<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2035" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/2035?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T14:26:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11937">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/acf6a0a9c2a39e50a1516d036aac32a9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4b23109c757ced6aeda1c4223231945f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7544">
                  <text>S. Gallia
smacks
Falcons

Halloween
in the
Ohio Valley

SPORTS s 1B

FEATURES s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 43, Volume 49

Sunday, November 1, 2015 s $2

Holzer Health
shines light
on lung cancer
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — November is Lung Cancer
Awareness Month and Holzer Health System is
sponsoring a “Shine a Light on Lung Cancer”
event at 6 p.m. Nov. 12 at the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care.
According to the Lung Cancer Alliance, lung
cancer causes more deaths each year than breast,
prostate, colon and pancreatic cancers combined.
Nearly 80 percent of those diagnosed are former
or non-smokers.
The American Lung Association states that lung
cancer is the leading cause of caner deaths in the
United States for
both men and
women.
Shine a Light,
founded by a
lung cancer survivor and caregiver, is the largest coordinated
awareness event
for lung cancer in
the U.S. Nearly 300 Shine a Light events will take
place in cities across the country as they kick off
their seventh annual Shine a Light on Lung Cancer Nov. 5th as part of Lung Cancer Awareness
Month.
This is the ﬁrst time Holzer Health System has
held an event for Lung Cancer Awareness Month
and according to Karrie Swain Davidson, communications coordinator for Holzer Health System,
she and others at Holzer thought this was a good
opportunity to raise awareness in the area.
“We hope our event will provide hope, inspiration, and support for all of those touched by lung
cancer,” said Sandy Thomas, program coordinator,
low dose CT scan, Holzer Health System. “With
the addition of our Low Dose CT Talin services,
we are excited to team with Shine a Light and
offer a community event during Lung Cancer
Awareness Month.”
“Lung cancer affects so many in our communities,” said Ken Moore, executive director, Holzer
Center for Cancer Care. “This event will create
awareness and education on the preventative measures that are available here locally.”
The event will feature guest speaker Dr. Melva
Pinn-Bingham, radiation oncology, Holzer Center
for Cancer Care, and Stephanie Harbour, whose
mother, Kay Mayo, was diagnosed and passed
away from lung cancer.
Lung cancer is most successfully treated when
detected before it begins causing symptoms.
Screenings are recommended as a tool in early
detection and it is hoped that screening will
increase survival and quality of life for those who
are diagnosed with lung cancer.
Holzer offers low dose CT scan services in Gallipolis and Athens. Individuals who are eligible to
receive the low-dose CT scan include patients age
55-77, and are smokers or who have quit within
the last 15 years with a smoking history of at least
30 packs per year. Pack-years are calculated by
multiplying the average number of packs of cigarettes a person smokes per day by the number of
years a person has smoked.
The public is invited to attend the Shine a Light
event to learn more about lung cancer and Holzer’s low dose CT services. Light refreshments
will be served.
For more information, call (740) 441-3905.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext.2551.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Football: 1B
Schedule: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 2-3B
Classified: 5B
Comics: 3C

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

Michael Johnson | Ohio Valley Publishing

Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland shakes hands with Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning at the conclusion of Thursday’s nights annual
Kennedy Day Dinner at the Bob Evans Farms Craft Barn. In the middle is Brent Larkins, a member of the Democratic Party of Meigs County.

Strickland not ready to give up
By Michael Johnson
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

RIO GRANDE — Former Ohio
Gov. Ted Strickland says he’s not
quite ready to give up ﬁghting for
all in which he believes.
Giving the “working people of
Ohio a chance at having a decent
chance to live a middle-class
life” is one of the main reasons
he cited for entering the race

for U.S. Senate, a seat currently
held by Republican U.S. Sen. Rob
Portman.
Strickland talked about his ﬁght
for the middle class, among other
things, Thursday night during the
Gallia County Democratic Party’s
annual Kennedy Day Dinner at
Bob Evans Farms Craft Barn.
Strickland, who served as Ohio’s
68th governor from 2007-11, as
well as Ohio congressman from

1992-94 and 1996-2006, said many
middle-class Ohioans are feeling a
squeeze.
“Some of us may aspire to be
millionaires and billionaires.
Certainly, none of us want to
live in poverty,” he said. “I think
what most of us – and what most
Americans – want is just to be
able to live a middle-class life.”
See STRICKLAND | 6A

Community Center a history haven
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Community Center is a building with history.
Originally built in the early 1930s, it
served as Syracuse Elementary School
until 2002, when the building was purchased by the late Robert L. Wingett, who
then turned the building into the thriving
community center that it is today. Wingett
also worked for Ohio Valley Publishing in
Pomeroy.
According to information provided by
the center, Wingett was a former student
of the school. He purchased the building
for $79,000 and then transferred it to the
original owners, Syracuse Village, for its
current intended purpose. Before his passing, he served as the president of the board
of trustees.
Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Syracuse Community Center has been in existence since 2002.

See CENTER | 6A

Agencies warn of local fraud attempts
By Dean Wright

giving your information to someone over the phone,” Browning
said. “Government agencies do
GALLIA COUNTY — The Gal- not work that way.”
lia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce reports
According to the sheriff, simia recent string of scam callers
lar scam calls have been made in
pretending to be IRS ofﬁcials.
Lawrence County as well.
“We have had several reports
Should individuals have questhat someone is calling people
tions about what might appear
claiming to be with the IRS and
to be a suspicious call, they are
trying to steal money from our
advised to contact their nearest
citizens, ” said Gallia County
law enforcement agency.
Sheriff Joe Browning.
According Dee McCullough
According to the sheriff’s
with Gallia County Adult Protecofﬁce, reports say the callers can tive Services, it is not uncommon
be convincing and even threaten for scammers to call mature citiindividuals that law enforcement zens in an attempt to steal their
will show at the individual’s
money.
home and arrest said person if
One common technique
money is not quickly received.
involves scammers calling and
The sheriff’s ofﬁce advises all
pretending to be a prospective
people who receive such a call to victim’s grandchild or loved one.
hang up.
The false individual then asks for
“We caution everyone about
money as they have supposedly

deanwright@civitasmedia.com

landed in jail and need quick cash
for a bailout. McCullough advises
citizens to be cautious when listening to such requests as they
may well be a ploy to relieve
seniors of some quick cash.
McCullough also advised the
public that scammers were also
making use of Walmart Green
Dot cards as a means of attempting to avoid a “paper trail” when
attempting to enact a con. Green
Dot cards are considered to be
reloadable debit cards.
Potential victims in the past
received what seems to be an
award check, often one that is
unexpected. Scammers then ask
a victim to wire back a payment
to cover some fabricated fees. A
victim wires money and then the
check they received will bounce.
See FRAUD | 6A

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
GALLIPOLIS —
Arthur William “Bill”
Brown Sr., 77, of Gallipolis, passed away at 12:30
a.m. Friday, Oct. 30,
2015, at Abbyshire Place,
Bidwell.
Born July 17, 1938, in
Gallipolis, he was the son
of the late Bert Brown
and Elizabeth Lee Betz
Brown Barker. He retired
from the Gallipolis Developmental Center after 30
years of service.
Bill is survived by his
wife, Sylvia Casto Brown,
whom he married in May
1959 in Gallipolis; sons
Art (Regina) Brown Jr.,
of Patriot, and Mark
Brown, of Florida; grandchildren Kyle (Jessica)
Brown, Stormi Brown
and Grant Brown; and

BOBBY C. ROACH

numerous nieces and
nephews.
In addition to his parents, Bill was preceded
in death by his sisters
Louise, Frances, Betty,
Jeanine and Barbara;
and his step-father Ray
Barker.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Monday, Nov.
2, 2015, at Cremeens
Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Pastor Ed Mollohan
will ofﬁciate. Interment
will follow in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends may
call two hours prior to the
services on Monday.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

ARTHUR CLINTON CONANT
GALLIPOLIS —
Arthur Clinton Conant,
86, went home to be with
the Lord on Oct. 29, 2015
at the Holzer Hospital in
Gallipolis after an extended illness. He was born
July 19, 1929 to Selby
and Mabel Conant in
Athens, Ohio. After high
school, Arthur went into
the Army and was a combat veteran of the Korean
War from January 1951 to
December 1952.
He is survived by a
son, Paul James Conant;
sisters Eva and Violet; a
brother, Jimmy; brother
and sister-in-law Larry
and Bernadine Campbell; stepdaughters Vicki
Hanson and Sherry King;
stepsons, Rick Clark and
Terry Clark and a special
friend, Reva McKenzie.

He was preceded in
death by his parents, ﬁrst
wife, Rachel, second wife,
JoAnn and a sister, Mary
Louise.
The family greatly
appreciates the wonderful
care he received at Overbrook Nursing Center in
Middleport.
Funeral services will
be held on Monday, Nov.
2, 2015 at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastor Mark Rosser
Ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at the South Canaan
Cemetery. Visitation for
family and friends will be
held one hour prior to the
service.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

GALLIPOLIS — Bobby
C. Roach, 84, of Gallipolis, Ohio went to his
heavenly reward Friday
morning on Oct. 30, 2015
at the Emogene Dolin
Jones Hospice House in
Huntington, W.Va.
Bob was born on June
12, 1931 in Waterloo,
Ohio, son of the C.H. and
Ola Miller Roach.
Bob served in the U.S.
Army and after being
honorably discharged he
returned to Gallipolis
and became involved
in plumbing work. Bob
purchased the Standard
Plumbing and Heating
business and served Gallipolis and its surrounding area for over 50 years
before retiring. He was
an active member of the
Knight of Pythias Lodge
in Gallipolis for 50 years,
and active in the Gallia
County Senior Citizens.
Bob was a Kentucky
Colonel for 50 years and
regularly met with two
groups at McDonalds and
Captain D’s. Bob was a
member of the Rodney
Pike Church of God
where he loved the people
there and loved to hear
his pastor minister.
Bob was well known
around Gallipolis and will
be missed by his family
and friends.
Bob was married to
Dorothy Criner Roach
and she preceded him
in death on Nov. 24,
1999. He is survived by a
daughter Vickie (Romey)
Swanson of Bidwell, a son
Charles “Chuck” (Paula)
Deriﬁeld of Dublin, Ohio;
grandchildren, Melissa
(Richard) Huffman of

Gallipolis, Adam (Karen)
Allie of Georgetown, Ky.,
Sydney Howard of Athens, Tenn., Austin Howard of Tenn., Grant and
Brandon Deriﬁeld both
of Dublin, Ohio, Emily
and Caroline Wagner of
Hilliard, Ohio and Richard Wagner of Dublin,
Ohio; great grandchildren
Ashlee Huffman, Richard
(RJ) Huffman, Caleb Patterson, Rhema Allie and
Daniel Allie; a great great
grandson Westin Howard;
sister-in-law Clarabell
Roach of Gallipolis, and
several nieces and nephews.
Bob was preceded in
death by his parents, his
wife Dorothy, a son Gary
Roach and a daughter
Terri Howard, and a
brother Richard Roach
and a sister. Doris Nolan.
Services will be at 1
p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 3,
2015 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Ron
Bynum ofﬁciating. His
burial will follow in the
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at Willis Funeral Home on Monday, Nov. 2, 2015 from 6-8
p.m.
There will be military
rites at the graveside by
the Gallia County Funeral
Detail.
In lieu of ﬂowers please
consider a donation in
Bob’s memory to Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice
House 3100 Staunton
Road, Huntington, WV
25702.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.

JANET MARIE ERWIN
BIDWELL — Janet
Marie Erwin, 59, Bidwell,
passed away Thursday,
Oct. 29, 2015, at her son’s
residence.
She was preceded in
death by her husband,
Ronald Erwin, on Nov.
30, 2014.
Graveside services will
be 1 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.
3, 2015, in Clark Chapel

Cemetery with the Rev.
Calvin Minnis ofﬁciating.
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton Chapel,
is honored to serve the
Erwin family.
In lieu of ﬂowers, please
consider a donation to the
American Cancer Society,
170 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

DEATH NOTICES
ADKINS
LESAGE, W. Va. — Deborah Lynn Adkins, 56, of
Lesage, died Saturday Oct. 31, 2015.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday Nov. 3,
2015 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio by Pastor Carl Merritt and Pastor Johnny
Gue. Burial will follow in Centenary Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 10-11 a.m. Tuesday Nov. 3, 2015
at the funeral home.
CORMIER
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Doris Cormier, 90, of Gallipolis, died Friday at the Holzer Assisted Living.
Arrangements will be announced later by Willis
Funeral Home.

Civitas Media, LLC

RUSSELL
RUTLAND, Ohio — Sheridan Thomas Russell III,
63, of Rutland, died October 30, 3015.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, Nov.
4, 2015 at 11 a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Middleport. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill
Cemetery.

Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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

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

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

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

RO X Y S

ELECT

Furniture &amp; Flooring

TONY L.
BECK

www.roxysfurnitureandﬂooring.com

740-446-4000
31A Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, OH

Med-Lift Lift Chairs

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

Trustee

60620121

(USPS 436-840)

Green Township
60618604

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

Elect

Paid for by candidate

John P.

60620322

Helene Udy is 54. Rock
singer Anthony Kiedis
(Red Hot Chili Peppers)
is 53. Pop singer-musician
Mags Furuholmen (a-ha)
is 53. Rock musician Rick
Allen (Def Leppard) is
52. Country singer “Big
Kenny” Alphin (Big and
Rich) is 52. Singer Sophie
B. Hawkins is 51. Rapper
Willie D (Geto Boys) is
49. Country musician
Dale Wallace (Emerson
Drive) is 46. Actress Toni
Collette is 43. Actress-talk
show host Jenny McCarthy is 43. Rock musician
Andrew Gonzales is 43.
Actor David Berman is
42. Actress Aishwarya
Rai (ash-WAHR’-ee-ah
rye) is 42. Rock singer
Bo Bice is 40. Actor Matt
Jones is 34. Actress Natalia Tena is 31. Actor Penn
Badgley is 29. Actor Max
Burkholder is 18. Actormusician Alex Wolff is 18.

✓YES

Thank you
Addison Township Trustees

#*/(0�t�#*/(0�t�#*/(0
$1000 COVERALL
EVERY MONDAY – 6:30 pm
Doors open @ 5:30 pm

People of Letart Township –
Exercise your right to Vote!

Zachary B. Manuel
60620635

60620609

Paid for by the candidate. James B. Hawthorne, 38566 Twp Rd. 404, Long Bottom, OH 45743

60620207

Joseph Freeman Post 476-American Legion
Wilkesville, Ohio
1-740-669-0047
for more information or directions

Today is Sunday, Nov.
1, the 305th day of 2015.
There are 60 days left
in the year. This is All
Saints Day.
Today’s Birthdays:
Golfer Gary Player is
80. Country singer Bill
Anderson is 78. Actress
Barbara Bosson is 76.
Actor Robert Foxworth
is 74. Magazine publisher
Larry Flynt is 73. Country
singer-humorist Kinky
Friedman is 71. Actress
Jeannie Berlin is 66.
Music producer David
Foster is 66. Actress
Belita Moreno is 66.
Rhythm-and-blues musician Ronald Khalis Bell
(Kool and the Gang) is
64. Country singer-songwriter-producer Keith
Stegall is 61. Country
singer Lyle Lovett is 58.
Actress Rachel Ticotin
is 57. Rock musician
Eddie MacDonald (The
Alarm) is 56. Apple CEO
Tim Cook is 55. Actress

for the Addison Township Fire Levy.
This is a renewal and will not increase your taxes.

SCHOOL BOARD

ELECT
James B. Hawthorne
Chester Township
Trustee

TODAY IN HISTORY...

on November 3rd

Gallia County Local

Paid for by Kimberly Cade, 4130 State Route 218, Gallipolis, OH 45631

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — The Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine yesterday
launched its ﬁrst scholarly medical journal.
The Marshall Journal of Medicine is a peer-reviewed,
open-access online journal designed to shed light
on medical issues and conditions of priority to West
Virginians and the Appalachian region. The ﬁrst issue
features submissions from physicians, medical faculty
and residents from both Marshall University and West
Virginia University.
“This journal is another step toward establishing
a culture in our School of Medicine that prioritizes
research,” said Dr. Joseph I. Shapiro, dean of the Joan
C. Edwards School of Medicine. “Showcasing research
that is focused on better health outcomes for our region
goes hand in hand with our overall mission of fostering
a skilled physician workforce to meet the health care
needs of West Virginia and central Appalachia.”
“We are thrilled to have a new open-access venue to
share Appalachian-focused, scholarly work on the global
scale,” said Dr. Darshana Shah, associate dean for
faculty affairs and professional development and editorin-chief of the Journal. “Working with our colleagues on
the main campus through the Digital Scholar Platform
has allowed us to produce a dynamic, content-rich publication that we all should be proud of.”
As an open-access publication, the Marshall Journal
of Medicine facilitates online collaboration among
researchers and allows them to build on the ﬁndings
of others without restriction in order to accelerate discovery, Shah said. The ﬁrst issue can be viewed at mds.
marshall.edu/mjm.
In addition to Shah, members of the journal’s editorial board include Dr. James Becker, Dr. James Denvir,
Dr. Mehiar El-Hamdani, Dr. Susan L. Flesher, Dr.
Suzanne Holroyd, Dr. Aravinda Nanjundappa, Dr.
Mohammed Ranavaya, , Dr. Nalini Santanam, and Dr.
Franklin Shuler.
“I am incredibly proud of the collaborative effort
between University Libraries and the School of Medicine to bring back publishing to our university,” said
Dr. Jan I. Fox, senior vice president for information
technology/CIO at Marshall University. “The open,
online nature of the journal makes it both cost effective
and accessible.”
Anyone, regardless of institutional afﬁliation, may
submit an original article to be considered for publication. Marshall Journal of Medicine accepts scholarly
articles, including case studies, original research,
review articles and letters to the editor. Articles also
receive Digital Object Identiﬁers, or DOIs, from the
CrossRef organization to ensure they can always be
found. The journal does not charge for submission. Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis online at mds.
marshall.edu/mjm. To contact the Journal, please e-mail
mjm@marshall.edu.

Please vote

Davis II
Paid for by: John P Davis 435 Richards Rd Patriot OH 45658

Staff Report

60618054

ARTHUR WILLIAM BROWN SR.

MU School of
Medicine launches
medical journal

EVERYONE WELCOME!!!!

mydailysentinel.com or mydailytribune.com

would appreciate your vote
for township trustee this
upcoming election!
Paid for by the candidate, Zachary B. Manuel

60620514

2A Sunday, November 1, 2015

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The
Meigs Community Calendar will only list event
information that is open
to the public.

SUN., NOV. 1

POMEROY — Nancy
Haney, of Point to Hope Ministries, will speak at the Hemlock Grove Christian Church
at 6 p.m. For more information contact Pastor Diana
Kinder at 740-591-5960.
SYRACUSE — Carleton
Schools and Meigs Industries will host a spaghetti dinner, 50/50 rafﬂe and a bake
sale from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. A
suggested donation is $7 for
adults and $4 for children.
Advance tickets available.
For more information or to
purchase tickets call 740-9926681 or 740-508-9300.
RACINE — American
Legion Post 602 in Racine
will host their monthly lunch
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday’s menu includes fried
chicken, pulled pork, green
beans, mashed potatoes,
noodles, cole slaw, roll, dessert and drink.

MON., NOV. 2

SYRACUSE — Sutton
Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal Building.

TUES., NOV. 3

SALEM TOWNSHIP —
There will be an election day
lunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Sunday, November 1, 2015 3A

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

at the Salem Township Volunteer Fire Dept. on St. Rt.
124 at the Salem Center. The
menu includes soups, sloppy
joes, hot dogs and desserts.
Please bring containers for
take-out soup. For more
information call Linda at 740669-4245.
EAST LETART — There
will be an election day lunch
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
East Letart United Methodist Church. The menu
includes vegetable soup,
chili, hot dogs and desserts.
Please bring containers for
take-out soup.
RACINE — There will
be an election day dinner at
the Racine United Methodist Church from 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. Soups, sandwiches and
desserts will be served. Carryout available. Bring your
own containers for soup.
SYRACUSE — Syracuse
Community Center will be
serving an election day dinner consisting of soup, chili,
pulled pork, hot dogs and
sauce, chicken and noodles,
sloppy joes and desserts.
People can eat in or take
home. Soups are sold by the
bowl or by the quart. Lunch
begins at 10:30 a.m.
POMEROY — There will
be an opportunity to donate
blood from 8 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. Nov. 3 at the Meigs
Local High School gymnasium. The event is sponsored
by the Meigs County American Red Cross.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public.

Meigs Board of
Elections meeting
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Elections will be 6 a.m. Nov. 3. The
board’s meeting will reconvene at 7 p.m. the same day
to continue Election Day business.

Tuppers Plains Nov. 4 breast
and cervical screenings
TUPPERS PLAINS — Breast and cervical cancer
screenings and education will be provided by the Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s
(OU-HCOM) Community Health Programs, 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. The clinic will be held on the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine Community Health
Programs’ Mobile Health Van parked at the St. Paul
United Methodist Church on Route 7 in Tuppers
Plains Free Pap tests, pelvic and breast examinations, breast health education, and appointments
for mammograms will be provided to uninsured and
underinsured women. Appointments are required and
interested persons should call 1-800-844-2654 or 740593-2432 to schedule.

Editor’s Note: The Gallia Community Calendar will list event information that is free and open to the public.

CARD SHOWER

Darrell Ferrell, a resident at The
Arbors of Pomeroy, is recovering
from surgery. Card may be sent to:
Darrell Ferrell, c/o The Arbors of
Pomeroy, P.O Box 36759, Rockspring Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Jack Carter will be celebrating his 103rd birthday on Nov. 8.
Cards may be sent to him at: 1064
State Route 218, Gallipolis, OH
45631.

EVENTS
MONDAY, NOV. 2

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis

Neighborhood Watch will meet at
1:30 p.m. at 518 Second Ave. in the
Justice Center conference room.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis in
Lights will be holding a workshop
and fundraiser at Courtside Bar
and Grill. Group volunteers will
teach comers how to make light
balls from chicken wire. Acoustic music will be played by the
Stringbenders during the workshop.
GALLIPOLIS — American
Legion Lafayette Post 27 will
meet at 6 p.m. at the post home
on McCormick Road. All members are urged to attend.

ees will meet for lunch at noon
at Bob Evans restaurant in Rio
Grande.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet at 7
p.m. at the Gallipolis Municipal
Building, 333 Third Ave. The
meeting room may be accessed
through the side entrance at 2½
Alley.

THURSDAY, NOV. 5

CHILLICOTHE — The Southern
Ohio Council of Governments will
hold its next board meeting at 10
a.m. in Room A of the Ross County
Service Center, 475 Western Ave.,
Chillicothe. Board meetings usually
TUESDAY, NOV. 3
are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the
RIO GRANDE — Holzer Clinic month. For more information, call
and Holzer Medical Center retir- 740-775-5030, ext. 103.

GALLIA CHURCH CALENDAR

GALLIA LOCAL BRIEFS

REVIVAL

Healthy Holiday event

Nov. 6-8, End Time Harvest Church, 1215
Dixon Run Road, Jackson, (log church, exit 327).
Pastor Larry and Wendy Crawford, of Lincoln,Ill.
Friday-Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday worship service,
11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Special singing.

SUNDAY, NOV. 1

GALLIPOLIS — Coffee Klatch at 9:45 a.m.,
Sunday School at 10 a.m., morning worship service at 10:30; Pastor Bob Hood, Bulaville Christian Church, 2337 Johnson Ridge Rd.; 740-4467495 or 740-709-6107.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light” Worship in the
Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m.; choir practice, 4:30
p.m.; Discipleship 101, 6 p.m.; Teen Worship in the
Family Life Center, 6 p.m., First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave. with Pastor Douglas Downs.
ADDISON — Sunday School, 10 a.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church; Sunday evening service
at 6 p.m. with Pastor Rick Barcus preaching.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4

GALLIPOLIS — Children’s Ministries, 6:45
p.m.; Youth “Impact 127”, 7 p.m.; Prayer &amp; Praise,
7 p.m.; Choir Practice, 7 p.m.; First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.
ADDISON — Prayer meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church, with the Rev. Truman
Johnson preaching.

FRIDAY, NOV. 6

GALLIPOLIS — Prayer Force, 8:45 a.m., Harmon Chapel, First Church of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave.

GALLIPOLIS — Bossard Library and Holzer
Health System are teaming up to present a Healthy
Holiday Cooking Demonstration between 5-7 p.m.
Nov. 3 in the library’s new Riverside Room. Attendees will have the opportunity to sample common
holiday dishes, made healthy and delicious. Holzer
Health System’s chef will provide a meal (recipes
included) and describe healthy cooking techniques,
while a dietitian reviews tips and tricks to avoid
weight gain during the holiday season. Registration is
required. Contact the library to secure a spot for this
program. Come hungry for food and information.

SOCOG meets Nov. 5
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council
of Governments will hold its next board meeting at
10 a.m. in Room A of the Ross County Service Center, 475 Western Ave., Chillicothe. Board meetings
usually are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the month.
For more information, call 740-775-5030, ext. 103.

VFW to honor veterans
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County VFW Post
4464 will honor Veterans Day at the Gallipolis
Wal-Mart store on Nov. 7. At 9:30 a.m., the VFW
will present the nation’s colors with a small parade
from the ball ﬁelds on Smithers Avenue (the street
directly across from the entrance to Wal-Mart,
with the signal light) to the outdoor living center
of Wal-Mart. At 10 a.m., there will be a ceremony
to honor Veterans Day inside the store hosted by
employees of Wal-Mart.

SURGERY

at Pleasant Valley Hospital is

BETTER THAN EVER
with Marshall Surgery.
PLEASANT VALLEY SURGICAL ASSOCIATES
ARTHUR FINE, MD, FACS
From appendectomy to hernias, from wound
Introducing…

Dorothy (Dottie) Reynolds
7-14-47 - 10-13-15

60620203

The Reynolds/Slayton Families would like to
WKDQN�HYHU\RQH�ZKR�VHQW�FDUGV��ÁRZHUV��
or condolences during our recent loss.
Special thanks to all at the Willis Funeral Home
who always provides that special attention to
our loved one while providing the family with
comfort, guidance and support;
to Pastor Alvis Pollard of the First Baptist
Church of Gallipolis for his very comforting
message during the service, and to the
remaining Church congregation for it’s
continual love and acceptance toward Dottie
throughout the years; to Laura, Helena, and
Oliva Neal for their angelic voices of song
which comforted the family and guests greatly;
to Floral Fashions’ outstanding display of
ÁRZHU�DUUDQJHPHQWV��WR�*DOOFR�,QGXVWULHV��
Middleton Estates, ResCare, Bridges who all
provided love, care, and a family with Dottie
throughout many years; to Kay Wallace and
Alice Bufford for their ever-lasting friendships;
WR�'RWWLH·V�FDUHWDNHUV�.DWK\UQ�$GNLQV� $36, ��
7LQD�0LWFKHOOO� &amp;7&lt;�%G �DQG�5REHUWD�)HOOXUH�
5HV&amp;DUH �ZKR�DOO�GHGLFDWHG�WKHPVHOYHV�WR�KHU�
KDSSLQHVV�DQG�ZHOO�EHLQJ��DQG�WR�DOO�
RWKHUV�QRW�PHQWLRQHG��EXW�QRW�IRUJRWWHQ��
´'RWWLHµ�ZLOO�DOZD\V�EH�RQ�RXU�PLQGV�DQG�
forever in our hearts.
The Reynolds/Slayton Families

www.mydailysentinel.com
or www.mydailytribune.com

care to laparoscopy, patients with surgical
concerns now have access to comprehensive,
surgical care from board-certified Marshall
Surgeon, Arthur Fine, MD, FACS, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Dr. Fine’s extensive experience and expertise
is a valuable addition to the Point Pleasant
community. He performs surgeries for teens
and adult patients with appendectomies,
breast biopsies, carpal tunnel release,
cholecystectomy, colectomy, endoscopy,
hemorrhoidectomy, inguinal and ventral
hernia, mastectomy, skin excisions, and
umbilical hernia. Dr. Fine is also highlyskilled with wound care and laparoscopy.
Because health happens here in the
community we love.

ARTHUR FINE, MD,
FACS
Dr. Fine earned his medical
doctorate from the St.
Georges University School
of Medicine, and completed
his residency in surgery
at McKeesport Hospital in
McKeesport, Pennsylvania. He served in the
United States Air Force as Chief of Surgery at
USAF Hospital in Laughlin AFB, Texas. He also
developed the first community and on-base
breast cancer screening and surgery program
in the Armed Forces. His decorations include
the Air Force Commendation Medal, Longevity
Ribbon, Marksmanship Ribbon, and Gulf War
Service Ribbon.

“One of the many great things about the partnership with Pleasant Valley Hospital, Cabell
Huntington Hospital, and Marshall Health is that it brings together the best technology,
expertise and quality of service that allows Pleasant Valley Hospital to serve the health care
needs of this community. Providing general and specialized surgeries for all patients who
we care so much about in rural communities is a great opportunity,” stated Arthur Fine, MD,
FACS, Marshall Surgeon.

60613472

Pleasant Valley Surgical Associates
�����7BMMFZ�%SJWF �4VJUF�(���o�1PJOU�1MFBTBOU �87�������o�������������

�E ditorial
4A Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Social
media,
spreading
rumors
Social media, the Internet
and email are great inventions.
Many of us use these tools
every day for work, school and
everyday communications.
However there are times
when social media, particularly Facebook and even worse,
Topix, can do more harm than
good to a community.
A prime example is the situation at Mingo Central High
School in West Virginia earlier
this week. A student made a
comment to another student
that he had a gun. Thankfully,
that wasn’t the case. But,
when the rumors and gossip
began, the story rapidly spiraled out of control.
False and unconﬁrmed statements can spread like wildﬁre
and do just as much damage.
Naturally, parents are going
to be concerned and their
fears can quickly turn into
panic. After all, we have seen
devastating school shootings
across the United States the
past few years. If you say the
word “Columbine,” it instantly
strikes a nerve in most people.
The lockdown at the West
Virginia school most likely
could have been avoided if not
for social media and e-mails.
The exchange of messages —
even by parents — had many
apprehensive about sending their children to school.
Several parents went to the
school to sign their kids out,
even though the situation was
blown out of proportion.
The initial incident had been
resolved Monday afternoon,
but the rumors persisted and
only served to add fuel to the
ﬁre.
This is a perfect example of
how social media can create
unnecessary panic.
We have come a far cry from
backyard over-the-fence gossiping.
There was another situation in the Phelps, Ky., area
in which some residents
reported a low-ﬂying airplane
and that it may have crashed.
The Phelps Volunteer Fire
Department was dispatched
and some media reports say
a helicopter was sent out to
look for a possible downed
aircraft. Unconﬁrmed reports
say it was a military training
exercise and that was why the
plane was ﬂying so low over
the mountaintops.
Facebook and Twitter are
great ways to communicate
with family and friends. Many
of us could not do our jobs if
we did not have the Internet
and email. That is just the way
things have changed.
However, as with many tools
that can aid society, sometimes they can also be detriments.
Please be careful when
spreading messages via social
media and email unless the
topic you are talking about
is conﬁrmed. Gossip, in any
form, is just idle talk.
We all need to responsibly
participate in social media.
Used correctly, it is a terriﬁc
tool for both gaining and giving information. Used incorrectly, it can induce panic,
chaos and confusion.
Always remember that
rumors are not only damaging,
but can also be dangerous,
escalating a manageable situation into a state of panic. So
try to avoid getting involved in
spreading hearsay and unconﬁrmed issues.
It’s just the right thing to
do.

YOUR VIEW

‘Yes’ vote encouraged
on fairgrounds tax levy
Dear Editor,
On Nov. 3, we have a unique opportunity in
Gallia County. A one-quarter of one percent
(0.25 percent) sales tax levy will be voted on
that will pay to move our fairgrounds to higher
ground already owned by the fair.
This small sales tax will amount to 25 cents
additional tax per $100 spent on taxable items.
One-hundred percent of the tax goes to pay
for the new fairgrounds and will end when the
debt is paid off for a maximum of 20 years.
Plus the great thing about a sales tax is that
people making purchases on their way through
Gallia County help pay for our project.
Folks, this is a great deal if the fairgrounds
were used only one week a year, but the new
fairgrounds will be used year round for events
like gospel concerts, outdoor shows, small buying shows, country music shows, weddings,
ﬂea markets — it’s endless — so it’s a super
deal. We cannot afford to pass on this opportunity.
This is just another important step in taking
our community to the next level.
Our present grounds need repair. The fair
is one of the largest events in the county and
serves thousands of children in 4H activities
through the years. Add in all of the new uses,
and this makes this project is a no-brainer. It’s
time for today’s generations to take us to the
next level.
Vote “Yes” to help our own community.
I suggest everyone vote yes on Tuesday, Nov. 3.
Sheila Eastman

Gallipolis

Forefathers had
fairgrounds foresight
Dear Editor,
In regards to the Gallia County Junior Fair
levy, I am asking that all voters check their
ballot with a “Yes.”
In making this commitment, we will be
supporting most important the young adults
and their endeavor to learn leadership, sharing of limelight (the highs and lows) and the
beneﬁts of hard work with their projects. This
commitment will also beneﬁt older adults
with a facility that will provide entertainment,
distribution of health services, ﬂea markets,
auctions, reunions and social gatherings.
We have been very fortunate that our
forefathers looked to the future for many of
us in securing the present site and making it
what it has been. Now we need to step up to
the plate and provide a safe and secure place
for our children, grandchildren and greatgrandchildren to have the satisfaction and
opportunities we had.

Jean Niday

our children and grandchildren than 4-H?
Fellow Gallia County residents, the Gallia
County Jr. Fair, for more than half a century,
has provided a safe venue for scores of Gallia
County young people to display the projects
that required countless hours of work. The
location of our fairgrounds is no longer the
“safe” venue it once was.
This year, once again, a fair-destroying
and, perhaps, life-taking ﬂood occurred just
one week before the fair began. For the safety
of our most valuable resource, our young
people, we must relocate the fairgrounds. We
are fortunate the fair board already owns the
property for relocation. We are fortunate that
our county commissioners have approved
a ﬁnancing source that is time speciﬁc (20
years), amount speciﬁc (a one-quarter of 1
percent sales tax).
While the Gallia County Jr. Fair is more
than 4-H, all those other activities that are
“more than 4-H” will also beneﬁt from the
relocation. We’re talking about “25 cents per
$100 spent” is the investment to be made.
Perhaps the best summary of the value of
4-H is a comment sausage maker Bob Evans
once made: “If we had more 4-H camps, we’d
need fewer prisons.”

Jeff Smith

Gallipolis

New fairgrounds will
provide safe location
Dear Editor,
Please join me Nov. 3 by voting to support
an increase in the sales tax of one-quarter
of one per cent for relocation of the Gallia
County Fairgrounds.
I ﬁrst became involved nearly 60 years ago
as a 4-H exhibitor and later as a Youth Board
member representing FFA. Those were exciting times with each year being bigger and
better than the last.
A new fairgrounds will allow us to recapture that same excitement in a new up-to-date
safe location. In recent years, Gallia County
has grown to be the “Ag Center” of the
Mid-Ohio Valley. We excel in quality of our
purebred livestock and club animals. Our crop
yields are competitive on a regional basis. Our
people are in leadership positions for organizations at the state and national levels. Much
of these successes are a result of a strong
youth program and the incentive that the
county fair provides.
The next step is a new, safe fairgrounds
that will serve an exciting, expanding youth
program and put Gallia County in the forefront for future generations of leadership and
excellence. A new venue can also host yearround activities such as purebred cattle sales,
club animal sales, farm equipment shows and
regional/state ag organization meetings. The
possibilities are endless.
Vote for the sales tax referendum Nov. 3.

Ed Vollborn
Gallipolis

Gallipolis

Fairgrounds: Another
Current fairgrounds is
tragedy waiting to happen
no longer a ‘safe’ venue Dear Editor,
Dear Editor,
Let me ﬁrst say I’ve been blessed to have
grown up in Gallia County, attend school in
Gallia County and, after college, returned to
Gallia County, where I’ve also been blessed
with a working career that has spanned more
than four decades.
I’ve come to appreciate the discipline and
responsibility 4-H instills in the young people
of our county, skills such as responsibly caring
for both plants and animals, running an efﬁcient meeting, keeping accurate minutes and
completing projects on time. As parents and
grandparents, with so many negative inﬂuences today, we are all concerned with the futures
of our young people. May I suggest there are
few institutions more positive in the lives of

There’s been a signiﬁcant amount of talk
about the reasons for a new fairgrounds, most
notably avoiding the potential of a tragic ﬂash
ﬂood that could take place during the fair.
We’ve been fortunate that we’ve avoided
what could be a terrible rainstorm during fair
week. But we must also be aware, that it’s
likely not a matter of if a tragedy takes place,
but when. At some point, there will be a ﬂash
ﬂood event during fair week. The impact will
be a tragedy for our region.
Our area, has already suffered signiﬁcant
tragedy. Let’s not allow another life-changing
event scar the lives of our entire region, much
like a dangerous ﬂash ﬂood would cause.
I’ll take you back a few decades, and talk
about someone who was near and dear to my

heart — my brother, James Richard Maxwell.
On a busy holiday afternoon, he called a
clothing store in Point Pleasant asking if he
could pick up his layaway the following day.
Sadly, the clerk who answered said that “all layaways must be picked up by closing time today
or they will be returned to store stock.”
Most of us know that in virtually all cases,
layaway items were typically to be picked up
by Dec. 15 — a day that we remember all too
well.
My brother was 20 years old at the time. It
was late in the afternoon on Dec. 15, 1967. He
traveled to Point Pleasant and picked up the
item before the store closed that day. It was
approximately 5 p.m. He placed the layaway
item in his car — a dress for his new wife,
Linda. They had been married six months at
the time.
Two minutes later, he was gone.
My brother was one of the 46 individuals
who died that day. He was right in the middle
of the westbound trafﬁc on the Silver Bridge
when it collapsed. His body was found a few
days later.
Our family was obviously forever in pain due
to this tragedy. My father died a few years later.
We’ve always said that it was the loss of our
brother that eventually caused health problems
for our father, who passed away in 1979.
So, our area already knows what a tragedy
can be. Let’s not allow another to happen. We’ll
never recover.
Vote “yes” for safety. Vote “yes” for our children. Vote “yes” for a new fairgrounds. It will
be a few pennies to change the future while we
still have the chance.

Christine Wray
Gallipolis

Vote ‘yes’ for MCHD levy
Dear Editor,
I have been privileged to work for Meigs
County residents via the Meigs County
Health Department. Like many of you, I pay
property taxes to support essential services
including public health.
Your hard-earned support of the MCHD is
greatly valued. We strive to be good stewards
of taxpayer funds because we also struggle
to make ends meet. In 2011, a renewal levy
was sought because county residents were
struggling, but we needed a replacement
levy to meet operating expenses. People have
retired and not been replaced, with additional
responsibilities added to already overloaded
employees. A full-time health commissioner
was replaced with that of a part-time position
to allow us to function within limited means.
Making more with less is a reality we all can
relate to, but it is getting harder to provide
services. (Visit www.meigs-health.com for
service information.)
The MCHD is seeking an additional one
mill levy. It will run concurrently with the
current one mill that expires in 2016. If this
levy passes, we will not renew/replace current
millage. We need this additional levy because
the MCHD is experiencing challenges not
encountered previously. We must become
nationally accredited to be eligible to receive
funding from the Ohio Department of Health.
Accreditation is a lofty goal for all health
departments, especially small ones.
Meanwhile, the ODH is transitioning to
awarding 100 percent reimbursable grants.
Local tax levy funding will have to support these programs until reimbursement
is received. Please remember that we are
operating with a scaled back staff that needs
expanded to maintain the services we currently provide plus to meet new challenges.
The ODH Director stated that local communities should support their health department. Everyone beneﬁts from services provided by the MCHD. Please vote yes.

Courtney C. Midkiff
Pomeroy

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 1, 2015 5A

OSHP releases latest OVI arrest report
By Dean Wright

also charged with being in possession
deanwright@civitasmedia.com
of a drug instrument, more speciﬁcally a syringe, and is incarcerated at
GALLIA COUNTY — The Ohio
the Gallia County Jail.
State Highway Patrol post on Jackson
On Oct. 2, Brent Smith, 23, of
Pike has released another report of
South Webster, Ohio, was arrested
its OVI arrest reports for the Gallia
for alleged OVI at the Gallipolis
County Area consisting of incidents
OSHP Post after driving to the post
from the last few weeks.
to pick up a friend of his who had
On Sept. 28, Wesley Wise, 73, of
been arrested in an earlier related
Vinton was arrested for alleged oper- OVI incident. Smith submitted to a
ating a vehicle while impaired (OVI) breath test and was allegedly shown
after being involved in a one-vehicle
to have a blood alcohol content of .1.
crash on Story’s Run Road at 4:40
Smith was placed under an adminisp.m. Wise submitted to a breath test trative license suspension.
and was allegedly shown to have a
On Oct. 14, Alice Mullins, 40, of
blood alchol content of .151. Wise
Gallipolis, was arrested for alleged
was also cited for alleged failure to
OVI on State Route 588, west of
control and wearing no seat belt. He Gallipolis. Mullins submitted to a
was placed under an administrative
breath test and allegedly measured to
license suspension.
have a blood alcohol of .22. Mullins
On Oct. 1, Amber Phillips, 28, of
was also charged with driving with a
Gallipolis was arrested for alleged
suspended license, no seat belt and
OVI on State Route 7 just north of
driving left of center. She was place
Gallipolis. She was suspected of
under and administrative license
being under the inﬂuence of drugs.
suspension.
Phillips submitted to a urine test.
On Oct. 15, Joseph Sellers, 53, of
The results are still reportedly
Waverly, was arrested for alleged OVI
unknown as of this time. She was
on U.S. Route 35 near the rest area at

approximately 4:30 p.m. after being
reported by witnesses as driving recklessly. Sellers was suspected of being
impaired by drugs. Sellers allegedly
refused to submit to a urine test and
was placed under an administrative
license suspension.
On Oct. 17, Timothy Voss, 31, of
Gallipolis, was arrested for alleged
OVI on Porter Road near State Route
160. Voss was suspected of being
impaired by drugs. He allegedly
refused to submit a urine test and
was placed under an administrative
license suspension. Voss has four
prior OVI convictions.
On Oct. 20, Kevin Young, 38, of
Jackson, was arrested for alleged
OVI on Georges Creek Road around
3 a.m. Ofﬁcers seized suspected
marijuana and drug paraphernalia
during the stop. Young was suspected
of being impaired by drugs. He allegedly refused to submit to a urine test
and was placed under administrative license suspension. He was also
charged for driving left of center.
Dean Wright can be reached at (740) 4462342, Ext. 2103.

MU expands graduate education
Staff Report

teams of physicians and
administrative staff, are
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — to be commended on this
Marshall University’s Joan
wonderful achievement for
C. Edwards School of Medi- our school.”
cine has been approved for
The fellowship will
an accredited sports medilaunch in July with one
cine fellowship in the depart- position open to a physiment of family and comcian who has completed a
munity health, Dr. Joseph I. three-year family medicine
Shapiro, dean of the school, residency.
announced today.
“Our sports medicine
“Approval from the
fellowship will offer an
Accreditation Council for
outstanding opportunity
Graduate Medical Educafor a family practitioner
tion to begin a new fellow- to expand his or her intership at Marshall is truly the est and skill in a growing
culmination of outstanding ﬁeld,” said Dr. Stephen
work by many people at
M. Petrany, chairman of
our institution,” Shapiro
the department of family
said. “Drs. Steve Petrany
and community health. “In
and Paulette Wehner, as
partnership with our department of orthopaedics and
well as their dedicated

the Marshall Sports Medicine Institute, the program
will offer the most advanced
and highest quality training
experiences for managing
the variety of sports medicine problems that these
physicians will encounter in
their own practices.”
Petrany said the training will include areas of
emphasis in team physician
experience, fracture care
and research.
Marshall’s vice dean
for graduate medical
education, Dr. Paulette S.
Wehner, said the sports
medicine fellowship at
Marshall will become the
newest clinical education
program in graduate medical education.

Marshall was approved
for a psychiatry residency
and nephrology fellowship within the past year
and neurology and dental
programs, both of which
had recent site visits, are
expecting accreditation
decisions in early 2016.
The school is also applying
this month for a hematology/oncology fellowship and
anticipates the application
being presented during
the accreditation council’s
January 2016 meeting.
In addition to Petrany
and Wehner, faculty
involved in writing the
sports medicine program
application were Dr. David
P. Rupp, Dr. Ross M. Patton
and Dr. W. Mitch Shaver.

Commissioners
OK two bids
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners
accepted a $3,800 bid from Kramer Engineering, of Columbus, for the Middleport sidewalk improvement project.
Robbie Jacks, director of Meigs County EMS/911,
also made a stop by the ofﬁce and said that they had
received three bids regarding the purchase of a new
ambulance. He told the commissioners Thursday that
he planned to accept a bid of $96,169 from Myers
Equipment Corp. of Canﬁeld, Ohio.
An appropriation of $10,000 for appointed counsel
was approved, with bills and minutes from the previous week also approved.
The trio approved a resolution from Meigs County
Department of Job &amp; Family Services that increases the
amount of a contract between Job &amp; Family Services
and the Meigs County Juvenile Court from $39,298.54
to $50,760.62. According to the resolution, the provider agrees to accept 66 percent of the total contract
as payment in full, with 66 percent of the total contract
being $33,502.01. The resolution says that both parties
agree that all terms, conditions and obligations of the
contract will remain in effect through Dec. 31.
The commissioners announced that Sara Gore will
be present Nov. 12 with a Home Health Care Hospice
Month proclamation.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155. EXT. 2555.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

992.2155
or 446.2342

Holzer would like to thank the Gallia County Junior
Fair Board for its support in use of the Gallia County
Fairgrounds during our Annual Treat Street Event!
fff�W^[iTa�^aV�~� �'$$�#7&gt;;I4A�� �'$$�##%�$("&amp;�

60620606

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, November 1, 2015

Strickland
From Page 1A

Strickland said “middle-class
life” means, to him, being able
to live in a decent home, have
a decent job with reasonable
beneﬁts, sending children to good
schools that will prepare them for
life and being able to send those
children to college without being
burdened with what he called “a
lifetime of debt.”
Strickland said 70 percent
of all the young people who
graduate from Ohio’s public
colleges and universities leave
school with a diploma and an
average debt of $30,000.
“To be a middle-class person
means you can face your
retirement years without fear

The center is a nonproﬁt building that holds
cultural, recreational and
educational activities
within its walls, including a ﬁtness room, yoga
classes and a painting
class. The space can also

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 56.65
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 109.72
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.10
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 43.27
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.82
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.62
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.290
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.83
Collins (NYSE) —86.72
DuPont (NYSE) — 63.40
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.18
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 28.92
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.45
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 64.25
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.80
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 95.98
Norfolk So (NYSE) —80.03
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.92

BBT (NYSE) —37.15
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 19.16
Pepsico (NYSE) — 102.21
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.73
Rockwell (NYSE) — 109.16
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.75
Royal Dutch Shell — 52.46
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 23.37
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 57.26
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.16
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.65
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.70
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Oct. 30, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

68°
48°
56°

61°

59°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

48°
35°
64°
41°
83° in 1950
23° in 1965
(in inches)

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

0.00
2.36
2.71
41.39
35.74

Today
6:55 a.m.
5:29 p.m.
10:26 p.m.
11:57 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
6:56 a.m.
5:27 p.m.
11:23 p.m.
12:42 p.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Nov 3

First

Full

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

Minor
10:49a
10:44a
11:35a
12:20p
12:40a
1:19a
1:57a

Major
5:02p
4:57p
5:46p
6:31p
7:12p
7:51p
8:28p

Chillicothe
66/46

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

0

Lucasville
66/48

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Minor
11:16p
11:09p
11:58p
---1:02p
1:40p
2:18p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 1, 1861, a hurricane battered
the Union ﬂeet as it tried to attack
ports in the Carolinas. On Nov. 1,
1946, a tropical storm drenched
Naples, Fla., with almost 8 inches
of rain.

Portsmouth
66/49

AIR QUALITY

Dean Wright can be reached a (740) 446-2342, Ext.
2103.

THURSDAY

73°
53°

24
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
12.63
17.73
21.70
12.91
13.44
25.38
13.36
26.52
34.97
13.27
18.90
34.70
17.70

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.07
+0.71
+0.14
-0.16
+0.47
+0.01
+0.24
+1.62
+1.26
+1.10
+2.80
+0.70
+3.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Mostly cloudy and
remaining warm

Marietta
64/48
Belpre
65/45

Athens
65/44

St. Marys
65/49

Parkersburg
66/46

Coolville
65/45

Elizabeth
65/50

Spencer
65/51

Buffalo
66/51
Milton
66/52

Clendenin
66/54

St. Albans
67/54

Huntington
66/51

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
55/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
69/59
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
84/61
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

73°
50°

Mostly sunny, nice
and warm

Murray City
65/45

Ironton
66/52

Ashland
66/53
Grayson
66/54

FRIDAY

72°
55°

Wilkesville
65/46
POMEROY
Jackson
65/49
66/46
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
66/50
66/48
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
64/44
GALLIPOLIS
66/48
66/51
66/48

South Shore Greenup
66/52
66/48

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

64°
45°
Sun and areas of high
clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
65/44

Waverly
66/48

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

0 50 100 150 200

Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25

Major
Today 4:36a
Mon. 4:32a
Tue. 5:23a
Wed. 6:09a
Thu. 6:51a
Fri.
7:30a
Sat.
8:07a

Adelphi
66/43

Q: What weather word spelled backward means to get married?

SUN &amp; MOON

Logan
65/43

Day on Tuesday, with an
election day lunch beginning at 10:30 a.m.

who will quickly drain the card account.
McCullough advised mature citizens
around the area to be wary of this technique as she has been encountering it in
her day to day investigations.
Should citizens suspect they are victims of potential fraud, they should contact the Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce at
(740) 446-1221.

A: Dew.

Precipitation

71°
51°

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

0

WEDNESDAY

Partly sunny, nice and Sunny and pleasantly
warm
warm

Warmer today with variable cloudiness. Mostly
cloudy tonight. High 66° / Low 48°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Mostly cloudy

auction call 740-992-2365.
The building will also
serve as the election headquarters for Syracuse and
Minersville come Election

Now, a new technique has surfaced
in which scammers tell victims to purchase Green Dot MoneyPaks, often
available at drug stores. These “packs”
are used to ﬁll a money card and its
details are then given to the scammer

TUESDAY

Reach Michael Johnson at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2102, or on Twitter @OhioEditorMike.

Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

From Page 1A

MONDAY

According to The Washington
Post in a story published on
March 10, 2015, Portman was one
of those 47 letter-signers.
“(Portman) signed that letter …
in the middle of negotiations in an
effort to embarrass the president
and to scuttle the negotiations,”
he said. “For Portman to sign
that letter was disgraceful.
Some people have used harsher
descriptions than that. I’ll just say
it was a disgraceful act.”
Before closing his remarks,
Strickland said much is at
stake for not only Democrats,
but for America.
“I’m running for … the future
of the Senate, the future of the
Supreme Court, and the future of
the middle class in this country.”

The center also has a shelter and a playground for local children.

Fraud

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Strickland said groups such as
the Koch Brothers, Karl Rove, U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, American
Chemical Association, Kentucky
Congressman Mitch McConnell
and Portman “have already
spent … over $10 million’ against
Strickland’s run for U.S. Senate.”
“Why are they doing that? Don’t
you think that’s a good question
to ask the people of this state?”
Strickland asked. “Why would they
spend that much money, more than
a year before the election? Because
they have, in Rob Portman, the
perfect senator for them. He’s
always there when they need him.”
Strickland also slammed
Portman for being one of 47
Republican U.S. senators who
signed a letter to Iran’s Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei warning that
Congress could revoke any nuclear
deal that President Obama makes.

building was replaced and
an eight-inch drain was
installed under the sidewalk. The parking lot was
also paved, along with the
road around the shelter
and the basketball court.
New lines were also
painted on the parking lot
and basketball courts, and
awnings were installed
over all the doors on the
building.
And with the changing
of the seasons, the center
is hoping to purchase
energy-efﬁcient window
blinds. They will hold a
consignment auction at
10 a.m. Dec. 5, with 20
percent of any sales going
toward the center. For
more information on the

WJOS-TV, the Emergency
Planning Commission
(Blue Med Response System) and the River City
Players.
However, while the
building is booked almost
daily, repairs still need
to be made on myriad
aspects of the structure.
In 2015, 130 feet of sidewalk in the back of the

be rented out for special
events and is the current
location for practices by
Southern Local’s basketball teams.
The Wildwood Garden
Club, church groups,
T-ball teams and the
Girl Scouts also call the
building home. A speciﬁc
room in the upstairs area
is also designated for

From Page 1A

for the U.S. Senate seat —
Portman. The former governor
must ﬁrst defeat Cincinnati
councilman P.G. Sittenfeld in the
primary before he can take on the
incumbent senator next fall.
“I understand (Portman)
doesn’t spend a lot of time in this
part of the state … until recently,”
he said.
Strickland said Portman “is a
really conservative guy with really
good manners.”
“Because he has good manners
— and I know him well; he
does have good manners — he’s
perceived to be a moderate kind of
guy. My friends, he’s not moderate
in his voting,” he said. “He is a
reliable vote for the reactionary
conservatives any time they need
his vote. He’s the kind of guy
who’s always there when you don’t
need him.”

that you’re going to have to live
your last years in poverty because
of some illness or some other
catastrophic thing that can happen
to you. I think that’s what most
people aspire to,” he said.
According to Strickland,
the middle class in American
has been, of the last 30 years,
shrinking.
“It’s has become more and
more difﬁcult to be a part of the
middle class in America. People
have worked hard over the last
30 years,” he said. “Productivity
has increased, wealth has been
created, but unfortunately most of
that wealth has been concentrated
in the top 1 percent of the richest
people in America. That wealth
has not been shared with the
working people.”
Strickland also took a few
shots at his presumed opposition

Charleston
66/52

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
48/34

Montreal
55/40
Toronto
57/39

Billings
65/38

Minneapolis
61/45
Denver
72/39

Kansas City
72/47

Detroit
63/43

Chicago
63/45

New York
66/54
Washington
71/56

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
66/41/s
32/27/pc
68/63/r
67/54/c
70/50/c
65/38/c
61/42/c
62/48/c
66/52/c
66/60/r
66/39/pc
63/45/s
66/48/c
63/44/pc
66/46/c
71/51/pc
72/39/s
70/49/s
63/43/pc
89/75/c
77/57/c
66/47/pc
72/47/s
82/60/s
68/56/sh
84/61/s
69/55/c
87/76/pc
61/45/pc
68/58/sh
74/63/r
66/54/c
72/46/s
88/71/s
70/54/c
84/59/s
64/46/c
57/43/c
69/60/c
70/55/c
69/47/pc
68/49/pc
69/59/c
55/46/r
71/56/c

Hi/Lo/W
68/44/s
37/31/sn
71/59/r
63/51/r
60/45/r
51/35/r
53/35/c
61/46/pc
67/49/sh
72/55/r
64/38/c
69/49/s
70/47/c
66/45/s
68/45/pc
78/55/s
73/41/pc
72/51/s
66/44/s
88/75/sh
78/58/s
70/44/pc
74/52/s
80/54/pc
73/52/pc
72/53/c
72/53/c
87/76/pc
67/48/pc
70/54/t
76/62/pc
64/50/c
75/52/s
89/71/pc
64/49/r
86/60/s
63/43/c
60/40/pc
71/56/r
63/50/r
72/52/s
64/44/sh
64/52/c
52/44/c
60/52/r

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
68/63

High
Low

El Paso
70/47
Chihuahua
74/41

90° in Death Valley, CA
14° in Bridgeport, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
77/57
Monterrey
83/53

GOALS

Miami
87/76

110° in Marble Bar, Australia
-31° in Sachs Harbour, Canada

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

Center

Sunday Times-Sentinel

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 1, 2015 s Section B

Spartans outlast Marauders, 35-26
By Dave Harris

For Ohio Valley Publishing

ROCKSPRINGS — The
Alexander Spartans rode
the back of Mason Chapman
en route to their ﬁrst-ever
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division championship by
defeating the Meigs Marauders 35-26 Friday evening at
Meigs High School.
Meigs went into the contest needing a win to tie the
Spartans for the crown, but
Chapman — who accounted
for 243 yards of total offense
Donald Lambert | OVP Sports
Meigs sophomore Zach Helton (10) returning a punt during the Marauders’ 35-26 loss to and had an hand in all ﬁve
Spartans touchdowns —
Alexander on Friday in Rocksprings, Ohio.

ended the Marauders’ hopes.
The Marauders received the
opening kickoff and quickly
went on a 16-play, 81-yard
score and took the ﬁrst lead of
the night when Cody Bartrum
hit Colton Lilly with a pass
for the score at the 6:03 mark
of the ﬁrst period.
The Spartans however took
just three plays to take the
lead when Chapman hit AJ
Marks for a screen pass, and
the junior took it 61 yards for
the score. Kyle Howard added
the kick and the Spartans
were on top 7-6 with 7:25 left
in the ﬁrst period.
Lane Cullums gave the

Marauders a 14-7 lead with an
eight yard run, Bartrum added
the extra points with 7:42 left in
the half. The big play in the drive
was a 40-yard pass from Bartrum
to Kaileb Sheets on a third and
21 the play before the score.
Meigs went for the onside
kick and the Marauder kicker
almost missed the ball giving
Alexander great ﬁeld position. Trent Bradbury went
10 yards on ﬁrst down and
Chapman went the ﬁnal 23
for the score. Howard tied
the game at 14-all and that is
way the half ended.
See MARAUDERS | 4B

Shadyside
slips past
Raiders, 14-7
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

SHADYSIDE — Even
in defeat, the Raiders
completed their mission.
The River Valley football team dropped a 14-7
non-conference decision
to host Shadyside on
Friday night in Belmont
County, but not all
was lost as the Raiders
clinched their ﬁrst-ever
playoff appearance.
“If we’re lucky enough
to play in Week 11, we
have to get back in the
ﬁlm room and correct
some errors,” ﬁfth year
RVHS head coach Jerrod Sparling said. “We
have to ﬁx our mistakes
and get back to our
brand of football.”
Shadyside (4-6) —
which clinched its 11th
straight playoff appearance with the win —
ﬁred the opening salvo
as junior Jesse Cain
scored on a one-yard
run in the second quarter. William Johnson
added the point after
and the Tigers led 7-0 at
halftime.
River Valley (7-3)
evened the game in
the third period when
senior quarterback Dayton Hardway scrambled
into the endzone from
10 yards out, and Devin
McDonald kicked home
the extra point.
The Tigers regained
the lead in the fourth
quarter on a three-yard
run by Johnson. John-

son added the extra
point and the hosts held
on for a 14-7 victory.
“We just didn’t play
our brand of football,”
RVHS head coach Jerrod Sparling said. “We
weren’t passionate, we
weren’t energetic, we
made mental errors and
you just can’t have that
and expect to beat a
good football program
like Shadyside.”
The Raiders were
outgained 263-to-182
in total offense, including 196-to-145 on the
ground. Shadyside held
a 15-to-9 advantage
in ﬁrst downs and a
67-to-37 edge in passing yards. Both teams
were penalized for 25
yards, RVHS on four
ﬂags and SHS on three.
River Valley fumbled
three times and kept
possession twice, while
Shadyside recovered its
lone fumble.
Hardway, who had 27
yards and a touchdown
on ﬁve carries, completed 5-of-10 pass attempts
for 37 yards with one
interception.
Mark Wray led the
Raiders on the ground
with 80 yards on 16 carries, followed by Justin
Arrowood with 38 yards
on 10 carries. Kirk Morrow led all RVHS receivers with 30 yards on
two receptions, while
Jacob Dovenbarger
caught one pass for
seven yards.
See SHADYSIDE | 4B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Monday, November 2
Volleyball
Huntington St. Joe, Hannan, Charleston Catholic, Buffalo at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Tuesday, November 3
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Winﬁeld, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, November 4
Volleyball
Huntington St. Joe, Hannan, Charleston Catholic, Buffalo at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Friday, November 6
Football
Point Pleasant at Princeton, 7:30
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30
Saturday, November 7
Cross Country
OHSAA State Championships at National Trail
Raceway, 10 a.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

South Gallia senior running back Isaiah Geiger, right, eludes a Miller defender during a first half run Friday night in a Week 10 TVC
Hocking football contest at Walter Harrop Field in Hemlock, Ohio.

South Gallia smacks Falcons, 61-26
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HEMLOCK — The Rebels handled their business well. Now they
may have an even better job lined
up for next week.
The South Gallia football team
kept its postseason aspirations
alive Friday night with an emphatic
61-26 thumping of host Miller in
a Week 10 Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division ﬁnale for both
programs at Walter Harrop Field.
The Rebels (6-4, 5-3 TVC Hocking) needed a victory to keep their
Division VII, Region 25 playoff
hopes aﬂoat, and the guests wasted
little time in making those dreams
a reality after jumping out to a 22-0
advantage less than three minutes
into the second canto.
The Falcons, however, also had
Region 25 playoff possibilities
entering Friday’s affair, and the
hosts showed some resiliency by
matching touchdowns with SGHS
during the rest of the half — making it a 34-14 contest at the break.
Miller (6-4, 4-4) managed to
close its gap down to two possessions following a six-yard scoring
pass to Carson Starlin from Cole
Geil at the 7:02 mark of the third,
but the hosts were never closer
than that 34-20 deﬁcit the rest of
the way.
In fact, on the ensuing extrapoint try — a Miller lineman suffered a gruesome leg injury that
ultimately resulted in an almost
hour-long pause in play. When play
resumed, the Rebels drove home
the proverbial nail in the cofﬁn.
South Gallia scored on four
of its ﬁnal ﬁve possessions and
eventually took a 61-26 cushion
with 3:01 left in regulation. Miller
mustered only three more offensive
snaps over the ﬁnal minutes on a
continuous clock, allowing the Red
and Gold to wrap up the 35-point
triumph.
In all, the Rebels scored touchdowns on nine of their 13 drives,

churned out 595 yards of total
offense and ﬁnished plus-1 in
turnover differential. Conversely,
the Falcons mustered 235 yards on
offense and had seven ﬁrst downs
total — with only two of those
chain-movers coming in the ﬁrst
half.
It was about as complete an
effort as one could get, and sixthyear SGHS coach Jason Peck was
more than proud of his young men
following the game. As he noted,
there was no chance at a playoff
game if the Rebels didn’t work
together to get out of Perry County
with a victory.
“We’ve battled some adversity
this season, but these kids have
really responded over the last four
weeks just to get us in this position. They knew they were playing
for their postseason lives, and they
responded to that challenge,” Peck
said. “They are a resilient bunch of
kids and I can’t say enough about
their work ethic. We played like a
playoff team tonight and we hope
to be playing next week. If not, we
were in the hunt until the end and
we won our ﬁnal game.
“Either way, it was a good night
for these kids and the program. I
just really hope that we are playing
one week from tonight.”
As of Friday night, the unofﬁcial
standings on joeeitel.com had
South Gallia listed as the eighth
and ﬁnal qualiﬁer in the Region 25
bracket. The Rebels, however, can
be eliminated from the postseason
if Lancaster Fisher Catholic defeats
Whitehall-Yearling on Saturday.
The ofﬁcial OHSAA playoff pairings will be released Sunday morning on ohsaa.org
South Gallia needed only ﬁve
plays and 1:38 of possession to
cover 111 yards in the ﬁrst quarter,
which resulted in an early 14-0
edge. Landon Hutchinson scored
on a one-yard run at the 10:30
mark, then Owen Bevan hauled
in a 48-yard scoring pass from

Hutchinson with 9:20 left in the
opening canto.
The score remained that way
until the 9:28 mark of the second
period as Johnny Sheets bullied his
way in from four yards out, making
it a 22-0 contest.
The Falcons responded and
ﬁnally got on the board less than a
minute later after Starlin hauled in
a 74-yard scoring pass from Geil at
the 9:00 mark for a 22-6 game.
SGHS answered with a 13-play,
51-yard scoring drive that lasted
over six minutes. Sheets capped
things with a two-yard TD run at
the 2:58 mark for a 28-6 advantage.
Miller followed with a 7-play,
65-yard drive that turned into
points when Garrett Bartley
caught a 28-yard TD from Geil
with 55 seconds left in the half for
a 28-14 contest.
South Gallia, however, covered
75 yards in a mere ﬁve plays and
43 seconds to put one last score
on the ﬁrst half scoreboard. Kane
Hutchinson pulled in a 22-yard
TD pass from Landon Hutchinson while being guarded by two
defenders, making it a 34-14 contest headed into halftime.
Sheets and Landon Hutchinson each accounted for a rushing
touchdown for SGHS after the
break, while Isaiah Geiger twice
crossed the goal line in the second
half for the Rebels — who led
41-26 headed into the ﬁnale. Geil
threw touchdown passes to Starlin
and Bartley in the third quarter.
The Rebels churned out a whopping 474 rushing yards on 60 carries, which included a trio of 100yard rushing efforts. Geiger led the
guests with 184 yards on 25 carries, while Sheets had 173 yards on
19 attempts. Landon Hutchinson
also ran 16 times for 117 yards.
Landon Hutchinson was 4-of-13
passing for 121 yards, throwing
two touchdowns and zero interceptions. Kane Hutchinson led
See GALLIA | 4B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallia Academy falls to Ironmen, 64-20
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON — The end of
an era.
The Gallia Academy
football team ended a major
chapter in its history Friday
night, as the Blue Devils fell
to archrival Jackson 64-20
in the Apple City. The game
marked the ﬁnal Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
gridiron showdown between
the foes, as Gallia Academy

heads to the Ohio Valley
Conference next year.
After forcing a Blue Devil
punt on the game’s opening
possession, Jackson (9-1, 3-0
SEOAL) marched down the
ﬁeld and scored the game’s
ﬁrst touchdown on a ﬁveyard Johnny Farley run.
Gallia Academy (1-9, 1-2)
fumbled the ball away on its
next possession and the Ironmen setup shop at the GAHS
16. On Jackson’s ﬁrst play of
the drive quarterback Hunter

Sexton scrambled for a
touchdown that gave the Red
and White a 14-0 lead.
The Blue Devils punted
again on their next possession, and the Ironmen
returned it to the GAHS seven-yard line. Jackson, which
had a touchdown called back
because of a hold, settled for
a 27-yard ﬁeld goal by Sheldon Moore at the 3:39 mark
of the ﬁrst quarter.
The Ironmen scored one
more time in the opening

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1
7 PM

7:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Football Night in America
3
News
(L)
NBC Nightly Football Night in America
Inside
Edition
News
(L)
ABC 6 News ABC World America's Funniest Home
at 6:00 p.m. News
Videos (N)
Antiques Roadshow "Tulsa
2nd Opinion Saving the
"Medical
Ocean "River (Hour One)"
Marijuana" of Kings" 2/2
Eyewitness ABC World America's Funniest Home
News at 6
News
Videos (N)
CBS Evening 10TV News 60 Minutes
News
at 6:30 p.m.
(4:30) NFL Football Seattle Seahawks at
The OT
Dallas Cowboys Site: AT&amp;T Stadium (L)
History Detectives Explore
PBS
BBC
NewsHour
Newsnight
intriguing family legends and
Weekend (N)
urban folklore.
CBS Evening 60 Minutes
(:05) 13
News
News

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

(:20) NFL Football Green Bay Packers at Denver Broncos Site: Sports Authority Field at
Mile High -- Denver, Colo. (L)
(:20) NFL Football Green Bay Packers at Denver Broncos Site: Sports Authority Field at
Mile High -- Denver, Colo. (L)
Once Upon a Time "The
Blood &amp; Oil "Convergence" Quantico "God" The team
Bear and the Bow" (N)
(N)
learns surveillance. (N)
Masterpiece Classic "Home Masterpiece Classic "Indian The Guilty DCI Brand is
Fires" Teresa gets bad news Summers" (N)
pressured to charge the
and makes a confession. (N)
prime suspect. (N)
Once Upon a Time "The
Blood &amp; Oil "Convergence" Quantico "God" The team
Bear and the Bow" (N)
(N)
learns surveillance. (N)
Madam Secretary "The
The Good Wife "Payback" CSI: Cyber "Hack E.R." (N)
Long Shot" (N)
(N)
MLB Baseball World Series Kansas City Royals at New York Mets Game 5 Site: Citi Field - New York, N.Y. (if necessary) (L)
Masterpiece Classic "Home Masterpiece Classic "Indian The Guilty DCI Brand is
Fires" Teresa gets bad news Summers" (N)
pressured to charge the
and makes a confession. (N)
prime suspect. (N)
Madam Secretary "The
The Good Wife "Payback" CSI: Cyber "Hack E.R." (N)
Long Shot" (N)
(N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Bl. Bloods "Most Wanted"
18 (WGN) B. Bloods "Burning Bridges" BlueB. "Forgive and Forget" B. Bloods "Excessive Force" Blue Bloods "Loose Lips"
Red Bull Air Race "Spielberg" (N)
Penguins
In Depth
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
24 (ROOT) Bull Riding Championship
25 (ESPN) (5:00) MLS Soccer Playoffs (L)
SportsCenter
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
26 (ESPN2) Poker World Series
Baseball Tonight (L)
NHRA Drag Racing Toyota Nationals Site: Las Vegas Motor Speedway -- Las Vegas, Nev.
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

(5:00) A Teacher's

Online Abduction A girl uses geotagged pictures to help Dangerous Lessons A high school teacher must use her
bring her kidnapped brother home.
wit and strength to save her family from a stalker. TVMA
Step Up 2: The
Grease (‘78, Mus) John Travolta. A leather-jacketed boy and a
Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Julia
Streets Briana Evigan. TV14 goody-two-shoes girl fall in and out of love in the 1950s. TVPG
Roberts, Richard Gere. TV14
Bar Rescue "Anything You Bar Rescue "Mandala
Bar Rescue "Til Debt Do Us Bar Rescue "Sour Lemons
Bar Rescue "Ripper's Rookie
Can Yell, I Can Yell Louder" Down"
Part"
and Bitter Business"
House"
Thunder
Thunder
H.Danger
H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
SVU "Blood Brothers"
SVU "Double Strands"
SVU "December Solstice"
SVU "Parole Violations"
SVU "Devastating Story"
Movie
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
CNN Newsroom
A. Bourdain "Bay Area"
A. Bourdain "Ethiopia"
A. Bourdain "Borneo" (N) Somebody's Gotta (N)
(4:30)
The Dark Knight Rises TVPG
The Librarians (N)
The Librarians (N)
The Librarians
(4:30)
Fantastic Four The Walking Dead "JSS"
The Walking Dead "Thank The Walking Dead "Here's Not Here" A
The Talking
You"
new face is introduced. (N)
Dead (N)
Ioan Gruffudd. TV14
Alaska: The Last Frontier
Alaska "Fear and Floating" Alaska: Exposed (N)
Alaska/Frontier (N)
Naked "All or Nothing" (N)
My Haunted House "The
My Haunted House "Dead My Haunted House "Don't Buried "Digging Deeper" People endure escalating horrors
Innkeeper/ Quarantine"
Ringer and Route 160"
Go Upstairs/ Swerve"
to test the five primordial fears in the human psyche. (N)
North Woods Law
North Woods Law
Rugged Justice (N)
North Woods Law
(:05) To Be Announced
Snapped "Kim Parker"
Snapped "Bernadette
Snapped "Catherine
Snapped: Killer Couples (N) Snapped "Tracy Lawson"
Perusquia"
Hamborsky"
CSI: Miami
CSI "Presumed Guilty"
CSI: Miami "Sink or Swim" CSI: Miami "Divorce Party" CSI: Miami "Flight Risk"
(5:30) Kardash The Kardashians
Kardash "The Last Straw" Kardash (N) Dash Dolls (N)
House of DVF (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
(:35) Reba
(:10) Reba
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "A Job for Robert" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Cosmos "Some of the
Cosmos: Odyssey "Unafraid Explorer: Bill Nye's Global Breakthrough "Fighting
Life on Mars: The Amazing
Things That Molecules Do" of the Dark"
Meltdown (N)
Pandemics" (N)
Rovers (N)
NASCAR Victory Lap (L)
F1 Auto Racing Mexican Grand Prix
Lucas Oil Motorsport Hour Triathlon
(5:30) UFC
Victory (N)
MLS Soccer Playoffs (L)
MLS Soccer Playoffs (L)
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers "Virginia American Pickers
American Pickers "Like
"Knuckleheads"
"Cowboys and Cobwebs"
Is for Pickers"
Father, Like Daughter"
"Everything Must Go"
The Real Housewives
Orange County Social (N) The Real Housewives (N)
Manzo'd With Children "Embracing the Crazy" (SF) (N)
(:05) Payne
(:35) Payne
(:05) Payne
(:35) Payne
(:05) Payne
(:35) Payne
House Payne House Payne House Payne House Payne
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Hawaii (N)
Hawaii (N)
IslndLif (N) IslndLif (N) IslandHunter IslandHunter
(5:30) The Conjuring A family is haunted and terrorized by
Phenomenon (1996, Drama) Kyra Sedgwick, Robert Duvall, John Travolta. When
a dark paranormal presence in their farmhouse. TVMA
struck by a bolt of lightning, a small-town mechanic is transformed into a genius. TVPG
Obsession
(5:00)

6 PM
(5:35)

6:30

7 PM

Fighting A young street fighter

7:30

8 PM

8:30

(:25) Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer

9 PM

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

9:30

The Leftovers (N)

400 (HBO) enters the brutal underworld of bare-

The Fantastic 4 face off against new foes - a
knuckle brawling to win money. TV14
planet-eating force and the Silver Surfer.
(5:45) The
(:25)
The Salton Sea Seeking answers (:10)
Deep Blue Sea (‘99, Hor) Samuel L. Jackson,
about his wife's death, a man gets
Saffron Burrows. Scientists fight for survival when an
Knick
entangled in a drug-torn underworld. TVM ocean experiment using sharks turns deadly. TV14
(5:15)
Last Vegas (‘13, Homeland "Why Is This
The Affair Pressure in
Homeland "Better Caul
Night Different?"
Helen's life mounts leading Saul" (N)
Com) Michael Douglas,
Robert De Niro. TV14
to a mistake.

10 PM

10:30

Project
(:40)
Together
Greenlight
(N)
"Handcuffs"
Black Sea (‘14, Thril) Jodie
Whittaker, Ben Mendelsohn,
Jude Law. TVMA
The Affair Alison makes a
chance discovery about
Noah. (N)

UP TO 40% OFF

NOVEMBER STORE-WIDE SALE

2pc Sectional

$699
*WINNERS DRAWING DECEMBER 2nd*
HOLIDAY
GIVEAWAY
Nov. 1st –
Dec. 1st

Mattresses
Starting @

Delivery
Available

stanza, as Sexton broke a
57-yard run with 40 seconds
left in the ﬁrst. JHS picked
up right where it left off in
the second period, as Collin
Massie scored on a 34-yard
run with 10:09 to play in the
ﬁrst half.
After an interception gave
JHS the ball back in Blue
Devil territory, Sexton connected with Kyle Kirby for
a 30-yard touchdown pass,
which gave the Ironmen a
38-0 lead.
Gallia Academy found the
endzone for the ﬁrst time
with 8:31 left in the second
quarter, when senior Kole
Carter completed a 38-yard
touchdown pass to fellow
senior Devin Henry. The
two-point conversion failed
and the Blue and White
trailed 38-6.
JHS sophomore Blake
McCoy posted the next two
scores, ﬁrst on a one-yard
run, and again on a 14-yard
pass from Bryce Hall. Jackson scored once more in the
second quarter, as Austin
Edwards recovered a fumble
in the endzone with 52 seconds remaining in the half.
Moore was 7-of-8 on point
after kicks in the ﬁrst half,
and the Ironmen led 58-6 at
halftime.
After a scoreless third
quarter, Carter gave the
GAHS fans something to
cheer about with a 25-yard
touchdown run to open
the fourth. However, JHS
expanded the lead back to 52
with a six-yard Matt Humphreys at the 8:29 mark of
the fourth.
Gallia Academy posted
the game’s ﬁnal score at
the 2:13 mark of the fourth
on a one-yard Carter run.
Freshman Justin McClelland ran in the two-point
conversion and the Blue

740-446-9523

touchdowns on three carries.
Austin Leach led JHS receivers with 49 yards on two
receptions, while Humphreys
had 51 yards and a score on
six rushes.
The Ironmen and Blue
Devils will not face each
other in football next season,
but the rivals will face off
again in Week 3 of the 2017
season, in Gallia County.
GAHS holds a 42-40-5 record
in all-time meetings with
JHS.
Jackson earned its 15th
outright SEOAL championship with the win. JHS has
also shared nine league titles.
Gallia Academy leaves the
SEOAL with a 325-222-20
all-time league record, to go
with 17 league titles, the last
of which came in 2012.
This marks the ﬁnal game
in the Blue and White for
GAHS seniors Kole Carter,
Devin Henry, Eric Ward,
Micah Saunders, Russell
Matthew, Isaiah Holley,
Matt Bailey, Brian Hurt, Ben
Saylor, Drew Vansickle, Brett
Johnson, Anthony Sipple,
Justin Reynolds, Ethan Robinson and Brett Hively.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

November
5th, 6th &amp; 7th

*Some
Some exclusio
exclusions apply.

The

854 2nd Ave, Gallipolis OH

Devils fell by a 64-20 ﬁnal.
The Ironmen held a 21-to10 advantage in ﬁrst downs
and a 426-to-237 edge in
total offense, including a
322-to-181 advantage on
the ground. The Blue Devils
fumbled six times and lost
possession twice, while
JHS lost both of its fumbles.
GAHS was penalized four
times for a total of 45 yards,
while JHS was sent back six
times for 60 yards. Gallia
Academy punted ﬁve times
and threw one interception,
while Jackson never punted
or threw an interception.
Carter, who completed
1-of-2 pass attempts for a
38-yard touchdown, led
GAHS on the ground with
103 yards and two scores
on 25 carries, while catching one pass for three yards.
Henry caught one pass for 38
yards and a score, while rushing six times for 66 yards.
McClelland, who was 2-of-4
passing for 18 yards, ran for
11 yards on three attempts,
while Eric Ward had one ﬁveyard run and Matt Bailey had
one 15-yard reception.
Sexton, who completed
4-of-8 pass attempts for 90
yards and a touchdown,
led the Ironmen rushing
attack with 93 yards and two

22% Off
Store-wide

$119
JA;=�K�&gt;MJFALMJ=

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Devin Henry (6) runs behind blockers Boo
Pullins (28), Brett Hively (81) and Anthony Sipple (65) during the
first half of the Blue Devils’ loss at Jackson on Friday.

arat Patch
Diamonds- N- Gold

418 SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA  GALLIPOLIS, OH

740-446-3484

ricesfurniture@yahoo.com
Monday - Saturday 10am - 5pm

60620124

60619036

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 1, 2015 3B

Three named to TVC Ohio golf team
By Bryan Walters

honors for the Vikings, while
Alec Boothe and Noah Waddell
also earned all-league accolades.
The Ohio Valley Publishing
Meigs ﬁnished second overall
area had three players selected
with a 37-5 league mark, which
to the 2015 All-Tri-Valley
led to two selections in sophoConference Ohio Division golf
more Levi Chapman and junior
teams, as determined by both
Chase Whitlatch. Senior Logan
seasonal stroke play and by the Sheets — last year’s league
coaches within the league.
POY — was River Valley’s lone
Vinton County led the selecchoice after the Raiders ﬁnished
tions process with four choices, ﬁfth overall with a 16-26 mark.
which included coach of the
Athens and Wellston both
year honors for Terry Hale. Aus- had two choices apiece after
tin Ward won player of the year tying for third place with identi-

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Patrick Geer.
Wellston (17-25): Blake Royster*,
Justin Rafferty.
River Valley (16-26): Logan
Sheets*
Alexander (11-31): Taylor Boggs.
Nelsonville-York (9-33): Ben
Johnson.
Player of the Year: Austin Ward,
Vinton County.
Coach of the Year: Terry Hale,
2015 All-TVC Ohio Golf Team
Vinton County.
Vinton County (40-2): Austin Ward*, * — indicates 2014 All-TVC Ohio
Alec Boothe*, Noah Waddell.
golf selection.
Meigs (37-5): Levi Chapman,
Chase Whitlatch*.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.
Athens (17-25): Drew Zorn,

cal records of 17-25. Alexander
(11-31) and Nelsonville-York
(9-33) each had one selection
after rounding out the bottom
two spots in the nine-team ﬁeld.
Ward, Boothe, Whitlatch,
Sheets and Blake Royster of
Wellston were repeat selections
to the squad from a season ago.

7 locals named to TVC Hocking

MONDAY EVENING
3

(WSAZ)

By Bryan Walters

4

(WTAP)

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

The Ohio Valley Publishing area had eight
people selected to the 2015 All-Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division golf teams, as
determined by both seasonal stroke play and
by the coaches within the league.
Waterford — which posted a perfect
16-0 league mark — led the way with four
selections, which included player of the year
honors for Cameron Bosner. Jordan Welch
and Josh Stewart were also selected on behalf
of the Wildcats, while Josh Arnold earned a
share of coach of the year honors.
The other half of the COY award went to
Eastern’s Nick Dettwiller, who guided the
Eagles to a third place tie with Southern.
Both EHS and the Tornadoes went 11-5 in
league matches and ﬁnished behind only
Waterford and Belpre (13-3).
Freshmen Jasiah Brewer and Ryan Harbour were the two Eastern selections, while
freshman Jensen Anderson and sophomore
Jonah Hoback garnered TVC Hocking honors for SHS.
Senior Cuyler Mills and sophomore Curtis
Haner were the two all-league selections for
South Gallia, which ﬁnished ﬁfth overall at
8-8. Wahama (7-9) also placed sixth and was
represented by senior Nathan Redman.
Trimble (4-12), Miller (2-14) and Federal
Hocking (0-16) respectively rounded out the
last three spots in the nine-team standings.
Bosner, Welch, Mills, Redman and Nathan
Kidder of Federal Hocking were repeat selections to the All-TVC Hocking golf squad from

BROADCAST

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

6

PM

WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur "Hic
or Treat/ Mr.
Alwaysright"
Eyewitness
News at 6
10TV News
at 6 p.m.
2 Broke Girls
BBC World

12 (WVPB) News:
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Wahama senior Nathan Redman watches a chip
shot out of the sand during a September 21
TVC Hocking match at Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallipolis, Ohio.

a year ago. Bosner was also the 2014 POY in
the TVC Hocking Division.
2015 All-TVC Hocking Golf Team
Waterford (16-0): Cameron Bosner*, Jordan
Welch*, Josh Stewart.
Belpre (13-3): Brice Ferrell, Alana Delancey.
Eastern (11-5): Jasiah Brewer, Ryan Harbour.
Southern (11-5): Jensen Anderson, Jonah Hoback.
South Gallia (8-8): Cuyler Mills*, Curtis Haner.
Wahama (7-9): Nathan Redman*.
Trimble (4-12): Casey Moore.
Miller (2-14): Collin Pargeon.
Federal Hocking (0-16): Nathan Kidder*.
Player of the Year: Cameron Bosner, Waterford.
Coach of the Year: Josh Arnold (Waterford) and
Nick Dettwiller (Eastern).
* — indicates 2014 All-TVC Hocking golf selection.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
2101.

America
13 News at
6:00 p.m.

6

PM

6:30

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2
7

PM

7:30

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

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

6:30

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Logan Sheets chips a ball onto
the seventh green during the Division II district
golf championships held at Crown Hill Golf Club in
Williamsport, Ohio.

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

The Voice "The Knockouts" The knockout rounds continue
with each competitor being paired against a teammate. (N)
The Voice "The Knockouts" The knockout rounds continue
with each competitor being paired against a teammate. (N)
Dancing With the Stars The celebrities will pay tribute to
influential figures in their lives. (N)
Antiques Roadshow "Tulsa Antiques Roadshow
(Hour Two)"
"Chicago (Hour Three)" (N)
Dancing With the Stars The celebrities will pay tribute to
influential figures in their lives. (N)
Supergirl "Stronger
Scorpion "Crazy Train" (N)
Together" (N)
Gotham (N)
Minority Report "Honor
Among Thieves" (N)
Antiques Roadshow "Tulsa Antiques Roadshow
(Hour Two)"
"Chicago (Hour Three)" (N)
Supergirl "Stronger
Together" (N)

8

PM

8:30

Scorpion "Crazy Train" (N)

9

PM

10

PM

10:30

Blindspot "Sent on Tour"
(N)
Blindspot "Sent on Tour"
(N)
CMACountdown "Country's
Greatest Crossover Hits" (N)
Phil's Having "Los Angeles"
Phil invites his LA friends to
his favorite spots. (N)
CMACountdown "Country's
Greatest Crossover Hits" (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
"Unspoken" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Phil's Having "Los Angeles"
Phil invites his LA friends to
his favorite spots. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
"Unspoken" (N)

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Jurassic Park (1993, Sci-Fi) Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill. TV14
18 (WGN) Bl. Bloods "Cellar Boy" 1/2 Funniest Home Videos
NCAA Football West Virginia at TCU
24 (ROOT) NCAA Football North Carolina at Pittsburgh Site: Heinz Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa.
25 (ESPN) Monday Night Countdown (L)
(:15) NFL Football Indianapolis Colts at Carolina Panthers (L)
26 (ESPN2) SportsCenter
Around Horn Interruption NBA Coast Live look-ins to games across the country. (L) Poker
Poker
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

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

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(TVL)

(WE)
(E!)

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

Sister Act A lounge singer witnesses a murder by her
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit Lounge singer Deloris returns to
The
mobster boyfriend and hides out in a convent. TVPG
the convent to help choral students save their school. TVPG
Preacher's ...
Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Richard Gere. A wealthy businessman Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous An FBI agent defies orders
hires a free-spirited call girl to be his companion for a week. TV14
and returns to the pageant scene after Miss USA is kidnapped. TV14
Cops "Coast Jail
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops
Cops "Coast Cops "Home Cops "In
Cops "What?
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Assaults"
Denial"
Who Me?"
Nicky
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
iCarly
iCarly
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS "High Seas"
Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Monday Night Raw
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy American D. American D. The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle "Dial M for Mayor" Castle
Castle "The Blue Butterfly" Major Crimes (N)
Legends (N)
(5:30)
300 The Spartan king assembles a small army
Kill Bill Vol. 1 (‘03, Act) Uma Thurman. After being attacked on her
Kill Bill
of soldiers to defend his land from the Persians. TVMA
wedding day, an assassin seeks revenge on former associates. TV14
Vol. 1 TV14
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws
Street Outlaws: Full (N)
Street Outlaws (N)
Rat Rods "Ditch Digger" (N)
Cursed: The Bell Witch
The Haunting of ... "Regis The Haunting of ... "Billy
The Haunting of ... "Travis Cursed: The Bell Witch
"The Betrayal of Kate Batts" Philbin"
Ray Cyrus"
Tritt" (N)
"The Real John Bell" (N)
Monsters Inside Me
Infested! "Night Terrors"
Infested!
Infested! "Under Siege"
Infested "Houses of Horror"
Snapped: She Made Me Do Snapped: She Made Me Do SexCity "The SexCity "All Sex and the SexCity "The (:15) Sex and (:45) Snapped
It "Adriana Vasco"
It "Rebecca Hatcher"
Good Fight" That Glitters" City
Good Fight" the City
CSI: Miami "Invasion"
CSI: Miami "Slow Burn"
CSI "Money for Nothing"
CSI: Miami "Wannabe"
CSI: Miami "Deadline"
Dash Dolls
E! News (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
Kardash "The Last Straw"
Bewitched
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
BrainG. "In Brain Games Hubble's Cosmic Journey
Mission Pluto
Edge of the Universe Using cutting edge effects, witness a
Living Color" "Trust Me"
non-stop journey from here through the cosmos.
(5:30) NASCAR Pro FB Talk FLW Outdoors (N)
Salt.Fishing Bass 2
Eye/ Hunter Deer TV (N) Truck Racing P.World (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Pure (N)
UFC 1on1 (N) Insider
Knockout
UFC Unleashed (N)
WPT Poker Alpha8
(5:00) Einstein
Roanoke: Lost Colony A team of historians and stone
Secrets of Einstein's Brain Take a dive into Einstein's life,
masons come together to solve the mystery of Roanoke.
theories, what we've learned and have yet to learn. (N)
VanderR "Reunion Part I" VanderR "Reunion Part II" Ladies of London (N)
Vanderpump Rules (N)
Après Ski (N)
Martin
Martin
(:05) Martin Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Martin
Love/List "Room to Grow" Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love/List "Site Unseen" (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Identity (‘03,
Underworld (‘03, Fant) Kate Beckinsale. A beautiful vampire
Underworld: Evolution (‘06, Fant)
Thril) John Cusack. TVM
warrior is torn when she falls in love with a werewolf. TVM
Scott Speedman, Kate Beckinsale. TVMA

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Diplomat (‘08, Act) Claire Forlani.
(:50) Project The Leisure Class (2015,
While on a secret mission, a diplomat is
Comedy) Ed Weeks, Bridget
Greenlight
(N)
apartment on the market. TV14
apprehended while carrying heroin. TV14
Regan, Larrs Jackson. TVMA
(:10) Non-Stop (2014, Thriller) Julianne Moore, Michelle
The Knick "The Best With
Wish I Was Here Zach Braff. A struggling (:50) The
450 (MAX) Dockery, Liam Neeson. The lives of passengers on an
actor finally starts to figure himself out
the Best, to Get the Best"
Knick
airplane are threatened until $150 million is secured. TV14
when he home-schools his kids. TVMA
(5:45)
Snowpiercer (‘14, Sci-Fi) Jamie Bell, Chris
Homeland "Better Caul
The Affair Alison makes a
Homeland "Better Caul
500 (SHOW) Evans. The survivors of a disastrous experiment live aboard Saul"
chance discovery about
Saul"
a train, where an uprising is staged. TVMA
Noah.
(4:30)

(:25) 5 Flights Up A long-time married

400 (HBO) X-Men TV14 couple puts their now-trendy Brooklyn

The Gallipolis Tribune, The Pomeroy Sentinel &amp; Point Pleasant Register
Present

John Sang Ford

Vote for your favorite entry in each of
the four categories at:
mydailytribune.com
mydailysentinel.com
mydailyregister.com

OVERALL WINNER
WITH THE MOST VOTES
$100
Submission Begins:
Saturday, October 17th Saturday, October 31st
Voting Begins:
Sunday, November 1st Tuesday, November 10th

JS

195 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis

1-800-272-5179
www.johnsang.com

60615707

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern Lady Eagles soar past Manchester
By Bryan Walters

son contests against Eastern, and
the third contest will take place at
approximately 2:30 p.m. Saturday
JACKSON — Welcome back.
at Jackson High School — with a
After a one year hiatus, the East- Sweet 16 appearance on the line.
ern volleyball program will once
It will be the second district ﬁnal
again be competing for a regional
on the sidelines for third-year EHS
berth following Thursday night’s
coach Katie Williams, who was part
25-20, 25-11, 25-16 victory over
of four district ﬁnals as a player
second-seeded Manchester in a
under Caldwell at Eastern. As she
Division IV district semiﬁnal conis well aware, facing her mentor
test at Jackson High School in the
will be a tough challenge — but she
Apple City.
also believes that her troops are up
The sixth-seeded Lady Eagles
for the challenge.
(14-10) trailed four different times
“The TVC Hocking will be getin the entire match, but the Green
ting somebody out to regionals,
and Gold were never down by more which is always a great thing for
than a single point on any of those the league,” Williams said. “This
occasions. EHS — which never
program plays for the postseason,
trailed in Game 3 — ultimately
so we are not just happy to be here
broke away early in each contest
— and Trimble won’t be either.
before rolling to a trio of convincing You’re going to have two teams that
victories.
our hungry to win a district title,
The Lady Greyhounds — who
so it will likely come down to who
were appearing in their ﬁrst district wants it most.
semiﬁnal match since 2000 — ﬁn“I will say that the familiarity of
ished their remarkable campaign
opening the tournament with Fedwith a 19-5 overall mark.
eral Hocking was a beneﬁt, and we
Eastern — which is making
managed to get past them despite
its 13th district ﬁnal appearance
losing both matches in the regular
since the 2002 season — will be
season. The same could very easaiming for the program’s ninth
ily be said here with Trimble. We
regional appearance in school hisknow what we are going up against
tory. All that stands between the
and what to expect from them. We
Lady Eagles is former coach Howie just have to be ready to play from
Caldwell and Trimble after the
the opening serve.”
Lady Tomcats posted a 3-1 match
Manchester managed early leads
decision over South Webster in the of 1-0, 6-5 and 10-9 in the openﬁrst semiﬁnal.
ing game, but the Lady Eagles
Trimble won both regular seaanswered with ﬁve consecutive

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Marauders

the help of a 44-yard pass
from Bartrum to Sheets,
Bartrum scored on a keepFrom Page 1B
er with 4:49 left to pull
Meigs to within 21-20.
Marks returned the secOn ﬁrst down Chapond half kickoff 40 yards
man hit Lukas Thompson
once again giving the
for a 31-yard gain to the
Spartans good ﬁeld posi- Marauder 25, Chapman
tion. Three plays later it
scored from the two with
was Chapman from 20
2:52 to go in the third.
yards out. Howard was
Howard added the extra
perfect with his kick and points for a 28-20 Alexanthe Spartans took a 21-14 der lead.
at the 11:03 mark of the
Meigs cut it back to
third period.
a two-point game when
But back came the
Cullums scored from
Marauders moving the
seven yards out on the
ball down the ﬁeld with
ﬁrst play of the fourth

points (14-10) and ultimately never
trailed again in Game 1. EHS twice
led by as many as eight points, the
last of which came at 24-16.
MHS reeled off four consecutive
points to close the gap down to
24-20, but Eastern broke serve and
claimed a 1-0 match lead with the
ﬁve-point decision.
The Lady Greyhounds took
their ﬁnal lead of the night at 2-1
in Game 2, but Eastern answered
with seven straight points to secure
an 8-2 cushion. EHS reeled off 11 of
the next 17 points to secure a 19-8
lead before cruising to the 14-point
win and a 2-0 match lead.
Manchester forced ties at one-all
and two-all, but Eastern scored
ﬁve straight points en route to a
7-2 edge. MHS closed to within a
single point at 10-9, but the Green
and Gold closed the game with a
15-7 run to wrap up the straightgame decision.
Williams was most pleased with
her kids’ performance, noting that
they really seem to be ﬁring on all
cylinders right now.
“We’ve preached to the girls
about consistency and playing with
enthusiasm in the postseason, and
the girls have really stepped up and
responded well,” Williams said.
“Everybody has been handling their
roles really well, which makes the
team play that much better overall.
I think we are playing our best
volleyball of the season right now,
mainly because we are all working

period. That was set up
by a Bartrum fumble
recovery of Chapman’s at
the seven.
But once again, the
Spartans drove 51 yards
in 11 plays and Chapman
scored from a yard out.
Howard added the extra
points for a 35-26 Spartan
advantage with 7:43 left
in the contest.
Twice in the ﬁnal
period, Meigs had the ball
in Spartan territory, each
time they turned it over.
All told the Marauders
wasted three opportunities to score in Spartan

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Kelsey Johnson (22) slams down on a kill over Manchester’s Kayla
Wagoner (9) as teammates Makenzie Brooks (11), Morgan Baer (15) and Katlyn
Barber, right, look on during Game 1 of Thursday night’s Division IV district
semifinal volleyball contest at Jackson High School in Jackson, Ohio.

together on the same goal.”
Elayna Bissell led the EHS service attack with 15 points and three
aces, followed by Katlyn Barber
with 14 points and Kelsey Johnson
with 10 points. Morgain Little was
next with six points, while Morgan
Baer and Brittney Leach respectively chipped in three and two points.
Barber led the net attack with
nine kills, followed by Johnson with
seven kills. Annalisa Boano and
Makenzie Brooks both contributed
six kills apiece to the winning cause
as well.
Barber and Boano both had 13

territory, twice inside the
Spartan 18-yard line.
The Marauders ﬁnal
chance came when Jake
Weaver picked off a Bartrum pass in the end zone
with 2:58 left in the game
to ice the win.
“Give them all the credit in the world”, a dejected Mike Bartrum said
after the contest. “They
made the plays when they
had to, they deserve to
win, we played hard and
I’m proud of our seniors,
but I feel I let them down
as a coach. Alexander
come into our house and

digs, while Baer and Johnson each
came away with seven digs. Baer
also dished out a team-best 19
assists in the triumph.
Summer Wilbur led Manchester
with six service points, followed by
Katie Sandlin, Abby McFarland and
McKayla Smith with ﬁve points
apiece. Cassidy Spires also had one
point in the setback.
The Lady Eagles have previously won district championships
in 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007,
2009, 2011 and 2012.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

ran it down our throats
they deserve it.”
Chapman led all rushers with 135 yards in 23
carries, he was also ﬁve
for seven passing for 108
yards. Taylor Kimbrough
was six of nine in the air
for 66 yards. Lukas Thompson led the Spartans with
90 yards in ﬁve catches.
Bartrum led Meigs on
the ground with 87 yards
in 25 carries Cody was
15 of 28 in the air with
three interceptions for
225 yards. Cullums had
40 yards in 14 carries and
Sheets 39 in eight tries.

Sheets chipped in with
four catches for 96 yards,
Lilly had seven for 75 and
Zach Helton three for 21.
Meigs ﬁnishes it’s season at 6-4 overall and 4-2
in the TVC Ohio, while
Alexander is 9-1 overall
and 6-0 in TVC contests.
The Spartans are also
headed to the Division V,
Region 17 playoffs next
Friday night.
Meigs still leads the
all-time series by a 26-6-1
margin.
Dave Harris is a sports
correspondent for Ohio Valley
Publishing.

SERVING YOU FOR OVER 60 YEARS

going

www.rutlandbottlegas.com

R u t l a n d Shadyside
Bottle Gas
1-800-837-8217

Johnson ran for 38 yards and a touchdown on 11 carries for SHS, while completing 7-of-13 passes for 67 yards with
an interception. Steven Doughty led
all rushers with 85 yards on 15 carries,
while Cain had 69 yards and a touchdown on 23 carries.
Gregory Quinn caught one 22-yard
pass for the Tigers, while Chase Wade

BE READY – Be Warm &amp; Cozy

Don’t Be
Left Out
in the

Cold!

Gallia
From Page 1B

Call Us Today For All Your Heating Needs
RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS - 282 MAIN STREET - RUTLAND, OH
60618282

740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217
4ORCH /H s *ACKSON /H s 'ALLIPOLIS /H s 2UTLAND /H s -C#ONNELSVILLE /H s ,OGAN /H s 4HE 0LAINS /H

s Watches are made in the USA
s All repairs done on-site
s Masonic &amp; Eastern Star jewelry

25

IN GOLD WE TRUST
ST

$

G

25

Quality
Jewelry
&amp; Repair

304-373-1160

25

25

.00

VALUE

328 Church Street
Ripley, WV 25271

TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS

25

Present coupon at visit. Cannot be combined with other discounts.
In stock items only

s Find us on Facebook: goldiggers.us
s Huge inventory of new &amp;

used jewelry

recovered a fumble and
Kane Hutchinson had an
interception as part of the
Rebels’ two takeaways.
Kody McKinniss paced
the MHS ground attack
with 38 yards on 11 carries, followed by Dekota
Tittle with 18 yards on
four attempts. Geil ﬁnished the night 8-of-21

passing for 176 yards
with a pick and four TD
passes.
Bartley led the hosts
with four grabs for 72
yards. Miller was penalized just seven times for
64 yards.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Write-in For Mayor

s Custom make a unique piece –

Sandy I

one of a kind
s Engrave anything – knives,
nameplates for wildlife mounts,
lighters, etc.
s Huge inventory – same-day sizing

Be sure to write name &amp; ﬁll in circle

Vote For Sandy I

Goldiggers

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2015

Quality Jewelry &amp; Repair

Thank You,
Dick &amp; Ruby Vaughan

328 Church Street | Ripley, WV

304-373-1160

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

We want to thank everyone who has placed
a sign in their yard for Sandy Iannarelli ...
And to everyone who has and
will vote for her.

s Artcarved class rings

G ld
ldiggers
digg
gge
gge
g

the wideouts with three
catches for 73 yards.
South Gallia accumulated 25 ﬁrst downs and
was penalized 16 times
for 120 yards. Bevan

OVP sports correspondent J.P. Davis contributed to
this report.

Attention Middleport Residents

s Cash for gold and trade-ins

$25.00 OFF $100 Purchase

From Page 1B

had 21 yards on two receptions and
Logan Cline had 18 yards on two
catches.
As of Friday night, the unofﬁcial
standings on joeeitel.com had River Valley listed in the seven spot and headed
to Zane Trace. The ofﬁcial OHSAA
playoff pairings will be released Sunday
morning on ohsaa.org

60619431

Paid for by Dick &amp; Ruby Vaughan 3rd Avenue, Middleport, Ohio

60620657

that extra mile

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday, November 1, 2015 5B

�6B Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Arbors of Pomeroy along with partners
Ohio Health and O’Bleness would like to announce
Dr. Douglas Hunter as Medical Director

* Long term and Short term rehabilitation
* Health care management
*Post operative care
*respiratory services
*Recovery services and support
*Physical Therapy (inpatient and out patient)
*24 hour/7day nursing staff

60619549

�Along the River
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, November 1, 2015 s Section C

Washington conducts Trunk or Treat

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Sunday Times-Sentinel

Brenda Phalin, Meigs Primary School counselor, went as Cleopatra
for Halloween. However, she said most students who recognized
called her “Jasmine,” so she said she just went with it.

Treat Street: where
scary and fun meet

Photo courtesy of Washington Elementary PTO

Washington Elementary in Gallipolis hosted its Trunk or Treat Friday at 2 p.m. Children up to second grade were on the playground
and third through fifth grade students were on the track. Each home class room had a station of vehicle that was decorated.
Students were allowed to parade about each station to collect their treats.

Trick or Treat night was a kid’s delight
Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith dressed as a prisoner as
he attended Treat Street with his family Thursday night.

Lorna Hart| Sunday Times-Sentinel

Last Thursday evening was Trick or Treat night for those in Gallia and Meigs Counties. Thousands of costumed children and parents
went house to house for treats. Some villages had a party after trick or treat’s ended. AT LEFT, trick-or-treaters roamed the streets
of Syracuse on Thursday evening. AT RIGHT, trick-or-treaters in Racine finished the evening with a town party at the Fire Station
that included music, food and best costume contest.

AT LEFT, Portland Community Center hosted a Halloween party Thursday after trick-or-treating was finished in the area. CENTER,
Layla Robson, Ava Roush, Audrey Riffle were awarded prizes for the best costumes in the 7-12 age group. AT RIGHT, Racine town
party.

ABOVE, Racine town party. TOP RIGHT, the Racine Area
Community Organization sponsored a Halloween Costume
Contest during the town party. Best costume winners in
the 0 to 6 year old category were Aliyah Holman, Nicholas
Browning, Hadley Booth AT RIGHT, Ella Cooper, Caitlin
Carr, Kalandra Nero displayed their Halloween spirit and
won the best costume prizes for 13 year olds and up.

Halie Parsons, 19, and John Wolfe, 18, of Vinton, really got into
character during Treat Street Thursday evening. Parsons said her
costume didn’t have a title, while Wolfe went as a mental patient.

ABOVE, an inventive costume featuring someone protecting
themselves from a “storm.” BELOW, Bryant Decoglin, 8, of Mason,
W.Va., went as a “headless blood zombie” during Pomeroy’s Treat
Street.

�LOCAL/STATE/AREA

2C Sunday, November 1, 2015

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Plea agreements are frequent in criminal law cases
As any fan of television crime
dramas knows, plea bargains
are a frequent part of the criminal justice process.
They offer a means to get
further cooperation from reluctant defendants. But they don’t
always work, as we saw in a
case involving a man named
Kareem Gilbert.
On March 12, 2009, Gilbert
was indicted on two counts of
aggravated murder with ﬁrearm speciﬁcations (meaning he
used a ﬁrearm in the commission of his crimes), two counts
of having weapons while under
disability (meaning that he was
prohibited from owning weapons), and one count of intimidation of a witness.
On May 18, 2010, Gilbert
entered into a plea agreement whereby he would plead
guilty to one count each of
manslaughter with a ﬁrearm
speciﬁcation, having weapons
while under disability, and
intimidation of a witness, and
he would be sentenced to 18
years in prison. In exchange,
Gilbert agreed to cooperate
with the state and testify in a
murder prosecution against his
father, Ruben Jordan. Gilbert
was sentenced the same day to
18 years’ imprisonment.
Exactly one year later, the
state asked the trial court to
vacate Gilbert’s plea because
he had failed to cooperate with
the state in its prosecution of
Jordan. The trial court granted

the request, withdrew
a defendant fails to abide
the original plea agreeby the terms of that plea
ment, and vacated the
agreement.
sentence.
The state argued that
Gilbert then entered
the plea agreement is
into a second plea
a contract between the
agreement and was
state and the defendant,
Paul E.
sentenced to imprisand that a breach of that
onment for 18 years
Pfeifer
contract requires a court
Contributing to revisit the original plea
to life, but he subsequently ﬁled an appeal. Columnist
and treat it as though
The court of appeals
the agreement had never
ordered brieﬁng on this
been made. As Justice
issue: Did the trial court have
William M. O’Neill noted in
authority to grant the state’s
writing our majority opinion,
motion to vacate Gilbert’s origi- “While this may appear to be
nal plea, and then reconsider
an equitable outcome, it simply
its own judgment and resenis not supported by the law. It
tence Gilbert?
would require that a trial court
The court of appeals ultihave jurisdiction to reconsider
mately reversed the trial
its own valid ﬁnal judgment.”
court’s decision, speciﬁcally
The Criminal Rules that
holding that the trial court
govern the trial process list the
did not have the authority to
requirements for a valid ﬁnal
reconsider its ﬁnal judgment
judgment in a criminal case.
after the defendant had been
Speciﬁcally, one of those rules
sentenced. According to the
provides that a judgment must
court of appeals, the fact that
set forth four elements: the fact
Gilbert had breached the plea
of the conviction, the sentence,
agreement was irrelevant. Once the judge’s signature, and the
Gilbert was sentenced, a ﬁnal
time stamp indication that the
order existed, and there was
clerk of the court entered the
no authority for the trial court judgment in the journal.
to revisit its judgment even
In this case, the judgment of
though the plea agreement had the trial court ﬁnding Gilbert
been breached.
guilty and sentencing him to
The state then ﬁled a motion 18 years satisﬁed each of those
to bring the case before us —
four requirements. It was,
the Ohio Supreme Court. The
therefore, a valid ﬁnal order.
question before us was whether
Additionally, a trial court
a trial court can revisit its earis generally not empowered
lier acceptance of a plea agree- to modify a criminal sentence
ment and ﬁnal judgment when by reconsidering its own ﬁnal

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of sales from Oct. 28, 2015.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $180-$250, Heifers,
$165-$225; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $180-$240,
Heifers, $155-$225; 550-625 pounds, Steers, $160$230, Heifers, $150-$210; 650-725 pounds, Steers,
$150-$200, Heifers, $130-$172; 750-850 pounds,
Steers, $130-$180, Heifers, $110-$155.
Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $84-$118; Medium/Lean,
$66-$79; Thin/Light, $51-$65; Bulls, $90-$107.
Back to Farm
Bred Cows, $725-$1,260; Cow/Calf Pairs,
$1,760; Baby Calves, $230; Goats, $130; Feeder
pigs, $12-$35.
Upcoming specials
Feeder calf sale Nov. 4.
Bred cow sale, Nov. 13, 6 p.m.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Ryan (304) 514-1858, Dewayne at
(740) 339-0241, Stacy (304) 634-0224, or visit the
website at www.uproducers.com.

Ohio students
use paper clips
to mark 6M slain
By Shannon Gilchrist

room totaled 226,330,
including last year’s haul.
The 26 students in the
COLUMBUS — Visu- ﬁrst-period class have colalizing 6 million is diflected 22,388 since early
ﬁcult.
September, and the 29
One hundred? Easy.
students in third period
Count students in the
have collected 40,047.
crowded hallways of
“To think that one of
Gahanna Lincoln High
those paper clips in that
School.
pile represents a person
One hundred thouwho died because of their
sand? Anyone who has
beliefs is unreal,” said
been to an Ohio State
Connor Ingram, 17. “It’s
University football game just horrible.”
in the ‘Shoe can picture
The idea actually came
that.
from a middle school
Much more than that is in Tennessee. But Cantoo big to envision, said
dor said she wanted to
Gahanna Lincoln history ensure that students
teacher Jennifer Candor. don’t forget the human
To drive home the
tragedy involved.
enormity of 6 million
Students write letters
Jews killed in the Holo— real snail-mail letters
caust, Candor sought to — to 10 or more people
give the students taking
of their choice, requesther World War II class
ing paper clips but also
some tangible way to
asking the recipients to
count.
share why they chose to
Last year, Candor
participate or to describe
started the paper-clip
an injustice they suffered.
project, with a goal of
“So it’s not just about
eventually collecting 6
the Holocaust but maybe
million.
an injustice that their
As of earlier this
families have suffered,”
month, the paper clips in Candor said. “It’s become
jars and bins around the a Gahanna tribute.”
Associated Press

judgment. Over the years, our
court has been committed
to the principle that ﬁnality
creates “certainty in the law
and public conﬁdence in the
system’s ability to resolve disputes.”
Once a ﬁnal judgment has
been issued in accordance with
the Criminal Rules, the trial
court’s jurisdiction ends. While
our court does not dispute “the
fact that contract principles
generally apply to the interpretation and enforcement of plea
agreements, those principles
are not so ﬂexible as to permit
jurisdiction to be maintained
in perpetuity to enforce such
agreements.”
The state relied on numerous
prior cases to support its argument that the trial court retains
jurisdiction when a defendant
breaches a plea agreement.
But in each of those cases, the
defendant had not been sentenced at the time the trial court
considered whether the plea
agreement had been breached.
Thus, each of those cases
was different from Gilbert’s
because the trial court’s
jurisdiction was not an issue.
Instead, in each of those cases,
the state followed the common practice of ensuring that
the defendant had complied
with the plea agreement prior
to imposing the sentence and
entering a ﬁnal judgment.
“Should a defendant experience a change of heart and

renege on a plea agreement
before a sentence has been
imposed,” Justice O’Neill
wrote, “the trial court is still
able to ensure that the defendant does not receive anything
that he or she is not entitled to
receive regarding the dismissal
of any charges or a lesser sentence. There is no justiﬁcation
to create an exception from this
standard procedure.”
We therefore concluded —
by a ﬁve-to-two vote — that
once a defendant has been
sentenced by a trial court, that
court does not have jurisdiction
to entertain a motion by the
state to vacate the defendant’s
guilty plea and sentence based
upon the defendant’s alleged
violation of a plea agreement.
Our vote afﬁrmed the judgment of the court of appeals.
Justice O’Neill concluded by
saying that if the trial court is
concerned with the defendant
abiding by the terms of the plea
agreement, the solution is to
postpone sentencing until after
the defendant has performed
the desired act.
“As every teacher knows,”
Justice O’Neill wrote, “you
reward the student after the
desired behavior, not before.
Much like teaching, plea negotiations are driven by the fact
that the incentive to do the act
in question disappears once the
reward has been given.”
Paul E. Pfeifer is a judge in the Court of
Appeals.

Wilcox named president of Peoples Ins.
Staff Report

MARIETTA — Peoples Bank,
National Association (Peoples
Bank) has promoted Tyler J. Wilcox to president of Peoples Insurance Agency.
Peoples Insurance Agency is a
full-service independent insurance
agency providing commercial and
personal insurance solutions. As
president of Peoples Insurance,
Wilcox is responsible for providing leadership, and directing the
activities of the organization which
include sales management and
partnership with Peoples Bank’s
full array of ﬁnancial services.
Wilcox joined Peoples in the
legal department in 2008 as associate counsel.

It was there he began
working with management
and the human resources
team on employment
related issues. In 2011,
he joined the HR team as
director of compensation
Wilcox
and beneﬁts and next was
appointed director of HR
in 2012. In 2013, Wilcox was promoted to senior vice president,
director of human resources.
“Tyler has worked as a true business partner and leader over the
past seven years. His broad experience with all of our businesses,
his legal background, and his commitment to our employees and
customers will be a valuable addition to our insurance team,” said

Chuck Sulerzyski, Peoples
Bank President &amp; CEO.
“Tyler has tremendous
energy and dedication, and
I am conﬁdent that he will
do a great job in his new
position.”
Wilcox earned a bachelor’s degree from Brigham
Young University and a Juris
Doctor from The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law.
He is licensed to practice law in
Ohio and is a member of the Ohio
Banker’s League Human Resources Advisory Group and Ohio State
Bar Association Employment Law
Council. He and his wife, Holly,
reside in Marietta with their three
children.

Young actress makes Broadway debut
By Anna Patrick

and Todd took their
girls to New York City
for their ﬁrst Broadway
CHARLESTON,
experience. During
W.Va. — On Sept. 1,
every show — “Annie,”
Tara Nelson watched her Cinderella” and “Matilda
daughter, Brooklyn, get
— Tara said Brooklyn
picked up by her pig tails literally sat on the edge
and thrown through the of her seat, taking in the
air by her large intimiaction.
dating principal. That’s
Less than two years
right — her administra- later, she joins the action
tor threw the small girl
as “Small Girl Swing”
like a bulging Olympic
on the cast. Her title
athlete competing in the denotes that she is capahammer throw.
ble of swinging between
But Tara didn’t move
multiple ensemble roles.
a muscle, didn’t try to
“I have loved this show
save her daughter. She
since I saw it on Broadcouldn’t. It would have
way last year, and I’m so
ruined the scene.
happy to now be a part
Tara, her husband,
of it,” said Brooklyn in
Todd, and youngest
a press release from the
daughter, Lacey, watched Cabell County school
as their older daughter
system.
and sister, Brooklyn,
Besides playing Aman11, made her Broadway
da, Brooklyn also plays
debut in “Matilda The
Matilda’s best friend,
Musical,” based on the
Lavender. Fans will know
novel by Roald Dahl,
her as the girl who ﬁnds
playing Matilda’s classa newt and later drops
mate Amanda Thripp.
it in Miss Trunchbull’s
Fans of the novel and/ water pitcher, creating
or 1996 ﬁlm adaptation
a comical scene. Since
“Matilda,” will know the her ﬁrst performance on
scene well, when the
Sept. 1, Brooklyn played
scary principal, Miss
Amanda twice on Sept.
Trunchbull, picks up
2 for a matinee and eveAmanda and throws the ning show — including
small girl by her blonde
the musical’s 1,000th
braids through a classperformance since its
room window.
Broadway premiere in
“It’s a stunt, but it
April of 2013.
looks very scary,” Tara
Before her Broadway
said.
debut, Brooklyn completed
The Nelson famsix intensive weeks of
ily, residents of Cabell
rehearsals in New York City.
County near BarboursA lot of things have
ville, witnessed the stunt changed for Brooklyn
and her family since she
once before, when Tara
Associated Press

completed the ﬁfth grade
at Village of Barboursville Elementary School
earlier this year.
After the Nelsons
watched “Matilda” on
Broadway, Tara will tell
you “that’s when it kind
of started. … We bought
the cast recording (of
“Matilda”) while up
there. She listened to
it repeatedly from that
point on.”
Since she was 8,
Brooklyn has performed
in a number of productions by local theaters
— First Stage Theater
Company, Curtain Up
Players, and the Huntington Area Regional
Theater.
But how do you make
the jump from regional
theaters to Broadway?
Brooklyn kept talking
about the musical, so
Tara started scanning
the web for open casting
calls. The family found
a call in September of
2014 and decided to
make the drive. Among
200 girls auditioning,
Brooklyn received a
callback. But after the
callback, they didn’t hear
anything else.
In April of 2015, Tara
found another audition,
and the Nelsons packed
up their car and took the
trip to the Big Apple.
This time, Brooklyn got
a call back and continued
getting called back. After
her initial audition, she
made three more trips
to New York over the

course of two months.
The ﬁnal callback included 13 girls, but only four
were cast.
Tara was waiting for
Brooklyn to ﬁnish a
dance class when she got
the call.
“When I saw that it
was a New York number
on my phone, I thought
that it might be good
news. She (the casting
director) said, ‘Are you
sitting down?’”
Since the middle of
July, Brooklyn and her
family have made a small
apartment in Manhattan
their home. Starting July
16, the young actress
has dedicated herself
to learning the show’s
songs and choreography,
putting in eight- to ninehour days, six days a
week to learn her roles.
When Tara sat in the
Shubert Theater on
Sept. 1 to watch her
daughter perform for the
ﬁrst time, she admits
that she was probably
more nervous than her
11-year-old.
“We had watched a few
clips of the original cast
over and over and over
again, so to see her actually
up there doing those dances
and things that I had seen
so many times, it didn’t
even seem real,” Tara said.
“She’s always been the
type of kid that handles
things well. She’s very
driven … very driven.”
The Nelsons expect
to remain in New York
through February.

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, November 1, 2015 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Dave Green

By Hilary Price

1
3
7 6
8
2
7
8
2 5 9
3
9
6
4
2 7
3
8
3
6
1
4
9
5
11/02

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/02

5
3
8
6
9
7
2
1
4

2
9
3
4
1
6
7
5
8

4
7
5
3
8
2
6
9
1

6
8
1
5
7
9
4
3
2

Everyday price $34.99/mo. All offers require
24-month commitment and credit qualification.

7
1
2
8
5
4
9
6
3

FOR 12
MONTHS

9
4
6
1
2
3
5
8
7

19

$

1
5
7
2
6
8
3
4
9

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

PROMOTIONAL PRICES
START AS LOW AS

8
2
4
9
3
5
1
7
6

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

3
6
9
7
4
1
8
2
5

DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

1

6

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

6

2

9

8

TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

FREE

PREMIUM
CHANNELS!
for 3 months

Call Now and Save.
Ask about Next-Day Installation!

1-800-697-0129

Se Habla Español

™

Offers expire 10/30/15. Restrictions apply. Call for details.

DR_16461_3x3.5

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

60619736

4C Sunday, November 1, 2015

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="249">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6692">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="7546">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="7545">
              <text>November 1, 2015</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="262">
      <name>brown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2816">
      <name>conant</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2817">
      <name>cormier</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="541">
      <name>erwin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="160">
      <name>roach</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
