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                  <text>History
lesson at
South Gallia

Reynolds
win match
at state

Business
finds
its niche

LOCAL s 3A

SPORTS s 1B

FEATURES s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 10, Volume 50

Two Gallipolis
residents
are sentenced
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — A pair of Gallipolis residents
were sentenced for separate crimes this past week.
Jacob Cockburn, 28, pleaded guilty Tuesday to
a pair of crimes that occurred in 2015. Cockburn
was sentenced by the Gallia County Court of
Common Pleas to eight months in prison for two
counts of harassment by an inmate, a ﬁfth-degree
felony. Upon leaving prison, he will
be supervised under community
control for two years.
In October 2015, justice ofﬁcials
removed Cockburn from the Gallipolis Municipal Court for unruly
behavior during a proceeding. When
found in the lobby of the Gallia
Cockburn
County Jail, Cockburn attempted
to smack his head into a wall and
injure himself. While corrections
ofﬁcers held him back, Cockburn
spit in one ofﬁcer’s face. Ofﬁcers
were medically examined as part of
jail policy protocol.
In December 2015, ofﬁcers placed
Cockburn
in a holding cell in the
Grate
Gallia County Jail. He apparently
failed to obey the orders of the
ofﬁcers and began banging his head against a
cell door. While attempting to restrain Cockburn,
he again spit on one of the corrections ofﬁcers.
Cockburn was then restrained and placed in a “spit
mask” before ofﬁcers were again medically examined.
“The defendant was charged with two counts of
‘harassment by inmate,’ which requires the state to
prove that the defendant had the intent to harass
a law enforcement ofﬁcer and cause the ofﬁcer
to come into contact with a bodily substance, in
this case saliva,” said Gallia County Prosecutor
Jeff Adkins. “This crime is a ﬁfth-degree felony in
Ohio, which usually would not carry actual incarceration. However, the defendant had prior felony
convictions from 2007 in New Jersey and therefore we were able to send him to prison for these
crimes and place him on community control once
he is released.”
Jacqueline Grate, 49, violated community
control and was ordered Thursday to serve a
17-month sentence in prison.
Justice proceedings found Grate guilty of two
counts of assaulting a peace ofﬁcer in 2011 and
placed her on community control after the conviction. The felonies happened because the defendant
was arrested originally for alleged domestic violence and was housed in the Gallia County Jail.
During her time there, she became aggressive with
ofﬁcers and punched and kicked a pair of them.
Ofﬁcers subdued Grate. She was placed on community control for the assaults.
Gallia County Court of Common Pleas revoked
Grate’s community control because of heroin
use allegations while on community control and
because she had violated curfew. Grate admitted
Thursday to committing such acts and was sentenced immediately thereafter.
“A bench warrant for the defendant was issued
in September 2015 and has been outstanding
ever since,” Adkins said. “Ofﬁcers with Gallia
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce had intelligence as to the
defendant’s whereabouts on Feb. 23, 2016. (Grate)
attempted to hide in the woods and then in a
closet inside a residence until she was ultimately
arrested by deputies.”
Dean Wright can be reached at (740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 5A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Wrestling: 1B
Basketball: 1B
NFL: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 2B
Classified: 4B
Comics: 3C

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

Sunday, March 6, 2016 s $2

URG board names new trustee
By Jessica Patterson
For the Times-Sentinel

RIO GRANDE — Bobbi Montgomery is
the newest member of the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Community College
Board of Trustees.
Montgomery is from Jackson, but spent
most of her growing-up years in southern
Louisiana.
She began her career at a manufacturing
ﬁrm based in Columbus where she was
promoted to Comptroller at 19 years old.
While working full-time, Montgomery
attended Ohio State University and served as
treasurer for the student government.
Montgomery returned to southeastern
Ohio in 1996 to join her family’s business,
Montgomery Machine &amp; Fabrication, Inc., in
Jackson. Devoted to developing the workforce,
she became involved in the community by
Courtesy photo serving on local, regional and state boards
University of Rio Grande President Dr. Michelle Johnston, left, and Larry for workforce, community and youth
Kidd, chair of the Rio Grande Community College Board of Trustees, welcome
Bobbi Montgomery to the board.

See TRUSTEE | 6A

Courtesy photos

Civil War re-enactors gather around the Civil War Memorial beside the Meigs County Courthouse during a “Decoration Day” celebration
to honor those soldiers who lost their lives to the conflict on both sides of the fighting.

Morgan’s Raid key in teaching history
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY —
Once again, history will
come alive in southeastern Ohio as Civil War
re-enactors take part in
Morgan’s Raid III,“The
Pursuit.”
This four-day event
will take place across two
counties, beginning Sept.
14 in Wilkesville, a small
town at the edge of Vinton County, and ending
Sept. 18 with the Battle
of Bufﬁngton Island
near Portland in Meigs
County.
According to Ohio
History Connection and
most local historians,
Morgan’s Raid was the
only major attack by
Confederate forces in
Ohio during the American Civil War and began
with the encroachment of
Confederate troops onto
Union soil. Led by Brig.
Gen. John Hunt Morgan,
a Confederate cavalry
leader, approximately
2,000 soldiers crossed the
Ohio River into southern
Indiana on July 8, 1863.
On July 13, the Indiana
militia engaged Morgan’s
troops and the Confederates entered Ohio, and
spent the night on the
outskirts of Cincinnati,

Pictured are Morgans Raid committee members Constance White, Eddie Wolfe, Mike Church, Darrell
Markijohn and Dale Colburn at a recent meeting in Pomeroy.

INSIDE
Historian recounts Morgan’s Raid in Gallia County. Page 1C

within sight of Camp
Dennison, a Union army
post. The next day, Morgan sent a small group
through Warren, Clinton,
Fayette, Ross and Jackson
counties. The remainder of Morgan’s forces
rode through Clermont,
Brown, Highland, Pike
and Jackson counties.
The group, which was
attempting to reach the

Ohio River, reunited at
Jackson and proceeded
east through Jackson,
Gallia, Vinton and Meigs
counties. A proclamation
was issued calling out the
Ohio militia on the night
of July 12 by Ohio Gov.
David Tod.
Troops were to be sent
to protect the southern
counties from Morgan’s
Raiders, but due to a lack

of established communication in many areas of
Ohio during that time,
many militiamen did not
hear of the proclamation
in time and Confederates
troops faced little opposition.
They were ﬁnally met
with resistance on July 18
when they encountered a
See HISTORY | 6A

�LOCAL

2A Sunday, March 6, 2016

DEATH NOTICES

PATRICIA RICKMAN
POMEROY — Patricia
A. Rickman, Pomeroy,
passed away on Thursday,
March 3, 2016 at the
Arbors of Pomeroy. She
was born on April 10,
1938 in Cheshire, to the
late Millard and Louise
(Gardner) Gilmore. She
was a Homemaker.
She is survived by her
daughter, Pam (Bruce)
Blackston, Pomeroy,
Ohio; step son, Joseph
Rickman; grandson, Clayton Blackston; brother,
Lionel (Judy) Gilmore.

She is preceded in
death by her parents,
husband, James Rickman;
sister, Reva Trent and a
niece Robin Collins
Graveside services will
be held on Sunday, March
6, 2016 at 2 p.m. at the
Gravel Hill Cemetery
with Tom Wilson ofﬁciating. Arrangements are
under the direction of
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com

TRENTON MITCHELL ROSEBERRY
SYRACUSE — Trenton Mitchell Roseberry,
25, of Syracuse, passed
away March 3, 2016. He
was born September 27,
1990 in Gallipolis, Ohio
to Tom and Dena (Watson) Roseberry. Trenton
was preceded in death by
his paternal grandfather,
Cecil Roseberry of Racine
and his maternal grandparents, Dave and Marilyn Watson of Minersville.
Trenton graduated from
Southern High School in
2008. He was a member
of Southern’s 2007 and
2008 District Championship Baseball Teams. He
was an avid outdoorsman
who loved to hunt and
ﬁsh. He was a member of
the Gold Ridge Gun Club.
Trenton was also a member of the UAW Union.
Trenton is survived
by his parents, Tom
and Dena Roseberry
of Syracuse; a brother,
Colby Roseberry and

ﬁancé Whitney Smith of
Wingate, N.C.; a brother
and sister-in-law, Andrew
and Melissa Roseberry of
San Diego, Calif. He also
leaves his paternal grandmother, Dorothy Roseberry and an aunt and
uncle, Cheryl and George
Gorham of Manassis, Va.
Services will be held on
Monday, March 7, 2016
at 1 p.m. at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
Ryan Eaton ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home Sunday,
March 6, 2016 from 6
p.m. till 8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be
Colby Roseberry, Andrew
Roseberry, Casey Hubbard, Chris Burkhammer,
Teddy Brown, and Bradley Brown.
A registry is available at
andersonmcdaniel.com

GALLIA/MEIGS
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Sunday Times-Sentinel appreciates
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. Gallia County events can
be emailed to: GDTnews@civitasmedia.com; Meigs County
events can be emailed to TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Monday, March 7
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Neighborhood Watch meeting, 1:30 p.m., in the Gallipolis Justice Center conference
room, 518 Second Ave.
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion Lafayette Post 27
will meet at 6 p.m . at the post home. All members and
ofﬁcers are urged to attend.
Sunday, March 6
POMEROY — New Beginnings United Methodist
Church, 112 E. Second St., Pomeroy, will host Evangelist
Ronn Jones for an evening of worship. Doors open at 5 p.m.,
and service begins at 6 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend.
Monday, March 7
POMEROY — Regular meeting of the Meigs County Agricultural Society at 7 p.m. at the fairgrounds in
the Coonhunter’s building.
Tuesday, March 8
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County PERI chapter will
meet at 1:30 p.m. at Faith Baptist Church, 1100 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis. Guest speaker will be Becky Pasquale from the
Our House Historical Tavern Museum. Members are ask to
bring a pack of toilet paper to be donated to a nonproﬁt organization. Agenda will be election of ofﬁcers.

Civitas Media, LLC

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Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

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

ADKINS
WILLOW WOOD — Tony Ray Adkins, 49, of
Willow Wood, passed away Sunday, February 28,
2016 at home.
There will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, is assisting the family with
arrangements.

follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation at
the funeral home will be 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
JONES
CHESAPEAKE — Jessie Jones, 34 of Chesapeake,
passed away Thursday, March 3, 2016 at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. Private family services will be held. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, is assisting the family with arrangements.

BARNETT
LANGSVILLE — Donald Wallace Barnett, Sr., 94,
Langsville, passed away at his residence Saturday,
THOMPSON
March 5, 2016. Arrangements will be announced by
WAVERLY — Janet Sue Thompson, 61, of WaverMcCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
ly, passed away Thursday, March 3, 2016 at Grant
Hospital, Columbus.
DRAKE
Burial will follow in Perkins Ridge Cemetery, WilGALLIPOLIS — Violet Drake, 84, of Gallipolis,
low Wood. Visitation will be held 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
died Thursday, March 3, 2016, at Holzer Senior
Monday, March 7, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and
Care. Graveside services will be Monday, March 7,
Crematory, Proctorville.
2016 at Centenary Cemetery. Willis Funeral Home
in care of arrangements.
WISE
MIDDLEPORT — Geneva L. Wise, 98 of MiddleHALL
port, passed away on Friday, March 4, 2016 at her
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Clara M. Hall, 85,
residence. Funeral services will be held on Wednesof Point Pleasant, passed away Thursday, March 3,
day, March 9, 2016 at 1 p.m. at the Anderson
2016, at King’s Daughters Medical Center. Funeral
McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport. Visitation
services will be 11 a.m. Monday, March 7, 2016, at
for family and friends will be held two hours prior to
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Burial will
the funeral service.

4-H dining hall challenge issued
By Beth Sergent

addition to being a home
to 4-H members in the
summer, the dining hall
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va.
and camp hosts many
— Progress is being
other organizations that
made on building the
help to positively shape
new dining hall at the
the youth of the area.
Mason County 4-H
The camp hosts 4-H
Camp, but more help
campers from other
is needed — a lot more
counties that don’t have
help.
the space or facilities, as
As of last month,
well as Camp Sunshine,
$48,000 had been raised a camp for children and
for the project, though
adults with mental and/
$70,000 is needed just
or physical disabilities.
for the construction
Also, teenagers from
materials for the new
four counties use
building. The West
the camp to attend
Virginia National Guard the Family Resource
has agreed to take on
Network’s Teen Institute.
the project by providing
Recently, the old
labor at no cost.
dining hall, which was
Organizers are hoping to more than 60 years old,
have a new dining hall in was torn down and
place in 2017.
National Guard members
This week, Mason
are soon going to be on
County Prosecuting
site doing excavation
Attorney Craig Tatterson and ground work.
made a donation to the
Linda Roush, a 4-H
cause. Tatterson has
advisor and fellow
issued a challenge to
organizer of the dining
other candidates during hall project, accepted
this campaign season to Tatterson’s donation on
give to the project.
Wednesday and said
she hopes more people
Tatterson said in

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Beth Sergent | Ohio Valley Publishing

Mason County Prosecuting Attorney Craig Tatterson, pictured at
left, donates to the 4-H dining hall fund as part of a challenge
to all candidates running for office to support the funding of the
project. Linda Roush, also pictured, is a 4-H advisor and accepts
the check on behalf of the dining hall fund.

respond because getting
to that $70,000 will
basically put the building
under roof, but would
not include some of the
necessary appliances and
furnishes for the inside.
Those who donate at
least $100 will receive
a commemorative brick
which will be placed on
a wall inside the dining
hall. The bricks can be

personalized in many
ways to leave a lasting
legacy and message for
4-H’ers to come.
Those interested in
purchasing a brick or
making a donation to
the Mason County 4-H
Building Fund, can do so
by calling 304-675-0888.
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

GALLIA/MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Cadot-Blessing Camp 126
meeting is March 7
RIO GRANDE — Cadot-Blessing Camp 126
of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War
will have the next bimonthly meeting at 1 p.m.
March 7 at the Craft Barn of Bob Evans Farms in
Rio Grande. The Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War is a congressionally chartered organization founded for charitable, fraternal, patriotic
and educational purposes and is the sole heir
to the Grand Army of the Republic. Any person
with Civil War ancestry is encouraged to pay the
ultimate honor to that ancestor by joining our
ranks. “It is not what you pay to be a member,
but what your ancestor paid for you to be eligible.”

Meigs Co. Health Dept.
immunization clinic scheduled
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department is offering an immunization clinic
on Tuesday, March 8 from 9 to 11 a.m. and 1
to 3 p.m. at 112 E Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Please bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children
must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $10.00 donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will
be denieded services because of an inability to
pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/

your
What is sleep apnea doing to

sleep?

or commercial insurance cards, if applicable.
Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia and some influenza vaccine are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our
website at www.meig,s-healthncom to see a list
of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

‘What’s Your Story’ open
house set for March 8
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Board
of Developmental Disabilities, which includes
GALLCO Workshop and Guiding Hand School
and Preschool, will host a “What’s Your Story”
open house between 1-3 p.m. March 8 at 77 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis. The open house is part
of a month-long celebration of Developmental
Disabilities Month. For more information, contact the Gallia County Board of Developmental
Disabilities at 7400-446-6902.

2016 Family &amp; Children First
Council Meetings
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County Family
and Children First Council will be conducting
regular business meetings at 9 a.m. March 8 at
the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis. For more information, contact
Lora Jenkins, intersystem coordinator, at (740)
446-3022.

Do your part!
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60626744

OBITUARIES

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Colonoscopy
screening saves lives

Sunday, March 6, 2016 3A

History lesson at South Gallia

By Dr. Arthur Fine
Pleasant Valley Hospital

What would you do if you knew a simple
screening could save your life?
If you answered, “Get the screening,” you’re
already on the right track.
March is Colon Cancer Awareness Month,
and according to the American Cancer Society,
approximately 40 percent of adults over the age of
50 have not had recent colon cancer screenings.
Yet colorectal cancer, when caught early, is easier
to treat and the outcomes bring a greater chance
of survival.
In fact, while colon cancer is the third leading
cause of cancer-related deaths in the U.S., regular
colon screenings can not only detect, but can
actually prevent this type of cancer. Colon cancers
begin as polyps, which can be removed during a
colonoscopy. Finding and removing these polyps
and cancers is important because they don’t
have symptoms — so screenings are the best
prevention.
At Pleasant Valley Hospital, we’re dedicated to
keeping the community we care so much about
free of cancer. That’s why we’re encouraging those
of you in the Point Pleasant area to take control of
your health. We’ll be here for you every step of the
way.
If you’re over the age of 50, schedule a
colonoscopy at your earliest convenience. It may
be your chance to protect yourself from something
more serious. Contact us today at (304) 675-1666.
Dr. Arthur Fine is a surgeon at Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Courtesy photo

Educators from South Gallia High School who are participating in the Landmark Moments Fellowship program recently presented a
program to Mr. Jeff Fowler’s freshman American History class. In conjunction with the current lessons on World War II and American
imperialism in Hawaii, students were treated to a ukulele demonstration, a pig created from Hawaii’s favorite foods, Spam accented
with fresh pineapple, and macadamia nut cookies. The Landmark Moments Fellowship program is directed by Dr. Denise Shockley, of the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Educational Service Center. Pictured are, from left, Linda Donohue, Dian Fleming, Ryan Shafer, Jane Ann Slagle
(representing the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Educational Service Center) and Jeffrey Fowler.

Gallia deputies arrest 3 Hively recognized in ‘Pay it Forward’
By Dean Wright

as to Grabans’
location on
Tuesday eveGALLIPOLIS —
ning.
The Gallia County
Ofﬁcers
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce has
responded to
arrested three india residence on
Deckard
Grabans
viduals for their alleged Johnson
State Route
roles in three separate
160 after
for the allegedly receiving
crimes last week.
receiving
information
that
“We’ve been periodically stolen property.
someone
reported
spotting
Reports came in that
posting on our Facebook
Grabans’ vehicle. Ofﬁcers
on Feb. 28, someone
page outstanding warblocked both the back and
had allegedly broken the
rants. Warrant Wednesday,” Gallia County Sheriff front door of Trustworthy front doors of the strucHardware in Bidwell. Sup- ture. Grabans allegedly
Joe Browning said.
posedly, around 28 knives attempted to exit the back
Deputies brought Matand 10 multitools were
door before encountering
thew E. Johnson, 35, of
Bidwell, into custody Friday reported stolen. Suspects
another ofﬁcer. Ofﬁcers
allegedly used a steel
morning. According to the
then entered the building
fence post to break the
sheriff, Johnson had a warand took Grabans into cusglass door. Ofﬁcers believe tody without incident.
rant in Gallia County for
Deckard may potentially
allegedly receiving stolen
Grabans is allegedly a
be linked to the crime.
property. The charge is
person of interest in sevOfﬁcers arrested Brian
normally issued, Browning
eral other crimes reported
said, when police suspect an Grabans, 40, of Vinton, for to the sheriff’s ofﬁce.
individual has property that alleged theft on a felony
warrant. Ofﬁcers respond- Dean Wright can be reached at
was stolen in the suspect’s
ed to information received (740) 446-2342, Ext. 2103.
control and knows it was
stolen at some point in time.
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce also had outstanding warrants for Johnson
Would like to express our
for alleged breaking and
heartfelt gratitude to everyone
entering charges. Ofﬁcers
who showed us kindness, love and
believed Johnson may have
support in so many ways during
been active in thefts in
the illness and recent death of our
Meigs and Gallia counties.
beloved mother, grandmother
“Once we put him on
and great-grandmother who left
(Facebook) on Wednesday,
us to be with God ten days after
we started receiving tips
her 95th birthday. Also, thanks
on where to go look for
for all the cards, phone calls, visits and Facebook
him,” Browning said. “He
wishes that made her last birthday very happy.
was apprehended (Friday)
morning.”
Carl, Sherry, Carol, Kevin, Carl,
Deputies also appreJennifer,Jeremy, Kelli, Kaleb, Evan
hended Dustin Deckard,
35, of Bidwell, on Monday
Addison, Daisy, &amp; Shredder.
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

The Family of Ethel DeWitt

60641650

VOTE

SARAH
GRACE
for

This week’s recipient of
“Operation Pay it Forward” is
Colt Hively, a sophomore at
Gallia Academy High School
and the son of Brian and
Heather Hively. He works at
Pizza Hut in Gallpolis and
loves to fish. Here, he stands
with Student Resource Officer
Deputy Chad Wallace. Hively
will receive a card for free
wings to Buffalo Wild Wings for
being an exemplary citizen at
GAHS.
Courtesy photo

at Pleasant Valley Hospital

JOINT REPLACEMENT SURGERY

For the surgeons from Marshall Orthopaedics, coming together
in 2014 as a team with Pleasant Valley Hospital and Cabell
Huntington Hospital, presented a unique opportunity - the chance
to provide a level of orthopedic care unmatched in the area.
Today, patients from Mason, Meigs, Gallia, and Jackson Counties
depend on Marshall Orthopaedics’ highly-specialized bone,
muscle and joint experts for their joint replacement surgeries right
here in the community we love.

“As a parent, I
know the value of a
quality education.
As a small business
owner I know how to
create jobs. As
your next State
Representative, I’ll
work hard for this
generation and
the next one.”

Because health happens here.
Joint replacement surgeries include:
o���Total or partial knee replacement
o���Hip replacement
o���Shoulder replacement
o���Reverse shoulder replacement

Ohio House District 94

Marshall Orthopaedics at PVH is accepting new
patients. For more information or to schedule an
appointment, please call 304.675.2781.

Early Voting now or
Vote March 15

VISION – DEDICATION – RESULTS
SarahGraceforOhio.com SarahGrace45701@gmail.com
FB: srahgrace45701
Paid by Friends of Sarah Grace, Julia Michael Scott, Treasurer, 165 N. Congress, Athens, OH 45701

60642960

MARSHALL ORTHOPAEDICS AT PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
�����7BMMFZ�%SJWF�4VJUF���� �1PJOU�1MFBTBOU �87�o�������������

�LOCAL

4A Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

NEW HAVEN HONOR ROLL, PERFECT ATTENDANCE
Contributed Article

NEW HAVEN — New
Haven Elementary has
announced its honor roll
and perfect attendance
for the ﬁrst and second
nine weeks grading periods. The listing as submitted by the school is as
follows:
First nine weeks
A honor roll students:
Third Grade: Mrs. Cullen:
Dillan Fields, Emma
Northup, Kate Reynolds,
Phoebe Richardson; Mrs.
Sayre: Hayden Lloyd, Kinsey
Roush, Paytin Staats, Ethan
Stiltner, Nicholas Williams,
Zalee Wood, Annabelle
Woodall; Mrs. Smith: Diego
Aguirre, Elissa Hoffman,
Anna Bella Mankin, Eli

Rickard; Fourth Grade:
Mrs. Tennant: Sawyer
VanMeter; Mrs. Blackshire:
Lillian Bowls, Carson Gibbs,
Kayden Gibbs, Hallie Kearns,
Bryce Zuspan; Fifth Grade:
Mrs. Northup: Nikolas
Roush, Michael VanMeter;
Mrs. Richardson: Ethan
Gray, Michaela Lieving,
Josiah Lloyd, Trey Ohlinger,
Andrew Roush, Amber
Wolfe, Emma Young; Mr.
Tyree: Skylar Day, Alexandra
Phillips, Chloe Robinson,
Alyssa VanMeter, Andrew
Warth; Sixth Grade: Mr. Vogt:
; Mrs. Kessinger: Emma
Fisher, Carolee Hoffman,
Lauren Noble, Abby Pauley,
Allison Tennant; Mrs. Smith.
A/B honor roll students:
Third Grade: Mrs. Cullen:
Dylan Duff, Cadence
Gerlach, Zander Hall,

Raegan Johnson, Seth
Ohlinger, Jayla Simpkins,
Macie Whittington, Lexi
Wood; Mrs. Sayre: Courtney
Hacker, Madison Deweese,
Blake Henry, Katie Johnson,
Ricky Jordan, Joshua
Lambert, Marissa Roush,
Trayton Strakey; Mrs. Smith:
Sophia Guo, Kaileyn Day,
Drew Duff, Eliijah Grady,
Shane Hill, Connor Lambert,
Olivia Roush, Jacob Russell;
Fourth Grade: Mrs. Tennant:
Brycen Bumgarner, Madison
Edwards, Nathan Fields,
Cadem Gibbs, Trey Gilkey,
Olivia Jeffers, Tyreese
Little, Gracie Marks, Angel
Oldaker, Brinna Roush, Kloe
Sigman, Austin Smith; Mrs.
Blackshire: Ashton Barnitz,
Coleman Day, Makayla Horn,
Jesse Lavender, Chandler
McClanahan; Fifth Grade:
Mrs. Northup: Rose Brown,

Sudney Burris, Hailey Darst,
Keirstin Darst, Mackenzie
Kearns, Logan Roach, Loryn
Weaver; Mrs. Richardson:
Selene Aguirre, Matthew
Barr, Ziara Orale, Kase
Stewart, Kylee VanMeter; Mr.
Tyree: Makenna Harrison,
Aaron Henry, Quinel Jones,
Emma Knapp, Mallory
Lloyd, Jeremy Young; Sixth
Grade: Mr. Vogt: ; Mrs.
Kessinger: Paige Berkley,
Evan Grady, Peyton Ingels,
Kaelee Maynard, Byron
Roush, Dalton Starkey, Wes
Woolard; Mrs. Smith: .

Fields, Wyatt Harris, Seth
Ohlinger, Jayla Simpkins;
Mrs. Sayre: Bailey Smith,
Makayla Woolard; Mrs.
Smith: Diego Aguirre, Drew
Duff, Lucas Gangwer, Shane
Hill, Elissa Hoffman, Eli
Rickard, Olivia Roush; Fourth
Grade: Mrs. Tennant: Brycen
Bumgarner, Angel Oldaker,
Brinna Roush, Emma Roush;
Mrs. Blackshire: Carson
Gibbs, Harley Lawson, Alicia
McClanahan; Fifth Grade:
Mrs. Northup: Ashton
Broughman, Rose Brown,
Hailey Darst, Andrew Day,
Sadie Jividen, Gunner Jones,
Perfect attendance:
Mackenzie Kearns, Mckenzie
Kindergarten: Ms. Baker:
Macknight, Logan Roach;
Annabelle Hersman, Richard Mrs. Richardson: Selene
Johnson, Haylin Jones, Kilah Aguirre, Morgan Christian,
Roush, Brooklyn Smith;
Ethan Gray, Trey Ohlinger,
Mrs.Gilkey: Merissa Fields,
Thaddeus Russell, Kase
Kyleigh Hall, Harrison
Stewart; Mr. Tyree: Gage
Lloyd, Trycen Putney,
Fields; Sixth Grade: Mr. Vogt:
Hunter Roush, Annie Taylor, ; Mrs. Kessinger: Emma
Gracie Zerkle; Mrs. Wolfe:
Fisher, Carolee Hoffman,
Aly Barnitz, Nixey Davis,
Peyton Ingels, Lauren Noble,
Mason Day, Sophie Gray,
Byron Roush, Ethyn Barnitz,
Kierstyn Hart; First Grade:
Wes Woolard; Mrs. Smith: .
Mrs. Thacker: Tyler Dennis,
Audrey Reynolds, Cyrus
Second nine weeks
Rickard, Briar Johnson,
A honor roll students:
Claire Ohlinger, Chole
Third Grade: Mrs. Cullen:
Rickard, Nash Johnson,
Dylan Duff, Dillan Fields,
Konner Koenig, Bryleigh
Raegan Johnson, Emma
Swisher, Jayden Adkins,
Northup, Kate Reynolds,
Weston Jones; Mrs. Hoffman Phoebe Richardson, Jayla
Tressel Gibbs, Kailynn
Simpkins; Mrs. Sayre:
Putney, Weston Starkey,
Haydon Lloyd, Kinsey Roush,
Maggie Swisher:; Mrs.
Ethan Stiltner, Nicholas
Roberts: Kayden Icenhower, Williams, Shy Denney; Mrs.
Olivia Deweese, Keyhen
Smith: Kaileyn Day, Eliijah
Carmichael, Lucas Bias;
Grady, Sophia Guo, Diego
Second Grade: Ms.Gilley:
Aguirre, Elissa Hoffman,
Payton Barnitz, Katie
Anna Bella Mankin, Eli
Cullen, Brianna Fields,
Rickard; Fourth Grade: Mrs.
Mackenzie Jordan; Mrs.
Tennant: Angel Oldaker,
Rose: Brady Burris, Natalia
Sawyer VanMeter; Mrs.
Hersman, Haleigh Roush;
Blackshire: Lillian Bowls,
Ms. VanMeter: Kryslen
Carson Gibbs, Kayden
Burris, Owen Edwards,
Gibbs, Makayla Horn, Hallie
Reece Gerlach, Lindsey
Kearns, Bryce Zuspan ;
Hacker, Fiona VanMatre;
Fifth Grade: Mrs. Northup:
Mrs. Poole: Laney Barnitz,
Rose Brown, Sydney Burris,
Cameron Chapman, Raelynn Alivia Layne, Logan Roach,
Fields, Logan Neal, Isaac
Michael VanMeter, Loryn
Riffle, Halo Young; Third
Weaver; Mrs. Richardson:
Grade: : Mrs. Cullen: Kaylyn Matthew Barr, Ethan Gray,
Christian, Dylan Duff, Dillan Michaela Lieving, Josiah

60642987

Window
to thepast
by

Kanetra Kopp

C hapter Eight:
Exciting News for Jenny

J

enny turned the pages in
the constellation book.
She stopped when she found
a constellation called Sagittarius, also known as The
Archer. The book said it could
be seen in the summer in the
northern hemisphere. It told
how to look for a teacup shape
in order to ﬁnd it easily. Jenny
jumped up and ran to show
her grandmother what she
wanted to try to ﬁnd in the sky
after supper.
Later that evening, Jenny and
her grandmother grabbed an

old quilt and headed outside.
Grandma had said the best
place to have a clear view of
the sky would be out in the hay
pasture away from the house
and the trees. So they climbed
into the old pickup truck and
drove out through the farm
gate to the top of the hill in
the pasture. Jenny spread out
the blanket on the ground and
she and Gradma sat down
together.

you see anything that looks
like a tea cup?” Jenny asked.
Eventually, with a little help
from her grandmother, Jenny
found the constellation with
the teacup shape in it. They
didn’t see any shooting stars,
but Jenny still enjoyed spending the night with her grandmother looking for them in
the clear night sky.
Jenny’s father came to pick
her up the next morning. He
said her Girl Scout leader had
called to ask if she wanted to
sign up for scouts again this
coming year. Jenny had started
to wonder if she wanted to
join Girl Scouts this year, but
after her afternoon with her
grandmother and hearing all
about Juliette Gordon Low she
had decided she did. Plus, she
couldn’t wait to tell her leader
and her friends in her troop
about her great-great-grandmother and the stories she had
learned from Grandma about
Juliette Gordon Low.
Later that afternoon, when
Jenny and her mother walked
into school where the Boy
Scouts and Girl Scouts and

other groups were holding
their registration event, they
headed over to the table where
her troop leader was sitting.
As they walked up they heard
the leader say to another
parent, “This is going to be
such an exciting year for us.
We are planning on traveling
to Savannah and touring the
birthplace of Juliette Gordon
Low.”
Jenny couldn’t believe it. “Are
you serious?” she asked her
leader. “My grandma was
just telling me about Juliette
yesterday. Can I invite her to
come with us?” she pleaded.
“I know she would just love to
go, too,” she added.
“Hi, Jenny,” the leader said. “I
think it would be wonderful
if your grandmother wanted
to go with us to Savannah. So
does that mean you think it
sounds like a fun trip?” she
asked.
“I sure do,” Jenny replied. “I
think it will be amazing to see
where Daisy grew up. I can’t
wait to tell my grandma!”
Jenny exclaimed.

Jenny spotted the Milky Way
right off and started looking
for Sagittarius. “Grandma, do

Things to Think About and Do
Newspaper stories and photographs are common
keepsakes. Look through your newspaper to ﬁnd
different types of stories and photographs that readers
might ﬁnd important to save in their own treasure
trunk. Cut out examples and explain why each would be
important.

N

To download the companion educator guide, with activities
that tie to some of the badge requirements for Girl
Scouts, visit mo-nie.com and use code: nnateach.

A S S O C I AT I O N
FOUNDATION

Learn more about the Girl Scouts of the USA by visiting
www.girlscouts.org

Produced by the Missouri Press
Foundation, ©2012

ATIONAL
EWSPAPER

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Lloyd, Zaira Orale, Andrew
Roush, Amber Wolfe, Emma
Young; Mr. Tyree: Chloe
Robinson, Alyssa VanMeter,
Andrew Warth ; Sixth Grade:
Mr. Vogt: ; Mrs. Kessinger:
Paige Berkley , Emma Fisher,
Lauren Noble, Abby Pauley,
Allison Tennant; Mrs. Smith:
Bailee Bumgarner, Jessica
Dangerfield, Alana Edwards,
Zachary Fields, Mattie
Ohlinger, Ian Orale, Rilee
Zerkle .
A/B honor roll students:
Third Grade: Mrs. Cullen:
Cadence Gerlach, Zander
Hall, Logan Mitchell, Seth
Ohlinger, Matthew Thomas,
Macie Whittington,
Lexi Wood; Mrs. Sayre:
Courtney Hacker, Blake
Henry, Katie Johnson,
Ricky Jordan, Joshua
Lambert, Samantha Miller,
Marissa Roush, Payton
Staats, Trayton Starkey,
Annabelle Woodall,
Makayla Woolard; Mrs.
Smith:, Drew Duff, Shane
Hill, Connor Lambert,
Zoie Mayes, Kendal Mills,
Olivia Roush, Jacob
Russell, Katarina WilsonGregory; Fourth Grade:
Mrs. Tennant: Nathan
Fields, Trey Gilkey, Olivia
Jeffers, Tyreese Little,
Gracie Marks, Brinna
Roush, Kloe Sigman; Mrs.
Blackshire: Ashton Barnitz,
Coleman Day, Anna Rose
Garrity, Jesse Lavender,
Chandler McClanahan,
Alicia McClanahan; Fifth
Grade: Mrs. Northup:
Ashton Broughman,
Hailey Darst, Keirstin
Darst, Mackenzie Kearns,
Rocky Kearns, Nikolas
Roush; Mrs. Richardson:
Selene Aguirre, Makailyn
Cavender, Morgan
Christian, Trey Ohlinger,
Kase Stewart, Kylee
VanMete, Trenton Zuspanr;
Mr. Tyree: Skylar Day,
Danielle Hacker, Makenna
Harrison, Quinel Jones,
Mallory Lloyd, Alexandra
Phillips, Jeremy Young;
Sixth Grade: Mr. Vogt:
; Mrs. Kessinger: Evan
Grady, Carolee Hoffman,
Byron Roush, Dalton
Starkey, Wes Woolard; Mrs.
Smith: Emma Haddox,
Haley King, Lacey Neal,
tori Sigman, Allison Warth,
Kamron Whaley.
Perfect attendance:
Kindergarten: Ms. Baker:
Elijah Frye, Hannah Frye,
Josiah Frye, Annabelle
Hersman, Kade Mossman,
Brooklyn Smith; Mrs.
Gilkey: Aiden Edwards,
Austin Garrity, Landon
King, Mahaylah Jones,
Parker Reitmire, Amelia
Staats; Mrs. Wolfe:Adyson
VanMeter, Christian
Cunningham, Nixey Davis,
Alexa Nance, Sophie Gray,
Parker Jodon, Jordan
Baldwin; First Grade: Mrs.
Thacker: Tyler Dennis,
Nash Johnson, Konner
Koenig; Mrs. Hoffman:
Dylan Jordan, Kobe Moore,
Kailynn Putney, Weston
Starkey; Mrs. Roberts:
Logan Rhodes, Haylinn
Grimm, Mia Croy, Lucas
Bias, Joshua Hughes;
Second Grade: Ms.Gilley:
Brianna Fields, Carson
Fowler, Alex Marks, Rylee
Snouffer, Wyatt Staats;
Mrs. Rose: Cheyenne
Brown, Brady Burris,
Katelyn Darst, Ryleigh Fink,
Natalia Hersman Maverick
Painter, Serenidy WilsonGregory; Ms. VanMeter:
Owen Edwards, Christian
Lyons; Mrs. Poole: Cameron
Chapman, Parker Fields,
Raelynn Fields, Jo-Lee
Jordan; Third Grade: : Mrs.
Cullen: Raegan Johnson,
Seth Ohlinger; Mrs. Sayre:;
Mrs. Smith: Diego Aguirre,
Lucas Gangwer, Shane
Hill, Kenna Mills, Jacob
Russell, Delani Warth,
Katarina Wilson-Gregory;
Fourth Grade: Mrs. Tennant:
Olivia Jeffers, Brinna
Roush; Mrs. Blackshire:;
Fifth Grade: Mrs. Northup:
Elizabeth Cunningham
Hailey Darst, Gunner Jones,
Rocky Kearns, Mckenzie
Macknight, Logan Roach
Michael VanMatre; Mrs.
Richardson: Matthew Barr,
Makailyn Cavender, Coey
Gangwer, Ethan Gray,
Josiah Lloyd, Noah Myers;
Mr. Tyree:; Sixth Grade:
Mr. Vogt: ; Mrs. Kessinger:
Emma Fisher ; Mrs. Smith:
A’leisia Barnitz, Jessica
Dangerfield, Alana Edwards,
Casey Greer, Brendon
Hornbeck, Madison Hughes,
Ian Orale, Allison Warth.

�E ditorial
5A Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

It’s ‘March
Madness’ at
Social Security
By Marcus Geiger
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Basketball fans are gearing up for March
Madness, which will culminate when the ﬁnal four
teams in the NCAA ﬁght for the title of national
champion. Fans wait in eager anticipation to see
whether their favorite team or alma mater will be
included in the “ﬁnal four.” While basketball fans
are excited about March Madness, Social Security
already has its own winning “ﬁnal four” to help
you this season.
Now, let’s turn to the action!
1. The online services you can put into play
with a my Social Security account are like freethrows. They’re quick and easier than muscling
your way to the basket (or ﬁeld ofﬁce). My Social
Security is an online account that allows you quick
and secure access to your personal Social Security
information. During your working years, once you
create your online account, you can use my Social
Security to obtain a copy of your Social Security
Statement; verify your earnings record; and see
estimates of the future retirement, disability, and
survivor beneﬁts you and your family may receive.
If you already receive Social Security beneﬁts,
you can sign into your account to view, save,
and print your beneﬁt veriﬁcation letter; check
your beneﬁt payment information; request a
replacement Medicare card; get a replacement
SSA-1099/1042S for tax season; and even change
your address and phone number in our records.
You can also start or change your direct deposit
information. In some states and the District of
Columbia, you may also be able to request a
replacement Social Security card online. Check it
out at www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount.
2. One of the most important fouls you might
want to avoid is not signing up for Medicare
Part B. Enrollment begins January 1 and ends
March 31. Medicare Part B covers two types of
services: medically necessary services — services
or supplies that are needed to diagnose or treat
your medical condition and that meet accepted
standards of medical practices. Medicare Part B
also covers preventive services — healthcare to
prevent illness (like the ﬂu) or detect it at an early
stage when treatment is most likely to work best.
You can avoid that foul (as well as the penalty you
must pay for not signing up during the enrollment
period) and sign up for Medicare Part B when you
turn 65 at www.socialsecurity.gov/medicare.
3. From a quick pass aimed at a well-positioned
three-point shooter to an alley-oop that ends in a
game-winning score, assists are one of the main
ways a team wins. Two of the primary ways we
assist people are with disability beneﬁts and
survivors beneﬁts. Disability is something most
people don’t like to think about, but the chances
that you’ll become disabled are probably greater
than you realize. Studies show that a 20-year-old
worker has a 1-in-4 chance of becoming disabled
before reaching full retirement age. The loss of a
key family wage earner is another event that can
be devastating both emotionally and ﬁnancially.
You can learn more about how we assist millions
of people each year at www.socialsecurity.gov/
disabilityssi and www.socialsecurity.gov/survivors.
4. A winning retirement plan is your slam
dunk. At www.socialsecurity.gov/retire you’ll
ﬁnd retirement planners, ways to estimate your
potential beneﬁts and your full retirement age,
as well as other helpful resources. When you are
ready to retire, apply for beneﬁts online in as little
as 15 minutes. At www.socialsecurity.gov, you’ll
be hitting slam dunk after slam dunk and ensure
your championship retirement.
As you can see, there’s no need for excess
madness this March if you use our “ﬁnal four.”
Social Security is on your team and we’re here
when you need us.
Marcus Geiger is Social Security district manager in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155
or 740.446.2342

THEIR VIEW

To find hope, look around you
they decide to act. They do
These are very unhappy
something about it.
times in Washington. RelaEven better, the less-thantions between the executive
admirable stumbling blocks
and legislative branches are
that we’ve come to identify
not just sour, but corrosive.
with politics — confrontaThe Republican-led Sention, obstructionism, diviate has declared it will
siveness — are rarely pressimply ignore a presidential Lee H.
ent. Public dialogues may
nomination to the Supreme Hamilton
Court. Both houses have
Contributing get heated, but they don’t
often descend to the level
announced that they will
Columnist
of bitterness and obstinacy
ﬂout a tradition going back
we see these days in Washto the 1970s, and refuse to
ington.
hold a hearing for the President’s
More than anything else, what
budget director to present the
you see when ordinary Americans
White House’s federal budget
decide to get involved in a public
proposal. Partisan paralysis and
issue is their common sense and
game-playing on Capitol Hill
good judgment, their fundamental
have become a hallmark of these
decency, and their remarkable
times, as has the evident distaste
sense of fairness. Over and over,
our nation’s leaders feel for one
as I watch citizens at work trying
another.
to ﬁx their communities in ways
It would be understandable to
big and small, I’ve found myself
give in to despair, and a lot of
wishing that members of Congress
Americans have done so. I have
and other ofﬁcials could take a
not, and for a simple reason: in
ringside seat. The people involved
our system there is always hope.
almost always want to see that
Why? Because our representative
even people they don’t agree with
democracy rests ﬁnally not on
have a chance to say their piece.
what politicians in Washington
They recognize there are differor in our state capitals do, but on
ences of opinion and that they
what our citizens do.
have to be sorted through. If you
The bedrock assumption of
ask them to describe what result
representative government is that
they want, they will always use the
Americans will make discrimiword, “Fair.” They make decisions
nating judgments about politiby and large based on hope, not
cians and policies, and shoulder
fear or despair.
their responsibility as citizens to
The sense that comes through
improve their corner of the world.
when you watch Americans at
The remarkable thing is, they
work on public issues is their overoften do. Over a long career in
whelming desire to improve their
politics, I’ve seen it happen more
community. Often this is reﬂected
times than I can count. At some
in concrete projects — a new
gathering, people will complain
bridge, a better school, a badly
about the schools or the roads or
needed sewer system. But you
the behavior of a public ofﬁcial or
can also see it in many people’s
an act of government that galls
cry for candidates who will set
them. Then, after talking it over,

narrow interests and excessive
partisanship aside, and work to
improve the quality of life for all
Americans.
While ordinary citizens may not
know all there is to know about
a given public policy issue, I was
constantly impressed while in
ofﬁce at how much I learned from
my constituents. We often think
of representative government as
a process in which the elected
ofﬁcial educates constituents, but
the reverse is usually even more
the case. Americans may think
that politics is ﬁlled with messiness and noise, but at the end of
the day they understand the need
for deal-making, compromise, and
negotiation — and that to achieve
change, they have to work through
the system we have, which means
educating and pushing political
leaders. As a constituent put it to
me, “What’s the alternative?”
This is why I have an underlying
conﬁdence in representative government. Americans are pragmatic. They recognize the complexity
of the challenges we face, understand there are no simple answers
to complex problems, and do not
expect to get everything they
want. They see that what unites
us — a common desire to improve
our communities and create better opportunities for families and
individuals — is stronger than
what divides us. My conﬁdence
in the system is built on citizens
exercising their right to make this
a stronger, fairer country.

Lee Hamilton is a Distinguished Scholar, Indiana
University School of Global and International
Studies; and a Professor of Practice, IU School
of Public and Environmental Affairs. He was a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives
for 34 years.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Sunday,
March 6, the 66th day of
2016. There are 300 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On March 6, 1836, the
Alamo in San Antonio,
Texas, fell to Mexican
forces after a 13-day
siege.
On this date:
In 1834, the city of
York in Upper Canada
was incorporated as
Toronto.
In 1853, Verdi’s opera
“La Traviata” premiered
in Venice, Italy.
In 1857, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled in
Dred Scott v. Sandford
that Scott, a slave, was
not an American citizen
and could not sue for his
freedom in federal court.
In 1933, a national

bank holiday declared
by President Franklin D.
Roosevelt aimed at calming panicked depositors
went into effect. Chicago
Mayor Anton Cermak,
wounded in an attempt
on Roosevelt’s life the
previous month, died at a
Miami hospital at age 59.
In 1935, retired
Supreme Court Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Jr., died in Washington
two days before his 94th
birthday.
In 1944, U.S. heavy
bombers staged the ﬁrst
full-scale American raid
on Berlin during World
War II.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former FBI and CIA director William Webster is 92.
Former Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan
is 90. Former Soviet cos-

monaut Valentina Tereshkova is 79. Former Sen.
Christopher “Kit” Bond,
R-Mo., is 77. Actresswriter Joanna Miles is
76. Actor Ben Murphy is
74. Opera singer Dame
Kiri Te Kanawa is 72.
Singer Mary Wilson (The
Supremes) is 72. Rock
musician Hugh Grundy
(The Zombies) is 71. Rock
singer-musician David
Gilmour (Pink Floyd) is
70. Actress Anna Maria
Horsford is 69. Actordirector Rob Reiner is 69.
Singer Kiki Dee is 69. Fox
News reporter John Stossel is 69. Composer-lyricist
Stephen Schwartz is 68.
Rock singer-musician Phil
Alvin (The Blasters) is
63. Sports correspondent
Armen Keteyian is 63.
Actor Tom Arnold is 57.
Actor D.L. Hughley is 52.

Country songwriter Skip
Ewing is 52. Actor Shuler
Hensley is 49. Actress
Connie Britton is 49.
Actress Moira Kelly is 48.
Actress Amy Pietz is 47.
Rock musician Chris Broderick (Megadeth) is 46.
Former NBA player and
College Basketball Hall of
Famer Shaquille O’Neal is
44. Country singer Trent
Willmon is 43. Country
musician Shan Farmer
(Ricochet) is 42. Rapper
Beanie Sigel is 42. Rapper
Bubba Sparxxx is 39. Rock
musician Chris Tomson
(Vampire Weekend) is 32.
Actor Eli Marienthal is
30. Actor Jimmy Galeota
is 30. Rapper/producer
Tyler, the Creator is 25.
Actor Dillon Freasier is
20. Actress Savannah
Stehlin is 20.

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, March 6, 2016

is crucial for moving
Rio forward,” Johnston
said. “I’m so pleased
to welcome Bobbi
Montgomery to our
board. Her expertise,
energy and experience
will undoubtedly make
us better.”
Montgomery has
also served as chair of
the Jackson County
Economic Development
Board and as an
executive member of
the Joint Economic
Development Initiative
of Southern Ohio.
Montgomery said
she is excited to join
the board of trustees
because, as a former
part-time student at Rio
Grande Community
College, she knows the
value the school adds
to the education of the
community’s students.
“I am very excited to

From Page 1A

youth development.
Montgomery is
a co-founder of
LAUNCH Inc., a
nationally recognized
youth development
organization that
brought in over $1
million of grant funding
to serve her local
community.
Rio Grande President
Dr. Michelle Johnston
said she is excited
to have someone
so dedicated to the
community on the
board.
“The Rio Grande
Community College
Board of Trustees is
an active and engaged
governing body. The
work of our trustees

History

be a part of the board.
Education is the key to
enhancing the economy
of southeastern Ohio
because, without a
skilled work force, we
cannot grow our current
businesses or attract
new ones. We are very
fortunate to have Rio
in our community and
I look forward to being
a part of the exciting
things Dr. Johnston
and her staff are doing
to grow this unique
education institution.”
Montgomery said.
Montgomery lives
in Jackson with her
husband, Jim Siders,
and their two children,
Abigail and Harrison.

From Page 1A

small earthwork defended by Ohio
militiamen. The militiamen were
outnumbered and forced to retreat, but
their presence allowed Union cavalry some
time to catch up to the Confederates.
Gunboats were sent to patrol the Ohio
River to prevent Morgan’s escape, and
were ready when Morgan’s men did
attempt a crossing at a ford near Bufﬁngton Island in what is now Portland. The
Confederates succeeded in getting a small
number of men across the river but were
unable to complete their crossing before
Union gunboats and soldiers arrived.
In what has become known as the Battle
of Bufﬁngton Island, Morgan’s remaining
troops broke through Union lines and
continued north along the river, still hoping to ﬁnd a crossing. When the Raiders
found an unprotected crossing about 20
miles upriver from Bufﬁngton Island, several hundred more succeeded in crossing
before Union gunboats arrived.
In retreat, Morgan moved westward
through Meigs and Gallia, then began taking a northeasterly route through Vinton,
Hocking, Athens, Perry, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Guernsey, Harrison, Jefferson,
Carroll and Columbiana counties. Morgan
was ﬁnally stopped at Salineville in Columbiana County. This ended his raid, but the
event had a lasting impact on the area.
While the incursion was not sanctioned
by Confederate command, it did succeed
in spreading terror through parts of the
north and diverted tens of thousands of
Union forces from other duties. The raiders managed to destroyed 34 bridges and
disrupted railroads at more than 60 places.
Thousands of dollars worth of supplies,
food and other items were taken from local
stores, houses and farms.
In Ohio, approximately 2,500 horses
were stolen and nearly 4,375 homes and
businesses were raided. It was estimated
that Morgan’s Raid cost Ohio taxpayers
nearly $600,000 in damage and more than
$200,000 in wages paid to the 49,357
Ohioans called up to man 587 companies
of local militia.
According to Constance White, a member of the Bufﬁngton Island Preservation
Foundation and one of the “The Pursuit”
organizers, the September event is the
second leg of the Morgan’s Raid trilogy.
Part one is scheduled for April 29-May 1
in Cynthiana, Ky., and part three, Morgan’s
Final Victory Battle in September 2017,
also in Cynthiana.
The Foundation, along with other histo-

Jessica Patterson is a
communications specialist with
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 62.43
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.32
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 100.72
Big Lots (NYSE) — 42.90
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —47.12
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 35.00
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.29
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.220
City Holding (NASDAQ) —46.47
Collins (NYSE) —89.66
DuPont (NYSE) — 63.18
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.03
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 30.44
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 46.77
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.04
Kroger (NYSE) —36.85
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 87.50
Norfolk So (NYSE) —77.40
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.75

BBT (NYSE) —34.49
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 18.70
Pepsico (NYSE) —99.88
Premier (NASDAQ) —15.80
Rockwell (NYSE) — 107.38
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —12.68
Royal Dutch Shell — 48.01
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 18.05
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 66.76
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.59
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.22
Worthington (NYSE) —32.68
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
March 4, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

35°

45°

40°

Clouds giving way to some sun today. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 51° / Low 35°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

37°/32°
52°/32°
83° in 1976
0° in 1943

Friday
Month to date/normal
Year to date/normal

Snowfall

Trace
0.82/0.47
8.28/6.62

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal

Trace
3.0/0.6
24.2/19.7

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:53 a.m.
6:27 p.m.
5:06 a.m.
3:59 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Full

Last

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

Major
9:08a
9:58a
10:50a
11:13a
12:11p
1:16a
2:18a

Minor
2:54a
3:44a
4:36a
5:31a
6:29a
7:30a
8:32a

Low

Moderate

High

Very High

Lucasville
52/37

Primary: elm
Mold: 18
Moderate

High

Very High

Portsmouth
53/37

Major
9:36p
10:26p
11:18p
---12:43p
1:44p
2:46p

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY

Minor
3:22p
4:12p
5:04p
5:59p
6:57p
7:58p
9:00p

WEATHER HISTORY
A storm that had caused ﬂoods on
the West Coast hit farther east on
March 6, 1983. A tornado at Monroe,
N.C., derailed a train. Winnipeg,
Canada, was encased in ice, which
closed the airport for three days.

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.75 +0.13
Marietta
34 20.48 -0.60
Parkersburg
36 24.12 +0.54
Belleville
35 13.08 +0.10
Racine
41 13.15 +0.27
Point Pleasant
40 26.55 +0.27
Gallipolis
50 12.26 -0.12
Huntington
50 30.52 +0.24
Ashland
52 36.71 +0.05
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.50 -0.58
Portsmouth
50 29.20 +0.40
Maysville
50 36.10 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 29.30 +0.20
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Let’s Talk
About Your

Logan
50/35

76°
55°

70°
46°

SATURDAY

67°
48°

Partly sunny and very Cloudy, some rain and
warm
a t-storm; warm

69°
49°

Overcast with rain
tapering off

Marietta
51/32

Murray City
50/34
Belpre
51/32

Athens
51/34

St. Marys
52/35

Parkersburg
51/35

Coolville
50/32

Elizabeth
51/33

Spencer
50/32

Buffalo
51/33
Milton
52/33

Clendenin
51/32

St. Albans
53/33

Huntington
51/38

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
53/41
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
61/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
64/49
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

FRIDAY

Cloudy and warm
with rain possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
52/37

Ashland
52/38
Grayson
53/37

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

THURSDAY

Wilkesville
51/34
POMEROY
Jackson
51/34
52/36
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
51/33
52/35
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
50/41
GALLIPOLIS
51/35
51/33
51/34

South Shore Greenup
53/37
52/36

51
300

Very warm with
periods of sun

McArthur
51/35

Waverly
51/37

Pollen: 9

0 50 100 150 200

Mar 8 Mar 15 Mar 23 Mar 31

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

Chillicothe
51/35

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Low

MOON PHASES

Partly sunny and
warmer

0

WEDNESDAY

73°
53°

Adelphi
50/36

Primary: cladosporium
Mon.
6:52 a.m.
6:28 p.m.
5:49 a.m.
5:08 p.m.

TUESDAY

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

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

(in inches)

MONDAY

66°
45°

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ry centers, hopes to use this re-enactment
to teach Civil War history and plan to
introduce curriculum into local schools to
allow students to gain inside knowledge
on local American history.
Visitors to the event can participate in
costume workshops, dance classes and
military balls. They will also have opportunities to visit one of the Union infantry
encampments on the banks of the Ohio
at Mason City, W.Va., as well as the camp
sites of Morgan and his raiders.
“Hide the Horses,” a play written about
Morgan’s Raid, will also be presented during the festivities.
White said this event allows those who
attend to see what things were really like,
not just what has been written in books.
“We aren’t trying to glorify the war, we
are trying to teach the next generation
about what life was like during this critical
period in our history,” she said. “Everyone
is invited to come out and participate in
our activities. They can learn how people
of all ages dressed and danced during the
Civil War era.”
Soldiers will be traveling on the same
roads and trails that Gen. Morgan and his
band of Kentucky and Tennessee troopers
used in July 1863 as they made their way
across the area. Those participating in
this adventure will live the life of a Civil
War soldier, complete with uniforms and
ﬁrearms. The soldiers will live out of their
packs, forage for food on local farms and
camp overnight at sites Morgan and his
men used, and the Union troops chasing
them along the way.
Re-enactors and hobbyists will be on
hand as mounted artillery and horsedrawn supply wagons roll across the
countryside. A squadron of authentic tall
stack river boats will take part in the ﬁght,
and Confederate cavalry and Union troops
engage in surprise skirmishes along the
way.
Brig. Gen. Darrell Markijohn, commander, USV Brigade, and Col. Mike Church,
commander, USV Cavalry Regiment, are
organizing the troops who will take part
in the “raid” and wish to invite those who
would like to participate to contact them
for details.
For more information on Morgan’s Raid
re-enactment and schedule of events visit
www.morgansraidreeanctment.com or
www.facebook.com/bufﬁngton.island.
The re-enactment is partnering with the
Pomeroy Sternwheel Festival. A schedule
of events can also be found on www.facebook.com/pomeroysternwheel/ and www.
pomeroysternwheel.org.

Charleston
50/34

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
39/27

Billings
70/38

Minneapolis
57/45
Chicago
49/43

Denver
70/37

Montreal
33/23
Detroit
41/36

Toronto
39/29
New York
45/35
Washington
52/37

Kansas City
69/56

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
72/40/pc
34/27/c
65/43/s
43/31/pc
49/33/pc
70/38/pc
54/37/sh
42/30/pc
50/34/pc
61/35/s
64/34/pc
49/43/pc
51/40/pc
46/38/pc
47/38/pc
76/62/c
70/37/pc
61/53/c
41/36/pc
84/68/s
76/62/c
53/42/pc
69/56/c
66/46/sh
70/54/pc
64/49/c
55/44/pc
80/66/s
57/45/pc
61/45/pc
75/56/pc
45/35/sf
73/56/c
77/53/s
47/33/pc
80/53/pc
49/34/pc
40/26/pc
58/36/pc
51/33/pc
61/51/pc
57/34/r
61/53/sh
53/41/r
52/37/pc

Hi/Lo/W
60/38/pc
36/27/c
68/49/pc
53/46/s
60/41/s
58/29/pc
53/31/c
50/36/pc
65/46/pc
65/45/s
46/28/r
58/53/sh
63/51/pc
59/47/pc
60/47/pc
72/61/t
51/29/r
66/59/t
57/44/pc
83/70/s
76/67/c
64/52/pc
72/57/c
63/46/c
69/60/c
57/47/r
65/52/pc
78/69/pc
62/53/c
67/51/pc
77/65/pc
55/43/pc
70/55/t
79/59/s
58/42/s
74/52/pc
61/44/pc
47/31/pc
65/45/s
62/44/s
70/58/sh
53/33/c
60/48/sh
52/40/sh
62/48/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
65/43

High
Low

El Paso
81/53
Chihuahua
86/43

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

91° in Imperial, CA
-20° in Clayton Lake, ME

Global
High
Low

Houston
76/62
Monterrey
88/64

GOALS

Miami
80/66

114° in Onslow, Australia
-55° in Oymyakon, Russia

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

Trustee

Sunday Times-Sentinel

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 6, 2016 s Section B

Fighting
Irish end
Wahama’s
season
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NITRO, W.Va. — Offense in abundance.
The fourth-seeded Wahama boys
basketball team combined with topseeded Huntington St. Joseph for 155
ﬁeld goal attempts Thursday night, and
the Fighting Irish topped the White Falcons by an 88-63 count in the Class A,
Region 4, Section 2 semiﬁnal at Nitro
High School.
The Fighting Irish (17-6) — who ﬁnished sixth in the ﬁnal Associated Press
Class A Poll — jumped out to a 6-2
lead, 2:30 into play, but the White Falcons (9-15) hit a pair of three-pointers
over the next two minutes and tied the
game at 8.
St. Joe brieﬂy reestablished its advantage, but back-to-back buckets gave
Wahama a 12-10 lead with 2:00 left in
the ﬁrst quarter. WHS was held scoreless over the remainder of the period,
however, as the Fighting Irish scored
eight points and led 18-12 headed into
the second quarter.
“We came out and did the things that
we wanted to do,” third-year Wahama
head coach Ron Bradley said. “We were
very disciplined and as a result we were
in the game. They chased us and double teamed us a little bit and we were
getting some easy looks. We weren’t
able to get them in all the time and that
led to some transition looks for them.”
The White Falcons began the second
stanza with a 10-7 run, that cut the deﬁcit to 25-22 with six minutes left in the
ﬁrst half. However, St. Joe ended the
half with a 26-8 run and a 51-30 lead.
See IRISH | 5B

Suspension
back on the
table for Brady
NEW YORK (AP) — New England
Patriots quarterback Tom Brady
could again be facing a four-game
suspension for the scandal known
as Deﬂategate after federal appeals
court judges spent time Thursday
shredding some of his union’s favorite
arguments for dismissal.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Manhattan gave a players’ union lawyer a tough time, with
Circuit Judge Denny Chin even saying evidence of ball tampering was
“compelling, if not overwhelming,”
and there was evidence to support
a ﬁnding that Brady “knew about it,
consented to it, encouraged it.”
“How do we as appellate judges
reviewing an arbitrator’s decision second-guess the four-game suspension?”
Chin asked attorney Jeffrey Kessler of
the NFL Players Association.
The appeals court did not immediately rule, but it seemed to lean
heavily at times against the union’s
arguments, raising the prospect that
the suspension Brady was supposed
to start last September before a judge
nulliﬁed it may begin next season
instead.
The appeals panel seemed receptive to the NFL’s argument that it
was fair for Commissioner Roger
Goodell to severely penalize one of
the game’s greatest quarterbacks after
concluding he tarnished the game
by impeding the league’s investigation into deﬂated footballs, including
destroying a cellphone containing
nearly 10,000 messages. The league
had concluded that deﬂated balls
were used when the Patriots routed
the Indianapolis Colts at the January
2015 AFC championship game before
they went on to win the Super Bowl.
Judge Barrington D. Parker said
the cellphone-destruction issue raised
the stakes “from air in a football to
See BRADY | 6B

Photos by Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Justin Reynolds, center, is joined by Gallia Academy coaches, from left, Zack Tackett, Scott Stanley, Doug Tawney and Todd May
atop The Schottenstein Center as part of Thursday’s annual state wrestling meet.

Reynolds wins match at state

By Paul Boggs

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS — Facing
elimination, and the end of
his standout Gallia Academy
High School wrestling career,
Justin Reynolds went into
“airplane” mode.
Trailing 2-0 in his ﬁrst consolation match on Thursday
night, Reynolds employed his
“airplane” move on Bay Village Bay’s Josh Barr — and
punched his ticket to Friday’s
wrestling round.
Reynolds — competing in
the annual Ohio High School
Athletic Association state
tournament — captured a
pinfall victory over Barr in
the Division II 182-pound
weight class, and advanced
himself to a second day inside
Ohio State University’s Value
City Arena in Columbus.
By Friday afternoon,
Reynolds had ﬁnished 1-2 at
the state meet, as he lost to
Valley View’s Stone Day in
a 9-5 decision in the second
consolation.
Thus, Reynolds wraps up
a remarkable career at Gallia
Academy, going 48-11 in his
senior season — and becoming the 11th all-time state
qualiﬁer at GAHS.
This was also the seventh
straight state meet in which a
Blue Devil has competed.
Had Reynolds defeated
Day, he would have placed in
the top eight to earn all-Ohio
honors — and secure a spot
on Saturday’s awards podium.
But winning at least one
match meant a lot for the
ﬁrst-time state qualiﬁer.
“I’ve worked seven years for
this (compete at state meet),
so to be here today means the
world. It was either live or die
on this match (against Barr),
because it’s either go home or
stay in (tournament). I just
pushed the pace and left it all
out on the mat,” said Reynolds. “I picked up the pace to
try and wear him down.”
Reynolds dropped into the
consolation bracket by losing
Thursday’s opening-round
match against senior Tyler
Wiederholt of Bellbrook by a
20-8 major decision.
Against the junior Barr,
Reynolds fell behind 2-0 in
the ﬁrst period, before things
turned his way in the second.
He got the “airplane” on
Barr, got him on the mat,
and got the pinfall win with
a minute and ﬁve seconds
remaining in the period.
The actual ofﬁcial duration
of the match was listed at a
minute and 54 seconds.
“He took me down in the
ﬁrst period and held me

Gallia Academy senior Justin Reynolds wrestles Josh Barr of Bay Village Bay during Thursday night’s first-round
consolation match as part of the annual state wrestling tournament. Reynolds won this match by pinfall to
advance to Friday’s second consolation.

down pretty good. I’m down
2-0 in the second period, so
I’m riding him for a second,
and I try to go for my special
move called the ‘airplane’ and
I can’t get it because he sits
through it. So then I spin him
around the head and I get a
lock on his head and arm and
just hipped him over,” said
Reynolds.
Gallia Academy coach
Scott Stanley said the second
period-position ﬂip set up the
winning maneuver.
“He (Reynolds) got down a
couple points and had a hard
time getting up off the bottom.
At the start of the second period, we got to ﬂip and so we
deferred. Barr choose down
(starting position for the period), so that was good for us.
Justin runs the ‘airplane’ really
well and he was staying on his
toes working on that,” said
Stanley. “He scrambled a little
bit, hipped the kid over and
stuck him. That’s a new move
that he’s been working on this
year. It ﬁnally paid off. Justin
felt that this was a do-or-die
situation, so he was picking up
the pace and leaving it all out
there on the mat.”
Stanley said Reynolds’
wrestling in the second
period played perfectly with
his style.
“Justin is a good thrower
and likes to be light on his
feet. His strategy is to try

and tie up and throw and get
them (opponents) on their
backs,” said the coach.
Unfortunately for Reynolds,
he wasn’t able to accomplish
that against Wiederholt, the
39-2 senior who was the
Southwest District champion.
In fact, Wiederholt was
viewed by many observers as
a favorite for the 182-pound
state championship.
Reynolds — the fourth
seed from the Southeast-East
District tournament — went
the distance against the Bellbrook grappler, but trailed
from start-to-ﬁnish on points.
“He (Wiederholt) has a good
offense and a good singleleg takedown that is hard to
defend. I couldn’t really defend
it at all. I tried to tie him up
and slow him down, but it
didn’t work. My strategy was
to tie him up, circle around,
and not let him get any takedowns. But it didn’t work out
too well,” said Reynolds. “He’s
really good and deserves to be
a number-one seed.”
Reynolds wrestled Wiederholt at the annual Hammer &amp;
Anvil Invitational at Western
Brown this season, so Stanley
said Reynolds knew who he
was wrestling.
He didn’t know Barr but
managed to get the pin,
before losing to Day in a close
contest on Friday.
Day, at 31-3, defeated

Jackson junior Billy Cooper
(16-5 major decision) in the
182-pound ﬁrst-round on
Thursday.
Reynolds was attempting to join Jeptha Robinson
(1988), Jared Gravely (2010),
Brandon Taylor (2012), Zack
Tackett (2012) and Cole Tawney (2013 and 2014) as the
only podium ﬁnishers in Blue
Devil history.
Starting with Gravely in
2010 and Taylor in 2011, and
including Tawney last season, Reynolds continued the
growing tradition of the Blue
&amp; White wrestling at “The
Schott”.
“This is the seventh year
in a row we’ve had a wrestler
here (at state), so we’re building a tradition at Gallia Academy. I’m happy that Justin
was here,” said Stanley. “He’s
a senior, it’s well-deserved
and we’re all very proud of
him.”
Reynolds won’t forget his
state meet experience, especially after winning Thursday’s match.
“It’s overwhelming. I’ve
tried to soak it all in and have
a good time with it. You can’t
get all caught up in the action
and not enjoy it,” he said.
“I’ve tried to have fun and
make the most of being here.”
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

13 locals named to District 13 girls teams
By Bryan Walters

Meigs freshman Kassidy
Betzing were each second
team choices in Division I-II.
A total of 13 girls from
The Blue Angels had two
Gallia and Meigs counties
special mention selections
were selected to the Disin D-2 with senior Jordan
trict 13 Basketball Coaches Walker and junior Jalea
Association teams for the
Caldwell, while senior Hal2015-16 season, as voted on ley Barnes and Madison
by the varsity girls coaches
Fields both earned special
within the District 13 bormention honors for the Lady
ders.
Marauders in Division I-II.
Three young ladies came
River Valley senior Shelby
away with ﬁrst team accoBrown was a special menlades and three more earned tion selection in Division III,
second team honors, while
while Southern senior Ali
the remaining seven all gar- Deem and Eastern junior
nered special mention selec- Elizabeth Collins were spetions within their respective cial mention honorees in
divisions. In all, six of the 13 Division IV.
local choices were seniors.
Rod Bentley of Vinton
River Valley senior Leia
County was named the
Moore, Eastern junior Laura Division I-II coach of the
Pullins and Southern junior year, while Doug Graham of
Faith Teaford were the ﬁrst Ironton and Jerry Close of
team selections. Moore
Waterford respectively came
earned her honor in Diviaway with the same honors
sion III, while both Pullins
in D-3 and D-4.
and Teaford were Division
VCHS senior Michaela
IV choices.
Puckett was named the DiviSecond team accolades
sion I-II player of the year
went to South Gallia senior and will serve as one of the
Mikayla Poling in Division
two D-13 representatives at
IV, while Gallia Academy
the Ohio North-South Alljunior Adrienne Jenkins and Star game later this year.

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

2015-16 District 13 Girls
Basketball Teams
DIVISION I-II
First Team
Michaela Puckett, Vinton County
12; Rebekah Green, Jackson
10; Molly McCutcheon, Warren
10; Paige Davis, Logan 12; Jalen
Hale, Vinton County 12; Allison
McNeal, Logan 12.
Player of the Year: Michaela
Puckett, Vinton County.
Coach of the Year: Rod Bentley,
Vinton County.
Second Team
Adrienne Jenkins, Gallia
Academy 11; Alexis McCollum,
Athens 12; Katie Rauch, Warren
11; Kassidy Betzing, Meigs 9;
Hannah Grosel, Marietta 11.
Special Mention
Cassidy Bosch, Logan 12; Jalea
Caldwell, Gallia Academy 11;
Madison Fields, Meigs 9; Amelia
Davis, Jackson 11; Jordan Walker,
Gallia Academy 12; Halley
Barnes, Meigs 12; Tricia Bentley,
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports Logan 12; Taylor Gregory,
South Gallia senior Mikayla Poling, right, tries to dribble past an Athens 12; Adrienne Lang,
Eastern defender during a January 21 TVC Hocking girls basketball Warren 12; Audrey May, Marietta
contest in Mercerville, Ohio.
12; Madison Miller, Marietta
12; Sophie Miller, Athens 12;
Autumn Roddy, Warren 12.
South All-Star game.
Ironton senior Lexie

Barrier earned Division
III player of the year
honors and will serve as
the other D-13 representative at the Ohio North-

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

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8

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39 (AMC)
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58
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6:30

SUNDAY, MARCH 6
7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Voice "The Blind Auditions Premiere" The 'blind auditions'
3
News
are held in front of a celebrity panel of musician coaches.
WTAP News NBC Nightly Voice "The Blind Auditions Premiere" The 'blind auditions'
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ABC 6 News ABC World Once Upon a Time "Swan Once Upon a Time "Souls
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Song"
of the Departed" (N)
Celtic Thunder "Mythology" Celtic Thunder performs at BAFTA Celebrates
the Helix Theater.
Downton Abbey BAFTA
honors Downton Abbey.
Eyewitness ABC World Once Upon a Time "Swan Once Upon a Time "Souls
News at 6
News
Song"
of the Departed" (N)
(4:15) NCAA 10TV News 60 Minutes
Madam Secretary
Basketball at 6:30 p.m.
"Hijriyyah" (N)
The
Cooper
(3:30) NASCAR Auto Racing Border "J.C. Bob's
Kobalt 400 (L)
Strikes" (N) Burgers (N) Simpsons (N) Barrett (N)
Celtic Woman "Emerald" Ireland and Celtic heritage are BAFTA Celebrates
celebrated with anthems, pop standards and original
Downton Abbey BAFTA
music.
honors Downton Abbey.
(4:15) NCAA CBS Evening 60 Minutes
Madam Secretary
"Hijriyyah" (N)
Basketball News

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Dateline NBC Marcia Clarke opens up about the case that
is still making headlines after 20 years. Marcia Clarke
Dateline NBC Marcia Clarke opens up about the case that
is still making headlines after 20 years. Marcia Clarke
The Family "All You See Is Quantico "Alex" (N)
Dark" (N)
Masterpiece Classic "Downton Abbey: Season Six" Learn
how fate will resolve the stories of the occupants of this
unforgettable house. (F) (N)
The Family "All You See Is Quantico "Alex" (N)
Dark" (N)
The Good Wife "Hearing" CSI: Cyber "Five Deadly
(N)
Sins" (N)
Family Guy Last Man on Eyewitness News at 10
(N)
Earth (N)
p.m.
Masterpiece Classic "Downton Abbey: Season Six" Learn
how fate will resolve the stories of the occupants of this
unforgettable house. (F) (N)
The Good Wife "Hearing" CSI: Cyber "Five Deadly
(N)
Sins" (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

(4:00) E.T. The Extra-Ter...

Fast Five (2011, Action) Paul Walker, Dwayne Johnson, Vin Diesel. TVPG
Outsiders "Weapons"
NHL Hockey Pit./N.J. (L)
Post-game Game 365
Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
NCAA Wrestling
(4:30) MLS Soccer Clb/Por (L) NCAA Basketball Big-10 Tournament (L)
NCAA Basketball Pac-12 Tournament (L)
(4:30) SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball A-Sun Tournament Championship (L)
30 for 30 "Survive and Advance"
(5:00) Stalked by My Doctor Nightmare Nurse Sarah Butler. A seemingly perfect home Break-Up Nightmare A woman tries to have nude photos
Eric Roberts. TV14
care nurse's troubled past comes to light. TV14
of her daughter removed from a revenge porn site. TV14
(5:00) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 Harry discovers the (:45) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry, Ron and
Deathly Hallows, the most powerful objects in the wizarding world. TVPG Hermoine return to Hogwarts to find and destroy the last of the horcruxes.
Bar Rescue "Meat Sauna" Bar Rescue "Anything You Bar Rescue "Back to the
Bar Rescue "Hard Heads
Bar Rescue "Bare Rescue"
Can Yell, I Can Yell Louder" Bar: No Laughing Matter" and Softballs"
SpongeBob GShakers
Cat Noir (N) SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House Full House Full House Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Smut" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Crush" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Witness" SVU "Deadly Ambition"
SVU "Military Justice"
(4:30)
Hitch TV14
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
(5:00) America's Choice 2016 "Flint Debate Pre-Show" (L) CNN Democratic Debate "Flint, Michigan" (L)
House "JFK vs. Nixon" (N)
(3:30) The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (‘13, Adv) Martin Freeman. TVPG
The Walking Dead "The
(5:30) Fear the Walking
The Walking Dead "Knots The Walking Dead "Not
Talking Dead (N)
Dead "Pilot"
Next World"
Untie"
Tomorrow Yet" (N)
Naked "Alligator Alley"
Naked "Garden of Evil"
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked &amp; Afraid: Wild (N)
Intervention "Kaeleen" (N)
Intervention "Justin/
Intervention "Carrie E"
Hoarders "Sybil and Ron" Intervention: Then and
Kayne"
Now "Penny" (N)
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
Curse of the Frozen Gold North Woods Law (N)
Curse of the Frozen Gold
Snapped "Sabrina Zunich" Snapped "Patricia Burney" Snapped "Maryann
Snapped "Erin Everett" (N) #KillerPost "Taylor/
Castorena"
Mitchell"
CSI: Miami "Lost Son"
CSI: Miami "Pro Per"
CSI "Murder in a Flash"
CSI "Under the Influence" CSI: Miami "Legal"
I Am Cait "Take Pride"
I Am Cait
I Am Cait
I Am Cait (N)
Hollywood Medium (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hard Time "Hustlers and
Hard Time "Prison Gangs" Explorer: Fighting ISIS (N) Brain Games "Life of the
Generation X "The Power of
Con Men"
Brain" (N)
Disruption" (N)
Rugby Sevens World Series (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Minnesota Wild Site: Xcel Energy Center (L) (:45) Overtime
(5:00) NCAA Basketball
MLS Soccer Sporting Kansas City at Seattle Sounders FC (L)
Answers (N) UFC 1 on 1 (N)
Ax Men "All Hail The King" (:05) Swamp People "Home
Ax Men "Take This Log and Ax Men "Reunited and It
Ax Men: Logged and
Shove It"
Feels Like Wood"
Loaded "Back in Black" (N) (SF) (N)
Turf" (N)
Housewives Atlanta
Housewives Atlanta
Housewives Atlanta (N)
Housewives Potomac (N) Housewives Atlanta
(5:00) I Can Do Bad All by Myself Tyler Perry. TV14
Mann's
Mann's
House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Bargain (N) Bargain (N) Life (N)
Life (N)
IslndLif (N) IslndLif (N)
(4:00) The
The Mummy (‘99, Adv) Rachel Weisz, Brendan Fraser. Adventurers The Mummy Returns A 3,000-year-old mummy is
Scorpion K... inadvertently resurrect a malevolent force with unspeakable power. TV14 resurrected and resumes its evil quest for immortality.

(ROOT) (5:00)

27 (LIFE)

31
34
35
37
38

6 PM

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

6 PM

6:30

(4:30) Furious 7 (2015,

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

(:55) Spy (2015, Action/Comedy) Jude Law, Rose Byrne,

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Vinyl "The Racket" (N)

Girls "Japan" Togetherne400 (HBO) Action) Paul Walker, Jason Melissa McCarthy. An unassuming CIA analyst volunteers
(N)
ss "Advanced
Statham, Vin Diesel. TV14
to go undercover to stop a deadly arms dealer. TVMA
Pretend" (N)
Gone Girl (2014, Mystery) Rosamund Pike, Missi Pyle, Ben Affleck.
Cop Car Hays Wellford. Two boys take an The Drop (‘14, Cri) Noomi
450 (MAX) Suspicion is turned on a husband who reported his wife missing on their abandoned cop car for a joyride and the
Rapace, James Gandolfini,
fifth anniversary. TVMA
owner hunts them down. TVMA
Tom Hardy. TVMA
Billions "The Deal"
Shameless "Pimp's
The Circus
The Circus Shameless "Be a Good Boy. Billions "The Punch" (N)
500 (SHOW)
Paradise"
Come for Grandma." (N)
(N)

MONDAY EVENING
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42

MONDAY, MARCH 7
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
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Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
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ent Tonight
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13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
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Edition

WSAZ News
3
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4 (WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
6 (WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Nature Cat
3

6:30

(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

6 PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Voice "The Blind Auditions, Part 3" The blind auditions are
held in front of a celebrity panel of coaches. (N)
Voice "The Blind Auditions, Part 3" The blind auditions are
held in front of a celebrity panel of coaches. (N)
The Bachelor "The Women Tell All" Ben faces the women
he rejected and sparks fly and the claws come out. (N)
'60s Pop, Rock and Soul Music legends of the 1960s unite
in this special, focusing on the years 1965 - 1969.

Blindspot "Scientists Hollow
Fortune" (N)
Blindspot "Scientists Hollow
Fortune" (N)
Castle "G.D.S." (N)

The Big Bang The Big Bang Scorpion "Robots"
Theory
Theory

NCIS: Los Angeles
"Command and Control"

Deepak Chopra Science can
answer fundamental
spiritual questions.
The Bachelor "The Women Tell All" Ben faces the women Castle "G.D.S." (N)
he rejected and sparks fly and the claws come out. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
The Big Bang The Big Bang Scorpion "Robots"
Theory
Theory
"Command and Control"
Gotham "A Dead Man Feels Lucifer "Wingman" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
No Cold" (N)
Potomac by Air: Our Nation's River
Coffee: The Drink That Changed America

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

DIVISION III
First Team
Lexie Barrier, Ironton 12; Leah
Richardson, Alexander 11;
Emily Chapman, Fairland 10;
Kaylee Curry, Chesapeake 12;
Cheyenne Scott, Ironton 12; Leia
Moore, River Valley 12.
Player of the Year: Lexie Barrier,
Ironton.
Coach of the Year: Doug
Graham, Ironton.
Second Team
Sydney Webb, Ironton 11; Kaci

DIVISION IV
First Team
Dani Drayer, Waterford 12; Laura
Pullins, Eastern 11; Faith Teaford,
Southern 11; Nikki Kish, Trimble
12; Regan Porter, Waterford 12;
Ali Kern, Waterford 10.
Player of the Year: Dani Drayer,
Waterford.
Coach of the Year: Jerry Close,
Waterford.
Second Team
Lynsey Booker, Ironton St. Joe
12; Cheyenne Barker, Belpre 11;
Mikayla Poling, South Gallia 12;
Jenyson Shepherd, Symmes
Valley 10; Destiny Tabler, Federal
Hocking 11.
Special Mention
Kaitlyn Payne, Symmes Valley
12; Megan Ball, Waterford 10;
Morgan Turner, Ironton St. Joe
11; Elizabeth Collins, Eastern 10;
Meranda Hayes, Symmes Valley
12; Morgan Murphy, Trimble 12;
Hannah Lawrentz, Belpre 12;
Ali Deem, Southern 12; Sanae
Dutiel, Miller 12; Katelyn Hughes,
Belpre 12.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Signups:
MRF baseball-softball signups
MASON, W.Va. — The Mason Recreation Foundation will be holding baseball
and softball signups for girls and boys
ages 4-16 at the Mason Fire Department
from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. on the Saturdays
of March 12, March 19 and March 26.
There is a signup fee of $40 per child
and $65 per family. A copy of each participant’s birth certiﬁcate needs to be made
available at signups.
For more information, call Rick Kearns
at 304-674-3491 or Allen Staats at 304593-1255. Please leave a message if
unavailable at the time of call.

12, and also from 5:30 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.
on Thursday, March 10. For more information, call Ken at (740) 416-8901.
Vinton Integrity baseball-softball signups
VINTON, Ohio — Integrity baseball and
softball signups will be held for girls and boys
ages 4-12 from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 12, at the Vinton Baptist Church.
The age limits are four years old as of
January 1 and no older than 12 years as
of April 30. There is a $45 fee per child,
which includes the uniform. Participants are
encouraged to bring a ball glove for skill drills
during the signup.
Practices will start in April and games are
played between May and June. For more
information, call Todd at (740) 388-8454.

MYL baseball-softball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth League will be holding
baseball and softball signups for girls
and boys ages 4-16 in the gymnasium at
the Middleport Jail from 10 a.m. until
2 p.m. on Saturday, March 12, and also
from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday, March 10.
There is a cutoff date, age-wise, of January 1 for girls and May 1 for boys. For
more information, call Dave at (740)
590-0438 or Jackie at (740) 416-1261.

Southern football golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team will hold a golf scramble on
Saturday, May 21, at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason County. The format
will be a four-man scramble, bring your
own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap of 40+ and only one player can be
under 10. Price is $60 per person and
includes golf, cart, lunch and beverages.
Prizes include club house credit for
the top three teams, among other cash
PYL baseball-softball signups
prizes.
POMEROY, Ohio — The Pomeroy
The tournament will begin with a
Youth League will be holding baseball and
shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. For more
softball signups for girls and boys ages
4-16 at the Pomeroy Fire Department from information, contact Southern football
coach Mike Chancey at 740-591-8644.
10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturday, March

10:30

Blue Bloods "In the Box"
Outsiders "Weapons"
P. of Interest "Panopticon" P. of Interest "Nautilus"
P. of Interest "Wingman"
NCAA Basketball NEC Tournament
MLB Baseball Spring Training Philadelphia Phillies vs. Pittsburgh Pirates
SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball MAAC Tournament Championship (L)
NCAA Basketball WCC Tournament Semifinal (L)
Around Horn Interruption NCAA Basketball The American Tournament (L)
NCAA Basketball SoCon Tournament Championship (L)
One for the Money A divorcee finds herself entangled
Enough ('02, Thril) Bill Campbell, Jennifer Lopez. On the run from her The Wrong
with her past when she joins the bail-bond business. TVPG abusive husband, a young mother trains herself to fight back. TV14
Woman TV14
(4:45) Harry Potter &amp; the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry, Ron &amp; The Fosters "Sixteen" (N)
Recovery Road "Sick as Our The Fosters "Sixteen"
Secrets" (N)
Hermoine return to Hogwarts to find &amp; destroy the last of the ...
Cops "Coast Jail
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "In
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Shots
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Jacksonville" to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Fired"
Thunder
Thunder
Paradise Run H.Danger
H.Danger
SpongeBob Full House Full House Full House Full House
NCIS "Up in Smoke" 1/2
NCIS "Till Death Do Us Part" WWE Monday Night Raw
American D. American D. Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy American D. A. Tribeca
Family Guy Family Guy Frontal (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Limitless ('11, Myst) Bradley Cooper. TV14
Major Crimes
Major Crimes (N)
Major Crimes
Jurassic Park (1993, Sci-Fi) Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill. Genetically re- Better Call Saul "Amarillo" Better Call Saul (N)
created dinosaurs break out of captivity and wreak havoc in a theme park. TV14
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws: Full (N)
Street Outlaws
Misfit Garage (N)
(5:30)
Gladiator Russell Crowe. A Roman general becomes a
(:45) Bates
Bates Motel "A Danger to Damien "The Beast Rises"
"Recap" (N) Himself and Others" (SP) (N) (P) (N)
gladiator when the Emperor dies and his son usurps the throne. TVMA
Yukon "Winter Takes All" Yukon Men "Dark Days"
Yukon "The Black Wolf"
Yukon Men "On Thin Ice" Yukon Men "Gut Check"
My Wife and My Wife and My Wife and
Men in Black II ('02, Sci-Fi) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. Two secret
Men in Black II ('02,
Kids
Kids
Kids
agents are called in to battle an alien disguised as a lingerie model. TV14 Sci-Fi) Will Smith. TV14
CSI: Miami "Crime Wave" CSI: Miami "Pirated"
CSI: Miami "After the Fall" CSI: Miami "Addiction"
CSI: Miami "Shootout"
Kardash "Baby, Baby, Baby" E! News (N)
I Am Cait
Hollywood Medium
Hollywood Medium
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "Ray's Ring" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
The Great Human Race
The Great Human Race
Wicked Tuna "Pissed Off on Wicked Tuna "Big Hauls
The Great Human Race
"Hunt"
"Thirst"
Pissah"
and Downfalls" (N)
"Adrift" (N)
(:10) Pro Football Talk (L)
NCAA Basketball CAA Tournament Championship (L)
NHL Hockey Arizona Coyotes at Colorado Avalanche (L)
Hoops Extra NCAA Basketball Big East Tournament (L)
Hoops Extra NCAA Basketball Big 12 Tournament (L)
Swamp People "Way of the Swamp People "All Hands Swamp People: Blood and Swamp People "Monster
(:05) Billion Dollar Wreck
Swamp"
on Deck"
Guts "Home Turf" (N)
Men"
"How It Went Down" (N)
Vanderpump "Bitch Ghost" VanderR "Beach, Please"
Vanderpump Rules (N)
Vanderpump Rules "Just the T.I.P." (N)
B.A.P.S ('97, Com) Halle Berry, Natalie Desselle. TVPG
Martin
(:05) Martin (:40) Martin (:15) Martin (:50) Martin
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
H.Hunt (N) House Hunt. EllnDsgn "The Finale" (N) H.Hunter (N) House (N)
(4:00)
The Mummy
The Scorpion King In ancient times, a warrior sets
The Magicians "The
Lost Girl "Follow the Yellow
Strangled Heart" (N)
Trick Road" (N)
Returns TV14
out to stop an evil king from taking over the land. TV14

10:30

Wit ('01, Dra)
(:10) Me and Earl and the Dying Girl ('15, Dra) Olivia
Girl in the
(:45) San Andreas A helicopter pilot and his
400 (HBO) Audra McDonald, Emma
Cooke, Thomas Mann. A high school senior forms a close River (N)
ex-wife attempt to rescue their daughter
Thompson. TV14
friendship with a classmate who has leukemia. TV14
after an earthquake. TV14
(5:20)
We Are Marshall A football
(:35)
The Judge (2014, Drama) Robert Duvall, Vera Farmiga,
A Perfect Murder ('98,
450 (MAX) program rebuilds after a horrible tragedy
Robert Downey Jr.. A lawyer sets out to uncover the truth when his
Susp) Gwyneth Paltrow,
wipes out the entire team. TVPG
estranged father is suspected of murder. TVMA
Michael Douglas. TVPG
Ginger &amp; Rosa ('13, Dra) Elle Fanning. The Circus Shameless "Be a Good Boy. Billions "The Punch" The
Shameless "Be a Good Boy.
500 (SHOW) A lifelong friendship between two teenage
Come for Grandma."
pressure from the US
Come for Grandma."
Attorney starts to affect Axe.
girls, Ginger and Rosa, is shattered. TVPG
(5:30)

Waterford senior Dani
Drayer was named the Division IV player of the year as
well.
The District 13 All-Star
Game will be held Monday,
March 14, at Jackson High
School. The girls game will
begin at 6 p.m. and the boys
will play afterwards. There
will be a three-point shooting and slam dunk contest
in between games.

Russell, Rock Hill 12; Jessie
Addis, Nelsonville York 10; Emily
Compliment, Dawson Bryant 10;
Rachel Richardson, Alexander 11.
Special Mention
Kaitlyn Hurd, Nelsonville York
12; Jayla Mace, Alexander 11;
Lexi Wise, Ironton 10; Bethany
Blanton, Oak Hill 11; Shelby
Brown, River Valley 12; Taylor
Perry, Fairland 12; Allie Marshall,
Fairland 9; Jordan Hannan,
Ironton 12; Kaylee Beals, Coal
Grove 12; Anna Darby, Rock
Hill 11.

60642331

�SPORTS

THURSDAY-FRIDAY PREP SCORES
Ohio Girls Basketball
Division I
Reynoldsburg 53, Newark 47
Solon 41, Can. McKinley 40
Division II
Cols. Eastmoor 44, Millersburg W. Holmes
43
Kettering Alter 54, Tipp City Tippecanoe 39
Ottawa-Glandorf 48, Tol. Rogers 46
Division IV
Cornerstone Christian 46, N. Jackson
Jackson-Milton 34
Fairfield Christian 53, Granville Christian 41
Fostoria St. Wendelin 50, Arlington 46
Gorham Fayette 48, New London 42
Jackson Center 42, Day. Miami Valley 36
N. Ridgeville Lake Ridge 41, Berlin Hiland 40
Waterford 62, South Webster 27
Ohio Boys Basketball
Division I
Bedford 68, Maple Hts. 67, OT
Can. McKinley 76, N. Can. Hoover 55
Cle. St. Ignatius 60, Brecksville-Broadview
Hts. 23
Dublin Coffman 50, Cols. St. Charles 44
Dublin Jerome 61, New Albany 49
Groveport-Madison 54, Lewis Center
Olentangy 42
Hilliard Davidson 52, Newark 51
Lima Sr. 54, Tol. Whitmer 47
Medina 52, Stow-Munroe Falls 47
Solon 67, Cle. Hts. 59
Tol. St. John’s 67, Sylvania Northview 36
Uniontown Lake 95, Copley 92, 5OT
Division II
Akr. Coventry 59, Alliance 56
Bay Village Bay 76, Medina Buckeye 57
Cle. Cent. Cath. 69, Cle. E. Tech 65, OT
Perry 58, Chardon NDCL 44
Poland Seminary 61, Salem 55
Cols. DeSales 57, Whitehall-Yearling 53, OT
Johnstown-Monroe 36, Cols. South 30
McArthur Vinton County 53, Lancaster
Fairfield Union 46
McConnelsville Morgan vs. Steubenville,
ppd. to Mar 5.
Division III
Archbold 61, Van Buren 56
Collins Western Reserve 65, Galion 47
Findlay Liberty-Benton 52, Defiance Tinora
50
Genoa Area 46, Swanton 43
Lima Cent. Cath. 71, Bluffton 35
Milan Edison 57, Willard 40
Spencerville 64, Haviland Wayne Trace 53
Tol. Ottawa Hills 43, Tontogany Otsego 34
Cle. VASJ 53, Beachwood 52

Cols. Grandview Hts. 43, Centerburg 40
Louisville Aquinas 54, Massillon Tuslaw 49
Marion Pleasant 83, Worthington Christian
65
Newton Falls 49, Garrettsville Garfield 45
Oberlin 56, Apple Creek Waynedale 51
Sugarcreek Garaway 69, Berlin Hiland 47
Division IV
Jackson Center 46, Cin. Christian 43
S. Charleston SE 79, Ft. Loramie 71, OT
Yellow Springs 66, Franklin Middletown
Christian 24
Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 57, Mogadore 49
Cornerstone Christian 68, Bristol 50
Gorham Fayette 37, Defiance Ayersville 36
Lima Perry 60, St. Henry 51
Mansfield St. Peter’s 57, Sandusky St. Mary
52
McComb 59, New Riegel 47
McDonald 67, Wellsville 48
Van Wert Lincolnview 52, Convoy Crestview
51
W.Va. Boys Basketball
Class AAA
Parkersburg South 69, Parkersburg 55
Morgantown 65, University 49
Martinsburg 62, Musselman 55
Capital 69, Ripley 59
Huntington 71, Logan 52
Class AA
Fairmont Senior 89, East Fairmont 46
Keyser 57, Frankfort 56
Bridgeport 53, Robert C. Byrd 51
Class A
Trinity 66, St. Marys 65, OT
Notre Dame 56, Tucker County 44
Fayetteville 64, Greenbrier West 45
Midland Trail 66, Meadow Bridge 50
Charleston Catholic 70, Buffalo 61
Saint Joseph Central 88, Wahama 63
Pendleton County 61, Pocahontas County
57
Tug Valley 57, Van 32
Parkersburg Catholic 57, Doddridge County
50
W.Va. Girls Basketball
Class AA
Fairmont Senior 65, Roane County 43
North Marion 80, Ritchie County 34
Grafton 61, Frankfort 52
Lincoln 70, Keyser 51
Summers County 38, Bluefield 35
Sissonville 67, Wayne 48
Wyoming East 62, PikeView 34
Tolsia 63, Poca 37

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DAVE’S SUPREME AUTO SALES
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Gallipolis, Ohio

Sunday, March 6, 2016 3B

60640584

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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At Generac, we're happy
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automatic home standby
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take our word for it. Listen to
what our satisﬁed customers
have to say. After all, they're
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Mention this ad to
receive a free 7 year
extended warranty

Good Cars for Good People

(supplies limited)

740-446-4400
'DYH�:LQH
Open Mon.-Thurs. 10-6, Fri. 10-5, Sat. 10-2

Advertise your business
in this space, or bigger
Call us at: 446.2342 or 992.2155

Call today for a free in-home consultation.

BANKS CONSTRUCTION COMPANY

POMEROY, OHIO
Phone 740-992-5009
Website www.banksconstruction.co

60640828

Sales Consultant - Owner

60641149

&lt;�
0$1 O
ET
MOR 6(�
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FROM

REAL GENERAC OWNERS AGREE

�CLASSIFIEDS

4B Sunday, March 6, 2016

LEGALS

Notices

Public Notice
The Gallia County Family
and Children First Councilҋs
financial statements for
Calendar Year 2015 are
complete and available for
review at 53 Shawnee Lane,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Contact Lora
Jenkins, Intersystem Coordinator between the hours of 8:00
a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday at
(740) 446-3022 for an
appointment.
3/6/16
Public Notice
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health
Services financial statements
for Calendar Year 2015 are
complete, according to
Section 117.38, of the Ohio
Revised Code, and available
for review at 53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Contact Ronald A. Adkins,
Executive Director, between
the hours of 8:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Monday through
Friday at (740) 446-3022 for
an appointment
3/6/16

Money To Lend

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

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

Drivers:
Home every other weekend!
Paid by mile. Excellent
Benefits. Hauling potatoes.
Reefer. CDL-A, good driving
record.319-754-1944 x112

LUNCH &amp; SPRING CRAFT
&amp; VENDOR FAIR
Saturday, March 12, 2016
9:00 a.m, to 3:00 p.m.
At New Life Lutheran Church,
900 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio
(on the hill behind
Kyger Dental &amp;
McClure's restaurant).
The church will
have a chicken and noodle
lunch.

Notices
CNA
will assist with elderly care,
housekeeping, shopping
and cooking
have references
call:740-418-5070

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

Help Wanted General

Instructors needed:
In accounting bachelorҋs degree minimum.
Economics instructor Masterҋs degree minimum.
send cover letter and resume to:
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

Help Wanted General

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

Help Wanted General

Special Notices

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Real Estate Auction

Help Wanted:
Seeking Experienced

Heating and Air
Conditioning
Installer.
Please inquire by
phone.
740-416-3039
60642681

Help Wanted General

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is currently seeking a

full time press operator,
and we're looking to ﬁll the position immediately.
Qualiﬁcations for this position include:
-Ability to work a ﬂexible schedule,
including nights and weekends
-Mechanical aptitude
-Ability to bend, stoop and kneel into tight spaces
-Ability to stand for extended periods of time
-Ability to lift 50 pounds
-Be a strong team player
-Basic math skills
~Good verbal and written communication
-No fear of getting dirty
The position offers a competitive hourly wage, health
insurance, paid time off and 401 K.
60638514

If interested, please email your resume to Henry Rayburn
at hrayburn@civitasmedia.com, or mail your resume to:
Henry Rayburn, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631,
or stop by the ofﬁce to ﬁll out an application.
60638938

Real Estate Auction

Auctions

A
S
N
S
OCIATES
A
M
D
L
O
G

LARGE AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 2016 @ 10:00 A.M.
Auction will be held at the Auction Center, Route 62 North,
Mason, WV. We’ll be selling the contents of the hanging rock
sport shop. Over 130 new riﬂes, shotguns, &amp; hand guns.

***ALL FFL LAWS APPLY***
Hand Gun Cleaning Kits; Pistol Magazines; Mags; Lg. Amt. of Holsters; Pocket Knifes;
Scope Mounts; Lg. Amt. of Scopes (Burris, Simmons, Bushnell, Thompson Center,
Tasco, BSA); Pistol Cases; Game Sprays; Pyrodex; Lg. Amt. of Ammo; Riﬂe &amp; Shot Gun;
Muzzel Loader Accessories; Two (2) Nice Hand Gun Showcases.

601 Main Street

615 Main Street

Real Estate Auction

Iron Gate Restaurant Complex
Thursday, March 31, 2016 @ 11:05am
601 Main Street - Brick Restaurant Building with 3 Apartments
615 Main Street - Brick Restaurant Building
Lot 34,400 +- SF - Zoned Business
Point Pleasant, West Virginia

Goldman Associates, Inc.
Jay Goldman, Broker/Auctioneer #1291
Mary Staples, Auctioneer #1756
1014 Bridge Road, Charleston, West Virginia 25314
Phone: (304) 343-5695
www.goldmanassociates.org

60641726

Properties Offered Separately &amp; Together

AUTOMATIC HANDGUNS ***GUNS WILL SALE IN THE ORDER THEY ARE LISTED*** Ruger
SR9C 9MM, Smith &amp; Wesson 22A 22, Smith &amp; Wesson 22A 22, Keystone 40105 22, Firestorm FS 3800T
380, Keystone 40105 22, Glock G22 40, Taurus PT-92 9MM, Taurus 738 380, Taurus 738 380, Hi-Point
34010 40, Hi-Point 34010 40, Ruger SR22 22LR, Smith &amp; Wesson S09VE 9MM, Beretta 92FS 9MM,
Smith &amp; Wesson M &amp; P 40, Taurus 1911 45, Taurus 1911 45, Para 1911 45, Smith &amp; Wesson M &amp;
PC 9MM, Smith &amp; Wesson M &amp; PC 9MM, Kel-Tec P3AT 380, Legacy Citadel 9MM, Legacy Citadel
9MM, Beretta Neo 22, Chappa Puma 22, Taurus PT740 40, Beretta Neo 22, Ruger 22/45 22 5-1/2
Barrell, Ruger 22/45 22, Smith &amp; Wesson SD9VE 9MM, Ruger SR9C 9MM, Colt Mustang 380, Colt
Mustang 380, Heritage Combo 22/22M, Taurus PT-22 22, Ruger 22/45 TB 22, Glock G42 380, Glock
22 40, Beretta PX4 45 ACP, Berretta PX4, Thompson Center Contender 22 Hornet, Rossi PST 22/410,
Kahr CW9 9MM, Kahr CW9 9MM, Bond Snake Slayer 45/410, Bersa E11 380, Walther PK 380 380,
Ruger SR 22 22, Ruger SR22 22, Ruger SR22 22, Glock 42 380, Glock 42 380; REVOLVERS: Traditions 1861 Colt Navy 38 SPL, N American Arms MMC 22 Mag, Taurus 941 22M, Ruger 661 17HMR,
Ruger NV35 0.357, Ruger VAQ 44 Mag, Ruger VAQ .45 LC, Taurus 617 357, NAA Earl 22/22M,
Charter 13520 357, Rossi 351 38, Taurus 94 22, Charter 72224 22, Taurus 608 357, Taurus 608 357,
NAA Blk Widow 22M, Charter Under Cover 38, Taurus 94 22, Cimarron SR45 45LC, Taurus 44
44M, Taurus 444 44M, Taurus 992 22/22M, Ruger LCRX 38, Charter Pathﬁnder 22, Ruger SGL SIX
22/22M, Taurus Tracker 44M, Ruger Bear Cate 22, Heritage RR22 CH6 22, Heritage 22 Ch6 22, Ruger
KNR5 22/22M, Ruger Bisley Hunter 44M, Taurus 605 357, Charter Patriot 327, Charter Pug 357,
Taurus 94 22, Ruger VAQ 45LC, Rossi 462 357; RIFLES: Marlin 25MG 22 Mag, Remington 6516 597
.17HMR, Stevens 200 0.223, New England H &amp; R 72554 243, Savage CUB 22, ATI AK47 22LR, Henry
001T 22, Marlin 60 22, Savage 11 204, Rossi Rio Grande 30-30, Henry 002B 22, H &amp; R Handi 30-30,
Rossi M92 44M, Smith &amp; Wesson M &amp; P 15-22 22, Savage 11 204, Ruger 10/22 TD 22, Ruger 10/22
TD 22, Ruger 10/22 22, Ruger 10/22 22, Savage AXIS 22/250, H &amp; R Handi 45/70, Howa Lightning
22-250, Mossberg 4 x4 7MM Mag, Mossberg 4x4 25-06, Marlin 925R 22, Savage MK11F 22, Savage
MK11 22, Remington 770 243, Ruger 22-Oct 22 Savage AX15 270, Marlin 795 22, Marlin 795 22,
Rossi CMBO 410-22 Riﬂe/Shotgun; SHOTGUNS: Mossberg 68291 12 GA, Mossberg 500 12 GA,
Mossberg 930 12 GA, Tri-Star Viper 20 GA, Rossi 512-50 12 GA, Mossberg SA20 20 GA, Rossi Blue
Tuffy 410, Mossberg 500 410, Stevens 320 12 GA, Remington 870 Exp 20 GA, H &amp; R Partner Pump
12 GA, Escort Mag 20 GA, H &amp; R Excel 12 GA, Remington 870 Exp 20 GA, Remington 870 Exp 20
GA, CIA 20-Dec 12 GA, Rossi 1212 12 GA, Remington 870 Exp 20 GA, Baikal MP 210 12 GA, Baikal
220 12 GA, Remington 870 EXP 12 GA, Remington 870 EXP 12 GA; MUZZLELOADERS: Thompson
Center System 1 50Cal, Traditions Tracker 50Cal, Thompson Center Triumph 50Cal, Thompson Center Omega 50Cal, Thompson Center Triumph Weather Shield 50Cal, Traditions Vortek 50Cal, Knight
Wolverine CAMO 50Cal, Knight Wolverine 50Cal, Traditions Kentucky 50 Cal, Thompson Center
Impact 50Cal, Thompson Center Impact 50Cal, CVA Wolf 50Cal, Thompson Center Tree Hawk
50Cal; BLACK POWDER HANDGUNS: F. Eli Pietta 1860 Army 44Cal, F. LLI Pietta 1860 Army 44Cal
Check back for full listing of guns &amp; pictures.
4ERMS� cash or check w/valid id ***WV State Sales Tax applies***
Food will be available

Auction Conducted by:
Rick Pearson Auction Co #66
Ricky Pearson Jr. #1955
��� ��� ���� /2 ��� ��� ���� s 3EE !UCTIONZIP�COM FOR DETAILS

60643026

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 6, 2016 5B

15 Gallia, Meigs locals named to D-13 boys teams
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

A total of 15 boys from
Gallia and Meigs counties
were selected to the District
13 Basketball Coaches Association teams for the 2015-16
season, as voted on by the
varsity boys coaches within
the District 13 borders.
Three young men came
away with ﬁrst team accolades — including one player
of the year recipient — and
six more earned second team
honors, while the remaining half-dozen all garnered
special mention selections
within their respective divisions. In all, 10 of the 15 local
choices were seniors.
South Gallia senior Joseph
Ehman was a ﬁrst team selection and also earned player of
the year honors in Division
IV. Eastern senior Jett Facemyer was also a ﬁrst team
honoree in D-4, while Meigs
senior Kaileb Sheets earned
ﬁrst team accolades in Division I-II.
Seniors Wes Jarrell and
Kole Carter came away with
second team honors in Division I-II for the Blue Devils,
while MHS senior Colton
Lilly was a second team

choice as well in Division I-II.
River Valley senior Tyler
Twyman was a second
team choice in Division III,
while SGHS senior Landon
Hutchinson and Southern
junior Crenson Rogers both
came away with second team
accolades in Division IV.
Luke Musser was a special
mention choice in Division
I-II for the Marauders, while
senior Kirk Morrow and
junior Jacob Dovenbarger
were special mention selections for the Raiders in D-3.
The Rebels had two special mention selections in
seniors Kane Hutchinson and
Darren Drenner in D-4, while
SHS junior Tylar Blevins was
also a special mention honoree in Division IV.
Matt Combs of Vinton
County was named the
Division I-II coach of the
year, while Nathan Speed of
Fairland and Tom Simms of
Waterford respectively came
away with the same honors
in D-3 and D-4.
VCHS senior Jordan
Albright and Athens junior
Grifﬁn Lutz shared the
Division I-II player of the
year honors. Albright will
serve as one of the two D-13
representatives at the Ohio
North-South All-Star game
later this year.

Irish

Jarrell, Gallia Academy 12; Luke
Drayer, Warren 12; Colton Lilly,
Meigs 12; Kole Carter, Gallia
Academy 12.
Special Mention
Cooper Donaldson, Jackson 9;
Zacciah Saltzman, Athens 12;
Sam Evans, Logan 12; Seth Hall,
Warren 12; Derick Jones, Vinton
County 11; Chase Wood, Vinton
County 11; Matt Altenberger,
Marietta 11; Luke Musser, Meigs
11; Gage Herb, Marietta 10;
Chase Weihl, Warren 11.

DIVISION IV
First Team
Joseph Ehman, South Gallia
12; Bryce Guthrie, Trimble 12;
Justice Jenkins, Trimble 12; Jett
Facemyer, Eastern 11; Isaac
Huffman, Waterford 11; Tavian
Miller, Belpre 12.
Player of the Year: Joseph
DIVISION III
Ehman, South Gallia.
First Team
Coach of the Year: Tom Simms,
Gage Rhoades, Chesapeake
Waterford.
12; Kollin Van Horn, Fairland 10; Second Team
Phillip Kratzenberg, Ironton 12; A.J. Cobb, Federal Hocking 12;
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Brad Meadows, Chesapeake 12; Jordan Welch, Waterford 11;
River Valley senior Tyler Twyman (10) releases a shot attempt over
Mason Chapman, Alexander 12; Shawn Belville, Symmes Valley
a pair of Alexander defenders during a January 26 TVC Ohio boys
Braydon Womeldorf, Wellston
12; Landon Hutchinson, South
basketball contest in Bidwell, Ohio.
12; Luke Thomas, Fairland 10.
Gallia 12; Crenson Rogers,
Player of the Year: Gage
Southern 11.
2015-16 District 13 Boys
Chesapeake senior Gage
Rhoades, Chesapeake.
Special Mention
Coach of the Year: Nathan
Rhoades earned Division III Basketball Teams
Tyler Ward, Ironton St. Joe 12;
Speed, Fairland.
Collin Webb, Symmes Valley
player of the year honors and DIVISION I-II
First Team
Second Team
12; Garrett Bartley, Miller 12;
will serve as the other D-13
Jordan Albright, Vinton County Seth Richardson, Alexander
Bryce Hilverding, Waterford
representative at the Ohio
12; Griffin Lutz, Athens 11;
12; Nolan Carroll, Oak Hill 10;
10; Chase Walters, Ironton St.
North-South All-Star game.
Tristan Bartoe, Vinton County
Hunter Edwards, Nelsonville
Joe 10; Cody Jones, Trimble
The District 13 All-Star
11; Kyler Dennis, Warren 11;
York 11; Tyler Twyman, River
12; Wyatt Long, Waterford
Kaileb Sheets, Meigs 12; Lane
Valley 12; Isaiah Howell, Fairland 10; Tylar Blevins, Southern
Game will be held Monday,
Little, Logan 12.
10.
March 14, at Jackson High
11; Dejon Bedgood, Belpre
Player of the Year: Jordan
Special Mention
11; Carson Starlin, Miller 10;
School. The girls game will
Marques Davis, Ironton 12;
Kane Hutchinson, South
begin at 6 p.m. and the boys Albright (VCHS) and Griffin
Lutz (Athens).
Chazz Davis, Wellston 12;
Gallia 12; Darren Drenner,
will play afterwards. There
Coach of the Year: Matt Combs, Aron Davis, Nelsonville York
South Gallia 12.
will be a three-point shooting Vinton County.
11; Mason Darby, Rock Hill 9;
and slam dunk contest in
Second Team
Travis Carey, Ironton 12; Sam
Bryan Walters can be reached at
Trent Dawson, Marietta 11; Wes Angelo, Dawson Bryant 10;
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
between games.

too little, too late and the Fighting
Irish claimed the 88-63 victory.
St. Joe — which has won seven
From Page 1B
of its last eight games — will
face Charleston Catholic in the
“We kind of got out of our game Class A, Region 4, Section 2 ﬁnal.
there in latter part of the second
Charleston Catholic defeated Bufquarter,” Bradley said. “You can’t falo by a 70-61 count in the secdo that against a team like that
ond semiﬁnal game, on Thursday
and they were able to make a
at NHS.
run.”
“That’s a quality team,” Bradley
St. Joe held a 26-to-20 rebound- said of St. Joe. “They have ﬁve
ing edge in the opening stanza,
quality starters that can all do
while hitting 51.2 percent of its
really good things, then they have
43 ﬁeld goal attempts. The Red
three or four kids that can come
and White shot 30.7 percent from of the bench and they don’t lose
the ﬁeld in the ﬁrst half and com- anything. They’re a very good
mitted seven turnovers, six more team and I wish them the best of
than SJHS did.
luck.”
The Fighting Irish outscored
For the game, St. Joe outthe White Falcons 24-to-18 in a
rebounded the White Falcons by
fast paced third period, making
a 48-41 clip, including 19-to-16
the SJHS advantage 75-48 with
on the offensive glass. The White
eight minutes remaining.
Falcons held a 20-to-19 edge in
Wahama outscored SJHS 15-to- assists, but SJHS held a 14-to-5
13 in the fourth quarter, but it was advantage in turnovers, a 13-to-2
Help Wanted General
We are a home health care
agency seeking a part-time
nurse in the Gallipolis area.
Approx. 13 hrs per week.
Training provided by an
experienced RN Mentor.
Must be reliable and have
dependable transportation.
We provide competitive wages
and benefits. If you are
interested in becoming part of
a winning team, please
forward or resume to
dcantrell@pcnsohio.com or
fax to 614-761-0696.

For Sale By Owner
Card &amp; Gift Shop for Sale
Owner retiring after 42yrs
Est 1973
Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis,Oh
740-592-1649
or
740-590-8455

Jacob Dovenbarger, River Valley
11; Gunner Short, Fairland 10;
Daniel Rutherford, Dawson
Bryant 11; Kirk Morrow, River
Valley 12.

advantage in steals and a 8-to-2
edge in blocked shots.
Wahama shot 6-of-9 (66.7 percent) from the free throw line and
26-of-71 (36.6 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 5-of-18 (27.8 percent) from beyond the arc. The
Fighting Irish made 7-of-11 (63.6
percent) free throw attempts and
38-of-84 (45.2 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, including just 5-of-29
(17.2 percent) three-point tries.
The White Falcons were led
by junior Philip Hoffman with
19 points, six rebounds and six
assists, followed by Ryan Thomas
with 10 points and three assists.
Noah Litchﬁeld recorded nine
points and six rebounds, Travis
Kearns added eight points and
six rebounds, while Mason Hicks
ﬁnished with six points, eight
rebounds and three assists.
Nolan Pierce recorded four
points, seven rebounds and three
assists for the White Falcons,

while Mason Hildreth scored four
points and Jacob Lloyd scored
three to round out the WHS scoring. Pierce and Bryton Grate each
came away with a steal for the
Red and White, while Hicks and
Thomas both blocked a shot.
Wahama lost nine of its’ ﬁnal
11 games with both wins coming
over in-county foe Hannan.
Deaundra Murphy led the
Fighting Irish 28 points, seven
rebounds and three assists, followed by Keith Clemons with 25
points. John Dawson recorded
12 points, 13 rebounds and seven
assists for the Blue and Gold,
while Travis McNeil scored seven
points and dished out four assists.
John Morrison scored ﬁve
points for the victors, Jacob
Strieter added four points and 10
rebounds, while Charlie Bailey
chipped in with three points.
Issac Bias and Gabriel Giompalo
rounded out the SJHS scoring

with two points apiece.
Dawson led St. Joe’s defense
with four steals and two blocks,
while Strieter added ﬁve blocks
and one steal. Murphy posted
three steals in the win, while
Clemons had two steals and one
block.
This marks the ﬁnal game in
the careers of Wahama seniors
Ryan Thomas, Mason Hicks and
Nolan Pierce.
“Three quality young men
there,” Bradley said of his senior
trio. “I know they’re going to be
successful in whatever they do.
They’re good kids, they’re hard
workers and they do the right
things. I’ve enjoyed having them
for the three years that I’ve been
here.”
St. Joseph also defeated Wahama on February 23, in Mason by
an 82-59 ﬁnal.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

Land (Acreage)

Land (Acreage)

Apartments/Townhouses

15 Acres in Mason County
off of Redmond Ridge. Some
level ground, all woods, great
hunting or camping, $23,000.
Financing with $2300 down &amp;
$273/mth for 10 yrs.
Call for maps,(740)989-0260.

Gallia Co. 5 acres on Fairview
or Davis Rds. $13,900 or 8
acres in Kyger $10,900. Meigs
Co. Danville 9 acres $14,500
or SR143 7 acres $21,500 –
more @ www.brunerland.com
or call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

For Rent: One Bedroom
Garage Apt. Central/HeatAir,All Electric, Kitchen
Furnished , No Smoking ,
No Pets Deposit:$450.00 Rent
mo:$450.00 Call:740-992-3823

CLASSIFIEDS

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

Auto Auction

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Miscellaneous

Houses For Rent

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

For Rent: 2/3 Bedroom House
Central Heat-Air, All Electric,
Kitchen Furnished,Full Basement, No Smoking, No Pets
Deposit:$475.00 Rent
mo.:$475.00
Call: 740-992-3823

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

Want To Buy

Auctions

SURPLUS AUCTION
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athens, OH
Saturday, March 12 – 9:00 a.m.
Ohio University surplus items will be sold at public auction. All Items are Sold As Is –
No Guarantee &amp; No Returns. Sales Tax will be charged. If Tax Exempt – Must
Provide Tax ID# Paperwork at Registration.
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 33/50 to Athens to Rt. 682 exit, go through roundabout at Richland
Avenue, turn left at The Ridges and follow signs to Building #13.
VEHICLES to be sold at Noon: 2000 Dodge Ram Van V1500 (3.0L V6) with 32,899
miles, 2-1998 Ford E-150 Cargo Vans (4.2 L V6) with 46,575 &amp; 48,951 miles,
OFFICE &amp; HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS : 3-antique oak vertical file cabinets,
wood glass door display cabinet, lots of wood &amp; metal desks, computer desks, study
carols, large assortment of tables, large (approx. 12 ft) wood conference table, wood
mailbox units, 100+ chairs (assorted styles), many lateral &amp; vertical file cabinets, several
patient files shelving units, metal &amp; wood: bookshelves, shelving units &amp; storage
cabinets, chalkboards, bulletin boards &amp; white boards,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: exam table, Whitehall Mfg. whirlpool bath unit, exercise
bicycle, 10+ interior doors, several chandeliers, 2-pallets full of new boxed electrodes,
conveyor belt on stand, salad bar unit, Crosley fridge, Kenmore &amp; Imperial upright
freezers, Kenmore built-in dishwasher, and other items.

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO CHANGE PRIOR TO AUCTION DATE
TERMS: Cash or check w/positive I.D., American Express, Master Card &amp; Visa Credit
Cards accepted. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available.
Food will be available. Not responsible for loss or accidents.

OWNER: Ohio University

Sheridan’s SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd &amp; Mike Boyd
60642367

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

60642674

�SPORTS

6B Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Brady
From Page 1B

compromising the integrity of a proceeding that
the commissioner had
convened.”
“An adjudicator looking
at these facts, it seems to
me, might conclude that
the cellphone had incriminating information on it
and that, in the teeth of
an investigation, it was
deliberately destroyed,”
Parker said. “So why
couldn’t the commissioner suspend Mr. Brady for
that conduct alone?”
“With all due respect,
Mr. Brady’s explanation of
that made no sense whatsoever,” Parker said.
Kessler said the league’s
investigator never asked
for the phone.
Chief Judge Robert A.
Katzmann noted that the
fact that commissioners
can be confronted with
a novel situation might
be why the language of
the players union’s contract agreement with the
league “gives the commissioner broad authority to
deal with conduct detrimental” to the game.
The judges did not treat
the NFL gingerly either,
with Parker questioning
whether Goodell took his
authority too far by designating himself the arbitrator and making ﬁndings
that went beyond a report
prepared by an investigator the league hired.
Parker told NFL attorney Paul Clement that
Goodell in effect is “the
judge, the juror and,
execution is not the right
word, but the enforcer,”
and that his power made
his role different fundamentally from arbitration
cases the court typically
handles.
Clement said both sides
had agreed in contract
negotiations that Goodell
would preside over “conduct detrimental” proceedings.
60641034

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&amp; vote for your favorite pet.
The winner takes home the
$100 grand prize.
$50 prize for runner up.
VOTING ENDS 3-19

To VoTe PLeaSe ViSiT:

60643040

mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com
Welcome to our newest branch.

Convenience on the go!

Sherry K. Queen DVM t Brian K. Hendrickson DVM
Janice Williams, DVM t Bill Harnetty DVM
1520 State Rte. 160, Gallipolis, OH 45631 • 740-446-9752

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phone for free from the Apple Store or Google Play Store.

304-675-4441

60640654

60640641

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 6, 2016 s Section C

Historical
recounts
Morgan’s
Raid in
Gallia Co.
For the Times-Sentinel

OHIO VALLEY — “When
Morgan’s Raid occurred 150 years
ago, the local newspaper, the
Gallipolis Journal, closed. Two
newspapers in the nearby town of
Jackson were destroyed. People
who witnessed the raid wrote
to their friends, but to this day,
newspaper accounts on the local
level about the raid remain scarce,
missing or hidden away,” began
John Holcomb in his presentation
to the Gallia County Genealogy
Society.
He continued, that after a
lapse of 30, 40, or sometimes
even 50 years, people who
witnessed Morgan’s Raid in
small communities around the
area began publishing personal
accounts of it. Books in recent
times have collected many of these
personal stories, shedding more
light on the raid.
He said the account of the raid
he presented at the Genealogy
Society banquet is based on
more recent books as well as
various newspaper accounts
he has collected. Holcomb also
included information from the
genealogical website, and some of
the information he shared had not
been previously presented.
Holcomb began his story of
Morgan’s Raid as it pertained to
Gallia County: On June 27, 1863,
Gen. John Hunt Morgan,with
two brigades of mounted infantry
consisting of 2,460 men, left
Sparta, Tenn., and headed north
into Kentucky to feign an attack
on Louisville, Ky., on the Ohio
River. In command of one brigade
of 1,460 men was Col. Baseil
Duke, brother-in-law of Morgan. In
charge of the other brigade, which
consisted of 1,000 men, was Col.
Adam R. Johnson.
The attack on Louisville
was a diversionary tactic to
draw Union forces away from
Tennessee, which Union Gen.
Ambrose Burnside, of the Army
of the Department of Ohio at
Cincinnati, planned to invade.
Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg,
head of the Confederate Army
in Tennessee, gave Morgan
permission to invade Kentucky,
but under no circumstance was
Morgan to cross the Ohio River.
Morgan had his own idea
of how to conduct a raid, and
crossed the river at Brandenburg
on July 8, 1863. By forcibly
taking fresh horses from
civilians, the raiders quickly
moved through the Ohio
counties of Hamilton, Clermont,
Brown Adams and Pike, reaching
Jackson County on the evening
of July 16. The rebels were
getting close to Gallia County,
maintaining a route parallel to
the Ohio River.
A newspaper account from
Jackson County states that
a few miles from Jackson, a
detachment of rebels was sent
south to the hold back Union
forces gathering in parts of
Lawrence and Gallia counties.
This detachment of 40 to 50
Confederate troops entered
Gallia along its western border,
perhaps near the Gallia Furnace
region. The report said 36 rebels
were captured at Crown City
by members of the 91st Ohio
Volunteer Infantry.
Capt. Edward Henderson’s
Squirrel Hunters (we will hear
more about them later) were at
Gallipolis when they received
the order to go to Crown City.
Henderson and his men boarded
the steamer Norman, which was
ﬁtted as a gunboat, and headed out.
See RAID | 2C

Rocket VII Interactive Web Designer Adam Johnson works on a project for a client.

Photos courtesy of Michelle Miller

Rocket VII Interactive finds its niche

By Michelle Miller
For the Times-Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS — Rocket
VII Interactive launched
in 2013 as an advertising
business, when Silver Screen
VII owners Robbie and Tessa
Pugh partnered with the local
online news site for ad sales.
According to Robbie
Pugh, the cinema started
selling advertising space on
day one, so stepping into a
separate business devoted
to just advertising sales
was a simple move. When
it became apparent there
were opportunities available
outside of the cinema, the
decision to start Rocket VII
was easy, especially since
they were able to launch it
with zero upfront cost.
“We opened the checking
account for Rocket VII with
a check from an invoice,
paid by an advertiser. So
we literally started Rocket
VII without any money
out of pocket,” he said,
“which I think is pretty cool
because I hear people all the
time say you have to have
money to start a business.
And it is true under most
circumstances, it does take
money and it’s expensive
to start a business, but we
literally started Rocket VII
with money that came in
from a customer. We relied
on our reputation, which we
worked really hard to build in
that short amount of time.”
Once the new business
showed promise, Pugh said
the advertising at the cinema
was also turned over to the
ﬂedgling company.
Over the past two years,
Rocket VII has continued
to grow and expand into a
marketing solutions business,
complete with digital
billboards, website design
and graphic design services.
The idea for the digital
billboards came out of a family
trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C.
“We’re always looking at
ways to branch off of what we’re
currently doing,” Pugh said.
“We have these customers. We
have these relationships. What
else are they looking for and
what can we do?”
In Myrtle Beach, he said
digital billboards are popular,
so they decided to research
the possibility of bringing
those billboards to Gallia

ABOVE, Rocket VII Interactive now has an office front in downtown Gallipolis. BELOW, the digital billboard on Eastern
Avenue was the first billboard erected by Rocket VII. They not have boards in Jackson and Pomeroy.

County. The ﬁrst Rocket VII
digital billboard was erected
on Eastern Avenue.
“It was probably the hardest
thing we had ever done,
because of the red tape with

local permits, state permits
and securing the property,”
Pugh said. “We learned a
lot with the ﬁrst billboard
because, locally, inside the city
limits, the City of Gallipolis

has a no billboard ordinance,
so we had to go before the
Board of Zoning Appeals to
get a variance to even put that
billboard up.”
See NICHE | 2C

�LOCAL

2C Sunday, March 6, 2016

PVH accepting applications
Contributed Article

The foundation initiated
the ﬁnancial aid program in
POINT PLEASANT,
the late 1980s, recognizing
W.Va. — Applications for
the serious shortage of health
the Pleasant Valley Hospital
care professionals that existed
Health Foundation’s scholars throughout the nation, includprogram, which provides
ing the Upper Ohio Valley
ﬁnancial assistance to local
and West Virginia, as well as
students preparing for careers the increasing cost of higher
in health care, are available
education. More than 175
now.
students have beneﬁtted since
Local high school guidance that time.
counselors have also received
To be eligible for ﬁnancial
applications, according to
assistance from the Pleasant
Annette Boyles, foundation
Valley Hospital Health Founchairman. Applications are
dation, an individual must be
available by calling Georgia resident of Mason County,
anna Tillis at 304-675-4340 x W.Va., or Gallia County or
1423, or via email at gtillis@ Meigs County, Ohio, have
graduated from an accredpvalley.org.

ited high school or possess
a G.E.D. certiﬁcate, and
been accepted for admission
and declared a major area of
study in a health care ﬁeld
at an accredited institution
of higher education in either
West Virginia or Ohio.
Applications must be
received by the Foundation
by April 1. Letters of reference from two people familiar
with the applicant’s academic
and/or employment history,
as well as school transcripts
must also be sent to the PVH
Health Foundation, c/o Georgianna Tillis at 2520 Valley
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV
25550 by the deadline.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of
sales from March 2, 2016.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers,
$125-$198, Heifers, $110-$180;
425-525 pounds, Steers, $120$198, Heifers, $100-$170; 550625 pounds, Steers, $110-$184,
Heifers, $100-$162; 650-725
pounds, Steers, $100-$160,
Heifers, $90-$142; 750-850
pounds, Steers, $100-$145,
Heifers, $98-$134.

Back to Farm
Bred cows, $675-$1,175;
Bulls, $1,100-$1,200; Goats,
$47.50-$90; Baby calves, $190;
Hogs, $27.50-$47; Feeder pigs,
$27.50-$37.50.
Upcoming specials
Easter lamb and goat sale,
March 11, 6 p.m.
Special cow sale, April 15, 6 p.m.
Fat cattle sale next week; 125
feeders preconsigned for next week

Direct sales or free on-farm
visits.
Cows
Contact Ryan (304) 514Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $731858, Dewayne at (740) 339$94; Medium/Lean, $68-$75;
0241, Stacy (304) 634-0224, or
Thin/Light, $30-$67; Bulls, $70- visit the website at www.upro$100.
ducers.com.

Raid

Hunter, who made a list of the
items. He then gave them to
Capt. Tealey, the acting post
From Page 1C
quartermaster in Gallipolis.
The recovered items
Following the Battle of
included $91 in gold, $12,760
Bufﬁngton Island on July 19,
in silver, $317 in bank notes
Morgan and an estimated 1,200 and $53,605 in Confederate
rebels who had escaped Union
script. Also conﬁscated were
forces, made a second entry
fabric, including 170 yards of
into Gallia County on July
calico, 100 yards of gingham, 94
20. Entering the northeastern
yards of check and 62 yards of
part of the county in Cheshire
delaine, along with dry goods,
Township, just north of Kyger
shoes, 137 horses, four mules,
Village, Union forces began
55 saddles and 42 bridles.
to close in as he moved south
A spy glass taken from one
toward Cheshire.
of the prisoners was not turned
Troops were on land and two
over to the quartermaster by
gunboats carrying militia were
order of Gen. Burnside, and
on the Ohio River. The Norman
instead returned with other
held Vinton and Gallia militia
property to the prisoner from
and the Condor held Meigs
whom it was taken.
militiamen. Alongside the
After slipping away in
gunboat was a large side wheel
Cheshire, Morgan continued
towboat named Horton, also
south to Addison, where the
ﬁlled with Meigs militia.
raiders turned west toward
The Condor was ordered to
Porter. Here, they threatened
Cheshire to assist the ground
to burn the mill, but were
forces. When the Condor
dissuaded by the women of the
approached, the bank and
town.
beaches of the river were alive
Two militia groups headed
with rebels, who “took back
to
Crown City in an attempt
up the bank and back on a
to
capture the ﬂeeing rebels.
hill” when they caught sight
Again,
the Squirrel Hunters
of the gunboat. As the other
were
in
action as part of the
groups of Union forces closed
group.
The
Hunters cornered
around them, they offered to
some
rebels
and told them
surrendered.
to
wait.
Four
or ﬁve ran to
It is said the surrender
the
river
and
escaped,
but 31
occurred when Morgan sent
surrendered.
in a ﬂag of truce offering
The prisoners were turned
unconditional surrender.
over
to ofﬁcers on a steamer,
While the negotiations were in
who
returned
to Gallipolis.
progress, Morgan slipped away
The
Trumbull
Guards were the
with some 800 men, leaving
troops aboard the steamer and
about 400 to surrender to the
took credit for capturing the
Northern militias.
rebels.
The prisoners were taken to
Holcomb promises there is
Gallipolis. Capt. A.A. Hunter, of
more
to this story, and will offer
the 23rd Regiment of the O.V.I.,
more
information in upcoming
was in charge of the army post at
articles.
Gallipolis, as well as several other
local militia during the raid.
Presented by John Holcomb, speaker at the
Items were taken from the
2015 Gallia County Genealogy Society’s
prisoners and turned over to
Lineage Banquet.

Niche

seem to close relatively quickly
when you start talking about
putting up a 200-square-foot
From Page 1C
digital display in a small town.
But it’s good. It’s great. We love
During his hearing, he said
it,” Pugh said.
he told members of the board
Offering website and graphic
the billboard was just the ﬁrst
design actually started, just to
step in growing the business
assist the Pughs with their own
and, if all goes as planned, it
businesses, Silver Screen VII,
will create jobs in the future
Pip &amp; Hud’s and Rocket VII
and a downtown ofﬁce.
Interactive. Pugh said he saw
“Now, two years later we
the local need, but was hesitant
have ﬁve boards. We have an
at ﬁrst to expand it as an
ofﬁce downtown. We have a
actual service offered to other
website designer and graphic
businesses.
designer. We have a director
“It all comes down to
of social media marketing for
reputation.
It’s very important
all of our businesses. We have
if
we
do
something
for
an account representative,”
somebody,
it
has
to
be done
Pugh said. “So, everything
right.
They
have
to
be
happy
we told the Board of Zoning
with
it.
They
have
to
be
happy
Appeals has come to fruition so
with
the
price
they
paid
and
it
far. We’re really excited about
has
to
function,”
he
said.
that. I have ﬁve people at my
The ﬁrst organization the
ofﬁce who are graduating from
company
contracted with, for
college and they’re probably
website
design,
was the Gallia
going to have jobs coming out
County
Chamber
of Commerce.
of college, because of that ﬁrst
“It was kind of an audition
billboard on Eastern Avenue.”
for our website designer. He’s
Pugh said there was also a
been pushing me to do it.
learning curve with securing
state approval for the billboard There’s a need in Gallipolis.
There’s nowhere to get a
because of its location on
website designed. There are
Eastern Avenue.
“That ﬁrst one was very, very so many small businesses in
difﬁcult. It was like trial by ﬁre Gallia County that don’t have
websites and it sometimes
because we learned a lot on
boils down to, they just don’t
that ﬁrst billboard,” he said.
know where to get one. So
Since then, Rocket VII has
been able to erect billboards in my employees have been
pushing me to try it,” Pugh
Gallia, Jackson and Pomeroy.
said. “Because of the chamber’s
“We want to grow. We’re
positive reviews of the process
trying to grow. It just takes a
and our web designer, Adam
lot of work, a lot of time and a
lot of effort. A lot of open doors Johnson, it gave me the proof

BIRTHS
Adam and Randi Watson are
proud to announce the birth of
their daughter, Claire McKenzie
Watson, on Jan. 21, 2016. Claire
is the granddaughter of Eddie
and Lisa Roush, Bobby and Julie
Watson, and Dan and Beverly
Bishop. She is also the sister of
Wade Watson.
Courtesy photo

Yost joins Angus Association
Contributed Article

computerized records include
detailed information on over
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — Den18 million registered Angus.
cil R Yost Jr., of Vinton, is a
The association records
new member of the American
ancestral information and
Angus Association.
The American Angus Asso- keeps production records and
ciation, with more than 25,000 genomic data on individual
animals to develop industryactive adult and junior memleading selection tools for
bers, is the largest beef breed
its members. The programs
association in the world and
is based in St. Joseph, Mo. Its and services of the Associa-

I needed to move forward. So
now we have packages in place
and are actively promoting our
website design services to local
businesses.”
Websites most recently
designed by Rocket VII
Interactive include www.
galliacounty.org, www.
pipandhuds.com, www.
rocketvii.com, galliagotsole.
com, thebeautybar404.com and
putnamprincessparties.com.
In addition to website
design, Rocket VII interactive
also offers logo, billboard
advertising and marketing
material design, and recently
partnered with Bossard
Memorial Library for an
upcoming event.
“We’ve branched out and
gotten into a lot of different
things. The needs we had are
the same needs everyone else
has,” Pugh said.
Overall, Pugh said the most
rewarding part of owning all
three of their businesses has
been the staff, many of whom
have been with them since
the opening of the cinema and
have since moved up into other
positions.
“One of the things we’re
most proud of is, we’ve been
with these kids for so long,
we’ve seen them grow. We
have meetings and we talk
about our goals for the month,
what we are going to promote
and market. It’s not a school
assignment. It’s not for fun.
It’s real life. It’s real business,”
Pugh said. “That’s the most

rewarding part of the whole
thing, seeing the growth.”
Recently, the Pughs held
a unique application process
for their businesses. Instead
of the standard application
process, they asked applicants
to compose a one-page essay
about why small business is
vital to the local economy and
what separates a small business
from a major corporation.
Pugh said the response was
phenomenal and inspiring.
As far as owning their
own businesses, Pugh said
it has been on both his and
Tessa’s career path since the
beginning.
“I’m a sports junkie, so I’m
competitive. I think business
is the closest you can get to
playing sports and still be
competitive because at the
end of the day it’s all about
numbers. Did you make
money? Did you not make
money? And I think that
ﬁlled the void for me, for
competitiveness. I want to
be the best. I want to win.
I think business is a good
outlet for that,” he said. “But
also, because my mentors
and role models growing up
were all business people. So
the people I always looked
at with the highest regard, I
want my kids to see me like
that. I want my kids to think
about me the same way Tessa
thinks of her grandfather, who
was a prominent business
professional. There’s also the
goal of ﬁnancial freedom and

tion and its entities — Angus
Genetics Inc., Angus Productions Inc., Certiﬁed Angus
Beef LLC and the Angus
Foundation — help members
to advance the beef cattle
business by selecting the best
animals for their herds and
marketing quality genetics for
the beef cattle industry and
quality beef for consumers.

overall freedom that comes
with being a business owner.”
Pugh said most people do
not understand, while there is a
certain amount of freedom that
comes with owning a business,
you are also tied down to that
business, in other ways 24/7.
“It’s more than 9 to 5. It’s all
day, every day. And it’s great. I
wouldn’t change it for anything
in the world, but it’s all day,
every day,” he said.
Most recently, Pugh said he
realized if Gallia County wants
to experience growth, someone
is going to need to take those
ﬁrst steps and it might as well
be them.
“A couple of years ago, we
were always guilty of saying, ‘I
wish they’d open up a yogurt
shop. I wish they would open
up this. I wish they’d do that,’”
he said. “And then one day I
just said, ‘Who in the heck is
they?’ ‘They’ does not exist.
We want to improve the
community. We want to have
some of the things they have in
a bigger city, in a bigger town.
The people of Gallipolis are
entitled to that. We deserve
nice things. We want to see
other people open up some
cool and unique locations. We
have to be the ‘they.’”
For more information
about Rocket VII, visit www.
rocketvii.com, stop by their
downtown location at 300 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis or call (937)
474-9427.
Michelle Miller is executive director of the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce.

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, March 6, 2016 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

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By Hilary Price

3/07

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

3/07

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Everyday price $34.99/mo. All offers require
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DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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Hank Ketcham’s

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DR_16461_3x3.5

�4C Sunday, March 6, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Congratulations to the
Ohio Valley
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Defenders

OCSAA 2016 State Champions

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