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                  <text>ALONG THE RIVER

SPORTS

History of the Telephone, C1

High school football action, B1

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Rev. Jesse Jackson
to speak at Ohio
University
Will address
Poverty in America
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS — The Rev.
Jesse Jackson is coming to
Athens on Monday, Sept.
26, and will speak on
“Rekindling the Spirit of
LBJ” at 11 a.m. on the portico of Memorial Auditorium.
According to a release
from Brian Rothenberg,
Executive Director,
ProgressOhio, It was at that
location that President
Lyndon Johnson delivered
his May 7, 1964 address
announcing his Great
Society initiative, the War on
Poverty.
Jackson will be calling for
formation of a White House
Commission on Poverty,
Malnutrition and Human
Need. His speech will be
followed by a public rally in
the Baker University Center
Room.
Rothenberg cited new
poverty statistics which
show that one in every six
Americans lives in poverty –
more than 46 million, the
highest number since the
government began keeping
track, with poverty rising
across all races and all
regions.
President Lyndon Johnson
on May 7, 1964 presenting
his vision for the Great
Society call for a War on
Poverty to give hope to millions living in poverty.
Outcomes of his War on
Poverty drive were The Job
Corps, Head Start, Medicare
and Medicaid, food stamps,
the Teacher Corps, and a rising minimum wage.
After initiation of the program, Rothenberg said figures from Joseph A.
Calfano, Jr., former secretary
of the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare,
show the portion of
Americas living below the
poverty line dropped from
22.2 percent to 12.6 percent.
The purpose of Jackson’s
visit is to “rekindle the spirit
of LBJ and again envision a
Great Society where government takes the lead in addressing issues of fairness, opportunity, equality and economic
justice.”

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Richard McGuire
• Laura Kalisch
• Fred A. Fisher
• Douglas L. Randolph
• Francis Reymond

WEATHER

$1.50 • Vol. 45, No. 39

Sunday, September 25, 2011

CIC expects spec building bid next month
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS —
The
Meigs
County
Community Improvement
Corporation expects to
award a bid sometime
next month for the construction of its new industrial spec building to be
built at the East Meigs
Industrial Park. The new
building will be the largest
yet at the industrial site in

Tuppers Plains.
Economic Development
Director Perry Varnadoe
said Friday the CIC is now
in the process of completing
the
paperwork
required for financing of
the project. The $1.2 million construction is being
funded through the Ohio
Department
of
Development’s loan program, in the amount of
$500,000, and a grant
from
the
Rural

Development Initiative in
the same amount — as
well as a CIC investment.
The new spec building
will be just slightly larger
than one already occupied
in the industrial park — at
35,000 square feet of
usable space. Even though
a bid has not yet been
awarded for construction
of the building, Varnadoe
said, the CIC and economic development office
have already begun the

process of marketing the
building as a potential
location for industry. Like
the first spec building the
CIC built at the site, this
will be finished to suit the
tenant. Earlier this year,
when the CIC first
announced plans to seek
funding for the project,
Varnadoe said the marketing focus for the building
will be directed toward
renewable energy businesses, but it could be

Exciting plans, big changes for Bob Evans Farm Festival
Multimillion-dollar renovation put to first use at 41st Annual Festival
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE —
Surprises are in store
for the approximately
30,000 visitors from 19
states expected to flock
to this year’s Bob
Evans Farm Festival
and the company prepared to unveil the
approximately $3 million dollar farm renovation project.
First discussed in
early March, the renovations include an
enhanced entry to the
Homestead Museum;
preservation and relocation of the historic
Adamsville log cabin
village; renovation of
the existing Quilt Barn
with space for receptions, meetings, and
other events; the
unveiling of the renovated
Union
Stockyards and Transit
Authority Sign – a
unique piece of livestock memorabilia purchased by Bob Evans
more than 40 years

Stephanie Filson/photo

In addition to overall improvements to the farm grounds, Bob Evans restaurant in Rio
Grande was rebuilt as part of the renovation project for the Bob Evans homestead and farm.
The historic village of
Adamsville, named after its
founder, Adam Rickabaugh
(1761-1836), is currently
be relocated from its home
near Raccoon Creek in Rio
Grande. The village will
take center stage as an
attraction in future farm
festivals.
Stephanie Filson/photo

This artistʼs
rendering is of
the new Bob
Evans Farm in
Rio Grande.
The total renovation is expected to be completed by the
opening bell of
the festival on
Oct. 14.

See Bob Evans, A2

NAMI to host event to inform public about mental illness
BY AMBER
GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS — An
organization dedicated to
the advocacy of individuals with mental illness, is
reaching out to the community to not only educate the public but to also
network with other service agencies to help support those families and
friends of people with
mental illness.
The National Alliance
on
Mental
Illness
(NAMI) of Southeast
Ohio will be hosting an
open house beginning at
6:30 p.m., Tuesday, Sept.

27 at the Senior Resource
Center, 1165 Ohio 160,
Gallipolis, and are inviting the public to join in
on the festivities and be
informed about mental
illness in the community.
“We are having our
open house to get our
name out to work with
agencies and organizations in the community
for the betterment of the
community,”
NAMI
Southeast Ohio President
Jill Austin said. “If we
helped one person, if we
helped one agency understand what we do and we
can link our priorities
together to help others in
the community, the event

would be successful. Of
course, we’re hoping that
people will come forward
and want to volunteer
with NAMI but that is,
obviously, not a prerequisite for attending.”
The southeastern Ohio
branch of NAMI, founded in 2005, serves Gallia,
Meigs, Lawrence and
Jackson Counties in
Ohio, as well as Mason
County West Virginia.
The organization is a
solely volunteer-based
operation and is an affiliate of NAMI Ohio and
national NAMI organization founded in 1979.
The overall purpose of
the organization is to

work toward achieving
equitable services and
treatment and to break
through the stigma that
surrounds the 1.5 millions Americans living
with mental illness and
their families.
Austin is hopeful that
the upcoming event is
just one of many future
events that will allow
NAMI Southeast Ohio to
educate the community
about mental illness, its
commonness and the services that are available in
the community to support
mental illness patients
and their families.

See NAMI, A2

Task Force facing drug situation in Meigs
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: 77
Low: 57

INDEX
3 SECTIONS — 24 PAGES

Classifieds
C2-4
Comics
C5
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MIDDLEPORT
—
This spring, the Prayer
Task Force had a tremendous showing of support
on the Pomeroy parking
lot in the battle against
drugs in Meigs County.
Members of the Prayer
Task Force have organized a new, free event
set for 6:30-8:30 p.m.,
Thursday, Sept. 29 at
Middleport Church of
Christ
Family
Life
Center. The event’s goals
are described as awareness and training for
those wanting to be educated on the latest drug

trends and resources
available to them to help
a loved one.
More specifically, the
mission is to hold an
event for anyone who
needs help personally or
knows of someone who
they may be able to help.
The Prayer Task Force’s
purpose it so provide
practical training on how
to approach victims of
various addictions and
show genuine care and
concern. In short, learn to
help yourself and others
by attending the event.
Everyone is invited to
promote a goal of everyone making a difference.
Organizers say the event

is especially for individuals who are struggling
with addictions at this
time, or family, friends,
neighbors or concerned
citizens. Organizers hope
to show people there is a
way out of addiction.
The event’s program
includes a variety of
speakers, including
Scott Fitch from Ohio
Bureau of Criminal
Investigation; Rick Smith
of Buckeye Hills; Betty
Fulks, a Christian counselor; Eddie Baer, Pastor
of Team Jesus; Jay
Proffitt, local businessman; Rockin’ Reggie
Robinson, local DJ and
abuse counselor; and

Judge Scott Powell,
Meigs Probate and
Juvenile Court Judge.
Topics of discussion
will include: “Current
Drug
Trends,
Approaching and Praying
with People in Need,
Where Do I Go From
Here, Family Issues and
Dynamics.” There will
also be a children’s session for ages five-12.
As reported back in
May, Judge Powell told
The Daily Sentinel, in his
eight years on the bench,
the caseload for children’s services had
tripled and he guessed

See Drug, A2

occupied by any type of
light industrial concern.
“We hope to have all of
the necessary documents
and paperwork prepared
by the end of the month,
and if that happens, the
project should go to bid in
October,” Varnadoe said.
The CIC anticipates as
many as 40 new jobs
could be created when a
suitable tenant is found for

See CIC, A2

Seventh Annual
Chili Fest set for
next Saturday
GALLIPOLIS — The
7th Annual French City
Chili Fest, sponsored
by the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce,
will be held Saturday,
October 1, in the
Gallipolis City Park,
according to Jodie
McCalla, who is chairing
this
annual
event. Festivities will
take place all day long.
In addition to the Chili
Cook-off competition, a
number of other activities are planned, including college football on
the big screen, eating
contests, the Gallipolis
Lions Chili Chase and
special activities for the
kids.
Those entering the
cook-off
competition
include individuals and
businesses. The extended
deadline to register is
Thursday the 29. The
individual entry fee is
$25, with cash prizes to
be awarded. The entry
fee for businesses is $50,
and those prizes will be
media packages. Cash
prizes will be $500 for
1st place, $300 for 2nd
place and $100 for 3rd
place.
All cooking preparation of the chili must
take place in the
park. Electricity for
cooking will not be
available, gas for cooking is required, but not
supplied. All those who
register receive the specific list of contestant
rules and regulations,
along with cooking rules
and procedures.
Each entrant must supply the judges with one
pint from the five gallons
they prepare on site. The
chili must be ready to
serve by noon. The public can purchase either a
sample or a bowl of any
of the chilis available.
All proceeds from the
Chili Fest go to the
Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce, as this is
one of their primary fund
raising events.
Included as activities
will be a Hot Dog Eating
Contest, a Chili Eating
Contest and a Corn Hole
Contest. Kids activities
will feature a bounce
house and kiddies’ train
ride. Also in and around
the park will be crafters
and food vendors.
The Gallipolis Lions
Chili Chase will have an
8 a.m. registration, with
the 5K Run starting at 9
a.m., and the 1 mile
Run/Walk to begin at
9:15 a.m. Post-Race
snacks and awards are
scheduled for 10:30 a.m.
For any additional
information or to register, call the Gallia
County Chamber of
Commerce at (740) 4460596, or stop in at their
16 State Street office.

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Gallia-Meigs Forecast

CIC

NAMI

From Page A1

From Page A1

the new building, Varnadoe told county commissioners
earlier this year. The CIC is a non-profit organization,
and owns a number of business sites in the county. It has
also helped with financing other locations for business
and public service, including the site of Family
Healthcare’s new health center near Rocksprings.
Two businesses currently occupy space in the industrial park. Remram, a locally-owned light industry, has
been operating from the first, 32,000 square-foot spec
building constructed at the site for more than a year. The
new building will be constructed near that one. We-Can
Fabricators also operates its business from the East
Meigs park, located just off Ohio 7.
If the project is bid out and work begins on schedule,
the building could be ready for occupancy as early as
late next summer, Varnadoe said Friday.

“There’s still a lot of stigma attached to mental illness and, personally, it is one of my strongest beliefs
that if we can help move that stigma back, it will
allow the freedom for people to say, ‘I need help,’”
Austin said. “We have compassion for people that
have heart trouble or diabetes or cancer, well, this is
an illness just like that. Mental illness, like any other
illness, doesn’t only affect the individual, it affects
family members, co-workers, the whole community.”
According to information provided by Austin, mental illnesses are brain disorders that cause severe disturbances in thinking, feeling and relating to other
people. Some common disorders include major
depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety and panic disorder, social phobia, eating disorders, autism, obsessive
compulsive disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder and post traumatic stress disorder.
Austin also reported that, in addition to volunteering with NAMI, there are small steps that everyone
can take to help raise awareness and help to support
those with mental illnesses.
“You can help NAMI in many ways: sharing it with
your co-workers, church members, and other agencies
that you are involved with, obviously, becoming a
member, helping to spread the word in the community and attending some of the classes that we hope to
hold here,” she said.
According to Austin, NAMI Southeast Ohio works
closely with Woodland Centers, Inc., and the Gallia
County Sheriff’s Office and, during the open house on
Tuesday, Wes Crum, Ph.D., Woodland Centers
Director of Clinical Services in Gallia County, as well
as Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning will speak.
Additionally, Denis Martin of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs Board of Alcohol and Drug Addiction and
Mental Health Services and Gini Haffner of NAMI
Ohio are scheduled to make remarks during the open
house.
In addition to the guest speakers, the public is invited to enjoy a dinner, live music with Kendra Ward and
Bob Bence, as well as and, weather permitting, outdoor activities, including a bounce house for kids.
Door prizes will also be given out.
For more information about the open house or about
NAMI Southeast Ohio, contact Jill Austin at (740)
339-0603 or via email at dahockeyfan2003@
yahoo.com.
“We are hoping to grow in the community, to get
our name out, let people know we are here and what
we do,” Austin said.

Bob Evans
From Page A1
ago; reconstruction of the Bob Evans restaurant located on the farm, as well as the resurfacing, grading and
overall improvements to the Farm Festival field.
“It truly is a new day at Bob Evans Farm,” Bob Evans
Farms, Inc. Chairman and CEO Steve Davis said. “We
recognize that the Farm is the touchstone of the Bob
Evans culture. We’ve made extensive changes to make
the farm and the festival experience even better for our
guests.”
The complete renovation is scheduled to be completed before the opening bell of this year’s festival which
will be held Oct. 14-16 at the Bob Evans homestead
and farm in Rio Grande. Activities, exhibits and presentations will be offered from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each
day.
“The decision to invest in our brand icon was an easy
one to make,” stated Davis. “This renovation pays
homage to our founder, who believed that farm-fresh
food brings families together.”
Entrance to the festival costs $5 for adults and $3 for
children ages 6-18 (children under six get in free).
Parking is included in the admission cost, and homestyle food will be served all day long.
Activities will include learning how to milk a cow,
shear a sheep or tutorials from a blacksmith or soap
maker in the farm’s traditional crafts area. Kids and
parents alike can join the pie-eating contest, climb to
the top of the hay bale castle, or take a tractor ride
around the farm grounds in the kids’ area.
Families will also enjoy cloggers performing traditional folk dancing, a Border Collie herding demonstration and bluegrass, gospel and country music. The
2010 International Bluegrass Music Association Male
Vocalist of the Year Russell Moore &amp; IIIrd Tyme Out
will perform on Sunday afternoon.
“Folks come from every direction, near and far, to
see where it all began and join in the festivities,” Ray
McKinniss, manager of Bob Evans Farm said. “We’re
excited to offer our guests the traditions they know and
love with an added bonus of our new grounds.”
For more information about this year’s Farm Festival,
including a full list of activities, directions, and entertainment schedule, visit www.bobevans.com/farmfestival or watch for updates at www.twitter.com/farmmanray.

Drug
From Page A1
four out of every five cases he hears is drug-related.
The problem of prescription drug abuse has become
so pervasive because, according to many in law
enforcement, the pills are so readily available.
Locally, Oxycontin is said to remain the pill of choice
of many abusers though it’s becoming so expensive
and its newer version “indestructible” that some users
are turning to the cheaper high of heroin. Marijuana
no longer seems to be the drug of choice in Meigs
County.
The Ohio Department of Health reported 327 accidental drug overdoses in Ohio in 1999 and 1,473 accidental drug overdoses in 2008. In fact, accidental drug
overdoses in Ohio are now the leading cause of injury
or death, surpassing motor vehicle accidents.

Industry: W.Va. gas plants
could mean 12k jobs

Deaths
Douglas L. Randolph
Douglas L. Randolph, 84, of Leon, W.Va., died at
his home on Friday, Sept. 23, 2011. Arrangements
will be announced by the Deal Funeral Home.

Oct 1 - 9am to 3pm
Farm Museum,
Point Pleasant WV

For Information
304-675-2887

Evans-Moore Realty
Floral Fashions
Gallia Rural Water
Hillard-Lyons
David Carman, DDS
J. Eric Jones, DDS
Johanna Jorgensen, DDS
Tim &amp; Billie Sue Kyger, DDS
Kenneth Kyger, DDS
Keith A. Sheets, DDS
David K. Smith, DDS

inch, except higher
amounts possible in
thunderstorms.
Monday Night: A
chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 50. Chance
of precipitation is 40
percent.
Tuesday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 70.
Tuesday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 51.
Wednesday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
71.
Wednesday Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 51.
Thursday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
72.
Thursday Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 51.
Friday: Sunny, with a
high near 74.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 37.45
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 40.70
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 45.29
Big Lots (NYSE) — 33.37
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 29.20
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 59.89
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.17
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.34
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 2.87
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 27.00
Collins (NYSE) — 51.55
DuPont (NYSE) — 40.46
US Bank (NYSE) — 23.21
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.21
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 33.89
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 29.59
Kroger (NYSE) — 21.78
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 40.37
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 61.53
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 16.87

BBT (NYSE) — 20.86
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 9.91
Pepsico (NYSE) — 60.34
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.06
Rockwell (NYSE) — 52.29
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 10.77
Royal Dutch Shell — 61.32
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 52.55
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 50.80
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.88
WesBanco (NYSE) — 17.06
Worthington (NYSE) — 13.54
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
September 23, 2011, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.Format Style

Correction

POMEROY — The Meigs County Council
on Aging will host a balance screening from 911 a.m., Sept. 27 at the senior center, not at
Francis James Reymond, 64, of Point Pleasant, died Holzer Meigs Clinic in rehab department.
Friday, Sept. 23, 2011, at home.
Clinic staff will conduct the screening. No regA memorial service will be held at 7 p.m. on istration needed.
Monday, Sept. 26 at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in
Point
Pleasant.
Visitation will be from 57 p.m. on Monday at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the
family requests that
memorial contributions
be made to: Wahama
High
School
Improvement Fund, c/o
Wahama High School,
P.O. Box 348, Mason,
WV 25260, or PPHS
Stadium Committee, c/o
Ohio Valley Bank, 328
Viand St., Point Pleasant,
WV 25550, att. Mario
Liberatore.

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel

A BIG THANK YOU!!

ANTIQUE
BOTTLE
SHOW

Sunday: A slight
chance of showers after
2 p.m. Mostly sunny,
with a high near 77.
Calm wind becoming
south between 5 and 8
mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Sunday Night: A
chance of showers,
mainly after 9 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 57. Light
south wind. Chance
of precipitation is 30
percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch
possible.
Monday: Showers
likely, with thunderstorms also possible
after noon. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near
75. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
rainfall amounts between
a tenth and quarter of an

Francis James Reymond

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) — A study by the
American Chemistry Council claims an ethane crackMeigs • 992-2155
er in West Virginia could create some 12,000 jobs.
Gallia • 446-2342
West Virginia is competing with several other states
that sit atop the Marcellus shale gas field for factories
that can convert ethane
— a byproduct of shale
drilling — into a widely
used compound, ethylThe Gallia County Health Department wishes to
ene.
thank the following businesses, local health
The Intelligencer
professionals, and churches for making the
reports the industry study
2nd annual “Back to School Immunization Fair” a
also claims a cracker
BIG success. Because of your generous donations, we
could generate as much
were able to provide school supplies, hygiene packs,
as $7 billion in related
and much more to every child that received
industry, such as the proimmunizations on Saturday, August 13, 2011.
duction of paints, coatThe primary goal of the “Immunization Fair”
ings, dyes and plastics.
is to make it convenient for parents/ guardians to be
Chief Executive Cal
sure that the children of Gallia County have
Dooley says the ethane
all of the state required vaccines before school starts
from the mile-deep shale
each year.
formations could be a
game-changer for the
Acquisitions
Holzer Health Systems
chemical industry.
Buckeye Rural Electric
L&amp;L Scrap Metals
Centenary United Methodist Church Ohio Valley Bank
Several companies are
Carters Plumbing
River Front Honda
considering building in
Chapman-Burris
CPA’s
Toler &amp; Toler Insurance
the region.
Cherrington, Moulton &amp; Evans
Cremeans Concrete

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A2

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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Tri-Mat Construction
Trinity United Methodist
Church
Gerald Vallee, MD

Adam Ritchie, MD
60246630

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

College scholarships given by Kiwanis Club Swisher named PVH Employee of the Month

Submitted photos

Pictured: Kiwanis Club scholarship recipient
Halee Myers and Club President Rod Stout.

Pictured: Kiwanis Club scholarship recipient
Brooke Marcum and Club President Rod Stout.

GALLIPOLIS — The Kiwanis Club of Gallipolis recently announced their college scholarship recipients. Checks of $300 each were presented to the recipients
by Club President Dr. Rod Stout at a recent club cook-out at Raccoon Creek
County Park.
The recipients are: Brooke Marcum, a 2011 graduate of River Valley High
School and Halee Myers, a 2011 graduate of Gallia Academy High School. Both
students will be attending the University of Rio Grande.

Meigs County Calendar
Monday, Sept. 26
RACINE — Southern
Local Board of
Education, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high
school media room.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 E. Memorial
Drive.

Church Events
Thursday, Sept. 22
POMEROY – The
Carleton Community
Church, Kingsbury
Road (CR 18) will have
services, Sept. 22, 23
and 24 at 7 p.m. each
evening with Harold
and Mary Cook as
speakers. There will be
special singing. Pastor
is Robert Vance, 6987238.
Sunday, Sept. 25
TUPPERS PLAINS –
Johnny Staats and the
Delivery Boys will present a gospel blue-

grass concert at the
Amazing Grace Church
in Tuppers Plains
(located across from
the fire station) 10 a.m.
Afterwards there will
be an old fashion cornbread and soup bean
dinner. Members are to
take a covered dish.
Visitors are welcome.
MIDDLEPORT –
Revival at the Hope
Baptist Church 570
Grant St., Middleport.
The Keffer Family
singing and preaching.
Sunday, 11 a.m. and 6
p.m. Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday, 7
p.m. Child care provided, everyone welcome.
Rev. Gary Ellis, pastor.
CHESTER –
Homecoming the Eagle
Ridge Community
Church. Potluck dinner
at noon followed by
special singing at 1:30
p.m. For more information call 985-3495.

RUTLAND —
Homecoming service
Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church.
Sunday school is at 10
a.m., followed by
morning preaching service with Ronnie
Warrens as guest
speaker. The Bate
Sisters will sing. Carryin dinner will be held
at noon, followed by
afternoon services.
POMEROY — Mt.
Union Baptist Church,
Redeemed Quartet
performs, 6:30 p.m.

PATRIOT — Flora
Dailey, retired
Southwestern High
School school teacher,
celebrated her 90th
birthday on Sept. 23,
2011. Cards may be
sent to her at: 97
Dundee St., Patriot,
Ohio 45658.
GALLIPOLIS —
Marlene Belville will be
celebrating her birthday
this month. Cards can
be sent to: Marlene
Belville, Assisted Living,
Briarwood Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Events
Tuesday, Sept. 27
GALLIPOLIS — The
National Alliance on
Mental Illness (NAMI)
Southeast Ohio Open
House, 6:30 p.m.,
Senior Resource Center,
1167 Ohio 160. The
event is free and open
to the public. Door
prizes, inflatables for
kids and food will be
available. For more info:
(740) 339-0603.

Church Calendar
Homecoming
GALLIPOLIS —
Bulaville Christian
Church Homecoming,
10:30 a.m., Sept. 25, at
Don Mink Farm on
Bulaville Road. Lunch
will be served at noon.
Bring a covered dish.
For more information,
call (740) 367-5023.
BIDWELL —
Homecoming, 10 a.m.,
Sept. 25, Harris Baptist

Boy Scout Troop 201 Court of Honor held

Birthdays
Monday, Oct. 3
MIDDLEPORT –
Herman Grate will
observe his 90th birthday on Oct. 3. Cards
may be sent to him at
Overbrook Center, 333
Page St., Middleiport,
Ohio 45760. For many
years Mr. Grate operated a Meigs County
business.
Submitted photo

Pictured in the front row, from left, are: Austin Sherrill, Harrison Luckeydoo, Micah
Sanders, Cory Shaw, Tristan Brumfield and Jonatan Painter. Back row, from left,
are: Scoutmaster Paul Koch, Justin Ferrell, Chris Daniels, Noah Ferrell, Michael
Walters, Dakota Bing and assistant Scoutmaster Mike Ferrell.

Gallia County Calendar
Card Shower

POINT PLEASANT — Amanda Swisher, office manager/LPN, in Physician
Practice Services – Dr. Tzuk’s Office, was recently named the Pleasant Valley
Hospital “Employee of the Month” for September.
This dedicated individual was acknowledged for being a living example of great
customer service. Swisher has been employed with the organization since May
2010. She was nominated because she possesses several attributes that make her
stand-out from the crowd. Her patient care and customer service skills are exemplary. Her attitude towards patients and staff is always very positive and very professional. She relates well to the patients and takes the time to give thorough
explanations and answer their questions. She has a great work ethic and will not
hesitate to come in early or stay late when needed.
Swisher will receive a $50 award, a congratulatory certificate and VIP parking.
In addition, she will also be entered in the facility’s Customer Service Employee
of the Year recognition.
Thank you, Amanda Swisher, for providing excellent customer service!

Church. Guest speaker
Robert Scott, 11 a.m. A
potluck dinner will be
served at 12 p.m.
Services at 1 p.m. with
Voices of Faith and local
singers. Everyone welcome.

Revival
BIDWELL — Revival,
Sept. 17-25, 6 p.m.,
Garden of My Heart
Holy Tabernacle, 4950
S.R. 850 Bidwell. Sept.
20 — Bill Green; Sept.
21 — Rod Walker; Sept.
22 — Rhonda Childers;
Sept. 23 — Rob Clark;
Sept. 24 — Calvin
Minnis; (Homecoming,
Sept. 25 — Dorsel
Messick). Singers:
Heaven Sent, Chrissy
Yagel, Rhonda Childers,
Calvin Minnis, Dale
Norman, Vickie Caldwell,
Amanda Clark, Gale and
Larry Chapman, Jodi
Hellman and others.
Pastor Charles
T.Glassburn invites all to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS — First
Baptist Church, 1100
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
Revival, Oct. 2 at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. and Oct.

COED SOFTBALL
TOURNAMENT
Saturday, October 1 and
Sunday, October 2

Round robin (or mini tournament) on Saturday

Tournament on Sunday
(Depends on final number of teams)
Guarantee 4 games
Entry fee: $125.00
For more information please call:
Bill Harmon 740.416.9106
Jan Harmon 740.416.6556
Home: 740.949.3114
Games played at Racine, Ohio
Proceeds go to teams of the Racine Summer
Youth League

3-4 at 7 p.m., nightly.
Pastor Jim Franklin,
speaker. Nursery and
transportation provided.

Events
Sunday, Sept. 25
ADDISON — Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor Rick Barcus
preaching.
KANAUGA — Rev.
and Mrs. Lamont Hess,
missionaries to the
Navajo Indians in
Arizona, will be speaking
at the Fair Haven United
Methodist Church beginning at 10:30 a.m. There
will be dinner after the
service.

GALLIPOLIS — Members of Boy Scout Troop 201 recently held its Court of
Honor.
A Court of Honor is a
ceremony in which scouts
18th Anniversary Sale
receive Merit Badges and
Sale Starts October 1st
rank movement accomplished since the previous
20-60% off store wide
ceremony. Most of the
Visit our Pumpkin Patch
merit badges were earned
at summer camp at Camp
for additional savings!
Arrowhead in July and at
Silver Bridge Plaza
Aquatics Camp at Camp
Gallipolis, OH
Cherokee in August.
740.446.3484
A total of 69 merit
M-F 10-6 • Sat 10-2
badges were presented on
kpdng@ymail.com
September 12. In addiwww.mykaratpatch.com
tion, four of the scouts
moved one rank in the
past three months. The
scouts have also performed many service projects this year and have
many more planned.

YES!!

There is still time to enroll
for Fall Quarter

th
Dining Wi Diabetes
Are You A Diabetic?
Do You Know A Diabetic?

Call Today!
1-740-446-4367
1-800-214-4052

FREE

Training &amp; Recipes for
Diabetic Support

Gallipolis
Career
College

October 4th, 11th &amp; 18th
6 - 8 p.m.
Courthouse Annex
Pomeroy, Ohio
For more information contact
Andrew Brumfield
740-992-6626
Meigs County Health Department

Fall Qu
arter S
tarts
Oct

ober 3
rd

“Careers Close To Home”
60239690

Public meetings

Submitted photo

Pictured are Tom Schauer, CEO; Ori Tzuk, MD; Amanda Swisher, office manager/LPN; and Bill Barker, senior vice president of administration.

Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis, Ohio
www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu
email: gcc@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member-Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools 1274B

�OPINION

Page A4
Sunday, September 25, 2011

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

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.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T O DAY I N H I S T O RY
Events
2009 – U.S. President Barack Obama, British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, in a joint TV appearance for a G-20 summit, accused Iran of building a
secret nuclear enrichment facility.
1992 – NASA launched a $511 million probe to
Mars in the first U.S. mission to the planet in 17
years. Eleven months later, the probe would fail.
1983 – Maze Prison escape: 38 republican prisoners, armed with 6 handguns, hijack a prison
meals lorry and smash their way out of the Maze
prison. It is the largest prison escape since WWII
and in British history.
1981 – Sandra Day O'Connor becomes the
102nd person sworn in as an Associate Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States and the
first woman to hold the office.
1977 – About 4,200 people take part in the first
running of the Chicago Marathon.
1957 – Central High School in Little Rock,
Arkansas, is integrated by the use of United States
Army troops.
1929 – Jimmy Doolittle performs the first blind
flight from Mitchel Field proving that full instrument flying from take off to landing is possible.
1804 – The Teton Sioux (a subdivision of the
Lakota) demand one of the boats from the Lewis
and Clark Expedition as a toll for moving further
upriver.
1789 – The U.S. Congress passes twelve amendments to the United States Constitution: the
Congressional Apportionment Amendment (which
was never ratified), the Congressional
Compensation Amendment, and the ten that are
known as the Bill of Rights.

Births
1983 – Donald Glover, American actor and
comedian
1969 – Catherine Zeta-Jones, Welsh actress
1968 – Will Smith, American actor and rapper
1961 – Heather Locklear, American actress and
model
1958 – Michael Madsen, American actor
1952 – Christopher Reeve, American actor (d.
2004)
1951 – Mark Hamill, American actor
1944 – Michael Douglas, American actor and
producer
1930 – Shel Silverstein, American humorist and
author (d. 1999)
1929 – Barbara Walters, American broadcaster
1897 – William Faulkner, American writer,
Nobel laureate (d. 1962)

Deaths
2005 – Don Adams, American actor and comedian (b. 1923)

L E T T E R S TO T H E E D I TO R
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be accepted for publication.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, please call one of our
newsrooms.

Our main numbers are:
Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-2342
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992-2155
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-1333
Our websites are:
Tribune • Gallipolis, OH
www.mydailytribune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
www.mydailysentinel.com
Register • Pt. Pleasant, WV
www.mydailyregister.com
Our e-mail addresses are:
Tribune • Gallipolis, OH

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paid at Gallipolis.
Member: The Associated
Press, the West Virginia
Press Association, and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address
corrections to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631.

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IMPACT: NYPD ethic tracking included citizens
BY ADAM GOLDMAN,
EILEEN SULLIVAN &amp;
MATT APUZZO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — The
grainy photographs could
have come from any undercover police file: A man in
jeans talking on his cell
phone. Another in a windbreaker walking past people
at a coffee shop. A car parked
outside a grocery store.
But the surveillance was
not part of any criminal case.
The photos were snapped as
part of secret New York
Police Department intelligence program that focused
on people and businesses
based on their ethnicity.
Police documents obtained
by The Associated Press
show how the city's rich heritage as a place where immigrants can blend in and build
their lives now clashes with
today's New York, where
police see blending in as one
of the first priorities for
would-be terrorists. The documents describe in extraordinary detail an NYPD program to build a database of
daily life, cataloguing where
people ate, worked and
prayed
It started with one group,
Moroccans, but the documents show police intended
to build intelligence files on
other ethnicities. U.S. citizens were among those subjected to surveillance.
Undercover
officers
snapped photographs of
restaurants frequented by
Moroccans, including one
that was noted for serving
"religious Muslims." Police
documented
where
Moroccans bought groceries,
which hotels they visited and
where they prayed. While
visiting an apartment used by
new Moroccan immigrants,
one officer noted in his
reports that he saw two
Qurans and a calendar from a
nearby mosque.
"A lot of these locations
were innocent," said an official involved in the effort,
who, like many others interviewed by the AP, spoke only
on condition of anonymity to
discuss sensitive police operations. "They just happened
to be in the community."
It was called the Moroccan
Initiative, and the documents
undercut the NYPD's claim
that its officers only followed
leads when investigating terrorism.
The goal, officials said,
was a database so complete
that if police ever received a
tip about a Moroccan terrorist, officers looking for him
would have the entire community at their fingertips.
To prevent attacks, police
monitored the path that generations of immigrants followed: getting an apartment,
learning English, finding
work, assimilating into the
culture. Activities such as
haircuts and gym workouts
were transformed from mundane daily routines into
police data points.
A U.S. citizen in Queens,
for example, starts work each
day at what police labeled "a
known Moroccan barbershop."
The
AP
previously
revealed the secret operations
of the NYPD intelligence
division as it mapped the
Muslim community in and
around New York, monitored
life in ethnic neighborhoods
and scrutinized mosques.
The Moroccan Initiative was
one of the division's projects.
Such programs began with
help from the CIA under
President George W. Bush
and have continued with at
least the tacit support of
President Barack Obama,
whose administration repeatedly has sidestepped questions about them. It is unclear
whether Mayor Michael
Bloomberg oversaw the programs. He has refused to
comment directly about
them.
Asked about the story
Thursday, Bloomberg said,
"You're just factually wrong,"
but he did not elaborate. His

spokesman, after being
shown the documents, also
declined to say what the
mayor believed was inaccurate.
In response to the AP's earlier stories, the CIA's inspector general is investigating
whether its unusually close
relationship with the NYPD
was unlawful.
On Thursday, the publisher
of an Arab-American newspaper said the CIA wanted to
resume running recruitment
ads in the Detroit-area ArabAmerican News. The spy
agency briefly stopped running the ads on the paper's
website after the paper published an AP story on the
government helping to spy
on Muslim-Americans.
Lawmakers have called on
the Justice Department to
investigate.
Assistant
Attorney General Thomas
Perez, the head of the Civil
Rights
Division,
said
Thursday he was reviewing
the request, but he repeatedly
refused to answer when
asked if, like the NYPD documents obtained by the AP,
the Justice Department considered "American Black
Muslim" to be an "ancestry
of interest."
Police spokesman Paul
Browne did not return messages seeking comment
about
the
Moroccan
Initiative. In an earlier email,
he said the department was
not involved in wholesale
spying but rather was trying
to document the likely
whereabouts of terrorists.
"The unit's personnel
would try to establish, for
example, what border crossing a terrorist entering New
York would use, what flop
house he'd use, what Internet
cafe he'd frequent to communicate, etc.," he wrote.
It's unclear exactly when
the initiative began and
whether it continues in any
form. Current and former
officials told the AP that it
started in response to the
2003 suicide bombings that
killed 45 people in the
Moroccan city of Casablanca
and the 2004 train bombing
in Madrid that was linked to
Moroccan terrorists.
In early meetings, police
were told there was no specific threat to New York from
Moroccans, officials said, but
they were instructed to gather
intelligence on the Moroccan
community because of concerns Moroccan terrorists
might strike here too.
NYPD intelligence chief
David Cohen, a former
senior CIA officer, oversaw
the program, current and former officials said. Many of
the documents obtained by
the AP were prepared for
Police Commissioner Ray
Kelly, but because of the volume of such documents his
office receives, it's unclear
whether he read them.
New York City law prohibits police from using race,
religion or ethnicity as "the
determinative factor" for any
law enforcement action. Civil
liberties advocates have said
that guideline is so ambiguous it makes the law unenforceable. The NYPD has
said intelligence officers do
not use racial profiling or
troll ethnic neighborhoods
for information.
The documents obtained
by the AP, many of which
were marked "secret,"
include a list of "Moroccan
Locations," a virtual tour of
the city's Moroccan neighborhoods. Photos of local
businesses were accompanied by notes from plainclothes officers, known as
rakers, who quietly kept tabs
on neighborhoods and eavesdropped on conversations.
Sometimes the notes
recorded in police files were
detailed, such as the officer
who reported that a local
sandwich shop was close to a
mosque and said the store
was closed during Friday
prayers.
"The restaurant serves only
Halal meat," the document
said. "The majority of the
customers are religious

Muslims."
Halal meat is prepared
under religious rules similar
to kosher food.
Other businesses were
described with fewer details.
But in every case, the officers
noted the ethnicity of the
owners.
"In America, you don't put
people under suspicion without good reason," said Rep.
Rush Holt, D-N.J., who
reviewed some of the documents obtained by the AP
and has urged the Justice
Department to investigate.
"The idea that people in a
group are suspect because of
being members of a group is
profiling, plain and simple."
Business owners in the
Astoria neighborhood of
Queens, where many of the
pictures were taken, at first
expressed amusement at seeing themselves alongside
their friends and neighbors in
documents compiled by officers hunting for terrorists.
"Police come here for
what? We cut hair all day,"
said barber Amine Darhbach,
a U.S. citizen who charges
$12 for a haircut and sends a
portion of his earnings to his
family in Morocco each
month.
As the local people flipped
through the documents, they
said they grudgingly accepted the police attention. It is
hardly news to them that,
since the 2001 terrorist
attacks, Muslims are under
greater scrutiny by the public
and law enforcement.
"We've been harassed for
so long, it doesn't make any
sense to complain," said Leo
Santini, a cafe owner and
U.S. citizen who changed his
name
from
Mohamed
Hussein because he thought
he would be treated better
without an Arab name. His
three American kids, he said,
"don't look Arab, so they
won't have any problems."
Sometimes, there was frustration and anger about being
included in police documents.
"All I want is the best for
my daughter and my community and to be treated like
a new American citizen," said
Sanaa Bergha, whose travel
agency was among the businesses photographed in the
intelligence files.
Like others, Bergha said
that, if asked, she would talk
to police about how she could
help keep the city safe. But
she's only spoken to the
police twice, she said. Once
was after she was burglarized. The second was when
she reported customers she
suspected of making fraudulent documents.
The documents on the
Moroccan businesses were
compiled by a team called
the Demographics Unit,
which police originally
denied existed. After the AP
obtained police documents
describing the unit as a team
of 16 officers with a mission
to map and monitor ethnic
neighborhoods, the department said the Demographics
Unit used to exist but never
had more than eight officers.
Browne, the department's
spokesman, has said the unit
only followed leads. There
is no indication in the documents, however, that police
were only investigating
criminal leads. Information
about crimes was included
in the Moroccan Initiative
files, but these do not appear
to be the program's focus.
"The
Demographics
Team was instructed by me
to re-canvas the city for any
new locations and they
came across a newly identified hotel that is referred to
Moroccan tourists," an
unidentified
supervisor
wrote in an undated update
on the initiative.
One police document, for
example, lists taxi companies and Dunkin' Donuts
and Subway franchises
known to hire Moroccans
and other Arabs. A local
gym and barber shop also
are mentioned. The end of
the document includes a
section about criminal activ-

ity and identifies four businesses believed to be
involved in marriage and
document fraud and drug
dealing.
Another
document
describes 14 restaurants,
two travel agencies and a
meat market catering to the
Moroccan
community.
Another said the NYPD
produced a list of every
Moroccan cab driver in the
city. Officers tried to interview them, but many were
unavailable to be questioned
because they were out working 12- to 14-hour shifts, the
document said.
Current and former officials said the information
collected
by
the
Demographics Unit was
kept on a computer inside
the squad's offices at the
Brooklyn Army Terminal. It
was not connected to the
department's central intelligence database, they said.
When a Moroccan was
arrested, according to the
documents, a unit called the
Citywide Debriefing Team
would visit him in jail or at
his home. Each was asked
how someone coming to the
United States from Morocco
might keep a low profile.
Officers had a list of 13
questions, including where
such a person might live,
obtain identification cards,
eat, worship and learn
English.
The questions helped
police identify small apartments in Brooklyn where
Moroccan
immigrants
shared rooms soon after
arriving in New York. Police
visited one apartment in
2007 to meet with someone
who had been arrested the
prior year, according to the
files. The officer noted the
number of bedrooms, the
layout, the furnishings and a
wall calendar from a nearby
mosque.
"There was a small table
as well as an entertainment
center," the document said.
"There were two Korans.
One on top of each speaker."
Police officials said such
detailed note-taking was the
result of enormous pressure
inside the department.
Officers assigned to conduct
interviews and visit homes
were told by supervisors
that, if the subject of their
interviews one day turned
violent, their reports would
be scrutinized with an eye
for what warning signs were
missed, officials said.
The intent was to keep
officers sharp and remind
them of the seriousness of
the job. Officials said officers were encouraged to
record even innocent details.
Unlike the information
from the Demographics
Unit, the information from
debriefings and personal visits was reported back to
headquarters and entered
into the police department's
central Intelligence Data
System, officials said.
Because of lawsuits by
civil liberties groups, police
lawyers have set stricter limits in recent years about
information the NYPD compiles about people not
accused of any crime, current and former officials
said. Lawyers review police
reports and sometimes
require officers to remove
information or rewrite their
reports. Some information
on innocent behavior is
removed. Other information
is labeled "sealed," which
means it can be seen only by
very senior officials, the officials said.
Meanwhile,
police
received from the U.S. government regular updates on
foreign visitors entering
New York, according to documents and interviews.
Police departments often
receive information on visitors on a case-by-case basis.
U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, which maintains
the federal documents,
declined to tell the AP
whether the broad access to
its files by a city police
department was unusual.

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Obituaries
Richard E.
“Richie”
McGuire
Richard E. “Richie”
McGuire,
37,
of
Gallipolis, Ohio passed
away
on
Thursday,
September 22, 2011, at his
residence. He was born on
March 4, 1974 in
Gallipolis, Ohio, son of
Eugene and Helen (Stang) McGuire. Richie was a
union brick mason and also worked with his father.
He was a member of the Hogg Club, and enjoyed riding his motorcycle, four wheeling, hunting, fishing
and shooting pool. He was a 1992 Buckeye
Hills/GAHS graduate.
Richie is survived by a daughter, Jessica (Joshua)
Case of Londonderry, Ohio; a son, Dalton Gaige
McGuire of Huntington, W.Va.; a grandson, Justin
Case; parents, Eugene and Helen McGuire of
Gallipolis; sister, Lori McGuire of Charleston, W.Va.;
brother, Dennis (Heather) McGuire of Gallipolis;
fiancé, Paula Maynard of Crown City; and her children, Haven Maynard and Devin Rogers; grandfather,
Bert McGuire of Gallipolis; aunts and uncles,
Rosemary and Paul Harris of Orland Park, IL, Betty
and Earl Nicodemus of West Liberty, W.Va., Marie
and Vernon Hall of Columbus, Beldon and Janet
Storms of Vinton, Linda Miller, Chester and Judy
McGuire, William and Bertie McGuire, all of
Gallipolis, and Tim and Deneena Trout of South
Point, Ohio; and several cousins.
He was preceded in death by his grandparents,
Rosella McGuire and Tony and Edna Stang; and an
uncle, Charles McGuire.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday,
September 27, 2011, at Willis Funeral Home, with
Pastor Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow in
Patriot Cemetery. Friends may call on Monday from
5-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
email condolences.

Laura Kathryn
"Kitty" Kalisch
Laura Kathryn "Kitty"
Kalisch, 78, of Brick, formerly of Bidwell, Ohio,
passed
on
Monday,
September 19, 2011, in
Brick, N.J. Born in
Rensford, W.Va., August
10, 1933, she lived in
Charleston, W.Va. and
Gallia County, Ohio,

where she graduated from Cheshire High School in
1951. She moved to Union City, N.J., in 1959 where
she was an Administrative Assistant for the Hudson
County Board of Social Services for over 20 years,
retiring from there in 1990. She also lived briefly in
Fresno, Calif. and several years in Cottontown, Tenn.,
before returning home to Gallia County in 1999,
where she lived up until this past summer.
Kitty thoroughly enjoyed her involvement with
the committee for the alumni banquet of the old
Cheshire High School each year.
She was the daughter of the late Albert and Laura
Rhodes. Predeceased are her husband, George
Kalisch; son, Gregory Lee Wills; sisters, Audrey
Arnold and Doris Conkle; and brother, John
Rhodes.
She is survived by daughters, Kathy Russo, of
Nashville, Tenn., Lana Snyder and son-in-law,
Troy, of Brick, N.J.; six grandchildren, Kristopher,
Gregory, Tammy, Amy, Jennifer and Shawn; and
seven great-grandchildren, Ally, Jeffrey, Olivia,
Bella, Lexy, Gregory and Sammy.
In lieu of flowers, please donate in her memory to
Breast Cancer Charities of America.
Private services will be held by the Silverton
Memorial Funeral Home, 2482 Church Road, Toms
River, N.J., www.silvertonmemorial.com.

Fred A. Fisher
Fred A. Fisher, 86, formerly of Vinton, Ohio,
passed away Thursday, September 22, 2011, at the
Ohio Veterans Home, Georgetown, Ohio. He was
born June 16, 1925, in Porter, Ohio, the son of the
late Raymond and Clara Fisher. Fred was a farmer
and retired from the Green Coal Company, Wellston,
Ohio, in 1989 where he was employed as a truck driver. He was a Vinton High School graduate in the
class of 1943, WWII U.S. Navy Veteran and his
memberships included the Vinton American Legion
161 and VFW Post 4464, Gallipolis.
Fred is survived by his wife, Thelma Cardwell
Fisher of Vinton, Ohio; daughters, Leah (Jo)
Brown and Gail F. McCarley; grandchildren,
Heather Fisher, Rama McCarley, Melody
McCarley and Garrett (Megan) Brown; and greatgrandson, Ethan Scott.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by a son, Jay Fisher.
Graveside services were held at 1 p.m., Saturday,
September 24, at Vinton Memorial Park with Tom
Kessel as officiant. Military graveside services
were conducted by veterans’ service organizations
of Gallia County. A fellowship luncheon was
served at Trinity UM Church, Ohio 160, Porter,
Ohio, by the Trinity UMW and the AM Legion
Auxiliary Post 161.
Services were under the direction of the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton, Ohio.
Condolences
may
be
sent
to
www.mccoymoore.com.

Betty J.
Spencer
Betty J. Spencer, 85,
Gallipolis, passed away at
4:30
p.m.
Friday,
September 23, 2011, at her
birthplace home at on Pine
Street. Born March 12,
1926 she was the 13th of
fourteen children of the
late Charles and Blance
Morton Harris. She was a
homemaker and a member of the Tridestone Baptist
Church. She was a 1944 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and also volunteered as a foster grandparent at the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
She married James Thomas Spencer on June 13,
1947, in Columbus, Ohio and he preceded her in
death on October 29, 1978.
Betty is survived by two daughters, Teri Howell and
Robin (Paul) Close, of Gallipolis; her son, Tom
(Linda) Spencer, Tuscon, Arizona; ten grandchildren,
Heather (Cody) Roberts, Robert (Bobby) Mabry,
Gilbert M.(Becky) Craig III, Gretchen (Brent) Jones,
J.T. (Cassie Rice) Spencer Howell, K.C. (Tyler)
McCall, Felicia Close, Bo Howell, Brea Close and
Natalie Close; eleven great-grandchildren, Harrison
Roberts, Spencer Roberts, CoMyah Roberts, Torraye
Mabry, MaLiyah Mabry, R.J. Mabry, Jaden Mabry,
Ava McCall, Ella McCall, Trey Brazzell and Craig
Jones; several nieces and nephews; and her faithful
companions, Pugg and Lucky.
In addition to her husband, Jim Spencer, she was
preceded in death by a daughter, Patricia Craig; sonin-law, Rev. Dr. Gilbert M. Craig Jr.; a great-grandson, Gilbert M. Craig IV; three sisters, Lucille Casey,
Loretta Diggs and Virginia Ratcliff; and six brothers,
Merrill Harris, Kenneth Harris, Wendell Harris, Paul
Harris, Dale Harris and Billy Harris.
A Celebration of Life Service will be conducted at
noon on Wednesday, September 28, 2011, in the Paint
Creek Baptist Church. Officiating will Pastors Melvin
Freeman, Gene Armstrong and Calvin Minnis. The
family will receive friends one hour prior to the service at the church. In lieu of flowers, memorials may
be made to Holzer Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Expressions of sympathy may be
sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com. Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis is
entrusted with Betty's funeral arrangements.

I’M A CHILD OF APPALACHIA®
“Continued support for the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio assures a focus on driving
higher expectations and improved educational results, finding the financial resources to
engineer them and developing a broad-based strategic leadership coalition that can
effectively leverage regional strengths into mission-critical educational investments.
FAO is the catalyst that encourages kids and their teachers to explore, create and
innovate. FAO nurtures, motivates and rewards their activities. Expansion of
FAO’s momentum and reach is crucial to Appalachian Ohio sustaining a vision
and future that places the benefits of new economy, private sector opportunities
within sight and reach of our children and their families!” — Dr. David Scholl

PORTRAIT BY FRED C. TOM © 2011

The Foundation for Appalachian Ohio is proud to honor Dr. David Scholl with the
2011 Child of Appalachia® Award. Under his leadership, Diagnostic Hybrids, Inc. in
Athens, Ohio grew from a small startup company to a world leader in cell-based
and monoclonal antibody diagnostic test kits. With a skilled workforce rooted in
Appalachia, Dr. Scholl and his executive team have strongly supported the
development and expansion of educational opportunities for every child
in Appalachian Ohio as the key to achieving his or her highest potential.

The Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, a community foundation serving the 32
counties of Appalachian Ohio, is committed to partnering with you to ensure every
child in Appalachian Ohio has access to the educational opportunities needed for success.
For more information on how you can support children of Appalachia, visit
the Foundation’s website at www.appalachianohio.org or call (740) 753–1111.

Keeping Meigs &amp; Gallia informed

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155
Gallia • 446-2342

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page A6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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�SPORTS
LOCAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS — A schedule of upcoming
college and high school varsity sporting
events involving teams from Gallia and
Meigs counties.

Monday, September 26
Volleyball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at Ohio Valley Christian,
5:30 p.m.
Soccer
South Point at Ohio Valley Christian,
5:30 p.m.
Tuesday, September 27
Volleyball
South Gallia at Belpre, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Ohio Valley Christian at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant (boys) at Hurricane, 5
p.m.
South Charleston at Point Pleasant
(girls), 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, September 28
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 5:30
p.m.
Thursday, September 29
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15
p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30
p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Covenant Christian, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant (boys), 6
p.m.
Cross Country
Point
Pleasant
at
George
Washington, 3 p.m.
Friday, September 30
Football
Belpre at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 7:30
p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 7:30 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
Hannan at Fayetteville-Perry, 7:30
p.m.
Soccer
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.

B1
Sunday, September 25, 2011

Rebels cruises past Eastern, 36-7
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

M E R C E RV I L L E ,
Ohio — Despite an early
scare, the South Gallia
football team cruised the
their fourth victory of the
season.
The Rebels (4-1, 3-1
TVC Hocking) struck
first, with Eastern (1-4,
1-3 TVC Hocking)
quickly cutting the deficit
to one points. The Rebels
scored 28 unanswered
points to claim the 36-7
victory.
South Gallia took the
opening kickoff, but
failed to gain a first down
in the opening series. The
Rebels punted to Eastern,
and three plays later the
Eagles punted the ball
back to the Rebels.
Ethan Spurlock took
the first play of the next
South Gallia drive 17
yards, moving into opponent territory for the first
time. Two more rushing

plays set up the 31 yard
touchdown run by Cory
Haner to give South
Gallia the lead. Spurlock
added the two point conversion run for the 8-0
advantage.
One minute and 15 seconds later, the Eagles
scored their first touchdown. Chase Cook took
the fourth play of the drive
into the endzone from six
yards out. Max Carnahan
made the extra point kick
to cut the Eastern deficit to
one point.
Sixty-two seconds later
South Gallia scored
again. Haner hit Josh
Cooper for the 72 yard
touchdown play at the
5:22 mark of the opening
quarter. The two-point
conversion
attempt
failed, leaving SGHS
with the 14-7 lead.
The Eagles looked to
be gaining momentum on
the next drive, but sacks
by Austin Phillips and
Spurlock pushed in the

wrong direction. Faced
with fourth and 17, the
Eagles were forced to
punt the ball away with
1:14 remaining in the
first quarter. The next
three possessions resulted in punts.
The Eagles began play
at the South Gallia 32
yard line on their next
possession, but a fumble
on the second down play
was
recovered
by
Spurlock.
A 40 yard run by
Phillips on the Rebels
next play set up a 27 yard
touchdown pass from
Haner to Levi Ellis .
Phillips added the two
point conversion run to
make the score 22-7.
It was not long before
South Gallia had the ball
back, with Cooper intercepting
the
Joey
Scowden pass on the
Eagles next play.
With 3:54 on the second quarter clock, the
Rebels carefully moved

Sarah Hawley/photo
South Gallia quarterback Cory Haner throws a two
point conversion pass during the Rebels game on
Friday against Eastern.

the ball down field.
Haner appeared to score
a touchdown with just
under
one
minute
remaining, but a penalty
brought the ball back to
the Eastern 17 yard line.

With just three seconds
remaining in the first
half, Haner found Danny
Matney near the goal line
for a 17 yard touchdown.
Please see REBELS, B6

White Falcons
win battle of
TVC unbeatens
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Spartans conquer
River Valley, 35-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE, Ohio —
Alexander
wrecked
Homecoming festivities
for the River Valley football team Friday night
following a 35-0 nonconference setback in a
Week 5 gridiron matchup
held at Raider Field in
Gallia County.
The host Raiders (1-4)
committed six turnovers
and mustered only 63
yards of total offense in
the loss, while the
Spartans (5-0) converted
those half-dozen takeaways into 21 points en
route
to
remaining
unbeaten this fall.
Alexander — which
committed
three
turnovers itself in the
game — amassed 378
yards of total offense in
the triumph, including
336 yards on the ground.
The Spartans also limited
RVHS to just two first
downs and minus-nine
yards in the first half on
their way to a 21-0 intermission advantage.
River Valley’s fortunes
turned bad early on, as
the hosts fumbled away
possession on the third
snap from scimmage —
giving AHS the ball at
the Raiders’ 11-yard line.
Two plays later, the
Spartans grabbed a 7-0
advantage after Benton
Milum plunged in from
five yards out at the
10:24 mark of the first
quarter.
Both squads traded a
pair of possessions,
which resulted in an
Alexander punt with 3:25
left in the opening period. The ensuing kick hit a
River Valley player in the
back of the leg as it was
landing, allowing the
guests to regain possession at the RVHS 24 with
3:15 remaining.
Three plays later, the
Spartans led 14-0 following a five-yard TD run by
Chris Grant at the 2:04
mark of the first period
— which ended the scoring over the opening 12
minutes of play.
River Valley had four
fumbles — two of which
were lost — and also produced minus-19 yards of
Please see SPARTANS, B6

Mike Brace/photo
Gallia Academy senior running back Brandon Taylor (10) takes a handoff from Wade Jarrell (13) and follows the blocking of Aaron Guisinger (71) during the second half of Friday nightʼs football game against
Ironton at Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Blue Devils come up
short against Ironton, 6-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— Six feet proved to be
the difference between a
win and the eventual
final outcome for the
Gallia Academy football
team Friday night after
dropping a heartbreaking 6-0 decision to visiting
Ironton
on
Homecoming in a Week
5 non-conference contest at Memorial Field.
The Blue Devils (3-2)

fought tooth-and-nail
with the Fighting Tigers
(4-1) for four solid quarters, but two bad breaks
allowed the guests to
sneak away from the Old
French City with their
fifth straight victory in
this
head-to-head
matchup.
Scoreless
through
three quarters, Ironton
caught its first big break
early in the fourth after
Dion Brown rumbled 73
yards to paydirt — giving IHS a 6-0 advantage

with 8:33 left in regulation.
The Blue Devils, however, countered with a
14-play drive that saw
the hosts get to within
two yards of tying the
game — or possibly
more — with 1:11 left in
regulation.
Facing a fourth-andgoal at the IHS two,
Gallia Academy opted to
go for the win through
the air — which ended
with a bad result for the
hosts.
Quarterback

Wade Jarrell was sacked
at the seven, allowing
Ironton to take over on
downs with 1:06 left on
the game clock.
The Fighting Tigers
ultimately took a knee
three times to run out the
clock, securing the hardfought one-possession
decision.
The Blue Devils gave
the ball to Brandon
Taylor 11 times on that
final 14-play drive,
which allowed the hosts
Please see GALLIA, B5

Marauders shutout Southern on homecoming
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY, Ohio —
Meigs jumped out to a
21-0 lead and coasted to
a 37-0 win over Southern
Friday night before a
large
damp
Homecoming/Alumni
crowd at Bob Roberts
Field.
Southern looked to
make it interesting early
in the contest, when
freshman quarterback
Tristen Wolfe hooked up
with Zac Beegle for a 40
yard gain just three plays
in the contest to the
Marauder 14. But the
Tornadoes couldn’t take
advantage of the big play
and a few plays later

were facing a fourth and
24 at the Meigs 28.
Wolfe’s fourth down pass
fell incomplete and
Meigs took the ball over
on downs.
Meigs drove down the
field, Dillon Boyer then
put the Marauders on the
board with a 36 yard run.
Barrett added the extra
points for a 7-0 Meigs
lead with 4:36 left.
Three plays later,
Boyer picked off a Wolfe
pass
to
give
the
Marauders good field
position at the Tornado
39, aided by Southern
penalties the Marauders
made it a 14-0 contest
when Jeffrey Roush
scored from two yards
Please see MEIGS, B5

Dave Harris/photo
Southern quarterback Tristen Wolfe is sacked by
Meigsʼ Blaine Perry (62) and Jesse Smith (67) during Fridayʼs game at Bob Roberts Field in
Pomeroy, Ohio.

MASON, W.Va. —
Anthony Grimm scored
three first half touchdowns while Kane Roush
hauled in a pair of
Trenton Gibbs touchdown passes to lead the
Wahama White Falcons
to its fourth straight win
Friday evening by a 61-8
margin over the visiting
Waterford Wildcats.
Coach Ed Cromley’s
Bend Area team continued to barrage the opposition with a devastating
offensive
attack
in
recording their fourth
consecutive win of the
2011 grid season. The
White Falcons totaled
more than 500 yards in
total offense while topping 60 points for the
third consecutive week.
The ninth ranked Falcons
improve to 4-0 overall
and 4-0 inside the TVC
Hocking Division while
visiting Waterford drops
its second contest of the
season to fall o 3-2 on the
season and 3-1 inside
league play.
Following a sluggish
first half beginning
Wahama exploded for 35
second quarter points to
quickly turn the game
into another rout. A
Crandal Neal one yard
run and a Zack Wamsley
point after kick in the
opening period afforded
the Mason County team
an early 7-0 before the
roof caved in on the
Wildcats.
Anthony
Grimm
scored a pair of touchdowns on runs of 13 and
five yards inside a three
minute span to begin the
offensive thrust for the
hosts during second
quarter action. Kane
Roush then grabbed a 23
yard scoring pass from
Trenton Gibbs before
Grimm added his third
score of the game with a
three yard burst into the
middle. Zack Wamsley
then capped off the first
half scoring barrage
inside the final minute of
the first half with a determined 67 yard burst into
the center of the line to
extend the Falcon lead to
42-0. Zack Wamsley split
the uprights on all six
first half WHS touchdowns and ended the
Please see FALCONS, B6

�Page B2 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Wolfe wins Jackson Invite; Hanning second
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

JACKSON, Ohio —
Southern’s Kody Wolfe
took first, while Meigs’
Cody Hanning was second at the Jackson
Invitational on Thursday
evening.
The event marked the
first cross country race to
be run at Jackson High
School. The race had previously been held at
Franklin Valley Golf
Club.
Wolfe ran a time of
16:34 to win the race,

with Hanning finishing
with a time of 17:52.
Steven Mahr was
eighth for the Marauders
(18:55), Brandon Mahr
was 18th (19:28) and
Forrest Nagy was 74th
(23:06).
For the Tornadoes,
Andrew Roseberry was
32nd (20:19), Andrew
Ginther
was
34th
(20:24), Chris Yeater was
44th (20:47), Bradley
McCoy was 57th (21:41),
and Chase Graham was
87th (25:56).
Only two local runners
competed in the girls

race.
Southern’s
Jennifer
McCoy finished fourth
with a time of 21:34 and
Meigs’
Shawnella
Patterson
was
21st
(23:59).
Vinton County won the
boys team title with a
score of 53 and Athens
was
second
(68).
Southern finished sixth
with a score of 129,
while Meigs did not
record a team score.
Athens won the girls
title with 30 points, followed by Alexander with
63 points.

Paul Boggs photos/Courtesy of the Jackson County Times-Journal
Southernʼs Kody Wolfe passes teammate Chase Graham during Thursdayʼs
Jackson Invitational in Jackson County, Ohio. Wolfe took first place at the event.

Meigsʼ Cody Hanning runs during Thursdayʼs Jackson Invitational in Jackson
County, Ohio. Hanning placed second in the race.

Southernʼs Jennifer McCoy runs during Thursdayʼs Jackson Invitational in
Jackson County, Ohio. McCoy finished fourth at the event.

GAHS inducts 10th Hall of Fame Class

Submitted Photo
The Gallia Academy High School Athletic Hall of Fame recently inducted its 10th
class. Members inducted are pictured here following Saturday night's annual Hall
of Fame induction banquet at Gallia Academy's High School cafeteria in
Centenary, Ohio. New members are (front row, left to right) Bill Smith, Delbert
(Pete) Neal, and John Thomas; (back row) Jeff Smith, in honor of the late Bill
Gray, Wayne and Jane Bergdoll, in honor of the late Betsy Bergdoll, James (Jeep)
Holley, Jodi Adams Sickles, Josette Baker and Reid Reigelsberger, in honor of the
late Gordon Baker. More than 100 attended the ceremony.

Point Pleasant outlasts
Ravenswood, 2-1
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

R AV E N S W O O D ,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant soccer team
took a first half lead
on Thursday evening
and
held
off
Ravenswood for the 21 victory.
Point Pleasant scored
first, in the 20th minute,
with a goal by Tommy
Foust. Steve Porter
crossed the ball from the
right side, with Foust

kicking the ball into the
goal from eight yards
out.
In the 23rd minute
Ravenswood tied the
game. Jon Scheifer
scored on a break away,
going one-on-one with
PPHS goalkeeper Brady
Reymond.
Josh Parsons gave
Point Pleasant the lead in
the 32nd minute, dribbling past two defenders
before scoring the go
ahead goal.
Point Pleasant had 18

shots in the game, while
Ravenswood had 10
shots.
Reymond had nine
saves in the game and
Ravenswood had 16.
The Big Blacks had
five corner kicks and
Ravenswood had four
corner kicks. The Red
Devils had 10 fouls
and Point Pleasant had
six.
Point Pleasant travels
to Hurricane on Tuesday
and hosts Sissonville on
Thursday.

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�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Prep Golf: Lady Marauders finish perfect for 2011 season
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The Meigs Lady
Marauders completed the
2011 regular season on
Wednesday evening with
a tri-match win over
Eastern and Logan.
The Lady Marauders
have won all seven
matches this season.
On Wednesday, Meigs
shot a 217, Logan shot a
233 and Eastern had a
263.
Alyssa Cremeans led
the Lady Marauders with
a 50, Jennifer Robinson
shot a 51, Natalie
Michael had a 56 and
Kerri Moon shot a 60.
Also playing for the Lady
Marauders were Harley
Fox (64) and Autumn
Williams (70).

Samantha Cline led the
Lady Eagles with a 55,
followed
by
Grace
Edwards with a 65,
Hannah Hawley with a
68 and Cassidy Cleland
with a 75.
For Logan, Emily
Warthman and Katherine
Imboden shot rounds of
55, Danielle Hubbard
had a 58 and Paige
Ludwin shot a 65.
Cremeans took medalist honors with the low
round of 50.
The Meigs and Eastern
boys teams also played a
JV golf match at
Kountry
Hills
on
Wednesday with the
Marauders winning 215241. Eastern’s Josh
Parker
was
match
medalist with a 42 and
Mitchell Metts led
Meigs with a round of

50.
The Lady Marauders
will compete in the sectional tournament on
Monday
at
Upper
Landsdown Golf Club in
Ashville, Ohio.
TORNADOES TOP
TRIMBLE
POMEROY, Ohio —
The Southern golf team
defeated Trimble on
Thursday evening at
Kountry Hills Golf
Course in Meigs County,
Ohio.
The Tornadoes shot a
team total of 174, while
Trimble shot a 201.
Jacob Hoback and
Adam Pape tied for
medalist honors with
matching rounds of 42
and Cole Graham added
a 43 for the Tornadoes.

210.
Meigs was led by
Treay McKinney with a
47, followed by David
Davis with a 48, Braden
Spencer with a 56 and
the trio of Dillan
Andrews, Paul Gibbs and
Chris
Folmer
with
rounds of 57. Only one
57 counted toward the
team total.
For the Buckeyes,
Brandon Flores shot a 46
to take medalist honors,
Wyatt May had a 52,
Ryan Duffy shot a 53,
Jarrod Bowers shot a 59
and Courtney McDonald
had an 81.

Trenton Cook and Ryan
Schenkelberg
shot
matching 47s for the final
Southern score.
Trimble was led by
Kyle Russell with a 48,
followed by Brayton
Hazen with a 49, Colin
Smith with a 51 and Nick
Smith with a 53. Also
playing for the Tomcats
were Jeff Andrews (60)
and Christian Sikorski
(70).
MEIGS

GOLFER BEAT

NYHS
LOGAN, Ohio — The
Meigs golf team defeated
Nelsonville-York by just
two points on Wednesday
evening at Brass Ring
Golf Course.
The Marauders shot a
team total of 208, while
the host Buckeyes shot a

SOUTHERN FALLS
WATERFORD

TO

POMEROY, Ohio —
The Southern golf team
fell to Waterford on

Wednesday evening by a
score of 163-181.
Waterford’s
Austin
Hilverding took medalist
honors with a round of
38, while Southern’s
Adam
Pape
and
Waterford’s
Brandon
Offenberger tied for the
runner-up spot with
rounds of 40.
For Southern, Jacob
Hoback shot a 46,
Trenton Cook had a 47
and Ryan Schenkelberg
added a 48. Also playing
for
Southern
was
Bradley McCoy with a
60.
In
addition
to
Hilverding
and
Offenberger for the
Wildcats, Shane Kern
shot a 42, Brent Ginther
had a 43, Randee Seevers
shot a 44 and B. Thomas
shot a 46.

Outdoor news notes
Deer archery season in
Ohio started this weekend
and by now numerous
deer hunters have had
opportunity to try out the
new automated deer
checking system.
The system got a trial
run during the spring wild
turkey season. It was the
first time wild turkey
hunters in the Buckeye
State weren’t required to
physically transport their
birds to a game checking
station, and now deer
hunters are no longer
required to physically
visit a check station.
It doesn’t mean hunters
won’t have to check their
deer, it just means they
can check them in via the
internet, over the phone
or by visiting a hunting
license agent.
In a way it is sad to
think that generations of
upcoming
successful
hunters will miss out on
their first visit to the deer
check station; for many
of us that first check station visit was an important rite of passage, a step
towards adulthood. For
some reason I don’t see

logging onto the website
carrying the same sort of
memory-making appeal.
Before heading afield,
make sure you renew
your permission to hunt
on private property. Even
if you have hunted on the
same property for years
and years, hunters owe it
to the landowners to
respect the privilege of
hunting on their property.
One of the biggest
complaints received by
wildlife officers and the
sheriff’s department is of
people hunting on private
property without permission. Hunting without
permission carries a pretty stiff penalty, especially
on second and subsequent offenses, it is one
of the biggest reasons
landowners post their
property or don’t allow
anyone to hunt.
Of course all hunters
need to exercise a little
common sense when it
comes to hunting on private property: don’t block
gates or access roads,
leave gates the way you
found them, don’t drive
into plowed or planted

fields and check to make
sure it’s ok to use your
four-wheeler.
An
Ohio
Hunter
Education Class will be
held commencing Oct. 3
at the Kountry Resort
Campground (formerly
Royal Oak Resort) near
Pomeroy.
Sessions will be held in
the banquet hall on
Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday, Oct. 3, 4 and 6,
from 6 to 9 p.m. with the
test being administered
on Saturday, Oct. 8, from
9 a.m. to noon. Students
must attend all sessions.
The Ohio Hunter
Education
course
includes 10 hours of
instruction in hunter
ethics and responsibility,
firearms, archery, first aid
and wildlife management
and biology. Classes are
free and all materials and
manuals are provided at
no cost.
All first-time hunters
must successfully complete a hunter education
course offered through
the Ohio Division of
Wildlife before purchasing a hunting license. In

addition, current hunting
license holders who wish
to purchase out-of-state
hunting licenses in other
states must in most cases
provide proof of having
completed a hunter education course before they
can purchase an out-ofstate hunting license.
Pre-registration
is
required and class size is
limited to 50 students.
This year the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources is conducting
an internet-based registration system and prospective students can find the
registration link by visiting www.dnr.state.oh.us
The inaugural Howl-OWeen 5K Trail Run/Walk
will be held Saturday,
October 29 at 10 a.m. at
the
Meigs
SWCD
Conservation Area.

This fun, pet-friendly
Halloween-themed event
will showcase the Meigs
SWCD
Conservation
Area, which is located on
New Lima Road between
Rutland
and
Harrisonville.
Medals will be awarded
to the top three male and
female finishers in running and walking divisions and ribbons will go
to top three males and
females in age group
divisions. An additional
medal, the “Top Dawg”
award will go to the
fastest
human/canine
team. Proceeds will benefit the Meigs SWCD
Conservation Area.
For more information
or to register contact the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District at
740-992-4282 weekdays

from 7-4:30 p.m. or visit
www.meigsswcd.com
and download a registration form.
Registration is $15 in
advance or $20 the day of
the race. Race-day registration and packet pickup will begin at 9 a.m. at
the picnic shelter with the
event to begin at 10 a.m.
Free kids’ races will
begin following the 5K
race, followed immediately by the presentation
of awards.
Jim Freeman is wildlife
specialist for the Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
His column appears every
other Sunday and he can
be contacted weekdays at
740-992-4282 or at
jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net

Political Advertisement

Lady Rebels beat Southern
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE, Ohio — The
South Gallia volleyball
team defeated Southern in
three sets during Thursday
evening TVC Hocking
volleyball match.
The Lady Rebels won
by scores of 25-12, 25-15
and 25-14.
Meghan Caldwell led
the Lady Rebels with 18
points
(four
aces),
Chandra Canaday added
10 points (one ace), Tori
Duncan had seven points,

Ellie Bostic added four
points, Jasmyne Johnson
and Chrissy Howell each
had three points and one
ace, Lauren Saunders had
two points and Shelby
Merry added one point.
Bostic led the team in
kills with 10, Caldwell,
Merry and Canaday
added five kills each,
Johnson had four kills,
Brynn Adams added
three kills, and Duncan
had two kills.
Caldwell had four
blocks for the Lady
Rebels, Bostic added

three, Adams had two
and Merry added one.
Duncan had 20 assists
and Sara Bailey had six
in the match. Howell led
the team in digs with
four,
Canaday
and
Saunders added three
each, and Bostic had one
dig.
Individual statistics for
Southern were not available at press time.
The Lady Rebels won
the JV match by scores of
25-11 and 25-21. Shelby
Sanders led the Lady
Rebels with 11 points.

· Live Music
· Activities For Kids
· BBQ Lunch
· Bring Lawn Chairs
Committee for Southeast
Ohio Solidarity
Ohio Civil Service
Employees Association
District 8

Eastern soars past Lady Falcons
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. —
The Eastern Lady Eagles
(13-0, 8-0 TVC Hocking)
defeated Wahama on
Thursday evening in
three sets during a TVC
Hocking match in Mason
County, W.Va.
The Lady Eagles won
by scores of 25-12, 25-7
and 25-4 over the host
Lady Falcons (2-10, 0-8
TVC Hocking).

Eastern was led by
Brenna Holter with 20
points (17 in the third
set), followed by Jordan
Parker with nine points,
Jamie Swatzel with seven
points and five points
each from Ally Hendrix,
Baylee Collins and
Brooke Johnson.
Jamie Swatzel had 10
kills to pace the Lady
Eagles at the net, while
Maddie Rigsby added
four kills, Holter had
three kills, Parker added

two kills and Kelsey
Myers, Kiki Osborne,
and Erin Swatzel had one
kill each. Holter also
added one block.
Brittany Stewart had
four points to lead the
Lady Falcons.
Eastern will return to
the court on Monday as
they travel to Federal
Hocking, while Wahama
will travel to South
Gallia on Monday. Both
matches will be TVC
Hocking contests.

Ohio AFL-CIO
Southeast Ohio Area
Labor Federation
AFSCME Meigs Local 1080

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D) Ohio

Lady Marauders cruise past Wellston
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WELLSTON, Ohio —
The
Meigs
Lady
Marauders (6-6, 1-4 TVC
Ohio) won their third
straight
match
on
Thursday evening with a
three set win over TVC
Ohio opponet Wellston.
The Lady Marauders
won by scores of 25-15,
25-13 and 25-23.

Mercadies George led
the Lady Marauders with
12 points, followed by
Emalee Glass with nine
points, Tori Wolfe and
Cheyenne Beaver with
seven points, Alison
Brown had four points,
and Tanisha McKinney
and Chandra Mattox
added three points each.
Brown had 14 kills,
George added 11 kills,
Marlee Hoffman had six

kills, Emily Kinnan had
four will, Olivia Cremeans
added one kill and Brook
Andrus had one kill.
Hoffman led the team
with three block, while
George and Cremeans
had one each. Glass had
31 assists for the Lady
Marauders and Andrus
had one.
Meigs
travels
to
Eastern on Tuesday for a
non-league match.

Paid for by We Are Ohio, Michael Weinman, Treasurer,
545 E. Town Street, Columbus, Ohio, 43215

�Page B4 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Big Blacks crush Vinton County, 42-7
BY ANDY LAYTON
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

McARTHUR, Ohio —
It was almost déjà vu: a
slow start with a strong
finish for the road win.
The Big Blacks cruised
to a road win in
McArthur over the
Vinton County Vikings
42-7. Point improved to
4-0 on the young season
and finished up an early
three game road trip.
“I thought our defense
played great all night”
said Head Coach Dave
Darst. “They kept us in
the game again and then
Eric Roberts came up
with some big throws.”
Roberts — three year
starter at quarterback —
came up with a career
high 195 passing yards
and three more passing
touchdowns.
Roberts
now has ten touchdown
passes on the season – a
mark that is believed to
be the record for Point
Pleasant quarterbacks.
Junior Tylun Campbell

was the leading rusher
again for Point with 89
yards on 13 carries.
Sophomore
Teran
Barnitz had a career high
72 yards on 8 carries and
senior Anthony Darst had
54 yards on 4 carries.
The night started with a
three and out from the
Vikings. Point responded
on the first possession of
the night with a quick
five play drive capped
with a 10 yard Anthony
Darst run. Junior Josh
Parsons kicked the extra
point for an early 7-0
lead.
After a nice kick return
from the Vikings special
teams unit, it was another
three and out forced by
the strong defense from
the Big Blacks. Point
would go three and out
on their second possession but a great 52 yard
punt from Eric Roberts
pinned the Vikings deep
and helped the defense
force another three and
out.
Point started the next

drive own their own 46
yard line and had a nice
drive going but a fumble
in the end-zone killed the
drive.
Vinton County started
the next drive at their
own 20 yard line and had
one big reception of 21
yards to get their first
first down of the game.
The celebration would be
short lived as on the next
play junior defensive end
Andrew
Williamson
forced a fumble and
senior defensive lineman
Trey Livingston picked
up the ball and ran it 32
yards for the score. The
extra point was good and
it was 14-0 as time
expired in the second
quarter.
The rest of the half
continued with more
strong defense and ended
with a strong final drive
from the Big Blacks.
Roberts completed a 24
yard pass with just 1:09
left in the first half to
sophomore
Chase
Walton. The late score

gave Point a 21-0 edge
going into the half.
The first drive of the
second half ended with a
missed field goal by
Point. After a Vinton
County possession was
halted at midfield, Point
responded in two plays
with a 33 yard score from
Darst to help make the
score 27-0. Another
Parsons extra point and it
was 28-0.
The next Vikings possession was ended early
but a muffed punt at midfield gave the ball back to
the home team. Three
more plays and it was
time for another punt
forced by the strong
defensive 11.
Roberts would respond
quickly on the next drive
with a 70 yard touchdown throw to fellow
senior Brandon Toler,
their fourth touchdown
connection of the season.
The Parsons extra point
was again good and it
was 35-0.
Point would later add

another 70 yard bomb
from Roberts as he completed a beautiful pass to
junior tailback Marquez
Griffin. Another Parsons
extra point set the score
at 42-0.
Vinton County would
add their only score of
the game with less than
two minutes left in the
game.
Strong defensive performances on the night
came from junior Conner
Templeton, senior Jason
Stouffer, senior Josh
Hereford, senior Jerrod
Long, and junior Andrew
Williamson.
“It will be nice to get
back home after a three
game road trip for a conference home game” said
Darst.
The Big Blacks will
host Wayne next Friday
night at home at 7:30
p.m.
Point Pleasant 42, Vinton County 7
PP
VC

14-7-7-14 — 42
0-0-0-7 — 7

Scoring Summary

URG’s Bevo Francis to be
inducted into NAIA Hall of Fame
BY RANDY PAYTON
RIO GRANDE SPORTS INFORMATION

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Clarence “Bevo”
Francis, the most recognizable figure in the athletic history at the
University
of
Rio
Grande, has been selected for induction into the
NAIA Hall of Fame.
Francis, who is entering the Hall in the
Meritorious Service category for men’s basketball, will be inducted on
March 13, 2012, during
the Men’s Division I
Basketball
National
Championship
in
Kansas City, Mo.
“I feel honored, but I
never really gave it a lot
of thought,” the ever
humble Francis said of
his induction. “It took a
long time to happen,
though.”
Francis, who was
raised — and who still
resides — in the quaint
village of Wellsville,
Ohio, rose to national
notoriety over a span of
two memorable seasons
in which he all but
rewrote both the NAIA
and NCAA record
books. The NAIA recognizes all of the games

that Rio Grande played
in determining Francis’
records,
while
the
NCAA only acknowledged games played
against
four-year
degree-granting institutions.
During the 1952-53
campaign, the 6-foot-9
center from Wellsville,
Ohio led the Redmen to
a perfect 39-0 record and
scored an amazing 116
points in a 150-85 win
over Ashland (Ky.)
Junior
College
on
January 9, 1953.
Francis finished the
season with four new
NAIA
single-season
marks — scoring average
(50.1),
points
(1,954), field goals (708)
and free throws (538) —
and was named an AllAmerican pick by the
Associated Press, United
Press International and
the Helms Foundation.
The following season,
he set the NCAA record
for points in a game with
113 in a 134-91 triumph
over Hillsdale (Mich.)
College on February 2,
1954 and for season
scoring average (48.3).
The Redmen finished
21-7 and were ranked
among the nation’s top

20 teams playing a
schedule which included
the likes of Villanova,
Providence, Miami-Fla.,
North Carolina State,
Wake
Forest
and
Arizona State.
Francis was a second
team AP All-American
in 1953-54.
“I tell people it’s nice
to hear your name mentioned when someone
talks about the school,
but it was always more
about the team than anything else,” Francis said.
“I could’ve stood out
there and not scored two
points if I didn’t have
my teammates.”
“This is the highest
honor presented by the
NAIA and, as far as I
know, Bevo is the only
person
from
the
University
of
Rio
Grande to receive this
recognition. For us to
be a part of it, it’s an
honor to say that he’s
ours,” said Rio Grande
athletic director Jeff
Lanham. “His teammates and coaches all
have been a part of this
and they all need to be
congratulated for it. It’s
a tremendous honor for
someone who grew up a
shy young man and

Blue Angels outlast Jackson
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

JACKSON, Ohio —
The Gallia Academy volleyball team held off
Jackson
(5-7,
1-4
SEOAL) on Thursday
evening, earning the five
set victory.
The Blue Angels (7-7,
3-2 SEOAL) held a 2-1
lead going into the fourth
set, but the Ironladies
battled back, sending the
march to the fifth set.
Gallia Academy scored
five straight points to
break a 4-4 tie in the final
set, going on to the 15-8

win in the decisive game.
The Blue Angels won by
scores of 25-23, 21-25,
25-18, 21-25 and 15-8.
Haley Rosier led the
Blue Angels with 15
points, followed by
Heather Ward and Kassie
Shriver with eight points
each. Shriver had four
aces, Kanessa Snyder
had three aces and Ward
had two aces in the
match.
Maggie Westfall and
Rachel Morris led the net
attack with 15 kills each,
Rosier had 13 kills and
Riley Nibert had eight
kills. Westfall had eight

blocks, Rosier added five
blocks and Nibert had
three blocks.
Ward led the team in
passes with 60, Snyder
had 18 digs, and Shriver
added 40 assists.
Kaitlyn Williams led
Jackson with 21 kills and
seven blocks, Payton
Ervin added 15 kills,
Kennedy Shasteen had
nine blocks and five kills,
Sarah Martin had seven
kills, 10 blocks and set
for 33 assists.Meredith
Harless had 30 digs for
Jackson and Heather
Chapman had nine
blocks.

The Daily Sentinel
Shopper's Delight
The Daily Sentinel is a community-wide sales event bringing you great deals from the best
stores in town. Whether its big ticket items or your daily staples, each of our partners have
made a commitment to give you bargains during the most convenient times to shop.
Browse through these offerings, check your e-mail for exclusive offers, and head over to
their stores to take advantage of the local sale's cream-of-the-crop!

SHOP LOCAL

WHY?

gained
worldwide
recognition as the
greatest scorer in the
history of college basketball.”
Joining Francis in the
Hall’s 2011-12 class are
Melody Robinson Britt,
Women’s Track &amp;
Field, Athlete, Midland
(Neb.) University; Bob
Burchard,
Men’s
Basketball,
Coach,
Columbia
(Mo.)
College;
Robert
Cornett, Men’s Golf,
Coach, Texas Wesleyan
University;
Natalie
Steele
Crane,
Volleyball,
Athlete,
Taylor
(Ind.)
University; Dr. Brian
Crossman,
Men’s
Soccer,
Meritorious
Service; Peter Fuller,
Men’s Soccer, Coach,
University of Mobile
(Ala.); Dr. Marion
“Woody”
Gibson,
Men’s
Soccer,
Meritorious Service;
Ron Hall, Football,
Athlete,
Missouri
Valley College; Pete
Hanson, Meritorious
Service;
Harold
Hubbard, Meritorious
Service; Steve Hulsey,
Women’s Golf, Coach,
Southern
Nazarene
(Okla.) University; E.L.

Hutton,
Meritorious
Service; John Loftin,
Women’s Basketball,
Coach, Southwestern
Oklahoma
State
University;
Richard
Panella,
Women’s
Basketball,
Coach,
Cardinal Stritch (Wis.)
University;
Freddy
Sanchez
(Baseball,
Meritorious Service;
Dr. Darrell Saunders,
Men’s
Soccer,
Meritorious Service;
and Earl Woudstra,
Women’s Basketball,
Coach, Northwestern
(Iowa) College.
Induction into the Hall
is the highest honor
bestowed by the NAIA.
Inductees must be persons of outstanding
quality, high moral character, fine leadership
ability and must be held
in high esteem by colleagues, coaches and
athletes.
The Hall of Fame consists of a division for
each sport currently or
formerly sponsored by
the associated and a
division for general meritorious service to the
NAIA. The Hall is divided into three categories –
athlete, coach and meritorious service.

First Quarter
PP — Anthony Darst 10 run (Josh
Parson kick), 8:33
PP — Trey Livingston 32 fumble
return (Parsons kick), :00
Second Quarter
PP — Chase Walton 24 pass from
Eric Roberts (Parson kick), 1:09
Third Quarter
PP — Darst 33 run (Parsons kick),
4:01
Fourth Quarter
PP — Brandon Toler 70 pass from
Roberts (Parsons kick), 10:30
PP — Marquez Griffin 70 pass from
Roberts (Parsons kick), 5:33
VC — Jeff Smith 20 run (Andreas
Chevaler kick), 1:52
First Downs — PP: 17, VC: 9;
Rushes-Yards — PP: 37-238, VC:
38-104;
Passing Yards — PP: 195, VC: 84;
Total Yards — PP: 433, VC: 188;
Comp-Att-Int — PP: 6-14-0, VC: 510-0;
Fumbles lost — PP: 2, VC: 2;
Penalties-yards — PP: 4-35, VC: 548.
RUSHING — PP: Tylun Campbell
13-89, Teran Barnitz 8-72, Anthony
Darst 4-54, Jarrod Long 4-11,
Marquez Griffin 2-5, Eric Roberts 22, Jacob Gardner 1-2, Zach
Canterbury 1-1, Chase Walton 1-1,
Cody Marcum 1-1, VC: Jeff Smith
11-59, Joey Batey 20-19, Tyler
Mullins 2-19, Curtis Lindner 5-7;
PASSING — PP: Eric Roberts 6-140 195, VC: Joey Batey 5-10-0 84;
RECEIVING — PP: Brandon Toler
1-70, Marquez Griffin 1-70, Chase
Walton 1-24, Teran Barnitz 1-19,
Tylun Campbell 1-6 John Kinniard 16, VC: Curtis Lindner 3-52, Shawn
Thompson
1-22,
Matthew
Smallwood 1-10.

Lady Cats beat
Point Pleasant
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Hannan
Lady Cats (3-8) defeated
Point
Pleasant
on
Thursday evening in five
sets.
The Lady Cats won by
scores of 15-25, 25-16,
25-19, 20-25 and 15-12.
Tiffany Adkins led the
Lady Cats with 19 points
(four aces), Jazi Casto
added 13 points (two
aces), Jasmine Wiese
had eight points, Katie
Ellis added six points
(four aces), and Heather
Ellis and Samantha
Blain added four points
each.
Heather Ellis led the
team in kills with four,
Katie Ellis added three
and Wiese and Blain
added
one
each.
Samantha Blain had 31
spikes, Heather Ellis had
21 spikes, Katie Ellis
had 17 spikes, and
Tiffany Adkins had two
spikes.
Katie Ellis had 63 sets
in the game, Heather
Ellis had 11, Blain had
three, Casto had two and
Adkins had one. Katie
Ellis had six digs, Casto
and Heather Ellis had
two each and Tosha
Stover added one.
Individual statistics for
Point Pleasant were not
available at press time.

AUCTION

When: October 1, 2011- 10:00 A.M.

Where: Corner of Ash Street &amp; Beech Street, Middleport, OH 45760
(Watch for signs)
We have been asked to sell items for Mrs. Manley that has been stored for
around 15 years or more! We are going through boxes and are working on a
complete list of items. Be sure to check the following website for photos:

www.auctionzip.com/auctioneer/5548

We will be updating website every day !!
Selling at Noon with Reserve: Vehicles/Forklift-1969 Mercedes-Benz 300SEL
&amp; Cadillac Fleetwood. (no Reserve Chevy Z24). Cars sell “as is”.
Automotive: 3 flat head Ford engines (50’s), Buick engine, several tires, car
manuals, and many car parts.
Antiques: 20+ church pews, cherry pitter, ice tongs, old country magazines
from the 50’s, stone crocks, cobbler set, 4077 M*A*S*H beer cans, bread boxes,
pottery, dishes, cookie jars, hammered aluminum, toys, doll house furniture,
Six Millionaire Dollar Bionic Man doll, old dolls, old picture frames, Lassie
child’s plate, Goofy’s glass, umbrella stand, smudge pot, child’s rocker, lawn
furniture, shadow box, parlor chairs, store displays, paper weights, produce
scale, Coke items, cash register, press back chairs, beds, tables, dressers, file
cabinets, sewing machines, nut crackers, Christmas items, old records, 8 track
tapes, gun racks, lazy susan, folk art, child’s chalkboard, old lamps, pottery, spit
tune, bottles, canning jars, metal bread boxes, McCoy pottery, pressure cooker,
art deco lamps, oil lamps, kitchen items and many more!
This will be an all day singing-come enjoy the day &amp; bring a friend!

AUCTIONEER: BILLY R. GOBLE, JR. • 740-416-1164
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH POSTIVE ID.

Announcements made at auction take precedence over all printed material.
Auctioneer is not responsible for accidents or lost property.
Food will be served by the West Columbia United Methodist Church.
GOD BLESS EVERYONE!!

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

West Virginia
Bishop Donahue 20, Notre Dame 10
Bridgeport 49, East Fairmont 14
Buffalo 55, Hannan 0
Cabell Midland 31, Huntington 30,
OT
Capital 28, South Charleston 6
Charlotte Latin, N.C. 31, Bluefield
14
Doddridge County 51, Gilmer
County 18
East Hardy 72, Tygarts Valley 20
Elkins 23, Robert C. Byrd 14
Fayetteville 33, Valley Fayette 21
George Washington 20, Princeton 8
Grafton 42, Buckhannon-Upshur 15
Greenbrier East 17, Spring Valley 14
Greenbrier West 34, Summers
County 6
Hurley, Va. 64, Montcalm 8
Keyser 34, Alleghany, Md. 0
Liberty Raleigh 33, Sherman 7
Lincoln County 66, Nitro 22
Logan 22, Chapmanville 21
Madonna 34, Cameron 7
Man 22, Mingo Central 8
Meadow Bridge 42, Pendleton
County 36, OT
Mountain Ridge, Md. 56, Hampshire
7
Nicholas County 19, Lewis County 0
North Marion 50, Preston 0
Northern - G, Md. 21, Frankfort 14
Oak Glen 14, Lisbon Beaver, Ohio 8
Oak Hill 54, James Monroe 20
Oakland Southern, Md. 42, Berkeley
Springs 18
Paden City 60, Hundred 0
Parkersburg 29, St. Albans 7
Parkersburg South 21, University 3
Pocahontas County 41, Richwood
18
Point Pleasant 42, McArthur Vinton
County, Ohio 7
Ravenswood 40, Tyler Consolidated
7
Roane County 41, Braxton County
21
Scott 30, Poca 0
Shady Spring 41, PikeView 19
Sherando, Va. 36, Jefferson 9
Toronto, Ohio 22, Valley Wetzel 8
Tug Valley 30, Jenkins, Ky. 12
Van 19, Midland Trail 18
Wahama 61, Waterford, Ohio 8
Warren County, Va. 55, Moorefield 3
Washington 25, Musselman 22
Wayne 60, Sissonville 12
Webster County 20, Lincoln 7
Westside 43, Independence 14
Wheeling Park 26, Brooke 20
Williamstown 69, Calhoun County 6
Winfield 40, Tolsia 15
Woodrow Wilson 53, Ripley 21
Wyoming East 49, Mount View 22
Zanesville, Ohio 62, John Marshall 0

Ohio
Ada 48, Bluffton 44
Akr. Garfield 28, Akr. North 0
Akr. Manchester 63, Can. Timken 28
Akr. SVSM 17, Akr. Hoban 14
Albany Alexander 28, Bidwell River
Valley 0
Alliance 49, Can. South 21
Alliance Marlington 35, Salem 7
Amanda-Clearcreek 28, Canal
Winchester 13
Andover Pymatuning Valley 55,
Conneaut 0
Ansonia 30, Bradford 16
Arcadia 30, Van Buren 20
Arcanum 54, New Paris National
Trail 20
Archbold 51, Swanton 0
Ashland Crestview 27, New London
13
Athens 42, Waverly 21
Attica Seneca E. 41, N. Baltimore 6
Aurora 52, Orange 15
Avon 27, Elyria Cath. 16
Avon Lake 28, Middleburg Hts.

Meigs
from Page B1
out; once again Barrett
was true on the extra
points.
The first of two interceptions by Alex Morris
set up the Marauders
third score another run
by Roush this time from
two yards out Barrett
added the extra points
with 26 seconds left in
the period for a 21-0
Meigs lead.
Roush scored from five
yards out with 7:55 left
in the half, and Barrett
from three with 3:50 left
in the half. Barrett made
both extra points for a

Gallia
from Page B1
to march down the field
and deep into Ironton territory. Taylor finished the
night with a game-high
142 rushing yards on 24
carries, an average of 5.9
yards per carry.
The game was a defensive battle throughout, as
both teams forced a pair
of interceptions. GAHS
also came away with the
lone fumble takeaway of
the night to finish plusone in turnover differential. Ironton mustered
only 12 first downs in
the contest, while the
Blue and White were
right on pace with 11
first downs.
Ironton outgained the
hosts by a 322-211 edge
in total yards of offense,
with IHS churning out
160 rushing yards on 37
attempts and another 154
yards through the passing
game.
Gallia
Academy mustered 70
passing yards and also
had 141 rushing yards on
38 totes.
After Taylor, the Blue
Devils were led in rushing by Cody Russell with
four carries for five
yards. Jarrell finished the

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page B5

Midpark 0
Bainbridge Paint Valley 21,
Southeastern 6
Baltimore Liberty Union 24,
Pataskala Licking Hts. 21
Barnesville
25,
Sarahsville
Shenandoah 6
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 44,
Sycamore Mohawk 12
Bay Village Bay 24, Vermilion 14
Beachwood 19, Independence 0
Beallsville 56, New Matamoras
Frontier 0
Bedford 12, Warren Harding 7
Bellbrook 21, Franklin 0
Bellevue 55, Tol. Waite 6
Bellville Clear Fork 17, Lexington 15
Beloit W. Branch 35, Carrollton 24
Berea 26, Amherst Steele 14
Berlin Center Western Reserve 46,
Lowellville 6
Blanchester 35, Williamsburg 12
Bloom-Carroll
35,
Lancaster
Fairfield Union 12
Bowling Green 26, Sylvania
Northview 14
Bridgeport 42, Lore City Buckeye
Trail 13
Brookfield 34, Newton Falls 19
Brookville 28, New Lebanon Dixie
20
Brunswick 35, Garfield Hts. 34
Bryan 58, Montpelier 0
Bucyrus Wynford 48, Crestline 7
Burton Berkshire 58, Richmond Hts.
8
Caledonia River Valley 60, Galion
Northmor 6
Can. Cent. Cath. 45, Bedford
Chanel 12
Can. Glenoak 21, Austintown Fitch
10
Can. McKinley 22, Massillon
Jackson 14
Canal Fulton Northwest 28, New
Philadelphia 7
Canal Winchester Harvest Prep 28,
Sugar Grove Berne Union 10
Canfield 21, Day. Dunbar 7
Cardington-Lincoln 19, Delaware
Buckeye Valley 17
Carlisle 53, Day. Northridge 13
Casstown Miami E. 41, Tipp City
Bethel 10
Centerburg 21, Howard E. Knox 13
Centerville 55, Springboro 17
Chagrin Falls 48, Chagrin Falls
Kenston 28
Chardon NDCL 24, Tol. Rogers 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 18, Perry
10
Cin. Anderson 40, Cin. NW 21
Cin. Clark Montessori 47, Cin.
Christian 0
Cin. Hills Christian Academy 22,
Cin. Country Day 6
Cin. Indian Hill 10, Cin. Mariemont 7
Cin. La Salle 28, Cols. Watterson 3
Cin. Madeira 49, Cin. Finneytown 26
Cin. Moeller 27, Cin. St. Xavier 24
Cin. N. College Hill 20, Cin. Summit
Country Day 0
Cin. Oak Hills 25, W. Chester Lakota
W. 21
Cin. Princeton 26, Hamilton 20
Cin. Sycamore 28, Liberty Twp.
Lakota E. 25
Cin. Turpin 42, Milford 3
Cin. Walnut Hills 31, Cin. Winton
Woods 28
Cin. Withrow 49, Cin. Hughes 0
Cin. Wyoming 42, Reading 0
Circleville Logan Elm 35, Ashville
Teays Valley 14
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 72,
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 7
Clayton Northmont 40, Lebanon 33
Cle. Benedictine 42, Cle. Cent.
Cath. 18
Cle. Hay 44, Cle. Lincoln W. 0
Cle. JFK 8, Cle. John Marshall 0, OT
Clyde 54, Castalia Margaretta 7
Coldwater 36, Versailles 19
Collins Western Reserve 14,
Monroeville 0

Cols.
Beechcroft
50,
Cols.
Whetstone 14
Cols. Bexley 49, Hebron Lakewood
7
Cols. Briggs 60, Cols. Africentric 20
Cols. Brookhaven 35, Cols.
Northland 14
Cols. Eastmoor 54, Cols. West 24
Cols. Grandview Hts. 55, Millersport
22
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 49, Circleville 6
Cols. Linden McKinley 28, Cols.
Centennial 20
Cols. Marion-Franklin 54, Cols.
Independence 30
Cols. Mifflin 41, Cols. East 6
Cols. Ready 23, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant 22
Cols. St. Charles 41, Cols.
Crusaders 28
Cols.
Upper
Arlington
56,
Worthington Kilbourne 21
Cols. Walnut Ridge 53, Cols. South
0
Columbia Station Columbia 35,
Medina Buckeye 6
Columbiana 33, Canfield S. Range
8
Columbiana Crestview 49, New
Middletown Spring. 0
Convoy Crestview 46, Lafayette
Allen E. 7
Copley 14, Macedonia Nordonia 6
Coshocton
41,
Uhrichsville
Claymont 14
Covington 35, Lewisburg Tri-County
N. 7
Creston Norwayne 61, Rittman 7
Crown City S. Gallia 36, Reedsville
Eastern 7
Cuyahoga
Falls
CVCA
22,
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 18
Day. Carroll 3, St. Bernard Roger
Bacon 0
Day. Christian 73, Day. Jefferson 22
Day. Meadowdale 22, Day. Ponitz
Tech. 2
Defiance Tinora 20, Sherwood
Fairview 14
Delaware Hayes 24, Mt. Vernon 13
Delphos St. John's 35, St. Henry 10
Dover 62, Tol. Woodward 0
Dresden Tri-Valley 55, Crooksville 0
Dublin Coffman 76, Galloway
Westland 0
Eastlake
N.
13,
Painesville
Riverside 11
Eaton 26, Day. Oakwood 0
Edgerton 40, Haviland Wayne Trace
14
Edon 64, Lakeside Danbury 34
Elida 35, Lima Shawnee 7
Fairborn 54, Sidney 14
Findlay 31, Tol. Cent. Cath. 7
Findlay Liberty-Benton 41, CoryRawson 14
Fostoria 13, Tontogany Otsego 9
Frankfort Adena 35, Chillicothe
Zane Trace 7
Franklin Furnace Green 25,
Fayetteville-Perry 18
Fredericktown 28, Danville 26
Fremont Ross 40, Lima Sr. 17
Fremont St. Joseph 44, Kansas
Lakota 24
Ft. Loramie 41, Bronson, Mich. 0
Gahanna Cols. Academy 20,
Newark Cath. 10
Gahanna Lincoln 17, Lancaster 0
Galion 37, Bucyrus 7
Garrettsville Garfield 35, E. Can. 15
Gates Mills Hawken 50, Fairport
Harbor Harding 27
Geneva 10, Ashtabula Lakeside 6
Genoa Area 38, Millbury Lake 7
Girard 55, Warren Champion 16
Glouster Trimble 67, Corning Miller
0
Goshen 28, Batavia Amelia 21
Grafton Midview 34, Rocky River 14
Granville 28, Newark Licking Valley
21
Green 27, Lodi Cloverleaf 20
Greenville 27, Paulding 20
Grove City 24, Groveport-Madison

21
Grove City Christian 42, Cin.
College Prep. 14
Hamilton Ross 25, Morrow Little
Miami 17
Hamler Patrick Henry 41, Metamora
Evergreen 14
Hannibal River 42, Caldwell 41, OT
Hanoverton United 17, Lisbon David
Anderson 7
Harrison 34, Trenton Edgewood 13
Hicksville 68, Antwerp 0
Hilliard Bradley 45, Cols. Franklin
Hts. 12
Hilliard Darby 42, Grove City Cent.
Crossing 0
Hilliard Davidson 33, Thomas
Worthington 0
Holgate 42, Defiance Ayersville 41
Hubbard 46, Cortland Lakeview 25
Huber Hts. Wayne 47, Xenia 26
Hudson 26, Cuyahoga Falls 7
Huron 38, Sandusky St. Mary 12
Ironton 6, Gallipolis Gallia 0
Jamestown
Greeneview
14,
Cedarville 0
Jeromesville Hillsdale 42, Dalton 12
Johnstown-Monroe 56, Loudonville
35
Kent Roosevelt 35, Mogadore Field
21
Kenton 36, Ottawa-Glandorf 20
Kings Mills Kings 30, Cin. Glen Este
0
Kirtland 24, Cuyahoga Hts. 12
LaGrange Keystone 20, Brooklyn 14
Lakewood 20, Medina 15
Landmark Christian 52, Cin. Oyler
12
Leavittsburg LaBrae 19, Campbell
Memorial 14
Lees Creek E. Clinton 14, Batavia 0
Leipsic 41, Arlington 7
Lewistown
Indian
Lake
22,
Bellefontaine 21
Liberty Center 34, Wauseon 0
Lima Bath 37, Van Wert 8
Lockland 15, Hamilton New Miami 6
London Madison Plains 14,
Greenfield McClain 7
Louisville Aquinas 48, Hudson WRA
21
Loveland 13, Cin. Mt. Healthy 7
Lucasville Valley 41, S. Point 8
Madison 28, Chardon 3
Mansfield Madison 27, Wooster 26
Mansfield Sr. 21, Orrville 14
Mantua Crestwood 19, Norton 12,
2OT
Maple Hts. 36, E. Cle. Shaw 6
Maria Stein Marion Local 26, Anna
14
Marietta 14, Warsaw River View 9
Marion Elgin 28, Sparta Highland 27
Marion Harding 27, Shelby 21
Marion Pleasant 54, Morral
Ridgedale 6
Martins Ferry 49, Belmont Union
Local 14
Marysville 14, Lewis Center
Olentangy 13
Mason 44, Fairfield 6
Massillon Tuslaw 21, Wooster
Triway 7
Massillon Washington 27, Akr.
Firestone 13
Mayfield 14, Stow-Munroe Falls 7
McComb 58, Vanlue 0
McDonald 13, Leetonia 7
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 28,
Ridgeway Ridgemont 12
Mechanicsburg 14, S. Charleston
SE 6
Mentor 49, Parma 0
Middlefield Cardinal 32, Newbury 14
Middletown Fenwick 62, Cin. Purcell
Marian 20
Milan Edison 28, Sandusky Perkins
27
Milford Center Fairbanks 63,
DeGraff Riverside 0
Millersburg W. Holmes 35, Ashland
31
Milton-Union
35,
Middletown
Madison 19

Mineral Ridge 32, E. Palestine 29
Minerva 29, Louisville 26
Minford 41, Oak Hill 12
Minster 27, New Bremen 7
Mogadore 45, Atwater Waterloo 13
Monroe 18, Germantown Valley
View 14
Mt. Orab Western Brown 48, BethelTate 7
N. Bend Taylor 20, Cin. Deer Park
19
N. Lewisburg Triad 21, Spring. NE
14
N. Olmsted 21, Westlake 14, OT
N. Ridgeville 40, Willard 0
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 41,
Lucas 14
N. Royalton 30, Elyria 14
Napoleon 56, Holland Springfield 7
Nelsonville-York 42, Logan 6
New Albany 45, Pataskala Watkins
Memorial 22
New Carlisle Tecumseh 10, St. Paris
Graham 6
New Lexington 53, McConnelsville
Morgan 0
New Richmond 33, Batavia
Clermont NE 7
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 41,
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 6
Northwood 46, Gibsonburg 0
Norwalk 24, Delta 0
Oak Glen, W.Va. 14, Lisbon Beaver
8
Oak Harbor 28, Port Clinton 7
Oberlin Firelands 20, Oberlin 0
Olmsted Falls 27, BrecksvilleBroadview Hts. 16
Ontario 41, Upper Sandusky 14
Orchard Lake St. Mary, Mich. 42,
Cols. DeSales 21
Orwell Grand Valley 41, Gates Mills
Gilmour 0
Pandora-Gilboa 40, Dola Hardin
Northern 23
Parma Hts. Holy Name 14, Parma
Padua 7
Pemberville
Eastwood
52,
Bloomdale Elmwood 0
Perrysburg 21, Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne 0
Philo 24, New Concord John Glenn
14
Pickerington Cent. 24, Pickerington
N. 21
Piketon 49, Chillicothe Huntington
26
Piqua 56, Kettering Fairmont 27
Plain City Jonathan Alder 41,
London 7
Plymouth 28, Ashland Mapleton 13
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 42, McArthur
Vinton County 7
Poland Seminary 10, Niles McKinley
7
Pomeroy Meigs 37, Racine
Southern 0
Portsmouth 31, Chillicothe 24
Portsmouth
Sciotoville
46,
Manchester 31
Portsmouth W. 21, Chesapeake 7
Powell Olentangy Liberty 20, Dublin
Jerome 16
Ravenna 35, Akr. Coventry 7
Ravenna SE 63, Windham 0
Reynoldsburg 36, Newark 10
Richmond Edison 21, Rayland
Buckeye 20
Richwood N. Union 48, Mt. Gilead 7
Rockford Parkway 36, Ft. Recovery
35, OT
Rocky River Lutheran W. 28,
Sheffield Brookside 0
Rootstown
41,
Peninsula
Woodridge 14
Rossford 28, Elmore Woodmore 26
Salineville Southern 40, N. Jackson
Jackson-Milton 13
Sandusky 56, Tol. Bowsher 12
Smithville
45,
Apple
Creek
Waynedale 0
Spencerville 42, Columbus Grove
38
Spring. Kenton Ridge 20, Spring.
NW 7

Spring. Shawnee 35, Spring.
Greenon 13
St. Clairsville 45, Cadiz Harrison
Cent. 7
St. Marys Memorial 32, Celina 20
Steubenville 22, Youngs. Ursuline
17
Stewart Federal Hocking 6, Belpre 0
Strasburg-Franklin 35, Magnolia
Sandy Valley 0
Streetsboro 42, Akr. Springfield 27
Strongsville 35, Parma Hts. Valley
Forge 0
Struthers 40, E. Liverpool 0
Sugarcreek
Garaway
56,
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 6
Sullivan Black River 34, Fairview 14
Sylvania Southview 45, Maumee 27
Tallmadge 35, Medina Highland 21
Thornville Sheridan 34, Cambridge
14
Tiffin Columbian 46, Tol. Start 14
Tipp
City
Tippecanoe
21,
Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 15
Tol. Ottawa Hills 48, W. Unity Hilltop
30
Tol. St. Francis 30, Oregon Clay 13
Tol. Whitmer 35, Tol. St. John's 7
Toronto 22, Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 8
Trotwood-Madison 37, Springfield
13
Troy 35, Beavercreek 28
Twinsburg 48, Lyndhurst Brush 27
Uniontown Lake 42, N. Can. Hoover
14
Urbana 62, Riverside Stebbins 16
Utica 33, Johnstown Northridge 3
Vandalia Butler 34, Miamisburg 7
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 35,
Union City Mississinawa Valley 6
W. Carrollton 30, Oxford Talawanda
19
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 41,
Malvern 20
W. Liberty-Salem 34, Spring. Cath.
Cent. 21
W. Salem NW 35, Doylestown
Chippewa 7
Wadsworth 42, Richfield Revere 0
Wahama, W.Va. 61, Waterford 8
Wapakoneta 21, Defiance 7
Warren Howland 50, Carrick, Pa. 0
Warrensville Hts. 25, Tol. Scott 6
Washington C.H. 43, Hillsboro 12
Waynesfield-Goshen 20, Lima Perry
7
Waynesville 43, Camden Preble
Shawnee 14
Wellington 35, Lorain Clearview 12
Wellston 33, Proctorville Fairland 15
Wellsville 14, Sebring McKinley 7
Westerville Cent. 41, Westerville N.
8
Westerville S. 45, Dublin Scioto 42
Wheelersburg 33, Ironton Rock Hill
8
Whitehall-Yearling 15, Heath 8
Wickliffe 26, Painesville Harvey 19
Williamsport Westfall 26, Chillicothe
Unioto 14
Willoughby S. 36, Hunting Valley
University 21
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 28,
McDermott Scioto NW 17
Wilmington 35, Norwood 0
Wintersville Indian Creek 21,
Bellaire 0
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 32,
Beverly Ft. Frye 0
Youngs. Boardman 40, Massillon
Perry 2
Youngs. Christian 34, Vienna
Mathews 0
Youngs. East 34, Barberton 28
Youngs. Liberty 19, Jefferson Area
12
Zanesville 62, John Marshall, W.Va.
0
Zanesville Maysville 42, Zanesville
W. Muskingum 7
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 25,
Navarre Fairless 14

35-0 Marauder halftime
lead.
Meigs closed out the
scoring when Jesse
Smith
and
Robbie
Cardiff tackled Wolfe in
the end zone for a safety
on the last play of the
third period.
“The kids played hard,
Mike Chancey said after
the game. “I’m happy for
everyone, but especially
the seniors to win on
homecoming. Enjoy it
tonight but we start conference play next week
against a good Athens
team.’’
Roush led Meigs with
105 yards in 11 carries,
Andrew Burt added 65
in 14 tries, Boyer 58 in

five, Barrett 57 in 12
and Cole Turner added
48 in 13 carries. Roush
and Barrett only played
the first half. Boyer
was two for two passing for 14 yards. Alex
Morris caught one for
11 and Barrett one for
three.
“Meigs has a solid
team,” Southern coach
Kyle Wickline said after
the contest. “I think they
are better than last year,
they are very physical
upfront and in the backfield.”
Southern’s fine freshman quarterback Tristen
Wolfe led Southern with
17 yards in nine tries,
Wolfe was three of 12

passing for 83 yards.
Beegle caught one for 40,
Ryan Taylor one for 24
and Trenton Deem one
for 19. The Southern
offense received a blow
with 4:18 remaining
when their outstanding
running back Danny
Ramthum was ejected
from the contest. Due to
Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association
rules, he must sit out the
next contest.
Meigs (4-1) will travel

to Athens next week;
Southern (1-4) will play
Wahama.

Rushes-Yards — S: 22-25, M: 65332;
Passing Yards — S: 83, M: 14;
Total Yards — S: 108, M: 346;
Comp-Att-Int — S: 3-12-3, M: 2-2-0;
Fumbles-lost — S: 1-1, M: 0-0;
Penalties-yards — S: 10-83, M: 630.

night 10-of-24 passing
for 70 yards, while Justin
Bailey led the wideouts
with 31 receiving yards
on five catches.
Brown led Ironton with
75 rushing yards on four
carries, while Tyler
Kratzenberg went 7-of12 passing for 154 yards.
Trevor White hauled in
two passes for 59 yards
for IHS, while Brown
also had one grab for 44
yards.
Gallia Academy was
flagged twice for 10
yards, while the guests
were penalized seven
times for 60 yards.
GAHS punted five times
for an average of 33
yards, while Ironton had
two punts for 37.5 yards
per kick.
Twice in the middle
quarters,
Ironton
appeared to be making its
way to the endzone. The
Orange
and
Black
marched the ball down to
the hosts’ nine midway
through the second, but
Tyler Warnimont intercepted a pass by
Kratzenberg to thwart
any hopes of breaking the
scoreless tie.
The Tigers’ opening
drive of the second half
also made its way to the
GAHS 16, but Bryant
Bokovitz stripped the

ball away from Ironton
ball carrier — resulting
in the lone takeaway on
the ground.
Senior Heather Ward
was named the 2011
Homecoming Queen at
Gallia Academy during
pregame festivities.
The Blue Devils —
now 1-2 at home this fall
— will host Logan next
Friday as GAHS opens
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League play at
7:30 p.m.
Ironton 6, Gallia Academy 0
I
GA

0-0-0-6 — 6
0-0-0-0 — 0

Scoring Summary
Fourth Quarter
I — Dion Brown 73 run (run failed)
8:33
First Downs — I: 12, GA: 11;
Rushes-Yards — I: 37-160, GA: 38141;
Passing Yards — I: 154, GA: 70;
Total Yards — I: 322, GA: 211;
Comp-Att-Int — I: 7-12-2, GA: 1024-2;
Fumbles-lost — I: 1-1, GA: 2-0;
Penalties-yards — I: 7-60, GA: 2-10.
RUSHING — I: Dion Brown 4-75,
Tyler Hager 13-61, Trevor White 427, Tanner Schweickart 3-5, Laron
Beach 1-0; GA: Brandon Taylor 24142, Cody Russell 4-5, Wade Jarrell
9-(-7), Joel Johnston 1-1.
PASSING — I: Tyler Kratzenberg 712-2 154; GA: Wade Jarrell 10-24-2
70.
RECEIVING — I: Dion Brown 1-44,
Trevor White 2-59, Jake Rawlins 124, Tyler Hager 2-22, Michael
Lawless 1-5; GA: Justin Bailey 5-31,
Cody Russell 3-8, Nick Clagg 1-17,
Sidney Saunders 1-7.

Meigs 37, Southern 0
S
0-0-0-0—0
M
21-14-2-0—37
First Quarter
M — Dillon Boyer 36 run (Charlie
Barrett kick), 4:36
M — Jeffrey Roush 2 run (Barrett
kick), 2:06
M — Barrett 3 run (Barrett kick) :26
Second Quarter
M — Roush 5 run (Barrett kick), 7:55
M — Barrett 3 run (Barrett kick),
3:50
Third Quarter
M — Safety, :00
First Downs — S: 5, M: 15;

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS
Cle. Rhodes vs. Cle. E. Tech, ppd.
to Sep 24.
Cle. Hts. vs. Euclid, ppd. to Sep 24.

RUSHING — S: Tristen Wolfe 9-17,
Tyler Barton 11-4, Daniel Ramthum
1-6, Ryan Billingsley 1-(-2), M:
Jeffrey Roush 11-105, Andrew Burt
14-65, Dillon Boyer 5-58, Charlie
Barrett 12-57, Cole Turner 13-48,
Jordan Hutton 1-(-1);
PASSING — S: Tristen Wolfe 3-123 83, M: Dillon Boyer 2-2-0 14;
RECEIVING — S: Zac Beegle 1-40,
Ryan Taylor 1-24, Trenton Deem 119, M: Alex Morris 1-11, Charlie
Barrett 1-3.

�Page B6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Spartans
from Page B1
offense in the first quarter alone, and the hosts’
lone first down came on
an Alexander penalty.
The Spartans also committed a fumble in the
opening stanza to go
along with four first
downs.
After forcing a punt
early in the second
canto, the Spartans put
together their longest
scoring drive of the
night — a 13-play, 93yard effort that resulted
in a touchdown following a 16-yard scamper
by Tyler Smith. Smith’s
score with 3:20 left in
the half gave the guests
a commanding 21-0
advantage headed into
halftime.
Alexander fumbled
away possession on its
opening drive of the second half, but the Raiders
quickly returned the
favor after an Austin
Whobrey pass was
picked off by Trey
Bennett and returned 47
yards to paydirt — giving the guests a 28-0
edge with 7:12 left in
the third quarter.
Grant added his second scoring run of the
night midway through
the fourth, plunging in
from three yards out
with 6:37 left in regulation to wrap up the 35point outcome.

Falcons
from Page B1
evening by booting seven
of eight point after kicks
for the game.
While the local offense
was having another successful evening the Bend
Area defense was equally
as impressive. Wamsley,
Zack Killingsworth and
Matthew Stewart along
with Colton Neal limited
the Wildcats to to a mere
26 yards of total offense
in the first two quarters.
Waterford
eventually
would enjoy a little more
success over the final two
periods to finish with 180
yards of offense with 122
yards on the ground and
another 58 through the
airways.
Wahama continued to
add to its advantage following the halftime break
with a score on its opening possession of the second half. Kane Roush
scored his second TD of

Rebels
from Page B1
The two point conversion
pass from Haner to
Cooper was good, giving
the Rebels the 30-7 half
time lead.
With the field and football slippery from the
first half rains, turnovers
were plentiful in the second half.
Eastern’s
opening
possession of the third
quarter ended with a
fumble which was
recovered by South
Gallia’s Jacob White at
the Rebels 20 yard
line. South Gallia was
unable to move the
ball across midfield on
the resulting drive, and
was forced to punt the
ball back to the
Eagles.
On the next play, Haner
intercepted the Joey
Scowden pass at the
Eastern 45 yard line, taking it all the way back for
the touchdown. The two
point conversion attempt
failed, leaving South
Gallia with the 36-7 lead
at the 7:08 mark of the
third quarter.
The next three possessions in the game resulted in punts.
The final 10:115 of the
game saw four turnovers
and seven possession
changes. Eastern’s Zach

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

The Spartans managed
20 first downs in the triumph, compared to only
five by the hosts.
Alexander was penalized eight times for 85
yards, while River
Valley was flagged only
twice — both of which
came in the fourth quarter — for 15 yards.
The Raiders produced
just 33 rushing yards on
24 carries and added
another
30
yards
through the air, while
AHS churned out 336
rushing yards on 59 carries and also added 42
passing yards in the win.
Six of the nine turnovers
came in the second half,
including all four of
River Valley’s interceptions.
Trey Bennett picked
off two of the four errant
passes by RVHS, while
Gage Miller and Braden
Jones also grabbed a
pick apiece for the
Spartans. The hosts ran
only two plays from
scrimmage in Alexander
territory all night long.
Patrick Williams led
the hosts with 47 rushing yards on 14
attempts, while Austin
Whobrey connected on
3-of-11 passes for 21
yards. Trey Noble led
the Raider wideouts
with two catches for 21
yards.
Tyler Smith led the
Alexander rushing attack
with 102 yards on 14 carries, while Bennett went
3-of-11 passing for 36
yards. Brandon Kisor led

the guests with one catch
for 14 yards.
Senior Kyla Thaxton
was named the 2011
Homecoming Queen at
River Valley during halftime festivities.
River Valley opens
Ohio Valley Conference
play Friday when it travels to Proctorville for a
Week 6 matchup with
Fairland. Kickoff is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.

the night when he hauled
in a short pass from
Gibbs, broke a couple of
early tackles, and raced
down the sideline to complete a 60 yard catch and
run touchdown reception.
The White Falcons
tacked on two more long
range scoring plays with
Isaac Lee racing 68 yards
with 4:23 remaining in
the third period before
the locals concluded the
nights scoring activity
with a 59 yard Colton
Neal touchdown run. The
PAT kick following the
Lee score was unsuccessful with the Falcons taking a knee following the
Neal score.
WHS totaled 360
yards on the ground in
addition to 151 yards
through the air for 511
yards in total offense.
Isaac Lee led the Bend
Area team on the
ground with 109 yards
in four carries with
Zack Wamsley netting
76 yards in three
attempts,
Anthony

Grimm 71 yards in
eight tries. and Colton
Neal 59 yards in his
only carry. Trenton
Gibbs connected on
seven of 12 passes for
151 yards and two
touchdowns with one of
his offerings being
intercepted.
Kane
Roush emerged as the
leading receiver with
four catches for 103
yards and a pair of
scores.
Matthew
Stewart and Anthony
Grimm had one reception apiece for 21 yards
each with Isaac lee
notching one catch for
six yards.
Brian Moore picked up
58 yards in eight carries
to pace the Wildcats on
the ground with Darek
Brown collecting 37
yards in 11 attempts.
Quarterback Trevor Lang
completed six of 17 aerials for 58 yards with
Moore hauling in four
passes for 51 yards and
Devon Patterson one
reception for 10 yards.

Wahama will return to
the road next week for a
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking
Division
encounter with neighboring Southern while
Waterford hosts the number two team in the conference in Trimble.

Browning recovered a
pair of South Gallia fumbles, while teammates
Garrett Ritchie recovered
another. For South
Gallia, Levi Ellis intercepted an Eastern pass.
Neither team could find
its way to the endzone in
the closing minutes.
South Gallia had 343
yards of total offense in
the game, with 209 yards
coming on the ground.
Eastern was held to just
106 yards of offense in
the game.
The Rebels had 15 first
downs to seven for the
Eagles in the game.
Eastern was led offensively
by
Ethan
Nottingham with 30 yards
on 13 carries, followed by
Chase Cook with 29 yards

on six carries and Zach
Scowden with 28 yards
on eight carries.
Joey Scowden was 412-3 passing for 38 yards
in the game. Garrett
Ritchie hat two catches
for 15 yards, Carnahan
had one catch for 18
yards and Marshall
Aanestad had one catch
for five yards.
Haner was 6-9-0 passing for 134 yards in the
win. White had 11 rushes for 69 yards, Spurlock
had 10 carries for 64
yards, Phillips had seven
carries for 33 yards,
Haner carried the ball
eight times for 21 yards,
Troy Zinn had three carries for 14 yards, Josh
Cooper had one carry for

seven yards and Devin
Lucas had one carry for
one yard.
Cooper led the South
Gallia receivers with
three catches for 82
yards, followed by Ellis
with one catch for 27
yards, Danny Matney
with one catch for 17
yards and Spurlock with
one catch for eight yards.
The Rebels will host
Federal Hocking next
Friday, while the Eagles
will host Belpre. Both
games
will
be
Homecoming contests.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Alexander 35, River Valley 0
A
RV

14-7-7-7 — 35
0-0-0-0 — 0

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
A — Benton Milum 5 run (Chase
Meeks kick) 10:24
A — Chris Grant 5 run (Chase
Meeks kick) 2:04
Second Quarter
A — Tyler Smith 16 run (Chase
Meeks kick) 3:20
Third Quarter
A — Trey Bennett 47 INT return
(Chase Meeks kick) 7:12
Fourth Quarter
A — Chris Grant 3 run (Chase
Meeks kick) 6:37
First Downs — A: 20, RV: 5;
Rushes-Yards — A: 59-336, RV: 2433; Passing Yards — A: 42, RV: 30;
Total Yards — A: 378, RV: 63;
Comp-Att-Int — A: 4-12-0, RV: 4-144; Fumbles-lost — A: 3-3, RV: 4-2;
Penalties-yards — A: 8-85, RV: 215.
RUSHING — A: Tyler Smith 14-102,
Trey Bennett 16-77, Chris Grant 1165, Benton Milum 8-28, Eric Davis
3-28, Josh Barnes 3-21, Tyler
Wilkinson 2-8, Gage Miller 1-8,
Nathan Stover 1-(-1); RV: Patrick
Williams 14-47, Burnie Stanley 210, Austin Lewis 1-0, Austin
Whobrey 7-(-24).
PASSING — A: Trey Bennett 3-11-0
36, Nathan Stover 1-1-0 6; RV:
Austin Whobrey 3-11-2 21, Patrick
Williams 0-1-1 0, James Williams 12-1 9.
RECEIVING — A: Brandon Kisor 114, Eric Davis 1-13, Gage Miller 1-9,
No. 30 1-6; RV: Trey Noble 2-21,
Dustin
Bickers
1-9,
Ethan
Dovenbarger 1-0.

Bryan Walters/photo
River Valley senior Trey Noble (7) prepares to tackle Alexander running back Eric
Davis (32) during the second half of Friday nightʼs Week 5 non-conference football contest at Raider Field in Cheshire, Ohio.

First Downs — Wat: 19, Wah: 14;
Rushes-Yards — Wat: 42-122, Wah:
31-360;
Passing Yards — Wat: 58, Wah:
151;
Total Yards — Wat: 180, Wah: 511;
Comp-Att-Int — Wat: 6-18-0, Wah:
7-12-1;
Fumbles-lost — Wat: 2-0, Wah: 2-0;
Penalties-yards — Wat: 3-20, Wah:
7-75.
RUSHING — Wat: Brian Moore 958, Darek Brown 12-37, Joab Camp
4-26, Joe Pugh 1-8, Jake Stewart 5-

6, Trevor Lang 7-1, Hunter Munjas
4-0, Wah: Isaac Lee 4-109, Anthony
Grimm 9-84, Zack Wamsley 3-76,
Colton Neal 1-59, Trenton Gibbs 738, Timmy Gibbs 2-4, Wyatt Wooton
1-3, Crandal Neal 3-1, Wyatt
Zuspan 2-(-1);
PASSING — Wat: Trevor Lang 6-170 58, Joe Pugh 0-1-0 0, Wah:
Trenton Gibbs 7-12-1 151;
RECEIVING — Wat: Brian Moore 451, Devon Patterson 1-10, Darek
Brown 1-(-3), Wah: Kane Roush 4103, Matthew Stewart 1-21, Anthony
Grimm 1-21, Isaac Lee 1-6.

Wahama 61, Waterford 8
Wat
Wah

0-0-0-8 — 8
7-35-13-6 — 61

Scoring Summary
First Quarter
Wah — Crandal Neal 1 run (Zack
Wamsley kick), 5:38
Second Quarter
Wah — Anthony Grimm 13 run
(Wamsley kick), 11:38
Wah — Grimm 5 run (Wamsley
kick), 9:20
Wah — Kane Roush 23 pass from
Trenton Gibbs (Wamsley kick), 7:01
Wah — Grimm 3 run (Wamsley
kick), 2:40
Wah — Wamsley 67 run (Wamsley
kick), :39
Third Quarter
Wah — Roush 60 pass from Gibbs
(Wamsley kick), 11:35
Wah — Isaac Lee 68 run (kick
failed), 4:23
Fourth Quarter
Wah — Colton Neal 59 run (run
failed), 2:09
Wat — Darek Brown run (two point
conversion good)

South Gallia 36, Eastern 7
E
7-0-0-0 — 7
SG
14-16-6-0 — 36
Scoring Summary
First Quarter
SG — Cory Haner 31 run (Ethan Spurlock
run), 7:39
E — Chase Cook 6 run (Max Carnahan
kick), 6:24
SG — Josh Cooper 72 pass from Haner
(run failed), 5:22

Alex Hawley/photo
Wahamaʼs Anthony Grimm carries the ball during
Fridayʼs TVC Hocking game at Wahama High School
in Mason, W.Va.

Second Quarter
SG — Levi Ellis 27 pass from Haner
(Austin Phillips run), 4:11
SG — Danny Matney 17 pass from Haner
(Cooper pass from Haner), :03
Third Quarter
SG — Haner 45 INT return (pass failed),
7:08
First Downs — E: 7, SG: 15;
Rushes-Yards — E: 34-68, SG: 41-209;
Passing Yards — E: 38, SG: 134;
Total Yards — E: 106, SG: 343;
Comp-Att-Int — E: 4-12-3, SG: 6-9-0;
Fumbles-lost — E: 2-2, SG: 4-3;

Penalties-yards — E: 3-15, SG: 7-58.
RUSHING — E: Ethan Nottingham 13-30,
Chase Cook 6-29, Zach Scowden 8-28,
Joey Scowden 7-(-19), SG: Jacob White
11-69, Ethan Spurlock 10-64, Austin
Phillips 7-33, Cory Haner 8-21, Troy Zinn
3-14, Josh Cooper 1-7, Devin Lucas 1-1;
PASSING — E: Joey Scowden 4-12-3 38,
SG: Cory Haner 6-9-0 134;
RECEIVING — E: Max Carnahan 1-18,
Garrett Ritchie 2-15, Marshall Aanestad 15, SG: Josh Cooper 3-82, Levi Ellis 1-27,
Danny Matney 1-17, Ethan Spurlock 1-8.

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Sarah Hawley/photo
Eastern quarterback Joey Scowden, right, prepares to throw a pass to Marshall
Aanestad (88) during Fridayʼs game at South Gallia.

37700 King Hill Road, Pomeroy OH

1-800-291-5600

�C1

ALONG THE RIVER

Sunday, September 25, 2011

It’s a phone...
it’s a camera —
it’s a multi-tasking device
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

In 1876 when Alexander
Graham Bell invented the telephone Samuel Clemens (aka
Mark Twain) had only this to say
— “The human voice carries
entirely too far as it is....and now
you fellows come along and seek
to complicate matters.”
––––––––
I wonder what he would have
to say today about cell phones
with billions in use, and the
newest on the market, the iPhone
which is not only a telephone,
but can take pictures, send and
receive messages, sort and organize information, and be both a
visual and verbal communications device.
The iPhone, to put it mildly, is
one heck of a cordless device
which puts the world virtually in
your pocket.
Telephones have come a long
way since Bell’s invention and
there’s no telling what is yet to
come out of those little handheld devices still foreign to many
of us.
For those who have and use the
latest in cell phones, “awesome”
seems to be their description.
It was on March 7, 1876 that
Alexander Graham Bell filed his
patent and in the first month of
the Bell Telephone Company’s
existence, only six telephones
were sold. A year later there
were 778 telephones in use, and
15 years later use of the telephone had grown to five million
around the country. It took the
telephone 75 years to acquire 50
million users.
The first telephone system,
known as an exchange, was
installed in Hartford, Conn. in
1877 and the first exchange linking two major cities was established between New York and
Boston in 1883.
The exchange involved a group
of operators working at a large
switchboard. The operators
would answer an incoming telephone call and connect it manually to the party being called.
Those manual switchboards
remained in common use until
the middle of the 20th century.
In the late 1950’s came rotary
phones, and then in the 1960s
the touch-tone style was introduced. But it wasn’t until 1978
that AT&amp;T Bell Laboratories
began testing mobile telephone
systems based on cells. The cellular telephone system began
nationwide usage in the United
States in 1983. In the first 15

years after the invention of cellular phones, more than 33 million wireless phones were in use
in the United States. Today it is
in the billions.
Communication has come a
long way and one has only to
talk to senior citizens who grew
up in rural Meigs County to get
the story of progress in their
lifetime.
Margaret Parker, president of
the Meigs County Historical
Society, remembers when you
turned the handle on a large
wooden box on the wall to call
your neighbor.
“Back then a line had several
different houses on it and the
ring came into every house on
that line. It was a party-line with
lots of ‘hushing’ to be quiet as
neighbors listened in to get the
latest news. Funny, now we pay
extra for conference calling and
then, it came with the service,”
she commented.
Parker, who grew up on a farm
at Dutch Ridge in rural Meigs
County, said at that time the
switchboard was at Sumner in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Sinclair with Mrs. Sinclair as the
operator. So if you wanted to
call someone you turned the
handle to ring the switchboard
and told the operator who to
connect you to.
Since there is so much history
connected with communication
and its evolution, continuing to
this day, the Meigs County
Historical Society president was
elated with a gift from the
Barnhill family.
Carl Barnhill was a businessman in Tuppers Plains and an
avid collector of old phones and
switchboards. In the 1980s he
had brought two of his switchboards to the museum for display at Heritage Weekend,
hooked them up and demonstrated to visitors how they operated.
Several years ago both Mr. and
Mrs. Barnhill died. The family
took some time to decide what to
do with their father’s switchboards and then one day a
daughter, Dorothy Stout, called
the museum to arrange delivery
of one which had been used in
Meigs County.
The switchboard along with
one of the old wooden telephones with a crank on the side
is now on display at the museum
for those who “remember when”
and those who don’t but are
interested in communication
devices dating back to the time
of Alexander Graham Bell’s
invention.

Rotary phones made the scene in mid-century.

Charlene Hoeflich photos

This switchboard, donated to the Meigs Museum as a gift from the family of
Carl Barnhill, was used in Sumner. Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs
County Historical Society, remembers well what it was like then to make a
telephone call.

Two shorts, four longs. Itʼs your neighborʼs ring and someone answers. But
most times the one being called is not the only one on the line. Others pick up
and listen in, a common practice in small rural communities. This phone is in
the old log cabin on the Rocksprings fairgrounds.

Touch-tone phones, some with answering services,
came along in the late 1960s.

Wireless phones first made the scene in 1983,
and since have gone through a continual process
of upgrading. Like most who have one, Hannah
Cleek is never without hers.

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page C2

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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Lady Shrinettes
Basket Games (Bingo)
Saturday Oct. 1st, 2011
Gallipolis Masonic Lodge
(Corner of 3rd Ave. &amp; Court Street)
Doors Open @ 5:00 p.m.
Games Start @ 6:00 p.m.
All new items from the fall booklet
Proceeds from this fundraiser will
benefit local needy Children &amp;
The Shriner's Children Burn Center
&amp; Orthopedic Hospital

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Alex Greer
ENO Sail-On 4-H Club

60247286

60247196

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Job Fair

Sat. Oct. 1, 2011 - 10 am

Located on State Rt 124 in Rutland, Ohio
Watch for Auction Sign
“Antique or Collectors Items”
Glass Show Case,Tea Cart, Dresser, Stands, Hull &amp; Mccoy, Chiffrobe, Radio, 1950 Woman Hats

&amp; Hat Boxes, Small Toys, 3pc Victorian Settee, Oak Wood School Chairs, Collection Of Miniature
Oil Lamps, Silver Coffee Set, Bicycle Built For Two, Organ Bench, Misc Knives &amp; Watches,
Mission Clock, Mantle With Mirror &amp; Lots More
“Auto”
1973 Mercedes-Benz Rag Top &amp; Convertible 450 Sl, 2 Door, Automatic
“Miscellaneous”
Speed Queen Wringer Washer, Couch, Recliner, Large Seigler Gas Heater, Pro 123 MTX
Stereo &amp; Speaker, Record Player, Ping Pong Table, Hammond Organ, Roll-Away-Bed, Lamps,
Lots &amp; Lots Of Box Loads, 2 Sets Mens Golf Clubs, Exercise Bike &amp; Tread Mill &amp; More!
OWNER - JOAN WOLFE

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John Smith - Auctioneer
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Not responsible for accidents or loss of property

STNA’s &amp;
Hospitality Aides

Wed, Sept 28th from12p-3p
Abbyshire Place, 311 Buckridge Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

We offer:
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PERSONAL CARE AIDE

www.vrablehealthcare.com
Equal Opportunity Employer

Galia-Meigs Community Action Agency is accepting applications for the following positions.
Case manager: Work with applicants/participants to assist in
accessing/utilizing services of employment programs. Position
will involve office and field work as required for program activities.

Program Manager: Supervise field operations of stream cleanup
project, supervise work crews, interface with relevant partner
agencies, plan and implement work, requires extensive outdoor
work in all weather conditions.

Please contact Jamie Northup,
Recruitment Coordinator, at
740.441.8052
or visit us on the web at
www.holzer.org

Applications may submit a resume but must submit an application which are available and can be submitted at the following
locations:

Applicants must have a high school diploma/GED with post
high school training and/or experience preferred, applicants
must have a valid drivers license, vehicle, and have auto insurance.
Applications accepted until positions are filled, submit by
9-28-11 for full consideration.

60247031

Auction
Located at 2025 Maxwell Ave., Pt. Pleasant, WV. We’ll be
selling the personal property of Kathleen Overholt, who
has moved into assisted living.
Furniture
Beautiful marble top washstand, walnut secretary, 4 pc BR suite,
cedar chest, two La-Z-Boy recliners, sofa, 3 pc cherry coffee
table and end table set, china cab., 5 pc wood dinette set, walnut platform rocker, Claw &amp; Ball organ stool, oak lamp table, pc.
rope twist candle stick signed (Brandt), antique Singer sewing
machine, oak dresser, chests, utility cabinets, Hitchcock chair, 3
pc wrought iron table set, Rose back sewing rocker, oak rocker,
Kenmore 1914 CF ref., Maytag washer &amp; dryer &amp; hyd. bed, small
chest freezer, glassware, Lenox china dinner set, eternal potters,
Brazilian china, (Princess) Cobalt Blue, Fostoria swirl, collection
of cups and saucers, Waterford, lamps, Blecko, Fenton Bell of
Pt. Pleasant WV, WV glass, Alfred Meakin pitcher &amp; sugar bowl,
Lenox teapot, creamer &amp; sugar, Corningware.
Collectibles
Reverse painted lamp, 6 gal Redware church quilt, oil lamps, pr.
cast iron birds, gilded mirror, linens, Kraut cutter, 1921-1925
Peace silver dollar, 1943 &amp; ‘57 1/2 dollar, floor lamps, US quarter collection in frame and much more.
Household &amp; Misc.
Great cookware, rugs, blankets, Dell computer, Mitsubishi console TV, rugs, Charles Shultz Peanut’s books, copper art, flatware, small kit. app., yard tools, hand tools, file cab., lawn furn.,
baskets, bird houses, gas grill, box lots.
Auction Conducted By:
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Terms: Cash or check with ID
Ricky Pearson, Jr. #A1955
Everything sold as is – Food
POA Sandy Elies
Auctioneer’s note: Extremely clean auction

GMCAA Offices
8010 North SR7, Cheshire
859 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
122 North Second Avenue, Middleport
DJFS One Stops
848 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
150 Mill Street, Middleport

Equal Opportunity Employer
Equal Opportunity Employer

Good Working Diesel John Deere 310C BACKHOE w/END-LOADER w/3size buckets, good rubber-sells w/ reserve! Very Good Zetor 5211 Diesel FARM
TRACTOR 3pt, pto, overhauled last year-sells w/reserve! Working Ride-On
DITCH-WITCH Trencher w/backfill blade on rubber tires. Case BULLDOZER
in “as-is” condition, gasoline, 8’ blade, 9-years since last started! Very Good
KAWASAKI 185 “Bayou” 4-Wheeler. MTD 5hp Chipper/Shredder used twice.
Nice W. &amp; L.E. Gurley Transit w/pole &amp; tripod. EQUIPMENT: Superior 3pt
39A sickle bar mower only 1½ years old! 6’ 3pt rotary mower, 3pt blade, 3pt cone
spreader, 3pt platform, 3pt hay spear, Ford 3pt 2btm plows, 4-gang disc, manure
spreader. Farm Items: 2-pipe gates, 500gal fuel storage tank partially filled
w/diesel fuel, 4-rolls woven fence, barb wire, Rubbermaid stock tub, steel fence
post, more. Welding: Lincoln 225arc welder, acet/oxy welding outfit, welding accessories. Garage Full of TOOLS: Coleman generator, Troy-Bilt Pony tiller,
Homelite water pump, parts cleaning cabinet, air compressor, come-a-longs,
chains/binders, Big Red 48” jack, elec band/hack saw, shop crane, 2-ATV sprayers,
new Cowley CL200 automatic level, 2-wheel measures, bench drill press, ladders,
barrel pumps, table &amp; scroll saws, electric hand tools, lawn roller, Craftsman
mulching mower, as-is electric mobility cart, lots of hand tools. ANTIQUES: 6Old Clocks: Welch &amp; Seth Thomas weight clocks, Ansonia carved oak kitchen
clock, gingerbread kitchen clock w/windmill panel, 2-Sessions mantel clocks.
Primitive farm items, 3-early coffee mills, nice “Old Crow” whiskey decanter,
Hanson Drill Bits cabinet, post office letter pigeonholes, old sleds &amp; bicycle, more.
Much to Uncover from Aged &amp; Rickety Farm Sheds! Hundreds of Auction Items!
A 60 Year Accumulation! Terms: Cash or good check auction day. Positive Id.
Food .

Saturday, Oct. 1, 2011
10:00 AM

HELP WANTED

*Performs basic personal care
*Homemaking &amp;
respite/companionship duties for
patients at their home
*Maintains a clean, safe and healthy
environment

60247509

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2011 @ 10:00am

Ottie: 740-385-7195.
View website pictures &amp; flyer @ www.opperman-auctions.com
or Auction Zip #12726

MIS Supervisor: Manage program records, maintain quality control on all office processes including payroll, maintain interface
between field operations and record activities.

(Per Diem)

This farm has been home to the Alkire Family for 60 years.
Bob passed early this year at age 86; therefore Mrs. Alkire intends to sell items
no longer needed at the homestead.
38641 State Route 684, POMEROY, OH
(in the tiny Village of Harrisonville)
From Pomeroy take State Route 143-North to State Route-684 and auction.

AUCTIONEER: OTTIE OPPERMAN &amp; CHRIS COLLINS

60247502

Do you want to make a difference?
If you are compassionate and
committed to providing
Quality Care come and be a part
of our Home Care Team.
We have the following position open:

FARM AUCTION
At the Meigs Co. Farm of FRANCES &amp; the late BOB ALKIRE.

www.mydailyregister.com
60246546

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

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Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Yes, we have apples!
Open 7 days a week 8-12 &amp; 1-4
jellies, jams, cider, apple butter

Richards Brothers Fruit Farm
2054 Orpheus Rd (Co Rd 46)
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JEEP WRANGLER HARLEY TRUCK GOLF CART TRAILERS

ABSOLUTE
PUBLIC AUCTION
Date: Saturday, October 1, 2011
Time: 10:00am
Location: 6 Dickason Street, Jackson, Ohio 45640

AUTOS: 2002 Jeep Wrangler very sharp, 6 cyl. auto, 85,000 miles, hard top
w/soft and bikini top, 1997 Dodge Dakota pick up, runs great and looks good,
170,000, V6 Ram auto.
MOTORCYCLE: 1996 Harley Davidson FLHT 20,000 miles ex. cond., new
Screaming Eagle paint, lots of chrome, very sharp!
2005 United Motors American made 1500cc Scooter, Yamaha electric golf cart
w/charger.
RIDING MOWER: Cub Cadet 1440 garden tractor, looks like new! Troybuilt
self propelled push mower.
UTILITY TRAILERS: Nice 5 ft. x 8 ft trailer, nice 5 1/2 x 7 trailer, motorcycle cargo trailer, plus misc. auto and Harley parts.
TOOLS: Stihl chain saw, 2 Stihl weed eaters, 2 Stihl blowers, laser level w/tripod,
case, and grade pole, 3 red wood concrete screeds, 3000 psi pressure washer, 2
electric air compressors, hydraulic jacks and stands, Dewalt table saw and miter saw,
cordless saws and drills, lots of carpentry and masonry tools, large 2 piece Craftsman
tool chest w/ tools, log chains and binders, scaffold w/wheels, moving dollies, painting
tools, electric supplies, nails and screws, veneer plywood, rebar, 100 plus concrete
pins, saw horses, misc. new wood and storm doors, plus box loads of misc.
FURNITURE: Jotul wood stove, gas space heater, reconditioned commercial
pool table 3 1/2 x 6 ft, oak chest and dresser, railroad lantern, old pay phone in
working cond., cast iron well pump, traffic light, rail road sign, TV’s, galvanized double
sink, iron bed, antique tables, wood trunks, mission rocker, sleeper sofa, washer and
dryer, LG armoire, old two seat tricycle, 50 plus old yard sticks, lawn furniture, Royal
Crown thermometer, aluminum sign, plus much more!
Owner: Dave Evans Jr.
Terms: Cash or local check w/proper ID.
PRESTON MUSTARD AUCTIONEER/APPRAISER
79 PIERCE CEMETERY RD
JACKSON, OHIO 45640 (740) 286-5868
LICENSED STATE OF OHIO
FOR PICTURES GO TO @ www.auctionzip.com

Holzer Clinic of Gallipolis
Seeks an
IT Systems Engineer
Holzer Clinic is accepting resumes from qualified information technology
professionals for the position of IT System Engineer.

12 months
same as cash!!!

The position requires a Bachelor’s degree in a computer related field or comparable
work experience.

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Monday-Friday 9am-5pm
Saturday 9-3
Free Estimates

The Systems Engineer is primarily responsible for daily operations and support of
server hardware, Active Directory, Microsoft operating systems, Virtualization
infrastructure, Messaging (Exchange), and Enterprise Storage. The successful
candidate will posses SME level experience with Active Directory, Windows Server,
VMWare and Citrix.

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Marcum Construction
and General Contracting

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

� Commercial &amp; Residential � General Remodeling

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Competitive benefit package including: Health, Dental, Life, Disability, 401(k) &amp; Profit
Sharing. Employees enjoy opportunities for career growth and professional
development.

Applicants may apply at:
www.holzerclinic.com
Equal Opportunity Employer
60244093

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�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Class of 2012

ATTENTION HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS!
SEE US FIRST FOR YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS

Continuing to serve you...
Save Time &amp; Money, Shop Local!
“Since 1948”

UPS Service

No Job To Big or To Small
We Do It All

Roofing, Siding, Remodel, Decks, Porches,
Pole barns and Custom Built Homes

Silver Bridge Plaza
Gallipolis, OH � 740.446.3484
M-F 10-6 � Sat 10-2

740-992-3345
Fax 740-992-3394

kpdng@ymail.com
www.mykaratpatch.com

FREE ESTIMATES
740-388-8931
l
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740-853-1024
C

MINOVA AMERICAS

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, October 1 – 10:00 a.m.
Rock Springs Road (Meigs County #20)
DIRECTIONS: From Athens take Rt. 33 East towards Pomeroy, just past Rt. 681 turn north on
Rock Spring Roads, just .2 mile on left to Ohio Valley Christian Academy facility. From Rt. 7Pomeroy, take Rt. 33 West 5.1 mile just past roadside rest stop on right to turn on Rock Springs
Road. NOTE: Check our web site for some photos.
CAMPER &amp; TRAILERS: 1988 Ford Econoline 350 Sportscruiser Camper “Honey” w/31,363 miles
in excellent condition, 6 ft. 2-wheel enclosed trailer, 2-wheel 5x8 utility trailer w/ramp, The Scooter
Store motorized chair.
TRACTOR, MOWER, EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS: John Deere 770 Tractor 24 hp. 4WD (750 hours)
w/end loader (sold w/owner’s consent), post hole drill w/9” &amp; 12” augers, Land Pride 60” finish
mower, Land Pride 50” tiller, Land Pride 6 ft. blade, John Deere LT160 riding mower 42” cut only 11/2 year old, Power Built 10 hp riding mower w/bagger, Lawn Chief 5hp. Rear tine tiller, Snow King
Snow Blower (like new), Stihl MS180C/Skil 009L/Homelite chain saws, Stihl FS85 &amp; Homelite weed
eaters, Stihl FS55 blower vac, Paramount PB100 &amp; Homelite leaf blowers, Weed Easter hedge trimmer, B &amp; D electric edger, lawn seeder, lawn roller, log chains, 4-Goodyear 6 lug 265/70R17 tires on
aluminum Chevy wheels, new dust collector system, Craftsman 10” table saw, Milwaukee circular
saw &amp; drill, Skil jig saw, Craftsman tool chest w/drawers, 2-laser levels, Roto multi purpose cutting
tool, Dayton air compressor, Craftsman portable drills, Bostitch framing air nailer, tile saw, air
sander, chisel, cut off tool, end line sander, bench grinder, belt disk sander, Makita 7” grinder, pipe
wrenches, Rigid pipe cutter, spray guns, lots of small hand tools, yard/garden long handled tools,
Werner 24 ft. extension ladder, 20 ft. extension ladder, wheel barrows, painters scaffolding, fishing
poles, large feed cart on steel wheels, 5T. railroad jack, floor &amp; hydraulic jacks, furniture clamps,
coolers, grill, car ramps, battery charger, 3-metal shelving units, spud bars, 2-kiln dried poplar
boards (8 ft x 18” &amp; 20”), lots of fuse &amp; breaker boxes, circuit breakers, wiring, electrical fittings,
etc., McCullough 3300 watt generator.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Plantation style desk w/glass doors on top, Fancy marble top walnut dresser w/mirror &amp; glove boxes, wash stand, beautiful oak ornate glass door bookcase unit, parlor settee, spindle rocking chair, White treadle sewing machine, Slag glass tiffany style lamp, tobacco
stand, Seth Thomas mantel clock, small school flip top desk, library table, Caswell-Runyon cedar
chest, ladies gloves, hankies, doilies, aprons, assorted vintage linens/tablecloths from 1930s, tubs full
of vintage fabrics, notions, buttons, wood jewelry box, dressing table sets, lots of pocket knives,
lighters, pens, watches, Army Uniform complete served in Korea w/foot locker, Mine Stickers, 2older quilts, quilt rack, wash boards, wood rug weaving tool, rug beater, apple butter stirrer, framed
photo 1928 NY Central Lines, Columbus, OH, Penn Central RR lantern, RR jack, kerosene lamps,
hurricane style lamps, 2-black glass horse figure lamps, Lamp made w/cobbler’s tools on base,
framed 1922 Ladies Home Journal, Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame &amp; Jim Dine prints, old silverware in
box, some old baskets, collector plates (3-pewter), 1970s Disney collector plates, some glassware,
several crocks/jugs (Roseville mixing bowl), collection of 10-rolling pins, 12+ green canning jars,
20+ teapots (Fiesta &amp; copper), egg baskets, coffee grinder, 10+ glass nesting hens, collection of
roosters/chickens, 12+ Occupied Japan figurines, 1963 Life &amp; Look magazines, few Nancy Drew
books, complete set of hard back Zane Grey books, record albums, collection of John Deere toy
tractors/memorabilia, child’s John Deere pedal tractor (older), assorted die cast toys including
Nascar, Structo car hauler toy truck, tube of Ohio Art toys, Cabbage Patch &amp; other old dolls, 40+
Ashton Drake Galleries &amp; Kewpie porcelain collector dolls, collectible bears, 1000+ marbles in jars,
Fender guitar w/stand, harmonica, old wood advertiser boxes, 4-pair Novelty slippers, dinner bell
(painted JD green/yellow), Mason’s sword.
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: Maytag &amp; GE washers &amp; dryers (both 1 yr.old), Frigidaire refrigerator, Wurlitzer studio piano &amp; bench, drum table, 2-heavy maple round lamp tables, hall stand,
maple desk, large maple mirror, maple dinette table &amp; chairs, new Queen Mattress/Box Springs, microfiber rocker/recliner, nice heavy 2-piece shelf unit for TV, cherry TV cabinet, replica Thomas shelf
radio/cassette player, curio cabinet, dark blue leather rocker/recliner chair, Ergonomic chair &amp; stool,
Phillips &amp; Mitsubishi portable TVs, wood wall shelves, several framed prints, framed mirror, Regulator
Clock, work table &amp; stool, 2-gun cabinets, Kenmore &amp; Singer portable sewing machines, 2—thread
racks, lots of material/parts for making stuffed bears, new pressure cooker steamer, Infinity speakers
&amp; stands, Brother copier/fax machine, Gympac 1000 weight machine, Stamina 4755 Recumbant Bike,
small metal storage cabinet, Live Animal cage, artificial Christmas trees/decorations, Lasko baseboard
heater, golf clubs in bag, gas hot plate, old Steelcase desk, lawn swing, patio table &amp; chairs, patio chairs
&amp; glass top side table, cornhole set, large window air conditioner, several concrete lawn statues, porch
swing, picnic table, window air conditioner, 2-Warm Morning propane heaters, Kozy World gas wall
heater, 2-new EdenPure Gen 3 Quartz Infrared portable heaters, knitting machine, 6-restaurant
booths, 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. All sales are final. Food will be available. Not responsible
for loss or accidents.

OWNERS: Jim &amp; Jan Artis and Kathy &amp; Curtis Allman
and Estate of Wayne E. Milhoan by Rhett Milhoan, Executor

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

AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
AUCTIONEERS: Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd, Brent King
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Patterson Construction

We Buy Gold
and Diamonds
Stop by today!

THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP, Inc.
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Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page C3

60247193

is now accepting applications for:
##
Assembly Workers
##
Forklift Operators
##
Press Operators
##
Shear Operators
##
Quality Control Personnel
##
Mechanical Repair Maintenance Personnel

Consider the Benefits that we provide:
##
Competitive Benefits and Wages
##
401k with a one to one match up to 5%
##
Pay for Performance Bonus
##
Weekly Incentive Compensation
##
Paid Time Off - Holidays and Vacation
##
Educational Assistance
##
Career Development

We are looking for associates that have a desire
to achieve positive results and to be rewarded
for their contributions. If you meet these criteria
please contact us or apply in person at 58 County
Road 12 South Proctorville, OH from 9am - 3pm
M-F.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

Sunday’s TV Listings

www.mydailyregister.com

60247100

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page C5

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s
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. 26, 2011:
This year, you will witness many
changes in your life. Some of which
you won’t be comfortable with; others you might like. You will choose to
spend a lot of time by yourself, more
so than usual. Use this time to rest,
digest what is happening and internalize it. If you are single, check out
anyone you meet with care. Someone
could be different from the person he
or she portrays. If you are attached,
you might take more of a back seat
than in the past. Your sweetie might
not understand why a new you is
emerging. Share more. VIRGO reads
you cold.
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)
++++ All work and no play can
be debilitating, yet it is Monday. You
must deliver professionally or within
your immediate circle. Pace yourself;
make lists. Demonstrate just how
efficient you can be when you try.
Tonight: Do only what you must.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
+++++ Allow your creativity to
flourish. Stop feeding undeveloped
ideas to others who could be judgmental. You are asking for negative
feedback. When you are ready,
encourage greater give-and-take.
Listen and share more. Others appear
to be unusually receptive. Tonight:
Squeeze in some fun.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
++++ Getting out the front door
could be a major effort. You really
would like to stay home. Who could
blame you? If you can get enough
done playing the recluse, then why
not? Otherwise, know that this, too,
will pass. Tonight: Head home. Touch
base with someone at a distance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
++++ Speak your mind, but
understand that not everyone wants
to hear your conclusions. You might
feel frustrated as you hit a brick wall.
Use this moment to experiment with
other styles of communicating. You
want your points heard, don’t you?
Tonight: Hang out with pals.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
++++ Keep your eye on your
budget, whether deciding to bring
treats in to work or buy a gift (even for
you!). It is so easy to overspend and
justify it. Keep your eye on increasing funds rather than depleting them.

HOROSCOPE

Tonight: Balance your budget.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
+++++ Allow greater giveand-take between you and others.
Someone in your daily life — it might
even be at work — could stress you
out. There is an implicit misunderstanding between the two of you.
Consider clearing it up soon. Tonight:
Whatever knocks your socks off.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
+++ You simply aren’t willing
to discuss everything that is on your
mind. Make that OK, though a child or
loved one knows something is going
on. This person might try to pry you
open. Enjoy the attention rather than
get annoyed. Tonight: Plan ahead.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
+++++ Zero in on what you
want. There could be some confusion
about a work, health or day-to-day
matter. You haven’t received a clear
message, and you aren’t giving one
either. If you see confusion, step in
and clarify. Tonight: Wherever the
crowds are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
+++ Take a stand and move
forward in handling a career-related
or key personal matter. Others will
intuitively follow you rather than question you. You might want to add to
the moment, making what you desire
possible. Tonight: The ball is in your
hands.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
+++ Keep reaching out for someone at a distance. This person could
be an expert or someone who often
tosses a different perspective on situations. Be careful with financial commitments. Tonight: Let your imagination rock and roll.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
++++ A partner or friend pulls
in close and has a lot to share. You
might have a mild sense of uneasiness with this person because he or
she is so different from you. Still, he
or she has a lot to offer. Tonight: Chat
over dinner.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
++++ Defer to others and
maintain a sense of independence.
Several friends, family and loved ones
express their desires, each with a
different, implicit agenda! You might
be happiest doing your own thing.
Tonight: Remember, you make the
final call.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Sunday, September 25, 2011

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday Times-Sentinel • Page C6

Bethany Keyes and Jeremy Ferguson

K EY E S - F E R G U SO N
E N G AG E M E N T
LETART, W.Va. — Bethany Lynn Keyes and
Jeremy Allen Ferguson, along with their families,
announce their engagement and upcoming marriage.
The bride-elect is a 2006 graduate of Wahama High
School. She attended Hocking College and is now
working as a licensed physical theraipist assistant at
Camden Clark Medical Center in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Her fiance is a 2005 graduate of Wahama High
School and is currently employed by AEP River
Operatons at Lakin, W. Va.
The wedding will take place at the Maranatha
Cornerstone Church in Letart, W. Va., on Oct. 15 at
3:30 p.m. The open church ceremony will be followed
by a reception at the Bend Area Community Center in
New Haven, W. Va.

Andy Warhol’s art takes
stage on National Mall
WASHINGTON (AP) — Andy Warhol is known
for soup cans and celebrity images, not so much for
painting headlines and abstract works.
The late pop artist has left much to be discovered
in two shows that open Sunday on the National Mall.
The National Gallery of Art is opening its first
Warhol exhibit with “Warhol: Headlines,” an examination of his use of news headlines throughout his
career. At the same time, the Smithsonian’s
Hirshhorn Museum will feature “Andy Warhol:
Shadows,” a 450-foot-long installation in the round
museum that marks the first time all of Warhol’s 102
abstract “shadow” paintings will be shown together
as the artist intended.
“This might surprise people,” said Hirshhorn curator Evelyn Hankins. “They get two very different
sides of Warhol.”
Besides his obsession with celebrities and iconic
images, it turns out Warhol was a news junkie. At a
time when nearly everyone on the New York City
subway had a newspaper in hand, Warhol was
watching, fascinated by the consumption of news.
“Probably for him, it was like a kid in a candy
store,” said Matt Wrbican, archivist at The Andy
Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. “He was a news
hound.”
Soon Warhol was sketching his own versions of
the New York Daily News, the National Enquirer and
The Wall Street Journal in the 1950s, mimicking
their layouts and tweaking their headlines.
His first painting of a front page, “A Boy for Meg,”
in 1962 is a near exact replica of a New York Post
page announcing the first-child born of Princess
Margaret of Great Britain.
Warhol used a projector to trace the newspaper
with his brush, though he left out the Post’s copyright line. Such work was a precursor to later artists
who have been sued for similarly tracing news
images.
The piece inspired curator Molly Donovan of the
National Gallery of Art to look closer at Warhol’s
use of the news.
“By enlarging the front page of the tabloid source
on which it’s based, this painting signifies the immediacy Warhol conveyed in his art and tells us that
something as mundane as the daily newspaper can
indeed be grand,” she said.
Donovan eventually brought together about 80
paintings, drawings, prints, photographs, sculptures
and videos from Warhol’s career that carry the theme
— and 40 percent of them have never been shown
publicly before.
The works include a commissioned piece from
1981 to commemorate an Italian earthquake. Warhol
blew up a newspaper headline reading “Fate Presto,”
which translates to “Hurry Up,” to emphasize the
human toll. It’s being shown in the U.S. for the first
time.
“Headlines” will be on view until January when
the exhibit travels to the Museum fur Moderne Kunst
in Frankfurt, Germany, followed by the Galleria
nazionale d’arte moderna in Rome and The Andy
Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh.
Another of Warhol’s most overlooked pieces,
“Flash,” is on view in full for the first time, Wrbican
said. Warhol created the installation in 1968 to mark
the fifth anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s
assassination. It includes teletype newswire
accounts from The Associated Press and others,
along with 14 images to show how news of
Kennedy’s death unfolded.
“Flash: Dallas — Two priests summoned to
Kennedy in emergency room,” one line reads, followed by “Flash: President Kennedy died at 1 p.m.
(CST).”
The show closes with a nod to Madonna. In 1985,
Warhol teamed up with Keith Haring to make a wedding gift for their friend before her marriage to Sean
Penn. They replaced a New York Post image on the
front page with a picture of the couple under the
headline: “Madonna on nude pix: So What!”
At the Hirshhorn, curators timed the “Shadows”
exhibit to coincide with the “Headlines” show, as
well as a film festival and other events.
Warhol created his colorful “shadows” in 1979 as
a play on abstract expressionism, Hankins said. He
did it his own way, though, painting his silkscreen
images with a mop. That began nearly 10 years of
other abstract works.
“I’ve come to realize we’re just beginning to
understand this prolific artist’s work,” Donovan said.
“I’ll never be able to glance casually at the tabloids
in the grocery store again.”

Rachel Sargent and Matthew Bess

Maria Schaefer and Cory Brown

S A R G E N T-B E S S
ENGAGEMENT

SCHAEFER-BROWN
ENGAGEMENT

Mr. Eric Sargent and Ms. Ronda Sargent are
pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Rachel Elizabeth Sargent, to Matthew Steven
Bess, son of Lawrence and Terri Bess of Patriot, Ohio.
Rachel is a graduate of Marshall University with a
bachelor’s degree in Public Relations and a master’s
degree in Healthcare Administration. She is the
Operations Manager at Hospice of Huntington.
Matthew is a graduate of the University of Rio
Grande with a bachelor’s degree in Exercise Science
and of Marshall University with a master’s degree in
Exercise Physiology. He is an Exercise Physiologist
in Cardiac Rehab at St. Mary’s Medical Center.
The wedding is planned for September of 2012 in
Huntington, W.Va.

The engagement of Maria D. Schaefer and Cory A.
Brown, both of Minersville, is announced.
The bride-elect, daughter of Rick and Chris
Schaefer of Minersville, is a 2004 graduate of
Southern High School and a 2010 graduate of Rio
Grande Community College with associate degrees in
business management and information technology.
Her finance, son of Rodney and Kelly (deceased)
Brown of Stewart, graduated from Federal Hocking
and the Tri County Career Center and is now a fulltime student at Rio Grande. He is employed at
McDonald’s.

Travolta &amp; Gotti widow to research new movie
NEW YORK (AP) — John Travolta visited the
widow of mob boss John Gotti to do research for his
upcoming movie role as the mafia kingpin.
The New York Post reports that Travolta arrived
Thursday at the Gotti home in New York City to meet
with widow Victoria Gotti, her son John “Junior” Gotti
and other key players.
The Post said the “Pulp Fiction” star was greeted
with handshakes and hugs. He brought a gift bag for
Victoria Gotti and stayed inside for more than two
hours.
All he would say when he emerged was that he was
doing research for the movie.
John Gotti died in prison in 2002.
The movie “Gotti: In the Shadow of My Father” is
set to start shooting in January. Barry Levinson is
directing.

Kim Delaney escorted from Philadelphia podium
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Kim Delaney, star of the
television show “Army Wives,” had to be escorted from
the podium at an event in Philadelphia after struggling
to read her speech from a teleprompter.
It happened Thursday at an event honoring former
Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
Delaney is a 52-year-old Philadelphia native. Her
remarks were punctuated by long pauses and fragmented sentences. After several minutes, a video began
to play. She was escorted away from the podium to a
chair on the side of the stage by a woman who appeared
to be a producer.
Her publicist did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
The event Thursday at National Constitution Center
was in honor of Gates. He received the 2011 Liberty
Medal, a civic award, for his long public service career.

South Korean pop star Rain says he’s joining army
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean pop star
Rain is joining the army.
The 29-year-old singer and actor said Friday that he
will enlist in the South Korean military next month.
All able-bodied South Korean men are required to
serve two to three years in the military, a legacy of the
Korean War of the 1950s.
Rain, whose real name is Jung Ji-hoon, said on his
website that he hopes to come back “more mature.”
He said, “I’ll serve faithfully and diligently.”
One of Asia’s most popular stars, Rain made his
Hollywood film debut in “Speed Racer” in 2008 and
appeared in “Ninja Assassin” the following year.

Steve Martin gives Eddie Murphy Oscar-hosting tips
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Steve Martin is giving some
free advice to Eddie Murphy about hosting the Academy
Awards.
The 66-year-old entertainer posted “an open letter” to
Murphy on his website Tuesday filled with tips based on
Martin’s three Oscar-hosting stints.
“Whatever you do, don’t have a co-host,” Martin wrote.
He most recently hosted the Oscar show in 2010 with
Alec Baldwin. He also advised Murphy to “start slimming down now.”
“You looked kind of paunchy in ‘Norbit,’” Martin said.
“If you feel tired midway through,” Martin continued,
“give Neil Patrick Harris a Red Bull and throw some
sheet music at him.”
Martin also urged Murphy to “remember to relax and
have a good time while 12,000 livebloggers rip you to
shreds.”
Murphy will host the Oscar show on Feb. 26, 2012.

Dolores Hope, wife of Bob Hope, dies at 102
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dolores Hope, who was
married to entertainer Bob Hope for 69 years and sang at
his shows, has died at age 102.
Hope family spokesman Harlan Boll says Hope died
Monday at home in Los Angeles. A specific cause of
death was not available.
The death was first reported by Entertainment Tonight.
Bob Hope died in 2003 at age 100.
Dolores Reade was a nightclub singer before she married Bob Hope in 1934. She mostly stayed home with
their children before Hope began his Christmas trips to
entertain U.S. troops during World War II.
She sang for U.S. troops and on his television specials.
The Hopes made their last visit to troops overseas in
1990. Dolores Hope sang “White Christmas” in Saudi
Arabia during the run-up to Operation Desert Storm.

Denzel, Ron Howard launch
Boys &amp; Girls Club’s PSA
ATLANTA (AP) — Denzel Washington still applies
the same principles in his acting career that he learned
when he was a third grader in the Boys &amp; Girls Club
of America.
Now, the Oscar-winning actor along with director
Ron Howard want to show how the club has impacted
his life along with 20 other celebrities and entertainers, who were once members of the club.
Washington, the club’s national spokesman, took
part Wednesday in the debut of the club’s campaign
public service announcement called “Great Future
Start Here.” The PSA, which was directed by Howard,
looks to draw awareness to the high school dropout
rate, childhood obesity and youth violence.
“I want to be part of a solution,” Washington said in
a telephone interview from Washington, D.C., after
the launch of the announcement. “I want to take the
positive approach in regards to these kids. They
inspire me. We can’t focus on the problem. We have
to focus on the solution.”
Washington said when he was a member of the
Mount Vernon, N.Y., club as a third grader, his track
coach made a difference in his life just when he was
trying out for a relay team.
“This new kid who joined the track team was faster
than me, and I was worried about it,” Washington
said. “But my mentor basically told me that my natural ability would only take me so far without the fundamentals. ... Today, I still use those same lessons
thanks to what I learned from my mentor at the club.”
The video also features Jennifer Lopez, Shaquille
O’Neal, Martin Sheen, Earvin “Magic” Johnson,
Sugar Ray Leonard, Mario Lopez, Ne-Yo, Lucille
O’Neal, Ashanti, Gen. Wesley Clark, Kerry
Washington, Shaun White, Misty Copeland, John
Paul DeJoria, Smokey Robinson, C.C. Sabathia,
Courtney Vance, Edward James Olmos, Jackie
Joyner-Kersee and Cuba Gooding Jr.
The music for the spot includes Beyonce’s single “I
Was Here” from her latest album, “4.”
Howard, who was never a member of the Boys &amp;
Girls Club, said he was compelled to support the club
once he understood the impact of the organization.
“At the Boys &amp; Girls Club, there’s no pressure of a
parental point of view,” Howard said. “There’s not the
pressure of grades. It’s a nurturing environment where
each kid or individual can count for something.”

Complete list of winners from Emmy broadcast
(AP) List of winners at
Sunday’s 63rd Annual
Primetime Emmy
Awards presented by the
Academy of Television
Arts &amp; Sciences:
— Drama Series: “Mad Men,”
AMC.
— Actress, Drama Series:
Julianna Margulies, “The Good
Wife,” CBS.
— Actor, Drama Series: Kyle
Chandler, “Friday Night Lights,”
DirecTV/NBC.
— Supporting Actor, Drama
Series: Peter Dinklage, “Game of
Thrones,” HBO.
— Supporting Actress, Drama
Series: Margo Martindale,
“Justified,” FX.
— Writing, Drama Series: Jason
Katims, “Friday Night Lights,”
NBC.
— Directing, Drama Series:
Martin Scorsese, “Boardwalk
Empire,” HBO.
— Comedy Series: “Modern
Family,” ABC.
— Actor, Comedy Series: Jim
Parsons, “The Big Bang Theory,”
CBS.
— Actress, Comedy Series:
Melissa McCarthy, “Mike &amp;
Molly,” CBS.
— Supporting Actress, Comedy
Series: Julie Bowen, “Modern
Family,” ABC.
— Supporting Actor, Comedy
Series: Ty Burrell, “Modern
Family,” ABC.
— Writing, Comedy Series:

Steven Levitan and Jeffrey
Richman, “Modern Family,” ABC.
— Directing, Comedy Series:
Michael Spiller, “Modern Family,”
ABC.
— Miniseries or Movie:
“Downton Abbey (Masterpiece),”
PBS.
— Actress, Miniseries or Movie:
Kate Winslet, “Mildred Pierce,”
HBO.
— Actor, Miniseries or Movie:
Barry Pepper, “The Kennedys,”
ReelzChannel.
— Supporting Actress,
Miniseries or Movie: Maggie
Smith, “Downton Abbey
(Masterpiece),” PBS.
— Supporting Actor, Miniseries
or Movie: Guy Pearce, “Mildred
Pierce,” HBO.
— Directing, Miniseries, Movie
or Dramatic Special: Brian
Percival, “Downton Abbey
(Masterpiece),” PBS.
— Writing, Miniseries, Movie or
Dramatic Special: Julian
Fellowes, “Downton Abbey
(Masterpiece),” PBS.
— Reality-Competition
Program: “The Amazing Race,”
CBS.
— Variety, Music or Comedy
Series: “The Daily Show With
Jon Stewart,” Comedy Central.
— Directing, Variety, Music or
Comedy Series: Don Roy King,
“Saturday Night Live,” NBC.
— Writing, Variety, Music or
Comedy Series: “The Daily
Show With Jon Stewart,”
Comedy Central.

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