A.N.T. Farm
Ally
Halloween"
a Blog
Ally
"ParticipANTS"
E! News TVG
Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
C. Lately (N)
E! News
(6:30) Monday Night Countdown (L) TVG
(:25) NFL Football Minnesota Vikings vs. New York Giants Site: MetLife Stadium (L) TVPG
SportsCenter
ESPN Mag "NBA Preview" (L) Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
NASCAR Now (L)
(6:00) ! !! Alice in Wonderland ('10, Adv) ! !! Twilight ('08, Dra) Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart. A teenager
The 700 Club TVPG
Johnny Depp. TVPG
yearning for belonging unexpectedly falls in love with a vampire. TV14
Guy's Grocery Games "Wild
Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners...Dives Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners... "All
in the Aisles" TVG
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives "Old to New"
Ins and Dives Ins (N)
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Over the Map"
(6:00) ! !!! Easy A ('10,
! !! Grown Ups ('10, Com) Adam Sandler. Five good friends and former
! !! Grown Ups ('10, Com) Adam
Com) Emma Stone. TV14
teammates reunite after their basketball coach passes away. TVPG
Sandler. TVPG
Love It or List It "Nursery
Love It or List It "Builder's
Love It or List It "Space for
House
House
Love It or List It "Better for
Needed" TVPG
Plan Predicament" TVPG
Six" (N) TVPG
Hunters (N)
Hunters (N)
Baby" TVPG
Ancient Aliens "The Greys"
Ancient Aliens "The Einstein
Ancient Aliens "The Anunnaki Ancient Aliens "Magic of the Ancient Aliens "Prophets and
TVPG
Factor" TVPG
Connection" TVPG
Gods" TVPG
Prophecies" TVPG
Wife Swap "Mallick/ Stewart" ! !! The Ugly Truth ('09, Com) Katherine Heigl. A crude
! !! Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous ('05,
TVPG
talk show host meddles in his boss' love life. TVMA
Com) Sandra Bullock. TV14
Big Tips Texas
Big Tips "Marketing Mayhem" Teen Mom 3
Teen Mom 2 "Two Steps Forward" TVPG
Teen Mom 3
Sam &amp; Cat
Awesome (N) Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends
(:35) Friends
! !!! X-Men ('00, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. A man leads a group of mutant ! !!! X-Men ('00, Sci-Fi) Hugh Jackman. A man leads a group of mutant
heroes against his arch nemesis in order to save the world. TV14
heroes against his arch nemesis in order to save the world. TV14
! !! A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge
! !!! Fright Night ('11, Com) Colin Farrell, Anton Yelchin. A teenager
! 30 Days of
('85, Hor) Mark Patton. TVM
hires a vampire slayer to help him kill his neighbor. TVMA
Night: Dark ...
Seinfeld "The Family Guy
Fam.G "Deep Family Guy
Family Guy
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan TV14
Doorman"
Throats"
"Peterotica"
"Petergeist"
Theory
Theory
(6:15) ! !! Eye of the Devil ! Boy (1969, Drama) Akiko Koyama, Tetsuo Abe, Fumio
! !!!! Knife in the Water ('62, Dra) Leon Niemczyk. A
('66, Myst) TVPG
Watanabe.
couple embarks on a yacht excursion. TVPG
Little "Countdown to India"
Half-Ton Mom
Half-Ton Dad
Half-Ton Killer?
Half-Ton Dad
Castle "Heartbreak Hotel"
Castle "Kill Shot"
Castle "Cuffed"
Major Crimes
CSI: NY
Adventure
Regular Show Uncle
MAD (N)
King of Hill
The Cleveland Bob's Burgers AmerDad "You Family Guy "Blue Harvest"
Time (N)
(N)
Grandpa (N)
"Talking Shop" Show
Debt Your Life" TV14
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Bizarre Foods "Twin Cities"
Foods "The Blues Trail"
Hotel Impossible (N)
Hotel Impossible
Griffith "One- The Andy
The Andy
Griffith "Class Loves Ray
Ray "Working
Friends
Friends
The King of
(:35) The King
Punch Opie"
Griffith Show Griffith Show Reunion"
"Anniversary"
Late Again"
Queens
of Queens
NCIS "Nine Lives" TV14
WWE Monday Night Raw TVPG
(:05) NCIS: Los Angeles
"Enemy Within" TVPG
Basketball Wives
Basketball Wives (SF) (N)
Crazy Sexy Cool: The TLC Story (P) (N)
TLC Story
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Met Mother
Rules of Eng

7 PM
(6:15) !

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

Les Misérables ('12, Mus) Hugh Jackman. A man
! Life According to Sam ('13, Bio) (P) TVPG (:45) ! !!! This Is 40 ('12, Com) Paul
cares for a younger girl to settle his wrongs. TVPG
Rudd. TV14
(5:45) ! !!! The Lovely
! !!! Lethal Weapon 3 ('92, Act) Mel Gibson. A gang of ! !! Ted (2012, Comedy) Mila Kunis, Seth MacFarlane,
Bones ('09, Dra) TV14
hoodlums is selling armor-piercing ammo. TVMA
Mark Wahlberg. A man's teddy bear comes to life. TV14
(5:30) ! !!! Lincoln ('12,
Homeland "Game On" TVMA
Masters of Sex "Thank You
Homeland "Game On" TVMA
Masters of Sex "Thank You
for Coming" TVMA
for Coming" TVMA
Bio) Daniel Day-Lewis. TVPG

�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY,
OCTOBER 20, 2013

ALONG THE RIVER

C1

Fall beauty
Fall’s true colors are showing
in the Ohio Valley. Pictured
are scenes from the top of
Mound Hill in Gallipolis, and
Mason County’s Tu-Endie-Wei
State Park and Krodel Park.

Photos by Agnes Hapka | Sunday Times-Sentinel

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Page C2 LîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, October 20, 2013

�IE6?D:@?î�@C?6C Facebook to let teens

low them to
Is your yard
air dry (in a
ready for winbarn or area
ter?
that doesn’t
Cleaning up
freeze) for a
the vegetable
couple weeks
and flower garbefore
you
dens
reduce
store them in
diseases and
a box or conpests in comtainer covered
ing years. Cutwith dry peat
ting back dead
moss, vermicpeony stems,
ulite or sand.
dead iris and
Remember
daylily leaves,
that the tender
and removing
Hal Kneen
bulbs, tuberdead annuals
Extension Corner
ous roots and
will
reduce
rhizomes need
many hiding
places for bugs that over- to be stored overwinter at
winter as adults. Slugs temperatures above freezand snails both adults and ing but below 50 degrees
egg masses commonly hid Fahrenheit if possible.
Want to get a jump on
overwinter in dead plant
material. Diseased plants growing early spring letshould be permanently re- tuce, spinach, onions, and
moved while healthy trim- radishes? Prepare yourself
a raised garden bed this
mings can be composted.
Clean up and store fall. Some homeowners are
stakes, bricks, hoses, wa- even building cold frames
tering cans, and garden- or mini low tunnels to proing equipment. Clean off tect their beds from winter
equipment of all dirt and weather. You can pick two
lightly oil the metal to pre- to four weeks earlier next
vent rust. It is too early to spring.
Lastly, if you have not
winterize your lawn mower (schedule it for mid to taken a recent soil sample
late November) as your of your lawn or garden
lawn will need cutting, if consider taking one now
not for growing grass then to see how acidic (low Calfor leaf removal. If you cium levels) your soil is. It
need more compost, ask is easy to do, just dig down
your neighbors for their four inches and put ten or
fallen leaves and run your so samples of the garden
lawn mower over them so in a bucket. Mix the soil
they are about quarter size. taken and bring one and
The earthworms will have one half cups into the explenty of time to transform tension office. For fifteen
the leaves into compost dollars, we send it off to a
this fall and winter. If you soil laboratory and receive
use manure, now would be test results for additions of
the best time to apply it to lime and fertilizer.
***
your gardens.
Check out your down
As soon as a killing
frost has occurred, cut off spouts and gutters on your
the tops from the dahl- home, garage and barn.
ias, gladiolus and cannas Fallen leaves, twigs and
plants. Prepare to dig up seed pods clog up many a
their storage roots and al- homeowners’ gutter only

to cause water damage as
the water freezes and lifts
the roof shingles. While
you are up near the roof,
check and fix any loose
or missing roof shingles.
An ounce of prevention
is worth a pound of cure.
Extend downspout lines at
least four to six feet away
from the building. Cut any
overhanging branches that
brush your buildings or
roof. Build up the soil nearest the building so it assists surface water to drain
away from the building. All
of these chores may seem
like work however they
may greatly reduce possible winter damage.
***
Are you interested in
grazing livestock on your
farm? A three session
Meigs County Grazing
School is being held from
6-9 p.m. on October 29
and October 31 at Kountry
Resort Campgrounds outside Pomeroy Ohio. It finishes on November 2 from
9-noon at the Keith Bentz
Farm off Bashan Road.
Topics will cover many aspects of grazing including
what to sow, measuring
forage height, estimating
grazing time per pasture,
watering
requirements.
Registration is requested
by calling Meigs County
Soil &amp; Water Conservation
office by October 23 at
740-992-4282. Cost is $40
for the first person from a
farm and $10 per additional person. You will receive
for the farm a notebook
with information covered
in the school plus refreshments.
Hal Kneen is the Agriculture &amp; Natural Resources Extension Educator for
Athens/Meigs Counties,
The Ohio State University

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers,
Inc., livestock report of sales from October 16, 2013.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $100-$190,
Heifers, $100-$175; 425-525 pounds,
Steers, $100-$180, Heifers, $100-$160;
550-625 pounds, Steers, $95-$168,
Heifers, $90-$153; 650-725 pounds,
Steers, $90-$155, Heifers, $90-$150;
750-850 pounds, Steers, $90-$135,
Heifers, $88-$132.\\
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $65-$81; Medium/Lean, $55-$64; Thin/Light, $14-$54;

Bulls, $62.50-$91.50.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $980-$1,075; Bred
Cows, $700-$1,210; Baby Calves, $65$140; Goats, $25-$177.50; Hogs, $63.
Upcoming Specials
10/23/13 — next sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241,
Stacy at (304) 634-0224, Luke at (740) 6453697, or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or visit the
website at www.uproducers.com.

share with bigger audience
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Face“On the one hand, you want to
book is now allowing teenagers to encourage kids to participate in the
share their posts on the social net- digital world, but they are not alwork with anyone on the Internet, ways very wise about how they do
raising the risks of minors leaving it,” she said. “Teens tend to take
a digital trail that could lead to more risks and don’t always undertrouble.
stand the consequences of their beThe change announced Wednesday affects Facebook users who list havior.”
The relaxed standards also may
their ages as 13 to 17.
Until now, Facebook users fall- spur teens to spend more time on
ing within that age group had been Facebook instead of other services,
limited to sharing information and such as Snapchat, that are becomphotos only with their own friends ing more popular hangouts among
or friends of those friends.
younger people. Facebook CEO
The new policy will give teens Mark Zuckerberg, though, says that
the choice of switching their set- the company’s internal data shows
tings so their posts can be acces- its social network remains a magsible to the general public. That op- net for teens.
tion already has been available to
Giving people more
adults, including users
reasons to habitually
who are 18 or 19.
visit its social network
As a protective meais important to Facesure, Facebook will
book because a larger
warn minors opting to
audience helps sell more
be more open that they
of the ads that generate
are exposing themselves
most of the Menlo Park,
to a broader audience.
The caution will repeat
Calif., company’s revbefore every post, as
enue.
long as the settings re“What this is really
main on “public.”
about is maximizing
The initial privacy
the kind of sharing at
settings of teens under
the heart of Facebook’s
18 will automatically
business model,” Montbe set so posts are seen
gomery said. She woronly by friends. That’s
ries that unleashing
more restrictive than
teens to share more
the previous default
about themselves to a
setting that allowed
general audience will
teens to distribute their
posts to friends of their
enable advertisers to
friends in the network.
collect more personal
In a blog post, Facedata about minors “who
book said it decided to
aren’t aware that their
revise its privacy rules
movements and interto make its service more
— Kathryn ests are under a digital
enjoyable for teens and
Montgomery microscope.”
to provide them with a
American University
Facebook hasn’t dismore powerful megaprofessor of closed how many of its
phone when they becommunications nearly 1.2 billon users
lieve they have an imare teens. The social
portant point to make
network was initially
or a cause to support.
“Teens are among the savviest limited to college students when
people using social media, and Zuckerberg started it in 2004, but
whether it comes to civic engage- he opened the service to a broader
ment, activism, or their thoughts audience within a few years.
on a new movie, they want to be
The teen audience is large
heard,” Facebook wrote.
enough to give Facebook periodic
The question remains whether
headaches. As its social network
teens understand how sharing their
has steadily expanded, Facebook
thoughts or pictures of their activities can come back to haunt them, has had to combat sexual predators
said Kathryn Montgomery, an and bullies who prey upon children.
Facebook doesn’t allow children
American University professor of
under
13 to set up accounts on its
communications who has written a
service
but doesn’t have a reliable
book about how the Internet affects
children.
way to verify users’ ages.

“On the
one hand,
you want to
encourage
kids to
participate
in the digital
world, but
they are not
always very
wise about
how they do
it.”

":G6î6G6?EDîAC@G:?8îH@CE9î7@Cî?6EH@C&lt;D
NEW YORK (AP) —
Television executives are
looking for more than
hot actors these days.
They’re searching for the
next Nik Wallenda.
With ratings for Wallenda’s tightrope walks
across Niagara Falls and
the Grand Canyon in
mind, networks are taking meetings from people pitching programs
about cars flipping over,
or an attempt to set a
record for simultaneous
skydives. They’re all on
the hunt for the next big
event.
Social media and tele-

vision’s economic system
have given rise to a counterintuitive trend: The
more opportunities there
are for people to watch
TV on their own time
with DVRs and video on
demand, the more valuable programming that
can deliver a big live audience has become.
It’s not just stunts. Live
sports, awards shows,
singing competitions and
the Olympics are all examples of programs that
networks consider DVRproof.
“The larger the event,
the more buzz-worthy it

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becomes, the more social
it becomes and it breaks
through the clutter,” said
Andy Kubitz, ABC scheduling chief.
Wallenda’s walk across
Niagara Falls last year
was a Top 10 show that
week for ABC. An average of 10.7 million people
saw him on a tightrope
stretched over the Grand
Canyon in June — the
most-watched live event
in Discovery’s history.
Watching ruefully from
his office was NBC executive Paul Telegdy, whose
network partly paid for
Wallenda’s
tightrope.
NBC had been planning
to air it, but Telegdy said
his bosses at the time got
cold feet.
“The Voice” and, in
particular, the London
summer Olympics taught
TV executives that social media conversations
about programs can create excitement and build
a larger audience. That’s
true of taped programs,
but much more so with
live events.
Building a big live
event was the idea behind “The Million Second Quiz,” which NBC
aired over two weeks in
September. The competition was live, and viewers were encouraged to
play along on their tablets at home. The show
was a critical failure and
didn’t meet NBC’s commercial
expectations,

but it still reached more ment of nominees.
people than the reruns
Sports are becoming
that would otherwise be more visible in primeshown. Telegdy said it’s time. NBC’s fall schedule
important to take such flows from its Sunday
risks, as NBC will do night NFL game. Saturover the holidays with a day night, once the outlive production of “The post for reruns or “AmerSound of Music.”
ica’s Most Wanted” on
“If somebody has a big, Fox, is now dominated
crazy and ambitious idea, by football games. Fox
they’re going
is
looking
to call me beforward
to
fore they call
airing World
other places,”
Cup soccer.
he said.
Scripted
Networks
dramas can
love programb e c o m e
ming
that
events
of
makes news
their
own
— a stumwith
cliffbling celebrihangers, bold
ty on “Dancplot
twists
ing With the
or
special
Stars”
or
guests.
A
c r i n ge - wo rprogram that
thy audition
pushes
its
on “American
way into the
Idol” — to
national concreate
the
versation —
aura that peothink of the
ple who don’t
brutal
“red
watch
live
wedding” epiare missing
sode of HBO’s
something.
“Game
of
Awa rd s
Thrones”
—
— Dan Harrison
shows
are
is pure gold.
Planning and
dependable
A M C ’ s
programming “ B r e a k i n g
draws, even
executive at Fox. Bad” series
more so in
recent years.
finale
and
Networks
“The Walking
try to stretch the expe- Dead” season premiere
rience by making red qualified as big events
carpet shows or, in the that many people had to
case of the Grammys, a see when they first aired.
performance show built It’s ironic, then, that
around the announce- much of their popularity

“To be able
to put on
a program
that week
in and week
out viewers
must see
that day —
that is every
broadcast
networks’
goal.”

is attributable to delayed
viewing by people who
discovered the shows on
streaming services.
“To be able to put on a
program that week in and
week out viewers must
see that day — that is every broadcast networks’
goal,” said Dan Harrison,
a planning and programming executive at Fox.
Networks don’t dismiss
people who record shows
to watch later; it’s just
that the business isn’t set
up to reward that practice. If you record “The
Blacklist” and watch Saturday night, the Nielsen
company doesn’t count
you in the calculations
that are used to determine how much advertising revenue a show gets.
Only people who watch
a playback or video file
within three days of its
airing are counted, and
only if they don’t fastforward through commercials. The surest way
to be counted is to watch
live.
With the three-day
limit in mind, CBS has
even taken to advertising some programs the
day AFTER they air, said
David Poltrack, research
chief.
Some advertisers pay
extra to reach live viewers because they’re considered more passionate
consumers, or tailor advertising campaigns to
live programs.

�Sunday, October 20, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 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,
Oct. 21, 2013:
This year you often find yourself in
no-win situations. Misunderstandings
surround you. Work on your clarity,
and be conscious of meetings and
times. Remain authentic, and you will
feel better. If you are single, you might
experience some difficulty transforming a dating situation into a more
intimate relationship. Do not get frustrated. Time will prove what is valid.
If you are attached, communication
between you and your sweetie might
not be as in sync as it previously has
been. You learned to listen to each
other once, and you can do it again.
GEMINI helps you see the big picture.
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)
You could be as clear as
a bell, but you still will witness a lot
of confusion. Your intuition will counter what you are hearing. You might
become irritated and angry as a result
of this misunderstanding. Know that
everyone is human. Tonight: Choose
a stressbuster.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Be aware of the cost of
not being as thorough as you could
be in a certain area of your life. You
might feel as if a risk is worth taking.
Make sure you look at the worst-case
scenario before you commit. You’ll be
less likely to make a mistake. Tonight:
Run errands on the way home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You’ll be ready to proceed
full throttle, but you could get tripped
up by a misunderstanding. You are
slightly accident-prone, and you might
not be ready to take off on a physical
jaunt. Relax, and choose to do only
what feels right. Tonight: As you like it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You might think one way,
but within hours, you could reverse
your direction. The elements of indecision and confusion easily could mark
your day, if not the next few weeks.
Try to give yourself some space to figure out what you want. Tonight: Start
thinking about Halloween.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Confusion starts right now,
whether it is around you or within
you. Be as succinct as possible. Your
diligence will keep you out of trouble.
Use caution and good sense before
spending money or committing to any
investments. Tonight: See through the
obvious.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Your anger flares easily. The issue is how you handle it.
Somehow you could be involved
with a misunderstanding today or in
the near future. No one likes being
misrepresented. A partner or associate will seem vested in not getting it.
Tonight: Claim your power.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You are all smiles, no
matter which way you look at a personal matter. At this moment, you will
want to detach to gain a new perspective. Don’t let this attitude undermine
being supportive. Confirm meetings
and times. Tonight: Release any tension through exercise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Deal with a partner directly.
Even if some tension ensues, know
that you have done better than anyone else could. Your imagination
might conjure up a lot of reasons for
the problem that might not be grounded. Let them go. Tonight: Even if it is
Monday, go let off some steam.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Defer to others, as your
perspective might not be heard at
the present time. A boss or someone
you look up to could be cantankerous
and touchy. Meanwhile, you could be
thinking in other terms and not connecting. Tonight: Go along with someone’s suggestion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Stay focused on what
you are doing. Confirm all plans.
Misunderstandings easily can happen. Understand your limits. Let your
creativity emerge in a discussion.
Know that your message might not be
digested and understood by everyone.
Tonight: Be diplomatic.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
While others are in the
midst of confusion, you seem to
carry on with the playfulness of the
weekend. Your easygoing attitude
might help you, but it could aggravate
someone close. Be as clear as you
can be about plans. Others will be
touchy. Tonight: Deal with someone’s
ire.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Defer to others as much as
you want. Confusion surrounds a
partner’s feelings. This person might
not be as clear as he or she should
be, and you might not be able to read
between the lines. In fact, you most
likely are seeing only what you want
to see. Tonight: Stay close to home.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page C4 LîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, October 20, 2013

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Megan Brittany Deel and ames Winston Sheets II

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Gregg and Karen Deel of Vinton, Ohio, and Chuck and
Joanne Easter of Bidwell, Ohio, are pleased to announce
the engagement and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Megan Brittany Deel, to James Winston Sheets, II,
of Vinton, Ohio, the son of the late Winston Sheets and
Tanya Sheets of Rio Grande, Ohio.
The future bride attends the University of Rio Grande
and is currently pursuing an associate’s degree.
The groom-to-be graduated from the University of Rio
Grande with an associate’s degree in computer science.
He is currently employed as a shift manager at CVS.
A wedding is being planned for 3:30 p.m. on October
26, 2013, at Vinton Baptist Church.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — To
make the world safer for pets,
Lindsey Wolko had to design an
indestructible dog.
Two years and hundreds of
thousands of dollars later, her
nonprofit Center for Pet Safety in
Reston, Va., has a set of crash-test
dog dummies that were battered,
throttled and sent flying to test
several car safety restraints.
The rare study of travel products
marketed to animal owners was released earlier this month and will be
followed by tests of car crates, carriers and barriers. Lifejackets are on
the short list of products to be tested

as soon as funding is found.
Inspiration for the center and
its inaugural test came nearly a
decade ago.
Wolko’s dog, Maggie, was seriously injured when Wolko braked
to avoid a traffic collision. Despite
a restraint, the English cocker
spaniel smashed into the back of
the driver’s seat, spraining her
spine and hip and getting her back
legs tangled in the harness.
Once Maggie recovered, Wolko
decided to sell dog products on her
for-profit website, caninecommuter.
com. She sold only products her
dogs responded to positively.

Often, however, she found the
safety equipment, toys and cleaning products were mostly untested and either failed to work as
promised or fell apart.
“Because of the lack of oversight
and the lack of testing in the industry — it is quite the ‘Wild West’
out there — you are consistently
putting consumers and their dogs
at risk,” Wolko said.
Just as the popularity of pet products boomed, Wolko split with sales.
She got her nonprofit credentials,
officially opened the safety center in
July 2011, met with engineers and
started building a boxer dummy.

Maya Angelou accepts Mailer Center lifetime award

NEW YORK (AP) — Her body for talking her into writing her break- the U.S. war in Afghanistan that led
weak, her voice rich and strong, through memoir, the million-selling to the resignation of Gen. Stanley
Maya Angelou sang, lectured and “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.” McChrystal, felt a kinship with for
reminisced as she accepted a lifetime The key was suggesting to her that the brilliant and troublesome Mailer.
achievement award Thursday night the book might be too hard to write. When the couple fought, she said, he
The people who knew her best, would point out that in “comparison
from the Norman Mailer Center.
The 85-year-old author, poet, danc- she explained, understood that “if to Mailer he was a great husband,” a
er and actress was honored during a you want to get Maya Angelou to do reference to a notorious incident in
benefit gala at the New York Public so something, tell her she can’t.”
which Mailer stabbed his wife.
Angelou, a longtime resident of
Library, the annual gathering orgaHastings was a “dissident, a cyninized by the Mailer Center and writ- North Carolina, will be back in Man- cal idealist and a breathtaking writers colony . Seated in a wheelchair, hattan next month to collect an hon- er,” she said.
she was a vivid presence in dark orary National Book Award medal.
The dinner event was the fifth
Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist gala for the Mailer center, named for
glasses and a sparkling black dress as
she marveled that a girl from a segre- Junot Diaz and the late author-jour- the celebrated author who died in
gated Arkansas village could grow up nalist Michael Hastings also received 2007 and dedicated to helping writprizes Thursday. Hastings’ widow, ers “across all genres who seek artto become a literary star.
“Imagine it,” she said, “a town Elise, teared up as she accepted a ful ways to express themselves and
so prejudiced black people couldn’t journalism award on behalf of her provoke meaningful discussion about
husband, who died in a car accident our society.”
even eat vanilla ice cream.”
Angelou was introduced by her last summer at age 33.
Previous honorees include Toni
GALLIPOLIS — The descendants of the Gooch Family former editor at Random House,
She recalled that Hastings, best Morrison, Keith Richards and Robmet on Sunday, September 29, 2013, at Haskins Park to Robert Loomis, and she praised him known for a Rolling Stone story about ert Caro.
celebrate their 92nd Annual Reunion. Beginning at 12:30
p.m., a social hour and potluck dinner were enjoyed by
all present.
Larry Betz called a brief meeting to order, followed by
a reading of last year’s minutes by Carol Rieve. As there
was no old business, the new business consisted of disNEW YORK (AP) — itself — allowed Food Net- lion U.S. households, they’ve got to continue
cussion of the date and location of next year’s 93rd re- Talk about an unlikely recwork to succeed, Flay said. never mind programming coming up with better prounion. It was decided to once again hold the reunion at
ipe for success — a cable
Food Network didn’t in- in more than 150 coun- graming.”
Haskins Park on the last Sunday in September, which will
network dedicated to… vent the food celebrity — tries around the world. It
So shows like Sara
be September 28, 2014. Contributions were collected to
has its own magazine, its Moulton’s easy paced
food?
the
fame
of
James
Beard,
cover the cost of the shelter house rental. As there was no
It may not seem even a Julia Child and others pre- own lines of cookware and “Cooking
Live”
gave
further new business, Dorothy Condee made a motion to
kitchen
gear.
Want
Food
little
preposterous
today,
date
it
by
decades
—
but
it
way
to
frenetic
competiadjourn, seconded by Jim Betz.
Those in attendance were Larry Betz, Kim, Scott and but when Food Network codified it into an industry. Network wine or table- tions like “Iron Chef,”
McKenna Rayburn, Jim and Opal Betz, Angela and Matt launched 20 years ago And it did so with such ef- cloths? There’s a product ”Chopped” and “Rachael
vs. Guy.” The switch from
Liberati, Carol and Randy Rieve, Bob and Dorothy Cond- America was sitting at a ficiency, spawning the likes for that.
Of course, that’s broad chefs to personalities, from
very different dinner table. of Flay, Rachael Ray, Tyler
ee, Naomi Haskins, Beatrice Bush and Judy Kennedy.
After all, this was before Florence and Emeril La- strokes history. There’s information to entertainwe’d learned to fetishize gasse, that other networks also plenty in those 20 ment, got ratings and adyears the network would vertisers, but triggered an
cupcakes, before Instagram were left scrambling.
made our every mouthful a
In many ways, the net- rather forget. Paula Deen MTV-style backlash.
absent
shared experience, before work was in the right (conspicuously
Just as the music netvegetables had cult follow- place at the right time. To from the party) speaking work was ridiculed for
ings.
Giada De Laurentiis, star her mind, anyone? Or not letting videos die, Food
GALLIPOLIS — The Belville and Sheets Reunion was
And yet this backwater of “Giada at Home” among minding her diabetes. And Network was ribbed for
held on Saturday, August 3, 2013, at the Golden Corral network launched, plunk- other shows, the right time there’s Robert Irvine’s little
favoring reality TV over
Restaurant in Gallipolis, Ohio.
ing cameras in front of was 9/11 and the nesting resume flub (the “Dinner:
The event was planned by Gail Belville of Gallipolis, Ohio. chefs — many of them tru- instinct it triggered in so Impossible” star was fired real cooking. Bourdain
practically launched his
Brenda Belville of San Antonio, Texas, was recognized ly not ready for prime time
for fabricating some of the post-Food Network career
many Americans.
for traveling the greatest distance. Also recognized were
— and hoping for the best.
“I truly believe my suc- more fantastic parts of his by bashing it — as well as
the youngest and oldest attendees, Caden Belville and
The gamble paid off. cess is because of 9/11. resume, but later returned some of its less pedigreed
Shenie Burnett.
Two decades on, the Food Had it not been for 9/11, with “Restaurant: Impos- stars.
The group enjoyed lunch and fellowship.
sible”). Meanwhile, lowerIn response, much as
Those attending were: Debbie Belville, Gail Belville, Network has morphed be- I don’t know that I would tier talent love to grumble
yond
a
television
station
be
here,”
she
said.
“It
MTV launched sister netJames Belville, Shephanie Harris, Roger and Carol Belabout stranglehold conville, Terri (Belville) Marchi, Dave Walters, Shenie Bur- that teaches us how to made them think twice tracts that give the net- works to recover its lost
cook
(more
about
that
in
a
about
what
was
important
ground, Food Network in
nett, and Ramona Lewis, all of Gallia County, Ohio; Ralph
work near complete con2010 created The Cooking
Sheets of Jackson, Ohio; Marjorie Belville of Logan, Ohio; moment). It has become a in life.”
Today, of course, food trol over budding careers.
Channel, a back-to-basics,
David, Amy, Emily, and Ellie Belville of Athens, Ohio; Jer- lifestyle, a marketing beheAnd then there’s the
edgier sibling.
emy and Caden Belville of Columbus, Ohio; Judith (John- moth turning chefs — and television is a crowded profitability
algorithm,
What about the next 20
son) and Nick Devine of Livonia, Michigan; and Brenda home cooks — into house- field. Bravo helped rede- which goes something
hold names even, if not es- fine the reality segment
years?
It’s hard to imagBelville of San Antonio, Texas.
like: less cooking equals
The group has plans to meet next year on Saturday, Au- pecially, with people who with “Top Chef” and its more viewers and sizzling ine Americans tuning out
never cook.
various spinoffs. Gordon
gust 2, 2014.
food-as- entertainment.
“It surprised me at first. Ramsay spouts fire on Fox. ad dollars. It actually took But that doesn’t mean
But I think now, it doesn’t ABC gave food a golden years for the network to Food Network gets an easy
surprise me,” longtime hour of daytime chat with get profitable. And many ride. Some of their biggest
network star Bobby Flay “The Chew.” Even CNN say it did so by turning its properties are feeling stale,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
said Thursday at a party to and Travel Channel have back on some if its own have been shown the door
Point Pleasant Register &amp; Daily Sentinel
celebrate the 20-year mile- pulled up a chair, snatch- fans and stars.
In those early red ink (Lagasse, for example), or
stone during the New York ing up Food Network alum
years,
the network was in Deen’s case simply imWine and Food Festival.
Anthony Bourdain.
ploded on their own.
Sponsored By: Children’s Dentistry- Johnna Jorgensen, D.D.S.
When the network
Still, Food Network known mostly for food
Meanwhile, Food Nettelevision
with
a
how-to
atmydailytribune.com • mydailyregister.com • mydailysentinel.com
launched,
Americans — one of many lifestyle
work hasn’t launched a
titude
aimed
at
people
who
didn’t take food seriously. brands owned by Scripps
major celebrity since Guy
Less than a decade later, a Networks Interactive — cook. But on television, Fieri won “The Next Food
ENTER TO WIN! Cutest - Category
personality
trumps
talent,
culinary awakening — fu- touts enviable numbers,
trounces Network Star” in 2006, a
eled in part by the network reaching some 100 mil- entertainment
Submit a photo of your creative
know-how. That spelled lifetime ago in TV years.
costumes to be a part of our Virtual
“I think that Food Netthe demise of shows with
Costume Party! It’s easy to enter. Just
work
is trying desperately
chefs
offering
teachable
submit a photo of your costume at
to
evolve,”
said De Laumoments at the stove.
mydailytribune.com
rentiis.
“They
cannot stay
To
Irvine,
it
was
a
mydailyregister.com
smart — and necessary — the same. There is so much
mydailysentinel.com
competition that there
choice.
“We’ve all got choices wasn’t 20 years ago when
now. And our choices are they started.
“They’re trying to evolve
very, very different from
what they were 10 years into something. They just
ago, 20 years ago,” he are not sure what the next
All entries will be automatically
said. “The television world step is yet. They’ll get
entered in the contest to win
has become so cutthroat, there.”
great prizes! Contest Starts

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Food Network: 20 years of changing food culture

October 6th

Hurry In
Sale
Ends
Soon!

60453062

60449996

Belville and Sheets reunion held

60450167

740-441-1234

60457127

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