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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM OR WWW.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

60444131

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Lorobi’s wins Best
Pizza in Ohio Valley
Reader’s Choise... C1

Chance of showers.
High of 84. Low of
63... Page A2

OVCS completes
news gymnasium
... B1

OBITUARIES
Mary Ann Call, 75

Charles Sanders, 81

Jessie McClure, 63

Delbert Spencer, 80

Charles J. McGuire, 47

Betty Mae Walters, 77

$2.00

SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 2013

Vol. 47, No. 33

Joint effort nets 100 pounds of pot, $750K
Stephanie Filson

sfilson@civitasmedia.com

CHESHIRE TWP — In a joint operation involving Gallia and Meigs counties, Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning
and Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood announced Saturday that a major drug bust took place early Saturday, netting drugs, weapons and a whole lot of cash.
According to a release from the two agencies, sheriff’s deputies made a drug trafficking and weapons
arrest overnight at a residence along Zuspan Hollow
Road near the Gallia-Meigs county line.
See POT | A2

Dennis C. Butcher

Tammy L. Butcher

Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood and Gallia County Sheriff
Joe Browning look over a Saturday morning haul taken from a
Zuspan Hollow Road residence. Two were arrested as a result.

Racine man dies
Luce named Best Coach, Teacher in OVP area
at area plant
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
readers have spoken … and this
Wolverine topped all the Buckeyes
and Mountaineers in the area in a
pair of separate categories.
Corey Luce — who originally hails from Quincy, Michigan — has been selected as the
Best Coach and Best Teacher
in the Ohio Valley Publishing
area during the 2013 Reader’s
Choice Awards.
Luce is beginning his 10th year
as a school teacher at Green Elementary in the Gallipolis City
School District, where he has
spent the last six years teaching
second grade. Luce also taught
first grade in his first few years
with the district.
Luce has also served as head
coach of the GAHS varsity golf
program from 2008 until 2012,
where his Blue Devils accumulated an unbeaten regular season, a league title, a sectional
title, five straight district appearances and a third place
team finish at the 2011 OHSAA
Division II championships.
Luce has also served as a varsity assistant to Rich Corvin’s
baseball program since coming
to the school district in the fall of

Cause of death under investigation
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

RAVENSWOOD — A Meigs County man has died after
being found unresponsive early Friday morning at Constellium Rolled Products in Ravenswood, W.Va.
Laura Prisc of Constellium said Jesse McClure, 63,
of Racine, was found unresponsive by a co-worker early Friday. Emergency responders were called, and McClure was taken to Jackson General Hospital where
he was pronounced dead.
At this time, the cause of death is unknown according
to Prisc, but an investigation will take place by the company. Production in the area where McClure was found
has been shut down pending this investigation.
McClure was a 40-year employee of the company, working as an equipment operator in the plate department.
Prisc said the company is offering support to the family
and grief counseling to employees at the plant on Friday.
Bryan Walters/file photo

Gallia Academy golf coach Corey Luce, left, gives a high-five to then junior
Rob Canady during the second day of the 2011 OHSAA Division II state golf
championships held Saturday, October 15, 2011, at the Northstar Golf Resort in Sunbury, Ohio.

2004. The Blue Devils have posted consecutive 20-win seasons
over the last two years and won
four SEOAL titles — including a
school-best three straight — during that span.
With all of his personal ac-

colades, Luce was humbled to
hear of his selections by the tricounty region.
“It’s an honor, a privilege and
definitely a surprise to be voted
See COACH | A5

PVH developing partnership with Cabell Huntington
Register Staff

PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT — This has
been an interesting year at Pleasant
Valley Hospital (PVH), and now Cabell Huntington Hospital (CHH) has
been thrown into the mix.
On Friday, PVH announced it intends to develop a partnership agreement with CHH. However, a spokesperson for PVH said this is about an

affiliation with CHH, not selling out.
PVH will stay in Point Pleasant and
be controlled by its board of trustees.
“The Pleasant Valley Hospital
Board of Trustees voted to enter
into a discussion stage regarding an
affiliation with Cabell Huntington
Hospital. Part of what the Board approved is the asset will not be sold,
the hospital will stay in Point Pleasant, West Virginia and the Board
will continue to have control of the

hospital. The members of our Board
believe Cabell Huntington and Marshall will be a strong partner. The
details of the agreement are in the
process of being completed. As the
discussions progress, we will provide more information,” Tracy Stewart Call, director of marketing and
community relations for PVH said.
The two hospitals are beginning
See PVH | A2

Brinker charged with theft
related to post office job
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A postal
worker has been charged
with theft for those she was
supposed to be serving.
Mindy Brinker, 38, of
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
was arraigned Friday morning on five counts of theft
after being indicted by the
Meigs County Grand Jury
earlier this week.
The charges against
Brinker allege that she
took prescription pills
from the post office in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
All five counts are
fourth degree felonies.
The indictment states
that Brinker did commit
the crime of theft from

the Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
Office. Count one is alleged on May 9, 2013,
while the other charges
allege the crimes occurred between February
and May 2013.
The charge of theft alleges that the defendant
did, with purpose to deprive the owner of property or services, knowingly obtained or exerted
control over either property or services in the
following ways: without
the consent of the owner
or person authorized to
give consent and if the
property stolen is any
dangerous drug.
See BRINKER | A2

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� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 84. Calm wind
becoming south around 6 mph in the afternoon.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 63.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 87.
Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 67.
Tuesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 87. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 70. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Partly sunny, with a high near 87. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 71. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
Thursday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a
high near 87. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 69.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 88.

"@42=îDE@4&lt;D
AEP (NYSE) — 43.16
Akzo (NASDAQ) —
21.66
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) —
87.41
Big Lots (NYSE) —
32.25
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)
— 51.42
BorgWarner (NYSE) —
98.42
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.46
Champion (NASDAQ)
— 0.28
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.93
Collins (NYSE) — 72.03
DuPont (NYSE) —
57.90
US Bank (NYSE) —
37.32
Gen Electric (NYSE) —
23.78
Harley-Davidson
(NYSE) — 59.84
JP Morgan (NYSE) —
52.32
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.53
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —
59.21
Norfolk So (NYSE) —
74.46
OVBC (NASDAQ) —

21.18
BBT (NYSE) — 35.76
Peoples (NASDAQ) —
22.73
Pepsico (NYSE) —
79.85
Premier (NASDAQ) —
12.07
Rockwell (NYSE) —
98.80
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 17.51
Royal Dutch Shell —
64.42
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.60
Wal-Mart (NYSE) —
73.44
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.95
WesBanco (NYSE) —
30.08
Worthington (NYSE) —
34.78
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions August 23, 2013, provided
by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Winfrey marks ‘Butler’ debut with Hula Hoop joy
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
When “Beloved” starring
Oprah Winfrey fell flat at
the box office in 1998, Winfrey drowned her sorrows
in macaroni and cheese.
She found a different
way to celebrate when “Lee
Daniels’ The Butler,” her
first big-screen performance

since “Beloved,” hit No. 1 in
its debut last weekend.
“I actually got a purple
Hula Hoop that I bring out
for occasions like this,”
Winfrey said this week.
“So I brought out that Hula
Hoop in the front yard.”
The scant turnout for
“Beloved,” based on Toni

Morrison’s novel, caught
Winfrey by surprise after
the reception of 1985’s “The
Color Purple,” the Steven
Spielberg film in which she
made her big-screen debut
and which earned her an
Oscar nomination.
“I didn’t know that by
Saturday morning you

could already know that
you’re a loser,” she said,
referring to how quickly
a new film’s performance
is judged. “So Saturday
morning I get the call that
(‘Beloved’) was beat out by
‘Bride of Chucky.’”
She asked her chef to
start cooking comfort food

Pot
From Page A1
Browning said two people were
arrested after a search warrant
was served in connection with a
combined Gallia and Meigs county
sheriff’s office investigation.
Gallia County residents Dennis C. Butcher and wife, Tammy L.
Butcher, age 52, of 38067 Zuspan
Hollow Road, Middleport, Ohio,

were charged with Trafficking in
Marijuana, Complicity to Drug Trafficking, Possession of Marijuana and
having a Weapon under Disability —
all felony 3 offenses. Deputies seized
more than 100 pounds of packaged
marijuana and more than $750,000
in cash from the search. The search
took place at approximately 2 a.m.
Both Gallia and Meigs county
Sheriffs were on scene with deputies
from both offices. Sheriff Joe Brown-

ing Commented that
“The investigation into drug trafficking in both counties will continue
as the tie-in with theft and burglaries
is obvious with such high proceeds
being located,” said Browning.
“The joint effort between the two
Sheriffs’ offices is a direct result of
information sharing, with a common
goal of stopping the drug trafficking
and thefts in our area,” added Wood.

Brinker
From Page A1
Brinker has retained
Charles Knight as counsel in the case. She was

released on her own recognizance after appearing for the arraignment.
A pre-trial settlement con-

ference in the case is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. on Oct.
21. A final pre-trial is scheduled for 9 a.m. on Nov. 13,

and a trial for Dec. 17.
It is unclear at this time
if Brinker is still employed
with the post office.

PVH
From Page A1
exclusive discussions toward a collaborative arrangement/partnership
agreement that will be designed to
mutually benefit both organizations.
Leaders at CHH and PVH plan to
work together to develop the agreement over the next 90 days.
“This partnership will enhance
the best of both organizations,” stated Brent A. Marsteller, president/
CEO, Cabell Huntington Hospital.
“The growth and development of
Cabell’s academic affiliation with
the Marshall University Joan C.
Edwards School of Medicine and
Marshall Health physicians over
the past decade has proved that
joining together to provide highlyspecialized physicians and services
means better health care for the
community. We know that formally

Still Accepting Enrollment

collaborating with Pleasant Valley
Hospital will benefit the communities to our north while continuing our high standard of personal
care in Huntington and the surrounding areas.”
Recently named one of the top hospitals in the State of West Virginia for
Quality Patient Care for the second
year in a row, those in the PVH organization have been seeking a partner
that will help them continue to ensure
the residents of Mason and Jackson
counties in West Virginia and the
counties of Gallia and Meigs in Ohio
have access to top quality health care.
“These are exciting and challenging
times for all health care organizations.
We chose to seek a partner that we
believe would best help us meet those
challenges and best serve the people
who live in our community. We believe
that Cabell Huntington Hospital’s vi-

sion for the future best aligned with
our vision,” said Larry Unroe, interim
CEO of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
According to a press release from
PVH on Friday, the development of
a partnership agreement between
CHH and PVH will provide opportunities for new and enhanced health
care services, based on the needs
of patients and the community. The
PVH campus will continue to provide hospital, nursing home and rehabilitation services.
“This opportunity will allow PVH
to be at the forefront of health care
excellence in the Tri-State,” stated
Unroe. “The Board of Trustees and
management believe PVH services
(i.e., hospital, nursing home, rehab,
etc.), our local physicians, and our
PVH staff will continue to play a vital
role in our communities.”

GREAT
GOLF

2013-2014

OUTSTANDING
EDUCATION
WE LEARN TOGETHER

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We offer a challenging 18 hole golf
course with excellent greens. Last
year we rebuild all of our bunkers
to provide the best golf
experience. Cliffside won the
Readers Choice award for Best
Golf course in 2013.

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For a Tee Time
call (740) 446-4653

1100 4th Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
www.ovcs.net

Owners
Jake and
Heather Hall
60441915

740-446-0374

Weekdays $27
Weekends $32
18 holes including cart

100 Cliffside
100 Cliffside Drive Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 Drive
740-446-4653
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
740-446-4653

60444594

�Sunday, August 25, 2013

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Card showers

Herman Rossiter will be celebrating
his 90th birthday on August 29. Cards
can be sent to him at 376 Gallia Street,
Crown City, Ohio 45623.

Events

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî�

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ers’ Market, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., State Street
adjacent to the Gallipolis City Park.
GALLIPOLIS — Church Rummage
Sale at the First Church, 1723 State
Route 141, of God from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Saturday, August 31.

Sunday, Sept. 1

Monday, Aug. 26

RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will meet in regular
session at 8 p.m. in the elementary library.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board will
be held at 3:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Local Board of Education will meet at 7 p.m.
The meeting was originally scheduled for Aug. 27.

Sunday, Aug. 25

PERRY TWP. — Fellure Family Reunion, 10 a.m., O.O. McIntyre Park (Ruffled Grouse Shelter House). Dinner will
be held at 12:30 p.m. Bring a covered dish.

Monday, Aug. 26

POMEROY — Holzer Clinic and Holzer Medical Center retirees will meet for
lunch, 12 p.m., Wild Horse Cafe, Pomeroy.
Tuesday, Aug. 27
PORTER — Springfield Township
POMEROY — The
Crime Watch meeting, 6 p.m., Springfield
Meigs County Tea Party
Township Fire Department.
will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
Saturday, Sept. 7
GALLIPOLIS — Yard sale sponsored Meigs Senior Center, 112
by the Ladies Auxiliary of the VFW Post Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
A time of prayer will be
4464, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., 134 Third Avenue.
held from 7:00-7:15 p.m.
for those who would like to
Monday, Sept. 9
pray for our country and its
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Neighborleaders. Discussions will
hood Watch meets at 1:30 p.m. at 518 Sec- be held about the Constituond Ave. police station meeting room.
tion and current events. A
report will be given on the
Tuesday, Sept. 10
Meigs Fair booth. There
GALLIPOLIS — Triad/SALT Coun- will be an open forum.
cil meeting, 1 p.m., Gallia County Snacks will be served.
Courthouse, second floor meeting
room. Everyone is welcome.
Thursday, Aug. 29
POMEROY — The
Saturday, Sept. 28
2013 Meigs County Relay
PERRY TWP. — Farm City Day, 10 for Life wrap up meeting
a.m.-2 p.m., Raccoon Creek County will be held at 5:30 p.m.
Park, O.O. McIntyre Park District, 518 in the conference room of
the Meigs County Health
Dan Jones Road.

PROCTORVILLE — Fulks Family Reunion, 12 p.m., dinner at 1 p.m., VFW in
Proctorville, Ohio. Please bring a covered
dish and dessert. Everyone is welcome.

Tuesday, Sept. 3

BIDWELL — River Valley Middle
School PTO meeting, 6 p.m., RVMS library. Agenda items include the election
of officers and planning for the 2013-2014
school year.

Tuesday, Aug. 27

GALLIPOLIS — There is a special American Legion Auxiliary and e-board meeting
at 6:30 p.m. at the home post in Gallipolis,
Ohio on McCormick Rd. All member are
encouraged to attend this meeting.

Thursday, Aug. 29

GALLIPOLIS — French 500 Free Clinic, 1-4 p.m., 258 Pinecrest Drive. The clinic serves the uninsured residents of Gallia
County between the ages of 18 and 65.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County Farmers’ Market, 4-7 p.m., Medical Shoppe,
101 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waste
Management District Board of Director’s
will meet in Special Session at 3:30 p.m.
to discuss bids.

Saturday, Aug. 31

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County Farm-

Department. Anyone interested in commenting on
the 2013 event or making
suggestions for improvement of the 2014 event
are encouraged to attend
or email input to Courtney
Midkiff at courtney.midkiff@meigs-health.com.
WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of
Director’s will meet in special session at 3:30 p.m. to
discuss bids.

Friday, Sept. 6

MARIETTA — The
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development
District Executive Committee will meet at 11:30
a.m. at 1400 Pike Street in
Marietta. For more information contact Jenny Myers at (740) 376-1026.

Sunday, Sept. 8

REEDSVILLE — The
Reedsville Neighborhood
Community Picnic will be
held at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Shelter House.
The Belleville Locks and
Dam is located on State
Route 124 in Reedville
Ohio. There will be a free
dinner and drinks provided. Along with music provided by George Hall. The
picnic starts at 1 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend
this free event. Come out

and enjoy great food, great
music with your neighbors.

Saturday, Sept. 21

POMEROY — The Veterans Memorial Hospital
employees will have their
annual reunion from 1 to
3 p.m. at the Meigs Community Center. Joyce
Redman and Barbara
Fry are in charge of this
year’s reunion.

Friday, Sept. 27

MIDDLEPORT
—
Health Recovery Services
will be hosting an open
house in honor of National Recovery Month.
The open house will take
place from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. with door prizes,
food and fun. Health Recovery Services is located at 138 North Second
Avenue in Middleport.

Birthday

POMEROY — John
Tucker will be 88 years
old on Sunday, Aug. 25.
Cards may be sent to him
at 39175 State Route 124,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Card Shower

POMEROY — Mrs.
Thelma Belcher was recently hospitalized. Cards
may be sent to her at
40250 White Oak Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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(AP) — Trey Powell’s first
name has an extra resonance
these days. Though still a bachelor, he now presides over a family of three as the dad of twin
daughters born six months ago
via a surrogate mother.
“I feel so lucky every day,”
Powell said.
At 42, he’s a new addition to
the ranks of men who intentionally seek the role of single father.
While some opt for adoption,

others yearn to have children
with genetic ties and are willing
to invest $100,000 or more to
make that happen.
There are no firm numbers of
how many men have taken this
route. It’s clearly still a rarity,
although Growing Generations,
a leading for-profit surrogacy
agency in Los Angeles, says
its caseload of single men has
risen steadily and totaled about
25 cases last year.

Experts say the driving force is
generally a male equivalent of the
“biological clock” that prompts
some unmarried women to have
children while they’re still fertile.
“They say they’ve always
wanted to be a dad, they haven’t
found a partner that they want to
start a family with, they’re getting older and just don’t want to
wait — the same things single
women say,” said Madeline Feingold, an Oakland, Calif., psychol-

Come visit our beautiful River Village!

ogist who has done extensive
counseling related to surrogacy.
That was the case for Powell, a
pharmaceutical company executive in Seattle who spent three
years futilely trying to adopt.
“I was in an adoption pool
for a year and half, didn’t get
any calls and got bummed
about the whole experience,”
he said. “I just wanted to be a
dad. Time was not on my side,
and I didn’t have the luxury of

waiting for an ideal mate.”
Before approaching Growing
Generations, Powell discussed
his options at length with family
members and with people who’d
been through surrogacy. There
was a lot of self-interrogation.
“If something happens to me,
who’s going to take care of my
daughters? Is this an egotistical,
selfish thing?” he recalled asking
himself. “I had to be sure it was
the right thing to do.”

NEW PATIENTS WELCOME!

DAVID J. FARO, DPM

Board Certified in Foot &amp; Ankle Surgery

Diplomate, American Board
of Podiatric Surgery
The Middleport
Community Association
invites you to join us.

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We work year around to make Middleport
a great place to live!
Meetings - Last Tuesday of each month
9AM - Middleport Village Hall
www.village.middleport.oh.us
More info contact Debbie Gerlach
740-992-5877

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�Sunday Times-Sentinel

OPINION

Onward and awkward with Don Dudding
My friend and editor, Stephis pretty delicious, and I’m not
anie, suggested I start this colmade of stone.
umn off by introducing myself
Okay, so here’s where Fate deand explaining the scope of
cided to play its little reindeer
this bi-weekly humor column,
game with me because I brazenly
but I’ll just have to get back to
sauntered between the Golden
that. Right now, I find myself
Arches this morning; the Big
stuck in the swamp of a moral
McDs is once again attaching
dilemma, and I want to yak
tiny peel-off squares that allows
about that.
people to collect them for prizes
It’s the typical dilemma that
and win free food. Between my
appears whenever my tradiiced coffee and my two hash
tional Appalachian upbringbrowns, I received six such tiny
ing collides with my New Age
cardboard squares reminiscent
aging-hippy sensibilities. I’m
of that board game that shall go
sitting in McDonalds, which is
Don
unmentioned because my famsomething I rarely do anymore
ily will no longer play with me
since my wife talked me into
Dudding
because I make vicious threats
joining her in following a vegan
when they cut side deals that I
diet. The “plant-based” diet is
think
should
be outside the sphere of acceptsupposed to help me live longer, or, at the
very least, provide me with the self-righteous able game play (“I’ll trade you Marvin Garsmugness that comes from thinking I’m go- dens for New York Avenue if you’ll wash my
ing to live longer. Ah, what could be more car sometime next week.”)
So naturally I pull the trading pieces from
fun than eventually living long enough to
see all my contemporaries die off from eat- the back of the food packages, and there it is,
ing poorly? Or even better, having my family boom, a free quarter pounder. Now there was
and friends relish the irony of how low my a time in my life when a free cheeseburger
cholesterol was when I was fatally struck by would have been cause for a minor dance parlightning or flattened by a bus.
ty in the parking lot, but those days have gone
So, living primarily off grains and the way of dinosaurs, disco, and blacksmiths;
greens, I guess you might say I’m a veg- the world has moved on, and I’m struggling
an hillbilly. My imaginary uncle, Woody to keep up with my convictions. UnfortunateHerb, would say that a “vegan hillbilly” ly, my reputation for cheapness has some bais anyone who has sworn off roadkill, and sis of truth in it; my children claim I’m able to
that as much as anything I reckon, sums squeeze a nickle until Jefferson squeals. And
up my lifestyle and the source of this par- now I find myself in one of those old Warner
ticular dilemma. The problem is this: it’s
harder for me to give up being cheap than Brothers cartoons where a tiny devil sits on
one shoulder while a tiny angel offers counsel
it is for me to forgo meat and cheese.
I’m sitting in McDonalds because I of- on the other. What do I do with the coupon
fered to get new tires put on my wife’s car, for the free quarter pounder?
Yeah, I know. I could throw it away, and let
and the tire place didn’t have wifi in their
waiting room. My wife’s front tire has had it go. But that’s wasteful, and my inner hilla slow leak and for the past three months, billy says it’s a sin to waste food. Can you see
we’ve been routinely plunking quarters how real this cheeseburger is to me? I know
into gas station air machines to keep the that in reality McD’s is not going to have an
car on the road. There’s just something extra quarter pounder that they don’t know
horribly wrong with society when we’ve what to do with, but that magical piece of
reached the stage in civilization where I’ve cardboard could produce an actual sandpaid for the tires, but somehow, I need to wich so it’s real enough to me. I could give
keep renting the air inside of them. Re- the coupon to someone else, but isn’t that
member when gas stations used to give like enabling someone else’s poor diet? What
air away? There was a time in America kind of human being would I be to encourwhen we used to call them “service sta- age a behavior I’m abstaining from? Thus,
tions,” and now, they only “service” us in the little hick devil on my shoulder says its
the same sense of the word as the Internal better that I eat the burger than to darken my
Revenue Service uses the word — which, karma with someone else’s clogged arteries.
frankly, is a pretty abusive use of the word What makes this so hard is that it’s not just a
in my humble opinion. Anyway, I digress. quarter pounder, it’s a prize. My Appalachian
So, because of the way I was raised, I upbringing has taught me that people who
am uncomfortable with sitting in a busi- don’t respect prizes are doomed never to win
ness establishment (even one as profit- anything again. Life comes with precious few
able as Mickey Dees) without spending
any money while I suck up their free band- freebies; “Take’em if you can get’em,” wails
width. Anyway, in the spirit of full disclo- the ghosts of my pot-licking ancestry.
So here’s where I am. I’m sticking the consure, I ordered an iced coffee and a couple
of hash browns. Neither the iced coffee or founded coupon in my wallet where all small
the hash browns are actually permitted pieces of paper go to die. And if sometime
on the “heart-healthy” diet, because the in the next few weeks, I find myself destitute
potatoes have spent too much time wal- and suicidal, I’ll cash it in. Otherwise, I’ll just
lowing in the luxury of hot grease and the hope the coupon expires before I do.
coffee comes with milk in it. Of my two
purchases, the iced coffee is probably the Don Dudding is a retired public school teacher who
more flagrant of the dietary violations be- has a Ph.D in English and who has recently taken up
cause it was excreted by a living animal, cartooning. You can read his daily webcomic “Pencilbut in my defense, McDonald’s iced coffee zania” at dudding.net.

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Page A4
Sunday, August 25, 2013

Editorials excerpts from
across the region …
The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 18
Ohio lawmakers wanted more details
about how expanding Medicaid could affect the state’s bottom line, and now that
they have them, it’s good news: Enabling
more poor Ohioans to have health insurance would, as previously reported, save
the state money in the long term.
That good news won’t matter, however, unless the legislature enacts the
Medicaid expansion, and so far this obviously beneficial path has been blocked by
tea party Republicans for no reason other
than ideological obsession. Some refuse
to consider the expansion because it is
part of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act.
Republican Gov. John Kasich recognizes that whether one likes the law or not,
it is the law, and his job is to make it work
to the benefit of Ohioans. The expansion
will make people healthier and save the
state money, so Ohio’s leaders have an
obligation to pursue it. …
Reforms such as better coordination of
care are good for Medicaid recipients and
taxpayers: People get healthier, so their
lives improve even as their state-paid
medical bills go down.
It’s reasonable to think those reforms
can be sustained, and the pleasing scenario spelled out in the latest report —
healthier people, fewer tax dollars spent
— can be reality.
But it won’t come to pass until lawmakers put Ohio’s well-being before political
point-scoring.
Online: http://bit.ly/16TX2yP
___
The (Martins Ferry) Times Leader,
Aug. 14
Ohio University Eastern played host
to a hearing that focused on the future
of the Ohio Valley. The subject matter
was coal, and the negative impact the
Environmental Protection Agency and
President Obama have delivered on that
industry. …
Dozens of Ohio coal-burning facilities
have been forced out of business in recent years. Several hundred have met the
same fate throughout the nation.
Much of the demise is directly attributed to the suffocating restrictions imposed
by the EPA, supported by Obama’s “War
on Coal.” …
The loss of well-paying jobs that coal provides is a painful pill to swallow. It is made
even more bitter when realizing that less
coal means much higher electricity rates. …
Industry officials and supporters need
to continue their passionate pleas with the
hope that they will reach friendly political
ears, reversing coal’s downward spiral.
Coal is a no-brainer solution to many
of our nation’s problems. Unfortunately,
Obama and the EPA do not have the
sense to realize that.
Online: http://bit.ly/19EbbWJ

___
The (Tiffin) Advertiser-Tribune, Aug.
16
Taxes have gone up, not just for “the
wealthy” but for every American who
works. The national debt is approaching
$17 trillion. Deficit spending still is reported in hundreds of billions of dollars a year.
But some liberals are saying federal
spending cuts can be put on the back
burner now, because government revenue has been increasing.
What kind of insanity is that?
Liberals’ new confidence was bolstered
by a report that federal government revenue through June was up 14 percent in
comparison to the same period last year.
The trend is expected to continue.
It has prompted some liberals to suggest the “sequester” spending cuts be rescinded and that talk of other reductions
in the size of government be dropped.
But some of the revenue increase
is because the payroll tax break,
benefiting all Americans who work,
was allowed to expire in January.
And, again, Washington continues to
spend far more than it receives.
The problem still is that our government spends — and misspends
— too much. That cannot be allowed to continue.
Online: http://bit.ly/14uwsdv
___
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Aug. 16
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder’s
powerful speech in San Francisco before
the American Bar Association, in which
he announced that he would direct federal prosecutors to avoid charging low-level, nonviolent drug offenders with crimes
that trigger mandatory prison sentences,
should be encouragement for Congress
to reform those harsh laws.
Time in prison ought to fit the crime, not
just for drug offenders but for all felons.
According to Holder, the Department
of Justice has too often pursued tough
charges against minor-league drug offenders in a draconian war on drugs.
Judges are then forced to follow harsh
federal guidelines that put the guilty behind bars for years.
Currently, 47 percent of the nation’s
219,000 prisoners were convicted of
drug crimes, according to the federal
Bureau of Prisons.
Holder said his new national policy requires that offenders who are nonviolent
and not affiliated with street gangs be
charged with offenses “better suited to
their individual conduct” or turned over
to their states for prosecution.
Joe Frolik, spokesman for Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty,
says that already is being done here in Ohio.
Online: http://bit.ly/1619j1M

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&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî��

%3:EF2C:6D
Charles Edward Sanders

Charles Edward Sanders, 81, of Gallipolis, went
home to the Lord on Friday,
August 23, 2013, at his residence. He was born on December 7, 1931, in Ironton,
Ohio to the late Wilfred and
Lillian Henthorn Estes.
On June 26, 1938, Charles
along with brothers, sister
and their father’s world
was turned upside down.
Charles, his brothers Ray
and Ralph, his sister Lois,
Dottie, Glenna Eileen, their
mother Lillian were in a
bad wreck.
The children’s mother and baby sister were killed as
they were riding home from church. Later the children
were separated; Dottie and Charles came to Mercerville
to live with Edgar and Maude Sanders. Even though they
were separated, the love these children had for each other
stayed strong; no matter the miles that separated them.
Charles loved both his Estes and his Sanders families.
Charles married Shelby Jean Facemire on August 23,
1958, in Northup, Ohio by Rev. Earl Cremeans. Shelby,
his wife of 55 years, survives along with daughter, Diana
(Philip) Glass and son, Charles “Chuck” (Crystal) Sanders, Jr.; grandchildren, Zachary (Sabrina) Glass, Tarra
Geiger and Xavier Lewis; great-grandchildren, Andre
“Dre” Geiger III, and Aryanna Glass; brothers, Ray (Freda) Estes and Ralph (Nancy) Estes; brothers-in-law, Paul
(Sherry) Facemire, Gene (Nickie) Facemire and Derry
Adams; sisters-in-law, Judy Reynolds, and Shirley (Charlie) Bailey; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents; his foster parents; a daughter, Kelly Ward; brother, Roy Lee Estes; and
sisters, Lois Fletcher, Dottie Adams and Glenna Eileen
Estes.
Charles was a United States Veteran, serving both in
the U.S. Army and U.S. Navy. He worked at Kaiser Aluminum, Ravenswood Aluminum, and Century Aluminum

for 36 ½ years. He was a member of the United States
Steel Workers of American Local 5668; life-time member of Veteran of Foreign Wars Post 4464. Charles loved
watching Chuck and Xavier race at the Kanawha Valley
Drag Way.
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Tuesday,
August 27, 2013, at Willis Funeral Home with Evangelist
Leland Allman and Pastor Bob Wiseman officiating. Entombment will follow in the Chapel of Hope Mausoleum
at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call on
Monday, August 26, 2013, at Willis Funeral Home, from
6-8 p.m. Military services will be given at the cemetery
by the Gallia County Funeral Detail.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

Delbert ‘Vance’ Spencer

Vance Spencer, 80, of
Chester, Ohio, passed
away peacefully on August
22, 2013, at Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center in
Middleport.
Vance was born on January 2, 1933, to Henry and
Edna Mae Spencer. He
was one of nine children
and lived his entire life in
Meigs County. He will be
fondly remembered eating
a McDonald’s cheeseburger while visiting with family and friends. He loved
crossword puzzles and crocheting. He spent his final years greeting residents and
staff while cruising around the halls of Overbrook in his
wheelchair. He will be missed by his family, friends and
nieces and nephews who he loved to “boss” around in
their younger days. But most especially he’ll be missed
by those living and working at Overbrook.
He is survived by his brother, Dayton (Sarah) Spencer
of Chester; his sister, Mary Spencer DeGroot of Fountain, Colorado; and his sister-in-law, Gladys Wright Spen-

cer. He is also survived by many nieces and nephews.
Vance was preceded in death by his parents; his sisters,
Eris Spencer (7 years old), Martha Spencer (infant), and
Avis Spencer Bing; his brothers, David Spencer (infant),
Elson “Bud” Spencer and Waid Spencer.
Visiting hours will be observed on Monday, August 26
from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home, 590 E. Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Funeral services will be held following the visitation
at 1 p.m. also at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home.
Burial will be at Chester Cemetery, Chester, Ohio. A reception will follow the graveside service at the Bashan
Volunteer Fire Department, 33478 Bashan Road, Long
Bottom, Ohio.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Mary Ann Call

Mary Ann Call, 75, of Middleport, Ohio, went home
to be with the Lord on August 23, 2013, after fighting
a long battle with leukemia. She was born on August
15, 1938, in Ashville, North Carolina. She was a loving
wife and mother and she attended Ash Street Church in
Middleport.
She is survived by her husband of fifty-nine years,
Woody Call; children, Debbie (Tim) Cundiff, Woody
(Christy) Call, David Call, Steve (Debbie) Call, Michael
Call, Cindy (Kevin) Bush and Karen (Jeremy) Gilbert;
daughter-in-law, Cheryl Call; nineteen grandchildren;
fourteen great grandchildren; sister, Nancy Ackerman;
brother, David (Annabell) Michael; and several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Marian and
Oliver Michael; son, Phillip “Del” Call; nieces, Becky
Ackerman and Tracy Reitmire.
Funeral services will be held at the Ash Street Church
at 2 p.m. Monday, August 26, 2013, with Pastor Mark
Morrow officiating. Friends and family may call at the
church from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Monday at the church.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Cancer Society.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Prosecutor disputes claims sheriff raped shooter �62E9î$@E:46D
said his brother, Leslie Maynard.
“Six or seven months ago, before he
shot Eugene, he tried to file charges
and they just throwed (sic) it away,”
Leslie Maynard said.
No one answered the door during several visits to the Maynard family’s Delbarton home, and there is no telephone
listing for the family. Tennis Maynard’s
defense attorney, Rick Weston, did not
immediately return a telephone call to
his office seeking comment Friday.
Maynard’s father has previously said
his son has mental health issues and was
exposed to harmful chemicals and injured while working at an Alabama coal
mine. In addition to the murder charge,
Tennis Maynard has been indicted by
a federal grand jury for possession of a
firearm by an individual who had been
committed to a mental institution.
Evidence collected by Sparks includes
orders of involuntary hospitalizations
from Williamson Memorial Hospital,
Logan-Mingo Mental Health Clinic and
Highland Hospital in Charleston.
Sparks told The Associated Press his
office has conducted an investigation
into the sexual assault claims and that
there is no evidence to support them.
He said the officer from the Mingo
County Sheriff’s Office who the Maynards claim took the complaint told
investigators none had ever been filed.
“We have found no evidence that
that happened, according to our investigation, that a complaint was made.
Certainly, I can tell you no one came
to my office with that,” Sparks said.
“And we will refute the other claim at
trial — that he was assaulted by the
sheriff. When an allegation like that
is made, we don’t put our head in the
sand. We’re going to investigate that.”

A call to the sheriff’s office was not
immediately returned.
West Virginia State Police Capt.
David Nelson said investigators have
been working closely with Sparks.
While he couldn’t talk specifically
about the allegations, he said state
police were investigating “a lot of different facets” of the sheriff’s slaying.
“We have spoken to the prosecutor in reference to various information that’s been passed along and
we are reviewing and investigating
anything given to us,” he said.
Sparks declined to say how he knows
there was no sexual assault, citing professional practice standards that he says
prevent him from disclosing such information ahead of a trial. While Weston
hasn’t disclosed all the evidence he may
present at trial, Sparks said even if there
were evidence that Crum had sexually
abused Maynard, “Our law does not
permit vigilante killings.”
State police investigated allegations that Crum sexually assaulted a
19-year-old woman in 2001 when he
was Delbarton’s police chief. A 2002
state police report on the investigation concluded that the sex was consensual, and no charges were filed.
In Delbarton, many people are still
mourning the loss of Crum and said
they don’t find the allegations of sexual assault credible.
“I’ve heard the stories. It’s not true
and I don’t believe it,” said Davina
Ball, who said she knew Crum for
decades. “If it was true, why didn’t it
come out while he was running (for
sheriff)? Why are they waiting for
the man to be dead, and then bringing it out? He’s a hero. He’ll stay our
hero. He was a good man.”

Coach
From Page A1
best coach and best teacher in the tri-county area,”
Luce said. “I’d like to
thank those who voted for
me. I believe it’s a blessing
to be considered among
all the other worthy recipients, and there are probably much more deserving
teachers and coaches in
the tri-county area.”
Luce was a member of
a state baseball championship as a player at Quincy
High School, where he
graduated in 1998. Luce
then attended Kellogg
Community College in
Battle Creek, Michigan,
where he played baseball
for three years before
transferring to the University of Charleston to finish
his baseball career.
Upon graduating from UC
in 2004, he went to work at
Green Elementary and has

been in the area ever since.
He also completed his Master’s Degree in Educational
Leadership from the University of Cincinnati in 2010.
Luce — who stepped
down as GAHS golf coach
this fall — has always
been passionate about
what he does, whether it
be in the classroom or in
the sports world.
He demands respect,
he emphasizes details and
strives for making people
responsible. He also believes that his passion
goes a long way in making a real difference for
the next generation.
“Having the opportunity
to teach younger students
at the elementary level,
while coaching the older
high school students in
sports, I feel like I have the
best of both worlds. My
hope is to provide a role

model for all the students
I come in contact with,”
Luce said. “Teaching them
the importance of honesty,
respect, and integrity is a
goal I strive for each day.
If students and studentathletes work hard, are
respectful, and follow
through with the task at
hand, I believe they have
the learned the skills necessary to become respected, successful adults.”

Corey and his wife Cara
are expecting twins in
November and reside in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Editor’s Note: Look for
other Reader’s Choice
winners from the Ohio
Valley area inside on C1
and in the Friday, August
30 edition of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point
Pleasant Register and The
Daily Sentinel.

McClure

Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Jessie McClure, 63, Racine, died unexpectedly,
Friday, August 23, 2013,
in the Emergency Department of the Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, West
Virginia.
Arrangements
will be announced by the
Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

McGuire

Charles J. McGuire, 47,
Gallipolis, died at 1:24 a.m.
Saturday, August 24, 2013,
in the Holzer Medical Center. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by the

Walters

Betty Mae Walters, 77,
of Proctorville, Ohio, died
Thursday, August 22,
2013, at The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House,
Huntington, WV. Funeral
service will be conducted
at 11 a.m. Monday, August
26, 2013, at Hall Funeral
Home, Proctorville, Ohio
by Rev. Eddie Salmons.
Visitation will be held 10
a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday,
August 26, 2013, at Hall
Funeral Home, Proctorville, Ohio.

Ohio Troopers get boot
options after footwear flap
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio’s highway patrol and
the union for troopers settled a disagreement Friday over
shoes for the officers, who can now choose to wear a
dressier short boot or a more athletic version with laces.
The Ohio State Troopers Association and several officers had filed grievances, contending the buckle boots being required were slick and potentially insecure, creating
unsafe working conditions.
Association president Larry Phillips said troopers are
satisfied with the settlement, which makes the athletic
style optional for everyday use. The leather buckle style
still is required in certain circumstances, including for
higher-ranking officers and at ceremonial occasions, classroom training and public speaking appearances.
The patrol’s new leader, Col. Paul Pride, considers the shoe
issue more about comfort than safety and said he thinks there
are bigger problems requiring troopers’ attention. But he said
providing the chukka boot option is a “common-sense decision”
and should help ensure troopers can refocus on their work.

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WILLIAMSON, W.Va. (AP) —
Mingo County authorities are challenging claims that former Sheriff
Eugene Crum raped the man who’s
been charged with murdering him, as
well as any allegations that the sheriff’s office ignored a complaint that
sexual abuse had occurred.
Tennis Maynard is accused of shooting Crum twice in the head on April 3
as the sheriff ate lunch in his parked
vehicle in downtown Williamson.
Maynard and Crum had known each
other for years, with Crum previously
serving as a boxing club mentor to
Maynard when he was a teenager and
when Crum was police chief in the town
of Delbarton. Maynard is 37. Crum was
59 at the time of the shooting.
Crum had been a longtime community figure and a county magistrate for
more than a decade when he stepped
down to run for sheriff last year. He
took office on Jan. 1.
“Eugene raped him,” Melvin Maynard, Tennis Maynard’s father, said
in a video recorded by WCHS-TV
and WOWK-TV outside a court hearing earlier this week. “It’d give me
the damn right to kill him.”
Prosecutor Michael Sparks said his
office looked into the rape claims made
this week by Maynard’s family and
found no evidence to support them.
It wasn’t clear exactly when Tennis
Maynard supposedly reported the
abuse or when it allegedly occurred.
Video from WCHS-TV shows Maynard, handcuffed and being led out of
the courthouse, declining to answer
a reporter’s question about whether
Crum had sexually assaulted him.
Maynard did try to report the
abuse, but his efforts were ignored,

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Soldier guilty of murder for Fort Hood shootings
out the attack in a crowded waiting room where
unarmed troops were
making final preparations
to deploy to Afghanistan
and Iraq. Thirteen people
were killed and more than
were 30 wounded.
Because Hasan never
denied his actions, the
court-martial was always
less about a conviction
than it was about ensuring he received the death
penalty. From the beginning of the case, the
federal government has
sought to execute Hasan,
believing that any sentence short of a lethal injection would deprive the
military and the families
of the dead of the justice they have sought for
nearly four years.
In the next phase of
the trial, which will begin Monday, jurors must
all agree to give Hasan
the death penalty before he can be sent to
the military’s death row,

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About 50 soldiers and ci- martyr” if executed.
vilians testified of hearing
Death sentences are rare
someone scream “Allahu in the military and trigakbar!” — Arabic for “God ger automatic appeals that
is great!” — and seeing a take decades to play out.
man in Army camouflage Among the final barriers
open fire. Many identi- to execution is authorizafied Hasan as the shooter tion from the president.
and recalled his handgun’s No American soldier has
red and green
been executed
laser
sights
since 1961.
piercing
a “There was
Hasan spent
room
made adequate
weeks
plandark with gun
ning the Nov.
smoke.
5, 2009, atprovocation
Hasan, who
tack. His prepacted as his — that
aration includown attorney,
ed buying the
began the trial these were
handgun and
by telling ju- deploying
videotaping
rors he was
a sales clerk
the gunman. soldiers that
showing him
But he said
how to change
little else over were going to
the magazine.
the next three engage in an
He
later
weeks, which
plunked down
convinced his illegal war.”
$10 at a gun
court-appointrange
outed
standby
side
Austin
— Nidal Hasan
lawyers that
and asked for
Army Maj. pointers
Hasan’s only
on
goal was to get
a death sentence.
As the trial progressed,
those suspicions grew. The
military called nearly 90
witnesses, but Hasan rested his case without calling
a single person to testify in
his defense and made no
closing argument. Yet he
leaked documents during
the trial to journalists that
revealed him telling military mental health workers that he could “still be a

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which has just five other
prisoners. If they do not
agree, the 42-year-old
could spend the rest of
his life in prison.
Hasan, a Virginia-born
Muslim, said the attack
was a jihad against U.S.
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He bristled when
the trial judge, Col. Tara
Osborn, suggested the
shooting rampage could
have been avoided were
it not for a spontaneous
flash of anger.
“It wasn’t done under
the heat of sudden passion,” Hasan said before
jurors began deliberating.
“There was adequate provocation — that these were
deploying soldiers that
were going to engage in an
illegal war.”
All but one of the dead
were soldiers, including
a pregnant private who
curled on the floor and
pleaded for her baby’s life.
Hasan was left paralyzed
from the waist down after
being shot in the back by
one of the Fort Hood police officers who responded to the rampage. He now
uses a wheelchair.
The sentencing phase
is expected to include
more testimony from
survivors of the attack
inside an Army medical
center where soldiers
were waiting in long lines
to receive immunizations
and medical clearance
for deployment.

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in the hand.
Chief Warrant Officer
Christopher Royal saw an
opening after hearing the
distinct clicking of the
gun’s chamber emptying.
But he slipped on a puddle
of blood while starting a
sprint toward Hasan. He
was shot in the back.
Tight security blanketed the trial. The courthouse was made into a
fortress insulated by a
20-foot cushion of blastabsorbing
blockades,
plus an outer perimeter
of shipping containers
stacked three high. A
helicopter ferried Hasan
back and forth each day.
The small courtroom was
guarded by soldiers carrying high-powered rifles.
In court, Hasan never
played the role of an angry extremist. He didn’t
get agitated or raise his
voice. He addressed Osborn as “ma’am” and occasionally whispered “thank
you” when prosecutors, in
accordance with the rules
of admitting evidence,
handed Hasan red pill bottles that rattled with bullet
fragments removed from
those who were shot.
His muted presence
was a contrast to the
spectacles staged by other unapologetic jihadists
in U.S. courts. Terrorist conspirator Zacarias
Moussaoui disrupted his
2006 sentencing for the
Sept. 11 attacks multiple
times with outbursts,
was ejected several times
and once proclaimed, “I
am al-Qaida!”
Prosecutors
never
charged Hasan as a terrorist — an omission that
still galls family members
of the slain and survivors, some of whom have
sued the U.S. government
over missing the warning
signs of Hasan’s views before the attack.

how to reload
with
speed
and precision. An instructor said he told Hasan to
practice while watching
TV or sitting on his couch
with the lights off.
When the time came,
Hasan stuffed paper towels
in the pockets of his cargo
pants to muffle the rattling
of extra ammo and avoid
arousing suspicion. Soldiers testified that Hasan’s
rapid reloading made it all
but impossible to stop the
shooting. Investigators recovered 146 shell casings
inside the medical building
and dozens more outside,
where Hasan shot at the
backs of soldiers fleeing toward the parking lot.
The first person to
charge Hasan, a civilian
doctor, was shot dead
while wielding a chair.
Another soldier who ran
at him with a table was
stopped upon being shot

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60442576

FORT HOOD, Texas
(AP) — Army Maj. Nidal Hasan was convicted
Friday in the 2009 shooting rampage at Fort
Hood, a shocking assault
against American troops
at home by one of their
own who said he opened
fire on fellow soldiers to
protect Muslim insurgents abroad.
A jury of 13 highranking military officers
reached a unanimous
guilty verdict on all
charges — 13 counts of
premeditated
murder
and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder
— in about seven hours.
Hasan is now eligible for
the death penalty.
Hasan had no visible reaction as the verdict was
read. After the jury and
Hasan left the courtroom,
some victims who survived
the shooting and family
members began to cry.
The Army psychiatrist
acknowledged carrying

�Sunday, August 25, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

#6:8Dî�@F?EJî"@42=î�C:67D
Immunization Clinic

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health Department will conduct as
childhood and adolescent
immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesdays, at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring children’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent
or legal guardian. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.

Traffic Advisory

MEIGS COUNTY —
County Road 46, Success
Road, will be closed for
approximately one week
beginning Sept. 3. County

forces will be replacing a
bridge at a site 1/2 mile
east of Ohio 7.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Road 10
(Carpenter Hill Road)
will be closed for approximately one month beginning July 29. County
forces will be replacing a
culvert with a new bridge
on County Road 10 at a
site approximately 2,000
feet north of County
Road 17 (Cotterill Road).
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 143 (located just
0.25 miles south of State
Farm Road) will be reduced to one lane to allow
for a bridge replacement
project. During construction there will be a 10’
width restriction. Traffic
will be maintained with
a portable traffic light.
Weather permitting, both

lanes of Ohio 143 will be
open September 1, 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The westbound lane of
Ohio 124 (located at the
63.91 mile marker, about
1.5 miles north of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will
be maintained by traffic
signals and concrete barriers. Weather permitting,
both lanes of Ohio 124 will
be open November, 1 2013.
MEIGS COUNTY —
Ohio 124 (located 0.4
miles north of Williams
Run Road) will be reduced
to one lane to allow for a
bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers.
Weather permitting, both
lanes of Ohio 124 will reopen August 31, 2013.

Teacher’s allergy, Ohio girl’s service dog at odds
Her dog is trained to calm
her and to walk on an attached tether so the girl
cannot wander. Gretz said
changing schools would
disturb her daughter.
But accommodations made
for Shyanna and her dog
must be balanced against the
allergic teacher’s rights, said
Carl Martin, superintendent
of the Athens City School
District. Moving Shyanna to
a different school is a reasonable solution, he said.
Gretz also said the bus
ride to a different school
would be about double the
ride to Morrison-Gordon.
“She does not do well with
buses,” Gretz said. Martin
disputed her claim about
the lengthened route, saying
Shyanna would not spend
significantly more time on
the bus because the schools
are only five miles apart.
There is a legal obligation to accommodate both
the student and the teacher,
said Sara Clark, an attor-

ney with the Ohio School
Boards Association. Clark
said the issue of service
dogs and classroom allergies has surfaced nationally,
but she wasn’t aware of any
other cases in Ohio.
Gretz plans to take her
case to the school board
that oversees the 2,800-student district southeast of
Columbus. But for now,
she plans to keep her
daughter at their home in
The Plains and use online
courses for instruction.

*@FC:DED�îC6D:56?EDî]66î
9F86î\C6î?62Cî/@D6&gt;:E6
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) —
A California wildfire raging out of control on Friday grew from 99 square
miles to more than 165
square miles as it spread
inside the border of Yosemite National Park.
The flames have also
forced the evacuations of
hundreds from homes in
communities near the park.
California Department
of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman Daniel
Berlant said Friday the
blaze was only 2 percent
contained. Berlant said the
fire threatens about 4,500
residences.
“Most of the fire activity
is pushing to the east right
into Yosemite,” Berlant said.
While the park remains
open, the blaze has caused
the closure of a 4-mile
stretch of State Route 120,
one of three entrances
into Yosemite on the west
side. Yosemite can still be
accessed via state Routes
140 and 41 from the west,
as well as State Route 120
from the east side.
Within the park, the
blaze is burning on about
17 square miles in a remote
area around Lake Eleanor,
about 4 miles northwest
of Hetch Hetchy reservoir,
Yosemite
spokeswoman
Kari Cobb said.
Backcountry
permits
are required to hike in

that area, Cobb said, and
the park is no longer issuing those and has contacted every person who
had received a permit to
go there. Two roads that
lead into the area — Hetch
Hetchy Road and Eleanor
Road — have been closed.
Hodgdon Meadow Campground, which is near the
park’s west entrance via
Route 120 has also been
closed, its campers relocated to other areas.
“We don’t have anybody
we know of in that area
based on the permits we
have out now,” she said.
The fire is not threatening Yosemite Valley, she
said. It’s burning more
than 20 miles from the Valley, where skies are “crystal clear” and there’s no
sign of smoke, Cobb said.
“Right now there are
no closures and no visitor services are being affected in the park,” Cobb

said. “We just have to take
one day at a time depending on fire activity.”
Officials also have advised voluntary evacuations of more than a
thousand other homes,
several organized camps
and at least two campgrounds in the area outside the park’s boundary.
More homes, businesses
and hotels are threatened
in nearby Groveland, a
community of 600 about
5 miles from the fire and
25 miles from the entrance of Yosemite.
“Usually during summer, it’s swamped with
tourists, you can’t find
parking downtown,” said
Christina Wilkinson, who
runs Groveland’s social
media pages and lives
in Pine Mountain Lake.
“Now, the streets are
empty. All we see is firefighters, emergency personnel and fire trucks.”

60438232

Service Tech

3 rooms for $99

RESTORATION AND CLEANING SOLUTIONS

SERVICE TRI-COUNTY AREA

60438719

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) —
The mother of an autistic
first-grader in Ohio who uses
a service dog is challenging
a decision that the girl must
change schools because her
special-education teacher is
allergic to dog dander.
Charla Gretz said a
school official told her
on the first day of school
this week that her daughter, 6-year-old Shyanna,
and her black Labrador
retriever, Spring, could
not attend Morrison-Gordon Elementary School
in southeast Ohio, a
Columbus
newspaper
reported. The official
told her that the specialeducation teacher at the
school is extremely allergic to dog dander and
Shyanna must transfer,
according to Gretz.
Shyanna gets overwhelmed by sensory issues
and does not cope well
with change, Gretz said.

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî��

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27 Years Experience

60428152

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60442043

60441997

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Emblem Club announces scholarship recipients
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Emblem Club #199 announces
recipients of the Supreme, State,
and local Emblem Club #199
scholarships.
Hanna Gillespie received a
$1,000 scholarship from the Supreme Emblem Club. Hanna attends Ohio State University and
is the granddaughter of member
Noretta Gillespie.
Amanda McGhee, an Emblem Club
member and daughter of member
Karen McGhee, received a $750 State
Emblem Club scholarship. Amanda attends Marshall University.
Zachary Gillespie, Jessica McGhee, Wendy Wade, and Micha
Clevenger each received $500 scholarships from the local Emblem Club.
Zachary attends Ohio State University and is the grandson of member
Noretta Gillespie. Jessica is an Emblem Club member and attends Marshall University. She is the daughter
of member Karen McGhee. Wendy
attends the University of Rio Grande
and is the granddaughter of member Cathy Bostic. Micha attends
Shawnee State University and is the
daughter of member Terri Jividen.

Submitted photo

The 2013 Emblem Club #199 scholarship recipients pictured are, from left: Amanda McGhee, Hanna Gillespie, Zachary Gillespie, Wendy Wade and Micha
Clevenger. Not pictured is Jessica McGhee.

�2==:2î�@F?EJî�C:67D
Bulaville Pike to close
for resurfacing

BIDWELL — Gallia County
Engineer Brett A. Boothe has
announced that Bulaville Pike
will be closed between Ohio
554 and White Road on Monday, August 26 and Tuesday,
August 27, from 6 a.m. to 6
p.m. for asphalt resurfacing.
Residents are asked to use
other county roads as a detour.

Historical Preservation
Board meeting

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Historical Preservation Board
will hold a meeting at 5:30 p.m.
on Monday, August 26 at the Gallipolis Municipal Building, 333
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The
meeting room can be accessed

from the entrance door next to
2 ½ Alley. On the agenda is the
approval of the minutes from
July 22 meeting; case # 1 Shayna
Chapman, 5 Court Street - paint;
case # 2 Ali Golji — Second and
State - windows for third floor;
case # 3 Karen Smith - signage for
riverfront - public use area; case
# 4 Stan Evans - signage for 300
Second Avenue; concerns on any
other properties in the historical
district and any other matters
brought before the board. For
more information, please call
Bev Dunkle at 441.6015 or Brett
Bostic at 441.6022.

GAHS Class
of 1993 reunion

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
Academy High School Class of

1993 is planning their 20 year
reunion the last weekend of August 2013. At 7 p.m on Friday,
August 30 an adult only meet
and greet event will be held at
Envy Ink in Gallipolis. A family
picnic will be held the following
day at 1 p.m. in the Gallipolis
City Park. Please bring picnic
favorites, games and a blanket.
Saturday evening from 7-11
p.m., the class will gather at
the Green Valley Gathering
Place. The main course will
be provided hog roast style.
Please bring your favorite
side/dessert. There will be a
DJ and “open mic” time. Bring
your guitar, harmonic, etc. To
RSVP or to volunteer to help
organize the weekend, contact
Amy Canaday Duke at (317)

379-4779 or email GAHS.
class.of.1993@gmail.com.

Old fashioned hoedown

JACKSON — An old time
hoedown will be held on Saturday, August 31 at the Wagon
Wheelers Square Dance Hall,
354 Summitt Street, Jackson.
Doors open at 6 p.m. and
dancing is from 7-10 p.m. Big
Country Band will provide
live music for clogging, square
dancing and round dancing.
This West Virginia Band features outstanding and award
winning musicians. Several
expert callers will be on hand
to lead participants through
moves. New dancers are welcome to participate. No alcohol
is permitted, but concessions
will be available. For more in-

formation, call (740) 884-4506.

Highway Department
schedule

GALLIPOLIS — Beginning
Tuesday, September 3, the
Gallia County Highway Department will be returning to
an eight hour day, five days
per week schedule. The regular hours will be from 7 a.m.-3
p.m., Monday through Friday.

Cheshire Village
Council meeting

CHESHIRE — The regular
September 2 council meeting
for the Cheshire Village Council
has been moved to Tuesday, September 10 due to the holiday and
other matters. Meetings are held
at 6:30 p.m. at the village hall,
119 Ohio 554, Cheshire.

Since 1913

Funeral Home

Celebrating 100 Years of Serving
Meigs County

Kevin Schwarzel
Mike Putman
Owners

Jeff Warner Agency
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113 West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
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INSIDE

SPORTS

SATURDAY,
AUGUST 25, 2013
mdsports@civitasmedia.com

Capital blanks
Black Knights, 3-0
in opener...B8

Ohio hunters gearing up for ‘October Thunder’
Jim Freeman
Special to OVP

It doesn’t seem possible, but Ohio’s hunting
season gets underway in
just a few short days with
squirrel and early migratory game bird seasons
starting next Sunday.
For the majority of
Ohio’s hunters the biggest change in this year’s
seasons is the antlerless
deer muzzleloader season
the weekend of Oct. 1213. A season I call “October Thunder.”
Now I can understand

that some archery hunters aren’t too cracked
up about sharing “their”
woods with other deer
hunters that early in the
season, but the fact is that
Ohio’s archery hunters
have many other weekends and several months
to bag their bucks – from
Sept. 28 to Feb. 2, 2014 to
be exact, and the woods
belong to everyone. On
the other hand, if I could
tweak the rules I would
allow archery hunters to
take a buck that weekend.
The biggest complaint
I have heard is that hunt-

ers in the woods will
mess up the bucks’ travel
patterns, but studies
from states with similar
seasons show that not to
be the case, according to
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources’ Division of Wildlife.
Personally I am kind of
excited by the prospects
of being out in the woods
with my muzzleloader in
mid-October. It is probably the most beautiful
time of year to be in the
woods; it isn’t too hot or
too cold, and there is still
plenty of daylight left for

people to hunt in the afternoon. As an extra treat
the leaves in southeastern
Ohio are almost at peak
color during that time.
I think anything that
gets people off of their
couches and into the
woods is a good thing. If
someone wants to disagree
with me, I’m fine with that,
but if you just don’t want
to share the woods (or
deer) with other hunters,
then save your breath.
Ohio deer hunters generally have a little time to
get their muzzleloaders
ready for deer season,

either for the deer gun
season in late Novemberearly December, or for
the muzzleloader season
in early January. If your
muzzleloader hasn’t been
out of the cabinet since
last deer season, break
it out and run a patch or
two down the barrel - this
serves the dual functions
of cleaning your bore and
making sure there are no
obstructions. Fire a few
shots to make sure your
sights (or your eyes)
haven’t changed over the
past year; this applies
even if you use a tradi-

Alex Hawley | Daily Tribune

Meigs junior Hannah Cremeans (9) spikes the ball during the
first set of the Lady Marauders 3-1 loss to Federal Hocking
Thursday night in Rocksprings.

tional cap-and-ball sort
of rifle with traditional
open sights or a more
modern, scoped inline
muzzleloading rifle.
During that two-day
season, deer hunters can
take antlerless deer only
(deer without antlers or
with antlers less than three
inches in length). Hunters
can use a muzzleloading
rifle .38 caliber or larger, a
muzzleloading shotgun 10
gauge or smaller using one
ball per barrel. Hunters
can also use archery equipSee HUNTERS | B2

Photos by Bryan Walters |Daily Tribune

An outside view of the new gymnasium at the First Baptist Church of Gallipolis, home of the Ohio Valley Christian School.

OVCS
unveils
new
gymnasium
Lady Marauders fall

to Federal Hocking
Alex Hawley
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — A turn for the worse.
Since defeating South Gallia in the opening game of the
season the Lady Marauders have dropped two stright contest; the latest of which came by a 3-1 count to Federal Hocking in Larry R Morrison Gymnasium, Thursday night.
The Lady Lancers (2-0) took the first two games 25-19
and 25-18 respectively, but Meigs (1-2) rallied to avoid
the sweep with a 25-16 third set win. Federal Hocking
took the fourth game 25-22 to take the 3-1 match victory.
Kelsey Hudson led the Lady Marauders service attack
with 11 points, followed by Brooke Reynolds and Devyn
Oliver with seven apiece. Olivia Cremeans marked six
points, while Brook Andrus and Ariel Ellis each added
three. Lindsay Patterson finished with two points and
rounding out the MHS scoring total was Aly Dettwiller
with one marker.
Andrus and Olivia Cremeans weach finished with seven
kills to pace the Lady Marauders net attack. Hudson added six kills, Hannah Cremeans had three, while Dettwiller
finsihed with two kills. Dettwiller and Oliver tied for a
team-high with nin digs apiece, while Ellis had 10 assists
for the Maroon and Gold. The Meigs net defense was anSee MARAUDERS | B2

OVP Sports Schedule
Monday, August 26

Volleyball
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Parkersburg Christian at Ohio Valley Christian,
5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
Golf
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 4:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Miller 4 p.m.
River Valley at Southern, 4 p.m.

Tuesday, August 27

Volleyball
Athens at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30 p.m.
Golf
Gallia Academy at Logan
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 4 p.m.
Chesapeake at River Valley, 4 p.m.
Eastern, Federal Hocking, Miller at Trimble,
4:30 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, 6:30 p.m.

Wednesday, August 28

Volleyball
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Golf
Federal Hocking/Trimble at Southern, 4:30 p.m.

Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —To quote the New International Version of Psalms 128:2 in the Bible, “You
will eat the fruit of your labor; blessings and prosperity will be yours.”
For three years, Ohio Valley Christian School has
put in plenty of planning, effort and painstaking work
to get a gymnasium attached to its new school site at
the First Baptist Church in the Old French City.
Over the course of the last few weeks, OVCS has
officially begun enjoying its bountiful harvest.
The Defenders and Lady Defenders will officially christen their 16,500 square-foot facility
this 2013-14 school year in varsity sports such as
volleyball, boys basketball and girls basketball, but
the building itself will provide something much
more needed to the new educational facility — a
place to grow, as needed.
“People will be using this building long after
most of us who were involved in this construction
project are gone. It’s something that the future
generations will get to enjoy, and it was designed
to be expanded on if it is needed later by the ministry,” OVCS Chief Administrator Patrick O’Donnell
said. “I feel like we were fiscally responsible in
such a tight economy with our private resources,
and we wanted to honor the fans and honor the
teams with a nice facility while also honoring
Christ with excellence.
“Like most others involved with this project, I
feel really privileged to have been a part of this.
It’s really something to see it in a completed state.”
The building itself cost $1.6 million to complete,
and that money came from private collections —
not state or federal funds, as is the case with most
public schools that get new gymnasiums. Besides
a new hardwood floor, the new facility also contains additional room for classes, a youth room,
a kitchen, locker rooms with showers, restrooms
and additional space for school storage.
The locker rooms were designed to be soundproof due to the close proximity of their locations,
while the new gymnasium will feature fold-in
bleachers on one side and a green-inspired, ultraquiet ventilation system above.
The floor itself was also designed to allow heat
and humidity out from underneath the surface to
ensure an even temperature on both sides of the
wood to prevent warping.

An inside look at the new Ohio Valley Christian School
gymnasium during a volleyball practice last Friday at the
First Baptist Church of Gallipolis.

The new facility also houses six basketball rims,
compared to four in the old gym, which will allow
multiple practices to run full court at the same
time — a luxury also not afforded at the previous
facility. The new court is also set up for Awana
youth services on Wednesday nights.
But besides the athletic purposes that the new
building serves, the addition also makes way for
new opportunities that were not a luxury since
the school moved from its Third and Locust
streets location to its current facility at First Baptist Church on Fourth Avenue.
Little things, such as recess, will no longer be
held in the parking lot or on gravel drive paths or
even in the grass during less than ideal conditions.
“We’re offering physical education to all of our
elementary, junior high and high school classes,
and recess will take place in here when the weather
is rainy or cold. It’s something that we’ve never
See GYM | B2

Defenders blank Grace Christian in opener, 5-0
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

BARBOURSVILLE, W.Va. —
There’s nothing like a nice road trip
to start the season.
The Ohio Valley Christian soccer team received a hat trick from
senior T.G. Miller Friday night
during a convincing 5-0 victory
over host Grace Christian in the
2013 season opener for both programs at the Barboursville Soccer
Complex in Cabell County.

The visiting Defenders (1-0-0)
outshot the hosts by a sizable 26-2
overall margin and also claimed a
7-0 edge in corner kicks. OVCS led
3-0 at the intermission, then added
two goals in the second half to wrap
up the five-nil decision.
Miller started the scoring in the
15th minute after netting an unassisted goal from 20 yards out, giving the Defenders an early 1-0 lead.
Miller followed by assisting Scotty
Wood on a header goal in the 18th
minute, making it a 2-0 contest.

Miller closed out the first half scoring after netting a pass from Evan
Bowman in the 33rd minute, giving
OVCS a 3-0 halftime advantage.
Miller completed his hat trick in
the 65th minute after netting a pass
from Phil Hollingshead for a 4-0
cushion. Bowman completed the
scoring in the 74th minute on a free
kick from 18 yards out.
OVCS keeper Marshall Hood recorded a shutout by making two
saves. Grace keeper Chris Harmony
had 17 saves in the setback.

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� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

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URG 9th in NAIA men’s soccer preseason poll

Alex Hawley

Randy Payton

WELLSTON, Ohio — In the win column.
The River Valley volleyball team earned its first victory
of the season Thursday night with a 3-2 decision over
host Wellston in a non-conference matchup.
The Lady Raiders (1-2) took the first set 25-17, before
dropping the second set 26-24 and the third set 25-18 to
the Lady Rockets (0-2). River Valley bounced back to take
the fourth set by a convincing 25-12 margin. RVHS held
off WHS to take the 15-12 win in the fifth set and the first
match victory of the 2013 season.
Junior Leia Moore led the victors with 16 points, followed by Rachael Smith with nine. Courtney Smith and
Kaci Bryant each contributed eight points, while Chelsea Copley and Jacey Walter both marked five. Rounding out the RVHS scoring was Brea Stout and Jessica
Saunders with one point apiece.
Moore finished with 11 kills to pace RVHS, followed
by Rachael Smith and Courtney Smith each had seven.
Copley, Bryant and Walter each had four kills, while
Saunders finished with one. Copley and Courtney
Smith split the majority of the 35 River Valley assists,
while Courtney Smith finished with 11 digs to lead the
team. Moore had a team-high two blocks, while Walter
and Rachael Smith each had one block.
This is the lone meeting between these teams this season.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The
University of Rio Grande is
ranked ninth in the 2013 NAIA
Men’s Soccer Coaches’ Preseason
Top 25 poll announced Tuesday.
The RedStorm received 379
points in the balloting of 19 head
coaches representing each of the
conferences, independents and
unaffiliated groups.
Head coach Scott Morrissey’s
team, which finished the 2012
season at 16-3-1 and ranked ninth
after a season-ending loss to
Hannibal-LaGrange (Mo.) in the
second round of the national tournament, earned its 50th consecutive Top 10 ranking, dating back
to the 2009 Preseason Top 25
poll. Rio is also making its 64th
straight appearance in the poll.
However, the No. 9 ranking marks just the fourth time
that the RedStorm has been
ranked outside of the top five

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Special to OVP

in the preseason poll.
Rio Grande, last year’s MidSouth Conference regular season champion, opens its regular
season schedule on Saturday
night when St. Xavier (Ill.) University visits Evan E. Davis Field
for a 7 p.m. kickoff.
Defending national champion
Belhaven (Miss.) remains atop
the poll after receiving all 19 firstplace votes and 529 total points.
The consecutive No. 1 rankings
are a first for the Blazers, who
will tangle with Rio Grande on
September 7 in the IWU Classic
hosted by Indiana Wesleyan.
Mobile (Ala.), the Southern
States Athletic Conference foe
whom Belhaven defeated 2-0 in
the 2012 National Championship,
accumulated 510 total points to
earn the No. 2 ranking.
Lindsey Wilson (Ky.), who compiled an NAIA-best 22-2 record a
year ago, received 496 points en
route to the No. 3 position. The
Blue Raiders fell 1-0 to Belhaven

in the 2012 National Championship semifinals.
MidAmerica Nazarene (Kan.)
and Auburn Montgomery (Ala.)
round out the top five with 477
and 461 points, respectively.
The Southern States Athletic
Conference claimed three of the
top five positions in the preseason
poll and leads all conferences/
independents/unaffiliated groupings with five teams in the Top
25 - Belhaven, Mobile, Auburn
Montgomery, No. 8 Southern
Poly (Ga.) and No. 22 Southern
Wesleyan (S.C.).
The Heart of America Athletic
Conference, with three, and the
American Midwest Conference,
Mid-South Conference, Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference and the unaffiliated grouping
of Frontier/A.I.I./North Star, with
two each, also placed multiple
teams in the Preseason Top 25.
The first regular-season Top 25
Poll will be announced Sept. 10.

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Staff Report
MASON, W.Va. — Ed
Debalski of Sandyville, Vest
Virginia is now on top of the
Riverside senior mens golf
league with five weeks remaining. Debalski’s total of
108 leads Gene Thomas of
New Haven, who has 103.5
points, and Phil Burton,
who has 99.5 points.
A total of 71 players
were on hand Tuesday,
making up 17 foursomes
and one three-man team.
There was a three way tie
for first place at nine-under
par 61 between the team of
Jim Turley, Bobby Walker,
Mitch Mace and Claude

Proffitt, the team of Ken
Whited, Rudy Stewart,
Gene Thomas and Jack
Fox, and the team of Bob
Oliver, Jack Ocheltree,
Tom Fisher and Albert
Durst. The closest to the
pin winners wer Richard
Mabe on the ninth hole and
Bill Yoho on the 14th.
With five weeks remaining here is the current top10 standings: Ed Debalski (108), Gene Thomas
(103.5), Phil Burton (99.5),
Rex Young (94.5), Charlie Hargraves (92.5), Bill
Nease (90.5), Jim Lawrence
(90.5), Tom Hoschar (88),
Mick Winebrenner (88),
and Gary Minton (87.5).

Marauders
From Page B1

From Page B1
had the opportunity to do here before,” O’Donnell said. “When the
younger kids get in here, it’s simply fun to watch them because they
know what this building is for. The
four year-olds, the kindergartners
and the first graders get in here and
just run because they are so full of
joy. It’s really nice to be able to offer that now.”
Even the one varsity program —
soccer — that technically would
not benefit from an indoor gymnasium is still reaping some rewards
from the new facility.
The complex comes with outdoor access to the new locker
rooms, which are located less than
100 feet from the southwest goal.
There are also men’s and women’s
restroom facilities located on the
outside of the new building.
For OVCS athletic director and
current soccer coach Jeff Patrick, he’s
sees the addition as a win-win for all
of the Defenders’ future endeavors.
“I think it’s an absolute benefit to
every sport here, and not just at the
varsity level. Before, we were doing
recess in the parking lot or whatever — and we were kind of limited
to what we could do,” Patrick said.

chored by Hannah Cremeans with eight blocks, followed
by Hudson and Olivia Cremeans with three blocks each.
Ellis finished with two blocks, while Andrus had one to
round out the Meigs total.
Mckenzie Steele led the victors with 13 points, including 11 in the final game. Andrea Russell marked 12 points,
Megan Thompson finished with nine, while Makayla
Williams had six. Ashton Cale’s five points and Charlee
Cobb’s four rounded out the FHHS total.
Steele and Williams each marked six kills in the win,
while Russell had five and Thompson marked one. Cale
finished with a game-high 13 assists, whole Whitney Gil- From Page B1
lian led the Lady Lancers with five digs. Thompson and
ment during this season.
Williams each had four blocks in the win.
Hunting hours are one
This is the lone scheduled meeting between these
half hour before sunrise to
teams this season.
one half hour after sunset
for all deer seasons in Ohio.
Although this particular
season isn’t geared towards
young hunters, there are
several factors that make
it an ideal opportunity to
introduce youngsters to
the woods. For one, like
I mentioned before, midOctober is a great time to
be afield. Second, it is on a
weekend when youngsters
can be out in the woods in

“Now, with this facility, it’s really
going to help build our programs
from the bottom all the way up.
“As a soccer coach, to have direct access to locker rooms next
to the field and for fans to have
access to restrooms here on the
campus — it’s going to make a big
difference in a positive way. It’s going to benefit the kids, our school
and opponents as well.”
The new building has more than
adequate parking in comparison to
the old facility, and the location of
the facility also serves a nice bridge
between the campus and the soccer
facility. There is also roughly 3,500
square feet left between the parking
lot and the soccer facility, in case
the school continues to grow and
wants to make another addition.
Entry into the new gymnasium
will also be more convenient, as
fans will enter through a set of
double doors on the west side of
the campus to purchase tickets just
outside the gymnasium area. The
entry area is located between the
new building and the original First
Baptist Church facility.
As OVCS begins a new chapter
in its illustrious history, enrollment
has jumped up for the start of the
2013-14 school year. O’Donnell

noted that the ministry is currently
receiving students from the tricounty area and also out of Jackson
County, W.Va. — and more outside
areas may soon be joining that list.
And since Ohio Valley Christian
School is expanding into new areas,
O’Donnell was adamant that locals
be involved in the completion of
this new building when the discussions came up three years ago.
“We have been so fortunate to be
blessed with this facility, and I am
truly grateful to the people at the
school, the First Baptist Church
and everyone in the surrounding
communities that helped make
this building a reality,” O’Donnell
said. “We’ve had a lot of local businesses in here working on different
aspects of the building, and we are
grateful to have had so many local
contractors in here on this job. Everybody has just done a really nice
job in making this place what it is.”
OVCS will have a gymnasium
dedication at 11:15 a.m. on Sunday,
September 22, which the public is
invited to attend. The first varsity
sporting contest to be played at the
new facility is scheduled for Monday,
August 26, when the volleyball team
hosts Parkersburg Christian at 5 p.m.

Hunters

lieu of the classroom.
Furthermore, muzzleloading rifle loads can easily be tailored for younger
shooters and many manufacturers make youth models especially made for
smaller stature shooters.
While most modern
.50-caliber muzzleloading
rifles can easily handle up
to 150 grains of black powder, it really isn’t necessary
to use such punishing loads.
After the first 100 grains of
powder it takes a lot more
to achieve even a small gain
in muzzle velocity.
The standard loading

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these days for a .50-caliber
muzzleloader is 100 grains
of “powder” in the form of
two 50-grain pellets. This
is too much for most kids
or smaller shooters, and
demonstrates a problem
with pellets: one pellet
(50 grains) doesn’t offer
enough velocity for bullet
expansion or sabot separation and (for most shooters) three pellets (150
grains equivalent) is too
punishing on the shoulder,
so you are limited to two
pellets or 100 grains.
For serious shooters,
loose powder is the way to
go, offering you the ability to “tune” your rifle for
optimum accuracy. With
my .50-caliber rifle I get
good results with 80 grains
and a 240-grain, saboted
.44-caliber pistol bullet.
That particular load is
deadly accurate, and we all
know that shot placement
is what really counts. On
the other hand, if you want
your gun to kick harder,
then go ahead and load

it up, but it isn’t going to
make a deer any deader.
It is said that Buffalo Bill
Cody killed literally thousands of bison using a .4570 Government Springfield shooting a 470-grain
bullet pushed by “only”
70 grains of black powder;
a load not too dissimilar
from many muzzleloading
rifles. While not necessarily a role-model of conservation, he showed it took
marksmanship and not bullet velocity to bag game.
No matter how much
powder you use and how
fast you try to push a projectile, a muzzleloader
should still be considered
a 150-yard gun for deer.
That is, unless you are
Buffalo Bill Cody.
Jim Freeman is wildlife specialist
for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District and a long-time
contributor to the Sunday TimesSentinel. He can be contacted
weekdays at 740-992-4282 or at
jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net

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Stringers needed for
2013 football season

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Ohio Valley Publishing is
currently searching for
two individuals that want
to be a part of the upcoming 2013 football season
in an extra capacity.
OVP is looking for a
pair of hard-working,
self-motivated and football-knowledged people
to help cover and write
football games in the tricounty area.
The stringer job pays
$20 per game for 10
games a year. Anyone interested in covering football games should send
an email resume to Bryan
Walters at bwalters@civitasmedia.com
OVP currently has
stringers for the football
squads at both Meigs and
Wahama.

GAHS Meet the Teams
Night

GALLIPOLIS,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be having a
Meet the Teams Night
at 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug.
22, at Memorial Field.
All junior high and high
school teams will be represented at the event,
which includes golf, cross
country, football, soccer,
volleyball, cheerleading
and band. The boys cross
country team will be collecting non-perishable or
canned food items for admission to the event. All
food items collected will
be donated to the Grace
United Methodist Church
Food Bank.

Foxy Grant
Memorial Golf
Scramble

GALLIPOLIS,
Ohio
— The Kiwanis Club of
Gallipolis will be sponsoring the first annual
Foxy Grant Memorial

Golf Scramble on Saturday, Sept. 14, at Cliffside
Golf Course.
The event, in honor of
former 40-year Kiwanian
Charles “Foxy” Grant,
will be a four-player blind
draw tournament that
will start at 8:30 a.m.
Seniors over 60 will play
from the black tees and
ladies will play from either the red or black tees,
whichever is closer.
Cash prizes will be
awarded to the winning
teams, and individual
skill prizes and lunch are
included in the entry fee
with an optional skins
game on the side. There
are separate entry fees for
members and non-members at Cliffside.
Proceeds will benefit
the youth programs of Kiwanis in Gallipolis. Signup sheets are available in
the Cliffside clubhouse,
or contact Ed Caudill at
(740) 645-4381 or the
Cliffside clubhouse at
(740) 446-4653 for more
information.

RVMS Athletic Booster

BIDWELL, Ohio —
The River Valley Middle
School Athletic Boosters
will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 26, at the RVMS
Library. Agenda items include the Election of Officers and planning for the
2013-2014 school year.

Eastern Fall
Season Passes on Sale

TUPPERS
PLAINS,
Ohio — Eastern High
School now has season
passes on sale for all 201314 fall athletic events, and
the passes are available
for purchase at the main
office at EHS from 8:30
a.m. until 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. The
following is a list of the
passes that are available
for purchase.

— Senior Citizen Fall
Passes: A pass must be
purchased for the 2013
fall sports season for
$20. You must have a
Golden Buckeye Card to
purchase this pass and
you must be a resident of
the Eastern Local School
District. The pass is good
for Junior High and High
School Volleyball and
Football games at home.
— Adult All Passes: An
adult pass may be purchased for the 2013 fall
sports season for $65.
You must be a resident of
the Eastern Local School
District to purchase this
pass. The pass is good
for Junior High and High
School Volleyball and
Football home games.
— Student Fall Passes: A student pass may
be purchased for the
2013 fall sports season
for $30. The pass is
good for all Junior High
and High School volleyball and football games
at home. You must be a
student of the Eastern
Local School District to
purchase this pass.
— Adult Volleyball Fall
Passes: An adult pass
may be purchased for the
2013 volleyball season for
$35. The pass is good for
all Junior High and High
School home volleyball
games at home. You must
be a resident of the Eastern Local Scholl District.
— Adult Football Passes: An adult pass may be
purchased for the 2013
football season for $30.
The pass is good for all
Junior High and High
School football games at
home. You must be a resident of the Eastern Local
Scholl District.

Sunday Times Sentinel L�

FANTASY GRIND: Draft
plans, defaults, bargains
Oskar Garcia

The Associated Press

The upcoming NFL season is
driving tens of millions of people
to make fantasy predictions about
how America’s most popular sport
will play out. But whether you’re
basing picks on gut calls, devouring
every nugget of advice and news
or using complex spreadsheets to
strategize for your league, there’s
one basic truth about winning at
fantasy football — it’s a grind.
It’s not really about proving your
self-proclaimed expertise. You’ll need
as many avenues to victory as you can
get — and likely some luck. That all
starts with getting ready for your draft.
We’ll try to help a bit here each
week, highlighting players, strategy
and the incremental wins and frustrations that come with the grind. We’ll
also call on some folks who make a
full-time living focusing on this stuff.
By the end of Week 16 or 17, hopefully you’ll win a title and some decent
bragging rights. But honestly, who
knows? You don’t, we don’t — and it’s
all part of the fun.
———

DRAFT PREP: KNOW YOUR
LEAGUE

It seems simple, but you’d be surprised how many people don’t account for their league’s unique scoring and roster settings when they put
together a strategy for draft day.
At CBSSports.com, for example,
only 24 percent of leagues use standard offensive scoring — the rest
use some form of customization. The
most common modification, scoring
points for receptions, is used in just
28 percent of leagues.
So be sure to check if your league doles
out points for things like return yardage,
milestone bonuses or other plays.
Even default settings are slightly
different across fantasy’s most popular platforms: CBS Sports scores six
points for passing touchdowns while
Yahoo, ESPN and NFL.com award
four points; interceptions deduct one

point from quarterback scores on Yahoo but two points on other sites.
Roster makeup, quirky scoring and
the number of owners in each league
have significant implications for when
players should be drafted or how
much auction prices should be.
———

EVERYONE’S GOT A GUY

By now, your leaguemates probably
know about wideout Tavon Austin
in St. Louis, a rookie, and tight end
Jordan Cameron in Cleveland. Some
experts consider them sleeper picks
this season.
The problem? Sleepers aren’t sleepers anymore if you draft them too early
or pay too much at auction. And even
players who inspire less excitement in
fantasy circles, like Arizona running
back Rashard Mendenhall or Miami
wide receiver Mike Wallace, become
worthy of drafting at the right price.
Here are some players who could be
bargains in the right spot:
QB: Andrew Luck, Indianapolis.
Projections from several sources aggregated by FantasyPros.com predict
Atlanta’s Matt Ryan will be less than
one point per game better than Luck.
But Luck is being drafted an average
two rounds later than Ryan in 10-team
leagues. And even if Luck gets taken
before you think he should, there are
still several very serviceable quarterbacks going later.
RB: DeAngelo Williams, Carolina.
Williams will likely see a bump in
carries with Jonathan Stewart injured but is being drafted on average
in the 10th round in 10-team leagues
— after some top backups. Panthers
coach Ron Rivera said this week that
Stewart might start on the physically
unable to perform list, forcing him to
miss the first six games.
WR: Steve Smith, Carolina. Smith
had a down year in 2010 but put up
more than 1,100 yards in 2011 and
2012. FantasyPros projections calculate him to be the 19th best wideout
with just under 1,100 yards and nearly
six touchdowns, but he’s going well
after similarly projected Denver teammates Eric Decker and Wes Welker.

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

An additional look
at the new OVCS
gymnasium
Pictured clockwise are some additional views of the new Ohio Valley Christian School
gymnasium at the First Baptist Church in Gallipolis, Ohio. Pictured at the top is a wide
view of the floor and bleachers within the new OVCS gymnasium. The picture at the
bottom right is a look at the new locker room, while the picture at the bottom left is a
view of the entrance into the new gymnasium at Ohio Valley Christian School.
Photos by Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

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Sunday Times Sentinel L��

Meyer began SEC title run, now wants to end it
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Urban Meyer had
officially been the head
coach at Ohio State for
maybe 10 minutes when
he was hit with his first
question about his old
conference.
So, is the Southeastern
Conference better than the
Big Ten, and if so, why?
“It’s obvious that the SEC
right now is dominant,” the
ex-Florida coach said in
November 2011 at his first
news conference as new
head man of the Buckeyes.
“It’s a faster league than the
Big Ten. Does it mean it’s
a better league? Yeah, it’s
the best conference in college football. Does it mean
the Big Ten’s far behind?
I don’t think it’s that far. I
think you’ll see the game
change again. It changes
all the time.”
Since Meyer spoke those
words the SEC has won
two more national championships, stretching to
seven its unprecedented
domination of the college
game’s landscape.
No conference had
ever won even three consecutive titles since The
Associated Press began
its poll in 1936.
It was Meyer who lit the
fuse on that string of success, winning the title after the 2006 season. More
than most, he knows what
makes the SEC such a powerhouse. Does he have any
insight into what it will
take for Ohio State or Oregon or Stanford or someone else to break through?

“I don’t think it’s just the up-close look at the SEC
Big Ten, I think everyone in his six years at Florida
is chasing the SEC,” Mey- (2005-10) and another
er said last month in Chi- year spent as a college
cago at the Big Ten’s pre- football analyst at ESPN.
season get-together. “And
“I know the highest level,”
it’s well-deserved. If you he said. “Yep. I think it helps,
look in the (NFL) draft, to answer your question.”
that’ll answer it. There are
But he backed away
just more (SEC) guys get- from making any promises
ting drafted. That doesn’t that this might be the year
mean the Big Ten doesn’t the domination ends or
have great players. There that his Buckeyes might be
are great players in the Big the team to do it.
Ten conference.
“I’m not worried about
“The SEC has more the SEC,” he said recently
great players.”
during Ohio State’s prepaThe SEC’s control of the ration for its 2013 opener.
sport
began
“I’m worried
with
Meyer
about the Big
during
his “We’ve had
Ten.”
days at Florida
A
glance
with a land- opportunities at the preslide 41-14 vic- to play in
season AP poll
tory over undoesn’t appear
beaten and No. some big
to show that
1 Ohio State in
anyone is gainthe 2006 sea- games and
ing ground on
son’s national
the SEC.
title
game. we’ve won
Alabama,
After another some and
winner of the
SEC school,
last two naLSU, routed missed on
tional
titles
the Buckeyes
and three of
again a year some others.” the last four,
later, Meyer
is a clear-cut
— Jim Delany choice as No.
and the Gators
added another Big Ten Commissioner 1. Ohio State
crystal trophy
is second, but
in 2008. The
there are five
SEC’s iron grip on No. 1 SEC teams in the top 10
has continued to this day.
for the second year in a row
Now Meyer is at Ohio in the initial poll. Georgia
State and is on the other is No. 5, South Carolina
side, trying to break that No. 6, Texas A&amp;M and
streak.
Heisman Trophy winner
He concedes it may Johnny Manziel are at No.
help that he has insight 7 and Florida is at No. 10.
into what it might take
By the way, the SEC’s
to do that because of his coaches don’t even think

Manziel — who gave the
conference its fourth Heisman winner in the last six
years — is the best quarterback in the league. They
picked Georgia’s Aaron Murray as preseason first team.
Is it any wonder that
some coaches and schools
are getting tired of hearing
about the SEC?
“Don’t talk to me about
the SEC. Let’s compare
specific programs,” Nebraska coach Bo Pelini said
Brooke LaValley | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo
at the Big Ten preseason
meetings. “The whole Ohio State head football coach Urban Meyer coaches the
“Scarlet Team” during the Scarlet vs Grey spring game in CoSEC isn’t Alabama, isn’t lumbus, Ohio, Saturday, April 21, 2012.
LSU, isn’t Georgia. Let’s
talk about certain teams.
. There are some teams in hat off to (the SEC) and Georgia, five from Texas,
the SEC that are trying to respect them for what four from Florida and six
bridge the gap to be us. Ev- they’ve done and you con- more from California, the
erybody wants to lump the tinue to chase the brass Carolinas and Virginia.
The Buckeyes are clearly
whole SEC into one cat- ring,” he said.
When Meyer talks pursuing SEC speed.
egory. Let’s not go there.”
“We’re a faster team,” MeyBig Ten Commissioner about the biggest difJim Delany was asked dur- ference between his old er said of his current team.
He compares the influx
ing a trip to Ohio State conference and others,
of
speed to what took place
he
falls
back
on
a
familabout his conference vs.
iar refrain: “SEC speed.” with that first championthe SEC’s upper hand.
To him, the league is ship team at Florida.
“We’ve had opportuni“The ‘06 team injected
ties to play in some big faster, top to bottom, but
games and we’ve won particularly on the defen- a bunch of speed and playsome and missed on some sive line and at linebacker. makers into that team,” he
others,” he said. “With South Carolina has fear- said. “I see very similar
the resources we have and some junior defensive end qualities (here).”
Of course, it’s easy to say
the commitment on the Jadeveon Clowney, peracademic and athletic side haps as quick as many ac- you’re matching up more
that we think is the right claimed major-college run- with the SEC. It’s another
matter entirely to win a
way. As far as academics ning backs.
Meyer and his staff have showdown on the field.
and athletics, we are the
Asked if the Buckeyes
stretched the typical geogold standard.”
Then he acknowledged graphical borders of Ohio or the Big Ten have the
that the SEC might just State’s recruiting. The capacity to end the SEC’s
be a diamond standard, or Buckeyes appear to be get- control of the top spot,
whatever’s better than gold ting more players out of Meyer said: “Sure. Why
when it comes to winning the SEC’s back (or front) do you think every day
yard. The current roster we’re waking up, trying
games and titles.
“You just take your includes six players from to change that?”

OSU sub who saved perfect season still second string
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — It was during
a spring workout when
someone mentioned to
Kenny Guiton that, no
matter what, he would
always be remembered
for one game.
“Yes, sir. That’s pretty cool,” he said with
a wide grin. “That’s
something I have to
live on for the rest of
my life. I’m happy that
got to happen.”
“That”
was
Ohio
State’s game last Oct.
20 against Purdue.
With a perfect season
teetering on the brink,
Guiton stepped in for
injured standout quarterback Braxton Miller
and etched his name
forever in the memory
banks of Buckeyes fans.
In one of the few appearances of his career
when a game was still
in doubt, Ohio State’s
backup
quarterback,
just moments after he
threw an interception,
led the Buckeyes 61
yards in the final 47
seconds for a touchdown and a two-point
conversion that sent
the game to overtime.
Then he directed
traffic as the Buckeyes
hung on for a dramatic
29-22 victory.
It was an improbable
eighth victory in a season that would end up
12-0.
Miller remembers the
exchange he and his
good friend Guiton had
just before Miller was
helped off the field and

“I think Kenny’s getting the ball out a little quicker.
He has all the intangibles that you could ask for of
a leader, of a quarterback, and he knew the offense
inside and out, and he’s a coach on the field. The big
knock on him was he just didn’t quite have the quick
release and velocity on his ball. That’s improved.”
— Tom Herman
Ohio State quarterbacks coach and co-offensive coordinator
then taken to the hospital for evaluation.
“He told me when I
went down, he said, ‘I
got you, man,’” Miller
remembered. “So I felt
good going into the ambulance.”
No matter how long
he lives or where he
goes, there will likely
always be someone
around who will recall
the day that Guiton,
a little-used backup
from Texas who snared
a
scholarship
offer
only because other big
names turned down
Ohio State, stepped
into the spotlight.
Now, almost a year
later, Guiton is once
again a backup and
once again trying to
make the best of it.
“It’s tough,” he said
of his role as Miller’s
relief pitcher.
“But I keep my head
up. I always try to stay
ready to go. I continue
to do that.”
Even
though
the
games must last forever with Miller taking

almost every snap for
the past two years, Guiton remains upbeat and
popular.
He has a ready smile
to almost any question.
He’s had ups and downs
in his Ohio State career,
but always seems to see
the glass as half full.
No wonder his coaches and teammates think
so much of him.
Ohio
State
quarterbacks coach and
co-offensive coordinator Tom Herman calls
Guiton one of the best
backups in the nation, a
player capable enough
to start for maybe half
of the country’s teams.
“Without a doubt,”

Herman said twice
when asked if he was
comfortable
should
Guiton get the call to
come in.
Herman believes Guiton has improved, too.
“I think Kenny’s getting the ball out a little
quicker,” he said.
“He has all the intangibles that you could
ask for of a leader, of
a quarterback, and he
knew the offense inside and out, and he’s a
coach on the field.
“The big knock on
him was he just didn’t
quite have the quick
release and velocity
on his ball. That’s improved.

“It’s certainly not
close to where Braxton’s is or maybe some
of the elite guys in the
country, but he makes
up for maybe some of
that deficiency with his
leadership, his ability,
his anticipation.”
Miller may be on the
short list of Heisman
Trophy favorites, but
he recognizes the value
of having a solid player
right behind him.
“Kenny’s
my
big
brother,” Miller said.
“We’ve got mutual
respect, outside of football too.
“It feels good — he
can tell me what I’m
doing wrong. He’s behind me in practice. He
helps me out a lot.”
Guiton realizes that
had he not come to
Ohio State, he might
have blossomed into a
star somewhere else.
Now a fifth-year senior, he tries to dwell
only on the positives,
on what he’s gained
from his time in Columbus and not what might
have been.
“Sometimes it comes
up in my head. What if?

“What if I did this or
that?’” he said.
“But I’m here. I’m
happy I came here,
it’s a lot of fun. I keep
working. I want to play,
so that’s one thing I’m
shooting for.”
Even if he never has
an impact like he did
last October, Guiton
will be remembered.
“He’s a rock in my
meeting group,” Herman said. “I can tell you
that.”

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

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Sunday, August 25, 2013

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PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
sealed bids will be received
until 12:00 noon on September 9, 2013. Sealed bids may
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Vehicles sold in as is condition.
MCBDD reserves the right to
reject any and all bids submitted. Vehicles may be viewed
by calling 740-992-6681
between 8:00 a.m. and 3:00
p.m. Monday thru Friday.
8/25

Non-Discrimination Statement
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. is the recipient
of federal financial assistance
from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA). The USDA
prohibits discrimination in all its
programs and activities on the
basis of race, color, national
origin, age, disability, and
where applicable, sex, marital
status, familial status, parental
status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any
Help Wanted
General
public
assistance program.
(Not all prohibited bases apply
to all programs.) Persons with
disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information
Integrity M.S., Bidwell,
Ohio
(Braille, large
print, audiotape,
etc.) should contact USDA’s
Looking for drivers experienced
in
transporting
TARGET Center
at (202) 7202600 (voice and TDD). To file
refrigerated and general
freight.
a complaint of discrimination,
to USDA, Director, Office
.40 per mile, Homewrite
weekends
ofmost
Civil Rights,
1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., WashingCall Harold 740-645-2345
ton, D.C. 20250-9410, or call
toll free (866) 632-9992 (voice)
or send resume
or (800) to:
877-8339 (TDD) or
(866)377-8642 (relay voice
harold@integritymovingandstorage.com
users). USDA is an equal op60438842
portunity provider and employMedical /er.
Health
8/25

DRIVERS NEEDED

Auctions

EVENING AUCTION
16 Arden Place, Athens, OH

Tuesday, August 27, 5:00 p.m.
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 33 exit on East State Street, turn west, then turn onto North
May Avenue, turn west on Arden Place, house on right, watch for signs.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: antique oak library table, antique flip top student
desk, antique oak lamp table, loveseat sofa, upholstered chairs, platform rocking
chair, foot stools, step end table, 2-maple coffee tables, 2-round lamp tables, desk
&amp; chair, corner desk, glass top bamboo sofa table, rattan chair/foot stool/shelf unit,
hurricane style lamp &amp; other lamps, gossip bench, magazine rack, glass door display
cabinet, lots of knick knacks, dresser w/mirror, Maple dining table &amp; 6 chairs,
Maple china cabinet, Maple tea cart, set of Currier &amp; Ives china, few Fenton pieces,
Ironstone bowl/pitcher, kerosene lamp, miscellaneous kitchen dishes, pots/pans &amp;
small kitchen appliances, spinning wheel planter, some house plants, baskets, flower
pots, several area rugs, some lawn/porch furniture, Gibson dehumidifier, Toro leaf
blower, vise w/small anvil, shovels, and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000
must have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyers premium on all sales
with a 4% discount for cash payment. All sales are final. Food will be available.
OWNER: Ruth Shumate by Ellen Shumate, POA

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan
Kerry Sheridan Boyd, Mike Boyd

Help Wanted
Wirt County Health Services Association, a Federally
Qualified Community Health Center, Needing an FNP at our
Southern Local Wellness Center, in Racine Ohio.
To work as part of a family practice for all ages. Seeking
highly motivated, energetic and friendly individuals who are
patient centered and a team player. Computer skills a must
for a fast paced office.
Family Nurse Practitioners, licensed in Ohio to work per
diem. Without restrictions outpatient only with option to do in
patient care.
Please forward resumes to
cdavis@wchsa.com or mail to
Attn: Cheryl Davis
WCHSA
PO Box 609
Elizabeth, WV 26143

Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com

PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

STNAs
-�( �'�!����
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Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal

60441776

(304)675-2786

Backhoe–Trenching–Trucking
Septic Systems–Basements
Land Clearing–Site Prep
Dozer – and More!
Large or Small Jobs
Since 1963
Free Estimates
(740) 245-9921

Medical / Health

60435655

Auction Closes
Sept. 5, 2013

Help Wanted General

Tuxedo Rentals Available.
M-F 10am-6pm
Sat. 10am-3pm
415 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV

60434384

2.79 acres Vacant Land
Former US Postal Service Site
State Route 62
Point Pleasant, WV

*Limited Time Only, While Supplies Last.

60443267

ONLINE AUCTION

Drivers: CDLA Teams &amp;
Singles. Owner Operators &amp;
Company Drivers Wanted.
$1000 Sign On Bonus for O/O
Dedicated Lanes. Great Home
Time, Safety Bonus Program,
Benefits available after 90
days. 6mo verifiable exp.
Call 502-664-1433

Buy 1 Long Dress
Get 1 Long Dress for $10.00!

60444585

Non-Discrimination Statement
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. is the recipient
of federal financial assistance
from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA). The USDA
prohibits discrimination in all its
programs and activities on the
basis of race, color, national
origin, age, disability, and
where applicable, sex, marital
status, familial status, parental
status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs,LEGALS
reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any
public assistance program.
(Not all prohibited bases apply
to all programs.) Persons with
disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information
(Braille, large print, audiotape,
etc.) should contact USDA’s
TARGET Center at (202) 7202600 (voice and TDD). To file
a complaint of discrimination,
write to USDA, Director, Office
of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, or call
toll free (866) 632-9992 (voice)
or (800) 877-8339 (TDD) or
(866)377-8642 (relay voice
users). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
8/25
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost &amp; Found
FOUND - Small Dog approx. 3
miles west of Centenary on St
Rt 141. Call to Identified 740379-2140
Notices
GUN SHOW
Marietta, OH
Comfort Inn
Aug 24 &amp; 25
6' TBLS $35
Adm $5
740-667-0412
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE
Yard Sale
Furniture MOVING! Queen
Anne Cherry Dining Rm. Furniture including DREXEL
Hutch, Oak Desk with Credenza, Oak Roll Top Chest,
Daybed,Assorted Chairs, Console TV (Free), Misc. 740-7091221. Will be having Yard Sale
Aug 30th, 2013 @ 487 Kathy
Street (Gallipolis) 8am - 5pm
SERVICES

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

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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

EMPLOYMENT

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck Driver &amp; Installation for
Gas lines, must have CDL lic.
Send Resume to Driver 8 c/o
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel 111
Court St, Pomeroy, OH 45769

�Sunday, August 25, 2013

&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Drivers: HOME
WEEKLY/BI-WEEKLY
Layover/Detention/Short
Haul Pay
70% D &amp; H/90% NO
Touch. No
Canada/Hazmat or NYC!
BC/BS, Dental,
Vision,401k etc…
Class A CDL w/6 mos.
Exp.
877-705-9261
Help Wanted General

Sunday Times Sentinel L��

Land (Acreage)

Houses For Rent

Boats &amp; Marinas

Miscellaneous

Want To Buy

55.75 acres of Land located on
Lower 9 Mile off Crab Creek
Rd. asking $60k. 304-5763129

2 &amp; 3 BR houses for rent in
Gallipolis. 1 Small dog OK in
some locations. References &amp;
security deposit required. 740446-3870 (Available Sept 1,
2013).

1988 21ft Shamrock Center
Console, inboard, single Ford
351 cubic inch, water cooled,
gas engine, recent complete
overhaul, $12,000 cost. Deluxe equipped for large Lake
or Gulf usage, $35,000 replacement value, $14,000 insured value, New Magic tilt
Trailer $4,000, asking
$10,000 for all, will consider
offer, interested parties only,
call 740-654-3813 for details
&amp; full description.

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!
1-800-734-5524

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

REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 Bedroom 2nd Floor APT. AirWasher -Dryer Hook-up. NO
PETS, Refs. $500month $500
deposit Ph: 740-339-3063
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
2-Bdrm Apt. Appliances furnished, water paid. in Centenary $400/mo Ph: 740-256-1135
3 BR-$425, 2 BR-$375, 1 BR$325, plus dep &amp; util, 3rd St,
Racine, OH, 740-247-4292
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL
Jordan Landing Apts-1, 2 &amp; 3
BR units avail. You pay electric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-6740023 or 304-444-4268

3 - Bedroom Home, Village of
Patriot, NO PETS, 740)3792540 Leave Message
FOR RENT
2 HOUSES, Good location &amp;
cond $400 $475 Homestead
Realty Broker. Nancy 304-6754024, 304-675-0799.

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping.
Nationwide Service.
$29.95/Month CALL Medical
Guardian Today
855-850-9105

AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

For Rent A 3 Bedroom House
NO PETS - Trash &amp; Water
Paid Ph: 740-388-9326

MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
$25 off service. Call for
immediate help.
1-888-781-3386

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
Very nice 1BR home in
Pomeroy, great neighborhood,
large yard, ideal for 1 or 2
people, new appliances. No
indoor pets, No smoking. 740992-9784
Land (Acreage)
Double Lot for 2 mobile homes
in Point Pleasant. Electric,Water already there. No Land
Contracts $21,500 Call 6453452

Sale-Carpet and Vinyl Direct
Mill pricing, $5.95 sq/yd and
up, Free Estimates. Mollohan
Carpet 317 ST RT 7 North,
Gallipolis OH 45631 740-4467444

OMAHA STEAKS:
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE
Burgers - The Family Value
Combo - Only $39.99.
ORDER Today
1-888-721-9573,
use code 48643XMD - or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9

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

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Carpeting

Call

RESORT PROPERTY

ANNUITY.COM
Guaranteed Income For Your
Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!
CALL for FREE copy of our
SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus
Annuity
Quotes from A-Rated
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READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-InternetDigital Phone-Satellite. You've
Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.
888-929-9254

ANIMALS

EDUCATION

AGRICULTURE
Houses For Rent

REAL ESTATE SALES

2 Bedroom - 438 Burkhart Ln.,
Gallipolis
$575/month No Pets 740-8531101

AUTOMOTIVE

CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call
1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off
your prescription and free
shipping.

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST
FREE TOWING
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction
UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION
Providing Free Mammograms
&amp; Breast Cancer Info
888-928-2362

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AUGUST 26, 2013
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60436546

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Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty The Glades "Tin Cup"
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TVPG
couple escape their controlling community.
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TV14
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! Trouble With the Curve ('12, Dra) Clint Eastwood. An

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NFL Football Pre-season Minnesota Vikings vs. San Francisco 49ers Site: Candlestick Park
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DISC
DISN
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAM
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

Duck Dynasty

Duck Dynasty
Independence
Day (‘96, Sci-Fi) TV14
Gator Boys "Gators Gone
Rogue" TVPG
(5:00) ! ! For Colored Girls
Housewives/NewJersey
"Hair-Binger of Doom" TV14
Dog &amp; Beth: On the Hunt
Anthony Bourdain
(:05) Futurama (:35) Futurama

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

7 PM
(:10) ! !!!!

7:30

Duck Dynasty
Breaking Bad "Confessions"
(N) TV14
Call of the
Call of the
Wildman
Wildman
Sunday Best (N)
Sunday.. "Soaring to Victory"
Wives NJ "Spaghetti Western Eat, Drink, Love "Show and
&amp; Meatballs" (N) TV14
Tells a Lot" (N)
Hillbilies Hire Hillbilies Hire Tunnel of Fire
We Were There
Crimes-Century "Waco" (N)
(:05) Futurama (:40) Futurama (:10) Futurama (:40) Futurama

10 PM

10:30

11:30

11 PM

11:30

Bad Ink (N)
Bad Ink (N)
Bad Ink
Bad Ink
Low Winter Sun "No
(:05) Talking
(:35) Owner's
Rounds" (N)
Bad (N)
"Stunt Plane"
Gator Boys "Horse Devouring Call of the
Call of the
Gator" TVPG
Wildman
Wildman
Sunday Best "God's Favor"
Black Awards (N)
Housewives NJ "Spaghetti
Watch What
Housewives/
Western &amp; Meatballs" TV14
Happens Live NewJersey
! !! Wild Hogs (‘07, Com) John Travolta. TV14
Inside Man "Unions" (N)
We Were There
(:10) Futurama (:45) Futurama (:15) Drunk
(:45) Tosh.O
"Wild West"
Tickle
Tickle
Gold Rush "Guyanese Gold"
Gold Rush "The Frozen North" J.Gold "Run and Gun" (N)
Gold Rush "The Frozen North"
(5:30) ! The
Austin and
Jessie
A.N.T. Farm
A.N.T. Farm
Dog With a
Dog With a
Good Luck
Dog With a
Shake It Up
Ally
Blog
Blog
Game Plan
Charlie
Blog (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
The Kardashians (N)
Divas "Feuding Funkadactyls" The Kardashians
Baseball Tonight (L)
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox vs. Los Angeles Dodgers Site: Dodger Stadium (L) TVG
SportsCenter
Skateboarding Street League (L) TVG
T&amp;Spills
NHRA Drag Racing
MLS Soccer Portland vs Seattle (L) TVG
(6:30) ! !! National Treasure (‘04, Adv) Nicolas Cage. TVPG
! !!! National Treasure: Book of Secrets (‘07, Adv) Nicolas Cage.
TV14
FoodTruck "I Left My Food
Restaurant: Impossible "Pie Food Truck Race "A Strange
Cutthroat Kitchen "Tac'o the Iron Chef America "Zakarian
Cart in San Francisco" TVG
in the Sky" (N) TVG
Brew in Portland" (N) TVG
Town" (N) TVG
vs. Talde" (N) TVPG
(5:30) ! !! Star Trek (‘09,
! !! Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (‘09, Act) Megan Fox, Shia LaBeouf. When
! !! Transformers:
Sci-Fi) Chris Pine. TVPG
the Decepticons search for an ancient weapon, the Autobots have to stop them. TV14
Revenge of the Fallen TV14
House
House
Extreme Homes "Bridge,
House Hunters Renovation
Brother vs. Brother "Double
House
House Hunter
Hunters
Hunters Int'l
Wedge, Cloud" TVPG
(N) TVPG
Twin Powers" (N)
Hunters
"Hello, Jolly!"
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Mountain Men "Going for
Mountain Men "Ticking
Ice Road Truckers "Winter
Hatfield "Still Hatfields and
"Unprankable" Broke" TVPG
Clock" (N) TVPG
Takes All" (N) TV14
Explodin'"
McCoys
Devious Maids "Scrambling
! Ryder and Julina (‘13, Dra) Mary McCormack. A young
Devious Maids "Hanging the
Devious Maids "Scrambling
the Eggs" TVPG
couple escape their controlling community.
Drapes" (N) TVPG
the Eggs" TVPG
Catfish
2013 VMAs "Pre Show"
2013 VMAs (N)
2013 VMAs
(6:00) ! Swindle (‘13, Adv)
See Dad Run WendVinn (N) ! !! Cats and Dogs (‘01, Com) Jeff Goldblum. TVPG
Friends
Friends
Bar Rescue "Two Flew Over
Bar Rescue "Corking the
Bar Rescue "A Bar Full of
Tattoo Rescue "Jersey Boys" Bar Rescue "Don't Judge a
the Handlebars"
Hole"
Bull" (N)
(N) TV14
Booze by Its Bottle"
! !! Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (‘09, Act) Michael
! !! G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (‘09, Act) Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje.
! !!! Sin
Sheen. TV14
An elite military unit known as G.I. Joe battle an evil organization. TVPG
City (‘05, Cri)
(6:00) ! !! Evan Almighty
! !!! Bruce Almighty (‘03, Com/Dra) Jim Carrey. A man ! !!! Bruce Almighty (‘03, Com/Dra) Jim Carrey. A man
(‘07, Com) Steve Carell. TV14 finds himself endowed with God's powers. TV14
finds himself endowed with God's powers. TV14
(6:00) ! !!! Mogambo
! !!!! It Happened One Night (‘34, Rom) Claudette
! !!! Too Hot to Handle (‘38, Rom) Myrna Loy, Walter
(‘53, Act) Ava Gardner. TVPG Colbert. A reporter tracks down a runaway heiress. TVG
Pidgeon, Clark Gable. A search for a missing brother. TVPG
Breaking Amish: LA "Exile"
Sister W "Christmas Surprise" Sister W (N)
Sister Wives
Break. Amish "Sin City" (N)
Sister Wives
Sister Wives
(6:45) ! !!!! Red (‘10, Act) Bruce Willis. TV14
! !!! Gran Torino (‘08, Dra) Clint Eastwood. TVMA
! Collateral
(6:00) ! !! Paul Blart: Mall Amazing
Looney Tunes King of the
King of Hill
The Cleveland Family Guy
Bob's Burgers Family Guy
Gumball
"Mr. Weiner"
Hill
"Ho Yeah!"
Show
"Killer Queen" "Dr. Yap"
Cop (‘09, Com) TV14
Magic (N)
Magic (N)
Ride (N)
Ride (N)
Fandem (N)
Bikinis
Rock RV (N)
Bikinis
Best Takeout Best Takeout
(:05) Hot In
(:45) Golden
(:20) Golden Girls "Ebbtide VI: Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(:35) Golden
"Corpse Bride" Girls
The Wrath of Stan" TVPG
Girls
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Law &amp; Order: Special
Burn Notice "Tipping Point"
Victims Unit "Rooftop" TV14
Victims Unit "Fault" TV14
Victims Unit "Zebras" TV14
Victims Unit "Smoked" TV14 TV14
T.I. and Tiny
T.I. and Tiny
Basketball Wives
MTV Video Music Awards 2013 (N) TV14
La La (N)
Bball Wives
Bloopers
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
Met Mother
WGN News
(:40) Replay
! Dumb &amp; Dumberer: Wh...
(5:00) ! !!!

Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
Breaking Bad "Buried"
TV14
To Be Announced

11 PM

(:35) Storm
WSAZ News
Stories
Tonight
Eyewitness
(:35) Ent.
News 11 p.m. Tonight
Ring of Honor Wrestling
TVPG
13 News
CSI: Miami
Weekend
WTAP News at (:35) Burn
Notice
11
A Salute to Vienna TVG

(:55)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Dark Knight Rises (‘12, Act) Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway. Batman
makes his return to Gotham, when a new terrorist threatens to take over the city. TVPG
(6:35) ! Wrath of the Titans
(:15) ! Taken 2 (‘12, Act) Famke Janssen, Liam Neeson. A
(‘11, Act) TVPG
retired CIA agent and his wife are taken hostage. TV14
Dexter "Are We There Yet?"
Ray Donovan "Bridget" TVMA Dexter "Make Your Own Kind
TVMA
of Music" TVMA

(:05)

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

The Newsroom "Red Team III" The Newsroom "Red Team III"
(N) TVMA
TVMA
! !! A Very Harold and Kumar Christmas ! Sweet
(‘11, Com) Kal Penn. TVMA
Prudence &amp; ...
Ray Donovan "Road Trip"
Ray Donovan "Road Trip"
TVMA
TVMA

�&amp;@&gt;6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D

��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Wahama golfers win tri-match at Ravenswood
Staff Report

Alex Hawley | Point Pleasant Register

Point Pleasant’s Liam Stewart (17) dribbles away from Capital
defender Logan Garrison (8) during the Cougars 3-0 victory
at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field, Friday night.

Capital blanks Black
Knights, 3-0 in opener
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Season opener, spoiled.
The Point Pleasant soccer team’s first game of the
2013 season didn’t go as planed Friday night, as the
Capital Cougars took a 3-0 decision at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field.
The Blue and White got on the board for the first
time in the 10th minute of the contest off the foot of
Zac Koonts. Junior Zac Humphrey pushed Capitals
lead to 2-0 just two minutes later with a goal of his
own. The score remained 2-0 at halftime, but just seven
minutes into the second half Jacob Curry scored for
Capital to push its lead to three. PPHS failed to score
and fell to the Cougars by a count of 3-0.
Jason Schultz was in goal for PPHS Friday night and
had 11 saves. The Capital goalkeeper save all three
shots on goal. The Cougars held a 14-3 advantage in
shots on goal. Point Pleasant received the game’s lone
yellow card on the night.
This is the lone meeting between the Black Knights
and Capital this season and the first of three straight
home games for Point Pleasant.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. — It has been written that
“it never rains on a golf course.”
The young golfers from Wahama, Ravenswood and
Ripley just might disagree with that statement. The
three before-mentioned teams gathered at the Green
Hills Golf Course Thursday for a 9 hole tri-match using a play 6, count 4 format.
The course played tough as the golfers played the
back tees and played the ball “down” everywhere. If
that was not enough to face, the players came face to
face with wind, hard rain and thunder and lightning.
Of course, the latter two of these elements
brought play to a halt and the players back to the
clubhouse. Play was resumed after approximately
an hour delay. The wet conditions made the course
play even tougher, but the young men hung in there
and finished play shortly before dark.
The White Falcons final score of 183 gave them a
winning margin of seven strokes over Ravenswood’s
193. Ripley finished third with a final score of 214.
Wahama’s Michael MacKnight and Nolan Pierce
each shot 46 giving them a share of the medalist honors. Just a stroke behind was Mason Hicks and Nathan Redman who both carded identical 47s.
Although their scores were not included in the
final team total, Michael Hendricks and Benjamin
Foreman both shot sub-50 scores shooting a 48
and a 49 respectively.
Overall, the White Falcons, considering everything they faced, shot acceptable scores. They
have shown a few signs of this type of consistency
in this young season. They now need to take this
performance and improve on it.
The Ravenswood team also played with some consistency with 4 of their five players breaking 50 for the
day. Jon Watkins led his team with a 47. Trey Hatcher
finished with a 48 while Trace Baso and Evan Metical

Bryan Walters | Daily Tribune

Wahama sophomore Nathan Redman chips onto the first
green during this August 12 golf match at Cliffside Golf
Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.

each finished with the same score of 49. Caleb Megiage
added a 51 which was not part of the final tally.
Justin McKown and Logan Reynolds both shot 47 to
lead the host team, Ripley. Derik Hill turned in a 58 for the
day while both Taylor Casto and Josh Sinclair each added
a 62 with only one of those counting in the total score.

NFL: Players have ‘buyer’s remorse’ on HGH testing
NEW YORK (AP) — The man who
oversees the NFL’s drug program
says the players’ union has “buyer’s
remorse” about HGH testing.
A union official says “the only thing”
the league cares about “is power.”
Ah, just another day in the squabbling between the NFL and players
over how to put in place blood testing
for human growth hormone. The latest public back-and-forth Thursday —
featuring NFL senior vice president
Adolpho Birch and NFL Players Association assistant executive director
of external affairs George Atallah —

Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home

comes exactly two weeks before the
first game of the 2013 regular season.
Two full seasons already have
come and gone since the NFL collective bargaining agreement signed in
August 2011 paved the way for the
league to check players for HGH.
HGH is a banned performanceenhancing drug that is hard to detect
and has been linked to health problems such as diabetes, cardiac dysfunction and arthritis.
“There is a chance it won’t happen
this season,” the NFL’s Birch told The
Associated Press. “I will also say there

Taylor Motors's expansive inventory of new
Chrysler vehicles is constantly growing.

Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep &amp; Ram
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2013 Chrysler
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is a chance it will. I strongly hope that
it does. I would have said the same
thing last year. I would have said the
same thing in October 2011.”
The league says the main sticking
point right now is whether Commissioner Roger Goodell — or someone he
designates — will continue to hear appeals for violations other than a positive
test. The NFL wants to keep that part
of the drug policy in place, while the
union would prefer a panel of arbitrators
to hear appeals that involve breaking a
law or the demonstrated use of a performance-enhancer without a positive test.

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Parts - 888-676-1402

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60428632

�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY,
AUGUST 25, 2013

ALONG THE RIVER

C1

Lorobi’s Pizza — A delicious slice of Gallia County
Gallipolis staple voted Best Pizza in 2013 Ohio Valley Reader’s Choice Awards

Callie Lyons

Special to the Sunday Times-Sentinel
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — There’s no pizza quite like Lorobi’s —
just ask their thousands of fans from all over the country.
Lorobi’s, with locations downtown and in the Silver
Bridge Plaza, was voted the Best Pizza in Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties in this newspaper’s annual Reader’s Choice Awards.
Serving from the same location for more than 40 years,
Lorobi’s features a menu resplendent with pizza, salads
and sandwiches.
The operation is the result of a mother/daughter partnership between Deloris Hart and Dreama Matovich.
“We do everything by hand here,” Matovich explained.
Shredding their own cheese, making sausage, and mixing up fresh dough are all part of the process. All the sauces are homemade, too, and with the freshest ingredients.
“I use local produce as often as I can,” Matovich said.
Since the eatery first opened its doors in the 1960s,
there have been a couple of different owners, but the recipes have not changed a bit. There are no shortcuts here.
“We take a lot of pride in our store,” Matovich said.
The dynamic duo says their customers are as dependable as clockwork. And, those who relocate away from the
area are sure to stop back in whenever they are in town.
“It is the first stop they make when they come in and
the last stop when they leave,” Matovich said.
Lorobi’s pizzas are made to travel, too. Fans have carried them from Gallipolis to locations all over the country.
“I think we’ve made it from coast to coast,” Matovich said.
Lorobi’s has two locations in Gallipolis — the Silver
Bridge Plaza and 248 Second Ave. To browse the menu,
participate in contests, and view specials, visit Lorobi’s
on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Lorobis.

Stacks of ready pizza dough await sauce and toppings.

Photos by Stephanie Filson | Daily Tribune

Amanda Trammel and Teresa Dovenbarger prepare dough and
pile on toppings was business started to pick up Friday evening, while Beth Martin, not pictured, cut finished pizzas to
be served.
Trammell loads a pizza with fresh toppings before popping it
in the oven.

Crispy, cheesy perfection.

Lorobi’s Downtown features a full menu that includes pasta and subs, as well as pizza.

Lorobi’s Downtown has a convenient pick-up window.

Lorobi’s is a popular place for after school snacks. Wyatt Sipple, at left, Josh Faro and Brody Sauer, all 7th graders at Gallia Academy Middle School, face off against Beverly Faro (at back) and
Gallia Academy High School freshman Jacob Faro making quick work of the large pizza between them. When asked what they thought of the pie, one boy said, “It’s amazing!” while another
quipped, “It’s friggin’ awesome!”

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� îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Notes from the
)A:56CD�îH@C&gt;Dî2?5îA6DE:4:56D
�?E:BF6î$FCD6
Isn’t that just like God?
Look
at
my
spirits
those
colto
bringing
ors; no one
me to tears,
can paint the
the one that
sky like God.
I
couldn’t
When I was
stop
thinkon evenings
ing
about
and
came
was
“Isn’t
home in the
that just like
wee hours, I
God?” Some
would
take
of the words
a minute to
in that song
look up and
are “The one
just
admire
who formed
the
handi- Sharon McNabb the stars and
work of God.
galaxies lives
It takes my
in the heart of
breath away! We are just me. The one who speaks
human and are weak, to the waves and stormy
that combined with our seas, quiets every storm
free will, gets us in trou- in me … isn’t that just
ble sometimes. Oh, the like God?”
moaning and groaning I
I haven’t written in
can do! God usually finds quite a while, and I felt
a way to hit me across the compelled to share this
head (sometimes it takes with you. To me, life is a
more than one bump) to constant struggle trying
remind me of my many to do what is right, guardblessings. Now, isn’t that ing my mouth (which is a
just like God to know my problem I fail at too many
needs before I do?
times), and remembering
Isn’t it just like God to to treat others as I expect
use ordinary things, like them to treat me, and
a baby’s smile, to show us most of all to be the best
the miracle of life and the person, the person God
mighty power of His love? expects me to be.
Several years ago, I
Yesterday morning, I
attended the Women of was feeling down, for no
Faith conference in Cin- reason clear to me, and
cinnati, where I heard a the phone rang. “Hi Mawwonderful singer named Maw, how are you today?”
Babbi Mason. Her mu- Well, that frown that was
sic was inspiring and on my face, turned upside
beautiful, and although down and went from ear
it touched me in differ- to ear! … Now isn’t that
ent ways, from uplifting just like God?

":G6DE@4&lt;î(6A@CE
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers, Inc., livestock report of sales from August 21, 2013.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $100-$202, Heifers, $100-$160;
425-525 pounds, Steers, $100-$175, Heifers, $100-$150;
550-625 pounds, Steers, $100-$178, Heifers, $100$144; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $100-$142, Heifers,
$100-$135; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $100-$147, Heifers, $95-$130.
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $75-$84; Medium/Lean, $68-$74;
Thin/Light, $45.50-$67; Bulls, $72-$108.50.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $1,100-$1,675; Bred Cows, $450$1,100; Baby Calves, $19-$145; Goats, $50-$147.50;
Lambs, $80-$112; Hogs, $68-$70.
Upcoming Specials
8/28/13 — Next sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy at (304) 6340224, Luke at (740) 645-3697, or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or
visit the website at www.uproducers.com.

normal fruit flies that
Be on the watch for
infest decaying fruit,
the Garden Spider
the Spotted Wing
(Argiope aurantia) in
Drosophila breed in
your landscape. This
ripe fruit before it bewell recognized black
comes overripe or deand yellow spider is
cays. It invaded Ohio
quite noticeable in
in September 2011
the garden now with
and has already been
its large orb shaped
found
throughout
web with its characOhio. Its lifecycle is
teristic zigzag design
relatively short, only
in the center. It is a
8 to 16 days from egg
beneficial spider that
to adult. The larvae
eats flying insects
Hal Kneen
feeds inside the fruit
like aphids, flies and
Extension Corner
for 5-7 days before
grasshoppers. Its web
it pupaes and emeris found in sunny garden bed or vegetable garden loca- gences at an adult fruit fly. One
tions. The reason we don’t find female fly can lay up to 350 eggs.
them in the spring is that their You can monitor it in your patch
life cycle begins in the summer. using a baited trap (see direcThe egg cases are not produced tions on OSU factsheet located
until the summer and the spiders at www.bugs.osu.edu/welty/pdf/
hatch in the fall but remain in the SWD_Ohio_handoutV8.pdf) If
egg case all fall and winter. They any SWD are found in the trap
emerge in the spring to seek sun- you need to begin to use a preny areas in which to build their ventative spray such as malathion
webs and continue to grow into (every 5-7 days) or Entrust (
maturity before the end of sum- OMRI product every 3-5 days).
mer to restart their life cycle. Al- Commercial growers have a largthough quite large, if their web is er list of available pesticides, see
disturb they come out to search fact sheet.
In addition, you need to imfor the insect stuck in their web.
Fortunately their bite is not poi- prove sanitation around your
sonous to humans. Teach your patch by collecting and destroychildren that not all bugs should ing unharvested or damaged
be killed, some are beneficial. fruit every two days. Remember
Consider reading to them, Char- they can reproduce in as little
as eight days. The SWD also
lotte’s Web by E.B. White.
can infest apples, blueberries,
***
Several homeowners and com- peaches, and grapes. OSU State
mercial growers of raspberries Entomologist, Celeste Welty is
in the region have discovered attempting to track their spread
white little grub-like worms in throughout the area. So if you
their fruit. These are the larvae find them in your fruit let your
of a new pest, Spotted Wing Dro- locate extension office know and
sophila (SWD), a fruit fly. Unlike bring some fruit in plastic zip

We will be having
With summer readour Second Annual
ing in the books, the
Quilt Expo on Saturlibrary staff is looking
day, Sept. 28th from 10
forward to fall. Fall stoa.m. – 4 p.m. Start the
ry times begin Septemday off by browsing the
ber 9th at all library
quilts that have been
locations.
entered into the conAlso, be on the
test, as well as the Ohio
lookout for our reguDonor Quilt and a varilar movie matinees as
ety of hand-made quilts
well as the ever poputhat will be on display
lar Pumpkin Painting
throughout the library.
program which will be
Sit with experienced
held near the end of
quilters and ask quesOctober.
Kristi L. Eblin
tions or even try your
Don’t forget to conDirector, Meigs
hand at quilting with
tact the library when
County Library
special guest Rosalie
the book reports and
Story from The Hemprojects begin.
We’re always happy to help lock Grove Quilters.
There will be displays from loour local students in any way we
can by assisting them in locating cal vendors including a display
sources or by providing access to of quilting now vs. quilting in the
our computers, printers and copi- past from the Pomeroy Fabric shop
and an antique quilt display from
ers.

CC

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1176 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

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10 Airport Road
Gallipolis, OH

Other Insurance To Follow

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60438641

Morning Classes 9:00 AM to 12:40 PM
Number of required lab hours per class indicated in parentheses
Room #

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

103
Computer
Lab
Capacity 17

CS15301 (2)
Windows
Applications

CS25001 (2)
Spreadsheets I

TY21101 (2)
Advanced Word
Processing

104
Capacity 18

BA10101
Introduction to
Business - AM

105
Typing Lab
Capacity 18

TY10101 (2)
Keyboarding I

SE23101 (1)
Office
Management

MD20301 (2)
Medical
Transcription

TY10201 (2)
Keyboarding
II - AM

106
Capacity 24

MA10201
Business Math II

MD20001
Medical
Terminoloy I - AM

AC10201 (1)
Business
Accounting II

AC20001 (1)
Cost Accounting

107
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MA10001
Refresher Math

PD20101
Professional
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BERENT
3:00 - 8:40 PM
MD20601 (2)
Med Off Proc
STATEN

CO10101
Communications I

CO10301
Communications
III - AM

Friday

101 Library
Capacity 4
CS24201 (2)
Integrated
Office Applications
MG12301
Principles of
Supervision

Room #

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

“A Celebration of Life”
Friday

103
Computer
Lab
Capacity 17
AC10101 (1)
Business
Accounting I
TY10201 (2)
Keyboarding
II - PM

105
Typing Lab
Capacity 18
106
Capacity 24

BA10102
Introduction to
Business - PM

107
Capacity 24

CO10302
Communications III - PM

MA10101
Business Math I

MD20002
Medical Terminology I - PM

Call Toda
y
for a Tou
r!

AH10101
American
History

101 Library
Capacity 4

104
Capacity 18

Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center

TY10401 (2)
Advanced
Document
Development

Evening Classes 6:00 PM to 9:40 PM
Number of required lab hours per class indicated in parentheses

AUTHORIZED TESTING CENTER

We are now in
network with:
Aetna
Medical Mutual
Cigna
CareSource
United Health Care

FALL Quarter Schedule

Call Today!
Approved for
the Training of
Veterans

60410930

NEW TRUCK LOAD!

60421760

ALL IN STOCK “HOT TUBS” ON SALE!!!

Classes
begin
Oct. 7th

the Chester Shade Historical Society.
Tea and treats will be served at
noon with guest speaker Cathy
Cooper giving a presentation beginning at 1 p.m.
Judging of the quilts will take
place in the late afternoon from 2
– 4 p.m.
Three awards valued at $50
each will be given for the best of
show in the following categories;
antique quilts, embroidery and applique.
This year’s awards are sponsored by the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club.
All quilts must be pre-registered
from Sept 2nd – 25th.
Call the library at 740-992-5813
for a complete list of contest rules
or for more information on any of
our upcoming programs.
We hope to see you this fall at
the library!

anaday

• Pool Maintenance
• Chemicals &amp; Liner Replacements
• Customized Pools &amp; Hot Tubs
• Pool Accessories and Much More!

“Careers Close To Home”

Hal Kneen is the Agriculture &amp; Natural
Resources Educator for Athens and Meigs
County, Ohio State University Extension.

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(740) 441-9896

GALLIPOLIS
CAREER
COLLEGE

bags so they can be sent off for
proper identification.
***
Interested in obtaining an
Ohio Department of Agriculture
private pesticide applicator’s license used in applying pesticides
in and around your farm, greenhouse or barn? An ODA representative will be giving the tests
for the region at the Ohio State
University Extension Meigs
County office on September 12
starting at noon. OSU Extension
office will offer two review sessions prior to the test date on
September 5 starting at noon
and again at 6:30 p.m. Study material is available on line at www.
pested.osu.edu or contact my
office at 992-6696. The Meigs
County extension office is located at 117 E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy (next to Holzer Clinic
Meigs County). Preregistration
is preferred. Individuals wanting to become Commercial Pesticide applicators need to call
ODA at 1-800-282-1955 to make
special arrangement
***
Visit your locate farm stand or
Farmers Market for the freshest
fruits and vegetables. It won’t be
long that locally grown produce
will be gone. Remember, if you
need your dial gauge pressure
canner tested, our Meigs County
extension office is having a Family Consumer Science Educator,
Kathy Dodrill come over from
Washington County on August
28 at 10 a.m.

SS12101
Sociology

SS12301
Political
Science

Gallipolis Career College reserves the right to cancel any class due to low enrollment.

Accredited Member: Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools 1274B

We are proud to announce that Medicare has given
Overbrook the Tri-County’s only 5 STAR RATING!
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com
740-992-6472
333 Page Street
Middleport, OH 45760
60444589

�Sunday,
25, 25,
20132013
SUNDAYAugust
, AUGUST

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

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COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

Sunday Times Sentinel Lî�

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday,
Aug. 26, 2013:
This year you approach life with
seriousness and the ability to realize
a long-term desire. You have both
endurance and Lady Luck on your
team. An associate whom you are
close to might be most unpredictable. You will need to learn to flex
because of this person. If you are
single, you could be unusually idealistic and/or confused when dating
or getting to know someone better.
Know that there are several potential
suitors heading your way. If you are
attached, it is through working together that you become closer. TAURUS
helps you see the big picture.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You could be overly serious as the day begins. You might feel
as if there is a lot of tension around
a domestic matter that you need to
deal with. Opportunities will break
through the moment. The unexpected
will occur with a financial issue.
Tonight: Follow your instincts.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You might want to think
through a decision more carefully.
Remain responsive as you juggle
different forms of communication. A
sudden insight might help you gain
a better perspective about an individual. Tuck away this information.
Tonight: Your smile wins the day.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Know when to take a pass
and not jump headfirst into a project.
Honor the fact that you have had
enough. If you can take a day off,
then do so. A friend might surprise
you with his or her actions. Tonight:
Make your excuses and take some
much-needed personal time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You will find that success comes naturally. If you start to
overthink things, you might sabotage
yourself. Your instincts are right on,
so follow them. Vague news might
come in from afar. Know what you
want, and you won’t lose your focus.
Tonight: Join a friend or two.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You’ll want to see results
from your recent efforts, and you’re
more than willing to put in the necessary hours. A boss could feel pushed
by your enthusiasm. You might sense
a coolness between the two of you as
a result. Just remember who the boss
is. Tonight: Till the wee hours.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Detach, especially if you’re
feeling pressured by a partner. You
might not be sure what direction you
should head in. A loved one or dear
friend will add a certain element of
chaos to your life. Try to understand
where this person is coming from.
Tonight: Listen to a roommate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Relate to a partner or
friend directly. You will see better
results, and so will those around you.
You seem very busy to others, and a
loved one could do the unexpected.
You have a long-term desire that
could be fulfilled right now. Tonight:
Go along with someone’s suggestion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Defer to others, as they
are unlikely to be responsive at this
moment. Take an overview, and
you’ll gain a deeper understanding of
what is motivating others. Your creativity is likely to soar to an unprecedented level. Tonight: Once again,
you are the one doing the listening.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You dive into your to-do list
nearly immediately, and with someone’s help, you could get through
your list earlier than you might have
thought. A loved one could be most
unpredictable, but he or she makes
you laugh. Your compassion will
flow. Tonight: Be naughty and nice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could feel subdued by a
choice you need to make. Someone
close to you clearly spoils you;
however, this person might not be
able to give you feedback regarding
this matter. You will wonder about
your limitations. Tonight: Listen to a
friend.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You are full of laughter
and fun despite the fact that you are
dealing with a heavy burden or a difficult situation. Your innate optimism
mixes well with your willingness to
work. You know that you will find
a way out of this problem. Tonight:
Hang out with a friend.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
You might be making a situation more confusing than it needs
to be. You have some strong words
you want to share about a money
matter. Know what is necessary
to take pressure off the situation.
Question what is motivating a partner
or friend. Tonight: Speak your mind.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

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��îîLîîSunday Times Sentinel

Sunday, August 25, 2013

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Kaylee and Evan Wilkof

Kaylee
Nicole
Kennedy,
daughter of Darla and Cliff Kennedy of Rutland and Evan Mason Wilkof, son of Susan and
Sam Wilkof of Canton were married on April 6, 2013.
The wedding and reception was
held at Franklin Park Conservatory
in Columbus. The ceremony was
officiated by Rabbi Benjy Bar-Lev
and Pastor Brian Dunham.
The bride was attended by Amy
Garnes as matron of honor, with
bridesmaids, Caitlin Williamson,
cousin of the bride, and Kristin
Wilkof, sister-in-law of the bride.
The best man was Michael
Wilkof, brother of the groom, and
the groomsmen were Jonathan
Wilkof, brother of the groom, Scott
Kennedy, brother of the bride. Music was performed by Jamie Bailey,
a friend of the bride. The ushers
were Steven Starek and Andrew
Reaven, friend of the groom.
The bride graduated from
Ohio University with a Bachelor
of Science in Early Childhood
Education. The groom graduated from Ohio University with a
Bachelor of Science in Business
Administration.
The couple resides in Athens.

Shirley and Harold Adkins

Adkins celebrate 60th anniversary
Shirleyann and Glenn Harold Adkins, Sr., of the Kanauga community
celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Monday, July 29, 2013. Their
children took them on the Belle of
Cincinnati River Boat.
Harold retired from Kaiser Aluminum after 37 years. Shirley worked for

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Ron and Darlene Parcell of Addison are proud to
announce the birth of their daughter, Lilah Kay. Lilah was born at Holzer Hospital on June 21, 2013,
at 12:53 p.m. She weighed 6 pounds, 4 ounces, and
measured 19 inches long.
Lilah is the granddaughter of Retha and the late
Herman Parcell and Donna and the late Owen McKinney. Lilah was welcomed home by big brother, Logan,
along with several aunts, uncles, cousins and friends.

the Angel Corp of Wheelersburg, Ohio.
They are the parents of Lissa and
Short Curnutte and the grandparents
of Shirley Hill of Columbus, and Andrew H.J. Fillinger of Gallipolis.
They have two deceased children,
Glenn, Jr., and Stephanie Fillinger and
a special little friend, Hunter.

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3:CE9î@7î52F89E6C

Submitted photo

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Steele

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Melissa Dawn Tilley, daughter of Barbara and Dwight Tilley, Jr. of Wellston, and David
Mark Steele, son of the late
Charlene and the late Pastor
John Steele, Jr., formerly of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., were
married on Aug. 10.
The ceremony was held in
Point Pleasant at the Church of
Christ in Christian Union, with
Rev. Richard Parsons officiating.
Given in marriage by her

Megan Elizabeth Rose was born Friday, May 17,
2013, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
She weighed 6 pounds, 4.5 ounces and was 20 inches long. Megan was welcomed home by parents,
Anthony “AJ” and Autumn Rose of Patriot, Ohio.
Her grandparents are Michael and Kathy Little
and Charles and Judith Fields of Gallipolis, Ohio,
and Arnold and Beverly Rose of Sidney, Ohio. Her
great-grandparents are Catherine Little of Gallipolis, Ohio, and Donald and Evelyn Rose of Conover,
Ohio. Megan was also welcomed home by big
brother, Troy Sanders, and big sister, Olivia Rose.

father, the bride was attended by her son, Brandon Long.
The groom was attended by
his son, Mike Steele.
The reception was held
at the Point Pleasant Moose
Lodge #731.
The groom is employed at
R and L Carriers in Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va., and the bride is
employed at the Point Pleasant Register. The couple resides in Point Pleasant.
Megan Elizabeth Rose

Lilah Kay Parcell

‘Hyperloop’
travel idea
gains fans if
not backers

WELCOME
Sergio Ulloa, DO
Dr. Ulloa is an Athens native who
completed his medical education at
Ohio University. Fellowship trained
in sports medicine at the Cleveland
Clinic, he served as a team physician
to the Browns, Indians and Cavaliers.
Now with Athens Medical Associates—
he is here to keep you active.

Sergio Ulloa, DO | Orthopedic Surgeon

Specializes in:
• Arthroscopic surgery of hip, knee, and
shoulder including:
- FAI (femoroacetabular impingement)
surgery
- Labral repairs (SLAP of the shoulder)
- Rotator cuff repair
• Orthopedic trauma fracture care
• Pediatric orthopedic care
• Joint reconstruction
To schedule an appointment

(740) 566-4720
Located at Castrop Center, Suite 350

75 Hospital Drive Athens, Ohio 45701
To learn more obleness.org

60443787

LOS ANGELES (AP)
— Billionaire entrepreneur
Elon Musk urged the public
to polish sketch plans he released last week for a “Hyperloop” that would shoot
capsules full of people at
the speed of sound through
elevated tubes connecting
Los Angeles and San Francisco.
From tinkerers to engineers, the race is on.
A Utah firm hustled out
a model using a 3-D printer.
A Pennsylvania company is
testing a virtual Hyperloop
with sophisticated computer software. People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals wants ad space inside
capsules, and in San Francisco, enthusiasts interested
in “making Hyperloop a reality” will meet over beers.
Meanwhile, Musk himself has shelved the project
and returned to his established future-is-here transportation ventures: luxury
electric car maker Tesla
Motors Inc. and the rocketbuilding company SpaceX.
In principle, the Hyperloop is doable.
The concept pulls together several proven technologies: Capsules would float
on a thin cushion of air and
draw on magnetic attraction
and solar power to zoom
through a nearly air-free
tube. Because there would
be so little wind resistance,
they could top 700 mph and
make the nearly 400-mile
trip in about half an hour.
Actual
construction
would hinge on challenges
far more complex than
advanced engineering —
those involving money and
politics.

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