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                  <text>White
appointed to
Commission

Wahama state
title top sports
story of year

Meigs teen
selected for
program

LOCAL s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

FEATURES s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 25, Volume 49

Gay marriage
legalized
nationwide

Sunday, June 28, 2015 s $2

Airport to receive $1M grant

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Internet and cable service
at the home of Rhonda Moon and Wendy Gilkey
went down Friday morning for repairs just as
news of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling striking down same-sex marriage bans was breaking
nationwide.
Moon and Gilkey, of Meigs County, were
the ﬁrst same-sex couple to be legally married
in Mason County, W.Va., last October when it
became legal for them to wed in West Virginia —
but not in their home state.
Moon said she found out about the historic decision when her mother-in-law called and said, “Let
me be the ﬁrst to congratulate you.”
“I said, ‘What are you talking about?’” Moon said,
relaying the moment she learned her marriage would
now be legally recognized in Ohio and every other state.
Ohio’s ban on same-sex marriage was voted
upon in 2004. Friday’s 5-4 ruling on the cases by
the U.S. Supreme Court included challenges that
started in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati. After
last October’s ruling legalizing gay marriage in
West Virginia, several same-sex couples from the
Buckeye State began traveling to the neighboring
Mountain State to be married.
Those Ohio couples will now have their marriages in West Virginia recognized in their home
state and beyond. The ruling places them on level
footing with heterosexual couples.
Still, Moon said she didn’t quite believe it until
President Barack Obama interrupted morning
television to respond to the announcement.
“My grandson was here and I brought him in to
watch. I said, ‘You need to pay attention to this
because this affects your life and everyone else’s
life,’” she said.
See MARRIAGE | 5A

Dean Wright | Times-Sentinel

According to Karen Sprague, Gallia County Administrator, the Ohio Department of Transportation highly prioritized the rehabilitation of
the Gallia-Meigs Airport runway, saying that it must be one of the first things upon which the county should consider spending money
and maintenance time.

Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
funded to restore runway
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS —
Gallia-Meigs Regional
Airport is expected to
receive roughly $1 million in federal funding to
restore its runway.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown made the
announcement late
Thursday. According to
information provided by
Brown’s ofﬁce, the U.S.
Department of Transportation and the Federal
Aviation Administration

awarded the money.
“Support for community airports is key to the
safety of travelers and
the ﬂow of commerce,”
Brown said. “This award
will give Gallia-Meigs
Regional Airport the
resources to make needed

improvements that will
beneﬁt those that rely on
the local airport and its
services.”
Karen Sprague, Gallia
County Adminstrator,
was pleasantly surprised
as she noted the grant
application process can
be “a long one.” Sprague
said she ﬁled the ﬁnal
grant application June
18. She expected the
announcement to be
made sometime in
August.
See GRANT | 5A

‘The Raineys’ return for Gallia concerts
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

Photo courtesy of Amber Snowden

GALLIPOLIS — A husband and
wife duo will be making their gospel
musical rounds in local areas before
and after performing at River Recreation Festival this coming Independence Day weekend.
The Raineys, from Harrisburg, Ill.,
will play at Grace United Methodist
Church at 6 p.m. July 1, and again
July 5 in Hamdon at Puritan Free
Will Baptist Church for Sunday
morning service. They will then
travel to Addison for a 6 p.m. show
at Addison Freewill Baptist Church.
The pair will also be making appearances at Gospel Day during River
Rec Fest on July 3.
Courtesy photo
James Rainey, 51, was born in
The Raineys take the opportunity to perform with their friend, Randy Shafer (middle),
any time they are in the same town together. James and Laura Rainey will be performing Richmond, Ind., but lived in Gallipoat River Recreation Festival, as well as putting on a concert at Grace United Methodist lis as a teenager. His father, James

The scene outside the U.S. Supreme Court shortly after the
court struck down same-sex marriage bans.

See CONCERT | 6A

Lakin proposal addresses pay for officers

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 5A

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

— SPORTS
Recap: 1B
Outdoors: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 7, 8A
Classified: 7B
Comics: 3C

Church in Gallipolis on July 1; Puritan Freewill Baptist Church in Hamdon on July 5; and
Addison Freewill Baptist Church, also on July 5.

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

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
Although there were differing opinions
concerning proposed changes to the
Lakin Correctional Center, the need
for higher wages for correctional
ofﬁcers was one issue upon which
everyone seemed to agree.
At a meeting last week in Point
Pleasant, hosted by Mason County
Commissioners Rick Handley,
Miles Epling and Tracy Doolittle,
personnel from the West Virginia
Division of Corrections, state

“Some of my staff have second jobs, some get medical cards,
they get food stamps, they get HUD housing.”
— Lori Nohe
Lakin warden

legislators and members of the
public spoke on the issue of wages
for the ofﬁcers.
In West Virginia, correctional
ofﬁcers start out at a salary of
$22,500 a year — about $15,000 less
than what their counterparts make at
federal facilities. In addition, it costs

the state between $25,000 to $26,000
to care for one inmate in its prison
system, which is a few thousand
dollars more than some correctional
ofﬁcers are paid annually working to
care for those inmates.
See LAKIN | 6A

�LOCAL

2A Sunday, June 28, 2015

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

JUDITH JOHNSON
GALLIPOLIS — Judith
“Judy” Johnson, 83, of
Gallipolis, passed away
Friday, June 26, 2015, at
her residence.
She was born Dec. 22,
1931, in Frankfort, Ohio,
daughter of the late Roger
and Ruth Garrison Acton.
Judy married David R.
Johnson and he survives
her. She retired from the
Mine Safety and Health
Administration and former co-owner of Tranquility Christmas Tree Farm,
in Jackson, Ohio. She
was a member of Faith
Baptist Church and the
Ross County Genealogical
Society.
Surviving are her husband, David R. Johnson,
of Gallipolis; a grandson,
Jonathan David Dennis,
of Ashley, Ind.; two greatgranddaughters, Juliana
and Rayland, of Ashley; a
brother, Rodney Acton, of

Washington Court House,
Ohio; a niece, Lynne
(Greg) McPherson, of
West Jefferson, Ohio; two
special great-nieces; and a
sister-in-law, Evelyn Buck,
of Fort Wayne, Ind.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
by her ﬁrst husband,
Bill Dennis; a son, William Todd Dennis; and
a stepdaughter, Karla
D’Augustine.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015,
at Faith Baptist Church
with Pastor Jim Lusher
and Pastor Jeff Reed ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
at Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may
call Willis Funeral Home
between 5-7 p.m. Tuesday, June 30, 2015.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

GROVER WILSON WARD
PHOENIX, Ariz. —
Grover Wilson Ward, 80,
of Phoenix, passed away
peacefully at home June
16, 2015.
He is survived by his
wife of 52 years, Norma
(Morris-Ward); son
Alan (Patricia) Johnson;
daughter Debra Amey;
ﬁve grandchildren; ﬁve
great-grandchildren; and
brothers Glenn Ward, of
Rio Grande, Ohio, and
Tom Hayes, of Avon Lake,

Ohio.
He was preceded in
death by his daughter
Lisa Brinson.
Grover served his country as a U.S. Marine for
31 years and retired as a
master gunnery sergeant.
He will be greatly missed
by his loving family,
many friends and his two
beloved Greyhounds.
Arrangements entrusted to Whitney &amp; Murphy
Funeral Home.

GALLIA CHURCH CALENDAR
SUNDAY, JUNE 28

ADDISON — Sunday School, 10 a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.,
Addison Freewill Baptist Church. Pastor Rick Barcus will preach.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light” Worship in the Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:45
a.m., Evening Worship, 6 p.m.; First Church of the Nazarene,
1110 First Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.
CROWN CITY — Jason Adams will be preaching at Dickey
Chapel Church. Services will begin at 6 p.m. There will be singing by Covered by Love.

BOWEN
BARBOURSVILLE, W.Va. — Frances Forth
Bowen, 86, of Barboursville, W.Va. died Saturday,
June 27, 2015 at home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

her home following an extended illness.
Service will be 5 p.m. Sunday, June 28, 2015, at
Casto Funeral Home Chapel, Evans, with Pastor
Dwight Baker ofﬁciating. Visitation will be from
3 p.m. until time of service Sunday at the funeral
home. Committal service will be 10 a.m. Monday,
June 29, 2015, at Creston Cemetery.

BOWERS
GALLIPOLIS — Carol S. Bowers, 65, of Gallipolis, died Wednesday morning, June 24, 2015, at her
residence.
Services are at the convenience of the family.
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home is assisting
the family.

HOLLAND
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Chrissi Marie Holland,
33, of Huntington, passed away Wednesday, June
24, 2015, at home.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Monday, June 29,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Visitation will be 10-11 a.m. Monday,
June 29, 2015, at the funeral home.

DIXON
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Zechariah Charles
Dixon, 28, of Huntington, W.Va. died Tuesday, June
23, 2015.
Funeral service will be conducted 3 p.m. Monday,
June 29, 2015 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, Ohio.
Visitation will be held 1-3 p.m. at Hall Funeral
Home, Proctorville, Ohio.
GRATE
RUTLAND — Herman Lewis Grate, 93, of Rutland, Ohio died June 27, 2015.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday, July 1,
2015 at 11 a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Entombment will follow at Miles
Cemetery. Visiting hours will be Tuesday from 6-8
p.m. at the funeral home.
HICKMAN
EVANS, W.Va. — Betty Jane (Nicholson) Hickman, 71, of Evans, passed away June 25, 2015, at

Gallia-Vinton
Board meetings

weeks surrounding Independence Day to help ensure a
sufﬁcient blood supply now
and throughout the summer, as
RIO GRANDE — The Records blood donations often decline
during the summer months.
Commission meeting of the
Gallia-Vinton Educational Service You can donate at the following
locations: Middleport, Church
Center Governing Board will be
of Christ Family Life Center,
4:45 p.m. June 29, followed by
437 Main St., Wednesday, July
the regular monthly meeting at
1 from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; Gal5 p.m., at the University of Rio
lipolis, Ohio Valley Bank, 143
Grande, Wood Hall, Room 131.
Third Avenue, Thursday, July 2
Call (740) 245-0593 for more
from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
details.
River of Life United Methodist
Church, 35 Hillview Dr., Friday,
July 3 from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.;
and New Haven, American
Legion 140, 140 Mill Street,
Tuesday, July 7 from 11:30 a.m.
OHIO VALLEY — The Ameri- to 5 p.m.Eligible donors are
can Red Cross urges eligible
encouraged to choose their day
donors to donate blood in the
to make a difference. Donors of

Red Cross Urges
Blood Donations

CONTACT US

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

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

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

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

I wish I could turn back the clock…
I would ﬁnd you and I could have
loved you longer, Larry

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

60593034

It’s hard to believe it has been a year
that my “best friend” has left this world
to be with our maker
I miss him with every breath I take
Pastor Jim and Mike Young;
you made Larry’s day with ALL your visits!
His Middleport Masonic Lodge
and all the local lodges…”Thank You”
Donna Wilson “our angel from God”,
Ace Hardware, my Quilt group..and everyone else,
a heartfelt “thank you”
for all the kind words and donations
A special thank you to Guy and Mary Kaye S.,
Mike L., Greg &amp; Micki R., and Tom &amp; Roxann R.
for all your special help for us…

A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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

“Careers Close To Home”

740-596-0896 304-773-5015
McArthur, Ohio

Genealogical
society open house
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Genealogical Society,
OGS Chapter, will will have an
open house between 11 a.m. and
3 p.m. July 3 at their new location
at 459 Second Ave. Refreshments
will be served. There will a drawing for a ﬂeur de lis canister set.

(7-1-14)

Telephone: 740-446-2342

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

all blood types, but especially
those with types O negative,
A negative and B negative, are
needed. To make an appointment to give blood, download
the Red Cross Blood Donor
App, visit redcrossblood.org or
call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800733-2767).

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Larry M. Morgan

(USPS 436-840)

NANCE
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Terry Allen Nance, 56, of
New Haven, passed away June 25, 2015, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Graveside service with military rites will be 2:30
p.m. Monday, June 29, 2015, at Moore’s Chapel
Cemetery, Ashton, W.Va., with Pastor Ted Nance
ofﬁciating. Visitation will be noon to 1 p.m. Monday
at the funeral home. Arrangements provided by
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.

GALLIA LOCAL BRIEFS

From the wife (Theresa) of the “late”
Civitas Media, LLC

KEATON
WHITEHALL, Ohio — Odrey J. Sowards Keaton,
83, of Whitehall, Ohio, formerly of Proctorville,
Ohio, died Wednesday, June 24, 2015, after a long
battle with cancer.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Sunday, June 28,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, and ofﬁciated by Jerry Stephens. Burial will
follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation
will be 1-2 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Mason, WV

ENROLL
TODAY!

Summer Quarter
Begins July 6th

877-696-8741
Toll Free

*Septic Tank Cleaning
*Portable Toilet Rental

Call Us Today!
60590778

“FEEL THE
DIFFERENCE”
GALLIPOLIS CAREER
COLLEGE
740-446-4367
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools
Reg# 1274B

Zurcher is new
pastor at Heath UMC
MIDDLEPORT —Heath United Methodist
Church, located on South 3rd Avenue, wishes
to invite everyone to attend Sunday morning
worship service at 10:30 a.m. Pastor Rebecca
Zurcher, newly appointed supply pastor at the
Church, will be presenting her first sermon.
Many remember Zurcher as a vibrant and dedicated teacher of young children who taught
for many years at Middleport Elementary and
Meigs Local School. Now retired from teaching,
she is also a certified lay speaker, and this is her
first assignment as a pastor.

NOW
ENROLLING!
Adult Center:
*Medical Ofﬁce
*Industrial
*Medical Assisting Maintenance
*Cosmetology
Pneumatics/
*Peace Ofﬁcer
Hydraulics
*Welding

Financial Aid is available to
students who qualify.

“Creating Successful Lives”
For more information

740-245-5334
www.buckeyehills.net

60583715

�Sunday, June 28, 2015 3A

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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�E ditorial
4A Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Are you getting
married?

Give Social
Security your
new name
By Marcus Geiger
Guest Columnist

Every year, June
marks the beginning
of two busy seasons:
summer and “wedding
season.” With joyful
expectation, many of
us have already marked
our calendars and started wrapping up our
plans for the vacations,
ceremonies, and honeymoons. While brides
and grooms work out
the details, Social
Security wants to
remind them about one
detail that’s extremely
important: the “record”
Social Security keeps of
your life’s earnings.
Weddings often
mean a name change
is in order, and one
task the happy couple
should have on that
to-do list is to contact
Social Security. If you
are legally changing
your name, you need
to apply for a replacement Social Security
card reﬂecting your
new name. If you’re
working, also tell your
employer. That way,
Social Security can
keep track of your earnings history as you go
about living your wonderful new life.
If you have reported
income under your former or maiden name,
we might not have
received an accurate
W-2 and your earn-

ings may have been
recorded incorrectly.
This is easier to ﬁx
now — when you ﬁrst
change your name —
than years from now
when you retire. So,
go to our website at
www.socialsecurity.gov/
ssnumber, or call us at
1-800-772-1213 (TTY
1-800-325-0778) to
ﬁnd out what speciﬁc
documents you need to
change your name and
to apply for a replacement card.
After the honeymoon
comes your career,
moving to a new home,
and a well-deserved
retirement. It happens
so fast! We hope somewhere in there, you
opened your free my
Social Security account
at www.socialsecurity.
gov/myaccount.
With your personal
my Social Security
account, you can make
sure your earnings
record is correct and
that you have the 40
total work “credits”
you need for us to pay
you the beneﬁts you’ve
earned.
Remember, ensuring your earnings are
reported accurately
to Social Security is
vital to getting every
dollar in beneﬁts you
deserve. If you need
to change your name
for any reason, go to
www.socialsecurity.gov/
ssnumber and apply
for a replacement card
right away.
Now, you’re all set.
Let the celebrations
begin!
Marcus Geiger is Social Security
district manager in Gallipolis.

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

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155
or 740.446.2342

THEIR VIEW

Ring of truth escapes groom

weekend, she went the long
Since John had become
distance to his home to meet
my roommate, he had
his family. The very next
done many things that I
weekend he traveled to her
considered strange, but
house to meet hers.
the day that he came home
Then, suddenly, with no
and informed us that he
explanation, he quit dating
had quit dating Marinda
her, just as he had all of the
caused the greatest shock
Daris
others. Trying to talk to him
of all.
Howard
He had dated many
Contributing was even more futile than
before, and he would get
wonderful young ladies.
Columnist
upset at the smallest provocaMy roommates and I had
tion.
grown fond of each one,
One day, when I ran into Marinonly to have him break it off.
da, I asked her what had caused
Each time had been pretty much
their breakup. She tearfully told
the same. He would date the girl
me she had no more answers than
until the relationship had become
the rest of us. She thought he had
very serious. They would reach
been in love with her, and she said
the point where they were talking
that one night he had even pulled
of marriage, and then, suddenly,
out a beautiful wedding ring for
something would happen, and
her to try on. Then, suddenly, it all
John would sever his association
ended.
with her.
As the next few months proBut the funny thing was, he
gressed, John dated a little bit,
always seemed at least as heartbut he couldn’t seem to shake his
broken as the girl was. He would
feelings for Marinda. Eventually
mope around, hardly talking,
another nice young man started
barely able to function, often skipto date her. John became jealous,
ping his classes. Asking him why
and extremely miserable as he
he had quit dating the girl only
watched. Unlike the rest of us who
brought a curt, “I don’t want to
were happy to see Marinda enjoytalk about it!” as a response.
ing life again, it just made him
But with Marinda, it was even
depressed.
worse. They had done everything
After a few months, Marinda,
and gone everywhere together for
announced her engagement. She
most of a year. There was never
came personally to our apartment
a night she was not either at our
to share her joy with those of us
apartment or he was at hers. John
who had become her friends. Howstarted attending church with her,
ever, when John saw who it was
and they spent almost every Sunstanding outside the door, he went
day evening, just walking hand in
into his bedroom.
hand and talking.
Marinda was all smiles as she
There was never a formal dance
shared her news. She wanted to let
that a person didn’t see them
John know, but he refused to join
out on the dance ﬂoor, dreamily
us, so she gave each of the rest of
looking into each others’ eyes.
us a hug and asked us to pass the
We were sure a proposal was getinformation on to him. After she
ting close when, on one holiday

left, John emerged, looking like a
man whose world had just fallen
apart.
When we told him what she
came for, he snapped at us, informing us that he had heard. Sam
became irritated. “You don’t need
to get mad at us! If you had wanted to marry her, you could have!”
“No, I couldn’t!” John shot back.
“Why not?” I asked.
“Because she didn’t ﬁt the ring!”
John blurted out.
“What ring?” I asked.
John then told us that once,
when he had been in Mexico, he
had come across a beautiful ring,
and decided to buy it for the girl
he would marry someday.
“None of the girls I have dated
could wear it, so I couldn’t marry
any them,” he explained. Then,
barely able to control his emotions
he added, “I was especially hoping
it would ﬁt Marinda.”
I could hardly believe what I was
hearing. “John, don’t you think the
girl is more important than the
ring?”
He instantly became angry at
me for asking, but what Sam asked
brought him up short. “John, you
do know that ring sizes can be
adjusted, don’t you?”
John was shocked. “They can?!”
Well, John didn’t join us at
Marinda’s reception that summer. But as I watched her smiling
radiantly, standing by the man she
had grown to love, I couldn’t help
but think she was probably better
off being married to someone who
knew she was more important
than was the ring she wore on her
ﬁnger.
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated
columnist, playwright, and author, can be
contacted at daris@darishoward.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Sunday, June
28, the 179th day of 2015.
There are 186 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On June 28, 1914,
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his
wife, Sophie, were shot
to death in Sarajevo
(sah-ruh-YAY’-voh) by
Serb nationalist Gavrilo
Princip — an act which
sparked World War I.
On this date:
In 1778, the Revolutionary War Battle of
Monmouth took place in
New Jersey; it was from
this battle that the legend
of “Molly Pitcher” arose.
In 1836, the fourth
president of the United
States, James Madison,
died in Montpelier, Va.
In 1838, Britain’s
Queen Victoria was

crowned in Westminster
Abbey.
In 1919, the Treaty
of Versailles was signed
in France, ending the
First World War. In Independence, Mo., future
president Harry S. Truman married Elizabeth
Virginia Wallace.
In 1939, Pan American
Airways began regular
trans-Atlantic air service with a ﬂight that
departed New York for
Marseilles, France.
In 1940, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
signed the Alien Registration Act, also known
as the Smith Act, which
required adult foreigners
residing in the U.S. to be
registered and ﬁngerprinted. Corporate lawyer Wendell Willkie received the
Republican presidential
nomination at the party’s

convention in Philadelphia
(U.S. Senate Minority
Leader Charles McNary of
Oregon was nominated for
vice president).
In 1944, the Republican
national convention in
Chicago nominated New
York Gov. Thomas E.
Dewey for president and
Ohio Gov. John W. Bricker for vice president.
In 1950, North Korean
forces captured Seoul, the
capital of South Korea.
Today’s Birthdays:
Comedian-movie director Mel Brooks is 89.
Former Sen. Carl Levin,
D-Mich., is 81. Comedianimpressionist John Byner
is 78. Former Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta is
77. Rock musician Dave
Knights (Procul Harum)
is 70. Actor Bruce Davison is 69. Actress Kathy
Bates is 67. Actress Alice

Krige is 61. College
and Pro Football Hall of
Famer John Elway is 55.
Record company chief
executive Tony Mercedes
is 53. Actress Jessica
Hecht is 50. Rock musician Saul Davies (James)
is 50. Actress Mary
Stuart Masterson is 49.
Actor John Cusack is 49.
Actor Gil Bellows is 48.
Actress-singer Danielle
Brisebois is 46. Jazz
musician Jimmy Sommers is 46. Actress Tichina Arnold is 46. Actor
Steve Burton is 45. Actor
Alessandro Nivola is 43.
Actress Camille Guaty is
39. Rock musician Tim
Nordwind (OK Go) is 39.
Rock musician Mark Stoermer (The Killers) is 38.
Country singer Big Vinny
Hickerson (Trailer Choir)
is 32. Country singer Kellie Pickler is 29.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

From Page 1A

A former Meigs County
resident didn’t have to
watch the historic event
unfold on television because
she was in Washington,
D.C., on Friday.
Amber Snowden was
the 2002 valedictorian of
Meigs High School. She
then went on to graduate
summa cum laude with a
bachelor’s degree in political science in 2006 and an
MPA in 2009 from Ohio
University. She was a public
information specialist in
Mecklenburg County, N.C.,
and is now a public policy
coordinator at the International City/County Management Association in Washington, D.C. She monitors
legislation and Supreme
Court cases that affect local
governments, advocates on
behalf of her members, and
keeps them informed.
“I’m proud to live in a
country that recognizes that
love is love, no matter what
its form, and that all people
are entitled to dignity
under the law. I’m excited
to be here to see it happen,”

Snowden said.
Snowden provided Ohio
Valley Publishing with
photos from the historic
day in her new, adopted
hometown.
Friday’s ruling brought
about a ﬂurry of activity
in courthouses across the
nation, including in Ohio
where same-sex marriages
began taking place after the
announcement.
In Gallia County, Judge
Thomas S. Moulton Jr.
said Gallia County Probate
Court had already received
some calls Friday from
people inquiring about marriage licenses.
Moulton said Friday
afternoon he hadn’t had
time to review the court’s
entire decision and its
implications but planned
to do so. He added that
probate court will need to
update its computer system
to adjust to the changes,
and his court has already
made a request to update
the software. When a ruling
like this happens, there are
several housekeeping items
that need to be addressed,
including changing marriage license forms to
reﬂect “bride and bride” or

Photo courtesy of Amber Snowden

Local probate courts in Ohio spent Friday responding to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision that legalized gay marriage across the
country. Pictured is a scene from outside the U.S. Supreme Court shortly after the decision was announced.

Probate Court was made
but not returned by press
time. Moulton did, however, say he had been in
discussions with Powell on
how to proceed with the
changes.
As even President Obama
acknowledged, not everyone is in support of samesex marriage.
“I know that Americans
of good will continue to
hold a wide range of views
on this issue,” he said in
his speech to the nation.
“Opposition, in some cases,
has been based on sincere

“groom and groom.”
As for what his staff was
telling people of the same
sex who wanted a marriage
license: “We’re telling them
we need time to review the
decision and update our
computer system.”
Moulton said Gallia
County Probate Court
may be able to issue marriage licenses to same-sex
couples sometime next
week, depending on when
software updates can be
made.
A call to Judge L. Scott
Powell of Meigs County

Grant

monly used refueling point for pilots.
According to Potoczak, the runway will also
be grooved once asphalt has been laid over its
From Page 1A
entirety. A 10-foot depth surrounding the runway perimeter will, however, not be. Grooves
According to Sprague, the total cost of the are anticipated to be cut a quarter inch deep.
runway’s rehabilitation will be $1,202,580.
Grooves in the runway are meant to displace
The grant awarded will provide $1,082,322.
water and prevent dangerous hydroplaning
About $120,250 is expected to come from
during aircraft activity on the runway.
the county general fund. That is roughly a
“I’ve known some of the local (industrial)
10-percent locally funded match, while the
plants to ﬂy product in and out occasionally,”
federal grant is anticipated to cover roughly 90 Commissioner Harold Montgomery stated
percent of the rehabilitation costs.
earlier in the year. “Some people may view it
According to information provided earlier in as just a recreational area (the airport), but
the year by Delta Airport Consultants project
it is an important tool in our (Gallia-Meigs)
manager Steven Potoczak, the project is largely economic development.”
a “mill and ﬁll” effort. Machines will grind
Sprague anticipates the actual grant award
asphalt down an inch and then remove debris
paperwork to be ﬁnalized in August with
before new asphalt can be laid. County commis- contracting companies soon starting work the
sioners said earlier in the year, the last time the same month. The runway will measure 3,999
airport runway saw any kind of major maintefeet long by 75 feet wide.
nance was a crack patching project in 2004.
The Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport is a com- Dean Wright can be reached at (740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

59°

68°

69°

Breezy today with decreasing clouds. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 75° / Low 54°

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.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

83°
67°
85°
64°
100° in 1921
50° in 1979

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.50
4.29
3.42
24.72
21.50

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:06 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
5:37 p.m.
3:28 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Jul 1

Jul 8

New

Jul 15

First

Jul 23

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

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

Minor
3:02a
3:46a
4:34a
5:26a
6:21a
7:20a
8:21a

Major
9:39p
10:25p
11:15p
---12:35p
1:34p
2:34p

Minor
3:27p
4:12p
5:01p
5:53p
6:49p
7:48p
8:48p

WEATHER HISTORY
The battle of Monmouth, N.J., was
fought on June 28, 1778. War reports
indicated more casualties caused by
heat than bullets. Heat was oppressive at 96 degrees in the shade.

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Some sun, then
clouds with a t-storm

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
76/55

Primary: grass, other
Mold: 901
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
77/56

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
12.30
19.30
23.91
12.58
12.88
25.65
12.18
28.77
36.37
12.74
26.70
36.10
26.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.29
-1.67
-0.19
+0.28
-0.17
+0.06
+0.04
-0.02
-0.16
-0.09
-0.50
-0.60
-1.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Cloudy

84°
64°

82°
66°

A morning
thunderstorm, then a
shower

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

Marietta
69/54

Murray City
71/53
Belpre
70/54

Athens
71/52

Today

St. Marys
68/53

Parkersburg
70/54

Coolville
71/54

Elizabeth
71/55

Spencer
72/55

Buffalo
75/56
Milton
76/57

Clendenin
74/55

St. Albans
76/56

Huntington
76/55

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
85/65
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/56
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
83/63
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
76/55

Ashland
76/55
Grayson
77/58

FRIDAY

78°
61°

Wilkesville
72/54
POMEROY
Jackson
73/55
74/54
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
73/56
75/54
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/59
GALLIPOLIS
75/54
74/56
74/56

South Shore Greenup
77/57
76/54

53
300

Logan
71/53

McArthur
72/53

Waverly
74/55

Pollen: 6

0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major
9:15a
9:59a
10:48a
11:40a
12:07a
1:06a
2:07a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Low

MOON PHASES

78°
62°

Chillicothe
75/56

Reach Beth Sergent at 304-6751333, ext. 1992 or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

BBT (NYSE) —41.29
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.16
Pepsico (NYSE) — 94.91
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.17
Rockwell (NYSE) — 124.72
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 19.90
Royal Dutch Shell — 59.21
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 28.12
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.12
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.35
WesBanco (NYSE) — 34.67
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.92
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
June 26, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

THURSDAY

79°
63°

Adelphi
72/54

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

WEDNESDAY

80°
63°

2

Low

AEP (NYSE) — 52.91
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 122.55
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.26
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 51.88
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 59.49
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 11.30
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.35
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 50.22
Collins (NYSE) —94.73
DuPont (NYSE) — 65.60
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.51
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.09
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 56.91
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 68.95
Kroger (NYSE) — 73.11
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 88.06
Norfolk So (NYSE) —88.87
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.00

TUESDAY

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

Primary: cladosporium
Mon.
6:06 a.m.
8:58 p.m.
6:36 p.m.
4:10 a.m.

MONDAY

released a statement that
said: “We must respect (the
Supreme Court’s) decision.”
After watching the president’s speech Friday, Moon
said her grandson turned to
her and asked, “Are you (and
Gilkey) ﬁnally married?”
“Yes, we’re ﬁnally married now,” Moon responded.
“For real, Nannie?” Her
grandson asked again.
“For real,” Moon said.

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

and deeply held beliefs. All
of us who welcome today’s
news should be mindful of
that fact and recognize different viewpoints, revere
our deep commitment to
religious freedom.”
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said in
a statement: “While Ohio
argued that the Supreme
Court should let this issue
ultimately be decided by the
voters, the Court has now
made its decision.”
Ohio Gov. John Kasich,
who has been pondering
a run for the presidency,

Charleston
75/55

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
82/60

Billings
96/67

Toronto
61/55

Minneapolis
79/63
Chicago
78/62
Denver
87/59

Montreal
59/52

Detroit
75/59

Kansas City
85/64

New York
78/62
Washington
80/63

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
83/65

High
Low

El Paso
93/72
Chihuahua
90/61

Mon.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
90/68/pc
91/69/t
Anchorage
68/54/sh 69/54/sh
Atlanta
83/65/s 85/70/s
Atlantic City
79/64/pc 78/68/s
Baltimore
77/58/pc 81/67/s
Billings
96/67/pc
98/70/t
Boise
108/77/s 101/70/s
Boston
68/60/r 76/60/pc
Charleston, WV 75/55/pc 81/64/s
Charlotte
85/61/s 88/67/s
Cheyenne
82/56/s 82/60/s
Chicago
78/62/t
76/61/t
Cincinnati
78/58/s 78/64/c
Cleveland
68/59/sh 76/64/pc
Columbus
74/57/pc
77/63/t
Dallas
91/73/s 96/76/pc
Denver
87/59/pc 87/64/pc
Des Moines
84/64/t 84/68/pc
Detroit
75/59/pc
73/63/t
Honolulu
90/75/pc 89/75/pc
Houston
89/74/t
90/74/t
Indianapolis
78/61/pc
76/64/t
Kansas City
85/64/t 86/67/s
Las Vegas
108/85/t 109/87/pc
Little Rock
89/70/s 93/71/c
Los Angeles
83/63/pc 85/65/pc
Louisville
81/63/s 82/67/c
Miami
92/78/t 92/79/s
Minneapolis
79/63/t 84/62/pc
Nashville
82/61/s 83/67/s
New Orleans
84/75/t
89/77/t
New York City
78/62/pc 80/65/s
Oklahoma City
90/67/s 95/71/pc
Orlando
92/75/t
90/75/t
Philadelphia
80/62/pc 82/64/s
Phoenix
111/89/pc 110/87/t
Pittsburgh
64/54/sh 77/62/pc
Portland, ME
58/52/r 74/53/pc
Raleigh
84/60/s 87/67/s
Richmond
83/61/s 85/68/s
St. Louis
83/68/t 85/69/s
Salt Lake City
103/74/s 104/73/pc
San Francisco
71/56/pc 68/54/pc
Seattle
85/65/pc 89/59/s
Washington, DC 80/63/pc 83/69/s

117° in Needles, CA
35° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Houston
89/74

Monterrey
93/68

GOALS

High
Low
Miami
92/78

118° in Turbat, Pakistan
0° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

Marriage

Sunday, June 28, 2015 5A

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�6A Sunday, June 28, 2015

LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Veterans Service representative

Courtesy photo

percent with you,” Sen. Mitch
Carmichael said. “This has been a
systemic problem and we are trying
to address it.”
During the discussion,
WVDOC Commissioner Jim
Rubenstein said corrections,
on average, loses 57 percent of
its employees during the ﬁrst
year of employment. He added
that his agency is looking at
a recruitment and hiring plan
involving working across his
division, with the regional jail
authority and division of juvenile
services, to address recruiting

issues. He said there must be
a streamlined process to show
people where opportunities are
and to get those salaries up to
where people will want to stay.
Del. Scott Cadle said he wants to
co-sponsor a bill in the next session
to propose raises for correctional
ofﬁcers that may also cut down on
other expenses, such as overtime
which he said was $8 million
last year. He called the raises a
“priority.”
Del. Mike Ihle agreed the
problem of retention and overtime
needed to be addressed with the

James’ wife of six years,
shared her anniversary with
her husband June 24. James
said they would be having
their anniversary celebration with friends and family
during the coming Independence Day weekend.
James said he met his wife
in Connersville, Ind., after a
performance on a Mother’s
Day morning.
“I could see this beautiful
woman coming toward the
table. She came back to the
spot where we were selling
albums and talking with the
audience and introduced
herself. She said, ‘HI, I’m
Laura.’ I said, ‘Hi, I’m your
husband,’” Rainiey said.
While performing with his
wife, Randy Shafer, a local
River Rec Fest gospel group,
performs with the Raineys
whenever they are in the
area. Shafer also owns and
operates Swan Creek Valley
Studios in Crown City.
“I got my driver’s license
in Gallipolis. I had my ﬁrst
girlfriend there. I graduated
(from high school) there and
was in the band and choir.
Everything I did was about
Gallia County,” Rainey said.
“My love is toward that
town (Gallipolis). I only
ever see the good side of it.”
Dean Wright can be reached at (740)
446-2342, Ext. 2103.

state losing people they had paid
to train to better opportunities.
By raising salaries, he said it may
create a shortfall but in the long run
it would save the state money.
“It’s easy for us to say this now,
with (Lakin) employees sitting
behind us,” Ihle said. “I can say
with all certainty, after looking
at the data, there’s certainly no
state agency more in need, that I
saw, for pay increases than certain
classiﬁcations in corrections.”
Reach Beth Sergent at 304-675-1333, ext.
1992 or on Twitter @BSergentWrites.

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Call Us Toll Free
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$20,000 for 60 days of work.
“Some of my staff have second
jobs, some get medical cards,
From Page 1A
they get food stamps, they get
HUD housing,” Nohe said to the
There is always the argument
legislators in the room.
that correctional ofﬁcers have
She also brought up the issue
certain beneﬁts on top of those
of classes at Glenville State
salaries, which Lakin Warden Lori College being cut, which she
Nohe addressed to the legislators in said were used as an incentive
the room, saying beneﬁts “don’t put for those correctional ofﬁcers
food on the table.”
wanting to pursue criminal
Nohe said her employees are
justice degrees. She said those
public servants for the state of West classes were used as a retention
Virginia who work to make $22,500 tool to keep employees.
“Look, we hear you, we are 1,000
a year when state delegates make

From Page 1A

H. Rainey, was a reverend at
First Church of God. Rainey
noted that his ﬁrst steps into
professional gospel performance came at the hands of
The Gospel Harmony Boys
from Huntington, W.Va.,
when they were searching
for a piano accompanist.
James auditioned at the
age of 14 and the group
took him on as their newest
member.
James noted that he had
support from his father as
he “knew this was what God
was calling me to do.”
James gives a large
amount of credit to The
Gospel Harmony Boys
for helping him become
acclimated to road life and
traveling shows the ﬁrst few
years.
For more than 21 years,
James has traveled singing
southern gospel music and
played piano for groups like
The Hoppers, Rusty Goodman, The Greenes, The
Singing Americans, The
Trailblazer’s Quartet, Wendy
Bagwell and the Sunlighters,
Priority and The Singing
Shafer Family.
Laura Joe Rainey, 30,

Tom White (right)
was recently
appointed to the
Gallia County
Veterans Service
Commission as
a representative
of the VFW. White
is pictured with
Judge Dean Evans,
who administered
the oath of
office. White will
join four other
members of the
Veterans Service
Commission who
represent the
American Legion,
DAV, AMVETS and
Vietnam Veterans
of America.

Lakin

Concert

No Job Too BIG or SMALL

60514373

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 28, 2015 7A

Gallia claims winners in senior citizen art show

is a Book” by Jeri Ingles
First Place Acrylic/Animals
and Birds — “Baby Squirrel
RIO GRANDE — The
with His Mother” by Rita Haley
artwork of local seniors
was recently showcased at Fourth Place Acrylic/Animals
the Area Agency on Aging and Birds — “Whoops!” by Rita
Haley
District 7’s 33rd annual
Third Place Acrylic/Landscape
Senior Citizens Art Show — “Sunset Swamp” by Rita
and Essay/Poetry Contest Haley
at the Esther Allen Greer
First Place Mixed Media/
Museum, located on the
Seascape — “Day and Night”
by Pat Parsons
campus of the UniverSecond Place Oil/Animals and
sity of Rio Grande in Rio
Birds — “Autumn Sparrow” by
Grande, Ohio.
This year, 193 art pieces Lynda Dunlap
were entered in the contest Third Place Oil/Animals and
Birds — “Lone Wolf” by Sandra
with 48 essays/poems.
Lane
Special awards were preFirst Place Oil/Floral — “Iris in
sented: “Victor Potts Best Springtime” by Ann Day
of Show Award” in the
Third Place Oil/Landscape —
Amateur Category went to “Grandad’s Home!” by Lynda
Alice M. Smith, of Adams Dunlap
County, for her watercolor, First Place Oil/Portraits —
“The Golden Years” by Ann Day
“Pink Magnolia”; “Victor
Potts Best of Show Award” Second Place Oil/Still Life —
in the Professional Catego- “Let it Snow” by Ann Day
Third Place Oil/Still Life —
ry went to Pat Thompson, “Granny’s Things” by Sally
of Adams County, for her
Roberts
pencil, “Conference on the First Place Pencil/Animals and
Mound”; the “Mary Peck
Birds — “Fantastic Flight” by
Friend of Animals Award” Danny Carter
went to Rita Haley, of Gal- First Place Pencil/
lia County, for her acrylic, Landscape — “Farm

Staff Report

Memories” by Danny Carter
First Place Photography/
Animals and Birds — “Boss of
the Hen House” by Suzanne
Wise
Second Place Photography/
Animals and Birds — “Meal
Delivery” by Jeri Ingles
Fourth Place Photography/
Animals and Birds — “Getting
My Wings” by Jeri Ingles
First Place Photography/
Animals and Birds
(Professional Category) — Elk
Autumn Rut Yellowstone by
David M. Hayes
First Place Photography/
Landscape — “Afternoon
Glow” by Mary Lee Marchi
Third Place Photography/
Landscape — “Eureka Dam”
by Suzanne Wise
Fourth Place Photography/
Landscape — “Country
Bridge” by Cheryl Enyart
Fifth Place Photography/
Landscape — “Home on the
Pond” by Suzanne Wise
Sixth Place Photography/
Landscape — “The Valley from
the Hill” by Mary Lee Marchi
First Place Photography/
Landscape (Professional
Category) — “Heaven’s Peak
by David M. Hayes
First Place Photography/

“Baby Squirrel with His
Mother”; People’s Choice
Award went to Sharon
Brown, of Jackson County,
for her acrylic, “Adams
County Barn”; Best Overall
Essay went to Norma E.
Graf, of Scioto County, for
“Josie’s Rose”; and Best
Overall Poem went to Jeri
Ingles, of Gallia County,
for “Your Life is a Book”.
Ohio residents age 55
or older were eligible to
participate in the Art Show
and Essay/Poetry Contest.
Winners announced from
Gallia County included:
Mary Peck “Friend of Animals”
Award — “Baby Squirrel with
His Mother” by Rita Haley
Best Overall Poem — “Your Life

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)

NOW
ENROLLING!
Adult Center:
*Medical Ofﬁce
*Industrial
*Medical Assisting Maintenance
Pneumatics/
*Cosmetology
*Peace Ofﬁcer
Hydraulics
*Welding

6

PM

SUNDAY, JUNE 28

6:30

7

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
2nd Opinion
"Mystery
Diagnosis"
Eyewitness ABC World
News at 6
News
CBS Evening 10TV News
News
at 6:30 p.m.
(2:00) USGA Golf U.S. Senior
Open (L)
PBS
BBC
NewsHour
Newsnight
Weekend
13 News
CBS Evening
Weekend
News

WSAZ News
3
Inside
Edition
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Ideas
Exchange

6

PM

6:30

7:30

PM

8

8:30

PM

9

9:30

PM

10

PM

10:30

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC (N)

I Can Do That!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC (N)

I Can Do That!

Celebrity Family Feud

Celebrity Family Feud (N)

BattleBots (N)

American Odyssey "Real
World" (N)
American Odyssey "Real
World" (N)
Castle "Kill Switch"

Antiques Roadshow
"Vintage Sacramento"
Celebrity Family Feud

Last Tango Halifax Caroline
and pregnant Kate set a date
for the wedding. (N)
Celebrity Family Feud (N)

Masterpiece "Poldark"
Verity's big chance leads to a
showdown. (N)
BattleBots (N)

The Crimson Field A large
convoy of wounded brings
challenges. (N)
Castle "Kill Switch"

60 Minutes

Big Brother (N)

Bob's Burger BobB "The
"Mazel-Tina" Frond Files"
In Performance at the
White House "The Gospel
Tradition"
60 Minutes

7

PM

Madam Secretary "Need to
Know"
Brooklyn
Family Guy Golan "Shell
The
Simpsons
Nine-Nine
"JOLO"
Raiser" (N)
Last Tango Halifax Caroline Masterpiece "Poldark"
and pregnant Kate set a date Verity's big chance leads to a
for the wedding. (N)
showdown. (N)
Big Brother (N)
Madam Secretary "Need to
Know"

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

9:30

PM

CSI: Crime Scene "Rubbery
Homicide"
Eyewitness News at 10
p.m.
The Crimson Field The girls
arrive at a British hospital in
France.
CSI: Crime Scene "Rubbery
Homicide"

10

PM

10:30

Backdraft Kurt Russell. TVMA
The Sixth Sense ('99, Thril) Haley Joel Osment, Bruce Willis. TV14 Salem (N)
18 (WGN) (4:30)
Sports Unlimited (N)
Footvolley Pro Tour
In Depth
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
24 (ROOT) Rodeo
25 (ESPN) (4:30) MLS Soccer (L)
Baseball Tonight
MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals Site: Busch Stadium (L)
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
Poker 2013 World Series Final Table
Poker 2014 World Series
Poker 2014 World Series

29

Attending the “Meet the Artists Tea” to conclude the Area Agency on
Aging District 7’s 33rd Annual Art Show and Essay/Poetry Contest
from Gallia County were, front row, left to right, Ann Day, Gail Belville,
Peggy McCory, Rita Haley, Joan Unroe and Cheryl Enyart. Second
row, left to right, Sandra Lane, Jeri Ingles, Carol Carter and Danny
Carter. Third row, left to right, James Anderson, Sally Roberts and
Pat Parsons. Back row, left to right, David Hayes and Charles Murray.

County — “These Colors” by
James J. Anderson
Third Place Poem/Gallia
County — “My Mother’s
Hands” by Anita Gail Belville
Fourth Place Poem/Gallia
County — “Oscar Odd
McIntyre” by Charles Murray
Fifth Place Poem/Gallia
County — “Our Heavenly
Home” by Joan Unroe
To learn more about next
year’s art show, which is
typically in May or June of
each year, call 1-800-582-7277.

SUNDAY EVENING

27 (LIFE)

Courtesy photo

Spinner” by James J. Anderson
First Place Essay/Gallia
County — “The Dream” by
David M. Hayes
Second Place Essay/Gallia
County — “Our Spot” by
Cheryl Enyart
Third Place Essay/Gallia
County — “Ten Thousand
Days” by Rita Haley
Fourth Place Essay/Gallia
County — “A Tribute to My
Mother” by Anita Gail Belville
First Place Poem/Gallia
County — “Your Life is a Book”
by Jeri Ingles
Second Place Poem/Gallia

Portraits (Professional
Category) — “Manito” by
David M. Hayes
Third Place Photography/Still
Life — “Company Store” by
Anita Gail Belville
First Place Photography/
Other — “Reflections” by
Cheryl Enyart
Third Place Other/Fiber Arts
— “Pineapple Doily” by Pat
Dillon
First Place Other/ThreeDimensional Arts — “Turtle
Swimming” by Pat Parsons
Fourth Place Other/ThreeDimensional Arts — “Wind

68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

(5:00) Sole Custody ('14,

A Deadly Adoption A couple houses &amp; cares for a pregnant Perfect High ('15, Dra) Bella Thorne. A high school dancer
Thril) Julie Benz. TV14
woman in the hopes of adopting her unborn child.
starts using painkillers and having pharm parties. TV14
(5:00)
Kung Fu
Despicable Me A criminal mastermind uses three Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! An elephant has trouble
Panda Jack Black. TVPG
orphans in his grand scheme to steal the moon. TVPG
convincing his neighbors that a microscopic community exists.
Bar Rescue "To Protect and Bar Rescue "All Twerk and Bar Rescue "Sticky
Bar Rescue "Take Me Out of Catch a Contractor "The
to (Over) Serve"
No Pay"
Situation"
the Bar Game"
Wrongest Yard"
SpongeBob SpongeBob Harvey
SpongeBob
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules TVPG
Full House
Full House
(5:00)
The Lost World: Jurassic Park TV14
Jurassic Park III ('01, Sci-Fi) Sam Neill. TV14
Modern Fam Modern Fam
Bedtime Stories ('08, Fant) Adam Sandler. TVPG
Shrek 2 ('04, Ani) Mike Myers. TVPG
The Pacifier TVPG
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Hawaii"
Anthony Bourdain
Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me (N)
(:45) Be Me
(5:30)
The Dark Knight Rises ('12, Act) Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway. TVPG
The Last Ship (N)
Falling Skies (N)
Independence Day (1996, Sci-Fi) Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum, Will Smith. A group HUMANS (N)
Halt and Catch Fire
"Infiltrator" (N)
of people race against time to try to save the world from alien invaders. TV14
Naked and Afraid XL (N)
N.Afraid "Chris Fischer" (N) Naked and Afraid XL (N)
Naked "Garden of Evil" (N) Naked and Afraid (N)
Duck Dyn.
Duck Dyn.
Duck
(:35) Duck D.
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
"Plan Bee"
"Fowl Play" Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
"Life of Si"
The Last Alaskans
Alaskans "The Last Sunset" The Last Alaskans
River Monsters: Unhooked (:05) Finding Bigfoot
Snapped "Regina Williams" Snapped "Donna Cobb"
Snapped: Killer Coup "Kim Snapped "Susie Newsom
Snapped "Constance Clark"
Williams and Eric Williams" and Fritz Klenner" (N)
CSI: Miami
CSI: Miami "Simple Man" CSI: Miami "Dispo Day"
CSI: Miami "Double Cap"
CSI "Grave Young Men"
Botched "House of Horrors" Botched
Botched
Botched (N)
#RichKids of B.H. (N)
(:25) Reba
Reba 2/2
(:35) Reba
(:10) Reba
(:50) Ray
(:25) Raymond "The Article" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games
"Faces"
"Logic"
(N)
"Scams" (N) "Sleep" (N) (N)
(5:30) M. Hour /Drive
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More
Mecum Auctions
Fox Sports Live
MLS Soccer Seattle Sounders FC at Portland Timbers (L)
Garbage (N) TUF: 21 "Do or Die"
American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Sweet
American Pickers "Mad as American Pickers "Rocket American Pickers "A Hard
Royal Risk"
Homes Alabama"
a Picker"
Man"
Rain's Gonna Fall"
Housewives "Take a Swing" Orange County Social (N) Summer by Bravo "First Looks" (N)
Wives
(:55) Flipping /(:10) Wives
Awards Pre "Live! Red! Ready! Red Carpet Show!" (L)
BET Awards The BET Awards celebrate their15th anniversary. (L)
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Caribbean
Caribbean
IslandHunter IslandHunter
Terminator 2: Judgement Day ('91, Sci-Fi) Arnold Schwarzenegger. A machine is Terminator 2: Judgement Day A machine is sent back in
sent back in time to protect a boy who will be the savior of the world. TV14
time to protect a boy who will be the savior of the world.

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

9:30

PM

Pacific Rim ('13, (:15)
John Wick ('14, Act) Adrianne Palicki,
True Detective (N)
Keanu Reeves. When Russian mobsters kill his beloved
Kikuchi, Idris Elba. TVMA
dog, an ex-hit man sets out to exact vengeance. TVMA
(3:20)
(:25) Veronica Mars Kristen Bell. A former (:15)
The Purge: Anarchy ('14, Hor) Kiele Sanchez,
Dances With teen sleuth returns to her hometown when Frank Grillo. Five people attempt to survive a night in L.A.
Wolves TV14 her ex-boyfriend is accused of murder. TV14 where all crime is sanctioned for 12 hours. TV14
HAPPYish
HAPPYish
HAPPYish
Nurse Jackie Penny Dreadful "Memento Nurse Jackie HAPPYish (N)
"Vigilante
Mori"
"I Say a Little
Jones"
Prayer" (N)
(5:00)

400 (HBO) Act) Charlie Hunnam, Rinko

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

10

PM

10:30

Ballers
The Brink
"Raise Up" "Half(N)
Cocked" (N)
Dreamgirls ('06, Mus)
Beyoncé Knowles, Eddie
Murphy, Jamie Foxx. TV14
Penny Dreadful "And Hell
Itself My Only Foe" (N)

We STILL accept
United Healthcare Medicaid
Delivery, Drive-Thru and Pickup!

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
636 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Hours: M-F 9AM-7PM,
S 9AM-4PM
Phone: 740-992-2955
www.ThePharmacy4u.com

Financial Aid is available to
students who qualify.

High School
Programs Include:
* Healthcare
*Early Childhood
* Construction Education
*Cosmetology

~ SUMMER MENU ~

Smoothies
16oz .............$475
20oz ............. $505

Yogurt base (non fat)
Strawberry-bannana, Wild berry

“Creating Successful Lives”

Fruit Base
Peach, Pomegranate blue acai, Mango,
Mandarin-orange passion

For more information

740-245-5334

Frozen Lemonade - additions (free)
Strawberry, Lime, Peach,
Raspberry, Red sangria

www.buckeyehills.net
60583729

Tea

16oz .............$100

20oz .............$150
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,WDOLDQ�6RGDV
16oz .............$200
20oz .............$250
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60591605

�CALENDAR

8A Sunday, June 28, 2015

Lunch Along the River
1st Wednesday of April - October
(July Lunch is the 8th)
11-1 delivery available
$6.00 donation

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR
REUNIONS

The Bradley-Jenkins reunion will be
June 28 at the Old Kyger FWB Church,
16 Stingy Creek Road. The potluck dinner will be at 1 p.m.
Jacob and Maggie Sluyter Davis
family Reunion, 1 p.m. July 5, Christ
United Methodist Church, 9688 Ohio 7
South, Gallipolis. For more information,
call 740-245-9605.
Card ShowerVictor Burgess will
celebrate his 94th birthday on July 19.
Cards may be sent to him at 5631 S.R.
141, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

60589402

591-6095 / 416-2247

Cat’s Meows FREE Movie Nights
Available of

6/26, 7/24, 8/28, 9/25

Middleport Pool

6:30 pm

Middleport High/Jr. High

Middleport Village Hall

Meigs High School

Everyone Welcome!

Middleport Community Association
MONDAY EVENING

4
6

PM

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

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Two and a
Half Men
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6

PM

6:30

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
ABC World Judge Judy EntertainmNews
ent Tonight
CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
News
Fortune
Two and a
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Half Men
Theory
Theory
Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inBusiness
depth analysis of current
events.
Report (N)
CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

American Ninja W Competitors tackle two new obstacles
including, the snake crossing and the wind chimes. (N)
American Ninja W Competitors tackle two new obstacles
including, the snake crossing and the wind chimes. (N)
The Bachelorette Kaitlyn attempts to protect all of her
relationships in the face of her indiscretion. (N)
Antiques Rd. "Vintage
Antiques Roadshow
Denver" A 19th-century
"Vintage Hartford"
Tabor mining archive. (N)
The Bachelorette Kaitlyn attempts to protect all of her
relationships in the face of her indiscretion. (N)
2 Broke Girls Mike &amp;
Scorpion "A Cyclone"
Molly
Can Dance "Vegas Callbacks #1" The stage and street
hopefuls head to Vegas for the first round of callbacks. (N)
Antiques Rd. "Vintage
Antiques Roadshow
Denver" A 19th-century
"Vintage Hartford"
Tabor mining archive. (N)
2 Broke Girls Mike &amp;
Scorpion "A Cyclone"
Molly

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

The Whispers "What Lies
Beneath" (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "Blaze of
Glory"
Eyewitness News at 10
POV "The Overnighters" (N)

NCIS: Los Angeles "Blaze of
Glory"

10

PM

10:30

Home Videos Pt. 2 of 2
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Salem "The Witching Hour"
UFC 149 Urijah Faber takes on Renan Barao in Calgary, Alberta.
UFC Unleashed
MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Baltimore Orioles Site: Camden Yards (L)
Baseball Tonight (L)
Battlefrog College
Battlefrog College
Battlefrog College
Fitness 2014 CrossFit Games
(5:00)
While You Were
27 Dresses A perennial bridesmaid struggles to
Devious Maids "The Talk of UnREAL "Truth" (N)
Sleeping TVPG
accept that her sister is marrying her secret crush. TV14
the Town" (N)
The Lucky One Upon his return from Iraq, a marine The Fosters "More Than
Becoming Us
The Fosters "More Than
searches for a woman whose photo kept him alive. TV14 Words" (N)
"#Heart2Heart" (N)
Words"
Cops "Coast (:40) Cops
(:20) Cops
(:55) Cops
(:35) Cops
(:15) Cops
(:55) Cops "Coast to Coast" Cops "Coast
to Coast"
"Bad Girls 4"
to Coast"
Thunder
H.Danger
H.Danger
100 Things Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
NCIS "Light Sleeper"
NCIS "Head Case"
WWE Monday Night Raw
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy "It's a Trap!"
American D. American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "3XK"
Major Crimes "Open Line" M.Crimes "Turn Down" (N) Murder1 "Suger Walls" (N)
(5:30)
The Godfather II (1974, Drama) Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall, Al Pacino. A Mafia chief's life is
Making of the Mob:NY
contrasted with flashbacks of his father's early days. TV14
"King of New York" (N)
Outlaws "Texas Grudge"
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws: Full (N)
Street Outlaws (N)
Fast N' Loud (N)
The First 48 "Dead End
The First 48 "Shattered
The First 48 "The Stranger/ The First 48: Murder for
The First 48: Murder for
Dreams/ Left to Die"
Prince of Darkness"
Hire "Bad Company" (N)
Drive/ The Fixer" (N)
Hire "Graveyard Love" (N)
River Monsters: Unhooked Ultimate Treehouses
Treehouse Masters
Treehouse Masters
Redwood Kings
(4:30) To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Snapped A profile of women Snapped A profile of women
who are accused of murder. who are accused of murder.
CSI: Miami "Complications" CSI "Witness to Murder"
CSI: Miami "Pro Per"
CSI:Miami "Target Specific" CSI: Miami
(4:00) Sex and the City
E! News (N)
Botched
Enough ('02, Thril) Jennifer Lopez. TV14
The Dukes of Hazzard
Gilligan
Gilligan
Met Mother Met Mother Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
American Genius "Edison Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games BrainG. "Left Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games Brain Games
vs. Tesla"
"Memory"
"Money"
vs. Right"
(N)
(N)
"Morality"
NASCAR
NASCAR
NASCAR Auto Racing Classics 2004 Ford 400
NASCAR Auto Racing Classics 2003 Ford 400
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC Fight Night Lyoto Machida vs. Yoel Romero
Swamp People "Floating
Swamp People "Gator Boo- Swamp People "Here Gator The Woodsmen "Collapse" (:05) Forged in Fire
Dead"
Fay"
Gator" (N)
(N)
"Chakram" (N)
The Real Housewives
Housewives "Take a Swing" H.Wives "Whine Country" H.Wives "Charity Case" (N) Odd Mom
SecretsWives
(5:00) To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Love/List "Cramped Spaces" Love/List "Healthy Start"
Love It or List It "Tall Tale" Love It or List It (N)
HuntVint (N) House (N)
(4:30)
Halloween Resident Evil: Afterlife A woman helps a group of survivors
Doom Karl Urban. A team is forced to go to war with
Malcolm McDowell. TVMA who want to make their way to a supposedly safe haven.
mutants while investigating a settlement on Mars. TV14

6

PM

6:30

RIO GRANDE — The Records
Commission meeting of the GalliaVinton Educational Service Center
Governing Board will be 4:45 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Genealogical Society, OGS chapter,
will have an open house between 11
a.m. and 3 p.m. at their new location
at 459 Second Ave. Refreshments will
be served. There will a drawing for a
ﬂeur de lis canister set.

10:30

The Island "Anything Can
Happen" (N)
The Island "Anything Can
Happen" (N)
The Whispers "What Lies
Beneath" (N)
POV "The Overnighters" (N)

18 (WGN) Home Videos Pt. 1 of 2
24 (ROOT) Bull Riding Championship
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) SportNat (N) Interruption
27 (LIFE)

MONDAY, JUNE 29

FRIDAY, JULY 3

MONDAY, JUNE 29
7

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
SciGirls

6:30

GALLIPOLIS — The Strother
and Nellie (Swindler) Houck
Reunion will be at Raccoon Creek
County Park, Shelterhouse 5 (Bob
White). For more information, call
740-256-9118.

June 29, followed by the regular
monthly meeting at 5 p.m., at the
University of Rio Grande, Wood
Hall, Room 131. Call (740) 2450593 for more details.

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Last Week
Edge of Tomorrow ('14, Sci-Fi) Emily Blunt, Tom Larry Kramer in Love An in-depth 'warts
True
and all' portrait of the legendary author,
Detective
Dupree TVPG John Oliver caught in a time loop after he is killed. TV14
activist and playwright. (N)
(5:35)
A Good Year Russell Crowe. A (:35)
Man of Steel (2013, Action) Amy Adams, Michael Shannon,
Lost in Translation
450 (MAX) banker inherits his late uncle's vineyard and Henry Cavill. An alien raised as a human confronts members of his race
('03, Com/Dra) Bill Murray,
chateau where he spent his childhood. TV14 who have come to claim Earth. TV14
Scarlett Johansson. TVM
(4:30) The
Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004, Action) David Carradine, Daryl Hannah, Uma Penny Dreadful "And Hell HAPPYish
Nurse Jackie
500 (SHOW) Twilight
Thurman. An assassin continues her quest for vengeance against her
Itself My Only Foe"
"I Say a Little
Prayer"
Saga: Brea... former boss and his associates. TVM
(4:30)

400 (HBO) You, Me and Tonight With Cruise. A soldier in a war against an alien race becomes

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUN., JUNE 28

POMEROY — New
Beginnings United Meth-

odist Church will have an
“Alive at 5” worship service at 5 p.m. with sing-

The French
Art Colony
Riverby Theatre Guild:
Plays, Musicals &amp; More!

MON., JUNE 29

HOW THE OTHER
HALF DIES
Comedy Murder-Mystery July 24-26

BROADWAY
MUSICAL REVUE

August 22 &amp; 23

POMEROY —The
Meigs County Veterans
Service Ofﬁce Commissioner will have a public
meeting at 9 a.m. at 117
E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy.

WED., JULY 1

July 31 - August 2

LITTLE MERMAID

ing, testimony and fellowship. All are welcome.
RACINE —The Neville
T. and Martha Rose family reunion will be at the
home of Karen Holter
Werry, 31980 Court
Street Road (near Morning Star), beginning at
1 p.m. Barbecue chicken
and baked ham will be
provided. All family and
friends are welcome to
attend.

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�������������t�www.frenchartcolony.org

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
— The Scipio Township
Trustees regular monthly
meeting will be 7 p.m.
at the Harrisonville Fire
House.
OLIVE TOWNSHIP —
Olive Township Trustees
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Township Garage.

60592464

3

6

SUNDAY, JUNE 28

60584412

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bears
and
poplar
trees

Sunday, June 28, 2015 s Section B

No. 1: White Falcons

By Jim Freeman
In The Open

Why are the poplar trees turning brown?
Driving down the highways
lately you may have noticed a
lot of trees with brown leaves.
Chances are that the trees you
are seeing are tulip poplars, and
the reason they are brown is due
to a little insect called a yellow
poplar weevil.
According to the West Virginia
Department of Forestry there
are a lot of yellow poplar weevils
this year. The weevils themselves
aren’t yellow; they are dark little
insects that look like ticks at ﬁrst
glance, but they only eat poplar
leaves so they won’t hurt you or
your animals.
They are native insects, and
most healthy trees will live, but
they just aren’t going to be very
pretty the rest of the summer
and fall. By mid-July the weevils
will go into hibernation and
won’t return until next spring.
According to the Ohio State
University Extension Service,
the weevils are native insects
and will feed on tuliptree (tulip
poplar), sassafras, and deciduous
and evergreen magnolias. They
are very tick-like in form and
home owners often express concern about the “ﬂying ticks” that
may land on their clothing.
Bears have been in the news
a bit here in Ohio with several
reported sightings including one
hit by a car near Lancaster, and
an Athens County teenager
attacked by a bear in the Great
Smoky Mountain National Forest.
Young male bears are occasionally seen this time of year as they
roam about looking for new territory. I’m not going to waste a lot
of ink describing a black bear; if
you see one, you will know it.
However if you should happen to
see a black bear in the wild (or in
your garbage) don’t approach the
animal or try to feed it. This may
sound like common sense, but far
too often these wandering bears
cause a major sensation in the
little towns and villages they pass
through, with people chasing them,
trying to tempt it with food to get
photographs, or otherwise harassing them. Black bears are occasionally shot by local cops because they
“charged someone,” never minding
the fact that the bear was totally
surrounded by humans.
For the record, black bears
are endangered in Ohio and it
is illegal to kill them except in
extreme circumstances of selfdefense (the mere presence of
the bear is not enough to constitute an imminent threat).
Fortunately bear attacks are
very rare, and the last bear-related fatality in Ohio involved a captive bear that attacked and killed
one of its caretakers. If a black
bear should attack you, you are
advised to ﬁght back. Black bear
attacks are generally predatory
in nature, meaning that the bear
wants to eat you, so you have
little to lose by ﬁghting back.
If you see this endangered
Ohio animal, report the sighting
at 1-800-WILDLIFE. The Ohio
Division of Wildlife keeps track
of conﬁrmed and unconﬁrmed
black bear sightings. Most
reported sightings are considered “unconﬁrmed,” which simply means that was no additional
proof (tracks, photos, hair, scat,
or damage caused by a bear)
other than the sighting alone.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife specialist for
the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District. He can be contacted weekdays
at 740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Members of the Wahama baseball team pose for a picture after winning the 2015 WVSSAC Class A baseball championship with a 7-0 decision over Man on
Saturday, June 6, at Appalachian Power Park in Charleston, W.Va.

Wahama
wins it all
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

It almost didn’t happen, but
thank goodness it did.
The Ohio Valley Publishing
area needed the ﬁnal day of the
2014-15 school year to come away
with a state championship, but the
Wahama baseball team expanded
the tri-county area’s run to 11
consecutive years with some sort
of state title after defeating Man
by a 7-0 count on Saturday, June
6, in the 2015 WVSSAC Class A
ﬁnal at Appalachian Power Park in
Charleston, W.Va.
Wahama (25-7) had a common
blueprint en route to the program’s
third state championship in baseball, a plan that most baseball aﬁcionados know by heart — pitch
well, play solid defense, be patient
at the plate and everyone contributes.
Scoreless through four complete, the visiting White Falcons
ﬁnally broke through in the top
of the ﬁfth when nine-hole hitter
Jared Nutter provided a one-out
double down the right ﬁeld line.
Leadoff hitter Ricky Kearns followed with an RBI-single to center
for a 1-0 advantage.
The Hillbillies (19-15) had the
wheels fall off the wagon in the top
of the sixth, as a one-out ﬂy ball to
left ﬁeld was dropped — allowing
the guests a golden opportunity.
MHS followed by getting another
pop up for the second out in the
frame, but Wahama answered by
reeling off six consecutive hits for
six runs and a comfortable 7-0
cushion.
From there, Wahama’s defense
escaped a bases-loaded jam in
the bottom of the sixth and left
runners stranded at the corners
in the seventh. WHS reliever Garrett Miller fanned Man standout
Braden Grifﬁn — a West Virginia
State signee — for the ﬁnal out,
and a quick throw to ﬁrst on the
dropped third strike started the
White Falcon celebration.
The historical win capped a
remarkable 7-0 postseason run,
one that saw the White Falcons
outscore and outhit their opponents by overall margins of 72-7
and 76-24, respectively. The
six-run outburst in the top of the
sixth was also the 13th time in 43
innings that WHS plated at least
three runs during the postseason
trek.
Wahama also posted ﬁve
shutouts in those seven Class A
tournament games and committed
only four errors during that span,
compared to 20 miscues by the
opposition. The Red and White
also never allowed more than two

Wahama head baseball coach Tom Cullen, middle, is joined by assistant coaches Phil Hoffman, left, and Ron Bradley,
right, for a picture with the 2015 Class A championship trophy after Saturday’s 7-0 victory over Man at Appalachian
Power Park in Charleston, W.Va.

runs in any of those 43 tournament innings played.
After 11-plus seasons as Wahama skipper, not to mention being
involved in a coaching capacity
with the WHS program for 35
years, Tom Cullen was smiling earto-ear as his troops joined the 1996
and 1998 squads in bringing home
a state championship.
Nonetheless, ending the White
Falcons’ 17-year absence at the
state tournament and coming
away with the big prize still left the
venerable mentor looking to the
future.
“It’s a sweet topping on a rather
long career, being my ﬁrst as head
coach. Hopefully we don’t have
to wait as long to do this again
the next time,” Cullen said with
a chuckle. “We lose three great
seniors and have a lot of kids coming back, but it will be up to those
kids to want to get back here. I
think they’ll work pretty hard to
get back here again, but I’m pretty
proud of all of them right now.”
Wahama outhit the hosts by a
sizable 12-4 overall margin and
committed only one of the four
errors in the contest, the White
Falcons’ ﬁrst postseason miscue
since clinching the Region 4, Section 3 title with a 15-0 victory over

Calhoun County at J.C. Cook Field.
WHS — which won both
regional and state games as the
guests on the scoreboard —
stranded just six runners on base,
compared to nine left on by the
Hillbillies.
Wahama has now won six
straight Class A state tournament
games and owns an alltime mark
of 8-3 in the WVSSAC Final Four.
WHS previously defeated Van
(3-2) in 1996 and Mooreﬁeld (9-4)
in 1998, the other two White Falcon championship campaigns.
Wahama’s 7-0 win was also the
ﬁrst shutout in a Class A ﬁnal
since Buffalo blanked East Hardy
10-0 back in 2006. The Red and
White also appeared in the 1969,
1978 and 1998 state tournaments.
It was the ﬁnal baseball game for
seniors Demitrius Serevicz, Garrett Miller and Kristopher Clark
in Wahama uniforms. The White
Falcons’ remaining 2015 roster
included juniors Jared Nutter,
Kaileb Sheets, Ian Hook, Mason
Hicks, Ryan Thomas and Ricky
Kearns; sophomores Philip Hoffman, Kaleb Gibbs, Nyles Riggs,
Josh Petry and Jared Oliver; and
freshmen Colton Arrington, Cass
Kimes and Dalton Kearns.
Joining Tom Cullen on the WHS

coaching staff this season were
assistants Ron Bradley and Phil
Hoffman. Marcia Ortiz and Gary
Clark also served as statisticians
for the program.
The White Falcons defeated
Hannan (17-0), Calhoun County
(10-0), Calhoun County (15-0),
Charleston Catholic (6-4), Williamstown (11-0) and Bishop Donahue
(6-3) en route to the Class A state
ﬁnal.
Wahama recorded 10 shutout
victories and outscored opponents
251-62 . WHS posted double-digit
runs 12 times this year and held
opponents to two or fewer runs 23
times.
The White Falcons ﬁnished the
season with a team batting average
of .298, a team ﬁelding percentage of .925 and a team earned run
average of 1.27. The WHS pitching staff struck out 283 batters,
walked 100 and allowed opponents
to hit just .174.
Congratulations to all of the
scholar-athletes on their successes
during the 2014-15 campaign. The
next batch of memories are just
two months away.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

2015 Meigs Marauder
Youth Football Camp

ing to their position in their age group.
A man/woman of the year is determined at the end
of the ﬁrst four weeks of play based on the points
accumulated. The ﬁnal event of the year is a “Fun
Day,” where handicaps are used to determine the winPOMEROY, Ohio — The 2015 Meigs Marauder
ning scores for that day. All participants taking part
Youth Football Camp will be held on Saturday, Aug.
in “Fun Day” will receive a prize. The ﬁnal day scores
1, at Holzer Field, Farmers Bank Stadium at Meigs
High School. The camp is open to students in grades will also be used to break any ties that may exist after
1-8 and a child in any school district can attend. Camp the ﬁrst four weeks.
The tournaments, courses and dates of play are as
Fee is $20 per camper. If you register before July 19,
you are guaranteed a camp t-shirt. Register the day of follows: Monday, June 29, at Riverside Golf Course in
the camp begins at 8 a.m., and the camp will be from Mason; Wednesday, July 8, at Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallipolis; and Monday, July 13, at Hidden Valley Golf
9 a.m. until 1 p.m. For more information or to regisCourse in Point Pleasant.
ter, call Tonya at 740-645-4479, follow the camp on
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player. A
Facebook at “Meigs Youth Football Camp”.
small lunch is included with the fee and will be served
at the conclusion of play each week. Registration
begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9 a.m. Please
contact Jeff Slone (740-256-6160), Jan Haddox (304675-3388) or Bob Blessing (304-675-6135) if you can
contribute or have questions concerning the tour.
RACINE, Ohio — The Southern football program
will be holding its 2015 Southern Youth Football
Camp from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 21,
through Thursday, July 23, at Roger Lee Adams Field
in Meigs County. The cost is $25 for any camperin
grades 3-8 and a t-shirt will be given to all who regGALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia County Elks
ister before May 27. The camp will be conducted by
Youth Football League will sponsor a football camp
Southern coaches and players. Checks should made
from 6-8 p.m. July 13-14 on Memorial Field in Gallipopayable to Southern Athletic Boosters, courtesy of
lis. This is a free camp for students in second through
Kyle Wickline, 920 Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771.
sixth grades who are interested in playing football this
The makeup date will be Friday, July 24.
year. The camp will be conducted by Gallia Academy
and South Gallia high schools, middle schools and
youth league coaches. Each camper will receive a free
T-shirt for attending the camp. For more information,
call Mike at 740-446-7538 or Dave at 740-208-0554.
Look them up on Facebook: Gallipolis Elks Football
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club
League.
will be hosting the seventh annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages 9-18 on
Thursday, July 9, at 10 a.m. The competitors will be
divided into age groups 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and 16-18
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Local youth football
and there is a fee. Golfers ages 12 and under will be
signups
will be held every Saturday in July from 11
charged a $20 fee, while golfers ages 13 and older
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Middleport Stadium. Kids will
will have a $30 fee. Awards will be presented to the
be placed on a team by the school they attend, cost is
top three golfers in each age group. Spectators are
$35 and all equipment is provided by the league. Area
allowed. To enter, please contact the clubhouse at
commissioners are Tye Schwall (Gallipolis), Eber
740-446-4653 or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or 740Pickens (Southern), Pat Newland (Eastern), Bill Mil645-4381.
liron (Meigs) and Dave Barr (Wahama). For addition
information please contact Sarah at (740) 444-1606 or
Tony at (740) 992-4067.

Southern Youth
Football Camp

Gallia Elks to hold
youth football camp

Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside

Youth football signups

Tri-County Junior
Golf Schedule

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The schedule for the
2015 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League
has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially began on June 15 at the Hidden
Valley Golf Course. Age groups for both young ladies
and young men are 10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16,
and 17-19. Trophies are awarded each week to the
ﬁrst, second and third place positions in each age
group. All participants receive weekly points accord-

Eastern football
Golf Scramble
BELPRE, Ohio — The Eastern football team will
be holding a four-man scrable on Saturday, July 11,
at the Oxbow Golf Course. The 18-hole event will
begin at 8 a.m. with registration begining at 7 a.m.
The cost is $60 per person with addition fees for mulligans, forward tee shot and a skins game. The will

also be a 50/50 drawling and a closest to the pin contest. Please register in advance by contacting Chris
Buchanan at (740)591-3489 or by email coachbuchanan@windstream.net

Eastern Golf Scramble
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern golf programs
will be holding a four-man scramble on Saturday, July
18, at the Meigs County Golf Course. The 18-hole
event will have a 9 a.m. shotgun start, with registration starting at 8 a.m. that morning. The cost is $40
per player, which includes 18 holes, cart and lunch.
There will also be prizes for closest to the pin, longest
drive and other feats, as well as a skins game and mulligans available for an additional fee. The ﬁeld is limited to the ﬁrst 10 teams to register and pay. For more
information, contact Nick Dettwiller at 740-416-0344
or by email at nickdettwiller@gmail.com

Blue Angels Basketball
Exposure Camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy girls
basketball team will be hosting an exposure camp on
July 20, at GAHS. The goal of this camp is to give the
student-athlete an opportunity to be seen for a chance
to play on the college level. This event is for female
athletes to showcase their talents against top competition while being viewed by scouting services and
college coaches. The cost of the camp will be $150.00
per camper and is for girls entering grades 10-12 and
any unsigned seniors. Check in will begin at 9 a.m.
with games starting at 11. The deadline to register
is July 6. For more information and to apply contact
Blue Angels head coach Joe Justice by email at joe.
justice@gck12.oh.us

Gallia Academy
youth track team
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Gallia Academy track and
ﬁeld coach Paul Close is tentatively working on starting a youth track team for grades 1-6. Close would
like to start practice this month and compete through
July. Due to a late start next year, we will ofﬁcially
begin in May of 2016 and compete through July. The
scope would be to work as a team, learn the basic
fundamentals of track and ﬁeld, and build self esteem
and conﬁdence. If you are a parent or grandparent
and would love to see this happen, please contact
Coach Close at 740-645-7316. Close’s intent is not
to make this something competitive or to win major
competitions, but to emphasize the basic fundamentals of track and ﬁeld. Practices will likely run twice a
week at Gallia Academy high school, with times and
schedule yet to be announced. Once things get up and
rolling, Close would like to form a committee of 5-6
parents to create a charter and plan goals, etc., for the
team.

Chet Thomas takes lead in Riverside Seniors
Tuesday at Riverside Golf
Club in Mason County.
Through 12 weeks of
play, Thomas has a total
of 128.5 points. Smith
is right behind him in
second with 128 points,
while Jay Rees is in third
place with 119 points.
A total of 63 players
took part in Tuesday’s
round, which made 15

passed Dewey Smith for
the lead at the 2015 RivMASON, W.Va. — Chet erside Senior Men’s Golf
Thomas of Patriot has
League being held every

740-596-0896 304-773-5015
McArthur, Ohio

Mason, WV

and Chet Thomas, who
collectively shot a 9-under
par round of 61, while
there was a ﬁve-way tie
for third place with a collective shot of 7-under
par round of 63
The closest to the pin
winners were Rex Young
on the ninth hole and
Dewey Smith on No. 14.
The current top-10

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The low round of the
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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 28, 2015 3B

Gallia duo playing big roles in URG success
By David Smalley
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande women’s
basketball program completed
another memorable chapter in the
program’s storied history this past
season behind the talent of two
local hardwood standouts - Morgan
Daniels, a 2011 graduate from
Gallia Academy High School, and
Brooke Marcum, a 2011 graduate
from River Valley High School.
Both athletes played integral
roles in the record-setting accomplishments of head coach David
Smalley’s squad during the 2014-15
season. The RedStorm championed
in their inaugural season in the
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference (KIAC), posting a 13-1
record in conference play en route
to a national tournament berth.
After a loss to Point Park University in their KIAC opener, the
RedStorm went through a recommitment process, which ignited
a program-record 16 consecutive
wins spanning from January 10th
to February 24th. The RedStorm
continued its championship season
by earning a bid to participate in
the 2015 NAIA Division II National
tournament in Sioux City, Iowa the program’s sixth national tournament appearance.
Marcum and Daniels helped
guide Rio to an impressive 25-8 season, which ended in a seven-point
loss to eventual national semiﬁnalist Hastings (Neb.) College.
As a senior at Gallia Academy
High School, Daniels was recruited
to Rio to play volleyball for head
coach Billina Donaldson and bas-

ketball for Smalley. She played two
seasons of volleyball as a weak side
hitter and ﬁnished with 57 blocks
for her career.
During her freshman year,
RedStorm volleyball went 21-15
and the following year garnered a
21-10 overall record in the highlycompetitive Mid-South Conference
(MSC). Daniels earned All-MSC
Scholar Athlete honors both years
of her volleyball career.
After just one season of playing on the junior varsity level
of the women’s hoops program,
Daniels proved her worth on the
court and joined the varsity ranks.
Throughout her career at Rio, she
was thought of as a leader both on
and off the court. Late in her junior
year, Daniels suffered an apparent
career-ending knee injury. However,
her determination and work ethic
serve her well and she rehabbed
her way back onto the court for an
exciting senior season.
Daniels proved to be one of the
main reasons for the overall success
of Rio’s inside game, Smalley said.
“She was a strong rebounder,
a solid interior player, and relentless defender who led the team in
taking charges and used a variety
of post moves to score around the
basket,” he said.
Daniels started ﬁve games for
the RedStorm, but her strength
was in coming off the bench and
maintaining the team’s strong post
play. Other KIAC coaches remarked
that Daniels even elevated the level
of the inside game when she took
over.
Daniels closed out her career
by averaging 6.5 points per game
and pulling down 4.8 rebounds per

game in her senior
season.
“Morgan is a
great student of
the game with a
high basketball
IQ,” Smalley said.
“In the classroom, Daniels
she was a conscientious student
with exemplary study habits which
allowed her to consistently be honored in sports academia. While at
Rio, she was a perennial member
of the Dean’s List and was honored
as Daktronics NAIA Scholar Athlete, WBCA All-Academic Scholar
Athlete, and KIAC All-Academic
Team.”
Daniels, a Middle School Math
and Science major, loves children
and plans to teach and coach when
she completes her degree.
Daniels is the daughter of Gwen
and Arthur Daniels of Rio Grande,
Ohio.
During Brooke Marcum’s senior
year at River Valley High School,
Smalley liked what he saw.
“I was blown away by her skill
set as a young high school player.
She wasn’t polished, but possessed
a ton of versatility,” Smalley said.
“She had good handles for a sixfooter, shot the medium-range
jumper well and was strong inside
with the basketball. The recruiting
process started immediately with
Marcum. The moment I ﬁrst saw
Brooke grab a rebound and, with
deer-like motion, advance the ball
full-court to ﬁnd the open teammate for the eventual score, I knew
I wanted her to be a part of my
program.”
Marcum signed a letter-of-intent

Marcum

to attend Rio
Grande, but had to
redshirt her ﬁrst
year. She became
disenchanted with
both school and
basketball after the
fall semester and
walked away from
a full basketball

scholarship.
Over the next six months, she
regained her passion for the classroom and basketball court.
“Brooke knocked on my ofﬁce
door in late June. She nervously
cleared her throat and asked for
another chance to join the team. I
was just as nervous as she was but
very excited as she wanted another
opportunity to rejoin our family,”
Smalley said. “I told her she walked
away from a full ride and that she
would have to earn it back by playing next season and paying out of
pocket. And play she did! She lost
weight, got in shape, made herself
stronger in the weight room and
played for her love of the game.”
During the 2013-14 season,
Marcum statistically proved to be
the frontrunner for MSC Freshman
of the Year, averaging 9.4 points
and pulling down 8.7 rebounds per
game on an 18-win team.
“Brooke played with passion
and a purpose to prove to herself
and others what she was capable of
doing in the classroom and on the
basketball court,” Smalley said.
During the 2014-15 season,
Marcum earned Player of the
Week Honors in the KIAC and
tied the single-game school record
by grabbing 23 rebounds against
Point Park University. Three games

later, she tied the NAIA Division II
single-season high for an individual
– and set a new school record - by
ripping down 27 rebounds against
Indiana University-East.
Marcum averaged 8.6 points
per game, while pulling down 11.2
rebounds. She started 29 games as
a sophomore and shot 55 percent
from the ﬁeld and will enter her
junior year in 2015-16 on track to
secure over 1,000 rebounds and
score over 1,000 points for her
career.
Marcum, a physical education
major, excels in the classroom and
would love to teach and coach in
the future. She is the daughter of
Dawn and Sherman Marcum of
Hudson, Fla. A commuter student,
Marcum resides with her surrogate
family of Bobby, Allison, Ana, Lexi
and Nick Jeffers of Vinton, Ohio.
“My involvement over the past
23 years of service at the University
of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College has afforded
me the privilege of interacting with
a long list of dynamic individuals. Morgan Daniels and Brooke
Marcum are at the top of this list,”
Smalley said. “They’re genuine,
goal-oriented, conscientious
student-athletes and great team
players. They’re the barometer I
measure future prospective studentathletes by. I’m so proud and honored to have been a small part of
their academic and athletic lives at
Rio Grande. Gallia Academy and
River Valley High Schools should
be congratulated on preparing two
of Gallia County’s ﬁnest people.”
David Smalley is the women’s basketball
head coach of the University of Rio Grande.

Rio Grande alum named Pecos League All-Star
Alamogordo, New Mexico. located in New Mexico.
He currently sports a 4-0
Steele posted a 13-15
record with one save and a
record with three saves and
4.69 earned run average.
a 3.87 ERA during his four
Steele’s four wins make
him part of a four-way tie
for ﬁfth place among the
league leaders.
The Pecos League is comprised of eight teams in four
states, with most of the teams

seasons at Rio Grande. He
appeared in 58 games - 28
of which were starts - with
eight complete games and

a pair of shutouts.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Celebrate

July 4th
in
Middleport, Ohio
Saturday, July 4th
Dave Diles Park &amp;
Downtown Middleport

4 pm – Children’s Games
5:30 pm – Parade Line-up @ Dairy Queen
Remember our “Pulled - Pushed, Pedaled &amp; Pets Category”
6:00 pm – Parade
Flag Raising following Parade @ Dave Diles Park
6:30 - 10:00 pm – Entertainment
Featuring the band “Remember Then” &amp; DJ Kip Grueser
10:00 pm – Fireworks
EVEN BIGGER &amp; BETTER THIS YEAR
The Middleport Community Association &amp; the town
of Mason, WV have combined their resources to bring
you an awesome ﬁreworks display for 2015!

Sponsored by the Middleport Community Association
Info: 740-992-5877

60589412

in the independent professional league’s All-Star
Game on Monday, June
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
29, at 6 p.m. MDT, at Fort
Former University of Rio
Marcy Park in Santa Fe,
Grande baseball standout
New Mexico.
David Steele has been named
Steele, who completed
a 2015 Pecos League Southhis Rio Grande career in
ern Division All-Star.
2014, is a pitcher for the
Steele, a native of Ketter- White Sands Pupﬁsh, a
franchise headquartered in
ing, Ohio, will participate

For Ohio Valley Publishing

60591797

By Randy Payton

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

SGHS athletes honored at 2015 Spring Sports Banquet
Staff report

Isaiah Geiger.
Third-year awards were
MERCERVILLE,
presented to Owen Bevan
Ohio — South Gallia
and Aaron Schoolcraft,
High School honored its
while Terry Shaffer was
spring sports athletes at
presented with the para banquet on Thursday,
ticipation award. Geiger
May 28, in the school
was awarded the High
cafeteria.
Point Award, while Kane
Members of the track
Hutchinson was given the
program were the ﬁrst to Rebel Award.
be honored, with junior
Softball was presented
high track awards prenext. First-year awards
sented to Gavin Bevan,
were given to Erin Evans,
Jacob Birtcher, Chad
Kylie Haislop, Alana
Bostic, Justin Butler, Tay- Riggle, Ashley Northup,
lor Burnette, Alyssa Cre- Mikayla Poling, Carlee
meens, Tanner Dennison, Bartum, Justine BowBryceton Folden, Olivia
ers, Maddie Simpson,
Harrison, Amaya Howell, Brooke Campbell, Olivia
Zach Meade, Kyle NorHornsby, Aailyah Howell,
thup, Wyatt Rapp, Emily Keirsten Howell, Destiny
Riggle, Hunter Sanders
Johnson and Alexandria
and A.J. Woodall.
Sweeney.
Girls track was honored
The second-year
next. First-year awards
awards were presented
were presented to Shayto Katie Bostic and Ciara
lee Rose, Zoe Simms and Small, while Shelby
Maggie Wallace, while
Sanders and Caitlyn
the lone second-year
Vanscoy were presented
award was presented to
with the third-year
Mariah Chapman.
awards. Sara Bailey was
The third-year award
given the four-year award
was presented to Kelsey
and Kelsey Pugh was
Corbin. Fourth-year
presented with the parawards were presented to ticipation award.
Lexie Johnson and Alana
Bailey was named the
Riggle. Jayna Garnes was Most Valuable Player,
presented with the parwhile Vanscoy was given
ticipation award.
the Most Strikeouts
Chapman was present- plaque, Sanders was
ed the High Point Award given the Catching Award
for running events, while and Simpson was given
Johnson was given the
the Rebel Award.
High Point Award for
In baseball, ﬁrst-year
ﬁeld events. Corbin took awards were presented
home the Rebel Award.
to Ronny Evans, Jacob
Boys track presented
Brumﬁeld, Cory Bryan,
ﬁrst-year awards to
Colton Cougenhour,
Dakota Bettis, Colton
Johnny Sheets, Austin
Triplett, Virgil Watson,
Bowers, Joesph Ehman,
Joey Woodall, Tyler
Kane Hutchinson, LandBryan and Brandon Rutt.
on Hutchinson, Chayce
The lone second-year
Pearson and Dominick
award went to Christian
Seward. Second-year
Spaun, while the thirdawards were presented
year awards went to
to Nathan Colburn and

Courtesy photos

South Gallia Spring Sports plaque winners: Mariah Chapman, Lexie Johnson, Kelsey Corbin, Isaiah Geiger, Kane Hutchinson, Sara Bailey,
Caitlyn VanScoy, Shelby Sanders, Maddie Simpson, Johnny Sheets, Virgil Watson and Cuyler Mills.

Members of the 2015 All-Academic TVC team: Sara Bailey, Katie Bostic, Kelsey Corbin, Kylie Haislop, Lexi Johnson, Cuyler Mills, Ashley
Northup, Maddie Simpson and Vaitlyn VanScoy.

Cuyler Mills and Dustin
Hornsby.
Mills was named the
MVP, while Sheets and
Watson were presented

with the Rebel Award.
Four-year letter award
plaques were given to
Sara Bailey (softball),
Lexie Johnson (girls

track) and Alana Riggle
(girls track).
Members of the 2015
All-Academic TVC team
were Sara Bailey, Katie

Bostic, Kelsey Corbin,
Kylie Haislop, Lexi Johnson, Cuyler Mills, Ashley
Northup, Maddie Simpson and Caitlyn Vanscoy.

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*Must finance through Ally Bank, Wells Fargo or GM Financial to qualify. **Must own 99 or newer non GM vehicle. Not responsible for typographical mistakes.

We Are Professional Grade

The New Class of World Class

60590765

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, June 28, 2015 5B

URG SUMMER CAMPS

MEN’S AND WOMEN’S SOCCER: The
University of Rio Grande
soccer programs have
announced their 2015
summer camp schedule.
A team camp for girls’
high school squads is
planned for July 12-15,
with a boys’ high school
team camp slated for July
19-23. Cost for the girls’
camp is $270, while the
boys’ camp has a fee of
$305.
Fees for the residential
camps include lodging,
meals, training sessions
and tournament play.
Camp directors are
URG men’s soccer head
coach Scott Morrissey,
men’s assistant coach
Tony Daniels and Rio
women’s soccer head
coach Callum Morris.
The camp brochure is
available on the men’s
soccer link of the school’s
athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com. Online
registration and payment is available at www.
rioredstormsoccercamps.
com.
Registration forms
should be mailed to URG
Lyne Center, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Checks should be
made payable to Scott
Morrissey.
For more information,
contact Morrissey at
740-245-7126, 740-6456438 or e-mail scottm@
rio.edu; Daniels at 740245-7493, 740-645-0377
or e-mail tdaniels@rio.
edu; or Morris at 740853-2639 or cmorris@
rio.edu.
VOLLEYBALL: The
University of Rio Grande
will host its 2015 Summer Volleyball Camp,
June 28-30, at the Lyne
Center on the URG campus.
The camp is open
to girls in grades 6-12.
There will be two divisions for campers –
grade 6-8 and grade 9-12.
Campers will receive
instruction in fundamentals and various drills
from a staff that will
include a former AllAmerican, as well as AllOhio and Player of the
Year honorees and NAIA
national leaders in their
area of specialty.
Campers will also be
divided into teams for
tournament play to conclude the camp.
Cost is $200 per
camper, which includes
overnight lodging, meals
and awards.
Registration forms and
a camp schedule is available on the volleyball link
of the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and
a $100 deposit should
be mailed to Billina
Donaldson, Volleyball
Coach, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made
payable to Billina Donaldson Volleyball Camp.
For questions or concerns, call Donaldson at
740-988-6497 or send
e-mail to billinad@rio.
edu.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: The University of
Rio Grande’s 2015 Women’s Basketball Camp is
scheduled for July 5-8 at
the Lyne Center on the
URG campus.
The overnight instructional camp is open to
girls in grades 4-12.
Cost is $280 per camper,
which includes lodg-

ing, meals, a certiﬁcate
of participation and a
t-shirt.
Campers will also
receive 24-hour supervision from coaches and
counselors; lecture/discussion groups and ﬁlm
sessions; daily instruction on shooting, ballhandling, post play and
defense; and use of the
school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a
camp store featuring
drinks, snacks, pizza and
Rio Grande apparel for
sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande
women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley,
who ranks among the top
10 coaches on the active
wins list with more than
400, will be the camp
director.
Online registration
is available through the
women’s basketball link
on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration
forms are available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center
during regular business
hours.
Registration forms
should be mailed to
David Smalley, Rio
Grande Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O. Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.
Checks should be made
payable to Women’s Basketball Camp.
For more information,
contact Smalley at 740245-7491, 1-800-2827201, or e-mail dsmalley@rio.edu.
CROSS COUNTRY/
TRACK &amp; FIELD: The
University of Rio Grande
Cross Country/Track
&amp; Field programs will

simultaneously host their
2015 Distance Camp and
2015 Track Camp, June
28-July 2, on the URG
campus.
The objective of the
camps is to increase the
standards and knowledge of distance running
and track &amp; ﬁeld, while
providing current knowledge in techniques that
will result in life-long
beneﬁts.
Campers will hear from
a number of guest speakers.
Long-time Rio Grande
track &amp; ﬁeld/cross
country head coach Bob
Willey will direct both
camps. Willey has over
40 years of coaching at
the collegiate level and
has fostered a program
of more than 100 cross
country/track &amp; ﬁeld AllAmericans.
Cost is $250 per
runner/athlete, which
includes room, meals
and recreation facilities.
A $25 discount is available to members of a
school with ﬁve or more
athletes attending. A
$25 deposit is required
with the return of a camp
application, with the balance payable on the participant’s arrival at camp.
On-site registration
will take place on Sunday, June 28, from 1-1:30
p.m., at Bob Evans Farm
Hall on the URG campus.
Registration forms and
the camp brochure are
available on the track
&amp; ﬁeld and cross country links of the school’s
athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms
and the non-refundable
deposit should be mailed

man guided the RedStorm to a 32-16 record,
a KIAC Tournament
championship and the
school’s second NAIA
National Tournament
berth.
The pitching camp
will provide beginning
pitchers with a speciﬁc
fundamental basis. They
will leave with a daily
workout progression.
SOFTBALL: The
University of Rio Grande Advanced pitchers will
receive instruction on
softball program has
announced its 2015 sum- spin pitching along with
advanced coaching on leg
mer camp schedule.
drive and balance.
A two-day instrucParents and coaches
tional camp is scheduled
are welcome to attend
for June 23 and 24, at
any of the sessions to
Rio Softball Park on the
observe and ask quesURG campus. The session for players age 7-13 tions.
Players MUST have
is scheduled from 9 a.m.noon each day, while the a completed Medical
Consent Form, which is
session for players age
available from the Rio
14-18 is set for 1-4 p.m.
softball webpage on the
on both days.
school’s athletic website
Cost is $70.
A pitching camp is also (www.rioredstorm.com),
before being allowed to
scheduled for Sunday,
participate. Softballs will
July 19, at Rio Softball
be provided, but players
Park.
should also bring approThe camp will run
priate gear to the tryout.
from 1-3 p.m. for playBoth an online regisers age 7-13 and from
tration form and a regis3-5 p.m. for players age
14-18 on both dates. Cost tration form which can
be printed and returned
is $30.
by mail are also available
Rio Grande softball
on the website,
head coach Amber
Checks should be made
Bowman will direct the
payable to Amber Bowcamps, while RedStorm
players will also be assist- man and mailed to 218
North College Avenue,
ing in the instruction.
P.O. Box 500, Rio
Bowman was a fouryear starter at shortstop Grande, Ohio 45674.
For more information,
for Rio from 2008-11.
She then spent two years contact Bowman by
phone at 740-245-7490 or
as a graduate assistant
by e-mail at abowman@
coach for the RedStorm
rio.edu.
before serving as an
assistant coach at the
WOMEN’S BASUniversity of NorthwestKETBALL SCHOLARern Ohio in 2014.
Earlier this year, Bow- SHIPS: The University
to URG Lyne Center, P.O.
Box 500, Rio Grande,
OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable
to Coach Bob Willey.
Deadline for early registration is June 22.
For questions or concerns, send e-mail to
rwilley@rio.edu or call
740-245-7487.

of Rio Grande would like
to make high school girls
who reside in Gallia and
Meigs aware of an opportunity to apply for full
and partial scholarships
to attend Rio’s overnight
basketball camp.
The camp, which is
directed by long-time Rio
Grande women’s basketball head coach David
Smalley, is scheduled for
July 5-8.
The D. Wayne Evans
endowment will provide
one full and several additional basketball camp
scholarship opportunities
for high school girls at
each high school in both
Gallia and Meigs counties.
To be considered for
the scholarship program,
campers simply need
to complete the online
application form, which
can be found on the
women’s basketball page
of the University of Rio
Grande’s athletic website
(www.rioredstorm.com).
Applicants can click on
the “D. Wayne Evans
Camp Scholarship” tab
at the top of the page
and the application will
be forwarded directly to
Smalley.
Evans’ family understands the importance of
extracurricular activities
for high school girls.
Through the establishment of the scholarship
program, they hope
to support area high
school girls who have
established a balance
of academics, servant
leadership qualities and
ﬁnancial need.
For more information,
contact Smalley by phone
at 740-245-7491 or by
e-mail at dsmalley@rio.edu.

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RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande has announced
its 2015 summer camp/
shootout schedule for
men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s
basketball, volleyball,
track &amp; ﬁeld/cross country and softball.

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Timberwolves select Towns with No. 1 pick in draft
NEW YORK (AP) — The
Minnesota Timberwolves got
their man in the middle. The
Lakers got a playmaking partner
for Kobe Bryant.
Knicks fans just got mad —
though not for long.
Minnesota selected Kentucky’s
Karl-Anthony Towns with the
ﬁrst pick in the NBA draft on
Thursday night, the ﬁrst of three
straight freshmen chosen before
New York chose Latvian forward
Kristaps Porzingis, triggering
loud, long boos from their fans
inside Barclays Center.
They were cheering later in
the ﬁrst round when the Knicks
acquired the rights to Notre
Dame guard Jerian Grant from
Atlanta for Tim Hardaway Jr.
Before that, the Timberwolves
went for a center in their ﬁrst
time owning the No. 1 pick.
They can add him to a young
roster featuring Rookie of the
Year Andrew Wiggins, who was
picked ﬁrst last year by Cleveland and later dealt to Minnesota
in the Kevin Love trade.
Towns’ selection wasn’t a surprise — though he said he didn’t
know until it was announced.
“When Mr. Adam Silver came
out, I saw him, and he said,
‘With the No. 1 pick’, I was racing,” said Towns, who was sitting with Kentucky coach John
Calipari.
“I told Coach Cal before when
he ﬁrst came out that I was trying to drink the water and I was
shaking uncontrollably, and I
told him, ‘Coach, don’t give me
the ball right now for the lastsecond shot. I wouldn’t make it.’”
The Los Angeles Lakers then
took guard D’Angelo Russell of
Ohio State, who was wearing a
scarlet jacket, bowtie and shoes
that matched the Buckeyes’
school colors.
Red — or some shade of it —
was the color of choice in the
green room, though Towns wore
a grey jacket and Russell’s table

guys going to go tonight.”
But they had to settle for tying
the record with six selections,
as Dakari Johnson and Andrew
Harrison went in the second
round, but Aaron Harrison was
not picked.
For weeks, Towns and Duke’s
Jahlil Okafor had been considered the top two selections. But
the Lakers instead decided on
backcourt help with a player who
can step right in and play alongside Bryant in what could be the
superstar’s ﬁnal season.
“Kobe’s a great dude,” Russell
said. “Not knowing how much
he has left in the tank is the
scary thing. I’m really looking
forward to him taking me under
his wing if possible and feed me
the most knowledge he can and
use that as ﬁre against my opponents.”
Okafor fell to the Philadelphia 76ers at No. 3, becoming
the 19th lottery selection and
29th ﬁrst-round pick — most
in NCAA history — under
coach Mike Krzyzewski. Those
numbers increased when Miami
drafted Justise Winslow 10th
and Cleveland took Tyus Jones at
No. 24 — though his rights were
later dealt to Minnesota.
The Knicks ended the run of
one-and-dones when they took
Porzingis with the No. 4 pick.
Kathy Willens | AP
The 19-year-old forward had
D’Angelo Russell, right, gestures as he is greeted by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver after the Los Angeles Lakers selected
been surging up draft boards but
Russell with the second pick in the NBA basketball draft Thursday, in New York.
Knicks fans, who haven’t forgotten the drafting of Frederic Weis
later turned gold when his supThe 6-foot-11 Towns averaged the sixth pick, Utah grabbed
and were underwhelmed by the
porters donned Lakers hats.
10.3 points and 6.7 rebounds
Trey Lyles at No. 12 and guard
acquisition of Andrea Bargnani,
He drew huge cheers when he in just 21 minutes per game, as
Devin Booker followed one spot wanted no part of him, booing
was announced but his crowd
Kentucky used a platoon system later to Phoenix.
lustily after his name was called
was dwarfed by Towns’. The
in winning its ﬁrst 38 games and
Booker, at 18 the youngest
by Silver.
New Jersey native said he had
reaching the Final Four.
player in the draft, gave the Wild“Lot of fans weren’t happy
above 50 family and friends in
It was Kentucky’s third No. 1
cats a record-tying four players
they drafted me,” Porzingis said.
attendance.
pick in the last six years, joining among the top 14 selections.
“I have to do everything in my
“This is home to me,” he said. Anthony Davis in 2012 and John Duke in 1999 and North Carohands to turn those booing fans
“Been able to come here and
Wall in 2010. The Wildcats were lina in 2005 also had four lottery into clapping fans. I was happy
have all my closest friends and
hoping to have a record seven
picks.
about it. Want to be part of this
love ones come out here. It’s the players picked and were well on
“Just shows our team was
organization, the fans are harsh
most special moments in my
their way when Sacramento took special. Unlike any other,”
sometimes, that’s how it is in
life.”
center Willie Cauley-Stein with
Lyles said. “Still got three other New York and I’m ready for it.”

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60592731

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�CLASSIFIEDS

PUBLIC NOTICE
Murphy Oil Company Inc.,
1691 Lynn Dr., Lancaster,
Ohio 43130, (740) 215-1011 is
applying to permit a well for the
injection of brine water produced in association with oil
and natural gas. The location
of the proposed injection well
is the William McKelvey #1A,
Sec. 16, Lebanon Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the
Newburg Zone of the Lockport
Dolomite at a depth of 4793 to
4853 feet. The average injection is estimated to be 3000
barrels per day. The maximum
injection pressure is estimated
to be 1105 psi. Further information can be obtained by contacting Murphy Oil Company
Inc., or the Division of Oil and
Gas Resources Management.
The address of the Division is:
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Oil and
Gas Resources Management,
2045 Morse Road, Building F2, Columbus, Ohio 432296693, (614) 265-6922. For full
consideration, all comments
and objections must be received by the Division, in writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.
6/26/15-6/28/15-6/30/157/1/15-7/2/15
Quotes for Supplies
Eastern Local School District,
50008 State Route 681,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772 is
accepting quotes for transportation supplies and dairy supplies. Specifications can be
obtained by calling the
superintendentҋs office
at 740-667-6079. Quotes will
be opened in the treasurerҋs
office at noon on Thursday,
July 16, 2015. Specifications
and the information contained
in this advertisement may be
found on the district website at
www.easternlocal.com. The
board reserves the right to reject any or any part of the
quote. Quotes, should be
labeled “Supplies Quote” and
mailed to:
Eastern Local School District
Treasurerҋs Office
QUOTE FOR SUPPLIES
50008 State Route 681
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
6/28/15

Eastern Local School District
Treasurerҋs Office
QUOTE FOR SUPPLIES
50008 State Route 681
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
6/28/15

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

Rentals

Excavating

Apartments available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven,
WV. Now accepting applicatons for HUD-subsidized,
One bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Full Time STNAs

GMHA Reopens Section 8
Housing Choice Voucher
Program Waiting List
Help Available for Struggling
Gallia County Families
Bidwell- The Gallia Metropolitain Housing Authority (GMHA)
is pleased to announce the reopening of its Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program
waiting list.
GMHA's Section 8 waiting list
has been closed since June
2012. Thanks to careful management by GMHA, the waiting list will be reopened to applicants on July 7, 2015.
Qualified applicants will be
placed on the waiting list in the
order that applications are received.
Interested applicants may submit an application in person or
by mail beginning on July 7,
2015. Applications will be
available at the GMHA Administrative Offices at 381 Buck
Ridge Rd, Bidwell,Oh.
In addition to providing rental
assistance to nearly 170 families in Gallia County, GMHA
also owns and 140 low-income apartment units in Bidwell and Rio Grande.
GMHA supports equal housing opportunity and non-discrimination and is open
Monday - Friday 8am to
4:30pm.

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Days/Nights

STNA Training Program
Classes start 7/6
Respond by 7/1
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�0XVW�KDYH�D�FOHDQ�
EDFNJURXQG�FKHFN
�$ELOLW\�WR�SDVV�D�GUXJ�WHVW
For more information
FRQWDFW��$EE\VKLUH�3ODFH
����%XFNULGJH�5RDG
Bidwell, OH 45614
3K��������������
ZZZ�YUDEOHKHDOWKFDUH�FRP

EOE

60590838

Land (Acreage)

Gallia Co. Davis Rd. 5 acres
$11,900 or Kyger 8 acres $
10,900! Meigs Co. SR 143, 7
acres $21,500 or Danville 9
acres $14,900-more @
www.brunerland.com or call
740-441-1492, we glady finance!
Apartments/Townhouses

2 bedroom Apts. Furnished
500.00 month-No Pets
Racine, Ohio
740-591-5174
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2BR, downstairs Apt., in Pt Pl,
w/heat/AC/Kitchen Appliances,
W/D hook up. $350 Mo, $250
Dep. 804-677-8621

Spacious second/third floor apt
overlooking the Gallipolis City
Park and River. LR, Den, Lg
Kitchen-Dining area with all
new appliances &amp; cupboards.
3 BR 2 baths, Laundry area.
$750 per month. Call 446-2325
or 446-4425.
Houses For Rent

108 Legion Terrace Ranchtype house in goood shape
with all seasons porch and
view of the river. Living room,
formal dining room, built-in
equipped kitchen with nook, 2
bedrooms and bath. New furnace &amp; central AC. Full basement with w/d/ hookup, 1/2
bath and garage. Features a
stone archway with not much
yard upkeep. Close to business section of town. 108
Legion Terrace, Pomeroy.
$550/month plus deposit
740-992-5502

2 bdrm house for rent in Gallipolis. 1 Small dog OK References &amp; security deposit required. Electric Heat Rent
$450/Deposit $450 740-4463870.

Providing Residential
Heating &amp; Cooling
Service &amp; Installation
26 years experience

$59 Diagnostic fee
$59 Preventative Maintenance
Tune-up
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General

Gardener wanted part-time
Wednesday and Friday
2pm-5pm must know plants
and love gardening.
handiness a big plus
send contact info:
Blind Box 115
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Industrial Cleaners Needed in
Buffalo, WV. Full-time Positions Available. Days/Evenings. Must pass background
check and drug test. 304-7686309.

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Farm Equipment

3 PT. BACKHOES 7' REACH,
PTO PUMP $3900
NEW AND USED WAGON
GEARS, MANY WITH BEDS
$395 AND UP
GOOD DEAL ON TILLERS
4,5,6 &amp; 7'
CALL FOR PRICES
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
INC.
2150 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
740-446-9777

�Dozer  Backhoe
�Trenching  Trucking
 Septic Systems
�Basements
 Land Clearing
 Site Prep  and More!
Large or Small Jobs Since 1963

FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 245-9921

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

LEGALS

Public Bid
Project #131102
Meigs County District Public Library
Pomeroy Public Library Addition and Alterations
216 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Bids Due: until 12:00 p.m. Local Time, Wednesday, July 22,
2015; at the Meigs County District Public Library at 216 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

2 Bedroom House full
basement for rent July 1st
State Route 7 South
740-446-1211

Bid Documents: $50.00 each (NO REFUNDS) plus shipping if requested, from RVC Architects, Inc., 131 West State Street,
Athens, Ohio 45701, ph: 740.592.5615, fax: 740.593.8811,
email: monroe@rvcarchitects.com.

Auctions

Pre-Bid Conference: A pre-bid conference will be held at the
Meigs County District Public Library, Lower Level at 216 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 on Tuesday, July 7, 2015 at
10:00 a.m.

EVENING AUCTION
TRACTOR, TRAILERS &amp; OTHER EQUIPMENT
TOOLS, GENERATOR, ETC
MUSICAL ITEMS: Guitars/Banjo, Dulcimer
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS

WOLFE HOME
SOLUTIONS

Reese Excavating

Contract Cost Estimate
General Construction $645,000.00

Thursday, July 2 – 4:00 PM

Professional Services

2 Bedroom Centenary
appliances furnished
no pets $400 plus deposit
740-446-0945

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

257 Old River Road, Little Hocking, OH

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

Office Manager Position
Send Resume to:
PO Box Holder
PO Box 994
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Houses For Rent
3 BR House small car
attached garage utility room no
pets Gallipolis area $600 plus
deposit 740-853-1101

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

Notices

740-856-4213

Apartments/Townhouses
3 Bdrm Apt. $425 plus Utilities
&amp; Dep. also a 2 Bdrm Apt.
$375 plus utilities 3rd street
Racine,Oh 740-247-4292

Go to www.shamrock-auctions.com to view the complete a
with photos or call for ad to be mailed.

Each bid must be accompanied by a BID GUARANTY meeting
the requirements of Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code.
Minimum Wage Rates and Equal Employment Opportunity as
provided in Chapter 4115, Section 9.47, Section 123.151 ORC,
Administrative Rule 123:2-15-02, the Governor's Executive Order of January 27, 1972, and amended Governor's Executive Order 84-9 are applicable to this bid invitation.
More Info: Penny Mullen, RVC Architects, Inc., 131 West State
Street, Athens, Ohio 45701, ph: 740.592.5615, fax:
740.593.8811, e-mail: mullen@rvcarchitects.com
6/28/15-7/5/15-7/12/5

OWNERS: Mike Neeley &amp; Jackie LeBerth

Sheridan’s Shamrock Auction Service, LLC
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Training/Instruction

Marietta Plumbers &amp; Pipefitters

Help Wanted General

Enjoy Flexible Work Schedule?
Enjoy a Friendly Working
Environment?
Ohio Valley Home Health is accepting applications
for motivated individuals to ﬁll our:
Full Time &amp; Part Time

Joint Apprenticeship
&amp; Training Committee (JATC)

Physical Therapist Positions

119 Wood Street
Marietta, OH 45750
Jeff Smith, Training Coordinator
1IPOF���������������t�'BY��������������

SIGN ON BONUS!!
Competitive wages and excellent beneﬁts
including Health, Dental, Vision, Paid
Vacation Days, Extended Leave Beneﬁt,
Paid Holidays, Company Car and much more!

Exciting new opportunity in the HVACR Industry!
PLUMBERS &amp; PIPEFITTERS LOCAL #168 Joint Apprenticeship
Training Committee will distribute applications for it’s new HVACR
Apprenticeship Program from 12:00 PM until 5:00 PM, August 3rd
through August 7th and August 10th through August 14th at the
Local 168 Training Center, 119 Wood Street, Marietta, Ohio.
Applicants must be 18 years of age and be a high school graduate
or have a GED equivalency. All applicants will be required to take
an aptitude test and must achieve the established minimum score
to qualify for an interview. A test fee of thirty ($30.00) dollars
must accompany each returned application. The apprentice
term is 5 years, consisting of paid on-the-job training as well as
related classroom instruction. Upon successful completion of the
program, graduates will be certified as an HVACR Journeyperson.
All applicants will be considered without regard to gender, race,
age, color, religion, or national origin.
Applications must be returned by 5:00 PM, August 14, 201 and
include the following:
Proof of birth date.
High school transcript or report of GED with results.
Proof of high school graduation or equivalent.
If you were in the military, a copy of your DD214.
A resume is recommended but not required.
60590859

Qualiﬁcations:
s 04 n /( ,ICENSED
s %XCELLENT $OCUMENTATION 3KILLS
s "ASIC #OMPUTER +NOWLEDGE
s %XCELLENT /RGANIZATION AND 4IME
-ANAGEMENT 3KILLS
s !BLE TO WORK INDEPENDENTLY
s 7ILLING TO TRAVEL IN SERVICE AREA
For more information please call
!PRIL "URGETT 2. !DMINISTRATOR
at 740-441-1393
OR APPLY AT ���� *ACKSON 0IKE 'ALLIPOLIS /(
!PPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT WWW�OVHH�ORG
%MAIL RESUME� ABURGETT OVHH�ORG

WWW�OVHH�ORG

60587528

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bobby J. Adams Jr., P.O. Box
456, Racine, Ohio 45771,
(740) 416-0546 is applying to
permit a well for the injection of
brine water produced in association with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Charles
Theiss #1, Sec. 21, Lebanon
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. The proposed well will
inject into the Newburg Zone of
the Lockport Dolomite at a
depth of 4909 to 4935 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1800 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
1130 psi. Further information
can be obtained by contacting
Bobby J. Adams Jr., or the Division of Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the Division is: Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, Division of Oil and
Gas Resources Management,
2045 Morse Road, Building F2, Columbus, Ohio 432296693, (614) 265-6922. For full
consideration, all comments
and objections must be received by the Division, in writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.
6/26/15-6/28/15-6/30/157/1/15-7/2/15

Help Wanted General

60591630

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Southern Local Board of
Education (Board) wishes to
receive bids for the following
categories for the 2015-2016
school year: Bread/Bakery,
Milk/Dairy, and Fuel/Oil. All
bids shall be received in, and
bid specifications may be obtained from, TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 106 Broadway Street,
Suite 1, Racine, Ohio 45771,
on or before 11:00 a.m., Friday, July 17, 2015. The Board
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, and the submitting of any bid shall impose no
liability or obligation upon the
said Board. All envelopes must
be clearly marked according to
the type of bid and mailed to:
Christi Hendrix, Treasurer, PO
Box 147, Racine, Ohio 45771.
Questions may be addressed
to christi.hendrix@southernlocal.net.
6/21/15-6/28/15-7/5/15

LEGALS
mailed to:

60592588

LEGALS
I Terry A. Hager
seeking a divorce from
Brenda L. Hatfield. Hearing is
set 10:30 am
on July 9, 2015 at Lincoln
County Court House
Hamlin, WV.
6-24-15 thru 7-8-15

Sunday, June 28, 2015 7B

60592751

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�SPORTS

8B Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bucs QB Winston: ‘I’m just moving forward’
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
Jameis Winston knows there
are always eyes on him —
watching, dissecting and waiting for him to make a mistake.
The spotlight doesn’t leave,
and Winston wants to shine in it.
“It’s about my actions,” the
Tampa Buccaneers rookie said
while attending a youth football
clinic. “I got to be a quarterback.
When I’m off the ﬁeld, I got to be
a quarterback. When I’m on the
ﬁeld, I’ve got to be a quarterback.
I know people are going to look
at me in each and every way.
“I just smile, man.”
He did a lot of that on Friday.
Winston is trying to move on
from a celebrated and checkered
college career at Florida State,
where he won a Heisman Trophy and led the Seminoles to a
national championship but also
brought himself and the school
shame for multiple off-ﬁeld
incidents, including a rape accusation that was dismissed after
prosecutors cited problems with
a police investigation.
As he embarks on his NFL
career, the 21-year-old is staying positive. And while he’s not
hiding from his past, Winston
is focused on what’s in ahead,
not behind him.
“I have nothing to prove,”
he said. “I believe that people
make mistakes but I also
believe that you bounce back
from those and I’m just moving
forward.”
Winston and the NFC’s
other drafted rookies got a
break from their four-day
symposium — a league-run
orientation program designed
to help players transition to the
pros — by playing with schoolaged children on Cleveland
Browns training ﬁelds. While
the youngsters ran pass routes,
bumped into blocking pads and
tossed footballs into garbage
cans, Winston seemed to be the
biggest kid on the ﬁeld.

David Richard | AP

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Jameis Winston, left, and fullback Joey Iosefa, second from left, play a game with students during the NFL Rookies Symposium
in Berea, Ohio, on Friday.

He led the boys and girls in
cheers, handed out high-ﬁves
and advice and taught the kids
how to put some touch on a
pass or ﬁre a rocket.
“Set your feet and let it rip,” he
told one boy. “Don’t be afraid.”
Winston was clearly in his
element inside the ﬁeld’s whitechalked borders. It was when
he has ventured off the ﬁeld,
out of bounds, that Winston
has gotten into trouble.
There was the shoplifting
charge for stealing crab legs
from a grocery store; the suspension for jumping on a table
on Florida State’s campus and
screaming an explicit phrase
and the sexual-assault allegation in 2012. Those actions

overshadowed Winston’s
achievements on the ﬁeld,
earned him a troublemaker’s
image and made him a target of
criticism on social media.
While the 2015 rookie class
is being lectured on professional life by former players offering their experiences, Winston
can already speak to how a bad
decision can be irrevocable.
Several of Winston’s fellow rookies said he has been one of the
most engaged players this week.
And despite his higher proﬁle, he
has been just one of the guys.
“He is the most high-spirited
guy I’ve been around,” said Buccaneers offensive tackle Donovan Smith, a second-round pick
from Penn State. “He’s a great

leader. And he likes to have fun.
You’re looking at us — we’re 21,
22 years old. You have to think
about it. We’re adults, but we’re
still kids sometimes and we
want to have fun.”
And although he recognizes
Winston may endure more scrutiny than other players, Smith
said every pro athlete is under
a microscope and should be
accountable for their behavior.
“All of us are in spotlights,”
he said. “We’re the one percent of athletes who make it
to the pros. We’re going to be
scrutinized in our worst times,
praised in our best times. It
comes with the territory. We
just got to live with it.”
Winston will stay active on

social media, while others are
more wary of potential dangers.
Earlier this week, No. 2 pick
Marcus Mariota said he won’t
bother with Twitter or any
other online platform.
Winston isn’t going to hide.
“You can only be yourself.
What people put out there on
social media is just whatever.
But I am just trying to be a
better person and live life, and
that’s all,” he said. “I mean
social media can help you in
so many ways, from a positive
standpoint. I can’t control what
people put on social media
about me, but I can control my
actions and what I do.”
And he plans to smile while
doing it.

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BANKS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY

POMEROY, OHIO
Phone 740-992-5009
Website www.banksconstruction.co
60590760

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs teen
selected
for program

Sunday, June 28, 2015 sSection C

Camp traditions

By Lindsay Kriz

town, Md. His
ﬁrst residential
camp centered
TUPPERS
on “writing and
PLAINS — Gus
imagination,”
Kennedy, a
and last year
13-year-old soonhis camp was
Kennedy
to-be Eastern
the Chesapeake
Middle School
Bay Camp. He
eighth grader
also a 12-week course
from Tuppers Plains,
on inventions and engiwill attend the Johns
neering, and took other
Hopkins Center for Tal- courses on advanced
ented Youth’s challeng- math and life science.
ing programs for acaHe credited his granddemically gifted second father with introducing
through 12th graders
him to the courses.
this summer.
This summer, Ken“I’m speechless,” Ken- nedy will be taking the
nedy said. “It was kind CTY summer program
of a surprise; mom just “Whales and Estuary
sprung it on me.”
Systems” at Living ClassKennedy joins more
rooms Foundation. In this
than 9,400 other stucourse, students learn
dents from across the
about whales at StellwaUnited States and
gen Bank near Boston,
around the world who,
Mass., and compare and
because of their outcontrast estuary systems
standing academic abili- along the northeastern
ties, will engage in sum- U.S. coast. During their
mer programs held by
eight-day ﬁeld compothe Center for Talented nent, students sail and
Youth (CTY). Founded sleep aboard the Lady
in 1979, CTY has been Maryland, a 104-foot
“nurturing academic
schooner, and may travel
talent in young people” through portions of the
for 35 years.
Chesapeake Bay, DelaThis is Kennedy’s
ware Bay, Hudson River,
third year of camps on
Long Island Sound,
college campuses. His
Peconic Bay and the
ﬁrst two campus took
North Atlantic Ocean.
place at Washington
College in ChesterSee TEEN | 4C

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Holzer plans
Bereavement Camp
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Holzer Hospice announced
plans Friday for their annual bereavement camp
for children who have suffered a loss.
The one-day camp, titled “Camp Courage,” will
be 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. July 20 at Canter’s Cave 4-H
Camp in
Jackson.
The camp,
at no cost
to its participants,
provides an
environment
where children ages 6
to 17 come
together
with other
individuals who have experienced the loss a close
family member, friend or pet.
According to national statistics, childhood
bereavement is far more common than many
people realize. One in nine children experiences a
loss before the age of 20 through divorce, death or
other circumstances.
The goal is to give children a place where they
are free to express their feelings, camp ofﬁcials
said. The activities that are held during the camp
generate thoughts and enhance discussion about
what they are feeling in a non-threatening way.
“The focus of the camp is on the loss in the life
of the child,” Cinda Saunders, of Holzer Hospice,
said. “It’s all about their loss and ﬁnding ways to
express that loss, to allow them to grieve in their
own way.”
One of the things about grieving is ﬁnding new
meaning in life without a loved one, Saunders
said. A camp of this nature, she added, is beneﬁcial to children and is fully funded through grant
dollars and contributions from local business and
community members.
Volunteers are needed to facilitate the camp’s
activities and supervision the children. Past volunteers have included registered nurses, social
workers, chaplains, counselors and adult and teen
volunteers. Holzer guidelines stipulate that volunteers be at least 18 years old or older.
For more information about the camp, apply for
a child to attend, to volunteer for the camp or to
have a Hospice representative speak to an organization about the camp, call Hospice at 740-4465074 or 1-800-500-4850.

Beth Sergent | OVP News

Campers attempt to untie knots in a frozen T-shirt to win a spot at the front of the lunch line.

Mason Co. carries on
4H camp traditions
By Beth Sergent

families that spans generations.
Extension Agent Rodney
Wallbrown said camp remains both
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Summer fun and educational. He also said
is in full swing when campers
this year is the 100th anniversary
descend on the Mason County 4H of 4H camping in West Virginia.
Camp.
Lorrie Wright, extension agent,
On Thursday, the camping
said 4H camp also provides a spirit
season wrapped up as younger
of diversity and acceptance. She
4H’ers, ages eight to sixth grade,
said many children who attend
gathered around council circle
camp many not interact with each
for one last night of fun. Older
other while in a public school
4H members were at camp the
setting. For whatever reason, 4H is
week before. About 170 children
a safe space to get to know fellow
experienced camp this year.
tribe members.
While at camp, 4H members
And being in 4H is all about
play games and have fun, but they
ﬁnding a tribe and learning how
also attend classes that consist
to get along, solve problems and
of everything from archery and
celebrate who gets the “spirit
creating survivor bracelets, crafts
stick.” The coveted “spirit stick”
to science classes, wood shop, air
is given out at the end of camp
riﬂes, photography, slate painting
to the chief of the winning tribe
and more.
based upon criteria that includes
In a time in which children have who inspires, motivates, entertains
and embodies the 4H spirit. An
so many options in terms of how
Extension camping instructor from
to spend their time, 4H camp
remains a staple. In Mason County, out of the county determines who
gets chosen for the award.
4H camp is a tradition for many

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

This year’s ECI was Kirsten
Reneau, of Taylor County, who
spent the previous week at the
state 4H camp.
For those who want to relive
the 4H camping experience,
Mason County Alumni 4H Camp
Weekend is July 10-11 and is open
for those ages 22-122 at the Mason
County 4H Camp. The event is a
fundraiser for the new dining hall
at the camp and will be the last
time that the old dining hall will be
used.
The cost of the alumni camp
is $50 to cover the cost of food,
with all other proceeds going to
the dining hall fund. Friday, July
10 camp starts at 5 p.m. followed
by a tribal meeting with spaghetti
dinner served, the evening will
consist of council circle. Saturday,
July 11 will consist of breakfast,
lunch and sports and end with a
dance. A silent auction will end
at 4 p.m. Saturday, July 11 for the
dining hall.
No alcohol is allowed at the
event, which is for adults only.
Contact Lisa Arbogast for
information and to register at
lanurse66@yahoo.com; ﬁnd
Arbogast on Facebook; or call her
304-675-4506 or Linda Roush at
304-675-7293.
Reach Beth Sergent at 304-675-1333, ext. 1992
or on Twitter @BSergentWrites.

Hull Pottery Show coming next month
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

CROOKSVILLE —
The Hull Pottery Association 22nd annual Show
&amp; Sale will be July 10-11
at the Crooksville High
School, which is located
one mile south of Crooksville on Ohio State Route
93.
Hours for the show are
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 10
and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. July
11
Iva Sisson, of Rutland,
is a longtime collector of
Hull pottery and said this
is the largest Hull Pottery Show in the world.
In addition to pottery
and friends, there will
be lots of drawings and
giveaways. A luncheon at
noon July 11 will honor
past Hull Pottery Co.
employees, with the HPA
auction starting at 2 p.m.
The luncheon is open to
members.
A dinner will also be

Courtesy photo

A display of pottery from a previous show. All pieces can be viewed and many will even be for sale.

Saturday afternoon for
all Hull employees. There
will be a demonstration
on how to make pottery.
While pottery pieces can
be viewed, Sisson empha-

sized that many pieces
will be for sale as well.
Hundreds of authentic,
rare and one-of-a-kind
pieces of Hull Pottery,
and many other favorite

pottery pieces, will be
on display. The public is
invited to join members,
dealers and collectors
See SHOW | 4C

�2C Sunday, June 28, 2015

LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Crochet arts bind us all Time keeps on slippin’
What the Most
“Time keeps on slipSuccessful People Do
pin’, slippin’, slippin’…
Before Breakfast (Laura
into the future.”
Vanderkam)
Whenever I hear
Work Simply: Embracthese lyrics from the
ing the Power of Your
popular song by the
Personal Productivity
Steve Miller Band, I
am reminded how fastFrom the Style (Carson Tate)
Driven to Distraction
paced our lives are as
Bookshelf
at
Work: How to Focus
we try to ﬁt more and
Debbie
and Be More Productive
more into our daily
Saunders
(Edward Hallowell)
schedules. From school,
Getting Things Done:
work and Little League
The Art of Stress-Free Productivbaseball to social activities, it
seems our calendars are full from ity (David Allen)
Better Than Before (Gretchen
dawn until dusk.
Rubin)
In a world in which technolThe Sweet Spot: How to Find
ogy supposedly makes us more
Your Groove at Home and Work
productive, this same technol(Christine Carter)
ogy can also adversely impact
our level of productivity.
The Upside of Stress : Why
Are you interested in learning Stress is Good for You, and
how to increase your productivHow to Get Good at it (Kelly
ity and thereby lower your stress McGonigal)
level at home and in the workIt’s About Time! 10 Smart
place? Bossard Library is pleased Strategies to Avoid Time Traps
to offer many self-help resources and Invest Yourself Where it
to assist you in maximizing your Matters (Carolyn Castleberry).
time so you can spend more
In addition to these titles,
hours on those activities that mat- Bossard Library is pleased to
ter most to you.
offer a free online course titled
Selections include:I Know
“Individual Excellence.” The
How She Does It: How Success- instructors of this online course
ful Women Make the Most of
note that participants will develop
Their Time (Laura Vanderkam) career-enhancing skills in a single

course that covers 12 popular oneday seminar topics, including goal
setting, time management and
personal organization. You’ll learn
how to improve your creative abilities, gain conﬁdence with ﬁnancial matters, and how to minimize
conﬂict in your life. You will also
develop a fulﬁlling career plan and
improve relationships with coworkers, friends, and family.
For more information on this
free online course or in locating
these book selections, the staff
of Bossard Library is ready to
assist you.
Author Carson Tate notes that
his book titled “Work Simply” can
be a “tool that supports you as
you reclaim your life … and make
you more productive, creative
and happy.” It is my hope that
all of these tools, available to you
through the use of your library
card, will be used to enhance the
quality of life of you and your
family.
Take some time out this week
to visit Bossard Library — your
resource center for information
on productivity, time management and becoming a better you.
Debbie Saunders is library director of
the Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library
in Gallipolis.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc.,
livestock report of sales from June 24, 2015.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $250-$315, Heifers,
$235-$310; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $235$305, Heifers, $225-$270; 550-625 pounds,
Steers, $220-$275, Heifers, $185-$235;
650-725 pounds, Steers, $200-$250, Heifers,
$145-$180; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $170$190, Heifers, $165-$195.
Cows
Well-muscled/fleshed, $102-$125; Medium/Lean,

60592948

As a crocheter, have you
brought on a greater desire for
ever just sat down and thought
yarns of all types. There is a
call for high-style, handmade
about the direction in which
clothing in places such as
many things ﬂow? Friendships
Italy, Spain and France. These
are broken, skies are sunny or
crocheted pieces are sold at
grey, we’re happy or sad and
unbelievable prices in shops
so on.
on Fifth Avenue and deluxe
For crocheters and knitters, Karen
no language we speak or where Buffington shops in San Francisco and in
we live presents a barrier.
Contributing other metropolitan cities. The
high-style designs are shown
Columnist
in the smallest towns and vil‘The Tie That Binds Us’
lages as a style inﬂuence.
I have noticed there is a
The average crocheter does
tie that binds us. We don’t have to be
not want to pay expensive prices in
as advanced as those with the title,
yarn for high-style designing. We’re
“Independent Professional Crochet
Artists.” No matter our skills, we love looking for yarn at a medium, if not
low, price and with our range of skill,
to help each other — learn a stitch,
drop a stitch, back stitch, cross-stitch, we want to turn out a smart looking
post-stitch, pick-up a stitch, etc., just as piece for little money.
This price range of medium to
someone taught us.
low yarns, and variety, can be found
Why?
There is a tie that binds “a circle of in some areas with specialty shops,
department stores, as well as discount
friends” who aren’t so independent
and outlet stores and markets. After
and “know all that.” Classes can be
ﬁnding the price that is best for you
held for those who want to underand with the level of your skill — great
stand, more clearly, about the art of
crochet, in different forms and will be caps, coats, socks, dresses, jewelry,
fashionable sweaters and scarves will
committed to attend.
be ﬂying off those hooks and needles
We all learn as we go. We can’t,
always, teach ourselves what we need in all designs and colors.
Yarn today is available in a variety
to know, no matter how much online
of
textures and weights. Wool, cotton,
or ofﬂine information there is. If you
linen
and nylon are combined and
are already an expert and have done
spun
together
to produce a new effect.
just about everything a teacher can
Wool is still the most popular for cropossibly instruct you about, then
cheting and knitting.
help with teaching others who aren’t
so advanced. It’s possible your skills
Now take a little trip!
might be extended and your enjoyYou should think about the route
ment increased in that way.
it took for yarn to become skeins: A
I always remember what Solomon
said: “There is nothing new under the woolly sheep or an alpaca was happily
grazing in a pasture. In short, that
sun, but there is a lot under the sun
woolly stuff ends up becoming a soft,
that we don’t know.” This applies to
satisfactory product you go looking for
crochet art, too.
in shops. Wool of many colors ﬁll your
crochet/knitting bag for scarves, caps,
Growing Interest
sweaters and the many designs you
Lately, I have run into women who
wish to make for family, friends — and
say they don’t crochet, but enjoy the
yourself.
writings. Men say the same thing and
Being interested enough to become
some of them “do” crochet. Possibly
an avid hooker gives you the opporthe reading about this art will spark
tunity to meet so many like-minded
more interest in picking up a hook.
people from “all over the world.”
As we learn more about the art of
That’s why, in this art, there is “a tie
crochet, why should we be so timid
that binds us all.”
when it comes to giving it a “thumbs
up” in the world of arts?
Karen Ann Buffington is onwer and operator of
The interest in crochet/knitting has Karen’s Korner Crochet, 93 Pine St., Gallipolis.

60589109

$93-$104; Thin/Light, $85-$92; Bulls, $118-$135.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $1,025-$2,500; Bred Cows,
$1,175-$1,850; Baby Calves, $400-$510; Goats,
$20-$115; Feeder Pigs, $33-$42.50; Hogs, $56.
Upcoming specials
None
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy
(304) 634-0224, Luke (740) 645-3697 or
Mark (740) 645-5708 or visit the website at
www.uproducers.com.

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

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�LOCAL

4C Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

New Emblem Club officers

Phillips family
conducts reunion
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Emblem Club officers are seen taking their oath on May 14 for the 2015-2017 term. Supreme President Nancy Harris, from Hot Springs,
Ark., performed the installation duties. Supreme Marshall Diann Northern assisted. On far right is Beth Sheets, the new club president.
Other officers are: Junior Past President Anitra Dray; First Vice President Karen McGhee; Recording Secretary Kim Canaday; Treasurer
Kitty Griffith; Financial Secretary Jennifer Giles; Chaplain Bradie Angell; Trustees Maria Gaul, Ashley Russell, and Teresa Steinbeck;
Corresponding Secretary Sandra Mayes; Historian Cheri Stanforth; Press Correspondent Connie Holcomb; Marshall Beverly Dunkle;
Assistant Marshalls Beth McQuaid and Donna Thompson; First Guard Noretta Gillespie; and Second Guard Amy Saunders.

Teen

the talent search, advanced young
learners take above-grade level
tests designed for older students
From Page 1C
as a means of gaining insight into
their abilities. Seventh and eighth
Kennedy said he was most excit- graders take the SAT or ACT —
ed about whale watching.
the same tests used for college
“That’s gonna be cool,” he said.
admissions, while second through
Throughout their voyage, stusixth graders take the School and
dents employ scientiﬁc equipment College Ability Test, an above-level
to analyze water and marine life
test scaled for younger students.
in these estuary environments. At
The Ancient World (for third
the Stellwagen Bank, they attempt and fourth graders), Examining the
to survey and monitor the whale
Evidence (for ﬁfth and sixth gradpopulation through observation,
ers) and Logic and Probability and
photo identiﬁcation and historical Game Theory (for seventh through
analysis.
10th graders) are just a few of the
“This year is going to be really
more than 100 CTY summer proexciting,” Kennedy said. “I’m really gram courses available during two
looking forward to it.”
three-week sessions this summer.
Kennedy qualiﬁed for CTY SumThe format of the program
mer Programs by participating in
makes it possible for bright stuCTYs annual talent search, which
dents to work at an accelerated
accepts applications from early
pace, study topics in-depth and
September through May. During
explore subjects that are not usu-

ally available to students their age.
By participating in CTY, students
also have the opportunity to forge
friendships with students from
around the world who share their
interests.
CTY summer programs are
offered at 24 sites, from Johns
Hopkins University in the east to
Stanford University in the west.
The center offers two kinds of
summer programs. Residential
programs, available to students in
grades 5-12, provide the opportunity to live on a college campus
while studying and socializing with
other bright, motivated students.
Day programs, open to students in
grades 2-6, give younger students
the opportunity to pursue intellectually challenging topics in an
active, dynamic setting.
For more information about
enrolling in the CTY talent search,
visit www.cty.jhu.edu.

On June 7, Dale Lamphier, widower of Betty Jean
Phillips Lamphier, graciously hosted the 108th reunion
of the decendents of the George Reuben Phillips family.
Prior to the family’s gathering at the old home place
on Smokey Row Road, they joined descendents of the
Paul Tope family for the community memorial service
at White Cemetery Church on White Cemetery Road.
Three generations of the Phillips family and their
friends, while dining on the bountiful potluck buffet for
which this group is well known, enjoyed an afternoon
of sharing events of the past year, memories of descendents and years gone by, and future plans.
Those Ohioans enjoying the pot luck, family news,
and banjo picking included: Melissa Channell, Susie
Channell, Leah Shaffer, Rick Watts, Robbie Watts, Fred
Channell and Connie Zerkle Crocker, all of Urbana;
Mark and Malinda Collins, of Galloway; Manuel Payton, of Chillicothe; Carolyn and Adam Cail, of Cincinnati; David and Sandra Cail, of Dayton; John and Sue
Zerkle, of Tipp City; John and Irene (Rose) Warner, of
Middleport; Dottie Rose Roviscane and Phyllis Brown,
of Gallipolis; and Peggy Lamphier, Dale, Kevin and
Leslie Lamphier and Christine Phillips, of Patriot. Ruth
Kirkland, of Huntington, W.Va., also attended.

Show
From Page 1C

Courtesy photo

from all over the United
States for the 22nd
annual show and sale
in the pottery capitol of
the world.
The HPA annual
social for HPA members will be 6-8 p.m.
July 9 at the Roseville
Community Center.
“We’d love to have
lots of Meigs, Gallia
and Mason countians
come to see us,” Sisson
said. “If you love Hull
pottery, you’ll love our
convention.”

Hull made a variety of items along
with historic pieces such as the
Donkey/Rider that was sent to
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
during World War II and was on his
desk up until he died. This piece is
now in the Smithsonian on display Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740with his other memorabilia.
992-2155 EXT. 2555.

888-675-8554

60590772

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$20,995

2012 Honda CR-V EX SUV

Engine: 2.4L I-4 cyl, Transmission: 5-Speed Automatic
Exterior Color: Crystal Black Pearl, Stock #: 55622250

Internet Price:

$18,495

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