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

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Scenes from the 12th
Annual Mothman
Festival... C1

Partly sunny.
High near 76. Low
near 58.... A2

Week 5 football
coverage... B1

Charles Gary Cox, 59
Carol Jean McCoy, 69
Barbara A. Smeltzer, 77
Edna Mae Smith, 88
Chuck Williams, 81

$2.00

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 38

Four arrested following Meigs drug busts
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

MIEGS COUNTY —
Three drug busts — two of
which were methamphetamine labs — resulted in
four arrests by the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Office on
Thursday.
Thursday was a very
busy day for officers with
the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Office and those involved
in the neutralization of

methamphetamine labs.
According to Meigs
County Sheriff Keith
Wood, his office — along
with multiple other agencies — responded to a
methamphetamine lab at
the Old Town Creek Wildlife Area in the Great Bend
area of Meigs County on
Thursday afternoon (3:18
p.m.) and responded to a
second lab at the Old Fort
Meigs Campground on
Thursday evening (8:48

p.m.).
Officers
also
responded
to another
drug-related call bePatricia
tween the
McFall
time of the
two methamphetamine labs.
Sheriff Wood said his office was contacted Thursday afternoon by an Ohio
Department of Natural

Leslie Storms

Resources
Division
of Wildlife Officer at the
Old Town
C r e e k
Wi l d l i f e
Area on a

traffic stop.
Upon speaking with the
occupants of the vehicle,
Deputies and a Wildlife
Officer located a mobile
methamphetamine
lab

with four
one-pot
re a c t i o n ary
vessels, along
with other
d r u g s
Whitney
and drug
Laughlin
paraphernalia. The
discovery resulted in the
arrest of Patricia McFall
of Portland and Whitney
Laughlin of Ravenswood,
W.Va.

M c Fa l l
and Laughlin
are
both being
held at the
Middleport Jail.
Zachary
Deputies
Matthew
were also
assisted at
the scene by Middleport
Police Officers, Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
See ARRESTS | A2

Defense counsel
withdraws from
police officer
shooting case
Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

Stephanie Filson | photos

Simple beauty
Barns add
character,
charm to local
rural landscape
GALLIA COUNTY — Nothing feels
more like autumn than driving on
secondary country roads taking in
the ever-changing rural landscape,
complete with rolling mature
corn fields, bales of hay, colorful
pumpkins and gourds … and barns
of all designs, sizes and degrees of
disrepair. No matter; the older the
barn, the more steeped in mystery
and therefore, a find! The barns
pictured were discovered on an
adventure across Ohio 588 (and
beyond!) Friday afternoon.

‘Rachel’s Challenge’ coming to Meigs local schools
Character
development
program addresses
bullying
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — “Rachel’s Challenge,” an inspirational program
where kindness, compassion and
character are stressed as a way of reducing bullying in schools, is coming
to Meigs High and Middle Schools
on Nov. 7.
Announcement of the upcoming
anti-bullying event was made at last
week’s meeting of the Meigs Local
School Board by David Deem, Middle School assistant principal, who
last year introduced an anti-bullying
program into that school.
Deem reported that arrangements
have been made for a representative
of Rachel’s Challenge to be here to
present programs not only for the
students in assemblies at the Middle
and High Schools, but also for a public presentation at 6:30 p.m. on Nov.
7 at Meigs High School.

Deem related to the Board members and others attending the meeting the story of Rachel Scott, killed
in the Columbine High School shooting incident on April 20, 1999, and
the legacy that she left in her diaries
and other writings including an essay titled “My Ethics, My Code of
Life,” the basis for the program being
presented by her family members. In
that essay, she talked about making a
difference in the lives of others by the
way they are treated. In conjunction
with Deem’s comments, he showed
a video pertaining to the upcoming
presentation.
Last year, Deem attended an outof-state program relating to bullying
in the schools and how the fear of being bullied affects students’ behavior
and performance.
Deem, joined by Vicky Jones, principal, discussed the techniques they
are currently using in the Middle
School to reduce bullying and the effect on behavior of students that they
are seeing.
At the Board meeting, the matter
of busing students to school and the
time they spend on a bus was again
discussed. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Burson
were present seeking some solution
to the time their six-year-old child is
spending on the bus getting to and

from school. They reported that their
child spends about two hours on the
bus to get to school, and about two
hours on the bus returning home,
and they asked for some solution
geared to decrease the length of time
the child is spending on the bus.
The child, the couple reported,
gets on the bus just before 6 a.m. and
gets back home about 4:30 p.m. The
school day ends at 2:30 p.m. They
also said the bus is over-crowded
with students which they fear is causing a safety issue, and they asked that
something be done to resolve that
problem. The busing schedules and
overcrowding had been discussed at
the last meeting of the Meigs Local
Board by others who also called for
change.
Superintendent Rusty Bookman
said the issue is being discussed
with the bus superintendent, Dean
Harris, and solutions are being considered. He said there is a possibility that dual routing will have to be
reinstated on some of the routes. The
school changed from dual routing to
single routing a couple of years ago
to reduce the cost of bus operation.
Bookman assured the Bursons that
school officials are aware of the prob-

GALLIPOLIS — The
defense counselors in the
case against a man accused
of shooting and greviously
wounding a Gallipolis Police Officer last September
withdrew as counsel last
week, according to documents filed with the Gallia
County Clerk of Courts.
In an entry filed on September 25, almost exactly
one year after the alleged
shooting on September 24,
2012, Gallipolis attorneys,
William Eachus, Michael
Eachus and Jeffery Finley,
withdrew as counsel of record for Cole C. Miller, 29,
Gallipolis, and are no longer obligated to render any
further services for him as
of the date of the entry.
According to court documents, Attorney Samuel
H. Shamansky of Columbus has filed a notice of appearance as counsel in this
case.
Prior to this latest entry,
the court filed several jour-

nal entries last month, including its ruling in regard
to a motion by the defense
for a change of venue due
to what the defense called
“extensive and ongoing
pretrial publicity.” In this
document, the court defers
its ruling in regard to the
change of venue until it is
shown that an impartial
jury cannot be seated.
Additionally, the court
has also overruled the defense’s motion to preclude
the state from using certain evidence at trial, while
granting the state’s motion
to prohibit expert testimony in this case.
This document states
that the “Defendant may
not introduce expert testimony to argue that the Defendant lacked the mental
capacity to form the specific mental state required
for any of the offenses
with which Defendant is
charged unless Defendant
first demonstrates that the
evidence is relevant and
See SHOOTING | A2

‘Wanted’
shooting victim
turns himself in
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — A recent shooting victim
in Meigs County who had a warrant issued for his arrest
in Mason County, W.Va., has turned himself in.
According to the Mason County Sheriff’s Department,
Allen R. Brickles, 21, Pomeroy, turned himself in to personnel with the sheriff’s department without incident
on Sept. 25. A warrant was issued for Brickles’ arrest
on Sept. 6 after he failed to appear in court regarding a
grand jury indictment handed down against him earlier
this month in Mason County.
Brickles was indicted for malicious assault, conspiracy,
battery five counts, destruction of property two counts,
public intoxication and underage consumption. As previously reported, Brickles was charged in a joint indictment
which included two other men from Meigs County —
James M. Gray, V, 20 and Garrett C. Hall, age unreported, both of Pomeroy. Both Gray and Hall were indicted
for malicious assault, conspiracy, battery, destruction of
property, public intoxication and underage consumption.
The three men were arrested by deputies with the Mason County Sheriff’s Department after an incident which
allegedly occurred on the Mason County Fairgrounds
during the county fair on Aug. 9. Brickles, Gray and Hall
are all accused of committing felony assault by allegedly
maliciously wounding L.D. Pyles, age and address unreported, and causing bodily injury to Pyles with the intent
to permanently maim, disfigure, disable or kill him. Also,
Brickles is charged with misdemeanor battery for allegedly intentionally making physical contact of an insulting
or provoking nature with five others at the scene. Gray
and Hall were indicted for the same charged against one
victim.
Brickles was taken into custody on the capias warrant
See CHALLENGE | A2 by Cpt. Stearns.

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Sunday, September 29, 2013

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Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 76. Calm wind becoming southwest 5 to 8
mph in the afternoon.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers, mainly after 10 p.m. Cloudy, with a low around
58. Calm wind. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday: A chance of showers, mainly before 11 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near
71. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 52.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.
Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 52.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 77.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 54.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 57.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 75.

Challenge

Monday, Sept. 30

POMEROY — Meigs County P.E.R.I.
Chapter 74 will hold their meeting at 1 p.m.
at the Mulberry Community Center. Election
of officers and planning for 2014 will be on the
agenda. Members are encouraged to come.

Wednesday, Oct. 2

TUPPES PLAINS — The Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Board will have their regular
meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community Association will hold its final Lunch
Along the River beginning at 11 a.m. at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport.

Thursday, Oct. 3

CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio
Council of Governments (SOCOG) will hold
its next board meeting at 10 a.m. in Room
A of the Ross County Service Center at 475
Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601.
Board meetings usually are held the first
Thursday of the month. For more information, call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade Historical Association will meet at 7 p.m. at the
Academy.

stitute personal assistants.
An overnight field trip for the Meigs
lem, that everything is being evaluated Middle School eighth grade class to Wiland that they will come up with a plan.
liamsburg and Jamestown, Va., May 14During the meeting, Paula Roush 16, was approved by the board. On the recwas re-hired on a five-year contract,
ommendation of Chrissy Musser, Meigs
Tamara Nelson, Marjorie Davis, Linda
Harrison and Bobbi Moleski were hired Food Service director, the Board accepted
as substitute cooks, and James Essick the Certification of Standards governing
was employed as a substitute teacher types of foods and beverages which can be
for the current school term. The resig- sold on school premises.
Attending the meeting held at the Meigs
nation of Wetzel Bailey as a substitute
Tuesday, Oct. 1
bus driver and part-time maintenance Middle School were all Board members,
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Holzer
worker was accepted. Other hirings in- Ryan Mahr, Larry Tucker, Ron Logan,
cluded Scott Williams as eighth grade Todd Snowden, and Roger Abbott, presi- Clinic and Holzer Medical Center retirees
boys basketball coach and Larry Hunt dent; along with Superintendent Rusty will meet for lunch at 12 p.m. at the Iron
as freshman boys basketball coach; and Bookman, and Treasurer CFO Mark Rho- Gate Bar and Grille, Point Pleasant.
Tracy Erwin and Chandra Moon as sub- nemus.
GALLIPOLIS — Public meeting on
the changing of Court Street to one-way
traffic from Second Avenue to Third Avenue with angle parking, 6 p.m., Gallipolis Municipal Building, 333 Third Avenue,
From Page A1
After searching the ve- on a tip of a methamphethicle, deputies located amine lab at the Old Fort
and Meigs County EMS drugs, drug paraphernalia Meigs Campground. Upon
Squad 33.
and a loaded hand gun. arrival, deputies located
Deputies then made a Storms was taken to Gallia
seven one-pot metham- From Page A1
traffic stop at Ohio 124 and County on the warrant but
Ohio 7 on a vehicle match- will now also having pend- phetamine reactionary ves- probative for purposes other than a dimining the description of a ve- ing charges for possession sels.
No one, however, was ished capacity defense.”
hicle involved in a breaking of drugs, possession of
Miller had previously undergone a psyand entering that had just drug paraphernalia and at the residence. The in- chological exam to determine his compevestigation
is
ongoing,
occurred. After further in- weapons under disability
and charges are pending. tency to stand trial.
vestigation, it was learned in Meigs County.
After receiving the results of this examithat the vehicle was not inAlso arrested on the Deputies were assisted at nation, which states that the defendant
volved in the breaking and traffic stop was Zachary the scene by Middleport “fully appreciates the nature of the proentering but the driver, Matthew of Gallipolis for Police Officers, Rutland ceedings against him and that he possessLeslie Storms of Pomeroy, possession of drug abuse Volunteer Fire Department es the requisite capacities to assist in his
and Meigs County EMS own defense,” the court found that Miller
had a felony warrant out of instruments.
Gallia County.
Deputies also responded Squad 44.
is fit to stand trial in this case and to aid
in his own defense.
Miller was arrested during the early
morning hours of September 24, 2012, after he allegedly fired upon police officers
who had responded to his residence on
McCormick Road in reference to a neighbor dispute.
Prior to the arrival of officers that evening, Miller had confronted his neighbors
and had reportedly shot a car parked outside of the residence.
Gallipolis City Police Officers were requested to respond to the scene by the
only Gallia County Sheriff’s deputy on
call that night while he traveled back to
McCormick Road from his position in the
southern portion of the county.
Upon the arrival of the city police officers, Miller allegedly refused to exit his
residence, and, just as the sheriff’s deputy
From Page A1

Friday, Oct. 4

POMEROY — The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m.
at the office, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
POMEROY — A planning meeting for
Pomeroy’s Treat Street event will be held at
6:30 p.m. at Village Hall.

Tuesday, Oct. 8

Wednesday, Oct. 9

MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of
the Natural Resources Assistance Council at
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District, 1400 Pike Street, Marietta,
Ohio, on Wednesday, October 9, 2013, at 10:00
a.m. The purpose of the meeting is to review
the scoring methodology for Round 8 of the
Clean Ohio Conservation Fund for District 18.
Questions regarding this meeting should be directed to Michelle Hyer mhyer@buckeyehills.
org at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District or call (740) 376-1025.

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Arrests

Gallipolis. Comments can be mailed to
P.O. Box 339, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
emailed to citymanager@gallipoliscity.
com.

Monday, Oct. 7

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Neighborhood Watch meeting, 1:30 p.m., Gallipolis
Police Department, 518 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis.

Shooting

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Gallia2147Auto
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Jackson Pike

2008 Chevy 3500
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arrived on scene, the suspect reportedly
fired shots at the three officers located
outside his home.
Patrolman Jamie Bartels with the Gallipolis Police Department was wounded
during the incident, receiving a gunshot
wound to the arm, and was rushed to the
Holzer Medical Center Emergency Room
by a fellow city police officer who quickly
arrived on scene after shots were fired.
Miller, who exited the residence and
surrendered to the officers remaining on
scene, was taken into custody without incident.
Bartels was later transported to Cabell
Huntington Hospital where he remained
for several weeks for extensive surgeries.
A case against Miller was later brought
before a grand jury, and an indictment was
handed down specifying six charges: attempted aggravated murder for his alleged
actions against Patrolman Bartels, three
felonious assault charges for his alleged attempt to purposefully cause physical harm
to three peace officers, as well as obstructing official business and resisting arrest.
According to court documents, the latest schedule has the defendant set for trial
on December 11 in the common pleas
courtroom. A negotiated plea agreement
may be filed by November 22 in this case.
Miller is currently being held in the Gallia County Jail under a $1 million, 10 percent bond.

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City to hold public
meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The
City of Gallipolis will hold
a public meeting on changing Court Street to one-way
traffic from Second Avenue
to Third Avenue with angle
parking at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, October 1, 2013, in the
conference room at the Gallipolis Municipal Building,
333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The meeting room may
be accessed through the
side entrance door adjacent
to 2 1/2 Alley. All citizens
are invited to attend and
provide the city with written and/or oral comments
and ask questions concerning the proposed change.
Comments may be mailed
to P.O. Box 339, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. You may also
email comments to citymanager@gallipoliscity.com.
City commission
meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis City Commission
will hold its regular monthly
meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, October 1, 2013, at the
Gallipolis Municipal Building, 333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The meeting room
may be accessed through
the side entrance door adjacent to 2 1/2 Alley.

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Archaeology Month to be observed
ATHENS — The Athens County
Historical Society and Museum
(ACHS&amp;M) will celebrate Ohio Archaeology Month with two events
in October, both of which are free
and open to the public.
There will be a series of lectures about Ohio archaeology on
Wednesday evenings in October
from 5 to 6 p.m. with the lecture
series to cover three fields within
archaeology: historic archaeology,
prehistoric archaeology and archaeoastronomy.
The observance will be highlighted with a new exhibit showing
stone points, pipes, potsherds and
unknown items from the Sprague
Native American collection. The
opening of the exhibit will be held
on Wed., Oct. 23.
Dr. Lynne Newell, special projects
chairman for the Athens County
Historical Society &amp; Museum, wh0
is in charge of the event, recently
retired as the San Diego County

(California) Historian and Archaeologist. She describes archaeology
as an important contribution to the
understanding of the past.
The purpose of the Athens County Historical Society &amp; Museum
is to collect, preserve and display
items of historical nature, to promote interest in and disseminate
information about the history of
Athens County and its people, and
to provide an organizational structure for affiliations by groups with
similar historical interests.
Archaeology Month is a national
program which promotes the preservation of the United States’ heritage. At least 37 states celebrate
each year during Archaeology
Month, and the specific month is
determined by the governor. October is Archaeology Month in Ohio.
These celebrations are designed to
generate understanding and interest in archaeology.

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

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ATHENS — George Eberts, an expert on the history
of the Athens Asylum or “The Ridges,” will lead walking
tours of the asylum grounds this fall.
Each tour will be approximately one hour long, and the
first will be on Monday, Oct. 7, at 4 p.m. Later dates include Oct. 15 and 27 at the same time.
The tours are limited to 15 people per group, and they
are first come, first served. The $15 ticket can be purchased at the Athens County Historical Society and Museum, 65 N. Court Street in Athens.
Eberts, a former employee of the Athens Asylum, has
been giving these tours for several years.
“At one time, the Athens Asylum was the largest employer in Athens County,” said Lynne Newell, member of
the ACHS&amp;M Board of Trustees. “Much of Athens County history is connected to the Athens Asylum. The history
of the Athens Asylum – particularly as George tells it – is
interesting and exciting.”
For more information or to purchase tickets, call
ACHS&amp;M at 740-592-2280.

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NRCS Conservation programs
POMEROY— The local work
group for the Meigs County field
office of the Natural Resources
Conservation Service will meet
Tuesday Oct. 8, 10 a.m. at the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District Office at 113 East Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
The purpose of the local work
group is to provide guidance to
NRCS field offices concerning
the implementation and delivery
of conservation programs. The
LWG identifies program priorities
by completing a natural resource
needs assessment and based on
the assessment, develops proposals for priority areas. Generally
the local work group consists of
SWCD, NRCS, FSA and Extension representatives, but anyone is
invited to attend the meeting.

held at noon Wednesday at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport. Free exchange of plants and seeds. Demonstration on caring for perennials
and houseplants. Lunch available
from Middleport Community Association.
Parent-Teacher Conferences
POMEROY —Meigs High
School will be holding parentteacher conferences, 3 to 6 p.m.on
Thursday, Oct. 3. Parents and
guardians encouraged to attend.
Letter describing the conference
scheduling procedure taken home
by students. Form to be returned
by Wednesday or call 992-2158 for
scheduling.

SOCOG board meeting
CHILLICOTHE — The
Southern Ohio Council of
Governments
(SOCOG)
will hold its next board
meeting on Thursday, October 3 at 10 a.m. in Room
A of the Ross County SerFlu Shot Clinic
vice Center at 475 Western
POMEROY — The Meigs
Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio,
County Health Department will
45601. Board meetings
conduct a flu shot clinic from 9-11
usually are held the first
a.m. and 1-7 p.m. on Oct. 1 for resFall Plant Exchange
Thursday of the month. For
POMEROY — The annual fall idents 6 months of age and older.
more information, call 740- plant and seed exchange will be There is no high dose flu vaccine
775-5030, ext. 103. SOCOG
provides administrative support for the County Boards
of Developmental Disabilities in Adams, Athens,
Brown, Clinton, Fayette,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton counties. Its primary
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Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.75
vestigative services and
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 56.51
Royal Dutch Shell — 65.88
BorgWarner
(NYSE)
—
101.51
residential administration
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 59.05
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.26
of waivers and supportive
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 74.36
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.20
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.55
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.51
living in order to provide inWesBanco (NYSE) — 29.39
Collins (NYSE) — 68.59
dividualized, personal supWorthington (NYSE) — 34.23
DuPont (NYSE) — 59.01
port to people with developUS Bank (NYSE) — 36.50
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 24.05
mental disabilities. SOCOG
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 64.65
ET closing quotes of transactions
is a government entity creJP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.24
for September 27, 2013, provided
ated under Chapter 167 of
Kroger (NYSE) — 40.69
by Edward Jones financial adviLtd
Brands
(NYSE)
—
61.11
the Ohio Revised Code, repsors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 77.79
resenting 15 county boards
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley MarOVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.70
of development disabilities.
rero in Point Pleasant at (304)
BBT (NYSE) — 33.97

available for people age 65 and
older at this time.
A childhood and adolescent immunization clinic will also be held
at the same time. Please bring
children’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Otherwise, there will be a $25 fee for
flu shots.
O’Kan Coin Club Show
GALLIPOLIS — The O’Kan
Coin Club’s annual fall show will
be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Oct. 6 at the Quality Inn in Gallipolis.
Free clogging classes
MIDDLEPORT — Beginning
clogging classes will start at 6
p.m. Thursday, Oct. 3, in the auditorium of Middleport Village
Hall. There is no charge to attend
the classes which will be held on

Thursdays each week. For additional information call Vivian May,
992-7853.
Riverbend Art Show
MIDDLEPORT —The Riverbend Arts Council is sponsoring
its 7th annual “Art in the Village”
on Oct. 5th. Applications for those
wanting to exhibit art work can
be picked up at Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy or King Ace Hardware in
Middleport. Deadline is Sept. 22.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — The westbound lane of Ohio 124 (located
at the 63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will
be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will be
maintained by traffic signals and
concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.

"@42=î)E@4&lt;D

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.89

Gallia-Vinton ESC
to host class
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia-Vinton Educational
Service Center will be holding a Christmas ball making class at Gallia Acadmey
Middle School at 6 p.m.
on October 22. The participants will be making
one ball to take home and
two to donate to the city. All
supplies will be provided.
Those who are interested
should contact Rashel Fallon at (740) 245-0593.

674-0174. Member SIPC.

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Jerry Hayman
as your

Sutton Township Trustee
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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

OPINION

Page A4
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2013

Let’s honor our visionaries Letter to the Editor:
by contributing to the vision
Child obesity
requires attention
in Appalachia

Stephanie Filson

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It’s been a difficult
week for many across the
tri-county area with the
unexpected passing of a
vibrant, young friend and
colleague Lorie (Falls)
Neal who served as the
Executive Director of
Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce for the past
12 years. In the news
business, we don’t have
time to feel our emotions for very long. We
have deadlines to meet.
Stories to write. The
news doesn’t slow down
because we are angry,
sad or frustrated with
its nature. It just is, and
we, as reporters and journalists, are tasked with
bringing this news to our
communities at large in a
fair and unbiased manner
… no matter how we feel
about it personally.
This isn’t always easy.
As I was driving home
from work in the early
hours of Friday morning,
I found myself thinking
of Lorie through a different lens. I considered our
many parallels — both
growing up in Meigs
County (she in Reedsville, me in Racine), both
attending the University of Rio Grande, both
spending time working
in the public sector in
a service capacity, both
having preteen sons and
both working in Gallipolis. I pulled into the parking lot of Eastern High
School, where she graduated in 1991, just a few
miles away from Southern High School, where
I graduated in 1994. As
I sat there in my car in
the quiet fog, I wondered
to myself what it was exactly that made Lorie so
well respected, and moreover, well loved in the
way she approached her
work, and it came to me
… community pride and
personal perseverance.
She talked the talk and
walked the walk when it
came to promoting Gal-

lia County and southeast
Ohio … and in that regard
among others, I strive to
be just like her.
When Lorie was working, it was simply an extension of how she really
felt about the area. She
was ‘on’ all the time, attending after hours business events, eating at local
establishments, planning
technical workshops to
help fledgling businesses,
buying local goods. She
worked to create networking opportunities for
business owners and community leaders. She used
the resources she had to
boast local accomplishments, and she had a hand
in nearly every event held
within the Gallipolis city
limits in the past decade.
Lorie earned respect
in her career by tirelessly
working to support a vision for a better place to
live and work … a vision
shared by many.
The wonderful truth
is we have many visionaries in southeast Ohio.
The entire landscape of
the tri-county area has
changed since Lorie and
I were children in rural
Meigs County. Our shared
home county now features new highways that
open access to economic
development opportunities in the region, a task
that requires decades of
planning and implementation. Pomeroy now hosts
some of the greatest blues
performers in the world
because of the efforts of
people with a shared vision, and a new Imagine
Pomeroy effort is gaining
steam to further improve
our region.
Neighboring
Mason
County, West Virginia, only last weekend
hosted the 12th Annual
Mothman Festival [see
page C1 of The Sunday
Times-Sentinel] which
brought nearly 4,000
tourists to the area, filling every hotel in the tricounty region to capacity, and as I write this,
the first Dragonboat

Sunday Times-Sentinel
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races at Krodel Park are
about to get started.
In Gallia County, we
now have a growing River
Recreation Festival, Chilifest, Rockets Over Rio
and Envy Ink Salon. We
support the arts with an
elaborate and oh-so-fun
Mardis Gras fundraiser,
and music fills the downtown area during Second
Fridays and the various
Ohio River Live events
throughout the year. New
initiatives are also under
way to light up the Gallipolis City Park this Christmas, and local families are
rolling up their sleeves to
help make it happen.
When I think of Lorie
Neal’s legacy in southeast
Ohio, I think of her genuine love for the region
coupled with a passion
and ambition to see the
work required through
to completion. Lorie was
a force in Gallia County;
she created momentum.
If we want to honor her
memory, I can think of no
better way than to continue to support her vision
and stick-to-it-ivensess by
finding ways to give back
to our communities and
maintain the momentum
of the years of work already done.
It’s not that difficult. Attend community events,
and if you went once ten
years ago and didn’t enjoy
it, give it a second chance.
Instill a sense of community pride in your children. Show them the good
things we have to offer in
our part of the world. Embrace the uniqueness and
beauty of southeast Ohio
and western West Virginia
— and give back. Volunteer to help with something you believe in, and
show your children what
that looks and feels like.
Yes, there have been visionaries who have come
before, but it is now up to
us to build upon the momentum needed to make
our communities stronger,
safer, more vibrant and
fully alive. Let’s roll up our
sleeves and get started.

Dear Editor,
As America wrangles
with daunting issues, no
challenge is more urgent
than protecting the health
and well being of our children — now, and as they
grow. Over the past several
decades, we have witnessed
childhood obesity grow to
epidemic proportions. More
than 23 million children and
teenagers are obese or overweight. That’s roughly one
child in every three.
New information show
that rural Appalachian areas,
such as Meigs County, are
disproportionately affected.
Our adult and child obesity
rates both exceed the state’s

rate. These youngsters risk
developing serious health
problems in adulthood,
such as heart disease, type 2
diabetes, stroke and several
types of cancer.
The financial impact is
a sobering $14 billion per
year in direct health care
costs alone.
The psycho-social consequences can hinder these
kids academically and
socially. Many parents,
health care providers, educators, civic leaders and
organizations have created
programs and activities
to promote healthy eating
and physical activity. The
effort begins at home.
Parents have enormous
influence over their children’s lifestyles by the ex-

ample they set and the decisions they make, and it isn’t
always easy. By modeling
healthy eating and physically active lifestyles, we can
set our children on the road
to a lifetime of good habits.
The fight against childhood obesity gains momentum in September, which is
National Childhood Obesity
Awareness month. The results can last a lifetime. All
children deserve a healthy
start in life; it’s our responsibility to make that possible.
Learn more at www.
COAM-month.org.
Juli Simpson, RN BSN,
LSN
Child &amp; Family Health
Services Program Director
Meigs County Health Department

Recognizing teachers for their service
Renée A. Middleton

2L�LM��/+8M�$2/��6+.C=�'L�+8.��+@3.��L� +&gt;&gt;98��966/1/�
90��.?-+&gt;398��239�%83@/&lt;=3&gt;C

Waiting at the Post Office I saw a young
man in military fatigues. He stood dignified,
a picture perfect soldier. After conducting
his business, he stepped to leave. As he
walked past, an elderly woman stopped him,
reached out her hand, looked him in the eye
and said, “Thank you for your service.”
It’s a sentiment that can never be expressed enough — gratitude to our service
people whose career is to ensure the health
and safety of our nation. They lay their lives
on the line so that we may enjoy the benefits
of our democracy.
There are many, not just those in the
armed forces, whose lives are devoted to
serving our nation — people like police officers, firemen and public school teachers.
At first glance it may seem odd to include
teachers in that list, but please hear me out.
Like servicemen and those in public safety,
public school teachers do not choose their
careers for the easy hours or generous compensation. For many teachers, the workday
begins before 7:30 a.m., and it lasts long
after the 3 p.m. bell. Their afternoons and
weekends are full supervising extracurriculars. They grade papers and prepare lesson
plans long into the night. Summers are no
respite from their 10-hour days. Many take
on summer jobs to make ends meet.
And yet, even as these men and women
struggle to cover their own bills, they still
pay out of pocket for supplies for their students. The life of a public school teacher is
about service. It is ensuring that every student has access to a bright tomorrow, even
if that means the teacher has to tighten his
or her belt.
Teachers enter a classroom of 25 children,
each learning at a different pace. They are
tasked with ensuring every one meets state
mandates. I have heard an accomplished

teacher say that when it comes to teaching
a subject like reading for her first graders,
she is really teaching six or seven different
classes. She must adapt her lessons for those
who are gifted and for those who need extra
assistance and levels between. She was matter of fact about this, without exasperation
or frustration. To her and countless others in
her position, a teacher always ensures every
young learner meets state requirements. It
does not matter how big of a task it is. It is
her calling, her job.
Their work keeps America strong. They,
like our rightfully lauded servicemen and
women, work to secure the future of American democracy. The backbone of any strong
democracy is an educated electorate. The
children at the desks will one day vote and
maybe run for office. No matter how they
participate in democracy, students will use
skills and values learned at a teacher’s knee.
Our public school teachers nurture our
children. They are a constant presence, offering instruction, discipline and praise.
Public school teachers care deeply about
every class. Many have, without a moment’s
hesitation, made the ultimate sacrifice to
protect for their students. Who can forget
the stories of the heroic teachers in Newtown, Conn. who perished saving their children? Of the Oklahoma teachers who threw
themselves on top of their classes as a tornado whipped through their school? Their
sacrifice is as inspiring as it is tragic.
It is with deep humility that I say to teachers, “Thank you for your service!”
Thank you for answering the call to serve.
Thank you for caring for children long after
they have left your classroom. Thank you
for every hour spent nudging a child in the
right direction. Thank you for encouraging
dreams and nurturing self-reliance. Thank
you for seeing the future in the eight-yearold at work. Your time, energy and effort do
not go unnoticed. Thank you for your service yesterday, today and tomorrow.

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

Sunday Times Sentinel

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Phone (304) 675-1333

Letters to the Editor

Fax (304) 675-5234

Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
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number. No unsigned letters will be published.
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will not be accepted for publication.

Ohio Valley
Newspapers
200 Main Street
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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

�Sunday, September 29, 2013

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

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

%3:EF2C:6D
SALSER
Esther Coelle Salser, 78, of Pomeroy, Ohio, went to be
with the Lord on September 26, 2013. She was born in
Meigs County on January 19, 1935, daughter of the late
James and Mary Esther Clark. She was a member of the
First Southern Baptist Church.
Esther was the office manager at Gribble Chevrolet
and Larry Schay Chevrolet for many years.
She is survived by two sisters, Weltha Lynn (John) Garraway of Fredericksburg, Virginia, and Patsy L. Perkins of
Athens, Ohio; and many cousins, nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death
by her husband, Alonzo Hudson, and her brother and
sister-in-law, Jack and Grace Clark.
Graveside funeral services were held on Saturday, September 28, 2013, at 1:30 p.m. at Wells Cemetery. Visiting
hours were held on Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
SMELTZER
Barbara A. Smeltzer, 77, of Gallipolis, passed away
unexpectedly on Friday, September 27, 2013, at her residence.
She was born July 14, 1936, in Gallia County, Ohio,
daughter of the late Joseph A. and Etta Luikart. She was
married to William O. Smeltzer, whom she assisted in
his accounting business, on October 25, 1986. She was
a 1954 Gallia Academy High School graduate.
Surviving is her husband, William O. Smeltzer; children, Missy (Doug) Hubbard of Grove City, Ohio, Marc
(Rosemary) Weiher of Grove City, Ohio, and Matthew
(Kristi) Harrison of Columbus, Ohio; stepchildren, Bill
Smeltzer of Gallipolis, Ohio, and Carolyn (Bill) James
of Point Pleasant, West Virginia; three grandchildren,
Ryan (Becca) Hubbard, Katie (Paul) Carmichael, and
Nichole Harrison; three great-grandchildren, Rylie and

R.J. Hubbard, and Logan Harrison; one sister, Margaret
Sullivan of Gallipolis, Ohio, along with several nieces
and nephews.
Barbara was preceded in death by her parents and four
sisters, Mary Phillips, Marie Glassburn, Eleanor Thomas, and Irene Weaver.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, October 1, 2013, at
Willis Funeral Home in Gallipolis, Ohio, with Pastor Paul
Voss officiating. Entombment will follow in the Chapel
of Hope Mausoleum in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 12 p.m. until
the time of the service.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.
WILLIAMS
If success is defined by what you do with what you’ve
got — Chuck Williams was a success. Chuck was a hardworking football player, hard-working teacher and coach
and hard-working union representative. In the game of
life Chuck Williams was in it to win it. He dedicated his
life to giving back to students and teachers.
Chuck finished life a success, he passed away Wednesday morning September 25, 2013, in Samaritan Regional
Health System in Ashland. He was 81.
Born Charles David Williams October 12, 1931, in Rio
Grande to Floren and Sadie (Altizer) Williams, he was
graduated from Lebanon High School in 1948. Chuck
earned his Bachelor’s degree in Education from Miami
University, where was active with Delta Upsilon fraternity. While a student at Miami of Ohio, Chuck played
offensive guard for coach Ara Parseghian, and fullback
for Woody Hayes. His Miami Redskins made history on
January 1, 1951, beating Arizona State 34 to 21 in Montgomery Stadium in Phoenix in the Salad Bowl.
Chuck went on to serve two years with the U.S. Navy
(even playing football for Navy), and then returned to

school to earn his Master’s degree in Education from
Kent State University.
He taught math at Maple Heights High School, where
he also coached football, basketball and baseball. He accepted a position with Ohio Education Association, serving over 35 years as Uniserve Consultant — a union representative for the teachers.
He held season tickets to the Cleveland Browns, Ohio
State Football Buckeyes, Miami Redskins and Cleveland
Indians. Chuck really loved sports! He played golf and
snow skied, and looked forward to vacations at Stoney
Lake in Canada. Chuck loved to tinker at his rental properties in Mansfield, and also loved his faithful animal
companions: Duke, Toby and Duchess.
He is survived by his wife, Janet (Switzer) Williams,
whom he married June 17, 1978; step-sons, Mike Gray of
Warsaw and Stephen Gray of Columbus; a step-daughter,
Laurie Gray Pahdopony of Columbus; a brother, Sam Williams of Mason; sisters-in-law and brothers-in-law, Skip
and Glenna Rea, Linda and Dan Detwiler, John Switzer
and Nancy Grimes; and numerous nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a son, Wayne Williams
on January 30, 2013. Also deceased are his parents and
sisters, Janet Hurley and Karen Kaladow.
The Williams family will receive friends Thursday, October 3, 2013, from 1-2 p.m. in the Lexington Avenue
Snyder Funeral Home, where a memorial service will immediately follow at 2 p.m. Pastor Don Earlenbaugh will
officiate. Interment will follow in Lexington Cemetery,
where American Legion Post #535 will hold graveside
military honors.
Contributions in Chuck’s memory to the North Central Ohio Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association may be
made at the funeral home.
Snyder Funeral Home is honored to serve Mr. Williams’
family and private messages of sympathy and support may
be made online at: www.snyderfuneralhomes.com.

�62E9î$@E:46D
SMITH
Edna Mae Smith, 88, of Proctorville,
Ohio, died Thursday, September 26,
2013, at home.
Funeral service will be conducted at 2
p.m. Monday, September 30, 2013, at Hall
Funeral Home by Minister David Roach.
Visitation will be held from 1-2 p.m. Mon-

day, September 30, 2013, at the funeral
home.
McCOY
Carol Jean McCoy, 69, of Huntington,
W.Va., died Thursday, September 26,
2013, at home.
A memorial service will be held at 7

p.m. Monday, September 30, 2013, at
Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio,
with Pastor Darrell Huffman officiating.
The family will receive friends from 6-7
p.m. Monday, September 30, 2013, at the
funeral home. In lieu of flowers, memorial
donations may be made to the charity of
one’s choice.

COX
Charles Gary Cox, 59, of Henderson, W.Va.,
died Thursday, September 26, 2013 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A graveside service and burial will be held
at 11 a.m., Monday, September 30, 2013, at
Brewer Cemetery in Point Pleasant with Rev.
James Lawson officiating.

OU president to head new state higher education commission

ATHENS — Ohio University President Roderick J.
McDavis will head the newly
formed Ohio Higher Education Funding Commission
2.0, Governor John R. Kasich announced Friday.
“It is an honor to be
named chair, and I welcome the opportunity to
lead the Higher Education
Funding Commission,” McDavis said during a press
conference in Columbus. “I
thank Governor Kasich and

Chancellor Carey for their
continued support and confidence in the higher education community.”
In late 2011, Kasich
called on the state’s 37
public college and university presidents to put
aside their traditional
process for dividing the
state’s capital construction
budget and to collaborate
on a single list of recommended projects that identified the true needs of the

entire system.
That first commission,
led by former Ohio State
University President Gordon Gee, compiled a list of
recommendations for the
use of capital funds. The
result of this unprecedented process was widely applauded. Continuing that
successful model, McDavis will lead a commission
of college and university
presidents to recommend
a list of priority projects

for consideration in the
new capital budget, the
governor said.
“Our new culture in
higher education — where
you all collaboratively work
to solve some of our greatest
challenges — has received
national attention and I’m
very proud of what we have
accomplished together,” Kasich said. “I appreciate your
leadership over the past several years and we look forward to working with you

to build upon what we have
achieved to make our higher
education system stronger
and more unified.”
McDavis said the first
commission provided a
clear roadmap to follow as
the new group of presidents
continues with the process
of allocating the state’s limited capital resources.
“The $400 million investment of the 2013-14
Capital Budget was critical to the higher education

community being able to
continue fulfilling its mission and providing a world
class learning opportunity,” he said. “But there
are still many outstanding
infrastructure projects that
need to be accomplished
as we educate today’s
students and prepare for
those to come. I appreciate
the governor’s confidence
in us and look forward to
working with my fellow
presidents.”

�=:&gt;2E6îA2?6=�î-2C&gt;:?8îZ6IEC6&gt;6=Jî=:&lt;6=J[î&gt;2?�&gt;256
STOCKHOLM
(AP)
— Scientists can now say
with extreme confidence
that human activity is the
dominant cause of the
global warming observed
since the 1950s, a new
report by an international
scientific group said Friday.
Calling
man-made
warming “extremely likely,” the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change
used the strongest words
yet on the issue as it adopted its assessment on
the state of the climate
system.
In its previous assessment, in 2007, the U.N.sponsored panel said it
was “very likely” that
global warming was manmade.
One of the most controversial subjects in the
report was how to deal
with a purported slowdown in warming in the
past 15 years. Climate
skeptics say this “hiatus”
casts doubt on the scientific consensus on climate
change.
Many governments had
objections over how the
issue was treated in earlier drafts and some had
called for it to be deleted
altogether.
In the end, the IPCC
made only a brief mention
of the issue in the summary for policymakers,
stressing that short-term
records are sensitive to
natural variability and
don’t in general reflect

long-term
snow and ice
“This is yet
trends.
has
dimin“An
old
ished,
the
another wake- global mean
rule says that
climate -rele - up call: Those
sea level has
vant trends
risen
and
should not be who deny
the concencalculated for the science
trations
of
periods less
greenhouse
than around or choose
gases have in30
years,”
creased,” said
said Thomas excuses over
Qin
Dahe,
Stocker, co- action are
co-chair
of
chair of the
the working
group
that playing with
group
that
wrote the rewrote the refire.”
port.
port.
Many sciThe
full
— John Kerry 2 , 0 0 0 - p a g e
entists
say
U.S. Secretary of report
the purported
isn’t
State going to be
slowdown reflects random
released until
climate flucMonday, but
tuations and an unusually the summary for policyhot year, 1998, picked as a makers with the key findstarting point for charting ings was published Friday.
temperatures.
Another It contained few surprises
leading hypothesis is that as many of the findings
heat is settling temporar- had been leaked in adily in the oceans, but that vance.
wasn’t included in the
As expected, the IPCC
summary.
raised its projections of
Stocker said there the rise in sea levels to
wasn’t enough literature 10-32 inches (26-82 cenon “this emerging ques- timeters) by the end of
tion.”
the century. The previous
The IPCC said the evi- report predicted a rise of
dence of climate change 7-23 inches (18-59 centihas grown thanks to more meters).
and better observations,
But it also changed its
a clearer understanding estimate of how sensitive
of the climate system and the climate is to an inimproved models to ana- crease in CO2 concentralyze the impact of rising tions, lowering the lower
temperatures.
end of a range given in
“Our assessment of the the previous report. In
science finds that the at- 2007, the IPCC said that
mosphere and ocean have a doubling of CO2 concenwarmed, the amount of trations would likely re-

sult in 2-4.5 C (3.6-8.1 F)
degrees of warming. This
time it restored the lower
end of that range to what
it was in previous reports,
1.5 C (2.7 F).
The IPCC assessments
are important because
they form the scientific
basis of U.N. negotiations
on a new climate deal.
Governments are supposed to finish that agreement in 2015, but it’s
unclear whether they will
commit to the emissions
cuts that scientists say
will be necessary to keep
the temperature below a
limit at which the worst
effects of climate change
can be avoided.
Using four scenarios
with different emissions
controls, the report projected that global average
temperatures would rise
by 0.3 to 4.8 degrees C
by the end of the century.

That’s 0.5-8.6 F.
Only the lowest scenario, which was based on
major cuts in CO2 emissions and is considered
unlikely, came in below the
2-degree C (3.6 F) limit
that countries have set as
their target in the climate
talks to avoid the worst impacts of warming.
“This is yet another
wake-up call: Those who
deny the science or choose
excuses over action are
playing with fire,” U.S.
Secretary of State John
Kerry said in a statement.
“Once again, the science
grows clearer, the case
grows more compelling,
and the costs of inaction
grow beyond anything
that anyone with conscience or common sense
should be willing to even
contemplate.”
At this point, emissions
keep rising mainly due to

rapid growth in China and
other emerging economies. They say rich countries should take the lead
on emissions cuts because
they’ve pumped carbon
into the atmosphere for
longer.
Climate activists said
the report should spur
governments to action.
“There are few surprises in this report but the
increase in the confidence
around many observations
just validates what we are
seeing happening around
us,” said Samantha Smith,
of the World Wildlife
Fund.
The report adopted Friday deals with the physical
science of climate change.
Next year, the IPCC will
adopt reports on the impacts of global warming,
strategies to fight it and
a synthesis of all three reports.

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�&amp;286î��îLîSunday Times Sentinel

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

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Audit: Army paid
$16M to deserters,
AWOL soldiers

Submitted photos

Faith Baptist Church honors local first responders
RODNEY — In celebration of Patriot Day, a remembrance of 9/11,
the Faith Baptist Church in Rodney,
Ohio, honored local first responders
during a special service Sunday, September 8. All fire fighters, EMS personnel, as well as law enforcement
officials were recognized individually
and given the book “Stories of Faith
and Courage from Fire Fighters and

First Responders” as a thank you and
for encouragement.
Family members were also praised
for their support and dedication.
Faith Baptist member David Johnson personally greeted each first responder. Johnson has over 30 years
experience as a fire fighter in both
civilian and military settings. He also
had the honor to serve as a guard at

the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
After the morning service, all
first responders and family were furthered honored at a buffet luncheon
in the ministry center.
Pastor Jim Lusher stated, “First
Responder Sunday will become an
annual event as we desire to honor, support and pray for our local
heroes.”

%S4:2=�î�2CîFD65î3Jî!6?J2î&gt;2==î2EE24&lt;6CDî7@F?5
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Investigators have recovered a vehicle believed to have been used by the terrorists who led the attack at a Nairobi
mall that killed at least 67 people, a
top Kenyan government official said
Friday.
They are also building the profile
of a man who warned a pregnant
woman at the mall to flee for her own
safety moments before Saturday’s attack, he said.
Investigators are tracing the car’s
ownership after it was retrieved outside the mall, the official said on condition of anonymity because he was
not allowed to reveal such details

while the investigation is ongoing.
They are looking at more vehicles
that may have been used by the attackers, he said, but gave no more
details.
An Associated Press reporter saw
a group of Kenyan and foreign investigators inspecting a silver saloon car
parked about 20 meters (yards) from
the mall’s main entrance on Thursday
afternoon. The car’s trunk was open
as the investigators took pictures and
notes, but it was impossible to tell
what exactly they were seeing.
Kenyan police have given little
information since the attack that
shocked this East African nation,

saying the investigation has only just
began into the storming of the mall
on Saturday by Islamic militants
throwing grenades and using assault
rifles.
Some bodies are believed to be
buried under the rubble of the mall,
which will take investigators at least
seven days to comb through, Joseph
Ole Lenku, Kenya’s interior minister
said Wednesday.
The al-Qaida-linked Somali Islamic
extremist rebel group al-Shabab has
claimed responsibility for the attack,
saying Kenya is a legitimate target
for sending its troops into Somalia to
fight the militants.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
— Even as the Army faces shrinking budgets, an
audit shows it paid out
$16 million in paychecks
over a 2 ½-year period
to soldiers designated as
AWOL or as deserters,
the second time since
2006 the military has
been dinged for the error.
A memo issued by Human Resources Command
at Fort Knox, Ky., found
that the Army lacked sufficient controls to enforce
policies and procedures
for reporting deserters
and absentee soldiers to
cut off their pay and benefits immediately. The
oversight was blamed
primarily on a failure by
commanders to fill out paperwork in a timely manner.
The payments from
2010 to 2012 represent
only a fraction of the
Army’s nearly $44 billion projected payroll for
2013, but auditors and a
watchdog group derided
the waste as government
agencies grapple with the
automatic federal spending cuts known as sequestration.
“In this current environment of scarce resources,
this is unacceptable,”
auditors wrote in a July
memo sent by the Department of Defense across
the Army, including to the
U.S. Army Deserter Information Point and Human
Resources Command.
The Defense Department says 466 service
members
across
all
branches were listed as
absent without leave or
as deserters in 2012; the
agency did not have a
tally specific to the Army.
However, the $16 million
represents 9,000 individual direct deposit payments, suggesting at least
some of the soldiers received several paychecks
before the problem was
corrected.
The audit marks the
second time in the past
seven years the Army has
come under scrutiny for
paying soldiers who did
not report for duty when
called up. The audit outlines what steps should be
taken across the Army to
ensure deserters and soldiers who are absent without leave don’t get pay or
benefits.
A more narrowly focused 2006 audit by the
Government
Accountability Office found the
Army paid 68 soldiers
about $684,000 while the
soldiers were considered
deserters. That review, by
Gregory D. Kutz, the managing director of forensic
audits and special investigations for the GAO,
focused on the 1004th
Quartermaster Company
in Greensburg, Pa.
The audit issued in July
called on Human Resources Command to establish
standards for commanders to provide status updates of AWOL soldiers
and deserters on a regular basis. The message
also directs commanders
throughout the Army to
follow up on all in-transit
soldiers who do not arrive
on their report dates and
to place a strong emphasis on the status of absentee soldiers.
Auditors found that
commanders weren’t filling out paperwork on absent soldiers in a timely
manner, so the orders to
stop pay weren’t being
processed and absent sol-

diers were still being paid.
The latest audit comes
as the Army, Navy, Air
Force and Marine Corps
are projected to slash $52
billion from the defense
budget for the 2014 fiscal year under automatic
spending cuts that kicked
in March 1.
The Army classifies a
deserter as someone who
drops from the rolls of a
unit after being absent
without authority for 30
or more consecutive days.
Soldiers who join the military of another country,
seek political asylum or
live in a foreign country
are also considered deserters.
Kutz included in the audit recommendations that
the Army develop a strategy for tracking possible
desertion cases and possibly initiating criminal
actions against deserters
who took unearned pay.
The note in July reiterates
some of Kutz’s recommendations and points to
new regulations requiring
stricter tracking and processing of soldiers who
don’t report for duty.
“The purpose of this
message is to reinforce
current policy and actions
to be taken by commanders and staff offices to alleviate the situation,” the
All Army Activities memo
states.
U.S. Rep. C.A. “Dutch”
Ruppersberger, who was
among four congressmen
to request the 2006 audit, said he was troubled
to see the problem persist particularly in light
of the current financial
and budget challenges the
government faces. Ruppersberger, D-Md., said
Army leadership has assured him that corrective
actions are being taken,
including efforts to recoup the money paid.
“Deserting our military
is a serious offense, and
these men and women —
and the unit commanders
in charge of the personnel
paperwork — need to be
held accountable,” Ruppersberger said. “It’s also
unfair to the vast majority of troops putting their
lives on the line and honorably serving our country every day.”
An Army spokesman
said AWOL soldiers or
soldiers considered deserters must repay any
earned benefits if they
are dismissed from the
military. Refusing to do
so could lead to the debt
being turned over to a
collection agency. Soldiers who return to duty
may have their wages
garnished to cover the
debt. A Defense Department spokesman knew of
no similar audit for other
branches of the military.
Sean Kennedy, director of research for the
watchdog group Citizens
Against
Government
Waste, said the audit results were “pretty crazy.”
It appears there’s little
incentive to fix the problem, even though it has
been pointed out multiple
times, Kennedy said.
“It’s a drop in the bucket compared to the larger
Army bucket, but the
GAO identified this years
ago, and it was never
fixed,” Kennedy said. “Before the Army cries poor
again, they should look internally for waste that can
be eliminated. This is an
example of that.”

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INSIDE

SPORTS

SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 29, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

Athens drops
Blue Devils,
3-1...B2

Blue Devils bounce Vinton County, 48-19
Alex Hawley

aahwley@civitasmedia.com

McARTHUR, Ohio — It’s not
how you start, but rather the way
you finish that’s important.
The Gallia Academy football
team trailed 13-0 five minutes
into Friday night’s contest at
Vinton County. The Blue Devils
answered by out scoring the Vikings 48-to-6 over the remainder of the game to earn their
fourth straight win.
Vinton County (3-2) quarterback Andy Long found Devlin

Hall for the 68 yard touchdown
pass at the 9:06 mark of the first
period to take the lead. Zach
Stulley added the kick for VCHS
and the Vikings held a 7-0 lead.
VCHS got on the board again
just 1:29 later. this time it was
sophomore Tim Ousley running
in from 10 yards out.
Once the Blue Devils (4-1) offense was able to take the field
Wade Jarrell simply over. Wade
Jarrell first found fellow senior
Reid Eastman for a 24 yard score
at the 4:46 mark of the first.
Dylan Saunders added the kick

to pull the Blue Devils within six.
Wade Jarrell then found Logan
Allison from 45 yards out for the
score with 2:19 remaining in the
first and, after Saunders added
the extra point, gave the Blue
Devils the 14-13 lead.
In the second quarter Wade
Jarrell connected with Allison
for three scores, the first from 30
yards at the 8:01 mark, the second
from 29 yards at the 1:07 mark and
the third from 80 yards at the 14
second mark. Saunders hammered
home two-of-three extra points
and GAHS led 34-12 at halftime.

Less than two minutes into
the second half Wade Jarrell
connected with Eastman for
a 29 yard score, and following
Saunders’ kick put the Blue and
White up 41-12.
Vinton County’s Levi Thompson broke away from the GAHS
defense and scored from 43
yards out at the 6:47 mark of the
third period. The two-point conversion attempt failed and the
VCHS trailed 41-19.
Just a 1:05 later Wade Jarrell
found the endzone on the ground
from five yards away. Saunders

added the point after and GAHS
led 48-19. The Blue Devils slowed
down the offense and held on for
the fourth straight win.
Wade Jarrell finished the game
with 319 yards on 12-of-18 passing with six touchdowns and no
interceptions, to go along with 10
rushes for 51 yards and a score.
Allison had four carries for 65
yards, Ty Warnimont had seven
attempts for 32 yards, while Kole
Carter ran twice for two yards
and Blake Wilson was stopped for
See DEVILS | B2

Alex Hawley | Daily Tribune

Southern junior Ryan Billingsley (45) fights through a pair of
Symmes Valley defenders during the Tornadoes 14-6 win at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Stadium, Friday night.

Tornadoes
stop Symmes
South Gallia fends off Eagles, 20-13
Valley, 14-6
Photos by Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

South Gallia quarterback Landon Hutchinson, left, follows a block by teammate Ethan Spurlock (10) during the first
half of Friday night’s Week 5 football contest against Eastern.

J.P. Davis

Special to OVP

Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio — The only thing that matters is who
scores the most points.
The Symmes Valley football team held an advantage
in nearly every aspect of the game Friday night, but the
Southern Tornadoes had the one statistic that mattered,
points. Southern earned the 14-6 victory in a non-conference matchup at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Stadium,
keeping the Tornadoes undefeated record intact.
Southern (5-0) began the game in excellent field position after Zac Beegle retured the opening kickoff to the
SVHS 37 yard line. Tyler Barton took the handoff on the
first play from scrimmage 28 yards and gave the Tornadoes a first and goal from the nine yard line. On the very
next play Barton finished what he started and punched
See TORNADOES | B2

OVP Sports Schedule
Monday, September 30

Volleyball
Waterford at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:30
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Parkersburg Christian,
5 p.m.
Hannan, Clay County at Parkersburg Catholic,
6 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Sherman at Point Pleasant, 6:30
College Volleyball
Pikeville at URG, 7 p.m.

Tuesday, October 1

Volleyball
Miller at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Hannan, Teays Valley Christian at Calvary Baptist, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Warren, 5:30
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Lincoln County at Point Pleasant, 6:30
College Volleyball
URG at St. Catharine, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, October 2

Volleyball
Meigs at River Valley, 5:30
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Southern, Meigs, River Valley
at Alexander, 4:30
Golf
Gallia Academy at Pickaway C.C. Districts, 9
a.m.
College Soccer
Pikeville at URG women, 5 p.m.
Pikeville at URG men, 7 p.m.
College Volleyball
Bluefield at URG, 6 p.m.

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — The
South Gallia Rebels outscored
the Eastern Eagles 20-7 in the
first half, then eventually held on
to claim a 20-13 victory Friday
night at Rebel Stadium. The Rebels scored all of their points in the
first and second quarters.
South Gallia (3-2, 2-2 TVC
Hocking) had the opening possession and took the ball down
the field to finish with a Landon
Hutchinson 30-yard touchdown
pass to Ethan Spurlock and a
failed PAT gave the Rebels the
lead with 6-0 at the 8:27 mark into
the first quarter.
Eastern (2-3, 2-2) used its opportunity with its first offensive
possession to finish with a 1-yard
touchdown run by Dylan Bresciani and a successful PAT, giving
the Eagles a 7-6 lead at the 6:01
mark in the first quarter.
A healthy kickoff return by
Ethan Spurlock took SGHS to the
Eagles’ 39-yard line. At the 5:30
mark in the first quarter, Ethan
Spurlock rushed for a 6-yard
touchdown run and a successful 2-point conversion by Mikey
Wheeler gave South Gallia the
lead at 14-7.
Eastern’s Dylan Bresciani threw
an interception to Brayden Greer
at the 4:11 mark in the first quarter. With a three-and-out from
each team, the Rebels contained
the Eagles 14-7 at the end of the
first quarter. South Gallia led the
time of possession in the first
quarter of 6:44 to Eastern’s 5:16.

Eastern junior Dylan Bresciani, right, fends off a South Gallia tackler during
the first half of Friday night’s Week 5 football contest in Mercerville.

Within the first three minutes
into the second quarter, SGHS
had a loss of downs and a lost
fumble, while EHS had one lost
fumble. At the 5:16 mark of the
second frame, Landon Hutchinson connected a 26-yard touchdown pass to Jared Northup and a

unsuccessful PAT gave the Rebels
the lead at 20-7.
Each team had two more possessions with nothing to show
for and at halftime, South Gallia
had the lead of 20-7 over Eastern.
See EAGLES | B2

River Valley conquers Spartans, 40-29
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley snapped a five-game losing skid
by picking up its first victory of the
2013 football season Friday night following a 40-29 decision over visiting
Alexander in a Week 5 non-conference matchup in Gallia County.
The Raiders (1-4) trailed 14-12
after one quarter of play and were
down 21-20 at the intermission, but
the hosts rallied for 20 consecutive
points to turn a one-point halftime
deficit into a sizable 40-21 cushion
with 5:51 remaining in regulation.
The Spartans (1-4) answered with
a score and successful two-point conversion with 4:28 left in the contest
to pull to within 11 points, but ultimately never came closer the rest of

the way. The win allowed the Raiders
to snap a three-game skid against the
Spartans, whom they last defeated in
2007 by a 29-7 count.
RVHS outgained the guests by a
slim 365-353 overall margin in total
yards and also claimed a small 1917 edge in first downs, but the difference in the final outcome came in
the turnover department. The Raiders had just one turnover, while the
Spartans threw four interceptions
and also had the game’s only fumble
— resulting in a plus-4 turnover differential for the hosts.
Those extra possessions allowed
River Valley to control the game by
controlling the clock, as the Raiders
were on offense for 32:27 out of a
possible 48 minutes of regulation.
Early on, however, the Spartans

seemed to have control after jumping
out to an early 7-0 lead following a
17-yard TD run by Josh Barnes with
8:19 remaining in the opening period. The Raiders answered on their
ensuing possession, as Austin Bradley hauled in a 30-yard scoring pass
from Dayton Hardway with 8:19 left,
making it a 7-6 contest.
RVHS took its first lead of the
night less than two minutes later, as
Bradley scampered in from a yard out
with 6:35 left in the first quarter for
a 12-7 edge. Alexander came right
back with a one-yard scoring pass
from Brody McGrath to Barnes with
4:53 remaining in the first, giving the
guests a 14-12 advantage.
AHS extended its lead out to 2112 just nine seconds into the second
See SPARTANS | B2

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

&amp;286î� îLîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 29, 2013

�676?56CDî6586î*62JDî Athens drops Blue Devils, 3-1
,2==6Jî�9C:DE:2?�î �
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Just in the
nick of time.
With the match tied headed into the
80th minute when T.G. Miller found the
back of the net off of a Justin Beaver assist
to give the Defenders the 2-1 victory over
visiting Teays Valley Christian, Friday
night in the Old French City.
The Defenders (5-4-1) got on the board
first with a goal by Micah Sanders in the
33rd minute off of the assist by Beaver.

The score remained the same until the
78th minute when Teays Valley Christian’s
Eli Gillespie found the back of the net. In
the 80th minute OVCS earned a corner
kick, and Beaver passed the ball past the
TVCS keeper. Miller knocked the ball in
the net take the 2-1 victory.
The Lions held a 13-to-11 advantage in
shots, a 12-to-9 advantage in shots on goal
and a 7-to-4 advantage in corner kicks.
Marshall Hood had 11 saves for the Defenders, while Luke Mace had seven for
Teays Valley Christian.

Bengals hit road, renew long rivalry with Browns
CLEVELAND (AP) —
The Bengals believe this
is their year, the one when
they finally put it all together. No more excuses.
No more playoff flops.
Cincinnati, which spent
the summer in the spotlight
on HBO’s “Hard Knocks”
and is being touted as a
team to watch this season,
has its sights on winning
the AFC North and making
a legitimate run at a Super
Bowl championship.
A young team has earned
its stripes.

“They’re special,” Browns
cornerback Joe Haden said.
“They’re starting to get it.
They feel like they’re finally
starting to get over that
hump and get on top.”
It’s a long, unpredictable road to the Lombardi
Trophy, and this week it
takes the Bengals up Interstate-71 for their yearly
visit to the Browns (1-2)
in the 80th edition of the
“Battle of Ohio.”
Coming off one of the
most unimaginable wins in
team history, the Bengals

(2-1), who overcame four
turnovers and a 16-point
deficit to beat Green Bay
last week, will play five
of their next seven games
away from home. They
can’t be as sloppy against
the Browns (1-2).
“Cleveland is a special
place because it’s a division
game on the road,” Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis said.
“We know how difficult it
is: the fans, the crowd. We
know what kind of environment it’s going to be. This
is a big game for us.”

Eagles
From Page B1
SGHS led the time of possession in the
second quarter of 7:07 to Eastern’s 4:53.
In the third quarter, neither South
Gallia nor Eastern scored any points.
Eastern had the ball for three possession, which EHS had two lost fumbles.
South Gallia had the ball for two offensive possessions and was forced to punt
the ball on both occasions.
At the end of the third quarter, SGHS
maintained the lead of 20-7. Eastern led
the time of possession in the third quarter
of 7:34 to South Gallia’s 4:26.
At the 10:39 mark in the fourth quarter,
Eastern failed to convert a fourth down
and turned the ball over to South Gallia.
The Rebels returned the ball back to Eastern with a three-and-out.
On the Eagles’ next possession, they
marched the ball down the field and Chase
Cook threw an interception to the Rebels’
own Landon Hutchinson with 6:18 left in
the game. SGHS could not complete a first
down and gave EHS the ball with 3:30 left
in the game.
Eastern’s own Chase Cook completed
a 27-yard, fourth-and-five touchdown
conversion to Zach Browning and a unsuccessful 2-point conversion narrowed
South Gallia’s lead to 20-13.
Eastern tried an unsuccessful onside kick and South Gallia’s own Ethan
Spurlock secured the ball at the 1:28
mark left in the game. Jacob White
sealed the deal for South Gallia with a
7-yard run for a first down and a Rebel
victory. The final score of the game, in
favor of the Rebels, 20-13. SGHS led
the time of possession in the fourth
quarter of 6:28 to Eastern’s 5:32.
South Gallia’s Landon Hutchinson led
the Rebels in passing with 3-for-8, 61
yards and two touchdowns. Jacob White

led the team in rushing with 18 carries for
117 yards. Ethan Spurlock had 10 carries
for 31 yards and one touchdown. Landon
Hutchinson had 13 carries for 31 yards.
Ethan Spurlock led the Rebels in
receiving with two receptions for 35
yards and one touchdown. Jared Northup had one reception for 26 yards and
one touchdown. The Rebels had a total
of 246 yards of offense.
The victors had nine first downs and
a total of five penalties for 25 yards.
SGHS also had a total of two fumbles
and lost one. The total time of possession for the hosts was 24:45.
Eastern’s Chase Cook led the Eagles in
passing with 1-for-5, 27 yards, one touchdown and one interception. Dylan Bresciani was 1-for-4 passing, one yard and
one interception.
Tyler Barber lead the team with in rushing with 14 carries for 77 yards. Dylan
Bresciani had three carries for 45 yards
and one touchdown.
Tyler Barber had four carries for 33
yards. Chase Cook had 13 carries for 32
yards. Christian Speelman had one carry
for six yards. Zack Scowden had nine carries for zero yards.
Zack Browning led EHS in receiving
with one reception for 27 yards and one
touchdown. Chase Cook had one reception for one yard.
The Eagles had a total of 221 yards
of offense and 10 first downs, as well as
a total of three penalties for 25 yards.
EHS also had a total of three fumbles —
all lost. The total time of possession for
the Eagles was 23:15.
South Gallia will return to action on
Friday when it hosts Federal Hocking
on Homecoming, while Eastern also returns to action Friday for its Homecoming game against Belpre. Both games
will kickoff at 7:30 p.m.

CENTENARY, Ohio — It’s not always how you start, but rather how
you finish.
The Gallia Academy soccer team
held a 1-0 lead over Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League co-leader Athens early in Thursday night’s matchup.
However, the visiting Bulldogs got it
together and cruised to a 3-1 triumph.
The host Blue Devils (3-7, 1-6 SEOAL) struck first, when sophomore Logan Carpenter found the back of the
net from long distance.
Athens got on the board in the 12th
minute when Victor Davis scored on
the Finn Kola assist to tie the game at

1-1. Davis gave his club the lead in the
21st minute, this time on the assist from
Dustin Goetz. With time winding down
in the half Sammy Morales added to the
AHS momentum scoring from the base
line to give the Bulldogs the 3-1 lead.
Defense was the order of the second half as GAHS senior goalkeeper
Alex Greer and Athens goalkeeper
Sam Conrath-Sweeney both had second half shutouts.
With the loss and Alexander’s 0-0
tie with Logan, the Blue Devils find
themselves in last place at 1-6 in the
league with three SEOAL games remaining. Warren defeated Jackson 3-1
Thursday night, meaning the Bulldogs
and Warriors are still gridlocked at the
top of the league at 5-1-1.

Spartans
From Page B1
canto after Barnes hauled in a 5-yard scoring pass from McGrath with 11:51 remaining in the half. River Valley retaliated with
a 37-yard TD pass from Hardway to Kirk
Morrow with 10:21 left, making it a 21-20
contest at the intermission.
The Raiders took a permanent lead following its first possession of the second
half, as Hardway found Bradley on a 25yard scoring pass with 9:52 left in the
third for a 26-21 edge. Hardway added a
39-yard scoring pass to Morrow with 3:20
left in the third, making it a 34-21 contest
headed into the fourth.
Morrow hauled in one final scoring pass
from Hardway — this time from 10 yards
out — to give the hosts a comfortable 4021 advantage with 5:51 left in regulation.
McGrath connected with Barnes on a 30yard scoring pass with 4:28 remaining in
the game to wrap up the scoring.
Mark Wray led the Raiders rushing attack with 44 yards on 11 carries, followed
by Bradley with 18 yards on six attempts.
Justin Arrowood also had three carries for
12 yards for the victors.
Hardway finished the game 24-of-38 passing for 364 yards, which included five touchdowns and one interception. Hardway was
also sacked six times for negative 78 yards,

which led to RVHS having only one rushing
yard total on 34 attempts by night’s end.
Morrow led the hosts with 10 catches
for 180 yards and three touchdowns, while
Bradley hauled in 10 passes for 148 yards
and two scores. Wray and Jared Mabe
each caught two passes apiece for 26 and
10 yards, respectively.
Mike Williams had two sacks for the
Raider defense, which was led in tackles by Morrow with eight. Brody Moles
picked off two AHS passes, while Morrow
and Wray each had one interception.
Josh Barnes led the Spartans with 65
rushing yards on eight carries, followed by
Joe Barnes with 13 yards on three totes.
Alexander mustered just 81 rushing yards
on 22 tries in the setback.
McGrath finished the night 20-of-43
passing for 272 yards, throwing three
touchdowns and four interceptions. Josh
Barnes led the wideouts with six catches
for 43 yards and three touchdowns, while
Jacob Wirick had five grabs for 85 yards.
RVHS was penalized nine times for 85
yards in the victory, while Alexander was
flagged 11 times for 85 yards. The Raiders
also had six of the 10 punts in the contest.
River Valley opens its final season of OVC
play next Friday when it hosts Chesapeake
in a Week 6 Homecoming clash at 7:30 p.m.

Tornadoes
From Page B1
into the endzone. Trenton
Deem added the extrapoint kick and Southern
held the 7-0 lead just 39
second into play.
After a stalled drive by
each squad the Vikings
(3-2) found themselves
deep in their own territory.
Symmes Valley marched
down the field and into
the endzone on a quarterback scramble by Tanner
Mays. The drive featured
16 plays, a pair of fourth
down conversions and covered 86 yards in just over
seven minutes. The two
point conversion attempt
failed and the Silver and
Red trailed 7-6.
An interception by Kyle
Vallance set up the Vikings
deep in their own territory
again with 3:25 remaining
until halftime. On the 10th
play of the drive an 18 yard
touchdown run by Tyler
Rowe was called back due
to holding. SVHS couldn’t
recover from the penalty
and Southern took the 7-6
lead into the break.
The Tornadoes had ran
just 13 offensive plays
in the first half and held
possession of the football
for just under seven and
a half minutes.
Symmes Valley controlled the game yet again
in the third period, holding possession of the ball
for nine minutes and 52
second, while allowing
Southern to run just three
offensive plays. The Vikings were unable to find
the endzon however and

were forced to punt on the
opening play of the fourth
quarter.
Southern was looked
as though it was forced
into a three-and-out again
but Ryan Billingsley ran
a fourth down fake punt
for a 16 yards and a first
down. Six plays later
quarterback Tristen Wolfe
found paydirt from three
yards out to increase the
SHS lead. Deem kicked
in the extra point and the
Purple and Gold held a
14-6 advantage.
The final nail was driven into Symmes Valley’s
coffin with a 1:15 remaining when Colten Walters
intercepted a pass for
Southern. A trio of kneel
downs by Wolfe and the
Tornadoes rang the victory bell to the tune of 14-6.
“It feels real good and it
was a great effort out of
our guys up front,” Southern coach Kyle Wickline
said. “Defensivly we knew
we were going to hold
them and we got a spark
from (Ryan) Billingsley
on the fake punt and his
leadoff tackle.”
The Tornadoes running
game was paced by Barton
with 29 yards on 12 carries
and a touchdown. Billingsley had 44 yards on six
carries, while Wolfe had
27 yards and a touchdown
on seven carries. Trenton Deem ran once for 26
yards, while Paul Ramthun
was held to negative one
yard on two carries.
Wolfe was just 1-of-4
passing with 20 yards and
an interception. Hunter

Johnson caught one pass
for 20 yards on the night.
The Vikings offense was
led by Tyler Rowe with 15
carries for 71 yards and
Mays with 66 yards and a
score on 18 attempts. Collin Webb added 59 yards
on 15 rushes, Brandon
Craft had 35 yards on seven carries, while Kyle Vallance was stopped for no
gain on one carry.
Mays was 3-of-7 passing for 39 yards with an
interception, while Rowe
was 1-of-2 passing for five
yards. Curtis Lybarnd
caught one pass for 48
yards, Rowe reeled in one
pass for eight yards, Craft
had one grab for five yards,
and Webb had one catch
for two yards.
Symmes Valley held a
16-to-9 advantage in first
down, a 275-to-185 advantage in total offense and
a 65-to-32 advantage in
offensive plays ran. Southern was penalized three
times for 25 yards, while
SVHS was set back five
times for 35 yards. Each
team fumbled once, with
Symmes Valley recovering
both loose balls.
Prior to this 2006 was
the lone time Southern defeated Symmes Valley. The
Tornadoes won 14-7 in
Willow Wood. This could
be the last matchup between these schools as the
contract has not yet been
renewed for next season.
The Tornadoes will
host Wahama next week,
while Symmes Valley
will host Green.

Devils
From Page B1

60451096

negative one yard on two carries.
Allison caught seven passes for 224
yards and four scores, while Eastman
caught four passes for 77 yards and two
touchdowns. Wes Jarrell had one grab for
15 yards, followed by Payton Halley had
one catch for three yards.
Vinton County’s Andy Long was 5-of-17
passing for 73 yards with a touchdown and
two interceptions.
Ousley led the Vikings on the ground
with 103 yards on 13 carries with a score,
Long rushed for 50 yards on 19 attempts,
Levi Thompson had two carries for 47
yards and a score, while J.T. Hayes had
36 yards on 10 carries. Nate Schrader
with two rushes and five yards and Todd
Wallingford with four yards on one carry

rounded out the VCHS rushing attack.
Hall had two receptions for 63 yards
and a score to lead the VCHS receiving
core. Wallingford caught two passes
for four yards and Schrader had one
grab for six yards.
Gallia Academy held a 15-to-14 edge in
first downs and a 468-to-318 advantage in
total yards, while VCHS had a 69-to47 advantage in plays from scrimmage. GAHS
fumbled once, Vinton County fumbled
three times and the Vikings recovered all
four loose balls.
Wade Jarrell now has 16 passing
touchdowns and seven rushing touchdowns this season.
The Blue Devils will travel to Kentucky next week to take on undefeated
Belfry, while VCHS opens league play
at 1-4 Alexander.

�Sunday, September 29, 2013

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

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

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Notices

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PUBLISHING CO.
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Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

SERVICES

Second half surge leads Point past Generals, 21-7

Business Consulting

Yard Sale

while Toler added 11 yards on three
totes. Aden Yates added 10 yards on
14 carries, followed by Cody McDaniel and Gage Buskirk with eight and
four yards on two carries apiece.
Yates was 8-of-10 passing for 113
yards and threw zero touchdowns or
interceptions. Walton also completed
his only pass attempt for 14 yards.
Jon Peterson led the hosts with 73
yards on four catches, followed by
Mitchell with four grabs for 49 yards.
Buckirk also hauled in one pass for
five yards in the triumph.
Winfield finished the night with
17 rushing yards on 27 attempts and
added another 73 yards through the
air. The Generals also managed just
five first downs in the contest, compared to 18 by the hosts.
Ethan Copeland led WHS with 25
rushing yards on six carries. Show
finished the night 7-of-13 passing for
73 yards, which included an interception by Point’s Gage Buskirk. John
Hathaway led the Winfield wideouts
with five catches for 51 yards.
Chris Turner, Winfield’s top offensive weapon, was held to negative five yards rushing on six attempts and did not have a catch
in the setback.
PPHS was flagged six times for
55 yards, while the guests were penalized five times for 40 yards. Both
teams committed two turnovers
apiece in the contest. Colin Peal was
3-for-3 on extra-point kicks, while
Bryce Boggs was perfect on his only
attempt for WHS.
Point Pleasant returns to action
Friday when it travels to Brooke for
a Week 6 football contest at 7:30 p.m.

60444042

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — A
tale of two halves, unless your talking about the defense.
Point Pleasant surrendered just
90 yards of total offense and broke
a scoreless tie at halftime with three
consecutive rushing touchdowns en
route to a 21-7 victory over visiting
Winfield in a Week 5 football contest
at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field
in Mason County.
The Big Blacks (4-0) posted a
7-2 edge in first downs and held a
110-27 advantage in total yardage
during the first half, but the hosts
had nothing to show for their dominance by intermission.
PPHS put together consecutive
scoring drives after the break for a
14-0 lead through three quarters of
play, then added another rushing
touchdown with 7:37 left in regulation for a comfortable 21-0 cushion.
The Generals (2-2) responded
with their only sustained drive of the
night, which came at the 2:17 mark
of the fourth after Toby Show scampered in from five yards out — making it a 21-7 contest.
Winfield successfully attempted
and recovered an onside kick on
the ensuing possession, but the
guests were unable to do anything positive with the extra set
of downs — which ended on a
fourth down sack by Tanner Hill
with less than a minute to play.
“We had some things that were
hurting there in the first half, and
it really stalled us a bit,” Darst said.

“Nobody panicked when we came in
at halftime and we just went back to
doing what we do well. It really paid
off for us there in the second half.
“I was really pleased with what
we did there in the second half offensively, and my hat’s off to the
defense for their efforts tonight.
We feel like we have one of the top
defenses in triple-A, and these kids
really come to play every night.”
The Big Blacks finished the night
with 325 yards of total offense, which
included 198 rushing yards on 53 attempts. Cody Mitchell accumulated
116 of those rushing yards on 21
totes, which included a pair of third
quarter touchdown runs.
PPHS took the opening kickoff
of the second half and marched
straight down the field to paydirt
following a Mitchell scoring run of
16 yards, giving the hosts a 7-0 lead
with eight minutes left in the third.
Mitchell added a nine-yard TD run
at the 3:31 mark, giving Point a 14-0
edge headed into the finale.
Austen Toler drove the proverbial
nail in the coffin with a five-yard
scoring run with 7:37 remaining in
regulation, giving the Big Blacks a
decisive 21-0 lead. Winfield added
its only score five-plus minutes later,
wrapping up the 14-point outcome.
Point Pleasant mustered 53 rushing yards on 22 attempts and also
had 57 yards passing to go along
with the only turnover in the first
half. WHS, conversely, had 18 rushing yards on 14 tries and another
nine yards through the air at the half.
Chase Walton followed Mitchell
with 49 rushing yards on 11 carries,

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

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Health
FINANCIAL SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General

Licensed Social Worker
*Bachelor’s degree
in Social Work
*Must possess an active
Ohio Social
Work License
*Minimum of 1 year
experience in a long
term or sub acute
care rehabilitation setting
*Demonstrated ability
to assess resident
needs, develop and
implement a plan of care
and coordinate the
discharge planning process.

Hudson with one apiece. Olivia Cremeans had two blocks in the game,
followed by Andrus with one. Olivia
Cremeans had a trio serving aces,
while Dettwiller had one.
The Lady Bulldogs were led by
Lauren Tigner with 12 kills, followed
by Rachael Gilkey with 10 and Sara
Skinner with five. Skinner had a
game-high 33 assists.
Athens has won all 18 TVC Ohio
sets this season.

OHIO
Athens 55, Proctorville Fairland 46
Bainbridge Paint Valley 38, Chillicothe Zane Trace 24
Baltimore Liberty Union 18, Bloom-Carroll 0
Bidwell River Valley 40, Albany Alexander 29
Byesville Meadowbrook 34, Lore City Buckeye Trail 0
Caldwell 34, Hannibal River 14
Chillicothe 56, Washington C.H. 6
Circleville 38, Ashville Teays Valley 6
Circleville Logan Elm 41, Lancaster Fairfield Union 18
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 35, Waverly 27
Crooksville 51, Zanesville W. Muskingum 6
Crown City S. Gallia 20, Reedsville Eastern 13
Frankfort Adena 27, Chillicothe Huntington 0
Gallipolis Gallia 48, McArthur Vinton County 19
Glouster Trimble 55, Corning Miller 0
Lees Creek E. Clinton 27, Greenfield McClain 21
Logan 14, Nelsonville-York 12
Lucasville Valley 62, S. Point 29
McDermott Scioto NW 61, Franklin Furnace Green 34
Minford 30, Oak Hill 16
New Matamoras Frontier 34, Beallsville 14
Portsmouth 33, Ironton 20
Portsmouth W. 42, Chesapeake 0
Racine Southern 14, Willow Wood Symmes Valley 6
Southeastern 41, Chillicothe Unioto 31
Stewart Federal Hocking 21, Belpre 13
Thornville Sheridan 42, McConnelsville Morgan 14
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 42, Hillsboro 0
Wellston 18, Ironton Rock Hill 15
Wheelersburg 49, Jackson 14
Williamsport Westfall 18, Piketon 14
Zanesville 70, Cambridge 17
WEST VIRGINIA
Auburn, Va. 42, Montcalm 27
Bluefield 57, Greenbrier East 18
Bridgeport 65, East Fairmont 21
Cabell Midland 63, Hurricane 14
Capital 34, South Charleston 31, OT
East Hardy 36, Tygarts Valley 3
Fairmont Senior 48, Elkins 13

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

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Money To Lend

Apply: Abbyshire Place
311 Buckridge Rd.
Bidwell, OH 45614
vhcjobs@vrablehealthcare.com
Or visit
www.vrablehealthcare.com
EOE
60453084

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

Frankfort 28, Northern - G, Md. 15
Gilmer County 61, Buffalo 46
Hampshire 37, Mountain Ridge, Md. 20
Huntington 77, Ripley 7
John Marshall 28, E. Liverpool, Ohio 6
Keyser 12, Allegany, Md. 7
Lewis County 59, Lincoln County 0
Liberty Raleigh 28, Sherman 13
Lincoln 27, South Harrison 7
Logan 27, Chapmanville 14
Madonna 48, Cameron 6
Martinsburg 28, Morgantown 21
Meadow Bridge 28, Pendleton County 13
Midland Trail 36, Van 13
Moorefield 31, Webster County 13
Nicholas County 34, Clay County 6
Notre Dame 37, Bishop Donahue 16
Oak Hill 23, Buckhannon-Upshur 10
Oakland Southern, Md. 48, Berkeley Springs 0
Paden City 67, Hundred 6
Parkersburg 35, Marietta, Ohio 10
Petersburg 48, Spring Mills 6
PikeView 23, Shady Spring 12
Pocahontas County 43, Richwood 25
Point Pleasant 21, Winfield 7
Preston 41, North Marion 14
Ritchie County 33, Doddridge County 22
River View 18, James Monroe 14
Roane County 37, Braxton County 19
Robert C. Byrd 34, Grafton 20
Scott 59, Poca 14
Sherando, Va. 43, Jefferson 3
Spring Valley 21, Princeton 14
St. Albans 43, Nitro 19
Summers County 27, Greenbrier West 20
Tolsia 34, Tug Valley 14
Tucker County 10, Philip Barbour 7
Tyler Consolidated 43, Calhoun County 6
University 56, Parkersburg South 14
Valley Fayette 44, Fayetteville 34
Wahama 54, Waterford, Ohio 6
Wayne 58, Sissonville 19
Weir 34, Liberty Harrison 14

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
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from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

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Carpeting
Drivers &amp; Delivery

CARPET SALE!

Need Extra
Cash???

12 WIDE AND 15 WIDE
New Shipment
DIRECT MILL PRICING

Early Morning
Newspaper Delivery Routes Available in
Gallia County, OH,
MUST HAVE RELIABLE
TRANSPORTATION
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Today
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For More Information contact
JESSICA
CHASEN EXT 12

MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

60450840

-66&lt;î�î�@@E32==î)4@C6D

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

CARPET SALE!
12 WIDE AND 15 WIDE
New Shipment
DIRECT MILL PRICING
MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

60450842

THE PLAINS, Ohio — Can’t stop
perfection.
The Athens volleyball team remains perfect on the season by defeating Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division visitor Meigs, Thursday
night in three sets in Athens County.
The Lady Bulldogs (12-0, 6-0
TVC Ohio) took the opening set

25-13, the second set 25-12 and
the third set 25-13.
Meigs (5-10, 1-5) was led by Brook
Andrus with 10 kills, followed by Aly
Dettwiller and Olivia Cremeans with
two each. Ariel Ellis rounded out the
Lady Marauders net attack with one
kill. Devyn Oliver had a team-high 10
assists, Lindsay Patterson had three,
while Ellis had two.
Dettwiller had a team-high two
digs, followed by Andrus and Kelsy

SERVICES

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New Shipment
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Help Wanted General

"Hiring Direct Care
Staff for individuals with
developmental disabilities in Gallia and Jackson Areas. If interested
please call 740-5786906 or apply in person
from 10a-3p at
352 2nd Ave Gallipolis,
OH
(BTS Building)"

MOLLOHAN CARPET
317 State Route 7 North
740-446-7444

60450848

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Yard Sale Oct 1-5, 2 miles out
Beechgrove Rd. Rutland. Rain
or Shine, for more info 740742-2849

740-591-8044

#6:8DîDH6AEî3Jî"25Jî�F==5@8D
Alex Hawley

Lg Garage Sale @ 9994 St Rt
7 S. 6 miles below Gallipolis.
Oct 1st &amp; 2nd - 8:30am to
4:30pm. Lots of nice Fall &amp;
Winter Clothing &amp; Much more.
Oct 1,2,3,4. 9-6, next to EHS,
985-3929 Road King Cycle
parts, Barbie's, Furniture, Electric Stove, Washer, Toys, Lots
of Misc

Professional Services

60451794

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Household Estate Sale: Paul &amp;
Ruth Karr residence-follow
signs at Chester, OH; Fri.&amp;Sat.
Oct 4 &amp; 5, 9am-6pm. Furniture,
tools, appliances, etc. Also
2005 Mercury Grand Marquis
G, 42k miles $6,500. 740-4167742

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Excavating

Reese

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

60446896

Bryan Walters

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

5 - Family Garage Sale October 3rd &amp; 4th @ 4466 State Rt
554. Clothes-infant boys, boys
5 - 5 &amp; 14-16, girls 5-6, mens,
juniors - plus size, nursing
scrubs,maternity, Exesaucer,
jumperoo, Bathroom set, xmas decor &amp; pre-lit tree, harlequim books, toys and lots of
misc.

Auctions

Point Pleasant running back Cody Mitchell (14) shrugs off a tackle attempt by Winfield’s Tyler Hill during a third quarter touchdown run Friday night at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

NOW HIRING
CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS
QUALIFICATIONS: 1 YR
GENERAL WORK EXPERIENCE, VALID DRIVERS LICENSE; HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR EQUIVALENT.
OFFERING:
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Resources Office at (304) 6742440

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

&amp;286î��îLîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Houses For Sale

Condominiums

Pets

Home on 5 acres overlooking
Ohio River, St. Rt 7 &amp; St. Rt
218, 4 Bdrms, 2 1/2 baths, garage, pole barn, finished basement, Walk up attic, City
schools &amp; water $295,000.00
740-441-1492
One-Level Home in Striversville near Portland. 1 acre lot.
Living Rm, Family/Dining Rm,
3BR, 1BA, Kitchen, Laundry
Rm. Sorry NO Rentals or Land
Contracts . Please leave message with name &amp; phone number at 740-992-2472

New Condo, 2BR, 2BA, Microwave, Dishwasher, AC,
Patio. NO Pets/Smoking. $650
month + deposit 740-247-3008

Give Away to a Good Home a
Sm. Carney Terrior
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all shots updated. Very
Friendly and is good with Children &amp; Elderly Call 740-6125133

Want To Buy
WANT TO BUY ripe Pawpaw's
- $1.00 lb -Black walnuts starting Oct 1st. 740-698-6060

Apartments/Townhouses

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

SUBSTITUTE COOKS
and AIDES (PARTTIME, AS NEEDED).
Buckeye Hills Career
Center is now accepting
applications. Contact the

Immediate Opening
District Sales Manager
Looking for self-starter with a
positive attitude, active team
player, have reliable transportation, &amp; dependable.

at 740-245-5334. EEO

Responsibilities include: Overseeing Independent Contractors, Daily Customer Service, &amp;
Achieving Circulation Goals.
Position offers company benefits including 401K, Health,
Dental, Vision, and Life Insurance.

Installation / Maintenace / Repair

HVAC Technician
Need Installer and Service Technician. Experience Needed. Call
Comfort Air @ 4410114.

Please send resume to:
Circulation Distribution
Manager
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave
Gallipolis, OH 45631
or email to:
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m
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740-446-3808
EDUCATION

Help Wanted General

Now Hiring

REAL ESTATE SALES

Full-time general laborers w/no exper. req.
for 1st shift, work 4 10-hr days Mon.-Thurs.,
starting pay is $9/hr plus $250 attendance
bonus avail. mo.’ly, addtn’l benefits aft. 90 days,
occasional Fri.’s &amp;/or overtime req., drug-free
candidates should apply in person at Pioneer
City Casting, 904 Campus Drive, Belpre OH.
60453099

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1-Bedroom Apartment Call
740) 446-0390
2 - Rm efficiency Apartment in
the country - 7 miles from Gallipolis on Rt 7 south. 2 car garage, All electric, Utilties not included. $300 /mo, Deposit &amp;
1st mo. rent &amp; References Call
740-446-4514
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
FOR RENT:1BR Apt, Furnished, Very clean, Non
smokers, No pets, C/A
304-675-1386
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2, 3,
4BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-6740023 or 304-444-4268

Hate Laundromats ? Washer
&amp; Dryer Available. 2-Bdrm 1
bath, All Electric home with attached one car garage . Includes ice box / stove. Near
grocery, hospital, Ideal place
for 1 &amp; 2 Adults. one sm. pet
allowed, Pet Fee. $625/mo
$625 deposit water includedreferences Sorry NO
SMOKERS.
HOUSE FOR RENT: 2BR,
Very clean. Conveniently located, Non-smoker, Ref, dep,
no pets. 304-675-5162
Newly remodeled 2-3 Bdrm
House @ 848 4th Ave (Gallipolis) $500 /mo $500 dep.
water &amp; sewage incl. Call 740612-0565
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
1 Bedroom trailer for Rent in
Henderson W.VA - Private Lot.
NO PETS, Call 740-446-3442
2 Bdrm - 2 bath mobile home Cheshire Area - $425/mo $425
deposit NO PETS Call 740367-7025 or 740-339-9712
Nice 2 Bdrm Mobile Home NO PETS - $375/mo &amp; $375
deposit Call 740-446-9151
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

For Sale By Owner
For Sale or Rent Approx. 3/4
Acre Mobile Home Lot located
on Klicher Road, Concrete
Pads, Electric, Septic and Water, Close to Green Elementary. $8.000 Call 446-6565
HOUSE FOR SALE:3BR, 2BA,
2car garage, outbuilding, on 2
lots, 1 owner well maintained,
1600sqft Pt.Plsnt 149,000.
Please call 304-675-4217

Land (Acreage)
Houses For Sale

POST OFFICE
PROPERTY
ONLINE AUCTION

238 First Ave. House in rear &amp;
2nd floor Apt. furnished Kitchen, Hook ups for Washer &amp;
Dryer. 2 Person occupancy in
each. Apt $525, House $600,
plus utilities. Deposit, References 740-446-4926
FOR RENT
3BR Mobile home. All elec, Appliances, W/D hookup. 304812-0708

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

3 to 4 Bdrm House with 2 story
Garage in Henderson WV,
New Roof - windows - Completely remouldal Asking
$59,500 OBO 740-446-3442

RESORT PROPERTY

ANIMALS
Nice 2BR, Apt, near Harrisonville. $425 plus utilities No
Smoking, No Pets 740-7423033
Friendly, beautiful 48 unit complex has units available. We
have a total of 24 one bedrooms &amp; 24 two bedrooms.
Rent now and receive $150
gift-card to Walmart after 3
months! Call 740-446-2568 or
stop in at 52 Westwood Dr #27
Gallipolis, Ohio during business hours of M-F 8am4:30pm

Pets
2 Male Cavalier King Charles
Spaniel puppies, Black &amp;
White w/Tan markings, $400
ea. 2 Female, Boxers, Black
w/white markings, $450 ea. All
Vet checked &amp; AKC registered
740-696-1085
Free Kittens to a Good Home (
Litter trained) Call 740-4468657

Help Wanted General

POINT PLEASANT

AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

Miscellaneous
Wood fireplace insert with
blower $200. Call 740-4462460 before 8:00pm
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

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

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Auctions

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

LAND
STATE ROUTE 62

LOUIS MANCUSO
404-331-9451

Fiscal Manager for multi-county mental health care
facility based in Gallipolis to oversee payroll, accounts
receivable, and accounts payable, as well as prepare
general ledger analysis reports, income statements,
balance sheet reports, and expense reports. This person
will also monitor billing and receiving productivity. Tempto-direct, $15-20/hour + perm benefits.
Human Resource Manager for employer in Gallipolis
to oversee interviewing, customer service management,
screening, and relationship building. Direct, f/t,
competitive pay + some perm benefits.

louis.mancuso@gsa.gov
https://realestatesales.gov

For details on these jobs and lots more, and for information
about us and how to apply, visit:

CLOSING DATE
10/04
INSPECTIONS UPON REQUEST

www.careerconnections.info

GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION (GSA)

Locally owned and operated.
No fees. EOE.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013
@ 11:00 A.M.
LOCATED 6 MILES SOUTH OF POINT PLEASANT, WV.
TAKE ROUTE 2 SOUTH TO GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV., TURN
ON HENRY LANE THEN TAKE AN IMMEDIATE LEFT ONTO
CHURCH ROAD, FOLLOW SIGNS.
Selling a 1987 14’ x 70’ Shultz, 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, All Electric Mobile
Home with an 8’ x 20’ Slide Extension. Central Air, Heat Pump, 2
Decks. 30 days to Remove, until November 3, 2013. Mobile Home
is Clean. Owner is moving out of state to be close to daughter.
Owner is Debra Freymuth.
Terms: Cash or Certified Funds, due the day of auction.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO
#66
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pictures

60450965

60449960

Auctions

Auctions

EVENING AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION

80 Briarwood Drive, Athens, OH

Washington Road, Albany, OH

Tuesday, October 1 – 4:00 p.m.

Saturday, October 5 – 10:00 a.m.

DIRECTIONS: From 33 exit in Athens on Columbus Road, follow towards Athens at stop light
turn left on North Columbia Avenue go to 5th street on right, turn onto Briarwood Drive, house at
end of street, watch for signs.

DIRECTIONS: From Athens take Rt. 32/50 west 8 miles to Albany, at stop light turn north on
Washington Road (Marathon Gas Station), just a short distance on the right, watch for signs.
Many items yet to be uncovered.

VEHICLE: 1994 Cadillac DeVille Sedan, in excellent condition w/all the extras, 70,000 miles,

TRACTOR : Ford 4000 Industrial w/bucket &amp; front end loader and re-built engine – needs put
together – sold w/reserve,

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: 2-Ladies 14k diamond rings (1-European cut solitaire
diamond measures 3.85 &amp; weighs .20cts.tw. solitaire &amp; 1-round brilliant diamond measuring
3.55 mm x 2 mm &amp; weighs .17 cts. Set in white gold illusion style head also contains 2- 1.75 mm
single cut diamonds), some costume jewelry, 4-pocket watches, silver dollars (1-1884, 2-1922/23
&amp; 3-1974-76), Book of Roosevelt starting at 1946-few missing, collection of state quarters,
Athens Ice &amp; Storage Pen, Antiques writing desk, oak lamp table, oval lamp table, organ stool,
rose back needlepoint chair, 3-ornate parlor chairs, old record cabinet, cast iron floor lamp, 3Goofus Glass dishes, green depression bud vase for old car,
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS : 2-newer Panasonic 46” flat screen TVs, Zenith TV in cabinet,
matching sofa/loveseat/chair, 2-upholstered swivel rocker, 3-upholstered occasional chairs, 2seat loveseat rocker, hide-a-bed sofa, loveseat, 3-section bookshelf unit w/glass doors, 3-section
bookshelf unit, end tables, lamps, sideboard cabinet, wall hangings, lots of knick knacks and
home decorator items, 6-framed Normal Rockwell tapestries, book shelf unit, assorted linens,
jewelry armoire, Maple single bed, 2-night stands, 2-maple chest of drawers, King size bed,
matching dresser/chest of drawers/2-night stands, Queen size bed w/matching dresser/chest of
drawers/2-night stands, Dining Table w/8 chairs, matching china cabinet &amp; sideboard cabinet,
kitchen dishes, pots/pans &amp; small appliances, microwave, bar stools, White &amp; Kenmore portable
sewing machines, Kirby G4 vacuum, Eureka upright sweeper, GE refrigerator, small Kenmore
counter top fridge, 2-sets of Kenmore washers &amp; dryers (1-gas), Panasonic stereo system
w/speakers, record albums, some 78s, Sony CD player, 2-18 drawer cabinets, office desk,
computer desk, filing cabinets, lots of VHS movies, 2-patio table sets &amp; furniture, hanging swing
chair, electric grill, fans, storage chest, yard/garden hand tools, workbench table, ladder, holiday
decorations, and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds
available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash/check payment. All sales are final. Food will be
available.

OWNER: Norma McFarland by Phillip A. Knapp, POA

EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS: Lufkin Micrometer set, JT Slocomb Co. large micrometer, Ammco
Special Cutting Crank Pin Re-Turning Tool, Kwik-Way Engineering Valve Facing Machine, 1.5
hp air compressor w/40 gallon tank (approx.), Lampco brake drum machine, VanNorman 555
grinder, cutting torch plus brazing tips, Tobin-Arp Mfg. bearing babbit machine, sand blaster, 2Snap On tool cabinets, tool organizer cabinets, Snap On Toqometer, 3-large pipe threaders, pipe
cutter, key machine &amp; display, 30+ old heavy handles, lots of tools &amp; parts, screws, bolts, etc.,
lots of old motorcycle parts, lots of automotive spark plugs &amp; other parts, various gauges, 1930s
rear fenders (rough), Lots of old mechanic’s manuals,
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Signs: 1940s metal Mail Pouch Tobacco Thermometer,
metal AC Radiator Pressure Cap, old Snap On cardboard sign, Niehoff Automative Products
display shelf, 2-electric Busch National Light Beer signs, 24+ metal Sunoco &amp; Quaker State oil
cans, post drill, post auger, crosscut saw, bow saw, hay spear, galvanized gas cans, Boye Needle
Company, Chicago, hook display w/hooks, Victrola record player, 12-78 records, some
glassware (2-ironstone coffee pots), biscuit jar (no label), heavy milk bottle crate, 3-kerosene
lamps, lanterns, small cast iron kettle, 5-gallon glass bottle, 2-old Singer sewing machines (1desk cabinet/1-wood hump cover), several old cigar boxes, nice small lamp w/slag glass shade,
2-older style lamps, 3-old quilts, 48-star flags, old muzzle loader gun, framed print “Cradle to
Grave” President Garfield, Athens National Bank &amp; Hocking Valley Bank cloth money bags, 3CooCoo Clocks, old tap &amp; dye cabinet, 2-flatwall cabinets, large wood cabinet w/glass doors,
oak sideboard, oak dining table, 10+ old composition &amp; rubber doll heads and body parts, some
old metal toy trucks, Hot Wheels cars &amp; PEZ dispensers in pkg., Books: 1955 Map &amp; Compass
Handbook, 1956 Scout Masters Ideas &amp; Stories, 1967 Boy Scout Patrol Leaders Handbook,
several 1972 Scout Handbooks, Patrol &amp; Leadership Book, Scout Masters Book, and other items.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds
available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a 4% discount for cash/check payment. All sales are final. Food will be
available.

OWNER: Wilbur Conkey

SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com

SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com

AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd

60452826

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

60452778

Help Wanted General

Houses For Rent
2 Bedroom - 438 Burkhart Ln.,
Gallipolis
$575/month No Pets 740-8531101

AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd

60452825

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

�Sunday, September 29, 2013

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

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î��

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted General

Please visit us online
at
www.mydailytribune.com

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

60453156

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7 PM

7:30

SEPTEMBER 30, 2013
8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Voice "The Blind Auditions Part 3" The blind auditions
continue in front of the judges. (N) TVPG
EntertainDancing With the Stars The 11 remaining couples
ment Tonight competed. (N) TVPG
Modern
The Big Bang Bones "El Carnicero el el
Sleepy Hollow "For the
Family "Pilot" Theory
coche" (N) TV14
Triumph of Evil" (N) TV14
13 News at
Inside Edition Met Your
We Are Men
2 Broke Girls Mom (N)
7:00 p.m.
Mother (N)
"Pilot" (P) (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
The Voice "The Blind Auditions Part 3" The blind auditions
Fortune
continue in front of the judges. (N) TVPG
PBS NewsHour TVG
Antiques Roadshow "Hartford Genealogy Roadshow
(Hour One)" TVG
"Detroit" (N) TVPG
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7 PM

Jeopardy!

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Blacklist "The
Freelancer" (N) TV14
Castle "Dreamworld" (N)
TVPG
Eyewitness News TVG

11 PM
WSAZ News
Tonight
Eyewitness
News 11
Modern "Go
Bullfrogs!"
13 News

11:30

Tonight
Show J. Leno
(:35) Jimmy
Kimmel Live
The Arsenio
Hall Show
Hostages "Invisible Leash"
(:35) David
(N) TV14
Letterman (N)
The Blacklist "The
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
Freelancer" (N) TV14
Eleven
Show J. Leno
Independent Lens "Don't Stop Believin':
E Street
Everyman's Journey" (N) TVPG
"Power Play"

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

(:35)

11:30

Storage Wars Storage Wars Barter Kings
Barter Kings "Tradecation"
Barter Kings
Barter "The Gloves Come Off"
! !!! Shooter (2006, Action) Michael Peña, Danny Glover, Mark Wahlberg. A sniper
Breaking Bad "Felina" The
(:15) ! !!! Shooter ('06,
who was abandoned behind enemy lines is called back to service. TV14
series finale. TV14
Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
Inside Me "My Brain Has
Monsters Inside Me "You
Monsters Inside Me "The
Infested! "Houses of Horror" Monsters Inside Me "The
Been Hijacked" TV14
Left What Inside Me?" TV14
Flesh-eating Monster" TV14
TVPG
Flesh-eating Monster" TV14
(6:) 106&amp;Park ! !!! Death at a Funeral ('10, Com) Keith David. TV14
! !! Beauty Shop ('05, Com) Queen Latifah. TV14
(6:30) Miami
I Dream of Nene: The "Patch Housewives NJ "Salon, Farewell" A new face House Miami "Mama Elsa
Watch What
Housewives/
"La La Land"
the Leakes" TVPG
becomes involved in a confrontation. TV14
Comes Home" (N) TV14
Happens (N)
NewJersey
Reba
Reba
Ext. Makeover: Home
Ext. Makeover: Home
Ext. Makeover: Home
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Live
AC360 Later
OutFront
The Colbert
The Daily
Futurama
Futurama
South Park
South Park
Brickleberry
South Park
The Daily
The Colbert
Report
Show
"City Sushi"
"Trailer Park"
"W.T.F."
Show (N)
Report (N)
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud
TurnBurn "Junk to Funk" (N)
Fast N' Loud
Liv and
Austin and
! Teen Beach Movie ('13, Fam) Maia Mitchell, Ross Lynch. Dog With a
Jessie "Evil
A.N.T. Farm
Jessie
Maddie
Ally
Brady and McKenzie take the last wave of summer. TVPG
Blog
Times Two"
E! News TVG
RSeacrest
Kardash "Backdoor Bruiser"
The Kardashians
C. Lately (N)
E! News
(6:30) Monday Night Countdown (L) TVG
(:25) NFL Football Miami Dolphins vs. New Orleans Saints (L) TVPG
SportsCenter
SEC Storied "The Book of Manning"
30 for 30
E:60 (N)
Baseball Tonight (L)
SportsCenter Olbermann
! !! Zookeeper ('11, Com) Rosario Dawson, Kevin
! !! Billy Madison ('95, Com) Adam Sandler. An adult
The 700 Club TVPG
James. Zoo animals help the zookeeper find love. TVPG
must repeat elementary and high school. TV14
Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners... "Big Diners...Dives Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners, Drive- Diners... "Big Diners, DriveIns and Dives Ins and Dives Breakfast"
"Breakfast"
Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Ins and Dives Time Flavour" Ins and Dives
(5:30) ! !! Eagle Eye ('08,
! !!! Unstoppable ('11, Act) Denzel Washington. A conductor and an
! !!! Unstoppable ('11, Act) Denzel
Act) Shia LaBeouf. TV14
engineer race against the clock to stop an unmanned freight train. TV14
Washington. TV14
Love It or List It "One Family, Love It or List It "A Hasty
Love It or List It "A New
House
House
Love It or List It "Design TV
Two Roofs" TVPG
Decision" TVPG
Arrival" (N) TVPG
Hunters (N)
Hunters (N)
Wanna Be" TVPG
Ancient Aliens "Destination
Ancient Aliens "Secrets of
Ancient Aliens "Secrets of
Ancient Aliens TVPG
Ancient Aliens "Beyond
Orion" TVPG
the Pyramids" TVPG
the Tombs" TVPG
Nazca" TVPG
(6:00) ! !! Hocus Pocus
! !! Hocus Pocus ('93, Com) Bette Midler. Three 17th
! !! Because I Said So ('07, Rom) Diane Keaton. A
('93, Com) Bette Midler. TVPG century witches are accidentally conjured. TVPG
mother helps her daughter find a young man. TV14
True Life
Teen Mom 2
Teen Mom 2 "Taking Sides"
Teen Mom 2 "Switching Gears" TVPG
Teen Mom 2
Sam &amp; Cat
Drake &amp; Josh Awesome (N) Full House
Full House
Full House
The Nanny
The Nanny
Friends
(:35) Friends
Cops
Cops "Morons Cops "Back to Cops "Stupid
Cops
Cops "Family
Cops
Cops "Ho! Ho! Cops
Cops
on Parade #6" Broward"
Behaviour #3"
Ties #2"
Ho! #8"
! Drive Angry ('11, Act) Amber Heard, Nicolas Cage. A
! !! Ghost Rider ('07, Act) Eva Mendes, Nicolas Cage. A stuntman
! !! The
father hunts down the man who killed his daughter. TVMA
makes a deal with a devil and becomes an indestructible anti-hero. TV14
Covenant
Seinfeld "The The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Moby, J.B. Smoove,
Doll"
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
Demi Lovato (N) TV14
(6:00) ! !!! Magnificent
! !!!! Stagecoach ('39, West) John Wayne. An odd
The Story of Film
(:15) ! !!!! Citizen Kane
Obsession ('54, Dra) TVPG
group of passengers travel by stagecoach. TVPG
('41, Dra) Orson Welles. TVPG
Medium "Unseen"
Medium "On the Road"
Long Is. Medium "Florida"
Long Is. Medium "Chicago"
Long Is. Medium "Florida"
Castle "Significant Others"
Castle "Under the Influence"
Castle "Death Gone Crazy"
Major Crimes
CSI: NY "Do or Die"
Adventure
Regular Show Uncle
MAD (N)
King of the
Cleveland "Til Bob's Burgers American Dad Fam.G "Brian Family Guy
Time (N)
(N)
Grandpa (N)
Hill
Deaf"
"Art Crawl"
the Bachelor"
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods "Denver"
Hotel "In the Doghouse" (N)
Hotel Impossible "The Curve"
(:20) The Andy (:55) Andy Griffith Show "The
(:25) The Andy Loves Ray
Raymond "The Friends
Friends
The King of
King-Queens
Griffith Show Luck of Newton Monroe" TVG Griffith Show "The Sigh"
Annoying Kid"
Queens
"Foe: Pa"
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
WWE Monday Night Raw TVPG
(:05) ! !!! Fast Five ('11,
Act) Vin Diesel. TVPG
Debt" TV14
Basketball Wives
Basketball Wives (N)
TI Tiny (N)
Black Ink Crew (N)
Basketball Wives
T.I. and Tiny
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Parks/Rec
Parks/Rec
WGN News at Nine
Met Mother
Rules of Eng

7 PM
(:15) !

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

Parental Guidance (2012, Comedy) Grandparents
! !! Prometheus ('12, Adv) Noomi Rapace. Explorers
(:15) Down
(:45) Boxing
care for three mischievous grandchildren. TVPG
fight a terrifying battle to save human race. TV14
"Chapter 22"
WCB
(5:45) ! !!
(:50) ! !! The Five-Year Engagement ('12, Com) Jason Segel. A man and ! !!!! The Dark Knight Rises ('12, Act) Christian Bale,
Deep Impact
his fiancé humorously attempt to navigate their long engagement. TV14
Anne Hathaway. Batman returns to protect Gotham. TVPG
(6:25) ! Flying Blind ('12,
Homeland "Tin Man Is Down" Masters of Sex "Pilot" TVMA
(:05) Homeland "Tin Man Is
(:05) Masters of Sex "Pilot"
TVMA
Down" TVMA
TVMA
Dra) Helen McCrory. TVMA

�&amp;286î��îLîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, September 29, 2013

White Falcons soar
past Waterford, 54-6
Gary Clark

Special to OVP

MASON, W.Va. — Despite scoring three more touchdowns to give
him 13 over the past three weeks
and putting together his fourth 100
yard contest, exciting senior speedster, Kane Roush, had to share some
of the spotlight Friday evening with
fellow senior running back, Colton
Neal, as the pair led Wahama to
an expected easy 54-6 football win
over visiting Waterford.
Neal found the end zone with a
pair of long second quarter runs
and finished as the games leading
ground gainer with 148 yards in
only six carries to lead the Bend
Area gridders to the Tri-Valley Conference, Hocking Division triumph.
Neal also joined Demetruis
Serevicz and Brent Larck as the
defensive stars for the Falcons with
numerous stops while Hunter Bradley joined the prominent parade
with a pair of touchdown passes in
addition to picking off his third defensive pass interception this year.
The 14th ranked Class A White
Falcons claimed its third consecutive decision on the 2013 campaign
against one loss while putting together a 3-1 TVC showing in league
action. Waterford dropped its fourth
straight contest overall to fall to 1-4
in all games while dropping to 0-3
inside the TVC.
An unusual sluggish beginning
by the Mason County eleven led to
a slim 6-0 edge during the first 12
minutes of the conference challenge
but the White Falcons exploded for
28 second quarter points to extend
its lead to 35-0 at the half and put
the game on ice.
Neal led the first half charge with
a pair of long scoring runs while
Roush delivered an 88 yard punt return, his second in two weeks. Bradley tossed a pair of scoring passes,
one to Randall Robie and another
to Jarod Nutter and the rout was on
following the huge second quarter
scoring outburst.
Waterford constructed its best offensive series of the night following
the second half kickoff. The Wild-

cats retained possession for 9:41 in
putting together a 16 play, 71 yard
drive for its only points of the night.
Austin Lang was the big workhorse in the drive for the visitors
and capped the series with a six
yard run but that would be the lone
offensive bright spot of the evening
for Waterford.
WHS followed the solitary Wildcat score of the game by answering
the touchdown with a pair of long
runs by Roush covering 57 and 56
yards and a competition conclusion
score by Brandon Stewart covering
eleven yards.
Bradley booted three point after
kicks while Billy Joe McDermitt
added one with Wyatt Wooten snaring a two-point conversion pass from
Bradley to complete the Falcon’s
scoring activity for the evening.
Wahama ran only 33 plays in the
game and finished the night with 387
total yards with 369 of those coming
on the ground. The Bend Area team
added 12 first downs and 18 yards
through the air while taking care of
the football without throwing an interception or fumbling the pigskin.
WHS was penalized 10 times for 85
yards in the outing.
Waterford doubled up Wahama
in offensive plays with 66 and finished the night with 91 yards on the
ground and another 76 through the
air for a total effort of 167 offensive
yards. The Wildcats committed one
turnover, an interception by Bradley, while being penalized five times
for 35 yards.
The White Falcons will face unbeaten Southern next week in an
significant grid contest for both
teams that will encompass a huge
impact in both the TVC Hocking
Valley standings as well as postseason playoff action.
Southern (5-0) will host the affair
after defeating River Valley; South
Gallia, Belpre, Federal Hocking and
Symmes Valley in succession. The
Falcons’ lone setback of the year was
o unbeaten Trimble with the Bend
Area team defeating Fayettville;
Eastern, Belpre and Waterford.

Alex Hawley | Daily Tribune

Gallia Academy senior Kassie Shriver (11) sets the ball during the Blue Angels’ four set win
over Logan, Thursday night in Centenary.

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C2==JîA2DEî"@82?
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio —
Padding the lead.
The Gallia Academy
volleyball team entered
Thursday night’s South-

eastern Ohio Athletic
League matchup with a
half game lead over the
Lady Chiefs. The Blue Angels defeated Logan in four
sets to expand their lead to
a full game.
Logan (7-10, 3-2 SEO-

60449206

AL) took the opening set
of the night 25-18, but the
Blue Angels (11-7, 5-1) answered back with a 25-20
victory in set two. Gallia
Academy charged to 2514 victories in the third
and fourth sets to claim
the match and the season
sweep of the Lady Chiefs.
Kassie Shriver paced
the Blue Angels with 20
service points, followed by
Maggie Westfall with seven. Micah Curfman, Kathleen Allen, Jenna Meadows and Chelsy Slone each
had five points, Haleigh
Caldwell had four, while
Maggie Clagg rounded out
the total with two. Shriver
had five aces in the game,
Clagg had a couple, while
Meadows, Allen and Curfman each had one.
Westfall led the net play
with 17 kills, followed by
Caldwell with nine and
Clagg with six. Shriver
marked five kills, while
Curfman and Slone each
had four. Shriver had teamhighs in digs with 18 and
assists with 28. Meadows
marked 15 digs, Caldwell
had 14, while Hannah
Roach and Brooke Pasquale
each had 11. Maggie Clagg
marked five blocks, followed by Caldwell, Wesfall
and Slone with two apiece.
The Purple and White
were led by Hanna Topf
with 13 points, while
Mackenzie Mays, Laurel
Frasure and Grace Seibel
each had six points. Sam
Studer marked two points
to round out the LHS total.
Seibel had 14 kills, Mays
marked 11, Alexis Snyder
added nine, while Melanie
Starlin had five kills.
A pair of milestones
were surpassed by GAHS
seniors in the match. Westfall eclipsed 200 kill mark
on the season, while Shriver surpasses the 400 assist
mark on the year.
The Blue Angels are now
5-1 in the SEOAL, leading
Warren at 4-2 and Logan at
3-2. Jackson is 2-3 in fourth
place, while Portsmouth is
0-6 in fifth. GAHS has two
league games left, Monday at Portsmouth with a
chance to clinch a tie for
the league title and October 10 against Jackson in
the season finale.
Logan’s only two SEOAL losses have come at the
hands of the Blue Angels.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

ALONG THE RIVER
Mothman Mania

SUNDAY,
SEPTEMBER 29, 2013

Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

OHIO
VALLEY
—
Though Mothman calls Ma-

son County home, his festival benefits the surrounding
counties and beyond.
Last weekend’s festival
in downtown Point Pleas-

ant was once again packed
with people from not only
the Mason, Meigs, Gallia
See MOTHMAN | C2

Mothman Festival mastermind Jeff Wamsley speaks with visitors on the tram ride while being
followed around by a film crew on Saturday.

“Who you gonna call?” That’s right. The ghostbusters.

C1

Photos by Beth Sergent | Daily Tribune

Where else but at the Mothman Festival can you see a monk on his cell phone beside a giant
dragon’s head?

The famous Mothman Statue in Gunn Park was THE destina- Mothman makes the rounds at the vendor tents at his festival
tion for Mothman fans and the Men in Black.
though he was never able to shake the Men in Black.

The Riverside Cloggers prepare to take Main Street during the Mothman Festival and continued performing in the rain, proving
“the show must go on.”

Members of the West Virginia Army National Guard brought
in this special rock climbing wall which was a big hit with kids
and adults alike at the Mothman Festival.

The marquee of the State Theater was once again lit up durThe Mothman Museum had its biggest weekend of the year as visitors flocked to its exhibits, including this Man in Black man- ing the Mothman Festival for special speakers and the First
Mothman Ball.
nequin standing guard over the archives and Mothman hanging from the ceiling.

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

&amp;286î� îLîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 29, 2013

�IE6?D:@?î�@C?6C ‘Top Chef’ set in New
Orleans, debuts Oct. 2
hiding areas.
Be on the
Trapping is eflookout
for
fective inside
migrating
a
building,
mice
(Mus
especially usmusculus)
ing snap traps.
and deer mice
Set up traps
(Peromyscus
near the walls
maniculatus)
with the bait
attempting to
end
closest
find a warm
to the wall.
place to overNewer bait stawinter: it may
tions can be
be your home,
set up outside
cabin, garage
Hal Kneen
the buildings
or barn area.
to catch the
Mice
preExtension Corner
mice that do
fer seed and
not allow the
grains but will
eat foods high in fat, pro- mice to get out of the trap.
tein or sugar. They do not These are especially needneed much water as they ed when we want poisons
get water from the grains left outside a food storage
and seeds they eat. Mice or processing area.
***
are inventive in ways to
Fall is a great time to
enter or get to foodstuffs.
They can jump, gnaw, divide our spring and sumclimb and swim. Studies mer blooming perennial
show that mice normally plants. The roots can reestravel only 10-30 feet from tablish in the warm fall soil
their home to their food and get a jump on growing
sources. Mice have poor the following spring seaeyesight and mainly move son. Sow perennial seeds
like coneflower, Black
and feed at night.
How to control them? Eyed Susan, asters, Joe
Try exclusion using physi- Pye Weed and milkweed.
cal barriers. Look around You may have to cover with
your buildings for any netting to keep out critters
openings larger than one and birds. The Xerces Soquarter inch. Screening ciety (proponent of native
works better than foam insects and invertebrates)
fillers, remember they can suggests the planting of
gnaw. Around piping, fill native plants to encourin using a combination of age the habitat developsteel wool and foam fillers. ment for native pollinators.
Fix gaps in cement block Check out their website
using concrete or masonry www.xerces.org and factcement. Clean up around sheet “Mid-Atlantic Plants
the buildings by cutting for Native Bees”and many
tall weeds and eliminating other gardens. Fall bloom-

ing plants like asters, goldenrod and helenium should
wait until spring to be divided. However, get their
landscape beds this fall
when the soil is so much
easier to prepare for early
spring planting.
Now is the time to divide and transplant peonies. A plant with 15-20
stems can be divided into
three to four divisions,
each with 4-6 stems and
some of the long carrot like
roots. Remember to dig a
large hole and incorporate
large amounts of compost
or well-rottened manure.
The plant will probably
not be needing moved for
another 10-20 years. Plant
the large root system with
the “red–eyes” (next year’s
stem buds) only three
quarters to an inch below
the soil surface. If planted
too deep it may take several years before the peony
blooms again.
***
Reminder to plan to attend the Annual OSU Master Gardener Exchange of
Plants and Seeds on October 2, at noon at Dave Diles
Park (restored Middleport
train station) located in
downtown
Middleport.
Discussion and presentation on planting will begin
at 11:30 a.m. Bring plants
to share and take home
some new ones.

NEW
ORLEANS
(AP) — New Orleans’
po-boy shops, gourmet
restaurants and suburban bayou-side eateries
are the backdrop for
the country’s search for
its next “Top Chef.”
Bravo’s 11th season of the hit reality
TV food competition
show was filmed in
and around the city.
On Wednesday, some
of New Orleans’ own
top chefs walked a red
carpet for a special prepremiere screening of
the show, which debuts

on the cable network
channel Oct. 2.
Chef Emeril Lagasse,
who returns this season as a judge, said the
season is sure to be different from any other.
“It’s going to be a
very interesting season because I think a
lot of this new talent
maybe haven’t worked
with alligator, maybe
haven’t worked with
turtle,” he said. “The
culture and cuisine
here is over 200 years
old. You can’t say that
about a lot of cities.

It’s really amazing.”
Chef John Besh, who
also served as a guest
judge on two of this season’s episodes, praised
his home state and the
show’s coming season.
“What we have here
is really special,” said
Besh, who owns several New Orleans restaurants,
including
Restaurant August and
Domenica. “We have
the only indigenous urban cuisine in the country, and to share it with
an audience of millions
is really special.”

Mothman
From Page C1
area but from even further
beyond, much further, as
in Canada and Louisiana
to name a few places. The
festival celebrates not only
that unexplained, winged
creature but the history of
Mason County.

It was also a weekend
where businesses across
Mason County, as well as
surrounding counties, benefited from the economic
boost of nearly 4,000
people spending money
from Main Street to the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum - many of those

visitors booking rooms in
Gallia County hotels and
spending money at Gallia
County businesses.
Next year’s event will be
the 13th year for the festival which promises to be
even bigger and better and
stranger than ever.

Hal Kneen is the Agriculture &amp; Natural Resources Educator, Athens/
Meigs Counties, Ohio State University Extension.

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE
GALLIPOLIS — United
Producers, Inc., livestock
report of sales from September 26, 2013.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers,
$100-$200, Heifers, $100$175; 425-525 pounds,
Steers, $100-$185, Heifers, $100-$155; 550-625
pounds, Steers, $95-$140,
Heifers, $90-$135; 650-725
pounds, Steers, $90-$135,
Heifers, $100-$125; 750850 pounds, Steers, $90$125, Heifers, $85-$115.

Cows
Well
Muscled/Fleshed,
$68-$82; Medium/Lean, $60$67; Thin/Light, $19-$59;
Bulls, $80-$100.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $660$1,235; Bred Cows, $600$1,250; Baby Calves, $80$110; Goats, $30; Hogs,
$75-$78.
Upcoming Specials
10/2/13 — next sale, 10
a.m.
10/2/13 — ODA will be

conducting a meeting at
6:30 p.m. about new tagging system for shipping
livestock across state lines.
More groups of country
cattle will be available.
Direct sales and free
on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740)
339-0241, Stacy at (304)
634-0224, Luke at (740) 6453697, or Mark at (740) 645- Vendors at the Mothman Festival were a diverse lot, like Danette Pratt of Coolville, Ohio who
5708, or visit the website at brought her “Seriously Sick Socks.” Pratt makes sock monkeys with a twist, like this Mothman
sock monkey she’s holding.
www.uproducers.com.

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�@J5[Dî?6Hî?@G6=îZ)@=@[
try and on to Washington
on a perilous lone mission.
Boyd steers Bond away
from his big-screen action-hero image and back
toward the complex and
conflicted character of
Fleming’s novels.
“Even though he’s this
handsome superspy, when
you read the books you
realize that he’s haunted,”
Boyd told the Associated
Press Wednesday.
“He’s not a cartoon character. Fleming gave him
all his traits, his tastes, his
likes and dislikes — and
his complexes. Bond has
a dark side. He’s troubled
sometimes. He weeps
quite easily. And he makes
mistakes. That’s what’s so
interesting about him.”
As the book opens, Bond
is recovering from birthday
celebrations at the Dorches-

Going
on
NOW
60453060

LONDON (AP) — William Boyd has left James
Bond stirred, if not shaken.
The British writer has
taken on the fictional spy
in “Solo,” a new 007 novel
that balances fidelity to Ian
Fleming’s iconic character
with subtle changes.
Bond fans will find much
they recognize, along with
some surprises — one of
which is that in Boyd’s
mind, James Bond looks
like Daniel Day-Lewis.
Boyd says Fleming once
described the spy as “looking like the American
singer-songwriter Hoagy
Carmichael. Daniel DayLewis looks like Hoagy
Carmichael.”
“Solo” is set in 1969,
and takes the suave British
spy from London’s plush
Dorchester Hotel to a warravaged West African coun-

ter. He has just turned 45,
and is feeling his age.
“Bond is mature. He’s
seasoned,” Boyd said. “He’s
lived a lot, he’s a man of experience. He may not run
quite as fast as he could
when he was 25, but he’s
seen how life has changed
and times have changed. It’s
a good age for him to be.”
Boyd, 61, a winner of the
Whitbread and Costa book
prizes, follows writers
including Kingsley Amis
and Sebastian Faulks as a
successor to Fleming, who
died in 1964.
His novel is authorized
by the Fleming estate, and
was launched Wednesday
with fanfare befitting a major British cultural export.
Boyd posed gamely
for a photo call — at the
Dorchester, naturally —
alongside British Airways
flight attendants, clutching a copy of the book in
a translucent attache case.
Seven copies of the books
were driven in a Jensen
convoy to Heathrow Airport, destined for seven cities around the world with
ties to Boyd or Bond: Edinburgh, Amsterdam, Zurich,
New Delhi, Los Angeles,
Cape Town and Sydney.
“Solo” hits British bookstores on Thursday and will
be published Oct. 8 in the
United States and Canada.
Espionage is familiar
ground for Boyd, whose
books include the spy
thrillers “Restless” and
“Waiting for Sunrise.”
He has been a Bond fan
since he read “From Russia
With Love” in the 1960s
as “an illicit thrill” after
lights-out at his boarding
school. He made Ian Fleming a character in his 2002
novel “Any Human Heart.”

Ruth Finley, owner of the Lowe Hotel, gives a “ghostly” tour of the historic haunt in downtown
Point Pleasant. Here, Finley shares a history lesson of not only the Lowe, but Point Pleasant,
in the fourth floor ballroom.

Best friends come in all shapes, sizes and from different planets. Just ask this young man under one
of the vendor tents which were jam packed both days of the Mothman Festival despite the weather.

�Sunday, September 29, 2013

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

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&amp;286î�

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
Sept. 30, 2013:
This year will be pleasant for you,
especially if you enjoy your friends
and fulfill your long-desired goals!
You seem to be fortunate in nearly
every area of your life. Your career
blooms in July 2014. You’ll start to
see the results of your efforts in the
period that follows. If you are single,
let others know of your decision to
maintain that status. Some of you will
meet several potential life mates. If
you are attached, the two of you will
need to deal with a certain amount of
the unexpected. Stay goal-oriented
and focused. LEO can be a strong
personality.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
The unexpected continues
to make daily life exciting for anyone
around you. Whether you’re working
on a love letter or coming up with a
new business idea, your creativity
seems to be at work. Tonight: Kick up
your heels and be noticed. Don’t worry
about tomorrow.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You will want to spend more
time at home than you have in a while.
Pressure could build, and you might
feel more comfortable staying at home.
However, be aware that a family member likely will lose his or her cool as
a result. Just do your thing. Tonight:
Make a favorite dinner.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
So many people seek
you out that you easily could be overwhelmed by all of the requests and
invitations. Listen to what people are
sharing. Try to avoid getting into a tiff,
if possible. Screen your calls in order
to accomplish what you want. Tonight:
Off to enjoy yourself.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Be aware of others’ needs.
Recognize that you have a tendency
to go overboard. You might not worry
about the damages now, but you will
later. Be careful if you become angry
or frustrated, as you could be accident-prone. Tonight: A little restraint
might help.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Others will be delighted to
have you around, at least until they
realize the level of your energy. In
fact, if you can’t express yourself the
way you want to, you could become
difficult. Be open to positive changes.
Someone’s reaction might surprise
you. Tonight: Let it all hang out.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Trust your sixth sense about
what is going on behind the scenes.
You might want to rethink a recent
decision you’ve made once you either
confirm or deny what your intuition is
telling you. Don’t swallow your anger;
make a point to choose your words
with care. Tonight: Lie low.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Understand that someone you
care about suddenly could become
difficult. You do not have to react or do
anything. Stay calm and centered. You
will see this person realize the error
of his or her ways. A neighbor could
be on the warpath. Tonight: Beam in
more of what you want.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Someone you look up to
seems to be bent out of shape. You
might be taken aback by this person’s
behavior at the moment. If you are
smart, you will keep your opinion to
yourself. This person will calm down,
and you will feel more relaxed as a
result. Tonight: A must appearance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
At first, you might be upset by
what is going on. The unexpected
could throw your plans in several different directions. You will be forced to
gather your own facts, and as you do,
you will notice that you are detaching
considerably. Tonight: Think about taking off for a few days.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You absorb a lot of information, and quite quickly at that.
Nevertheless, you might feel challenged by someone you look up to.
Your limits could be tested, as well as
your ability to handle someone else’s
less-than-perfect behavior. Tonight:
Spend time with a close friend.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Someone you know quite well
might come barreling toward you like
an enraged animal. How you handle
this person’s behavior could determine
the long-term durability of this bond.
Think carefully about the ramifications.
Tonight: Out and about. Others seek
you out.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
You might be trying to do
so much that you could be accidentprone as you speed from one person
or activity to another. You might need
to take some time to sit down, discuss
what needs to get done immediately,
and revamp your schedule. Tonight: A
close encounter.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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

&amp;286î��îLîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Stapleton-Reynolds
engagement
The engagement of Rachael Joan Stapleton and
Tyler Joe Reynolds is being
announced by the couple’s
parents, John and Karen Stapleton of Crown City, Ohio,
and Terry and Amy Reynolds of Crown City, Ohio,
along with the late Rebecca
Crouse -Reynolds.
Rachael is a 2013 graduate of South Gallia High
School and attending the
University of Rio Grande
majoring in Art. She is cur-

Rachael Stapleton and Tyler Reynolds

Zoos make party animals out of goats and sheep

Dustin Peaytt and Heather Crum

Crum-Peaytt engagement
Larry and Marketta Crum of Point Pleasant announce
the engagement of their daughter Heather Lynn Crum to
Dustin Lee Peaytt.
The bride-to-be graduated from Marshall University,
where she graduated with honors and received her degree
in Public Relations and Marketing. She is employed as
the Marketing Manager for Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
The prospective groom also graduated from Marshall
University with honors. He received his BSN and currently works at CAMC Memorial Hospital.
The couple plans to “take the plunge” on April 12,
2014, in Point Pleasant.

Rare Rolling Stones pics
to be shown at rock hall
NEW YORK (AP) —
Rare photos of the young
Rolling Stones, taken by
their tour manager during
their first years in the United States, will be unveiled
during the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame’s celebration
of the group next month.

rently employed at Mercerville Convenience Store.
Tyler graduated in 2013
from South Gallia High
School and is currently attending Marshall University
majoring in Political Science.
He is employed at Mercerville
Convenience Store.
The couple will be married
on October 26, 2013, at 1:30
p.m. at St. Louis Catholic
Church in Gallipolis, Ohio,
with a reception to follow.

Bob Bonis was the
group’s tour manager from
1964 to 1966. The photos
show a wide range of their
activities, from performances onstage to hanging out. One photo shows
Keith Richards cutting
Charlie Watts’ hair.

POMONA, Calif. (AP) — Sheep
and goats may not be known as party
animals, but they’re increasingly at
the center of the celebration as petting zoos grow in popularity for birthdays, graduations and other bashes.
Petting a gentle animal of any kind
seems to appeal to young, old and in
between. Daycare centers, schools,
churches and even nursing homes
rent mobile zoos that will bring animals and handlers to them or organize trips to petting zoos.
“You can see the absolute joy as
they are sitting there stroking some
animal, particularly if it’s the first
time in their life they have touched
one,” said Sky Shivers, superintendent of Fairview Farms at the Los
Angeles County Fair, 35 miles east
of downtown LA. “There is tranquility, an exchange of emotion
that’s amazing to watch.”
Shivers, 63, of Prague, Okla.,
said a good zoo is as educational
as it is entertaining, reeling off several fun facts: baseballs have wool
in their cores; doctors use the intestinal lining from some animals
to graft serious burns; female goats
have beards like males; and while
sheep prefer grass to weeds, goats
want it the other way around.
Sheep and goats are popular be-

cause they only have bottom teeth
and are safer around children.
“Ponies and donkeys have teeth on
the top and bottom and are more likely to nip fingers,” Shivers said. Even
so, pony rides are often coupled with
petting zoos, and can often be found
during the holidays at many pumpkin
patches and Christmas sales lots.
Rental fees range from $200 to $325
per hour, depending on the number of
animals and the particular business.
The animals run the gamut from
tortoises to hares. Some include exotic critters like wallabies and llamas
while others offer creatures that can
be found closer to home, such as
deer and donkeys.
People often like to see babies, so
Brendon Kline features baby chicks,
ducks and bunnies, small potbellied
pigs and a baby goat at Party Animalz Farm in Brogue, Pa.
“A lot of the older people enjoy it
as much as the children do,” Kline
said. “A lot of them grew up on farms
and these are animals they don’t see
every day anymore.”
All God’s Creatures in Chino Hills,
40 miles east of Los Angeles, features
Serenity the silly goose and Goliath,
an 80-pound turtle.
Owner Lori Bayour takes the animals on the road to hospices, city

neighborhoods, parties and a rodeo.
Faith Lundgren loves to watch her
grandson at Bayour’s petting zoo
each October at the Industry Hills
Charity Pro Rodeo.
“The animals don’t shy away
from the kids at all,” Lundgren said.
“Sometimes they even make the first
move. They enjoy being there as
much as the kids enjoy having them.”
Not everyone thinks petting zoos
are a good thing.
“We think they’re a bad idea,” said
Meredith Turner, spokeswoman for
the national advocacy group Farm
Sanctuary. “Animals are often not in
good health, they’re kept in an unnatural environment, and they teach
kids that animals exist for our entertainment, when in actuality, they exist for their own reasons.”
Animals need to be clean, healthy,
gentle and insured. Handlers should
provide feed for the animals and
clean up after them. Another must is
a sanitizing station so those who pet
the animals can wash their hands.
A bad experience for a child can
last a lifetime.
“You can’t leave them alone,”
Shivers said. “They will get
knocked down and scream and
cry and be afraid of animals for
the rest of their lives.”

*C@G6î@7î#:49 î7@=&lt;î&gt;FD:4îF?62CE965î:?î2C49:G6
DETROIT (AP) — Detroit is
famous for its music, from the Motown hits of the 1960s to the cuttingedge punk of Iggy Pop to the rap of
Eminem. Little known, though,
is that Michigan was also fertile
ground for folk music, brought to
the region by immigrants in the
early 20th century and played in the
logging camps, mines and factory
towns where they worked.
Legendary folklorist Alan Lomax discovered the music in 1938
when he visited the Midwest on
his famous 10-year cross-country
trek to document American folk
music for the Library of Congress.
A trove of his Michigan recordings is now being publicly released

for the first time by the library,
coinciding with the 75th anniversary of Lomax’s trip. The release
is causing a stir among folk music
fanciers and history buffs.
“It was a fantastic field trip
— hardly anything has been published from it,” said Todd Harvey, the Lomax collection’s curator at the library in Washington.
The Michigan batch contains
about 900 tracks and represents
a dozen ethnicities.
Lomax, son of famous musicologist John A. Lomax, spent
three months in Michigan on his
research, which also took him
through Appalachia and the deep
South. He drove through rural com-

munities and recorded the work
songs and folk tunes he heard on
a large suitcase-sized disc recorder
powered by his car’s battery.
The trip was supposed to cover much of the Upper Midwest,
but he found so much in Michigan that he made only a few recordings elsewhere in the region.
The
collection
includes
acoustic blues from southern
transplants, including Sampson
Pittman and one-time Robert
Johnson collaborator Calvin Frazier; a lumberjack ballad called
“Michigan-I-O” sung solo by an
old logger named Lester Wells;
and a similar lament about life
deep in the copper mines of the
Upper Peninsula called “31st

Level Blues,” performed by the
Floriani family, who were of Croatian descent.
The 250 disc recordings of about
125 performers, along with eight
reels of film footage and photographs, reflect the rich mixture of
cultures in Depression-era Michigan, where immigrants fleeing poverty and persecution in Europe and
the South came seeking jobs.
Natives of French-speaking
Canada, Finland, Italy, Croatia,
Germany, Poland, Ireland and
Hungary perform the songs,
which represent 10 languages.
John and Alan Lomax’s archives at the library’s American Folklife Center encompass

10,000 sound recordings and
6,000 graphic images, documenting creative expression by cultural groups around the world.
Most famous were the field
recordings made in the South,
including those of Leadbelly,
Muddy Waters and Son House.
“This fills in a big chunk of the
top half of the middle section of
the country,” says Laurie Sommers, an ethnomusicologist who
serves as Michigan’s program coordinator for the Lomax project.
“Now you have the stories and
the sounds of sailors, miners and
lumberjacks, ethnic communities
who came to work … and brought
their traditions with them.”

Z�C62&lt;:?8î�25[î:Dî6?5:?8îCF?îDE:==î=@@&lt;:?8î8@@5
NEW YORK (AP) —
The supply is running
low and you know there
won’t be more. “Breaking
Bad” stands to leave its
fans reeling.
For five seasons of wickedness this AMC drama
has set viewers face-to-face
with the repellant but irresistible Walter White
and the dark world he
embraced as he spiraled
into evil. With the end imminent (Sunday at 9 p.m.
EDT), who can say what
fate awaits this teacherturned-drug-lord for the
havoc he has wreaked on
everyone around him.
This is more than the
end of a TV series. It’s a
cultural moment, arriving
as the show has logged
record ratings, bagged a
best-drama Emmy and
even scored this week’s
cover of The New Yorker
magazine.
Up through the penultimate episode, “Breaking
Bad” has been as potent
and pure as the “blue
sky” crystal meth Walter
cooked with such skill.
Judging from that consistency in storytelling and
in performances by such
stars as Bryan Cranston
(Walter White), Aaron
Paul (his sidekick Jesse
Pinkman), Anna Gunn
(who just won an Emmy

as Walt’s wife) and Betsy
Brandt, the end will likely
pack unforgiving potency.
But one thing is dead
sure: It will be beautiful.
“Breaking Bad” has often been described as addictive, and if that’s so,
the look of the show is its
own habit-forming drug.
Michael Slovis, the series’
four-times-Emmy-nominated director of photography, has been cooking up
that look since the series’
sophomore season.
“I go for the emotion in
the scene, not to overtake
it, but to help it along,”
said Slovis over a recent lunch in Manhattan.
“With ‘Breaking Bad,’ I
recognized very early that
I had a story and performances that could stand
up to a bold look.”
The action is centered in
Albuquerque, N.M., which
invites sprawling desert
shots and tidy manicured
neighborhoods;
washes
of light and jagged sundrenched expanses.
The look of the show
makes the most of its setting, and also the technology by which viewers
see it: In an age of digital
video, with the smallest
detail and the sharpest
resolution visible to the
audience, Walter’s battered
mobile meth lab could

be clearly discerned as a bold lighting,” he said,
speck against a vista of “and Michael became an
deserts and mountains. A indispensable part of the
doll’s disembodied eyeball ‘Breaking Bad’ equation.”
bobbing in a swimming
The imagery of “Breakpool had chilling vividness. ing Bad” is second-nature
And don’t forget the to its viewers, whether
show’s visual signature: or not they are conscious
“Breaking Bad” was never of Slovis’ work. So when
afraid of the dark.
they swoon at the beauty
Slovis recalls how, his of the desert outside Alfirst week as DP, he was buquerque, they may not
shooting
in
know the comJesse’s baseplexion of this
ment.
badlands was
“I go for the
“Jesse and
created in his
Walter
are emotion in the camera.
down
there
“The desert
cooking meth, scene, not to
on the show
and I turn off overtake it,
has a tonality
all the lights
that doesn’t
and turn the but to help it
exist in real
back lights on.
life,” he said
There’s smoke along.”
with a laugh.
and shafts of
This color is
— Michael Slovis achieved with
light coming
through the
a
so-called
basement door
“tobacco
and I go, ‘This is what I filter” clamped on the
came to do!’”
lens. “I don’t pay much
“We have some interest- attention to reality when
ing extremes in lighting, I light or even when I
thanks to Michael and his shoot exteriors. But nofearlessness,” said “Break- body questions the color,
ing Bad” creator Vince Gil- because it becomes part
ligan from Los Angeles. of the storytelling.”
He invoked the fancy arYou would have a hard
tistic term for this, “chiar- time finding many stylistic
oscuro,” which means the links between “Breaking
use of strong contrasts be- Bad” and some of Slovis’
tween light and dark.
other credits, which in“‘Breaking Bad’ has be- clude “CSI” (for which he
come known for beautiful won an Emmy), “Fringe,”

AMC’s short-lived noir
thriller “Rubicon,” and
lighter fare including “Running Wilde” and “Royal
Pains.” (Nor his additional
credits as a director, which
range from four episodes
of “Breaking Bad” to “Chicago Fire” and “30 Rock.”)
Instead, he said he
strives to let each project
suggest its own look.
Now 58, Slovis is softvoiced and lanky, with
a head whose baldness
rivals Walt White’s in
Heisenberg mode.
He got the photography
bug while growing up in
Plainview, N.J., where he
became the school photographer and won a state
photography contest. He
was invited to study at
the Rochester Institute of
Technology.
He imagined himself a
fine-arts photographer but
he loved movies and storytelling, and, after graduate
school at New York University, he landed jobs shooting music videos and commercials, then got nibbles
from feature films.
But in 2001 he found
movie offers drying up,
and, though he had never
seen TV in his future, he
gratefully accepted a call
from the NBC series “Ed.”
The timing was terrific.
For decades, TV’s hasty,

assembly-line production
schedule proved an obstacle to giving a series its
own visual style.
“Film had been just a way
to record the TV picture,”
Slovis said. A further barrier to getting too creative
was the low resolution
and squarish shape of the
old TV receivers, which
conversely had a negative
impact on theatrical films,
whose wide-screen format
was forced to conform (with
lots of medium and close-up
shots) to movies’ eventual
small-screen telecast.
Slovis hails pioneering
exceptions such as “Twin
Peaks,” ”Law &amp; Order”
and “The X-Files,” and
credits “CSI” as “one of the
first times that cinematography became a real character on a show. TV began
changing around us.”
Gilligan agreed that
“the advent of flat-screen
TV really allowed Michael’s work to shine in a
way it wouldn’t have, 20
years ago.”
Now the end of “Breaking Bad” is nigh. But
through Sunday’s final
fade-out, Slovis’ influence will remain, capturing the “Bad” times you
can’t turn your eyes from.
He’s a series star who’s
out of sight, yet controlling what you see.

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