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                  <text>Caregiver
month
observed

Chamber
Awards
Gala

District
football
teams

NEWS s 3A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 46, Volume 53

Sunday, November 17, 2019 s $2

Saving the music

Breakathon Facebook photos

Participants in the third annual Breakathon took turns breaking board to
benefit the local school band programs.

Participants in the third annual Breakathon took turns breaking boards to benefit the
local school band programs.

Breakathon
returns,
gives back

decided the third Breakathon would beneﬁt the
local music programs,
Meigs, Southern and
Wahama participating
in the event.
When selecting the
beneﬁciary of the event,
Nease said that the
event focused on “Save
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
the Music” to bring
attention and awareness
to the music programs
MIDDLEPORT
in general. The amount
— The third annual
Bitanga’s Breakathon was of participants and
a success, exceeding the funds raised showed the
$30,000 goal to “Save the community supports
local music, said Nease.
Music.”
The event took place at
Bitanga’s Martial Art
Center owner, and found- the Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life
er of the Breakathon,
Local auctioneer Billy Goble auctions off a cake made by Edible Arts by Samantha which raised
Ben Nease explained
See MUSIC | 7A $540 for the local bands.
that early in 2019 it was

Over 6,200 visit library space exhibit
By Dean Wright

tor Debbie Saunders. “We
have civic groups and the
general public coming.
People are traveling in
GALLIPOLIS —
Bossard Memorial Library from all different areas of
our region. Being the calihas had over 6,200 visitors to SPACE: A Journey ber that it is, it was at the
Smithsonian National Air
to Our Future since the
and Space Museum and
exhibit opened Sept. 7.
“We’ve got school visits the exhibit was made in
collaboration with NASA.
and many still scheduled
It’s very worth coming to
because the exhibit will
File photo
see.”
continue to run through
Visitors interact with SPACE: A Journey to Our Future in the
Saunders reports that
Jan.
5,”
said
Library
DirecBossard Memorial Library.
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 4B
Comics: 6B

visitors have come from
Montana, California, Florida and North Carolina, as
well as surrounding states
and Ohio counties.
According to a previous release from Evergreen Exhibitions, the
organizer of the SPACE
exhibit,“‘SPACE: A
Journey to Our Future,’
an interactive exhibit
See SPACE | 2A

Jackson General becomes full
member of the WVU Health System
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Celebration held
at Ripley hospital
Staff Report

RIPLEY — A celebration event was held
earlier this week to ofﬁcially welcome Jackson
General Hospital as a
member of the West Virginia University Health
System.
Jackson General Hospital (JGH) in Ripley
ofﬁcially joined the
West Virginia University
Health System on Oct.

1. On Tuesday, representatives from WVU,
WVU Medicine and
JGH joined together in
Ripley to celebrate the
milestone.
According to a news
release from WVU Medicine, Jackson General
Hospital entered into a
management agreement
with WVU Hospitals on
Sept. 1, 2018. Earlier
this year, JGH signed
a letter of intent to
join the WVU Health
System, and WVU Hospitals received a Cer-

tiﬁcate of Need (CON)
from the West Virginia
Health Care Authority
to acquire the hospital.
“We are so glad to
ofﬁcially welcome
Jackson General
Hospital, its employees,
and patients into the
WVU Medicine family,”
Albert L. Wright, Jr.,
president and CEO
of the WVU Health
System, said in the
release. “JGH has
provided quality care
See WVU | 8A

Meigs
Grand Jury
indicts 27
Staff Report

POMEROY — Meigs
County Prosecuting
Attorney James K. Stanley announces that on
Nov. 14, the Meigs County Grand Jury returned
28 indictments against 27
individuals.
Those indicted include:
Kaitlyn Bailey, 24,
of Coolville, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (LSD), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree. The
Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated this
matter.
Angela Barnhart, 36,
of Albany, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (6-Monoacetymorphine), a felony of
the ﬁfth degree, and Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree. The
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce investigated this
matter.
Jimmy Bond, Jr., 26,
of The Plains, Ohio, was
indicted for Illegal Use of
Food Stamps or WIC Program Beneﬁts, a felony
of the ﬁfth degree. The
Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family
See JURY | 5A

Drug court
discusses
recovery
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Every
year, the U.S. Substance
Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
sponsors a “Recovery
Month” to increase
awareness and understanding of substance use
and mental health disorders and celebrate the
people who recover. This
year, Gallia Citizens for
Prevention and Recovery
(CPR) asked the Gallipolis Municipal Court to
highlight its specialized
drug court docket.
Municipal Judge Eric
Mulford said that this
year’s Recovery Month
theme is “Join the Voices
for Recovery: Together
We Are Stronger.” Mulford said that this year’s
theme reminds him to
be thankful for the fact
that the local courts, law
enforcement, and behavioral health agencies see
the value in providing
team-based wrap-around
services to individuals
who ask for help in recovering from substance use
disorders.
The municipal court’s
drug court is known by
its participants as the
“Recovery Court,” and
has had 30 participants
this year. Mulford said
that he appreciates the
dedication and seriousness the participants
bring to the program.
“We have a very special
group of people working
hard in Recovery Court
right now, and they each
try to encourage and
See COURT | 5A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
EARL RAY KESTERSON

DEBORAH SUE SCHAEFER BROCKERT
POMEROY — Deborah
Sue Schaefer Brockert,
63, of Pomeroy, passed
away, at 4 a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019, in the
Arbors at Pomeroy. Born
May 1, 1956, in Pomeroy,
where she lived most
of her life, she was the
daughter of the late Nora
Schaefer Nitz.
Following her marriage
to her surviving husband
Joseph Paul Brockert on
April 10, 1976, in Sidney
Ohio, she lived in Sidney
from 1976 to until 1984,
when they moved to
Springﬁeld, Virginia. Deborah was a homemaker,
and she was active at her
sons’ elementary schools
and she enjoyed bowling
leagues. They moved
back to Pomeroy in 1994.
She became an active
member of the Council of
Catholic Women, including national conventions
and she served as a Lector Eucharistic Minister
and ofﬁce volunteer at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
She was also an active
member and ambassador
of the Red Hat Society,

including local, national,
and international events.
In addition to her husband Debroah is survived
by her sons, Jonathan
(Jana) Brockert, of Jacksonville, Fla., and Jason
(Lisa) Brockert, of Ladson, S.C.; grandchildren,
Cody (Kelly), Christian,
Candace, Jolie, and
Julian; a great-grandson,
Henry Brockert. Brothers,
Don Nitz, and Brian Nitz,
and a sister, Vicki Schaefer Morrison, of Middleport, and numerous
nieces, nephews, cousins
also survive.
In addition to her
mother she is preceded
in death by her brothers,
Rick Schaefer, and Russell
“Rusty” Nitz.
A memorial service will
be held at a later date in
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. The CremeensKing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy is entrusted
with the arrangements.
In lieu of ﬂowers
memorials may be made
in Deborah’s memory to
the Meigs County Cancer
Initiative, P.O. Box 85
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

MARY KATHLEEN MOORE
MIDDLEPORT —
Mary Kathleen Moore,
70, of Middleport, Ohio,
went to be with her
Lord, Friday, Nov. 15,
2019, at Ohio State University Medical Center,
Columbus, Ohio.
Born Oct. 26, 1949, at
Baltimore, Md., daughter of Thelma Louise
Russell Moore and the
late Holmer Wilson
Moore. She was a homemaker and attended the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, Rutland, Ohio.
She is survived by
her mother, Thelma;
son, John Morgan
(Carrie) Wolfe; granddaughter Morgan
(David) Boling; step-

granddaughter, Chatel
Casto; step-grandson,
Brady Norville; sisters,
Vicki Colecchi, Kimali
McWilliams and Pamela
Moore.
Besides her father
preceded by husband,
Ferrell Day.
Services are Monday,
Nov. 18, 2019, at 1 p.m.,
at Birchﬁeld Funeral
Home, Rutland, Ohio,
with Pastor Ed Barney
ofﬁciating. Burial to
follow at Rutland Cemetery, Rutland, Ohio.
Family to receive friends
Monday from 11 a.m.
until time of services.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

past and introduces visitors to today’s explorers
who are shaping our
future destiny in the
From page 1A
universe. Most of the
emphasis in the content
relates to current and
produced by Evergreen
Exhibitions in educational future exploits in human
collaboration with Nation- spaceﬂight. The exhibit
al Aeronautics and Space features child-friendly
interactives, immersive
Administration (NASA)
and as seen at the Smith- environments and stateof-the-art technology
sonian National Air and
to bring this epic story
Space Museum will be
to life. Highlights will
on display at the library
through Jan. 5, 2020. The include opportunities to
5,000-square foot SPACE touch pieces of the Moon
exhibition has traveled to and Mars, ride a selfmajor science centers and powered centrifuge, tour
a full-scale future Moon
museums across North
America. The purpose of habitat and work station,
SPACE is to present edu- get an up-close view of
next-generation spacecational elements in scenic environments that will craft and technology and
interactively plan a trip to
fuel one’s imagination in
the future of space explo- Mars.”
ration. SPACE examines
Dean Wright can be reached at
amazing discoveries and
740-446-2342.
explorations from the

Space

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
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937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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

Dale D. (Sarah)
Kesterson of
Dayton, Ohio;
and his grandchildren, Chelsea
Kesterson, Kevin
Kesterson Jr.,
Stephanie Kesterson, Hannah Davenport,
Isabel Kesterson, Maura
Kesterson, and Jack Kesterson.
In addition to his wife
and parents, a sister,
Phyllis Turner, and two
brothers, Lonnie Kesterson and Roy Kesterson,
preceded him in death.
The family will receive
friends from 6-8 p.m.,
Tuesday, Nov. 19,
2019, at the ReynoldsSmith Funeral Home,
327 N. South Street,

accounting from
Ohio University.
Mr. Kesterson
began his career
at the Wilmington Air Base and
worked in accounting and ﬁnance for
the federal government
until his retirement.
He was a member of
the First Church of God
in Wilmington, the Hamilton Masonic Lodge,
and a lifetime member
of the VFW. Earl loved
anything dealing with
airplanes or ﬂying. He
enjoyed reading and Cincinnati Reds baseball.
He is survived by two
sons, Kevin Ray (Chasity
Davenport) Kesterson of
Wilmington, Ohio and

WAYNESVILLE —
Earl Ray Kesterson, 86,
of Waynesville, Ohio
(formerly of Wilmington, Ohio) passed away
Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019,
at Ohio Living Quaker
Heights. His wife, Esther
L. Kesterson, preceded
him in death Nov. 29,
2014. They were married July 27, 1968. Mr.
Kesterson was born Feb.
23, 1933, in Pomeroy,
Ohio, son of the late
Marion Dale Kesterson
and Mabel Shoemaker
Kesterson.
He served in the U.S.
Air Force during the
Korean War, obtaining the rank of Senior
Master Sergeant. He
obtained his degree in

Wilmington, Ohio. A
funeral service with
Pastor Larry Speelman
ofﬁciating will be held
10:30 a.m., Wednesday,
Nov. 20, 2019, at the
Reynolds-Smith Funeral
Home. Burial will be in
Clinton County Memory
Gardens with military
honors provided by the
United Stated Air Force
Honor Guard.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations in Earl’s memory may be made to the
VFW Post 6710, 1130 N.
Lincoln Street, Wilmington, Ohio 45177.
For more information
or to leave a note of
condolence visit www.
smithandsonfuneralhomes.com.

BETTY L. GILKEY
Debra (Kevin) Ely, Billie
Jo (Terry) Milby; great
grandchildren, Carly
Jane, Jake, Emily, Rachel,
Hunter, Cody, Jarrod,
Bryanna, Gage and Christopher; great great grandson Boss Baby Cameron;
sister, Geneva Shackford;
special nephew, Charles
Casto; special friend,
Irene Hanning and several nieces and nephews.
She is preceded in
death by her parents; two
brothers; ﬁve sisters; and

VFW Ladies Auxiliary.
She was also a member
of the Eagles in Pomeroy. She will be greatly
missed by all that knew
her.
She is survived by her
children, Richard (Karen)
Gilkey, Middleport,
Ohio, Debbie Boston,
Letart, W.Va. and Mark
(Debra) Gilkey, West
Palm, Fla.; grandchildren,
Paula (David) Hubbard,
Richard (Julie) Gilkey,
Christi (Mike) Roush,

MIDDLEPORT
— Betty L. Gilkey of
Middleport, Ohio, passed
away on Saturday, Nov.
16, 2019, at the Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center in Middleport.
She was born on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1930, in
Kenna, W.Va. to the late
Perry and Dona (Hardman) Parsons. Betty was
a member of the Ladies
Auxiliary, American
Legion, New Haven and
a member of the Mason

MARY MARGARET (MARGE) ROSSITER
COLUMBUS —
Mary Margaret
(Marge) Rossiter 84 ,
Columbus, formerly of
Clinton and Portage
Lakes, passed away
peacefully on Nov.9,
2019.
She was born on
June8, 1935, in Crown
City, the only child of
Woodrow and Myrtle
(Watts) Hayner. She
was preceded in death
by her partner of 35
years, Walter Smith

and is survived by
four children, Audette
Gooch, Gallipolis;
Cindy (Justin) Miller,
Gallipolis; Tim Rossiter, Salem, Va.; and
Kevin (Mary) Rossiter
of Las Vegas, Nev.;
seven grandchildren
and nine great grandchildren.
Marge retired from
the General Motors
Corp, Lordstown,
where she was active
in the UAW Union.

She loved spending
her winter months in
N. Fort Myers, Fla.,
enjoyed being the life
of the party, and was
very proud of her family.
In accordance with
the families wishes,
cremation will take
place under the direction of the Moreland
Funeral Home. Condolences may be left at
www.morelandfuneralhome.com

husband Bernard Gilkey.
Funeral services will be
held on Wednesday, Nov.
20, 2019, at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow
in the Hickory Grove
Cemetery in Kenna,
W.Va. Visitation will be
held on Tuesday, Nov. 19,
2019, from 6-8 p.m. at the
funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

WICK
GALLIPOLIS — John
Bruce Wick, 85, of Gallipolis,
died November 15, 2019, in
the Valley View Care Center,
Frankfort. Arrangements will
be announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Gallipolis.
MANUEL
RACINE — Robin D.
Manuel, 45, of Racine, died
November 15, 2019, in the
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. Arrangements will be
announced by the CremeensKing Funeral Home, Racine.

Measure in Ohio would ban abortion outright
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— A group of conservative lawmakers in Ohio
has introduced a bill to
outlaw abortion outright
except to save the pregnant woman’s life.
State Rep. Candice
Keller, a Republican from
Middletown, says the
bill’s backers are tired of
taking an incremental
approach to ending abortion.
“The time for regulating evil and compromise
is over,” she said in a
statement. “The time
has come to abolish
abortion in its entirety
and recognize that each
individual has the inviolable and inalienable
Right to Life.”
The legislation,
introduced Thursday,
declares a fetus a person and would subject
doctors who terminate
pregnancies to potential
murder charges.
The bill makes an

Brooke LaValley | The Columbus Dispatch via AP, file

Some members of the Ohio House applaud after their vote in
April on the Heartbeat Bill at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus,
Ohio, while others photograph protesters who unfurled banners
reading “This is not a House of Worship” and “This is not a
Doctor’s office.” A group of conservative lawmakers in Ohio has
introduced a bill to outlaw abortion outright, declaring a fetus
a person and subjecting doctors who terminate pregnancies to
potential murder charges. The legislation introduced Thursday
appears to make an exception for the life of the mother.

exception for the life of
the pregnant woman,
saying a doctor would
escape prosecution for
performing “a surgery,
before the unborn child
is viable, for the sole
purpose of treating the
pregnant woman’s fatal
condition.”
Ohio is among
states that have passed

restrictive abortion
laws in recent years
in hopes of sparking
a legal challenge that
would overturn Roe v.
Wade, which legalized
abortion. Abortion
opponents have been
emboldened by the new
conservative majority
on the U.S. Supreme
Court.

Ohio House OKs bill expanding
religious freedom in schools
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The Republican-dominated Ohio
House has approved
a bill expanding religious freedom in public
schools and allow
students to engage in
religious expression
in their school assignments. The measure
was sent to the Senate
Wednesday after a
61-31 vote.
The bill would

remove a current
provision limiting
expressions of religious
beliefs by public school
students to lunch and
non-instructional periods and would allow
them to gather as
students do for secular
activities.
It also says schools
can’t prohibit students
from religious expression in homework,
artwork or other

assignments and teachers cannot penalize or
reward work based on
its religious content.
Republican sponsor
Rep. Timothy Ginter
told Cleveland.com
work that should be
graded using ordinary
academic standards
and assignments could
still receive a lesser
grade if they don’t
reﬂect what’s being
taught.

“This has been the
goal of the grassroots of
the pro-life movement
since the disastrous
Roe decision of 1973,”
stated Margie Christie,
president of the Right
to Life Action Coalition
of Ohio.
But Ohio Right to
Life, the state’s oldest and largest antiabortion group, was not
involved in the latest
effort and is neutral.
Abortion rights
groups lined up to blast
the bill, calling it medically dangerous and
insulting to women.
“This is yet another
attack on the sacred
physician-patient
relationship and on
reproductive health
care,” Lauren BlauveltCopelin, of Planned
Parenthood Advocates
of Ohio, said in a statement. “This extreme
bill goes to outlandish
levels to further restrict
Ohioans’ decisions
around health care and
parenting.”

Teens plead
not guilty
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) —
Two 16-year-old boys have
pleaded not guilty in the
death of a woman killed
by a falling log at an Ohio
State park on Labor Day.
The Chillicothe Gazette
reports Jaden Churchheus and Jordan Buckley
were arraigned Friday in
Hocking County Court
on murder, involuntary
manslaughter and reckless homicide charges.
The teens are being tried
as adults.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 17, 2019 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Holiday food safety

Sunday, Nov. 17

Food safety is always
important, but it
becomes especially
important during the
holidays. Since we are
cooking for larger groups,
we are more likely to be
serving those who are
highly susceptible to a
food borne illness. The
highly susceptible groups
include the elderly, the
very young, pregnant
women and any one with
underlying medical conditions. If you have family
and friends on this list,
food safety should be a
concern for you.
First be sure to keep
your kitchen clean.
Items that touch raw
meats, such as cutting
boards, knives, utensils
and dishes should be
sanitized with a cleaner
that kills bacteria. Bleach
is a good option. It is
cheap, effective and just
a little goes a long way.

germs will multiply
Counter tops and
while waiting to
sinks should also
be consumed. I
be sanitized if they
used to wash my
come in contact
hands twice and
with raw meats or
use a nail brush
their juices. Store
before preparing
raw meat items on
deviled eggs that
the lowest shelves Dawn
I knew my elderly
in the refrigerator.
Keller
This will keep raw Contributing grandma was going
to eat.
meat juices from
columnist
Finally, be aware
dripping on ready
of temperatures
to eat items.
of your foods. Hot foods
Next, be sure to wash
need to be kept hot and
your hands thoroughly.
cold foods need to be
This is always an important step, but can be criti- kept cold. Egg-based pies
cal when preparing ready such as pumpkin and
pecan should be kept in
to eat foods such as devthe refrigerator. Refrigeriled eggs. Once the eggs
ate left overs as soon as
are boiled and cooled,
everyone is done eating
they will not be cooked
or within two hours.
again to kill germs. This
Never thaw raw meat
means that any germs
that get on the eggs from at room temperature.
To thaw a turkey in the
your hands while you
refrigerator, allow 24
are preparing them, will
hours for every 5 pounds
still be there when your
of bird. Be sure to cook
guests eat them. In the
stufﬁng and poultry to
case of bacteria, those

165 degrees. Use a food
thermometer to check the
temperature in the thickest part of the food, in at
least two spots.
Food thermometers
are just a couple bucks
and will help you prepare
a juicy bird. Before use,
ensure your thermometer
is calibrated by placing it
in a glass of ice water. It
should say 32 while in the
ice water. If not, adjust
the nut under the dial to
make it read 32. Now it
is calibrated and ready
to use. They key to juicy
the turkey is to cook it
to 165 as described, but
not overcook it. Once you
ﬁnd the temp is 165 in a
couple of thick areas, pull
the turkey out of the oven
and let it set for about 5
minutes before cutting.

Dawn Keller is a registered
sanitarian with the Meigs County
Health Department.

HELPING YOU AGE BETTER

Caregiver Month observed in November
National Family Caregiver Month is celebrated
each year in November. In
what better month could
we express our gratitude
for the 90 million family
caregivers nationwide
who provide countless
hours of care to their
loved ones?
The national theme
for this year’s special
observation is, “Be
Care Curious,” with an
emphasis on encouraging
caregivers to ask questions, explore options,
and share in the care
decisions that affect the
health and well-being of
their loved ones. This can
include your loved one’s
goals, treatment options,
research, the care plan,
and insurance coverage.
The Area Agency on
Aging District 7 (AAA7)
would like to thank all
family caregivers for the
selﬂess acts you do each
day. We encourage you to

Support Program
make caregiving
through the Area
for yourself a priorAgency on Aging
ity as a caregiver.
District 7, please
The AAA7
call 1-800-582provides help to
7277.
caregivers through
Did you know
the Caregiver
that our Agency
Support Program, Nina R.
also has a special
which is designed Keller
to assist caregivContributing program available
to help family careers with ﬁnding
columnist
givers in their careanswers about how
giving role? Powertheir caregiving
role impacts their life and ful Tools for Caregivers is
a six-week program that
where to ﬁnd resources
provides caregivers with
and services to decrease
caregiver stress. Caregiv- a wealth of self-care tools
to: reduce personal stress;
ers may be caring for an
change negative self-talk;
older adult, their adult
communicate their needs
child with a disability,
to family members and
or the caregiver may be
healthcare or service
a grandparent caring for
providers; communicate
their grandchildren or
non-relative child. Servic- effectively in challenging
situations; recognize the
es include assessments,
training, information and messages in their emoassistance, supplemental tions; deal with difﬁcult
feelings; and make tough
services, respite, as well
caregiver decisions. Class
as answers and counselparticipants also receive
ing. For more informaa copy of The Caregiver
tion about the Caregiver

Handbook that has been
developed speciﬁcally for
the class.
Powerful Tools for
Caregivers is an evidencebased, self-care educational program for family
caregivers that has proven
to be highly effective in
helping caregiver participants learn to minimize
the potentially negative
impacts of caregiving
through discussions and
classroom work that
emphasize self-care and
empowerment. The program is offered several
times through the year
in our ten-county district
area. If you are interested
in learning more or would
like to add your name to
the list for when a class
comes near you, please
call the AAA7 at 1-800582-7277 or e-mail info@
aaa7.org.
Nina R. Keller is the executive
director for the Area Agency on
Aging District 7.

MIDDLEPORT — Rev. Dennis Karp will be
speaking at Ash Street Church, Middleport,
Ohio, in the 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. services.
‘Anchor Holds’ will be singing in the 6:30 p.m.
service.

Monday, Nov. 18
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
at the Letart Township Building.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Village Council
will hold a special meeting at 6 p.m. regarding a
resolution for the refuse trucks.

Tuesday, Nov. 19
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township
trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting
at 6 p.m. at the township garage.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Board
of Developmental Disabilities, regular monthly
board meeting, 4 p.m., at the administrative
ofﬁces, 77 Mill Creek Road.

Wednesday, Nov. 20
MIDDLEPORT — Due to the Thanksgiving
holiday, Leading Creek Conservancy District
changed their November board meeting to
Wednesday, November 20, 2019, 4 p.m.

Thursday, Nov. 21
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at
the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

Friday, Nov. 22
POMEROY — Family Movie Night will take
place at 5 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Dora and
the Lost City of Gold will be shown.

Monday, Nov. 25
POMEROY — Book Club will meet at 6 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Library. “Murder on the Orient
Express” by Agatha Christie will be discussed.

Tuesday, Nov. 26
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the Library, 6
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. All skill levels and
listeners are welcome. Bring an instrument and
play along.

Nov. 26 and 27
POMEROY — Stuffed Animal Sleepover will
be held at the Pomeroy Library. Drop off your
stuffed buddy at the Pomeroy Library on Tuesday
by noon. Pick him/her up on Wednesday at 10:30
a.m. Enjoy doughnuts and Storytime while you
learn about the fun your stuffed animal got into
at the library overnight.

Wednesday, Nov. 27
POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners will meet at 11 a.m. for their regular weekly
meeting. The meeting has been changed due to
the Thanksgiving holiday.

Thursday, Nov. 28
GALLIPOLIS — The
latest livestock report
as submitted by United
Producers, Inc., 357
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
740-446-9696.
Date of Sale: Nov. 13
Total Headage: 303
Feeder Cattle (#1 Cattle)
Yearling Steers 600700 pounds: $125.50
- $131.00; 700-800
pounds: $122.00$130.00; Yearling Heifers 600-700 pounds:
$100.00-$112.50;
700-800 pounds:
$90.00 - $100.00; Steer
Calves 300-400 pounds:
$120.00 - $140.00; 400500 pounds: $120.00
- $146.00; 500-600
pounds: $130.00 $149.00; Heifer Calves
300-500 pounds:
$100.00 - $122.50; 500600 pounds: $105.00$120.00; Feeder Bulls
250-400 pounds:
$130.00-$141.00; 400-

MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs Library locations will be closed in observance of Thanksgiving Day.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

LIVESTOCK REPORT
600 pounds: $125.00$141.00; 600-800
pounds: $112.00-$120.00
Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
Comm &amp; Utility:
$30.00 - $59.50; Canner/
Cutter: $15.00 - $30.00;
Bred Cows: $325.00
$650.00; Choice Steers
&amp; Heifers: $106.00 $113.25
Bulls
By Weight: $74.00$78.50

Night of Thanksgiving
POMEROY — A Night of Thanksgiving will
take place at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 23 at the
Mulberry Community Center. The event will
include a free dinner and musical performances.
The event is put on by the Meigs Ministerial
Association and is open to the public.

Nov. 28 and 29
POMEROY — Meigs County government ofﬁces, including the Meigs County Courthouse will
be closed for the Thanksgiving holiday. Normal
hours will resume on Monday, Dec. 2.

CAMDEN CLARK MEDICAL CENTER

Small Animals
Aged Sheep: $67.00;
Heavy Hog: $46.00 $56.00; Heavy Sow:
$47.00

Nurse Commuter Program

Comments:
10 Steers 556lb at
$145.00; 9 Steers 512lb
at $153.00; Hollybrook
Herd Dispersal, Nov. 24,
1 p.m.; Open Consignment Cow Sale, Nov. 30,
5 p.m.

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e x p e r i e n c e

�Opinion
4A Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Birthday
party for
a toddler
My responsibilities for birthday parties have always
been limited: writing a check, picking up the bill at
a restaurant, making a simple meal, and talking with
guests.
Then I agreed to give a little party at my house for
my great- grandson Cohl who just had his third birthday. I worried more than a bit even after my granddaughter Hailey told me that kids just play. And I do
have quite a few toys stashed at one place and another
in my living room. But I still worried.
Then Cohl’s mother said she’d bring the birthday
cake and candles. Check.
Decorations? I thought about this long
and hard and decided not to do any.
Invitations and conﬁrmations? Cohl’s
Uncle Quentin indicated he might drive
up from Kentucky, no short distance for
a toddler’s party. And he did, bringing
his trick Hungarian sheepdog Cash,
a great addition to any party with his
Vivian
black dreadlocks and pleasant disposiBlevins
Contributing tion.
Grandparents Lance and Rhonda came
columnist
a day early from Kenton and picked up
the birthday boy to spend the night with
us. Because his birthday was coming up, they let me
give him Cow Tails, which he loved but which kept
him very active into the wee hours of the morning. I
went to bed at my usual time and left them to handle
the riot.
On the day, Aunt Hailey showed up from Kettering
with daughter Parker, soon to be three, and twins Kipton and Corwin, soon to be ten months old. When she
arrived in Piqua, she drove around town for a good
while because the twins needed to complete the naps
they started on the drive so as not to be cranky at the
party.
Food was not an issue. I made a huge salad which
few ate, and Cohl’s mother ordered the pizzas from
a local restaurant after spending thirty minutes with
indecisive guests about what they wanted and didn’t
want. Thank heaven for delivery. Food. Check.
From the onset, there was the issue of gifts and
games. I want my readers to know that you never buy
toys for little ones without consulting parents. Kids
already have many, some are age inappropriate, and
some are not desirable for too many reasons to list. I
thought tricycles might be good for Cohl and Parker
whose birthday party was a week away. I learned that
Cohl already had two tricycles, and Parker’s parents
wanted to buy hers. I had thought that tricycles would
be a good gift with my mechanical genius Quentin on
site to put them together. With advice from parents, I
managed on the toy issue with a local trip and another
two trips to Sidney.
But what do toddlers do at a party? I ﬁnally decided
on the following: (1) buy a Christmas tree and soft
ornaments for little hands to decorate the tree. Nothing small or breakable. (2) After two phone calls and
two trips, I located the little craft kit where kids put
their hands onto a Christmas decoration and create an
ornament for their tree to memorialize this season of
their lives. (3) Then, I found Halloween costumes at
90 percent off and bought four to ﬁt the twins and the
toddlers for some play time and great photo opportunities.
Had I planned enough? I over-planned. Hailey was
right: they played with the old toys, didn’t seem much
interested in the new ones although Uncle Quentin
loved the big dinosaur and I loved the poseable African animals.
Someone read the directions on the handprint kits
(Quentin had insisted on always following directions
and had when putting the tree together, and Cohl was
very eager to help), and I decided to send those kits
home with the parents. Too messy and complicated
for me.
There was no time for the Halloween costumes, so I
packed them away for Parker’s party next week.
As the Kettering guests were departing, Parker
didn’t want to leave my house, and I loved that. Cohl
was sound asleep on the couch between dad Tyler
and mom Ele. Quentin was giving Cash one more
time in the yard before the long trip back to Kentucky
and taking a few dozen cans of Mountain Dew to his
truck. I insisted that Rhonda and Lance take leftover
pizza, salad and Cokes to create a little space in my
refrigerator. As I surveyed the living room, I noticed
Ele’s coffee container and shouted at her from the
porch. I learned it was her favorite.
I checked to make sure parents had Great Grandpa
Jack’s birthday cards and money in purses and cleaned
up a few empty cans and napkins on tables in the living room.
With plentiful kisses, hugs, and a dozen expressions
of “I love you,” I turned all the lights off to look at the
Christmas tree, all 7 feet of it, sat in my recliner, and
reﬂected on my blessings which are so much more
than I could have ever imagined.
Vivian B. Blevins. Ph.D., served as a community college president for 15
years in Kentucky, Texas, California, and Missouri before returning to Ohio
to teach telecommunication employees from around the country and
students at Edison State Community College and to work with veterans.
Reach her at (937) 778-3815 or vbblevins@woh.rr.com.

THEIR VIEW

College, alcohol and sexual assault
Chanel, a young
female, because intoxicated at a party. She
passed out and was
sexually assaulted by a
young male (also intoxicated) college student
that attended the party.
Two witnesses saw the
male sexually assaulting Chanel behind a
dumpster. The male was
arrested and convicted.
Know My Name: A
Memoir (September 24,
2019) by Chanel Miller
is a powerful book—
a message to victims
and survivors of sexual
assault. Her book is
a bestseller. “She was
known to the world as
Emily Doe when she
stunned millions with a
letter. Brock Turner had
been sentenced to just
six months in county
jail after he was found
sexually assaulting her
on Stanford’s campus.
Her victim impact
statement was posted
on BuzzFeed, where it
instantly went viral—
viewed by eleven million people within four
days, it was translated
globally and read on
the ﬂoor of Congress; it

actions/crimes
inspired changes
whether drunk or
in California law
sober.
and the recall of
“I was drunk,”
the judge in the
is not accepted
case. Thousands
as an excuse for
wrote to say that
driving drunk
she had given
and killing. “I was
them the courage Melissa
drunk,” should not
to share their
Martin
own experiences Contributing be accepted as an
excuse for sexual
of assault for the columnist
assault.
ﬁrst time.”
According to the
“Incapacitated
National Collegiate Date
sexual assault is a term
and Acquaintance Rape
used to describe when
Statistics, 90 percent
victims are unable to
of acquaintance rapes
consent to sexual acts
involve alcohol.
because they are incaHeavy drinking is
pacitated by alcohol or
other drugs,” according one of the most signiﬁcant predictors of
to Campus Advocacy
sexual assault in college,
and Prevention Profesaccording to a 2015
sionals Association
Washington Post-Kaiser
(CAPPA).
“Alcohol-related sexual Family Foundation
poll of 1,053 college
assault is a common
students. Analysis of
occurrence on college
the results found that
campuses,” According
to a 2015 article in The women who say they
Journal on the Studies of sometimes or often
drink more than they
Alcohol and Drugs.
should are twice as likely
However, alcohol is
to be victims of coma risk factor in sexual
pleted, attempted or susassault, but alcohol
pected sexual assaults
is NOT the cause of
sexual assault. Men that as those who rarely or
sexually assault women never drink. Alcohol is
classiﬁed as a drug, but
are legally and morally
it is a legal drug.
responsible for their

Educating young
women about becoming
intoxicated at parties is
imperative. Educating
young women about
staying in the company of a friend(s) while
intoxicated is imperative. Educating young
females to drink in moderation is imperative.
This column is about
sexual assault on college campuses and at
college parties. Helping
potential victims is not
victim-blaming, but
empowering them with
information, knowledge,
and precautions about
alcohol. Being less vulnerable to perpetrators
is only part of the solution.
Vanessa Grigoriadis is
the author of “Blurred
Lines: Sex, Power,
and Consent on Campus.” I recommend her
book. And I agree that
sexual consent should
be focused on changing
men’s behavior.
Melissa Martin, Ph.D., is an
author, columnist, educator, and
therapist. She lives in Scioto
County, Ohio. She can be reached
at melissamartincounselor@live.
com

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, Nov.
17, the 321st day of
2019. There are 44 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 17, 1800,
Congress held its ﬁrst
session in the partially
completed U.S. Capitol
building.
On this date:
In 1558, Elizabeth I
acceded to the English
throne upon the death
of her half-sister, Queen
Mary, beginning a
44-year reign.
In 1869, the Suez
Canal opened in Egypt.
In 1889, the Union
Paciﬁc Railroad Co.
began direct, daily railroad service between
Chicago and Portland,
Oregon, as well as Chicago and San Francisco.
In 1911, the AfricanAmerican fraternity Omega Psi Phi was
founded at Howard University in Washington,
D.C.
In 1947, President

Harry S. Truman, in
an address to a special
session of Congress,
called for emergency
aid to Austria, Italy and
France. (The aid was
approved the following
month.)
In 1970, the Soviet
Union landed an
unmanned, remotecontrolled vehicle on the
moon, the Lunokhod 1.
In 1973, President
Richard Nixon told
Associated Press managing editors in Orlando,
Florida: “People have
got to know whether or
not their president is a
crook. Well, I’m not a
crook.”
In 1979, Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini (ah-yahTOH’-lah hoh-MAY’-nee)
ordered the release of
13 black and/or female
American hostages being
held at the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran.
In 1997, 62 people,
most of them foreign
tourists, were killed
when militants opened
ﬁre at the Temple of
Hatshepsut (haht-shehpSOOT’) in Luxor, Egypt;

the attackers were killed
by police.
In 2002, Abba Eban
(AH’-bah EE’-ban), the
statesman who helped
persuade the world to
approve creation of Israel
and dominated Israeli
diplomacy for decades,
died near Tel Aviv; he
was 87.
In 2003, Arnold
Schwarzenegger was
sworn in as the 38th governor of California.
In 2006, former “Seinfeld” star Michael Richards unleashed a barrage
of racial epithets during
a stand-up routine at the
Laugh Factory in West
Hollywood.
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama held
formal, closed-door talks
in Beijing with Chinese
President Hu Jintao (hoo
jin-tow). Sarah Palin’s
autobiography “Going
Rogue” was released; 1
million copies sold in
less than two weeks.
Five years ago: Pope
Francis conﬁrmed that
he would be attending
the World Meeting of
Families in Philadelphia

Thought for Today:
“The upper classes
are merely a nation’s
past; the middle
class is its future.”
— Ayn Rand,
Russian-American author
(1905-1982).

in Sept. 2015. Dr. Martin
Salia, a surgeon who’d
contracted Ebola in his
native Sierra Leone,
died at the University of
Nebraska Medical Center
in Omaha, two days after
being admitted. Jimmy
Rufﬁn, 78, the Motown
singer whose hits included “What Becomes of the
Brokenhearted,” died in
Las Vegas.
One year ago: Tribesman on the isolated
island of North Sentinel, between India and
Southeast Asia, were
seen dragging and burying the body of American missionary John
Allen Chau, who had
reached the island the
previous day despite a
ban imposed by India’s
government.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Trump intervenes in military justice cases, grants pardons

GALLIA, MEIGS
BRIEFS

By Darlene Superville

Straw available
for animal
bedding

a written statement that the
president is responsible for
ensuring the law is enforced
and that “mercy is granted,”
WASHINGTON — Presiwhen appropriate.
dent Donald Trump has par“For more than 200 years,
doned a former U.S. Army
presidents have used their
commando set to stand trial
authority to offer second
next year in the killing of a
suspected Afghan bomb-maker chances to deserving individuand a former Army lieutenant als, including those in uniform
convicted of murder for order- who have served our country,”
ing his men to ﬁre upon three she said. “These actions are in
Afghans, killing two, the White keeping with this long history.”
Trump said earlier this year
House announced late Friday.
that he was considering issuThe commander in chief also
ordered a promotion for a dec- ing the pardons.
“Some of these soldiers are
orated Navy SEAL convicted
people that have fought hard
of posing with a dead Islamic
and long,” he said in May. “You
State captive in Iraq.
White House press secretary know, we teach them how to
be great ﬁghters, and then
Stephanie Grisham said in

Associated Press

The Meigs County Humane
Society will be providing
straw for animal bedding
during the months of November, December, January, and
February. Vouchers may be
picked up at the Humane
Society Thrift Shop, 253
North Second Street, Middleport, Ohio, for a fee of $2
per bail. Vouchers are to be
redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more
information call 992-6064.

Jury

Sunday, November 17, 2019 5A

when they ﬁght sometimes
they get really treated very
unfairly.” At the time, Trump
acknowledged opposition to
the possible pardons by some
veterans and other groups and
said he could make a decision
after trials had been held.
One of the pardons went
to Maj. Mathew Golsteyn, a
former Green Beret accused of
killing a suspected bomb-maker during a 2010 deployment
to Afghanistan. Golsteyn was
leading a team of Army Special
Forces at the time and believed
that the man was responsible
for an explosion that killed two
U.S. Marines. He has argued
that the Afghan was a legal target because of his behavior at

the time of the shooting.
The second pardon went to
1st Lt. Clint Lorance, who had
been convicted of murder for
ordering his soldiers to ﬁre
upon three unarmed Afghan
men in July 2012, killing two.
Lorance has served more than
six years of a 19-year sentence
at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Trump also ordered a promotion for Special Warfare
Operator 1st Class Edward
Gallagher, the Navy SEAL convicted of posing with a dead
Islamic State captive in Iraq
in 2017. Gallagher was in line
for a promotion before he was
prosecuted, but he lost that
and was reduced in rank after
the conviction.

State Highway Patrol
investigated this matter.
Michael King, 28,
of Pomeroy, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession of
Drugs (Heroin), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree, and
Possession of Drugs (Fentanyl), a felony of the ﬁfth
degree. The Gallia-Meigs
Major Crimes Task Force
investigated this matter.
Terry Lambert, 27,
of Langsville, Ohio was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. In a separate
indictment, Lambert was
indicted for Trafﬁcking
in Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
fourth degree, and Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree. The
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce and the GalliaMeigs Major Crimes Task
Force investigated these
matters.
Christopher Meldau,
37, of Middleport, Ohio,
was indicted for Illegal
Use of Food Stamps or
WIC Program Beneﬁts, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Family Services and the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney’s Ofﬁce
investigated this matter.
Joshua Partlow, 31,
of Rutland, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The GalliaMeigs Major Crimes Task
Force investigated this
matter.
Andrew Pauley, 36,
of McArthur, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession of

Drugs (Clonazepam), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree,
and Possession of Drugs
(Buprenorphine), a felony
of the ﬁfth degree. The
Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated this
matter.
Michael Pethtel, 54,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Cocaine), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated this
matter.
Ronnie Petrey, 34,
of Athens, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs, a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Ohio
State Highway Patrol
investigated this matter.
Shawn Price, 45, of
Coolville, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree, and Improperly Handling Firearms
in a Motor Vehicle, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated this
matter.
Tammy Quillen, 57, of
Long Bottom, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Ohio
State Highway Patrol
investigated this matter.
Johnny Ratliff, 52,
of Cheshire, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Ohio
State Highway Patrol
investigated this matter.
Joshua Simpson, 37,
of Long Bottom, Ohio,
was indicted for seven
counts of Rape, each a

felony of the ﬁrst degree,
and Sexual Battery, a
felony of the third degree.
Additionally, the Grand
Jury returned a Sexually
Violent Predator speciﬁcation. The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Family Services, the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, and the Meigs
County Prosecuting
Attorney’s Ofﬁce investigated this matter.
Alisha Small, 39, of
Reedsville, Ohio, was
indicted for Theft, a
felony of the ﬁfth degree,
and two counts of Misuse
of Credit Cards, each a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
The Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce investigated
this matter.
Crystal Tanner, 29, of
Long Bottom, Ohio, was
indicted for two counts
of Illegal Use of Food
Stamps or WIC Program
Beneﬁts, a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Meigs
County Department of
Job &amp; Family Services
and the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney’s
Ofﬁce investigated this
matter.
Tommy Thompson, Jr.,
34, of Pomeroy, Ohio, was
indicted for Tampering
with Evidence, a felony
of the third degree. The
Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas Juvenile Division Probation
Department, the Meigs
County Department of
Job &amp; Family Services,
and the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney’s
Ofﬁce investigated this
matter.
Jade Wallace, 27,
of Albany, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession

of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Ohio
State Highway Patrol
investigated this matter.
David Westfall, 42, of
Long Bottom, Ohio, was
indicted for Theft, a felony of the fourth degree.
The Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce investigated
this matter.
Jacob White, 34, of
Shade, Ohio, was indicted
for Possession of Drugs
(6-Monoacetymorphine),
a felony of the ﬁfth
degree, Possession of
Drugs (Buprenorphine), a
misdemeanor of the ﬁrst
degree, and Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
investigated this matter.
Richard White, Jr.,
26, of Racine, Ohio, was
indicted for two counts
of Felonious Assault,
each a felony of the second degree. The Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
investigated this matter.
James Whiteman, 37,
of Langsville, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree, and Possession of Drugs (Heroin), a
felony of the ﬁfth degree.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated this
matter.
Jacqueline Wilson,
31, of Albany, Ohio, was
indicted for Tampering
with Evidence, a felony
of the third degree. The
Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family
Services and the Meigs
County Prosecuting
Attorney’s Ofﬁce investi-

gated this matter.
All cases will proceed
in Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas.
For informational
purposes, possible penalties for felony offenses
committed before March
22, 2019 include: felonies
of the ﬁrst degree- 3-11
years in prison and up to
a $20,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the second degree- 2-8
years in prison and up to
a $15,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the third degree- 9-36
months in prison and up
to a $10,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the fourth degree- 6-18
months in prison and up
to a $5,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the ﬁfth degree- 6-12
months in prison and up
to a $2,500 ﬁne. Possible
penalties for ﬁrst and
second degree felonies
committed on or after
March 22, 2019 include:
felonies of the ﬁrst degreea minimum sentence of
3-11 years in prison with
an indeﬁnite maximum
sentence of up to 16.5
years in prison and up to
a $20,000 ﬁne; felonies
of the second degree- a
minimum sentence of
2-8 years in prison with
an indeﬁnite maximum
sentence of up to 12 years
in prison and up to a
$15,000 ﬁne. For most
felonies of the fourth and
ﬁfth degrees, sentencing guidelines found in
the Ohio Revised Code
require ﬁrst-time offenders to be sentenced to
community control unless
certain conditions exist
permitting the imposition
of a prison sentence.
Information provided
by the Meigs County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce.

out-patient or communitybased treatment over
the course of a year to
achieve graduation from
From page 1A
the program. The ﬁrst
eight weeks of Recovery
lift up one another,” the
Court is dedicated to
judge said. “It’s a team
achieving stability in
effort on the part of the
the participant’s life and
both the treatment proestablishing an individuviders as well as the paralized treatment plan,
ticipants.”
followed by 10 months
Shallon Schuldt is a
probation ofﬁcer and the of treatment while working on educational and
director of Specialized
vocational skills, learning
Docket Programs for
moral and ethical thinkthe Gallipolis Municipal
ing, developing pro-social
Court. Mulford said that
he and Schuldt recognize behaviors, making restitution to crime victims and
that defendants who are
involved in the Recovery performing community
Court require stability in service, and generally
improving the ability to
meeting their own basic
react to stress, triggers
needs, such as for food
for drug use, and everyand shelter, before they
day problems.
can focus on recovery.
“A specialized docket is
The treatment team
a problem-solving dockhelps the participants
et,” Mulford said. “We
establish stable housing,
food sources and medical work together to identify
care, then begins dealing the underlying cause of
a problem and solve it
directly with the addicwhile emphasizing that
tion. Participants are
everyone needs to accept
permitted to consider
traditional, faith-based, or personal responsibility
medication-assisted treat- for their decisions and
actions. Ultimately, a lot
ment.
of healing takes place,
The Recovery Court
which is good for the parfollows a program
ticipants, their families,
designed by the Ohio
and the entire commuCommission on Specialnity.”
ized Dockets, an arm of
The goals for every
the Ohio Supreme Court.
participant, as outlined
Each participant in the
Recovery Court must suc- by the supreme court,
cessfully advance through are: to develop a noncriminal pattern of living;
four phases of intensive

to learn to be alcohol
and other drug free; to
adjust to a drug-free
lifestyle; to learn better
ways of coping with life;
to enhance employment
skills through educational
pursuits and/or vocational
or alternative training;
to attend and become
involved in community
support groups, such as
Alcoholics Anonymous,
Narcotics Anonymous,
and others; to increase
social skills, self-esteem,
and self-motivation; and
to learn the warning signs
of relapse and develop
and implement a relapse
prevention plan.
The municipal court’s
specialized docket speciﬁcally is designed as a
post-conviction program
for defendants sentenced

to probation instead of
jail for a non-violent misdemeanor crime. The primary goal of a specialized
docket is to reduce recidivism, thereby improving
public safety.
“Since January, 2017,
we have had only three
graduates of the Recovery
Court who were charged
with a new crime, so from
a recidivism standpoint
this program is very successful,” Mulford said.
“One of our new goals is
to integrate some of what
we have learned from
administering the specialized docket into a pretrial services program to
more quickly identify and
intervene with defendants
who are in need of, and
would react in a positive
way to, our assistance.”

The municipal court’s
treatment team consists
of the judge, probation
ofﬁcers, and representatives of Health Recovery
Services, Hopewell
Health Centers, Step
Stone Initiatives, Holzer
Health Systems, Spectrum Outreach Services,
TASC of Southeast Ohio,
Integrated Services, and
the Field of Hope Community Campus.
For more information
about the municipal
court, visit the court’s
website at gmcourt.org,
or call the bailiff at 740446-9400, ext. 222.
The CPR coalition consists of area nonproﬁts
such as God’s Hands at
Work, the Field of Hope
Community Campus, as
well as behavioral health

organizations such as
Health Recovery Services, the Gallia County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, the Gallia County Prosecutor’s
Ofﬁce, Gallipolis Neighborhood Watch, Holzer
Health System, the Gallipolis City Commission,
Gallia County Health
Department, and more.
With the goal of ﬁghting
drug abuse in Gallia, the
group commonly meets
the second Monday of the
month at noon in various
rooms at Holzer Medical
Center. The group can be
reached at its Facebook
page.
Stories of program
graduates and those currently in the program will
appear in an upcoming
issue of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune.

Services and the Meigs
County Prosecuting
Attorney’s Ofﬁce investigated this matter.
Rodney Byus, 48, of
Gallipolis, Ohio, was
indicted for three counts
of Trafﬁcking in Drugs
(Methamphetamine),
each a felony of the
second degree, Possession of Drugs (Methamphetamine), a felony of
the second degree, and
Engaging in a Pattern of
Corrupt Activity, a felony of the ﬁrst degree.
The Gallia-Meigs Major
Crimes Task Force investigated this matter.
Sabrina Estep, 28,
of Pomeroy, Ohio, was
indicted for Tampering
with Evidence, a felony
of the third degree. The
Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family
Services and the Meigs
County Prosecuting
Attorney’s Ofﬁce investigated this matter.
Bruce Grant, 41, of
Zanesville, Ohio, was
indicted for Abuse of
a Corpse, a felony of
the ﬁfth degree, and
Tampering with Evidence, a felony of the
third degree. The Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
and the Gallia-Meigs
Major Crimes Task
Force investigated this
matter.
Ianzoe Herman, 37, of
Middleport, Ohio, was
indicted for Possession
of Drugs (Buprenorphine), a felony of the
ﬁfth degree. The Ohio

Court

Thank You!
The Gallia County Board of Elections sincerely
says Thank You to Boy Scout Troop 200 and the
leaders for their tireless work assisting with
equipment on Election Night.
Thank you to: Terry McKinniss, Bob Oehler, Gage Smith,
Conner Walter, Adam Stout, Gavin Hunt, Steve Hunt.
OH-70158998

From page 1A

Your greatly appreciated
contribution improves our
Election Night processes, and we
look forward to working with
you again in March.

The Middleport Planning
and Zoning Commission
will meet on December 12,
2019 at 1pm to discuss a
variance in Middleport's
fence ordinance. The
resident at 440 Grant Street
is asking for a 6' chain link
fence in his front yard.
OH-70159350

�A long the River
6A Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Chamber honors businesses, individuals
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY
— The Meigs County
Chamber recently
honored businesses
and individuals for
their contributions to
the county during the
annual Meigs Chamber
Awards Gala.
Held at Kountry
Resort Campground
near Pomeroy, the gala
included the presentation of seven awards, as
well as a catered dinner.
Award recipients were
as follows:
Entrepreneur of
the Year — Larry and
Candice Hess of River
Roasters Coffee Co.
Economic Impact
Award — Uplift Fitness,
owner Chase Jenkins
Community Pillar
Award — Perry Varnadoe, Meigs County
Economic Development
Director
Outstanding Meigs
County Ambassador —
Howard Mullen
Best First Impression
Award — Bitanga’s
Martial Arts Center,
owner Ben Nease
Outstanding Meigs
County Citizen —
Toney Dingess, Director
of the Meigs Marching
Band
Lifetime Business
Achievement — Farm-

ers Bank and Savings
Co., President and CEO
Paul Reed
The 2019 Gala sponsors and participants
included: Elite Community Partners — Farmers Bank, University
of Rio Grande, Holzer
Health Systems, Meigs
Independent Press, New
Era Broadband; Event
Sponsors —Brandon
Bartee of The Athens
Real Estate Company,
Uplift Fitness, The
Daily Sentinel, Home
National Bank, Kountry
Resort Campground,
Mark Porter, Ohio Valley Bank, OhioHealth
O’Bleness Hospital,
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy; Dinner Sponsor — Meigs County
CIC; Drink Sponsor
— McDonald’s; Meat
&amp; Cheese Trays SponPhotos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
The 2019 Meigs Chamber Award recipients are pictured following the presentation of the awards during the annual gala held at Kountry
sor — Powell’s Food
Fair; Wine Sponsors — Resort Campground.
Clark’s Jewelry Store,
Front Paige Outﬁtters,
Riverside Auto &amp; Towing; Beer Sponsor
— Maple Lawn Brewery; Coffee Sponsor
— Jittery Joes; Meal
— Austin Cole Catering; Servers — Meigs
County Historical
Society; Music — Brent
Patterson; Ornaments
and Awards — Red Tail
Design Co.; Event Photographer — Andrew
Johnson.

Farmers Bank was the recipient of the Lifetime Business Achievement Award, which was accepted by President and CEO Paul Reed. Reed
is pictured with Farmers Bank staff who were in attendance at the gala.

Howard Mullen receives the Outstanding Meigs County Ambassador
award from Chamber President Andy Campbell.

Ben Nease of Bitanga’s Martial Arts Center received the Best First
Impression Award for the martial arts center. Nease is pictured
with Chamber President Andy Campbell.

Uplift Fitness received the Economic Impact Award. Pictured is
owner Chase Jenkins receiving the award from Chamber President
Andy Campbell.

Toney Dingess receives the Outstanding Meigs County Citizen
award from Chamber President Andy Campbell.

Entrepreneurs of the Year Larry and Candice Hess receive their
award from Chamber President Andy Campbell.

Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe receives the
Community Pillar award from Chamber President Andy Campbell.

Brent Patterson provided music for the evening.

Howard Mullen, the recipient of the Outstanding Meigs County
Ambassador award, speaks at the Meigs Chamber Gala.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 17, 2019 7A

Music

forms, ﬁxing instruments
and other needed items.
In its ﬁrst two years the
Breakathon supported the
From page 1A
renovation work at The
Blakeslee Center which
Center. In the end,
will be the future home of
each band received
the Meigs County Coun$10,429.17, meaning
cil on Aging. The ﬁrst
more than $31,200 was
year raised more than
raised through the Break$10,000 for the weight
athon. Additionally, the
room work, with the secbands had the opportuond year raising $20,000
nity to sell Breakathon
for the auditorium renoshirts, with each band
vations.
keeping the proceeds
Already looking toward
from the shirts it sold.
Breakathon 4, Nease
“Meigs County champisaid they will soon be
oned this, coming togethputting out information
er to make this happen,”
looking for ideas on what
said Nease of the support
cause or organization
from the county for this
year and past years.
to raise money for next
A total of 68 paryear. They hope to have
ticipants from Bitanga’s
a cause selected by early
Martial Arts Center took
2020.
part, collecting sponsors
The plan is to continue
to support the cause. In
with the two day event in
addition, 48 non-memThe alumni band cake auctioned off at the event was created by 2020, possibly adding in
bers paid to participate by
additional items such as a
Samantha Wolfe of Edible Arts by Samantha.
learning to break boards.
Breakathon Facebook photo
kick-off parade.
Breakathon top fundraisers were Malakai Durham, Benjamin Troyer were donated and cut for
Crafters and other venTop fund raisers were
Once it opens to the
and Rylie Wolfe.
the event by Valley Lum- dors were set up during
Malakai Durham with
public, The Blakeslee
both days of the event
ber in Middleport.
$6,000 for the bands.
martial arts uniform.
$2,635 raised, BenjaCenter will be the annual
with various items availNew this year was the
An “Alumni Band” cake
Nease said 14 parmin Troyer with $2,540
home for Bitanga’s Breakopening day of the event able for purchase. Close
created with all three of
ticipants met the $1,000
raised and Rylie Wolfe
athon.
to Home Catering with
with a concert on Friday
the band mascots on it
with $2,427 raised. Each goal.
For more on the annual
the Meigs County Counevening by Jake Dunn
was made by Samantha
In addition to the
received special awards
Breakathon visit Bitanga’s
cil on Aging also providand the Blackbirds.
and prizes for their fund- individual sponsorships, Wolfe of Edible Arts by
Breakathon or Bitanga’s
On Saturday, the Meigs, ed food for the event.
Samantha and auctioned
more than 60 busiraising efforts.
Martial Arts Center on
Nease said some of the Facebook.
Southern and Wahama
nesses sponsored boards off by Billy Goble. The
Additionally, those
cake auction raised $540. bands performed outside bands indicated the funds
raising more than $1,000 at $100 each, which
Sarah Hawley is the managing
would help with uniMore than 1,000 boards the Family Life Center.
brought in more than
received a special red
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Job’s Daughters hold annual visit
nightly to her children
and often referred to the
Book of Job, quoting as
in an ideal philosophy
to her daughters that
“in all the land were no
women found so fair as
the daughters of Job”
and stating her hope that
her personal trials and
tribulations might also be
rewarded by her daughters becoming as “fair as
the daughters of Job.”
This left a lasting impression on her Daughter
Ethel which eventually
resulted in the founding
of Job’s Daughters.
While attending the
Creighton Medical College in Omaha, Nebraska,
Ethel Wead became
acquainted with William
Henry Mick, a fellow
medical student and they
were married in May,
1904. They had two
daughters Ethel (Mrs. C.
Spencer Shotwell) and
Ruth Elizabeth (Mrs. A.
J. A. Brideau), and two
grand-sons William and
Alfred Brideau.
Mrs. Mick was a
charter Member of the
Nebraska Mayﬂower
Association, and a member of Nu Sigma Phi
(a medical sorority),
the Daughters of 1812,
Daughters of the American Revolution, White
Shrine of Jerusalem.
She organized and was
the ﬁrst Matron of AkSar-Ben Chapter, Order
of the Eastern Star; the
ﬁrst President of the East
Cleveland Chapter of
the Ladies Auxiliary of
the Veterans of Foreign
Wars; and of course, the
organizer and founder of
the International Order of
Job’s Daughters.
Her hobbies included
singing, oil painting on
canvas, china painting,
reading, traveling and her
clubs.
The Order of Job’s
Daughters was founded in
Omaha, Nebraska in 1920
by Mrs. Ethel T. Wead
Mick, or Mother Mick as
the members affectionately call her. Mother Mick,
realizing the importance
of the early training she
received from her mother,
and especially the beautiful lessons in literature
and drama as found in the
Book of Job, decided to
give her time and talent
to make it possible for all
young women of Masonic
relationship to share
the rare privileges that
were hers. After several

years of careful study and
consideration with the
assistance of her husband
Dr. William H. Mick and
other capable workers,
she founded the Order of
Job’s Daughters, in honor
and memory of her mother, Elizabeth D. Wead.
The purpose of the
Order was to band
together young girls
with Masonic relationship for character building through moral and
spiritual development
by teaching a greater
reverence for God and
the Holy Scriptures:
loyalty to the Flag and
the Country for which it
stands, and respect for
parents and Guardians.
The organization was
named “Job’s Daughters”
after the three daughters
of Job in the Bible. The
organization was founded
on the 15th verse of the
42nd Chapter of the Book
of Job: “In all the land
were no women found so
fair as the daughters of
Job; and their father gave
them inheritance among
their brethren.”
In 1920 weekly meetings were held in the
upstairs family parlor of
the Mick residence. The
Worthy Grand Matron
and Worthy Grand
Patron, Order of Eastern
Star of Nebraska and
other leading Masonic
related persons were in
attendance. The Grand
Master of Masons and the
Grand Lodge in Nebraska
approved and lauded the
formation of such a group
for young women.
The Order was historically founded on October
20, 1920, at which time it
was deﬁnitely decided to
adopt the carefully developed plans of Mrs. Mick
and the weekly planning
group, and to proceed
with the forming of the
Order. The Executive
Council was formed on
January 19, 1921, when
the Executive Council
Ofﬁcers were chosen.
The ﬁrst initiation was
held May 6, 1921 in the
Omaha Masonic Temple.
On May 27, 1921, the
Order of Job’s Daughters
was formally organized
at a called meeting
held in the ofﬁce of Dr.
Mick. The ﬁrst Annual
Meeting of the Supreme
Guardian Council was
held in October 14,
1921. The ﬁrst Charter
granted was issued to
Bethel No. 1 of Omaha

on December 31, 1921.
The authority to proceed with this organization was jointly granted
by Most Worshipful J. B.
Fradenburg, the Grand
Master of the Grand
Lodge of Nebraska, the
Worthy Grand Matron,
Mrs. Anna J. Davis, and
the Worthy Grand Patron,
James E. Bednar of the
Courtesy photo
Grand Chapter of Eastern The Job’s Daughters International Bethels #62 of Middleport and
Star of Nebraska.
#65 of Belpre recently held their Official Visit for 2019.

ESTATE AUCTION

THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21, 2019
@ 5:00 P.M.
LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER, RT 62 N,
786 ADAMSVILLE RD., MASON WV. SELLING THE
ESTATE OF THE LATE LLOYD.&amp; MARY ROACH OF
POINT PLEASANT, WV
FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES
Beautiful Sofa/Loveseat; Two Matching
Claw &amp; Ball Wing-Back Chairs; Cherry Sofa
Table; Antique Secretary Bookcase; Cherry
Curio Cabinet; 3 Pc BR Suite; Blanket Chest;
Antiques Square Oak Table w/6 Oak Claw
Footed Chairs; wicker Tables; Coffee Table
&amp; End Tables; Patio Table W/Chairs; Amana
Dryer; Crosley Washer; Plus More.
GLASSWARE &amp; MISC
Several Fenton Baskets, Bells, &amp; Other Pieces;
Roseville; Angel Figurine; Green Depression
Oil Lamp; Plus Other Beautiful Lamps;
Nativity Set; Old Pictures; Lanterns; Marbles;
Tool Boxes; Roybi Leaf Blower; Poulan Weed
Eater; some Tools; Mitre Saw; Two Hi-Back
Plastic Chairs; Plus More
FOOD AVAILABLE
TERMS:
CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID

OH-70159297

On Sunday, Nov. 10,
the Job’s Daughters International Bethels #62 of
Middleport and #65 of
Belpre held their Ofﬁcial
Visit for 2019. Once the
Bethels opened together,
a welcome was given by
Honored Queens Morissa
Barcus of Middleport
Bethel #62 and Ariel
Baker of Belpre Bethel
#65. Distinguished guests
were introduced prior
to the Job’s Daughters
Friendship Ceremony,
performed by the ofﬁcers
of the Bethel of Middleport #62: Honored Queen
Morissa Barcus, Senior
Princess Carmin Barcus,
Junior Princess Adrian
Baker (Belpre Bethel
#65,) Guide Cyanne
Pearce, Marshal Grace
Matheny, Recorder Rebecca Patterson, Chaplain
Lila Barcus, First Messenger Leah Taylor, Inner
Guard Alexus Ault, Outer
Guard Erikah McCartney,
and Junior Custodian
Breasia Savage.
The theme for the term
of Honored Queen Morissa Barcus is “keep your
head in the game,” with
the colors being green
and sunset orange. The
scripture is from Psalms
138:3: “On the day I
called, you answered me:
you made me bold with
strength in my soul.” The
Bethel mascot is “Dunk”
the basketball.
With thousands of
members across the
United States, Canada,
Australia, the Philippines,
and Brazil, Job’s Daughters offers young ladies
between the ages of 10
and 20 a limitless array of
opportunities.
According to the Job’s
Daughters International
website, Ethel T. Wead
Mick was born March 9,
1881 in Atlantic, Iowa.
She passed away on Feb.
21, 1957. Burial was at
Forest Lawn Memorial
Park Omaha Nebraska,
USA Section 19, Lot 39.
Mrs. Mick was able to
trace her descent both
through her father’s and
her mother’s family to
the Mayﬂower company,
notable ancestors being
William Brewster, Anne
Hathaway (wife of Wm.
Shakespeare), Governor
Preuce, the Colthanes,
Anne Hutchinson, Stephen Foster and others.
As a child her family
was a closely knit one
and very religious. Her
mother read Bible stories

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK
PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
AUCTIONZIP AUCTIONEER ID# 3228

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

WVU
From page 1A

to the people of the midOhio Valley for more than
50 years, and we look
forward to strengthening
and building upon that
legacy.”
JGH, which was founded in 1964, is a 25-bed
non-profit critical access
hospital that employs
more than 300 people.
The hospital provides
inpatient, outpatient,
primary, and emergency
care; specialty services,
including ophthalmology,
orthopaedics, general surgery, urology, and interventional pain; infusion,
physical, and respiratory
therapies; and imaging
and laboratory services.
As part of the transaction, the WVU Health
System and Jackson
General Hospital will
begin planning for a
replacement facility for
JGH with a goal to begin
construction on the new
facility as soon as possible after receipt of all
required approvals.
“Many months ago, the

WVU Medicine President and CEO Albert Wright, Jr., explained the
health system’s strategy to improve health of West Virginians by
increasing services while lowering costs during Tuesday’s event.

Photos courtesy of WVU Medicine Jackson General Hospital

WVU President E. Gordon Gee speaks during the celebration on Tuesday in Ripley, officially welcoming
Jackson General Hospital as part of WVU Medicine.

JGH Board of Directors
and I began the journey
toward becoming a full
member of the WVU
Health System with full
support from the JGH
team of employees and
our patients, for which we
are most grateful. Today,
I am thrilled to finally be
called WVU Medicine
Jackson General Hospital,” Stephanie McCoy,

The WVU Health System, the state’s largest
health system and largest
private employer, is comprised of 11 member hospitals, five managed hospitals, and two clinically
affiliated hospitals. It also
includes five institutes.
For more information,
visit WVUMedicine.org.

M.B.A., R.N., president
and CEO of JGH, said in
the news release. “Albert
Wright and the WVU
Medicine team have been
supportive and enthusiastic throughout the
journey, and I am totally
convinced this is the
beginning of a fresh and
promising future for JGH
and the community we so
proudly serve.”

Apply Online Now
2020CENSUS.GOV/JOBS

Jackson General Hospital and WVU representatives are pictured
following the celebration event. Pictured (from left to right) are
JGH board chair Rob Fisher, WVU President E. Gordon Gee, JGH
CEO Stephanie McCoy, WVU Medicine President and CEO Albert
Wright, Jr., and JGH board member and state Delegate Steve
Westfall.

Information and photos provided
by WVU Medicine Jackson General
Hospital.

Apply Online Now
Thousands of jobs are available nationwide.
2020CENSUS.GOV/JOBS
Help support your community — be a census taker.

OH-70157772

Thousands of jobs are available nationwide.
Help
your community
— be a census
 support
Extra income
 Weekly
paytaker.

Extra income
✓Flexible
hours

Weekly
pay
✓ Paid
training

✓ Flexible hours

✓ Paid Training

For more information or help applying, please call 1-855-JOB-2020
Federal Relay Service: 1-800-877-8339 TTY/ASCII www.gsa.gov/fedrelay
For
more
or helpis
applying,
please
call 1-855-JOB-2020
The
U.S.information
Census Bureau
an Equal
Opportunity
Employer.
A look at the future of WVU Medicine Jackson General Hospital as displayed during Tuesday’s event.

Federal Relay Service: 1-800-877-8339 TTY/ASCII www.gsa.gov/fedrelay
The U.S. Census Bureau is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

TODAY
8 AM

2 PM

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

MONDAY

TUESDAY

49°
32°

WEATHER

25°

44°

39°

Mostly sunny and cold today. Cloudy and cold
tonight. High 50° / Low 32°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

50°
26°
57°
37°
77° in 1964
17° in 2014

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.33
1.66
40.82
37.50

Today
7:13 a.m.
5:14 p.m.
9:49 p.m.
11:57 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:14 a.m.
5:13 p.m.
10:56 p.m.
12:44 p.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Nov 19 Nov 26

First

Dec 4

Full

Dec 11

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

Major
Today 3:12a
Mon. 4:13a
Tue. 5:12a
Wed. 6:06a
Thu. 6:56a
Fri.
7:42a
Sat.
8:27a

Minor
9:26a
10:27a
11:26a
12:20p
12:43a
1:30a
2:14a

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

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: Is it true that most raindrops begin
as snowflakes?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
3:40p
4:41p
5:39p
6:33p
7:22p
8:08p
8:52p

Minor
9:54p
10:55p
11:53p
---1:09p
1:55p
2:39p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 17, 1989, the temperature in
Raleigh/Durham, N.C., plummeted to
29 degrees, becoming the latest first
freeze on record. The previous record
occurred Nov. 14, 1946.

Adelphi
48/28
Chillicothe
47/30

Logan
47/28

Lucasville
51/30
Portsmouth
51/31

AIR QUALITY

59°
42°

Partly sunny

0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

Belpre
51/30

Athens
49/29

St. Marys
50/31

Parkersburg
51/29

Coolville
50/30

Elizabeth
51/31

Spencer
51/31

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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.29
16.91
21.85
13.02
13.35
24.92
15.30
25.83
34.49
12.83
16.70
34.00
16.10

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.37
+0.32
+0.18
+0.20
+0.61
-0.66
+2.09
-0.02
+0.01
-0.02
-0.20
+0.10
-0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Buffalo
53/31
Milton
53/31

St. Albans
53/34

Huntington
53/30

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
58/49
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
68/51
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
90/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
70/42
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

51°
31°

Low clouds

Marietta
49/30

Murray City
49/28

Ironton
52/32

Ashland
52/32
Grayson
52/32

SATURDAY

46°
25°

Considerable
cloudiness

Wilkesville
50/29
POMEROY
Jackson
50/31
49/30
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
51/31
51/30
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
47/31
GALLIPOLIS
50/32
51/31
50/31

South Shore Greenup
52/32
50/31

84

FRIDAY

Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
48/28

Waverly
49/31

52°
37°

Mostly cloudy and
chilly

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

48°
32°

THURSDAY

A: Yes.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Mostly cloudy and
chilly

WEDNESDAY

Clendenin
54/31
Charleston
55/31

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
30/21

Billings
56/42

Minneapolis
39/29

Montreal
26/16

Detroit
38/30

Toronto
33/28
New York
43/38
Washington
45/40

Chicago
39/31

Denver
58/39
Kansas City
55/36

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

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

Global
High
Low

Houston
67/47
Monterrey
77/55

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
66/36/s
35/28/sf
59/40/pc
48/42/r
50/32/c
57/37/pc
62/42/pc
45/38/r
52/33/pc
59/39/pc
57/35/s
39/30/c
48/32/c
46/31/c
47/31/c
71/43/s
63/38/s
46/36/pc
40/30/c
85/73/t
71/49/s
44/32/c
57/39/pc
77/51/s
59/43/pc
89/59/s
49/36/c
79/61/pc
41/32/pc
52/37/pc
66/48/pc
46/38/r
70/40/s
74/53/pc
47/36/r
85/59/s
46/30/c
39/31/r
58/39/c
54/36/c
50/39/pc
61/42/pc
67/53/s
55/47/r
51/37/c

EXTREMES FRIDAY
Atlanta
59/43

Chihuahua
70/46

Today

Hi/Lo/W
60/36/s
37/31/sh
59/43/pc
52/43/r
45/37/c
56/42/c
59/36/pc
45/39/pc
55/31/s
55/37/s
54/41/pc
39/31/pc
48/30/pc
46/32/s
48/32/s
66/38/pc
58/39/pc
47/30/c
38/30/pc
85/74/t
67/47/pc
44/30/pc
55/36/c
76/52/s
56/36/pc
90/60/s
50/34/pc
76/58/pc
39/29/sf
55/33/pc
64/44/pc
43/38/c
61/38/pc
68/51/pc
43/38/c
86/55/s
47/29/s
36/26/pc
50/38/c
46/37/r
48/36/c
57/35/pc
68/51/s
58/49/r
45/40/c

Miami
76/58

88° in Picacho Peak, AZ
2° in Yellowstone N.P., WY

112° in Marble Bar, Australia
-50° in Strelka-Chunya, Russia

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

OH-70107875

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Middleport

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Lady Knights ousted in Class AA quarterfinal
By Alex Hawley

— took its ﬁrst lead of the
morning at 4-3 in the opening game. The Lady Indians
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — (35-16-3) tied it up at four,
ﬁve and six, but couldn’t
An impressive state debut,
regain the edge, as the Lady
even with an early exit.
Knights took the ﬁrst by a
The ﬁfth-seeded Point
25-17 tally.
Pleasant volleyball team
After a trio of early ties,
played in its ﬁrst-ever state
tournament match on Friday Point Pleasant took its only
lead of the second game at
morning at the Charleston
13-12. Bridgeport claimed
Coliseum and Conventhe next three markers and
tion Center, with the Lady
then stretched its lead to
Knights taking the opening
as high as seven points, at
game, but eventually falling
22-15. The Lady Knights
to defending champion and
fourth-seeded Bridgeport by scored seven in a row to tie
it up, but then surrendered
a 3-1 tally in the Class AA
three of the next four markquarterﬁnal.
ers, as BHS evened the
Point
Pleasant
(33-4-2)
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports
match at 1-1 with a 25-23
—
winner
of
25
straight
Point Pleasant sophomore Brooke Warner (right) passes the ball in front of classmate
win.
Katelyn Smith (6), during the Lady Knights’ state quarterfinal loss on Friday morning in matches before ending the
Charleston, W.Va.
PPHS led initially in the
year with back-to-back losses
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

third game, but Bridgeport
was in front at 5-4 and didn’t
look back on its way to the
25-16 victory, moving ahead
2-1 in the match.
Following a pair of lead
changes early in the fourth
game, the Lady Indians
pushed their advantage to
eight points, at 11-3. The
Lady Knights cut their
deﬁcit in half with a 10-to-6
run, but never got closer, as
Bridgeport sealed the 3-1
win with a 25-20 triumph.
Following the match, ﬁfthyear Point Pleasant head
coach Marla Cottrill noted
that while the Lady Knights
started out on the right foot,
a few too many mistakes let
See KNIGHTS | 2B

Raiders seek to
avoid letdown vs.
winless Bengals
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Derek Carr knows
full well what the Cincinnati Bengals are enduring
this season: nine straight losses to open the year.
Carr began his rookie season as starting quarterback for the Oakland Raiders with 10 consecutive
defeats before ﬁnally breaking through with a win.
“You feel like everything is against you because
for the fans, sometimes for older players, they
don’t see any light at the end of the tunnel,” he
said. “They just see what’s in front of them at the
moment and it’s hard man. It’s tough and one
thing I’ll say though is, if you can grind through
those moments, work really hard, stick to your
process, when the good moments come around it
makes you thankful for those other moments.”
Carr bounced back from the rough debut campaign to win 12 games and lead the Raiders to
the playoffs in 2016. Two more down seasons followed, but Carr has Oakland (5-4) back in contention again this year heading into Sunday’s home
game against Cincinnati (0-9).
After two straight wins to open a homestand,
Carr wants to make sure his team doesn’t let up in
the third game and squander a chance.
“I don’t care about records, man,” he said. “I
prepare every game as if this is the game and so
there is no, ‘They haven’t won a game.’ I don’t
care how many games they have or haven’t won,
they got Pro Bowlers all over their football team
and they are going to bring it, that’s for sure.”
The Bengals are trying to avoid falling to 0-10
for the third time after doing it in 1993 and 2008.
First-year coach Zac Taylor believes things will get
better soon even if it doesn’t seem that way right
now.
“There’ll be a time — I can’t wait to look back
on it — and say, ‘Remember when all that stuff
happened?’” Taylor said. “We’ll get there. This is
one of the things we have to go through right now,
unfortunately. We’re going to ﬁght through it, and
there are going to be some positive things as this
season comes to an end.”
Finley II
Rookie Ryan Finley made his debut and had two
huge turnovers against the Ravens. His sideline
pass was picked off and returned 89 yards for a
touchdown, and he had a fumble also returned for
a score. Finley ﬁnished 16 of 30 for 167 yards with
a touchdown, one interception and a passer rating
of 66.9. The Bengals expect him to be better now
that he’s experienced a game.
“He’s getting used to playing NFL-caliber
football and not preseason football, real starting
football against a good defense,” offensive coordinator Brian Callahan said. “And so, his timing was
a little bit off. I think you’ll see a pretty dramatic
leap for him in game two, understanding what it’s
like to play at that speed.”
Remember me?
Taylor signed with Oakland coach Jon Gruden’s
Tampa Bay team as an undrafted quarterback out
of Nebraska in 2007. He was waived before the
See BENGALS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Tuesday Nov. 19
College Football
Ohio at Bowling Green, 7:30

Saturday, Nov. 23
College Football
Marshall at Charlotte, 3:30

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Cade Roberts (34) brings down Point Pleasant receiver Zane Wamsley during a Sept. 13 contest at Memorial Field
in Gallipolis, Ohio.

OVP lands 24 all-district football picks
Devils’ Roberts,
Eagles’ Oldaker
named Defensive
POYs; Penrod
shares D-4
coaching honors

Mention list in D-4 on
behalf of the Blue Devils.
Waverly senior running
back Payton Shoemaker
was named the Division
IV Offensive player of the
year.
The Eagles (8-3) qualiﬁed for their ﬁrst postseason appearance since
2001 and came away with
eight total selections in
Division VII after falling
35-7 to Newark Catholic
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
in the Region 27 opening
round.
Eastern junior lineA total of 24 people
backer Will Oldaker was
from the Ohio Valley Pubnamed the D-7 Defensive
lishing area were named
player of the year after
to the 2019 Ohio Prep
amassing 61 tackles, 29
Sports Writers Associatackles for loss and a pair
tion Southeast Ohio Allof interceptions.
District football teams
Oldaker was joined on
within six divisions, as
the ﬁrst team by junior
voted on by numerous
running backs Blake Newmedia outlets within the
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports land and Steven Fitzgersoutheast district of the
Eastern junior Will Oldaker (50) drags down Newark Catholic’s ald, junior offensive
Buckeye State.
Derek Hawk (2) near the line of scrimmage during the Eagles’ 35-7 lineman Jake Barber and
The OVP area prosetback on Nov. 9 in Newark, Ohio.
senior linebacker Mason
duced a pair of playoff
Dishong.
Third year GAHS
qualiﬁers from its six area tion choices, but the Blue
Senior Nick Little
frontman Alex Penrod
Devils also came away
programs, and both Galalso repeated as Division and sophomore Brayden
lia Academy and Eastern with both the Defensive
Smith were also chosen
IV COY in sharing this
player of the year and
were well rewarded for
to the Special Mention
year’s honors with Chris
a share of coach of the
making their respective
list in D-7 on behalf of the
year honors for a second Crabtree of Waverly.
postseason runs.
Eagles.
Roberts was joined on
straight postseason.
The Blue Devils (9-2)
Southern secured
Senior linebacker Cade the ﬁrst team by junior
appeared in their second
running back James Arm- three selections in DiviRoberts — a ﬁrst team
consecutive Division IV,
sion VII after putting
strong, junior offensive
selection last fall —
Region 15 postseason
together a 5-5 season.
replaced graduated team- lineman Riley Starnes,
before falling to Waverly
junior quarterback Noah Senior running back Trey
in the opening round, but mate Jacob Campbell as
Vanco, sophomore defen- McNickle and senior
the Blue and White led all the new D-4 Defensive
quarterback Gage Shuler
sive lineman Brayden
of Gallia and Meigs coun- POY after posting 111
Easton and senior punter were ﬁrst team honorees,
ties with nine total selec- tackles, six tackles for
while senior Matthias
loss, one sack, one forced Andrew Toler.
tions — including a pair
Stansberry was a special
Senior lineman Cole
fumble, one fumble recovof special honorees.
mention selection for the
GAHS came away with ery and one interception Rose and junior lineman
Tornadoes.
Zack Hemby were also
in 10 regular season
six ﬁrst team selections
chosen to the Special
and a pair of special men- games.
See OVP | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 17, 2019

Knights

blocks. Cottrill was next
with nine kills and one
block, followed by Milhoan with four kills and
From page 1B
two blocks. Warner had
two kills and one block
the match slip away.
for PPHS, while Rickard
“The ﬁrst game, we
added one kill and two
were on,” Cottrill said.
blocks. Dotson earned
“The second game we
one kill, one block and
got behind, we came
back, there were just little a team-best 30 assists
for Point Pleasant, while
things. Finishing blocks,
Jordan came up with a
making sure we were
moving our feet to get to match-best 16 digs.
For Bridgeport, Peyton
the digs, just little things,
Merica led the way with
but little things accumulate and that’s what loses 12 points and three aces,
followed by Violet Sickles
a match for you.”
The Lady Knights were with 11 points and four
led by Olivia Dotson and aces. Cambria Freeman
Baylee Rickard with nine had eight points and two
points and an ace apiece. aces in the win, Shea Hefner added seven points
Haley Milhoan marked
seven points and one ace and one ace, Jacey Lucas
collected ﬁve points
in the setback, Katelyn
and one ace, while Julia
Smith came up with ﬁve
Grifﬁth picked up a pair
points, while Brooke
of points.
Warner ended with four.
Hefner led BHS at
Addy Cottrill and Peyton
Jordan ﬁnished with two the net and on defense,
posting two dozen kills
service points apiece for
and 11 digs. Merica had
PPHS, with two aces by
12 kills and three blocks
Cottrill.
for the Lady Indians,
Tristan Wilson led the
Lady Knights’ net attack Addison Phillips chipped
in with four kills, while
with 13 kills and three

ton Durst and Cheyenne
Durst.
Milhoan noted that
playing at the state tournament will rank among
her favorite high school
experiences.
“It means so much,”
Milhoan said. “I’ve known
all of these girls my whole
life, so to start something
as meaningful as this,
and to play it with them,
I know it means just as
much to them, it means
the world to me. It’s been
one of my greatest experiences in high school for
sure. It sucks that it’s over
now, but all of the memories, I know they’ll last a
lifetime.”
Dotson — the school’s
all-time leader in assists,
surpassing 1,000 for her
career earlier this season
— is also thankful for the
memories while setting a
new standard for PPHS
volleyball.
“Being part of this team
has been awesome, making memories and setting
the bar high,” Dotson
said. “Making the states
for the very ﬁrst time,

Lucas earned three kills
and a match-best 37
assists.
Coach Cottrill acknowledged that nerves might
have played a part in her
team’s performance, but
was happy that the Lady
Knights achieved their
goal for the season.
“We were excited to be
here, we may have been
a little nervous coming
in, it’s a big forum, three
courts going side-by-side,
but it was a privilege to
be here,” Cottrill said.
“That was our season
goal, our goal was to
make it to states. Then
when we won sectionals,
it became ‘we can come
in and win states’, but
you have to get through
that ﬁrst match before
you can move on. It’s sad
for my ﬁve seniors, but
we have the rest of the
team coming back, we
just have to work hard
and move on.”
The ﬁve seniors Point
Pleasant will lose to
graduation include Haley
Milhoan, Olivia Dotson,
Peyton Jordan, Reming-

Sunday Times-Sentinel

it’s a great experience
with the team, we’ve put
effort and hard work in.”
Remington Durst also
talked about the Lady
Knights’ hard work to
make history, and wants
the program to keep
improving.
“It means a whole lot,
we’ve worked really hard
for it throughout the
year,” Remington Durst
said. “For the ﬁrst time,
coming my senior year
with my best friends, it
means a whole lot. I’m
hoping the girls who are
younger than us come
and set it higher.”
Cheyenne Durst also
hopes the team continues to progress in the
future, and reﬂected on
how far they’ve come.
“It’s honestly amazing,” said Cheyenne
Durst. “I remember
when we couldn’t even
go far in the postseason,
and now to come all this
way. Hopefully with the
upcoming group, they
can deﬁnitely place at
states next year.”
Jordan — the all-time

school-record holder in
digs for a career, also
reaching quadruple
digits earlier this fall —
acknowledged the special bond the team has
and how far the program
has come in just a few
years.
“It was a really great
experience, playing with
these girls for the last
ﬁve years,” Jordan said.
“Coming from where
we were freshman year,
barely getting out of
section, and senior year,
ending at state, it’s a
great experience and
great memories made. I
couldn’t ask for a better
team to be surrounded
by. I can’t wait to see the
team next year, and how
much we’ve grown.”
The Lady Knights will
have a chance to return
eight players from this
team, as they look to
follow up on their winningest season in school
history and their ﬁrstever state appearance.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Fire burns for Stewart as he chases another NASCAR title

Bengals
From page 1B

HOMESTEAD, Fla.
(AP) — Tony Stewart
was convalescing from a
nasty wreck, and he was
depressed because, as he
cracked, “if you live with
your mom and stepdad
for a month, you’ll be
depressed,” when he
took a phone call he was
sure was a prank.
His buddies had taken
turns messing with
Stewart, saying they
were A.J. Foyt or Mario
Andretti, before he ﬁnally stopped answering the
phone. Mom, though,
still picked up. Pam Boas
took a late-night call and
passed the phone to her
son.
“Sure, here we go,
which one of these
(jerks) is it now,” Stew-

start of training camp, a
move that surprised him
then but makes sense
now. Taylor was familiar
with Tampa Bay’s system because his college
coach, Bill Callahan,
was a close friend of
Gruden’s.
“I think they probably just brought me in
because I could call the
plays in the rookie minicamp,” Taylor said. “In
hindsight, those are the
things you start to ﬁgure
out as you start coaching. That made a little
bit of sense. They could
evaluate the other players
while I got out there and
called the plays correctly.
It’s all good.”

gray button-down shirt
emblazoned with logos
and a black Ford hat.
Gibbs wore a white,
button-down shirt and
black sports coat, more
ﬁtting for a night out
at a swanky Miami
Beach joint than a stroll
through the garage.
“This is how you dress
if you have one car in the
championship,” Stewart
joked before he turned to
Gibbs. “And this is how
you dress when you have
three. I walked in and
I’m like, are you going to
court today?”
Come Sunday, it’s
Stewart-Haas Racing’s
Kevin Harvick vs. the
Joe Gibbs Racing stable
of Martin Truex Jr.,
Denny Hamlin and Kyle
Busch.
In the pits, it’s Coach
vs. Smoke.
“To be able to compete against him for a
championship is a really
cool deal,” Stewart said.
“This whole year and
everything with the Hall
of Fame, all of it is really
special to be doing a lot

of this with Joe.”
Beating Gibbs would
feel pretty good, too.
Stewart took many
of the lessons learned
racing for a decade for
Gibbs with him when
he left and teamed with
Gene Haas to start their
eponymous race team in
2009. Stewart won Cup
titles for Gibbs in 2002
and 2005; and one as an
owner/driver in 2011.
The R-rated Stewart,
who is 48, learned how
to lead a team from the
God-fearing Gibbs, 30
years his senior.
“If we’re upset about
it, the whole organization gets upset,” Stewart
said. “You can be mad
and walk through the
whole shop and by the
end of the day everybody
is mad at the shop. You
walk through — and
we’ve had a bad weekend
— and you walk through
and you’re positive and
upbeat. By the end of the
day, everybody is positive and upbeat and looking forward to the next
weekend.”

of Symmes Valley was
named D-7 coach of the
year.
Both Meigs and River
From page 1B
Valley landed two players
apiece on the Division
South Gallia landed
two selections on the D-7 V squads after posting
identical 2-8 marks in the
squads with a 1-9 camregular season.
paign. Senior defensive
Sophomore quarterback
back Kyle Northup was a
ﬁrst team honoree, while Coulter Cleland was a
senior Justin Butler was a ﬁrst team selection and
special mention selection was joined by junior Abe
Lundy, who ended up as a
for the Rebels.
special mention honoree
Zane Heiss of Waterin D-5 for the Marauders.
ford was named the D-7
The Raiders had a
Offensive player of the
pair of special mention
year, while Rusty Webb

selections in seniors Cole
Young and Darian Peck.
Talyn Parker of Portsmouth was the Division
V Offensive player of the
year and Reid Carrico of
Ironton was named the
D-5 Defensive player of
the year.
Trevon Pendleton of
Ironton, Bruce Kalb of
Portsmouth and Mike
Smith of Wellston all
shared the D-5 coach of
the year honors.

art said. “So they hand
the phone over to me,
and I’m like, ‘Hey, Joe,
how the hell are you.’ He
goes, ‘Tony?’ And I’m
like, oh my God, it really
is Joe Gibbs.”
It was indeed the real
Joe Gibbs on the line,
and the NFL coachturned-NASCAR owner
was trying to strike a
deal with Stewart to
join his race team. They
would eventually meet in
Indianapolis — a negotiation that somehow
included Don Meredith
and Stewart’s bluff to run
a Top Fuel car — and
lay out the details of
the contract. Because
of some long-distance
phone tag, the ﬁnishing
touches became a bit

Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department
Annual Turkey Dinner
Saturday November 23rd
Serving starts at 5pm
Meigs Elementary School
Tickets: $8.00 available at the door
To pre-order your tickets contact:
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more complicated.
“I couldn’t ﬁnd him
lots of times,” Gibbs
said. “I would call the
girlfriend, and she would
tell me where he was
and everything. So about
the third time I called
the girlfriend, she goes,
‘That no good, rotten —
don’t you ever call this
house again.’ I went,
well, that was done.”
Those calls in the
late 1990s sparked a
lifelong connection that
has stretched through
even more girlfriends for
Stewart, NASCAR championships won together,
busted TVs, tough love,
media dustups, grief, a
professional breakup and
two more big milestones
coming up fast: They
will face each other as
owners Sunday in the
winner-take-all title
race, followed by a 2020
induction in the same
NASCAR Hall of Fame
class.
Heck, Stewart might
even spruce up for the
occasion. He dressed
Friday in a short sleeve,

OVP

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Hilltop's 43rd Annual We Offer Full Service
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Thursday, November 21st,
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Remember us for all your holiday
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turkey
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Choice of: Macaroni Salad or Coleslaw $8.00 for Children
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36 New Haven Rd
Mount Alto, WV 25264

Nightmare Before
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(304) 895-3477
www.hilltop-pizza.com

Closed Sundays and delivery is all day for our famous pizza , subs, wings and more!!!

Monday &amp; Tuesday - Closed
Wednesday - 12 pm - 8 pm
Thursday - 12 pm - 8 pm
Friday - 12 pm - 9 pm
Saturday - 12 pm - 9 pm
Sunday - 1 pm - 6 pm
OH-70158997

516 W. Main Street, Ripley, WV 25271

304-532-4230

facebook.com/iscreamsundaewv

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

2019 ALL-DISTRICT FOOTBALL TEAMS

Divisions IV, V and VII

Chesapeake, 5-7, 150,
Sr.; Michael Stitt,
Proctorville Fairland,
Division IV
5-8, 160, Sr.; Triston
OFFENSE
Diltz, Oak Hill, 5-9, 195,
First Team
Sr.; Brayden Campbell,
WR — Eli Lynch,
McDermott Northwest,
Washington C.H.
5-8, 165, So.; Talyn
Washington, 6-2,
Parker, Portsmouth,
180, Sr.; Will Futhey,
5-11, 195, Sr.; Ty Wiget,
Waverly, 6-5, 195, So.;
Minford, 5-9, 175, Sr.;
OL — Riley Starnes,
Makya Matthews,
Gallipolis Gallia
Wheelersburg, 5-9, 175,
Academy, 6-5, 295,
Sr.; All-Purpose — Rylan
Jr.; Draven Stodgel,
Molihan, Wellston,
Hillsboro, 6-0, 250, Sr.;
5-9, 170, Sr.; William
Andrew Welch, Waverly,
Journey, Portsmouth
6-0, 315, Jr.; QB —
West, 5-6, 151, Sr.; Evan
Noah Vanco, Gallipolis
Horsley, Wheelersburg,
Gallia Academy,
5-10, 205, Sr.; PK —
6-2, 195, Jr.; Haydn’
Avery Book, Ironton,
Shanks, Waverly, 6-3,
5-11, 180, Sr.
190, Jr.; RB — James
DEFENSE
Armstrong, Gallipolis
First Team
Gallia Academy, 6-0,
DL — Seth Fosson,
190, Jr.; Jacob Wells,
Ironton, 6-1, 235,
McArthur Vinton
Sr.; Junior Jones,
County, 5-10, 180, Sr.;
Ironton, 6-0, 240,
Payton Shoemaker,
Sr.; T.J. McGinnis,
Waverly, 5-9, 155, Sr.;
Ironton Rock Hill,
Christian Vance, New
6-2, 255, Sr.; Jordan
Lexington, 6-0, 181,
Williams, Proctorville
Sr.; All-Purpose — C.J.
Fairland, 6-3, 186,
Ratliff, New Lexington,
Jr.; Flint Barger, Oak
5-10, 165, Sr.; PK
Hill, 6-5, 230, Jr.;
— Grayson Diener,
Austin McKenzie,
Waverly, 6-3, 155, Sr.
Portsmouth, 5-7, 217,
DEFENSE
Sr.; Brady Warner,
First Team
Wheelersburg, 6-0,
DL — Brayden Easton,
225, Sr.; LB — Josey
Gallipolis Gallia
Kelly, Williamsport
Academy, 6-1, 185,
Westfall, 5-11, 187, Jr.;
So.; LB — Collier
Kaleb Easley, Albany
Brown, Washington
Alexander, 5-9, 185, Sr.;
C.H. Washington,
Luke Chapman, Albany
6-1, 215, Sr.; Chase
Alexander, 6-1, 230, Sr.;
Sluder, Washington
Reid Carrico, Ironton,
C.H. Washington,
6-3, 225, Jr.; Cameron
5-11, 205, Sr.; Cade
Deere, Ironton, 5-11,
Roberts, Gallipolis
185, Jr.; J.D. Brumfield,
Gallia Academy, 6-1,
Proctorville Fairland,
225, Sr.; Garitt Leisure,
5-9, 190, So.; Brock
Washington C.H.
Eggers, Wellston,
Washington, 6-1, 200,
5-10, 190, Jr.; Austin
Sr.; Mark Gallimore,
Henderson, Piketon,
Hillsboro, 5-11, 180, Sr.;
6-1, 200, Sr.; Evan Lintz,
Zeke Brown, Waverly,
McDermott Northwest,
6-3, 200, Jr.; DB — Zack
5-9, 225, So.; Christian
Radabaugh, McArthur
Keys, Portsmouth, 5-6,
Vinton County, 5-9,
156, Jr.; DB — Chanston
170, So.; P — Andrew
Moll, Williamsport
Toler, Gallipolis Gallia
Westfall, 5-6, 138,
Academy, 6-1, 185, Sr.
Sr.; Keaton Potter,
Offensive Player of
Oak Hill, 5-10, 160,
the Year: Payton
Sr.; Luke Bradford,
Shoemaker, Waverly.
Portsmouth West, 6-2,
Defensive Player of the
140, Jr.; Eric Purdy,
Year: Cade Roberts,
Portsmouth, 5-8, 153,
Gallipolis Gallia
Sr.; Matthew Risner,
Academy.
Minford, 5-10, 170, Jr.;
Co-Coaches of the Year:
P — Braxton Sammons,
Alex Penrod, Gallipolis
Wheelersburg, 5-11,
Gallia Academy; Chris
180, So.
Crabtree, Waverly.
Offensive Player of the
Special Mention
Year: Talyn Parker,
Ethan Rogers-Wright,
Portsmouth.
Washington C.H.
Defensive Player of the
Washington; Jamie
Year: Reid Carrico,
McCane, Washington
Ironton.
C.H. Washington; Isac
Payne, Circleville; Isaac Tri-Coaches of the Year:
Trevon Pendleton,
Daugherty, Lancaster
Ironton; Bruce Kalb,
Fairfield Union; Evan
Portsmouth; Mike
Valentine, Circleville
Smith, Wellston.
Logan Elm; Conner
Special Mention
Robinson, Circleville
Joey Truman,
Logan Elm; Zach
Williamsport Westfall;
Hemby, Gallipolis
Gabe Shanton,
Gallia Academy; Cole
Chillicothe Zane Trace;
Rose, Gallipolis Gallia
Drew Harris, Albany
Academy; Nick Pittman,
Alexander; Jordan
McArthur Vinton
Grizzle, Ironton; Collin
County; Jonathon
Freeman, Ironton;
Vanover, McArthur
Nate Cochran, Ironton;
Vinton County; Matt
Caden McFann, Ironton;
Bliss, Greenfield
Donald Richendollar,
McClain; Braden
Chesapeake; Larry
Wright, Greenfield
Fox, South Point;
McClain; J.T. Barnett,
Chance Gunther, South
Waverly; Spencer
Point; Logan Hankins,
Pollard, Waverly; Logyn
Ironton Rock Hill;
Ratliff, New Lexington;
Tristan Delong, Ironton
Brady Hanson, New
Rock Hill; Gavin Hunt,
Lexington.
Proctorville Fairland;
Cameron Kearns, Oak
Division V
Hill; Austin Campbell,
OFFENSE
Oak Hill; R.J. Kemp,
First Team
Wellston; Jonathon
WR — Hunter Smith,
Garvin, Wellston; Cole
Wellston, 6-5, 170,
Young, Bidwell River
Jr.; Bryce Wallace,
Valley; Darian Peck,
Portsmouth, 6-2, 155,
Bidwell River Valley;
Sr.; Drew Skaggs,
Abe Lundy, Pomeroy
Minford, 5-10, 155,
Meigs; Steven Salyer,
Jr.; Hunter Ruby,
Piketon; Sammy
Wheelersburg, 5-10,
Savage, Piketon; Joe
160, Sr.; OL — Noah
Igaz, Portsmouth
Davidson, Ironton,
West; Nathan Rivers,
6-5, 315, Sr.; Tucker
McDermott Northwest;
Carpenter, Ironton
Zane Gilley, McDermott
Rock Hill, 6-4, 280, Sr.,;
Northwest; Drew
Grant Gifford, South
Roe, Portsmouth; Ty
Point, 6-2, 270, Sr.;
Pendleton, Portsmouth;
Josh Bodey, Wellston,
Hunter Livingston,
6-5, 240, Sr.; Caleb
Minford; Tyler Miller,
Crabtree, McDermott
Minford; Gage Adkins,
Northwest, 6-1, 280, Jr.;
Wheelersburg; Luke
Levi Warren, Minford,
Miller, Wheelersburg.
5-11, 295, Sr.; Gavin
Welch, Wheelersburg,
Division VII
6-3, 265, Sr.; QB —
OFFENSE
Gage Salyers, Ironton,
First Team
6-1, 205, Sr.; Coulter
WR — Ethan Huffman,
Cleland, Pomeroy
Franklin Furnace
Meigs, 6-1, 185, So.;
Green, 6-0, 165, Jr.;
Levi Gullion, Piketon,
Tre McCoy, Corning
6-0, 165, So.; Elijah
Miller, 5-7, 155, So.;
Vogelsong-Lewis,
Nick Fouss, Waterford,
Minford, 5-10, 175,
5-11, 155, Sr.; OL —
Jr.; RB — Kamren
Gavan Yates, Willow
Harless, Chesapeake,
Wood Symmes Valley,
6-1, 165, Sr.; Will Todd,

6-0, 240, So.; Seth
Imes, Franklin Furnace
Green, 6-3, 265, Sr.;
Jake Barber, Reedsville
Eastern, 6-0, 210, Jr.;
Kyle Beasley, Beaver
Eastern, 6-0, 185, So.;
Haden Offenberger,
Waterford, 5-7, 170, Jr.;
QB — Colby Bartley,
Corning Miller, 5-8,
165, Sr.; Gage Shuler,
Racine Southern,
5-10, 155, Sr.; Zane
Heiss, Waterford, 5-10,
170, Sr.; RB — Josh
Ferguson, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 5-10,
175, Jr.; Blake Newland,
Reedsville Eastern,
5-7, 170, Jr.; Steven
Fitzgerald, Reedsville
Eastern, 5-10, 205, Jr.;
Trey McNickle, Racine
Southern, 6-0, 185, Sr.
DEFENSE
First Team
DL — Cole Miller,
Waterford, 6-0, 165,
Jr.; LB — Caleb Mullins,
Willow Wood Symmes
Valley, 6-1, 210, Jr.; Will
Oldaker, Reedsville
Eastern, 6-3, 260,
Jr.; Mason Dishong,
Reedsville Eastern, 6-2,
200, Sr.; Joe Pantelidis,
Waterford, 6-2, 180,
Jr.; Braidan Haney,
Sciotoville East, 5-10,
200, Sr.; DB — Kyle
Northup, Crown City
South Gallia, 6-0, 164,
Sr.; Logan Clemmons,
Beaver Eastern, 5-10,
160, Jr.; Jack Leith,
Willow Wood Symmes
Valley, 6-3, 170, Sr.
Offensive Player of the
Year: Zane Heiss,
Waterford.
Defensive Player of the
Year: Will Oldaker,
Reedsville Eastern.
Coach of the Year: Rusty
Webb, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley.
Special Mention
Tanner McComas, Willow
Wood Symmes Valley;
Kylan McClain, Corning
Miller; Nick Little,
Reedsville Eastern;
Brayden Smith,
Reedsville Eastern;
Matthias Stansberry,
Racine Southern; Justin
Butler, South Gallia;
Tyler Hanshaw, Beaver
Eastern; Dillion Mattox,
Beaver Eastern; Bailey
McGraw, Waterford;
Haydon Reynolds,
Waterford; Chase Coyle,
Sciotoville East; Logan
Emnett, Portsmouth
Notre Dame; Kris
Walters, Manchester.

Sunday, November 17, 2019 3B

Martin signs with WVSU volleyball

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Peri Martin, seated second from left, will be continuing her volleyball career
after signing with West Virginia State University on Wednesday, Nov. 13, during a ceremony held at
the library inside Gallia Academy High School. Martin — a 3-time All-OVC and all-district selection,
as well as a 2-time all-state honoree and District 13 offensive player of the year recipient — plans to
major in civil engineering and currently owns a 4.0 grade-point average. Peri is joined in front by his
parents, Leanna and Rick Martin of Gallipolis. Sister and current WVSU volleyball player Grace Martin
is also seated at the right. Standing in back, from left, are GAHS athletic director Adam Clark, GAHS
volleyball coach Janice Rosier, and strength and conditioning coach Josh Perry. The Division II Yellow
Jackets are based in Institute and are members of the Mountain East Conference.

Samson signs with West Liberty wrestling

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Zac Samson, seated center, will be continuing his wrestling career after signing
with West Liberty University on Wednesday, Nov. 13, during a ceremony held at the commons area
inside Point Pleasant High School. Samson — a 3-time state qualifier, 2-time team captain and
152-pound placer on last year’s Class AA state championship squad — plans to major in business
and currently owns a 3.6 grade-point average. Zac is joined in front by his parents, Wendell and Kelli
Samson of Point Pleasant. Standing in back, from left, are PPHS Principal Bill Cottrill, PPHS assistant
coach James Casto, PPHS assistant coach Jed Ott, PPHS assistant coach David Bonecutter, PPHS
volunteer assistant Andy Lambert and PPHS head coach John Bonecutter. The Division II Hilltoppers
are based in Wheeling and are members of the Mountain East Conference.

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Give You Up"
Ray settles his final score
Love. Luck." (SP) (N)
Prince For Tomorrow You
(N)
(N)
and revisits the past.
Shall Be King" (N)
(:05)

�4B Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

ROGERS BASEMENT
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
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newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
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LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the City
Manager, City of Gallipolis, 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 until Noon on December 5, 2019 and will be opened and
read immediately thereafter for the:

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Blue Fountain Lift Station Pump Replacement
Completion Date - 90 days from Notice to Proceed
This project consists of renovation of the Blue Fountain Lift
Station and includes the installation of two submersible pumps
and equipment, control panels and electrical wiring, valve box,
air release valve, and piping.
Bids must be in accordance with specifications and on forms
available for review at the Gallipolis City Manager's Office at
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 and can be obtained
at the office of the Gallipolis City Manager, 333 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 for a fee.
Each bidder is required to furnish with its proposal, a Bid Guaranty and Contract Bond in accordance with Section 153.54 of
the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form,
shall be issued by a Surety Company or corporation licensed
in the State of Ohio to provide said surety.
Each Proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties submitting the proposal and all persons interested therein.
Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences on projects of similar size and complexity.
All contractors and subcontractors involved with the project
will, to the extent practicable, use Ohio Products, materials,
services, and labor in the implementation of their project.
Additionally, contractor compliance with the equal employment
opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code Chapter
123, the Governor's Executive Order of 1972, and Governor's
Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on Public
Improvements in Gallia County, Ohio as determined by the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Wage and Hour
Division.
City of Gallipolis reserves the right to waive irregularities and
to reject any or all bids.
BY ORDER OF
Eugene Greene, City Manager
City of Gallipolis, Ohio

The Daily Times publishes six days a week,
Monday-Saturday. The Community Common is our Sunday
publication. In addition to our print products the newspaper
has a robust website, www.portsmouth-dailytimes.com, and
social media presence. We serve Portsmouth, Ohio and surrounding communities with a combined circulation of over
35,000 readership, 120,000 monthly viewership and over
15,000 social media presence.
Our editor will be an individual who understands how to connect content to our readers by providing depth and context to
the news we deliver. The successful candidate will be someone who can mentor a staff and develop an open dialogue
with readers and community leaders.
In addition, our editor is part of the management team of the
newspaper and is a part of the face of our newspaper in the
communities we serve.
Additionally, s/he will:
Have a solid understanding of the fundamentals of local
news.
Strive to be the leading information source in our communities.
Understand the value of social media and use it as much as
an engagement tool as a promotional tool.
Constantly search for new ways to tell stories and present
news, both online and in print.
Demonstrate integrity and dedication through a comprehensive approach to balanced and credible journalism.
Be a constant, contributing reporter.
Write 2-3 editorials each week on local or state issues that
impact Scioto County.
If you value local journalism, love nothing better than helping
journalists grow in their craft, believe newspapers – both
online and print – remain the foundation of an informed community, and are looking for a great community in which to
live, we want to hear from you.
Email us your resume, five working links to some of your latest and best reporting (editorials, too, if you have them), and
a cover letter explaining why you’re the best person for this
job. Please send those documents to Hope R. Comer,
hcomer@aimmediamidwest.com

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
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510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679

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740-446-2342

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 17, 2019 5B

Thundering Herd hammers Louisiana Tech, 31-10
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— For a blackout, things
ended up awfully bright
for the Thundering Herd.
The Marshall football
team ran for 192 yards,
forced two turnovers and
limited visiting Louisiana
Tech to just three points
over the ﬁnal three quarters of regulation Friday
night during an impressive 31-10 Conference
USA victory at Joan C.
Edwards Stadium.
The Thundering Herd
(7-3, 5-1 CUSA East)
moved into a ﬁrst place
tie with Florida Atlantic in the East Division
standings while also
handing the Bulldogs
(8-2, 5-1 CUSA West)
their only league loss
thus far this fall.
The potential Conference USA championship
matchup ended up falling on Marshall’s annual
75-game, a tribute weekend that marks the anniversary of the plane crash
that killed 75 members of
the program and nearly
ended MU football back
in 1970.
With fans encouraged
to wear black as the Herd
broke out their traditional black uniform tops for
this contest, it appeared
early on that the LTU
was up for the challenge.
The Red and Blue
struck ﬁrst as Justin
Henderson capped the
third offensive drive of
regulation with a 5-yard
touchdown run, ending
an 8-play, 55-yard drive
that resulted in a 7-0

lead with 9:07 left in the
opening canto.
The hosts answered
with a 9-play, 60-yard
drive that ended with
Justin Rohrwasser missing a 31-yard ﬁeld goal
wide to the right, but
Bailey Hale returned the
favor three drives later
after missing from 42
yards out early in the second frame — leaving the
contest at 7-0.
Rohrwasser redeemed
himself by connecting on
a 44-yarder with 6:58 left
in the half, trimming the
deﬁcit down to 7-3.
The Herd then secured
a permanent lead on
their next drive after covering 52 yards in three
plays, with Willie Johnson hauling in an 18-yard
corner lob pass from
Isaiah Green at the 4:25
mark for a 10-7 edge.
Both teams traded
punts and Louisiana Tech
was on its way to a third
straight punt, but a bad
snap resulted in a 12-yard
loss on fourth-and-5 —
giving Marshall possession at the LTU 1-yard
line.
Brenden Knox covered
that single yard on the
second play of that next
drive, allowing MU to
secure a 17-7 advantage
with 40 seconds left in
the half.
The Herd committed the ﬁrst turnover
of the game after using
a 10-play drive to start
the second half, then the
Bulldogs countered by
covering 65 yards in 14
plays before settling for
a Hale 38-yard ﬁeld goal
for a 17-10 contest with

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Marshall quarterback Isaiah Green (17) shakes off a pair of
Louisiana Tech defenders on his way into the end zone during
the third quarter of Friday night’s Conference USA matchup in
Huntington, W.Va.

Marshall wideout Willie Johnson, left, hauls in a touchdown pass
over a Louisiana Tech defender during the second quarter of Friday
night’s Conference USA matchup in Huntington, W.Va.

4:04 left in the third.
The Green and White,

however, started putting the outcome away

from there as the hosts
covered 75 yards in eight
plays. Green rumbled
17 yards and shook off a
pair of tacklers to reach
the end zone with 33
seconds left in the third
period for a 24-10 MU
lead.
Tavante Beckett recovered a fumble on Louisiana Tech’s next drive,
then Knox capped an
8-play, 40-yard drive with
a 4-yard scamper at the
6:25 mark of the fourth
— extending the lead out
to 31-10.
Steven Gilmore came
up with an interception
on the Bulldogs’ ﬁnal
offensive drive, and the
hosts simply ran off the
ﬁnal 3:32 of regulation
by picking up a pair of
ﬁrst downs before a kneel
down wrapped up the
Herd’s ﬁfth consecutive
triumph.
It was just the thirdever meeting between
the two programs, including the ﬁrst since the
teams met in the 2014
CUSA Championship
won by MU. The Herd
now leads the series by a
2-1 count.
Marshall claimed a
22-18 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and outgained
the guests by a 405-261
overall margin, which
included a sizable 19267 edge on the ground.
The hosts were plus-1 in
turnover differential and
accounted for seven of
the 10 points scored off
of takeaways.
Knox led Marshall with
113 rushing yards and
two scores on 25 carries, followed by Sheldon

Evans with 38 yards on
six attempts.
Green ran for 24 yards
and a score on nine totes
while also completing
14-of-26 passes for 213
yards, including a touchdown and an interception.
Obi Obialo made his
long-awaited season
debut by hauling in a
team-high eight catches
for 146 yards.
Beckett led the MU
defense with 13 tackles,
followed by Omari Cobb
and Darius Hodge with
nine and seven stops
respectively. Fermin Silva
also came away with the
hosts’ lone sack of the
night.
Henderson led LTU
with 87 rushing yards
on 21 carries, while
Aaron Allen completed
19-of-32 passes for 159
yards. Smoke Harris led
the wideouts with nine
catches for 91 yards.
L’Jarius Sneed recorded 13 tackles to lead the
Bulldog defense. Connor
Taylor and Milton Williams were next with 10
stops apiece. Michael
Sam came away with an
interception in the third
quarter.
Louisiana Tech entered
Friday night’s matchup
averaging 38.1 points per
game offensively.
Marshall completed
the road portion of its
2019 regular season on
Saturday when it travels
to Charlotte for a Conference USA East Division
matchup at 3:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Myles Garrett, helmet a ‘weapon,’ banned for rest of season
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Myles Garrett is done
playing for the Cleveland
Browns this season. The
NFL isn’t saying when
the star defensive end
will play again.
He was suspended for
at least the rest of the
regular season and postseason — if the Browns
qualify. The league discipline Friday came hours
after Garrett swung an
opponent’s helmet and
used it “as a weapon” by
striking Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph
in the head.
The violent outburst
in the ﬁnal seconds of
Thursday’s nationally
televised game against
the Steelers resulted in
the longest suspension for
a single on-ﬁeld infraction
in league history. Tennessee’s Albert Haynesworth
was suspended ﬁve
games in 2006.
The league’s No. 1
overall pick in 2017 was
also ﬁned an undisclosed
amount. Garrett must
meet with Commissioner
Roger Goodell before his
reinstatement is considered.
Until then, the defen-

sive end’s career is on
hold.
After wrestling
Rudolph to the ground as
the Browns were closing
out a rare win over their
rivals, Garrett ripped off
the quarterback’s helmet
and clobbered him on top
of the head, triggering a
brawl that capped another physical game between
the AFC North teams.
“I made a terrible mistake,” Garrett said in a
statement Friday. “I lost
my cool and what I did
was selﬁsh and unacceptable. I know that we are
all responsible for our
actions and I can only
prove my true character through my actions
moving forward. I want
to apologize to Mason
Rudolph, my teammates,
our entire organization, our fans and to the
NFL. I know I have to
be accountable for what
happened, learn from my
mistake and I fully intend
to do so.”
Rudolph, who suffered
a concussion earlier this
season, avoided serious
injury and said after the
game the attack was
“cowardly and bush

league.” That sentiment
was shared across the
league and sports world.
The NFL said Garrett
“violated unnecessary
roughness and unsportsmanlike conduct rules,
as well as ﬁghting and
removing an opponent’s
helmet and using it as a
weapon.”
Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, who was
trying to separate Garrett and Rudolph, was
suspended three games
without pay and also
ﬁned for punching and
kicking Garrett. Browns
defensive tackle Larry
Ogunjobi was suspended
for one game. He shoved
Rudolph to the ground
from behind during the
melee.
The suspended players
have three business days
to appeal their penalties.
The Steelers and
Browns were ﬁned
$250,000 each.
Browns coach Freddie
Kitchens met with Garrett at the team’s training
facility Friday and said
the 23-year-old expressed
more remorse.
“He understands that
he let himself down, he

let his teammates down
and he let his organization down,” Kitchens
said. “We look at our
team as a family, and in a
family, sometimes family
members make mistakes.
You support them in
every way that you can,
even if it is an egregious
mistake. We know who
Myles is as a person. We
know who Myles is and
the character that Myles
has, and that is under no
circumstance what he
wants to be portrayed as.
We will support him.”
There was a ripple
effect to Garrett’s act,
causing embarrassment
to the league and both
teams.
“There is no place for
that in football and that is
not reﬂective of the core
values we strive for as an
organization,” Browns
owners Dee and Jimmy
Haslam said in a statement. “We sincerely apologize to Mason Rudolph
and the Pittsburgh Steelers.”
Added Steelers President Art Rooney II: “We
must always maintain
composure, no matter
what happens. After

a hard-fought game
between two rivals, it is
a shame the game ended
that way.”
Rudolph’s agent, Tim
Younger, said he’ll explore
legal action against Garrett. Cleveland police
say no police report or
charges have been ﬁled.
“There are many risks
an NFL QB assumes with
every snap taken on the
ﬁeld,” Younger wrote on
Twitter. “Being hit on
your uncovered head by
a helmet being swung by
a 275 lb DE is not one of
them.”
The brawl overshadowed a big 21-7 win for a
Cleveland franchise just a
few years removed from
a winless season. The
Browns (4-6) have moved
into the playoff race but
will now be without their
best defensive player.
They are 2-0 in their
division for the ﬁrst time
since league realignment
alignment in 2002, the
last time they made the
playoffs.
This was not the only
nasty hit in the 135th
game between Pittsburgh
and Cleveland. Browns
free safety Damarious

Randall delivered a
helmet-to-helmet shot on
Steelers rookie receiver
Diontae Johnson, who
left with a concussion.
Randall was ejected.
The Browns and Steelers play again in Pittsburgh on Dec. 1.
Although Garrett has
been ﬁned more than
$50,000 this season, ﬁrst
for punching Tennessee
tight end Delanie Walker
and then for two late hits
on New York Jets quarterback Trevor Siemian,
this sort of attack was out
of character for the selfproclaimed paciﬁst and
poet. Last month, Garrett
didn’t retaliate after a fan
wanting a photograph
punched him in the face
while stopped in trafﬁc
downtown.
The loss of Garrett
is a devastating blow
to Cleveland’s defense.
He’s one of the league’s
edge rushers and the
Browns are already missing end Olivier Vernon,
who missed his second
game Thursday with a
knee injury. But beyond
the football, the Browns
have taken a shot to their
image.

Classifieds
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�COMICS

6B Sunday, November 17, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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see what’s brewing on the

job market.
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jobmatchohio.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 17, 2019 7B

O’Bleness Hospital

WE
BELIEVE IN

CHANGING
FOR GOOD

At OhioHealth, we’re committed to rising to the occasion, every occasion. As a part of
our growing family of experts across the state, Physician Group Heritage College and
O’Bleness Hospital have expanded and improved care. Our surgical, cancer, specialty
and primary care providers can offer you more than ever before. We believe in the
greatness of southeast Ohio, and we know you’re a believer, too.

OH-70159146

Visit OhioHealth.com/OBleness to see all the changes we’ve made for the good of our region.

© OhioHealth Inc. 2019. All rights reserved. FY20-190545. 09/19.

�8B Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

During the month of November, low-dose CT
lung cancer screenings are $75 for those who
qualify and FREE for qualifying VETERANS.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among men and women in the United States.
When caught early, survival rates increase dramatically. Pleasant Valley Hospital is committed
to providing you and your family with the care needed to live a long and healthy life. Preventive
care and health screenings are a critical part of providing that care. Please call today to see if
you qualify for a low-dose CT, lung cancer screening. It could save your life.

&gt;

LUNG
CANCER
DEATHS

COLON
PROSTATE
BREAST
COMBINED

Each year, more people die of lung cancer than of
colon, breast, and prostate cancers combined.

Lung Cancer is the Most
Common Cancer Killer

Are you eligible?
You must be

55-77 years old
You must have smoked
at least...
1 PACK PER DAY
FOR 30 YEARS

of Men &amp; Women in the United States &amp; world.

2 PACKS PER DAY
FOR 15 YEARS

Every year...

200,000
WILL DIE
160,000

DIAGNOSED

WITH LUNG CANCER
FROM LUNG CANCER

that’s

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LUNG CANCER HAS AN

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SURVIVAL
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FOR 10 YEARS

Even if you quit smoking,
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You must have quit in the past 15 years.

Talk with your
doctor to
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OH-70157652

when detected and treated early*

*In a 10-year study conducted by the New England Journal of Medicine, lung cancer survivor rates increased by 88%
when detected and treated early.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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