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                  <text>St. Patrick’s
annual
parade

Jazz
in the
village

All-Ohio
boys
teams

NEWS s 6A

NEWS s 7A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 12, Volume 53

Sheriff ’s office
recovers stolen
property

Sunday, March 24, 2019 s $2

Next stop, Carnegie Hall

Staff Report

MEIGS
COUNTY —
Two people
were arrested on
Thursday as part
of an investigation by the Meigs Cline
County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce which led
to the recovery
ov multiple stolen items.
Meigs County
Sheriff Keith
Wood reports
Runyon
that on Thursday
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce executed a search warrant
at 36612 School House
Road in Long Bottom.
The search warrant was
the result of an investigation into a stolen
motor vehicle from the
Village of Pomeroy.
Earlier in the day
on Thursday, Deputy
Campbell, Deputy
Leggett and Sgt. Stewart took Michael R.
Runyon, 31, of Pome-

roy into custody
on outstanding
state and federal
arrest warrants
as well as being
the suspect in
the stolen vehicle
from Pomeroy.
Sheriff Wood
further states
that Runyon
was arrested
without incident
at a residence
located on Point
Lane in Pomeroy.
Runyon is incarcerated pending
his initial appearance
in Meigs County
Court and for failure
to appear in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court. The Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
was assisted by the
Pomeroy Police Department in the arrest.
Deputies were able
to get a location on
the whereabouts of
See STOLEN | 5A

Courtesy

Pictured are members of the Gallia Academy Madrigals on Friday evening in New York City. The group attended “Wicked” on Broadway
at the Gershwin Theatre. The choir members perform this Sunday at Carnegie Hall.

Madrigals arrive in New York City
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

Officers Stewart,
King promoted
at MCSO
By Sarah Hawley

NEW YORK, N.Y. —
Nobody gets to Carnegie
Hall alone.
This weekend, 43 Gallia Academy Madrigals

will be performing at the
prestigious concert venue
thanks to their own hard
work and the support of
their families, teachers,
choir boosters and community members.
The trip is nearly a

year in the making, with
Madrigals Choir Director
Nattalie Phillips saying,
those many months ago,
she questioned whether
the dream should be
attempted but after talking with parents and
choir boosters, they
“went for it.” A big part
of taking that leap of faith

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — Two law enforcement ofﬁcers
were recently promoted within the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
Sgt. Frank Stewart was recently promoted to
the newly created investigator position at the
sheriff’s ofﬁce, while deputy and K-9 handler
Brandy King was promoted to Sergeant. Stewart
will retain his rank as sergeant while in his new
role.
“An investigator is something we have needed
for a long time,” said Sheriff Keith Wood of the
new position. He said in the short time since
Stewart took on the role it has already proven successful.
Wood said that Stewart is “very motivated” and
has good connections which will assist in the new
position. Stewart now has an ofﬁce in the sheriff’s
ofﬁce and Wood encouraged members of the community with information to share to come speak
with Stewart.
Having the investigator frees up deputies for
other duties while allowing for someone to be
focused on investigations full-time. It has been
See OFFICERS | 7A

REEDSVILLE — For
the second consecutive
year Eastern will be
sending a Science Olympiad team to the state
competition.
Eastern Middle School
Team One took second
place in the regional
competition held in Marietta. Last year was the
ﬁrst time the program,
which began six years
ago, had sent a full team
to the competition. Eastern’s second team was
not eligible in the team
standings as there was
not enough team members/events competed in
for a complete team.
Teams competed in the
areas of life, personal and
social science (anatomy

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Eastern Science Olympiad participants (Row 1, from left) Seth
Collins, Peyton Buckley, Hope Reed, Hayley Sanders, Juli Durst;
(Row 2, from left) Aszandra Schultz, Savannah Barnes, Abby
Guthrie, Kyra Zuspan, Ella Carleton, Brayden O’Brien, Trey Hill;
(Row 3, from left) Koen Sellers, Grant Martin, Lilly Suttle, Sydney
Reynolds, Kendyl Householder, Breanna Nelson; (Row 4, from left)
Olivia Harris, Lane Barber, Jacob Spencer, Trenton Morrissey, Ethan
Short and Emma Epling.

and physiology, disease
detectives, heredity,
herpetology, and water
quality), Earth and
space science (dynamic

planet, fossils, meteorology, road scholar, and
solar system), physical
science and chemistry
(circuit lab, crime bust-

ers, density lab, potions
and poisons, and thermodynamics), technology
and engineering (battery buggy, boomilever,
elastic launched gliders
and roller coasters), and
inquiry and nature of
science (experimental
design, game on, mystery
architecture, and write it
do it).
Placing ﬁrst in their
respective events were
as follows: Lilly Suttle
and Savannah Barnes in
Roller Coaster; Juli Durst
and Brayden O’Brien
in Water Quality; Lilly
Suttle and Grant Martin
in Road Scholar; and
Emma Epling and Olivia
Harris in Anatomy and
Physiology.
Taking second in their
See OLYMPIAD | 5A

Campaign for new GAHS stadium, STEM facility

A NEWS
Obituaries: 82A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 4B
Comics: 6B

See HALL | 5A

Eastern Science Olympiad team qualifies for state
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

was a belief in the support of the community
which has come through
in a big way by donating
to fundraisers for the trip.
All of those creative fundraising efforts resulted
in offsetting the costs by
$300 per choir member,

By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

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

CENTENARY — Volunteers are
beginning renewed efforts to bring
a stadium to the Gallia Academy
High School campus along with
STEM facilities focused on technological education.
“It’s called the Gallia Academy
Stadium and STEM Project,” said
campaign organizer Josh Bodimer.
“Short term, the goal is to raise
funds and all the money would
funnel through the (athletic)
boosters to design, build and
complete a STEM classroom facility and multi-use state-of-the-art
stadium out in Centenary by the
high school.”
The STEM acronym has com-

monly been used in education to
identify the disciplines of science,
technology, engineering and mathematics.
“Increasing a STEM presence
in schools is kind of a national
initiative, we feel,” said Bodimer.
“There originally was a project
to raise money for the stadium
called the One Team, One Dream
Project. The school already has
a design and have shared it with
us.”
Bodimer said the project intends
to have a website created and a
kickoff fundraising event to provide information to the public. It is
tentatively scheduled for May 9 at
the Colony Club from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Visitors are anticipated to be
able to participate in “game show”

events, Bodimer said. A donors
announcement will be made along
with a brief digital slide presentation of the project. Visitors will
also be given the option to donate
by envelope, should they choose.
Gallipolis City Schools Superintendent Craig Wright said
while the school will be informed
and partner with the boosters in
project efforts, no school money
would be utilized to fund the project.
“One of the (Gallipolis City
Schools Board of Education’s)
goals when I came on was the
project and not just for our athletes but we’re thinking an extension of academics,” said Wright.
See GAHS | 7A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, March 24, 2019

OBITUARIES

ADELL PLYMALE CALDWELL

ROGER BROYLES
GALLIPOLIS — Roger
L. Broyles, 63, of Gallipolis, passed away from cancer on Wednesday March
13, 2019 at his residence.
Born December 31,
1955 in Corning, he
was the son of the late
Thomas Henry Broyles
and Lurena Helena Hill
Broyles. In addition to his
parents he was preceded
by one brother; Jim Broyles and by one sister;
Mona Hamilton.
Roger was a selfemployed carpenter with
a huge intellect and a
heart to match. He will
continue to inﬂuence all
the lives he has touched.

He attended the Good
News Baptist Church.
Roger is survived by his
wife; Leota Jane Durst
Broyles of Gallipolis; two
sons; Adam S. (Corrine)
Broyles of Reynoldsburg,
and Wade A. (Crystal)
Durst of Centerville;
three daughters; Sara
L. Broyles of Highland
Heights, Kentucky, Cinnamon J. Broyles of
Mason, West Virginia,
and Monica J. Broyles of
Gallipolis; eight grandchildren; four brothers;
Thomas (Mary) Broyles
of Columbus, Mike
(Grace) Broyles of Gallipolis, Bill (Tina) Broyles

TOMLIN
PROCTORVILLE — David Lee Tomlin, 72, of Proctorville, passed away
Friday, March 22, 2019 at Harbor Healthcare of Ironton. There will be no services
held. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, is assisting the family with
arrangements.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

of Pleasant Plains, and
Charles (Terry) Broyles
of Florida; one brotherin-law; Gilbert Hamilton
and by one sister-in-law;
Camille Broyles.
Memorial services will
be with Pastor Morgan
McKinniss ofﬁciating.
Date is still to be determined. The family asks
in lieu of ﬂowers to share
a memory or photo, or
donate to the American
Cancer Society Central
Region Ofﬁce-GALL
5555 Frantz Road Dublin,
Ohio 43017.
An online guest registry is available at www.
waugh-halley-wood.com.

BOWERS
COLUMBUS — Donna S. Bowers,
74, of Columbus, formerly of Racine,
died Saturday, March 23, 2019 at her
residence.
Arrangements are being provided
by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Racine.

BIDWELL — Adell
Plymale Caldwell, 87,
Bidwell, passed away
peacefully at her home on
Friday, March 22, 2019.
She was born on April
17, 1931, Gallia County,
daughter of the late Estus
and Elsie Brucker Plymale.
Adell was a registered
nurse at Holzer for over
40 years, she was a member of the 1949 Class of
G.A.H.S., and a 1952
graduate of the Holzer
School of Nursing. Adell
was a member of First
Baptist Church in Gallipolis.
She was married to
Carroll Cline Caldwell
on Oct. 19, 1952 and he
preceded her in death on
Nov. 12, 2007. Adell, in
addition to her husband
and parents, was preceded in death by a son,

Carroll Cline Caldwell
Jr.; by a brother, Charles
Plymale; and a sister,
Marianna Tye.
Adell is survived by
her children, Cathy
Caldwell, Chris (Ginger)
Caldwell, Carlos (Brenda)
Caldwell, and Chip (Debbie) Caldwell; 10 grandchildren, Christy (Matt)
Randles, Cari (Travis)
Carter, Cayla (Ryan)
Watson, Carrie Wiseman,
Cody (Mindy) Caldwell,
Casee (Nick) George,
Matthew Caldwell,
Colby Caldwell, Caitlin
Caldwell, and Colton
Caldwell; in addition to
her ten grandchildren,
Adell was loved by her ﬁfteen great grandchildren;
three sisters, Luella Plymale, Louise Grover, and
Ruby (George) Kinder;
sister-in-law, Helen Plymale; and many nieces and

THEISS
RACINE — Bernice Theiss, 95,
Racine, died Friday, March 22, 2019.

nephews.
The funeral for Adell
Caldwell will be at 1 p.m.,
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Bob Hood
ofﬁciating with her burial
following in Ridgelawn
Cemetery. Friends may
call at Willis Funeral
Home on Monday, March
25, 2019 from 4-7 p.m.
Adell’s grandsons will
serve as her pallbearers.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family requests that donations be made in Adell’s
name to Holzer Hospice
at 2881 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
and/or to First Baptist
Church 1100 Fourth
Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Guests may visit www.
willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.

Funeral arrangements will be
announced at a later date by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Racine.

GAHS NHS members inducted
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Newly inducted and veteran Gallia Academy High School National
Honor Society members are, row one from left to right: Grace
Montgomery, Kirsten Hesson, Katie Queen, Timothy Hill, Reece
Thomas, Cade Roberts, Benjamin Cox, Brady Angel, Claire Hamilton,
Brooke Johnson, Macy Jones, and Abigail Johnson. Row two from
left to right: Megan Bailey, Peri Martin, Rebecca Sydenstricker,
Tessa Skinner, Barbara Wright, Eliza Davies, Morgan Loveday,
Bailey Meadows, and Alex Barnes. Row three from left to right:
Cory Call, Clay Montgomery, Elijah Baird, Brittany Masters, Mariah
Liberatore, Madalyn Williamson, Kiesla Kormanik, Cheyenne
McGuire, Ashton Webb, Taylor Burnette, and Bo Saxon. Row four
from left to right: Abigail Cremeans, Molly Fitzwater, Tea McCarley,
Morgan Stanley, Derek Henry, Gretchen McConnell, Elizabeth
Hoover, Ashley Turley, Taylor Staton, Haylee Polinsky, and Wyatt
Sipple. Row five from left to right are National Honor Society
Officers:Treasurer, Justin McClelland; Secretary, Katie Carpenter;
Vice-President, Cole Davis; President, Lane Pullins. Not Pictured:
Brett Sisson and Jenna Wood.

Newly inducted Gallia Academy High School students, row one from left to right,
are: Grace Montgomery, Kirsten Hesson, Katie Queen, Timothy Hill, Reece Thomas,
Cade Roberts, Benjamin Cox, Brady Angel, Claire Hamilton, Brooke Johnson, Macy
Jones, and Abigail Johnson. Row two from left to right are: Megan Bailey, Peri Martin,
Rebecca Sydenstricker, Tessa Skinner, Barbara Wright, Eliza Davies, Morgan Loveday,
Bailey Meadows, and Alex Barnes.

CENTENARY — Twenty-one
students from Gallia Academy High
School were inducted into membership of the National Honor Society in
an evening ceremony held in the Holzer Center for the Performing Arts
at Gallia Academy High School on
Thursday, March 7, 2019.
Members were selected by a faculty
council for meeting high standards
of scholarship, service, leadership,
and character. The National Honor
Society ranks as one of the oldest
and most prestigious national organizations for high school students.
Throughout the year, members of the
chapter serve as role models for other
students. In addition to the strong
academic records which established
their eligibility for membership,
chapter members are leaders in many
student organizations and serve the
school and community through many
activities. The GAHS chapter has
been active since 1929. Currently
there are 49 active members at GAHS.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Road Closure

ment will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
SUTTON TWP. — Meigs County Road 122, Roy
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
Jones Road, will be closed for approximately two
legal guardian. A $30 donation is appreciated for
weeks beginning Monday, March 25. This closing is
immunization administration; however, no one will
necessary in order for county forces to repair a slip.
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
The slip is located approximately 0.5 miles southwest
administration fee for state-funded childhood vacof Township Road 123, Snowball Hill Road.
cines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
insurance cards, if applicable. Those who are insured
open but restricted to one lane. Portable trafﬁc conPOMEROY — The Knights of Columbus will be
trollers are installed near the area of the slip. Please
sponsoring a Lenten Fish Fry on March 29 and April via commercial insurance are responsible for any balance their commercial insurance does not cover for
obey all signs and lights.
5 in the Sacred Heart Church basement from noon
vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are also available as
CHESTER — A bridge rehabilitation project begins to 7 p.m. The Church elevator is available.
well as ﬂu shots. Call for eligibility determination and
on March 25 on State Route 248 in Meigs County.
availability or visit our website at www.meigs-health.
The project is taking place between Bashan Road and
com to see a list of accepted commercial insurances
Locust Grove Road. One lane will be closed in this
and Medicaid for adults.
area and temporary trafﬁc signals will be in place.
RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande
The estimated completion date is June 15, 2019.
and Rio Grande Community College, in partnership with Gallia County Economic Development
and Gallia County Department of Job and Family
Services, will host the 2019 Spring Career Fair,
Students applying must be a Gallia resident,
April 2, from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. in the Lyne Center. enrolled in an accredited, nonproﬁt, technical or vocaRACINE — The 3rd annual Southern PTO Color
Over 35 companies from throughout the region will tional institute, community college, four-year college
provide students and the public an opportunity to
or university that offers an academic major related to
network and secure employment. For more informa- agriculture or natural resources. Students are asked
tion, please contact Kathy Musser at 740.245.7279.
to provide a letter of acceptance and proof of registraEmployers may register through March 27 at www.
tion. They must plan for a career focused in agriculrio.edu/career-fair.
ture or natural resources. If an applicant is in doubt
about their eligibility, they are encouraged to apply
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC
still. The ﬁnancial award is to be put towards tuition,
(USPS 436-840)
room and board, books or supplies and incidental
Telephone: 740-446-2342
BURLINGHAM — The trustees of the Burlingham expenses. The award is good for a year and not based
on ﬁnancial need. The application is due at the Gallia
Cemetery will soon begin spring cleaning. Families
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Soil and Water Conservation District Ofﬁce by 4 p.m.
with grave decorations that they would like to keep
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
the last business day of March. No late applications
should remove them no later than April 1st.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
RUTLAND TWP. — The Rutland Township Trust- will be accepted. The ofﬁce is located at 111 Jackson
Prices are subject to change at any time.
ees ask that all decorations be removed from cemeter- Pike, Suite 1569, Gallipolis, OH 45631. The ofﬁce can
also be contacted at 740-446-6173. Applications can
ies in Rutland Township from March 15 thru April
CONTACT US
be found at the ofﬁce.
10 for spring cleanup and preparations for mowing
season. Items should remain off until April 10.
CIRCULATION MANAGER
PUBLISHER
OLIVE TWP. — Cemetery Cleanup in Olive TownDerrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
ship will begin April 1st. Trustees are asking that all
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
ﬂowers and grave blankets be removed by the end of
The Gallia County Engineer, Brett A. Boothe, has
SPORTS EDITOR
EDITOR
March.
announced
that the annual Dust Patching and HerBryan Walters, Ext. 2101
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township cem- bicidal Opt-Out forms are now being accepted at the
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
etery annual cleanup will be from now until March
Engineer’s Ofﬁce. The Dust Patching form is required
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
31.
Please
remove
anything
you
wish
to
keep.
for those residents who would like to apply for mateJulia Schultz, Ext. 2104
SALISBURY TWP. — Salisbury Township Trustrials to be applied at a requested site to reduce the
jschultz@aimmediamidwest.com
ees Cemetery clean up takes place April 15th. If you
dust generated from trafﬁc on a stone county road.
would like to keep any items from the grave site
The Herbicidal Opt-Out form is required for those
please
remove
them
prior
to
this
date.
residents who do not want herbicidal spraying in spe825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
ciﬁc areas along county road right-of-ways and agree
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
to maintain those areas. Both forms may be picked up
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
at the Engineer’s Ofﬁce, 1167 State Route 160. The
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
deadline for submittal is May 1, annually.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health DepartRun, 5K run/walk will be held on Saturday, April 20
at Star Mill Park. Registration begins at 8 a.m., with
the run at 9 a.m. rain or shine. Preregistration ends
April 1. For more information contact Heather DailyJohnson at 740-949-4222 or heather.dailey-johnson@
southernlocal.net.

Fish Fry Fridays

Spring Career Fair

Raina Fulks Scholarship

Color Run

Cemetery Cleanup

Dust patching, herbicidal opt-out

Immunization clinic

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 24, 2019 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Tuberculosis: Still an important public health issue
Happy World TB Day!
Each year, March 24th is
designed to build public
awareness that tuberculosis remains an epidemic in much of the world,
causing the deaths of
nearly one-and-a-half
million people each year,
mostly in developing
countries. This annual
event commemorates the
date in 1882 when Dr.
Robert Koch announced
his discovery of Mycobacterium tuberculosis,
the bacillus that causes
tuberculosis (TB).
Still today, up to
13 million people in
the United States are
infected with latent TB,
which happens when a
person breathes in TB
bacteria, but his body is
able to ﬁght off the infection. This person has no
symptoms, doesn’t feel
sick, and cannot spread
TB bacteria to others,
but will usually have a
positive TB test. Without treatment, a person
with latent TB has a 5
to 10 percent chance of
developing full-blown
TB disease. Active TB
happens when a person’s
immune system cannot
ﬁght off the TB bacteria,
and this person usually
feels sick, and has symptoms that may include:
a bad cough that lasts
three weeks or longer,
pain in the chest, coughing up blood or sputum,
weakness or fatigue,
weight loss, no appetite,
chills, fever and sweating
at night. It is important
to note the one thing
that both latent TB and
active TB have in common is they both require
treatment.
Both latent TB and
exposure to active TB

are identiﬁed through
testing. The Mantoux
tuberculin skin test is
the test of which most
are familiar. This type of
testing was offered for
many years through the
Meigs County TB Clinic
levy, operated under the
Meigs County Commissioners. This levy was a
completely separate levy
from the Meigs County
Health Department
(MCHD) levy. Many
assumed this TB Clinic
was part of the health
department because both
businesses were housed
under the same roof.
This clinic was closed by
the County Commissioners on Dec. 31, 2016,
due to the speciﬁc language of the levy being
for treatment of patients
with tuberculosis and
not for the educational
and preventive services
that were being offered.
Our public health system and private providers play a crucial role in
the effort to identify and
control and eliminate TB
in the United States. As
it is our mission to preserve, promote, and protect the health and wellbeing of Meigs County,
the MCHD is currently
considering becoming
designated as the TB
Control Unit within
Meigs County. This
appointment, should it
occur, will come from
the Meigs County Commissioners as is designated by Ohio Revised
Code (ORC) 339.72.
So, you may ask, who
should be tested for
TB? You will ﬁnd that
some colleges and some
professions do require
a person to be tested.
These rules are set at

any of these high-risk
as hospitals, homeless
disease include
the discretion
areas, I encourage you
shelters, correctional
those have been
of each place of
recently infected facilities, nursing homes, to be tested for TB.
business. Often,
Presently, the MCHD
and residential homes
with TB bactehealthcare workfor those with HIV. Also refers residents to their
ria, including:
ers are required
at risk of developing TB primary care provider
close contacts
to be tested. TB
or other local health
disease include persons
of a person with
testing is usudepartment for testing.
with
medical
conditions
infectious
TB
ally a covered
Leanne
that weaken the immune A public announcement
disease; persons
service by priCunningham who have immi- system, such as: HIV
will be made should the
vate insurance
Contributing
infection (the virus that MCHD be designated as
grated
from
areas
and Medicaid.
columnist
of the world with causes AIDS), substance the County’s TB Control
You’ll recall that
high rates of TB; abuse, silicosis, diabetes, Unit.
it used to be all
For questions about
children less than 5 years severe kidney disease,
students entering kinTB, please visit https://
low body weight, organ
of age who have a posidergarten had to have
www.cdc.gov/tb/ or
tive TB test; groups with transplants, head and
a TB test. Because this
https://odh.ohio.gov/
neck cancer, medical
high rates of TB transwas no longer method
wps/portal/gov/odh/
treatments such as
mission, such as homeof detecting or preventknow-our—programs/
corticosteroids, and
less persons, injection
ing cases of childhood
TB, Ohio Administrative drug users, and persons specialized treatment for tuberculosis/TB_Welcome or call me at 740Code (OAC) 3701-15-04 with HIV infection; per- rheumatoid arthritis or
992-6626 Ext. 1032.
sons who work or reside Crohn’s disease (CDC,
“Tuberculin testing and
2016). If you, a family
examination in schools” with people who are at
Leanne Cunningham is the
high risk for TB in facili- member, or someone
was rescinded effective
Director Nursing at the Meigs
you
know
fall
within
September 1, 2008; thus, ties or institutions such
County Health Department.
schools no longer require
TB testing in teachers,
school bus drivers or
students. A strong recommendation, however,
to be tested would be for
any student or staff who
have lived outside the
US ﬁve years or longer
and whom have never
been tested. Restaurant
owners, food service
workers and fair booth
volunteers often ask if
they need tested for TB,
as this has been a longstanding practice. State
of Ohio Uniform Food
Safety Code (OAC 3717John Thomas, MD
1) does not address this;
General Surgeon
thus this decision is left
up to the owner/management of the establishment.
Meigs County has
had no conﬁrmed case
of TB since 2009. Ohio
Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in the US, and the
had 151 cases in 2017
while the US had 9,105
second leading cause of cancer death. It affects men and women of all
new cases diagnosed in
racial and ethnic groups, and is most often found in people 50 years or
that same period. Genolder. However incidence in those younger than 50 is on the rise.
erally, persons at high
risk of developing TB

Colonoscopy helps
ﬁnd cancer early
when treatment can
be most effective.

Colorectal Cancer Screening S A V E S L I V E S

Durst wins $50K Creative Communities
Scholarship to Ohio Christian University
CIRCLEVILLE —
Cole Durst will receive a
$10,000 per year scholarship toward tuition at
Ohio Christian University
and a $2,500 per year
stipend for work as an
intern in a ﬁeld aligned
with his major.
Durst, of Middleport,
is a senior at Meigs High
School.
The Creative Communities Scholarship
is based on academics,
character, service, leadership and the student has
to attend a school with
approximately 750 or
fewer students in grades
9-12.
Durst participated in
OCU’s Scholars Day, an
annual event for the university’s highest-achieving

Cole Durst

applicants to compete for
scholarships. Each student submitted an application, essay, reference
letter and participated in
an interview and mock
classes.
Ohio Christian University is committed to offering a complete education

that develops students
intellectually, professionally, and spiritually. OCU
offers degree programs
for residential undergraduate students, graduate
students, and adult and
online students.
Additionally, students
can participate in OnlinePlus which provides
undergraduate classes
online with the option of
participating in for-credit
enrichment experiences
on campus or abroad.
The Trailblazer Academy
allows high school students to complete college
classes. All programs are
designed to equip students to become leaders
in their careers, communities, families, and the
world.

“Colorectal
cancer is the
second-leading
cancer killer -but it doesn’t
have to be.
Colonoscopy
KHOSV�ÀQG�
cancer early
when treatment
can be most
effective.”
- John Thomas, MD
General Surgeon

If you’re 50 or older, getting a colorectal
cancer screening test could save your life.

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For more information or to schedule a
consultation at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
please call 304.675.1666.
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�Opinion
4A Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

YOUR VIEW

Reader recognizes
the first to respond

Dear Editor,
The ﬁreﬁghters, police and all other ﬁrst
responders should be commended for their
actions at the ﬁre (last) Sunday morning (in
Pomeroy). They train as much as possible and
are available all the time for such emergencies.
Although they are all from small departments,
they pulled together as one ﬁghting unit to keep
the citizens of Pomeroy safe and to keep the surrounding properties from total destruction.
Jerry L. Swift
Columbus, Ohio

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, March 24, the 83rd day of
2019. There are 282 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On March 24, 2015, Germanwings Flight 9525,
an Airbus A320, crashed into the French Alps,
killing all 150 people on board; investigators
said the jetliner was deliberately downed by the
27-year-old co-pilot.
On this date:
In 1765, Britain enacted the Quartering Act,
requiring American colonists to provide temporary housing to British soldiers.
In 1832, a mob in Hiram, Ohio, attacked,
tarred and feathered Mormon leaders Joseph
Smith Jr. and Sidney Rigdon.
In 1882, German scientist Robert Koch (kohk)
announced in Berlin that he had discovered the
bacillus responsible for tuberculosis.
In 1944, in occupied Rome, the Nazis executed
more than 300 civilians in reprisal for an attack
by Italian partisans the
day before that killed 32
Thought for
Today: “If merely German soldiers.
In 1955, the Tennessee
‘feeling good’
Williams play “Cat on a
could decide,
Hot Tin Roof” opened on
drunkenness
Broadway.
In 1958, Elvis Presley
would be the
was
inducted into the U.S.
supremely
Army at the draft board
valid human
in Memphis, Tennessee,
experience.”
before boarding a bus for
— William James, Fort Chaffee, Arkansas.
American (Presley underwent basic
psychologist (1842- training at Fort Hood,
1910). Texas, before being
shipped off to Germany.)
In 1976, the president
of Argentina, Isabel Peron, was deposed by her
country’s military. British war hero Field Marshal
Viscount Montgomery, 88, died in Alton, Hampshire, England.
In 1988, former national security aides Oliver
L. North and John M. Poindexter and businessmen Richard V. Secord and Albert Hakim pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from the IranContra affair. (North and Poindexter were convicted, but had their verdicts thrown out; Secord
and Hakim received probation after each pleaded
guilty to a single count under a plea bargain.)
In 1989, the supertanker Exxon Valdez (vahlDEEZ’) ran aground on a reef in Alaska’s Prince
William Sound and began leaking an estimated
11 million gallons of crude oil.
In 1995, after 20 years, British soldiers
stopped routine patrols in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
In 1998, two students, ages 13 and 11, opened
ﬁre outside Jonesboro Westside Middle School in
Arkansas, killing four classmates and a teacher.
(The gunmen were imprisoned by Arkansas until
age 18, then by federal authorities until age 21.)
In 1999, NATO launched airstrikes against
Yugoslavia, marking the ﬁrst time in its 50-year
existence that it had ever attacked a sovereign
country. Thirty-nine people were killed when ﬁre
erupted in the Mont Blanc tunnel in France and
burned for two days.
Ten years ago: In his second prime-time news
conference since taking ofﬁce, President Barack
Obama claimed early progress in his aggressive
campaign to lead the nation out of economic
chaos and declared that despite obstacles ahead,
“we’re moving in the right direction.” Citing
the AIG debacle, Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke, in a rare joint appearance before a
House committee, asked for unprecedented powers to regulate complex nonbank ﬁnancial institutions.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama began
a week of international travel as he arrived in
the Netherlands with Russia’s Crimean incursion at the top of his agenda. An Egyptian court
sentenced to death nearly 530 suspected backers
of ousted President Mohammed Morsi over a
deadly attack on a police station, capping a swift,
two-day mass trial in which defense attorneys
were not allowed to present their case. Five former employees of imprisoned ﬁnancier Bernard
Madoff were convicted at the end of a six-month
trial in New York that cast them as the long arms
of their boss.

THEIR VIEW

Regarding the river museum
As many of you already
know, the Point Pleasant River Museum and
Learning Center suffered
an electrical ﬁre last July
that destroyed the roof
and third ﬂoor, along
with the accompanying
water damage throughout most of the interior.
As another organization
currently taking form,
searching for a home,
and considering things
like exhibit, library, and
ofﬁce space, we, at the
Mason County Historical
and Preservation Society,
sympathize with their
needs going forward.
However, we also feel a
need to speak out regarding this proposed demolition plan and what we
view as, quite simply, a
rushed process.
Starting with the ﬁrst
reports following the ﬁre,
it was initially reported
the building was in relatively good condition and
could likely be saved.
As is usually the case
with old buildings, this
changed following more
detailed inspections by
both the insurance ﬁrm
and Burgess &amp; Niple, an
architecture and engineering ﬁrm. The building was found to be structurally unsafe, as it currently stands. Following
this determination, both
the museum and Point
Pleasant City Council
(the city of Point Pleasant owns the building)
began moving forward
with a plan to demolish
the current building and
construct a new one on
the same site. This is
when we ﬁrst began to
get involved, with Historical and Preservation
Society Director Kyle
McCausland attending
the meetings, and both
he and I reaching out to
various council members.
The original proposal
was, as was described at
past meetings and relayed
to me by McCausland,
“essentially a warehouse.”
This has since been
updated to a brick building that “strongly resembles the old one.”
Problem #1- According to Councilman Gabe
Roush, the insurance
ﬁrm’s report, ﬁnished
last fall, was not distributed to the council until
February 13th. Council
had reportedly received
the report of their own
engineer, from Burgess &amp;
Niple, just two days earlier at the regular February

Built around 1870,
11th council meetthe building was a
ing. We understand Chris
dry goods store for
that it takes time
Rizer
to process these
Contributing decades. But why
is it all the way
reports and gather columnist
down there, blocks
the various parties
away from the core
for review. Yet, this
underscores the Society’s of the business district?
feeling that plans regard- The dry goods stores
farther up Main never
ing the demolition were
survived as long. Lookrushed, having been
ing at historic maps, the
discussed last fall, well
area between has always
before the reports were
ﬁnalized and distributed. been residential or comTruly, the 6 council mem- munity space, so why is it
all by itself? The answer
bers approached by the
Society over the last two is simple, really. The
weeks all agreed that this success of the dry goods
store was tied directly to
process has been rushed
and placed many of them the old wharf at the end
in a tough spot. Shouldn’t of Main Street and easy
access to the hundreds of
potential oversights or
steamboats that traveled
mistakes be addressed?”
Problem #2- That leads the Ohio and Kanawha
rivers. Thus, the building
us to the second issue.
Further debate, or bring- itself is a part of Point
Pleasant’s river history.
ing in an engineer with
Add to this the fact
experience in historic
that most of Point Pleasbuildings, would likely
ant’s historic district was
add about two months
to the project. This delay rebuilt following ﬁres in
the 1890s, and the buildis seen as unacceptable
ing takes on even greater
as the river museum has
important. Of the comalready been closed for
mercial buildings in the
nearly 9 months and,
district, this is one of the
according to statements
made by the architectural only surviving examples
that dates to before 1890.
ﬁrm and relayed to me
by McCausland, it will be It is also the only visual
another 18 months before connection between the
the new building is ready. core business district and
Is an additional 2 months Tu-Endie-Wei (hidden
from the main historic
really a deal breaker in a
district by the ﬂoodwall).
27-month project?
Problem #3 - A project Perhaps more important
though, the loss of this
that saves the building
building would put us solwould qualify for the
idly at 25 percent of the
Historic Tax Credit, and
district lost. Add to that
as this is a roughly $1.5
million project, we’re talk- the buildings altered to
the point that they no loning about over $600,000
ger meet National Regisin additional funding.
The application could be ter standards and the loss
the buildings outside the
sent in as work is ongoﬂoodwall due to the loss
ing if done correctly,
of visual connectivity, and
adding no additional
we are well over 1/3rd of
time to the project. Yet
the district delisted. Such
on Wednesday, the City,
extreme loss of integrity
with the support of the
could, potentially, bring
Museum, voted to conabout a new survey of
tinue with the current
the district and lead to
plan and abandon any
either new boundaries, or
chance of getting those
tax credits. Why? What is in a worst-case scenario,
the downside? For a rela- complete delisting. We
tively small building, the urge both the City and
rehabilitation and demo/ Museum to remember
that this debate isn’t just
rebuilding costs won’t
be far apart, especially if about one building. This
they now plan on rebuild- demolition could impact
the National Register
ing a replica of the old
listing, tax credit eligibilbuilding. And, even if it
were to increase the cost, ity, grant eligibility, and
$600,000 would certainly much more across the
entire district.
cover the difference.
Finally, a rebuttal to
This building is too
a reported statement
important to the history
of Point Pleasant, Mason made at Wednesday’s city
council meeting. It is true
County, and indeed, the
that people come to Point
Ohio River Valley, for
Pleasant for the unique
the Historical Society to
stay silent on this project. experience we offer. They

come for Tu-Endie-Wei,
the River Museum, and
the Mothman Museum.
But, what do all of those
things have in common?
They’re all a part of our
history, and anyone who
is coming here for the history is expecting the “historic experience.” Now,
somebody please answer
this question for me. If
tourists are expecting
that experience, do you
really think they’ll keep
coming once that history
is gone? It’s no secret
that Tu-Endie-Wei is one
of the least visited state
parks, otherwise the state
wouldn’t threaten to sell
it off every few years, and
it will stay that way if we
continue this path.
Now, we aren’t one to
suggest something without at least proposing a
few potential solutions.
Preferably, we would like
to see as much of the
building saved as possible.
Thus, the ﬁrst option
should be to examine
whether the current
building can be reinforced
with a structural steel
frame. This is a very
common solution and
was mentioned by both
engineers that have surveyed the building, and
this is the only option
that would qualify for the
Historic Tax Credit.
If that is not possible,
or the cost is too high,
then option two is what
preservation typically
calls a “facade-ectomy.”
Save the original walls
fronting Main and 1st
Streets and tie those
walls to the new building.
Essentially, the two historic walls would shield
the new building.
The ﬁnal option, as
far as we are concerned,
would be to salvage as
much original brick as
possible during demolition and reconstruct at
least the Main and 1st
Street walls using that
original material. This
would also include saving
the current storefront and
other key architectural
features.
Complete loss, as is
currently proposed, is
simply not acceptable.
This statement signed,
and unanimously
endorsed, by the Mason
County Historical and
Preservation Society
Board of Directors.
Chris Rizer is president of the
Mason County Historical and
Preservation Society.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

deputies located a stolen Beretta handgun, a
stolen Arctic Cat ATV,
along with suspected
From page 1A
methamphetamine
and prescription pills.
the stolen vehicle and
Some of the stolen
located it on School
property that was
House Road in Long
Bottom, where a search recovered also has ties
to the recent break-ins
warrant was obtained
in the Pageville area.
with the assistance of
After locating the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James alleged stolen items
K. Stanley due to other and narcotics, deputies
arrested David J. Cline,
stolen property being
suspected at the home. 47, of Long Bottom.
Sheriff Wood states
Upon execution of
that Cline is currently
the search warrant

Stolen

Card shower
GALLIPOLIS — Violet Halley will be celebrating
her 95th birthday on April 1, cards may be mailed to
her at 1100 Sunset Dr., Gallipolis, OH 45631.

Sunday, March 24
RUTLAND — Jerry and Diane Frederick will be
singing at 10:30 a.m. at the Rutland United Methodist
Church.

Monday, March 25
POMEROY — Book Club Meeting: Read and discuss Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale
Hurston at 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Refreshments are served.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. in the ofﬁce
located at 97 North Second Avenue, Suite 2, Middleport.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board will be held at 3:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
GALLIPOLIS — The District Advisory Council of
Gallia County General Health District will meet at 7
p.m. in the conference room of the Gallia County Service Center, 49 Jackson Pike.

ple of our great county
by seizing the property
and getting it back to
its rightful owners”.
The Meigs County
Prosecutor James
Stanley stated that
“The Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
continues to work hard,
following every lead,
and that hard work
pays off with solving
crimes and recovering
stolen property for the
victims.”
Information from the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce.

being held in the Middleport Jail pending his
initial appearance in
Meigs County Court.
“The search warrant
operation was a success
and I am pleased with
the stolen property my
ofﬁce has recovered
and the narcotics that
were seized,” stated
Sheriff Wood. “This
investigation just goes
to show that we have
once again closed the
door on another individual that preys upon
the hard-working peo-

Olympiad
From page 1A

respective events were
the following: Ella Carleton and Juli Durst
in Disease Detective;
Lilly Suttle and Seth
Collins in Herpetology;
Ella Carleton and Jacob
Spencer in Meteorology;
and Grant Martin and
Seth Collins in Mystery
Architecture.
Team 1 members were
Trent Morrissey, Lane
Barber, Ella Carleton,
Juli Durst, Savannah Barnes, Brayden
O’Brien, Seth Collins,
Sydney Reynolds, Trey
Hill, Grant Martin,
Jacob Spencer, Hayley
Sanders, Koen Sellers,
Lilly Suttle and Kyra
Zuspan.
Team 2 members
were Olivia Harris,

Tuesday, March 26
POMEROY — The Oh-Kan Coin Club will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Farmers Bank in Pomeroy.

Thursday, March 28
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet at 6 p.m. at the Carleton
School in Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone is welcome.
Please come and join us in discussing how we can
make money to support our local candidates. We will
welcome any and all input.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at the district
ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial Drive,
Suite D, Pomeroy.
GALLIPOLIS — Community Lenten Services, noon
at Grace United Methodist, Father Hamm of St. Louis
Catholic is anticipated to speak.

Courtesy photo

Eastern Science Olympiad students are pictured following the trophy presentation at the recent
competition.

Emma Epling, Abby
Guthrie, Aszandra
Schultz, Breanna Nelson, Kendyl Householder, Peyton Buckley,

Hope Reed and Ethan
Short.
The teams are led by
teacher Krista Johnson.
The stat competition

is to take place on April
27 in Columbus.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

SUNDAY EVENING

Friday, March 29

BROADCAST

MIDDLEPORT — The Riverbend Arts Council, in
partnership with the Meigs Marauder Band, will host
Jazz in the Village featuring Matt James and the Ohio
University Jazz Ensemble from 7:30-10:30 p.m. at the
River Bend Arts Council, 190 North Second Avenue,
Middleport. Tickets are available at King Hardware,
Clark’s Jewelry and from Meigs Band Students. The
band will receive a portion of tickets sales from the
tickets purchased from band members.
GALLIPOLIS — National Vietnam Veterans Recognition Day Parade starts at 1 p.m. Line up is outside
of Duke’s Cleaners. A free lunch will be held at 134
Third Avenue after, hosted by VFW 4464. The event
is sponsored by Vietnam Veterans of America, Chapter 709, VFW 4464 and American Legion Post 27.

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CABLE

lia Academy Symphonic
Band traveled to Boston,
Mass. with the World
Strides organization. The
From page 1A
Madrigals earned a Gold
1st Place rating in their
category. The students
to give kids the opportuwill perform with approxinity of a lifetime.
mately 400 other students
“We started the Madfrom all over the nation
rigals Take Manhattan
while in New York City
campaign and the comthis weekend.
munity really got behind
When it’s all said and
us,” Phillips said.
This weekend, the Mad- done, and the Madrigals
rigals and their entourage are traveling back to Gallia County, Phillips said
of around 60 adults, are
touring Radio City Music her hope is “that they
Hall, including backstage realize what an honor it is
to receive the gift of peraccess and attending a
performance of “Wicked” forming at Carnegie Hall
on Broadway, in addition but that music is more
than just singing, it’s
to attending rehearsals
for their performance on more about connection.”
Phillips said she hopes
Sunday. Choir members
this trip is one her stuwill be rehearsing with
dents will remember and
acclaimed composer
talk about to their chiland conductor Andre
dren and even grandchilThomas. The group will
dren. She also said she
also be visiting the 9/11
wants the group members
Memorial.
As previously reported, to learn the value of having a goal and knowing
the students earned the
with hard work, you can
opportunity to perform
reach it.
at Carnegie Hall after
competing in the Boston
Heritage Festival last year Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio Valley
Publishing.
when they and the Gal-

Hall

Sunday, March 24, 2019 5A

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Poker Night Poker Heartland Tour
SportsCenter (N)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
H.S. BasketC. ‘18 Jam Fest NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
My Husband's Secret Life (2018, Drama) Kara Killmer.
Married to a Murderer (2018, Suspense) Aaron Arnold,
(:05) A Daughter's
TV14
Austin Arnold, Anna Hutchison. TV14
Deception TV14
(:10)
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York A boy finds himself all
(:50)
Ghostbusters (‘84, Com) Harold Ramis, Bill Murray. Three
alone in New York City and sets out to foil two bumbling burglars. TVPG parapsychologists open a ghost removal business in New York. TVPG
Bar Rescue "Mandala
Bar Rescue "Bikini Bust"
Bar Rescue "Crappy
Bar Rescue "Phising for
Bar Rescue "Owner on the
Down"
Cantina"
Answers"
Run"
H.Danger
The Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards
Ice Age: The Meltdown Ray Romano. TVPG
The Office
The Office
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Blinded" Law&amp;O: SVU "Unstable"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Bombshell" Law&amp;O: SVU "Delinquent" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Smoked"
The Big Bang The Big Bang NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament Second Round (L)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
Tricky Dick (N)
The Bush Years (N)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament (L)
NCAA Basketball Division I Tournament Second Round (L)
(5:50) Dead
(:55) The Walking Dead
(:55) The Walking Dead "Scars" A family
The Walking Dead "The Calm Before" (N) (:25) Into the
"Guardians" "Chokepoint"
deals with the secrets of a traumatic event.
Badlands (N)
Naked "Trouble in Paradise" Naked "Threesome" (N)
Naked and Afraid "Stomping Grounds" (N)
Alaskan Bush People (N)
(5:00)
Armageddon (1998, Adventure) Liv Tyler, Ben
American Gangster (‘07, Cri) Russell Crowe, Denzel Washington. A detective
Affleck, Bruce Willis. TV14
works to bring down a heroin kingpin smuggling drugs into 1970s America. TVMA
The Zoo
The Zoo: Bronx Tales (N)
The Zoo (N)
Evan Goes Wild (N)
Dodo Heroes
Snapped "Uloma CurryIn Ice Cold Blood "Menage- Snapped "Eugenia
Snapped "Uloma CurryAccident, Suicide "The
Walker" (N)
a-Murder"
Campbell"
Walker"
Sinister Minister"
Law &amp; Order "Deceit"
Law &amp; Order "Atonement" Law &amp; Order "Slave"
Law &amp; Order "Girlfriends" Law &amp; Order "Pro Se"
(4:30) No Strings Attached
10 Things I Hate About You Heath Ledger. TV14 Total Bellas (N)
Very Cavallari (N)
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Monster Fish "Green
Monster Fish "Giant
Wicked Tuna "Family
Wicked Tuna "Wreck It
Primal Survivor "Deadly
Goliath"
Goonch"
Feuds" (N)
Ralph" (N)
Jungle" (N)
FIS Skiing U.S. Grand Prix
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Colorado Avalanche at Chicago Blackhawks (L)
(:45) Overtime
Boxing Premier Champions (L)
Boxing Premier Champions (L)
World Surf League (N)
The Bible "In the Beginning/ Exodus"
The Bible "Homeland/ Kingdom" Joshua conquers Jericho. (:05) The Bible "Survival/
Hope"
Housewives Atlanta
Atlanta "The Model Bride" Housewives Atlanta (N)
Married to Med L.A. (N)
Watch (N)
Don't Tardy
(5:05)
The Family That Preys Alfre Woodard. TV14
Finding Justice (N)
American Injustice (N)
American Soul
House Hunt. House
House Hunt. House Hunt. Beach (N)
Beach (N)
Life (N)
Life (N)
Med. Life (N) Med. Life (N)
(5:50)
Fast and Furious (2009, Action) Paul Walker,
Fast Five (‘11, Act) Vin Diesel. The crew find themselves on the
(:45) The Fast
Jordana Brewster, Vin Diesel. TVPG
wrong side of the law as they try to get out of Brazil. TVPG
&amp; the ...

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Case Against Adnan
Green Zone (‘10, The Meg (2018, Action) Ruby Rose, Bingbing Li, Jason
(:10) The Case Against
400 (HBO) Action) Said Faraj, Matt
Statham. After a research vessel is attacked, a prehistoric Syed (N)
Adnan Syed
Damon, Yigal Naor. TVMA shark is found in the ocean's depths. TV14
(4:25) Me,
(:25) Snatched Amy Schumer. A mother and
True Lies (1994, Action) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tom Arnold,
(:25)
450 (MAX) Myself and daughter are forced to get over their
Jamie Lee Curtis. A secret agent puts his family at risk when they discover Getaway
Irene TVMA differences when they are kidnapped. TVMA his true identity. TV14
TVPG
Billions "Chucky Rhoades's SMILF "Sex Black
Action Explore the
SMILF (N)
Billions "Arousal Template" Black
500 (SHOW) Greatest Game"
Makes It Less Monday
legalization of sports
Axe hits it off with a venture Monday "2"
"7042"
(N)
Formal"
gambling. (P) (N)
capitalist. (N)
(5:05)

Dr. Vaidya welcomes
new patients:

OH-70111936

Charleston Area Medical Center welcomes
Shrikant K. Vaidya, MD, to its medical staff
Dr. Vaidya joins the CAMC medical staff specializing in urology. Dr. Vaidya completed a
urology residency at Mercy Hospital. He is certified by the American Board of Urology.

CAMC Urology Teays Valley
3825 Teays Valley Road,
Suite 100
Hurricane, WV 25526
Phone: (304) 757-0050

Dr. Vaidya joins more than 700
physicians practicing at CAMC.

�A long the River
6A Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Celebrating all on St. Patrick’s Day
A March tradition
in Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS — Everyone is technically Irish
in downtown Gallipolis
when the annual St. Patrick’s Day Cultural Parade
takes place, the only
parade of its kind in the
readership area.
The ﬁfth annual parade
stepped off last Saturday
on Second Avenue, full
of leprechauns, pageant
queens, Shriners, ﬁrst
responders, a shamrock,
antique cars, roller derby
athletes and a vehicle
with two deer heads
duct-taped near the windshield.
Organized by The Artisan Shoppe in Gallipolis,
it’s meant to celebrate
not only the Irish, but
cultures and people from
everywhere. The inclusive
celebration is also a fundraiser to support cultural
arts non-proﬁt work in
the community by The
Artisan Shoppe.
The parade was started
by Kelsey Kerr and her
mother Valerie Thomas,
of The Artisan Shoppe,
after having spent time
living in Orlando, Fla.
According to Kerr, both
have a strong Celtic back-

ground. Kerr learned to
Irish dance in Florida.
Previously, Kerr told
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, “every year we were
involved in the Winter
Park’s Saint Patrick’s Day
Parade and there was a
show after. We thought
it was a nice thing and
celebrating the holiday in
general. When we moved
here back to mom’s hometown, we noticed there
wasn’t anything celebrating Saint Patrick’s Day.
We thought that needed
to change and that this
would be a good opportunity to start a parade…”
Saint Patrick’s Day, also
called the Feast of Saint
Patrick, is traditionally
held March 17 and serves
as a religious and cultural
celebration recognizing
the death date of Saint
Patrick. The Christian
feast day is observed by
the Catholic Church, the
Eastern Orthodox Church
and the Anglican CommuPhotos by Beth Sergent | OVP
nion Church to remember With the Gallipolis Police Department leading the way, the VFW Post #4464 Honor Guard carries the colors and begins the St. Patrick’s
the introduction of Chris- Day Cultural Parade in Gallipolis.
tianity in Ireland and
Irish culture.
Beth Sergent and Dean Wright
contributed to this article.

The Gallipolis Shriners and their mini cars are always a parade favorite.

A shamrock from Need A Lift Transportation.

Employees and representatives from Holzer Health System walk The familiar banner of the St. Patrick’s Day Cultural Parade.
in the parade.

Everyone was following this leprechaun on Second Avenue.

Members of the Gallipolis Shrine Club.

Holzer Health System representatives get in the holiday spirit. This young man was sure to wear his green in the parade.

Two deer heads and some duct tape were This antique vehicle makes a St. Patrick’s Day
sure to make heads turn, and smiles delivery.
appear, when this vehicle appearead on the
parade route.

River Recreation Festival Queen Sydnee Runyon shows support for the parade.

Teen Miss Gallipolis In Lights Kenzie Long supports This fireman gave children “high fives” along the parade
route, leading a long line of first responders in the parade.
the parade.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 24, 2019 7A

COLLEGE NEWS AND NOTES

Jazz in the Village coming to Middleport

Hollingsworth receives
Residency Match
ROOTSTOWN — As they opened their envelopes during National Match Day at noon, Friday, March 15, fourth-year College of Medicine
students at Northeast Ohio Medical University
learned where they will continue their medical
training as resident physicians following graduation in May. Parker Hollingsworth of Gallipolis
will be heading to Brigham &amp; Women’s Hospital
in Boston, Mass., for a residency in MedicinePreliminary. As they have each year, NEOMED
students were matched with some of the best
hospitals in the nation including Mayo Clinic
(Rochester, Minnesota), Cleveland Clinic, CedarsSinai Medical Center (Los Angeles) and UPMC
(Pittsburgh), as well as many others in Ohio
and beyond. Several students also matched with
military medical centers, including Walter Reed
National Military Medical Center in Maryland,
Madigan Army Medical Center in the state of
Washington and Tripler Army Medical Center
in Hawaii. “Match is a celebration of our students’ success,” said Elisabeth H. Young M.D.
(‘85), FACP, dean of the College of Medicine.
“The caliber of which our students matched was
exceptional in an increasingly competitive arena.
I am thrilled that our students will be working
to improve the health and quality of life of the
communities of Ohio. It speaks volumes about
the health systems that we have in Northeast
Ohio that so many of our students choose to stay
here to practice.” Hollingsworth is among 148
students — 6.5 percent more than last year —
from NEOMED’s Class of 2019. Students began
applying for residency programs at the beginning of their fourth year. Throughout the fall and
early winter, applicants interview with programs.
From mid-January to late February, applicants
and program directors rank each other in order
of preference and submit the preference lists to
National Resident Matching Program, which processes them using a computerized mathematical
algorithm to match applicants with programs. For
more information about the graduates and their
residency matches, please visit neomed.edu.

Courtesy photo

The Riverbend Arts Council, in partnership with the Meigs Marauder Band, will host Jazz in the Village featuring Matt James and the Ohio
University Jazz Ensemble from 7:30-10:30 p.m. on Friday, March 29, at the River Bend Arts Council, 190 North Second Avenue, Middleport.
The event will be an evening of Jazz, Swing, Big Band, and Dance Music. Tickets are available at King Hardware, Clark’s Jewelry and from
Meigs Band Students. The band will receive a portion of tickets sales from the tickets purchased from band members. Refreshments
will be served.

years of law enforcement
experience having also
worked with the Middleport Police Department
From page 1A
and the Gallia-Meigs
Major Crimes Task Force.
Sgt. King was previa positive change for the
ously a sergeant with the
department, said Wood,
Pomeroy Police Departwith everyone adjusting
ment before joining the
to the change.
Meigs County Sheriff’s
“It is nice to have
Ofﬁce in 2013. Later
someone who can focus
in 2013, King became
on investigations 40
the ofﬁce’s K-9 handler,
hours a week whether it
joined by partner K-9
would have been myself
Bax. King and Bax conor someone else,” said
tinue to work together
Stewart. He noted that
nearly six years later.
in the normal role of a
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Bax, who will turn nine
deputy with the sheriff’s
Sgt. Brandy King, Sheriff Keith Wood and Investigator Sgt. Frank this year, is expected to
ofﬁce there is not time
Stewart
retire from his role with
to devote to investigathe work of both Stewart the sheriff’s ofﬁce later
that with the transfer of
tions without having to
and King is earning their this year said Sheriff
go on transports or other Stewart to investigator
Wood. An exact time
promotions.
calls which may take the it opened up a sergeant
“I am proud of both of frame for the retirement
position. The opening
deputy away from the
has not yet been deterthem… they care about
was posted to those in
investigation for a long
mined. A second canine
the community and care
the ofﬁce, with King
period of time.
joined the sheriff’s ofﬁce
about making the comWood said that Stewart coming in at the top in
munity safer,” said Wood, last year with K-9 Cheri
testing, background and
has already been workworking with Deputy
adding that both have a
ing with the Gallia-Meigs the interview process,
Tylun Campbell.
strong work ethic and
Major Crimes Task Force said Wood.
With more than 14
have the ability to motiWood stated that he
on some cases, as well as
years in law enforcement,
vate those around them
is not sure if King was
working on a cold case
King said she is excited
to work harder.
with BCI. He will also be the ﬁrst female deputy
Investigator Sgt. Stew- about the promotion and
or road ofﬁcer for the
looking into some other
the opportunity to furart joined the sheriff’s
ofﬁce’s older cases which county, but that she has
excelled to the point that ofﬁce in September 2017 ther her career.
remain unsolved, some
and was promoted to
she has now earned the
for decades.
sergeant in the Spring of Sarah Hawley is the managing
promotion to sergeant.
As for the promoeditor of The Daily Sentinel.
2018. Stewart has nine
Sheriff Wood praised
tion of King, Wood said

Officers

Capital U. announces
Dean’s List for Fall 2018
BEXLEY — Megan Douglas, of Coolville, Ohio
was named to the Dean’s List at Capital University
for the fall 2018 semester. In order to be named to
the Dean’s List, full-time, degree-seeking students
must have achieved a grade point average of at
least 3.5.

Columbus State Community
College Dean’s List

still has a future with the
district as plans are being
discussed.
“We’ve been looking
into different types of
grants,” said Wright.
“We’ve reached out to
Congressman Bill Johnson as well as some of our
alumni.”
School ofﬁcials and
athletic booster members
thanked previous efforts
and donations made by
the community in support
of the previous project,
the results of which
ultimately produced blueprints as well as other statistical information. They
also thanked supporters
of the Eastman Athletic
Complex and a previous donation to the One
Dream, One Team Project
by Ohio Valley Bank of
roughly $100,000.
Plans for new GAHS
sport facilities have
reportedly been discussed
as far back as the late
2000s.

COLUMBUS — The following students have
been named to the 2018 Autumn Semester Dean’s
List at Columbus State Community College. To be
named to the Dean’s List, a student must achieve
a grade point average (GPA) of 3.5 or higher and
be enrolled for six or more credit hours.
From Pomeroy, Michael Blaettnar (Skilled
Trades Technology), Brandon Grueser (Skilled
Trades Technology), James Hubbard (Skilled
Trades Technology), Weston Zirkle (Skilled
Trades Technology).
From Racine, Dyllan Roush (Skilled Trades
Technology).
From Shade, Shawna Black.

HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH
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MARCH 24 at 6pm
MARCH 25-27 at 7pm
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Dean Wright can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2103.

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BEXLEY — Capital University is pleased to
announce its President’s List honorees for the
fall 2018 semester. Local students named to the
President’s List were Hope Diehl of Pomeroy and
Koleton Carter of Thurman. Capital has three lists
denoting academic distinction among full-time,
degree-seeking students: the President’s List, Provost’s List, and Dean’s List. The President’s List
indicates the highest level of academic distinction.
To be named to the President’s List, students
must have achieved a grade point average of at
least 3.85.

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GAHS

in the area.
“The STEM room
would be one big area to
be utilized for technology
projects,” said Wright.
“Not just for students at
the high school but we
can transport students
from the middle school
and elementary schools
for their use. It would
give us a very functional
facility to get some of
those things done...This
isn’t just a football stadium either. It’s a multisport facility. We would
like to see our programs
in here.”
Wright said facilities
were aging at Memorial
Field in Gallipolis and
it was hard to accommodate multiple sports
needs there currently.
Community members
outside the school have
brought forward concerns
with ﬂooding and maintenance in the past. The
ﬁeld recently celebrated
70 years of existence and
has long been an icon in
Gallia Academy athletics.
Wright said the facility

OH-70109899

for their physical ﬁtness
needs, as well as an
educational facility for
adult education classes,
From page 1A
community meetings, and
an adult training center…
According to an
The estimated cost of the
informational letter
ﬁrst phase is $1,250,000
provided by the
without the second ﬂoor.
superintendent that
The proposed Phase Two
has been sent to some
of GAHS Stadium Project
alumni, “Phase One of
the proposed project is to will be the construction
of the football stadium
build a fully functioning
itself to include home and
20,000 square foot ﬁeld
visitor bleachers, football
house with classrooms.
ﬁeld, scoreboard, etc.
The 10,000 square foot
The estimated cost of
ﬁrst ﬂoor is presently
designed to accommodate Phase Two has been set at
$3,000,000. This brings
the athletic needs
the total cost of the
(dressing rooms, weight
project to approximately
training, restrooms,
$4,250,000 and closer
showers, ofﬁcers,
to $5,000,000 with the
storage, etc.) of all the
educational second ﬂoor.”
athletics at GAHS, as
Blueprints have already
well as a concession and
been completed and the
restroom facility which
stadium is designed to ﬁt
will serve all sporting
around the current track
events at the Eastman
at the GAHS property,
Athletic Complex. This
said Wright. Currently,
complex now includes
the project is focused on
ball ﬁelds, tennis courts,
creating the ﬁeld house
and an all season track.
portion in its ﬁrst phase,
The potential second
along with a second story
story of the ﬁeld house
tier for the STEM techwould provide our
students with classrooms nology facility above it.
The hope is to generate
and conference rooms
momentum and support
equipped with advanced
for the project and tackle
technology. These
portions of the overall
rooms would serve
stadium construction in
the instructional and
phases. STEM room costs
educational needs
will have to be appraised
of our students with
as they were not included
strong focus for science,
in the original stadium
technology, engineering
design. School ofﬁcials
and medicine. Both
hope to meet the educaaspects of this facility
tional needs of students
would be utilized by the
with businesses already
adult school community

Capital U. announces
President’s List for Fall 2018

570 Grant Street
Middleport, Ohio
Sunday School 10am
Worship 11am
Pastor Ron Branch

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OHIO BRIEFS

Abortion ban
delayed
CINCINNATI (AP) —
A judge is temporarily
blocking part of a new
Ohio law that bans the
abortion method of dilation and evacuation in
most cases.
Senior U.S. District
Judge Michael Barrett
in Cincinnati stopped
short of saying whether
the procedure commonly
used in second-trimester
abortions is unconstitutional. He says he wants

eral’s ofﬁce is defending
the law’s constitutionality and asked Barrett to
reconsider.

to hear more from both
sides in a pending lawsuit
before deciding that.
The lawsuit by Planned
Parenthood argues the
ban is unconstitutional
because it puts an undue
burden on women seeking abortions after about
15 weeks of pregnancy.
The ban signed last
year by then-Gov. John
Kasich took effect Friday,
but Barrett’s Thursday
order blocks enforcement
of it in certain circumstances for two weeks.
The Ohio attorney gen-

was 4.5 percent.
It also remains higher
than the national unemployment rate, which was
3.8 percent, down from
4 percent in January and
4.1 percent last February.
The Ohio Department
of Job and Family Services says the state’s nonCOLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — State ofﬁcials say agricultural wage and salOhio’s seasonally adjusted ary employment dropped
by 8,200 from January to
unemployment rate in
February was 4.6 percent. February.
The agency says job
That is down slightly
from 4.7 percent in Janu- losses were reported in
sectors including conary but up from a year
struction, manufacturing,
ago, when the state rate

Jobless rate
drops a bit

PRIME
INVESTMENT
ACCOUNT

1.39%

The Gallia Academy High School Alumni Association has established a scholarship program which
awards two one time $1,000 scholarships to current
GAHS graduating seniors. Awards are based on
ﬁnancial need, scholastic achievement and leadership qualities. All amounts awarded will be paid
directly to the college or university of the applicants
choice. Applications are available in the school guidance ofﬁce or online at the GAHS website. Complete
applications are due April 26.

Emancipation Scholarship

700 West Main Street

The Gallia County Emancipation Celebration Committee announces the 2019 Emancipation Scholarship application and instructions are available online
at www.emancipation-day.com/node/19 and must
be submitted by mail with a postmark no later than
April 15, 2019 to Gallia County Emancipation Proclamation Scholarship Fund, P O Box 511, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Any questions please contact Emancipation President Andy Gilmore at 740-446-7611.

740-992-2357
Prime Investment is a money market account so certain transaction restrictions will apply. A $10,000.00
minimum initial deposit is required to open this account. Rate is indexed to the New York Prime Rate (NYP) and
is determined by multiplying 25% (.25) of the current NYP as published in the Wall Street Journal. (Example:
As of 12/20/18, NYP Rate = 5.50%, account balance of $10,000 or more would earn a rate of 1.38% and an
annual percentage yield (A.P.Y.) of 1.39%). A monthly service fee will be assessed if the average monthly
balance falls below $10,000.00. A monthly statement fee will be assessed if you receive statements by mail,
no fee if you receive statements electronically. Fees may reduce earnings. First order of 20 checks is free.
Transfers to third parties are limited to 6 per month. Terms and rates are subject to change.

OH-70109756

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

33°

53°

55°

A shower or two this afternoon. Occasional rain
and drizzle tonight. High 63° / Low 48°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Friday
Month to date/normal
Year to date/normal

Snowfall

Trace
1.60/2.78
10.78/8.82

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal

0.0
2.4/3.0
7.3/21.9

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:26 a.m.
7:44 p.m.
none
9:55 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mar 27

New

Apr 5

First

Full

Apr 12 Apr 19

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

Major
Today 3:14a
Mon. 4:11a
Tue. 5:07a
Wed. 6:01a
Thu. 6:52a
Fri.
7:40a
Sat.
8:25a

Minor
9:27a
10:24a
11:20a
12:14p
12:40a
1:28a
2:13a

Major
3:40p
4:37p
5:33p
6:26p
7:17p
8:05p
8:49p

Minor
9:52p
10:50p
11:46p
---1:05p
1:52p
2:37p

WEATHER HISTORY
Kansas City, Mo., already knows the
danger of severe spring thunderstorms and tornadoes. However, on
March 24, 1912, 25 inches of snow
accumulated in 24 hours.

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

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
62/46
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
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.

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

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

Level
12.73
17.34
21.93
12.60
12.70
24.76
12.09
26.83
34.67
12.72
20.50
34.40
21.40

Portsmouth
63/47

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.31
-0.04
-0.19
-0.13
-0.28
+0.04
-0.27
-0.48
-0.34
-0.01
-2.00
-0.40
-1.40

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Sunny

70°
51°

Pleasant with partial
sunshine

A blend of sun and
clouds

Marietta
61/43

Murray City
58/41
Belpre
62/44

Athens
59/43

St. Marys
62/44

Parkersburg
61/42

Coolville
60/44

Elizabeth
63/46

Spencer
63/47

Buffalo
65/49
Milton
66/49

St. Albans
67/49

Huntington
64/46

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
60/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
62/51
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
70/51
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

67°
44°
Mostly cloudy with
t-storms possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
65/48

Ashland
65/48
Grayson
65/48

FRIDAY

68°
44°

Wilkesville
61/45
POMEROY
Jackson
62/46
61/45
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
63/47
62/47
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
54/38
GALLIPOLIS
63/48
64/48
62/48

South Shore Greenup
65/48
61/45

58

Logan
58/40

THURSDAY

61°
34°

Sunny and cool

McArthur
59/42

Very High

Primary: cedar, juniper, elm
Mold: 241
Moderate

Chillicothe
58/41

WEDNESDAY

54°
29°

Adelphi
58/41

Waverly
60/43

Pollen: 58

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Primary: diatrypaceae

Mon.
7:25 a.m.
7:45 p.m.
12:04 a.m.
10:33 a.m.

TUESDAY

Cooler with periods
of rain

0

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

(in inches)

MONDAY

51°
28°

Statistics for Friday

52°/40°
59°/37°
87° in 1907
14° in 1914

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC

Precipitation

admitted he used heroin
before he struck and
killed a woman riding an
electric scooter in downtown Cleveland has been
sentenced to eight years
in prison. Twenty-yearold Scott McHugh Jr.,
of Amherst, had pleaded
guilty to charges including aggravated vehicular
homicide and driving
under the inﬂuence of
drugs. Police say he was
speeding when he hit the
scooter driven by 21-yearold Jenasia Summers last
August. She was thrown
from the scooter and
pronounced dead at a
hospital.

GAHS Alumni Scholarship

An account that gives you complete access
to your funds, with no penalties for withdrawal.

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
— Two 17-year-old boys
have been charged with
murder in the shooting
death of a 16-year-old girl
in Ohio.
Prosecutors in Toledo
say the boys have been
charged as juveniles, but
they will ask a judge to
transfer the case to adult
court. Police have said a
social media dispute led
to a ﬁght and a shooting
on March 11 that killed
Alexia Carey. Her grandfather was grazed by a
bullet. Authorities say
investigators think several
people ﬁred shots. A third
teen and an adult also

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Annual Percentage Yield

Member FDIC
www.ovbc.com

have been charged in connection with the dispute.
Carey was a student at
Northwood High School
near Toledo.

Crash death
Teens charged costs 8 years
(AP)
in girl’s death —CLEVELAND
A car driver who

Introducing ...

POMEROY SAV-A-LOT

and leisure and hospitality. Small employment
gains were reported in
federal and state government and professional
and business services,
among others ﬁelds.

Clendenin
65/47
Charleston
66/47

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
31/13

Billings
51/33

Montreal
39/16

Minneapolis
50/22
Chicago
47/29

Denver
55/33

Toronto
46/19
Detroit
49/27

New York
58/44
Washington
65/49

Kansas City
60/42

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
66/40/pc
44/31/s
74/56/pc
55/45/pc
63/44/pc
51/33/c
55/36/sn
58/39/pc
66/47/pc
71/52/s
50/30/c
47/29/r
57/45/sh
53/31/sh
56/40/sh
80/56/c
55/33/c
52/31/r
49/27/sh
84/71/s
79/63/c
53/40/c
60/42/c
73/53/s
70/52/t
70/51/s
60/51/c
80/70/pc
50/22/c
65/51/c
76/59/pc
58/44/pc
70/46/c
82/60/pc
59/45/pc
81/56/s
57/36/pc
51/29/pc
69/52/s
67/51/s
66/41/t
52/36/r
62/51/pc
60/44/pc
65/49/pc

Hi/Lo/W
68/44/s
43/31/s
68/50/t
51/32/r
56/31/r
58/37/c
63/42/c
47/29/pc
55/32/r
69/46/t
54/32/pc
39/27/s
47/27/c
38/25/pc
45/25/c
70/47/s
60/35/s
47/32/c
41/24/pc
84/68/pc
80/56/pc
46/27/c
52/35/c
78/56/s
64/44/pc
73/52/pc
55/31/sh
82/67/pc
45/30/s
63/38/sh
77/55/pc
52/31/c
63/40/s
83/60/pc
53/32/r
85/59/s
46/23/c
40/19/pc
69/43/t
66/39/sh
51/31/c
63/44/c
59/48/r
59/45/r
58/36/r

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
74/56

High
Low

El Paso
77/48
Chihuahua
84/50

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

85° in Presidio, TX
6° in Tuolumne Meadows, CA

Global
High
113° in Diffa, Niger
Low -61° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
79/63
Monterrey
85/61

Miami
80/70

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

OH-70107875

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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM��+&lt;-2� M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

One Marauder named to D-3 All-Ohio list
By Alex Hawley

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Meigs senior Weston Baer (20) dribbles near the top of the key, during the Division III sectional final
on Feb. 22 in Jackson, Ohio.

to Canal Winchester Harvest Prep junior Christopher Anthony, while the
Coach of the Year award
went to Joe Frank of
Archbold.

5-11, sr., 19.7; E.J. Farmer, Cleveland Heights
Lutheran East, 6-4, soph.,
22.5; Davis Black, ByesCOLUMBUS, Ohio —
ville Meadowbrook, 6-5,
The Ohio Prep Sportssr., 16.5; Tanner Holden,
writers Association has
Wheelersburg, 6-6, sr.,
released the Division III
27.0.
All-Ohio boys basketball
Division III
Player of the Year:
teams, featuring Meigs
FIRST TEAM
Christopher Anthony,
sophomore Weston Baer.
Christopher Anthony,
Canal Winchester HarBaer — a 6-foot-2
Canal Winchester Harvest Prep
guard and career 1,000vest Prep, 6-0, jr., 25.0;
Coach of the Year: Joe
point scorer — was
Dallas Patrick, Columbus
named to the special
Wellington, 6-1, sr., 25.0; Frank, Archbold
SECOND TEAM
mention portion of the
Jayson Woodrich, BeachLukas Swartz, MogaAll-Ohio list, moving up
wood, 6-5, sr., 26.7; Mark
dore, 5-11, jr., 21.9; DJ
from honorable mention
Wise, Cincinnati Deer
Moore, Worthington
a year ago. Baer averaged Park, 6-4, jr., 18.0; Tyler
Christian, 6-3, fr., 18.8;
19.8 points per game to
Stephens, Leavittsburg
Calijaha’won Davis,
lead the 13-11 Marauders LaBrae, 6-6, sr., 19.9;
Columbus Africentric,
this season.
Grifﬁn Doseck, Anna,
The Division III Player 6-5, sr., 15.0; Owen HieSee MARAUDER | 3B
of the Year award went
gel, Ottawa-Glandorf,

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Lady Panthers
outlast Point in
8 innings, 11-10
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

HAMLIN, W.Va. — A whole lot of work for nothing.
The Point Pleasant softball team scored four
runs in the top of the seventh to force extra
innings, but a Brooklyn Salmons RBI-single in the
bottom of the eighth ultimately allowed host Lincoln County to claim an 11-10 victory on Wednesday night in a non-conference matchup.
The visiting Lady Knights (1-1) led 2-0 after
a half-inning and were ahead 3-2 through three
before extending their lead with two runs in the
top half of the fourth for a 5-2 cushion.
The Lady Panthers (4-1), however, sent 13 batters to the plate in their half of the fourth, which
resulted in eight runs on six hits, two walks and an
error — giving the Black and Blue a comfortable
10-5 advantage.
Madilyn Keefer singled home Peyton Jordan
with two away in the sixth to close the gap down
to four runs, then Jordan started Point’s ferocious
seventh-inning rally with a two-out solo home run
to left-center.
Back-to-back errors put Hayley Keefer and Tayah
Fetty on the basepath, then Emma Harbour drew a
walk to load the bases.
Riley Cochran followed with a single that plated
See PANTHERS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, March 25
Baseball
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Zane Trace, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Ironton at Gallia Academy, 4:30

Tuesday, March 26
Baseball
Hannan at Fairview, 5 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Charleston Catholic at Hannan, 5:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 5:30
Track and Field
Meigs Open, 4:30

Wednesday, March 27
Baseball
Athens at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Wellston at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Nitro, 5:30
Softball
Athens at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Wellston at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Cory Call (22) drives to the basket, during the Division II sectional final on Feb. 23 in Londonderry, Ohio.

2 locals named to All-Ohio D-2 squad
By Alex Hawley

Vermilion, 6-3, sr., 19.4;
Levi Seiler, Wauseon,
6-4, sr., 17.3; Nate Voll,
New Philadelphia, 6-2, sr.,
COLUMBUS, Ohio
14.1; Evan Conley, Lan— The Ohio Prep Sportscaster Fairﬁeld Union,
writers Association has
6-0, sr., 18.2; CJ Napier,
released the Division II
Middletown Fenwick, 6-5,
All-Ohio boys basketball
sr., 19.3.
teams, featuring a pair
SPECIAL MENTION
of players from Gallia
Myles Martinez,
County.
Columbus Centennial;
Both ﬁrst time honorJosh Irwin, West Geauga;
ees on the All-Ohio basJosh Raley, New Concord
ketball list, Gallia AcadJohn Glenn; Craig Bober,
emy senior Cory Call and
St. Clairsville; Jordan
River Valley sophomore
Zimmerman, SteubenJordan Lambert both
ville; Gabriel Roach,
received honorable menEast Liverpool; Brice
tion selections.
Williams, Minerva; Blane
Call led the 15-9 Blue
Himmelheber, Alliance
Devils with 12.9 points
Marlington; Chris Richper game, while Lambert
ardson, Richﬁeld Revere;
paced the 3-20 Raiders
D.J. Snyder, Peninsula
with 15.1 points and 8.6
Woodridge; Luke Fennell,
rebounds per contest.
Canal Fulton Northwest;
The Division II Player
A.J. McClellan, Cortof the Year award went to
land Lakeview; Braeden
Trotwood Madison senior
O’Shaughnessy, Poland
Amari Davis, while the
Seminary; Cooper DonCoach of the Year award
�&lt;C+8�'+6&gt;/&lt;=n�&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;= aldson, Jackson; Elijah
went to London’s Zach
River Valley sophomore Jordan Lambert (20) blocks a shot attempt
Williams, Athens; Seth
Brown.
during a Nov. 30, 2018, boys basketball contest against Eastern in
Dennis, Vincent Warren;
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
Devin Carter, Greenﬁeld
Division II
McClain; Gavin Arbaugh,
Milton Gage, Dayton
Dean, Cincinnati Aiken,
FIRST TEAM
McArthur Vinton County;
Chaminade-Julienne,
6-0, sr., 21.9.
Morgan Safford,
Nekhi Smith, Cincinnati
5-11, sr., 17.9; Paul
Player of the Year:
Columbus Hartley, 6-footTaft; George Mangas,
McMillan, Cincinnati
Amari Davis, Trotwood
4, sr., 25.6; Luka Eller,
Lima Shawnee; Quan
Hughes, 6-2, fr., 25.1;
Madison
Mentor Lake Catholic,
Hilory, Mansﬁeld Senior.
Cade Stover, Lexington,
Coach Of the Year:
6-7, jr., 27.1; C.J. CharlesHONORABLE MEN6-5, sr., 18.0; Kobe Mitchton, Gates Mills Gilmour Zach Brown, London
TION
ell, Cadiz Harrison CenSECOND TEAM
Academy, 5-10, sr., 24.7;
Luke Frazier, Mentral, 6-1, soph., 25.5.
Otto Kuhns, CarChris Livingston, Akron
tor Lake Catholic; Nick
THIRD TEAM
roll Bloom-Carroll, 6-3,
Buchtel, 6-5, fr., 24.3;
Stoltz, Geneva; Roderick
Spencer Hall, Louisjr., 22.0; Luke Howes,
Cyler Kane-Johnson,
Coffee III, Painesville
ville, 6-8, sr., 13.5; Trey
Fairview Park Fairview,
Niles McKinley, 5-10,
Harvey; Bryon Ottrix
Woodyard, London, 6-6,
6-2, jr., 22.6; R.J. Clark,
sr., 25.6; Amari Davis,
soph., 16.0; Erik Painter, Jr., Cleveland Glenville;
Youngstown Ursuline,
Trotwood-Madison, 6-4,
Javon Todd, Lorain ClearBay Village Bay, 6-1, sr.,
5-11, sr., 21.3; Ethan
sr., 30.1; Brandon Hawview; Jaden Hameed,
20.0; Treohn Watkins,
Heller, Thornville Sheriaway, Norwalk, 6-2, sr.,
Cleveland Villa AngelaColumbus South, 6-0,
dan, 6-1, sr., 21.5; Cam
20.5; Na’elle Simmons,
St. Joseph; Taryl Davis,
sr., 13.4; Quentin RichEvans, Chillicothe Zane
Columbus Beechcroft,
ardson, Parma Heights
Trace, 6-0, jr., 25.2; Joey
6-7, sr., 15.3; Davin ZeiHoly Name, 6-0, jr., 20.8;
Edmonds, Cincinnati
gler, Cleveland BenedicSee D-2 | 2B
Mason Montgomery,
tine, 6-2, sr., 20.7; D’Arris Wyoming, 6-0, sr., 19.0;
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, March 24, 2019

D-2
From page 1B

Cleveland Central
Catholic;
Trevor Strata, Alliance; Brandon Heigelmann, Tallmadge;
Reese Leone, Beloit
West Branch; Jonathan
King, Akron Buchtel;
Hunter Drenth, Richﬁeld Revere; Michael
Knoll, Medina Buckeye; Brock Brumﬁeld,
Medina Buckeye; Daniel
Kramer, Poland Seminary; Marquel Gillespie,
Youngstown Chaney;
Austin Claussell, Girard;
Cory Call, Gallipolis
Gallia Academy; Jordan
Lambert, Bidwell River
Valley; Evan Upthegrove, Washington
Court House Washington; Isaac Ward, Circleville Logan Elm; Riley
Gibson, Circleville;
Noah Nichols, Vincent
Warren; Cobe Marquez,
Waverly; Ethan Watson, Hillsboro; Grant
Heileman, Thornville
Sheridan; Caleb Wallis,
Jackson;
Trent Valentine,
Cambridge; Cade Williams, Gnadenhutten
Indian Valley; Michael
Allan, Wintersville
Indian Creek; Noah
Begue, New Philadel-

phia; Adam Chaney,
Carrollton; Matt Busby,
St. Clairsville; Hunter
Moore, Duncan Falls
Philo; James Roundtree,
Steubenville;
Zach Sawyer, Columbus Watterson; Mack
Anglin Marengo Highland; Kayin Derden,
Columbus DeSales;
Dylan Herbert, Delaware Buckeye Valley;
Benjamin James,
Columbus Independence; Tronny Keaton,
Columbus MarionFranklin; A.J. Kenney,
Caledonia River Valley;
Taquan Simington,
Columbus South;
Carl Blanton, Trotwood-Madison; Twon
Hines, Dayton Northridge; Dionte McBride,
Cincinnati Woodward;
Anthony McComb,
Dayton Thurgood Marshall; Thomas Myers,
Clarksville ClintonMassie; Evan Prater,
Cincinnati Wyoming;
Darren Rubin, Dayton
Oakwood;
Tahj Staveskie, Sandusky; Brennan South,
Bellville Clear Fork; Isaiah Alsip, Galion; Adam
Scott, Wapakoneta;
Jaron Sharp, Kenton;
Genesis Warith, Toledo
Scott.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

CLASS AA BOYS TEAM

Point’s Bush named to all-state basketball squad
SECOND TEAM
Elliot White, Elkins; Dasilas
Jones, Fairmont Senior; Drew
Hatﬁeld, Logan; Tanner Kennedy,
Robert C. Byrd (captain); Isaac
McKneely, Poca; Tommy Williams,
Shady Spring; Ethan Travis, Oak
Glen; Khori Miles, Robert C. Byrd.

By Bryan Walters

Lincoln; Hunter Hill, Lincoln County; Braden Howell, Liberty Raleigh;
RJ Hood, Wyoming East; Chance
Howell, Liberty Harrison; Tanner
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Point
Huffman, Nicholas County; Jaelin
Pleasant sophomore Hunter Bush
Johnson, Fairmont Senior; Gavin
was the lone Mason County athKennedy, Robert C. Byrd; Jordan
lete chosen to the 2019 Class AA
Kish, Chapmanville; Jansen Knotts,
all-state boys basketball team, as
Frankfort; Ryan Leep, Lincoln;
voted on by members of the West
Bryson Lucas, Robert C. Byrd;
Virginia Sports Writers AssociaTHIRD TEAM
tion.
McKinley Mann, James Monroe Andrew Mahairas, Nitro; Levi MacBush — a 6-foot-2 guard — led
(captain); Darrick McDowell, Oak Adam, Philip Barbour; Evan McKneely, Poca; Blake Moore, Grafton;
the Big Blacks in scoring with 18.2 Hill; Nick Stalnaker, Bridgeport;
Shawn Moran, Lewis County;
points per outing. It is the ﬁrst all- Joel Sweat, Nitro; Tanner Walls,
state selection for Bush in basketLincoln County; McQuade Canada, Philip Mullins, Chapmanville; Robert Murphy, North Marion; Peter
ball and Point Pleasant ﬁnished the Wyoming East; Jack Faulkner,
Noe, Logan; Hunter Poole, Petersyear with an 8-15 overall record.
Grafton; Gunner Murphy, North
burg; Garrett Quinn, Clay County;
Jalen Bridges of Fairmont Senior Marion.
Reggie Redman, Keyser; Reed
was named the ﬁrst team captain,
Reitter, Weir; Shad Sauvage, James
while Tanner Kennedy of Robert C. HONORABLE MENTION
Monroe; Andrew Shull, ChapmanByrd was the second team captain.
EJ Barkley, Berkeley Springs;
ville; Sean Smith, Oak Glen; Ryan
McKinley Mann of James Monroe Jagger Bell, Scott; Tanner Bifano,
Shoemaker, Keyser; Zach Snyder,
was the third team captain.
Bridgeport; Caleb Bish, Grafton;
Lincoln; Jadyn Stewart, Braxton
Grant Bonner, Herbert Hoover;
County; Ben Underwood, East FairJake Bowen, Bridgeport; Hunter
FIRST TEAM
mont; Hunter Walters, Westside;
Bush, Point Pleasant; Jared CanJalen Bridges, Fairmont Senior
(captain); Obinna Anochili-Killen, nady, Independence; Jordan Coon, Josh Wellman, Mingo Central; Zach
Whiteacre, Frankfort; Donovan
Roane County; Zach Cook, Man;
Chapmanville; Zyon Dobbs, Fairmont Senior; Devin Collins, Chap- Christian Frye, Winﬁeld; Kyle Gan- Wiles, Elkins; A.J. Williams, Liberty Raleigh; Stephen Williams,
manville; David Early, Logan; Luke non, Lewis County; Will Hackney,
LeRose, Nicholas County; Andrew Sissonville; Jacob Hamilton, Nicho- Shady Spring.
las County; Jon Hamilton, Scott;
Work, Oak Hill; Braeden Crews,
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
Luke Haught, Weir; Jed Hawkins,
Blueﬁeld.
ext. 2101.
Philip Barbour; Payton Hawkins,
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

followed with a single
that put runners on the
corners, then Salmons
dribbled an inﬁeld single
From page 1B
that allowed Roberts to
come in with the gameKeefer for a 10-8 contest, winner for an 11-10 triumph.
then Fetty and Harbour
Both teams produced
scored on an error that
a dozen hits apiece and
allowed Madilyn Keefer
Lincoln County committo reach safely — all
ted six of the 10 errors in
while knotting the conthe contest. The Red and
test up at 10 apiece.
Black stranded 12 baserAfter leaving a potenunners, while the hosts
tial game-winning run
left 10 on the bags.
stranded at third in the
Sydney Maynard was
seventh, LCHS started its
eventual rally with a two- the winning pitcher of
record after allowing ﬁve
out single from Amber
earned runs, 12 hits and
Roberts.
four walks over eight
Roberts advanced to
innings while striking out
third as Kendall Stricker
six.
Riley Cochran took
the loss for PPHS after

Panthers

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Wiseman Real Estate Inc.
David Wiseman, Broker
500 Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-3644
OH-70114095

40 yrs experience
CHERYL LEMLEY, REALTOR
PH: 740-742-3171
email clemley3171@suddenlink.com
My only purpose is to give you the best results.
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surrendering six runs
(ﬁve earned), six hits and
three walks over 4 2/3
frames of work while fanning two.
Jordan paced Point
Pleasant with four hits,
followed by Fetty and
Madilyn Keefer with two
safeties apiece. Harbour
had a two-run homer in
the ﬁrst inning, while
Cochran, Shala Swain and
Haley Bryant also had a
hit each in the setback.
Madilyn Keefer led the
Lady Knights with four
RBIs and Harbour added
a pair of RBIs. Jordan
and Harbour also led
the team with three runs
scored apiece, while Fetty
and Hayley Keefer each
crossed home plate twice.
Stricker, Amber Rob-

erts and Randa Watts
paced the hosts with
two hits apiece, while
Salmons, Aly Layne, Natalie Fout, Shelby Browning and Elizabeth White
added a safety each as
well. Koree Roberts also
had a two-run homer in
the home half of the ﬁrst.
Point Pleasant hosted
Parkersburg South on
Thursday night and held
a 1-0 lead in the fourth
before the game was postponed due to inclement
weather.
That game will be
resumed on Monday
when the Lady Knights
travel to PSHS for another matchup with the Lady
Patriots at 5 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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John Thomas, MD
General Surgery

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Radiology

Contest
Submission
March 8 thru
March 22
Voting will be
March 23 thru
April 5

Debbie Mitchell, RN
Nurse Navigator

Winners will
be announced
April 8

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

Devils’ Faro signs with Rio baseball
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— Fulﬁlling a dream
while also keeping his
priorities in a proper
frame of mind.
Gallia Academy
senior Josh Faro will be
continuing his baseball
career after signing
with the University of
Rio Grande on Monday,
March 18, 2019, inside
the GAHS library.
Faro — a three-year
starter and three-year
letterwinner through
his junior season — has
been the Blue Devils’ ace
hurler over the last two
years and is coming off a
9-1 campaign that resulted in a second-team AllOhio selection.
The southpaw is 20-5
in his prep career and
has a 1.53 earned-run
average in 166 innings
on the mound. Faro also
has 211 strikeouts and
50 walks over his ﬁrst
three seasons in the Blue
and White.
Faro — a three-time
All-Ohio Valley Conference performer and twotime all-district selection
— has always wanted to
play baseball at the collegiate level, and being
able to do so in his own
‘backyard’ was something that truly resonated in his decision.
The fact that the University of Rio Grande
also offers majors in both
of his planned ﬁelds of
study also played a part
in his choice.
“It’s an amazing opportunity to be able to continue both my academic
and my athletic career,”
Faro said. “I’m playing
baseball and doing what
I love while working on a
career in a ﬁeld that I am
passionate about, plus I
get to do all of this close
to home.
“Given all of the circumstances that go into
this kind of decision, it’s
just a perfect ﬁt. I know
the campus, the school
and the program, and I
know it’s a great place to
be. My mother was also

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Josh Faro, seated second from left, will be
continuing his baseball career after signing with the University
of Rio Grande on Monday, March 18, 2019, at the GAHS library.
Josh is joined in front by his parents, Dave and Bev Faro, and
brother Jake Faro, right. Standing in back are GAHS assistant
Jack James, GAHS baseball coach Justin Bailey, Rio Grande
baseball coach Brad Warnimont, former GAHS coach Rich Corvin
and GAHS assistant Jeremy Brumfield.

recently diagnosed with
Stage 3 breast cancer,
so I knew being close to
home for the family was
a priority in this decision. I’m very thankful
for the opportunity that
Rio Grande has provided
me.”
Faro was nearly ﬂawless during his 2018
campaign, winning his
ﬁrst nine contests before
losing a 1-0 decision in
eight innings during a
Division II district semiﬁnal against Hillsboro.
Faro fanned 108 batters and walked 17 in
68 1/3 innings of work a
year ago, which resulted
in a 1.1.3 ERA for the
season.
First-year GAHS baseball coach Justin Bailey
served as the pitching
coach last year during
Rich Corvin’s ﬁnal season as skipper, so the
rookie mentor is wellaware of what he’s inherited on the mound.
A former standout
pitcher himself during his playing days
at GAHS, Bailey also
believes that Rio Grande
is getting a solid addition to its established
program.
“As his pitching coach
last year, I learned pretty
quickly that he cognitively knows what it
takes to get people out.
He understands all of
the ﬁner points of pitching, rather it be holding

runners on or doing
whatever it takes to get
an out,” Bailey said. “He
has a very good mental
approach to the game,
he has the tools and the
intangibles to be very
good at the next level.
He also knows what
works for him and what
he needs to improve on.
“Rio Grande is getting
a smart young man that
can probably step in and
help their program in
some capacity, maybe
even in some tougher
spots. He’s a gamer and
he’s not afraid of situations on the mound. All
of us here at Gallia Academy are very proud for
Josh today.”
University of Rio
Grande baseball coach
Brad Warnimont was
thrilled to be adding a
young man like Faro,
someone that has proven
himself at a high level
over time while also
proving to be a good citizen and student.
“We always want to
recruit kids of high
character, and I think
the sky is the limit for
a kid like Josh. He is a
complete pitcher already
and he is only going to
get better over the next
four years,” Warnimont
said. “There will be an
acclimation phase to the
speed of the game and
facing 21- and 22-yearold men at the plate, but
you can adjust mechan-

ics and approaches. The
one thing you can’t teach
is character, and Josh
has very high character.
That is something that
bodes well for a program
down the road and we
are thrilled to have him
at the University of Rio
Grande.”
Faro holds a 3.76
grade-point average and
plans to have dual major
in Biology and Chemistry.
Faro had a productive
freshman campaign at
Gallia Academy, going
6-1 overall in 46 innings
of work. Faro struck out
38 and walked a dozen
while posting a 1.83
ERA.
His transition to the
No. 1 starter spot proved
a little rough his sophomore season after going
5-3 with a 1.63 ERA in
51 2/3 innings of work.
Faro recorded 65 strikeouts and issued 21 walks
in 2017.
Faro has been part of
OVC and sectional championship squads over his
prep career, so the senior
is hoping for one last run
with the Blue Devils this
spring.
Faro also knows that
a baseball future is there
waiting after graduation,
and that is something
that he feels ready for.
“I feel prepared for the
challenge ahead because
Gallia Academy has
always tested us to be
the best that we can be.
Coach (Rich) Corvin and
Coach (Justin) Bailey
have always stressed the
importance of being prepared and being accountable,” Faro said. “It’s
about being something
bigger than yourself and
focusing on what you
could have done better
instead of what you did
well. I think those are
attributes that will translate well at the next level
and I’m looking forward
to being a member of the
RedStorm.”
Josh is the son of Dave
and Bev Faro of Gallipolis.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Sunday, March 24, 2019 3B

2019 GALLIA COUNTY
SPRING SPORTS SCHEDULES
GAHS Baseball
Date
Opponent
3-23
Maysville at VA
3-27
vs Athens
3-30
vs Jackson
4-1
at Ironton
4-3
vs South Point
4-5
at Rock Hill
4-6
at Wellston
4-8
vs Portsmouth
4-9
at Symmes Valley
4-10
vs Chesapeake
4-12
at Coal Grove
4-13
vs Point Pleasant
4-15
at Fairland
4-17
vs Ironton
4-18
at Piketon
4-19
at South Point
4-20
at River Valley
4-22
vs Rock Hill
4-23
at Logan
4-24
at Portsmouth
4-26
at Chesapeake
4-27
vs Meigs
4-29
vs Coal Grove
5-1
vs Fairland
5-6
vs Logan
5-7
at Jackson
5-8
at Chillicothe
5-11
vs Westfall

Time
3:30
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
2 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.

GAHS Softball
Date
Opponent
3-25
at Zane Trace
3-27
vs Athens
4-1
at Ironton
4-3
vs South Point
4-5
at Rock Hill
4-8
vs Portsmouth
4-10
vs Chesapeake
4-12
at Coal Grove
4-15
at Fairland
4-17
vs Ironton
4-19
at South Point
4-22
vs Rock Hill
4-23
at Logan
4-24
at Portsmouth
4-26
at Chesapeake
4-29
vs Coal Grove
5-1
vs Fairland
5-6
vs Logan
5-7
vs Eastern
5-8
at Chillicothe

Time
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.

5-8

GAHS Track and Field
Date
Event
Time
3-23
at South Point
5 p.m.
3-26
at Meigs
5 p.m.
3-30
at Nelsonville-York
11 a.m.
4-2
GAHS Relays
4 p.m.
4-5
at Chesapeake
4:30
4-9 Gallia County meet at RV 4:30
4-12
at Portsmouth
4:30
4-13
at Parkersburg
noon
4-16
at Coal Grove
4:15
4-18
at Fairland
4:30
4-26
at Unioto
5 p.m.
4-30
KOVCCT at Fairland
5:30
5-3 Battle for The Anchor at GA 4 p.m.
5-9 OVC Championships at PHS 5 p.m.
GAHS Tennis
Date
Opponent
3-25
vs Ironton
3-28
vs Marietta
4-3
at Logan
4-4
vs Athens
4-8
vs Jackson
4-11
at Jackson
4-18
at Ironton
4-23
at Marietta
4-25
at Athens
4-30
vs Logan
RVHS Baseball
Date
Opponent
3-23
vs Oak Hill
3-27
vs Wellston
3-29
at Vinton County
3-30
at Fairland
4-1
vs Meigs
4-3
at Nelsonville-York
4-5
at Athens
4-8
at Ironton SJ
4-10
vs Alexander
4-12
at Wellston
4-15
vs Vinton County
4-17
at Meigs
4-20
vs Gallia Academy
4-22
vs Nelsonville-York
4-23
vs Ironton SJ
4-24
vs Athens
4-25
Southeastern (at VA)
4-29
at Alexander
5-3
vs South Gallia
5-4
vs Ironton
5-7
at Eastern

Time
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
Time
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
7:30
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.

at Southern

5 p.m.

RVHS Softball
Date
Opponent
3-23
at Oak Hill (DH)
3-27
vs Wellston
3-28
at Point Pleasant
3-29
at Vinton County
3-30
at Fairland
4-1
vs Meigs
4-3
at Nelsonville-York
4-5
at Athens
4-6
vs New Boston (DH)
4-10
vs Alexander
4-12
at Wellston
4-15
vs Vinton County
4-17
at Meigs
4-19
vs Southern
4-20
vs Gallia Academy
4-22
vs Nelsonville-York
4-24
vs Athens
4-25
at Southeastern
4-29
at Alexander
5-3
vs South Gallia

Time
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.

RVHS Track and Field
Date
Event
4-2
Home quad
4-6
at South Gallia INV
4-9
Gallia County meet
4-13
at Warren
4-16
at Meigs Relays
4-19
at Fairland
4-23
Home quad
5-2
TVC Ohio meet
5-7
at Meigs INV

Time
4:30
11 a.m.
4:30
11 a.m.
4:30
4:30
4:30
4 p.m.
4:30

SGHS Baseball
Date
Opponent
Time
3-23
at Miller (DH)
1 p.m.
3-25
at Eastern
5 p.m.
3-27
vs. Federal Hocking
5 p.m.
3-29
at Southern
5 p.m.
4-1
vs. Wahama
5 p.m.
4-2
at Fairland
5 p.m.
4-4
vs. Trimble
5 p.m.
4-6
at Belpre (DH)
10 a.m.
4-8
at Waterford
5 p.m.
4-11
vs. Eastern
5 p.m.
4-12
at Federal Hocking
5 p.m.
4-13
vs. Green (DH)
11 a.m.
4-15
vs. Southern
5 p.m.
4-17
at Wahama
5 p.m.
4-22
at Trimble
5 p.m.
4-24
at Ironton St. Joseph
5 p.m.
4-26
vs. Waterford
5 p.m.
4-27 at Sciotoville East (DH) 1 p.m.
4-30
vs. Fairland
5 p.m.
5-1
vs. Ironton St. Joseph 5 p.m.
5-3
at River Valley
5 p.m.
SGHS Softball
Date
Opponent
Time
3-23
at Miller (DH)
1 p.m.
3-25
at Eastern
5 p.m.
3-27
vs. Federal Hocking
5 p.m.
3-29
at Southern
5 p.m.
4-1
vs. Wahama (DH)
5 p.m.
4-2
at Fairland
5 p.m.
4-4
vs. Trimble
5 p.m.
4-6
at Belpre (DH)
10 a.m.
4-8
at Waterford
5 p.m.
4-11
vs. Eastern
5 p.m.
4-12
at Federal Hocking
5 p.m.
4-13
vs. Green (DH)
11 a.m.
4-15
vs. Southern
5 p.m.
4-22
at Trimble
5 p.m.
4-24
at Ironton St. Joseph
5 p.m.
4-26
vs. Waterford
5 p.m.
4-27 at Sciotoville East (DH) 1 p.m.
4-30
vs. Fairland
5 p.m.
5-1
vs. Ironton St. Joseph 5 p.m.
5-3
at River Valley
5 p.m.
SGHS Track and Field
Date
Event
Time
3-26
at Meigs Open
4:30
3-30
at Nelsonville-York
Rocky Brands INV
9:30
4-2
at River Valley Open
4:30
4-6
South Gallia INV
10 a.m.
4-9 Gallia County INV at RVHS 4:30
4-18
at Fairland INV
4:30
4-24
at Athens Open
4:30
5-1
at Meigs TVC
Hocking Championships 4:30
5-7
at Meigs Open
4:30
OVCS Track and Field
Date
Event
3-22
at Point Pleasant
3-26
at Meigs
4-2
at River Valley
4-9 Gallia County meet at RVHS
4-16
at Meigs Relays
4-23
at River Valley
5-7
at Meigs INV

Time
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30
4:30

RedStorm softball salvages split with Racers
By Randy Payton

rule-shortened victory in the
opener, snapping a 41-game home
winning streak for Rio that dated
back to April of 2015.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — After
The RedStorm, who were among
seeing its long home winning
streak snapped in an opening game the teams receiving votes in the
latest NAIA coaches’ poll, ﬁnished
loss, the University of Rio Grande
the day at 13-9.
made sure that a doubleheader
The Racers, who were also
sweep at the hands of the Univeramong those receiving votes in
sity of Northwestern Ohio wasn’t
the coaches’ poll, closed the day at
in the cards.
10-4 with the split.
The RedStorm rebounded from
For a while, it looked as if UNOH
an early 3-0 deﬁcit to post a 6-3
win and earn a split of the twinbill was poised to hand the RedStorm
with the Racers, Wednesday after- consecutive losses at home for the
ﬁrst time since a doubleheader
noon, at Rio Softball Park.
sweep at the hands of Georgetown
UNOH posted an 11-3 mercy

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Garaway, 6-3, sr., 11.9;
Brian Collier, Columbus
Grandview Heights, 5-10,
jr., 17.6; Cal Kildow, BelFrom page 1B
mont Union Local, 5-8,
sr., 20.5; Brayden Sipple,
Blanchester, 6-4, soph.,
6-1, jr., 17.4; Alex Dot26.2; Austin Wiemken,
son, Cincinnati PurcellArchbold, 6-4, sr., 15.8;
Marian, 6-4, sr., 13.3;
Jacob Plantz, Genoa, 6-3, Mason Darby, Oak Hill,
6-4, sr., 16.0; Kaden
sr., 21.6; Luke Powell,
Mellott, West Salem
Barnesville,6-1, jr., 30.0;
Northwestern, 6-4, jr.,
Jordan Burton, Oregon
Cardinal Stritch,5-10, sr., 18.0; Derek Reber, Apple
15.0; Charlie Large, Iron- Creek Waynedale, 6-4,
sr., 15.0; Brandon Rush,
ton, 6-0, sr., 19.5; Quinn
Hiles, Creston Norwayne, Warrensville Heights, 6-3,
6-2, sr., 15.7; Trevon Ellis, sr., 20.0.
SPECIAL MENTION
Dayton Stivers, 6-3, jr.,
Owen Hazelbaker, John13.0.
stown; Ramelle Arnold,
THIRD TEAM
Warrensville Heights;
Hayden Kanicki,
Ashtabula Edgewood, 6-3, Nehemiah Benson, Cleveland Heights Lutheran
sr., 18.0; Jarred Logan,
East; Deandre Pugh,
Elyria Catholic, 6-6,
Martins Ferry; Dante
sr., 15.5; Jacob Gudorf,
Tucci, Magnolia Sandy
Brookville, 6-3, sr., 15.2;
Valley; Isaac Schmitz,
Joey Holiﬁeld, Cardinal
Richmond Edison; Mila
Stritch, 6-2, jr., 14.3;
Square, Youngstown
Erik Miller, Sugarcreek

Marauder

(Ky.) College on April 23, 2014.
The Racers scored once in the
ﬁrst inning and twice in the third
inning to take a 3-0 lead, but a twoout, three-run home run off the
bat of freshman Kenzie Cremeens
(Ironton, OH) - her team-best
seventh circuit-clout of the season knotted the score at 3-all.
Rio then took the lead for good
with a pair of runs in the home
fourth. Freshman Taylor Webb
(Willow Wood, OH), who led off
the inning with a double, scored on
a wild pitch and senior Carly Skeese (Newark, OH), who reached on
See RACERS | 5B

Valley Christ; Mason
Jakacki, Mantua Crestwood; Joe Abramovich,
Warren Champion;
Caleb Francis, Atwater
Waterloo; Chance Wells,
Wooster Triway; Michael
Miller, Beaver Eastern;
Weston Baer, Pomeroy
Meigs; Elijah McCloskey,
Chillicothe Huntington;
J.K. Kearns, Albany Alexander; Lane Brewster,
Latham Western; Alex
Blanton, Piketon; Grant
Whisman, Middletown
Madison; Josh Crall,
Bucyrus Wynford; Luke
Denecker, Bluffton.
HONORABLE MENTION
Seann McGill, Kirtland; Aaron Anderson,
Ashtabula Edgewood;
Austin Roberts, Andover
Pymatuning Valley; Dion
Hardy, Cleveland Martin
Luther King; Edward
Wright III, Elyria Catholic; Sam Jerman, Ashtabu-

la Edgewood; Jimmie
Mitchell, Beachwood.
Jordan Zupko, Mineral
Ridge; Dylan Johnson,
Canton Central Catholic;
Angelo Milini, Canton
Central Catholic; Scott
Steger, Rootstown; Kyle
Coffman, Mogadore;
Chris Brooks, Canﬁeld
South Range; Benton
Tennant, Leavittsburg
LaBrae; Zach Geiser,
Apple Creek Waynedale;
J.J. Cline, West Salem
Northwestern; Logan
Domer, Orrville;
Zach Fout, Frankfort
Adena; Ethan Wilson,
Ironton; Austin Webb,
South Point; Eli Archer,
Chesapeake; Matt Mondlak, Proctorville Fairland; Clayton Thomas,
Proctorville Fairland;
Matthew Fraulini,
Portsmouth; J.J. Truitt,
Wheelersburg; Evan
Leist, Beaver Eastern;
Marcus Hamilton, Sar-

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Taylor Webb scores the go-ahead run on a wild pitch in
the fourth inning of Wednesday’s game two win over the University
of Northwestern Ohio at Rio Softball Park. The RedStorm defeated
the Racers in the nightcap, 6-3, after suffering an 11-3 mercy ruleshortened loss in game one.

dinia Eastern Brown;
Elijah Young, Seaman
North Adams; Bowan
Tomlin, West Union;
Chase Hammond, Oak
Hill;
Ethan Roden, Sugarcreek Garaway; Koleten
Smith, West Lafayette
Ridgewood; Jeremy
Salvo, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley; Keegan
Offenberger, Magnolia
Sandy Valley; Gavin
Williams, Coshocton;
Zach Grafton, Old Washington Buckeye Trail;
Peyton Neff, Byesville
Meadowbrook; Nic Hart,
Beverly Fort Frye;
Cross Hackathorne,
Milford Center Fairbanks; Hunter Antritt,
Baltimore Liberty
Union; Ben Casey, West
Jefferson; Nick Cunningham, Fredericktown;
Nick Kimmel, Marion
Pleasant; Luke Lachey,
Columbus Grandview

Heights; Dorrian Moultrie, Gahanna Columbus
Academy; Will Rifﬂe,
Amanda-Clearcreek;
Willie Bowman, West
Alexandria Twin Valley
South; AJ Garrett, Cincinnati Purcell Marian;
Steven Gentry Jr., Cincinnati Deer Park; Brice
Hill, Cincinnati Seven
Hills; Kendal James,
Tipp City Bethel; Brandon Ross, Cincinnati
Reading; Michael Stammen, Versailles;
Hayden Stone, Carey;
Cooper Parrott, Willard;
Karson Howell, New
London; Karson Howell,
New London; Luke Rowlinson, Collins Western
Reserve; Marcus Bruns;
Jeron Williams, Archbold; Mason Loefﬂer,
Metamora Evergreen;
Andrew Bench, Genoa.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�4B Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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AUCTIONS

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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April 1, 2019

Sealed Bids will be received for each contract for all material,
labor and services as described in the Drawings and Specifications. Bids will be opened publically and read immediately.
All bids must be accompanied by a bid guaranty as noted in
the project specifications.

REAL ESTATE

ANIMALS

Land (Acreage)
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Proposed Income Tax Levy
Alexander Local School District
(Athens, Meigs and Vinton Counties)
A majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage.
Shall an annual income tax of 1% on the earned income of individuals residing in the school district be imposed by the Alexander Local School District for a period of 5 years, beginning
January 1, 2020, for the purpose of providing for the current
operating expenses of the school district?

Home of the Car Fairy

OH-70004516
OH-70108909

www.markporterauto.com

ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee
Established 1975

The project is a Phase I renovation of existing gym and stage
area, see summary of work for full description. Project will be
bid with the following contracts, with estimates:
* Framing and Drywall - $7,500.00
* Masonry - $4,500.00
* Injected Masonry Insulation - $14,000.00
* Gym Ceiling Insulation - $48,000.00
* Batt Roof Insulation - $5,000.00
* Doors, Hardware and Window - $16,500.00
* Painting - $26,500.00
* Plumbing - $2,500.00
* HVAC - $75,000.00
* Electric - $37,500.00
* Fire Alarm - $18,00.00
* Sprinkler System - $100,00.00

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+XQGUHGV 2I /RFDO 5HIHUHQFHV
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FREE ESTIMATES
�� +RXUV

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollarsilver/gold coins, any
10k/14k/18k gold jewerly,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop 151
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446-2842

Amy Carter
Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
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amycarter@markporterauto.com

MOTOR ROUTE

Against the Tax

BDT Architects and Interior Designers (BDTAID, Inc.)
26 E. Park Dr., Suite 101
Athens, Ohio 45701
Telephone: 740.592.2420 Telefax: 740.592.3824

MERCHANDISE

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

For the Tax

Drawings and Specifications prepared by:

Bidders may obtain complete sets of the Bidding Documents
from the Architect for a non-refundable charge of $40.00 per
set. An electronic set of the Bidding Documents can be
emailed to bidders at no charge.

14 Angus Bulls and Heifers
top performance and blood
lines priced reasonable.Slate
Run Angus Jackson, Oh
740-418-0633 see
www.slaterunangus.com

Best Deal New &amp; Used

3/24/19

A pre-construction meeting will be held at the site, 11821 State
Route 160; Vinton, Ohio 45686 on Wednesday, April 3, 2019,
at 10:00 am local time.

Livestock

MARK PORTER FORD

Sealed Bids will be received by the Field of Hope Community
Campus, Inc, at 11821 State Route 160; Vinton, Ohio 45686
until Monday, April 15, at 3:30 p.m. local time, for the
following project:
Field of Hope
Gym Renovation Phase I
11821 State Route 160
Vinton, Ohio 45686

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
�
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�
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Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle &amp; provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute

(740) 446-0870
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Auction Alert!

Thursday, March 28th 6:00 PM
Gallipolis AMVETS Building
107 Liberty Ave., Galllipolis, OH

Don’t miss this great Thursday Night Auction! Featuring
Advertising, Cast Iron, Vintage Toys, Railroad, Antique
Stoneware, &amp; Collectables. Stay tuned to www.auctionzip.com,
www.estatesale.com, &amp; Facebook for continual updates and
pictures! Auctioneer: Josh Bodimer call Josh with any questions
740-645-6665 or email bodimer@wisemanrealestate.com.

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679

3/24/19, 3/31/19,4/7/19
OH-70113965

Now
Hiring
Leaders

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

Are you an enthusiastic go-getter? Do you thrive on new challenges?
Do you have a knack for communicating and building strong client relationships?
Are you motivated by the potential of an unlimited income and premium beneﬁts package?

OH-70109070

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
Apply with Résumé to Matt Rodgers,
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

OH-70106342

If you answered yes to all of these questions, you are the type of candidate we want to meet.
We are currently seeking sales representatives to develop new business and manage existing
accounts. We give you all the tools you need to succeed, including a base salary, no-cap
commission plan and paid training. All you need is the drive to reach your full potential.

CALL TODAY!

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 24, 2019 5B

2019 MEIGS COUNTY SPRING SPORTS SCHEDULES
EHS Baseball
3-23
at Wirt County (DH)
3-25
vs. South Gallia
3-27
at Belpre
3-29
vs. Waterford
4-2
vs. Wahama
4-4
at Federal Hocking
4-5
at Miller
4-8
vs. Trimble
4-9
at Southern
4-11
at South Gallia
4-12
vs. Belpre
4-15
at Waterford
4-18
at Wahama
4-20
vs. Frontier (DH)
4-22
vs. Federal Hocking
4-24
vs. Miller
4-25
at Trimble
4-26
at Whiteoak
4-29
vs. Southern
5-3
vs. Logan
5-4
at Warren (DH)
5-7
vs. River Valley
EHS Softball
3-25
vs. South Gallia
3-27
at Belpre
3-29
vs. Waterford
3-30
at Point Pleasant
vs. Symmes Valley
4-2
vs. Wahama

noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
7:30
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
1 p.m.
5 p.m.

Racers
From page 3B

a one-out error, scored
on a single by sophomore
Kayla Slutz (Navarre,
OH).
The RedStorm closed
out the scoring with an
insurance run in the sixth
inning thanks to backto-back one-out doubles
by sophomore Mary
Pica (Minford, OH) and
Skeese.
Sophomore Raelynn
Hastings (Commercial
Point, OH) overcame a
shaky start, blanking the
Racers on just one hit
over the ﬁnal four innings
for her eight win in 12
decisions.
Hunter Conzelmann
started and took the loss her ﬁrst in four decisions
- for UNOH, allowing ﬁve
hits and as many runs
over four innings.
Shayla Munyan had two
hits, including a double,
for the Racers, while Kendall Benning and Grace
Jackson drove in one run
each.
In game one, UNOH
exploded for six runs in
the ﬁfth inning and three
runs in the sixth inning
to snap a 2-2 tie and deal
Rio its ﬁrst loss at home
since dropping a 7-3 decision to Carlow University
in the second game of a
doubleheader on April 14,
2015.
The Racers jumped to a
2-0 ﬁrst inning lead, parlaying a pair of RedStorm
errors into two unearned
markers.
Rio tied the game in
the home fourth thanks to
an RBI single by Pica and
a run-scoring groundout
by sophomore Morgan
Santos (Dayton, OH), but
UNOH lowered the boom
against Rio senior starter
Kelsey Conkey (Minford,
OH) in the ﬁfth.
Kennedy Arndt and
Munyan opened the
frame with back-to-back
singles before Conkey
rebounded by striking

4-4
4-5
4-8
4-9
4-11
4-12
4-15
4-18
4-20

at Federal Hocking
at Miller
vs. Trimble
at Southern
at South Gallia
vs. Belpre
at Waterford
at Wahama
at Symmes Valley
“Valley of Thunder”
vs. Vermilion, Waverly
vs. Federal Hocking
vs. Miller
at Trimble
vs. Southern
vs. Logan
at Gallia Academy

4-22
4-24
4-25
4-29
5-3
5-7
^
EHS Track and Field
3-23
at Warren
3-26
at Meigs
3-30
at Nelsonville-York
Rocky Brands INV
4-2
at River Valley
4-6
at Fairfield Union
4-16
at Vinton County
4-20
at South Webster
4-23
at River Valley
5-1
at Meigs TVC Hocking
Championships
5-7
at Meigs

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
10 a.m.
4:30
9:30
4:30
10 a.m.
4:30
10 a.m.
4:30
4:30
4:30

out Benning and coaxing
Jackson to force Munyan
with a ﬁelder’s choice
grounder to second, but
Joey Brinegar and Carson
Baymiller hit back-to-back
home runs - on consecutive pitches - to give the
Racers a 6-2 lead.
Mackenzie Watson
added a two-run double
later in the inning to push
the advantage to 8-2.
The RedStorm got one
of the runs back in the
home ﬁfth on a two-out,
bases-loaded walk to
Pica, but the comeback
threat ﬁzzled moments
later when UNOH starter
Aubrey Brunst induced
Skeese to ﬂyout to right
ﬁeld and leave the bases
full.
The Racers set up the
mercy rule with three
more runs in the eighth,
two of which came on
RBI doubles by Jackson
and Baymiller.
Baymiller ﬁnished 3-for4 with two RBI, while
Brinegar was 2-for-4 with
four RBI in the win. Munyan and Eleya Montroy
added two hits each.
Brunst improved to 5-2,
allowing eight hits and
a pair of walks in a complete game effort.
Conkey slipped to 4-3
with the loss, allowing
14 hits and 11 runs - nine
earned. All 11 runs she
allowed came with two
outs.
Conkey and Skeese
both had two hits in a losing cause. One of the hits
by Skeese was a double.
Rio Grande is scheduled to return to open a
four-game, River States
Conference road swing
on Friday afternoon at
Ohio Christian University. First pitch for the
opening game is set for
3 p.m.
The RedStorm’s road
swing also includes a
trip to Newport, Ky. to
face Cincinnati Christian
University on Saturday
afternoon.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

MHS Baseball
3-23
at Piketon
11 a.m.
3-25
at Vinton County
5 p.m.
3-28
vs. Belpre
5 p.m.
4-1
at River Valley
5 p.m.
4-3
vs. Athens
5 p.m.
4-5
at Wellston
5 p.m.
4-8
at Alexander
5 p.m.
4-10
vs. Nelsonville-York
5 p.m.
4-11
vs. Marietta
5 p.m.
4-12
vs. Vinton County
5 p.m.
4-13
at Logan (DH)
2 p.m.
4-17
vs. River Valley
5 p.m.
4-18
at Miami Trace
5 p.m.
4-20
vs. Philo
noon
4-22
at Athens
5 p.m.
4-23
at Marietta
5 p.m.
4-24
vs. Wellston
5 p.m.
4-26
vs. Alexander
5 p.m.
4-27
at Gallia Academy
11 a.m.
4-29
at Nelsonville-York
5 p.m.
5-6
at Southern
5 p.m.
^
MHS Softball
3-25
at Vinton County
5 p.m.
3-28
vs. Belpre
5 p.m.
3-29
vs. Ripley
5:30
3-30 vs. South Charleston/Brooke noon
4-1
at River Valley
5 p.m.
4-3
vs. Athens
5 p.m.

4-5
at Wellston
5 p.m.
4-8
at Alexander
5 p.m.
4-10
vs. Nelsonville-York
5 p.m.
4-11
vs. Marietta
5 p.m.
4-12
vs. Vinton County
5 p.m.
4-13
at Logan (DH)
2 p.m.
4-17
vs. River Valley
5 p.m.
4-18
vs. Point Pleasant
5 p.m.
4-20
vs. Ripley
noon
4-22
at Athens
5 p.m.
4-23
at Marietta
5 p.m.
4-24
vs. Wellston
5 p.m.
4-26
vs. Alexander
5 p.m.
4-27
at Herbert Hoover
noon
4-29
at Nelsonville-York
5 p.m.
^
MHS Track and Field
3-26
home meet
4:30
3-30
at Nelsonville-York
Rocky Brands INV
9:30
4-5
at Logan
4:30
4-6
at South Gallia
10 a.m.
4-13
at Warren
10 a.m.
4-16
home meet
4:30
4-25
at Vinton County
4:30
5-2
at River Valley
(TVC Ohio Championships) 4:30
5-4
at Morgan
10 a.m.
5-7
home meet
4:30
SHS Baseball

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
noon
5 p.m.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

XENIA, Ohio — Ever since
a tornado ripped through the
town of Xenia, residents often
have uttered the saying “Xenia
Lives,” in recognition of its
ongoing progress since that
dreadful day on April 3, 1974.
Now nearly 45 years later,
Xenia High School Head Coach
Kent Anderson has something
he thinks the locals will enjoy
saying even more:
“Mr. Basketball lives in
Xenia.”
XHS senior Samari Curtis has
been named Ohio’s Mr. Basketball for 2019, as determined by
a distinguished panel of Ohio
Prep Sportswriters Association
and Associated Press media
members.
Anderson told Curtis he
would be doing a routine interview in recognition of his being
selected onto the Division I
All-Ohio team as its Player of
the Year. It wasn’t until he met
with a local writer that the wily
coach dropped the news.
Curtis was overcome with
emotion.
“Lebron (James) is my most
favorite player, ever. He’s the
reason I started playing basketball. So to get an award that he
got … it’s so humbling,” Curtis,
a 6-foot-4 senior forward, said
upon learning he would join his
childhood idol as a recipient of
the Mr. Basketball Award.
James, now an NBA star with
the Los Angeles Lakers, was
the Mr. Basketball recipient
from 2001 through 2003, during
those years when Curtis was
ﬁrst learning the game from
his older brothers Marcus and
Aaron.
Curtis led the always-tough
Greater Western Ohio Conference in scoring three of his four
years with the Buccaneers. During his senior season, Curtis
ﬁnished with a 34.4 points per
game scoring average. He also
had the second-most assists in
the GWOC with 5.8 per contest.
His 224 made free throws
this season are unofﬁcially the
ninth most free throws made in
Ohio High School Athletic Association boys basketball history.

Saturday, March 30th, 10:00 AM
47 Pine Grove Drive, Nelsonville, OH
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 33 northwest of Athens, exit #182 toward Nelsonville onto
West Interchange Road, follow round about to West Washington Street, before stop
light turn left onto Pine Grove Drive, follow up the hill, watch for signs. Check our
web site for photos:
COLLECTIBLES &amp; GLASSWARE: 1972 Folbot Kayak (2-person w/paddles &amp; life
jackets), old bamboo ﬁshing rod, Milk Bottles: pint J. T. Hope &amp; Sons Dairy, Athens,
OH, Kasler ½ pint, lots of glassware, children’s toys, and much more.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Living room &amp; dining room furniture, new Viking
Husqvarna portable sewing machine, some Disney Character Adult Costumes, 10+
Longaberger baskets &amp; stand, Resin Patio Table/Chairs,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: John Deere GT235 Riding Mower, exercise equipment,
some photography equipment, and other items.
For complete listing &amp; photos, go to our web site: www.shamrock-auctions.com or
call for a listing to be mailed.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must
have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyer’s premium on all sales with a 4%
discount for cash or check payment. All sales are ﬁnal. Food will be available.

OWNERS: Bob and Mary Wilson
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd &amp; Michael Boyd
OH-70114248

SHS Softball
3-25
vs. Trimble
3-27
at Wahama
3-29
vs. South Gallia
3-30
vs. Hannan (DH)
4-1
at Federal Hocking

By John Bombatch

PUBLIC AUCTION

Email: shamrockauction@aol.com

PH: 740-591-5607

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
TBA
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
TBA
5 p.m.
5 p.m.

4-2
4-4
4-5
4-8
4-9
4-11
4-12
4-15
4-17
4-18
4-19
4-22
4-23
4-24
4-29
4-30
5-1

vs. Waterford
at Miller
at Belpre
at Hannan
vs. Eastern
at Trimble
vs. Wahama
at South Gallia
vs. Federal Hocking
at Waterford
at River Valley
vs. Miller
vs. Roane County
vs. Belpre
at Eastern
at Wellston
at Vinton County

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.

SHS Track and Field
3-26
at Meigs
4:30
3-30
at Nelsonville-York
Rocky Brands INV
10 a.m.
4-2
at River Valley
4 p.m.
4-6
at South Gallia
10 a.m.
4-10
at Athens
4 p.m.
4-16 at Meigs Marauder Relays 4 p.m.
4-24
at Athens
4 p.m.
4-27
at Marietta
10 a.m.
5-1
at Meigs
(TVC Hocking Championships)4 p.m.
5-7
at Meigs Open
4:30

Xenia’s Curtis named Mr. Basketball in Ohio

Classifieds

WEB: shamrock-auctions.com

3-25
vs. Trimble
3-27
at Wahama
3-29
vs. South Gallia
3-30 vs. Fairfield Christian (DH)
4-1
at Federal Hocking
4-2
vs. Waterford
4-4
at Miller
4-5
at Belpre
4-9
vs. Eastern
4-11
at Trimble
4-12
vs. Wahama
4-15
at South Gallia
4-17
vs. Federal Hocking
4-18
at Waterford
4-19
at Warren
4-22
vs. Miller
4-24
vs. Belpre
4-27
at Fisher Catholic (DH)
4-29
at Eastern
4-30
at Wellston
5-1
at Vinton County
5-4
vs. Alexander (DH)
5-6
vs. Meigs
5-8
vs. River Valley

Courtesy photo

Xenia senior Samari Curtis prepares
to shoot a free throw during a 2018-19
regular season basketball contest.

Curtis made more free throws
than anyone else in the league
had even attempted. His 514
career free throws made put him
13th on the OHSAA’s all-time
list. He set the school record for
points in a single game at 52 in
a non-league home win on Feb.
5.
At the prestigious Flyin’ to
the Hoop basketball showcase in
January, Curtis scored 44 points
against First Love Christian
Academy (Pa.). His total is the
second most points scored in
that event’s history.
Yet despite all the scoring
accolades, Curtis takes pride
in his leadership qualities the
most.
“From my sophomore year to
my senior year, coach Anderson
has really helped me to try and
see the ﬂoor as a coach, like
how he sees it,” Curtis said.
“Senior year, I had a lot of sophomore teammates. So I really
had to step my leadership up, on
the defensive and offensive end.
… If coach wouldn’t have helped
me with that, I don’t think we
would’ve been as successful this
year.”
Anderson says he had a hard
time getting his star scoring
machine to shoot the ball, when
the preseason started. On a roster loaded with underclassmen,
Curtis had other plans ﬁrst.
“I said ‘Samari, what are you
doin’? Shoot the ball!’” Ander-

son laughed. “He said, ‘Coach,
I’ve gotta get these guys ready
to play basketball.’ That was
his mindset in terms of what he
wanted to do to help his team
get ready for the season ahead.
And now it’s come back to him.”
Curtis played a support role
on the Buccaneers team as a
freshman, but vowed to improve
himself in the offseason. The
day after that season ended, he
was in the weight room.
“Freshman year, I didn’t have
very much athleticism,” he said.
“But I could shoot though, and
that kept me on the ﬂoor. I had
two good players in Ray James
and Rocky James, and so I just
tried to make my shots when I
could. Do what I could to make
a play. … I couldn’t really do too
much off the dribble my freshman year, but that’s most of my
game now. I’m a better defender,
I’m stronger, I jump higher. I got
better all around.”
XHS Athletic Director Nathan
Kopp appreciated the fact
that Curtis stayed at the same
school, despite there being other
programs that would’ve loved to
have him.
“The number that resonates
with me is “one” — the number
of high schools Samari attended
during his high school career!
This is a tribute to Samari and
his belief in Xenia, and it also
says a lot about Kent Anderson
and his coaching staff and the
relationships they are able to
forge with the student-athletes
at Xenia High School,” Kopp
said.
Curtis is now headed to the
University of Cincinnati to
play for Mick Cronin and the
Bearcats. He hopes to major in
Business Management at UC.
Curtis is the son of Revonne
Arrington, who lives in Xenia.
His father, Marcus Curtis,
resides in Columbus.
Other ﬁnalists for the award
were Davis Black of Byesville
Meadowbrook, Ben Roderick of
Olentangy Liberty, Zach Rasile
of McDonald, Devon Grant of
Lorain, Bo Myers of Logan and
Brandon Haraway of Norwalk.

John Bombatch is a sports writer for the
Xenia Daily Gazette and supplied this story
on behalf of the OPSWA and the OHSAA.

�COMICS

6B Sunday, March 24, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

�

�

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� �
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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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see what’s brewing on the

job market.
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jobmatchohio.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, March 24, 2019 7B

The Samual Zion Foundation is holding its CDH AWARENESS
CALENDAR RAFFLE to honor April, as it is Congenital
Diaphragmatic Hernia Awareness Month (April 19th,
Awareness Day). We are looking for community members
to help in our plight to spread awareness of CDH. Our goal
at the Samual Zion Foundation is to do just that, spread
awareness of CDH and give the best support we can to
Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia patients and their families.
“CDH is a birth defect where there is an opening in the muscle that helps you breathe, called the diaphragm. This opening can
be on the right or left side, but is most common on the left. The contents of the belly, including the stomach, spleen, liver, and
intestines go up into the chest. There is little room for the lungs to grow and develop.” according to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital,
where our son Samual Zion Eddy was born February of 2017. “CDH occurs in about 1 in 2,000-1-5,000 live births,” according
to Columbia University Medical Center- DHREAMS Study. A study our Samual still is a part of, even though he received his
cherub wings May-2017. “Over 1600 babies are born with Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia EVERY YEAR in the United States
alone. With a 50% survival rate, 800 of those babies will die. Today, and every day, at least 4 families with be devastated with
the news of CDH.” according to CHERUBS, the family
support division of CDH International, “the world’s largest
charity for CDH”. Our Samual was one of the lucky ones
to get a chance to be at home, although complications
of CDH only allowed us a little under four months, he
was truly an amazing soul, his brother describing him
as a superhero. We have created his non-proﬁt, because
it isn’t over for him.
To bring awareness to CDH we are asking your help
with our APRIL CDH CALENDAR. Each calendar will be
$30 to helping CDH patients and their families. The
purchase of a calendar gives you a daily chance to win
our extravagant, beautiful prizes donated by dedicated
folks that share our vision in spreading awareness for CDH. The April Prize Calendar is listed below. If you do not want to help
in that way, a donation helps. Our goal is to let you know about it, and hopefully you will tell someone else what you have
learned if nothing else. Please know that any little thing will go a long way in what we are trying to achieve.
Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

1

Drawing Days Subject to change

2

$30 Value

B&amp;B Auto

Zach and Scotty’s

Live Daily Drawings

$50 Gift Certificate

$25 Gift Certificate

Thursday

Friday

3
Ladies and Gems
Boutique package

Saturday

4
Air Fryer

5
Amethyst ring

Wine basket w/Cutting board

30 Chances to win
7
Birdwatcher delight
Birdhouse, feed, and
outdoor mushroom

8
Oil Necklace with
Lavender and Eucalyptus

14

9
Aaron’s

Pendant Necklace

1 year anti-virus

15

Silver Kings

Village Pizza

His and Her Keychains

2 pizzas

16
Design&amp;Thread Kenny’s Custom Designs

21

10

Karat Patch

22

23

24

Aaron’s

Pine Street Storage

Vera Bradley purse

$30 Gift Certificate

Queen size Mattress
and boxspring cover

28

29
Set of 3 Pearl Earrings

12
Kitchen Aid Mixer and
meat Grinder

$25 Gift Certificate
17

Imaginative Mama

Giovanni’s Party Pack

11
Tuscany

Insta-Pot

Pine Street Storage

6
OSR

18

13
Poppy’s
$25 Gift Certificate

19

Lanier Plumbing

City of Gallipolis

Pioneer Women
laundry basket set

Family Season Pool
Passes
25

20
Gallipolis Junior Women’s Club basket

26

27

Silver Kings

Merry Family Winery

Anchor Glassware

Artisan Shoppe &amp;
Studio Gift card and
tote

Necklace and earrings

Private vineyard tour
for 4, must be 21+

CDH effects 1 in every
1,600 babies born in
the U.S.

Environmental and
genetic factors
determine CDH

Survival rates depend
on hospitals capability
in NICU, Surgical Staff,
and ECHMO capabilities.

Usually diagnosed
around 20 week
during anatomy ultrasound

30
Owlet Smart Sock 2

The Samual Zion Foundation is a non-proﬁt organization, so please know that anything you help with will be a tax deductible donation.
We also will showcase your company on our APRIL CDH AWARENESS CALENDAR so everyone will know that you are a generous
person, dedicated to spreading Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Awareness. If you are ready to join us or have any questions please
contact me directly, Jennifer Eystad-President of the Samual Zion Foundation.

Purchase at these locations: Need-a-Lift Transportation, The Karat Patch, Poppy’s,
Aaron’s, B&amp;B Exhaust and Tire, or The Artisan Shoppe &amp; Studio.
OH-SPAD0302095537

NON-EMERGENCY

We will not keep
you waiting!

740-709-0177
MEDICAL TRANSPORT 740-612-5953

OH-70112265

OH-70111980

samualzionfoundation@gmail.com | www.samualzionfoundation.org | (740)339-9374

�8B Sunday, March 24, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mountain Health Network and
Pleasant Valley Hospital Sign Joint
Management Services Agreement
Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) and Mountain Health Network have
finalized a Management Services Agreement for its hospital and
nursing &amp; rehabilitation center.
This agreement replaces the previous agreement PVH entered into
with Cabell Huntington Hospital (CHH) in December 2013. The new
agreement was approved by the PVH Board of Directors on January
28, 2019 and Mountain Health Board of Directors on March 5, 2019.
´)RU�WKH�SDVW�ÀYH�\HDUV��39+�DQG�&amp;++�KDYH�
had a positive working relationship that has
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and surrounding counties,” stated Michael
Mullins, FACHE, President and CEO, Mountain
Health Network. “The combination of shared
common goals, dedicated staff, and quality
patient care has formed a strong foundation
Michael Mullins, FACHE
Mountain Health Network
President &amp; CEO

for success that we intend to build upon.”
´7KH�DIÀOLDWLRQ�ZLWK�&amp;++�KDV�strengthened
PVH’s core services as well as specialty
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agreement with Mountain Health will further
expand access,” stated Glen Washington,
FACHE, CEO of PVH. “We have been able to
better meet the medical needs of more
patients at PVH, while having the assurance

Glen A. Washington, FACHE
Pleasant Valley Hospital CEO

of access to a tertiary care hospital and
Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School

OH-70114029

of Medicine specialists.”

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