<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="850" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/850?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T09:57:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="10750">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8e5be3988607159c1e07ccbba874d092.pdf</src>
      <authentication>081679274d9899c39dbaad6ad5590f41</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1840">
                  <text>Learning
to do
without

Lady
Eagles
stunned

Meigs’
top
students

EDITORIAL s 4A

SPORTS s 1B

ALONG THE RIVER s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 20, Volume 51

Sunday, May 14, 2017 s $2

Mayor’s Partnership discusses crime in SE Ohio
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — The Mayors’ Partnership for Progress
met Thursday evening in
Bossard Memorial Library to
discuss the challenges with law
enforcement and criminal justice throughout southeast Ohio
and the Appalachian region.
The organization is a coalition of city managers and
mayors from over 60 communities throughout 13 counties in
southeast and southern Ohio.
The group serves as a networking and learning tool for
municipality leaders in order

to discuss resources and serve
as a function to team up to
meet some of the area’s toughest problems. The partnership
is formed from Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Pike,
Ross, Scioto, Vinton and Washington Counties.
Gallipolis Municipal Judge
Eric Mulford started the discussion.
“It’s a very different system
from what I’m used to,” said
Mulford as a former Gallia
assistant prosecutor. “Municipal court I would equate that
to the emergency room to a
hospital. Things move very

rapidly and we have a lot of
cases. We have a very short
amount of time to make the
right decision.”
Mulford said that if an individual was arrested without
a warrant for a felony crime,
that person was brought before
the municipal court. The
court has 10 days to either
give that person time to hire
or get an appointed attorney
to represent them. The court
also holds preliminary hearings
to determine whether there is
probable cause.
“Where we do a lot of our
See CRIME | 5A

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Publishing

From left to right, Gallipolis Municipal Judge Eric Mulford discusses the
challenges of law enforcement in Gallia County with Gallipolis City Solicitor
Adam Salisbury and Gallipolis Police Chief Jeff Boyer.

Holzer announces
pay increase for
employees
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Health System, which
includes Holzer - Gallipolis, Holzer Medical
Center - Jackson, Holzer Center for Cancer Care,
Holzer Cardiovascular Institute, a long-term care
division including senior care and assisted living
establishments in Jackson and Gallipolis, a dental
clinic, and multiple clinical and support facilities
throughout the region, has announced a two-percent wage increase for all employees.
With approximately 2,400 employees, Holzer
Health System states it remains one of the area’s
largest employers. The wage increase will take
effect on June 12, 2017.
“Holzer is proud to be able to recognize the
hard work and dedication of our staff. The business of healthcare is challenging, particularly
in rural communities. We are committed to our
patients and our staff and appreciate the community’s choice of Holzer for their healthcare needs.
Our mission is ‘Friendly Visits, Excellent Care,
Every Patient, Every Time.’ We believe this truly
deﬁnes who we are and our employees embrace
this approach to care. We are constantly working
to improve our services, most recently evident in
our emergency rooms, hospitalist services and a
team-based approach to primary care. We could
not make these improvements without the hard
work and support of our front-line staff. This pay
adjustment is simply another step in our on-going
commitment to our employees, who are a priority for our system and our community,” stated
Michael Canady, MD, CEO, Holzer Health System.
“We are committed to growth, job creation and
growing our talent internally. Even though we live
in a rural community, we have exceptional people.
We live in a wonderful part of the country that still
places a focus on family values. We are proud of
who we are and what we have to offer,” Canady,
further stated.
“All of these investments are necessary steps to
retain our great talent and recruit, at competitive
wages, new employees to join our communities.
We are blessed to live in one of the most beautiful
See HOLZER | 5A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 6A

Morgan McKinniss | OVP

On the weekend of Oct. 13, these fields will be full of vendors, crafters, food and drinks, live music, and activities for the whole family to
enjoy at the Bob Evans Farm Festival.

Bob Evans Farm Fest is returning
Planned for the weekend of Oct. 13
By Morgan McKinniss
mmckinniss@civitasmedia.com

RIO GRANDE —
Despite a year of corporate changes, the Bob
Evans Farm Festival is
set to return, being held
Oct. 13-15.
Clark Walker has been
the manager of Bob
Evans Farms for approximately 18 months, since
the passing of longtime
manager Ray McKinniss. Since that time,
the company was sold,
the fate of the farm has

been strongly debated,
and rumors have spread
throughout the community as to what the future
holds for a landmark of
Gallia County. Beginning
his work as manager of
the farm has not always
been a smooth ride for
Walker.
“Farm Fest is happening this year for sure,”
stated Walker. “And we
are excited about the
future of the farm, and
Farm Fest. We hope for
it to continue for many
years.”

With new ownership
comes new changes to
the longstanding festival, which is celebrating
its’ 47th year. Regular
attendees will be right at
home among the crafters, lumberjack exhibits,
and livestock.
“The traditions
of Farm Fest will all
be there,” Walker
explained.
He went on to tell
about some of the new
changes that are coming
for Farm Fest, some of
which the public will not
discover until Oct. 13.
“We’re excited for
what is coming up, we

hope it reaches out to
younger generations
while still maintaining
the essence of Farm
Fest,” said Walker.
Some of these changes
will be minor, barely
noticeable to the general
public. Others still could
be on the face of the
event.
As Walker put it: “We
want to see the community support Bob Evans
and the Farm, particularly by coming the Farm
Fest and having a good
time.”
Reach Morgan McKinniss at
740-446-2342 ext. 2108 or
mmckinniss@civitasmedia.com

Give some books, buy some books

B SPORTS
Sports: 1B
Classifieds: 4B-5B

By Erin Perkins
Special to OVP

C ALONG THE
RIVER
Television: 2C
Comics: 3C
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com
and visit us on facebook
to share your thoughts.

POMEROY — Books,
books and more books.
Bi-annually the Pomeroy Public Library hosts
a book sale, with the the
ﬁrst sale of 2017 held in
early May.
Tables were aligned
throughout the basement
sorting books of different
sorts for the shoppers.
A plethora of choices
surrounded the room;

ﬁction to nonﬁction,
youth to adult, hardcover
to paperback. Any book
lover would not go
empty handed from the
library. This event is a
well thought strategy
to bring in the public
and for the public to
give back to library
and the community.
The proceeds from
the sale are used for
the establishment
See BOOKS | 5A

Erin Perkins photo

A view from the recent book sale at the Pomeroy Library.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2A Sunday, May 14, 2017

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

SHIRLEY MAYO
BIDWELL — Shirley J.
Harrison Sullivan Mayo,
78, of Bidwell, passed
away at 2:58 a.m. on
Tuesday, May 9, 2017 in
the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born April 5, 1939 in
Liberty, W.Va., she was
the daughter of the late
Leonard and Virgie Landers Harrison. She was a
homemaker.
Shirley is survived by
her sons, Rick (Paula)
Sullivan, of Racine, and
Kevin Sullivan, of Huntington, W.Va., a daughter, Becky (Jim) Wyman,
of Pittsburg, Penn.,
grandchildren, Rev. Cory
(Lindsey) Sullivan, Ryan
(Haley) Sullivan, Jim
(Laurie) W. Wyman, II,
Kristen (Joe) Kline, and
Levi Sullivan. A greatgranddaughter, Molly
Wyman, a brother, Donnie Harrison and numerous nieces and nephews

also survive.
In addition to her parents, Shirley is preceded
in death by her ﬁrst husband, David Sullivan, her
second husband, Richard
Mayo, two brothers, and
a sister.
A celebration of
Shirley’s life will be held
at noon on Saturday,
May 20, 2017 in the
Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, Pomeroy. Her
grandson Rev. Cory
Sullivan will ofﬁciate.
Interment will be at
the convenience of the
family in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may
call one hour prior to the
service at the church.
The Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
is entrusted with
Shirley’s arrangements.
Expressions of sympathy
may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeenking.com.

DEATH NOTICES
HAYES
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Julia M. Hayes,
86, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away on Friday
May 12, 2017 at CAMC General in Charleston, W.Va.
Arrangements will be announced by the Deal Funeral
Home.
SHEPHERD
WILLOW WOOD — Charles Shepherd, 69, of Willow Wood, passed away Thursday, May 11, 2017 at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, W.Va.
There will be a graveside service at 1 p.m. Monday,
May 15, 2017 at Hatﬁeld Cemetery. There will be no
public visitation and Phillips Funeral Home, 1004
South Seventh Street, Ironton, OH is assisting the
family with the arrangements.
SMITH
POMEROY — Erma M. Smith, 91, of Pomeroy,
passed away Saturday, May 13, 2017 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Monday, May 15,
2017 at Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be Monday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Home.
NEU
GALLIPOLIS — Duane H. Neu, 62 of Gallipolis,
died Sunday, May 7, 2017 at Abbyshire Place.
Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
WILSON
SOUTH POINT — Clayton Wilson, 95, of South
Point, died Friday, May 12, 2017, at Woodland Hills
in Ashland, Ky.
Schneider-Hall Funeral Home in Chesapeake is in
charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.
WATTS
PROCTORVILLE — Billy Joe Watts, 78, of Proctorville, passed away Thursday, May 11, 2017 at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington,
W.Va.
Private family graveside services will be held. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio is
in charge of arrangements.

For the best local
news coverage, visit
mydailytribune.com

Civitas Media, LLC

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

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

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

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

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

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

Editor’s Note: The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and The Daily Sentinel appreciate your input to
the community calendar. To make sure items can
receive proper attention, all information should
be received by the newspaper at least ﬁve business
days prior to an event. All coming events print on
a space-available basis and in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to: GDTnews@civitasmedia.
com or TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

The Community Health Improvement Plan will be
presented for review/comment. Rio Grande Community College will provide lunch. RSVP by May
16th to Courtney Midkiff 740-992-6626 or courtney.
midkiff@meigs-health.com.

Friday, May 19

GALLIPOLIS - AFSCME retirees,Gallia and Jackson counties, subchapter 102, will meet at 2 p.m.
at the Gallia County Senior Resource Center, 1165
State Route 160, Gallipolis. The subchapter is seekPOMEROY — AA Meeting, 7 p.m., closed 12 and ing new members in the two-county area. AFSCME
(Ohio Council 8, OCSEA, and OAPSE),OPERS and
12 study, Sacred Heart Catholic Church 162 MulSERS public employee retirees and their spouses are
berry Ave.
invited to attend the next meeting. Non-AFSCME
members, who retired from the city, county, state or
school district, are also welcome to attend. We also
encourage public employees who plan to retire in
MIDDLEPORT — The May meeting of the
Meigs County Veterans Service Commission will be the near future to attend. Issues that are important
held at 9 a.m. at the ofﬁce, located at 97 N. 2nd Ave. to retirees are discussed each month. The group
usually meets the third Friday of each month. For
in Middleport.
more information, interested retirees may call 740LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the
245-0093 or 740-245-5255
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis is once again holding
at the Letart Township Building. There will be an
a city-wide yard sale May 19 and May 20. Hours of
meeting of the Letart Community Association durparticipation are from 9 a.m. to dusk. Any may dising the May 15th Letart Township meeting.
play goods for sale outside their residence or place
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at of business, so long as it is done in a manner not to
impede trafﬁc or pedestrians. There are no permits
6 p.m. at the township garage.
for the two day event and one does not need regHARRISONVILLE — The Harrisonville Senior
ister with the city. For more information, contact
Citizens will hold their ﬁrst meeting of the year at
Brett Bostic at 740-441-6022 or Bev Dunkle at 740noon with a pot luck dinner at the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall. All seniors are 441-6015.
MIDDLEPORT — Snack and Canvas with
invited to attend. Blood pressures will be taken.
Michele Musser will be held at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Art Council, 290 North 2nd Ave, Middleport,
Ohio. For more information and to reserve a space
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teach- call Michele at 740-416-0879 or Donna at 740-9925123.
ers group will meet for a noon meal at the Trinity
Congregational Church on Second Street, Pomeroy.
The speaker will be Mike Gerlach on Meigs County
History Tales. Music will be provided by the Meigs
Middle School Choir. All 740-992-3214 two days
POMEROY — The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapahead for lunch reservation. Guests are welcome.
ter of Daughters of American Revolution will meet
MIDDLEPORT — Get Healthy Meigs! will meet at 1 p.m., at the Meigs County Library in Pomeroy,
at 10:30 a.m. in the 3rd Floor conference room of
OH . The Program will be on the Civil War, prethe Meigs Co. Dept. of Jobs and Family Services.
sented by Gina Tillis.

Sunday, May 14

Monday, May 15

Thursday, May 18

Saturday, May 20

Cooperative Parish scholarships available
POMEROY — Meigs Cooperative Parish scholarship applications are available at member
churches or can be picked up at
the Parish Ofﬁce, 260 Mulberry
Ave., from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Tuesday through Friday.
Eligibility requirements
include:Applicant must attend
a participating church afﬁliated
with the Meigs Cooperative Parish and the church supports the
scholarship endowment.
Applicant must complete a
written application.
Applicant must have complet-

ed one year of higher education
after high school.
Priority will be given to students 21 years old and younger.
Applicant must maintain a
minimum grade average of 2.5,
with an ofﬁcial transcript provided.
Scholarships will be awarded
in the amount of $500 as money
is available.
Awards will be given solely on
the basis of the application.
An interview may be requested.
Applicant must be a full-time

student.
Applicants must return a completed application with an ofﬁcial
transcript to the pastor of the
church for his/her signature by
June 4. The pastor must return
the completed application to the
Cooperative Parish Ofﬁce by
June 11.
The scholarships will be
awarded at the volunteer banquet
on July 17. Checks will be sent
directly to the institution on the
application. The Parish will only
write one check per awarded
scholarship.

Despite warnings, drivers still die on flooded roads
By Jim Salter and Jim Suhr
Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Christina
Thompson was joking when
she texted her dad last month
after days of unrelenting
thunderstorms near his rural
southern Missouri home: “Are
you getting washed away?”
She didn’t realize that hours
earlier, the 69-year-old retiree
had been swept to his death as
he tried to cross a ﬂooded patch
of road to get home. William
Floyd’s body was found ﬁve days
later, still in his 2009 Kia Spectra,
which was wedged onto a log
with only its bumper and rear
tires visible.
“Why would he do that?”
Thompson asked of her father’s
ill-fated decision to drive through
the water. “I was just wondering,
‘What was he thinking?’ My dad
was smarter than that. It just
didn’t make sense.”
Such tragedies are all too
common. Despite public service
announcements, warning signs,
barriers and even gates at ﬂoodprone crossings, the majority of
ﬂood deaths in America involve
people trying to drive through
water on ﬂooded roads.

“It is frustrating,” said Todd
Shea, warning coordinator
meteorologist for the National
Weather Service in La Crosse,
Wisconsin. “It gets back to human
nature. Sometimes you look at
these cases and you just have to
shake your head.”
Data compiled by Shea shows
that 595 Americans have died
in ﬂoodwater since 2011. A few
fell into rivers or drowned while
ﬁshing on ﬂooded waterways.
And some children died playing
too close to high water. But
61 percent of victims died in
vehicles, often after driving
around barriers or ignoring signs
warning them to turn back.
Texas, with its vast rural areas
and many waterways, has had
more ﬂood-related deaths than
any other state since 2011. Nim
Kidd, chief of the Texas Division
of Emergency Management, said
too many people underestimate
the power of water and “think
emergencies and disasters happen
to somebody else.”
When torrential rains in late
April led to ﬂooding across
Missouri, ﬁve people, including
Floyd, died driving onto ﬂooded
roads. The death toll would have
been worse if not for hundreds of

water rescues.
Among those rescues were nine
calls in Joplin, the Missouri town
devastated by a 2011 tornado
that killed 153 people. Fire Chief
Jim Furgerson said rescuers put
their own lives on the line to save
people in ﬂooded cars.
“We take precautions with life
vests, we have ropes, but you
don’t know if there’s something
hidden in the water that’s going
to cut you or catch your ankle,”
Furgerson said.
Kidd was involved in countless
water rescues earlier in his career
when he was a ﬁreﬁghter in San
Antonio.
“We would ask people, ‘Why
did you drive around a barricade?’
or, ‘Why did you drive into the
water?’” he said. “The number
one answer was, ‘I didn’t know
any other way to get to where I
was going.’ We’ve got to change
that mindset.”
Ofﬁcials throughout the U.S.
are trying. Several state agencies
and the National Weather Service
have produced public service
announcement videos warning
that just a foot of water can sweep
away and car and 18-24 inches of
water can do the same to a larger
vehicle.

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 55.21
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 86.92
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.52
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 49.55
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 116.96
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 31.20
BBT (NYSE) - 43.01
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 32.11
Pepsico (NYSE) - 112.91
Premier (NASDAQ) - 19.91
Rockwell (NYSE) - 155.70

Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 14.30
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.31
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 9.49
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 75.71
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.84
WesBanco (NYSE) - 38.47
Worthington (NYSE) - 41.43
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions
May 12, 2017.

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 68.06
Akzo Nobel - 27.51
Big Lots, Inc. - 47.51
Bob Evans Farms - 66.87
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 41.65
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 13.52
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 67.71
Collins (NYSE) - 103.31
DuPont (NYSE) - 79.30
US Bank (NYSE) - 51.41
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 28.27

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, May 14, 2017 3A

Dozens of countries hit by huge cyberextortion attack
By Anick Jesdanun, Jill Lawless
and Aritz Parra
Associated Press

NEW YORK — Dozens of
countries were hit with a huge
cyberextortion attack Friday
that locked up computers and
held users’ ﬁles for ransom at a
multitude of hospitals, companies and government agencies.
It was believed to the biggest
attack of its kind ever recorded.
The malicious software
behind the onslaught appeared
to exploit a vulnerability in
Microsoft Windows that was
supposedly identiﬁed by the
National Security Agency for
its own intelligence-gathering
purposes and was later leaked
to the internet.
Britain’s national health
service fell victim, its hospitals
forced to close wards and emergency rooms and turn away
patients. Russia appeared to be
the hardest hit, according to
security experts, with the country’s Interior Ministry conﬁrming it was struck.
All told, several cybersecurity
ﬁrms said they had identiﬁed
the malicious software responsible for tens of thousands
of attacks in more than 60
countries, including the United
States, though its effects in the
U.S. did not appear to be widespread, at least in the initial

Matt Dunham | AP

Patrick Ward, 47, a sales director at Purbeck Ice Cream, from Dorset in
England, poses for photographs after giving media interviews after his heart
operation scheduled today was cancelled because of a cyberattack, outside St
Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, Friday. A large cyberattack crippled computer
systems at hospitals across England on Friday, with appointments canceled,
phone lines down and patients turned away.

hours.
Computers were infected
with what is known as “ransomware” — software that
freezes up a machine and
ﬂashes a message demanding payment to release the
user’s data. In the U.S., FedEx
reported that its Windows
computers were “experiencing
interference” from malware,
but wouldn’t say if it had been
hit by ransomware.
Mikko Hypponen, chief
research ofﬁcer at the Helsinkibased cybersecurity company

F-Secure, called the attack “the
biggest ransomware outbreak
in history.”
Security experts said the
attack appeared to be caused by
a self-replicating piece of software that enters companies and
organizations when employees
click on email attachments,
then spreads quickly internally
from computer to computer
when employees share documents and other ﬁles.
Its ransom demands start at
$300 and increase after two
hours to $400, $500 and then

$600, said Kurt Baumgartner, a
security researcher at Kaspersky Lab. Affected users can
restore their ﬁles from backups,
if they have them, or pay the
ransom; otherwise they risk
losing their data entirely.
Chris Wysopal of the software security ﬁrm Veracode
said criminal organizations
were probably behind the
attack, given how quickly the
malware spread.
“For so many organizations
in the same day to be hit, this
is unprecedented,” he said.
The security holes it
exploits were disclosed several
weeks ago by TheShadowBrokers, a mysterious group that
has published what it says
are hacking tools used by the
NSA as part of its intelligencegathering.
Shortly after that disclosure,
Microsoft announced that it
had already issued software
“patches” for those holes. But
many companies and individuals haven’t installed the ﬁxes
yet or are using older versions
of Windows that Microsoft no
longer supports and didn’t ﬁx.
By Kaspersky Lab’s count,
the malware struck at least
74 countries. In addition to
Russia, the biggest targets
appeared to be Ukraine and
India, nations where it is common to ﬁnd older, unpatched

versions of Windows in use,
according to the security ﬁrm.
Hospitals across Britain
found themselves without
access to their computers or
phone systems. Many canceled
all routine procedures and
asked patients not to come to
the hospital unless it was an
emergency. Doctors’ practices
and pharmacies reported similar problems.
Patrick Ward, a 47-yearold sales director, said his
heart operation, scheduled
for Friday, was canceled at St.
Bartholomew’s Hospital in
London.
Tom Grifﬁths, who was at
the hospital for chemotherapy,
said several cancer patients
had to be sent home because
their records or bloodwork
couldn’t be accessed.
“Both staff and patients
were frankly pretty appalled
that somebody, whoever they
are, for commercial gain or
otherwise, would attack a
health care organization,” he
said. “It’s stressful enough for
someone going through recovery or treatment for cancer.”
British Prime Minister
Theresa May said there was
no evidence patient data had
been compromised and added
that the attack had not speciﬁcally targeted the National
Health Service.

Police chief, 2 nursing home employees killed; shooter dead
By Julie Carr Smyth
and Andrew Welsh-Huggins
Associated Press

KIRKERSVILLE, Ohio — An armed
man gunned down a new village police
chief on an Ohio street on Friday and
then killed two employees in a nearby
nursing home, where he later was found
dead, a sheriff said. No nursing home
residents were injured, nor were two
hostages brieﬂy held by the alleged gunman.
The slain police chief, Steven Eric
Disario, had headed the Kirkersville
Police Department for only about three
weeks, Licking County Sheriff Randy
Thorp said. Disario was shot on a street
near the Pine Kirk Care Center, and the
two female employees and the gunman
were found dead inside, Thorp said.
Disario, 36, was a father of six children, with a seventh on the way, the
sheriff said. Flowers and ﬂags appeared
in an impromptu memorial outside the
village police hall, located less than a
block from the site of the shooting.
Thorp called it a hard day for all.
“We’ve lost a police ofﬁcer. It’s just a
tragic event,” he said. “I guess the only
peace of mind is that the threat is over.”
Thorp gave the following timeline of
events in the village of about 500 residents, roughly 25 miles (39 kilometers)
east of Columbus:
The gunman was in a wooded area
behind the nursing home when he
encountered two passers-by, whom he
temporarily took hostage.
Disario, responding to a report of a
man with a gun, apparently encountered the gunman in that area. The
chief’s last radio communication said he
had the man in sight.
When a shot was ﬁred at the chief,
the hostages escaped unharmed.

“We don’t know the cause or the purpose or what drove this individual to
do this,” Thorp said, adding that was
being investigated.
Responding ofﬁcers found Disario
on the street and then investigated
a report of a gunman at the nursing
home, Thorp said.
Some of the nursing home’s 23 residents barricaded themselves during
the shooting, but none of them was
injured, he said. All were relocated to
other facilities until investigators were
out of the nursing home.
Police did not immediately identify
the gunman. Ohio Attorney General
Mike DeWine, who came to the scene
Friday afternoon, said search warrants
had been executed on two vehicles
owned by the suspect and at his home
in Utica, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) away.
Thorp said law enforcers were still
working to determine what, if any,
relationship the man had with the nursing home. The facility is secure, and
it’s unclear how the gunman got in, he
said.
The shooting closed down the main
street in the village, which was ﬂooded
with police ofﬁcers from several surrounding agencies and with ambulances.
“We don’t have this stuff go on
around here,” said Ron Rogers, 67, a
local shopkeeper. “The only sirens we
hear are when the Fire Department
goes out.”
A woman who lives across the street
said she and her 6-year-old son heard it
happen.
“We heard it all,” said Tiffani Chester, 25. “We heard yelling, we heard the
gunshots, then it was just sirens.”
Pine Kirk is licensed for 24 patients
and had 23 as of May 3, according to

Ohio Department of Health records.
A message was left with the center,
whose employees appeared wheeling
medical carts out of the facility Friday
evening to put them into storage while
patients are away.
Peter Van Runkle, the head of the
state trade association representing
nursing homes, told the Dispatch that
Pine Kirk caters to “the forgotten
members of society.”
“They provide them with a small
environment that’s less institutional
than some facilities might be,” he said.
“They do a good job of taking care of a

niche clientele.”
The state Bureau of Criminal Investigation is leading the probe into what
happened. County Coroner Michael
Campolo didn’t expect to release
autopsy results until Sunday, after all
four victims had been examined.
Gov. John Kasich ordered ﬂags ﬂown
at half-staff in Licking County and the
Statehouse and expressed his condolences in a tweet.
“Join me in praying for his family,
friends and colleagues, and for the others injured in this tragedy,” the Republican governor said.

It is no secret that Southeastern Ohio contains the most
beautiful and remote lands that Ohio has to offer. Within
the heart of the deep forests and rolling farmlands lies the
legendary Triple Nickel. The Triple Nickel is a 62 mile route
along Ohio S.R. 555 that is guaranteed to stimulate your
inner biker. Awaken your senses with hundreds of twists,
tight turns, elevation changes and unparalleled scenery.
Ohio’s Southern Coast is a stretch of more than land...it’s
magical miles of adventures, escapes into the wilderness,
culinary experiences, fun fairs and festivals and
excitement that we affectionately call home. We invite
you and your family, your colleagues and your group to
join us at Ohio’s Southern Coast!

www.ohiossoutherncoast.org
60718560

60714604

�Editorial
4A Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Learning to
(sort of ) do
without
When faced with the loss of something
you’re readily used to having around in your
daily life, you either tough it out until it can
be part of the routine again, or
ﬁnd ways to compensate. On such
occasions when you lose that
something, you wonder how you
and others, including ancestors,
did without and still managed a
normal life. You know, the good
old days — although most reliable
Kevin
sources inform us they weren’t
necessarily good or even barely
Kelly
Contributing tolerable. In fact, compared
columnist
to today’s conveniences, those
halcyon days of yesteryear were
pretty miserable, as any viewing of
“Victorian Slum House” and past PBS programs
of its kind will reveal.
We were recently scheduled for an upgrade
of our telephone and Internet service when the
old DSL modem from AT&amp;T that had served
us faithfully for a number of years kicked the
bucket. That meant a few days of doing without
our Internet until the technician could make
his service call. Yet phone service remained
uninterrupted, much to the delight of the
robo-callers we strive to ignore thanks to the
miracle of caller ID. We then discovered, much
to our discomfort, how much we rely upon our
Internet connection for news, social media,
entertainment and sources of information.
Going online had become an ingrained form of
distraction for all of us.
Oh, there were things to ﬁll the void in our
collective attention span — regular TV, music,
reading (wow, what a concept!) and get this,
talking to each other
— but pretty soon
“Technology is all
you missed those
for the advancement moments of sitting
of convenience in
down at the desktop
our lives, or so we’re unit or tablet and
conducting your
told.”
own personal review
of what’s out there.
Because for even
somebody as old school as myself, once you
learn how to access stuff online, or indulge in
new technology, it’s hard to go back to what
previously worked.
For example, typewriters became obsolete for
me when I regularly began working at a word
processor around 1980, a great development
since I never was any good at changing ribbons.
Boiling water for a single cup of instant coffee
fell by the wayside with the purchase of a
Keurig, and passwords still crowd for space in
your brain in this increasingly technical world
in which we live. I could go on, but you get the
idea. And all of that, like or not, is okay — must
be — because it’s how we now exist, except if
you choose to go to your own Walden Pond and
live off the grid, not an unknown idea.
Technology is all for the advancement of
convenience in our lives, or so we’re told. Yet
I ﬁnd phone books still have a purpose on
those occasions when you can’t consult your
computer for a local number; a broom, dustpan,
brush and some elbow grease work just as well
as a Roomba; and I still consult books and
periodicals when doing research as much as I do
Wikipedia and the like. Clinging to yesterday,
sure, but it works for me. But technology has
provided its share of delights, one of them
streaming older and obscure movies and TV
shows into the 55-inch screen in the living
room. To be truthful, that’s what I really missed
about not having Internet, but it appears I’ll be
losing that option soon and adapt to another
means of access.
Indeed, it must be adaptability inspired by
living in an ever-changing world of upgrade and
larger capacity that keeps everyone fascinated
with technology, providing them with another
challenge to master this piece of work. Seems
we all know somebody who has to rush out
and get the newest and improved device for
communicating and functioning when it hits
the market. Must be what makes the national
economy, and credit card debt, the wonder it is
today.
So when a new modem and service was
installed — and thank you for everything, Chris
Nelson of AT&amp;T — we happily returned to our
favorite online pursuits. But at those times when
we’re disconnected or some mishap keeps us in
the dark both literally and ﬁguratively, and not
dependent on smart phones, iphones or whatever,
put your faith in simple low-tech or no-tech things
like candles, books, cards, board games or just
old-fashioned conversation until the lights and the
worldwide web are back on again.
Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
resides in Vinton, Ohio.

THEIR VIEW

Honoring a mother’s frugality
My mother died in
2010 after a dreadful
ﬁght with Parkinson’s
disease and dementia.
She was the strongest
and most selﬂess person
I’ve ever known, and I
miss her terribly.
Fortunately, she left
behind relics from her
too-short life, small
rituals that reﬂect her
spirit. In perpetuating
those rituals, I feel that
I’m honoring her and, in
a strange way, that I’m
preserving her essence
on Earth.
One such practice
was hang-drying our
clothes. Throughout her
life, my mother dutifully
deployed a clothesline
or drying rack, and I just
naturally have kept the
tradition going. It’s easy,
saves money and reduces greenhouse gases.
And it keeps me connected with my mom.
Arlys Carlson Warren began life during
the Great Depression,
one of four children
born to a welder and a
schoolteacher. After the
stock market crashed,
her father was laid off
at the naval shipyard
in Bremerton, Wash.,
and for a while, there
weren’t many potatoes
to put in the pot.
Like other Ameri-

gift rather than
can families, the
Jennifer
something storeCarlsons slowly
bought — then
rebounded, and
Warren
out of their adver- Contributing by all means we
should.
sity came a strong columnist
Hang-drying our
allegiance to
laundry was an
thrift. That ethic
— blending ﬁscal frugal- emblem of this “small-isbeautiful” life. Although
ity with the practice of
we lived in a foggy
never tossing out what
climate, my mother
might be put to another
religiously draped our
use — deﬁned my
clothes on lines and
upbringing, and I honor
racks outside or in a
it as best I can today.
musty, oversized closet
When I was a kid,
that housed the water
however, my appreciation of thrift had not yet heater. Sometimes it
took days for our sweattaken hold. In fact, I
shirts to dry, but she
found it downright
persevered, and we kids
annoying. Saturdays
rolled our eyes as she
often were spent at
described the energy we
Goodwill, where my
mother devoted hours to saved by idling our shiny
Maytag dryer.
combing dusty bins for
In many households,
random treasures as well
as clothes for me and my those time-saving dryers
caused the once-ubiquisiblings.
tous clothesline to fall
Even on vacation, our
out of favor beginning in
family rarely passed a
garage sale without pop- the 1960s. But, thanks
ping in for a look, just in to global warming, that’s
case an irresistible lamp changing now. Unlike a
solar panel or a Tesla, a
shade or soup pot or
other gem might be lurk- clothesline is a carbonfree item everyone can
ing there for a pittance.
afford. It cuts energy
Although both of my
costs by reducing reliparents worked and
ance on dryers, the gas
we were solidly middle
guzzlers of home appliclass, there hovered
around us the sense that ances, and — bonus! —
if we could make do with prolongs the life of your
clothes.
less — a smaller, more
The clothesline never
efﬁcient car, less heat in
disappeared from our
the winter, a handmade

yard, but as my mom’s
Parkinson’s disease progressed, my father took
over their household
chores, laundry included. Dad was a conservationist too, but I always
suspected he continued
hang-drying socks, skivvies and other clothes
as a tribute to my mom,
one small way to deal
with his grief during her
decline.
In my own home,
meanwhile, acceptance
of hang-drying came
grudgingly. Our two
daughters griped about
skinny jeans as stiff as
plexiglass tubes, and
nobody liked the sandpaper towels.
But priorities change.
Not long ago, we went
to visit our younger
daughter at her college
southeast of Los Angeles. As I approached her
dorm, I saw something
colorful hanging from
the railing outside her
second-ﬂoor room —
her bedsheets.
“You know, Mom,”
she explained earnestly,
“dryers use a lot of energy. This is one way I can
help conserve.”
Amen to that.
Jenifer Warren, a former Los
Angeles Times reporter, is a writer
and communications consultant in
Sacramento.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, May
14, the 134th day of
2017. There are 231 days
left in the year. This is
Mother’s Day.
Today’s Highlight in History
On May 14, 1787, delegates began gathering at
the State House in Philadelphia to draw up the
United States Constitution. However, only delegates from Virginia and
Pennsylvania had arrived
by this time, and the convention did not achieve
a quorum of seven states
until May 25.
On this date
In 1643, Louis XIV
became King of France at
age four upon the death
of his father, Louis XIII.
In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner inoculated 8-year-old James

Phipps against smallpox
by using cowpox matter.
In 1804, the Lewis
and Clark expedition to
explore the Louisiana
Territory as well as the
Paciﬁc Northwest left
camp near present-day
Hartford, Illinois.
In 1900, the Olympic
games opened in Paris as
part of the 1900 World’s
Fair.
In 1925, the Virginia
Woolf novel “Mrs Dalloway” was ﬁrst published
in England and the
United States.
In 1942, Aaron Copland’s “Lincoln Portrait”
was ﬁrst performed by
the Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra.
In 1948, according to
the current-era calendar,
the independent state of
Israel was proclaimed in
Tel Aviv.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
“A mother becomes a true grandmother the day she
stops noticing the terrible things her children do
because she is so enchanted with the wonderful things
her grandchildren do.”
— Lois Wyse, American advertising executive, author
and columnist (1926-2007).

In 1955, representatives from eight Communist bloc countries,
including the Soviet
Union, signed the Warsaw Pact in Poland. (The
Pact was dissolved in
1991.)
In 1961, Freedom
Riders were attacked by
violent mobs in Anniston
and Birmingham, Alabama.
In 1973, the United
States launched Skylab 1, its ﬁrst manned
space station. (Skylab 1
remained in orbit for six

years before burning up
during re-entry in 1979.)
The National Right to
Life Committee was
incorporated.
In 1987, actress Rita
Hayworth died in New
York at age 68.
In 1998, singer-actor
Frank Sinatra died at a
Los Angeles hospital at
age 82. The hit sitcom
“Seinfeld” aired its ﬁnal
episode after nine years
on NBC.
Ten years ago:
See HISTORY | 6A

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA, MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, May 14
POMEROY — Kevin Spencer in concert, Hillside
Baptist Church, 39724 S.R. 143, Sunday evening service, 6 p.m.
SYRACUSE — Dennis Moore will be singing and
preaching at 6:30 p.m. at Syracuse Community Community Church, Second Street, Syracuse. Everyone
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m. Sunday
School at 10 a.m. studying Sermon on the Mount.
Worship at 10:30 a.m. Pastor Bob Hood. 2337 Johnson Ridge Road.; (740-446-7495 or 740-709-6107).
Everyone is welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — Breakfast for the Ladies in the
Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Morning Worship Service
– Happy Mother’s Day, 10:45 a.m.; No evening worship; First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.
with Pastor Douglas Downs.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
Sunday School 10 a.m., evening service 6 p.m.

Monday, May 15
GALLIA COUNTY — National Peace Ofﬁces’
Memorial Day and National Police Week.

Tuesday, May 16
GALLIPOLIS — Christian Care Circle Ladies meeting 10:30 a.m. at Bob Evans in Rio Grande, studying
women of the New Testament.

Wednesday, May 17
POMEROY — A free movie night will be held
at Common Grounds Mission, 216 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy at 6 p.m. The movie will be The Letters:
Untold Stories of Mother Theresa. Refreshments will
be served.
GALLIPOLIS — Bible study at 6 p.m., “Finding
Hope when life seems Dark” by Kay Arthur and Pete
DeLacy, Pastor Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian Church.
2337 Johnson Ridge Road.; (740-446-7495 or 740-7096107). Everyone is welcome.
HARRISON TOWNSHIP — Donnie Massie will
preach at Dickey Chapel at 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS — Children’s ministry, 6:45 p.m.,
Youth “Impact 127” in the teen room, 7 p.m., prayer
and praise in the sanctuary, 7 p.m., choir practice 7
p.m., First Church of the Nazarene.
ADDISON — Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
business meeting and Bible study, 7 p.m.

Thursday, May 18
ADDISON —Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
ladies aid meeting, 6:30 p.m.

Friday, May 19
GALLIPOLIS — Prayer Force 8:45 a.m. in the Harmon Chapel First Church of the Nazarene.

Saturday, May 20
GALLIPOLIS — Ariel Opera House, Tri-County
Gospel Sing 6 p.m.

Holzer
From page 1A

and relaxed places in the country and are proud to
be a community-focused organization,” added Brent
Saunders, chairman of the board, Holzer Health System.
Information for this article submitted by Holzer Health System.

Books
From page 1A

and betterment of the youth programs the library
holds for our community’s children.
One of the friends of the library, Joyce Lindquist,
said that the material used for the sale is either overstock from the library’s shelves or donations from the
public. Anyone wishing to donate books can do so
at anytime of the year and they can donate as many
books as they see ﬁt.
The buyers can purchase as many books as they can
carry, or even more, at the amount of money they can
spare. The range of donations from customers varies,
but any amount of money given is helpful to keep this
event running and successful.
The next sale of the year will be held the ﬁrst
Thursday and Friday of October.

Crime

Sunday, May 14, 2017 5A

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs and Gallia Briefs will
only list event information that is open to the public
and will be printed on a space-available basis.

Meeting
change
SYRACUSE — The regular May meeting of Syracuse Village Council has been rescheduled for 7 p.m.
on May 17.

Road
closure
MEIGS COUNTY — County Road 28, Locust
Grove Road, will be closed for slip repair beginning
Monday, May 15, and continuing for approximately
two weeks. The slip is located 1.10 miles north of
State Route 248.

Immunization
clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
pneumonia; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination and availability or
visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

Clean Up Day
volunteers needed
POMEROY — Volunteers, age 13 and older, are
needed for the Meigs County Clean Up Day Event
from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturday, May 20. Pizza,
snacks and t-shirts will be provided for all volunteers. To register contact Betsy Entsminger at 740992-4629.

Memorial Day
parade preparations
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Memorial Day
Parade will be held on Monday, May 29, organized
by the Gallia County Veterans Service Commission.
All veteran service organizations, businesses, foundations and other community support groups are
invited and encouraged to participate in the parade.
Individuals or groups interested in participating
in the Memorial Day Parade are asked to please
contact the Gallia County Veterans Service Ofﬁce
at 740-446-2005 no later than Friday May 26. The
parade will begin at 10:30 a.m. and end at City Park
at approximately 11 a.m. with a ceremony to follow.
Again, we thank all the members of the community
for their contribution in paying tribute to those that
have gone before us.

Alumni
banquets
POMEROY — Tickets are now on sale for alumni
and guests for the Pomeroy High School Alumni
Banquet to be held on Saturday, May 27, 2017 in
the Meigs High School Cafeteria. Social hour begins
at 5:30, with the banquet being served at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at Francis
Florists, 252 East Main Street, Pomeroy, or by mailing a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Pomeroy
Alumni Association, Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Anniversary years will be 1942, 1947, 1952,

1957, 1962 and 1967.
RACINE — Southern High School Class of 1977
reunion, 3 p.m., Saturday, May 27, at the Racine
American Legion Hall. This is a covered dish event.
For more information call Bobbi at 740-416-3422,
Jerrena at 740-416-1934, Alisa at 740-949-8003.
LETART — The Wahama High School Class of
‘76 will hold a class reunion on Saturday, May 20, at
1 p.m. at the Letart Community Center in Letart,
W.Va. Class members are asked to bring a covered
dish. For more info, contact Christy Ohlinger at
304-514-2027 or Kim Gerlach at 304-593-3502.
LETART — The Wahama High School Class of
‘77 will hold a 40th class reunion on Saturday, June
3, at 1 p.m. at the Letart Community Center in
Letart, W.Va. Class members are asked to bring a
covered dish. For more info, contact Ralph Ohlinger
at 304-514-2027.
SYRACUSE — The Southern High School Class
of 1964 will be having a reunion potluck/picnic on
Saturday, May 27, at noon at the Syracuse Community Center. If the weather is nice, the reunion will
be held at the shelter house; if not, inside the community center. For more information, contact Carol
Reed at 740-949-2910.
MASON — Wahama High School Class of 1972
will be holding it’s 45th class reunion, May 20 at
Riverside Golf Course Clubhouse. Finger foods and
refreshments will be served. Starts at 6 p.m. and
lasts until tired of reminiscing. There is no charge
for attending the reunion but classmates will take
up donations to award to a Wahama program which
beneﬁts others. For more information you can contact Maria or Dave Morgan at 304-675-5929.
GALLIA COUNTY — Kyger Creek High School
alumni will hold their annual event May 27 at 7
p.m. at the American Legion Hall in Point Pleasant, W.Va. on 100 Second Street. Guests graduating between the years 1957 and 1992 are invited.
Special classes honored will have reserved tables
provided. Music will be provided by a DJ along with
door prizes and snacks. Teachers who taught the
years of the alumni are also invited. RSVP to Sherry
Roberts at 740-446-1864, or Avalee Swisher 304675-4831 or Steve Henderson, Barton Stump, John
Daniels, Don Johnson or Robert Polcyn. This event
is following the KCHS annual dinner to be held in
Life United Methodist Church Hall in Addison at 5
p.m. The banquet will be held May 27 at the River
of Life United Methodist Church Fellowship Room
at 35 Hillview Drive, Gallipolis. Registration begins
at 5 p.m. and the meal at 6 p.m. Reservations can
be made by sending $20 to KCHS Alumni, Carolyn
Holland, 194 Stingy Creek Road, Cheshire, OH
45620, Reservations need made by May 17.
GALLIA COUNTY — Reservations can be made
with Diane Russell, 158 Shively Road, Vinton, OH
45686, for the alumni banquet of Vinton, Bidwell,
North Gallia and River Valley High Schools. Checks
can be payable to Vinton Area Alumni Association.
No phone reservations and no children under 12
allowed. Registration will be held at 5 p.m. with a
social hour at Vinton Elementary and a 6:30 p.m.
dinner and program. The association asks for $18 a
person. The event will be held May 27. Send reservations by May 15 to Diane Russell at 158 Shively
Road, Vinton, OH 45686.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia Academy High
School alumni reunion will be held at the Gallia
Academy Middle School at the corner of Fourth
Avenue and State Street on Saturday, July 1. All
GAHS alumni and friends urged to attend. Doors
will open at 10 a.m. At noon, a catered lunch will
be served. Drew Van Sickle and Hollie Bostic will
speak after having been recognized the 23016
Alumni Board Scholarship winners. Megan Wise,
2017 Alumni of the Year, will be honored. An
information and reservation form will be mailed
to GAHS graduates.
BIDWELL —The event will be hosted at River
Valley Middle School as the 95th such event
featuring the classes of 1902 to 1957 on May 27
from 3 to 6 p.m. Cost is $5 a person and payable
at the door. For more information call Donna
Broyles at 740-446-2071 or write to 85 Locust St,
Gallipolis, or call Herman Sprague at 740-4462565. Attendees are encouraged to bring a classmate or friend.

Rotary honors Southern academic honor students
RACINE — The MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club
recognized three students
during the 27th annual
Southern Local Academic
Banquet.
The names of three students
were drawn from the group
of 41 elementary honorees.

incarcerating the defendant
in jail.”
Mulford said he knew that
From page 1A
the city manager and city
work is with the misdemeanor commissioners often have a
tough job because the jails in
cases,” said Mulford. “From
the area have no space.
a standpoint of a lot of the
Many of the leaders in the
municipalities, the problem
room echoed a similar sentiwith misdemeanors, unlike
ment with concerns about
common pleas or juvenile
lack of jail space. A recent
court where you’re supposed
bill passed by the Ohio House
to rehabilitate the offender
of Representatives looks to
and take into account what
resources you have before sen- put $1.25 million towards
a regional jail facility in
tencing, in municipal court
Franklin Furnace in Scioto
the purposes and principles
County. According to a previof sentencing are to punish
ous conversation with State
the offender and protect the
Representative Ryan Smith
public. From a judge’s per(R-Bidwell), the facility would
spective, that to me means

The selected students were
presented with a certiﬁcate of
congratulations and a $50 bill
from the rotary club.
Receiving awards were
Allyson Anderson, daughter
of Jamie and Heidi Anderson
(4th grade); Jonah Diddle, son
of Shawn and Amy Diddle (7th

hold 150 and would ideally be
used for surrounding southern and southeastern Ohio
counties in need of inmate
space.
Gallipolis City Police
Chief Boyer said prisoner
transports traveling several
counties a way, which the
city has reached agreements
with, sometimes takes several
hours. Due to a full local jail,
this puts pressure on local
police with already thin budgets and low ofﬁcer counts.
Gallipolis City Solicitor
Adam Salisbury said the city
utilized trafﬁc diversion and
criminal diversion programs
in an attempt to alleviate

grade); and David Gregory
Shaver, son of Barry and Beth
Shaver (8th grade).
Retired Southern Local
educator Robert Beegle made
the presentation on behalf of
the Rotary Club. The club has
been making presentation to the
students for at least 20 years.

pressure on the law enforcement system in the area.
A digital trafﬁc class was
recently brought to Gallia in
order for trafﬁc offenders to
register for courses in order
to lessen court penalties. The
chief of police and the solicitor also described the city’s
“day report program” which
put low tier and nonviolent
offenders to work perhaps
painting a building or cleaning the pool.
With the diversion courses
though, city ofﬁcials say
the jail budget in the past
has been close to around
$300,000.
Among other topics covered

were the municipal court’s
drug court program. While
it had its criticisms, Mulford said the court system
was effective and could turn
offenders into productive citizens of society. It took time
and resources.
Salisbury said that while it
make take time and resources,
many times those who repeatedly caused crimes were
maybe “10 percent” of those
in society. Making certain an
offender was not repeating an
action alleviated future burden on the court system.
Dean Wright can be reached at 7400-4462342, ext. 2103.

�NEWS/WEATHER

6A Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pope cheered in Fatima to honor children who urged peace
Associated Press

FATIMA, Portugal — Pope
Francis urged Catholics on
Friday to “tear down all
walls” and spread peace as he
traveled to this Portuguese
shrine town to mark the
100th anniversary of one of
the most unique events of the
20th-century Catholic Church:
the visions of the Virgin Mary
reported by three illiterate
shepherd children and the
“secrets” she told them.
Thousands of pilgrims lined
Francis’ motorcade route and
tossed ﬂower petals, evidence
that Latin America’s ﬁrst
pope has a huge following in
this largely Catholic country.
Cheers of “Viva o papa!” —
“Long live the pope” — erupted when Francis pulled into
Fatima’s main square, which
had been doused by heavy
rains but was treated to a brilliant warm sun by the time he
arrived.
There was no ofﬁcial crowd
estimate, but the main square
has a capacity of 600,000 and
was overﬂowing. Authorities
said they expected 1 million
people.
“It is a big emotion because

History
From page 4A

DaimlerChrysler said it was
selling almost all of Chrysler
to private equity ﬁrm Cerberus
Capital Management for
$7.4 billion, backing out of a
troubled 1998 takeover. The
trial of suspected al-Qaida
operative Jose Padilla (hohZAY’ puh-DEE’-uh) opened
in Miami. (Padilla and two
co-defendants were convicted
of terrorism conspiracy and

leaving golden roses at Marian
shrines.
In a prayer, he urged the
faithful to follow in the footsteps of the young shepherds
and spread peace even in times
of war.
“We will tear down all walls
and cross every frontier, as we
go out to every periphery, to
make known God’s justice and
peace,” he said.
The Fatima mystery has
fascinated Catholics and nonCatholics alike for a century,
blending visions of the Virgin,
supernatural meteorological
events and apocalyptic messages of hell, World War II,
Alessandra Tarantino | AP communism and the death of
Pope Francis prays at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fatima Friday in Fatima, a pope.
It all began on May 13, 1917,
Portugal. Pope Francis will canonize on Saturday two poor, illiterate shepherd
children whose visions of the Virgin Mary 100 years ago marked one of the most when three cousins, aged 7-10,
important events of the 20th-century Catholic Church.
Francisco and Jacinta Marto
and Lucia dos Santos, reported
that they had seen a vision of
He is hoping the message of
it is the ﬁrst time he comes
the Virgin Mary as they grazed
peace that they reported 100
here, and we are always
their sheep. They returned to
years ago, when Europe was
hopeful that something can
the same spot in the coming
in the throes of World War I,
improve,” said Laurindo
will resonate with the Catholic months and reported similar
Pereira, a 55-year-old carpenvisions.
ter. “It is faith. In everything, it faithful today.
Portuguese church ofﬁcials
During an evening vigil at
is about faith and it is a beautiinitially doubted them. Many
the chapel built on the site of
ful thing.”
the apparitions, Francis bowed doubters, though, became
Francis is spending fewer
his head in silent prayer before believers after the so-called
than 24 hours in Fatima to
“miracle of the sun” on Oct.
the statue of the Virgin and
celebrate the centenary of the
left a gold-leaf rose at its base, 13, 1917. The children had
apparitions and canonize two
predicted that the Virgin would
of the three shepherd children. following a tradition of popes

perform a miracle that day, and
tens of thousands of people
ﬂocked to Fatima and saw
what witnesses reported was a
vision of the sun “spinning” in
the sky and zigzagging toward
Earth.
The Portuguese church
declared the visions authentic
in 1930.
The children reported that
the Madonna revealed to them
three “secrets,” and urged
them to pray for peace and
turn away from sin. Francisco
and Jacinta Marto died of
inﬂuenza two years later, and
will be declared saints by the
pope Saturday, the 100th anniversary of the initial vision.
Lucia, who later became a
nun and wrote of the children’s
experiences, is on track for
beatiﬁcation, the ﬁrst step
toward becoming a saint. Her
case couldn’t begin until after
her death in 2005.
Francis’ deputy, Cardinal
Pietro Parolin, has said the
importance of Fatima lies in
the fact that poor, illiterate
children — not the wealthy,
the learned or intellectuals — were able to convey a
powerful message of love and
forgiveness at a time of war,
when “the talk was of hatred,
vendetta, hostilities.”

George Lucas is 73. Actress
Meg Foster is 69. Movie director Robert Zemeckis is 66.
Rock singer David Byrne is 65.
Actor Tim Roth is 56. Rock
singer Ian Astbury (The Cult)
is 55. Rock musician C.C. (aka
Cecil) DeVille is 55. Actor
Danny Huston is 55. Rock
musician Mike Inez (Alice In
Chains) is 51. Fabrice Morvan
(ex-Milli Vanilli) is 51. Rhythmand-blues singer Raphael
Saadiq is 51. Actress Cate
Blanchett is 48. Singer Danny
Wood (New Kids on the Block)
is 48. Movie writer-director

Soﬁa Coppola (KOH’-pah-lah)
is 46. Actor Gabriel Mann is
45. Singer Natalie Appleton
(All Saints) is 44. Singer Shanice is 44. Actress Carla Jimenez
is 43. Rock musician Henry
Garza (Los Lonely Boys) is 39.
Alt-country musician-singer
Ketch Secor is 39. Rock singermusician Dan Auerbach is 38.
Rock musician Mike Retondo
(Plain White T’s) is 36. Actress
Lina Esco is 32. Actress Amber
Tamblyn is 34. Facebook cofounder Mark Zuckerberg is
33. Actress Miranda Cosgrove
is 24.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

58°

75°

75°

Mostly sunny, a shower this afternoon. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 81° / Low 54°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.69
2.29
1.74
15.00
15.12

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

First

May 18 May 25 Jun 1

Full

Jun 9

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

Major
Today 2:47a
Mon. 3:39a
Tue. 4:32a
Wed. 5:24a
Thu. 6:15a
Fri.
7:03a
Sat.
7:50a

Minor
8:58a
9:51a
10:44a
11:36a
12:00a
12:51a
1:37a

Major
3:10p
4:03p
4:56p
5:48p
6:39p
7:27p
8:14p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
81/54
Very High

Minor
9:22p
10:15p
11:08p
---12:27p
1:15p
2:02p

WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature at Climax, Colo.,
sank to 10 degrees below zero on
May 14, 1896. That is the coldest
temperature ever recorded in the
United States in May.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
12.37
21.24
23.74
12.45
12.88
24.68
11.90
30.68
36.65
12.27
29.40
36.20
31.00

Portsmouth
81/56

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.02
-0.01
-0.67
-0.33
+0.12
-0.73
+0.04
-1.47
-1.08
-0.36
-2.20
-0.80
-2.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Abundant sunshine

Partly sunny and hot

Partly sunny and
warm with a t-storm

Logan
77/53

Murray City
76/51
Belpre
78/52

Athens
77/53

85°
59°

89°
66°

A t-storm possible in
An afternoon
the afternoon
thunderstorm possible

St. Marys
76/49

Parkersburg
76/51

Coolville
77/52

Elizabeth
78/52

Spencer
78/54

Buffalo
80/55
Milton
81/56

Clendenin
79/52

St. Albans
80/55

Huntington
80/57

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
56/45
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
63/50
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
71/54
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
82/57

Ashland
82/57
Grayson
81/58

FRIDAY

Marietta
76/49

Wilkesville
79/53
POMEROY
Jackson
80/54
79/53
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
80/54
80/54
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
80/57
GALLIPOLIS
81/54
80/53
80/54

South Shore Greenup
81/57
80/55

59

88°
63°

McArthur
77/53

Very High

Primary: walnut, pine, oak
Mold: 781

THURSDAY

90°
66°

Adelphi
77/53
Chillicothe
78/54

WEDNESDAY

87°
63°

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

Waverly
79/54

Pollen: 87

Low

MOON PHASES

TUESDAY

Partly sunny and
pleasant

0

Primary: ascospores

Today
Mon.
6:17 a.m. 6:16 a.m.
8:33 p.m. 8:34 p.m.
11:49 p.m.
none
9:09 a.m. 9:57 a.m.

MONDAY

80°
55°

Statistics for Friday

60°
56°
74°
52°
90° in 1956
34° in 1913

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

headed to a casino in rainy
conditions crashed north of
Laredo, Texas, killing eight
people and injuring 44 others.
Hundreds of climate activists marched to the site of
two reﬁneries in northwest
Washington state to call for a
break from fossil fuels, while
a smaller group continued to
block railroad tracks leading to
the facilities for a second day.
Today’s Birthdays: Photorealist artist Richard Estes is
85. Actress Sian Phillips is 84.
Former Sen. Byron Dorgan,
D-N.D., is 75. Movie producer

material support after a
three-month trial; Padilla was
originally sentenced to 17 years
in prison, but that sentence
was lengthened in 2014 to 21
years.)
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama sought to tarnish Republican Mitt Romney
as a corporate titan who got
rich by cutting rather than creating jobs; Romney’s campaign
responded that the former
Massachusetts governor alone
helped spur more public and
private jobs than Obama had.
One year ago: A charter bus

Charleston
79/55

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
68/45

Billings
65/44

Montreal
58/45

Minneapolis
82/60

Denver
76/48

Detroit
69/44

Toronto
61/42

New York
66/52

Chicago
76/50

Washington
77/54

Kansas City
83/62

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
84/55/s
55/43/pc
82/62/s
67/53/pc
73/49/pc
65/44/pc
60/39/pc
49/46/r
79/55/s
83/58/s
67/44/c
76/50/s
79/59/s
68/46/pc
76/53/pc
90/68/pc
76/48/pc
87/66/s
69/44/pc
84/72/sh
88/64/pc
81/58/s
83/62/s
84/60/s
82/56/s
71/54/pc
83/62/s
87/74/t
82/60/pc
84/58/s
83/66/s
66/52/t
86/63/s
88/67/pc
71/51/t
93/66/s
69/43/pc
48/43/r
83/61/s
80/55/pc
85/62/s
70/53/s
63/50/pc
56/45/sh
77/54/pc

Hi/Lo/W
81/49/s
62/45/s
88/63/s
68/54/pc
72/50/s
66/43/pc
65/43/pc
57/51/r
76/54/pc
86/61/s
69/46/s
80/63/pc
81/59/pc
66/49/s
76/57/s
91/68/s
79/46/s
91/70/s
72/52/s
84/73/sh
88/69/s
82/61/pc
88/68/s
77/58/s
85/62/s
66/53/pc
84/62/s
89/75/pc
77/65/t
87/61/s
85/65/pc
68/53/pc
88/65/s
89/66/pc
71/52/pc
86/61/s
70/47/s
55/44/r
83/57/s
77/50/s
89/66/s
71/49/s
64/52/pc
53/45/r
74/53/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
82/62

High
Low

El Paso
91/62
Chihuahua
94/55

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

104° in McAllen, TX
23° in Squaw Valley, CA

Global
High
117° in Matam, Senegal
Low -29° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
88/64
Monterrey
93/67

Miami
87/74

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
RACINE
SYRACUSE
promise to make you feel right at home.
740-949-2210
740-992-6333

60701680

By Nicole Winfield, Barry Hatton
and Trisha Thomas

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Van
knocks out
Wildcats
INSIDE s 3B
#?8.+CM��+C�� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

Lady Eagles stunned by Trimble, 6-4
By Alex Hawley

Trimble (8-14) — which lost
its ﬁrst 12 games of the season,
but has won eight of its last 10
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — — broke the scoreless tie in the
There’s no such thing as a sure top of the second inning, when
Kym Williams blasted a solo
win.
home run.
The top-seeded Eastern
Eastern (17-5) — which
softball team had won eight
entered play with a three-game
straight Division IV sectional
winning streak —tied the game
titles and the Lady Eagles
at one with two outs in the botswept eighth-seeded Trimble
tom of the fourth inning, when
by counts of 28-2 and 12-8 in
Courtney Fitzgerald singled
the regular season.
home Katlyn Barber. Later in
Unfortunately for the hosts,
the frame, EHS took a 2-1 lead,
none of that mattered on
as Abbie Hawley single home
Thursday evening at Don
Jackson Field in Meigs County, Kelsey Casto.
The Lady Eagle lead was
as the visiting Lady Tomcats
short-lived, however, as Rhianclaimed a 6-4 victory and the
spot in the district tournament. non Brown drew a bases loaded

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Abbie Hawley hauls in a long fly ball during the Lady Eagles’
sectional final loss to Trimble, on Thursday in Tuppers Plains.

walk with one out in the top of
the ﬁfth, bringing Alyssa Turley around to score and tie the
game at two.
Trimble took the lead on
the very next at-bat, as Skylar
Moore hit a three-run triple.
Moore then came around to
score on a throwing error, giving the guests a 6-2 advantage.
With one out in the top of
the ﬁfth, the Lady Eagles got
two runs back, as Katlyn Barber launched a two-run home
run.
Eastern brought the potential
go-ahead run to the plate in the
bottom of the sixth inning, but
See TRIMBLE | 2B

Lady Tornadoes
win sectional, 6-0
over Waterford
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD, Ohio — Throw the regular season out the window, this is tournament time.
The sixth-seeded Southern softball team lost
twice to third-seeded Waterford in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division play this season, but in
Thursday’s Division IV sectional ﬁnal in Washington County, the Lady Tornadoes took their
revenge.
Southern (11-11) blasted three home runs and
held Waterford (15-8) to just ﬁve hits, as the Purple and Gold punched their ticket to the district
tournament, with a 6-0 win.
The Lady Tornadoes stranded a baserunner on
second in the second inning, and then left one on
third in the third. The Lady Wildcats left the bases
loaded in the bottom of the third inning and never
reached third base again.
The game-winning run was scored with one
out in the top of the fourth inning, as SHS junior
catcher Paige VanMeter launched a solo home run.
With two outs in the fourth, Katie Barton singled
home Lauren Lavender, giving the guests a 2-0
advantage.
Southern’s lead grew to 4-0 with two outs in
the top of the ﬁfth, as VanMeter hit a her second
homer, this time of the two-run variety.
After a scoreless sixth frame, SHS scored the
ﬁnal two runs of the win with two outs in the top
of the seventh, when Sydney Cleland connected
for a two-run home run.
Sydney Cleland was the winning pitcher in a
complete game for SHS, striking out one, walking
two and allowing ﬁve hits.
“Paige (VanMeter) and Sydney (Cleland) did an
absolutely phenomenal job calling and pitching the
game tonight,” SHS head coach Alan Crisp said.
“The ﬁrst time we faced Waterford, they had 17
hits. The second time we faced them, they had 15.
They only had ﬁve tonight.”
Smitley struck out one and walked one in a complete game loss for Waterford, allowing six runs
and 10 hits.
The Lady Tornadoes had a trio of players go
2-for-3 in the win. VanMeter recorded two home
runs, two runs scored and three runs batted in,
Sierra Cleland recorded a double and a single,
while Barton singled twice and drove in one run.
Sydney Cleland helped her own cause with a
home run, one run scored and two RBIs. Lavender
and Jaiden Roberts both doubled once and scored
once in the win, while Josie Cundiff contributed a
single and a run scored.
See SECTIONAL | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Monday, May 15
Baseball
(3) Eastern vs. (2) Portsmouth Clay at Paint
Stadium, 7 p.m.
Softball
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Tennis
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 16
Baseball
(3) Portsmouth ND vs. (2) Southern at Paint
Stadium, 7 p.m.
Meigs at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Division II districts at Meigs HS, 4 p.m.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy’s John Stout (7) sprints toward third base as Athens infielders Joseph Thomas (5) and Nate Trainer (16) await a relay
throw during Thursday’s Division II sectional championship baseball game at Athens High School’s Rannow Field.

Athens ends Blue Devils’ season
By Paul Boggs

league mark en route
to capturing its second
straight OVC title, GAHS
made a blue-painted
THE PLAINS, Ohio
—Unfortunately for these shovel its object in the
shovel-bearing Blue Dev- dugout at each and every
ils, they ﬁnally dug them- contest.
However, the four-spots
selves a hole too deep to
on Thursday, against last
dig out of.
That’s because the Gal- year’s regional runner-up
lia Academy High School and this year’s Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
baseball team, in falling
behind by four runs three champions, were just too
times on Thursday, fell to much to overcome.
Despite the surge to
the host Athens Bulldogs
get within 5-4 and with
9-4 in a Division II secthe go-ahead run on ﬁrst
tional championship tilt
base, the Blue Devils
at Rannow Field in The
deﬁnitely didn’t start the
Plains.
The Blue Devils trailed game well.
In their opening at-bat
4-0 following the opening
inning and 5-1 after two, off Athens pitcher Brody
then rallied to within 5-4 Rodgers, they went three
following four-and-a-half. up and three down on
three swinging strikeouts.
But the Bulldogs bit
Meanwhile, the Bullback in the ﬁfth frame
with three unearned runs dogs banged out four
runs on ﬁve hits off Gallia
— once again extending
Academy ace Josh Faro.
the advantage to four
“That’s (Athens) a
(8-4).
Finally, Athens —with pretty good offensive
ace pitcher Brendan Sano team, and I don’t think
(Josh) Faro was settled in
on in relief and fully in
to start. I don’t know if it
command — added an
had anything to do with
insurance marker in the
sixth on Joseph Thomas’ the bullpen before the
game, but it just didn’t
RBI-single.
look like he was settled
For the Blue Devils, it
was their second consecu- in. But you can’t take anytive loss as a seventh-seed thing away from Athens.
They can smash it,” said
in the sectional tournaGAHS coach Rich Corvin.
ment, as they end their
“Once he (Faro) settled
season at 15-9 and as
down about the fourth
Ohio Valley Conference
(inning), we were down
co-champions.
only 5-4 at that point, but
Athens, the second
in the (bottom) ﬁfth we
seed in the sectional
give up a walk and have
which defeated the Blue
an error, it just fell apart
Devils 6-2 in a regularthere. We’re right back
season tilt 10 days ago,
raised its stellar record to to being down four runs
again.”
21-3 — and advanced to
The Blue Devils got
the Division II districts.
down 4-0 to begin with
In rallying from an 0-2

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

— when Andy Kostival
and Sano singled to center to lead off, then Brock
Stewart struck a double
to cross Kostival and
Sano.
Thomas walked with
one out, then Reece
Lonas laced a two-run
single to left —scoring both Stewart and
Thomas.
The two teams then
exchanged single
unearned runs in the
second, as Brody Thomas
led off with a single for
Gallia Academy — before
Braden Simms singled
him home with two outs.
Sano — starting as the
designated hitter for the
Bulldogs — singled in
Kostival, who reached on
an error.
The Bulldogs ﬁnished
with 11 hits off Faro, who
faced 33 batters in going
the distance and taking
the pitching loss.
Only ﬁve of his nine
runs allowed were
earned, as he walked
three and hit one while
striking out three.
Lonas led Athens with
three hits, including
another two-run single in
the ﬁfth to make it 7-4.
Indeed, the Blue Devils
did battle back, as they
got to Rodgers for seven
hits and two walks in his
opening three and twothirds.
As a team, Gallia Academy amassed 10 hits
—none bigger than John
Stout’s solo home run to
left ﬁeld in the third to
make it 5-2.
In the fourth, the Blue
Devils got to within 5-4,
when Simms drew a one-

out walk before Stout
doubled to score Simms,
followed by an RBI-single
by Cole Davis.
However, the Blue
Devils did strand seven
runners —including two
apiece in the second,
third and fourth frames.
In the third, following
a walk to Davis and a
two-out double by Jeremy
Brumﬁeld, the Blue Devils had runners at second
and third.
But Rodgers recorded
a strikeout to end the
threat, as Sano — after
Garrett McGuire singled
in the fourth for runners at ﬁrst and second
— came in and got an
inning-ending strikeout of
his own.
For the Blue Devils,
it was all downhill from
there, as Athens — combining a leadoff walk
to Stewart, an error, an
inﬁeld bunt single, Lonas’
two-run single and a pair
of ﬁelder’s choices —
answered in the ﬁfth for
the 8-4 lead.
Sano, meanwhile,
struck out ﬁve in retiring the ﬁrst six batters
he faced — part of eight
overall including for all
three outs in the seventh.
In the sixth, Stout and
Davis reached on singles,
as did Brumﬁeld in the
last, but Sano was bringing 85 to near 90 miles
per hour heat.
Both Bulldog pitchers
struck out eight Blue
Devils apiece.
“I thought we got to
(Brody) Rodgers pretty
well. I thought if we
See SEASON | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, May 14, 2017

Lady Marauders top Parkersburg, 7-4

From page 1B

had six hits, we could give ourselves
a chance to win. Offensively, we hit
the ball well, but we still had way
too many strikeouts,” said Corvin.
“You’re not going to win games striking out 16 times. And (Brendan)
Sano throws mid-80s (mph) with a
nice breaking-ball for a high school
pitcher.”
For Gallia Academy, Thursday’s sectional ﬁnal was the ﬁnal affair for ﬁve
seniors —Brumﬁeld, Brody Thomas,
Quinton Yarger, catcher Josh Davis
and reserve Gabe Peck.
A year after winning the OVC outright, these young and inexperienced
Blue Devils rallied for a championship
share.
“We had ﬁve guys who left it all out
there on the ﬁeld tonight,” said Corvin. “Those ﬁve guys are special guys.
Just solid kids man. Part of two OVC
championship teams, they left it. I’m
so proud of them.”
It was just unfortunate that the Blue
Devils dug themselves too deep a hole
to climb out of at Athens.
Corvin, though, is already looking
ahead to next season.
“That junior class, we’re really looking forward to them, then throw in
those sophomores. We’ll be excited to
get chomping at it here again soon,”
he said.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2106

Sectional
From page 1B

Huffman led the hosts with three
singles, while Young doubled once and
Ohse singled once.
The Lady Tornadoes committed
both of the game’s errors. SHS left
ﬁve runners on base, three fewer than
Waterford.
In the regular season, Waterford
defeated Southern by a 10-7 count on
April 18, in Racine, and then the Lady
Wildcats topped SHS by a 10-3 ﬁnal
on May 2, at WHS.
“From our record, I thought a No. 6
seed was the best we could get and of
the top teams, I wanted Waterford,”
Crisp said. “I thought we matched up
well with them. In the two games that
we got beat, we were right there, but
one inning in each game cost us.”
Southern also knocked Waterford
out of the 2015 sectional tournament.
The Lady Wildcats have now missed
the district tournament in three
straight postseasons.
In the last four seasons, this is
Southern’s third trip the the Division
IV district tournament at Minford
High School, with last year as the lone
exception.
“Last year was a big disappointment, but Trimble just had our number all season,” Crisp said. “We wanted to get back to Minford this year,
that was the goal from day one and
the kids worked at it. It’s a lot different team than the one I’ve had the last
four years. It took me a while to get
adjusted to how to coach them, but
once we all got together, we played
pretty well down the stretch.”
The Purple and Gold will face
second-seeded Leesburg Fairﬁeld, on
Thursday at Minford. The Lady Lions
defeated Western by a 15-0 ﬁnal on
Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2100.

From page 1B

THS escaped unscathed.
After back-to-back
ﬂyouts to start the
bottom of the seventh,
Emmalea Durst doubled
off of the right ﬁeld
fence, to keep hope alive.
However, after Durst
moved to third on a
passed ball, a line drive
straight to the THS
centerﬁelder gave the
Lady Tomcats a 6-4 win.
“I told the kids coming
in ‘this team will be out
to spoil our season’,”
said fourth-year Eastern
head coach Bryan Durst.
“They won 17 games last
year and just lost one
player from last year’s
team. They deﬁnitely
worked hard all week
long and they believed in
themselves. They were

By Alex Hawley

run right back in the top of the fourth.
After walking the bases loaded, Bre
Colburn scored on a wild pitch to give
Meigs a 4-2 lead.
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. — Truly a
PHS was back within one in the
successful tournament tune-up.
bottom of the ﬁfth, as Kelsey Goots
One day after securing its spot in
tripled and then courtesy runner
Saturday’s sectional ﬁnal, the Meigs
softball team led wire-to-wire en route MaKenzie Riddle scored on a sac-ﬂy
by Kacee Roberts.
to a 7-4 victory over non-conference
Meigs was held off the board in the
host Parkersburg, on Thursday in
ﬁfth and sixth frames, but added three
Wood County.
The Lady Marauders (19-3) — win- insurance runs in the top of the sevners of six straight — manufactured a enth. First, Peyton Rowe singled home
run in the top of the opening inning, as Pullins, then Colburn singled home
Devyn Oliver singled, moved to second Morris, and ﬁnally Morgan Lodwick
doubled home Rowe.
on a groundout, advanced to third on
Parkersburg freshman Maddi
an error and ﬁnally scored on a sacriLeggett scored the ﬁnal run of the
ﬁce bunt by Danielle Morris.
game on a two-out error in the bottom
After a scoreless second frame,
of the seventh.
Meigs senior Alliyah Pullins blasted a
Breanna Zirkle earned the pitchtwo-run home run with one out in the
top of the third, giving the guests a 3-0 ing victory in ﬁve innings of relief for
MHS, allowing four runs, one earned,
advantage.
on four hits and one walk. Pullins
Parkersburg (20-14) cut the MHS
started in the circle and pitched two
lead to one run, at 3-2, in the bottom
innings for the guests, striking out one
of the third, but the Big Reds gave a

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

batter, walking one and allowing three
hits.
Alyssa Gates suffered the loss in two
innings of work for Parkersburg, striking out one and allowing one run, on
one hit and one walk.
Pullins, Oliver and Taylor Swartz
were each 2-for-4 at the plate to lead
the victors. Pullins hit a home run,
scored twice and drove in two runs,
Oliver doubled once and scored once,
while Swartz crossed home plate once.
Lodwick doubled once and drove in
a run for the Maroon and Gold, Rowe
and Colburn both singled once, scored
once and drove in one run, while Morris had one run scored and one RBI.
Katie Hudkins led the hosts at the
plate, going 2-for-3 with a double and
an RBI.
Both teams stranded seven runners
on base. The Lady Marauders committed three errors, one more than
Parkersburg.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2100.

Tigers trounce Meigs, 10-0 in sectional
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

MARIETTA, Ohio — No hits, no
hope.
The eighth-seeded Meigs baseball
team reached base just three times,
all on walks, in Thursday’s Division
II sectional ﬁnal, as top-seeded host
Marietta claimed a 10-0 victory in ﬁve
innings, at Legion Field in Washington
County.
The Tigers (21-3) — ranked ninth
in the latest Ohio High School Baseball Coaches Association Division II
poll — scored one run in the opening
inning and added three more in the
second frame.
Meigs (14-10) held the Orange and
Black off the board in the third inning,
but surrendered two runs in the
fourth. The Tigers pushed four runs
across with one out in the ﬁfth frame,
sealing the 10-0 mercy rule win.
Brandon Schamp struck out six bat-

ters and earned the win in a complete
game for Marietta, allowing three
walks, zero hits and zero runs.
Christian Mattox suffered the loss in
four frames for the Marauders, striking out four batters, walking one, and
allowing six runs on eight hits. Zayne
Wolfe pitched the ﬁnal .1 innings,
allowing four runs on ﬁve hits.
Luke Musser, K.J. Tracy and Tyler
Johnson each drew a base on balls for
Meigs.
Marietta was led by Turner Hill and
Trent Dawson with three hits apiece.
Hill tripled once, scored three times
and drove in ﬁve runs, while Dawson
added two RBIs.
The Marauders committed all three
of the game’s errors. The hosts left ﬁve
runners on base, while the Maroon and
Gold stranded two.
The Tigers swept the Marauders in
regular season, winning 6-0 on April 4,
in Rocksprings, and 14-1 on April 25,
in Marietta.

This is the second straight sectional
crown for Marietta. Meigs had won
back-to-back sectional titles.
The Tigers and Marauders met also
met in the 2015 and 2014 sectional
tournaments, with Meigs eliminating
Marietta both times.
The setback means Meigs must now
say farewell to seniors Tyler Williams,
Luke Musser, K.J. Tracy, Tyler Bachtel,
Jake Roush, Cameron Smith, Layne
Acree, Chase Whitlatch, and Cody
Bartrum.
MHS wraps up its regular season on
Tuesday, when it visits River Valley for
a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division
tilt.
Marietta advances to Monday’s district semiﬁnal at Athens High School,
where it will face ﬁfth-seeded Washington Courthouse, which topped No.
4 Fairﬁeld Union by a 2-0 count on
Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2100.

Lewis headlines Rio honorees on All-RSC baseball team
By Randy Payton

Teams. Also named was the RSC Gold
Glove team and the RSC Champions of
Character Team.
Three other Rio Grande players
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — University
- senior pitcher Trent Downs (Chilliof Rio Grande senior Daryin Lewis
earned Pitcher of the Year honors and cothe, OH), senior outﬁelder Carlos
Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) and
a pair of spots on the All-River States
Conference Baseball ﬁrst team during junior outﬁelder Kameron Herring
(Heath, OH) - were named to the ﬁrst
an on-ﬁeld awards ceremony at last
team, while the RedStorm was repreweekend’s RSC Baseball Tournament
sented on the second team by junior
at VA Memorial Stadium.
pitcher Osvaldo Duran (Guayanilla,
Lewis, a native of Circleville, Ohio,
Puerto Rico), senior catcher Dan Crowas named the league’s Pitcher of the
zier (Ballston Spa, N.Y.) and senior
Year with a record of 9-2 and a 2.16
shortstop Luis Jimenez (Salinas,
earned run average following the conclusion of postseason play. He was also Puerto Rico).
Downs ﬁnished with a 10-2 record
named to the All-RSC First Team both
and a 2.63 ERA, tossing a team-high
at pitcher and third base.
As a hitter, Lewis batted a team-high six shutouts and recording a team-best
.212 opponent’s batting average. Flores
.362 with ﬁve homers and 37 runs
batted in. He led the RedStorm in hits hit .33 with a team-high eight home
(64), while ranking second in RBI and runs, four triples and 41 RBI, while
Herring hit .355 with ﬁve home runs,
doubles (12).
33 RBI and a team-best 18 stolen bases
The conference honored 18 players
in 19 attempts.
on both the All-RSC First and Second

For Ohio Valley Publishing

probably the only ones
who thought they were
going to win this game
and they pulled it off. I
give credit to them and
their coaching staff.”
Brianna Lunsford
earned the pitching
victory in a complete
game for the Lady
Tomcats, allowing four
runs on 12 hits and two
walks.
Elaina Hensley
suffered the loss in 4.2
innings of work for EHS,
allowing six runs, ﬁve
earned, on three hits
and 11 walks. Sophia
Carleton pitched 2.1
innings of scoreless,
hitless innings from
the ﬁfth frame into the
seventh. Hensley — who
pitched the ﬁrst four
innings and then came
back in for the last .2 —
struck out four batters,
while Carleton struck
out one.

A quartet of Lady
Eagles were 2-for-4 at
the plate, led by Katlyn
Barber with a home
run, a single, two runs
scored and two runs
batted in. Durst singled
once and doubled once
in the setback, Abbie
Hawley singled twice
and drove in one run,
while Taylynn Rockhold
contributed two singles.
Casto and Cera
Grueser both singled
once and scored once,
Fitzgerald added a
single and an RBI, while
Hannah Bailey chipped
in with a single.
For Trimble, Williams
was 1-for-2 with a home
run, two runs scored
and one RBI, Moore was
1-for-2 with a triple, one
run scored and three
RBIs, while Kaitlyn
Spears went 1-for-4 in
with a double.
The Trimble defense,

which recorded 12
groundouts in the
victory, didn’t commit
an error. Meanwhile,
Eastern committed two
errors. The Lady Eagles
left six runners on base,
while THS stranded nine
baserunners.
This marks the ﬁnal
game in the high school
careers of EHS seniors
Katlyn Barber, Taylynn
Rockhold, Hannah
Sharp, Abbie Hawley
and Hannah Bailey.
“It’s real tough with
those seniors, I’ve
enjoyed my time with all
of them,” Coach Durst
said of losing quintet to
graduation. “You look at
Katlyn Barber, I’ve been
around her a long time
and she’s a very good
softball player. Taylynn
Rockhold is as good of
a left handed hitter as
I’ve had. Hannah Sharp,
who didn’t always get

Duran ﬁnished with a 7-2 record, a
3.24 ERA and a team-high 63 strikeouts in 75 innings pitched, while Crozier batted .323 with 12 doubles, three
homers and 34 RBI. Jimenez hit .328
with a team-high 45 runs scored and
14 doubles.
Joining Rio’s quartet of selections
to the ﬁrst team were six players from
RSC regular season champion Point
Park University - pitchers Addison
Domingo and Nolan Krivijanski, catcher Chris Hernandez, ﬁrst baseman
Emmanuel Lopez, outﬁelder Stefan
Mrkonja and designated hitter Richard
Perez.
Midway - which won the tournament
title - and Indiana University Southeast each had three players on the ﬁrst
team. Pitchers James Davenport and
Jake McCoy and utility player Hector
Quinones represented Midway, while
shortstop Richard Rodriguez, catcher

to play the whole time,
gave everything all the
time, and I could tell
it hurt her a lot to lose
that game tonight. You
look at Abbie Hawley,
who had a great senior
season. Hannah Bailey
is a scrapper, she’s gave
us everything she’s had
for four years and we’re
really going to miss her.”
In the past four
seasons, Eastern has
amassed a 79-18 record,
to go with a trio of both

See LEWIS | 3B

league and sectional
championships.
For the third straight
season, the Lady
Tomcats will move on to
the district tournament,
at Minford High School.
THS will face fourthseeded Peebles, which
claimed a 3-2 win over
Portsmouth Notre Dame
in Thursday’s sectional
ﬁnal in Adams County.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

WANTED!!! MALE &amp; FEMALE GOLFERS
Meigs Senior League 50+
Senior Golf Scramble
9 am-Fridays
Red Tee Scramble-9am-Wednesdays
Ladies Outing-10 am-Tuesdays
MEIGS COUNTY GOLF COURSE
Will’s Hill Road Pomeroy, Ohio

60719930

Season

Trimble

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, May 14, 2017 3B

Van knocks out Wildcats, 12-9
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ASHTON, W.Va. —
Another frustrating postseason, but the Wildcats
do have their title.
The Hannan baseball
team had a roller-coaster
season come to a bitter
end on Thursday night
following a 12-9 setback
to visiting Van in a Class
A Region 4, Section 2
loser’s bracket contest at
the Craigo Athletic Complex in Mason County.
The host Wildcats
(4-11) — a ﬁve seed —
started the season with
seven consecutive losses, then capped a fourgame winning streak by
claiming the 2017 Tolsia
Wooden Bat tournament
championship before
dropping their ﬁnal two
decisions of the regular
season.
HHS lost a 3-2 heartbreaker to Sherman after
leading by two runs in
the opening round of
the tournament, but the
Blue and White were fortunate to draw a home
game as a higher seed
against the sixth-seeded
Bulldogs (6-14).
The Wildcats once
again scored ﬁrst as
Junior Morehart doubled
in Dalton Coleman for
a 1-0 advantage through
an inning of play, but
VHS countered by sending 10 batters to the
plate in the top half of

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Hannan catcher Dalton Coleman hands the ball back to pitcher Junior Morehart, left, following a bodytwisting pop out in the fourth inning of Thursday night’s Class A Region 4, Section 2 baseball contest
against Van at the Craigo Athletic Complex in Ashton, W.Va.

the second. That offensive eruption resulted in
six runs on four walks
and three timely hits —
giving the Blue and Gold
a 6-1 cushion.
Hannan, however,
battled right back in its
half of the second with
ﬁve runs to knot things
up. Morehart drove in
both Coleman and Nick
Hughes with a two-out
double to center, then
Sawyer Casto knocked
in Morehart, Corey
Hudnall and Christian
Holland with a double to
left-center — tying the
contest up again at six.

The score remained
that way until the top
of the ﬁfth as Van’s
Kenny Gibson dropped
a one-out, bases-loaded
suicide squeeze bunt
down the third base line,
which led to an error
and everyone being safe
while taking a 7-6 edge.
Grant Brady followed
with a bases-clearing
double to right-center,
giving the Bulldogs a
10-6 advantage.
Sid Ross reached on
a walk and advanced
to second on a single
by Hughes, then a twoout error in right ﬁeld

allowed James Bledsoe
to reach safely as Ross
came around to score for
a 10-7 deﬁcit after ﬁve
full frames.
Caleb Green singled
home Puckett in the
top of the sixth, but the
hosts answered with two
runs in their half of the
frame as Casto received
a bases-loaded walk
that plated Hudnall and
Morehart came in on a
Ross single — making it
an 11-9 contest headed
into the seventh.
Van came away with
an insurance run in its
ﬁnal at-bat as a single

and an error moved Cole
Price to third with one
away, then Alex Gibson
laid a safety squeeze
down the ﬁrst base line
that allowed Price to
score the ﬁnal run of the
night.
It was the ﬁnal game
for seniors Corey Hudnall, Sid Ross, James
Bledsoe and Nick
Hughes in the Blue and
White, which was something that was very difﬁcult for third-year HHS
coach Tad Greathouse to
discuss afterwards.
Then again, as he
did note, the future of
the program looks a lot
brighter because of that
quartet.
“It’s emotional to see
it end for this group,
both the seniors and the
underclassmen. This is
one of the best groups
of kids that I have ever
had and I really do feel
blessed to have coached
them and watched them
progress over the years.
I really couldn’t have
asked for more out of
any of them,” Greathouse said. “The four
seniors that are leaving
have helped us get the
program to where we
now have something that
no other Hannan team
has here in at least a
decade … a title. They’ve
helped the younger kids
understand what it takes
to be successful at this
level, so they have noth-

ing to hang their heads
about. They’ve been special … all of them.”
The Bulldogs outhit
HHS by an 11-8 overall
margin and also committed only one of the ﬁve
errors in the contest.
Both teams stranded 10
runners apiece on the
bags.
Brady Grant was
the winning pitcher of
record after allowing
two runs, four hits and
six walks over three-plus
innings of relief work.
Morehart took the loss
after surrendering six
runs, eight hits and one
walk over ﬁve innings of
relief work while fanning
seven.
Hudnall and Morehart
led the Wildcats with
two hits apiece, followed
by Casto, Ross, Hughes
and Bledsoe with a
safety each. Hughes and
Morehart each knocked
in three RBIs, with Coleman, Hudnall and Morehart also scoring twice
apiece in the setback.
Cole Price led VHS
with three hits and
Caleb Green added two
safeties. Gibson, Grant,
Puckett, Kory Williams,
Caleb Price and Ethan
Acord also had a hit
each in the triumph.
Green and Brady Grant
each drove in three runs
as well.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Rio Grande dominates All-RSC softball team
junior catcher/designated
player Tayler Arndt
(Clyde, OH) and junior
third baseman Gabby
VIENNA, W.Va. —
University of Rio Grande Gregg (Ashville, OH).
Rio Grande also had
sophomore Kelsey
Chris Hammond as the
Conkey was named
RSC Softball Coach of
both the River States
Conference Pitcher of the the Year. The second-year
head coach has led the
Year and Player of the
RedStorm to a record of
Year during an on-ﬁeld
45-8 overall and 17-1 in
awards ceremony at last
RSC play, while capturing
weekend’s RSC Softball
back-to-back conference
Tournament at Jackson
tournament and regularMemorial Park.
season titles.
Conkey, a native of
Conkey is hitting .333
Minford, Ohio, was
with 12 home runs and
one of eight RedStorm
players - four on the ﬁrst 49 runs batted in. She is
second on the club with a
team and four on the
.618 slugging percentage
second team - named
and is tied for fourth
to the All-River States
on the team with nine
Conference Softball
doubles.
Teams.
As a pitcher, Conkey
Joining Conkey on the
has a record of 21-1
ﬁrst team were senior
with two saves and a
pitcher Jenna Jones
0.87 earned run average
(Lancaster, OH), senior
in 136.2 innings. The
second baseman Alex
right-hander has struck
Stevens (Oak Hill, OH)
out 96 and walked 22,
and freshman shortstop
while surrendering just a
Michaela Criner
(Lancaster, OH). Second .177 opponent’s batting
average and authoring
team honorees included
a league-high nine
sophomore outﬁelder
shutouts. She is also tied
Carly Skeese (Newark,
for sixth nationally in
OH), senior catcher/
ERA.
outﬁelder Cheyenne
Jones is 12-4 with three
Hamaker (Hilliard, OH),

For Ohio Valley Publishing

saves and a 1.79 ERA in
125-1/3 innings. She has
four shutouts of her own
and the opposition is
batting just .199 against
the right-hander.
Stevens is hitting
.403 with a team-high
46 runs scored and is
tied for second on the
team in doubles (10),
while Criner leads the
RedStorm in batting
average (.482), hits (68),
triples (4), slugging
percentage (.667) and
on-base percentage
(.516).
Skeese is batting .321
with a team-high 13
home runs and 52 runs
batted in; Hamaker is
hitting .319 with a teambest 12 stolen bases;
Arndt is hitting .349 with
a team-high 11 doubles;
and Gregg is batting .260
with three homers and
27 RBI, while tying for
second on the club with
10 doubles.
The All-RSC
Softball First Team
was comprised of four
pitchers, two catchers,
ﬁve inﬁelders, four
outﬁelders, a designated
player and a utility player.
The All-RSC Second

Team followed a similar
pattern and honored 17
players as well.
Joining the Rio Grande
quartet on the All-RSC
First Team were three
players from regular
season runner-up catcher Kelsey Gravens,
pitcher Tiffany Wickline
and outﬁelder Carly
Benz.
IU Southeast, Point
Park, WVU Tech and
Cincinnati Christian had
two players each on the
ﬁrst team. IU Southeast
garnered inﬁelder Emily
Hollis and designated
player Sydney Seger,
while Point Park was
represented by pitcher
Ashley Iagnemma and
ﬁrst baseman Kim
Corcoran and WVU-Tech
had outﬁelder Skyler
Connelly and utility
player Genna Trippett.
CCU’s honorees
included catcher Bailey
Blair and outﬁelder
Valerie Hudepohl, with
Brescia outﬁelder Megan

Myers and Carlow third
baseman Allison Hryadil
rounding out the ﬁrst
team.
Gravens received the
league’s Newcomer of the
Year award as a transfer
from now-defunct St.
Catharine’s College. She
hit .438 with a leaguehigh 15 homers and
ﬁnished second to Skeese
with 49 RBI.
The conference also
named a Champions
of Character Team,
with one player from
each team who best
exhibits the NAIA’s
ﬁve core character

values of the respect,
responsibility, integrity,
servant leadership and
sportsmanship named to
the list.
Rio Grande’s
representative on the
CoC team was senior
Tiffany Bise (Circleville,
OH).
A complete list
of the second team
and Champions of
Character honorees
is available at www.
riverstatesconference.
com
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

Help Right Here At Home
• Mesothelioma
• Lung Cancer
• Wrongful Death

740-992-6368

200 E. 2nd�6WUHHW�3RPHUR\��2+�Ř�WHQODZ#VXGGHQOLQNPDLO�FRP

60717682

By Randy Payton

Lewis

Point Park head coach Loren Torres
claimed Coach of the Year honors. He
led the Pioneers to the RSC regularseason title at 26-6 conference.
From page 2B
The RSC Gold Glove team, which
chose the best defender at each posiTanner Leenknecht and second basetion, included Rio’s Duran at pitcher
man Logan Barnes represented IU
and Flores among the outﬁeld honorees.
Southeast.
The RSC Champions of Character
WVU Tech center ﬁelder Tanner
Team recognized one player from
LeVine took home top honors as the
each team who best exhibited the ﬁve
conference’s Player of the Year. The
senior from Long Beach, Calif., was the character values of the NAIA’s Champions of Character program, which
leading hitter in the conference hitting
are respect, responsibility, integrity,
.444 (83-for-187) with six homers and
servant leadership and sportsmanship.
51 RBIs. LeVine was one of four outDowns represented Rio Grande on the
ﬁelders on the ﬁrst team.
list.
WVU Tech third baseman Jacob
For a complete list of the All-RSC
Reimold was named the Freshman of
second team, the Gold Glove team and
the Year as the top freshman vote-getter. The All-RSC second team selection the Champions of Character honorees,
hit a pair of home runs, including a two- visit www.riverstatesconference.com
out ninth inning long ball in the Golden
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
Bears’ elimination game win over Rio
University of Rio Grande.
Grande.

60718211

�4B Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Notices

Professional Services

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Livestock

Want To Buy

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

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

The Oak Hill Union Local
Board of Education
is accepting
applications/resumes for
the following position:
K - 5 Teaching Positions
Individuals interested in
applying for a position should
submit a resume, certification
and letter of interest to
Michael A. McCoy,
205 Western Avenue,
Oak Hill, Ohio 45656
no later than 12:00 noon
on Monday, May 15,2017.

Upstairs apt. for rent
2 bdrm 1 bth water pd.
475.00 sec dep 475.00 rent
740-446-3481

Angus Bulls &amp; Heifers
High EPD's over 40 yrs.
Performance selection,
Top bloodlines,
Priced reasonably,
Call 740-418-0633
www.slaterunangus.com

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

Miscellaneous
Bryant Farm &amp; Lawn Care
Bulk Mulch &amp; Quality Gravel
Stone &amp; Sand
Mowing &amp; Landscaping
Pickup or Delivery
740-245-5002
740-645-1277

Automotive

Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

Amy Carter

60713776

Pool deck and stairs for sale
57in high 3x5 wide asking
$225 obo 740-645-9393

�����.BZIFX�3E�t�+BDLTPO �0)������

Yard Sale
Oak Porch Swings
Tomato Stakes
1914 state Rt 141
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
740-446-1080

�������������t��������������
Fax: 740-286-5728
BNZDBSUFS!NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN
XXX�NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN

Lawn Service

Help Wanted General

Ranking Cleaning
&amp; Refuse Trailer

3 Bedroom upstairs apt.
near Washington School
$650 mth plus $650 deposit
water included no pets
740-245-2381

27 Acres in Mason County
on Redmond Ridge. Great
hunting, some level, all
woods, $29,000. Financing
available with $2900 down &amp;
$344/mth for 10 yrs.
Call for maps, (740)989-0260.
www.brunerland.com.

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

House for Rent-2 Bedroom,
No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Land (Acreage)
Meigs Co. 7 acres $21,500 or
29 acres $46,900, Gallia Co.
many 5 acre lots $11,900 +up!
More @ www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

133 Portsmouth Rd., Gallipolis
56 Neil Ave., Gallipolis

53, 53 1/2, and cottage 1 &amp; 2 Spruce Street., Gallipolis.
2129 Chestnut St., Gallipolis

Direct Care Needed in Jackson County

Submit resumes to: Westbrook Health Services
Attn: Human Resources
2121 7th Street
Parkersburg, WV 26101
OR
eoates@westbrookhealth.com

Watch our website and facebook page
for more details coming soon!
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
David Wiseman, Broker
500 SECOND AVE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

446-3644

Josh Bodimer Auctioneer

740-645-6665

Auctions

Auctions

60716424

Family Operated
We will clean it up,
haul it away, or both!
(740) 541-3867

Date/and Location of Auction:
May 18th to be held in the Conference room
at Wiseman Real Estate
500 Second Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio
Time: 4:00PM
Properties to be Auctioned include:

located on Addison Pike, Gallipolis (landlocked)

Help Wanted General

No previous experience required, on the job training is provided.

Christ Driven

REAL ESTATE AUCTION ALERT!
MULTIPLE PROPERTY
REAL ESTATE AUCTION

1/3 undivided interest of 92.09 acres +/-

Professionals are needed to provide companionship for
individuals with intellectual/developmental disabilities. Direct
Care Professionals provide the care that is essential to quality
of life, as well as quality of care for disabled individuals.
Part time positions available.

Experienced cook wanted
immediately apply at the
Quality Inn 740-446-0090

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

Real Estate Auction

Land (Acreage)

Apartments/Townhouses

Product Specialist

Houses For Rent

60719823

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

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

60718567

60717035

60718564

Auctions

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, May 14, 2017 5B

Point sends 24 to Class AA state meet
By Bryan Walters

place on the girls side of
competition as Winﬁeld
smoked the ﬁeld with
a winning tally of 299
WINFIELD, W.Va. —
points. PPHS was second
It’ll be a full bus ride to
out of 11 scoring teams
Laidley Field.
with 98 points, while
The Point Pleasant
Nitro took third with 79
track and ﬁeld teams
points.
had 24 different athPoint Pleasant came
letes qualify for state in
away with two individ20 separate events on
ual titles at the regional
Thursday night following the conclusion of the event and also had 10
automatic qualiﬁers —
2017 Class AA Region
4 championships held at top-three ﬁnishers — in
its 11 advancing girls
David Bailey Track on
events.
the campus of Winﬁeld
Senior Aislyn Hayman
High School in Putnam
— who recently signed
County.
Both the Black Knights with Marshall University
track — earned both
and Lady Knights will
have a dozen representa- regional championships
tives apiece at the annual for the Lady Knights
WVSSAC track and ﬁeld after winning the shot
championships, with the put (40-2) and discus
(132-4) competitions.
girls competing in 11
Sami Saunders was
events while the boys
will be busy in nine con- also a dual qualiﬁer with
a second place ﬁnish in
tests.
The Lady Knights won the high jump (5-4) and
a third place effort in the
the battle for second

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

pole vault (9-0).
Madison Hatﬁeld was
second in the 400m dash
with a time of 1:02.36,
while Morgan Roush
was second in the discus
with a throw of 101 feet,
7 inches. Grace Allensworth also earned an atlarge bid in the shot put
by placing fourth with a
heave of 32 feet, 1 inch.
PPHS had four relay
teams qualify, with the
quartet of Hatﬁeld,
Ashley Staats, Teagan
Hay and Sydnee Moore
placing second in both
the 4x100m (53.90)
and 4x200m (1:54.67)
events.
Moore, Hatﬁeld,
Allison Henderson and
Morgan Miller were
the 4x400m runners-up
with a mark of 4:28.51,
while Miller, Henderson,
Cierra Beatty and Lexi
Watkins-Lovejoy ﬁnished
second in the 4x800m
(10:58.16) event.

Auctions

Winﬁeld won the boys
competition with 220
points, with Nitro (88)
and Poca (79) rounding
out the top three of 10
scoring teams.
The Black Knights
were fourth overall with
74 points and earned
automatic qualiﬁers
in eight of their nine
advancing events, which
included a trio of relays.
The foursome of Wyatt
Dean, Brady Adkins,
Jared Icenhower and
Peyton Hughes ﬁnished
second in the 4x800m
relay with a time of
9:43.13.
Justin Brumﬁeld,
Cason Payne, Justin Staats and Keshawn Stover
were third in the 4x100m
(46.54) event, while
Payne, Stover, Icenhower
and Steven Trent placed
third in the 4x400m
(3:50.75) relay.
Luke Wilson was a dual
qualiﬁer after ﬁnishing

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

The Point Pleasant duo of Teagan Hay, left, and Madison Hatfield
complete an exchange in the 4x200m relay event at the 2017
Battle for the Anchor held on April 25 at Gallia Academy High
School in Centenary, Ohio.

third in both the 1600m
(4:48.93) and 3200m
(10:22.71) runs, while
Jesse Gleason is also
headed to state in two
events after placing third
in the discus (136-5) and
earning an at-large bid in
the shot put (42-1).
Eddie Mayes was the
shot put runner-up with
a heave of 44 feet, 5 inches, while Trent advanced
in the pole vault with a
third place effort of 10

feet, 6 inches.
The 2017 WVSSAC
track and ﬁeld championships will be held next
Friday and Saturday at
Laidley Field on the campus of the University of
Charleston.
Complete results of the
Class AA Region 4 track
and ﬁeld championships
are available on the web
at runwv.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Auctions

AUCTION
May 18th, 2017 5:00pm
Meigs County Fair Grounds
The family of Horace Karr has requested us to sell several items
from the home. We will move everything to the fair grounds.

Below you will ﬁnd a short list of some of the items!
King size log bed, dressers, rocker, hunting items, hunting blinds, Grand Father
clock Howard Miller, corner shelf, Fenton bird, Ohio Art globe, vintage dolls, quilts,
bedding, phalzcraft dishes, baskets, rocking chair, cow bell, match book collection,
stone water cooler (has damage), stone crocks, yard sticks, sled, tool, advertising
item Arnold Palmer Jack Nicholson autographed photos, Uncle Sam bank, minnow
bucket, cream can, sewing machine, quilt rack, vintage board games, cook books,
hat collection, hunting gear, knifes, blinds, camo, duck calls, turkey call, and more.
Busy Beavers 4-H group to be food vendor!

Billy Goble - Auctioneer

1-740-416-4696

Help Wanted General

60719990

Terms: cash or check any over $1000.00 need be approved prior to auction by
auctioneer. Please inspect all items before bidding!
60719902
Yard Sale

Turn Your Clutter

INTO CASH!

If you have a car and a few hours to
spare, this is your opportunity to
earn extra money by delivering the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Daily Sentinel or
the Point Pleasant Register!

Advertise Your Garage Sale
to Thousands of Readers In
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

To learn more about opportunities delivering
the Gallipois Daily Tribune, Daily Sentinel
or the Point Pleasant Register call our
circulation department at 740-446-2342

FREE SUNDAY
4 lines, 2 days
inprint &amp; online

Only $15.00

The Daily Sentinel

Call or visit your local ofﬁce to place your ad.

Carriers are Independant contractors

60717751

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register

Gallipolis Daily Tribune Point Pleasant Register Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com
740-446-2342
304-675-1333
740-992-2155

60652848

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Wahama advances 16 to Class A state meet
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
— Wahama will be busy
at Laidley Field.
The White Falcons and
Lady Falcons combined
to qualify 16 different
athletes into 17 separate
state events on Wednesday night following the
completion of the 2017
Class A Region 4 track
and ﬁeld championships
held at Stadium Field
on the campus of Parkersburg High School in
Wood County.
Wahama had a collectively solid showing as
the boys had 11 athletes
advance to state in 14 different events while ﬁnishing third out of 11 scoring teams, while the girls
advanced ﬁve athletes in
three separate contests
while placing ﬁfth out of

nine scoring teams.
Williamstown won the
Region 4 boys championship with 227 points, with
Ravenswood (83) and
Wahama (81) rounding
out the top three positions. Hannan was also
10th out of 11 programs
with ﬁve points.
The White Falcons did
not have a single regional
champion on the boys
side, but the Red and
White qualiﬁed for all ﬁve
state relays and had 10
automatic qualiﬁers —
top-three ﬁnishers — in
their 14 advancing events.
Brady Bumgarner
and Travis Kearns both
scored a pair of individual
advancements to state.
Kearns qualiﬁed by being
second in the long jump
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
(18-1.75) and earning an
Wahama junior Chris Hesson releases a throw in the shot put event during the 2017 Meigs Marauders
at-large bid after placing
Relays held on April 19 at Meigs High School in Rocksprings, Ohio.
fourth in the 800m run
(2:09.29). Bumgarner
large bid in the 4x400m
The quartet of Board,
advanced to state after
relay (3:51.85).
Bumgarner, Abram
placing third in both the
The top ﬁnisher for the
Pauley and Jacob Lloyd
100m (11.92) and 200m
Hannan boys was Jordan
advanced with a sec(24.39) dashes.
Fitzwater, who placed
ond place ﬁnish in the
Wyatt Edwards
fourth in the 110m hur4x200m relay (1:38.62),
advanced in the discus
dles with time of 17.16
with a second place heave while Hildreth, Lloyd,
seconds. No Wildcats
James McCormick and
of 137 feet, 4 inches,
qualiﬁed for the state
Isaiah Pauley were the
while Johnnie Board
4x800m runners-up with meet.
moved on in the pole
Williamstown won the
a mark of 8:52.16.
vault with a third place
Region 4 girls championHoward, Bumgarner,
effort of eight feet even.
Kearns and Abram Pauley ship with 204 points,
Brodee Howard qualiﬁed for state in the 110m combined for third in the with Buffalo (98) and
Huntington Saint Joseph
hurdles by ﬁnishing third 4x100m (47.33) event,
Central (79) rounding
while Lloyd, Edwards,
with a time of 17.16 secout the top three posionds and Mason Hildreth Board and Howard were
tions. Wahama was ﬁfth
also third in the 4x110m
earned an at-large bid in
out of nine scoring teams
shuttle hurdle relay
the 3200m run by placwith 28 points, while the
ing fourth with a mark of (1:07.07).
Lady Cats were the last
The 4x400m squad of
10:52.70. Chris Hesson
team on the list with a
was also an at-large quali- Edwards, McCormick,
Lloyd and Abram Pauley single point.
ﬁer in the shot put (41The Lady Falcons did
1.5) after ﬁnishing sixth. also advanced on an at-

4 Man Golf Scramble
Saturday, May 20th
Cliffside Golf Course,
Gallipolis Ohio
Start time 8 a.m.
Entry fee $60.

$300 for 1st place
$200 for 2nd place

not have a single regional
champion, but the Red
and White qualiﬁed for
one state relay and had
three automatic qualiﬁers
in all of their advancing
events.
The quartet of Skylar
Rifﬂe, Elizabeth Mullins, Kaleigh Stewart
and MacKenzie Barr
advanced in the 4x100m
event after ﬁnishing second with a time of 55.03
seconds.
Stewart qualiﬁed with
a second place ﬁnish in
the long jump (15-0.5),
while Pia Thomanek
advanced in the 3200m
run with a third place
effort of 14:19.28.
Mullins just missed
qualifying in the 100m
dash as she placed ﬁfth
at regionals with a time
of 13.70 seconds, but she
was edged out by twothousandths of a second
for the ﬁnal at-large bid.
The top ﬁnisher for the
Hannan girls was Cassidy Duffer, who placed
sixth in the discus with
a heave of 85 feet, 11
inches. No Lady Wildcats
qualiﬁed for the state
meet.
The 2017 WVSSAC
track and ﬁeld championships will be held next
Friday and Saturday at
Laidley Field on the campus of the University of
Charleston.
Complete results of the
Class A Region 4 track
and ﬁeld championships
are available on the web
at runwv.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

$100 for 3rd place
Contact: Corey Small

MYDAILY
TRIBUNE.COM

740-525-7625
60720058

brenner, Dave Seamon, Mitch Mace and
Bill Yoho.
The third place score of 10-under par
MASON, W.Va. — Carl Stone, a Spencer native, has had his lead of the 2017 60 was ﬁred by the group of Charlie
Hargraves, Jim Francisco, Bobby WatSenior Men’s Golf League at Riverside
son and Albert Durst.
Golf Club cut down to just six points,
The closest to the pin winners were
through six weeks of play.
Bob Avery on the ninth hole and Kenny
Stone’s total of 86 points, leads curGreene on No. 14.
rent runner-up Charlie Hargraves.
The current top-10 standings are
On Tuesday, just 51 players braved
the conditions and were divided into 12 as follows: Carl Stone (86.0), Charlie
Hargraves (80.0), Willis Korb (70.5),
four-man teams and one of trio.
Bill Yoho and Mick Winebrenner (69.5),
There was a tie for ﬁrst place, with
Glenn Long (67.5), Albert Durst and
winning score was a 11-under par 59,
Dave Seamon (66.0) Kenny Pridemore
between the team of Dewey Smith,
(65.0), Dave Bodkin and Jay Rees
Ralph Six, Glenn Long and Kenny
(62.0).
Greene, and the quartet of Mick Wine-

Staff Report

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Browns RB Isaiah
Crowell signs tender
CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleveland
Browns starting running back Isaiah
Crowell signed the second-round
restricted free agent tender the franchise placed on him.
The team announced the move on
Thursday night along with signings of
three draft picks: cornerback Howard
Wilson (fourth round), left tackle Rod
Johnson (ﬁfth round) and running back
Matthew Dayes (seventh round).
Crowell, who rushed for 952 yards
last season, will make $2.7 million next
season and is eligible to become an
unrestricted free agent in 2018.
Cleveland can sign him to a contract
extension at any time before then.
The Browns view Crowell, who did
not attend the team’s voluntary workout
program that began last month, as a
core player going forward.
He was signed as an undrafted free
agent in 2014.
Crowell averaged 4.8 yards per carry
last season and caught 40 passes for
319 yards.

60718113

for further info

Stone’s lead trimmed in
Riverside senior league

Steelers sign draft
picks Conner, Holba
PITTSBURGH (AP) — James Conner is ofﬁcially a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The former Pitt running back who
has overcome cancer signed a four-year
deal with the Steelers on Thursday.
Pittsburgh selected Conner in the
third round of the draft last month.
Conner, who set Atlantic Coast Conference records for total touchdowns
(56) and rushing touchdowns (52), will
wear No. 30 with the Steelers.
Pittsburgh also signed long snapper
Colin Holba to a four-year deal.
Holba served as the long snapper at
Louisville in 2015 and 2016.
The Steelers have now signed four of
their eight draft picks.
First-round pick T.J. Watt, secondround pick Juju Smith-Schuster, thirdround pick Cameron Sutton and fourthround pick Josh Dobbs have yet to come
to terms.

University of Dayton
plans renovations
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — The University of Dayton is planning $172 million
in updates to its arena, which is used
for the pair of March Madness play-in
games known as the First Four.
The Dayton Daily News reports the
cost is being covered through private
donations and the school.
In a statement, the president and the
athletics director at the university say
the money will go toward turning the
arena into an “environmentally conscious, state-of-the-art facility.”

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, May 14, 2017 Section C
Daniel Dunfee,
the Franklin B.
Walter award
recipient,
receives his
award from
Daniel Otto,
Southern
High School
Principal.

Photos courtesy of Meigs Local Gifted Coordinator Sarah Lee

Meigs County top students honored
Dunfee receives
Franklin B. Walter Award

The Hollywood themed event
is sponsored by the AthensMeigs Educational Service
Center and held at Meigs High
School.
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com
In addition to the recognition
of the students from around the
county, one student is presentROCKSPRINGS — Some
ed with the Franklin B. Walter
of Meigs County’s best and
All-Scholastic Award.
brightest students were honThis year’s Franklin B.
ored on Monday evening at the
33rd annual Meigs County Aca- Walter award recipient was
Southern Local’s Daniel Dundemic Excellence Banquet.
fee. Dunfee was presented
Each year, the top ﬁve perthe award by Southern High
cent of the students in grades
4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 from Eastern, School Principal Daniel Otto.
In receiving the award, Dunfee
Meigs and Southern Local are
then addressed those in attenhonored for their academic
dance.
achievements.

Dunfee inspired students
with his speech about the inﬂuence of family, imagination and
realms that are opened through
reading and the importance of
making the choice to do good
in the world. He left students
with empowerment that they
are the future leaders of the
world and they will achieve
great things.
The Franklin B. Walter AllScholastic Award was established in 1989 by Ohio’s County Superintendents to recognize student achievement and
promote academic accomplishment. One senior from each
of Ohio’s eighty-eight counties

receives this prestigious honor
each year. They have achieved
this honor by virtue of their
academic achievement, personal accomplishments, and
community service.
Students recognized at the
33rd annual Meigs County
Academic Excellence Banquet
included,
Meigs Local: Halle Lewis,
Dominic Bryan, Quentin Smith,
Rebecca Young, Katy Cox, Jack
Musser, Morgan Myers, Caleb
Ogdin, Alexa Russell, Olivia
Goble, Jocelyn Cunningham,
Marissa Allen, Madison Fields,
Allison Hanstine, Matthew
Jackson, Marissa Noble, Angela

Morris, Jordan Roush, Elena
Musser, Dillon Mahr, Raeline
Reeves, Gracie Hoffman, Courtney Jones, Tyler Williams.
Eastern Local: Kayla Sellers, Rylan Weeks, Trenton
Morrissey, Jake Barber, Olivia
Barber, Ella Carleton, Chase
King, Mollie Maxon, Katelyn Edwards, Jett Facemyer,
Laura Pullins, Jessica Coleman.
Southern: Katie Brooker,
Carson Reuter, Jake Roush,
Riley Lisle, Kyler Rogers,
Kristin McKay, Mallory Johnson, Marissa Brooker, Sierra
Cleland, Amanda Cole, Daniel
Dunfee, Sara Schenkelberg.

Meigs Intermediate and Middle School students (seated) Halle Lewis, Quentin Smith, Rebecca Young, Southern Elementary and High School students (seated) Katie Brooker, Jake Roush, Riley Lisle, Kyler
Katy Cox, Jack Musser, (standing) Morgan Myers, Caleb Ogdin, Alexa Russell, Olivia Goble, Jocelyn Rogers, (standing) Kristin McKay, Mallory Johnson, Marissa Brooker, Sierra Cleland, Amanda Cole,
Cunningham, Marissa Allen.
Daniel Dunfee, Sara Schenkelberg.

Meigs High School students (seated) Madison Fields, Allison Hanstine, Matthew Jackson, Marissa Eastern Elementary and High School students (seated) Kayla Sellers, Rylan Weeks, Trenton Morrissey,
Noble, (standing) Angela Morris, Jordan Roush, Elena Musser, Dillon Mahr, Raeline Reeves, Gracie Ella Carleton, (standing) Chase King, Mollie Maxon, Katelyn Edwards, Jett Facemyer, Laura Pullins.
Hoffman.

�ALONG THE RIVER

2C Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lyme disease cases on the rise in Ohio
mon, American Dog tick. An adult
According to the Ohio Departblacklegged tick is no larger than
ment of Health, the number of
a sesame seed and may go undeLyme disease cases has steadily
tected due to the size. A young
increased in Ohio over the past
blacklegged tick may appear as
four years (93 in 2013, 119 in
a black speck on the skin. As for
2014, 154 in 2015 and 160 in
identiﬁcation, the blacklegged tick
2016).
has no markings or ornamentation
Last year the Meigs County
Meigs
on its ‘back’ while the American
Health Department reported
Health dog tick and the Lone Star tick
have two Lyme disease cases
Matters have distinct markings. The
within the county. Lyme disSteve
Swatzel blacklegged tick is typically found
ease is transmitted to humans
around shrubbery and in forested
through the bite of infected
areas. Unlike the American dog tick,
“Blacklegged tick” (commonly known
the blacklegged tick is active the entire
as a Deer tick). Typical symptoms of
year. Before 2010 the blacklegged tick
Lyme disease include fever, headache,
fatigue, and a characteristic circular red- was not established in Ohio. Current
dish rash around or near the site of the ﬁndings have the blacklegged tick in at
tick bite. The rash appears in 60-80% of least 60 counties now, including Meigs
the cases. If left untreated, infection can County. These ticks must be attached
have a lasting effect on joints, the heart, to the body for 36 to 48 hours or more
and the nervous system. A blacklegged before the Lyme disease bacteria is
tick is much smaller than the more com- passed. There is no direct transmission

of Lyme disease from person to person
or from dog to person; however, pets
can unknowingly transport the ticks
into or near your home.
If you do ﬁnd a tick attached to you
or to your pet it is important to remove
it as soon as possible. To remove an
attached tick, grasp it with tweezers as
close as possible to the skin and pull
with ﬁrm, steady pressure straight out.
Do not twist or jerk the tick, as the
mouthparts may break off. If tweezers
are not available, protect ﬁngers with
rubber gloves or tissue paper. Do not
handle ticks with bare hands. Do not
squeeze, crush or puncture the body of
the tick as it may contain infected ﬂuids. After removing the tick, thoroughly
disinfect the bite site and wash your
hands. Place the tick in a small jar or
plastic bag and contact your local health
department for help with identiﬁcation.
See or call your doctor if there is a con-

cern about incomplete tick removal or
as if symptoms develop.
To protect you and your family from
ticks here are a few tips:
�7le_Z�Wh[Wi�e\�^_]^�Xhki^�m^[d�
you’re in the woods.
�M[Wh�bed]�ib[[l[i�WdZ�fWdji�m^[d�
you can.
�9^[Ya�\eh�j_Yai�W\j[h�[l[ho�j_c[�oek�
go outside.
�Ki[�_di[Yj�h[f[bb[dj�m_j^�:;;J�_d�
it.
�Ki[�W�b_dj�hebb[h�ed�oekh�ia_d�WdZ�
clothes when you come indoors. The
roller may pick up the ticks too small to
see.
�7i�Wd�Wbj[hdWj_l[�je�:;;J�oek�cWo�
use essential oils to repel ticks such as
Peppermint, Geranium, Thyme, Melaleuca, Cedar wood.
Steve Swatzel, RS, is director of environmental health,
Meigs County Health Department.

Perrin receives Feeney Bennett Post 128 installs officers
senior award
in journalism
;ccW�F[hh_d"�ZWk]^j[h�
of Amy and Jon Perrin
of Pomeroy, a recent
summa cum
laude graduate in
journalism at the
Ohio University
Scripps College of
Communication,
received the Outstanding Strategic
Perrin
Communication
Senior Award in
journalism for 2017.
She was a graduate of
Meigs High School and
has been an Ohio University Cutler Scholar for

four years. This program
provides unmatched
leadership and service
experiences, international study and
travel opportunities
for students with
the potential to be
change-makers and
leaders.
Perrin is currently
employed by Ohio
University as the
associate producer for the
newly launched professional theater company,
Tantrum Theater, in Dublin, Ohio.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Courtesy

New officers were recently installed for Feeney Bennett Post 128 American Legion Middleport. Pictured are (left to right front row)
Robert Byer, Commander; Bob Schmoll First Vice Commander; Myrna Van Meter, Second Vice Commander; Roscoe Wise, Adjutant;
(back row left to right) Jim Bradbury, Chaplain; Homer Tate, Finance Officer; James Bailey, Veterans Service Officer; and Dewey
Smith, Sergeant at Arms.

GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock
report of sales from May 10.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $140-$180, Heifers, $130$168; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $130-$180, Heifers,
$120-$155; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $130-$168, Heifers, $110-$140; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $120-$155,
Heifers, $95-$135; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $110$140, Heifers, $80-$120.
Fed Cattle
Choice, Steers and Heifers, $138-$142.75.
Cows
M[bb#ckiYb[Z%Ó[i^[Z"��,&amp;#�-,1�C[Z_kc%B[Wd"��+)#
�,-1�J^_d%B_]^j"��*(#�+(1�8kbbi"��++#�'&amp;+$
Back to Farm
9em%9Wb\�FW_hi"��/(+#�'*-+1�8kbbi"��'(+&amp;#�'+&amp;&amp;1�
Hogs, $22-$50; Bred Cows, $650-$1125; Baby Calves,
$30-$150; Feeder Pigs, $25-$40; Goats, $190-$257.50.

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

Upcoming specials
40 weaned heifers next week, weaned and shots,
5-700 pounds.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Ryan Vaughn (304) 514-1858, or visit the
website at www.uproducers.com.

CABLE

COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney General Mike
:[M_d[�WdZ�j^[�&lt;[Z[hWb�JhWZ[�9ecc_ii_ed�j^_i�m[[a�
announced a joint lawsuit against the operators of an
alleged computer repair scam. The action is part of a
nationwide sweep against sham tech-support services.
According to the lawsuit, Repair All PC and several
related companies and individuals tricked consumers
into paying for unnecessary computer support services and security software. Nationwide, hundreds of
consumers ﬁled complaints about the scheme with the
Federal Trade Commission, Attorney General’s Ofﬁce,
or other agencies. Victims often reported losing about
$100 to $500 each, though some reported losing much
more.
ÆM[�\ekdZ�j^Wj�j^[�ef[hWjehi�e\�j^_i�iY^[c[�mekbZ�
scare people into thinking there was a problem with
their computers and then pressure them into paying for services they didn’t need,” Attorney General
:[M_d[�iW_Z$�ÆEkh�]eWb�_i�je�mWhd�f[efb[�WXekj�j^[i[�
tactics and to stop the bad practices.”
The investigation into Repair All PC found that the
See SCAM | 4C

6:30

SUNDAY, MAY 14
7 PM

7:30

(2:00) PGA Golf The Players

Little Big Shots "Little Big
Championship (L)
Steppers"
(2:00) PGA Golf The Players Little Big Shots "Little Big
Championship (L)
Steppers"
ABC 6 News ABC World Once Upon a Time "The
at 6:00 p.m. News
Final Battle Begins" (N)
Living Well Life/Line "It's Antiques Roadshow
With "The
All About the "Virginia Beach (Hour
Berkshires" Journey"
Three)"
Eyewitness ABC World Once Upon a Time "The
News at 6
News
Final Battle Begins" (N)
Weekend
10TV News 60 Minutes
News
Sunday
Rizzoli &amp; Isles "Money for Bob'sBurgers Simp. "Kamp
Nothing"
"Aquaticism" Krustier"
PBS
BBC
Globe Trekker "Road Trip:
NewsHour
Newsnight Patagonia"
Weekend
13 News
Weekend
60 Minutes
Weekend
News

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Little Big Shots "Memory
Chicago Justice "Tycoon" Shades of Blue "The Quality
Lane" (SF) (N)
(N)
of Mercy" (N)
Little Big Shots "Memory
Chicago Justice "Tycoon" Shades of Blue "The Quality
Lane" (SF) (N)
(N)
of Mercy" (N)
Once Upon a Time "The
Once Upon a Time "The
Match Game (N)
Final Battle Part 1" 1/2 (N) Final Battle Part 2" (SF) (N)
Call the Midwife Nurse
Masterpiece Classic "King Charles III" King Charles III
Crane faces an unexpected imagines Prince Charles’ ascension to the throne. (N)
crisis. (N)
Once Upon a Time "The
Once Upon a Time "The
Match Game (N)
Final Battle Part 1" 1/2 (N) Final Battle Part 2" (SF) (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
Madam Secretary
Elementary "Scrambled"
(N)
"Unleashed" (SF) (N)
"Revelation" (N)
The 66th Annual Miss USA Pageant Hopefuls from all 50 Eyewitness News at 10
states and D.C. compete. (N)
p.m.
Call the Midwife Nurse
Masterpiece Classic "King Charles III" King Charles III
Crane faces an unexpected imagines Prince Charles’ ascension to the throne. (N)
crisis. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
Madam Secretary
Elementary "Scrambled"
"Unleashed" (SF) (N)
"Revelation" (N)
(N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Blood "Most Wanted" Blue Bloods
Postgame
24 (ROOT) (4:00) MLB Baseball (L)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter Baseball Tonight
26 (ESPN2) (5:30) E:60
SportsCenter
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)

Computer repair scam
results in lawsuit

6 PM

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

BlueB. "Power of the Press" BlueBlood "Under the Gun" Blue Bloods "Baggage"
Pirates Ball Triathlon
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
MLB Baseball Houston Astros at New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L)
SportsCenter
SportsCenter 30 for 30 "One and Not Done"
Softball Selection (L)
Mary Kills People "Raised
Boyfriend Killer (2016, Thriller) Barbie Castro, Kate Mansi, The Good Nanny (2017, Thriller) Ellen Hollman, Peter
Patrick Muldoon. TV14
Porte, Briana Evigan.
by Wolves" (N)
(4:10)
Grease (‘78, Mus) John Travolta. A leather-jacketed boy and (:50)
The Devil Wears Prada (‘06, Com) Meryl Streep. An aspiring
a goody-two-shoes girl fall in and out of love in the 1950s. TVPG
journalist works for an overly demanding fashion magazine editor. TVPG
Bar Rescue "Yo-Ho-Ho and Bar Rescue "Characters
Bar Rescue "Empty
Bar Rescue "Back to the
Bar Rescue "Bar Over
a Bottle of Dumb"
Assassination"
Pockets"
Bar: Hot-Headed Owners"
Troubled Water"
H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
GShakers "Clam Shakers"
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs Eunice Cho. TVG
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam
(5:00)
Into the Woods (‘14, Fant) Johnny Depp. TVPG
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Laos" (N)
UnitedShadesAmerica (N)
Tammy (‘14, Com) Melissa McCarthy. TVMA
The Help (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Emma Stone. TV14
(4:00)
The Day After Tomorrow Dennis Quaid. A climatologist valiantly Into the Badlands "Sting of Badlands "Nightingale Sings
the Scorpion's Tail"
No More" (N)
Twister TV14 tries to save his son from a polar storm engulfing New York. TV14
Naked "Shannon" (N)
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked "Himalayan Hell"
NakedAfr "Outbreak" (N)
American Pickers "Urban
American Pickers "Motor American Pickers "Bad
American Pickers
American Pickers "Sicilian
Cowboys"
City"
Mother Shucker"
"California Streaming"
Standoff"
River Monsters: En. (N)
River Monsters: En. (N)
Riv Monsters: Unhook (N) River Monsters: Sup. (N)
(:10) River Monsters
Snapped "Vegas Bray" (N) Snapped "Chandaliea
Snapped "Susan Walls"
Snapped "Vegas Bray"
Snapped "Diane Borchardt"
Lowder"
CSI: Miami
CSI: Miami "Triple Threat" CSI: Miami "Bloodline"
CSI: Miami "Rush"
CSI: Miami "Just Murdered"
Kardashians "The Ex Files" Kardashians "Guilt Trip"
The Kardashians
The Kardashians (N)
Happens at The Abbey (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
America's National Parks America's National Parks Wicked Tuna "Hickory
Wicked Tuna "Hissy Fit" (N) Primal Survivor "Hostile
"Yosemite National Park"
"Great Smoky Mountains" Dickory Docked"
Canyon" (N)
(3:30) Cycling
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L)
MLS Soccer Los Angeles Galaxy at New York Red Bulls (L) MLS Soccer New York City FC at FC Dallas Site: Toyota Stadium Texas (L) UFC Top Ten
To Be Announced
Forged in Fire "Butterfly
Forged in Fire "Katar"
Forged in Fire: Cutting
To Be Announced
Swords"
Deeper "Judges' Pick" (N)
Atlanta "Reunion Part 3"
Atlanta "Reunion Part 4"
Housewives Atlanta (N)
Cabo "Tick Tick Boom" (N) Atlanta "Secrets Revealed"
(5:30) A Madea Christmas Chad Michael Murray. TV14
Madea's Family Reunion (‘06, Com) Maya Angelou, Tyler Perry. TVPG
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Bargain (N) IslndLif (N) IslndLif (N)
Troy (2004, Action) Orlando Bloom, Eric Bana, Brad Pitt. The Prince of Troy starts a
Maleficent (2014, Adventure) Elle Fanning, Sharlto
war when he leads the Queen of Sparta away from her husband. TV14
Copley, Angelina Jolie. TVPG

6 PM
(5:10) Sully

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Jason Bourne (2016, Action) Julia Stiles, Alicia Vikander, Matt The Leftovers "It's a Matt, Silicon
Veep
Matt, Matt, Matt World" (N) Valley (N)
Tom Hanks. Damon. Jason Bourne finally remembers who he is. He searches for the
"Chicklet"
TV14
truth behind his past. TV14
(N)
(:15)
Dark Water (‘05, Thril) John C. Reilly, Tim Roth,
Trapped Charlize Theron. The parents (:50) The Other Side of the Door A mother
Jennifer Connelly. A mother and daughter are haunted by of a kidnapped girl turn the tables on the
visits a strange temple to find her dead son,
the ghost of their apartment's former resident. TV14
kidnappers' foolproof plan. TVM
but he returns to haunt them. TVMA
Guerrilla
Guerrilla The gang moves to Guerrilla Kent begins to
Guerrilla Marcus and Jas'
Guerrilla Infighting
a secret location in the
enjoy his role and forms an relationship is tested after a threatens to split the gang.
countryside.
alliance.
tragedy. (N)
(N)
(:50)

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, May 14, 2017 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

� �
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
� �
�
�
�
� �
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
� �
� �

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

ª$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

����

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

���� #ONCEPTIS 0UZZLES $IST� BY +ING &amp;EATURES 3YNDICATE )NC�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

����

� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
ª$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

Hank Ketcham’s

���� #ONCEPTIS 0UZZLES $IST� BY +ING &amp;EATURES 3YNDICATE )NC�

� �

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�ALONG THE RIVER

4C Sunday, May 14, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Teaford honored by Lions Club

Holzer/Courtesy photos

Pictured from left: Dr. Christopher Marazon, Holzer Residency Program Director, Leslee Rice,
Jennifer Smith, Jennifer Hatfield, Morgan Werry, and Dr. Lois Bosley, OUHCOM Assistant Dean.

Holzer recognizes students
Courtesy photo

Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club member Bruce Teaford was presented with two honors by local
President Kenny Klein. Teaford was honored with Lions Club Zone 7 “Lion of the Year” award as well as
the Silver Centennial Membership pin for recruiting new members into the Lions Club. Teaford joined
the Lions Club on Oct. 1, 1973, and has been active for all of his nearly 44 years of service to the
Lions Club and his community. He is a Past President of the local Lions Club, having served multiple
terms. He has been active in all of the Lions Club projects over the years, including 27 straight years
of working in the Lions Club booth at the Meigs County Fair. Bruce was the driving force behind one
of the Lions Club’s largest projects: construction of the roof over the stage in downtown Pomeroy.
This area has become the centerpiece for many functions during the course of every year. Please join
us in saying “Thank you, Bruce, for your many years of service to the Lions Club and your community.

From page 2C

scheme generally began
when consumers were
browsing online and
received a pop-up security warning on their computer. The warning indicated that the computer
was infected with a virus
(or was otherwise compromised) and instructed
the consumers to call a
toll-free number.
Once consumers called,
they were connected to
telemarketers who asked
for remote access to
their computers and who
claimed to ﬁnd errors,
viruses, spyware, malware, or other problems.
The operators also gave
people the impression

that they were afﬁliated
with well-known companies like Microsoft or
Apple. Eventually, the
telemarketers asked for
payment.
In some cases, if consumers refused to pay, the
telemarketers allegedly
used an application that
would allow them to set a
secret password and make
the consumer’s computer
unusable until the password was entered. The
scheme’s operators also
allegedly used a practice
called “browser hijacking,” meaning consumers
would be unable to close
or navigate around the
pop-up warnings that
appeared on their computers.
The Attorney General’s and Federal Trade

Commission’s lawsuit,
ﬁled in the U.S. District
Court for the Northern
District of Ohio, accuses
the following defendants
of violating the FTC Act
and the Ohio Consumer
Sales Practices Act:
Repair All PC LLC; Pro
PC Repair LLC; I Fix PC
LLC; WebTech World
LLC; Online Assist LLC;
Datadeck LLC; I Fix PC
(also doing business
as Techers 247, I Fix
PC, and I Fix PC 247);
Jessica Marie Serrano;
Dishant Khanna; Mohit
Malik; Romil Bhatia;
Lalit Chadha; and Roopkala Chadha.
Consumers can learn
more or report suspected
fraud at www.OhioProtects.org or by calling
800-282-0515.

Outstanding Award for Graduate Medical
Education Award was presented to Dr. Joshua
Bryant, Resident, at right, by Dr. Lois Bosley,
OUHCOM Assistant Dean.

standing Faculty Award for Family
Medicine – Dr. Brian Still, Family
Practice, Inducted into the Gold
Humanism Honor Society were Jordan Browning and Jason Rodriguez,
both third year medical students from
OUHCOM.
Residents also presented awards to
outstanding preceptors/staff. Among
those recognized were Dr. Nabil
Fahmy, Dr. Laurel Kirkhart, Dr. Phil
Long, and Bonnie Arnold, RN. On
behalf of the students, Dr. Ben Jaderholm presented awards to the chosen
staff members.
Submitted by Holzer Health System.

60718114

Scam

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer recently
recognized its graduating medical students. Students and attendees enjoyed
dinner and an awards ceremony in the
Davis Family Education and Conference Center at Holzer Gallipolis.
Holzer 2017 Medical School Graduates include Jennifer Hatﬁeld, Internal
Medicine, Andrea Merry, Pediatrics,
Leslee Rice, Family Medicine, Adrienne Roarke, Internal Medicine &amp;
Pediatrics, Jennifer Smith, Intern
Year, and Morgan Werry, Family Medicine. Students are from the Ohio University Heritage College of Medicine
(OUHCOM), Athens, Ohio and the
West Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine (WVSOM), Charleston,
West Virginia.
Commendations from the OUHCOM students were awarded to
several Holzer providers. Presenting
awards to the Holzer staff on behalf
of the OUHCOM was Dr. Lois Bosley,
Family Practice, Holzer Health System.
Recognitions included: Outstanding
Faculty Award for Primary Care – Dr.
Nabil Fahmy, Internal Medicine, Outstanding Award for Graduate Medical
Education – Dr. Joshua Bryant, Family Practice Resident, Outstanding
Faculty Award for Specialty Medicine
– Dr. Laurel Kirkhart, OB/Gyn, Out-

60720001

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="63">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1600">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="3945">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1841">
              <text>May 14, 2017</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="64">
      <name>harrison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="88">
      <name>hayes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1746">
      <name>mayo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1747">
      <name>neu</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1184">
      <name>sheppard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="168">
      <name>watts</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
