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                  <text>Cullen
inducted to
NWHOF

ORTA
supports
Habitat

Holzer
raising
awareness

SPORTS s 1B

LOCAL s 3A

ALONG THE
RIVER s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 46, Volume 50

Sunday, November 20, 2016 s $2

Holiday events planned

Bidwell man
sentenced
to prison
in Meigs
County case
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

File photo

Santa and Mrs. Claus will again make their appearance in the Ohio Valley in the coming weeks as holiday events take place throughout the region. This photo shows
the duo arriving in the annual Middleport Christmas Parade.

Meigs, Gallia counties filled
with events for weeks ahead

POMEROY — A
Bidwell man was sentenced to ﬁve years in
prison after pleading
guilty to a single count of
robbery in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Jerry D. Woodrow was
indicted in the spring on
the single count of robbery, a second-degree felony, in connection with a
March 31 incident.
According to Meigs
County Prosecutor Colleen Williams, Woodrow followed a woman
from Gallipolis to her
residence in Meigs
County. The woman
pulled into her driveway
and Woodrow allegedly
approached her while
asking for directions to
Racine. When the victim
started giving directions,
Woodrow grabbed for
her purse and the pair
struggled. The victim’s
husband came out of
the home and Woodrow
allegedly ﬂed from the
scene in his vehicle.
At the time of Woodrow’s arrest in April,
Gallia County Sheriff
Joe Browning told the
Tribune that Woodrow
See BIDWELL | 5A

Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — With the
holiday season upon the region,
here is a list of some of the
upcoming happenings in both
Meigs and Gallia County.
The University of Rio Grande
Masterworks Chorale will present its annual fall performance
Sunday, Nov. 20 at 3 p.m. in
the John W. Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center. The
performance this year will be
a rendition of Benjamin Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols
featuring soloists Racquel Sims
and Adelynne Michaels. The
Masterworks Chorale, under
the direction of Dr. Sarin Williams, will also feature guest
musician Sally Kelton. Kelton
is a professional harpist from
Kentucky and will be an artist
in residence with the university
this week.
Operation Dear Hero is back
underway. Last year, 1st Sgt.
Don Walker and his wife Jennifer Walker worked with the

American Red Cross to send
roughly 1,000 cards gathered
from the community to active
service members overseas. This
year, the pair are collecting
holiday cards for local service
members. With the help of
VFW Post 4464, the Walkers
will hand deliver cards and visit
with local service members to
brighten the holiday of local veterans. Those volunteering cards
are asked to remember to thank
veterans for their service as well
as wish them a merry Christmas. Cards can be collected at
Gallia Academy Middle School
or sent to Ratliff Pool Center
through Friday, Dec. 2.
In Pomeroy,Christmas Along
the River will take place on Sunday. Nov. 27. The annual Christmas parade will take place at 2
p.m. Line up for the parade will
be at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy ball
ﬁelds. All entries are welcome.
For more information contact
Toney Dingess at 740-591-2260.
In addition to the parade,

Pugh named
Holzer board
member
Staff Report

Dean Wright | Daily Tribune

Many of Gallipolis in Lights fixtures have already been erected in Gallipolis City
Park and await the luminous “switch throwing” ceremony, Wednesday night.

the merchants in Pomeroy will
be hosting an open house from
noon to 4 p.m. that day. Following the parade, Santa will be at
Peoples Bank in Pomeroy.
Gallipolis in Lights will be
holding its 2016 Galla at the
Elks Lodge Dec. 1. The event
will start a 6 p.m. with social
hour and dinner will begin at
7 p.m. Comers can expect an
evening ﬁlled with ﬁne dining,
spirits and Christmas favorites
performed by John Eric Booth.

The actual lighting ceremony
for Gallipolis in Lights will
be held in City Park with preceremony activities at 5:30
p.m., including drinks and
refreshments. Admission is free.
Entertainment will begin on the
stage at 6 p.m.
The Our House Tavern is having an open house holiday event
also around the time of the
lighting ceremony. Tours will
See HOLIDAY | 3A

Meigs Sheriff receives
Distinguished Service Award

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

By Sarah Hawley

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

shawley@civitasmedia.com

C FEATURES
Along the River: 1C
Comics: 3C

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

POMEROY — Meigs
County Sheriff Keith
Wood was recognized
earlier this week with
the Distinguished Service Award from the
Buckeye State Sheriff’s
Association.
Wood was nominated
for the honor by Pike
County Sheriff Charles
Reader for Wood’s work
in Pike County following the murder of eight
members of the Rhoden
family in April 2016.

Wood and others,
including a chief deputy
from Warren County,
were recognized for
their assistance in the
early part of the investigation into the shootings.
The Meigs County
Sheriff spent four weeks
in Pike County, being
down there beginning
on the ﬁrst day to offer
his assistance.
One of the major
roles for Wood was
with the scheduling of
over 700 ofﬁcers from
around 70 counties who

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Meigs County Sheriff Keith
Wood

assisted in Pike County
during the early weeks of
See SHERIFF | 5A

GALLIPOLIS —Robbie Pugh, area entrepreneur, was recently named
a member of the Holzer
Health System Board of
Directors.
Pugh is the owner
of several businesses
in Gallipolis, including
ElevenVII Interactive,
Rocket VII Interactive,
Silver Screen VII and
Pip and Hud’s. In addition, Pugh contributes
to several community
boards including the Gallia County Community
Improvement Committee,
Downtown Revitalization
Project, and the GalliaVinton ESC Business
Advisory Council.
“We are excited to
have Robbie join the Holzer Board of Directors,”
stated Brent Saunders,
chairman of the board,
Holzer Health System.
“Robbie’s vision and
enthusiasm for our communities is appreciated
and welcomed by our
board members, which
are focused on improving
not only the health of our
residents, but continuing to advance the local
opportunities for the
communities we serve.”
“I am extremely honored to be chosen as a
member of the board
of directors at Holzer
Health System,” stated
Pugh. “I look forward to
See PUGH | 3A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

2A Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
EVAN HAYMAN

JOSEPH WEBSTER
daughter, Jeannine
(Gregg) Landis,
of Logan, Ohio;
grandchildren,
Joseph Webster,
III, and Andrew
Webster Caiden
Landis, Mollie
Landis, Ryann
Landis. A sister, Carol
(Bob) Wiley, of Gallipolis, and numerous
nieces and nephews also
survive.
Funeral services will
be held on Tuesday, Nov.
22, 2016, at 11 a.m. in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. Pastor
Bill Thomas and Pastor
Bob Powell will ofﬁciate.
Interment will follow
with full military honors
provided by the Gallipolis
Veterans Funeral Detail
Team in the Mound Hill
Cemetery. Kevin Roach,
Ed Lewis, Jack Rife,
Gregg Landis, Caiden
Landis, and Nathan King
will serve as active casketbearers, Guy Guinther,
Roger Saunders, Rick
Carter and Jim Love will
serve as honorary casketbearers. Friends may call
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. on
Monday at the funeral
home.
In lieu of ﬂowers
memorials may be made
to the Shriners Children’s
Hospital, St. Jude Children’s Hospital, or Gallipolis Veterans Funeral
Detail Team. Expressions
of sympathy may be sent
to the family by visiting
www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

RUTLAND — Evan
Ray Hayman, 9, of Rutland, Ohio, has gone
home to live with Jesus,
on Thursday, Nov. 17,
2016, from his residence.
Evan was born Sept.
25, 2007, at Gallipolis,
Ohio, to Robert W. and
Lindsey M. White Hayman. He was a member
of Common Ground Missions, Pomeroy, Ohio and
a third grader at Meigs
Local Primary School,
Rutland, Ohio.
He is survived by his
parents, grandparents,
Sidney and Carol Hay-

CLARENCE MCDONALD
DEXTER — Clarence
(Sonny) McDonald, 76,
of Dexter, Ohio, went
to be with the Lord on
Thursday, Nov. 17, 2016,
at Overbrook Center,
Middleport, Ohio.
He was born April 2,
1940, at Sattes, West
Virginia, to the late
Romey Lee and Violet
Andrea Meeks McDonald. He was a loving husband, father, and grandfather and was a dedicated long time member
of Old Dexter Church.
He loved gardening,
canning, bird watching,
and spending time with
his grandchildren. He
worked as a laborer and
farmer.
He is survived by three
daughters, Shirley (William Dailey) Van Meter,
Jeannette (Harvey) Martin, and Andrea (Daniel)
Henry; grandchildren,

PAULA MORLAN
LOGAN — Paula K.
Morlan, 60, of Logan,
died Saturday, Nov. 12,
2016, at her residence.
Born Aug. 29, 1956 in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., she
was the daughter of the
late Ellen Layne and Steven Morlan
Paula is survived by her
husband, Steve of Pomeroy; three daughters, Valerie Taulbee, Stacy Lock-

Civitas Media, LLC

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

CONTACT US
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

Kyle and Kevin Van
Meter and Emily and
Daniel Henry; a brother,
David McDonald; sisterin-law, Judy McDonald;
and brother-in-law, Ralph
Stone.
He was preceded in
death by his parents;
sisters Bertye Hedrick,
Phyllis “Pip” Slater, Opal
“Pood” Duff, Gertrude
McDonald, and June
Stone; and brothers,
Danny McDonald and
Romey Lee McDonald.
Services are Tuesday,
Nov. 22, at 1 p.m. at
Birchﬁeld Funeral Home,
Rutland, Ohio. Burial
will be at a later date
at Standish Cemetery,
Dexter, Ohio. Family will
receive friends Monday,
Nov. 21, 2016, from 5-7
p.m. at funeral home.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

KEITH WOODS

hart and Renee Smith;
and ten grandchildren.
Besides her parents,
she was preceded in death
by a brother, Mike Layne.
A memorial service
will be held at 4 p.m., on
Sunday, Nov. 27, 2016,
at Ewing-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Friends are invited to
sign the online guestbook
at ewingfuneralhome.net.

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

man, and Dwayne and
Kathy White, along with
several aunts, uncles, and
cousins.
Eavn’s family will welcome friends Sunday,
Nov. 20, 2016, from 2-5
p.m., at the Family Life
Center, Middleport, Ohio.
There will be private
services for Evan, with
Pastor Dennis Moore
ofﬁciating and a burial at
Odd Fellows Cemetery,
Mason, West Virginia
later.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

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

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH

MIDDLEPORT —
Keith Woods, 90,of
Middleport,went to be
with the Lord Friday
evening, Nov. 18,2016, at
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center, surrounded by his
family. He was born on
Sept. 2, 1926 in Milford,
Utah.
For most of Life he was
an over-the-road truck
driver. He served in the
Army during WW II. He
was an avid golfer. He
was a member of Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church.
He is survived by his
devoted wife of 67 years,
Gertrude (Dolly) Woods;
sons, Tom (Lisa) Woods,
Ted (Janie) Woods;
daughters, Mary (Fred)
Davis, Brenda Woods,
and Cheryl (Bruce)
Michaels; also his stepfather and his wife,
Wesley (June) Herrick.
His eleven grandchildren, their spouses, and
19 great-grandchildren
include, Missy (Jesse)
Howard and Morgan and
Mitchell; Kate (Zach)
Ash; Ryan (Renee) Davis
and Carli, Carson, and
Kensli; Amber (Chris)
Kapple and J.D., Mitchell,

and Macy Wright; Kenny
(Kendra) Davis and
Reese, Riley, and Ross;
Scott Carr and Jayden
Carr Wolfe; Jason Neigler; Matthew (Nichole)
Neigler and Kamara;
Jared Woods and Alexis;
Shaun (Tonya) Imboden
and Ethan, Alana, and
Logan; Brandon Michaels
and Addison and Lilly.
His one great-great granddaughter, Elli.
He is preceded in death
by his mother, Velma
(Mable) Herrick, and
great-grandson, Chase
Roush.
Funeral services will be
held on Monday, Nov. 21,
2016, at 1 p.m. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, Ohio,
with Rev Ed Barney ofﬁciating. Visitation will be
Sunday, Nov. 20, 2016
from 6-8 p.m. and Monday from 11 a.m. until
the time of service. Burial
will follow at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
The family would like
to extend their gratitude
to all the staff at Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center for their dedicated
care.

sisters, Karen (Everette)
Downard Huffman, Earl
(Valerie) Downard,
Kenny Downard, Jim
Downard and several
nieces, nephews and special friends.
She preceded in death
by her parents; husband,
Ray Goble; brothers,
Mike, Aaron and Leonard Downard.
Services will be held
at the convenience of the
family. Arrangements
are under the direction
of the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

DEATH NOTICES
THACKER
PRICHARD — Michael James Thacker, 24, of
Prichard, West Virginia, died Monday, Nov. 14,
2016.
A visitation will be held 6-8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 21,
2016, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.
BRYANT
JACKSON — Gladys Lucille Bryant, 88, of Jackson,
Ohio, died Friday, Nov. 18, 2016.
There will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
BODKINS
SPENCER — Gustava Bodkins, 101, Spencer, West
Virginia, and formerly of Racine, died Saturday, Nov.
19, 2016.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Racine.
OHLINGER
MT. ALTO — Robert Ray Ohlinger, 59, of Mt. Alto,
W.Va., passed away Thursday, Nov. 17, 2016.
Service will be Saturday, Nov. 19, 2016, 6 p.m., at
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with Pastors Mike Martin and Randy Parsons ofﬁciating. Visitation will be from 3-6 p.m., Saturday, at the funeral
home.
JARRELL
MASON — Georgie Ruth Jarrell, 72, of Mason,
W.Va., passed away on Nov. 18, 2016.
Funeral services will be held on Monday, Nov. 21,
2016 at noon at the Anderson Funeral Home in New
Haven, W.Va. Burial will follow at Sunrise Memorial Cemetery. Friends and family visiting hour will
be from 11 a.m. to noon on Monday at the funeral
home.
CARVER
MCARTHUR — Larry E. Carver Sr., 75, of
McArthur, and formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
passed away Thursday, November 17, 2016 at his
residence.
Funeral services will be held 1 p.m., Monday,
November 21, 2016 in the Garrett-Cardaras Funeral
Home, 201 W. High St., McArthur, with Pastor Wes
Gallaugher ofﬁciating. Interment will be in Mt. Zion
Cemetery, McArthur, with military graveside services
being held by the McArthur VFW Post #5299. Friends
may call at the Garrett-Cardaras Funeral Home on
Sunday, from 6-8 p.m.
BADGLEY
NASHVILLE — Derek Martin Badgley, 52, of
Nashville, Tennessee, died Nov. 17, 2016.
Graveside service will be Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2016,
atnoon at Sunrise Cemetery Letart, West Virginia,
with full military honors provided by V.F.W. Post 9926
Mason, W.Va., American Legion Post 140 New Haven,
W.Va. and American Legion Post 39 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Visitation will be Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2016, from 6-8
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, West
Virginia.

STOCKS

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

AEP (NYSE) - 58.44
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Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 44.30
BorgWarner (NYSE) 35.68

Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.
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SYRACUSE — Cheryl
Ann Goble, 60, of Syracuse, passed away on
Sunday, November 13,
2016 at her residence.
She was born on January 22, 1956 in Wellston
to the late Ernest and
Marjorie (Williams)
Downard. Cheryl loved
to garden and she loved
her family. She was
a wonderful mother,
grandmother and sister.
She will be missed by all
that knew her.
She is survived by her
children; Tyler Goble,
Chad Goble and Heather
(Daniel) Teaford; grandson, Jackson Goble
Thomas; brothers and

60688415

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GALLIPOLIS
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Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
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Daily stock reports are
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JACKSON
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60661141

GALLIPOLIS
— Joseph “Joe”
Morris Webster,
79, of Gallipolis
passed away,
at 2:05 p.m. on
Friday, Nov. 18,
2016, in the Holzer Medical Center surrounded by family
and friends. Born Feb. 6,
1937, during the historic
ﬂood in Gallipolis, to
the late Morris and Ruth
I. Johnson. He retired
after 35 years from the
International Nickels
Corporation in Huntington, West Virginia,
and a member of the
Grace United Methodist
Church, life member of
the AMVET’s, and the
Wrinkle Club . He was a
United States Air Force
veteran having served
as a mechanic and crew
chief in Okinawa, Japan,
he was also present during the Enewetak Atoll
nuclear weapons testing.
Joe loved spending time
with his grandchildren
as they were the joy of
his life. He also enjoyed
hunting, ﬁshing, and
browsing the Flea Markets, and socializing
with his friends and family. Joe was well known
for his sense of humor.
Joe is survived by his
wife of 53 years, Judith
Shuler Webster, whom
he married on June 15,
1963, in Grace United
Methodist Church, of
Gallipolis; a son, Joseph
M. (Kim) Webster, II,
of Savannah, Georgia; a

CHERYL ANN GOBLE

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 20, 2016 3A

Retired teachers chapter partners with Habitat for Humanity
to buy building materials and supplies. Most
recently they donated a
basket of Gallia County
items for their annual
Taste of Southeastern
Ohio Habitat for Humanity fall fundraiser held at
Hocking College in Nelsonville.
“Our retired teachers
know well the critical
importance of a good
home for a family. The
ORTA - Habitat partnership has provided a
convenient way for our
chapter to focus more
intensive efforts in 2016
on Habitat’s long and
highly respected homebuilding program. Habitat
for Humanity offers a
hand-up rather than a
hand-out assistance to
families who are putting
forth good effort to build
a better home and life for
themselves,” said Donna
DeWitt, former President
of Gallia County RTA and
current Publicity Chair,

The Meigs County
Extension Ofﬁce will
be holding the 9th
From page 1A
annual Holiday Program,
be from 6 to 9 p.m. with “Spreading Christmas
Cheer” on Thursday,
live music in the ballDec. 1. Make and take
room by Kendra Ward
craft, indoor pine tree,
(dulcimer) and Robert
food samplings and door
Bence (guitar). A Pup
prizes. One class is at 11
and A Cup Tea Co. will
a.m. and the second class
have a variety of teas
at 6 p.m. at the Meigs
to sample. Cookies and
County Extension Ofﬁce
hot chocolate will also
located at 113 E Memobe served. The Gallia
Academy Madrigals will rial Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy. Preregistration is
be singing Christmas
Carols in front of the tav- required and the cost is
ern. This is all free to the $25 per person. For more
information call 740-992public.

6696.
Saturday, Dec. 3 will
be the annual Christmas
Celebration in the Village
of Middleport hosted
by the Middleport Community Association. The
day will begin with the
Christmas Market running from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. at the Riverbend
Arts Council building.
There will be two cash
drawings awarded at the
end of the day.
In addition, there will
be free carriage rides for
the public from 1:30-4
p.m. loading beside the

Holiday

Courtesy photo

Samantha Waldron from Habitat for Humanity of Southeastern Ohio is shown on the left accepting
the basket of Gallia County items donated by Gallia County Retired Teachers Association from Donna
DeWitt, Publicity Chair of GC-ORTA.

“and we invite our community to join us in this
most worthwhile partnership. Any interested party

may contact Samantha
Waldron at Habitat for
Humanity of Southeast
Ohio at 740-592-0032,

ext. 102, to ﬁnd out how
they can help.”

Riverbend Arts Council
building. The community band will perform
a concert outside of the
Arts Council Building
beginning at 4 p.m. until
the parade begins at 4:30
p.m. Parade lineup takes
place at 4 p.m. at Dairy
Queen and along Front
Street.
Following the parade,
Santa and Mrs. Claus
will be at the Arts Council Building to visit with
the children.
The Gallipolis Christmas Parade will be held
on Second Avenue, Dec.

3 at 1 p.m. Santa will be
available to speak with
children afterwards in the
Santa House in City Park.
The Ohio Valley
Symphony will host its

annual Christmas show
the same Saturday night
at 7:30 p.m. at the ArielAnn Carson Performing
Arts Centre on Second
Avenue in Gallipolis.

Submitted by Donna DeWitt.

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

Help Right Here At Home

Mesothelioma • Lung Cancer
Wrongful Death

740-992-6368

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

OPEN ENROLLMENT

Pugh
From page 1A

learning from and working alongside the current
board members and hope
to bring a new perspective and fresh ideas to
the ever-changing ﬁeld of
health care.”
Pugh has received
several awards including the Gallia County
Citizen of the Year, presented by the Gallipolis
Lions Club in June 2016,
and recognition by the
Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce for the
Sudden Impact Award
in January 2013 and the
Committee of the Year
in for the Downtown
Revitalization Project
in January 2014 and
the Marianne Campbell
Volunteer of the Year in
January 2015.
“Robbie is an energetic
individual who is truly
fully vested in our com-

*Seniors (over 65) or on
Disability, help with
Prescription Drug coverage
Courtesy photo

Shown left to right, Michael Canady, CEO, Holzer Health System,
Robbie Pugh, Board Member, Holzer Health System, and Brent
Saunders, Chairman of the Board, Holzer Health System.

munities,” stated Michael
Canady, MD, MBA, CPE,
FACS, CEO, Holzer
Health System. “I look
forward to working with
him as a board member
as we continue to advance
Holzer services. We are
committed to being the
best possible health care
system for our friends,

*Seniors (over 65) or on
Disability, help with their
choices between Advantage
Plans or Supplement
(Medigap) Plans.

family members, and
neighbors.”
Pugh received his Bachelors in Business Administration from the University of Rio Grande and
is a graduate of Jackson
High School. He and his
wife, Tessa, reside in Gallipolis with their children,
Piper and Hudson.

*Open Enrollment begins
November for the
Affordable Care Act Plans
(Obama Care).

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60682679

Ryan Miller’s presentation of a video about
Habitat for Humanity’s
history and its current
activities around Ohio,
the United States, and the
world. ORTA then President-Elect Carol Remington and Public Relations Chairman Claudia
Trombla arranged for the
35 state board members
present at the ceremony
to wear ORTA/Habitat
hard hats and carpenter
pocket aprons.
Activities have been
carried out during 2016
to provide support for
Habitat families. The
partnership also offers
potential beneﬁts to
the ORTA and Habitat
organizations themselves
through these expanded
community involvement
activities.
Gallia County Retired
Teachers recently collected $225 to donate
to Habitat for Humanity
of Southeastern Ohio

GALLIA COUNTY
— All 88 local retired
teacher chapters in Ohio,
including Gallia County
Retired Teachers Association, learned last year of
a volunteer partnership
to be established in 2016
between the Ohio Retired
Teachers Association
(ORTA) and Habitat for
Humanity of Ohio.
The partnership is
intended to promote and
encourage, both at the
ORTA state level and,
voluntarily, at the local
chapter level, retired
teacher volunteerism
activities to support
Habitat families’ homebuilding efforts.
A partnership “kick-off”
ceremony brought the
two organizations together last October at the
ORTA ofﬁce, Columbus,
as part of ORTA’s annual
fall state board meeting.
The program featured
Habitat for Humanity
State Executive Director

�E ditorial
4A Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Why the networks
didn’t see Donald
Trump coming
I will never forget how it felt to have television
cameras in my face and a puzzled reporter asking why I wasn’t celebrating after the networks
announced my congressional candidate had won.
It felt awful. But the situation was certainly
understandable.
After all, the role of pollsters and the process for
predicting victors often confuses people, including
members of the media, leading to false hopes and
frustrations.
We certainly saw that this year, as
Greg R.
surprise candidate Donald Trump,
Adams
despite predictions to the contrary,
Contributing
vanquished one Republican primary
columnist
opponent after another before shocking the nation by capturing key Rust
Belt states and defeating Democrat Hillary Clinton.
How do upsets like this happen, and why don’t
professional journalists see them coming?
That’s a big question with many possible
answers, so let’s tackle one piece — the networks’
Election Day coverage, during which outlets are
focused on three main things: exit polls, how early
numbers compare to forecast models, and what
happens in bellwether
In this election, when precincts and counties.
the expected surge
That equation, like
of Hispanic voters
any other, of course,
failed to materialize
is susceptible to
for Clinton, pollsters errors, which is how
you wind up with a
scurried to create
sure thing turning
new models. No
into a shocker.
one wants to call a
In this election,
when the expected
state wrong after
surge of Hispanic
the Florida fiasco of
voters failed to mate2000, when some
rialize for Clinton,
said we’d have a
pollsters scurried to
President Gore.
create new models.
No one wants to call a
state wrong after the
Florida ﬁasco of 2000,
when some said we’d have a President Gore.
But they missed another element — the curveball thrown by Trump supporters that wound up
skewing forecasts.
Many people don’t feel comfortable telling a
stranger how they voted, particularly if religion or
race is involved.
It’s what politicos call the Bradley effect, named
after former Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, an
African-American Democrat, who despite leading
polls heading into the 1982 California gubernatorial race, wound up losing to George Deukmejian,
a white Republican.
This year, Trump supporters, after enduring
months of unﬂattering press portrayals and harsh
critiques of their candidate — no fan of the media
himself — had the last laugh, fooling exit pollsters
and thereby not triggering alarms about ﬂawed
turnout models.
Networks could have predicted the outcome
sooner and more accurately had the polls and forecasts been more sound.
Then there’s the matter of how votes are tallied.
Ofﬁcials in Detroit’sWayne County, for example,
made it difﬁcult for the networks by not divulging
how many absentee ballots they received, choosing to only tally them at the end, causing some
viewers to wonder why broadcasters could not
declare a Michigan victor with 80 percent of the
vote already in hand.
That constant attention to the percentage of
votes already tallied is often misleading. The ﬁrst
30 percent reported, for example, is often not at
all reﬂective of the next 30 percent that will come
in, so the apparent loser can suddenly surge ahead
to win, bewildering partisan fans in the process.
Anchors also frequently place too much emphasis on who is allegedly winning each county or
state.
Campaign organizers worth their salt know they
must outperform the historical norm precinct by
precinct, and if they don’t, the networks should
see that problem when they check the speciﬁc
precincts that almost always go with the winners.
This year, these bellwether precincts gave the
pollsters early indigestion, which is why numerous
states were “too early to call” for some time.
An ultimately disappointing ground game is part
of the reason Clinton lost, with her team’s efforts
— lauded as they were — falling short, garnering
about 3 million fewer votes than President Barack
Obama received in 2012 and about 6.5 million
fewer votes than he got in 2008.
For all these reasons, I knew better than to
assume Clinton had it in the bag, just as I knew
not to join the big celebration after my congressional candidate had supposedly won. I knew some
of my opponent’s strongest precincts had not yet
been tallied and it was too early to join the conga
line.
Greg R. Adams has been a Washington-based campaign manager,
fundraiser, political marketer, and ghostwriter for presidents and
politicians for the past 34 years.

THEIR VIEW

Are my working-class roots showing?
Class, like sexual identity, is on a continuum.
Just as Benedict Cumberbatch is more feminine
than Cameron Diaz, so
are members of “Duck
Dynasty’s” Robertson
family — estimated net
worth of around $53
million — regarded by
many fans as “real working guys” while Supreme
Court Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg — worth just
over $4 million — is
regarded as a privileged
Ivy League elitist.
Is class a matter of
identity, like gender and
race? Is it a matter of loyalty? How do Americans
deﬁne themselves when it
comes to class?
It’s an uncomfortable
question, so I’ll begin. If
I were using trendy identiﬁcation politics alone
to provide my answer,
I’d say I identify as a
working-class woman —
because that’s the class
into which I was born and
in which I was raised —
who as an adult has made
money.
But that self-portrait is
misleading. I’m a college
professor and columnist
who lectures around the
country. To call myself
working class would be
as disingenuous as the
character played by Bryan
Cranston in “Seinfeld”
who converted to Judaism in order to tell Jewish
jokes. To refer to myself
as working class now

whose true colors
would be to disreGina
can be seen only
spect those who
when somebody is
are the real thing. Barreca
I no longer have Contributing looking down on
columnist
her? Am I like my
to rise before
friend Lynne Ferdawn, as my parrigno, who says her
ents did, to take
family has “white-collar
public transportation to
jobs they didn’t like for a jobs but many blue-collar
wage that underpaid them values”?
My former student and
so that they could pay
friend, Ebony Murphybills that left them with
no savings, no retirement Root, argues that “Trump
voters don’t own the
and, most signiﬁcantly,
no way out. I didn’t leave label ‘working class.’ I
don’t need to read the
school after the eighth
grade, as they did, to sup- Harvard Business Review
port their families. Their to understand the U.S.
hard work and disciplined working class. How about
life permitted me choices I just ask my dad, who’s
driven a tractor-trailer
they didn’t have.
for the past 30 years? He
Sure, I grew up weardoesn’t seem that resenting used clothes, used
ful. He taught me no one
shoes and never ownowes you anything and
ing a pair of pajamas
certainly you are not
or slippers, which were
owed a life ‘better than
considered frivolities
your parents had it’ just
only the wealthy could
for being born.”
afford. We waited for
It seems to me that
condescending relatives
to ship us their old stuff many Americans voted
against their own selfas hand-me-downs, and
interest in this year’s
I don’t think my mother
election, if practical
ever wore stockings
personal gain is the only
that didn’t have a run in
measure. I did; my housethem. But that was my
hold will proﬁt from the
family of origin; it’s not
lower taxes and cuts in
who I am today.
spending promised by
Now if I work my tail
the party I voted against.
off, I do it on my terms
My friends who voted
— and if there is any
deﬁnition of privilege, it’s for Trump are, for the
most part, hard-working,
precisely that.
working-class people
So what am I? Upperwho I believe will be punmiddle with my lower
roots showing, like some- ished by the Republican
administration. They
body who doesn’t color
her hair often enough and have family members on

Is class a matter of
identity, like gender
and race? Is it a
matter of loyalty?
How do Americans
define themselves
when it comes to
class?

disability; they have relatives relying on workers’
comp, Social Security or
veterans’ beneﬁts, and I
think these programs will
be in danger.
Maybe humor can save
us, or at least help us connect. When I ﬁrst went
to college, I had no idea
how to cope with the
unfamiliar environment.
On one of my ﬁrst days
in the dining hall, I saw a
girl who sat across from
me in my French course.
I decided it would be too
weird not to acknowledge
her. “I know we’re in a
class together,” I said.
“Which is it?” “Upwardly
mobile,” she said, grinning, and bit into a hard
roll. From that day forward, I ﬁgured I would be
OK. Here’s hoping all of
us will start feeling that
way soon.
Gina Barreca is an English professor
at the University of Connecticut and
the author of “If You Lean In, Will
Men Just Look Down Your Blouse?”
and eight other books. She can be
reached at www.ginabarreca.com.

THEIR VIEW

Please stop making me happy Trump was elected
Since the election,
Democrats have been
apoplectic about losing
the presidential race.
Republicans not only
won the White House
but kept their majorities
in the House and Senate
and now control a record
number of state legislatures as well.
As a conservative,
even one who did not
support President-elect
Donald Trump, it’s difﬁcult to avoid the rush of
schadenfreude at the collective freak-out by those
on the left, made all the
more delicious given their
previous certitude of a
sweeping Election Day
victory.
That satisfaction

concerns would
aside, I still have
Cynthia
be to wait until
real fears about a
Trump’s tenure has
Trump presidency, M. Allen
Contributing begun and then to
among them that
hold him accounthe will continue to columnist
able for his deciengage in dangersions as president.
ous and divisive rhetoIf he fails or disapric, that he will follow
points, voters should
through on some of his
replace him in four years
more outlandish campaign statements, that his or elect people to Congress who will derail his
cavalier and intellectuagenda.
ally shallow approach to
But some progressives
campaigning will carry
over to the White House aren’t reacting appropriately, and frankly, their
and that he will damage
conservatism for a genunreasonable response
eration.
is starting to make me
With the exception of
happy Trump won.
the last, these fears are
In cities across the
shared by many people on nation, protesters have
the left.
taken to the streets carryThe normal and appro- ing signs that read “Not
priate response to such
my president.”

Sadly, they seem
unaware of the
basic tenants of our
democracy — that
even if you didn’t
vote for the person
who wins, that person
is still your president.
Sadly, they seem
unaware of the basic tenants of our democracy
— that even if you didn’t
vote for the person who
wins, that person is still
your president.
He wasn’t my choice
either, but it’s time to get
See ALLEN | 6A

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sheriff

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today’s Highlight in History:
On Nov. 20, 1789, New
Jersey became the ﬁrst
state to ratify the Bill of
Rights.
On this date:
In 1620, Peregrine
White was born aboard
the Mayﬂower in Massachusetts Bay; he was the
ﬁrst child born of English
parents in present-day
New England.
In 1910, the Mexican
Revolution of 1910 had
its beginnings under the
Plan of San Luis Potosi
issued by Francisco I.
Madero.
In 1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Massachusetts.
In 1945, 22 former Nazi
ofﬁcials went on trial
before an international
war crimes tribunal in
Nuremberg, Germany.
(Almost a year later, the
International Military
Tribune sentenced 12 of
the defendants to death;
seven received prison sentences ranging from 10
years to life; three were
acquitted.)
In 1947, Britain’s
future queen, Princess
Elizabeth, married Philip
Mountbatten, Duke of
Edinburgh, at Westminster Abbey.
In 1959, the United
Nations issued its Declaration of the Rights of the
Child.
In 1966, the musical
play “Cabaret,” set in preNazi Germany, opened
on Broadway with Jill
Haworth as Sally Bowles
and Joel Grey as the Master of Ceremonies.
In 1969, the Nixon
administration announced
a halt to residential use
of the pesticide DDT as
part of a total phaseout.
A group of American
Indian activists began a
19-month occupation of
Alcatraz Island in San
Francisco Bay.
In 1975, after nearly
four decades of absolute
rule, Spain’s Generalissimo Francisco Franco
died, two weeks before
his 83rd birthday.
In 1976, the boxing
drama “Rocky,” a United

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

From page 1A

“There are people in every time and every land
who want to stop history in its tracks. They fear
the future, mistrust the present, and invoke the
security of a comfortable past which, in fact, never
existed.”
— Robert F. Kennedy (1925-1968).

the investigation. Wood
explained that a command post was brought
in from Butler County
and that is where he
spent four weeks working. From that location
the visiting deputies
were sworn in as Pike
County deputies. Wood
also made calls to others who would help to
arrange for ofﬁcers to
come to Pike County to
help with the case or to
cover shifts as needed.
Wood explained that

Artists release starring
Sylvester Stallone as a
journeyman ﬁghter who’s
given the chance to face
the heavyweight champion, premiered in New
York.
In 1985, the ﬁrst version of Microsoft’s Windows operating system,
Windows 1.0, was ofﬁcially released.
In 1992, ﬁre seriously
damaged Windsor Castle.
Ten years ago:
After a ﬁrestorm of
criticism, News Corp.
said it had canceled the
O.J. Simpson book and
TV special “If I Did It,”
in which Simpson was
to speak hypothetically
about how he would have
committed the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole
and her friend, Ronald
Goldman. (A federal
bankruptcy judge later
awarded the rights to
Simpson’s book to Goldman’s family, who had
it published under the
title, “If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer.”) Six
imams were removed
from a US Airways ﬂight
at Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport
after passengers reported
they were acting suspiciously. (The imams,
charging discrimination,
later settled with the
airline.) Ryan Howard of
the Philadelphia Phillies
was voted the National
League’s MVP. Movie
director Robert Altman
died in Los Angeles at
age 81.

season ﬁnale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Landon Donovan scored
in the 72nd minute on
passes from Robbie
Keane and David Beckham, and the Los Angeles Galaxy’s three superstars won their ﬁrst MLS
Cup together with a 1-0
victory over the Houston
Dynamo. The Americans
won the Presidents Cup
as a team, 19-15, in Melbourne, Australia.
One year ago:
Islamic extremists shot
up a luxury hotel in Mali’s
capital that was frequented by diplomats and businessmen, killing 20 people in an attack blamed
on Islamic extremists.
A week after the deadliest attacks on France in
decades, shell-shocked
Parisians honored the
130 victims with candles
and songs. Jonathan Pollard, a former U.S. Navy
intelligence analyst, was
released from prison after
30 years behind bars for
spying for Israel. Actor
Keith Michell, remembered for his portrayals
of England’s King Henry
VIII, died in London at
age 88.

Today’s Birthdays:
Actress-comedian Kaye
Ballard is 91. Actress
Estelle Parsons is 89.
Comedian Dick Smothers is 78. Singer Norman
Greenbaum is 74. Vice
President Joe Biden is
74. Actress Veronica
Hamel is 73. Broadcast
journalist Judy Woodruff
is 70. Actor Samuel E.
Five years ago:
Wright is 70. Singer
Spain’s opposition
conservatives were swept Joe Walsh is 69. Actor
Richard Masur is 68.
into power as voters
Opera singer Barbara
dumped the Socialists
Hendricks is 68. Former
— the third time in as
U.N. Ambassador John
many weeks Europe’s
debt crisis had claimed a Bolton is 68. Actress Bo
government. Tony Stew- Derek is 60. Former NFL
art held off Carl Edwards player Mark Gastineau is
to win his third NASCAR 60. Reggae musician Jim
Brown (UB40) is 59.
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dusky.
The murders of
40-year-old Christopher
Rhoden Sr.; his 16-yearold son, Christopher
Rhoden Jr.; 44-yearold Kenneth Rhoden;
38-year-old Gary Rhoden; 37-year-old Dana
Rhoden; 20-year-old
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Gilley; and 19-year-old
Hanna Rhoden, remain
unsolved and under
investigation.
Three children in the
residences at the time
were unharmed.

“We had a warrant
on him already for
passing bad checks,”
Browning said at the
time of the arrest. “(It
was) a large amount
of bad checks here
in Gallia County on
a separate case we
were working. In the
meantime, our detective worked with

(Meigs County) Sheriff
(Keith) Wood and his
staff on cases they had
up there.”
Woodrow has numerous cases in Gallia
County Municipal Court
involving the alleged
passing of bad checks.

Reach Sarah Hawley at shawley@
civitasmedia.com.

Reach Sarah Hawley at shawley@
civitasmedia.com.

For the best local news coverage, visit
MyDailyTribune.com

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they wanted one contact
person to handle the
scheduling so that was
the role he ﬁlled. Additionally, deputies from
Meigs County went to
Pike County to provide
manpower as they were
available.
Wood said he was
honored to receive the
award.
“It was an unfortunate
incident, but everyone
came together,” said
Wood of the efforts of
law enforcement following the shootings.
Wood was presented
the award when at the
organization conference
earlier this week in San-

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6A Sunday, November 20, 2016

Writing in The Atlantic, Jamelle Bouie asserted that “there is no such
thing as a good Trump
From page 4A
voter.”
Indeed, he argues that
over it.
Some demonstrations nearly half of voters will
have turned to violence. be morally responsible
In Portland, Ore., and for any acts of racism,
sexism or xenophobia
Oakland, Calif., protesthat occur during the
tors caused millions of
dollars in damage to cars Trump administration.
He cites a reported
and businesses; they
threw Molotov cocktails rise in hate crimes since
the election as sign of
at police and grafﬁtied
things to come.
buildings.
While I don’t dispute
On college campuses,
Trump’s election has
despondent students
are largely avoiding vio- emboldened bigoted
lence, but their response elements of society —
indeed, that’s been one
to Trump’s election is
of my concerns from
equally absurd.
the beginning — I have
At the University
a healthy skepticism
of Pennsylvania, one
that all of these alleged
dormitory hosted a
crimes can be blamed on
post-election “breathTrump voters.
ing space” for students
Given the number
overwrought by Trump’s
of hate-crime hoaxes,
election. This included
“cuddling with cats and including a recent fabrication by a Louisiana
a puppy, coloring and
student alleging an
crafting, and snacks
attack by two men, one
such as tea and chocoshe said wore a “Trump”
late,” according to the
hat, it seems just as likeCollege Fix.
ly that Trump’s election
About 150 Rice Uniwill be an opportunity
versity students gathered for a healing “group for progressives to perpetuate discord.
hug” to help comfort
And asserting that
one another.
all Trump voters are
And Cornell Unibigoted will not help
versity held a “cry in”
build bridges or heal the
that provided students
nation, which is explicmourning the election
itly what many progresresults with a “safe
sives are demanding
space” to share their
Trump do.
feelings.
This perspective illusSniveling and whining
trates also how many on
is not the way to build
empathy for your cause. the left have completely
failed to understand
Some progressives
what precipitated
skipped the crying and
Trump’s election in the
went straight to ﬁngerﬁrst place — not racpointing.

MONDAY EVENING
6

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

6

27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
(AMC)

39

40 (DISC)
(A&amp;E)

42

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)

500 (SHOW)

37°

0.00
0.56
2.02
40.77
37.97

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Nov 21 Nov 29

First

Dec 7

Full

Dec 13

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

Major
Today 4:43a
Mon. 5:34a
Tue. 6:20a
Wed. 7:02a
Thu. 7:40a
Fri.
8:18a
Sat.
8:56a

Minor
10:55a
11:46a
12:10a
12:51a
1:30a
2:07a
2:45a

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
5:08p
5:58p
6:43p
7:24p
8:02p
8:39p
9:17p

Minor
11:21p
---12:31p
1:13p
1:51p
2:29p
3:06p

WEATHER HISTORY
A storm on Nov. 20, 1798, brought
heavy snow with high winds to New
England. The storm caused great
damage to vessels on coast, and
many people were killed.

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

7:30

PM

Chillicothe
38/25

8:30

PM

8

9

Logan
36/22

Waverly
38/24
Lucasville
39/25

8:30

PM

WEDNESDAY

0 50 100 150 200

300

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 13.28 +0.14
Marietta
34 15.96 -0.46
Parkersburg
36 21.51 +0.17
Belleville
35 12.96 +0.18
Racine
41 13.33 -0.03
Point Pleasant
40 24.94 -0.11
Gallipolis
50 13.24 +0.10
Huntington
50 26.27 -0.07
Ashland
52 34.92 -0.18
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.40 -0.14
Portsmouth
50 16.10 +0.90
Maysville
50 34.30 +0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 15.00 +0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

9:30

PM

9

10

A brief afternoon
shower or two

10:30

PM

10:30

PM

10:30

I Love You, Man
('09, Com) Rashida Jones,
Paul Rudd. TV14
Solaris ('02, Sci-Fi)
Natascha McElhone, George
Clooney. TV14
Shameless "You Sold Me
the Laundromat,
Remember?"

SATURDAY

51°
30°

Cloudy and cool with
a passing shower

52°
31°

Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

Morning snow
showers possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
39/24

Murray City
37/22
Belpre
39/25

Athens
38/23

St. Marys
39/24

Parkersburg
40/24

Coolville
38/24

Elizabeth
39/25

Spencer
38/26

Buffalo
39/27

Ironton
42/26

Milton
41/26

St. Albans
41/27

Huntington
43/26

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
54/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
63/52
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
67/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

10

FRIDAY

50°
35°

Wilkesville
39/24
POMEROY
Jackson
39/25
39/24
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
39/26
39/26
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
38/25
GALLIPOLIS
39/26
39/26
39/27

Ashland
42/26
Grayson
42/25

9:30

PM

THURSDAY

49°
42°

Partly sunny and
chilly

McArthur
38/23

South Shore Greenup
41/26
40/25

52

PM

Timeless "Stranded" (N)

Marathon: The Patriots' Day Bombing Recounting the
dramatic story of the April 2013 terrorist attack at the
Boston Marathon. (N)
(:20) The Other Side of the Door ('16, Hor) Jeremy Sisto,
Sarah Wayne Callies. A mother visits a strange temple to
find her dead son, but he returns to haunt them. TVMA
Shameless "You Sold Me
The Affair Noah struggles to
the Laundromat,
navigate the challenges of
Remember?"
life.

49°
31°

Adelphi
37/23

Portsmouth
40/25

AIR QUALITY

10

Timeless "Stranded" (N)

Antiques Roadshow "New Antiques Rd. "Austin (Hour Soundbreaking "The World
York City (Hour Three)"
One)" A spinning wheel
Is Yours" (N)
given by Mahatma Gandhi.
Kevin Can
Man With a 2 Broke Girls The Odd
Scorpion "Mother Load" (N)
Wait (N)
Plan (N)
(N)
Couple (N)

A: Zero is freezing and 100 is boiling.

Today
Mon.
7:17 a.m. 7:18 a.m.
5:11 p.m. 5:11 p.m.
11:46 p.m.
none
12:43 p.m. 1:19 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

Q: On the celsius scale what are the
freezing and boiling points?

SUN &amp; MOON

7

TUESDAY

Plenty of sunshine

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

9:30

PM

Conviction "A Simple Man"
(N)
Antiques Roadshow "New Antiques Rd. "Austin (Hour Soundbreaking "The World
York City (Hour Three)"
One)" A spinning wheel
Is Yours" (N)
given by Mahatma Gandhi.
Conviction "A Simple Man"
Dancing With the Stars (N)
(N)
Kevin Can
Man With a 2 Broke Girls The Odd
Scorpion "Mother Load" (N)
Wait (N)
Plan (N)
(N)
Couple (N)
Gotham "Time Bomb" (N) Lucifer "Homewreckers" (N) Eyewitness News at 10

8

Minority Report (2002, Sci-Fi) Colin Farrell,
Samantha Morton, Tom Cruise. A crime forecaster goes on
the run when he is fingered as a potential murderer. TV14
(:20)
Crimson Peak ('15, Hor) Tom Hiddleston, Mia
Wasikowska. A beautiful young author is whisked away to
a terrifying mansion by a handsome stranger. TVMA
(5:05)
The Imitation
The Affair Noah struggles to
Game ('14, Bio) Benedict
navigate the challenges of
life.
Cumberbatch. TVPG

MONDAY

34°

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.

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

6:30

PM

Mostly cloudy, windy and cold today. Mainly
clear and cold tonight. High 39° / Low 26°

Temperature

9

The Voice "Live Top 11 Performances" Jason Sudeikis;
Kristin Chenoweth; DNCE. (N)
The Voice "Live Top 11 Performances" Jason Sudeikis;
Kristin Chenoweth; DNCE. (N)
Dancing With the Stars (N)

7:30

PM

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

7

8:30

PM

Toni Braxton: Unbreak My Heart (2015, Biography) Debbi
Just Wright (2010, Comedy) Common, Paula Patton, Good Deeds ('12, Com/Dra)
Morgan, Gavin Houston, Lex Scott Davis. TVPG
Queen Latifah. TVPG
Tyler Perry. TV14
(5:30) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry, Ron and
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time A rogue prince and a princess
Hermoine return to Hogwarts to find and destroy the last of the horcruxes. try to protect a magical dagger that can reverse time. TV14
Cops "Coast Cops
Cops "In
Cops
Cops "Fight Cops "Coast Cops "Dealt Cops
Cops "Too
Cops "Palm
to Coast"
Atlanta"
"Texas"
Night"
to Coast"
a Bad Hand"
Many Cooks" Beach, FL"
H.Danger
H.Danger
Henry Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Monday Night Raw
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Am.Dad (N) People Earth Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island TVPG
Edge of Tomorrow ('14, Sci-Fi) Emily Blunt, Tom Cruise. TV14 The Town
(5:00)
Goodfellas (1990, Crime Story) Joe Pesci,
Pearl Harbor (2001, War) Kate Beckinsale, Josh Hartnett, Ben Affleck. The Japanese
Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. TVM
attack on Pearl Harbor unfolds while two friends battle for the same woman. TVMA
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws "OH-HI-NO" Street Outlaws (N)
Fast N' Loud (N)
The First 48 "Up in Flames/ The First 48 "10 Pounds"
The First 48 "The Rookie/
The First 48 "Snapshot"
First 48: Revenge "Dying
Drive-By"
Cornered"
Declaration/ One Last Score"
Woods Law "Long Shot"
Alaskans "No Man's Land" Last Alaskan "The Hunted" The Last Alaskans
The Last Alaskans
Eyewitness "Crème Brulée" Eyewitness "The Lilies"
Eyewitness "The Yellow
Snapped "Juatasha Denton- Snapped "Selena: The Death
Couch"
McCaster"
of a Superstar"
CSI: Miami "Rap Sheet"
CSI "MIA/ NYC - NonStop" CSI: Miami "Innocent"
CSI: Miami "Lost Son"
CSI: Miami "Pro Per"
Kardash "No Good Deeds" E! News (N)
Fashion Police (N)
Fashion Police
Kardash "No Good Deeds"
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Known Universe "Final
Hubble's Cosmic Journey Mars "Novo Mundo"
Mars "Grounded" (N)
Explorer Climbers journey to
Frontiers"
a remote peak in Myanmar.
NASCAR America (L)
NASCAR 120 (N)
Men/Blazers Premier Rev.
Race Hub
NCAA Basketball St. Francis (NY) vs. Providence (L)
NCAA Basketball Norfolk State vs. Butler (L)
Hoops Extra
American Pickers "From
American Pickers "A Few American Pickers "Going
American Pickers "The
(:05) Pawn
(:35) Pawn
Coupe to Nuts"
Good Junk Men"
Down?"
Greatest Pick on Earth" (N) Stars (N)
Stars (N)
H.Wives "Reunion Part 1" Orange County Social (N) The Real Housewives (N)
Vanderpump Rules
H.Wives "Reunion Part 3"
House Payne (:35) Payne (:05) Browns (:40) Browns (:15) Martin (:45) Martin (:20) Martin (:55) Martin
(:25) Martin
House
House
House
House
Tiny Luxury Tiny Luxury Tiny Luxury Tiny Luxury H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
The Legend of Hercules (2014, Action) Gaia Weiss,
Resident Evil: Afterlife (2010, Action) Wentworth
Resident Evil:
Scott Adkins, Kellan Lutz. TV14
Miller, Ali Larter, Milla Jovovich. TVMA
Apocalypse TVMA

6

450 (MAX)

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

6:30

PM

Cynthia M. Allen is a columnist
for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Readers may send her email at
cmallen@star-telegram.com.

Cops
Gran Torino ('08, Dra) Christopher Carley, Clint Eastwood. TVMA Gran Torino
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Chinatown" Cops
NHL Hockey New York Rangers at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
Post-game Penguins
DPatrick (N)
24 (ROOT) In the Room Pre-game
25 (ESPN) Monday Night Countdown (L)
(:15) NFL Football Houston Texans vs. Oakland Raiders Site: Estadio Azteca (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) NCAA Basketball
NCAA Basketball Legends Classic N.D./Col. (L)
Scoreboard NCAA Basket. CBE Hall of Fame Classic (L)

400 (HBO)

Statistics for Friday

79°
42°
56°
36°
81° in 1958
15° in 1959

8

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

45°
24°
31°

7:30

PM

(5:30)

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

7

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy EntertainmNews at 6
News
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m.
News
Fortune
2 Broke Girls Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
News 6:30 Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
America
Report (N)
events.
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

CABLE

gressives: Please stop.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21

6:30

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Nature Cat

PREMIUM

For the best local
news coverage, visit
MyDailyTribune.com

the behavior of many
on the left is making
me grateful for this outcome.
My message to pro-

class.
In the words of President Obama, let me be
clear: I’m not thrilled
about Trump, either. But

ism, but a complex mix
of factors including the
sense that many Americans felt ignored by
the political and pundit

Clendenin
39/23
Charleston
41/26

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
32/22

Billings
49/35

Montreal
41/32

Minneapolis
36/23
Chicago
39/23

Denver
64/39

Toronto
37/25
Detroit
39/25

New York
47/35
Washington
51/33

Kansas City
52/32

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
62/44/pc
24/21/pc
54/35/s
51/38/c
50/29/pc
49/35/s
53/38/c
50/35/c
41/26/c
53/27/s
59/35/s
39/23/s
40/22/c
39/29/c
39/24/c
63/45/s
64/39/pc
47/26/s
39/25/c
83/73/pc
64/42/s
40/23/pc
52/32/pc
71/56/pc
56/31/s
67/56/pc
45/26/s
77/58/s
36/23/s
50/26/s
62/42/s
47/35/c
61/39/s
67/41/s
48/37/c
79/61/c
38/27/sf
51/32/r
51/28/s
52/28/pc
49/32/s
63/43/s
63/52/r
54/46/r
51/33/pc

Hi/Lo/W
57/37/r
32/24/sf
60/36/s
47/36/pc
47/29/s
50/33/c
51/29/pc
46/34/pc
45/23/s
58/28/s
56/30/c
44/30/s
45/24/s
41/31/pc
42/23/s
72/61/s
59/33/c
52/38/pc
40/23/s
84/73/sh
74/59/pc
46/28/s
56/46/s
64/45/c
63/42/s
64/49/pc
51/31/s
76/63/pc
41/29/s
55/31/s
67/49/s
43/36/pc
67/53/s
69/46/s
46/35/pc
70/51/r
39/27/sf
43/29/pc
55/29/s
51/25/s
56/41/s
52/36/sh
62/51/pc
54/43/pc
49/34/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
54/35

High
Low

El Paso
69/47
Chihuahua
75/42

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 McAllen, TX
-13° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High 110° in Fitzroy Crossing, Australia
Low -49° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
64/42
Monterrey
66/47

Miami
77/58

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

60647073

Allen

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Trout,
Bryant
win
MVP
awards
CHICAGO (AP) —
While the Los Angeles
Angels stumbled, Mike
Trout soared again.
Just too good to ignore.
Trout won the AL MVP
award Thursday for the
second time in three
years, and Chicago Cubs
third baseman Kris Bryant was voted NL MVP in
balloting by the Baseball
Writers’ Association of
America.
“To win it one time, it’s
hard to do,” Trout said.
“Twice, I guess you saw
my emotions tonight, it
was something special.”
While the Angels ﬁnished fourth in the AL
West, Trout was his usual
brilliant self.
The center ﬁelder batted .315 with 29 homers,
100 RBIs and 30 steals.
He scored 17 percent
of Los Angeles’ runs, the
highest percentage for an
AL player since Rickey
Henderson with the 1985
New York Yankees.
Trout, who was a unanimous winner in 2014, had
ﬁnished second in three
of the past four years.
He becomes the ﬁrst
MVP from a losing team
since Alex Rodriguez for
Texas in 2003 and just the
ﬁfth player ever to accomplish the feat, joining Hall
of Famers Ernie Banks
(1958 and 1959), Andre
Dawson (1987) and Cal
Ripken (1991).
“At the end of the season a lot of people were
asking me about the same
question, you know, if
your team has a losing
record is it going to hurt
you in the MVP?” Trout
said. “With this MVP this
year, I guess it doesn’t
matter.”
Bryant hit .292 with 39
homers and 102 RBIs in
just his second year in the
majors, helping the Cubs
to their ﬁrst World Series
title since 1908.
The No. 2 overall
pick from the 2013 draft
becomes just the sixth
player to win rookie of
the year and MVP in one
or consecutive seasons.
“This year has certainly
been one of the best years
of my life,” said Bryant,
who is set to get married
in January. “I mean winning a World Series, now
this, it’s just icing on the
cake.”
The Las Vegas native
is the ﬁrst NL MVP from
the Cubs since Sammy
Sosa in 1998 and the
eighth player from the
club to win the award
since 1935. The once-forlorn franchise enjoying its
best run in decades also
had two of the top MVP
candidates, with ﬁrst
baseman Anthony Rizzo
ﬁnishing fourth.
Voting by BBWAA
members was completed
by the start of the playoffs.
“If it wasn’t for Anthony and his protection and
guidance, I wouldn’t have
won this award,” Bryant
said. “I mean he texted
me and I said the same
thing to him, I said if it
wasn’t for you I wouldn’t
See MVP | 2B

Blue Devils
earn OVC
honor
SPORTS s 2B
Sunday, November 20, 2016 s Section B

Joann Cullen inducted into NWHOF

Submitted photos

Joann Cullen, second from left, is joined by her family during the 2016 NWHOF induction ceremony held October 30 in Charleston, W.Va. Joining Joann is her son
Justin, left, her husband Jack, second from right, and her daughter Jordan.

She’s one of six selected from West Virginia chapter
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— At ﬁrst, her pupils referred
to her as Mrs. Coach before
advancing to the moniker of
Coach Momma.
Ironically, either nickname
still ﬁts — maybe more so now
than ever.
What started as a way for
Joann Cullen to spend more
time with her husband ended
up turning into something
much greater as the Point
Pleasant native was recently
inducted into the National
Wrestling Hall of Fame in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Cullen — who joins her
husband Jack as an NWHOF
inductee (2011) — was one of
six members selected on behalf
of the West Virginia Chapter of
the NWHOF, which occurred
during the 14th annual Hall
of Fame Day Banquet held
on October 30, 2016, at the
Charleston Embassy Suites.
Cullen — a 1979 graduate of
PPHS — became only the second female inductee into the
NWHOF from the Mountain
State by receiving the Lifetime

Service to Wrestling honor
for her countless efforts and
contributions over an almost
four-decade-long career.
Since her ﬁrst season in
1980, Joann had been involved
with Jack’s wrestling programs
in some way, shape or form
until his resignation as Point
Pleasant coach in 2009. She
is also still currently active in
the PPHS program in smaller
capacities.
She has twice served as a
varsity assistant coach (198488 and 2003-11) and has also
been the head scorer at numerous high school and middle
school tournaments that range
from local meets to the WVSSAC state tournament.
Cullen has also served as a
volunteer coach for the Point
Pleasant middle school programs and has also helped with
the brackets at the WVSSAC
championships.
It was those kind of contributions that allowed Cullen
to join 2007 inductee Diana
Archer as the only females
currently in the West Virginia
chapter of the NWHOF. Archer
See CULLEN | 2B

Joann Cullen, right, receives her NWHOF plaque from fellow NWHOF inductee
Diana Archer, right, during the 2016 NWHOF induction ceremony held October
30 in Charleston, W.Va.

Blue Angels land five on All-OVC team
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

The Ohio Valley Conference has released
its 2016 all-league volleyball team featuring ﬁve selections from back-to-back
league champion Gallia Academy.
The Blue Angels ﬁnished a perfect 14-0
in the eight-team league, never dropping a
single game in 42 chances. For the second
straight season, GAHS head coach Janice
Rosier was named Coach of the Year, while
junior Grace Martin and senior Carly
Shriver both landed on ﬁrst team.
GAHS sophomore Ashton Webb — who
was all-conference honorable mention last
fall — joined Martin and Shriver on the
ﬁrst team, while senior Jenna Meadows —
who was a ﬁrst team selection last season
— was named honorable mention this fall.
Portsmouth — which ﬁnished second
in the league with a 12-2 record — landed
Aiden Fields and Baleigh Bradley on ﬁrst
team, with Allison Douthat earning an
honorable mention spot. All three Lady
Trojans earned the same honors last year.
For Ironton — which ﬁnished with a 9-5

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Carly Shriver (20) sets the
ball up to sophomore Ashton Webb (11) during
the Blue Angels’ 3-0 victory over Rock Hill, on
September 29 in Gallia County.

league mark — Zakia Lee and Lexi Wise
were on the ﬁrst team, while D’Laynie
Keith was honorable mention. Wise was an
honorable mention for the Lady Tigers last

season.
For the second straight year, South
Point was represented on ﬁrst team by
Brooklyn Badgett. Badgett is joined on
the ﬁrst team by Mackenzie Fugitt, who
was an honorable mention last fall. Selena
Marcum was named honorable mention
for the Lady Pointers, who were 7-7 in the
conference.
Chesapeake’s ﬁrst team selections were
Natalee Hall and McKenna Curry, both
of whom are ﬁrst time honorees. For the
second straight season, Jozy Jones was
named honorable mention for the Lady
Panthers.
Also repeating on the ﬁrst team are Coal
Grove’s Kasey Murphy, Fairland’s Emily
Chapman and Rock Hill’s Anna Darby.
Fairland’s Nicole Wagner and Rock Hill’s
Jill Hairston are both honorable mentions
for the second straight season, while Coal
Grove’s Skylar Morrison was named honorable mention for the ﬁrst time.
The all-conference team is selected by
the coaches from within the OVC.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MVP
From page 1B

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy quarterback Justin McClelland captured first-team all-Ohio Valley Conference football honors.

4 Blue Devils earn all-OVC football
By Paul Boggs

tion.
Ironton’s six ﬁrst-team selections were Tyler Webb, Garrett
Carrico, Eli Willis, Jake Isaac,
An historic foursome.
Tanner Wilson and Ethan DunThat’s because, for the ﬁrst
can.
time in school history, memWebb was a repeat ﬁrstbers of the Gallia Academy
teamer, while Carrico claimed
Blue Devils have received
Honorable Mention last year.
all-Ohio Valley Conference
Chesapeake’s ﬁrst-team ﬁvefootball honors — as four Blue
some featured Casey McCoDevils were named to the allmas, Brendan Meadows, Will
conference club, which was
Scott, Cecil Fletcher and J.W.
announced on Thursday.
Bartrum.
This past season marked GalMcComas repeated to the
lia Academy’s inaugural in the
ﬁrst team, as he was also a
OVC) ended up with six and
OVC, as the Blue Devils — in
member of the all-OVC ﬁrst
runner-up Chesapeake (7-1
fact — are one of only two
team two years ago.
schools in the entire eight-team OVC) chalked up ﬁve.
Coal Grove’s four ﬁrstCoal Grove and Portsmouth
league not residing in Lawteamers included three ﬁrstplaced four ﬁrst-teamers
rence County.
team repeaters — Jacob Clark,
apiece, along with three each
The other is Portsmouth,
Daniel Rutherford and Brad
from Fairland and Rock Hill.
which — along with back-toRoach.
Each squad automatically
back league champion Ironton
The only ﬁrst-time ﬁrst-team
received two Honorable Men— completed only its second
honoree was Kimo Baldwin.
season of football in the confer- tion selections.
For Portsmouth, its four
While no Player of the Year
ence.
is chosen, Mark Vass of Ironton ﬁrst-teamers were all ﬁrst-time
The Blue Devils defeated
picks — Luke Purdy, Blake
repeated as Coach of the Year.
winless South Point for their
Wedebrook, Ryan Williams and
For the Blue Devils, sophoonly OVC win, while losing
Talyn Parker.
more Justin McCllelland and
their ﬁrst seven conference
Rock Hill had ﬁrst-teamers
junior Matt Moreaux made the
contests.
ﬁrst team, while senior Colton Logan Hankins, Trystan MatGallia Academy and South
Campbell and sophomore Cory ney and Brady Knipp, as MatPoint had two ﬁrst-teamers
ney repeated to the ﬁrst team
Call earned Honorable Menapiece, while Ironton (8-0

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Cullen
From page 1B

also made the plaque presentation to Cullen at the
HOF Banquet.
Cullen, however, is the
ﬁrst female to be inducted into the NWHOF for
her coaching efforts.
The additional work just
added to her otherwise
impeccable resume.
When asked about
the trying to explain the
emotions of receiving
such a prestigious accolade, Cullen was quick to
note that such an award
was truly an honor —
one that she still cannot
believe has happened.
She also pointed out
out, with a chuckle, that
it’s too late if anyone
wants to change their
mind.
“It’s very humbling to
even be considered for
such a thing as this, but
I am now in a place with
all of these great wrestling people that I have
known and worked with
for years. I never even
considered that I would
be a person that they
would consider worthy
of such an honor,” Cullen
said. “I’m very grateful
for the selection, but the
truth is that all of this is
still kind of sinking in …
even though I have had
a few weeks to grasp the
reality of it.
“I have wondered to
myself about why they

This past season marked
Gallia Academy’s
inaugural in the OVC,
as the Blue Devils — in
fact — are one of only
two schools in the entire
eight-team league not
residing in Lawrence
County.

decided to select me for
this, but I can also tell
you that I am not giving
back. I am still surprised
because this is something
that usually goes to head
coaches, but I am truly
thankful for the honor
that friends and peers
have bestowed upon me.”
To fully understand
Joann Cullen’s path to
the NWHOF, you must
ﬁrst realize how her trailblazing journey started.
After getting married
in 1979, Jack was hired
as the varsity wrestling
coach and started at Central Preston High School
in 1980. That same winter, Joann was brought
in by her husband to be
the wrestling cheerleader
adviser for his program.
Later, as she became
more familiar with what
Jack expected in his program, she started taking
on even more responsibilities — particularly
after the family returned
to the same job in Point
Pleasant back in 1984.
Soon afterwards, PPHS
started becoming the
dynasty that it is today.
But, there were also a
few hiccups along the
way of transitioning from
cheerleading adviser to
wrestling coach.
“I knew a little about
wrestling when I started
in 1980, but still to this
day I haven’t heard of too
many other teams having wrestling cheerleaders. Obviously, I never
dreamed that any of this

would end up where it is
now,” Cullen said. “I still
remember my ﬁrst trip
to state as an assistant
coach, and most everyone — including Jack —
does too.
“There was a call that
I didn’t agree with and
I kept arguing the call
throughout the match.
The referee had had
enough and threw the
coach out of the tournament … and I thought
ﬁne, I’ll leave. Turns out,
the head coach is the ﬁrst
to go … so Jack had to go
sit in the stands and I had
to coach the remainder of
the state tournament.
“That was when I
learned that I had to
be able to pull back as
a coach and not be so
emotional. Jack agreed
with my complaint, but
I will say I learned a lot
about coaching that day.
I can also tell you I never
got Jack thrown out of
another event again, so I
did learn from it.”
Cullen is connected
in some way with every
single one of Point Pleasant’s 21 individual state
championship winners,
not to mention serving
as an assistant on the
2010 and 2011 Class
AA state championship
teams at PPHS.
In a sport dominated
by men, Cullen sees herself as someone who was
simply there to beneﬁt
her school, her family
and her kids.
Those things aside,

while Knipp was Honorable
Mention last season.
For Fairland, it’s ﬁrst-team
trio consisted of Chase Fisher,
Keedrick Cunningham and
Jonah Galloway, as Fisher and
Cunningham made Honorable
Mention last year.
South Point’s pair of ﬁrstteamers were Drew Adams and
Owen Chaﬁn.
In addition to Gallia Academy’s Campbell and Call, the
other Honorable Mention
choices were Levi Langdon and
Jackson Pleasant of Ironton;
Wes Malavenda and Austin
Browning of Chesapeake;
Tanner Henry and Nathan
Harrison of Coal Grove; Colin
Boehm and Anthony Ferrara of
Portsmouth; Cameron Barnette
and Tim Adkins of Rock Hill;
Seth Clay and Jordan Michael
of Fairland; and Will Borders
and Elijah Adams of South
Point.
Borders also made Honorable Mention last season, while
Henry and Barnette both made
last year’s ﬁrst team.
Paul Boggs can be reached at (740) 4462342, ext. 2106

things did pop up along
that way that could have
pushed Cullen away from
the sport she so loves.
“I do see it as an elite
honor being the ﬁrst
woman inducted as a
coach, but I can also tell
you that it wasn’t always
easy. It wasn’t always
rough, but there were
times that I wasn’t very
well-received as a coach
in this sport,” Cullen
said. “I have been told
at various tournaments
over the years to get
back in the bleachers
with the other mothers and I actually went
through a spell where I
had to carry my coaching
card in my back pocket
so that I could prove
to athletic directors or
tournament directors
that I was supposed to
be sitting in the coaching
corner during matches.
“The one thing I can
say through all of it was
that our kids never created any trouble with
me as their coach. They
always stood up for
Momma when someone
would question why I
was down on the mats
with them. The kids
always showed me the
same amount of respect
as Jack or any of the
other assistants. That
was a big part in why
I kept getting more
involved too.”
Joann mentioned that
her plaque from the
NWHOF is the exact
same size as the one Jack

received in 2011 and that
she is very eager to rearrange the wall at home so
that two plaques can hang
equally — side-by side.
With the way this journey began, that is more
than a fair trade for the
Cullen family. Jack and
Joann also have a son,
Justin (Kiley) Cullen,
and a daughter, Jordan
(Tyler) Glover.
“The thing is, I wanted
to be where Jack was.
I didn’t want to be that
wife or mother wondering how things were
going or how the team
did. I wanted to be there
and be involved, and that
is why I always ended up
being there,” Cullen said.
“It has become a bit of
a family tradition for us.
My son ended up becoming a two-time state
placer and my daughter is
capable of scoring three
matches at the same time.
“Wrestling just became
part of all of our lives
and it has been a very
positive thing for our
family. This honor is
just another plus for us
in something we love
dearly.”
In looking back, the
one thing that Joann is
proudest of is seeing
how far her efforts, her
husband’s efforts, and
the efforts of so many
other like-minded individuals have paid off in
her hometown of Point
Pleasant.
“Honestly, probably the
best part of all of this is

have been able to do this.”
Bryant was a runaway
winner, grabbing 29 of 30
ﬁrst-place votes and 415
points.
Nationals second baseman Daniel Murphy, who
batted .347 for the NL
East champions, was the
runner-up with the other
ﬁrst-place vote and 245
points.
Dodgers shortstop
Corey Seager was third
after he was the unanimous winner of the NL
Rookie of the Year award
on Monday.
Seager will look to follow
in Bryant’s footsteps next
year.
Bryant was the unanimous NL Rookie of the
Year after he hit .275 with
26 homers and 99 RBIs
last season.
Bryant joins Dustin
Pedroia (2007-08), Ryan
Howard (2005-06) and Cal
Ripken (1982-83) as the
only players to go Rookie
of the Year-MVP in consecutive seasons.
Ichiro Suzuki (2001)
and Fred Lynn (1975) are
the only players to win the
awards in the same year.
“Kris is just an impressive young man in every
aspect,” Cubs owner Tom
Ricketts said. “(He) is very
mature, professional, lighthearted, but serious at the
same time. He’s just kind
of a dream player for any
organization.”
Trout received 19 ﬁrstplace votes and 356 points.
Mookie Betts, who batted
.318 with 31 homers, 113
RBIs and 26 steals in 158
games for the Boston Red
Sox, was second with 311
points, and AL batting
champion Jose Altuve of
Houston was third.
Retiring Red Sox slugger David Ortiz got one
ﬁrst-place vote ﬁnished
sixth in his ﬁnal year in
the majors.
“A well-deserved honor
for a player that puts his
name in the MVP conversation year in and year
out,” Angels manager Mike
Scioscia said in a release.
“Mike is the consummate
team player and deserves
every accolade he receives
on the ﬁeld just as he
should off of it for the person he is.”

that a lot of this work has
happened here at my alma
mater of Point Pleasant.
When you look back at
what we have been able
to do during our time at
Point Pleasant, we have
turned a football-basketball town into something
that is known state-wide
for its wrestling program
from the bottom up,” Cullen said. “The program
is something that we,
as a family, are all very
proud of. It’s become one
of our premier sports
with its own identity for
having success. That is
what makes this honor
so great, knowing that
it stems from what our
program has been able to
accomplish.”
Joann Cullen is the
third representative of
Point Pleasant High
School to be inducted
into the NWHOF, joining her husband, Jack,
and current PPHS football coach Dave Darst
(2014).
The other 2016
NWHOF inductees
for West Virginia were
Aristotle Svingos, Mike
Contic, Dr. Dan Doyle,
Richard Edge and Dale
Slack.
Cullen and the other
inductees will lead the
parade of champions at
the 2017 WVSSAC state
championships at Big
Sandy Superstore Arena
later this winter.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 20, 2016 3B

Ohio deer hunters should consider an SWC
Two years ago, Ohio
started allowing deer
hunters the option of
using a straight-walled
cartridge (SWC) riﬂe for
the ﬁrst time since… well,
forever, and they seem to
be catching on.
An SWC riﬂe is a riﬂe
that ﬁres cartridges
that have a straight
wall; a cartridge with
no tapered “shoulder”
between the body of
the case and the neck
which holds the bullet.
An example of an SWC
is the venerable .4570 Springﬁeld, which
started life back in 1873
as a military cartridge;
an example of shouldered cartridge that is
not allowed would be
the .30-Springﬁeld, a
military cartridge that
entered service in 1906.
Most of the early centerﬁre riﬂe cartridges
that came out in the late
1800s were SWCs with
most shouldered cartridges coming later with
the advent of smokeless
propellant. SWCs usually have larger, heavier
rounded bullets that lack
the range and velocity of

modern, shouldered cartridges using pointed, or
spritzer-style bullets.
To our friends in West
Virginia, none of this
applies, you have been
free to use straight-walled
or shouldered cartridges
for decades – good luck
with your gun season
Monday!
Many SWCs started out
life as handgun cartridges
but also shine as riﬂe
cartridges – the 44 and
357 magnums are in this
category.
According to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources – Ohio Division of Wildlife Deer Season Summaries for the
past two seasons, 2014
saw a total of 5,737 deer
killed with SWC riﬂes.
The majority of hunters
(68 percent) used a shotgun during the seven-day
traditional gun season
while 18 percent used
muzzle-loading riﬂes and
only 11 percent used a
SWC riﬂe.
The following year,
2015, the total was
10,317 deer killed with
SWC riﬂes, with 15 percent of hunters opting

use modern, sabofor those hunting
ted shotgun slugs
implements.
which may cost
Both years, the
about $3 apiece or
143-year-old .45-70
more. SWC ammo
Springﬁeld was
is closer to a $1.50
the most popular
per round for the
choice among Ohio
hunters, followed
In The larger calibers to
under a dollar per
by the 44 RemingOpen
round for smaller
ton Magnum, 444
Jim
cartridges like the
Marlin and 357
Freeman
44 or 357 magMagnum. Those
nums.
four cartridges
The same performance
accounted for roughly 90
percent of the SWC riﬂes is easily obtained with a
modern, in-line muzzlein the ﬁeld.
loader but with the obviThere is little differous impediment of slower
ence in the accuracy
and ballistics of an SWC reloads and thorough,
time-consuming cleaning
riﬂe, a riﬂed shotgun
after the hunt.
with saboted slugs,
Me, I just like the feel
and a modern, in-line
of a riﬂe versus a shotmuzzle-loading riﬂe.
For your average hunter, gun, and depending on
the caliber an SWC isn’t
any shot beyond 200
nearly as punishing on
yards with any of those
implements is a sketchy the shoulder as a shotgun
– which can be important
proposition.
It is not that SWC riﬂes for younger or smaller
hunters. My ideal SWC
shoot any better than
riﬂe would be a scoped,
modern shotguns with
saboted slugs or muzzle- lever-action riﬂe, perhaps
a Marlin 336, chambered
loaders that appeals to
me, but I like that it gives in .357 Maximum or 445
Super Mag (which would
hunters more options.
require some custom gunTo get performance
work to obtain).
similar to a .45-70 from
Personally my biggest
a shotgun, you have to

gripe with the use of
SWCs in Ohio is “the
list” of permissible cartridges. Some of them
have no business being
on there; cartridges like
the 45 ACP, 41 Long
Colt and 38 Special lack
the power needed to
make consistent humane
kills on deer-sized game
at typical deer hunting
distances. Other parts
of the list don’t seem to
make much rhyme or
reason: the 375 Super
Magnum is on there, but
not the 445 Super Magnum?
Considering that just
four cartridges comprise
90 percent of all of the
cartridges used, why not
simplify things? During
the open houses I suggested a standard that
SWCs must be .357-caliber or larger, with a minimum case length of one
inch (which was Ohio’s
standard for handgun
deer hunting in 2000
and before) that basically establishes the .357
Magnum as the minimum
acceptable caliber. I will
even donate a ﬁred .357
Magnum cartridge to

each of Ohio’s 88 county
wildlife ofﬁcers to use as
a ﬁeld gauge.
At any rate, it doesn’t
look like SWC riﬂes are
going anywhere in the
near future, and will probably only grow in popularity as more gun makers
chamber ﬁrearms in these
cartridges.
This weekend is/
was Ohio’s youth deer
gun season, and the
traditional gun season
begins the Monday after
Thanksgiving and runs
through the following
Sunday. A “bonus” deer
gun season will be held
Dec. 17-18. Hunting
hours are 30 minutes
before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset.
Please hunt legally and
hunt safely. Consult the
Ohio Hunting and Trapping Regulations 20162017 for more detailed
information, and always
plan your hunt and hunt
your plan.
Jim Freeman is the wildlife
specialist for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District. He
can be contacted weekdays at
740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

6 Blue Devils land all-OVC soccer honors
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— The OVC victors were
indeed the Blue Devils
— and so go this year’s
spoils.
That’s because the Gallia Academy Blue Devils,
in capturing their ﬁrst
soccer league championship in program history,
landed a half-dozen spots
on the all-Ohio Valley
Conference club — which
was announced on Thursday.
The Blue Devils, along
with South Point, shared
the inaugural OVC championship with identical
7-1 league records — as
this season marked the
ﬁrst ofﬁcial OVC soccer
campaign.
Both clubs, in fact,
rallied from two-goal
halftime deﬁcits to win
by one goal apiece on the
other’s home pitch.
Gallia Academy was
one of ﬁve schools in
the league — joined by
South Point, Fairland,
Chesapeake and ﬁrst-year
program Rock Hill.
Last year, with only
three league schools for
soccer, Gallia Academy
— in its ﬁnal season as a
member of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
— still had four players

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior goalkeeper Caden Wilt was named first-team all-Ohio Valley Conference in boys soccer.

recognized as all-OVC.
This year, both the Blue
Devils and South Point
posted four ﬁrst-teamers
apiece, while Fairland,
Chesapeake and Rock Hill
all had two ﬁrst-teamers
each.

Each squad automatically received two Honorable Mention selections.
For the Blue Devils,
midﬁelder Madi Oiler
repeated to the ﬁrst team,
as she was joined by fellow ﬁrst-teamers Isaiah

Lester, Jacob Ratliff and
Caden Wilt.
All four ﬁrst-teamers
were seniors, as Lester
was a forward, Ratliff a
midﬁelder, and Wilt was
the squad’s primary goalkeeper.

Lester was a member
of the all-OVC Honorable Mention unit a year
ago.
The Blue Devils’ pair
of Honorable Mention
picks this year were wing
Miguel Velasco and senior

defender Drew Hall.
For the Pointers,
repeating to the ﬁrst team
were Merrick Harris and
Jake Helton, as they were
joined on the ﬁrst four
by Chris Tatlonghari and
Drew Smith.
Tatlonghari had made
Honorable Mention last
season.
For Fairland, Alex Ward
and Jared Wilkes repeated to the ﬁrst team, while
Rock Hill’s ﬁrst-teamers
were Victor Aguilera and
Isaac Floyd.
Chesapeake’s pair of
ﬁrst-teamers were Dalton
Nida and Cameron King,
as Nida notched repeat
ﬁrst-team accolades.
In addition to Gallia
Academy’s Velasco and
Hall, the other Honorable
Mention choices were
Caleb Pennington and
Ryan Brown of South
Point; Sean Harris and
Alex Naegele of Fairland;
Cole Mills and Jacob
Martin of Chesapeake;
and Jason Aguilera and
Brody Floyd for Rock
Hill.
Naegele and Brown
both repeated as all-OVC
Honorable Mention.
There was no Player of
the Year nor Coach of the
Year selected.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Bobcats outlast Georgia Tech, 67-61
Campbell, Kaminski
combine for 40 points
in Ohio’s third win
ATLANTA (AP) — Antonio
Campbell scored 25 points and
grabbed 12 rebounds and Ohio
University rallied with 3-pointers Friday night to win 67-61 at
Georgia Tech.
Fifth-year senior Kenny Kaminski scored all 15 of his points in
the second half on 3-pointers as
the Bobcats (3-0) were 7 of 15
from beyond the arc after going 3
of 8 in the ﬁrst half.
Center Ben Lammers led
the Yellow Jackets (2-1) with
a career-high 22 points, 11
rebounds and four blocked shots
in his third career start. The
6-foot-10 junior frequently was

matched against the 6-9 Campbell, who last season was MidAmerican Conference Player of
the Year.
Georgia Tech led 32-27 at halftime and outrebounded the Bobcats 47-38, but the Yellow Jackets
shot 27.8 in the second half (10
of 36) and made one 3-pointer.
Junior guard Tadric Jackson
scored 17 off the bench. Starting
guard Josh Okogie added ﬁve
points and 11 rebounds.
The Bobcats began to pull away
when Georgia Tech went 5:18
without a ﬁeld goal and Campbell’s dunk gave Ohio a 22-17 lead
with 6:50 left in the ﬁrst half.
Campbell ﬁnished the ﬁrst half
with 14 points and ﬁve rebounds,
however, his teammates made
just 5 of 19 and scored 13 in that
time. Georgia Tech led 32-27 at
halftime, tying the game on Lammers’ three-point play with 5:23
to go.

Ohio continued to live by a
long ball just four days after making 15 3-pointers in a 96-75 win
Monday over Sam Houston State.
Kaminski was good from distance
on back-to-back possessions and
the visitors led 49-46 with 11:00
remaining.
Campbell added his third trey
moments later to stretch Ohio’s
lead to four.
Tech tied the game just once
more, when Jackson hit a short
jumper in the lane with 8:11 left
to tie it at 52.
Ohio has won in its last two
visits to ACC venues. The Bobcats won 61-55 at Maryland on
Dec. 12, 2007. The Terrapins
have since moved to the Big
Ten.
The Bobcats will be idle for a
week before playing host Nov. 25
to Tennessee Tech, which Georgia Tech beat 70-55 in the season
opener.

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4B Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GAHS lands 11 runners on All-OVC teams
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

A total of 11 athletes
from Gallia Academy
High School earned AllOhio Valley Conference
honors for cross country
during the 2016 fall
sports season.
Eight of the 11 recipients were repeat honorees, which included
repeat selections for ﬁve
of the six Blue Devils
that made this year’s list.
The Blue Angels also had
three repeat selections
from their ﬁve total honorees.
The Blue Devils had
four boys earn ﬁrst team
honors after ﬁnishing in
the top 19 spots. Three of
the four selections were
also ﬁrst team honorees a
year ago.
Repeating as ﬁrst team
selections were Kaleb Crisenbery, Caleb Greenlee
and Kyle Greenlee, while
Devon Barnes also moved
up to the ﬁrst team this
season after earning honorable mention accolades
last fall.
Kobe Cochran repeated
as a honorable mention
choice for GAHS, while
Ezra Blain picked up his
ﬁrst honorable mention
accolades this past season.
Other ﬁrst team

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy seniors Mesa Polcyn (128) and Mary Watts (133) run in the Skyline Bowling Invitational at GAHS, on September 6.

repeaters included Bryce
Day of Fairland; Brendon McCormick and
Victor Aguilera of Rock
Hill; and the Portsmouth
trio of Daniel Clark,
Aiden Kammler and

Ethan Haas.
The remaining ﬁrst
team All-OVC selections
for boys were Eli Baker,
Jason Aguilera, Ethan
Miller, Logan Boggs,
Brady Floyd and Nick

NASCAR championship
drivers stumble in qualifying
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) — Joey
Logano leaned in toward Jimmie
Johnson and offered a few words of
comfort.
“At least we all sucked,” Logano
said.
The four NASCAR Sprint Cup championship drivers all failed to get that
one ﬁnal boost they needed to better
position themselves to win it all Sunday at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Logano, Carl Edwards, 2015 Sprint
Cup champion Kyle Busch and Johnson all will start outside the top ﬁve.
Busch will start ninth, Edwards 10th,
Logano 13th and Johnson 14th. Johnson would match Dale Earnhardt Sr.
and Richard Petty for the NASCAR
record with his seventh career Cup
championship.
“I don’t think any of us want to start
that far back,” Edwards said.
But they are bunched close enough
that one TV camera can probably
catch them all as they head into the
ﬁrst turn on the 1.5-mile track. Busch
started third in the ﬁnale last season,
won the race and his ﬁrst career Cup
title.
The foursome likely won’t lag
behind the front of the ﬁeld for long.
“This is a place you can pass,”
Logano said.
The highest-ﬁnishing driver among
the four is the 2016 champion. Under
the revamped Chase format, the
Homestead winner the last two years
won the championship.
Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski,

Gannon of Coal Grove;
Zack Kincaid and Brandon Bowman of Fairland;
Wes Monroe of Ironton;
Seth Baker and Mark
Catell of Rock Hill; Brycen McCann and Jared

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Stewart ready for final race

eliminated from title contention in
earlier rounds of NASCAR’s playoffs,
played spoiler and swept the front row.
“I think we’ve been the two best
cars all year,” Keselowski said.
Ryan Newman, Denny Hamlin,
Chase Elliott, Martin Truex Jr., Matt
Kenseth and Ryan Blaney all will start
ahead of the championship drivers.
The drivers out of the championship picture traditionally part to let
the contenders race each other hard in
the meat of the race.
“You get a little more respect from
those guys,” Busch said.
Amid a heap of tributes, Tony Stewart starts 11th in the ﬁnal race of his
NASCAR career. Stewart is trying to
race to his 50th career Cup victory
and end a triumphant career in victory lane.
“There hasn’t been any part of my
career that I didn’t enjoy,” Stewart
said. “There are things about everything that I’ve done that I’ve liked
more than others and disliked more
than others. But as a whole, I’ve
enjoyed everything I’ve done and the
road that I’ve taken to get here.”
Edwards and Busch are each vying
to win a second straight championship for Joe Gibbs Racing. Johnson
could bring a 12th title to Hendrick
Motorsports. Logano wants to reward
Roger Penske’s 50th season in racing
with another championship.
Asked what keeps him going after
all these years, Penske quipped, “Trying to beat these guys.”

Lewy Body Dementia?
Parkinson’s Disease Dementia?
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Blankenship of Rock Hill;
Ethan Lafon and Tristen
Wilson of Fairland; and
Connor Ramey of Ironton.
The honorable mention
squad also included Evan

Carter of South Point;
and Caleb Clark of Portsmouth.
On the girls side of the
All-OVC list, GAHS had
two repeat selections on
the ﬁrst team in Mary
Watts and Mesa Polcyn.
Brooke Johnson also
picked up ﬁrst team honors for the ﬁrst time in
her career.
Cassidy Starnes
repeated as a honorable
mention selection for the
Blue Angels, while Abby
Johnson also came away
with her ﬁrst honorable
mention accolades.
Other repeat selections to the ﬁrst team for
girls were Deanna Hall ,
Haleigh Fuller and McKenna Pannell of Fairland,
as well as Tylan Easthem
of Rock Hill.
Olivia Lewis and Olivia
Burge of Fairland, Sarah
Cecil of Coal Grove,
and Lucy Simpson of
Rock Hill rounded out
the remaining ﬁrst team
spots.
The remainder of the
honorable mention girls
team included Graci
Davis and Molly Rust of
Ironton, Kaylan Evanich
of Fairland, and the Rock
Hill duo of Dana Grant
and Ally Stewart.

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�ŝŶĐŝŶŶĂƟ ............... DŽůůǇ�tŝŶƚĞƌƐ ...............(513) 558-0269
�ŽůƵŵďƵƐ ............... :ĞŶŶǇ�/ĐĞŶŚŽƵƌ ..............(614) 293-6882
60691893

Stewart will retire
after nearly two
decades of racing
HOMESTEAD, Fla.
(AP) — His race team
built him a car ﬁtting
for the baddest man on
wheels. Tony Stewart will
take his ﬁnal NASCAR
ride in a tribute Chevrolet signed by every team
member, the hood emblazoned with photos from
his championship years
and the slogan, “Always
a Racer, Forever a Champion.”
His helmet? Well, that
was something special.
It’s a weathered throwback that looks as if it has
been hanging in a barn
on his Indiana farm for
decades.
It appeared rusted,
said “Smoke. Unlimited
Speed,” and was a gritty
symbol of one of the last
true racers.
Stewart will retire from
NASCAR competition
Sunday after nearly two
decades on the hamster
wheel. His years were
spent winning races, battling authority and speaking his mind, even when
the topic was unpopular,
and when no one else had
the guts.
He’s brash, boorish and
a beast in a race car.
“I don’t know that
we’ve ever really had
someone like him come
into this series,” said
four-time champion Jeff
Gordon, himself a recent
retiree.
And that’s partly why
he’s leaving. He’s 45 and
his heart has never been
fully into NASCAR. This
series pays the bills and
gives him the resources
for his passion. Racing on
the dirt or on weeknights
at the grassroots level.
Stewart owns race
tracks, teams, a sprint
car series and he’s partowner of NASCAR’s elite
Stewart-Haas Racing.
So he’s not really going
anywhere, really. He’ll
be at NASCAR events
on behalf of SHR and its
driver lineup and sponsors.
The rest of the time?
He’ll be racing.

“It’s been a fun 18 years. Not every part
of it has been fun. I’ve always said what
was on my mind whether it was popular or
unpopular. I always fought for what I believed
in, whether it was safety for other drivers or
something etiquette that was going on on
the race track or whatever. I can sleep alright
knowing that is why I did it.”
— Tony Stewart,
NASCAR driver

Stewart has big ideas of
racing all over the country next year at the tracks
where he feels most at
home. That’s where he
came from, and he’s
always longed to return.
His love of sprint cars
possibly accelerated his
retirement and played
heavily into a long string
of personal tragedies.
Friends Jason Lefﬂer and
Bryan Clauson died in
accidents, Stewart badly
broke his leg in a 2013
crash, his car struck and
killed a competitor that
had walked onto the racing surface to confront
him. The family of Kevin
Ward Jr. has ﬁled a civil
suit against Stewart that
is pending.
Those closest to Stewart know what an emotional toll the last several
years have taken on him,
and they understand
his desire to ﬁnally just
be able to do whatever
he wants, whenever he
wants to do it. In the
month after Ward’s death,
Stewart said he’d probably never race a sprint
car again.
Now, he’s lining up as
many events as he can.
He did not want a
retirement tour, and he
did not want every week
to turn into a celebration
of the driver most relatable to fans for his blue
collar upbringing and his
tendencies like an old A.J.
Foyt or Dale Earnhardt
Sr.
His resume is stacked,
three NASCAR championships and one IndyCar
title. But it also has two
glaring holes: Stewart
never won the Daytona
500 or his beloved Indianapolis 500. Earlier this
week, the winningest car
owner ever at Indy said
his biggest regret is that

Stewart never drove for
Roger Penske in the 500.
“He brought such emotion and class to the sport
and competitiveness,”
Penske said.
That ﬁery side has led
to dustups on and off the
track. He’s never backed
down from a confrontation, and his acid-tongue
and sharp wit make it
impossible for anyone to
win an argument.
“If Tony hasn’t come
after you, then you’re not
doing something right,”
said one-time teammate
Kyle Busch.
Stewart has taken
great steps to make this
ﬁnal weekend as low-key
as possible. He did one
news conference and
turned down all interview
requests, even to those he
never declines.
Maybe it’s a defense
mechanism, to take as
much emotion as possible
out of these last few days.
But he’s clearly reﬂected
on his time, and knows
who he is and what’s
ahead.
“It’s been a fun 18
years. Not every part
of it has been fun. I’ve
always said what was on
my mind whether it was
popular or unpopular. I
always fought for what
I believed in, whether
it was safety for other
drivers or something etiquette that was going on
on the race track or whatever. I can sleep alright
knowing that is why I
did it.
“It wasn’t because I
was trying to be a jerk or
something like that, I just
always spoke my mind
and fought for what I
believed in.”
He’s not another Foyt
or Earnhardt or Allison.
Tony Stewart is simply
Tony Stewart.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 20, 2016 5B

Big Ben a painful reminder to Browns of what might have been
the staff, compared to
24-9 at home during that
same span.
HUE BETTER
BELIEVE IT: The
Browns may be down
for now, but coach Hue
Jackson said it won’t be
for long.
The losing has been
difﬁcult on Jackson, who
said he sometimes wakes
up wondering “What am
i doing?” But as hard as it
is for him to lose games to
division contemporaries
such as Cincinnati’s Marvin Lewis, Baltimore’s
John Harbaugh and Tomlin, Jackson is banking on
ﬂipping the script.
“They better enjoy it
now, because it is not
going to be like this very
long,” Jackson said, “I
promise you that.”
HELP WANTED:
While do-everything wide
receiver Antonio Brown
is on pace for another
120-catch season, he’s
getting little help. While
Brown currently has an
NFL-high 69 receptions,
no other Pittsburgh wide
receiver has more than

23. Injuries to Eli Rogers,
Sammie Coates, Markus
Wheaton and Darrius
Heyward-Bey haven’t
helped, but the inability
for anyone other than
running back Le’Veon
Bell to emerge as a consistent receiving threat
has created trouble in
recent weeks.
PRYOR COMMITMENT: Browns wide
receiver Terrelle Pryor
grew up in Jeanette,
Pennsylvania, the heart
of Steelers country. So,
of course, he rooted for
them?
“No,” he said. “Barry
Sanders. I was all about
Barry.”
Pryor, though, appreciates the black and gold
and what it would mean
for the Browns to beat
them.
“It is a great organization,” he said. “That is
somewhere we want to
be, and we want to be
great and bring championships here, and I think
we can, but this is the
test, ﬁrst test. We’ve got
to beat them.”

CLEVELAND (AP) —
Ben Roethlisberger was
convinced he was going
to be a Cleveland Brown.
He got lucky.
Call it his ﬁrst escaped
sack.
Pittsburgh’s prodigious
quarterback grew up in
Ohio, and as the 2004
draft neared and after a
workout for Cleveland,
he thought the Browns
would select him in the
ﬁrst round.
Instead, Cleveland
traded up and took tight
end Kellen Winslow with
the No. 6 overall pick.
“I am kind of over
that,” Big Ben joked this
week as the Steelers
prepared to face the rival
Browns, a team Roethlisberger has dominated like
no other during his NFL
career.
The Browns haven’t
recovered.
Roethlisberger, perhaps
more than any other
player, any failed draft
or any miserable season,
best symbolizes Cleveland’s general ineptitude
since returning to the

league in 1999.
While the Steelers have
thrived with the sturdy
Roethlisberger behind
center and won two
Super Bowls, the Browns
have gone through 26
starting quarterbacks in
17 years and still haven’t
solved their QB riddle.
Consider that since
2004, the Steelers are
130-71 in the regular
season and have won ﬁve
division titles, three AFC
championships and those
two Super Bowls.
The Browns are 61-141
and have ﬁnished last in
the AFC North 10 times.
“I mean I wasn’t here
when they made the mistake of not drafting him,
obviously,” said Browns
left tackle and perennial
Pro Bowl lock Joe Thomas. “But it would’ve been
great if we did.”
Adding insult, Roethlisberger is 20-2 — 19-2
in games he’s started
— against the Browns
(0-10), who are off to
the worst start in their
66-year history and will
be facing a snarling Steel-

ers team that has lost four
straight and is desperate
for a win.
“This is still a huge
rival for me, especially
me personally,” Roethlisberger said. “It is Ohio. It
is the Browns. I thought
I was going to go to the
Browns. For me, this is
AFC North football. This
is a huge rivalry for us.”
The numbers say otherwise. The Steelers are
28-6 against the Browns
since ‘99 and their towelwaving fans are certain to
overrun FirstEnergy Stadium on Sunday, which has
been an annual event on
the shores of Lake Erie.
The Steelers, though,
haven’t been themselves
of late as a 4-1 start has
been erased with only
the third four-game losing streak in coach Mike
Tomlin’s tenure.
NAME GAME: The
Browns have paraded
quarterback after quarterback onto the ﬁeld, so
many in fact that Roethlisberger wouldn’t even
attempt trying to name
them all.

“No chance,” he said on
a conference call before
playing along and rattling
off “a buddy of mine”
Bruce Gradkowski, Josh
McCown, Robert Grifﬁn
III and Colt McCoy.
“There have been a
whole bunch of them that
I have faced,” he said. “I
would love to look at the
numbers of which quarterback I actually played
the most because I feel
like it was almost a different one every time.”
For the record, Derek
Anderson (4) faced him
more than any other
Browns QB.
ROAD WOES: The
Steelers have been
dynamic at home since
offensive coordinator
Todd Haley came on
board in 2012, but have
struggled replicating that
success on the road. Not
even Roethlisberger is
immune. He’s thrown 10
touchdown passes against
14 interceptions outside
Heinz Field since the
start of 2015 and is under
.500 (15-18) in road
starts since Haley joined

Notices

Automotive

Help Wanted General

Houses For Rent

Help Wanted General

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.

Best Deal New &amp; Used

Do you enjoy working
with people and want to
be in management?
If so then this
position is for you!
The Woda Group
is looking for a Full-time
Apartment Manager in Bidwell
&amp; Thurman Ohio.
For more details, please go
online to our website at
www.wodagroup.com
and apply!

2 bedroom apartments
$550/$600 and deposit
located in Bidwell some
utilities paid call 740-446-4175

Do you enjoy fixing things
and working with your hands?

Amy Carter
Product Specialist
�����.BZIFX�3E�t�+BDLTPO �0)������

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

Wanted
Help Wanted For
HVAC Company
Hiring an experienced
installer. Also, helper with
some knowledge helpful if
interested call 740-441-1236.
if no answer leave
a message
Miscellaneous
Everything left from summer
yard sale make a offer
everything must go contact
740-446-4807
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Bossard Memorial Library
seeks Mobile Services
Associate/Circulation Clerk,
avg. 30 hrs/wk; Application
and job descriptions available
at Library (7 Spruce Street,
Gallipolis) or at
bossardlibrary.org.
Completed application must
be postmarked by November
30, 2016 and mailed to:
Bossard Memorial Library
Debbie Saunders,
Library Director
7 Spruce Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Do you enjoy fixing
things and working
with your hands?
If so then this opportunity will
be great for you!
The Woda Group
is looking for experienced
Part-Time Maintenance
Technicians for our Bidwell,
OH location. If interested
please go online to our
website at
www.wodagroup.com
and apply!
Diesel Mechanic Needed,
salary is negotiable, benefit
package available.
Experience is recommended
but not required.
Send your resume to:
Blind Box 101
825 3rd ave.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

For Sale By Owner
For Sale By Owner
2 rental properties
at the same location
1 house- 1 Apartment
call 740-709-9697
House For Sale
1075 2nd Ave
nice one level
740-441-9531 or
740-441-5238

2 HOMES FOR RENT:
3BR, 1 bath house,
recently remodeled.
No pets. $800/mo
2BR, 1 bath home
w/garage $500/mo.
Call 740-446-3644
for application.
2-Bdrm House
(Gallipolis City)
W/D Hook-up
$575/mo.
NO PETS,
740-591-5174.
House for Rent-3 Bedroom,
No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101

Land (Acreage)

Pets

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

Happy Jack Mange Medicine:
promotes healing and hair
growth to any mange, hotspot
or fungus on dogs and horses
without steroids. Dettwiller
Lumber (740)992-5500.
www.kennelvax.com

Land For Rent
Hunting rights on 75 acres
on wooded property
located at Wray Road
in Green Township
$2000.00 year
call 740-709-9697

Firewood

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-688-9416
or 740-988-6130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Nice 1 BR unfurnished
apartment. Refrig. &amp; range
provided. Water, sewage &amp;
garbage paid.
Deposit required.
Call 740-709-0072

Bryant Farm &amp; Lawn Care
Available Now
Seasoned Firewood &amp;
Quality Driveway Stone
Heap Vouchers Accepted
Pickup or Delivery
740-245-5002
740-645-1277
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

If so, then this opportunity will be great
for you! The Woda Group is looking for
experienced maintenance technicians for our
Colonial Park, Pomeroy, Ohio location.
If interested, please go online to our website at
www.wodagroup.com and apply!

60692541

Home of the Car Fairy

��������

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.

MARK PORTER FORD

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

60692380

6B Sunday, November 20, 2016

�A long the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 20, 2016 s Section C

Sarah Hawley | Times-Sentinel

Meigs County Commissioners signed a proclamation at their meeting earlier this month recognizing National Home Care, Hospice Palliative Care Month. Pictured are (front, from left) Commissioners Mike
Bartrum, Randy Smith and Tim Ihle; (back, from left) Holzer Hospice and Home Care representatives Amanda Johnson, Sara Gore, Samantha Blain and Vicki Nottingham.

Holzer announces Home Care and Hospice Month
By Dean Wright

needs of a patient.
The medical director
reviews cases for admission into hospice and
OHIO VALLEY —
assists team and staff
Holzer Health System is
celebrating November as and physicians in coming
National Home Care and up with a care plan as
well as acting as a liaison
Hospice Month.
between other health care
“In celebration of the
providers. The director
month to celebrate staff,
also oversees the managewe’ve been into all the
ment and education of
counties to complete
the hospice staff and can
proclamations, Gallia,
act as a primary physician
Jackson, Meigs, Vinton,
Athens, Ross, Scioto and for patients who do not
Lawrence Counties,” said have one.
According to NotVicki Nottingham, Holzer
tingham, patients have
Health System Director
been able to “graduate”
for Hospice and RN. “In
from hospice care. She
hospice, we take care
believes that the sooner
of patients that have a
a patient is discovered
terminal illness or a life
limiting illness. It doesn’t to have a terminal condition, the more hospice
necessarily have to be
might due to help the
a cancer diagnosis. It
patient by giving them
could be something that
individualized attention
they’re in the last stages
spanning both the physiof chronically. Cardiac,
cal, spiritual and mental
pulmonary, Alzheimer’s,
needs of a patient and his
those types of things.”
The hospice and home or her family.
“The myth is once you
care workers seek to
dispel some of the myths come into hospice, you’re
about their trade and bet- going to die,” said Notter raise awareness in the tingham. “Once patients
come into hospice, if they
public.
Some believe that hos- come in early enough,
instead of waiting, then
pice is a place whereas
sometimes they tend to
it most often occurs as
stabilize. They feel better
a service in roughly 70
percent of patient homes. and things can level off.”
“We’re trying to bust
Most hospice care is
through that myth
covered under private
because we want people
insurance plans, HMOs
to know that just because
and other managed care
you’re going to hospice,
organizations to include
doesn’t mean it’s the
hospice care as a benend,” said Nottingham.
eﬁt. Patients are able to
receive hospice care well “This is what the requirement is to get on hospice
after six months, should
(to have a terminal conditheir physician deem
tion), but depending on
them still terminally ill
the disease process, the
and believe the patient
person, their will to live,
would beneﬁt from the
this team approach, there
service.
Overall, hospice care is are of factors involved
(that contribute to the
about providing patients
patient’s care results).
with quality of life. The
Nursing is constantly
Holzer Health System
Hospice Team consists of evaluating and making
the patient’s primary care sure they are helping
provide comfort levels,
physician, nurses, phartreatment, medication.
macists, dietitians, perDo they (the patients)
sonal care aides and volunteers. Music therapists, have not only something
chaplains and social work- physical but something
psychological going on?
ers are also apart of the
That’s when we bring
team and seek to attend
in social work. Team
to some of the physical
needs as well as spiritual approaches are not just

deanwright@civitasmedia.com

Dean Wright | Times-Sentinel

Gallia County Commissioners stand with Holzer Health System representative as part of a proclamation announcing November National
Home Care and Hospice Month.

Courtesy photo

Holzer Health System Hospice staff shown. From left to right, Theresa Wolfe, billing specialist, Shannon Smith, LPN and in-take
coordinator, Kathy Sheets, administrative assistant.

for the patient, but also
the family.
Should a patient wish
to end hospice care, they
are welcome to return to

traditional care as they
choose. Patients can
determine whether or not
they wish to have hospice
care, they must be certi-

ﬁed as having a terminal
condition though with a
life expectancy of six or
fewer months. Hospice
is not just for elderly

patients. According to
Holzer information,
almost 20 percent of
patients are under the age
of 65 in hospice care.

�ALONG THE RIVER

2C Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

ANNIVERSARY

How to enjoy a healthy holiday

Workmans
celebrate 70
years of marriage

During the busy holiday season, food is a key
part of celebrations.
It can be tough to eat
healthy and ﬁnd time for
exercising, but it is possible to enjoy ourselves,
eat healthier and sneak
in physical activity.
It has been proven that
between Thanksgiving
and New Year’s Day people gain weight. What
can be done to avoid this
weight gain? During the
holidays, the best idea
is to adjust our mindset. Do not try to lose
weight, but maintain
your weight. This can be
accomplished by trying
to exercise regularly and
eating healthy foods.
Work to keep exercise
on track. Exercising
during the holidays can
help you maintain your
weight and relieve stress.
Some simple physical
activities such as walking or taking the stairs
can be done even when
traveling. For muscle
strengthening, resistance
bands travel well and can
be attached to a chair or
doorknob to use in toning legs and arms. Other
ideas for increasing your
activity are playing with
kids, grandkids and pets;
walking after dinner; and
catching up on housework such as washing

try to use smaller
windows, vacuumplates and make
ing or sweeping.
half your plate
Let yourself
with fruits and
splurge on the
vegetables. Anothfoods that make
er choice is to eat
your holiday
a plate of fruit and
meaningful while
vegetables before
enjoying your
Wendy
eating entrees and
favorite foods in
McGee
smaller portions. Contributing desserts. In addition, avoid being
What can you and columnist
in the “clean plate
your families do
club.” It is OK to
to prevent overleave something on your
eating? Eat small low
calorie, high ﬁber meals plate. Allow your kids to
and snacks such as WIC say no to food instead
of pressuring them to
approved fruit and vegetables or WIC approved eat. Finally, take your
time to relish every taste
whole grains or whole
grain crackers before the and pause for at least 10
party. At the party, study minutes before getting
seconds.
the table and decide
When preparing
which choices give you
foods, you can make
the most pleasure and
low calorie, low fat
stick to choosing only
recipes or items with
those items. Also, eat
fruits, vegetables and
your calories instead of
lean meats. An example
drinking them by stickcan be serving raw veging to low or no calorie
etables with a low or
drinks and sipping on
no fat yogurt or cottage
a large glass of water
cheese dip, fresh fruit
between every calorie
or a whole grain pasta
containing drink. This
will help with hydration salad. Some additional
and limit your beverage tips for ﬁxing foods with
less fat and calories are
calories . Another tip is
to use two eggs whites
to try not to hang out
in place of a whole egg;
close to food; instead
use low sodium, fat free
ﬁnd a comfortable spot
chicken broth in mashed
across the room. Addipotatoes to reduce the
tionally, watch your
butter or margarine;
portion sizes, and don’t
swap applesauce for
completely cover your
oil, margarine or butter
plate with food. Also,

in mufﬁns and quick
breads; and substitute
sliced almonds for a topping instead of French
fried onion rings.
Most of all, enjoy your
favorite holiday treats,
but take small portions and eat it slowly
to enjoy the taste and
texture of the delicious
foods. Contact me at the
Meigs County Health
Department WIC Ofﬁce
by calling 740-992-0392
for additional information.
For more ideas go
to https://www.choosemyplate.gov/ten-tipsmake-healthier-holidaychoices#
Sources Cited: www.
eatright.org/resource/
health/lifestyle/holiday/
enjoy-guilt-free-holidaycelebrations ; www.nutrition411.com/content/
healthy-holiday-eating
; www.eatright.org/
resource/health/lifestyle/
holidays/a-healthyapproach-to-holiday-eating ; www.eatright.org/
resource/health/lifestyle/
seasonal/helpful-tips-forhealthy-holiday-parties ;
www.kids.usa.gov/exercise-and-eating-healhy/
eating-healthy/healthyeating/index.shtml
Wendy McGee, RD, LD, WIC
Certifying Health Professional

Going home for the holidays?
What to look for when
visiting your loved one
During the holidays,
many travel to visit
loved-ones. For long
distance relatives, this
is a great time to look
for signs that more help
may be needed or for
changes in a loved one’s
health status. Some of
the things on this list
might seem minor on
their own, but when you
notice that two, three or
four of these issues have
come up, that’s a good
sign you might need to
have the dialogue and to

call in reinforcements.
Things to look for
include:
�Kdij[WZ_d[ii�ed�
their feet: look for tripping hazards such as
loose or uneven steps,
shaky or missing handrails, throw rugs or electrical cords. Ask if they
have fallen recently and
if you notice bruises,
ask about them.
�?\�oekh�h[bWj_l[�_i�
still driving, take a ride
with them and observe
how well they drive and
how conﬁdent they are
in heavy trafﬁc, making
left turns or driving at
night.

�9^Wd][�_d�^eki[keeping habits: previously clean and tidy
house is cluttered or
dirty
�KdfW_Z�X_bbi�eh�
ﬁnancial problems;
�De�\eeZ�_d�j^[�
fridge or cupboards;
�C[Z_YWj_ed�Zei[i�eh�
doctor’s appointments
missed;
�FheXb[ci�m_j^�
personal appearance or
hygiene;
�8Wj^heec�iW\[jo�Ä�
needing grab bars in the
bathtub and near the
toilet;
�?iebWj_ed"�bed[b_d[ii�
and possible depression;

�:[j[h_ehWj_ed�e\�
eyesight and/or hearing;
or
�C[ceho�beii�j^Wj�_i�
serious enough to compromise safety.
If you think you
need help, contact the
Area Agency on Aging
(AAA) that serves your
loved-one’s community.
The AAA can offer free
advice and connect you
to resources that could
improve your loved-ones
quality of life. Find your
AAA at www.eldercare.
gov. In Southeast Ohio,
call AAA8 at 1-800331-2644 or visit www.
areaagency8.org.

RIVER VALLEY MIDDLE SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Stumbo, *Jacob Winters,
Jade Winters.
Class 6D Garaffa.
BIDWELL — River
Students on honor roll
Valley recently released consist of:*Karina Barry,
its honor roll students
*Riley Bradley, Lauren
for the ﬁrst nine weeks Brown, *Michael Conkle,
of class.
*Abby Fife, *Adam Green,
An * denotes all As.
Kirsten Groves, *Taylor
Hopkins, *Kaylieona
Class 6A Hatfield.
Kemper, *Emma Lucas,
Students on honor roll
*Shayla Mullins, *Kaylee
consist of: Jacob Bennett, Norman, Kadence Petrie,
Gage Brooks, Carmen
*Ruth Rickett, Dakota
Gillenwater, Alyssa
Scarberry, *Cadence
Sargent-Holland, Andray
Shockey, Jena Shriver,
Howell, Hailey Jackson,
Markaela Simms, *Skylan
Ryan Jeffers, Robbie
Wray.
Keeton, Seth Mitchell,
Class 6E Jacks.
Kyle Neal, Mackenzie
Students on honor roll
Taylor, Stevie White, *Seth consist of : *Owen Barrett,
Witt, Macy Wood.
*Madison Hall, Jacquelyn
Classa 6B McCaulla.
Harrison, *Lillian Hawks,
Students on honor
Reid Haynes, *Jackson
roll consist of: Shasta
Justice, Tiffini McClintic,
Craycraft, Addison Burke, *Kaden Thompson, *Kaila
Jayla Chick, Caunnor Clay, Webb.
Bradley Ditty, Christian
Class 7A Walker.
Fry, *Troy Gardner,
Students on honor
*Sydney Gilbert, Landon
roll consist of: Allison
Goheen, Logan Hancock,
Arrowood, Chevy Barnes,
*Jance Lambert, Carson
Andrew Bentfeld, *Aislynn
Mares, Briana Martin,
Bostic, Austin Campbell,
Joshua McCoy, Carsyn
Haleigh Conant, Annabel
Miller, Zaira Orale.
Greathouse, Grace Hash,
Class 6C Klingaman.
*Shaelyn Huffman,
Students on honor roll
Makensey Lemley,
consist of: *Carmin
*Braden McGuire, Mason
Barcus, Michael Brown,
Rhodes, John Santos,
Hannah Chapman, *Haley Olivia Simms, Alexia
Clark, Spencer Coldwell,
Taylor, Zoe Taylor, Riley
*Grace Coleman, *Carley Wooldridge, *Cody
Crawford, Riley Evans,
Wooten.
Bransyn Gilbert, *Allison
Class 7B Graham.
Hess, *Hannah Johnson,
Students on honor roll
Harper Nolan, Krista
consist of: Leigha Bays,
Powell, Madison Pratt,
Christopher Goheen,
*Aubra Smith, *Carl
Jordyn Hoffman, James
Staff Report

Lawson, Cheyenne
Louden, Alissa Marr,
Sierra McClure.
Class 7C Roderick.
Students on honor
roll consist of: Lacee
Jennings, Hunter Eblin,
Alexis Dale, Morrisa
Barcus, Nathaniel Cadle,
Kelsey Price, *Javan
Gardner, Conner Nibert,
Leah Roberts.
Class 7D Holliday.
Students on honor roll
consist of: Jolene Braden,
William Cole, Isabella
Dobbins, Levi Dodrill,
Erika Justus, Jaylyn Lee,
Dalton Mershon, Preston
Runyon, Austin Donohue.
Class 7E Angel.
Students on honor roll
consist of: *Nathan
Brown, Sophia Gee, Edgar
Nolan, Kate Nutter, James
Orale, *Ian Swisher,
*Lauren Twyman, Baylee
Woodall.
Class 8A Shepherd.
Students on honor roll
consist of: Lidnsey Abbott,
Alexis Hogan, Brandy
Johnson, Kennedey
Lambert, Jakob Lewis, Zoe
Mitchell, Mikenzie Pope,
Riley Stevens, Breanna
Taylor, Bailey Young.
Class 8B Hysell.
Students on honor consist
of: Chase Barber, *Isaac
Barrett, Justin Campbell,
Michael Cicoff, *Kristen
Clark, Hunter Delancey,
Alex Euton, *Dylan Fulks,
Isiah Harkins, Jaylyn
Hunt, Hannah Jacks,
Ryan Lollathin, Regina
Maynard, *Zoe Milliron,

*Libby North, *Rebecca
Pearce, Macy Purkey,
Jessie Rife, *Alison
Roush, Sydnee Runyon,
*Keyana Shortridge,
Sierra Somerville, Justus
Williams, *Bailey Wray.
Class 8C Warden.
Students on honor roll
consist of: Jasper Adams,
Seth Bowman, Adrienne
Burd, Brier Campbell,
Akira Gilbert, Jaxxin Mabe,
Camron Miller, Hallye
O’Dell, Taylor Ramey, Nick
Roberts, Brooke Rucker,
Troy Simpkins, Connie
Stewart, Madison Swisher,
Alexis Thomas, Gracee
Wamsley.
Class 8D Bryant.
Students on honor roll
consist of: Alexis Campbell,
Wyatt Coon, Hannah
Culpepper, Ethan Gilbert,
Taylor Huck, Piper Johnson,
Seth Jones, Joseph Nichols,
Ryan Weber.
Class 8E McGuire.
Students on honor
roll consist of: Logan
Beekman, Evander
Ehman, Cameron Fulks,
Ashton Griffith, George
Hall, Eian Harkins, Joel
Horner, Jordan Lambert,
Olivia Peifer, Brice
Petitt, Sierra Phoenix,
Carista Rudduck,
Angel Saxon, Cole
Shadle, Jake Smathers,
Brooke Tracewell, Starr
Vanfossen, Kacey
Williamson, Whitt-Jasmine
Coleman, Billy Crossen,
Colt Engle, Michael Ferrell,
Samantha Mitchell,
Garrett Stewart.

Courtesy

Dale and Hazel (McKinney) Workman, pictured, will have been
married 70 years as of Nov. 19. A small family event has been
planned and a card shower given.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock
report of sales from Nov. 16, 2016.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $100-$150, Heifers, $95$141; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $95-$140, Heifers, $95$132.50; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $90-$138, Heifers,
$88-$122; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $85-$125, Heifers,
$85-$118; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $80-$110, Heifers,
$75-$110.
Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $54-$72; Medium/Lean, $44$55; Thin/Light, $26-$43; Bulls, $58-$88.
Back to Farm
Hogs, $26-$45; Feeder Pigs, $12.50-$20; Bred
Cows, $775-1000.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits
Contact Ryan Vaughn (304) 514-1858, or visit the
website at www.uproducers.com.

Caregiver Month
observed in November
delay getting
National Family
professional help
Caregiver Month
when you need it.
is celebrated each
7) Be open to
year in November.
new technologies
In what betthat can help you
ter month could
care for your loved
we express our
gratitude for the
Pamela K. one.
8) Organize
90 million family Matura
caregivers nation- Contributing medical information so that it’s up
wide that provide columnist
to date and easy
countless hours of
to ﬁnd.
care to their loved
9) Make sure legal
ones?
documents are in order.
The Area Agency on
10) Give yourself
Aging District 7 (AAA7)
credit for doing the best
would like to thank all
family caregivers for the you can.
The Caregiver Supselﬂess acts you do each
port Program at the
day. We encourage you
AAA7 is designed to
to make caregiving for
assist caregivers with
yourself a priority as a
finding answers about
caregiver.
how their caregivIn observation of the
ing role impacts their
month, below are “10
life and where to find
Tips for Family Careresources and services
givers” we wanted to
share from the Caregiver to decrease caregiver
stress. Caregivers may
Action Network (www.
be caring for an older
caregiveraction.org).
Share these with a family adult, their adult child
caregiver who could ben- with a disability, or
eﬁt from the information: the caregiver may be
a grandparent caring
1) Seek support from
other caregivers. You are for their grandchildren or non-relative
not alone.
child. Services include
2) Take care of your
assessments, training,
own health so that you
can be strong enough to information and assistance, supplemental
take care of your loved
services, respite, as
one.
well as answers and
3) Accept offers of
help and suggest speciﬁc counseling. For more
information about the
things people can do to
Caregiver Support
help you.
4) Learn how to com- Program through the
municate effectively with Area Agency on Aging
District 7, please call
doctors.
1-800-582-7277.
5) Caregiving is hard
work, so take respite
Pamela K. Matura is Executive
breaks often.
Director Area Agency on Aging
6) Watch out for signs District 7.
of depression and don’t

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, November 20, 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

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PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

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1

9
3
9

8

4

1

7
9

5

6
4
1

2

5

7 3

8 4

2

7

8

3

11/21

Difficulty Level

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/21

1
5
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8
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4
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3
1
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6
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4
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2
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�4C Sunday, November 20, 2016

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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