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                  <text>Project sponsors
African students,
changes lives.

Sunny. High
around 54.
Low near 34.

Point awaits
playoff
opponent.

FEATURES s 1C

WEATHER s 5A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 45, Volume 48

Sunday, November 9, 2014 s $2

Farm Bureau earns award
By April Jaynes

ajaynes@civitasmedia.com

April Jaynes | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pictured (left to right) are Gallia County Farm Bureau members Paul Shoemaker, Katie
Shoemaker, Ag Day coordinator, and Kim Harless, organization director.

GALLIA COUNTY — The
Gallia County Farm Bureau
recently received a national
award that recognizes it for
community involvement and
local activities — an award
in which only 24 counties
in the United States receive
each year.
The bureau received a
County Activities of Excellence Award in the 2015
American Farm Bureau
Federation, and is one of
six counties in Ohio to win.
Other CAE winning Ohio

counties are Champaign,
Franklin, Knox, Muskingum
and Tuscarawas county farm
bureaus.
Specifically, the CEA
program focuses on county
efforts in education and agricultural promotion, and identifies programs that display
the value of community and
volunteers working together
and serve as models of innovation for local activities.
The Gallia County Farm
Bureau was recognized
specifically for its annual
Agricultural Awareness Day,
a free field trip for all fourthgraders in county and city

schools. At the event, local
farm bureau members and
volunteer exhibitors provided
hands-on educational presentations about agriculture for
students.
Kim Harless, organization
director who oversees multiple county farm bureau’s
in Ohio, said Gallia’s community support for Ag Day
is what makes the county’s
event stand out from others.
“There’s a lot of counties
that do Ag Days. Four of my
own counties do them, and
two other ones applied for
See AWARD | 3A

Submitted photo

Pictured, from left, are Whitney Thoene, Dan Short,
Wes Karr and Ed Holter

Who’s Your
Mudder?
Chamber presents Fair
Board with donation
Staff report

POMEROY — The Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce recently presented the Meigs
County Fair Board with a donation to help
restore the Grandstand. The proceeds were
part of the Who’s Your Mudder? 5K mud run
that occurred earlier this year.
“The Grandstand is iconic,” chamber President
Tom Sutton said. “Just about everyone who has
attended the fair over the years has a memory
that includes the stands. We want to afford that
opportunity for generations to come.”
The chamber of commerce hosted a 5K mud
run Aug. 30. The race spanned over most of the
fairgrounds. It began in front of the Thompson
building, went across the top of the fairgrounds,
and then down to the race track. Participants finished in the same place they began.
Obstacles were found throughout the race.
They included two slides, several crawl-throughs,
muddy hills, a mud pit and many others.
“We put on a great event for a great cause,”
Dan Short, vice president of the chamber of
commerce, said. “The Grandstand is a historic
landmark and we wanted to do our part to help
preserve it.”
Keep up with the chamber of commerce on
their Facebook page: Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.

The new Holzer Meigs Emergency Facility is set to open Monday, Nov. 17.

New Emergency Facility opens Nov. 17
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs Emergency Facility
ribbon-cutting ceremony
on Friday introduced the
public to the new Holzer
Meigs Emergency Facility.
The building was packed
with guests, press and
employees to celebrate the
event.
The building was made
possible through a collaboration between Holzer
Health System and Meigs
County Community
Improvement Corporation. Currently, a tentative
official opening date will

be Nov. 17, according to a
press release.
The facility will feature a
24-hour staffed emergency
department equipped with
state-of-art technology and
a helipad. Other healthrelated agencies located at
the same campus include
Hopewell Health Centers,
Meigs County 911 Center
and Medflight, scheduled
to open in 2015.
Emergency care services
will include general imaging
and CT scans, laboratory,
respiratory therapy and supportive services. The Meigs
Emergency Facility will be
an integral part of Holzer
Health System, which is a

All of the ceremony’s speakers stand ready with golden scissors right
before the blue ribbon is cut.

multi-discipline health care
system of more than 160
board certified physicians
and providers offering care
in more than 30 areas of

expertise throughout Southeastern Ohio and Western
West Virginia.
See FACILITY | 5A

Vets help sheriff purchase defibrillators

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

Staff report

— SPORTS
Football: 1B
NFL: 4B
NBA: 6B
— FEATURES
Television: 4B
Classified: 5B
Comics: 3C

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4464
Commander William Mangus
this week presented the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Office with a $500
donation that will help purchase
automatic external defibrillator for
each sheriff’s cruiser.
The goal, according to Gallia
County Sheriff Joe Browning, is
to install an AED for each cruiser
in the fleet.
See HELP | 5A

Pictured are, from left, Gary Fenderbosch VFW, Gallia County Sheriff Joseph R. Browning,
and VFW Post 4464 Commander William Mangus. Gallipolis VFW Post 4464 donated $500
to the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office to help purchase automatic external defibrillators for
each sheriff’s cruiser.

�LOCAL/AREA

2A Sunday, November 9, 2014

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
PAUL J. KNOTTS

NANCY VIRGINIA FISHER TERRELL

International.
Paul is survived
by his wife, Anna
(Ann) Skaggs Borders Knotts; children Paul James
(Jan) Knotts, of
St. Paris, and
Steven Lee Knotts, of
Springfield; stepchildren
Donna Borders, of Sardis,
Lou Ann Thompson, of
Delaware, and David (Sue
Ellen) Borders, of Centerburg; grandchildren Brittani (Sean) Knotts Cute,
Ashley Knotts, Dylan
Knotts, Jozy Borders,
Damon (Kristin) Borders,
Katherine Thompson
(Mitchell Edwards), and
Kelli (Joseph) Michael;
great-granddaughter
Brynn Lee Borders; sister
Shirley Parker, of Springfield; and brother David
Knotts, of Prescott.
Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9,
2014, at Willis Funeral
Home in Gallipolis.
Services will be 10 a.m.
Monday, Nov. 10, 2014,
at Elizabeth Chapel, followed by interment at
White Oak Cemetery.
Pastor Alfred Holley and
Pastor Randy Carnes will
be officiating.
In lieu of flowers,
contributions in Paul’s
memory can be made to
the Holzer Cancer Center,
170 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

GALLIPOLIS —
Paul J. Knotts, of
Gallipolis, passed
away Thursday,
Nov. 6, 2014 at his
home after a long
battle with cancer.
He was born to
Paul and Gertrude Knotts
on June 10, 1933, in
Springfield, Ohio.
Paul was a graduate of
Enon High School. His
professional career culminated with his retirement from Robbins and
Myers as a plant manager
in 1984. He was owner
of Oscar’s Restaurant in
Gallipolis for a time and
then Frontier Farms restaurant before moving to
DeLand, Fla.
Paul was a talented
and creative artist who
excelled at painting landscapes. He also was an
accomplished chef who
loved to entertain his
family and friends with
his culinary talents and
sense of humor.
Paul was an active
member of the Gallia
County community. He
was president of the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce in 1984-85 and also
served as interim city
manager of Gallipolis. He
and and his wife, Ann,
attended Elizabeth Chapel, where they sponsored
the Recycled Teenagers
senior activity group for
many years. Paul was a
member of the Shriners,
Masons, Rotary Club,
Elks Club and Gideon’s

MIDDLEPORT —
Nancy Virginia Fisher
Terrell, formerly of
Middleport, left us suddenly to be with her Lord
on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014,
at Samaritan Bethany in
Rochester, Minn.
Nancy was the second
of six children born to
Clyde O. and Virginia Dillard Fisher in Middleport
in 1926. She loved learning and was class valedictorian and then spent one
year at Ohio University.
She was swept off her
feet by a charming chemical engineer named John
“Jack” Terrell, and they
married in 1945. They
were married for more
than 69 years.
Nan was the proud
mother of son John Jr.
and daughter Christine.
The family spent many
happy years in Oak
Ridge, Tenn., where Nan
and a friend opened a
preschool at their church
in 1961. She became not
only the director, but also
counselor and beloved
mentor to many, many
children and their parents. When she retired
after 30 years, the head-

line in the local paper
read, “Nan Retires!” Her
retirement bash was the
party of the year, with
hundreds of former students and parents coming
to pay tribute to Nan.
In 2001, Nan and Jack
pulled up stakes and
moved to Rochester,
Minn., to be closer to
their daughter.
She was preceded in
death by her parents;
brothers Tommy and
John; sister Sally; and
infant daughter Christine
Jane.
She is survived by
husband, Jack; son John
Jr. (Jane), of Sevierville,
Tenn.; daughter Christine
Lynn (Jean), of Rochester; two granddaughters;
a great-granddaughter;
sister Rosemary Moore;
and brother Robert
Fisher.
A private memorial
service was conducted
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2014,
in the chapel at Samaritan Bethany on Eighth.
Memorials preferred to
Paws and Claws Humane
Society, Feed the Children, or Mayo Clinic Parkinson’s research.

BREAKIRON
PROCTORVILLE —Raymond Ray Breakiron, 92, of Proctorville died Friday, Nov. 7,
2014 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted at 1 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 10, 2014 at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory in Proctorville by Pastor Rob
Jones.
Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Proctorville V.F.W. Post 6878 will conduct military graveside rites.
Visitation will be held from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 10, 2014 at the funeral home.
Condolences may be expressed to the family
at www.timeformemory.com/hall.
STICKLER
OAK HILL, Ohio — Sylvia Jean Stickler,
77, of Oak Hill, formerly of Chesapeake, Ohio,
passed away Monday, Nov. 3, 2014 at home.
There will be no services. Arrangements by
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, of Proctorville, Ohio.

Gay marriage
ruling means
review likely
By Dan Sewell

picture of marriage
to another,” said
Circuit Judge Jeffrey
CINCINNATI —
Sutton, writing for
The march toward gay himself and a felmarriage across the
ALLEN D. JIVIDEN
low George W. Bush
U.S. hit a roadblock
appointee, while a
ADDISON — Allen
member of Local #105
Thursday when a
Bill Clinton appoinPiketon, Ohio. Lizard
Dean “Lizard” Jividen,
federal appeals court
tee dissented.
enjoyed life, Chevy
58, of Addison, Ohio
upheld laws against
The ruling ran counTrucks and hunting.
passed away on Friday,
the practice in four
ter to a remarkably
He is survived by sons
Nov. 7, 2014.
states, creating a split rapid string of victoBeau (Erica) Jividen of
He was born on Oct.
in the legal system
ries for the gay rights
29, 1956 in Gallia County, Addison and Todd (Pam)
that increases the
movement over the
Casto of Gallipolis; three
son of the late Arnold
chances the Supreme past few months that
grandchildren Scarlet
Ray Jividen and Mildred
Court will step in to
have now made sameJividen, Chayse and Kier“Mick” (Hill) Jividen
decide the issue once sex marriage legal in
stein Casto, his mother
Jacobs of Bidwell. He
and for all.
at least 30 states.
Mildred “Mick” Jacobs,
was a boilermaker and
The cases decided
In fact, four other
brothers Arnie (Elaine)
were from Ohio,
U.S. appeals courts
Jividen of Gallipolis, and
Michigan, Kentucky
in other regions of
David “Fudd” (Sandy)
and Tennessee.
the country ruled in
Jividen of Bidwell, his forBreaking ranks with recent months that
mer wife Joyce Jividen of
other federal courts
states cannot ban gay
Gallipolis, several nieces
around the country,
matrimony.
and nephews, aunts,
the 6th U.S. Circuit
Cincinnati attoruncles, cousins and a host
Court of Appeals
ney Al Gerhardstein,
of friends also survive. He
ruled 2-1 that states
who represented gay
was preceded in death by
have the right to set
plaintiffs in two of
his father and sister Sharules for marriage and the cases, said he was
ron Hayes.
that changing a defini- disappointed and will
Services will be at 8
tion that dates to “the appeal to the nation’s
p.m. Monday, Nov. 10,
earliest days of human highest court.
2014 at Willis Funeral
history” is better done
The president of
Home with Rev. Junior
through the politipro-gay marriage
Preston officiating.
cal process, not the
group Freedom to
Friends may call at Willis
courts.
Marry, Evan Wolfson,
Funeral Home on Monday
“Surely the people blasted the ruling as
from 5-8 p.m.
should receive some being “on the wrong
Please visit www.willisdeference in deciding side of history” and
funeralhome.com to send
when the time is ripe out of step with the
to move from one
e-mail condolences.
courts and the majority of Americans.
“This anomalous
ruling won’t stand the
test of time or appeal,”
he said in a statement.
National Organization for Marriage presCivitas Media, LLC
ident Brian Brown,
an outspoken foe of
(USPS 436-840)
same-sex unions, said
Telephone: 740-446-2342
his group was “ecstatPublishes every Sunday.
ic” after the ruling.
Annual local subscription price for the Sunday Times-Sentinel is $250.
“The other side
Please call for more information on local pricing.
was counting their
Full price single copy issues are $3.
chickens before they’re
hatched,” Brown said.
CONTACT US
Ohio Attorney General
Mike DeWine’s
CIRCULATION MANAGER:
office, which argued in
Jessica Chason
CONTENT MANAGER:
740-446-2342, Ext. 2097
Michael Johnson
support of the voterjchason@civitasmedia.com
740-446-2342, Ext. 2102
passed 2004 Ohio ban
SPORTS:
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
on gay marriage, said
Bryan Walters
740-446-2342, Ext. 2101
NEWS:
it was “pleased the
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
April Jaynes
court agreed with our
Alex Hawley
740-446-2342, Ext. 2108
arguments that impor740-446-2342, Ext. 2100
ajaynes@civitasmedia.com
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
Lindsay Kriz
tant issues such as
ADVERTISING:
740-446-2342, Ext. 2106
these should be deter740-446-2342, Ext. 2096 or 2095
lkriz@civitasmedia.com
mined through the
740-992-2155, Ext. 2554 or 2553
democratic process.”
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
The appeals court,
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
in its ruling, rejected
one of the main arguPOSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
ments leveled against
gay marriage, saying
that same-sex couples
are just as capable
as heterosexual ones
of effectively raising
children.
But Sutton suggest3ECOND !VENUE s 'ALLIPOLIS /HIO
ed that the same argument that says there is
a constitutional right
to gay marriage could
topefurniture.com
be used in support
of polygamy or some
other combination.
Associated Press

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�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 9, 2014 3A

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY, NOV. 9

TUPPERS PLAINS —
The T.P. VFW Ladies Auxiliary will have a turkey and
dressing dinner at the T.P.
VFW Post 9053 Hall from
11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The
menu includes turkey/dressing, mashed potatoes green
beans, cole slaw, dessert

and drink. A donation of
$10 is requested. Carryouts
are available.

MONDAY, NOV. 10

POMEROY —The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative Inc.
will meet at noon in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
New members are welcome.
For more information, contact Courtney Midkiff at 9926626 Monday through Friday
8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Republican Executive
Committee will conduct their
last meeting of the year at
7:30 p.m. at the courthouse.

The group will be looking
ahead for 2015 so please
come and see what is new
and coming up.
MASON — The Mason
County Solid Waste Authority will hold their monthly
meeting at 10 a.m. at the
recycling center, 1927 Fairground Road.

Health Department
closed Veterans Day
POMEROY —The Meigs
County Health Department will
be closed Tuesday, Nov. 11 in
honor of Veterans Day. Normal
business hours will resume at 8
a.m. Nov. 12.

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

GALLIA COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS

LEAF PICKUP SCHEDULE

Gallia County Commission
meetings rescheduled

their service and sacrifice. Contact the Gallia County Veterans Service Office at 446-2005 no later than
Nov. 7 to confirm participation in the parade.

GALLIPOLIS — Due to the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays falling on the regular
meeting day, the Gallia County Commissioners have
rescheduled the Nov. 27 meeting to 9 a.m. Nov. 25;
the Dec. 25 meeting to 9 a.m. Dec. 23; and the Jan. 1
meeting to 9 a.m. Dec. 30.

‘Look Good, Feel Better’
program for cancer patients

GALLIPOLIS — The city of Gallipolis
will have the following leaf pickup schedule:
Mondays, all cross streets and Fifth Avenue;
Tuesdays, First Avenue and Second Avenue;
Wednesdays, Garfield Avenue, Ohio 141 and
Ohio 588; Thursdays, Third Avenue and
Fourth Avenue; Fridays, Eastern Avenue and
Maple Shade area.

CARD SHOWER

Willard G. Sheets will be celebrating his
80th birthday on Nov. 11. Cards may be
sent to him at: 156 2nd Ave., Gallipolis,
OH 45631.

EVENTS
TUESDAY, NOV. 11

BIDWELL — River Valley Middle School
will have a special Veterans Day program
at 10 a.m. and is seeking all United States
military veteran’s to participate. Call Terri
Jacks, sixth grade social studies and science
teacher, at the school for more information.

Award

of Addaville Elementary
(second place,) Devin
Siders of Hannan Trace
From Page 1A
Elementary (third place,)
James Hall of Vinton
this same award,” she
Elementary (fourth
said. “I think what makes place,) Aislynn Bostic
Gallia County unique is
of Addaville Elementary
that the community really (fifth place,) Brianna
gets behind it.”
Bradbury of Vinton EleMany community
mentary (sixth place) and
sponsors helped to make Kyla Craycraft of Vinton
Gallia’s Ag Awareness
Elementary, (honorable
Day 2014 possible such
mention.)
as: American Electric
Paul Shoemaker, GalPower, Holzer Helath
lia County Farm Bureau
System, Buckeye Rural
member and president at
Electric Cooperative,
the time of Agriculture
Crown Excavating and
Awareness Day 2014,
Stone Yard, Ohio Valley
said he’s proud of the volBank, Farm Credit Serunteers and the bureau’s
vices, Advanced Hearing efforts to pull together
Solutions, SFS Truck
and make the event posSales, S &amp;M Tax and
sible for students.
Accounting, Ohio Valley
“I just feel that it’s
Electric Corp., State Rep. an honor that we were
Ryan Smith, Eastman’s
chosen as an outstandFoodland, Farmer’s Bank, ing group to be doing
Brown Brother’s Agency
this. It’s national, it’s not
Inc., Foster Sales &amp; Deliv- just local,” he said. “I
ery Inc., Zach and Scotam proud of what we do,
ty’s Subs, Family Oxygen because there’s about 400
and Medical Equipment, kids that benefit from it
Feed Stop and Pepsi.
(Ag Day.)”
Some students also
Katie Shoemaker,
served as volunteer
Ag Day coordinator,
guides to assist teachers
said bringing students
and students at Ag Day,
together from throughout
such as the River Valley
the county to learn about
Academy and South Gal- agriculture is what makes
lia FFA class.
Ag Day effective.
Harless said about 85
“I am proud that we
FFA students total and
won this award. We’ve
60 volunteers helped out never had it before. We
with this year’s Ag Day.
bring the county and
“It’s definitely a joint
the city school’s fourtheffort,” she said.
graders together and they
Additionally, before
learn a lot more about
Ag Day, students drew a
farming, how farming is
picture of what agriculdone, what it means to
ture meant to them as
the children and what
part of a “Design Your
they get out of it,” she
T-shirt Contest,” and the said. “Togetherness is the
winning design was feawhole thing. That’s what
tured on free t-shirts for
it’s all about … bringstudents.
ing the whole county of
Ag Day 2014 T-shirt
fourth-graders together.”
contest winners were:
CEA winners will
Cody Wooten of Addadisplay their 2014 proville Elementary (first
grams at the American
place,) Montana Jennings Farm Bureau Federation

GALLIPOLIS — The American Cancer Society
Resource Center in Gallipolis sponsors a “Look
Good, Feel Better” program for patients undergoing treatment at Holzer Center for Cancer Care,
170 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. Meetings are held in
the Conference Room on the third Monday of each
month. These meetings will be held alternately
GALLIPOLIS — The 2014 Veterans’ Day parade, on Monday afternoons from 1-3 p.m. and the next
organized by the Gallia County Veterans Service
month from 6-9 p.m. “Look Good, Feel Better” is
Commission, will be 10:30 a.m. Nov. 11, followed by a program sponsored by The American Cancer
a ceremony at 11 a.m. in Gallipolis City Park. Guest Society to help women undergoing chemotherapy
speaker and parade marshall will be retired U.S.
treatments. It helps women deal with some of the
Army Warrant Office Donald T. Rees, a Gallia Coun- side effects of their treatments. Interested women
ty native. All veterans, veteran service groups, and
are requested to call The American Cancer Society
community organizations are encouraged to partici- to register at 1-888-227-6446 or the local Cancer
pate. The Veterans Day Parade is to honor military
Resource Center at (740) 441-3909. The next sesveterans and demonstrate community support for
sion takes place at 1 p.m. Nov. 17.

Gallipolis Veterans Day Parade
seeks participants

convention and IDEA Ag
Trade Show in San Diego
in January. They will also
receive a $2,250 stipend
to apply toward travel and
exhibition costs.
The Gallia Farm Bureau
is already brainstorming
ideas for innovative programs that can be done in
other counties or states
for the upcoming program year, which starts in
December, Harless said.
“We’re looking at doing

an ag plastic program,
where you collect plastic
bags that are for wrapping hay and anything in
general, because that can
be recycled.”
For more information
about the Gallia County
Farm Bureau and ways to
get involved, individuals
can visit www.ofbf.org/
counties/gallia.
Reach April Jaynes at (740) 4462342 ext. 2108 or on Twitter @
ajaynes_reports

Submitted photo

Pictured are students examining the bee station at 13th annual
Agriculture Awareness Day 2014 in May. Students sampled honey at
this exhibit and learned about the life of bees from presenter Frederick
Burdell. All exhibitors at Agriculture Awareness Day were volunteers.

Have story ideas or
suggestions?
Call us at:

740.446.2342
or 740.992.2155
60546743

�E ditorial
4A Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Obama is
unbowed
by setbacks
President Obama awakened Wednesday morning to a
seismic shift in the nation’s political landscape.
Republicans not only had seized control of the Senate
for the first time since 2006, they also had grown their
House majority to the highest level since World War II
and increased the number of governorships under GOP
control.
So the question in advance of the president’s postelection news conference Wednesday was what his mien
would be in the wake of the red wave that swamped
Democratic candidates throughout the land.
Would he stand by the rather bold declaration he
made last month that, while his name was not on the
ballot, the midterm elections were a referendum on his
policies?
Or would he reiterate the statement he made on Election Day — that Democratic losses were to be expected
because the party had the misfortune of facing its worst
midterm election map since Dwight Eisenhower was
president?
Our hope was that Mr. Obama would concede that
his policies had been soundly rejected by the voters. In
so doing, he would have evinced the kind of humility
he needs to summon if he is to improve the near-toxic
relations he has with the new Republican-controlled
Congress.
Well, Mr. Obama did not accept that his policies
were repudiated Tuesday by the American people. In
fact, he noted that in five states voters approved ballot
measures that raised their state minimum wage — a
proxy, he submitted, for his proposal to raise the federal
minimum wage.
But the president could not be accused of petulance
during his more than hour-long press conference.
Indeed, we thought him rather gracious in defeat,
promising to spend more face time with House Speaker
John Boehner and presumptive Senate majority leader
Mitch McConnell.
But it was not just that Mr. Obama pledged to “reach
out” to the party of Boehner and McConnell, but also
that he understands that the onus is on him to dial
down the extreme partisanship that has prevailed in
Washington during much of the past six years Mr.
Obama has spent in the White House.
“The American people overwhelmingly believe this
town doesn’t work well,” the president said. “And …
they rightly hold me accountable to do more to make it
work properly.”
As a first step to changing the tenor in the nation’s
capital, Mr. Obama has invited both Republican and
Democratic leaders to the White House on Friday to
talk about an agenda for the upcoming lame-duck session and beyond.
The president notes that there are several areas
of agreement that could be starting points for postelection detente between the two parties, including
rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure, more government
support for early childhood education and expanding
foreign trade.
The problem is that the outcome of the midterm election has not dissuaded Mr. Obama from taking executive actions that are anathema to Republicans on Capitol Hill. In fact the president acknowledged his plan to
take unilateral action on immigration reform before the
conclusion of the current session of Congress.
“I have consistently said that it is my profound preference and interest to see Congress act on a comprehensive immigration reform bill,” the president said. “But
what I’m not going to do is just wait.”
That sounds to us very much like a threat. And if Mr.
Obama follows through with it, he not only will engender the enmity of Republicans, he also guarantee over
the next two years the political acrimony and legislative
gridlock that are the inevitable consequences when the
president and Congress find themselves at odds.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

THEIR VIEW

Manchin must not help kill coal
W.Va. not responsible for sea-level rise

By Tom Harris

For Ohio Valley Publishing

It is frightening that West Virginia
Sen. Joe Manchin is attempting to
find “common ground” with Sen.
Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode
Island. Whitehouse states point blank
that his mission is to essentially put
America’s coal industry out of business.
The Rhode Island senator subscribes to the hypothesis that the
release of carbon dioxide (CO2) from
coal-burning power plants is a significant driver of global warming that
he believes will cause dangerous sealevel rise in the Ocean State. Whitehouse holds West Virginians partially
responsible for coastal management
problems in Rhode Island.
Incredibly, Manchin concurs, reassuring Whitehouse during their Oct.
14 tour of coastal areas in R.I.: “I am
not a denier. And I don’t think people
in West Virginia or other energy producing states are deniers. We know
that there is a climate problem and
seven billion people on planet Earth
are responsible. We need to do something.”
After hosting Whitehouse on a
tour of West Virginia’s energy production facilities on Oct. 22, Manchin
left no doubt about his desire to
appease Whitehouse: “We agree that
we must face the reality of climate
change without delay.”
Rather than contest the improbable
notion that humanity controls global
climate, Manchin promotes expensive technologies to capture and store
CO2 emissions underground. He
seems unaware that it will be years
before nationwide “carbon capture
and storage” on coal-fired power stations is possible, if indeed it ever is.
The technology has yet to be prov-

en economically viable. Estimated
costs for CCS are so high that much
of the industry will be driven out of
business if it is ever implemented.
Customers of the few coal-fired
power companies who might try to
operate with CCS will see their rates
soar and eventually seek other electricity providers.
This means that advocating CCS
is advocating an end to coal-fired
electricity in Appalachia, not to mention many other parts of the U.S. Yet
Manchin boosts exactly that outcome
whenever he promotes so-called
clean coal, a synonym most people
use for CCS.
Manchin stated on Oct. 14: “The
United States Department of Energy
has been sitting on $8 billion that we
could be investing in clean coal technology and then be able to clean up
the global climate …”
Used in this way, the term “clean
coal” makes no sense. CO2 is not
unclean and so removing it from a
coal station’s effluents does not make
the effluents cleaner. CO2 is not a
pollutant; it is an essential ingredient in plant photosynthesis, without
which there would be no life on
Earth.
Instead of supporting this major
threat to West Virginia’s most important industry, here is what Manchin
should be telling his fellow Democrat.
The oceans have risen continuously since the end of the last glacial
period about 11,000 years ago. During the Holocene Optimum, 8,000
years ago, when the planet was 2–3
degrees Celsius warmer than now
and large quantities of ice were melting, sea-level rose about 10 times faster than today and coastal settlements
had to move quickly or be ruined.
Manchin must make it clear to

Whitehouse that this is not the fault
of West Virginians.
Since the Rhode Island senator
believes the forecasts of theoretical climate models cited by the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, Manchin must tell him
about the models’ failures. None of
them foresaw the current 18-year
“pause” in global warming for one
simple reason — we do not yet
understand the science well enough
to know what to program the computers to compute.
Manchin must contrast the uncertainties of Whitehouse’s climate worries with the certainties of the threats
to West Virginia’s coal sector. Coal is
the Mountain State’s most important
industry and, as the source of 95
percent of its electricity, gives West
Virginia the seventh-lowest electricity costs in America. But the state’s
coal sector is now under siege from
increasingly damaging Environmental Protection Agency rules.
The consequence of this attack is
that total coal production in the state
declined 9 percent between 2012
and 2013, a period during which 17
percent of its coal mines closed, and
coal employment decreased 6.4 percent, a loss of 3,457 jobs. Even before
the EPA’s new climate change-driven
Clean Power Plan regulations, which
Whitehouse promotes, come into
force, the “war on coal” has already
cost West Virginia billions of dollars.
Manchin needs to inform Whitehouse that Rhode Island’s coastal
management issues are his own
state’s responsibility, not that of West
Virginia. Manchin cannot compromise on this. Ruining West Virginia’s
economy in a vain attempt to stop
the seas from rising will help no one.
Tom Harris is executive director of the Ottawa,
Canada-based International Climate Science
Coalition (www.climatescienceinternational.
org).

TODAY IN HISTORY...

Times-Sentinel
Letters to the Editor

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should be limited to 300
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“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

Today is Sunday, Nov.
9, the 313th day of 2014.
There are 52 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 9, 1989, communist East Germany
threw open its borders,
allowing citizens to
travel freely to the West;
joyous Germans danced
atop the Berlin Wall.
On this date:
In 1620, the passengers
and crew of the Mayflower sighted Cape Cod.
In 1872, fire destroyed
nearly 800 buildings in
Boston.
In 1918, it was
announced that Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II
would abdicate; he then

fled to the Netherlands.
In 1938, Nazis looted
and burned synagogues
as well as Jewish-owned
stores and houses in
Germany and Austria in
a pogrom that became
known as “Kristallnacht.”
In 1953, Welsh authorpoet Dylan Thomas died
in New York at age 39.
In 1963, twin disasters
struck Japan as some 450
miners were killed in a coaldust explosion, and about 160
people died in a train crash.
In 1965, the great
Northeast blackout
occurred as a series of
power failures lasting up
to 13 1/2 hours left 30
million people in seven
states and part of Canada
without electricity.

In 1967, a Saturn
V rocket carrying an
unmanned Apollo spacecraft blasted off from
Cape Kennedy on a successful test flight.
In 1970, former French
President Charles de
Gaulle died at age 79.
In 1976, the U.N. General Assembly approved
resolutions condemning apartheid in South
Africa, including one
characterizing the whiteruled government as
“illegitimate.”
Today’s Birthdays:
Baseball Hall of Famer
Whitey Herzog is 83.
Baseball Hall of Famer
Bob Gibson is 79. Actor
Charlie Robinson is 69.
Movie director Bille

August is 66. Actor
Robert David Hall is 66.
Actor Lou Ferrigno is
63. Sen. Sherrod Brown,
D-Ohio, is 62. Gospel
singer Donnie McClurkin
is 55. Rock musician
Dee Plakas (L7) is 54.
Actress Ion Overman is
45. Rapper Pepa (SaltN-Pepa) is 45. Rapper
Scarface (Geto Boys) is
44. Blues singer Susan
Tedeschi is 44. Actor
Jason Antoon is 43.
Actor Eric Dane is 42.
Singer Nick Lachey (98
Degrees) is 41. Rhythmand-blues singer Sisqo
(Dru Hill) is 36. Country
singer Corey Smith is 35.
Actress Nikki Blonsky is
26. Actress-model Analeigh Tipton is 26.

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 9, 2014 5A

Blankets and Bears Drive benefits many
and highest participation percentage number among all homePOMEROY — Career-Based
rooms, Career-Based Intervention
Intervention class held their inau- provided a donut and juice breakgural Blankets and Bears Drive
fast for the winning homeroom.
to benefit the Meigs County
After all donations had been
Sheriff’s Office and Meigs County collected, Richard Fetty’s homeEmergency Medical Services.
room won the donut breakfast
The students recently donated
the stuffed animals and blankets for most total donations. Mr.
Josh Eddy’s class won the
to Meigs County Sheriff Keith
breakfast for highest percentage
Wood and Meigs County Emergency Medical Services Director donation. It was noted that 492
stuffed animals and nine blankets
Robbie Jacks.
were collected for donation.
During the contest, students
Career-Based Intervention
and teachers at MHS were
program students coordinatencouraged to bring in new or
ing the drive were McKayla
slightly used stuffed animals
Barrett, Tyra Boothe, Kayand blankets for donation. As a
reward for the most donations
lynn Dickens, Nikki Dickens,

Staff report

Pictured are Mr. Blaettnar, assistant principal, Derek Miller, CBI teacher, Robbie Jacks, Meigs County EMS director, Sheriff
Keith Woods, and CBI students (back) Cory Stewart, Zach Russell, Dylan King, Cameron Mattox, Austin Quillen, Nate
McClintock, Kerri Moon. Middle: Tamera Miller, Nick Lester, AJ Kopec, Kelly Hanning-Roush, Caleb Smith, McKayla Barrett;
and (front) Kaylynn Dickens, Nikki Dickens and Tyra Boothe; and paramedics Jordan Shank, Cody Bryant and EMT Todd Kimes.

Kelly Hanning-Roush, Dylan
King, A.J. Kopec, Nick Lester, Cameron Mattox, Nathan

McClintock, Tamera Miller,
Kerri Moon, Austin Quillen,
Zach Russell, Caleb Smith and

Corey Stewart. Derek Miller is
the Career-Based Intervention
teacher at Meigs High School.

Facility
From Page 1A

The building is approximately 13,000-square
feet and features eight
treatment rooms, one
double trauma, two triage stations, laboratory,
pharmacy, general radiation and CT suite, along
with public staff support
areas. The project was
financed by Ohio Valley
Bank, facilitated by the
Meigs County Community Improvement
Corporation with a bond
resolution approved by
the Meigs County Commission.
The building design was
provided by Bitner, Dispenza, Thomas Architects
and Interior Designs. Construction was completed
by Kinsale Construction of
Meigs County and cost $6
million. The project was
assisted by Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Regional
Development District,
the Governor’s Office of
Appalachia, Sens. Sherrod
Brown and Rob Portman,
Congressman Bill Johnson,
Ohio Sen. Lou Gentile and
Ohio Rep. Debbie Phillips,
who both came to speak at
the event.
Services will include
chiropractic services, family practice, gastroenterology, general surgery, laboratory services, obstetrics
and gynecology, orthopedics, pediatrics, therapy
services and Urgent Care.
The facility hours will
be 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Urgent Care service hours
will be 1-8 p.m. weekdays
and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
weekends and holidays.
Comments at the ceremony were provided
by Meigs and regional

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

ABOVE, The Medflight helipad sits to the left of the new facility. The
Medflight agency is scheduled to open early 2015. AT LEFT, Ohio
Representative Debbie Phillips speaks to employees, journalists,
family, friends and community members during Friday’s ribbon
cutting ceremony.

representatives.
Brent Saunders, chairman of the Board of
Directors for Holzer
Health System, said he
looked forward to serving
the community’s needs
for emergency care.
“Many lives will be
saved,” he said.
Perry Varnadoe, director of the Meigs County
Economic Development
Office, said he was
excited for the facilities
in Meigs County. Greg
McKunas, medical director of emergency services
for Holzer, said the project seemed impossible,
but the people of Meigs
County are accustomed
to the impossible.
“The people in Meigs
County are dreamers,”
he said. “They’re doers.
They persist, they make
the impossible possible.
This is an example of
making a dream a reality.”
Jason Wilson, director
of the Governor’s Office
of Appalachia, said this
was an exciting time in
the community, and even
in the facility itself. He
emphasized the impor-

tance of finding help in
one’s hometown.
“You can go out and do
things and see things in
the world, but it’s always
best to come home,” he
said. “This building is an
example of how we can
serve our own in Meigs
County and Pomeroy.
This building will save
lives.”
While Portman could
not be present, state
director Teri Geiger said
she was personally glad
to be there to represent
him, as she was back in
her home region.
“It’s such a wonderful
day for Meigs County,”
she said. “For more than
a decade we’ve been without an emergency facility
for much too long.” Geiger emphaized the importance of job creation from
this opening, and said the
facility will provide about
35 jobs, as well as help
bring in additional jobs
and businesses.
Meigs County Commissioner Mike Bartrum
mentioned a family who,
years ago, was in an
accident, and on the way
to Holzer in Gallipolis

Help

with this donation to further assist the
first responders in Gallia County,” Mangus said.
From Page 1A
“It’s great to have service organizations in Gallia County taking an interest
An AED is a portable device that
in assisting in the purchase of these lifechecks the heart rhythm. AEDs are used saving tools that will be used by Gallia
to treat sudden cardiac arrest. If needCounty deputies,” Browning said. “We
ed, it can send an electric shock to the
are very thankful for the donation from
heart to restore normal rhythm. Sudden the VFW. I can honestly say that I see
cardiac arrest usually causes death if it’s every day where Gallia County’s veternot treated within minutes. Using an
ans are still serving their community.”
AED on a person who is having sudden
Other groups interested in helping
cardiac arrest may save the person’s life. with the project can contact the Gallia
“We are pleased to be able to help
County Sheriff’s Office at 740-446-4617.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 58.32
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.18
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 109.81
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.14
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 52.82
BorgWarner (NYSE) —57.86
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 28.14
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.13
Collins (NYSE) — 84.80
DuPont (NYSE) — 70.41
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.81
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.41
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 66.04
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 61.47
Kroger (NYSE) — 57.80
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 75.61
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 112.86
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.30

BBT (NYSE) — 38.18
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.41
Pepsico (NYSE) — 96.80
Premier (NASDAQ) — 16.00
Rockwell (NYSE) — 112.29
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.05
Royal Dutch Shell — 71.00
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.81
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 78.77
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.30
WesBanco (NYSE) — 34.41
Worthington (NYSE) — 38.93
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 7, 2014, 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.

they lost their lives. He
also emphasized that this
facility will save many of
the community’s children
because of the facility’s proximity to local
schools.
“Thank you, everybody,
for being a team and
working together,” he
said. “I learned in football
that if you don’t play as
one, you’ll never make it.
We’re playing as one in
Meigs County, and that’s

really important.”
Rod Crane, president
and CEO of Medflight,
said that safety is in the
hands of the community
now and said he knows
the community will make
the difference with help
from Medflight as a second option.
“We’re backup. We’re
not the first responders,”
he said. “It’s the people
on the street that take
care of lives.”

Dr. Wayne Monro, chief
executive officer of Holzer,
said he was excited for the
facility to open, and introduced both Gentile and
Phillips. Gentile thanked
employees and the community for their commitment to Meigs County,
and Phillips commented
on Meigs County’s can-do
attitude and ability to get
resources and jump the
hurdles that it took to create the facility.

For the best local weather coverage, visit either
www.mydailysentinel.com or www.mydailytribune.com

�6A Sunday, November 9, 2014

LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

60542157

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 9, 2014 s Page 1B

Buffalo bullies White Falcons, 36-18
By Gary Clark

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama quarterback Kaileb Sheets (7) eludes Buffalo defender Caleb Tucker
during a third quarter run Friday night in a Week 11 football contest at Bachtel
Stadium in Mason, W.Va.

MASON, W.Va. — Missed
opportunities both offensively
and defensively plagued the
Wahama White Falcons continuously Friday Night as the
Buffalo Bison visited the Bend
Area and came away with an
important 36-18 gridiron win
in the regular season finale for
both teams.
The Falcons inability to turn
a massive 75 offensive plays
into points and the number of
missed tackles proved to be
a huge factor in the contest.
Buffalo scored three times
from long range while adding
four more scores from inside
11 yards to hand the Mason

County team the convincing
setback on senior night.
The triumph improved Buffalo’s regular season record
to 8-2 on the year while the
defeat lowers the White Falcon slate to 6-4. Although the
loss dealt a severe blow to the
White Falcons’ playoff expectations, Coach Dave Barr’s
squad is projected to claim the
final position among the Class
A playoff contenders which
necessitates a likely visit to top
ranked St Marys next week.
Buffalo solidified their playoff location among the top
16 Class A, post-season participants with the victory and
appears to have nailed down
the 11th position in the playoff hunt after Van upset 12th

ranked Man in Friday Night
action.
A frigid senior night crowd
saw Buffalo jump out to an
18-0 halftime lead before
answering a trio of Falcon
scores over the final two quarters. Jordan Tucker, the talented speedy senior for the Bison,
scored three touchdowns while
rushing for 178 yards in only
16 carries to pace the visitors.
Dylan Lucas added a pair of
six-pointers with Ethan Burgess capping the Buffalo scoring activity with a 44 yard run.
Wahama failed to secure a
rushing touchdown but picked
up three second half scoring
passes from Kaileb Sheets.
See BUFFALO | 2B

Logan leads
early in SEOAL
All-Sports chase
By Craig Dunn

For Ohio Valley Publishing

At the conclusion of
the fall season, four of
the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League’s five
schools are in early contention for the 2014-15
William E. (Bill) Thomas All-Sports Trophy.
Defending champion Logan (14 points)
holds a slim half-point
advantage over runnerup Warren (13.5), with
Jackson (12) and Gallia
Academy (11.5) not far
off the pace, followed
by Portsmouth (4).
Only four of the eight
fall sports — football,
volleyball, boys golf and
boys soccer — counted
in the standings.
According to SEOAL
rules, three-fourths of
the member schools
must field a team (or
in the case of cross
country, register a team
score) for that sport to
count in the standings.

This season, that means
four of the five full-time
members must participate (and earn a team
score) in a sport for it
to count.
Girls soccer, boys
cross country, girls
cross country and girls
tennis did not count in
the All-Sports Trophy
standings, although
they are fully recognized as conference
champions.
Placement by associate members Athens
(tennis and soccer) and
Alexander (soccer) in
the tennis and soccer
standings do not count
in the All-Sports Trophy standings. Points
are figured either on a
5-4-3-2-1 (first through
fifth places) or 4-3-2-1
(first through fourth)
basis among full-time
SEOAL schools only.
Logan claimed three
of the eight overall fall
See CHASE | 2B

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahama co-ed
Volleyball Tournament
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama boys basketball
team is hosting a co-ed volleyball tournament on
Saturday, November 22 at the WHS gym. The
cost for a team is $120 with a maximum of eight
players, four men and four women, on a team. The
double-elimination tournament will feature games
to 25, win by two, and matches will be best two-ofthree. Players cannot play on multiple teams and
all players must sign a release form. To register, or
for more information contact coach Ron Bradley
by email at rbradley@k12.wv.us or by phone at
(304)-377-9295.

Erik Jones wins
again at Phoenix
AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Erik Jones won the
Camping World Truck race at Phoenix International Raceway for the second year when a power
outage Friday night forced NASCAR to end the
event with 24 laps left.
The start also was delayed more than an hour
because of an outage that knocked out the track’s lights.
The 18-year-old Jones was making his 12th and
final start of the season in the No. 51 Toyota he
shares with team owner Kyle Bucsh. Jones started
from the pole and led 114 of the 126 laps en route
to his third victory of the year and fourth overall.
“I felt like we had the dominant truck and we could
have brought it home,” said Jones, also a winner this
year in Iowa in July and Las Vegas in September.
See BRIEFS | 2B

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

River Valley coach Jerrod Sparling talks with his team following a Week 8 home win over Vinton County, the first league victory for the
Raiders as members of the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division.

Almost even in Ohio
By Bryan Walters

the OHSAA, and Eastern
captured its first win over
Wahama since the 2001
You could say it was
campaign.
average … at best.
Yet, for all of the highs
Of the six football
and lows for each proprograms in Gallia and
gram, almost every team
Meigs counties, not a
had some sort of even
single one finished the
effort this fall. South Gal2014 season with a winlia, Gallia Academy and
ning record. Then again, Meigs all went .500 in
only a third of those same home contests, while the
teams finished the year
Rebels and Blue Devils
with a losing mark.
finished .500 in their
The Ohio Valley Pubrespective league standlishing area ended the
ings.
gridiron campaign with
In fact, only two teams
a collective 28-32 overall posted winning records
record in the Buckeye
at home as the Tornadoes
State, which included
went 4-1 at Roger Lee
four teams with .500
Adams Memorial Field
marks and two squads
while RVHS posted a 3-2
that posted 4-6 finishes.
mark at Raider Field. The
None of those six teams
Marauders (4-2) finished
qualified for the playoffs, third in the TVC Ohio
a first for the Ohio side
and the Eagles finished
of the area since the 2010 fourth in the TVC Hockcampaign.
ing with a 5-3 record.
Ironically, it was the
SHS was the only team
last two teams that quali- not to win a road game
fied for the postseason
this fall, en route to a
that finished below the
sixth place effort of 3-5
.500 mark this year as
in the TVC Hocking. The
both the Tornadoes
Raiders also tied for fifth
(2013) and the Blue Dev- with both Wellston and
ils (2012) stumbled to
Vinton County in the
identical 4-6 records.
TVC Ohio standings with
The 2014 season did
matching 1-5 marks.
have more than its fair
There were also some
share of highlights, howother neat tidbits to the
ever, regardless of what
year, most notably at
the final records ended up River Valley — which
being for each team.
posted its first non-losing
River Valley claimed
season since the 2003
its first-ever league win
campaign.
as members of the TriThe Silver and Black
Valley Conference Ohio
were also the only team
Division, Meigs running
from the area that scored
back Michael Davis
on unbeaten Athens in
scored nine touchdowns
head-to-head competition
against Fairland to join a as the Raiders dropped a
handful of other players
77-14 Week 9 decision in
for second-place in the
The Plains. Gallia Acadall-time record books of
emy dropped a 52-0 deci-

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Tim Gearhart photo | Tim’s News &amp; Novelties of Ironton

Meigs senior Michael Davis (21) runs the ball during a Week 8 nonconference matchup against Ironton at Tanks Memorial Stadium
in Ironton, Ohio.

sion at AHS in the season
opener and Meigs lost a
49-0 contest at home in
Week 7.
The Raiders were outscored by a 276-224 overall margin by their opponents, but only one of
their losses was by more
than 21 points. RVHS was
also a point away from
a winning season after
dropping a heartbreaking
33-32 decision in overtime to visiting Wellston
in Week 6.
SGHS was the only
program to outscore its
opponents this season,
doing so by a favorable
228-201 overall margin.
The Rebels started the
year with a 2-0 mark after
outscoring opponents

92-20 through two weeks,
then mustered more than
20 points in a game only
twice over the last eight
weeks of play.
Meigs was outscored
by a 346-320 overall
margin by opponents,
which included eight consecutive weeks of allowing double-digit points
to start the year. The
Marauders — despite surrendering 69 points in a
Week 2 win over Fairland
(79-69) — allowed just
13 points over their final
two games in blowout
wins over Wellston (56-6)
and Alexander (38-7).
Eastern was outscored
by a 274-200 overall marSee EVEN | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 9, 2014

Bengals can’t
sleep after prime
time trouncing
CINCINNATI (AP) — Coach Marvin Lewis
stayed up until 3 a.m. watching video of his Bengals’ latest prime time meltdown. He took a twohour break and then went back to watching it all
over again.
It didn’t look any better the second time. Or the
third time.
And there’s no ready explanation or fix for
any of it, either. A 24-3 loss to Cleveland at Paul
Brown Stadium has reminded everyone that the
Bengals (5-3-1) not only can’t win the high-profile
games, they can’t even hold it together.
“We lost a football game, we didn’t fall off a
cliff,” Lewis said Friday, in a raspy voice that
reflected a lack of sleep.
In a sense, they did. From the opening series on
Thursday night, the Bengals looked like Wile E.
Coyote doing another long, slow descent before
finishing in a poof of smoke. They fell apart every
which way:
— Andy Dalton completed only 10 passes,
threw three interceptions and had a passer rating
of 2.0.
— The defense got run over for 170 yards by a
Browns team that had managed 158 yards rushing
total in the previous three games.
— Lewis got run over on the sideline by Dre
Kirkpatrick as the cornerback was covering a
punt.
No wonder there was so little sleep in Cincinnati.

Chase

Friday’s Logan at Warren
football game — won the
boys soccer championship
From Page 1B
and shared the volleyball
crown with Gallia Acadsports championships,
emy while also placing
winning boys golf and
second in golf.
both cross country titles,
Jackson won both the
and also finished second
football and girls soccer
in football, to hold off
crowns and finished second
second-place Warren.
in both boys soccer and
Warren, which had won girls tennis. Gallia Academy
the All-Sports Trophy
shared the volleyball title
three-straight seasons
and placed third in both
prior to last year — the
football and golf.
trophy was presented to
Portsmouth’s highest finish in a sport
Logan at halftime of last

Buffalo
From Page 1B

Sheets tossed a two yard
scoring pass to Garrett Miller, a 12 yard touchdown toss
to Jared Nutter and a five
yard strike to Ryan Thomas
over the final 13:39 of the
outing. Sheets also picked
up 89 yards in 24 carries to
join Demitrius Serevicz with
over 1000 yards rushing on
the 2014 grid campaign.
Nutter also experienced an
exceptional game with 10
receptions for 137 yards.
Buffalo jumped out to
the early lead and never
looked back as Tucker went
75 yards on the Bison first
offensive play. Lucas caught
an 11 yard scoring pass from
Burgess to open the second
period scoring before Tucker moved the count to 18-0
with a two yard run with :14
remaining in the half.
Garrett Miller grabbed
a two yard TD pass from
Sheets for the Falcons first
points to pull Wahama to
with 12 at 18-6 but Lucas
returned the ensuing kickoff
87 yards for another Buffalo touchdown and a 24-6
advantage.
Sheets found Nutter in
the end zone on a 12 yard

that counts toward the
All-Sports Trophy was a
fourth-place standing in
football.
All of the remaining
sports — boys and girls
basketball and wrestling
during the winter and
baseball, softball, boys and
girls track and boys tennis
in the spring — this school
year will count in the AllSports Trophy standings
since at least four of the
five schools have a team in
all of those sports.
Gallia Academy has boys

toss to open the fourth
quarter but again the
visitors answered when
Burgess broke a half dozen
Bend Area tackles on a 44
yard scamper to make it
36-12. Wahama concluded
the night’s scoring when
Sheets connected with
Ryan Thomas on a five
yard pass play to bring the
final tally to 36-18.
Wahama completed its
regular season with a disappointing setback and honored seven seniors before
the grid encounter. Timmy
Gibbs, Demitrius Serevicz,
Garrett Miller, Andrew
Tyree, Jared Lake, Brady
Taylor and Brent Larck concluded the home portion of
their WHS football careers.
The White Falcons will
learn of its post-season aspirations late Saturday evening. Should the Bend Area
team advance to the postseason they will find out
who, when and where their
playoff venture will convene
on Sunday at the WVSSAC
office in Parkersburg.
Before closing apologies
are in order for Falcon lineman, Jesse Hesson, who
for the second time this
season has been misidentified in previous WHS game
descriptions.

soccer and boys tennis
teams but does not have
enough athletes to field
girls teams in those sports.
Warren does not have boys
or girls tennis teams.
After Portsmouth
leaves the SEOAL at the
end of the current school
year, all 2015-16 sports
will count in the AllSports Trophy standings
with the exception of girls
tennis because Logan and
Jackson will be the only
full-time schools with
girls tennis teams.
The SEOAL, one of
the longest-running prep
conferences in the state,
was formed by William E.
(Bill) Thomas of Wellston
in 1925 and began competition with a boys track
meet that spring, with
1925-26 being the first
full season of conference
competition.
Craig Dunn is the sports editor
of the Logan Daily News and also
serves as the media representative
to the SEOAL.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama wide receiver Jared Nutter (5) is tackled from
behind by Buffalo’s Hayden Erwin during a fourth quarter
catch Friday night in a Week 11 football contest at Bachtel
Stadium in Mason, W.Va.

Even
From Page 1B

gin by opponents, with most of that discrepancy coming in losses to playoff qualifiers
Trimble (65-6) and Belpre (63-8) during
the eighth and ninth weeks of the year. The
Eagles were also the only area team with a
winning road record (3-2) and a losing home
mark (2-3).
A mere five points ended up being the difference for Southern, which was outscored
184-179 overall by opponents. The Tornadoes
lost four of their six contests by double digits
and dropped three of their final four outcomes after starting the year with a 3-3 mark.
GAHS was outscored by a 306-167 overall
margin by the opposition, which included
being shutout twice and held under double
digits in two other contests. To their credit,
the Blue Devils did play three unbeaten teams
and four playoff qualifiers in Athens (52-0),
Point Pleasant (58-3), Belfry (41-0) and Jackson (48-14).
There is always next year, and improving on
this season should be within reach for most of
the area’s six gridiron teams in the Buckeye
State. After all, they’ll only need to finish
above the .500 mark.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2341, ext. 2101.

Briefs
From Page 1B

Last year at the mile oval, Jones
became the series’ youngest winner at
17 years, 4 months. Cole Custer broke
the record in September at New Hampshire, winning at 16 years, 7 months, 28
days.
“It’s pretty cool to pick another win
here at Phoenix,” Jones said. “Definitely
a great way to top off the year in this
truck.”
Jones gave Kyle Busch Motorsports
its series-record 13th victory in 21 races
this season. Busch has seven wins in the
No. 51, and Darrell Wallace Jr. has three
in the No. 54 Toyota.
Points leader Matt Crafton was second in his bid for his second straight
season title. He increased his lead over
Ryan Blaney to 25 points heading into
the season finale next week in Homestead, Florida.
“It’s a shame that the lights went
out,” Crafton said. “I guarantee it
was going to be exciting on the next
restart.”
Custer was third, followed by Blaney,
Ben Rhodes and Wallace.

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Rockhold
beats Bisping
SYDNEY (AP) — Luke Rockhold
beat England’s Michael Bisping by submission in their middleweight fight at
UFC Sydney on Saturday.
Rockhold brought Bisping to the
canvas early in the second round and
followed up with a guillotine hold
before the Englishman tapped out at 57
seconds into the second round.
It was No.5 ranked Rockhold’s (13-2)
12th victory in his past 13 fights and
advances the American’s claims for a
shot at the winner of the middleweight
championship title fight between Chris

Weidman and Vitor Belfort next year.
For 35-year-old Bisping (26-7) his
fourth loss in his past seven bouts is
likely to end his chance of earning a
shot at the divisional title.
It may have been the first meeting
between the two high-profile middleweights but the much-hyped animosity
stemming from a 2012 sparring session
made its way into the bout as both
fighters clashed heads in the first round,
requiring the cage side doctor to treat a
cut above Bisping’s left eye.
Bisping of Manchester, England, was
a clear crowd favourite, but appeared
hampered by nerves in early exchanges
with Rockhold, who found his rhythm
early and repeatedly kicked at Bisping’s
body.
Rockhold of Santa Cruz, California,
had finished his previous two opponents, Tim Boetsch and Costa Philippou, in the first round and it didn’t take
him much longer to get the better of the
No.9 ranked Bisping.
Early in the second round, a Rockhold
kick brought Bisping to the canvas and
Rockhold pounced, landing several
punches to Bisping’s head, before performing the guillotine-choke hold which
forced the Englishman to submit.
In other main card fights, Soa Palelei
beat Florida’s Walt Harris by technical
knockout in the second round in the
heavyweight division, and Australia’s
Robert Whittaker survived a backand-forth brawl to beat Clint Hester of
Atlanta, Georgia, by TKO in the middleweight division.
Al Iaquinta of Wantagh, New York,
produced a stunning combination of
punches to beat Ross Pearson by TKO
at 1:41 into the second round for his
fifth win in his past six fights in the
lightweight division.
In a preliminary bout, the oldest
fighter on the card, 42-year-old Anthony
Perosh won by submission against
Guto Inocente at 2:38 in the first round
of their light heavyweight bout to the
delight of the Sydney fighter’s home
town support.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 9, 2014 3B

Gallia County honors longtime coach Jack James

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

After 35 seasons on the high school sidelines, longtime football coach Jack James took in one final
contest under the Friday night lights last weekend during South Gallia’s 20-6 victory over visiting
Miller in a Week 10 TVC Hocking contest at Rebel Field in Mercerville. James — who has served as a
defensive assistant for the Rebels on and off for the last 18 seasons — is retiring from his teaching
and athletic director position at the end of the school year, making the 14-point triumph his final
game as a gridiron coach. James — who has also served as a coach at Miami Trace, Southwestern,
North Gallia and River Valley — was honored at halftime as SGHS Principal Scot West presented a
custom-embroidered jacket to Mr. James for his dedicated service to Gallia County. The red jacket
had an outline of Gallia County on the front, with the initials of each high school he coached at
located within the Gallia County emblem. The back of the jacket had ‘Coach James’ embroidered in
large letters. James was also joined by his wife, Beth, and son, Craig, during the halftime presentation.

No joke: Browns
open eyes
with dominant win
CLEVELAND (AP) — There’s no coaching change
on the horizon. The Johnny Manziel-must-play chants
have quieted — for the moment — and for the first
time since 1994, when a young, hoodie-wearing Bill
Belichick coached them, the Browns have at least six
wins in their first nine games.
And Cleveland is showing early symptoms of playoff
fever.
Laughable losers for years, these Browns are no
joke.
With a dominating win on Thursday night in Cincinnati, the Browns (6-3) moved into a tie with Pittsburgh atop the AFC North and pushed themselves
into the playoff conversation. They’re legit, and a
national TV audience got a chance to see firsthand
that this is a Cleveland team to be taken seriously.
“I know last night came as a surprise to people outside,” rookie coach Mike Pettine said Friday, “but it
didn’t come as a surprise to us.”
The Browns took it to the Bengals from the start,
ending a 17-game road losing streak inside their division and validating their record after a three-week
stretch of games against Jacksonville, Oakland and
Tampa Bay, teams a combined 2-23. No, this wasn’t a
grind-it-out-just-get-by victory. This was a quality win
over a quality opponent.
Cleveland’s rushing game, which had stalled the
past few weeks following a season-ending injury to
Pro Bowl center Alex Mack, churned out 170 yards
with three running backs scoring touchdowns. The
Browns defense forced four turnovers, including three
interceptions of Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton,
who finished with an embarrassing 2.0 passer rating.
And Browns quarterback Brian Hoyer, playing
without three of his top receivers, improved to 9-3 as
a starter. He also won over a few more of those Cleveland fans who still believe Manziel would be doing
better.
There’s a lot of football left to be played, but the
Browns are showing signs of a team getting better by
the week.
Browns safety Donte Whitner and his teammates
know they can play with anyone, but such a complete
win will only boost Cleveland’s esteem as the season
progresses and the games become more meaningful.
“It’s huge,” Whitner said. “I think a win like last
night on a national stage in the fashion in which we
won you can only breed confidence from that. We
understand that the teams that make it to the playoffs
and win and advance are the teams that get hot in
November and get hot at the right time. We just want
to get hot at the right time, and last night was a good
start to that.”
Whitner grew up in Cleveland and knows what the
Browns mean to the city. He spent part of Friday at
a barber shop where more than razors were buzzing
as Browns fans talked about celebrating until the wee
hours after a regular-season win. Cleveland is fired up
about a team opening eyes nationally.
“It means everything to me,” Whitner said. “That’s
the reason I came here. Anybody that’s from anywhere
and has any pride about where they’re from, they
would love the opportunity to come to their hometown and win. Not only win — it’s about the people of
the city and making the people happy. … That’s why
we do this. That’s why I do what I do. That’s why it’s
good to be home.”
Pettine has been careful not to make more of Cleveland’s strong start. He has preached a game-by-game
ethos to his players, reminding them that if they do
their work and take care of that week’s opponent, bigger goals are reachable — the playoffs are possible.
“It was our goal at the beginning of the year,” he
said. “We wanted to be a playoff team. Why not us?
We talked about the number of teams that had gone
from worst to first in the division and the number of
teams that didn’t make the playoffs one year, but made
them the next. We weren’t going to hide from it, but
at the same time they have to know in order to accomplish that, we have to be extraordinary, extraordinary
each week.

James helps Cavs to 110-101 win
DENVER (AP) — LeBron
James had 22 points and 11
assists on a poor shooting night
by Cleveland’s Big Three, helping
the Cavaliers hold on for a 110101 win over the Denver Nuggets
on Friday.
James, Kevin Love and Kyrie
Irving were a combined 19 of
45 from the floor. The Cavaliers
had seven players score in double
figures and finished 1-2 on their
road trip.
Cleveland wound up with 25
assists two nights after the team
tied a franchise record with just
six in a loss at Utah.
Randy Foye scored 28 points
for the Nuggets, who have
dropped four in a row. Denver
played without speedy point
guard Ty Lawson after he was
scratched due to a sore left ankle.
Splitting time at point guard
with Irving, James looked determined to get everyone involved,
passing up shots in order distribute the ball.
After leading by as many as 21
in the third quarter, the Cavs took
their foot off the accelerator and
the Nuggets pounced.
They trimmed the lead to six
on a jumper by Wilson Chandler
with 4:30 remaining. But then

Dion Waiters had a steal and a
dunk, followed by a jumper, to
increase the lead.
Irving finished with 12 points
and six assists. He had 34 points
and no assists in the loss to the
Jazz.
A good sign for Denver was
Danilo Gallinari finding his shooting touch. He was 3 for 6 from the
field, making two 3-pointers, and
finished with 10 points. Gallinari
is returning to the court after
missing nearly 18 months with a
knee injury.
Earlier this week, James wrote
on his Twitter account for everyone to “relax.” The message was
in response to talk about Cleveland’s slow start.
The Cavaliers certainly played
relaxed — at least early on.
Although, it got tight just when
the game appeared to be turning
into a rout.
At the morning shootaround,
James dismissed reports that he
and Irving recently got into a
heated disagreement. James said
the two are simply trying to get
on the same page.
Things got a little rough with
4.4 seconds left in the first quarter, when Darrell Arthur smacked
Waiters as he went in for a layup.

Waiters stayed down for several
minutes.
Arthur was called for a flagrant-2 foul and his night was
finished.
TIP-INS
Cavaliers: Matthew Dellavedova (sprained knee) missed his
second straight game. … Asked if
the team might be in the market
for another backup point guard,
coach David Blatt said: “We’re
not looking for anyone else at
this moment, not that I know of
anyway.”
Nuggets: J.J. Hickson served
the last of a five-game suspension for violating the terms of the
league’s anti-drug program. …
Center Timofey Mozgov played
for Blatt on the Russian national
team when the squad captured a
bronze medal at the 2012 London
Games. “Except for tonight, I’ve
got a very, very soft spot in my
heart for him,” Blatt said. … Broncos WR Demaryius Thomas, TE
Julius Thomas and DB Chris Harris were in attendance.
UP NEXT
Cavaliers: Host New Orleans on
Monday.
Nuggets: Visit Portland on Sunday.

Chiefs, Bills each have relevant Week 10
By Barry Wilner

doesn’t get easier, it gets one at San Francisco — points in their five vicand has a defense to be
harder.”
tories.
Starting with Sunday. feared. Justin Houston
One oddity: Kansas
They are thinking
leads the NFL in sacks
Kansas City is rolling,
City has not had a wide
playoffs in Kansas City,
with 12 and the Chiefs
which makes some sense winning five of six —
the only loss was a tight have yielded only 66
See CHIEFS | 6B
even after the Chiefs
got off to a poor start
this season.
After all, KC qualified for the postseaVETERAN’S
son last year.
They’re also thinkDAY
ing playoffs in BufCELEBRATION
falo. Wait, Buffalo?
Yep, at 5-3, like the
Chiefs, the Bills are
in the middle of the
race, seeking to end
a 14-season playoff
drought.
“I mean, 5-3 is only
the beginning,” Bills
defensive back Corey
Graham says. “We’ve
still got a long way to
go. It’s not really how
you start, it’s how you
finish the season.”
The Bills usually
finish as an also-ran,
which means their
success so far in 2014
isn’t likely to go to
their heads.
“I can understand
the question,” coach
Doug Marrone says.
HURSDAY
WO HOUSAND
“I don’t think that’s
the case at all when
OVEMBER
OURTEEN
you haven’t been to
OVB
Annex,
143
3rd
Ave.,
Gallipolis
the playoffs in such
a long time. I think
the one message I
tried to tell them … it

Associated Press

OHIO VALLEY BANK
would like to invite all

Military Veterans
to join us for a free lunch!
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11 A.M. to 2 P.M.

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Red-hot Big Ben a big task as Jets face Steelers
berger is coming off becoming the first player in NFL
history to throw six touchdown passes in consecutive
games. He and Y.A. Tittle are
the only players to have two
six-TD games in a season.
Somehow still not
impressed? Well, consider
that Roethlisberger has 12
TDs in two games — while

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the Jets’ quarterbacks have
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“What he is doing right
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Pittsburgh (6-3) has won
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The Recruit ('03, Thril) Al Pacino, Colin Farrell. TV14 Blue Bloods
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Bride Wars ('09,
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Bar Rescue "Hostile
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The Da Vinci The Walking Dead "Four
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(5:30) Atlanta Housewives Atlanta "Reunion Part 3" 3/3 Atlanta "Bye Bye and Bon Voyage" (SP) (N) Housewives Atlanta
Atlanta
Lean on Me ('89, Dra) Robert Guillaume, Beverly Todd, Morgan Freeman. TVPG
Jumping the Broom ('11, Com) Paula Patton. TVPG
Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Alaska (N)
Alaska (N)
(5:00) End of the World
Zodiac: Signs of the Apocalypse Aaron Douglas. An
Poseidon On New Year's Eve, passengers fight for
Caroline Cave. TV14
ancient astrology artifact's powers are revealed. TVPG
survival on a sinking luxury ocean liner. TV14
(5:00)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

MONDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

9:30

Fantastic Four The Making of "Lone Survivor" /(:15) The Legend of
The Newsroom "Boston"
('05, Act) Jessica Alba, Chris Hercules ('14, Act) Kellan Lutz. Hercules must fight his way The team decides to err on
Evans, Ioan Gruffudd. TV14 back to the kingdom he is destined to save. TV14
the side of caution. (SP) (N)
The Rite (2011, Drama) Anthony Hopkins, Ciarán Hinds,
There's Something About Mary ('98, Com) Cameron
Colin O'Donoghue. A skeptical American seminary student Diaz, Matt Dillon, Ben Stiller. A sleazy private detective
travels to Italy to take an exorcism course. TV14
falls for the woman his client hired him to locate. TV14
(5:00)
The Longest
Homeland "From A to B and The Affair
Homeland "Redux" (N)
Yard ('05, Com) Chris Rock, Back Again" Carrie puts her
Adam Sandler. TV14
operation in motion.
(5:15)

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Moyers and
Company

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
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ABC World
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Business
Report (N)
ABC World
News
CBS Evening
News
Two and a
Half Men
Nightly
Business
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CBS Evening
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Eyewitness
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10TV News
at 6 p.m.
Modern
Family
BBC World
News:
America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6 PM

6:30

10

PM

10:30

The
(:40) Getting
Comeback
On
Unlimited (N)
Walk of Shame ('14, Com)
James Marsden, Elizabeth
Banks. TVMA
The Affair (N)

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Voice The top 20 artists perform in front of coaches
Adam, Blake, Gwen and Pharrell. (N)
The Voice The top 20 artists perform in front of coaches
Adam, Blake, Gwen and Pharrell. (N)
Dancing With the Stars For the first time ever America
gets to choose each couples style of dance. (N)
Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Roadshow
"Miami Beach (Hour Two)" "Madison (Hour One)"

The Blacklist "The
Decemberist" (N)
The Blacklist "The
Decemberist" (N)
Castle "The Time of Our
Lives" (N)
Secrets of the Dead "Lost
Ships of Rome"

Dancing With the Stars For the first time ever America
gets to choose each couples style of dance. (N)
2 Broke Girls The Millers Scorpion "Risky Business"
(N)
(N)
(N)
Sleepy Hollow "Heartless"
Gotham "The Mask" (N)
(N)
Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Roadshow
"Miami Beach (Hour Two)" "Madison (Hour One)"

Castle "The Time of Our
Lives" (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "Leipei"
(N)
Eyewitness News at 10

2 Broke Girls The Millers
(N)
(N)

8 PM

8:30

Scorpion "Risky Business"
(N)

9 PM

9:30

Ice Warriors The US Sled
Hockey team prepares for
Paralympics.
NCIS: Los Angeles "Leipei"
(N)

10 PM

since 2012. The Steelers will
be going for it against a team
that hasn’t won since Week
1, has had problems in the
secondary all season and is
going with Michael Vick for
the second straight game
over Geno Smith.
Oh, and with Jets fans disgruntled — one even rented
a plane-pulled banner urging
the team to fire general manager John Idzik — MetLife
Stadium could have plenty of
yellow Terrible Towels flying
on Sunday.
“Anywhere we go, there’s
always lots of Steelers fans,”
Roethlisberger said. “So,
there’s been a couple of
games this year that we’ve
been on the road that it literally felt like a home game.
We hope and anticipate and
expect there to be a lot of
Steelers fans there, but we
also have to expect it to be
loud because of Jets fans.”
And for the Jets (1-8),
they’re just hoping it won’t
be boos directed at them.
“Hopefully, the fans will
come out and support, and
if not we understand,” Vick
said. “But, I think when they
do, it characterizes them as
true fans.”
Here are some other
things to watch when the
Steelers take on the Jets:
BROWN DELIVERS:
Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown leads the NFL
with 71 catches and 996
yards receiving while establishing himself as one of the
game’s elite playmakers.
He needs at least five
catches and 80 yards receiving to become the first player
in league history to reach
those marks in each of the
first 10 games of a season.
He also needs just 4 yards
receiving to reach 1,000 for
the second straight season.
“He’s right up there at the
top of the list,” Roethlisberger said of where Brown ranks
on the list of receivers he has
played with.
BELL RINGING: Pittsburgh running back Le’Veon
Bell has become a dangerous
dual threat.
He’s fourth in the NFL
with 711 yards rushing, and
leads the AFC — and is

second in the league — with
1,144 yards from scrimmage.
Bell needs just five catches to
top John L. Williams (51 in
1994) for most in team history by a running back.
“He finds a way to contribute and help us,” Roethlisberger said, “no matter
what.”
LIKE MIKE: Vick was
solid — not spectacular — in
his debut as the Jets’ starting
quarterback.
He was 21 of 28 for 196
yards and one TD and passer
rating of 105.7, and had no
turnovers. With Smith recovering from a sore shoulder,
Vick’s performance prompted
Ryan to tab him as the starter against the Steelers — and
possibly longer, especially if
he can pull out a few wins.
“From this point on, we’ve
got to tighten up on the
details,” Vick said, “and make
sure that when we do have
an opportunity to score and
we’re in the red zone that we
do come away with some
type of points, but more so
touchdowns than field goals.”
CORNERBACK CHALLENGE: Because of injuries,
inconsistency and ineffectiveness, the Jets are trying
anything they can with their
cornerback situation.
That means even holding
an in-season competition.
That’s how Marcus Williams,
signed from the practice
squad on Oct. 28, ended up
starting opposite converted
safety Antonio Allen five
days later. Ryan hinted that
Allen will move back to safety
again, which means Williams
could be joined by a new partner — stay tuned — in the
starting lineup Sunday.
CATCHING ON: It didn’t
take long for Percy Harvin to
become a focal point of the
Jets’ offense.
Against Kansas City, and
in his second game with
his new team, Harvin was
targeted by Vick 13 times
and caught 11 passes for
129 yards. Disappointed that
Seattle didn’t use him more
down the field, Harvin is
getting that opportunity in
New York — and could help
a passing game ranked last in
the league.

1

WEDNESDAY, Nov 19th

DAY
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The Last Patrol A new society is formed Foo Fighters:
Hirsch, Mark Wahlberg. Four Navy SEALs are ambushed on to salvage order after an earthquake
Sonic
a covert mission to capture or kill a Taliban leader. TVMA destroys the western states. TV14
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(5:30)
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (‘13, (:15) Baggage Claim (2013, Comedy) Taye Diggs, Paula
300: Rise of an Empire
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Patton. With her younger sister's wedding fast
(‘14, Act) Eva Green, Sullivan
the next stage of their journey without Gandalf. TVPG
approaching, a flight attendant must find a fiancé. TVPG
Stapleton. TVMA
The Affair
Homeland "Redux"
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Robert Homeland "Redux"
Pattinson. The Volturi are in uproar upon learning of the
birth Edward and Bella's child, Renesmee. TVPG

400 (HBO) Durant
450 (MAX)

9 PM

EVENT

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

10:30

Celebrity Wife Swap "Andy Celeb Wife Swap "Tracey Celebrity Wife Swap "Kate Celebrity Wife Swap "Niecy True Tori "Dealing with
Dick/ Lorenzo Lamas"
Gold/ Carnie Wilson"
Gosselin/ Kendra Wilkinson" Nash/ Tina Yothers"
Demons"
Boy Meets
The Princess Bride A beautiful young woman must be
Miss Congeniality (‘00, Com) Sandra Bullock. A tomboy FBI agent
World
rescued from her cruel fiancé by her one true love. TVPG
goes undercover in a beauty pageant to prevent a terrorist bombing. TV14
(:55)
Jumper A young man with the ability to
I Am Legend (‘07, Sci-Fi) Alice Braga, Will Smith. The seemingly
I Am
teleport himself is hunted by a group of Paladins. TV14
lone survivor of a plague struggles to survive and find a cure. TV14
Legend TV14
H.Danger
iCarly
Thunder
Max
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
NCIS "Up in Smoke" 1/2
NCIS "Till Death Do Us Part" WWE Monday Night Raw
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy AmerDad (N) American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle "The Final Frontier" Castle "Swan Song"
Castle "After Hours"
Castle "Secret Santa"
Transporter "Harvest"
(5:00)
The Matrix A computer hacker learns that his
The Fast and the Furious (‘01, Act) Vin Diesel. An undercover police The Fast and
entire reality is merely a computer-created illusion. TVMA officer infiltrates an L.A. street gang to crack a hijacking ring. TV14
the Furious
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast Loud Revved Up (N)
Fast N' Loud
To Be Announced
The First 48 "Safe House" The First 48 "Family Ties/ A The First 48 "Murder in
Growing Up Gotti "Ten
Godfather of Pittsburgh
Good Neighbor"
Treme"
Years Later" (N)
"I'm the Big Guy" (P) (N)
LakeRebels "Fight for Food" Yukon Men "Tragic Spring" Yukon "Man Up, Move Out" Yukon Men "Logjam"
Yukon Men
(5:30) Tia and Tia and Tamera
Freaky Friday An overworked mother and her daughter
(:45)
Freaky Friday (‘03, Com) Lindsay
Tamera
"Twindividuals"
adapt to each other's lives when they switch bodies. TVPG Lohan, Jamie Lee Curtis. TVPG
CSI "Mommie Deadest"
CSI: Miami "Time Bomb"
CSI: Miami "All Fall Down" CSI: Miami "Fallen"
CSI: Miami "Sudden Death"
Kourtney &amp; Khloé
E! News (N)
Live E! (N)
The Soup
Kourtney &amp; Khloé
Kourtney &amp; Khloé
(:20) Hogan's Heroes
HoganHero (:40) Hogan (:20) Family Feud
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Friends
Friends
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers "Too Alaska State Troopers "Cut
"Backwoods Bust"
"Alaskan Standoff"
"Drunk and Dangerous"
Drunk to Drive"
in the Gut"
(5:30) Pro Football Talk (L) F1 Auto Racing Brazilian Grand Prix
Premier L
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Blazers (N) MLS Soccer
America's Pre-game (L)
Red Bull Air Race "Spielberg" (N)
Lineup
World Series Film "2014" (N)
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Woah Pawn "Smurf Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Chum Pawn S. "The Pawn Stars Pawn "Pawn
"Big Guns" "Jet Setters" Pilgrim"
and Turf"
Fever"
Book of Rick"
Fiction"
Beverly Hills
Housewives Atlanta
Vanderpump R. "Instafight" VanderR "All Fired Up" (N) Euros H. "Cold War" (N)
The Real
Honey (‘03, Dra) Lil' Romeo, Jessica Alba. TV14
Honey 2 (‘11, Com) Randy Wayne, Katerina Graham. TVPG
Love/List "Twin Takeover" Love It or List It
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House (N)
(5:00) Zodiac: Signs of the
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418 SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA����ALLIPOLIS, OH

60499375

740-446-3484

60470624

“I’ve had a lot of matchups
against Big Ben through
my days,” Ryan said. “I lost
two (AFC) championship
games to him. I had some
good games against him and
all that. I’ve never seen him
this hot.
“He’s just on fire right
now.”
That’s for sure. Roethlis-

Tuesday, November 18th, 2014
Meigs High School Gymnasium
42091 Pomeroy Pike Pomeroy, Ohio

Buy regular admission tickets in
sets of 10 or more for $10 each!!

(Limited Number Available)
VIP Includes:
Free Autographed cookbook,
Magazine subscription,
VIP Parking, entry, &amp; seating.
Stage Tour, Meet and Greet with
Chef Amanda Wilson.
Doors open at 5pm
Presentation begins at 7:00pm

Featuring Culinary Specialist

Come early and visit the Vendor Booths

Purchase tickets at:
The Ohio Valley’s Greatest Hits!

Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
All Farmers Bank Location

60546942

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) — Just what Rex
Ryan and the struggling New
York Jets needed.
Mired in an eight-game
losing streak and one defeat
from setting a dubious franchise record, the Jets now
have to deal with touchdowntossing Ben Roethlisberger
and the Pittsburgh Steelers.

WYVK/WMPO
Middleport, Ohio
Shear Illusions of Middleport

For more information please call
740-992-6485 or 1-866-655-3764 or bmerritt@wyvk.com

�CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

LEGALS

Professional Services

Notices

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available

Yes, we have apples!

Open 7 days a week 8-12 &amp; 1-5
jellies, jams, cider, apple butter

Richards Brothers
Fruit Farm

Gary Stanley

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

Help Wanted General

STNA Training
Program

60542651

Please leave a message

TO A LONG TERM
NURSING HOME STAY…

Business Consulting

RICKY’S
TREE SERVICE

For more information and to
register contact:

CALL ATTORNEY
TRENT CLELAND!

Complete Tree Care
Stump Grinding • Bucket Truck

Insured
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Years Experience

60543531

DON’T LOSE ALL OF
YOUR EARNED MONEY
60540142

740-612-5128

740-992-7101

TO A LONG TERM
NURSING HOME STAY…
CALL ATTORNEY
TRENT CLELAND!

IT’S NOT TOO LATE!!
740-992-7101

60545977

IT’S NOT TOO LATE!!

Top • Trim • Hauling

LEGALS
The November meeting of the
Huntington Township is being
changed to Thursday November 20, 2014 at 7:00
PM.11/9,11/11,11/12
Lost &amp; Found
Found Boxer Med size female,
well trained, Light brown, outside dog looks about 1 yr old,
good dog call 304-576-2642
Notices

60543521

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.

LEGALS

FORECLOSURE

Property to be sold at a Trustee Sale
Mason County Court House
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
November 14, 2014 @ 9:00am

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Attention Landlords
The Housing Authority of the
County of Jackson is currently
seeking new landlords. We
have vouchers available for
qualifying families but we need
your help in assisting these
families. Should you have any
questions about renting
through our Voucher Program
please contact any of our Section 8 staff at 304-372-2345.

Engineering/Drafting Position: qualification MUST have
degree in engineering/drafting
at least 3 years experience
with Auto Cad. Position is a 40
hour plus overtime. Pay rate is
based on level of degree and
experience. After 90 days
health insurance and life insurance is offered. One week
paid vacation after 1 year of
employment and 4 paid holidays. Please send resume to
70764 State Route 124 Vinton
OH 45686 SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY.

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for HUD
subsidized, 1
BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled. Call
(304)675-6679 or pick up application at 200 Main St.

We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, and scrap metal, We Pay old Cars 50/50
scrap payment Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341

DON’T LOSE ALL OF
YOUR EARNED MONEY

Auctions

Miscellaneous

For Sale: Antique Table w/ 4
chairs $300.; Women's size 7
ski's, poles &amp; boots $125.; Stereo Equipment with cabinet 6
pieces plus large speakers
$200

740-591-8044

60541141

Sunday, November 9, 2014 5B

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.

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

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

Help Wanted General
Drivers: CDL-A. Do you want
more than $1,000 a Week?
Excellent Monthly Bonus Program/Benefits. Weekend Hometime you Deserve! Electronic Logs/Rider Program.
877-704-3773
Drivers: Class-A Solos,
Sign-on bonus paid at orientation!
Hazmat &amp; Tank, 40cpm to
Start!
All Miles Paid!
1-855-975-6806
Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. hiring AIDES. Apply at
1480 Jackson Pike Gallipolis,
email resume to
aburgett@ovhh.org or phone
740-441-1393. Competitive
wages and benefits.

Help Wanted General

2208 Jefferson Street, Point Pleasant WV
Two story duplex, each unit features 2 BDRMS,
1 BA and has approx 952 sq. ft, plus a front porch.
Property to be sold “As Is”, “Where Is”.
Questions call Paul @ 888-376-3192 Ext 8
Don’t miss out on this opportunity!

60544745

Auctions

ABSOLUTE REAL ESTATE
&amp; PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
Tuesday, November 18th at 10AM
Registration &amp; Inspection Begin at 8:30AM
Real Estate Sells at Noon
1142 Spring Valley Drive, Huntington, WV

Fulltime Legal Secretary need
in the Gallipolis area. Please
send cover letter and resume
to: Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, Box 409,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
HELP WANTED
Technician/Installer - Plumbing and Electrical experience
helpful. Job requires heavy lifting and must have valid drivers
license. Apply at Baum Lumber in Chester, Ohio or send
resume to Box 67 Chester, OH
45720
Industrial Cleaners Needed in
Buffalo, WV. Full-time Positions Available. Days/Evenings. Must pass background
check and drug test. 304-7686309
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
have basic mechanical ability.
Traveling required. Health Insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124
Vinton, OH 45686
740-669-5300
Houses For Sale
2 Story Modular Home 3BR,
$86,000. 304-675-3151
4 - Bdrm 3 bath remodeled,
New heat pump/furnace, 2.05
acres @ 41982 Kingsbury Rd.
Pomeroy $120,000 Call 740446-7029
Brick House, 3BR, 2BA, 1500
sq ft, 0.6 acre lot. Gallipolis
Ferry area. Asking $85K , No
Land Contracts, 304-675-8019
For Sale by Owner. 2 Bd, 1
1/2 Bath Back of Meadowbrook. Below Appraisal. 304344-5832
Land (Acreage)

EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Have you been looking for a position in sales that really rewards you for your efforts? Could any or several of the following words be used to describe you or your personality? Fast
paced, competitive, decisive, persistent, eager, bold, forceful,
and inquisitive. How about assertive? Do you like to meet new
people? Are you good at multi-tasking? Do you work well with
others and with the public? If you answered yes to many of
these questions, you may be the person we are seeking. Civitas Media is looking for Business Development Representative to sell online and print advertising for our Newspapers.
These are full time salary positions with a generous commission program. Benefits include Health insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz @
jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals. Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY,
VA, WV, OH, IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

Hunters-Gallia Co. Vinton 22
acres $34,500 or 8 acres
$11,500! Meigs Co. Danville
24 acres $39,900 or SR143 29
acres $46,900-more @ brunerland.com or call 740-441-1492,
we gladly finance!
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom apartment for
rent, all utilities paid, HUD accepted, Near downton Pt.
Pleasant, 304-360-0163
1BR-Apt. @ 258 State St.
Util. Pd, AC, Wash/Dryer Avail,
No Smoking, No Pets,
$450/Mo,Deposit &amp; Refs. Required 740-446-3667
2 Bedroom Apartments
Furnished-Racine, Ohio
NO PETS 740-591-5174

Houses For Rent
5 Rooms &amp; Bath, Appliances,
No Smoking, No Pets. $425 &amp;
Deposit, 44 Olive St. 740-4463945
FOR RENT: 3 br, All elec, Lg
fenced back yard. Attached
garage. 725/mo dep. Quiet
sub-division, Point Pleasant.
Pets allowed. 304-892-4325,
304-531-1197
Lg 4 BR modular w/ 3 full
baths; lg kitchen w/ island
Newly remodeled; Near Hospital. Cntrl A/C References
needed. No Pets $1000.00
mo. $1000.00 sec dep 740446-3481
Small 2 BR 1 Bath mobile
home, all appliances deposit
and references (304)675-7961
Land (Acreage)
SITE FOR SALE
Whitten Estates, Milton
1.92 Acres
Great location for Modular
Home
Nice Quiet Country Setting
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $26,700.00
Price Reduced for Quick Sell
$7,900.00
304-295-9090
Rentals
3 to 4 bedroom, 1st floor carpeted, carport, walk up attic,
$590.00 mo + deposit,NO
PETS. Kingsbury Rd,Pomeroy,
OH. (330)328-6863
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Pets
Needs a good Home, 7 month
old German Shepherd, Elk
Hound mix &amp; 7yr old Rat Terrier, Blue &amp; White, both very lovable 740-379-9515 or 740-6456857
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Auctions

3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 2 Story Home, Forced Heat &amp; Air,
1,536 +/- Square Feet, Large Front Porch, Spacious Yard
PERSONAL PROPERTY - HOUSEHOLD ITEMS AND
FURNISHINGS - KITCHEN ITEMS - LAWN FURNITURE GARAGE TOOLS
TOO MANY ITEMS TO LIST!
Visit website for Complete Listing and Photos

JOE R. PYLE AUCTION &amp; REALTY CO.
Joe R. Pyle, Broker - WV212
Shinnston, WV
888-875-1599

ESTATE
AUCTION
Saturday, November 15 - 10:00 a.m.
23895 Mountain Belle Road, Coolville, OH

DIRECTIONS: Take US Rt. 50 to Coolville, exit at Coolspot turning west onto Brimstone Road/County Hwy. 56,
continue for 3.2 miles, turn right onto Mountain Belle Road/County Hwy. 64, go .7 mile to house on right, watch
for signs.

VEHICLE: 1999 Mazda Protégé w/168,167 miles, in good condition
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES &amp; GLASSWARE
CUB CADET 1500 SERIES RIDING LAWN TRACTOR
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS and miscellaneous items

Want To Buy

Visit our web site for complete listing and photos or call for direct mailing of auction flyer.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyers
premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash/check payment. All sales are final. Food will be available.
Estate of Wanedia Maxine Rader, Athens County Case #20141144
Administrators: James, Jerome &amp; Joseph Rader

SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com������F&gt;0��-*&amp;#+/(#*)'&amp;�eh�.&amp;&amp;#*'/#/'((

60546392

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

�6B Sunday, November 9, 2014

SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Column: King James knows Cavs a work in progress
Associated Press

LeBron James is right.
Everyone needs to
RELAX.
The Cleveland Cavaliers
are going to be just fine.
But it’s going to take
time.
James and his latest version of the Big Three are
still a work in progress,
which was evident as they
lost three of their first
four games.
Not surprisingly for a
team that’s already been
anointed as the next NBA
champion, the slow start
sparked an immediate
stream of conjecture over
just what’s wrong with
the Cavs. The diagnosis
ranged from James playing
too passively as he adjusts
to a new set of teammates
(guilty as charged) to the
King not getting along
with point guard Kyrie
Irving (a run-of-the-mill
disagreement has surely
been blown waaaaay out of
proportion).
James took to Twitter,
hitting the all-caps button
for emphasis.
He, better than anyone,
knows it’s far too early to
hit the panic button.
Let’s not forget: When
James and Chris Bosh
signed with Miami in
2010, joining Dwyane
Wade to turn the Heat
into a supposedly unbeat-

Chiefs
From Page 3B

receiver catch a touchdown
pass from Alex Smith.
“We want to get every-

able juggernaut, that version of the Big Three lost
eight of its first 17 games
together.
James, Irving and Kevin
Love will likely take even
longer to mesh.
“It’s a message for
everyone to understand
how important the process is,” James said, when
asked about his tweet during Friday’s shootaround
in Denver. “Everyone
wants overnight success.
It just doesn’t happen
when teams first come
together.”
The most pressing issue
for the Cavs was tightening up when they don’t
have the ball. Heading
into Friday night’s game
at Denver, they had surrendered 101.5 points a
game (23rd overall), not
exactly the sort of defense
expected from a championship-level team. Only
two teams were allowing
opponents to make a
higher share of their shots
than Cleveland, which
was giving up a whopping
49.5 field-goal percentage.
The Knicks made nearly
54 percent in their opening-night win at Cleveland;
they were shooting less
than 42 percent against
everyone else. Utah
knocked down more than
half its shots (39 of 77)
while beating the Cavaliers
on Wednesday night, the
first time the Jazz had

eclipsed 50 percent in a
game this season. The
Portland Trailblazers shot
significantly better while
beating LeBron &amp; Co.
(49.3 percent) than they
had against their other
opponents (a cumulative
44.2 percent).
James has long been
one of the league’s top
defenders, but he must
get some help from Love
and Irving. If not, the
Cavs are unlikely to get
out of the Eastern Conference, much less win longsuffering Cleveland’s first
championship — in any
sport — since the 1960s.
Not to get too far ahead
of ourselves, but the
Cavaliers may have to go
through a postseason disappointment or two before
they finally win it all.
That’s usually the way
it’s done.
Detroit had to get over
a pair of excruciating
defeats to Larry Bird and
the Boston Celtics before
the Bad Boys finally broke
through to win the first
of two straight titles in
1989. During both of
those title runs, the Pistons knocked off Michael
Jordan and the Chicago
Bulls in the Eastern Conference finals. MJ, of
course, used the motivation from those defeats to
win a half-dozen championships.
Even the Heat lost in

their first trip to the finals
with a Big Three, beaten
by the Dallas Mavericks
in 2011. James, Wade
and Bosh closed out their
four years together with
a crushing loss to San
Antonio in last season’s
championship round.
Now, James is teamed
with Love and Irving,
who are undoubtedly
two of the league’s best
players but don’t have the
same life experiences —
not yet anyway — as the
last Big Three.
Wade already had a
championship on his
resume before he played a
minute with King James.
Bosh had appeared in a
couple of playoff series for
Toronto before he signed
with the Heat.
Love and Irving have
never been to the playoffs.
Never even played for a
winning team.
Irving spent his first
three years as the top
player on Cleveland
squads that were a combined 74 games under
.500. Love endured even
more frustration during
six seasons in Minnesota,
essentially a one-man
team as the Timberwolves
struggled through 160
more losses than wins.
Both are used to putting up gaudy numbers,
with little feedback or
criticism for the flaws in
their games.

body involved in scoring
touchdowns, but to be honest, when you’re out there
playing, that’s not something I’m thinking about,”
Smith said. “When a play
gets called, there’s reads

and things that go into it,
you’re going out there trying to throw the ball where
it goes. We’re not trying to
press and force it to this
guy or that guy.”
The action began Thurs-

day night with Cleveland
manhandling Cincinnati
24-3. The visiting Browns
(6-3) moved into a tie for
the AFC North lead with
Pittsburgh and improved
their best start since 1994

Gallipolis Daily Tribune Point Pleasant Register
740-446-2342
304-675-1333
The Daily Sentinel
740-992-2155

60546119

By Paul Newberry

Phil Masturzo | Akron Beacon Journal | MCT photo

The Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James flexes his muscle after being
fouled by the New York Knicks’ Carmello Anthony during the first
quarter on Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014, at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland.

Now they’re playing
with King James, who is
the undisputed star.
Love and Irving are the
supporting players, and
how quickly they adapt
to less-glamorous duties
— playing tough defense,
pounding the boards,
doling out assists — will
go a long way toward
determining how long it
takes the Cavaliers to win
a championship. Consider
Wade and Bosh, whose
strong play in the early
going this season shows
just how much of an ancil-

lary role they played while
LeBron was around.
Irving, for instance,
can’t go through a stretch
where he’s taken 36 shots
since his last assist (as
was the case before Friday’s game against the
Nuggets).
“This team can be as
good as it wants to be,”
James said. “But we can’t
short-cut the process
along the way.”
Maybe he should’ve
added another word to his
“RELAX” tweet.
Patience.

— during the previous edition of the franchise.
The Browns won a division game on the road for
the first time since 2008,
ending a streak of 17 consecutive losses. Cincinnati
dropped to 5-3-1.
Monday night’s game is
Carolina at Philadelphia.
Off this week are Houston (4-5), Minnesota (4-5),
New England (7-2), Indianapolis (6-3), San Diego
(5-4) and Washington (3-6).
Miami (5-3) at Detroit
(6-2)
Two of the more surprisingly successful teams so
far — hey, the Lions lead
the NFC North. Detroit has
the top-ranked defense and
Miami is third.
“It’s a pretty even match
in terms of the type of
teams facing each other,”
Dolphins defensive coordinator Kevin Coyle said.
“We’re both strong on
defense, both have explosive-play ability on offense.
I think it’s going to be a
heck of a matchup.”
Dolphins DE Cameron
Wake has 4 1/2 sacks in the
past four games. The Lions
have seven players with at
least two sacks.
San Francisco (4-4) at
New Orleans (4-4)
Two of the more disappointing teams so far,
although the Saints are
coming on with three
straight victories. Even better for them, they play their
next three at home, where
they have won their past 20
with Sean Payton coaching;
he was suspended for the
2012 season.
San Francisco has
dropped its past two games
and needs to rediscover its
offense. Maybe the Niners
will turn to Frank Gore, who
has rushed for more than 80
yards in four of his past five
games against New Orleans,
including the playoffs.
Chicago (3-5) at Green
Bay (5-3)
Both teams come back
from a bye, and Packers
quarterback Aaron Rodgers
must be chomping at the
bit. Rodgers is 11-3 against
Green Bay’s oldest rival;
this is their 190th meeting.
The Bears have lost 10 of
their past 12 against the
Packers, including playoffs.
Plus, when the Pack is
back off a bye under Mike
McCarthy, it is 7-1.
The Bears have lost
four of five and were
routed at home by

Green Bay in Week 4.
Denver (6-2) at Oakland
(0-8)
Peyton Manning and
his teammates are smarting from a shellacking last
Sunday at the Patriots. No
better way to get healthy
than against the NFL’s only
winless team.
But Manning isn’t getting
sloppy or complacent —
not that he ever would.
“I don’t look at the
record, I look at the film,”
Manning said. “I look at
how we’re playing. Your job
each week is to study the
opponent and also be sure
you’re studying yourselves
and seeing what you need
to be doing to improve.”
Oakland has lost 14
straight, its longest skid
since dropping 19 in a row
in 1961-62.
St. Louis (3-5) at Arizona
(7-1)
The Cardinals have the
NFL’s best record, and
plenty of momentum after
wins over Philadelphia and
Dallas. They have not gone
8-1 since their 11-1 season
in 1948, when they called
Chicago home.
Run defense has been a
big part of Arizona’s success: It has not allowed a
100-yard rusher in 18 consecutive games.
St. Louis has done well
in the NFL’s toughest division, going 2-1, and comes
off a nail-biting upset of San
Francisco. The Rams had
six sacks all season before
getting eight against the
49ers.
New York Giants (3-5) at
Seattle (5-3)
Seattle hasn’t looked
much like a Super Bowl
champion recently, but it
has won two in a row. And
the Seahawks expect to get
several key players back
from injury: center Max
Unger, left tackle Russell
Okung, safety Kam Chancellor and defensive tackle
Jordan Hill.
The Seahawks also got
Marshawn Lynch back into
the offensive flow last week
against Oakland. He figures to
see plenty of action this week.
New York has dropped
three straight, its run
game stagnant and its pass
defense vulnerable. The
Giants saw two starters
hurt last Monday night
in a loss to Indianapolis:
rookie guard Weston Richburg (ankle) and cornerback Prince Amukamara
(biceps).

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 9, 2014 s Page 1C

Submitted photos

Bob and Mary Murphy feed each other cake on their wedding day
on Nov. 6, 1954.

Submitted photos

Emily Thompson, founder of the Jarrol Project, is from Point Pleasant. During the project’s first year, Thompson was able to raise
$5,360 to sponsor a total of 107 school children in Jarrol, a remote village in Gambia, via local sponsorships and donations.

Project sponsors students, changes lives
By April Jaynes

ajaynes@civitasmedia.com

Bob and Mary Murphy

Vinton couple
makes marriage
last for 60 years
By Paul R. Sebastian
For the Times-Sentinel

VINTON — Nov. 6 marked the 60th wedding anniversary of Bob and Mary Murphy, pillars of Gallipolis’
St. Louis Catholic Church since 1992.
In this day and age when so many marriages can’t
get past 10 years, the Murphys made it to 60. By
word and example, what can they teach people about
marriage as God intended it to be and how to keep it
going?
Bob and Mary said they are products of the “Greatest Generation” that grew up during the Depression
years and won World War II that completely absorbed
the country. When he was 17, Bob said he misrepresented his age to recruiters and entered the U.S.
Navy for four years toward the end of World War II. In
1949, he returned to the B.F. Goodrich Tire &amp; Rubber
Co. in Akron to work the night shift on the assembly
line. By day, he was a history student at the University
of Akron.
In the early 1950s, Bob said he was introduced to a
beautiful chemist by the name of Mary Bussan, who
was working in the lab of his company’s competitor, Firestone, next door. Mary had graduated from
Clarke College, a small all-female Catholic school in
Dubuque, Iowa, with majors in math and chemistry.
Their friendship grew and Bob proposed.
During the marriage preparation, Father
Wenchester discovered that Bob was not Catholic and
invited him into the fold. Bob became a strong and
devout Catholic and never misses his daily rosary.
They were finally married Nov. 6, 1954.
Bob and Mary said did not have the unrealistic
expectations that ruin so many marriages — illusions
of a fairy tale marriage in which everything would be
bliss and they would live happily ever after. When it
doesn’t happen that way, there comes the breakup.
Bob and Mary said took their marriage vows seriously — “for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer,
in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; until
death do us part.” They knew that their marriage
would have ups and downs, joy and grief, triumphs
and disappointments. Divorce was never an option.
In fact, it’s impossible when there’s firm resolve, true
and complete mutual self-giving and dying to self with
God at the center, they said.
Bob said he climbed the corporate ladder within
the sales force to the executive level as coordinator of
private brands, but at a great price. As many successful sales people under pressure, he said he fell into
alcoholism while entertaining prospective customers
on a daily basis. But Alcoholics Anonymous — and
especially his wife, Mary — helped him through the
recovery, he said.
In retirement, Bob said he used that great victory
over self to help others conquer their addictions. It
was unflappable Mary who helped Bob keep his Irish
temper in check; she kept the peace. When things got
tough, they said they confronted it and tapped the
See MARRIAGE | 2C

POINT PLEASANT
— After many months of
planning, implementing
fundraisers and collecting donations back at
home, Emily Thompson
of Point Pleasant was
able to return to Gambia
this fall and give the children of Jarrol more than
she ever expected.
Thompson, founder
of the Jarrol Project, initially traveled to Africa
last year, where she discovered an educational
and financial need for
the children of Jarrol, a
remote village in Gambia. Since then, Thompson has been hard at
work to develop the Jarrol Project, a endeavor
that aims to provide
children there with
the funds and supplies
needed to pursue an
education and ultimately
foster development in
the village.
This year, the project
generated $5,360 and
was able to sponsor
a total of 107 school
children in Jarrol —
much more than the 60
children Thompson initially thought the project
would sponsor.
“I never thought the
project would be so successful in its first year,
and I am overwhelmed
by the generosity of
everyone who contributed to the project in
anyway,” she said. “It all
makes a huge difference
in the lives of these children.”
With the project’s
money, Thompson was
able to pay for school
fees for 27 students,
development fees for 21
students, exam fees for
21 students, lunch for
the whole year for 53
children, 110 uniforms,
110 backpacks, 1,100
small notebooks, 50 set
boxes (which include a
ruler, compass, eraser,
pencil sharpener, etc.)
50 pairs of tennis shoes
and 700 pencils.
Students of all ages
were sponsored at the
following grade levels:
six children in nursery
school (similar to preK,) 53 children in primary school (1-6 grade,)
27 students in secondary
school (7-9 grade) and
21 students in senior
school (10-12 grade.)
Thompson said items
such as uniforms and
shoes are just as impor-

ABOVE, Thompson was also able to purchase 110 backpacks and 50 pairs of tennis shoes for
students via the Jarrol Project. BELOW, everything purchased for the Jarrol Project was bought
brand new from a market in Gambia. In addition to school fees, uniforms, shoes, backpacks and
lunch fees, Thompson was able to purchase the following school supplies: 1,100 small notebooks,
50 set boxes and 700 pencils.

tant as school fees, as
students are often sent
home if they come to
school without a uniform
or shoes.
“There are many
factors that hinder
the acquirement of an
education (in Jarrol,)
so all of these items are
extremely important.
These students want
desperately to attend
school and they will try
and try again to do so,”
she said. “In my short
time there, I saw several
students walk the blazing hot mile to school
without shoes, a uniform
or both, only to be sent
right back home. So, as
you can see, these items
are arguably as important as any required fees
the students must pay.”
School lunch fees are
also important as school
children do not always
have lunch money every
day and consequently do
not get to eat.
Thompson said she
was able to purchase a
year’s worth of lunch
in advance for students

sponsored at the primary
school because this was
an option this particular
school offered.
“It’s important to
note that, if the children
do not have money for
lunch that day, they
will not eat, and many
children face this reality daily,” she said. “To
put their situations into
perspective, their lunch
costs the equivalent of
about 2 cents, and many
families cannot afford to
send lunch money with
their children on a daily
basis.”
Another challenging
factor that Thompson
was able to remedy via
the project’s sponsors
and donations was past
due bills that some
senior school students
were unable to pay,
which consequently
forced these students to
quit school.
“Three of the students
on the list were delinquent because they did
not pay fees from the
previous year(s) and
were sent home from

school until they were
able to pay the bills,”
Thompson said. “So,
the project paid these
students’ past and present fees and they were
re-enrolled in school.”
Thompson said having
the opportunity to give
the children an education is an experience she
can’t quite describe and
that the children were
overwhelmingly grateful.
“I don’t think I can
adequately describe the
feelings and experiences
I had while I was in Jarrol,” she said. “From
the moment I arrived,
before most people even
knew what was about
to happen, everyone
was very welcoming,
accommodating and
interested. They immediately played traditional
music and everyone
danced to welcome me
to the village. When my
mission was revealed to
them and they learned
of the project, they were
overcome with emoSee PROJECT | 2C

�LOCAL

2C Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Local photographer receives state recognition
GALLIPOLIS — During the Portsmouth vs. Gallia Academy High
School football game on Memorial
Field, between the first and second
quarter, Tawney of Tawney Jewelers
and Studio in Gallipolis, was presented a “Friend of Youth” award from
the Ohio High School Athletic Association for his 50 years of filming the
GAHS football games.
Tawney started filming the games
in 1962, under coach Jack Olcott
and finished 13 coaches later, ending
with coach Mike Eddy.
Fifty years later, upon Tawney’s
retirement from filming, he continues
to enjoy working every day at Tawney Jewelers &amp; Studio at 422 Second
Ave. in downtown Gallipolis. His
father, Max Tawney, started the Stu-

dio in Gallipolis in 1933, at 33 Court
St. This year marks the 81st anniversary of the family owned business.
Tawney said it was amazing that he
filmed some of today’s football players’ grandparents, who played in the
early 1960s.
The plaque was presented by the
Southeast District Athletic Board
and given to Tawney by one of the
coaches, for whom he filmed 1983-97
and 1999-2001, Coach Brent Saunders. Tawney also received recognition from State Senator Bob Peterson, 17th Senate District; President
of the Ohio Senate, Tom Niehaus;
Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, William G. Batchelder
and Ohio Representative Ryan Smith,
House District 93.

Ohio Valley Christian Honor Roll

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United
Producers, Inc., livestock
report of sales from Nov. 5,
2014.

Submitted photo

Back to Farm
Cow/CalfPairs, $1,200$2,300; Bred Cows, $835$1,675; Baby Calves, $65$220; Goats, $39-$70; Hogs,
$86-$92.

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers,
$200-$323, Heifers, $200Upcoming specials
$265; 425-525 pounds,
11/12/2014 — Fat cattle
Steers, $200-$287.50, Heifers, sale, 10 a.m.
$200-$241; 550-625 pounds,
11/19/2014 — Feeder sale,
Steers, $190-$250, Heifers,
10 a.m.
$190-$241; 650-725 pounds,
11/26/2014 — No sale.
Steers, $190-$235, Heifers,
$185-$210; 750-850 pounds,
Direct sales or free on-farm
Steers, $175-$205, Heifers,
visits.
$165-$185.
Contact Dewayne at (740)
339-0241, Stacy (304) 634Cows
Well muscled/fleshed, $100- 0224, Luke (740) 645-3697 or
Mark (740) 645-5708
$130; medium/lean, $85-$99;
or visit the website at www.
Thin/light, $37.50-$84; Bulls,
$81-$135.
uproducers.com.

GALLIPOLIS — The following students have been named
to the Ohio Valley Christian
School Honor Roll for the first
nine weeks. Students earning
all A’s are denoted with an
asterisk.
First grade: *Nathaniel Beaver, *Benjamin Brown, *Savannah Davison, *Kayleigh Denny,
Eli George, *Mia Howerton,
*Garrett Johnson, *Ethan
Killingsworth, Tyler Morris,
*Joshua Staufer.
Second grade: *Makayla
Anderson, *Isaac Conley,
Nathan Hall, *Jazahera Moore,
*Brittyn Snedaker.
Third grade: *Austin
Beaver, Cash Burnett, Kelsey
Henry, Kathleen Johnson,
*Michael Staufer, *Emily
White, *Madeline Young.
Fourth grade: *Catherine

Haggy, *Micah Hughes, Trinity
Norville.
Fifth grade: John Case,
Kylie Henry, *Sarah Johnson,
*Cody Mathias, *Mallory
McDonald, Chloe Payne, Jeremiah Riddle.
Sixth grade: Josiah Johnson,
Emma Shamblin, *Laura Young.
Seventh grade: Amy Dong,
Laura Johnson, *Marcie Kessinger, Dayja’ Leach, *Autumn
Trent.
Eighth grade: Trevor Blank,
Jeremiah Case, *Emily Childers.
Ninth grade: *Shelby Bing,
Cori Hutchison, Benjamin
Riddle, Katie Westfall.
10th grade: Jared Parissi,
*Debbie Reed.
11th grade: Eric Blevins,
Ann Bowman, Caleb Burnett, *Ashley Childers, Marshall Hood, Morgan Jenkins,

Hannah Westfall.
12th grade: *Emily Carman,
*Alexis Clark, *Ashten Crank,
*Teah Elliott, Cassandra
Hutchison;
The following students made
the B Honor Roll for the first nine
weeks: Second grade: Rowdy
Lybbert, Emily Tolliver; Third
grade: Haylie Beaver, Madison
Beaver, Savannah Riddle; Fourth
grade: Kenzie Childers, Christina Dong, Lillian Tolliver; Fifth
grade: Isaac Blank, Lalla Hurlow,
Gabriel Tolliver, Conner Walter;
Seventh grade: Levi Anderson,
Aaron Hall; Eighth grade: Justin Beaver, Wyatt Cox, Makala
Sizemore; Ninth grade: Zachary
Long, YuYan Sun; 10th grade:
Rachel Sargent; 12th grade:
Danny Ballantyne, Evan Bowman, Phil Hollingshead, Rebekah
Sargent

River Valley Middle Honor Roll for first nine weeks
BIDWELL — The following
students have been named
to the River Valley Middle
School Honor Roll for the
first nine weeks. Students
earning all A’s are denoted
with an asterisk.
6A-Hatfield: Deandra Brader, Devonte Barber, Michael
Cicoff, *Jaylyn Hunt, *Jordan
Lambert, Mikenzi Pope, Jase
Shaw, Jake Smathers, Patrick
Taylor, Gracee Wamsley, Alexis Yates, Autumn Yates.
6B-McCaulla: *Zoe Milliron, Breanna Taylor, Samantha Ferrell, Sydnee Runyon,
Bailey Young, Lindsey Abbott,
Brianna Blazer, Ryan Weber,
Christian Higgenbothan,
Cassie Criner, Kacey Williamson, Kennedey Lambert.
6C-Caldwell: Chase Barber,
Seth Bowman, Austyn Eblin,
*Akira Gilbert, Skyla Hall,
Seth Jones, *Camron Miller,

Marriage

Sierra Somerville, Riley Stevens, Koren Truance.
6D-Warden: Isaac Barrett,
Adrienne Burd, *Kristen
Clark, Wyatt Coon, Jayden
Dunlap, Evander Ehman, Alex
Euton, Jason Hollingsworth,
Jacob Lollathin, Jaxxin Mabe,
Libby North, *Alison Roush,
Elle Steele, Chloe Swick,
Madison Swisher, Alexis
Thomas, Bailey Wray.
6E-Jacks: Alexis Campbell,
Hunter Delancey, Isiah Harkins, Alexis Hogan, Regina
Maynard, Rebecca Pearce,
Jessica Rife, Brooke Rucker,
*Megan Spencer, Connie
Stewart.
7A-Walker: Jordan Burns,
*Olivia Cohee, Breanna
Dodrill, Andrea Green, Tyler
Hess, Natalie Holmes, Morgan House, *Lora Kinney,
Jacob McGhee, Matthew
Mollohan, Savannah Mor-

row, Cierra Reynolds, Shayla
Sanger, Katie Slone, *Ryan
Snyder, *Cole Thaxton, *Cole
Young.
7B-Graham: Karlee Didelotte, Natysis Leach, Makayla
Lambert, Devan Martin, Hannah Thomas.
7C-Roderick: Cameron
Hess, Chantelle McLainBrown, Savannah Reese.
7D-Holliday: Katie Baker,
*Kaylee Gillman, Colton
Gilmore, *Savannah Livingston, Derek Reese, *Ashley
Schartiger, *Derick Thompson, *Alex Wood.
7E-Daniels: Airika Barr,
Chase Caldwell, Ethan Cline,
Whitney Dobbins, Jade
Douglas, Evalena Ehman,
Josh Farmer, Ashley Hatfield,
Hannah Johnson, Austin Livingston, Cassidy Oiler, Darian
Peck, Gabriele Ramirez, Jared
Reese, Ryan Robinson.

helped her parents raise her nine brothers and
sisters, plus her own six, that’s no big deal for
Mary. For Bob, with only one sibling, a lot of
From Page 1C
children was an adjustment and over the years
he became very good with them.
graces of the sacrament of matrimony. BelongSo how have they been able to keep their
ing to a charismatic prayer community also
marriage ticking for 60 years?
was a big help, the couple said.
“I don’t see obstacles. I just deal with them,
The fruits of their marriage were six chilriding with the bumps. That’s life,” Mary said.
dren. Mary was a full-time mother. They lived
Bob said his greatest joy is “being married
through the grief of losing baby Kathleen a
to a lovely woman who had faith and trust
day after birth, but God blessed their famin me, taught me how to be a Christian, and
ily with a religious vocation as Sister Mary
brought me to the Lord.”
became a dedicated missionary nun, giving
The couple said they don’t have a comher life to God and His people of Mexico.
plicated formula for staying married for six
There’s also Coleen Smith, Maureen Kormandecades.
ik, Patty Wallen, Kevin Murphy and Bridget
“Put one foot in front of the other and keep
Cline.
going,” Mary said. She added that she doesn’t
Their family of eight continues to multiply;
get upset and stays on course with a quiet
the extended family includes 16 grandchildren
determination and faith. Bob said he believes
and 11 great-grandchildren that have come
the secret is in faith, trust, kindness, tolerance
along with more to come.
and patience.
Retirement in 1992 did not slow Bob
Mary also credits their successful marriage
down. Born in Vinton, he returned to his
to prayer and faith.
roots in Gallia County with Mary and
“Make choices along the way and trust in
became an alcoholism counselor for almost
the Lord,” she said.
five years. During his spare time, he became
“Trusting each other, mutual kindness,
a grand knight (president) of the St. Louis
patience and tolerance,” Bob said.
Council of the Knights of Columbus. Mary
The parishioners of St. Louis Church and
was a CCD teacher and ran the Vacation
friends are invited to the 10 a.m. Mass on
Bible School for many years. Today, Mary
Sunday to celebrate the Murphys 60-year milecontinues as a Eucharistic minister and a
stone and honor them at the monthly Knights
member of the choir.
of Columbus Benefit Breakfast for a memorial
Although Bob could not be as active in his
to the unborn in the cemetery immediately fol80s, he still hauls his grandchildren to the
lowing. People can send cards to the couple at
Parish School of Religion — and McDonald’s,
13467 Ohio 160, Vinton, OH 45686.
too — for motivation. Bob, 86, and Mary, 83,
also help their widowed daughter raise the
Dr. Paul R. Sebastian is professor emeritus of
five grandchildren who live next door. Having management at the University of Rio Grande.

8A-Shepherd: Cheyanne
Allman, Avery Barcus, Bailey
Bennett, Baylee Browning,
Madisyn Burd, Jacob Campbell, Britney Davis, Katelynn
Dement, Dakota Doss, Cole
Franklin, Ashley Gilbert, Beth
Gillman, Leah Higginbotham,
Maddie McClure, Emily
Perry, Eric Weber.
8B-Hysell: Kelsey Brown,
*Mattison Comer, *Hunter
Copley, *Destiny Dotson, Ian
Eblin, *Bradyn Eblin, Adrianna Fox, *Jordan Garrison,
Chloe Gee, *Daniel Hatfield,
*Rachel Horner, *Sierra Huffman, *Logan Hunt, *Josie
Jones, *Julie Nutter, *Alexus
Painter, Allivia Runyon, Corey
Shaw, Alyssa Sheets, *Bryce
Simpson, *Alyssa Thomas,
Mya Trout, *Susan Workman.
8C-MacGregor: Brad
Bainter, Alexis Dunlap, Jack
Knox, Destiny Lemley, Seth

Project

McDonald, Destiny Miller,
Bailey Petrie, Mckayla Phoenix, Chassidy Rupe, Tyler
Woodrow.
8D-Bryant: Madison Harrison, Britani Hash, Kiley
Kingsley, Shali Kiser, Leah
Larson, Juliann Lemley,
McKenzie Martin, Destinee
McGuire, Nathan Michael,
Emilee Neekamp, Kaytlin
Test, Bethany Wray.
8E-McGuire: Emily Barker,
Jonathan Bays, Tyler Blackburn, Jenna Brammer, Samantha Burris, Adrianna Cox,
Chasity Deckard, Cierra Franklin, Baylee Hollanbaugh, Skylar Jones, Dylan Lemley, Caleb
McKnight, Andrew Mershon,
Isabella Moore, Lyvia Prince,
Cierra Roberts, Abby Stout,
Lexi Stout, Rory Twyman.
Williams-Tristen Crouse, JC
Fields, Billy McCombs, Jonathan Menendez.

themselves. I’m thankful
I was able to play a part
in changing their lives
From Page 1C
for the better.”
Plans to raise money
tion and excitement,
for next year’s students
and proceeded to
are already in the works,
shower me with love
and Thompson said she
and gratitude. They pre- would like to continue
pared a celebration for
the one-on-one sponsorthe following day and
ships, however getting
began planning an offiorganizations involved
cial ceremony to recog- is another approach she
nize the generosity of all aims to take.
those who contributed
“I like (the one-onin any way to the projone) concept because
ect, from the sponsors
it provides donors with
to those assisting me on a more intimate look
the ground.”
into the issue and gives
The children of Jarthem an opportunity
rol recognize that they
to have contact with,
are gaining an overall
and updates from, their
better life experience
respective students,”
by getting an education, she said. “Additionally,
Thompson said.
inspired by the sponsor“Education is so valu- ing of six students by
able; they recognize that Tom Tom’s and of seven
and they responded to
students by the St.
this gift accordingly.
Paul Lutheran Church
Presenting the students Women, I would like to
with their sponsoradvertise the option to
ship packages was an
other organizations —
amazing experience,”
schools, classes, churchshe said. “We are gives and businesses — as
ing these children the
well. I would love if this
opportunity to have
eventually became one
a brighter future, to
of Point Pleasant’s interescape poverty and
national projects.”
Thompson said she
create better lives for

is thankful for the donations and sponors the
project received this year
— and because of these
efforts, lives are changed.
“I would like to thank
everyone who played
a part in giving these
children the gift of education. I am amazed by
the immense generosity
and interest, and cannot
emphasize enough how
much it means to these
families and to me. I
have a deep appreciation
and admiration for those
who selflessly give to
those in need,” she said.
“I have encountered this
countless times since the
inception of the Jarrol
Project and it is because
of acts like these that we
achieve change.”
For more information
about the Jarrol Poject,
check out its Facebook
page and visit the project’s website at www.
thejarrolproject.com.
Individuals can also
donate directly to the
project by visiting www.
gofundme.com/5h604o.
Reach April Jaynes at (740) 4462342 ext. 2108 or on Twitter @
ajaynes_reports

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, November 9, 2014 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

5 4
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8
9
6 1
4
3 1
8
8
9
4
6
7
4
3 9
9
1 2
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6
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

Difficulty Level

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8

�LOCAL

4C Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Buckeye Hills Career Southwestern Elementary
Honor Roll, first nine weeks
Center Honor Roll
RIO GRANDE — The following
students have been named to the
Buckeye Hills Career Center Honor
Roll for the first nine weeks. Students
earning all A’s are denoted with an
asterisk.
Gallia Academy High School:
Brittany Angel*, Michael Arthur,
Matthew Cremeans, Samantha
Curry, Austin Davis, Jessica Dillon*, Isaac Heskett, Anna Holley,
Lonnie Johnson, Makayla Large,
Reuben Lawson, Hunter Martin,
Hannah Meek, Jessica Morris,
Katlin Muncy, Shelby O’Dell*,
Cera Pasquale, Carlee Proffitt,
Toby Rupe, Chace Smith, Nicholas
Staten, Brandon Taylor, Michael

Walters, and Hannah Wyatt.
River Valley High School: Kallie Birchfield, Brantley Brown, Jalynn Cain*, Hunter Collins, Lee Jay
Combs, Cora Conley, Joshua Glassburn, Alexandria Hamilton, Sarah
Holcomb, Shiane Johnson*, David
Kerns, LeAaron Leach, Chase McElfresh, Dwight Saxon, and Breanna
Yates.
South Gallia High School: Alyssa
Campbell, Shantaya Cremeans,
Rebecca Daines, George Duty,
Raleigh Evans*, Ronny Evans, Cierra
Fortner, Alaina Kuhn, Jena Mullins,
Caitlyn Nelson, Tessa Reynolds,
Zackary Rodgers*, James Sims,
Christian Spaun, and Logan Waugh.

PATRIOT — The following students
have been named to the Southwestern
Elementary School Honor Roll for the
first nine weeks. Students earning all
A’s are denoted with an asterisk.
KA — Mrs. Morgan: Keira Christian, Carson Cochran, Chelsea Costilow,
Elizabeth Doss, Wyatt Frazier, David
Herron, John Manley, Rory Martin,
Hunter McCombs, Madison Miller, Lilah
Nolan,Peyton Parrish-DeShields, Elexis Ray,
Aiden Ruggles, Clay Salyers, Gabe Stover.
1A Grade — Mrs. Carter: Braxton
Crews, Owen Davies*, Morgan Davis*,
Ashlee Lambert*, Wyatt Myers*, Zuyleme Reitmire*, Maggie Stover*, Morgan Taylor*, Brady Vaughn.
2A Grade — Mrs. Wood: Wade Bar-

cus, Morgan Cochran, Chloe Costilow*,
Garrett Gilbert*, Harley Hale, Reed Layton*, Haylee Barfield, Carlee Manley*,
Maleyiah Masters, Marissa McGuire, Will
Mullins*, Dakota Myers, Payton Thompson, Braden Thornton*, Gage West.
3A Grade — Mrs Hood: Jordan
Cochran, Madisyn Crisp, Maria
McFann, Ella Nida, Alexis Nolan.
3B — Mrs. Meek: Rees Booth,
Reegan Brown*, Emilee Lambert, L.J.
Perry, Mikey Swords, Sammi Walter*.
4A — Mr. Burnette: Dakota Gilbert,
Kodi Mandeville, Gus Nolan, Cadence
Shriver, Jena Shriver.
5A — Mrs. Walker: Allie Arrowood,
Austin Campbell, Mallory Gilbert, Conner Nibert, Edgar Nolan.

Vinton Elementary School Honor Roll

William and Kendra Burleson

A Gallipolis native
graduates from
Army flight school
FORT RUCKER, Ala. — U.S. Army Warrant Officer William K. Burleson II recently graduated from
the U.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence Flight
School.
Burleson, of Gallipolis, graduated as a qualified
AH-64 Apache pilot who will join his permanent unit
at Fort Carson, Colo., in December.
He served for nine years as an enlisted infantryman
in the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C.,
completing two combat tours to Afghanistan, and two
combat tours to Iraq. Burleson then applied and was
selected as a warrant officer candidate and graduated
as an honor graduate from Warrant Officer Candidate
School in May 2013.
Following WOCS, he completed Initial Entry Rotary
Wing Common Core Training and then chose to train
in the AH-64 Apache. After graduating from flight
school on Oct. 30, Burleson received his orders to
Fort Carson. He and his family will be stationed there
beginning in December.
Burleson is the son of Bill and Penny Burleson, of
Gallipolis. He and his wife, Kendra, have three daughters.

VINTON — The following
students have been named to
the Vinton Elementary School
Honor Roll for the first nine
weeks. Students earning all A’s
are denoted with an asterisk.
KA Roach: Mariah Brock,
Addison Browning, Kaylin
Burger, Remee Cremeens,
Kaleb Hatfield, Maddison Hollanbaugh, Deandra Holmes,
Cayden Kirby, Dylan Kline,
Casey Marcum, Ava McClure,
Riley Runyon, Karissa Unroe,
Luke Wellington.
KB Jones: Trent Canter, Jillian Hall, Morgan Hash, Stephanie Hill, Cash Hunt, Sophia
Marcum, Megan Prince, Kylee
Thompson, Brooke Unroe,
Kierra Willison.
KC Whittingon: Dolly Brewer, Khloe Bonecutter, Sevin
Brown, Ayla Harden, Christopher Henry, Brianna Houston,
Tucker Kiskis, Paige Myers,
Brylee Preston, Joshua Stanley, Braxton Weaver, Austin
Wright.
1A Toth: *Lila Barcus,
*Braden Bennett, *Wyatt
Braden, Landyn Daniel, *Logan
Deel, *Brynna Dodrill, *Braylee Fellure, Karsyn George,
*Elias Hatfield, *Andy Mares,
*Carson Mollohan, *Gracyn
Null, Derrick Shriver, *Logan
Wellington.
1B Davison: *Ava Smith,
*Jacob Reynolds, *Landon
Burns, *Taylor Bowen, *Nate
Combs, *Grace Engle, *Caeden
Huffman, *Ethan Ditty, *Madyson Looney, Kaydence Conrad,
Maddox George, Nick Miller,
Ciara Wray, Ian Bragg.
1C Gilmore: *Brayden
Clendenin, *Natalie Spencer,

*Lilyian Saxon, *Aaron Runyon, *Michael Taylor, *Damien
Harmon, *Madelyn Jones,
*Bryleigh Kelley, *Everett
Levacy, *Kadie Kingsley, Nhya
Lindsey, Caiden Wamsley.
2A Merry: *Katie Maynard,
*Kirsten Campbell, *Bryleigh
Saxon, *Michael Tackett,
*Tristan Pearce, Kallie Burger,
Caden Caldwell, Brendan
Clagg, Kylie Denney, Lyla
Groves, Phillip Hash, Paige
Kemper, Michael Lawson, Gracie Marcum, Uri Perry, Kaleb
Rapp, Ethan Richardson, Evan
Richardson, Kristen Stapleton,
Levi Wood.
2B Orsburn: *Aden Bentfeld,
*Bethany Blanton, *Nicolas
Casey, *Logan Clay, *Haylee Eblin, *Alexia Fitzwater,
*Kelsie Gibson, *Sydney Hammond, *Carson Hollanbaugh,
*Abbigail Kirk, *Josie Ramey,
*Keerstin Shaver, *Emma
Smith, *Castle Tackett, *Bailey Willis, Alex Allman, Skye
Elkins, Hayden Kemper, Katelyn McCown, Joseph Shriver,
Gary Truance.
3A Tenney: *Meranda Clark,
*Aubrey Pollock, *Dameion
Shriver, *Brooklyn Spencer,
*Emma Truance,* Rylie Wolfe,
Abbigail Browning, McKenna
Burns, Kendra Clark, Kenlee
Cole, Abbigail Hollanbaugh,
Brooklyn Jones, Kraig Lemley,
Kenzie Lloyd, Levi Partlow,
Ethen Unroe.
3B Oiler: *Amanda Barnes,
*Lydia Jones, *Jack Paxton,
Matthew Baird, Logan Bartels,
Jorja Belcher, Molli Cooper,
Grace Cremeans, Marijane
Estes Evans, Kylee Kemper,
Anthony Petty, Morgan Sager,

Jones’ celebrate
50 years together

Hannah Snodgrass.
3C Fortner: *Sierra Clay,
*Hailey Johnson, *Andrew
Dodrill, *Taylor Whealdon,
Hannah Belville, Karlee Cox,
Chance Hall, Alexandria Harden, Kaylen McGinness, Sarah
Mitchell, Alexis McCarty, Abigail Siciliano.
4A Davies: *Owen Barrett, *Dillon Burns, *Haley
Clark, *Spencer Coldwell,
*Colt Engle, *Carson Mares,
*Sammy Mitchell, *Emily
Reynolds, *Kaden Thornton,
Kade Alderman, Carmin Barcus, Gabby Cooper, Joseph
Dawson, Riley Evans, Carmen
Gillenwater, Allison Hess, Robbie Keeton, Conner Mayes,
Dillion Smathers, Mackenzie
Taylor, Summer Walter, Seth
Witt.
4B Stewart: *Lillian Hawks,
*Justin Stump, Bradley Ditty,
Christian Fry, Kirsten Groves,
Jacquelyn Harrison, Makayla
Johnson, Kaylieona Kemper,
Briana Martin, Kaylee Norman,
Trae Russell, Shayne Strange,
Skylan Wray;
5A Brown: Chevy Barnes,
Andrew Bentfeld, Erika Justus,
Kayla Miller, Mason Rhodes,
Preston Runyon, Ethan Schultz, Lauren Twyman, Amanda
Velazquez.
5B Tenney: Logan Aeiker,
Mercedeez Cochran, Nathan
Brown, Will Cole, Kyla Craycraft, Levi Dodrill, Hunter
Eblin, Annabel Greathouse,
James Hall, *Grace Hash, *Will
Hash, *Shaelynn Huffman,
Mason Miller.
5C Schlater: Jolene Braden,
Landen Dodrill, Caden Pennington, Kelsey Price.

The Mountaineer
mascot has
soft spot for kids
By Angelee Wiley
Associated Press

Pictured are Alexa Cook and Brody Cook

Submitted photo

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT

Submitted photo

John I. and Judy A. Jones recently celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary.

Alexa Cook announces the birth of her baby
brother, Brody Cook. Parents are Sarah and Cody
Cook, of Racine. Grandparents are Edna and Marvin Eddy, of Racine, Keith Cook, of Texas, and
Jenny and Don Whan, of Syracuse.
Brody was born Oct. 29, 2014, at Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.

Martinsburg man cleans up cemetery
By John McVey
Associated Press

MARTINSBURG, W.Va. — Pete
Miller of Martinsburg had an interest
in historic cemeteries long before such
interests became popular.
Miller likes to visit cemeteries
because of their peacefulness, he said
in a recent interview.
“Life and death go hand-in-hand,” he

said. “I respect all cemeteries. I believe
our heavenly father gave us the gift of
death so we can escape this physical life.”
While exploring Greenhill
Cemetery on East Burke Street in
Martinsburg in the 1970s, Miller
discovered a cemetery for free
blacks that borders the northeast
corner of Greenhill. He estimates it
might date from the late 1700s. It is

reportedly one of the earliest known
black cemeteries in the South.
About 1.5 acres in size, the cemetery
is wedged between East Burke Street
and a marshy wetland. The grounds
cling to the side of an at-times quite
steep hill falling away from the street
toward what was once a low-lying
street that was known as Bull Lane, the
path of which is still visible.

RIVESVILLE, W.Va. — Whether it’s cheering
on West Virginia University at a football field or
basketball court, Michael Garcia’s role as Mountaineer is an important job.
But Garcia will always say it is not his most
important job.
No matter what the age may be, Garcia loves
interacting with and helping children.
“I think that’s one of my favorite parts, if not
the most important parts of what I do, is for the
youth,” Garcia said. “If I can get (a good message)
across to any of them, that’s my goal.”
On Oct. 22, Garcia visited Fairmont and
dropped in on three Head Starts around the county. One in particular was Rivesville Head Start.
Garcia was greeted by loud cheers of “Let’s Go,
Mountaineers” from the students.
But as excited as the students were to see Garcia, he was just as excited to see them.
“It’s hard to explain how cool it is, and I think
I take it for granted sometimes,” Garcia said.
“When you can teach kids things valued by the
state of West Virginia, it’s cool to know you can
make an influence in a positive way.”
Being the Mountaineer is a lot of responsibility.
It’s a responsibility that he makes sure not to take
lightly. Garcia finds it difficult to describe what it
means to be a Mountaineer.
“A lot of times I say it’s hard to put into words,
but I found the best way to put it into words is
that I’m being an example (and) dedicating my
time to something I know is important,” he said.
Garcia understands how excited the kids are
when they see him walk in because it wasn’t too
long ago that he was sitting in their seat.

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