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                  <text>On this
day in
history

GA land 4
on SEOAL
soccer team

Chamber
marks
25th year

OPINION s 5A

SPORTS s 3B

FEATURES s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 44, Volume 49

Sunday, November 8, 2015 s $2

‘Small but mighty’ No. 56 remembered in Meigs

Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Thursday evening saw the Eastern Local high school football field awash in flame as friends, family, community members and fellow football players held a candlelight vigil for Wyatt Barber, 9, who passed
away during football practice Monday due to an unknown heart condition. Speeches were given, with lanterns and balloons released into the sky to honor No. 56, the number Barber wore. At the end, players,
with their candles, created a lit “56” in the middle of the field with the rest of the attendees gathered around them in support. Barber’s funeral is set for 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 9, at First Southern Baptist
Church in Pomeroy. For anyone who wishes to help the family, a GoFundMe page has been created in Barber’s honor at www.gofundme.com/c58anjf9. Locally, an account has been set up at Farmers Bank,
created by a friend of the family. All six Farmers Bank locations in Meigs, Gallia and Mason counties are accepting deposits. All proceeds go to benefit the family. Ask to contribute to the Wyatt Barber fund,
or mail any amount to Farmers Bank, 211 W. Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.

False urine
sample leads
man to prison
By Michael Johnson
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — A Gallia County
man will spend the next 15 months
of his life in prison for tampering
with evidence.
Wolfe
According to Gallia prosecutors,
Kyle Wolfe, 26, was asked to
perform a urine drug screen on July 7 as part
of his probation from a previous offense. While
submitting to the drug screen, Wolfe reportedly
used a container pre-ﬁlled with urine from an
outside source and purported it to be his own.
“The ofﬁcer noted the low temperature of the
urine, along with a positive screen for an illegal
substance,” Assistant Prosecutor Britt Wiseman
See PRISON | 6A

Chamber celebrates 25 years
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — The
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Gala was staged
against a backdrop of blue
and black as it celebrated
its 25th anniversary and the
accomplishments of past
years.
The event was held in a
country setting at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly on
Rocksprings Road. The candlelight dining room sparkled
Lorna Hart |Times-Sentinel as servers moved quietly from
Pictured are Meigs Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Whitney Thoene, Business award table to table.
winners Tom Sutton, Tammy Grueser, Jim Ridenour, Darrrel Norris, Angee Arnold, Susan ClarkDingess, and chamber President Dan Short. For more pictures, see page 1C.

See CHAMBER | 6A

Southern Local to honor veterans
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

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

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

RACINE — The Southern
Local School District will celebrate Veterans Day at 9 a.m.
Wednesday with a heartfelt tribute to all area veterans.
Opening ceremonies will begin
outside at the ﬂagpole, where the
Southern Local marching band
will play the National Anthem.
After a brief welcoming ceremony, the tribute will move inside for
a more solemn ritual. Once inside,
a local veteran will be honored as
the special honoree, a sacrament
that Superintendent Tony Deem
began with the district more than
eight years ago.

File photo

Pictured is part of large crowd that assembled at Southern High School last year for the annual
See VETERANS | 6A Veterans Day celebration and honors ceremony.

�LOCAL/STATE

2A Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dept. restricts flow of charter grant

THELMA CALLICOAT
BIDWELL — Thelma
Virginia Callicoat, 84, of
Bidwell, passed away on
Friday, Nov. 6, 2015, at
her residence.
Thelma was born on
March 8, 1931, in W.Va.,
daughter of the late Lance
David and Bessie Lee
(Moore) Sullins Sr. She
was a homemaker and
enjoyed her family and
her animals.
Thelma was married
to James E. Callicoat and
he preceded her in death
on Dec. 26, 1989. She
was also preceded by a
daughter, Mary Petry, and
a son, Johnny Callicoat,
two great-grandsons, and
by six brothers and two

sisters.
She is survived by
a daughter, Elizabeth
Ann “Cindy” (David)
McQuaid, of Gallipolis,
eight grandchildren, 13
great-grandchildren and
10 great-great-grandchildren.
Graveside services will
be 1 p.m., Wednesday,
Nov. 11, 2015, at the
Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may
call on Wednesday from
12 p.m. until 12:45 p.m.
on Wednesday at Willis
Funeral Home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

DEATH NOTICES
BRADY
HUNTINGTON — Carl Timothy Brady, 66, of Huntington, W.Va., died on Monday, Nov. 2, 2015, at St.
Mary’s Hospital.
A service will be held Nov. 10, 11 a.m., at Woodmere Memorial Park, Huntington. Hall Funeral Home
and Cremator of Proctorville is in charge of arrangements.
SHAMBLIN
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Loraine H. (Coutz)
Shamblin, 93, of Point Pleasant, died Friday, Nov. 6,
2015, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
in Point Pleasant. A graveside service and burial will
be 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant. Wilcoxen Funeral Home is
handling the arrangements.
SNODGRASS
XENIA, Ohio — Walter Leon Snodgrass, 78, of
Xenia, died Oct. 31, 2015, at the Legacy Rehab Center
in Xenia. A memorial service will be noon Nov. 14,
2015, at Orange Christian Church.

Civitas Media, LLC

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

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

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

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

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

By Julie Carr Smyth

charter schools nationwide.
The funding was announced
after Ohio School Choice Director
COLUMBUS — The U.S.
David Hansen resigned, acknowlDepartment of Education has
edging he withheld certain failing
restricted the initial ﬂow of a
grades from charter sponsor eval$71 million charter school grant, uations. The state responded by
pending further assurances that
pulling affected evaluations and
Ohio can responsibly oversee the referring documentation involvmoney amid an investigation into ing Hansen’s actions to the state
the state’s former school choice
auditor and inspector general.
director.
In his letter, U.S. Charter
In a letter sent Wednesday to
Schools Program Director Stefan
Superintendent Richard Ross, the
Huh said the federal department
federal charter schools program
made a preliminary determinadirector said that spending Ohio’s
tion — based on then-available
grant payments will temporarily
information — that concerns surrequire special approval from a
federal ofﬁcial. The letter says the rounding the charter oversight
ofﬁce run by Hansen should not
arrangement was agreed to Oct.
disqualify Ohio from the competi26.
The department asked Ohio to tion.
Since then, however, Huh said
refrain from drawing down funds
his department has received addior incurring expenses or obligations against the grant as it gath- tional information that “raises
continuing concerns” — “particuers additional information from
larly in the areas of oversight and
the state auditor and inspector
accountability” — over whether
general, among others.
the Ohio Department of EducaThe restrictions have been
imposed on the first $32.7 mil- tion can properly administer the
lion installment of the grant, as grant.
He said the department expects
the additional grant funds are
that once Ohio meets new condidependent on future congrestions and provides all the inforsional appropriations. Ohio’s
mation federal regulators are
full announced grant amount
seeking, it will be able to carry
represents the largest single
out its intentions for the grant
portion of proposed total federal funding of about $334 mil- money and “be successful in creating high-quality public charter
lion over five years to improve

Associated Press

schools for its students, especially
its most vulnerable students.”
Ohio Department of Education
spokeswoman Kimberly Norris
said Ross and his team remain
committed to addressing concerns raised by Hansen’s actions.
“Even before receiving word of
the awarding of the grant, ODE
reached out to the USDOE to
provide information about the
status of the charter school evaluation process in Ohio,” she said in
a statement. “We are in ongoing
conversations with the USDOE to
ensure that our revised evaluation
process and other accountability
measures fully align with grant
requirements and state laws.”
The federal department has
asked Ross to provide within two
weeks an accuracy review of the
state’s initial grant application as
well as additional information on
steps the state department has
taken to address concerns raised
by the Hansen matter, its ethics
and conﬂict of interest policies
and a host of other materials.
Within a month, it also wants a
summary of seven years of state
audits related to Ohio charter
schools and copies of those
audits.
Federal ofﬁcials retained the
right to commission a report from
an independent auditor after all
that information is gathered.

Top public schools official to retire
By Ann Sanner

superintendent of Reynoldsburg schools in suburban Columbus.
COLUMBUS — Ohio’s
Ross announced his
public schools superinten- plans to step down Dec.
dent said Friday that he
31 in a written stateplans to retire at the end of ment Friday morning.
the year.
“Coming out of retireSuperintendent Richment four years ago to
advocate on behalf of
ard Ross has served as
the boys and girls in our
state superintendent
classrooms has been the
since March 2013. The
most rewarding experi65-year-old Ross had
been an education advis- ence in my career,” Ross
said. “I enjoyed putting
er to Gov. John Kasich
beginning in 2011, after to use my 40 years of
experience to strengthen
previously serving as
education in our state
and I am proud of the
progress we’ve made in
RO X Y S
pursuing new reforms
Furniture &amp; Flooring
www.roxysfurnitureandﬂooring.com
that can position our
740-446-4000
schools for better aca31A Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, OH
demic success.”
Med-Lift Lift Chairs
The move comes as
the state Education
Department’s oversight
of charter schools has
recently come under ﬁre.
Earlier this week,
Associated Press

60618604

OBITUARY

the U.S. Department of
Education restricted the
initial ﬂow of a $71 million charter school grant,
pending further assurances that Ohio can responsibly oversee the money
amid an investigation
into the state’s former
school choice director.
School Choice Director David Hansen
resigned in July after
he acknowledged that
he omitted certain failing grades of online
and dropout-recovery
schools from evaluations of charter school
sponsors. The reviews
affect how the sponsors’
performance is reported
to the public and plays a
role in determining their
state aid. Hansen said
he didn’t want to “mask”
successes elsewhere.
The state responded
by pulling affected
evaluations and referring

documentation involving
Hansen’s actions to the
state auditor and inspector general.
Ohio Department of
Education spokeswoman
Kimberly Norris has
said Ross and his team
remain committed to
addressing concerns
raised by Hansen’s
actions.
Hansen’s wife is
Kasich’s presidential
campaign manager.
Ross told The Columbus Dispatch in an interview published Friday
that his retirement was
planned to happen sooner. But in a reference
to the summer charterschool ﬂap, he said, “I
just couldn’t do it during
that. We had to get that
settled.”
Messages seeking
additional details about
Ross’s retirement were
left with Norris.

Miranda
Sue Pearce

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

Nov 8, 1980 – April 3, 2003

Loved and Missed
Every Day!
Mom, Dad, Donald,
Missy &amp; Charlie

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

60621304

60462834

A Country Dinner Platter for just $6.99 between 3-5pm
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Country Breakfast

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Two eggs made to order,
choice of apples or potatoes,
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Fried potatoes smothered
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60622013

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 8, 2015 3A

OSHP reminds
public of
seat belt safety

GALLIA LOCAL BRIEFS

By Dean Wright

Sons of Union Veterans of
Civil War meets Nov. 9

deanwright@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — The Ohio State Highway
Patrol is encouraging all motorists to buckle up
this upcoming holiday season and continue to do
so throughout the new year.
From
2012 to 2014, 1,157 people were
killed in crashes across
Ohio who were not wearing an available safety
belt.
“It’s simple — safety
belts save lives and reduce
injury in crashes,” said Lt.
Max Norris, commander of
the Gallia/Meigs post. “It is
the easiest and most effective action you can take to
protect yourself, your family
and your friends.”
The National Highway Trafﬁc Safety Administration estimates 361 lives were saved in Ohio and
12,584 were saved nationwide in 2013 as a direct
result of motorists buckling up.
According to Ohio’s 2014 Observational Seatbelt Survey, 85 percent of motorists were found to
be in compliance with Ohio’s safety belt law. This
is the highest usage rate seen since observational
studies began in 1991. While these rates appear
high, many Ohioans still do not buckle up.
Ohio’s safety belt law remains a secondary violation; however, troopers continue zero tolerance
enforcement when motorists are stopped for other
violations and are found unbuckled. Troopers
wrote 121,945 citations last year for failure to
wear a safety belt.
Troopers ask the public to wear a safety belt
whenever traveling in a vehicle and insist that
those who travel with drivers buckle up as well.
For a complete statistical analysis of safety
belt violations visit www.statepatrol.ohio.gov/
doc/Safety_Belt_Bulletin_2015.pdf. The public
is encouraged to call the number 677 to report
impaired drivers and drug activity.
Dean Wright can be reached at (740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103.

CORRECTION
Ohio Valley Publishing strives for accuracy
in all of its content and
moves quickly to correct errors.
In the Thursday, Nov.
6 edition of The Daily
Sentinel, Brenda S.
Johnson and Annette
R. Vance both ran for
Lebanon Township Fis-

cal Ofﬁcer. Unofﬁcial
results had Johnson
with 108 votes and
Vance with 106. Final
election results will
be announced Nov. 16
after all provisional ballots have been counted.
The Ohio Valley Publishing apologizes for
the error.

Water off in Rodney Nov. 10-11 Congressman Johnson to
RODNEY — Water service will be off in Rodney on
Nov 10 or 11, 2015 (Tuesday or Wednesday), depend- speak with veterans
ing on weather for a couple of hours for a main line
tie-in, according to the Gallia County Rural Water
Association. Call 740-446-9221 for more information.

GALLIPOLIS — Congressman Bill Johnson will speak
at VFW Post 4464 at a dinner in his honor. The dinner
will start at 6 p.m. Nov. 13, followed by a question and
answer program (town hall meeting) in which the public
can address their concerns with the congressman.

AFSCME retirees to meet

RIO GRANDE — The local Cadot-Blessing Camp
126 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
will meet at 1 p.m. Nov. 9 at the Bob Evans Farms
Craft Barn. The Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War is a congressionally chartered organization founded for charitable, fraternal, patriotic and educational
purposes and is the sole heir to the Grand Army of
the Republic. Any person with Civil War ancestry is
encouraged to pay the ultimate honor to that ancestor
by joining our ranks.

Church to hold free
Thanksgiving dinner
GALLIPOLIS — Central Christian Church on Garﬁeld Avenue will be holding a free Thanksgiving dinner Nov. 13 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Individuals can RSVP
at (740) 446-0062.

GALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME Retirees, Gallia
and Jackson Counties, Sub-chapter 102, will hold
their next meeting at 2 p.m. Nov. 20 at the Gallia
County Senior Resource Center, 1165 State Route
160, in Gallipolis. AFSCME (Ohio Council 8, OCSEA
and OAPSE) OPERS and SERS public employee
retirees and their spouses are invited to attend the
next meeting. Non-AFSCME members who retired
from the city, county, state or school district are also
welcome to attend. The group also encourages public
employees who plan to retire in the near future to
attend. Issues that are important to retirees are discussed each month, including updates on the OPERS
medicare connector which enrollment continues
through Dec. 31. The group meets on the third Friday
of each month. The group welcomes new members in
the two-county area. For more information, call 740245-0093 or 740-245-5255.

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Gallia Community Calendar will list event
information that is free and open
to the public.

CARD SHOWER
Jack Carter will be celebrating
his 103rd birthday on Nov. 8. Cards
may be sent to him at: 1064 State
Route 218, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

EVENTS
MONDAY, NOV. 9
RIO GRANDE — The local
Cadot-Blessing Camp 126 of the
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War will meet at 1 p.m. at the craft
barn of Bob Evans Farms. The
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War is a congressionally chartered
organization founded for charitable, fraternal, patriotic and educational purposes and is the sole heir
to the Grand Army of the Republic
(GAR). Any person with Civil War
ancestry is encouraged to pay the
ultimate honor to that ancestor by
joining our ranks.

TUESDAY, NOV. 10
GALLIPOLIS — The Bossard
Memorial Library/Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees

will meet at 5 p.m. at the library.
RIO GRANDE — The regular
monthly meeting of the GalliaVinton Educational Service Center
Governing Board will be 5 p.m.
at the University of Rio Grande,
Wood Hall, Room 131. Call (740)
245-0593 for further details.
GALLIPOLIS — PERI Chapter58 will meet at 1:30 p.m. at
First Baptist Church, 1100 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis. Guest speaker
will be Amber Johnson, director of
Senior Services Holzer Post Acute
Care Division. Those attending
are asked to bring a box of tissues
to be donated to a local nonproﬁt
organization.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11
GALLIPOLIS — The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library will
be closed in observance of Veterans
Day. Normal operating hours will
resume on Nov. 12.
GALLIPOLIS — Disabled
American Veterans Chapter 141 of
Gallipolis will host a free meal at
4 p.m. at Golden Corral. Disabled
veterans who use a wheelchair
or walker can be served at 2 p.m.
For more information, call David
McCoy at 740-208-0113.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia

County Veterans Service Ofﬁce will
be closed on Veterans Day.

THURSDAY, NOV. 12
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis
Garden Club will meet at 7 p.m. in
the Fellowship Hall of First Presbyterian Church. The program for
the evening is “Favorite Nuts.” If
you are unable to attend contact
the president or any garden club
member.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Veterans Service Ofﬁce will
be closed for employee training.

FRIDAY, NOV. 13
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Veterans Service Ofﬁce will
be closed for employee training.

SATURDAY, NOV. 14
WILKESVILLE — Free Harvest
Dinner, 4-5:30 p.m., Wilkesville United
Methodist Church. Public is welcome.

TUESDAY, NOV. 17
GALLIPOLIS — Stroke Survivors’ Support Group meeting,
12:30-1:30 p.m., at the Gallia
Senior Resource Center, 1165 State
Route 160, Gallipolis (next to Gallia County 911 Center). Lunch
served at noon.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Card Shower for Ann
Taylor’s 89 birthday

building, 360 E. State St, Athens. Light refreshments will be served. Sponsored by the Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest Group, this event is free
and open to all. For more information call Perry
at 740 589-9915 or visit our web site at http://
seowig.weebly.com/.

RACINE — There will be a card shower for Ann
Taylor’s 89 Birthday on Nov. 13. Please mail your
cards to Ann Taylor, 48394 Karr Rd., Racine, OH,
45771.

Give a helping hand during
the holidays food donation

Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Store relocating

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

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Shop in Middleport will have a moving
sale Nov. 9 through Nov. 12. The shop will be closed
Nov. 13 and Nov. 14. The shop will reopen Nov. 16 at
its new location at 235 N. Second St. in Middleport.
Join them for their grand opening Nov. 17.

7 p.m. nightly Nov. 10-14 and 6:30 p.m. Nov. 15, with
Evangelist the Rev. Pat Mayle. For more information,
contact Pastor Mark Nix at 740-992-2952.

Ohio Woodland Interest
Group Program

Chuck Mugrage

Paid for by the candidate

60622185

STOP THE WAR ON BABIES
Since 1973, our nation has aborted
more children each and every year
than all the lives that were lost over
the entire Vietnam war. Our hands
have shed the blood of innocents and
now we are harvesting their body
SDUWV�IRU�SURÀW��:H�QHHG�WR�VWRS�WKLV�
war. America must turn, or burn.
Psalm 9:17 says: The Wicked shall be
turned into hell, and all the nations
that forget God.

Thank You
To The Voters of
Guyan Township

Debby O’Dell
Fiscal Ofﬁcer
Paid for by the candidate
1522 St. Rt. 141, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

60622092

Thank you for the support and
[gfÚ\]f[]�af�l`]�j][]fl�]d][lagf&amp;�

HOCKINGPORT — The Athens County Historical
Society and Museum, the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution are partnering to rededicate the Historic Marker commemorating
George Washington’s visit to the conﬂuence of the Hocking
and Ohio rivers in November of 1774. The marker will be
rededicated at noon Nov. 8 at Hockingport United Methodist Church at the intersection of Grand and Pavilion Streets
in Hockingport. A reception will follow in the Fellowship
Hall next to the church. All are welcome to attend.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel will
Natural Resources Assistance host Fall Revival Services
POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, 39589 St.
Council meeting notice
Rt. 143 in Pomeroy, will host Fall Revival Services at

MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the
Natural Resources Assistance Council at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District,
1400 Pike Street, Marietta, at 10 a.m. Nov. 10 to rate
and rank Round 10 grant applications for funding.
ATHENS — “From Rocks to Tree Tops, Geologi- Questions regarding this meeting should be directed
cal Influences on Southeastern Ohio’s Topography to Michelle Hyer at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District at (740) 376-1025 or
and Thoughts on Modern Local Floras” will be
mhyer@buckeyehills.org.
David Kidder, associate professor of geological
sciences at Ohio University, will talk about how
the local rocks came into being. Come hear the
story of changes in ancient climate and sea level
from when southeast Ohio was a tropical setting and how that influences today’s woodlands.
The program will be 7 p.m. Nov. 16 in the ODNR

TO THE VOTERS OF
SUTTON TOWNSHIP

George Washington’s historic
marker re-dedication

Paid for by the New Haven Baptist Church
PO Box 641
New Haven, WV 25265

60621109

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public.

�LOCAL

4A Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

3 arrested in separate incidents

GALLIA CHURCH CALENDAR

By Dean Wright

SUN., NOV. 8

warrant for Joshua Saunders,
deanwright@civitasmedia.com
35, of Bidwell, for being located
around the Gallia Metropolitan
GALLIPOLIS — The GalEstates property after having
lia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce has
been barred from the location in
released some of its latest com2007.
In a separate case, a complaint
plaint reports for late October
Cleland
Kirby
Saunders
was released by the Gallia Counand early November.
ty Sheriff’s Ofﬁce in regards to
According to police records,
dren
in
common.”
Cleland
allegedly
Mitchell Kirby, 24, of IndianapoGretchen Cleland, 23, of Gallipolis,
punched
her
boyfriend
in
the
face
lis.
Allegedly, Kirby is a fugitive
was arrested and transported to
twice
because
he
made
her
angry.
from
Indiana where he has been
Gallia County Jail on Nov. 1 for
charged
with breaking the terms
According
to
reports,
the
pair
had
allegedly violating 2919.25(A) of
of
his
probation
stemming from
been
arguing
throughout
the
day
the Ohio Revised Code in a report
a
theft
conviction.
The complaint
and
when
Cleland
became
intoxithat said Cleland allegedly and
says
Kirby
is
allegedly
in violation
cated,
she
supposedly
became
more
“knowingly caused physical harm
2963.11
of
the
Ohio
Revised
Code
aggressive
and
struck
her
signiﬁto a family or household member.”
for
ﬂeeing
to
Gallia
County.
cant other.
Allegedly, Cleland entered a
“verbal altercation with her live-in
boyfriend, with whom she has chil-

In a separate case, Gallia County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce requested an arrest

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

Marshall pledges support for student vets
Staff Report

currently studying at
the U.S. Army War ColHUNTINGTON, W.Va. lege in Carlisle, Penn— In honor of Veterans
sylvania, followed by
Day, Marshall University the presentation of
is pledging increased sup- the 5 Star Challenge
port for student veterans coin by David Moske,
as part of West Virginia’s president of the student
‘5 Star Challenge’ initiaveterans organization,
tive which launched earVeterans 4 Veterans,
lier this fall.
to Marshall University
The challenge, which
Interim President Gary
calls on institutions to
White, who by accepting
adopt a set of exemplary
the coin, accepts the 5
standards for supportStar Challenge.
ing student veterans, is
In accepting the chala tribute to the military
lenge, Marshall Univertradition of issuing “chal- sity has committed to 1)
lenge coins” to service
providing a signed commembers who embody
mitment from White to
the values and standards adopt best practices and
of their military units.
standards; 2) emphasizThe event at Marshall, ing a focus on increasing
access and affordability to
which starts at 1 p.m. in
higher education for stuthe Memorial Student
Center’s Shawkey Room, dent veterans; 3) providing increased academic
will begin with a brief
support including priority
keynote speech by Marregistration for classes;
shall alumnus Lt. Col.
4) enhancing social netTimothy Vance, who is

works for veterans on
campus; and 5) encouraging greater collaboration
with community organizations working to meet
the needs of military service members. A detailed
outline of the challenge
can be found at www.
cfwv.com, the state’s free
college and career-planning website.
“We are proud to
announce that all public
four-year undergraduate institutions in West
Virginia have accepted
the ‘5 Star Challenge,’
” Dr. Paul Hill, chancellor of the West Virginia
Higher Education Policy

Powered by her Heartbeat

Commission, said.
“Their participation in
this effort not only
acknowledges a sincere commitment to
meeting the unique
needs of our student
veterans, but also
results in real policies that will provide
tangible beneﬁts to
military service members
who are pursuing higher
education. By providing
student veterans with
services such as priority
registration and building stronger support
networks on campus, we
are honoring their service to our country and
equipping them with the
resources they need to
succeed.”
The “5 Star Challenge” is an initiative of
the Ofﬁce of Veterans
Education and Training
Programs within the Division of Student Affairs
at the Commission and
West Virginia Community
and Technical College
System. In addition to
issuing the challenge to
campuses, the Commission and WVCTCS are
committed to providing
more resources to help
student veterans navigate
the higher education system and ﬁnd support on
campus and in the community.
This Veterans Day
event is free and open to
the public. Please contact
Kim White, director of
military and veterans
affairs at Marshall University, at 304-696-5278 for
more information.

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

JACKSON — Winchester Community
Church homecoming,
noon, with dinner
and services to follow.
Church is located off U.S.
35 behind D&amp;W Homes
in Jackson. For more
information, call Ron
Walker at 740-418-0914.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.,
Sunday School at 10
a.m., morning worship
service at 10:30; Pastor
Bob Hood, Bulaville
Christian Church, 2337
Johnson Ridge Rd.;
740-446-7495 or 740709-6107.
GALLIPOLIS —
“First Light” Worship in
the Family Life Center,
9 a.m.; Sunday School,
9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worship, 10:45 a.m.;
choir practice, 4:30
p.m.; Discipleship 101,
6 p.m.; Teen Worship in
the Family Life Center,
6 p.m., First Church

of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave. with Pastor
Douglas Downs.
ADDISON — Sunday
School, 10 a.m., Addison Freewill Baptist
Church; Sunday evening service at 6 p.m.
with Pastor Rick Barcus
preaching.

WED., NOV. 11
GALLIPOLIS —
Children’s Ministries,
6:45 p.m.; Youth
“Impact 127”, 7 p.m.;
Prayer &amp; Praise, 7 p.m.;
Choir Practice, 7 p.m.;
First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.
ADDISON — Business meeting and Bible
study, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
with Dr. Jon Sullivan.

FRI., NOV. 13
GALLIPOLIS —
Prayer Force, 8:45 a.m.,
Harmon Chapel, First
Church of the Nazarene,
1110 First Ave.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar
will only list event information that is open to the
public.

SUNDAY NOV. 8
POMEROY — Dr. Michael Pango, Apostle of
Hysell Run Community Church, Hysell Run Road,
Pomeroy, will be ministering at the church at 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m. Everyone is invited for fellowship.
TUPPERS PLAINS — VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will host a turkey dinner from 11 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. Menu includes turkey, mashed potatoes,
green beans, cole slaw, dessert and drink. A suggested donation of $10 is appreciated. Carry out
dinners available.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer will have their regular meeting at 7 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce.

TUESDAY, NOV.10
BEDFORD — The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet at 7 p.m. at the town hall.

THURSDAY, NOV.12
SYRACUSE — The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Community
Center. Prospective new members are welcome.

SATURDAY, NOV. 14
REEDSVILLE — The 28th Annual Eastern
Music Boosters Craft Show will be held Saturday, Nov. 14 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eastern
Elementary School. The Craft show will feature
performances by the Eastern Choir, Handbells,
Marching Band and Concert Band. For more information contact Angie at 740-985-3690 or Jenny at
740-985-3479.
BURLINGHAM — Modern Woodman Chapter
7230 will have their Thanksgiving dinner and
meeting at First Southern Baptist Church, Pomeroy. Doors open at 3:30 p.m., dinner at 4 p.m. and
program at 5 p.m. Randy Sheets will be the guest
speaker on the topic of “The Constitution: Where
did our laws come from.” The public to invited to
the program.Members should RSVP for dinner by
Nov. 9 by calling 740-992-5628.
BURLINGHAM — There will be a public meeting of the Burlingham Cemetery Association at 1
p.m. at the Burlingham Church.

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�E ditorial
5A Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Analysis: Russian
goals in Syria
defined by timing
By Steven Hurst
Associated Press

There’s much speculation about Russian
motives for intervening in Syria. The root
answer lies in the timing.
Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin boss, ﬁnally
decided Syrian leader and Moscow ally Bashar
Assad was in danger of losing control of
Damascus, the capital of the civil-war ravaged
nation.
That, in turn, would have crushed a key
Russian foreign policy objective — keeping
Syria together as a unitary state and
maintaining the Russian foothold in the Middle
East.
“Assad has not been doing well for a long
time, so that leads me to believe they (the
Russians) saw something lately that made them
think things were getting considerably worse,
and they had to intervene,” said Eugene Rumer,
director of the Carnegie Endowment Russia and
Eurasia program.
Holding together the status quo has played
heavily in Kremlin foreign policy reaching deep
into the past. And the logic of Mideast and
North African developments — the centrifugal
spinning apart of Iraq and Libya, for example —
was deeply unnerving to Moscow.
That was particularly true as the Russians saw
the danger in Syria, a long-time client, arms
customer and Moscow’s only remaining outpost
in the region. Beyond that, Syria is home to
Moscow’s only naval base in the Mediterranean.
Putin began Russian involvement in what is
becoming his textbook incremental fashion.
First, in late summer, he quietly boosted
military hardware and personnel at the Sovietera Tartus base on the Syrian Mediterranean
coast. Then, in late September, Putin spoke at
the United Nations General Assembly for the
ﬁrst time in years. He issued a strong argument
that the U.S. was failing against ISIS militants
who hold a large swath of territory in Syria and
neighboring Iraq.
The next day, Putin said Russia might start
air strikes. Those bombing runs began within
days, but the targets were not ISIS ﬁghters, as
Putin had said, but the more moderate Syrian
rebels Washington was backing against Assad.
The northwest region out of which Moscow
is operating remains a heartland of Alawite
supporters of Assad. Alawites form a branch of
Shiite Islam, a fact that also has made Syria a
close ally of non-Arab but predominantly Shiite
Iran. Tehran already was heavily involved on
Assad’s behalf in the four-year civil war.
But Tehran’s help, along with militia ﬁghters
from Lebanon’s Shiite Hezbollah, wasn’t
enough.
“For some time Russian security and military
leaders have been frustrated that even with the
aid of ﬁghters from Iran and Hezbollah, Assad’s
forces have been unable to hold their own,” said
William Courtney, a former U.S. diplomat in
Moscow, and now adjunct senior fellow at the
RAND Corporation, and a former ambassador
to Kazakhstan and Georgia.
The Kremlin fears, however, that the armed
opposition to Assad will adapt to Russian
air power, which will then lose effectiveness,
Courtney said.
“These worries have contributed to Russia’s
recent professed interest in ﬁnding a ‘political
solution’ to the Syrian crisis,” he said. “The
Kremlin may press for a while for Assad to
retain his position. In some time, however,
Russia and the West may both see him as
expendable. The West views Assad as too
brutal, and Russia (sees him) as too weak and
ineffective.”
Whether effective or not, Russia’s involvement
has led to resumed talks about Syria’s future
in Vienna. So far there’s no progress but at
least there are talks, notable for including
Iran — at Russia’s insistence — for the ﬁrst
time. They are notable as well for easing the
Kremlin’s isolation after its takeover of Crimea
and backing for pro-Moscow forces ﬁghting the
central government in Ukraine.
The Russian action — whether causal or
not — has now been followed by President
Barack Obama’s decision to insert a few dozen
American special operators in Syria to bolster
the Assad opposition, including highly effective
Kurdish ﬁghters in the north. That move is in
contrast to Obama’s previous vow to not put
American “boots on the ground” in Syria.
While it remains unclear if Russia can succeed
in Syria — by holding together a uniﬁed state
whether led by Assad or another strongman — it
is certain Kremlin intervention was strategically
timed, has undercut U.S. tactics and has
restarted negotiations to end the Syrian civil war.
The success of those talks, however, remains
highly uncertain.
Steven R. Hurst is The Associated Press’ international political writer
and has covered foreign affairs for 35 years.

THEIR VIEW

The time to reform tax code is now

Congress has a number of
urgent items to consider in
the next few months — how
to deal with the debt limit,
how to fund the government, and how to fund our
highway programs.
For the sake of U.S. businesses and workers, there’s
another urgent item that
needs Congress’s attention
sooner rather than later —
tax reform.
Our tax code puts American workers and businesses
at a real disadvantage.
The United States has the
highest corporate rate in
the industrialized world,
and, unlike most other
countries, our government
taxes American businesses
when they try to bring their
overseas proﬁts back home.
As countries from the UK
to Japan have cut their corporate rates and eliminated
these repatriation taxes,
they are taking our jobs and
investment.
As a result, the hard reality is that U.S. businesses
are often much more valuable in the hands of foreign
companies who can reduce
their tax bills. That’s a big

business reasons to
reason why foreign
team up with Tim
takeovers of U.S.
Hortons. But when
companies doubled
deciding where to
last year to $275
locate the headquarbillion.
ters of the combined
I am concerned
ﬁrm, tax considerthat the current tax
ations ﬂatly ruled out
system is increasRob
the U.S. Burger King
ingly driving U.S.
Portman
businesses into the Contributing calculated that pulling Tim Hortons into
hands of foreign
Columnist
the noncompetitive
companies best
worldwide U.S. tax
able to reduce
net, rather than relocating to
their tax liabilities, rather
Canada, would destroy up to
than those best equipped
$5.5 billion in value over just
to manage and grow the
business — and create jobs ﬁve years. Far better, executives concluded, to put the
and increase wages here at
new company in a country
home.
America is also losing
that would allow it to reincorporate headquarters
vest overseas earnings back
through mergers in which
in the U.S. and Canada withU.S. businesses relocate
out incurring new taxes.
overseas. To better underI believe it should also
stand this trend of so-called include a tax extenders
“combination-migrations,”
package that makes many
the Subcommittee reviewed of our current tax extenders
in detail the 2014 merger
permanent. I think that we
of Burger King with the
can all agree that temporary
Canadian coffee-and-donut
tax policy is bad tax policy
chain Tim Hortons — an
— and whether it’s giving
$11.4 billion merger that
families certainty that there
sent Burger King’s corporate is going to be a mortgage
headquarters north of the
insurance premium deducborder. Our review showed tion, small businesses
that Burger King had strong certainty that there is going

to be expanded section 179
expensing, or innovative
companies assurances that
there is going to be an R&amp;D
credit, I believe that making
these policies permanent
would provide a big boost to
our economy.
In fact, the Joint Committee on Taxation found
that the short-term extenders package passed by the
Senate Finance Committee
last month would create
$10.4 billion in dynamic
tax revenue. Imagine the
growth if those were made
permanent.
If we don’t start to take
steps to reform our code
now, I’m worried that we’re
going to turn around in a
couple of years and ask,
“What happened? Where
did our jobs go? What happened to the American
companies?” If we do get to
that place, we’ll have no one
to blame but ourselves. We
cannot afford to kick the can
down the road on this issue.
The time to start reforming
our tax code is now.

Rob Portman is a Republican U.S.
senator representing Ohio in the
U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

YOUR VIEW

Ohioans tired
of drug problems
Dear Editor,
I found this interesting. For those
who might want to know the breakdown of vote results in Gallia County
to State Issue Three:
Total Votes: 7973; Yes: 2149 —
26.95 percent; No: 5824 — 73.05
percent.
Source: Gallianet
This is about a 3-1 margin. This is
highlighted by the fact that only about
24.5% of the county voted at all,
based on a population of about 32,500
people.
Additionally a statewide map of

polling precincts on a county by county basis showed that no county in the
state of Ohio approved of Prop 3 and
the closest races were in the Cleveland
area only.
I think the message that is being
sent and I don’t think the proponents
of recreational drugs are hearing it, is
that Ohio is sick to death of the drug
problem that is sweeping over the
state.
I for one, as a pastor, am not
opposed to “Compassionate Medical
Marijuana, as administered by a doctor and controlled by the state. We
had it in NY and yet recreational drug
use there is still illegal.
The proponents of drug legalization on the recent ballot issue could
not get their “return on investment”

solely based on legitimate medical
need as those who would need it are
disproportionately a smaller sector
of the societal demographic. In order
for them to justify their investment
they would need recreational user
purchasers to justify their millions in
investment.
That did not happen and it is likely
that it is never going to happen seeing
how we are awash in drugs today and
people are tired of it. Not even cities
like Dayton, Springﬁeld, Columbus
and Cincinnati voted for it and that
speaks volumes.
Bad laws that enrich others while
making other men moral slaves are
the worst sort of tyranny.

Wyatt Buchanan
Gallipolis

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Sunday, Nov. 8,
the 312th day of 2015. There
are 53 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Nov. 8, 1965, newspaper columnist Dorothy
Kilgallen was found dead
in her Manhattan home the
morning after appearing
as a regular panelist on the
CBS game show “What’s My
Line?” The TV soap opera
“Days of Our Lives” premiered on NBC.

Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Norman Lloyd is 101.
CBS newsman Morley Safer
is 84. Actress Stephane
Audran is 83. Actor Alain
Delon is 80. Singer-actress
Bonnie Bramlett is 71.
Singer Bonnie Raitt is 66.
TV personality Mary Hart is
65. Former Playboy Enterprises chairman and chief
executive Christie Hefner is
63. Actress Alfre Woodard is
63. Singer-songwriter Rickie
Lee Jones is 61. Author

Kazuo Ishiguro is 61. Rock
musician Porl Thompson
(The Cure) is 58. Singeractor Leif Garrett is 54. Chef
and TV personality Gordon
Ramsay is 49. Actress
Courtney Thorne-Smith is
48. Actress Parker Posey is
47. Rock musician Jimmy
Chaney is 46. Actress Roxana Zal is 46. Singer Diana
King is 45. Actor Gonzalo
Menendez is 44. Rock musician Scott Devendorf (The
National) is 43. Actress

Gretchen Mol is 42. ABC
News anchor David Muir is
42. Actor Matthew Rhys is
41. Actress Tara Reid is 40.
Country singer Bucky Covington is 38. Actress Dania
Ramirez is 36. Actress Azura
Skye is 34. Actor Chris
Rankin is 32. TV personality
Jack Osbourne is 30. Actress
Jessica Lowndes is 27. Singer-actor Riker Lynch (TV:
“Glee” ”Dancing With the
Stars”) is 24. Country singer
Lauren Alaina is 21.

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, November 8, 2015

Chamber

one place, but they aren’t
involved with the community the way the small
From Page 1A
boxes are. He asked if
anyone had seen a big
There was an air
box name as a sponsor
of excitement as the
on the back of their kids’
chamber had much
sports team shirts or anyto celebrate. The ﬁrst
where else.
speaker was Steve Story,
“The local business are
who used two boxes as
the sponsors of our kids,
examples of the positive
they give back to the
attributes of a small box. community,” he said. “We
He said the big box was
all share a common goal,
hard to carry but a good
to make businesses in the
place to store all the
county strong. If everyone
negative things in your
would spend their dollars
life. Then he held up the
in this county, it would
small box, and said this
go a long way. We need
is the good box and cited to support our local busiseveral examples of good nesses.”
Chamber President
things that come in small
Dan Short began his
boxes.
review of the chamber’s
“Like wedding rings,”
he said. “Small boxes are accomplishments with
chuckles from the audia lot like Meigs County.
ence as he said he was
What we have here are a
lot of small boxes, all with told he only had 15 minutes to present 25 years
good things inside.”
of accomplishments.
He encouraged every“Which mean I only
one to remember when
have a few seconds for
they were ready to shop
each year, and we have so
for the holidays to think
many things to be proud
of the businesses in
of,” he said. “We pulled
Meigs County as small
two chambers together
boxes with everything
and formed the Meigs
you need inside.
County Chamber of ComHe said the big boxes
merce 25 years ago. Since
have a lot to offer all in
then, the chamber has
been successful because
of the volunteerism, perseverance, public spirit,
unity and high energy
of its members. We are

From Page 1A

said. “(Wolfe) then admitted that he had a
container of someone else’s urine and used it in an
attempt to pass the mandatory drug screen.”
The Defendant was indicted by the Gallia
County Grand Jury in August.
Wolfe was originally placed on probation in
2013 for complicity to burglary, according to
Gallia County Prosecutor Jeff Adkins.
“In 2015, (Wolfe) violated the terms of his
community control and was then sent to prison for
a term of 30 days. After the defendant served the
stated prison term, he was released and ordered
to continue his adult probation through the Gallia
County Common Pleas Court,” he said.
Wolfe pleaded guilty recently to the tampering
with evidence charge, a third-degree felony,
and was sentenced to 15 months in the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction for
violating his probation and for misleading a public
ofﬁcial, his probation ofﬁcer, with the false urine
sample.
“We applaud the efforts of the Gallia County
Common Pleas Court Probation Department.
They are delegated the difﬁcult task of tracking
and overseeing all of those persons placed on
felony probation,” Assistant Prosecutor Eric
Mulford said. “They tirelessly work with those
persons who need drug rehabilitation and
are the ones making the phone calls to set up
appointments with facilities all in an effort to help
those that need it most.”
Reach Michael Johnson at 740-446-2342, ext. 2102, or on Twitter @
OhioEditorMike

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 53.95
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.47
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 112.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 48.04
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 43.20
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 41.69
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.49
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 51.12
Collins (NYSE) —87.75
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.11
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.72
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.94
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.16
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 68.46
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.57
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 96.88
Norfolk So (NYSE) —79.87
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 25.99

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

37°

BBT (NYSE) —39.04
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.86
Pepsico (NYSE) — 99.71
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.43
Rockwell (NYSE) — 109.00
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.02
Royal Dutch Shell — 52.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 24.09
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.80
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.56
WesBanco (NYSE) — 34.01
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.96
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 6, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

2 PM

50°

41°

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.

69°
61°
61°
40°
82° in 1975
21° in 1944

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.06
0.13
0.67
41.52
36.51

Today
7:03 a.m.
5:21 p.m.
4:02 a.m.
3:58 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:04 a.m.
5:20 p.m.
4:57 a.m.
4:29 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

First

Full

Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25

Dec 3

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

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

Major
8:44a
9:23a
10:04a
10:48a
11:07a
11:58a
12:56a

Minor
2:34a
3:12a
3:52a
4:36a
5:23a
6:14a
7:08a

Major
9:06p
9:45p
10:26p
11:11p
------1:21p

Minor
2:55p
3:34p
4:15p
4:59p
5:47p
6:39p
7:34p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 8, 1972, a powerful storm hit
the Northeast with heavy rain, ﬂooding and high winds. In New York City,
the ﬁerce coastal gale drenched the
city with a record 5.1 inches of rain.

63°
47°

Clouds and sun, a
shower in the p.m.

A morning shower;
mainly cloudy

0

Chillicothe
53/29

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

0

Lucasville
55/28

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Portsmouth
55/30

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.

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.52 -0.07
Marietta
34 15.76 -0.47
Parkersburg
36 21.20 +0.38
Belleville
35 12.65 +0.29
Racine
41 13.67 +0.82
Point Pleasant
40 25.16 -0.08
Gallipolis
50 13.33 +0.30
Huntington
50 25.88 +0.01
Ashland
52 34.50 none
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.82 -0.04
Portsmouth
50 17.00 +0.20
Maysville
50 34.00 -0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 15.70 -0.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

67°
56°
Cloudy to partly sunny

55°
34°

Sunny

Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
55/34
Belpre
55/31

Athens
54/27

St. Marys
55/35

Parkersburg
55/31

Coolville
54/30

Elizabeth
55/35

Spencer
55/34

Buffalo
55/31
Milton
55/34

Clendenin
57/36

St. Albans
57/37

Huntington
55/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
53/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
60/50
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
78/54
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

55°
34°

Cooler with
occasional rain

Murray City
53/26

Ironton
55/36

Ashland
55/32
Grayson
55/35

FRIDAY

60°
41°

Wilkesville
54/29
POMEROY
Jackson
55/31
54/28
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
55/31
55/30
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
52/29
GALLIPOLIS
55/32
55/30
54/31

South Shore Greenup
55/36
54/28

35
300

Logan
53/25

McArthur
53/26

Waverly
54/28

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

0 50 100 150 200

Last

60°
47°

Adelphi
53/26

Q: What is solar winter in the northern
hemisphere?

SUN &amp; MOON

TUESDAY

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

A: Early November through early February; part of year with least sunlight.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551

a learning opportunity to educate our
students on the importance of service,
and to honor the important folks who
From Page 1A
have served,” Southern High principal
Last year’s honoree was Paul Beegle, Daniel Otto said.
Guests are encouraged to view the
a veteran who served in the Paciﬁc Thedisplay
donated to the school by the
ater during World War II. A lifelong resRacine
American
Legion. The display
ident of the Racine area, Beegle gradufeatures
the
American
ﬂag, as well as a
ated from Racine High School and has
digital
photo
display
of
veterans from
always been very supportive of church,
school and community activities.
the area.
“All veterans are invited from anyThe public is invited to attend and
where within The Daily Sentinel
refreshments will be on hand for vetercoverage area. Veterans were crucial in ans following the ceremony.
building our country and preserving our
freedoms. We, as a school, take this as
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551

MONDAY

Plenty of sunshine today. A starlit sky and cold
tonight. High 55° / Low 32°

for Best First Impression.
Jim Ridenour received
the Community Pillar for
his long service to the
community.
Entrepreneur of the
Year went to Darrell
Norris of Darrell Norris
&amp; Son Greenhouses, for
his efforts at successfully
expanding and growing
the seasonal ﬂower business and creating new
jobs for the area.
Angee Arnold received
the Economic Impact
award for her efforts in
bringing Holzer Health
System to the area.
Susan Clark-Dingess
and Tom Sutton were
each awarded the David
P. Baker Award for their
community involvement.
The Lifetime Business
Award went to David
Grate of Rutland Bottle
Gas. The company has
gone from a one small
establishment in Rutland
in 1947 to a large company with more than 8,500
accounts throughout the
county and beyond.
The Gala closed with a
send-off by Short.
“We’re building something here,” he said.
“Lets’s look forward
to more changes and
improvements in the next
25 years.”

Veterans

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

tough in the face of adversity and no one needs to
be king or queen. We just
all work together.”
He went on to list some
of the accomplishments,
including the chamber’s
leadership on efforts to
get land funding approval
for the U.S. 33 corridor,
efforts to keep the mines
open for 10 years after
the Clean Air Act and
ﬂooding threatened their
closure, and the development of new business that
provide additional jobs
for the area.
According to Short,
the chamber has also
increased its visibility by
participating in community events such as Membership Monday, the county
fair, a golf outing, 5K mud
run, Party in the Park,
Sternwheel Festival and
a Breast Cancer Balloon
Launch. Also, the chamber has started a “Business Before Hours” event
to help area entrepreneurs
network and keep in touch
with each other.
“I want to encourage
members to get active
and stay active,” Story
said in closing. “Thank
you for all your hard
work.”
Now it was time for
the business awards,
with Tammy Grueser of
Swisher &amp; Lohse/Jittery
Joe’s receiving an award

Charleston
57/34

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
52/32

Billings
56/32

Toronto
50/32

Minneapolis
57/41
Chicago
53/31

Denver
59/33

Detroit
53/32

Montreal
45/33

New York
59/45
Washington
59/43

Kansas City
59/36

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
55/36/pc
32/28/c
55/48/r
58/40/s
59/35/s
56/32/s
56/40/c
56/40/s
57/34/s
60/44/pc
59/29/s
53/31/s
54/32/s
53/32/s
53/32/s
65/47/s
59/33/s
59/36/s
53/32/s
87/75/pc
66/51/c
54/30/s
59/36/s
68/47/pc
63/42/s
78/54/pc
58/38/s
87/77/pc
57/41/s
61/45/s
69/61/c
59/45/s
61/43/s
84/70/t
60/42/s
82/56/s
52/33/s
53/31/s
61/43/pc
60/37/s
56/36/s
58/42/pc
60/50/sh
53/42/t
59/43/s

Hi/Lo/W
61/38/s
37/26/sn
54/51/r
61/51/s
60/42/s
50/33/c
45/32/sh
60/44/s
64/47/pc
54/50/r
56/28/s
53/31/s
59/43/pc
59/43/s
59/44/pc
65/51/pc
60/34/s
58/42/s
56/37/s
87/75/pc
71/56/pc
58/39/pc
59/43/pc
67/45/pc
63/48/pc
68/52/pc
61/50/pc
87/75/sh
57/42/pc
59/50/sh
73/61/pc
61/46/s
60/47/s
83/67/t
62/47/s
79/53/s
58/42/s
57/34/s
60/54/r
62/49/pc
59/41/pc
58/38/sh
59/46/t
49/39/r
61/49/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
55/48

High
Low

El Paso
64/45
Chihuahua
63/46

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

91° in Harlingen, TX
1° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
66/51
Monterrey
68/55

GOALS

Miami
87/77

108° in Matam, Senegal
-41° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

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

Prison

Sunday Times-Sentinel

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 8, 2015 s Section B

Blue Devils burn South Gallia, 63-0
By Alex Hawley

as Ridge Durbin completed
a 32-yard touchdown pass to
Cal Honabarger just 30 secDANVILLE, Ohio —
onds into play. DHS scored
Sometimes there’s no way
again at the 8:46 mark of
around it, you’re simply out- the ﬁrst when Justus Brady
matched.
recovered a fumble in the
The South Gallia football
endzone. Ridge Durbin conteam knew what it was up
nected with Honabarger for
against Friday night, as the
a second scoring pass with
Rebels traveled to Knox
1:24 left in the ﬁrst, this time
County for a Division VII,
from nine yards out. Luis
Region 25 quarterﬁnal show- Martin, Reese Dorsey and
down with D-7 poll chamPiet Hartmann each made an
pion Danville. The host Blue extra point in the ﬁrst quarDevils, who have made ﬁve
ter and Danville led 21-0.
straight playoff appearances,
Ridge Durbin kept his roll
began their 16th postseason going in the second quarter,
in style, defeating SGHS 63-0 throwing three touchdown
in the Rebels fourth-ever
passes, while rushing seven
Donald Lambert | OVP Sports
playoff
game.
yards for another score.
South Gallia sophomore Chayce Pearson (78) and senior Isaiah Geiger (1) bring down
Danville
(11-0)
wasted
litHonabarger was one the
Ridge Durbin during Danville’s 63-0 victory in the opening round of the Division VII,
tle time getting on the board receiving end of a 30-yard
Region 25 quarterfinal, on Friday at Danville Municipal Park Stadium.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

touchdown, while Kenton
Mickley caught a 26-yard
scoring pass and an 11-yard
scoring pass in the second.
Hartmann made two extra
points in the second quarter,
while Dorsey and Eduardo
Demetrio each added one.
DHS scored just once in
the third, as Skyler Durbin
found paydirt on an 18-yard
run with 2:14 remaining
in the quarter. Danville
also scored once in the
fourth period, with Chris
Greenawalt punching in the
endzone from six yards out
with 8:28 left in the game.
Demetrio and Martin both
had an extra point kick in
the second half and Danville

See DEVILS | 6B

URG adding
4 to Athletic
Hall of Fame
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — A pair of men’s soccer
standouts, a talented softball pitcher and one of
the most decorated runners in school history highlight the University of Rio Grande’s Athletic Hall
of Fame Class of 2015.
Simon Carey, Tony Grifﬁths, Josh Perry and
Andrea Lotycz (Bowsher) comprise the quartet
elected earlier this year, with the formal induction
of Perry and Lotcyz set to take place on Saturday,
Nov. 21, at 7 p.m. as part of the school’s annual
Hall of Fame banquet.
Carey and Grifﬁths, both of whom were members of Rio’s 2003 national championship team,
were formally inducted during a brief on-ﬁeld ceremony on Oct. 10 prior to the men’s soccer game
against Cincinnati Christian University.
The Hall of Fame banquet will follow the conclusion of the Bevo Francis Invitational Tournament,
scheduled for Friday and Saturday, Nov. 20-21, at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
The entire Class of 2015 - and all Hall of Fame
members in attendance - will be recognized prior
to the tournament’s ﬁnal game at approximately
4:30 p.m. on the 21st. The banquet begins with a
6:30 p.m. reception, with the formal program to
follow at the top of the hour.
Perry, a native of Rio Grande, Ohio, earned
NAIA Outdoor Track and Field All-American
honors in 2008 and was named Rio Grande’s Male
Athlete of the Year in 2006-07 and 2007-08.
Perry is the owner of the former America
Mideast Conference meet record in both the 200meter dash and the 4x100m relay and was named
the league’s Athlete of the Meet in 2008.
Perry is either the sole- or part-owner of ﬁve
outdoor track &amp; ﬁeld records at Rio Grande and
also is the school record-holder in ﬁve indoor
events (55-meter dash, 60-meter dash, 200-meter
dash, 300-meter run and 400-meter run).
Perry also holds meet and facility records at a
number of other universities and/or continued to
be listed in the Top 10 Best Times as of the close
of the 2014 season.
“Josh was a tremendous athlete and an outstanding runner who re-wrote the record books time
and time again at Rio Grande,” said Rio Grande
track &amp; ﬁeld head coach Bob Willey. “Off the top
of my head, I think he broke 23 records - many of
which were his own - while he was here. I remember him running the indoor 300 one year and, at
the time, he was a little under a second off the
world record. I had coaches from all over the United States calling me and asking ‘where did you
get this guy?’. I told them he was from Rio Grande
and they said ‘we know he goes to Rio Grande,
but where’s he from?’. I had to tell them again that
he’s from Rio Grande - he lives here in the village.
He’s an outstanding Christian young man who was
a hard worker that was able to accomplish a lot
while he was here.”
Perry currently is employed as a teacher at Gallia Academy High School in nearby Gallipolis.
Lotycz, a native of Marysville, Ohio, was a pitcher in the Rio women’s softball program from 20022006, helping lead the then-Redwomen to the
2004 Region IX championship and a seventh-place
ﬁnish in the NAIA World Series - the program’s
only such World Series appearance to date.
Lotcyz ﬁnished her Rio career with a 60-34
record and a 2.30 earned run average, tossing
90 complete games among the 92 contests she
See HALL | 6B

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Justin Arrowood runs the ball through a lane created by teammates Dylan Greenlee, left, and Mike Williams, right,
during a second half carry against Zane Trace in a Division V, Region 17 quarterfinal playoff game in Kinnikinnick, Ohio.

Raiders fall to Zane Trace, 34-0
By Bryan Walters

incredible tonight and had a really
great game plan in place for us,”
Sparling said. “You know, my heart
KINNIKINNICK, Ohio — At
is broken for my seniors and my
the end of it all, it was still a good
underclassmen … and the communight to be a Raider.
nity. I think these kids represented
The River Valley football team
River Valley well, and we had some
had its fairy-tale season come an
chances to make things different,
emphatic end Friday night during
but we didn’t get it done.
a 34-0 setback to unbeaten Zane
“In a lot of ways we looked like
Trace in a Division V, Region
a team that had never been in the
17 quarterﬁnal at ZTHS in Ross
playoffs before, but the kids also
County.
showed their heart and left it all on
The seventh-seeded Raiders
the ﬁeld. I’m proud of all of them
(7-4) put up a spirited ﬁght in the
for what we’ve been able to accomprogram’s ﬁrst-ever gridiron playoff plish this year.”
contest, as the guests trailed only
The Pioneers took the opening
6-0 after the opening period of
kickoff and marched 68 yards in
play. The second-seeded Pioneers, seven plays for the ﬁrst score of
however, came away with three
the game. Joel Dunkle received an
consecutive interceptions during
option pitch from quarterback Austhe second canto — which gave the tin Harris and rumbled 16 yards
Red, White and Blue a comfortable to paydirt, making it a 6-0 contest
21-0 halftime advantage.
with 9:21 remaining in the ﬁrst
Both teams traded possessions
quarter.
throughout the third canto, but
The Raiders responded with a
neither team mustered any points
13-play drive that started at their
during that span. Second-seeded
own nine, but the drive ultimately
ZTHS (11-0) capped things off
stalled out at the ZTHS three.
with a pair of touchdowns in the
River Valley had ﬁrst-and-goal at
fourth to wrap up the 34-point
the seven and was at the two-yard
triumph, the Pioneers’ ﬁrst playoff line on third down, but the hosts
win in six appearances.
held and took over possession at
The Silver and Black — who
their own three.
set a school record for wins in a
Each team punted on its next
season this fall — committed four two possessions, giving Zane Trace
turnovers in the contest, with half the ball at the RVHS 46 just 26
of those leading to 14 Zane Trace
seconds into the second stanza.
points. It was also the most points The hosts followed with a 9-play,
that River Valley allowed in a game 46-yard drive that ate up 4:34 while
this year, as well as the ﬁrst time
also extending their early lead.
that Raiders had been shut out.
Truman Love broke out of a tackThe night didn’t go anywhere
le and away from a pair of RVHS
near how RVHS coach Jerrod Spar- defenders during an 8-yard TD run,
ling had hoped it might, but the
making it a 14-0 contest with seven
ﬁfth-year mentor was still tremen- minutes left until halftime.
dously proud of his kids for getting
And then, disaster struck the Silthemselves — and this program
ver and Black.
— into this spot. As he noted, the
The third play of River Valley’s
Raiders just ran into something a
ensuing drive resulted in a pick-6
little better.
by Zane Trace’s Zane Davis, who
“First off, my hat’s off to Zane
scampered 43 yards to the house
Trace. They were absolutely
following his interception for a

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

21-0 edge with 6:05 remaining.
Aiden Place and Alex Wolff each
came away with interceptions on
the next two Raider possessions,
but neither turnover resulted in
points. The Pioneers also returned
a small favor with a lost fumble following their last takeaway, which
was recovered by senior Mike Williams with 1:43 remaining in the
half.
Neither team mustered another
ﬁrst down the rest of the way,
allowing Zane Trace to take a 21-0
cushion into the break.
The Pioneers had slightly over
twice as much offense in the opening 24 minutes as RVHS, with the
hosts holding a 167-81 edge in
total yards. The Raiders had only
14 rushing yards and four ﬁrst
downs in the ﬁrst half, while the
hosts had 127 rushing yards and
eight ﬁrst downs before the intermission.
The Silver and Black put
together successive drives of 12
plays for 48 yards and 11 plays for
51 yards on their ﬁrst two second
half possessions, but both surges
ultimately resulted in loss of downs
inside the Zane Trace 25-yard line.
The Pioneers’ ﬁrst three second
half possessions, which went into
the start of the fourth quarter, also
resulted in punts.
Zane Trace ﬁnally ended the
second half scoring drought with
6:31 left in regulation as Wolff
hauled in a 42-yard pass from Harris, which capped a 2-play, 44-yard
drive while giving the hosts a 28-0
advantage.
ZTHS executed a pooch kick
into the middle of River Valley’s
kickoff return setup, but nobody on
the Raiders squad managed to fall
on the ball. Ty Shanton recovered
the turnover for Zane Trace at the
Raider 28, then came the ﬁnal nail
in the proverbial cofﬁn.
See RAIDERS | 6B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Point Pleasant trounces Tigers, 66-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

M

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Pictured are members of the 2015 Point Pleasant varsity football team. The Big Blacks capped off their third straight undefeated season on Friday, at Princeton.

Schultz was 2-for-2 on
ﬁrst quarter extra point
kicks and the Big Blacks
led 14-0 at the end of the
stanza.
PPHS junior Grant
Safford broke a 17-yard
touchdown run four
minutes into the second
quarter, with senior Cody
Mitchell adding on with
a 33-yard touchdown run

at the 5:42 mark. Mitchell — a verbal commit to
Marshall — scored again
at the 5:05 mark of the
second, this time from
four yards out.
With just over four
minutes remaining in the
ﬁrst half, Safford punched
into the endzone from the
Princeton (5-5) one-yard
line, after a long run by

MARK’S
&amp;
G
HEA
N
I
B
T
ING

PLU

PRINCETON, W.Va. —
A perfect end to another
perfect regular season.
The Point Pleasant
football team capped off
its third straight undefeated regular season on
Friday night, rolling to
a 66-0 victory over nonconference host Princeton, in Mercer County.
The Big Blacks, who have
now won a state-best 33
straight regular season
games, also posted perfect regular seasons in
1962, 1969, 1979, 2011,
2013 and 2014.
The PPHS (10-0) offensive onslaught began on
the defensive side of the
ball as senior Garrett
Litchﬁeld returned an
interception 46 yards for
a touchdown, less than
a minute into the game.
Point Pleasant found the
endzone again with 2:56
remaining in the opening period, when junior
Jason Wamsley scored
on a three-yard run.
Junior place kicker Jason

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Mitchell. Schultz — who
was 4-for-4 on point after
attempts in the second
quarter — kicked a
37-yard ﬁeld goal with
just one second on the
clock, sending the Big
Blacks into halftime with
a 45-0 lead.
Point Pleasant outgained the Tigers 279-to57 in total offense in the
ﬁrst half, while holding a
16-to-2 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and a 3-0 edge in
takeaways.
Mitchell scored twice
in the third quarter, ﬁrst
on a three-yard run at the
8:58 mark, and again on
a ﬁve-yard run at the 2:48
mark. Schultz knocked
home both third quarter
extra points and PPHS
led 59-0.
Point Pleasant sophomore Keshawn Stover

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broke a 17-yard touchdown run at the 9:58
mark of the fourth quarter that, with Schultz’s
extra-point, gave the Big
Blacks a 66-0 lead. PPHS,
which has won eight
straight regular season
ﬁnales, secured its ﬁrst
shutout of the season by a
66-0 ﬁnal tally.
For the game, the Big
Blacks held a 466-to52 advantage in total
offense, including 423-to16 on the ground. Point
Pleasant had a 25-to-3
advantage in ﬁrst downs
in the game and a 4-to-1
edge in takeaways. The
Big Blacks, who punted
just once, forced their
hosts to punt four times.
PPHS was penalized 11
times for a total of 70
yards, while Princeton
was ﬂagged six times and
sent back 45 yards.
Mitchell, who caught
one 17-yard pass and
was 1-of-4 passing for 14
yards, charged the victors
on the ground with 275
yards and four touchdowns on 20 carries. Safford, who caught one pass
for 14 yards, posted 79
yards and two scores on
nine rushes in the win.
Stover, who completed
his lone pass attempt for
minus-1 yard, rushed for
46 yards and one score

on three attempts, while
Cason Payne, who was
4-of-10 passing for 30
yards, gained 16 yards on
four carries. Austin Flowers had one 10-yard run,
Sheb Harris added eight
yards on two carries,
while Nathan Bowman
carried the ball once for
ﬁve yards. PPHS senior
Jordan Cunningham
hauled in two passes for
17 yards, while Bowman
and Jocelynn Wilson both
caught one pass for negative yardage.
Kevin Phillips led
Princeton on the ground
with 19 yards on seven
attempts, followed by
Zach Standifur with 13
yards on 10 carries. PHS
junior Christian Shafer
was 3-of-8 passing for 36
yards with two interceptions in the loss. Phillips
caught one pass for 17
yards, Jared Hamm added
one 16-yard reception,
while Tyler Whitt had one
grab for three yards.
The Big Blacks will
host a ﬁrst round playoff
game next week against
an opponent yet to be
determined. This will
be Point Pleasant’s seventh straight postseason
apperence.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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URG RedStorm
volleyball pummels
Alice Lloyd College
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

PIPPA PASSES, Ky. — The University of Rio
Grande closed out the regular season portion of its
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference schedule
by routing Alice Lloyd College in straight sets, Friday
night, at the Grady Nutt Athletic Center.
The RedStorm ran their record to 24-7 overall and
8-4 in the KIAC as a result of a 25-11, 25-5, 25-4 victory over the Eagles.
Alice Lloyd slipped to 1-17 overall and 0-10 in
league play with the loss.
Rio Grande had 24 service aces in the win, including eight by junior Kayla Briley (Marion, OH). Briley
also ﬁnished with 26 assists.
Junior Chandler Brown (Stockdale, OH) added 24
digs and ﬁve service aces in the win, while freshman
Taylor Overly (Chillicothe, OH) had four service aces
and eight digs.
Junior Autumn Snider (Marion, OH) had a .600
attack percentage and three solo blocks for the RedStorm, while sophomore Aleah Pelphrey (Piketon,
OH) had a .470 attack percentage for the night.
Rio Grande returns to action Saturday afternoon
in a tri-match hosted by St. Andrews University. The
RedStorm will face Montreat College at noon before
squaring off with the host Knights at 2 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director for the University of Rio
Grande.

Visit us at

mydailysentinel.com
or mydailytribune.com

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 8, 2015 3B

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Logan Carpenter, right, fends off an Alexander player from a loose ball during
the first half of an SEOAL soccer match on August 25 at Lester Field in Centenary, Ohio.

GA lands four on
SEOAL soccer team
By Bryan Walters

Gallia Academy landed a total of four
players on the 2015 All-Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League boys soccer team,
as voted on by a panel of coaches within
the conference.
The Blue Devils had two selections
to the main squad in senior Logan Carpenter and junior Madi Oiler. Carpenter
is a repeat selection from a season ago,
while it is the ﬁrst All-SEOAL honor for
Oiler in soccer.
Seniors Zach Johnson and Dekota
Metzler were also chosen as honorable
mention selections by the coaches.
League champion Athens led the way
with eight total selections, including the
Player of the Year in Dustin Goetz and
Coach of the Year in Simon Diki.
Warren was next with six selections,
while Logan and Alexander each had
ﬁve choices. Jackson joined GAHS with
four all-league representatives.

Norris*, Aric Russell*.
Athens: Sam Conrath-Sweeney, Victor
Davis, Dustin Goetz**, Finn Kola*, Samuel
Morales.
Gallia Academy: Logan Carpenter*, Madi
Oiler.
Jackson: Quinnton Haislop, Kyle Turner.
Logan: Ezra Bukky, Nathan Kudlapur*,
Jeremy Williams*.
Warren: Colton Cantley, Seth Hall, Zach
Sullivan, Elliott Ullman.
Player of the Year: Dustin Goetz, Athens
Coach of the Year: Simon Diki, Athens
Honorable Mention
Alexander: Trey Nuzum, Alex Tribe.
Athens: Aidan Crowl, Danny Pagan.
Gallia Academy: Zach Johnson, Dekota
Metzler.
Jackson: Devon Ball, Sheldon Moore*.
Logan: Caiden Landis, Josh Price.
Warren: Cole Miller, Michael O’Callaghan.
*—denotes previous All-SEOAL honors.
Moore was All-SEOAL in 2014; Tribe, Turner,
Bukky and Cantley were honorable mention
in 2014
Final standings: Athens 10-0, Warren 6-3-1,
Logan 6-4, Alexander 5-5, Gallia Academy
1-8-1, Jackson 1-9.

2015 All-SEOAL Boys Soccer Team
Alexander: Kyle Howard*, Michael

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

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RedStorm men roll
Thunderhawks in opener
By Randy Payton

ing 66.7 percent in the
second half (22-for-33),
and led by as many as 38
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
points with just under
— D.D. Joiner scored a
eight minutes remaining.
game-high 21 points to
Joiner, a senior guard
lead ﬁve University of
from Columbus, Ohio,
Rio Grande players in
connected on eight of
double ﬁgures, as the
his 12 ﬁeld goal attempts
RedStorm pulled away for and also collected six
a 102-65 win over Miami
rebounds in just under 20
University-Middletown in
minutes of playing time.
the opening round of the
Senior guard Kevonta
Saunders Insurance TipBlack
(Nashville, TN)
Off Classic, Friday night,
added
12 points and a
at the Newt Oliver Arena.
game-high
seven assists,
Rio Grande led just
while
freshman
forward
24-23 after a bucket by
Abe Eze (Lagos, Nigeria)
Middletown’s Malik
Jacbos with 8:23 remain- had 12 points and tied
sophomore teammate
ing in the ﬁrst half, but
DeVon Price (Pickeringthe RedStorm reeled off
ton, OH) for game-high
16 of the next 17 points
rebounding honors with
and never looked back
seven each.
en route to the blowout
Senior forward Travis
victory.
Elliott (Ironton, OH),
Rio Grande (1-0) shot
who missed all of the
57.4 percent from the
ﬁeld for the game, includ- 2014-15 season with a

For Ohio Valley Publishing

knee injury, scored 11
points off the bench in
his return, while junior
forward Matt Rhodes
(Westerville, OH) had 10
points in his Rio debut.
Jacobs netted 18 points
in a losing cause for
Miami-Middletown (0-2),
while Cooper Nolte and
Tre Hudson ﬁnished with
13 and 11 points, respectively.
The Thunderhawks
committed 18 turnovers
and were outrebounded
44-30.
MU-M will face Asbury
University, a 68-55 loser
to Taylor University on
Friday night, in Saturday’s second round of
the Classic at 2 p.m. Rio
Grande will face Taylor in
the 4 p.m. ﬁnale.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director for the
University of Rio Grande.

Logano focused on title chase
at Texas with Kenseth absent
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Joey
Logano arrived at Texas with a clear
conscience, an easy smile and a new
focus after being intentionally wrecked
by Matt Kenseth last weekend.
Kenseth’s two-race suspension begins
this Sunday after his appeals were
rejected. Logano said the incident at
Martinsville when he was leading might
not have been such a bad thing.
“Our team is more ﬁred up than ever,
I’m more focused than ever, I’m pretty
pumped up about being here at the race
track,” Logano said Friday. “We’ve still
got plenty of conﬁdence.”
Logano is last among the eight drivers still in contention for the Chase for
the Sprint Cup championship. He had
won three consecutive races and was

leading with 47 laps left when he was
wrecked by Kenseth as payback from an
incident three races earlier.
NASCAR suspended Kenseth, putting
Erik Jones in the No. 20 Toyota for Joe
Gibbs Racing for Sunday’s race. Kenseth’s
probation was reduced from six months
to the end of the year, but he remains suspended and promised Thursday to race as
he always has going forward.
Asked if he felt the penalties against
Kenseth were just, Logano said that
wasn’t his decision.
“NASCAR looked at it the way they
needed to, and they made the decision they
felt was right,” Logano said. “Our chase,
we’re not out of it by no means. We’ve got
plenty of time to get ourselves back in. I
feel conﬁdent we can get it done.”

60620374

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, November 8, 2015

James scores 31 as Cavs beat Sixers

Deer fibromas
spotted on area deer

CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Cavaliers played a listless ﬁrst
half Friday night.
LeBron James decided to do something about it.
James scored a season-high 31
points, 18 in the third quarter, and
the Cavaliers recorded their ﬁfth
straight victory, 108-102 over the
winless Philadelphia 76ers.
Veteran teammate James Jones
deserves an assist for Cleveland’s
decisive spurt. Trailing 50-49 at halftime, Jones had some heated words
in the locker room for his teammates.
“We weren’t playing inspired basketball and JJ got on all of us,” James
said. “I respect JJ probably more than
anybody in this area because of how
long we’ve been together. It’s my job
to respond.”
James recorded his 9,000th career
ﬁeld goal in the second quarter, but
gave the Cavaliers a scare when he
was kneed in the left quad while driving to the basket early in the fourth.
James was down on the court for
a couple of moments and limped to
the bench after being checked by a
trainer. He remained in the game and
was pulled with 2:31 remaining and
Cleveland (5-1) leading 104-90.
James hopes to play Sunday when
Indiana visits Quicken Loans Arena.
The four-time MVP said his leg was
sore, adding, “Probably a lot worse

By Jim Freeman
In the Open

Deer ﬁbromas, or deer warts, have been observed
on several deer in the area, according to Meigs Count
wildlife ofﬁcer Chris Gilkey.
Deer ﬁbromas are wart-like growths found on the
skin of deer; they can occur in white-tailed deer, blacktailed deer, and mule deer throughout North America.
An infection is called ﬁbromatosis.
He said several hunters have reported seeing or killing deer with these growths on them
In most cases these warts don’t seem to hurt the
deer unless they are so numerous they interfere with
vision, eating or movement, and since they don’t go
beneath the skin the meat is still safe to eat (unless
a large tumor gets a secondary infection that goes
beneath the skin). However, they are repulsive and
most people don’t want a deer with large growths on
its skin, not to mention making for an ugly trophy.
Several states’ departments of natural resources and
even the Quality Deer Management Association agree
that the deer are generally safe to eat, even if they are
ugly.
Without going into a detailed description of the
disease, it appears that most deer recover from the
disease and once infected develop an immunity to the
afﬂiction.
If you see a deer with ﬁbromas, and you don’t want
a deer with ﬁbromas, let it go. Give it a pass. QDMA
states that since most deer recover from the disease,
there is no need to harvest a deer just because it has
ﬁbromas.
Gilkey made one thing very clear: there is no money-back guarantee on deer tags – if you take and tag a
deer with ﬁbromas, it is your deer.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife specialist with the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District. He can be contacted weekdays at 740-992-4282 or
at jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net

Raiders looking to
make a statement
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Oakland gave the Pittsburgh Steelers ﬁts during
the Raiders’ decade-plus
run as a comically hot
mess.
Imagine the issues
that might crop up now
that Oakland might be …
good?
A victory on the road
Sunday would give the
Raiders (4-3) their best
record at the midway
point since 2001 and
serve notice that ﬁrst-year
head coach Jack Del Rio’s
rebuilding program is well
ahead of schedule.
“This is a different
team,” Oakland running
back Latavius Murray
said. “I won’t say completely different, but there
are new faces and the
atmosphere has changed
around here. It’s great
what we have going on
now, but we want to continue doing what we’re
doing.”
Namely, playing with
a swagger not seen since
Jon Gruden was scowling
on the sideline instead of
analyzing in the TV booth.
Quarterback Derek Carr
is taking care of the ball.
Murray is ripping through
holes and ageless Charles
Woodson is picking off
passes as if it was still the
late-90s.

“We can’t think of it as
just a bigger moment or
smaller moment,” Carr
said. “For us it’s just we
have the Pittsburgh Steelers at their place and that’s
never easy for anybody.”
Well, maybe anybody
but the Raiders. Oakland
is 4-1 against Pittsburgh
since 2006 and 43-103
against the rest of the
league. Del Rio and Carr
expect a playoff-type atmosphere, and in some ways
it could be an elimination
game for the Steelers
(4-4).
Injuries have decimated
Pittsburgh since training
camp with running back
Le’Veon Bell the latest to
head to injured reserve
after tearing the MCL in
his right knee last week
against Cincinnati.
DeAngelo Williams
ﬁlled in capably in September while Bell sat out
two games for violating
the league’s substance
abuse policy and his 4.9
yards per carry rank in the
top 10 in the league.
Coach Mike Tomlin has
preached faith in Williams,
and it will be tested as
the 32-year-old returns
to a feature role at an age
when most backs are slowing down. That’s not an
option if Pittsburgh wants
to reach the postseason.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

tomorrow. Probably be around-the
clock-treatment trying to get ready
for Sunday. Hopefully it doesn’t stop
me from playing.”
James reached his latest milestone
with a dunk late in the second quarter to become the 20th player in
NBA history — and ﬁfth active — to
record 9,000 ﬁeld goals.
Nerlens Noel and Jahlil Okafor
scored 18 points each for Philadelphia (0-5).
James took over in the third quarter when he hit three 3-pointers as
the Cavaliers turned the one-point
deﬁcit into a 16-point lead. James
came into the game shooting 2 of 18
from beyond the arc.
The Sixers, one of three winless teams in the league, were duly
impressed.
“When they get going, it’s like a
freight train going downhill,” Noel
said.
“Look at his stats, he had 13
assists,” coach Brett Brown said of
James. “Those are the things that
really kill you. LeBron will pick you
apart whatever you give him.”
Richard Jefferson scored 17 points
while Mo Williams added 16 for
Cleveland, which hasn’t lost since the
season opener against Chicago.
Cleveland’s fast start has come
despite a series of injuries. James
received an anti-inﬂammatory injec-

tion in his back in training camp,
but has played in every game in the
regular season.
Kyrie Irving (fractured kneecap)
and Iman Shumpert (wrist surgery)
have yet to play and J.R. Smith
(bruised knee and strained quadriceps) has missed the last two games.
Cavaliers power forward Tristan
Thompson left the game late in the
ﬁrst quarter after sustaining a cut on
his right eyelid. He received stitches
and returned a minute before halftime.

LINEUP SHUFFLE
Smith hasn’t played since leaving
Monday’s game in Philadelphia.
Coach David Blatt said he took part
in on-court drills Thursday and Friday, and is hopeful he can return Sunday. Smith is ofﬁcially listed as doubtful. … Jefferson started at shooting
guard Wednesday before Jared Cunningham got the start Friday.
PART OF GROWING UP
Brown doesn’t think his team
has backed down from the Cavaliers. “We’ve got the youngest
team in NBA history, but no one
was walking on eggshells going
against LeBron,” he said. “Honestly, I think naivety is a good
thing in a lot of cases when you
ﬁrst get to this level.”

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Independent Lens "Stray
Dog" Meet Ronnie 'Stray
Dog' Hall, a Vietnam vet. (N)
Castle "Cool Boys" (N)

Dancing With the Stars (N)
Supergirl "Fight or Flight"
(N)
Gotham (N)

Scorpion "Area 51" (N)

Bones "The 200th in the
10th"
Antiques Roadshow "Tulsa Antiques Roadshow "Junk
(Hour Three)"
in the Trunk 5" 1/2 (N)

Supergirl "Fight or Flight"
(N)

8

PM

8:30

Scorpion "Area 51" (N)

9

PM

9:30

NCIS: Los Angeles "An
Unlocked Mind" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Independent Lens "Stray
Dog" Meet Ronnie 'Stray
Dog' Hall, a Vietnam vet. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "An
Unlocked Mind" (N)

10

PM

10:30

Funniest Home Videos
Home Videos Pt. 1 of 2
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
NCAA Football Texas Tech at West Virginia
24 (ROOT) NCAA Football Notre Dame at Pittsburgh Site: Heinz Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa.
25 (ESPN) Monday Night Countdown (L)
(:10) NFL Football Chicago Bears at San Diego Chargers Site: Qualcomm Stadium (L)
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
Around Horn Interruption Poker World Series Final Table Site: Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino -- Las Vegas, Nev. (L)
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Daddy's Little Girls A mechanic falls in love with his
attorney while they fight for custody of his children. TVPG
Varsity Blues A Texas high school football team is led
by a back-up quarterback and an iconic coach. TVMA
Cops
Jail
Cops
Cops "Coast
to Coast"
Nicky
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
NCIS "My Other Left Foot" Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Ethiopia"
Castle "Significant Others" Castle
(5:30)
Constantine A woman enlists the help of an
exorcist to solve her sister's mysterious suicide. TV14
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
HauntedHouse "Followed/ My Haunted House "Under
A Portrait of Evil"
the Porch/ Bruises"
Treehouse Masters
To Be Announced
Snapped "Cynthia George" Snapped "Lisa Whedbee"

Women of Honor Obama
Hitch ('05, Com) Will Smith. While helping his latest
client, a professional date doctor falls for a journalist. TV14
(N)
(:15)
Steel Magnolias ('89, Com/Dra) Dolly Parton, Julia Roberts, Sally Field. Five
women regularly gather at a small-town Louisiana beauty shop to share stories. TV14
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Mardi Cops
Cops "Coast
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Gras 2004"
to Coast"
iCarly
iCarly
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
WWE Monday Night Raw
Family Guy Family Guy American D. American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
A. Bourdain "Borneo"
A. Bourdain "Istanbul"
Gotta Do It "Drag Racing"
M.Crimes "Four of a Kind" M.Crimes "Blackout" (N)
Legends (N)
The Matrix ('99, Action) Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Keanu Reeves. A
computer hacker learns that his entire reality is merely a computer-created illusion. TVMA
Street Outlaws: Full (N)
Outlaws "Import This!" (N) Rat Rods "Franken Rod" (N)
My Haunted House "Dead My Haunted House "Don't Cursed Bell Witch "The
Ringer and Route 160"
Go Upstairs/ Swerve"
Secret Life of Betsy Bell" (N)
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Sex and the Sex and the Sex and the Sex and the Sex and the Sex and the
City
City
City
City
City
City
CSI: Miami "Rap Sheet"
CSI "MIA/ NYC - NonStop" CSI: Miami "Pro Per"
CSI "Murder in a Flash"
CSI "Under the Influence"
Kardashians Kardashians E! News (N)
Kardash "The New Normal" The Kardashians
Kardashians "No Retreat"
Bewitched
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
(5:00) Journey to the Edge Brothers in War The story of Charlie Company - one of the Inside Combat Rescue
Fearless (N)
of the Universe
last American infantries to be sent to Vietnam.
"This Is a Nightmare" (N)
Pro FB Talk Drive
FLW Outdoors (N)
FLW Outdoors
Eye/ Hunter Deer TV (N) Truck Racing Premier L (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Motocross X-Fighters
Pure (N)
UFC Main Event
UFC Embedded (N)
Ancient Aliens "Creatures Bigfoot "The Definitive Guide" A team of top scientists
Bigfoot Captured A special compiled by a director who
of the Deep"
come together to create the definitive guide to Bigfoot.
traveled the world looking for proof of Bigfoot.
Vanderpump Rules (N)
Housewives Atlanta
Ladies of London (N)
Vanderpump "New Blood" Après Ski "Cold Feet"
(:05)
New Jack City ('91, Cri) Ice-T, Wesley Snipes. TV14
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Love It or List It
Love/List "Income Property" Love It or List It
Love It or List It (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Live Free or Die Hard (2007, Action) Justin Long, Timothy Olyphant, Bruce Willis.
Aeon Flux An assassin swears revenge against the
John McClane takes on a group of terrorists who are hacking into government files. TV14 government agents that murdered her family. TV14

6

PREMIUM

PM

(:15) Last

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

(:45) Whoopi Goldberg Moms Explore the

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes ('14, Sci-Fi) Jason Clarke, (:15) The Leftovers
Week
legacy of a groundbreaking AfricanGary Oldman. A nation of evolved apes launches a war
American stand-up comedienne.
Tonight
with a handful of human survivors of a virus. TV14
(4:45)
Into the Storm Richard Armitage. A group The Knick
Queen of the Damned A vampire's
(:45) The
Deep Blue
of storm chasers documents an unparalleled
music awakens an ancient queen, who
Knick
Sea TV14
series of devastating tornadoes. TV14
threatens humans and vampires alike. TVM
(5:45)
Waterworld ('95, Act) Jeanne Tripplehorn,
Homeland "Parabiosis" Saul The Affair Noah and
Homeland "Parabiosis" Saul
orders a sweep at the
Alison's relationship shifts. orders a sweep at the
Kevin Costner. In a world engulfed by water, a drifter
station.
station.
equipped with gills fights off a group of raiders. TV14

s Cash for gold and trade-ins
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Phone: 740-378-6293
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�CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 8, 2015 5B

LEGALS

Money To Lend

Houses For Sale

Houses For Rent

The Gallipolis Planning
Commission
Will hold a meeting on
Monday, November16, 2015
at 5:00 PM at the Gallipolis
Municipal Building meeting
room at 333 Third Avenue.
Entrance can be accessed by
2 Y2 Alley door.
Approval of the minutes from
July 7,2015 meeting.
Case # 1 Ferrell Deer
Processing Center, 33 Henkle
Avenue, conditional use in a
Residential 2 district.
Any other business to be
brought before the board.
11/8/15

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)

For Sale Nice 3 bedroom
home - Full Basement -Lg Lot
Good Neighborhood &amp; Location $125,000. Seller pays
closing cost, low or no down
payment if qualified. 740-446996 Consider property trade in.

Small 2 Bdrm house near Rio
Grande, $400/mo plus Utilities
740-441-5150

Syracuse Village Council is
accepting letters of interest for
a vacant seat. Letters may be
submitted to PO Box 266 or
Village Hall, 2581 Third St,
Syracuse, OH 45779, through
November 11.
10/25/15-11/1/15-11/8/15
The Gallipolis Historical
Preservation Board
Will hold a meeting on
Monday, November 16, 2015
at 5:00 PM at the City's
Municipal Building, 333 Third
Avenue Gallipolis, OH. The
meeting room can be
accessed from the entrance
door next to 2 1/2 Alley.
Concerns within the Historic
District and any other matters
brought before the board.
11/8/15
Notices

Yes, we have apples!

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

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

ADVERTISE

Open 8-12 &amp; 1-5

IT PAYS!

jellies, jams, cider, apple butter

Richards Brothers
Fruit Farm

Land (Acreage)

Rentals

Gallia Co. 5 acres on Fairview
or Davis Rds. $13,900. Meigs
Co. Harrisonville 13 acres
$31,000 or Danville 9 acres
$14,900 – more @
www.brunerland.com or call
740-441-1492, we finance!

2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$450.00 mo. includes water
540-729-1331
3-Bdrm Doublewide
(Bidwell/Poter Area. $600/mo.
Call 1-740-645-3592
Sales

Apartments/Townhouses

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
$360.00/$390.00
Plus Deposit. Gallipolis.
388-8277

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

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

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

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

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

Houses For Rent

Want To Buy

3BR, 1bath home
$750 mo/Sec Dep
call 740-446-3644
for application.

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

3BR, 3bath home
$850 month
740-446-3644

FULL TIME LPN – OFFICE POSITION
Gallipolis, Ohio Office
Job Duties: Scheduling, Intake, Telemonitor Monitoring, Lab Tracking
Qualifications:
LPN - Ohio License
Available Mon – Fri 8am-430pm
Basic Computer Knowledge
Excellent Organization &amp; Time Management Skills
Able to work independently
Home Health &amp; Computerized Scheduling Experience Preferred
Competitive wages and excellent benefits including Health, Dental, Vision Insurance,
Paid Vacation Days, Extended Leave Benefit, Paid Holidays, and much more!!
For more information please call April Burgett, RN, Administrator at
740-441-1393 or apply at 1480 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio. Email resume
or application to: aburgett@ovhh.org, applications available at www.ovhh.org
60620011

Help Wanted General

HIRING
Home Health Aides
Competitive wages and excellent benefits

Qualifications:
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Adjunct Instructor Positions
School of Health and Safety

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�����+BDLTPO�1JLF�(BMMJQPMJT �0IJP
Email resume: aburgett@ovhh.org
Applications available at www.ovhh.org
60619228

Sales / Business Development

60621584

Hocking College and the School of Health and Safety
are accepting resumes for the following adjunct
instructor positions for Spring Semester 2016:
Adjunct Nursing Instructor
(Pediatric Clinical – Nationwide Children’s Hospital)
Adjunct Nursing Instructor
(OB and Pediatric Nursing Theory)
Adjunct Opticianry Instructor
(New Lexington Campus)
For additional information, qualiﬁcations and how to
apply, please refer to our website at www.hocking.edu.
The positions will remain open until ﬁlled.

Help Wanted General

Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.

114 Klicher Road
2 bedroom 1 bath
for rent
$600 month/ $600 deposit
1 mile from Green School
call 740-446-6565

Real Estate Auction

Now Growing.

Now Hiring!

Real Estate Auction

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

No-Cap Commission Plan!

ONSITE REAL ESTATE AUCTION ALERT!!

Position Requirements

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

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

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

Ability to work both independently and as part of a team

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

JOIN OUR GROWING TEAM OF

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

446-3644

Josh Bodimer Auctioneer

60622121

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

Miscellaneous

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

Medical / Health

CRAFT
&amp;
VENDOR FAIR
Saturday
Nov. 21, 2015
10:00am to
3:00pm
New Life
Lutheran
Church
900 Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis,Oh
On Hill behind
Kyger Dental
McClure's
Restaurant
The Church will
be selling food
&amp; drinks

Call

Firewood

60615039

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

Help Wanted General

Want to Rent

Country home Meigs or Gallia
740-416-3130

BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT
REPRESENTATIVES

Send your resume today!
careers@mydailytribune.com

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

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, November 8, 2015

Devils

the regional semiﬁnal on Friday night
at a venue that has yet to be determined. HPHS also advanced passed a
From Page 1B
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division team in the opening round, as the
claimed the 63-0 victory, its eighth
Warriors edged Belpre by a 21-19 ﬁnal.
shutout in the last nine games.
South Gallia, which had to win its
“We came out and did the best we
ﬁnal four games of the season just to
could,” sixth year SGHS head coach
make the playoffs, was shutout for just
Jason Peck said. “We’ve been banged
the second time this season. The only
up for a little bit, but the kids came
other time the Rebels were held scoreand played hard and I appreciate that.
less this season was a 44-point, Week
I give our guys credit, they don’t quit.
6 loss at Belpre.
The score doesn’t reﬂect it, but I’m
“I was very proud of where we were
very proud them.”
at
the end of the season,” Peck said.
South Gallia (6-5) was outgained
“It’s
always our goal to get to playoffs,
502-to-92 in total offense, including
we
might
not have been ready for it
212-to-39 on the ground. Danville held
this
year,
but
we got here anyway. I’ll
a 27-to-3 advantage in ﬁrst downs
take
that
as
a
success.”
and a 4-to-1 edge in takeaways. Both
South
Gallia,
which falls to 0-4
teams were sent back 20 yards on
in
postseason
games,
and has been
penalties, and DHS only punted once,
shutout
in
three
of
its
four playoff
while forcing SGHS to punt six times.
appearances.
SGHS
also
qualiﬁed for
South Gallia senior Landon
the
playoffs
in
2005,
2006
and 2011.
Hutchinson, who was 6-of-13 passing
Danville
was
also
the
Rebels’
playoff
for 53 yards with one interception,
opponent
in
2006,
and
the
Blue
Devled the Rebels on the ground with 38
ils won that game by a 51-20 ﬁnal.
yards on 12 carries. Isaiah Geiger,
SGHS headed into Friday night’s
Johnny Sheets and Dominick Seward
game averaging 33.6 points and 409
each added two yards on the ground
yards of total offense per game.
in the setback.
This marks the ﬁnal game in the
Kane Hutchinson, who intercepted
Red
and Gold for South Gallia seniors
a pass in the endzone in the third
Isaiah
Geiger, Justin Crago, Jared
quarter, led the SGHS receiving corps
Nolan,
Landon Hutchinson, Kane
with 28 yards on three receptions.
SGHS senior Nathan Colburn caught Hutchinson, Owen Bevan, Nathan
two passes for 21 yards, while Geiger Colburn, Blake Strait, Dominick Johnson, Hunter Calhoun, Ty Carpenter,
had one reception for four yards.
Ridge Durbin, who led Danville on and Jake Saunders.
This group of seniors, who were in
the ground with 70 yards and a score
eighth grade the last time the Rebels
on 10 carries, was 24-of-29 passing
made the postseason, has helped
for 268 yards and ﬁve touchdowns.
Kenton Mickley had 95 yards and two SGHS to a pair of winning seasons in
scores on nine receptions, Honabarg- their four years.
er added 108 yards and three scores
Ohio Valley Publishing sports writer Donald
on eight receptions, while Skyler
Lambert contributed to this report.
Durbin had 54 yards and a touchdown
on four carries.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
Danville will face Harvest Prep in
ext. 2100.

Raiders
From Page 1B

The Red, White and
Blue needed only three
plays and 61 seconds
to cover the 28 yards,
as Dunkle hauled in a
9-yard pass from Harris
for a 34-0 contest with

5:30 left in regulation.
The ﬁnal ﬁve-plus
minutes had a running
clock due to there being
a 30-point lead in the second half, but the Raiders
did manage to march the
ball down to the ZTHS 18
just before time expired
— doing so with mostly
second-team players.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hall

Grifﬁths, a native of Glasgow, Scotland,
who played at Rio Grande from 2003-06,
lost just one regular season game during
From Page 1B
his four-year career. A two-time NAIA
All-American, earning honors in 2005 and
appeared in. She authored 17 career
2006, he was also named an all-tournament
shutouts and was an honorable mention
selection during Rio’s run to a national title
All-America Mideast Conference selection
in 2003.
as a freshman before earning second team
Grifﬁths was named to the All-America
All-AMC South kudos as a sophomore.
Mideast
Conference team in 2003, 2005
As a freshman, Lotcyz set an NAIA
and
2006,
while earning all-region honors
single-game record with 18 innings pitched
in
each
of
his
four seasons with the Redin a game against Cedarville University on
men.
A
team
captain
during his senior seaApril 29, 2003 - a mark which stood until
son,
Grifﬁths
scored
12
goals and assisted
2011.
on
eight
others
during
his
Rio career.
“Andrea’s very deserving of this honor,”
“Tony
Grifﬁths,
arguably,
was one of the
said former Rio Grande head coach David
best
to
ever
play
soccer
at
Rio
Grande,”
Pyles. “She won 17 straight games at one
said Morrissey. “As a left back, Tony had as
point during the season we reached the
national tournament. She was a great team much impact on every game as any player
on the ﬁeld.”
leader and role model while at Rio.”
The weekend’s festivities will also
Lotcyz, who currently is employed as a
Kindergarten teacher by Maryville Schools, include the induction of Rio Grande’s
resides in her hometown with her husband, 2000-2001 men’s basketball team, which
advanced to the Final Four of the NAIA
Nick Bowsher, and two sons, Kaylor (4)
and Kameron (2). The couple is expecting Division II National Tournament, to the
a third son soon.
school’s Athletic Wall of Honor. Team
Carey, who hails from Preston, England, members and coaches will be recognized
was a three-time All American (2001,
in between the ﬁnal two games of Friday’s
2003, 2004), in addition to earning ﬁrst
schedule at approximately 7:45 p.m.
team All-America Mideast Conference honTickets for the Nov. 21 banquet, which
ors in each of his seasons. He was named
are $15 each, can be purchased through the
the AMC’s Player of the Year in 2001.
Alumni Relations ofﬁce at 740-245-7431.
In 2001, Carey set Rio’s single-season
The University of Rio Grande takes great
record for goals with 37. He ﬁnished his
pride in awarding outstanding alumni, athcareer with 84 goals and 22 assists in 85
letes and former faculty members with varigames played and his 190 points currently ous recognition awards. Nominations from
stand as the school’s all-time top mark.
alumni and former faculty and staff are
Carey, who was also a three-time allencouraged. Nomination forms for alumni
region selection, served as team captain
awards, Athletic Hall of Fame and Educaduring his senior season in 2004. He never tors Hall of Fame are available through the
lost a regular season game during his Rio
resources link on the Alumni Relations
career.
webpage at rio.edu/alumni.
“Simon is one of ﬁve players to never
Nominations are due by Feb. 1 of each
lose a regular season contest during his
year. For more information, or questions,
career at Rio Grande,” Rio Grande head
please e-mail alumni@rio.edu
coach Scott Morrissey said. “He was a pure
goal scorer and one of the most proliﬁc
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
strikers to ever play here.”
University of Rio Grande.

The win allows Zane
Trace to advance to next
week’s Region 17 semiﬁnal
against third-seeded Alexander, who defeated sixthseeded Rock Hill on Friday
night by a 37-7 count.
The Pioneers outgained
the guests by a 250-202
overall margin in total
yards of offense and also

ﬁnished the night plus-3
in turnover differential.
ZTHS rushed 39 times for
159 yards, while the Raiders netted just 93 rushing
yards on 34 carries.
Both teams collected a
dozen ﬁrst downs apiece
in the contest. RVHS was
ﬂagged three times for 34
yards, while Zane Trace

was penalized eight times
for 72 yards.
Jacob Campbell led the
Raiders’ ground attack
with three carries for 35
yards, followed by Mark
Wray with 33 yards on
eight attempts. Justin
Arrowood also gained 19
yards on a dozen totes.
Dayton Hardway was

I COULD HAVE GONE TO A BIG-CITY CANCER HOSPITAL, BUT

I HEALED RIGHT HERE AT HOME.
Donna Morris

When I was diagnosed with cancer, I could have gone
anywhere, but I chose Dr. Bhati at Memorial Health
System. He offered a treatment, then suggested I get
a second opinion just to be safe. I went to one of the
country’s most famous cancer centers and they offered
me the exact same treatment. So I came back home
where I could continue to take care of my family and
attend all of my kids’ school and athletic events.
I trusted the team at Memorial Health System and now,
I’m completely healed.
Visit www.mhsystem.org
for more information.
60620799

9-of-31 passing for 94
yards while also throwing three interceptions.
Hardway, at one point
in the ﬁrst half, threw
three interceptions and
zero completions over 13
attempts.
Kirk Morrow led the
RVHS wideouts with ﬁve
catches for 59 yards, while
Wray hauled in three
receptions for 31 yards.
It was the ﬁnal football
game for seniors Arrowood, Williams, Morrow,
Hardway, Wray, Tyler
Twyman, Sam Payne,
George Williams, Ty Smittle, C.J. Jennings, Tyler
Ward, Dylan Greenlee,
Jacob Morris, Travis Sigman and Josiah Johnson
in the Silver and Black.
“I cannot say enough
about this groupof seniors
and what a remarkable
thing that they’ve done
here in our community.
They’ve deﬁnitely taken
the road less traveled,”
Sparling said. “These
guys have been around
when everyone called us
losers or when we were
regularly getting beat by
30 or 40 points. But these
guys, these guys stayed
the course. They bought
in and worked harder
when most other people
would have jumped ship.
“Being in the playoffs
is their reward, and now
they are the measuring
stick of greatness with
River Valley football. It
didn’t go the way any of us
had hoped, but it’s a start.
The future teams at River
Valley will all be aiming
to join this group of ﬁne
young men and what they
have accomplished.”
Dunkle led the ZTHS
rushing attack with 75
yards on 11 carries, followed by Love with 45
yards on 10 attempts and
Harris with 37 yards on
14 totes. Harris was also
7-of-10 passing for 91
yards and a pair of TD
tosses.
Wolff led the hosts with
50 yards on two grabs,
followed by Pierce Mowery with three catches for
28 yards. Dunkle also had
two catches for 13 yards
for the victors.
The Pioneers have now
won 16 consecutive football contests, dating back
to Week 6 of the 2014
gridiron season.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 8, 2015 s Section C

A night to remember … celebrating chamber’s 25 years

Photos by Lorna Hart | Sunday Times-Sentinel

AT RIGHT, Chamber members enjoyed social time before the Gala began. CENTER, Jim Ridenour’s daughter spoke warmly of her father during her speech before her father received his award for Community
Pillar. AT RIGHT, Steve Story explained the virtues of small boxes.

TOP LEFT, Susan Clark-Dingess and Tom Sutton each received the David P. Baker Award. AT LEFT, Whitney Thoene with Susan Clark-Dingess.
CENTER, Chamber president Dan Short with a power point presentation highlighted the achievements of the past 25 years. TOP RIGHT, Jim
Ridenour accepting his proclamations. ABOVE RIGHT, guests enjoyed a dining experience at the chamber gala.

AT LEFT, the following persons came with proclamations: Jim Milliken for Secretary of State Jon Husted; Dan Halliburton for U.S. Congressman Bill Johnson; Kathleen Young for Ohio Gov. John Kasich; and
Todd Shelton for U.S. Sen. Rob Portman. AT RIGHT, pictured are Business Award winners Tammy Grueser, Jim Ridenour, Darrrel Norris, Angee Arnold and Susan Clark-Dingess.

Meigs tent
aids community
By Lindsay Kriz

for up to 25 cot beds
for a potential triage
unit, curtains that can
POMEROY — Anyone section off parts of the
passing by Mark Porter’s tent, drops for Internet
former location earlier
and telephone if they are
this week in Pomeroy
available from the outwould’ve been greeted
side, a plenum to better
with a strange sight: a
distribute air, an electric
cylindrical shaped tent.
panel and ﬂourescent
The tent, formally
lights. Gorscak said the
known as the Meigs
facility can hold around
County Emergency
50 people and can also be
Response Shelter, is a
portable space that can be used as a communication
used for myriad reasons, center.
The tent itself was
although as its title suga gift to the county
gests, is mainly used in
from the Ohio Hospital
emergencies.
Association through
Frank Gorscak, emergency response coordina- an Assistant Secretary
for Preparedness and
tor, said the tent, which
is a 25 feet by 32 feet, has Response grant in 2008.
Meigs County, as part of
many features, includthe South Central Ohio
ing an air conditioning/
heating system, room
Regional Public Health

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

AT LEFT, the pictured tent was a gift to the county from the Ohio Hospital Association through an Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and
Response grant in 2008. Meigs County, as part of the South Central Ohio Regional Public Health area, can loan the tent to other counties,
including Athens, Gallia and Vinton Counties. AT RIGHT, pictured from left are, Frank Gorscak, emergency response coordinator, Steve
Swatzel, environmental health director, Colleen MurphySmith, registered sanitarian, and Halie Parsons, Medical Reserve Corps volunteer.

area, can loan the tent to
other counties, including
Athens, Gallia and Vinton
Counties.
Gorscak noted that
the tent was used during the Sept. 16, 2010,
tornado and storms that

swept through Athens
and Meigs counties —
speciﬁcally going through
Nelsonville in Athens
County and Reedsville in
Meigs County. Aside from
an emergency tent, the
facility has been used at

county fairs and a meeting place for the Local
Emergency Planning
Committee.
During their setup at
Mark Porter, Gorscak
said it took six people to
put up the tent and four

to take it down, making
it a truly mobile facility.
The crew also took photos of the facility and sent
them to the Ohio Hospital Association.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL

2C Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Court rules on workers’ comp case
On May 28, 2006,
of all the evidence contained
Charles W. Evert died as
within the claim ﬁle, she
a result of complications
wrote “I vote to deny the
from surgery related to
Spouse/Dependent’s request
an industrial injury that
for reconsideration as I ﬁnd
he had sustained in 2004
that there is no persuasive
while at work. On July 10,
evidence to support a ﬁnd2007, the Industrial Coming of a requisite reason to
Paul E.
mission of Ohio — which
invoke continuing jurisdicPfeifer
handles workers’ compenContributing tion in this matter.”
sation claims — allowed
Columnist
On May 20, 2011, Donna
the claim for death beneﬁts
ﬁled a complaint with the
made by Donna Evert,
Tenth District Court of
Charles’ surviving spouse.
Appeals alleging that the CommisA few days later, on July 19,
sion abused its discretion when
Donna ﬁled a motion with the
it refused to exercise continuing
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation jurisdiction and reconsider its denirequesting an award for Charles’
al of beneﬁts. In one of her briefs,
loss of use of his arms and legs
Donna further alleged that she had
prior to his death. The bureau
been denied due process of law
referred that claim to the Induswhen Commissioner Taylor voted
trial Commission, where a staff
on the motion for reconsideration
hearing ofﬁcer denied the motion
despite not attending the hearing.
because it had not been ﬁled within
In making her claim that she had
one year of the date of death as
been denied due process, Donna
required by law.
relied on a decision that had only
More than a year later, on April
just been released by the Tenth
21, 2009, Donna ﬁled a motion
District Court of Appeals in a case
asking the commission to exercalled State ex rel. Sigler v. Lubrcise continuing jurisdiction to
izol Corp.
rehear the issue based on new and
In that case — which was very
changed circumstances and an
similar to Donna’s case — a man
alleged mistake of law regarding
named Sigler alleged that he was
the limitation period for ﬁling a
deprived of due process when one
claim. But a staff hearing ofﬁcer
of the three voting commissioners
denied that motion as well.
did not attend the hearing that was
Donna asked the Commission
held on a motion for reconsiderato reconsider that decision. So, on tion.
Oct. 5, 2010, the commission held
The court of appeals in Sigler’s
a hearing on the matter with two of case determined that the absent
the three commissioners attending. commissioner could not evaluate
Even though only two commission- the credibility of witness testiers attended the hearing, all three
mony in the absence of a complete
of them voted on the matter.
record, and the court therefore
By a vote of two-to-one, the com- ordered the Commission to rehear
mission determined that Donna
the matter and make a complete
had failed to demonstrate that
record that would be available to an
sufﬁcient grounds existed to jusabsent commissioner to review.
tify the Commission’s exercise of
The 10th District agreed that
continuing jurisdiction. It denied
Sigler applied to Donna’s case. The
reconsideration.
court issued a writ vacating the
On the order denying reconsidcommission’s order and compeleration, there is a statement signed ling the commission to conduct a
by Commissioner Jodie M. Taylor
new hearing before all commission
— the commissioner who did not
members or a hearing at which
attend the hearing. She said that
a record is kept. Consequently,
she had discussed the matter with
the court did not review Donna’s
Alan Miller, a staff hearing ofﬁcer
arguments on the merits challengwho was present at the October
ing the commission’s denial of an
5 hearing. Taylor said that Miller
award.
summarized the testimony and
When Donna’s case came before
arguments presented by Donna’s
us — the Supreme Court of Ohio,
representative, “the Employer’s
the narrow issue before us was
representative and the Bureau of
whether we must reverse the
Workers’ Compensation’s represen- judgment of the court of appeals
tative at hearing.”
because the court relied on its deciAfter that discussion and review sion in Sigler. The trouble with

relying on Sigler was that our court
had subsequently reversed the
Sigler decision.
When we reviewed Sigler,
we stated that “the due process
requirement of a full and fair hearing means that the decisionmaker
must, in some meaningful manner,
consider and appraise all the evidence to justify the decision.”
We also stated that “the method
of the review is secondary.” In
Sigler, the absent commissioner
stated that he had reviewed the
claim ﬁle and had talked with a
longtime commission hearing
ofﬁcer who summarized the testimony, evidence, and argument for
him.
Acknowledging that a presumption of regularity attaches to commission hearings, we held that
Sigler failed to prove that he was
deprived of due process when that
commissioner voted despite not
attending the hearing.
Getting back to Donna’s case –
the commission and the Bureau
of Workers’ Compensation both
advocated that our court’s opinion
in Sigler was a deciding factor for
Donna’s case, and that that decision supported reversal.
They further maintained that
Donna’s case involved a perceived
mistake of law that is purely a legal
issue, unlike Sigler, in which the
commissioners had to evaluate the
credibility of witness testimony.
Donna agreed that Sigler should
apply. She additionally maintained
that we should send her case back
to the court of appeals for a ﬁnal
disposition on the underlying merits of the action.
As with the absent commissioner
in Sigler, Commissioner Taylor
stated that she had discussed the
matter with an experienced staff
hearing ofﬁcer who had been present at the hearing and who summarized the testimony and arguments
presented. In addition, Commissioner Taylor stated that she had
reviewed the entire claim ﬁle.
Thus, in accord with our opinion
in Sigler, she conducted a meaningful review of the matter sufﬁcient
to satisfy due-process concerns.
We therefore reversed the judgment of the court of appeals by a
seven-to-zero vote, and sent the
case back to the court of appeals
with instructions to consider the
merits of Donna’s complaint.
Paul E. Pfeifer is a justice on the Ohio Supreme
Court.

SOUTHERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
All As
Grade 9:
William Harmon, David
Dunfee, Mallory Johnson,
Marissa Brooker, Austin
Arnold, Emily Hall, Kayla
Boyer and Seth Swords.
Grade 10:
Sydney Cleland, Hannah Evans, Andee Hill and
Randal Moore.
Grade 11:
Sierra Cleland, Daniel
Dunfee, Marlee Maynard,
Trey Pickens, Kamryn
Smith and Amanda Cole.
Grade 12:
Haley Hill, Cameryn
Harmon, Elizabeth Tea-

ford, Jansen Wolfe, Joseph
Beegle, Holly Cochran and
Kalynn Seymour.
All As &amp; Bs
Grade 9:
Jacquelynn Dailey,
Elizabeth Reitmire, Jenna
Marshall, Reece Reuter,
Alex VanMeter, Logan
Drummer, Kathryn Matson, Austin Baker, Emma
Wolfe, Tori Chaney, Noah
Diddle, Baylee Grueser,
Madison Lisle, Morgan
Haines, Brian Anderson,
Ryan Acree, Peyton
Anderson and Shawn
Thomas.
Grade 10:

Dominique Wehrung,
Kendra Barton, Larry
Dunn, Jolisha Ervin,
Andrew Evans, Miranda
Greenlee, Jonah Hoback,
Jaiden Roberts, Owen
Jones, Austin Mckibben,
Julia Montgomery, Emily
Philips, Jacob Rifﬂe, Riley
Roush, Sailor Warden,
Joseph Wolfe, Christopher
Young, Lauren Lavender,
Kendra White, Domineke
Lyons and Nikita Woods.
Grade 11:
Edgar Willis, Crysta
Davis, Talon Drummer, Jordan Fisher, Eli Hunter, Connor Jarrell, Marissa John-

son, Haley Musser, Logan
Theiss, Faith Teaford,
Macey Marcinko, Macie
Michael, Sara Schenkelberg
and Katelyn Barton.
Grade 12:
Alison Deem, Hannah
Hill, Kari Arnold, Savannah Bailey, Myria Blain,
Brooke Cunningham, Sydney Diddle, Brynn Harris,
Dimitrious Lamm, Madison Maynard, Elizabeth
Wolfe, Joseph Morris,
Jeremy Dutton, Mickayla
Eblin, Kristopher Shortridge, Michael Kowell,
Allyshai Stobart and
Timothy Lavender.

Federal grant to
aid rural transit,
expand broadband
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — A
new Ohio Department
of Transportation project, funded in large part
by a federal grant, will
help Ohio’s 34 rural
transit systems operate more efﬁciently
and expand broadband
access in Ohio.
The Transit Tech
Ohio project has been
awarded a $6.8 million Transportation
Investment Generating
Economic Recovery
(TIGER) grant. The
money will be used to
help rural transit agencies purchase hardware
and software that
allows them to schedule
and dispatch transit
vehicles.
“The lack of these
upgrades is leading to
inefﬁciencies — inefﬁciencies that cost time
and money and ultimately underserve the
people who rely on the
vital services of rural
transit,” said ODOT
Assistant Director Jim
Barna.
Vehicles will also be
equipped with GPS,
Automatic Vehicle Location systems, tablets,
and mobile data terminals. All of the upgrades
will promote the ability
for multiple agencies to
share services.
“The expected funds
from this grant will
allow Wilmington
Transit to put in place
a call and dispatch
system that will greatly
improve efﬁciency

and help shorten wait
times which has been
our main obstacle to
providing the superior service we strive
for,” said Wilmington
Department of Public
Transportation Director
Phillip Floyd.
Transit Tech Ohio
will also expand access
to broadband by funding public-private
partnerships that optimize transit operations
through equipment
acquisitions, the installation of technology
on existing towers and
structures owned by the
state, and new tower
construction when necessary.
“Rural communities
continually struggle to
obtain the same level of
access to resources that
are available to urban
and suburban counterparts. We are excited
about all parties helping
to expand broadband
access, adoption, and
use throughout Ohio,”
said Lindsay Shanahan,
executive director of
Connect Ohio.
Increasing broadband
access will improve
the effectiveness of
existing business and
educational institutions,
including public schools
and small colleges. It
will also enhance the
quality of life for residents and businesses of
rural Ohio by delivering
information and access
to online resources.
The project is expected to take about 38
months to complete.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of sales from Nov. 4, 2015.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $185-$265, Heifers,
$170-$240; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $160-$235,
Heifers, $160-$210; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $155$220, Heifers, $140-$190; 650-725 pounds, Steers,
$120-$190, Heifers, $120-$160; 750-850 pounds,
Steers, $110-$175, Heifers, $110-$140.
Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $73-$94; Medium/Lean,
$64-$73; Thin/Light, $45-$63; Bulls, $90-$120.
Back to Farm
Bred Cows, $575-$1,350; Cow/Calf Pairs, $850$1,575; Baby Calves, $200-$525; Goats, $50-$145;
Hogs, $50-$53; Feeder pigs, $11-$43.
Upcoming specials
Fat cattle sale, Nov. 11
Bred cow sale, Nov. 13, 6 p.m.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Ryan (304) 514-1858, Dewayne at
(740) 339-0241, Stacy (304) 634-0224, or visit the
website at www.uproducers.com.

WASHINGTON ELEMENTARY SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
GALLIPOLIS — Washington Elementary Principal Helenlu Morgan has
announced the students who
have made the Honor Roll
for the ﬁrst-nine weeks of the
2015-16 school year. An asterisk denotes all A’s:
Fifth Grade
*Casey “CJ” Angel, Brayden
Burris, Cameron Carpenter,
*Tori Cox, *Brody Fellure,
*Carter Harris, Jenna Harrison, *Abigail Marxen,
*Brayden Merrill, *Heaven
Mullins, Rhiannon Pelfrey,
Logan Richardson, *Gabriel
Russell, *Halle Rykowski,
*Kierra Scott, *Alexis Smith,
Kory Smith, Devante Taylor,
*Bhanu Thayaparan, Braden
Whealdon, Tyler Wiseman,
Kathleen Yost
Fourth Grade
*Madison Angel, Audrianna Atkinson, Alexis Austin-

Braxton, *Ben Best, *Jordan
Blaine, *James Blankenship
*Alyssa Bonecutter, *Evan
Burdell, Mason Burk, *Allie
Call, *Aaron Carper, Leland
Clark, Joey Darnbrough, *Ally
Denney, *Kenyon Franklin,
*Nick French, *Matthew
Gordon, *Havanah Grube,
Ava Hamilton, Triniti Hamm,
*Linea Hancock, Jayce Jones
Hobbs, *Mary Howell, *RJ
James, *Ahnya Johnson,
*Gianna Johnson, *Trenton
Jones, Matt Liberati, Bradley
Lindsey, *Gavin Long, *Mackenzi McDonald, Joey Messer,
William Mullins, Kael O’Brien,
*Ben Petrie, Kylie Pryor,
*Brailee Rathburn, Gavin
Roach, *Kate Sanders, Peyton
Seidel, *Hudson Shamblin,
*Hunter Shamblin, *Dylan
Sheets, Madelynn Simmers,
Abby Skeen, Takoda Storm,
*Caleb Stout, *Carlos (CJ)

Thomas, Isaiah Thompson,
*Sophia Tran, Haylee Walker
Third Grade
Austin Beaver, Logan
Bolin, *Brooke Bonzo, Jeb
Bowers, Madison Brown,
Chloe Carroll, *Maxwell
Corwin, *Sarah Dawson,
Rylen DeWitt, *Kennedy Fellure, *Cooper Flinner, Bella
Flora, *Natalie Gomez, Jayda
Johnson, Nickalas Koebel,
Keagahn Lloyd, Carlito Long,
Ashley Masters, Jovohn Maynard, *Cade Mock, Alexis
Mullins, Addison Nolan,
Christian Ogden, Hunter
Peterson, Jayla Preston,
*Schylar Puhlman, *Behla
Qualls, Bray Rathburn, *Yuriana Reyes, *Nathan Rykowski,
*Kameye Say, *Jared Smith,
Mason Stout, Brode Talarigo,
*Briar Taylor, DeAnthoney
Taylor, Rylee Vallee, Quinton
VanMeter, Jacob Wallace

Second Grade
*Kloe Allen, *Ava Angel,
Mariah Armstrong, *Moe
Austin, Wyatt Barrett, *Rylan
Blaine, *Abigail Brabham,
*Parker Burris, Brycen Call,
Trey Cline, Brooke Clinton,
Sadie Cummons, *Liam Dalton, Angel Fletcher, Cedric
French, *Kaydence Garrett,
Samantha Gibbs, *Addison
Harris, Nevaeh Hooton, *Evan
Houck, *Jayden Johnson,
Tristan Jones, *Jace Justice,
Tanner King, *Kennedy Long,
*Nate Marcum, *Quinton
Massie, Cianna Mayes, *Audrie McGuire, *Sierra Mollohan, Brayden Mullins, *Owen
Nourse, Gunnar Peterson,
Matthew Petrie, McKenna
Richards, Logan Rinehart,
Ashlynn Russell, *Ayden Russell, *Maiya Say, Trey Sims,
*Luke Sisson, *Mersadies
Sowards, Madilyn Stroud,

Josiah Swann, Raven Swisher,
*Braedan Thompson, Addison
Wiseman, *Maddee Wolford
First Grade
*Jack Allison, *Joseph
Boggs, Ozzie Bradley, Jordynn
Brown, *Maxwell Canaday,
Sam Clagg, *Gracyn Clark,
*Baylee Cremeans, Madison
Crockett, Asia Delahoussaye,
*Maddux Delaney, Reese Denney, *Gracie Evans, *Skylar
Francies, Lilly Francis, Damien
Gilland, Trevor Hoffman,
Hayden Houck, Liam Hunt,
*Carley Johnson, *Eden Johnson, Layton Lemley, *Jackson
Loveday, *Corbin Mock, Tressel Nickels, Ariah Sinclair,
Adian Smith, Jayla Sturgeon,
*Brilee Unroe, Brynn Unroe,
Evan Warren, Wyatt Warren,
*Cheyenne Waugh, Mason
Willcoxen, Ryanna Williams,
MacKenzey Willis, *Jennings
Wills

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, November 8, 2015 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

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

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�LOCAL/AREA

4C Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Woman celebrates Student collects license plates
93rd birthday
By Bill Lynch

and services to the mainland of Africa come in the form of ﬁshing boats
who visit maybe a dozen times a year.
HURRICANE, W.Va. — Point to
The Hurricane resident also has
a license plate on Andrew Braun’s
license plates from Europe, Asia,
bedroom wall and he can pick up the South America — from all over,
globe on top of his dresser and point really, nailed up on neat rows on his
out where it’s from.
bedroom walls.
One plate, numbered J07129,
“Not everywhere,” he said. “There
is from the U.S. forces in Iceland.
are a lot of places that it’s very hard
Another is from the former East
to get plates from.”
Germany. Another is from Tristan da
The nations of Africa and the
Cunha.
Middle East have been spotty. He’s
“It’s in the South Atlantic,” said the written, but they don’t always write
18-year-old WVU sophomore, slowly back. Central America is also kind of
rotating the globe, tracing his ﬁnger
tricky. Braun has plates from Mexico,
along the blue of the ocean until he
but nothing from El Salvador and
ﬁnds a tiny speck.
Nicaragua.
Tristan da Cunha is one of the
“Some of the countries don’t want
most remote islands on the planet.
you to have their plates,” he said.
It has no airport, unreliable Internet, “They’re worried that you’ll take their
Associated Press

plate, put it on your car and go commit a crime.”
Braun understands there are diplomatic considerations, but feels it’s a
bit unfair to assume that everyone is
up to no good.
Braun is just a passionate collector — he also has a small collection
of rocks and minerals, as well as
stamps. He’s an honor student, an
Eagle Scout and a Geography Bee
Champion.
Braun won the state title in 2010 as
an eighth grader and placed ninth in
the National Geographic Bee.
He got started with license plates
not because he was interested in
where the plates came from initially,
but because he was a precocious
toddler, fascinated by numbers and
letters.

Quilt to be raffled for charity
Courtesy photo

Roberta Maynard Swisher celebrated her birthday recently at
her home in New Haven, W.Va. Her family brought in birthday
cake and ice cream, pizzas, a vegetable tray, potato chips
and pop. Attending were: Russ and Patty Maynard and Lily
Dugan, all from Mason, W.Va., Paul and Jill Maynard and Ben,
Jessica, Baylee and Bracken Loudin, all from Point Pleasant,
W.Va., Mike and Brenda Seagraves and Joe and Debbie Quivey,
all from Pomeroy, David and Ann Zirkle, from Racine, Bruce
and Terri Hysell, from Nitro, W.Va., and Marge Blake from
New Haven. Roberta also received gifts from Mel, Sherry and
Melisha Swisher, from Pomeroy, and flowers from Susan Allen
Witherite, from Lexington, Ky.

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Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Drew Webster Post 39 of the American Legion is raffling off a queen-sized quilt. The winner’s name will be drawn after the Christmas
parade. All proceeds will go toward Operation Comfort Warrior. Tickets are $1 each or 6 for $5. Tickets can be purchased at Farmers
Bank, Peoples Bank and Mill End Fabrics in Middleport, where the quilt is currently on display. Pictured are Jack Lewis and John Hood,
who have both sold tickets outside of Powell’s Food Fair in Pomeroy.

The Gallipolis Tribune, The Pomeroy Sentinel &amp; Point Pleasant Register
Present

John Sang Ford

Vote for your favorite entry in each of
the four categories at:
mydailytribune.com
mydailysentinel.com
mydailyregister.com

OVERALL WINNER
WITH THE MOST VOTES
$100
Submission Begins:
Saturday, October 17th Saturday, October 31st
Voting Begins:
Sunday, November 1st Tuesday, November 10th

JS

195 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis

1-800-272-5179
www.johnsang.com

60615707

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