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                  <text>Goodbye
to
icons

Soccer
schedules
released

Kicking
off fair
season

EDITORIAL s 4A

SPORTS s 1B

ALONG THE
RIVER s 1C

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 30, Volume 51

Sunday, July 23, 2017 s $2

Christmas in July

Alleged
methmaking
materials
found
By Morgan McKinniss
mmckinniss@aimmediamidwest.
com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis City Police ofﬁcers
responded Thursday
afternoon to a residence
in the 1400-block of
Eastern Avenue for a
well-being check and to
investigate reported drug
abuse in the home.
According to Gallia County 911, police
received a report of
substances being illegally manufactured in the
residence where children
also resided.
Gallipolis Police Chief
See MATERIALS | 6A

Sarah Hawley photos | Times-Sentinel

It was Christmas in July on Friday at the Meigs County Courthouse, with office holders, courthouse staff and employees from many local attorneys’ offices taking part
in the 10th annual celebration. A Christmas tree decorated with flip-flops and sunglasses, a Christmas themed flip-flop contest, prize drawings and food rounded out
the celebration. Prosecutor James K. Stanley and Sheriff Keith Wood dressed for the occasion both sporting designer flip-flops - sunglasses for the prosecutor and
a grass skirt for the sheriff. (Top right) Mary Ann Parsons took first place in the flip-flop contest with her Christmas scene design (right), with Stanley (in flip-flops
decorated by Tonya Griffin) taking second place. (Middle) Courthouse staff and elected officials decorated the courtroom for the celebration. Sheriff’s Office staff
Jessica Snoke and Cheyenne Davis wore matching Trolls themed flip-flops for the celebration.

Getting in tune for the season
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — The Ohio
Valley Symphony is tuning up
for its 28th season with Philadelphia Orchestra Concertmaster David Kim as its ﬁrst headline performance set for Sept. 9
at the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre.
All shows begin at 7:30 p.m.
their scheduled day.
According to Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing Arts
Centre Executive Director
Lora Snow, this will be Kim’s
third performance with the
symphony. Kim received his
bachelor’s and master’s degrees
from The Juilliard School and
is an expert in violin perfor-

mance. Highlights of his 2015
and 2016 season include teaching and performing at Oberlin
College, Bob Jones University
and the Boston Conservatory
of Music. Kim started playing
violin at the age of three and
joined the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1999. Kim is also a professor of violin studies at the
University of Philadelphia.
“It’s wonderful to have a
musician like David with us
again as he’s performed with
one of the best orchestras in
the world,” said Snow.
The Ohio Valley Symphony
will be playing Scheherazade
Nov. 4 as Maestro Ray Fowler
and the symphony set out

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A, 3A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 5A
Television: 6A

C ALONG THE RIVER
Comics: 3C
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com
and mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — In a
joint press release, Gallia County Sheriff Matt
Champlin
and Gallipolis Police
Department
Chief of
Police Jeff
Boyer have
Jaques
released
details
regarding an ongoing
investigation that their
ofﬁces are conducting in
cooperation with Ohio
Bureau of Investigations
Crimes against Children’s
Unit.
As a result of this
investigation into the
allegation of sexual misconduct, Scott H. Jaques,
age 33, of Gallipolis, has
been taken into custody
See RAPE | 6A

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Publishing

The Ohio Valley Symphony makes its home at the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre.

See TUNE | 6A

Commissioners
approve highway
department
requests

Senator meets with local officials

By Sarah Hawley

By Sarah Hawley

loss is currently awaiting a Senate
vote on the potential override of a
veto by Gov. John Kasich.
Hoagland expressed that he would
have no problem voting for the override, but cautioned that there is no
guarantee if the override is approved
that the federal government would
allow the fee waiver.
He explained that there needs to be
a secondary plan in place in case the
primary plan “goes upside down.” He
asked the ofﬁcials to be thinking of
what his ofﬁce and others can do to
help facilitate a back-up plan.
While the override is a major
concern for counties and the CCAO,
as far as procedure goes, the senate
technically has until the end of the
General Assembly (end of 2018) to
ofﬁcially override the veto.

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Commissioners approved multiple
items related to paving
projects in the county
during Thursday’s regular meeting.
County Engineer Gene
Triplett presented the
commissioners with a
notice of award, contract
and notice to proceed
related to the Round 31
Meigs County paving
projects. The project
includes paving of County Road 31 (Bald KnobStiversville Road) and a
portion of County Road
18 (Kingsbury Road).
The bid was awarded

See SENATOR | 3A

See REQUESTS | 3A

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

B SPORTS
Sports: 1B
Classifieds: 6B

Gallia man
charged
with rape

ROCKSPRINGS — State Senator
Frank Hoagland spent time in Meigs
County on Monday, meeting with
local ofﬁcials to discuss areas of concern.
Meigs County ofﬁcials Engineer
Gene Triplett, Treasurer Peggy Yost,
Recorder Kay Hill, Auditor Mary
Byer-Hill, Clerk of Courts Sammi
Mugrage and Commissioner Randy
Smith, along with County Commissioners Association of Ohio representative Brad Cole, met with Hoagland
for nearly two hours at the Rio
Grande Community College Meigs
Branch.
The Medicaid Managed Care Organization sales tax loss was the ﬁrst
item brought up by the local ofﬁcials,
as the proposed ﬁx for the revenue

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

�OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
MARVIN BEAN

VIOLET ROSE PAINTER

BIDWELL
— Violet Rose
Painter, 89, of
Bidwell, Ohio,
passed away
Thursday, July 20,
2017, at Holzer
Medical Center,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
She was born May 6,
1928, in Fayetteville,
West Virginia, a daughter
of the late Carl Beane and
Mary Angeline (Steele)
Beane.
“Vi” was a graduate
of St. Albans High
School Class of 1946
and a Beauty School
in Huntington, West
WARREN JUDD STEARNS
Virginia. She was the
by his parents, wife, June owner of “Vi’s” Beauty
RUTLAND — Warren
Shop and “Vi’s” Creative
Elizabeth Stearns; son
Judd Stearns, Rutland,
Gifts in Point Pleasant,
Roger Warren Stearns;
Ohio passed away on
West Virginia. “Vi”
four brothers, Delbert,
Thursday, July 20, 2017
at the Overbrook Rehabil- Albert, Dale, and Freddy received a commission of
itation Center in Middle- Stearns and a sister, Val- Kentucky Colonel.
In addition to her
erie Hill
port, Ohio.
parents, she was preceded
A visitation will be
He was born on Sepheld on Tuesday, July 25, in death by her husband,
tember 18, 1924 in
Fredrick Eugene Painter;
2017 from 6-8 p.m. at
Wayne, Ohio to the late
brothers, Earl Beane and
the Anderson McDaniel
Judd and Pearl Stearns.
George Beane; sisters,
Mr. Stearns worked most Funeral Home in Pomeroy. A graveside memorial Mary Byrnside, Dorothy
of his life as a farmer
Withrow, Mae Reed and
service will be held at a
and a carpenter. He was
Opal Byrnside; and a
also served in the United later date at the convegranddaughter, Becky
States Navy during World nience of the family.
In lieu of ﬂowers dona- Painter.
War II.
She is survived by
tions may be made to the
He is survived by his
her children, Robert
Silver Run Food Pantry,
son, Charles (Chelcie)
142 Mechanic St., Pome- Samuel Painter of
Stearns; grandchildren,
Bidwell, Brodrick “Brad”
Marcus, Cinda and Justus roy, Ohio 45769
A registry is available at Eugene (Kim) Painter of
Bratton and several nieces
www.andersonmcdaniel. Thurman, Ohio, Fredda
and nephews.
Jo Kent of Point Pleasant
He is preceded in death com

INA MEADOWS

and Billy Wilson
(Mickie) Painter
of Point Pleasant;
six grandchildren;
Fred Painter,
Erin Painter,
Kelly (Lacey)
Painter, Katie
(Chad) Brotherson,
Coria Kent and Jessy Ray
(Brian) Scott; 14 greatgrandchildren, Hannah
Painter, Johnathan
Painter, Nick Painter,
Chris Daniels, Alexus
Painter, Natalie Holmes,
Layne Painter, Tucker
Painter, Vincent Painter,
Mark Brotherson, Kenley
Brotherson, Jada Kent,
Jersey Painter and Lucy
Scott; two great-greatgrandchildren, Pazleigh
Painter and Cameron
Daniels.
A funeral service
will be held at 1 p.m.,
Monday, July 24, 2017,
at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
with Pastor Joe Nott
ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at the Vinton
Memorial Park in Vinton,
Ohio. The family will
receive friends two hours
prior to the funeral
service Monday at the
funeral home.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family
and memories may be
shared by visiting www.
wilcoxenfuneralhome.
com.

MIDDLEPORT — Ina
Meadows, 80, of Middleport, passed away peacefully surrounded by her
family on July 17, 2017.
She was born on Aug.
29, 1936, in Cincinnati,
Ohio, and was the daughter of the late Hayes and
Cora Morgan.
A life-long learner,
she graduated from the
University of Cincinnati
at the age of 20 with a
degree in elementary
education. She taught in
the city for several years
before moving with her
family to Middleport
in the early sixties. Her
teaching career continued in the area and she
taught 4th grade at the
old Pomeroy Elementary
School for 16 years. During this time, she earned
a Masters in Education
from Marshall University
and a Reading Specialist
Certiﬁcation from Ohio
University.
She taught for many
more years in Atlanta,
Georgia and St. Petersburg, Florida, and later
in Hamilton, Ohio. It’s
during this time that she
earned a second Masters
in Psychology at Dayton
University in Ohio. While
in Hamilton, she retired
as a school counselor with
the Hamilton County
Schools with seven more
years of service.
She enjoyed 10 years
of retirement in St. Pete
ELEANOR JUNE ‘ELLIE’ FAULK
Beach, Florida, all the
while enjoying being
her parents; brothers, William
(Sierra) St. Clair, Melissa
MIDDLEPORT — Eleanor
Grandma Ina at the Beach
Pooler and Wade (Trina) Pooler; and James McHafﬁe; sisters,
June “Ellie” Faulk, 86, of
to all her grandchildren.
Madeline Chatten, Reva Smith,
great grandchildren, Autumn
Middleport, Ohio passed away
During this time, she
and Betty Carsey.
(Nathan) Mohler, David Davis,
on Friday, July 21, 2017 at her
Funeral services will be held on also earned her certiﬁcaEzra St. Clair, Owen Cogar,
residence.
Monday, July 24, 2017 at noon at tion as a licensed clinical
Gage Barrett, Pasley Cogar,
She was born on November
psychologist and was
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Breanna Barrett; great great
10, 1930 in Middleport to the
in private practice at a
Home in Middleport. Burial
late George and Hazel (Butcher) grandchildren, Kade Mohler
clinic during her time in
will follow in the Rocksprings
and Kaliopi Mohler; brother and
McHafﬁe.
Cemetery in Pomeroy. Visitation Florida. She returned to
sisters; Judith McHafﬁe, Doris
She is survived by her
for family and friends will be held Ohio, missing family and
daughter, Myrtle (Gail) St. Clair; (Russell) Skidmore, and George
friends, and ended her
two hours prior to the service.
McHafﬁe, Jr. and several nieces
grandchildren, Donita (Chris)
A registry is available at www. career as a psychologist
and nephews.
Warren, Geoff (Erin) Cogar,
andersonmcdaniel.com
She is preceded in death by
Tericia (John) Bentz, Darrick

POMEROY — Marvin
Bean, 90, of Pomeroy,
died Thursday, July 19,
2017, at his residence.
Born January 1, 1927
in Keyser, West Virginia,
he was the son of the late
Arthur and Viola Bean.
Marvin was a U.S. Army
veteran who served in
the Korean Conﬂict.
He is survived by two
sons, Keith (Tamara)
Day and Robert (Wilma)
Boling; one daughter
Cheryl (John) Stumbo;
one sister; many grand-

children and great grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his wife Rhea; three sons,
Jack, Terry and Ralph
Day; one daughter, Sandra Hockingberry; several brothers and sisters,
and four grandchildren.
A memorial service
will be held at a later
date at the convenience
of the family. Friends are
invited to sign the online
guestbook at ewingfuneralhome.net.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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Telephone: 740-446-2342
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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

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Ohio Valley Home Health is accepting applications for
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60728006

with the Meigs County
Mental Health Clinic.
Ina loved her family so
much and was so proud
of them all. She always
worked hard to take care
of them and found great
joy in all the successes in
their lives.
She leaves behind
four children, Mitchell
Meadows of Middleport;
Cathy Stokes (Thom)
of Lawrenceville, Ga.;
David Meadows of
Atlanta, Ga.; and Jenny
Keller of Athens, Ohio.
She was blessed with 10
grandchildren, Brandi
Roush (Tommy); Zach
Meadows, Jessi Ohlinger
(Jeremy), and Jaxon
Meadows; Sarah and
Jenna Stokes; Conner
and Taylor Meadows; and
Katie and Ross Keller. Her
blessings continued with
four great-grandchildren,
Kyeger, Kamry, and Kallie
Jo Roush; and Jemma Rae
Ohlinger.
During her later years
in life Ina found great
pleasure in simple things
like spending time with
her family, playing bridge
with her wonderful bridge
partners, tutoring at the
after school program,
reading a good book with
her book club, visiting
with her fellow retired
teachers, talking about
old times, and just visiting with all those who
came to see her. She was
full of gratitude for a life
well lived and passed
along a quick smile to all.
She will be missed and
always loved by so many
people.
The family would like
to say a special thank you
to the staff at Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center in
Middleport. She lived
there after she suffered a
stroke last year. Their caring staff were beyond special to her, and the family
is in their gratitude for all
their hard work, love and
care for her. Special thank
you to Melissa Fields, RN
for all the extra love and
care that you showed for
her and her family. We are
all so thankful.
Ewing-Schwarzel
Funeral Home is in charge
of local arrangements. A
celebration of life will be
planned with the family at
a later time.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family requests that any
donations be made to the
Meigs High School Band
or Athletic Booster Clubs,
42091 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. She
found no greater joy then
attending all the activities that her children and
grandchildren participated in.
You are encouraged to
sign the online guestbook
at ewingfuneralhome.net.

DEATH NOTICES
THACKER
GALLIPOLIS — Robert E. Thacker, 82, of
Gallipolis, passed away on
Saturday, July 22, 2017 at
the Holzer Assisted Living. Arrangements will be
announced later by Willis
Funeral Home.
HALL
GALLIPOLIS — Dorothy Jean Hall, 79, of Gallipolis, Ohio passed away
on Friday, July 21, 2017
at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Graveside service will
be 1 p.m., Monday, July
24, 2017 at Ridgelawn
Cemetery with Pastor
Alfred Holley ofﬁciating.
Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family.

MORE
OBITUARES
ON PAGE 3A

�OBITUARIES/LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
GLEN T. CRISP
LANGSVILLE — Glen
T. Crisp, 65, of Langsville, Ohio, went to be
with his Lord, Thursday,
July 20, 2017 at his residence.
Born October 28, 1951
at Grundy, Virginia to
the late Jack William and
Glenna Ruth Ratliff Crisp,
Glen was a pilot, served
in the U.S. National
Guard, attended Church
Of Christ, and was a
member of Middleport
Lodge #363 F. &amp; A.M.
He is survived by two
sons, Ryan (Amy) Crisp
and Shaun Crisp; two
grandchildren, Camden
and Cadence Crisp; broth-

ers, Jim (Robin) and
Tom (Mary) Crisp; sister,
Carla (James) Large; as
well as nieces and nephews.
A gathering of family
and friends will be held
Sunday, July 23, 2017,
from 4 to 6 p.m., at
Birchﬁeld Funeral Home,
Rutland, Ohio. Interment
will be at Miles Cemetery,
Rutland, at a later date.
The family asks that in
lieu of ﬂowers to please
donate to your local ﬁre
department or local dog
shelter in Glen’s name.
Online condolences @
birchﬁeldfuneralhome.
com.

DEATH NOTICE
PEET
SOUTH POINT — Gary Lee Peet, 43, of South
Point, Ohio passed away Thursday, July 20, 2017
at home. Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m.,
Monday, July 24, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service at the funeral home.
CHASTIAN
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Betty Chastian, 81, of
Huntington, W.Va., died Saturday, July 22, 2017 at
Cabell Huntington Hospital.
There will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, is assisting the family.

Sunday, July 23, 2017 3A

Regional programs benefit seniors
Sponsor a senior effort launched
Submitted

OHIO VALLEY — The annual Senior Farmers’
Market Nutrition Program is so popular that
inevitably the demand outpaces the available
funding. Year-over-year, the Buckeye Hills region
in southeast Ohio maintains waiting lists with
hundreds of seniors who never get coupons for
fresh market items. The Buckeye Hills Regional
Council is the lead agency for the Southeast
Ohio Aging &amp; Disability Resource Network and
administers the program.
The Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition
Program (SFMNP) provides income-eligible
senior citizens with special coupons worth $50
to enjoy locally grown fresh fruits, vegetables,
herbs and honey. While the Senior Farmers’
Market Nutrition Program is funded by USDA
and the Ohio Department of Aging, their funding
is LIMITED. Many income-eligible seniors are
placed on waiting lists. Program coupons may
be exchanged for eligible foods from authorized
farmers. Only fresh, locally grown fruits, herbs,
vegetables and honey are eligible to be purchased
with the coupons.
“Since 1974, we have been a trusted source
for information and access to a full-range of
available services, programs and options to help
individuals, regardless of age or disability, remain
at home,” said Aging Director Jennifer Westfall.

“This year, we decided to create the sponsor a
senior program and ask the community to help
us meet the demand for Senior Farmers’ Market
Coupons in the form of donations. A donation
of $50 will sponsor one of the 500+ seniors in
Southeast Ohio on the current waiting list for
Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program
coupons.”
Westfall added that the sponsor a senior
program will also beneﬁt Project Lifesaver.
This technology, in the hands of certiﬁed law
enforcement partners, helps ﬁnd people with a
cognitive disorder such as Alzheimer’s disease
or Autism when they wander from a caregiver.
Clients are outﬁtted with a transmitter about the
size of a watch — worn on the wrist or ankle.
Should the client wander, the caregiver notiﬁes
911 and the local Sheriff’s Ofﬁce begins a search
immediately using Project Lifesaver equipment.
Without the technology, searches can last hours
or days. Through community donations, the
program is offered free to seniors and $350 will
sponsor one enrollee on the Project Lifesaver
Program.
Donations may be mailed to 1400 Pike St.
Marietta, OH 45750 or through the GoFundMe
site: www.gofundme.com/buckeyehillssponsorasenior (site transaction and processing
fees apply to donations). Donations are not
tax deductible as Buckeye Hills is not a 501(c)3.
To learn more, call Buckeye Hills at 1-800-3312644 or visit www.buckeyehills.org/sponsor-asenior.

MORE OBITUARIES ON PAGE 2A

GALLIA, MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Requests
From page 1A

to Shelley Company in the amount of $398,662.14,
with the work to be completed within 90 days.
Triplett stated that the bid came in below
estimate, with an estimated price of $72 per ton of
asphalt, and a bid price of $58.50 per ton.
During the previous week’s meeting the
commissioners had approved a bridge replacement
project on County Road 29 (Bowman’s Run Road)
through the Ohio Bridge Partnership Program. The
project is to take place approximately 0.16 miles
east of County Road 34 (Pine Grove Road) and run
approximately 230 feet.
In other business, the commissioners approved
a resolution recognizing the 50th anniversary of
the Buckeye Hills Resource, Conservation and
Development Council (RC&amp;D).
A request for the second half appropriation of
$3,500 for the Meigs County Historical Society was
approved.
The commissioners approved a professional
service agreement and contract with Triad
Engineering to complete an engineering report to
be submitted to the EPA for the running of water to
the new Family Dollar in Rutland.
After much discussion, the commissioners
approved the engineering study, but did not
commit to a speciﬁc plan for the water line
depending on the cost estimates in the engineering
report. There are options available as to connecting
the store to the water and sewer system, the report
will allow to determine what is the most feasible
option.
Bills were approved in the amount of
$221,584.36, with $24,964.32 from county general.
Sarah Hawley is the Managing Editor of The Daily Sentinel. She can be
reached at shawley@aimmediamidwest.com.

Senator

sibility of an increase to the gas
tax, a tax which directly impacts
the county highway budget.
He explained that the budget
From page 1A
has been the same since 2005
when the last gas tax was put in
Another topic of discussion
place.
was the need to bring broadAn increase of one cent on
band internet access to the
area. Broadband access is key to the gas tax, if divided the way
it is currently, would bring in
bringing business to the area,
an additional approximately
noted the senator.
$125,000 annually to the engiAnother area Hoagland and
his ofﬁce is working to address neer’s budget.
Triplett stated that a 10 cent
is the “internet sales tax gap.”
increase to the gas tax, even if it
Hoagland said his ofﬁce has
been working with Senator Rob were to be spread out in yearly
Portman’s ofﬁce to discuss what two cent increments would
greatly impact the budget and
options may be out there to
what his ofﬁce is able to do.
address the situation in which
That amount would bring a 40
many online purchases do not
percent increase to the budget.
incur sales tax.
License plate fees also go into
Hoagland cautioned that it is
the highway department budget.
not easy to regulate and so far
The state recently approved
states have not had much sucallowing counties to increase the
cess. Maryland has been the
most successful Hoagland stated. permissive license fee by $5 for
additional funds to the highway
Triplett asked about the pos-

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department. Triplett explained
that even if the county were to
approve the increase it would
generate less than a one cent
gas tax increase. The beneﬁt
would not be enough to ask for
the increase to be put in place in
Meigs County.
Overall, Hoagland said that
the state has to continue “feeding counties” funding, not the
opposite, which Commissioner
Smith noted has not been the
trend.
“I am a vehicle for you,” said
Hoagland. “We have got to work
together to ﬁnd proper solutions.”
Sarah Hawley is the Managing Editor of The
Daily Sentinel. She can be reached at shawley@
aimmediamidwest.com.

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Phone: 740-446-2206

60728821

Sunday, July 23
TUPPERS PLAINS — Amazing Grace Church in
Tuppers Plains will host Old Fashioned Day with Taj
Rohr at the 10 a.m. service followed by games and
activities.
GALLIPOLIS — “First Light” Worship Service in
the Family Life Center, 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30
a.m.; Morning Worship Service, 10:45 a.m.; No evening service, First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave.

Courtesy photo

Meigs County officials met with Sen. Frank Hoagland on Monday at the Rio Grande Meigs Center.

60729294

Vacation Bible School
MIDDLEPORT — First Baptist Church in
Middleport will hold Vacation Bible School with
the theme Barnyard Roundup (All about Jesus),
July 24-27 from 6-8 p.m. daily. There will be
lessons, music, activities, snacks, a bounce house
on Thursday and pool party on Friday. Ages
Kindergarten to 5th grade. Registration on
Monday by parent or guardian at the church, 211 S.
6th Ave., Middleport. For questions call 740-9921121.
RUTLAND — Vacation Bible School at Rutland
Free Will Baptist Church will be held July 24-28,
from 6-8:30 p.m., nightly. Drawing for bicycles
for students with perfect attendance on Friday. A
picnic will be held at 6 p.m. on Friday.
POMEROY — The Carleton Church, Kingsbury
Road, Pomeroy, will hold Vacation Bible School
from 6:30-8:30 p.m., July 31 to Aug. 4. The theme
is Hero Central: Discover Your Strength in God.
Program will be hled Friday, Aug. 4 at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by picnic and pinata at the shelter house.
For more information call 740-992-7690.

�Editorial
4A Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Goodbye to two
icons, hello to
new Doctor
Summer, in the news business, is commonly
known as the “silly season” since normally
weighty events of the year seem to go on vacation
along with the rest of the country.
That designation hasn’t seemed to
apply to this summer or 2016’s, but
there’s still room for the inconsequential kind of stuff that ﬁlls pages,
computer screens and air time. You
know, everything from strange things
that have grown in folks’ gardens,
bears cooling off in pools, or which
Kevin
celebrity wowed or shocked crowds
Kelly
Contributing with what they wore. Somewhere in
between during the past week was
columnist
the passing of two men who made
their mark in the ﬁeld of horror and
science ﬁction entertainment, and the casting of a
new Doctor Who.
All are probably as meaningless to some people
as the stories surrounding what some Hollywood
star or wannabe has or hasn’t done, but are pretty
important to others. Somehow, the deaths of
actor Martin Landau and ﬁlmmaker George A.
Romero last weekend struck a chord with lovers
of horror and science ﬁction cinema, while Jodie
Somewhere in
Whittaker’s appointment
between during
the past week was to the iconic role of the
benevolent Time Lord is a
the passing of two radical but, we hope, welmen who made
come change to the longtheir mark in the running British TV series
field of horror and that has won fans all over
the world.
science fiction
Landau, who died July
entertainment,
15 at 89, won the 1994
and the casting of Best Supporting Actor
a new Doctor Who. Oscar for his portrayal
of real-life horror ﬁlm
star Bela Lugosi in Tim
Burton’s “Ed Wood.” The title role was played
by Johnny Depp as the independent producerdirector who befriended and employed the all-butforgotten Lugosi in 1950s Tinseltown. Landau
was honored for maintaining the one-time screen
Dracula’s dignity and bearing despite Lugosi’s
unfortunate association with Wood’s pitifully lowbudget endeavors; his “Plan 9 From Outer Space”
(1958) is widely regarded as the worst movie ever
made, but take my word for it, there are numerous
other ﬂicks that rightly qualify for that honor.
Landau’s receipt of the Oscar was not only seen
as a vindication for Lugosi but for Landau himself,
whose career peaked in the mid-to-late ’60s as
master of disguise Rollin Hand, a member of the
original “Mission Impossible” team on TV. Interestingly, Landau was offered the role of Mr. Spock
on “Star Trek” but turned it down, paving the way
for Leonard Nimoy’s casting and resulting fame.
Ironically, Nimoy replaced Landau in 1969 when
the latter left “MI” along with his then-wife, Barbara Bain. The Landaus went on to star in “Space:
1999” (1975-1977), a British-made sci-ﬁ series
that sought to capture the allure and audience of
“Star Trek.” Landau spent a decade in lesser-quality ﬁlm roles until Francis Ford Coppola’s “Tucker:
The Man and His Dream” (1988), in which the
actor delivered, in the words of Leonard Maltin
and associates, “a poignant characterization” that
put him back on the A list.
Romero’s name may not immediately command
recognition, but for devotees of zombies and gore
in their viewing, he will be forever identiﬁed as
the director and creative talent behind “Night of
the Living Dead” (1968), its several sequels, and
their effect on U.S. and overseas cinema. Romero,
who was 77 when he passed July 16, saw “Night
of the Living Dead” arise from humble origins as
a black-and-white, low-budget, Pittsburgh-shot
attempt at a new kind of horror movie to national
success and a cult following. It was a heady beginning for a local TV technician who’d previously
worked on “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.”
“Night of the Living Dead” was roundly condemned at the time for its Grand Guignol excesses. I still recall a Reader’s Digest piece by U.S.
Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine who, in listing all of the ﬁlm’s visual horrors and shocks, said
it amply demonstrated the need for a movie rating
system that soon followed. Yet, “Night of the Living Dead” somehow struck a note with audiences
then coping with the Vietnam War, dissent and the
rise of a counterculture.
In later years, his role in pioneering a bolder
approach to horror hailed, Romero often smiled
broadly in interviews discussing “Night of the Living Dead” and the deeper meanings read into it
by critics and fans. It was if he was saying, “Come
on, it’s only a MOVIE!” Although he later made
several more respectable ﬁlms in addition to creating and executive-producing the 1980s syndicated
TV favorite “Tales from the Darkside,” Romero
knew he’d always be followed by the specter of his
initial directorial effort, but seemed to be okay
See DOCTOR | 6A

THEIR VIEW

Everyone has a story to tell
his doctor to give
America is
James. F. up running due to a Everyone has a story worth telling. What’s
built upon a culBurns
heart murmur.
tural foundation
yours? Find it and write it down for future
Contributing
A decade later— generations.
of ambition and
columnist
and after his doctor
excellence. Four
had died of cardiac
short stories
Kris and Kayla had
of Korea for over three
arrest—Clarence
involving physicircled the 2013 Boston
years. For 37 agonizing
decided to risk runcal challenges of endurMarathon in hopes of
months, his family only
ning again. He felt ﬁne,
ance—a hazardous hike,
becoming the ﬁrst mothbecame a ﬁerce competi- knew he was an MIA,
a death march, and two
er-daughter duo to comtor, and entered the 1922 missing in action. They
long races—illustrate
plete the storied race.
didn’t know that Leigh
Boston Marathon. He
these traits.
But darker forces were at
was alive, had dropped
not only won, he domiOhio, 1798. John Hoswork, two terrorists havto 85 pounds, and
nated the race for the
brook, a Revolutionary
ing also circled the 2013
next eight years, winning endured a ﬁnal death
War veteran from New
Marathon as a venue for
march to the Yalu River
six times between 1922
Jersey, had hacked out
expressing their hatred
near
the
Chinese
border.
and
1930.
Clarence
holds
a home for his family in
of America. Kris and
I was a freshman in
the Boston Marathon
the frontier wilderness.
Kayla would collide with
high school, a radio
record for most wins at
They survived largely
the radicalized evil of
junkie, and the only
seven and for being the
on the abundant deer,
the Tsarnaev brothers at
one awake in our house
oldest winner, breaking
bear, and small-game
the ﬁnish line.
when I heard another
the tape just short of his
meat of the surrounding
Having conquered
voice crackling over the
42nd birthday. The Bosforest. But in the midst
Heartbreak Hill,
radio late at night. They
ton Globe gushed that
of a brutally cold winter,
Kris and Kayla were
were reading off one of
Clarence had “the most
the Hosbrooks had run
approaching Copley
the ﬁnal lists of prisonfamous legs” in America
out of the salt needed to
Square as the Tsarnaevs
ers coming home from
preserve their dwindling other than a well-known
placed their bombs on
Korea. “Charles Leigh
actress.
food supply.
the sidewalk and melted
Whitaker, Cincinnati,
But the true greatHaving hiked eight
away in the crowd. The
Ohio.” Fighting tears, I
ness of Clarence DeMar
miles to a fort to replenbomb placed directly
jumped out of bed and
was in the future, not
ish his supply of salt,
woke up my parents and behind a family of four
the past—for he never
John Hosbrook set out
exploded just seconds
sister. “Leigh’s coming
quit running, running
on the return trip—not
after Kris’ ﬁancé, Brian,
home.”
on forever, as it were,
knowing that a ﬁerce
left that area to assist
Like Clarence DeMar,
for the sheer fun and
blizzard awaited him.
Leigh’s life had a remark- Kris and Kayla deal with
challenge of competing.
When winds began to
a pool of reporters waitable future as well as a
He ran his last Boston
whip through the foring to interview them.
past. He wed his high
Marathon at age 65 and
est and a heavy snow
school sweetheart, Joyce The shockwave of that
his last road race at age
soon covered his path,
Knippling, and, with her, ﬁrst blast killed a little
70, just months before
Hosbrook knew he
raised two beautiful chil- boy while severing the
dying of cancer. He was
was in trouble. Each
lauded for having “grace, dren—both with muscu- leg of his sister.
desperate step brought
Shrapnel ﬂew through
lar dystrophy. Robbie, 7,
grit, and gumption” and
him closer to home but
the air like bullets.
and Kerrie, 6, were the
the versatility of being a
also closer to collapse.
Brian was grazed in the
printer, preacher, runner, 1963 National Poster
Exhaustion prevailed,
head and bleeding as he
scoutmaster, farmer, and Children for the MuscuJohn Hosbrook’s knees
helped Kris and shielded
lar Dystrophy Associascholar with a Harvard
buckling beneath him as
Kayla from the full force
he plunged to the ground degree. Clarence DeMar tion. They were invited
of the blast. Fortunately,
to the White House to
epitomized the Ameriand soon froze to death.
meet President Kennedy, they all survived, and
can spirit.
John’s 13-year-old son,
Kris returned the next
posing for a picture
The Korean War. My
Dan Hosbrook, helped
year to run the Marawith the president (ﬁve
brother was the captain
his mother cope with
months before his assas- thon and defy the terrorof our high school foottheir tragic situation. In
ists.
sination) along with
ball team, and his best
time, the family ﬂourEpilogue. John Hosactors Jerry Lewis and
buddy, Leigh Whitaker,
ished, and Dan became
brook; Clarence DeMar;
Patty Duke in preparawas the play-by-play
the county surveyor,
Leigh Whitaker; Kris
tion for the annual M.D.
court sheriff, and a mem- announcer for home
and Kaya. Each showed
telethon fundraiser.
games. Leigh was lightber of the Ohio AssemThe Boston Marathon. courage and endurance
hearted, a fun guy, and
bly. My mother was
while contributing to the
My story ends up back
gave my brother credit
Dan’s great-granddaughfamily stories that form
at the ﬁnish line of the
for all gang tackles, our
ter and grew up on the
our American mosaic.
school’s primitive public- Boston Marathon. But
farm where her ancestor
Everyone’s now doing
address system crackling the year is now 2013.
had perished a century
DNA to trace their roots.
Competing in the diswith Leigh’s voice proearlier. My father’s from
But you may ﬁnd interabled division is Kris
claiming “yet another
the same small village of
esting family stories if
Biagiotti, pushing her
tackle by Bucky Burns.”
Madeira, Ohio, and his
you look elsewhere—in
severely-handicapped
Graduation came. War
best life-long friend was
old letters and stacks
Howard DeMar, the post- came. My brother ended daughter Kayla in a
and scraps of famup on a Coast Guard cut- wheelchair designed for
master of Madeira.
ily memorabilia before
The Boston Marathon. ter in the north Atlantic; road racing. Kris took
they’re thrown out;
Leigh ended up in Korea, up distance running
Howard’s ﬁrst-cousin
and in the minds and
with Kayla shortly after
an army medic whose
was Clarence DeMar—
memories of older family
her husband died of a
unit was overrun by a
who had a gift and a
members while they’re
gait for running, chasing pre-dawn attack south of heart attack. Known
still here. Everyone has
as Boston’s “K Girls,”
Seoul.
jack rabbits down the
a story worth telling.
Kris and Kayla do road
One of the few surviMadeira hills on his way
What’s yours? Find it
races to raise funds for
to school. Clarence never vors and initially lined
and write it down for
handicapped children.
stopped running, even to up for execution by a
future generations.
Again, there’s a family
ﬁring school, Leigh
work as an adult. Someconnection—my niece is
became a POW, a prisone suggested he enter
James F. Burns, a native Ohioan,
Kayla’s godmother and
oner of war who was
the Boston Marathon.
is a retired professor at the
Kris had recently attend- University of Florida.
He did. He won the 1911 kept on the march and
ed our son’s wedding.
slept on the cold ground
race but was advised by

�LOCAL/WEATHER

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 5A

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Immunization
clinic

Editor’s Note: The Meigs and Gallia
Briefs will only list event information
that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

houses, face painting, refreshments,
education materials, and more. For
more information, call (740) 446-5901.

Pediatric back-toschool fair set

POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
Immunization Clinic from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association is looking child(ren)’s shot records. Children must
be accompanied by a parent/legal guardfor candidates for a scholarship to be
given in early August. Applicants must ian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however,
be a college junior or senior education
no one will be denied services because
major whose home residence is Meigs
County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher is also a of an inability to pay an administration
requirement. Questions or applications fee for state-funded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards and/or comcan be obtained by calling Charlene at
740-444-5498 or Becky at 740-992-7096. mercial insurance cards, if applicable.

Scholarship
applications available

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer is hosting
a Pediatric Back to School Fair on Saturday, July 29 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the Hospital’s Shelterhouse, located
next to Holzer Center for Cancer Care
in Gallipolis. The ﬁrst 100 children to
attend will receive backpacks ﬁlled with
school essentials. A variety of activities will be available including bounce

Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit
our website at www.meigs-health.com
to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

Road
closure
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June
5, State Route 124 in Meigs County
will be closed between Township Road
29 (Wells Run Road) and Township
Road 144 (Dewitts Run Road) for a slip
repair project. The estimated completion date is Sept. 1.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
its board meeting at
10 a.m. at Yocktangee
Park, AMVets Shelter,
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601.
Board meetings usually
are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the month at 27
West Second Street,
Chillicothe, OH 45601.
For more information,
call 740-775-5030, ext.
103.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly
meeting at 11:30 a.m. at
the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D,
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The
Ladies of the Meigs
County Republican Party
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Carleton School in
Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone
is welcome. Please come
and join us in discussing
how we can make money
to support our local candidates. We will welcome
any and all input.
GALLIPOLIS — The
French 500 Free Clinic
will be open for those

Tuesday,
July 25

LEBANON TWP. —
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the township
garage. The 2018 budget
will be presented.
LEADING CREEK
— Leading Creek Conservancy District’s July
CHESTER TWP. —
The annual Family Picnic board meeting time has
of the Meigs County Ikes been rescheduled from
4 p.m. to 1 p.m., at the
will be 6:30 p.m. at the
Club House on Sugar Run water ofﬁce.
Road, Chester Township.
The Club will furnish
hamburgers and hot dogs.
Bring your favorite covered dish, drinks, table
service, and family memCHILLICOTHE —
bers.
The Southern Ohio
POMEROY — The
Council of Governments
regular meeting of the
(SOCOG) will hold

Monday,
July 24

Thursday,
July 27

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

75°

79°

Humid today with a shower or thunderstorm.
Partly cloudy tonight. High 89° / Low 70°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

87°
74°
86°
66°
104° in 1934
51° in 1951

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.05
3.89
3.03
26.96
24.99

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:22 a.m.
8:48 p.m.
6:35 a.m.
9:03 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jul 23

First

Jul 30

Full

Last

Aug 7 Aug 14

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

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

Major
12:19p
12:51a
1:52a
2:51a
3:47a
4:40a
5:29a

Minor
6:04a
7:05a
8:05a
9:04a
9:59a
10:51a
11:40a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
12:49p
1:19p
2:19p
3:16p
4:11p
5:03p
5:51p

Minor
6:34p
7:34p
8:32p
9:29p
10:23p
11:14p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
On July 23, 1979, heavy rain pushed
the Reedy River out of its banks
at Greenville, S.C. Thunderstorms
dumped 2.00 inches of rain on Johnstown, Pa., in just one hour.

86°
64°

Partly sunny and
humid with a t-storm

Humid with times of
clouds and sun

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.68 +0.12
Marietta
34 16.03 +0.17
Parkersburg
36 21.36 -0.15
Belleville
35 12.67 -0.05
Racine
41 13.28 +0.24
Point Pleasant
40 24.77 -0.73
Gallipolis
50 12.56 -0.86
Huntington
50 25.72 +0.13
Ashland
52 34.52 +0.25
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.12 +0.23
Portsmouth
50 15.40 -1.50
Maysville
50 33.80 none
Meldahl Dam
51 14.70 -0.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Certified Nurse
Practitioner

41865 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, OH

Contact 740-992-0540 today
Promoting health by
preventing &amp; treating diseases
&amp; disabilities of the elderly
Please contact the office
to see if you qualify
for in home visits...

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

91°
68°

87°
66°

Marietta
86/69
Belpre
87/70

Athens
87/69

St. Marys
86/69

Parkersburg
86/69

Coolville
87/69

Elizabeth
88/70

Spencer
87/69

Buffalo
88/70
Milton
88/71

St. Albans
89/71

Huntington
89/71

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
78/58
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
74/58
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
84/67
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

87°
64°

Sunny to partly cloudy A couple of showers Sun and clouds with a A couple of showers
and humid
and a thunderstorm
t-storm possible
possible

Murray City
87/68

Ironton
89/71

Ashland
88/71
Grayson
89/71

FRIDAY

88°
68°

Wilkesville
87/69
POMEROY
Jackson
88/69
88/69
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
88/70
89/70
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
87/69
GALLIPOLIS
89/70
88/70
88/70

South Shore Greenup
89/71
88/70

80
300

Portsmouth
89/71

Christi M. Roush

Specializing
in the unique
healthcare
needs of
older adults

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
87/68

Lucasville
89/70

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
88/68

Very High

Primary: unspeciﬁed
Mold: 1845

Logan
86/66

Adelphi
86/67

Waverly
87/68

Pollen: 5

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

TUESDAY

and Disability program)
will meet at 10 a.m. in
the Buckeye Hills ofﬁce
at 1400 Pike Street, Marietta.

NOW ACCEPTING
PATIENTS

MIDDLEPORT — The
monthly Free Community
Dinner at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center, corner of 5th
and Main Streets, will be
held at 5 p.m. This month
they are serving meatballs, mashed potatoes,
green beans, rolls, and
dessert. This is open to

89°
65°

4

Primary: basidiospores, unk
Mon.
6:23 a.m.
8:47 p.m.
7:43 a.m.
9:48 p.m.

MONDAY

the public.
MARIETTA — The
Regional Advisory Council for the Buckeye Hills
Regional Council (Aging

Friday,
July 28

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

83°

who do not have medical
insurance or are underinsured from 1 – 3 p.m.
on Thursday, July 27 at
258 Pinecrest Drive in
the old Hillcrest Clinic
off of Jackson Pike in
Gallipolis (Spring Valley), next to the Arbors
Nursing Home. No
appointment is necessary. The volunteer medical doctors and nurses
are happy to serve free
of charge the residents of
Southeastern Ohio and
Mason County, W.Va.,
and beyond over the age
of six. Phone 740-4460021. The next clinic is
scheduled for Aug. 31.

60729295

Meigs County District
Public Library Board will
be held at 3:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township Trustees
will hold their meeting at
7:30 a.m. at the Township
Garage.

Clendenin
89/69
Charleston
89/71

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
77/58

Billings
95/67

Minneapolis
80/60
Chicago
89/66

Denver
88/63

Kansas City
91/70

Toronto
76/62
Detroit
84/67

Montreal
74/57

New York
81/71

Washington
91/76

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
87/66/t
69/59/pc
92/74/t
84/75/t
87/73/t
95/67/pc
98/68/pc
75/63/pc
89/71/t
96/74/pc
86/57/pc
89/66/pc
89/71/t
84/70/t
86/70/t
99/80/pc
88/63/t
91/66/s
84/67/t
88/75/pc
92/77/t
88/71/pc
91/70/pc
104/84/s
94/76/pc
84/67/pc
94/77/t
93/80/t
80/60/pc
95/74/pc
89/76/t
81/71/c
99/73/t
90/74/t
83/73/t
96/79/t
83/67/t
75/57/s
97/76/pc
96/75/t
99/77/t
98/75/pc
74/58/pc
78/58/pc
91/76/t

Hi/Lo/W
85/68/t
65/53/c
90/74/t
89/72/t
91/68/pc
88/63/pc
100/70/pc
71/61/sh
89/65/t
92/72/t
93/61/t
77/64/pc
88/65/pc
79/64/pc
84/63/pc
99/80/t
94/65/s
88/70/s
78/61/pc
86/76/sh
96/77/s
83/65/s
91/71/pc
97/81/t
90/75/t
81/66/pc
93/72/t
93/81/pc
82/67/pc
91/73/pc
91/77/t
83/69/t
93/73/t
92/74/t
88/70/t
93/81/t
83/61/pc
69/57/r
94/74/t
96/72/t
96/75/pc
99/78/s
75/58/pc
84/60/s
91/73/pc

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
92/74
El Paso
86/70

High
Low

Global

Houston
92/77

Chihuahua
82/65
Monterrey
99/75

118° in Death Valley, CA
31° in Boca Reservoir, CA

High
Low
Miami
93/80

123° in Mitribah, Kuwait
1° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
RACINE
SYRACUSE
promise to make you feel right at home.
740-949-2210
740-992-6333

60701680

Editor’s Note: The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and The Daily Sentinel
appreciate your input to
the community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention,
all information should be
received by the newspaper
at least ﬁve business days
prior to an event. All
coming events print on a
space-available basis and
in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to:
GDTnews@civitasmedia.
com or TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

�LOCAL

6A Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

STOCKS
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 48.26
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 90.89
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.26
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 44.94
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 117.85
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 36.70
BBT (NYSE) - 46.28
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 31.00
Pepsico (NYSE) - 116.63
Premier (NASDAQ) - 19.91
Rockwell (NYSE) - 165.08

Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) -12.55
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.06
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 8.83
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 76.15
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.86
WesBanco (NYSE) - 37.87
Worthington (NYSE) - 52.11
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions July
21, 2017.

Tune
From page 1A

to paint music inspired by the
story of One Thousand and One
Nights. Scheherazade is
the chief narrator of the story
which centers around the
telling of such tales as Aladdin,
Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves,
Arabian Nights and more.
The musical piece is titled after
her.
The return of The Ohio Valley
Symphony’s Christmas Show
will be Dec. 2 with holiday
favorites such as Sleigh Ride
and White Christmas.
“Ray works really hard to
bring familiar pieces to the
audience with a new twist,”
said Snow. “Sometimes the
symphony will play the same
song but arranged differently
to illustrate unique styles to
listeners.”
Pianist Thomas Pandolﬁ
will play with The Ohio Valley
Symphony March 24. According
to information provided by
the performing arts centre,
The Washington Post has
called Pandolﬁ “an artist who
is master of both the grand
gesture and the sensual line

Materials
From page 1A

Jeff Boyer explained that
ofﬁcers checked the residence
and located an alleged one
pot reactionary vessel in the
home, a soda bottle that was
reportedly used for making
meth. Investigators said they
believe it had previously
been used to manufacture
methamphetamine, as it

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News NBC News
3 (N)
WTAP News NBC News
News at 6
(N)
Feel Grand
With Jane
Seymour
News at 6
(N)
Weekend
News (N)
Paid
Program
Newshour.
(N)

ABC World
News
Innovations
in Medicine
ABC World
News
10TV News
Sunday (N)
Paid
Program
Environment
Matters

13 News (N) Weekend
News (N)

6 PM

6:30

Dean Wright | Ohio Valley Publishing

Singer Phillip Armstrong, left, lends his talents to The Ohio Valley Symphony as
Maestro Ray Fowler conducts last season’s final show, honoring the memory of passed
Gallipolis writer, O.O. McIntyre.

Pandolﬁ possesses ﬁrst-rate
technical skills, an unerring
cunning legerdemain when it
comes to pedaling…etched with
calm and crystal clarity.”
Soprano Risa Rena Harman
will perform with the symphony
April 28. She has appeared
at the Kennedy Center with
the Washington Chorus as
well as the National Cathedral
Chorus Society and performed
solos at the Brooklyn Library

contained residue of chemicals
inside. Other chemicals
suspected of being used in the
production of meth were also
reportedly found on scene.
Also responding to the
scene were the Gallipolis
Fire Department and Gallia
County EMS, which is standard
protocol for an alleged drug
manufacturing situation.
The Gallia County Sheriffs
Ofﬁce responded to the
scene with meth technicians
which are ofﬁcers trained in

and Trinity Church. She
is credited with being the
winner of the American Jinny
Lind Competition and Italian
festivals Da Bach a Bartok
and Musica Nei Chiostri.
Harman is also the recipient of
awards from the Lee Schaenen
Foundation and Lott Lehmann
Foundation.
Dean Wright can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2103.

the safe removal of alleged
manufacturing equipment.
Gallia Children’s Services
was also contacted regarding
the juveniles in the residence.
According to Boyer, the incident
is still under investigation at this
time, no arrests have been made.
“This is a part of the
continued effort by law
enforcement to get rid of this
drug problem, it’s a constant
ﬁght,” said Boyer.
Reach Morgan McKinniss at 740-446-2342
ext 2108.

SUNDAY, JULY 23
7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Sunday Night With Megyn
Kelly (N)
Sunday Night With Megyn
Kelly (N)
America's Funniest Home
Videos
Antiques Roadshow
"Vintage Seattle"

Spartan: Ultimate Team
Challenge
Spartan: Ultimate Team
Challenge
Celebrity Family Feud (N)

America's Funniest Home
Videos
60 Minutes

Celebrity Family Feud (N)

Wild Alaska Live (L)

Big Brother (N)

Bob's
Bob's
Burgers
Burgers
Globe Trekker "Tough
Boats: The Arctic"

The
Family Guy
Simpsons
Wild Alaska Live (L)

60 Minutes

Big Brother (N)

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Spartan "Spartan Championship" The top six teams from
the season compete. (SF) (N)
Spartan "Spartan Championship" The top six teams from
the season compete. (SF) (N)
The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Steve Harvey's
Funderdome (N)
Remember Me Hannah is
Masterpiece Mystery!
"Grantchester" (N)
determined to find the
missing Tom Parfitt. (N)
The $100,000 Pyramid (N)
Steve Harvey's
Funderdome (N)
Candy Crush "I'm Freaking NCIS: Los Angeles
Out" (N)
"Payback"
American Grit "Role
Eyewitness News at 10
Reversal" (N)
p.m. (N)
Remember Me Hannah is
Masterpiece Mystery!
"Grantchester" (N)
determined to find the
missing Tom Parfitt. (N)
Candy Crush "I'm Freaking NCIS: Los Angeles
Out" (N)
"Payback"

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Blue Bloods
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Cursed"
Pirates
Xterra World
24 (ROOT) Postgame
25 (ESPN) (5:00) Soccer
Baseball Tonight
26 (ESPN2) Basketball The Tournament (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)

Blue Bloods
BlueBlood "Fresh Start"
Blue Bloods
Golf Life
Focused
Poker
Poker (N)
Poker Heartland Tour
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Chicago Cubs Site: Wrigley Field (L)
E:60
30 for 30
SportsC. "My Wish"
Escaping Dad (2017, Thriller) Jason Wiles, Grace Van Dien, Story of a Girl (2017, Drama) Jon Tenney, Kevin Bacon,
Double Mommy TV14
Sunny Mabrey. TVPG
Ryan Shane. TV14
(4:45)
The Devil Wears Prada (‘06, (:25)
Beauty and the Beast (‘91, Ani) Voices of
Just Go With It (‘11, Com) Adam
Com) Meryl Streep. TVPG
Richard White, Paige O'Hara. TVPG
Sandler. TV14
Bar Rescue "Sticky
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue "Punk as a
Bar Rescue
Bar Rescue "Mother Doesn't
Situation"
Drunk"
Know Best" (N)
H.Danger
H.Danger
Dude Per
Thunder
Nicky
School
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O: SVU "Babes"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Ballerina"
SVU "Blood Brothers"
SVU "Strange Beauty"
SVU "Funny Valentine"
(4:30)
Pacific Rim TVMA
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
CNN Newsroom
The Nineties "The One About TV"
The Nineties (N)
The History of Comedy
(5:00) Rush Hour TVPG
Get Hard (‘15, Com) Will Ferrell. TVMA
Claws "Escape" (N)
Claws "Escape"
(5:35)
(:40) Breaking Bad "No
(:45) Breaking Bad "Caballo (:50) Breaking Bad "I.F.T."
(:55) Breaking Bad "Green
Mas"
Sin Nombre"
Light"
BreakBad
Air Jaws:Fin of Fury
Great White-Killer (N)
Phelps vs. Shark (N)
(:05) Shark-Croc (N)
(:05) Hammerhead (N)
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me (N)
Monsters Inside Me (N)
I Prey "Wicked Bite" (N)
Snapped "Rebecca Fenton" Cold Justice "One of Our
The Jury Speaks "O.J.
The Jury Speaks "Michael Snapped "Rebecca Fenton"
Own"
Simpson"
Jackson" (N)
CSI "Happy Birthday"
CSI: Miami "Fallen"
CSI "Sudden Death"
CSI:Miami "See No Evil"
CSI: Miami "Manhunt"
Botched
Botched
Botched "Twin Terrors"
Botched (N)
Single "Fight Night" (N)
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Reba
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
The '90s "Shock and Awe" The '90s "Exposed"
The '90s "The Countdown" LA 92

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

Victory Lap (L)
Grudge
Cycling Tour de France Stage 21 Montgeron - Paris (Champs-Élysées)
MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Vancouver Whitecaps (L)
CONCACAF Soccer Gold Cup Semifinal (L)
(4:00) American Pickers
American Pickers "Beer
American Pickers "A Few American Pickers "Queen (:05) Pawn (N) /(:10) Pickers
"Picking the Northeast"
Factor"
Good Junk Men"
of Fortune"
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
The Real Housewives
Shahs of Sunset
(5:30)
This Christmas Delroy Lindo. TV14
A Madea Christmas (‘13, Com) Chad Michael Murray. TV14
(:35) Martin
Property Brothers
Property Brothers
Bargain
Bargain
Life (N)
Life (N)
Island (N)
Island (N)
(5:30)
Ghost Rider (2007, Action) Eva Mendes, Wes
Shooter (‘07, Act) Michael Peña, Mark Wahlberg. A sniper who was abandoned
Bentley, Nicolas Cage. TV14
behind enemy lines is called back to service. TVMA

6 PM
(4:15) Erin

400 (HBO) Brockovich

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Gallia PALS worked in
conjunction with two other PALS locations in food
collection for local charities.
PALS chose to work with God’s Hands at Work
(GHAW) with the food drive being between July
17 and 21. Gallia PALS held a community service
day with GHAW, a local nonproﬁt organization
covering ﬁve counties Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
Vinton Counties in Ohio as well as Mason County,
W.Va. GHAW is operated solely from community
donations which limits what is available on any
given day.
GHAW has offered assistance to ﬁre and ﬂood
victims, elders who have faced abuse, domestic
violence survivors, those affected by homelessness
and individuals who have been faced with job loss.
Gallia PALS looked into opportunities for
volunteering with GHAW as far as assisting in
cleaning and organizing donated inventory. Gallia
Pals feel that GHAW is a “super group of people
that reach out to help so many others.”

Rape

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

Gallia PALS assists
with food drive

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

(:35) Hacksaw Ridge (2016, Biography) Sam Worthington, Luke Bracey,

9 PM
Game of Thrones
"Stormborn" (N)

9:30

Andrew Garfield. Army medic Desmond Doss enlists in WWII, but refuses
TV14
to carry a weapon into battle. TVMA
(5:50)
Spider-Man (‘02, Act) Tobey Maguire. A
Aliens (‘86, Sci-Fi) Sigourney Weaver. A hive of
student becomes a spider-like superhero after he is bitten aliens attack an army unit that has been sent to find
by an unusual spider. TVPG
missing colonists. TVMA
(4:35) Bridge of Spies (‘15, I'm Dying Up Here "Girls
Twin Peaks "The Return:
Twin Peaks "The Return:
Are Funny, Too"
Part Ten" Laura is the one. Part Eleven" (N)
Thril) Tom Hanks. TV14

10 PM
Ballers (SP)
(N)

10:30

Insecure
"Hella Great"
(N)
(:20)
12 Rounds (‘09,
Act) Aidan Gillen, John
Cena. TV14
I'm Dying Up Here "My
Rifle, My Pony and Me" (N)

From page 1A

and is incarcerated in the Gallia County Jail for charges of Rape and Gross Sexual Imposition.
Sheriff Champlin and Chief Boyer state ”Investigators with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, the
Gallipolis Police Department and Ohio B.C.I. are still
investigating this matter and further details will be
available as this investigation continues. This investigation is ongoing and we are asking that if anyone
believes that their children may have had inappropriate contact with Scott Jaques they are urged to
contact the Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce at 740-4461221 or the Gallpolis Police Department at 740-4461313. Investigators have been in consultation with
Prosecuting Attorney Jason Holdren in regards to
the charges in this matter and we will continue to
consult with Prosecutor Holdren as we further our
investigation.”

Doctor
From page 4A

with that fact.
Now, no memorials but a welcome to the BBC’s
announcement that Whittaker will be the next Doctor Who, itself a bold step as her 12 predecessors in
the role have been all male. Whittaker, 35, is already
a veteran of United Kingdom ﬁlm and TV, where she
appeared in “Return to Cranford” and in the mystery
miniseries “Broadchurch,” co-starring in the latter
with David Tennant, who played the 10th Doctor
from 2005 to 2010. Whittaker will make her debut as
the quirky yet lovable sole survivor of the vanished
world of Gallifrey who routinely saves the Earth and
universe from destruction with this year’s BBC Christmas special.
The move came as “Doctor Who,” which originally
ran on the BBC from 1963 to 1989, and returned
to production in 2005, had come under criticism in
recent years. Some fans even called for its cancellation
due to dissatisfaction with storylines and Scottishborn actor Peter Capaldi’s interpretation of the part.
Whittaker’s portrayal will no doubt cause changes
in the Doctor Who saga, but hopefully for the better
(and with more coherent plots).
Carping about a woman taking on the role, carrying with it echoes of the hubbub surrounding Kate
Mulgrew’s casting as the captain on “Star Trek: Voyager” more than 20 years ago, was perhaps inevitable,
but is irrelevant. Just as the Doctor must regenerate
himself periodically into a younger version, “Doctor
Who” needs to do the same to retain its audience.
As I said before, this is silly season stuff, for which I
can only hope I provided our readers with some diversion on a weekend afternoon.
Kevin Kelly, who was affiliated with Ohio Valley Publishing for 21 years,
resides in Vinton, Ohio.

Celebrating over 25 Years in Meigs County

Millie’s
Restaurant

Craving a Home Cooked Meal?
How about ...
Come to Millie’s at
39239 Bradbury Road
Middleport, Ohio
740-992-7713
(Turn at caution light on Co. Rd. #5)
s $AILY 3PECIALS

s #ATERING !VAILABLE

s &amp;AMILY &amp;RIENDLY n
#OUNTRY !TMOSPHERE

s -ILLIE�S &amp;AMOUS
(OMEMADE 0IES

s (OME #OOKED -EALS &amp;RESH $AILY
Open 7 Days A Week 6am – 8pm

60727091

AEP (NYSE) - 69.98
Akzo Nobel - 29.65
Big Lots, Inc. - 48.19
Bob Evans Farms - 67.12
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 44.92
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 18.15
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 65.01
Collins (NYSE) - 109.31
DuPont (NYSE) - 84.54
US Bank (NYSE) - 52.12
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 25.91

�LOCAL

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 7A

Trump to visit Boy
Scouts Jamboree
in West Virginia

Empty Bed in the recovery house
By Morgan McKinniss
mmckinniss@aimmediamidwest.
com

Morgan McKinniss | OVP

Pictured far right, Tim White of Prestera spoke at length about various topics and encouraging
those present for the work they were doing in the Mason County Prevention Coalition. Also
pictured, Rita Darst, Mary Sue Kincaid, Georgianna Tillis and Tim Snow.

port group that is facilitated by Robin Jones. The
group is holding a new
class for those dealing
with a family member or
loved one who is dealing
with substance abuse.
The group will resume
meeting Sept. 7, beginning a seven-week video
and book series called
“Bafﬂed by Addiction.”
These meetings will take
place on Thursdays, at 6
p.m. at Main Street Baptist Church.
“I almost decided to
not do it at all. I had ﬁve
different phone calls in
a two-week period from
parents asking me for
help,” explained Jones.
She said to those
parents “I’ve got a lot
resources in my ofﬁce,
come by tomorrow and
we’ll see what we can do.
Not a single one of them
showed up.”
She said she was
encouraged by an editorial article in the local
paper about not being
ashamed of a loved one
dealing with substance
abuse. Because of that,
Jones decided to go ahead
with the class in September.
Some housekeeping
items were also discussed, including ﬁnancial reports. The state of

affairs for the ﬁnances
are in good order according to those reporting,
and a motion was made
to adjust the pay of the
Coalition’s main employee.
Also reported on were
the Synar Inspections, in
which stores are tested to
see whether they will sell
tobacco to minors. Eight
inspections took place
this past month, and all
eight stores passed the
test. While tobacco is
a signiﬁcantly less dangerous substance than
others, it’s is still considered a substance worth
monitoring as its use in
minors can lead to other
destructive habits later
on, according to Richard
Sargent, moderator for
the meeting.
Discussed by White
was training going on in
the schools. Prestera is
offering “Too Good for
Drugs” training in Mason
County Schools on Aug. 3
for employees and anyone
wanting to learn more
about substance abuse
and prevention. Also
being offered to administrators in the schools is
“Drug Trends” training,
in order to help them spot
drug-related behavior in
youth and how to respond
appropriately.

“Some kids today
are mixing MucinexD and Benadryl and
getting a cocaine
like effect,” he said.
“These are things
you can ﬁnd in your
home.”
These trainings will
alert school staff to
know what some of
these common substances being abused
are.
According to White,
funding for this years
Students Against
Destructive Decisions
(SADD) was not in
the state budget. He
reported that over the
weekend, they worked
to rectify this, and
will be holding SADD
this November. SADD
normally affects over
600 students.
The next Coalition
meeting will be held
at the Mason County
Courthouse Annex on
Aug. 15 at 4 p.m. and
the public is welcome
to attend.
Reach Morgan McKinniss at
740-446-2342 ext 2108.

GLEN JEAN, W.Va. (AP) — The Boy Scouts of
America says President Donald Trump will visit the
2017 National Scout Jamboree next week in West
Virginia.
On Monday, Trump will become the eighth U.S.
president to attend a Jamboree. More than 40,000
Scouts, their leaders and volunteers are at the 10-day
event.
Details of the visit were not immediately available.
The Boy Scouts says the event is not open to the public.
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited the
Jamboree on Friday.
Presidents dating back to George H.W. Bush
attended the Jamboree when it was previously held
at a military base at Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia. President
Barack Obama declined an invitation from the Scouts
to address the 2010 Jamboree in Virginia and the
2013 Jamboree when it was held for the ﬁrst time in
West Virginia.

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

Infant whose remains were
found was alive at birth
FRANKLIN, Ohio (AP) — A prosecutor has
said an infant whose remains were found buried in
southwestern Ohio was born alive.
Eighteen-year-old Brooke Skylar Richardson is
charged with reckless homicide in the baby’s death.
Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell said Friday that the charge was based upon evidence that
the infant was “born alive and was not a stillborn
baby.”
The remains were found July 14 near a home in
Carlisle, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of
Cincinnati.
Franklin Municipal Court judge on Friday continued the Carlisle woman’s $15,000 bond. A notguilty plea was entered for her.
Richardson’s attorney, Charles Rittgers, said outside court that Richardson is “a very good person.”
He declined to comment further on the case until
he can review it.
Fornshell says the investigation is continuing.

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60722762

POINT PLEASANT
— The Point Pleasant
Recovery Home, operated by Prestera Center,
now has an open bed,
and not for lack of a good
reason, as discussed at
this week’s meeting of the
Mason County Prevention Coalition.
“We have one bed open,
and that is because we
have another graduate,”
Rita Darst, director for
the recovery home told
those at the meeting.
This announcement
brought cheers from the
board. Darst explained
that participants at the
home do community service as part of their rehabilitation, and have been
working hard lately.
“They are very diligent
in their community service,” she said. “We have
an elderly neighbor that
can’t mow her own grass,
so they go over and mow
her grass for her.”
Darst discussed how
they took the initiative
and volunteered to help
their neighbor, despite
the time that could have
been used to work for
money.
“They are learning to
be a contributing member
of society,” she added.
“Whereas last year they
were sucking society dry.”
Tim White, Regional
Prevention Coordinator
for Prestera Center was
glad for this new opening.
“I love the fact that
we have a bed opening
because of graduation,
not because we had to ask
someone to leave,” White
said, alluding to the success of the program.
Also discussed were
other matters pertaining
to the Coalition, including the Loved Ones sup-

Locally owned &amp; operated

60729287

�8A Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

60727579

�Sports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

4 locals
earn
scholarships
INSIDE s 4B
Sunday, July 23, 2017 s Section B

Panels checked amid fears of fire
By Juliet Linderman, Jason
Dearen and Jeff Martin
Associated Press

Tony Dejak | AP

Fans walk into Cleveland Browns Stadium before the Minnesota Vikings play the
Browns in a Sept. 13, 2009, NFL football game, in Cleveland. In sales brochures, a
U.S. company boasted of the “stunning visual effect” its shimmering aluminum
panels created in the stadium, an Alaskan school and a 33-story hotel on
Baltimore’s waterfront.

In promotional brochures, a
U.S. company boasted of the
“stunning visual effect” its
shimmering aluminum panels
created in an NFL stadium,
an Alaskan high school and a
luxury hotel along Baltimore’s
Inner Harbor that “soars 33
stories into the air.”
Those same panels —
Reynobond composite material
with a polyethylene core —
also were used in the Grenfell
Tower apartment building in
London. British authorities say
they’re investigating whether
the panels helped spread the

blaze that ripped across the
building’s outer walls, killing
at least 80 people.
The panels, also called cladding, accentuate a building’s
appearance and also improve
energy efﬁciency. But they
are not recommended for use
in buildings above 40 feet
because they are combustible.
In the wake of last month’s ﬁre
at the 24-story, 220-foot-high
tower in London, Arconic Inc.
announced it would no longer
make the product available for
high-rise buildings.
Determining which buildings might be wrapped in the
material in the United States
is difﬁcult. City inspectors
and building owners might

not even know. In some cases,
building records have been
long discarded and neither the
owners, operators, contractors
nor architects involved could
or would conﬁrm whether the
cladding was used.
That makes it virtually
impossible to know whether
such structures as the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront
hotel — identiﬁed by Arconic’s
brochures as wrapped in
Reynobond PE — are actually clad in the same material
as Grenfell Tower, which was
engulfed in ﬂames in less than
ﬁve minutes.
At a Thursday news
See PANELS | 3B

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Mason County
senior sports passes
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mason County
Board of Education is offering sports passes for
senior citizens over 65. The pass is $30 and is
good for all home sporting events for the 201718 school year. Passes are available on Monday
through Friday at the Mason County Schools
Board of Education ofﬁce from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Football officials
training class
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The OhioKanawha Rivers Football Ofﬁcials Association is
planning to conduct a training class for individuals
who may be interested in becoming a registered
football ofﬁcial with the West Virginia Secondary
Schools Activities Commission.
Interested individuals must be at least 18 years
of age, have a good feel for the game of football,
and be willing to attend the training classes and
take the time to study and learn the rules of the
game.
Current plans have the classes being held on
Tuesdays and Thursdays for the next ﬁve weeks,
with the Tuesday classes being held in Point Pleasant and the Thursday classes being held in Ripley.
Anyone who might be interested can contact
Kevin Durst at 304-593-2544 or Grant Rhodes at
304-532-9405.

Rio Grande golf
open tryouts set

Paul Boggs photos | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant’s Zach Rediger (20) battles a Poca player for possession of the ball during last season’s season-opening boys soccer
match at Point Pleasant High School’s Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field.

2017 OVP soccer schedules released
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio
Grande will conduct open tryouts for its new
men’s and women’s golf programs at noon Wednesday, July 26, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis.
Contact head coach Keith Wilson at 740-3951775 or by e-mail at wilsonk@rio.edu for more
information.

GAHS youth
football camp
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
football staff will be conducting a youth football
camp for students entering grades 1-8 from 6-8
p.m. on Monday, July 24, through Wednesday, July
26, at Memorial Field. Camp participants will be
instructed by the Gallia Academy football staff and
players.
The cost of the camp is $35 per camper and
$25 for each additional family member. Students
can register the ﬁrst day of camp. All campers
will receive a t-shirt and compete for prizes. It is
requested to that campers bring cleats and a water
bottle.
Contact assistant coach Cody Call at 740-7941951 or email cody_call23@yahoo.com for more
information or to pre-register.

Meigs youth
football camp
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The 2017 Meigs
youth football camp will be held for kids in grades
K-8 from 10 a.m. until noon on Saturday, Aug. 12,
at Farmers Bank Stadium on the campus of Meigs
High School.
The camp will focus on attitude, effort, hard
work, teamwork, fundamentals, technique, individual drills and group drills. The camp instruction
will be provided by the Marauder coaching staff
and players.
Cost of the camp is $20 and proceeds will
See BRIEFS | 2B

The Gallia Academy
Blue Devils do intend
to build upon a historic
season.
The Point Pleasant
Black Knights and Lady
Knights simply aim to
improve.
And Ohio Valley Christian School simply wants
to ﬁeld a varsity club.
Those are the backdrops for the Ohio Valley
Publishing area’s four
soccer squads, as the
2017 season schedules
have been ofﬁcially
released.
For the Blue Devils
— despite the loss of 13
players from last season’s
team due to graduation,
transfer or the one-year
foreign exchange program — they do have a
target upon their backs
this year.
Gallia Academy is also
under a new head coach
in Cory Camden, but is
coming off its most successful season in school
history — albeit overall
brief.
After several struggling seasons, the Blue
Devils — under former
coach Richard Isberner — captured the
program’s only sectional
championships in the
past two years.
Last season, Gallia
Academy also established a single-season
school record for victories with 11 — and

earned a share of the
Ohio Valley Conference
championship with South
Point.
It was the Blue Devils’
only league championship in the sport — its
initial season in the OVC
after long being a member of the now defunct
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League.
The OVC, in fact, was
in its ﬁrst ofﬁcial season
as a soccer conference
— with Gallia Academy,
South Point, Chesapeake,
Fairland and Rock Hill all
having teams.
The Blue Devils’ double round-robin rotation
with the remainder of the
OVC includes Fairland
(Aug. 22 and Sept. 21),
Rock Hill (Aug. 31 and
Oct. 10), South Point
(Sept. 7 and Oct. 3) and
Chesapeake (Sept. 12
and Sept. 28).
Both South Point and
Gallia Academy amassed
7-1 league records a year
ago —with both winning on the other’s home
pitch.
The Blue Devils also
have home-and-home
bouts against OVCS
(Sept. 9 and Sept. 30)
and Point Pleasant (Aug.
29 and Sept. 14), as the
OVCS at Gallia Academy
match on Saturday, Sept.
30 is for the annual Holzer Cup.
Gallia Academy also
has Alexander on the
docket twice, and travels
to Jackson on Tuesday,
Sept. 5 and to Circleville

Gallia Academy’s Justin Day (27) tracks down a loose ball during
the Blue Devils’ soccer match against Fairland last season.

on Saturday, Sept. 23.
For those into counting, that’s eight league
and eight non-league
matches, as the Ohio
High School Athletic
Association allows 16
total tilts in the regular
season.
Meanwhile, the West
Virginia Secondary
Schools Activities Commission permits 20 total
matches, as the Black
Knights open their
campaign on Saturday,
Aug. 19 against visiting
Ravenswood.
Speaking of Ravenswood, that’s whom
Point Pleasant pitched a
4-0 shutout against last
season — capturing its
ﬁrst sectional tourna-

ment triumph in ﬁve
years.
The young Black
Knights of a year ago
notched a 9-12-1 overall
record.
This year, the only
home-and-home games
are against the Blue Devils (Aug. 29 and Sept.
14) — and against Shady
Spring on Saturday, Sept.
16 and Tuesday, Oct. 10.
The match at Shady
Spring on Oct. 10 will
conclude the Black
Knights’ regular season.
There are also two
matches that are initially
listed as “TBA” — at
home on Tuesday, Sept.
5 and away on Tuesday,
See SOCCER | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Coaches, players continue adjusting to lighter camps
By Barry Wilner

to a degree.
“I think it depends on who you are,”
the veteran of three NFL seasons said.
“If you are a guy who is really young
Hey, hold on. You can’t do that. Not
and a free agent and doesn’t have a
anymore.
lot of reps, it is really tough for you
When 10 years’ worth of labor peace
came to the NFL in 2011, so did a mas- because it really limits your reps and
sive change in the rules governing prac- your experience.
“If you’re an older guy, a vet like
tice — during the season, the offseason
and, most especially, in training camps. Alex Mack and Andy Levitre who have
played a lot of years and you can just
Lengthy double sessions, the dreaded
by players two-a-days, became a shorter come out here and get these nice, crisp,
hard and fast reps, I think it’s very bensession and a walkthrough.
eﬁcial.
Hitting anywhere outside the games
“That’d be tough as a rookie free
themselves was minimized. Days off
agent to come in here and only get a
during camp were required. Perhaps
as worrisome to coaching staffs, not to few snaps to show yourself.”
Where coaches would run and rerun
mention players on the roster bubble,
plays that didn’t look right in the prewas a signiﬁcant decrease in teaching
2011 training camps, they now must
time.
turn to ﬁlm study, videos, photos
Unless the collective bargaining
and other teaching methods in many
agreement is opened before it expires
after the 2020 season, none of that will cases. Some of the great strategists of
change. And the complaints will remain. the game, from Pete Carroll in Seattle
to John Harbaugh in Baltimore, have
“Some of the things, that you can’t
become educators at OTAs, minicamps
put a player in front of a player in the
offseason even with a pad on,” Cowboys and during the summer.
Having veterans who have been on
linebackers coach Matt Eberﬂus said
the same team for a while is a major
of one major problem. “That to me is
restrictive because you have to use man- boost to the coaches. Those players can
help the youngsters learn more quickly,
agers and those types of things. The
from the basics to the nuances.
rules are the rules and we abide by the
Of course, with free agency and monrules. But I think that at times can be a
ster contracts such an overriding factor
little bit restrictive.”
in today’s NFL, that stability is exceedSo does Falcons guard Ben Garland,

Associated Press

Soccer
From page 1B

Oct. 3.
Other home affairs include
Teays Valley Christian (Aug.
22), Cabell-Midland (Aug. 26),
Huntington St. Joseph (Sept.
12), Warren (Sept. 23), St.
Marys (Sept. 27), Parkersburg
South (Sept. 28) and Williamstown (Sept. 30).
Other road shows feature
Lincoln County (Aug. 28),
Nitro (Aug. 30), Cross Lanes
Christian (Sept. 11), Ohio
Valley Christian (Sept. 19),
Huntington (Sept. 21) and Sissonville (Oct. 7).
The Lady Knights are scheduled to open their season on
Saturday, Aug. 12 —traveling
to Cross Lanes Christian before
the ﬁrst of two tilts with South
Harrison (Aug. 18 and Sept.
2).
Point Pleasant plays two
matches as well with Lincoln
County (Aug. 29 and Oct. 9),
Williamstown (Sept. 7 and Oct.
3) and Shady Spring (Sept. 9
and Sept. 18).
After the opening South Harrison match, the Lady Knights’
next three are all at home —
against Saint Albans (Aug. 19),
Hurricane (Aug. 24) and Poca
(Aug. 26).
Other home duels include
Cabell-Midland (Sept. 13), Ripley (Sept. 16), Warren (Sept.
23), Grafton (Sept. 30) and
Spring Valley (Oct. 14) — with

the Spring Valley match set to
conclude the regular season.
The Lady Knights’ other two
road dates are at Nitro on Tuesday, Sept. 5 and at Huntington
St. Joseph on Thursday, Sept.
14.
For OVCS, unfortunately the
Defenders have struggled with
numbers recently — and are
doing so again this summer.
Still, the fall schedule is
set — with 16 matches on the
docket like the Blue Devils.
The only single matches for
the season include Belpre (Aug.
21), Wood County Christian
(Aug. 25), Ironton St. Joseph
(Sept. 7) and Point Pleasant
(Sept. 19) — as the home contest against Belpre kicks off the
year.
The Defenders do have
home-and-home matches
against Pike Christian (Aug. 29
and Sept. 12), Grace Christian
(Sept. 1 and Sept. 26), Gallia
Academy (Sept. 9 and Sept.
30), Calvary Christian (Sept.
15 and Oct. 10), Teays Valley
Christian (Sept. 22 and Oct.
7) and Rock Hill (Sept. 28 and
Oct. 12).
Point Pleasant is the only
WVSSAC school on the slate,
while OHSAA schools include
Gallia Academy, Rock Hill, Belpre and Ironton St. Joseph.
The complete schedules
for the four OVP area soccer
squads can be found inside
today’s sports section.

ingly difﬁcult to maintain. Plus, assistant coaches tend to move around.
“It is huge,” Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo explains about
the importance of continuity. “I mean
look, there have been times where I
have had this position and the staff has
changed one or two spots, and you do
spend some time teaching the coaches
exactly what you want if they haven’t
been in your system. We try to do a
very good job of it, the communication
to me to the coaches, to the players, has
to be exact or else it doesn’t come out
right.
“I mean every once in a while I say
to the guys, ‘Look, we are in graduate school now. We are there, so we
are going to put in something a little
bit more complex.’ And that was the
graduate thing last year. We built on it
and I think it helped the guys to do it
that way rather than to throw it all on
them.”
Is everyone in graduate school?
“Well,” Spags adds, “we are only in
graduate school in certain things. You
have the freshmen and the sophomores
(too).”
Lots of those. After all, clubs are
allowed 90 players in training camp. It
makes for some very crowded situations
at most positions. Playing your way
onto a roster is more difﬁcult than ever.
Unproven players, particularly the

2017 OVP SOCCER SCHEDULES
Point Pleasant Boys Soccer
August
19 vs. Ravenswood, 11 a.m.
22 vs. Teays Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
26 vs. Cabell-Midland, 1 p.m.
28 at Lincoln County, 6 p.m.
29 at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
30 at Nitro, 5:30 p.m.
September
5 vs. TBA, 7 p.m.
11 at Cross Lanes Christian, 7 p.m.
12 vs. Huntington St. Joseph, 7 p.m.
14 vs. Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
16 vs. Shady Spring, 1 p.m.
19 at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
21 at Huntington, 5:30 p.m.
23 vs. Warren, 1 p.m.
27 vs. St. Marys, 7 p.m.
28 vs. Parkersburg South, 7 p.m.
30 vs. Williamstown, noon
October
3 at TBA, 6 p.m.
7 at Sissonville, noon
10 at Shady Spring, 6:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant Girls Soccer
August
12 at Cross Lanes Christian, 5 p.m.
18 at South Harrison, 6 p.m.
19 vs. Saint Albans, 1 p.m.
24 vs. Hurricane, 7 p.m.
26 vs. Poca, 11 a.m.
29 at Lincoln County, 6 p.m.
September
2 vs. South Harrison, noon
5 at Nitro, 6 p.m.
7 at Williamstown, 6 p.m.
9 vs. Shady Spring, 1 p.m.
13 vs. Cabell-Midland, 7 p.m.
14 at Huntington St. Joe, 5:30 p.m.
16 vs. Ripley, 10 a.m.
18 at Shady Spring, 7 p.m.
23 vs. Warren, 11 a.m.
30 vs. Grafton, 2 p.m.

undrafted and the castoffs from other
teams, must excel everywhere and all
the time.
“I think we do a good job here of
taking advantage of our individual
work, taking advantage of what we do
at practice, making sure we’re not out
there just jogging,” said Broncos tight
end Virgil Green, a seventh-round pick
in 2011 who is entering his seventh pro
season.
Green could be the inspiration for the
overlooked, a guy who not only made
the show, but stuck around — despite
the limitations on proving himself.
“A lot of times as players we need
some mental learning. That second
walkthrough, I know it helped me my
ﬁrst few years … mentally and knowing
my assignments. Everything’s being
evaluated, but it’s a time where you can
really stop and see what’s going on, see
the older guys do things.
“Because when you go out there,
especially as a younger player, they’re
probably going to run the same plays
that the older guys ran. So, it’s a time to
really sit, look and listen to the coach
and hear what the coach says to the
older players if there’s a correction that
needs to be made. So I think that’s how
we make up for not doing the extra
practices; you take that extra time to
really gravitate to what we need to
learn.”

October
3 vs. Williamstown, 7 p.m.
9 vs. Lincoln County, 7 p.m.
14 vs. Spring Valley, 11 a.m.
Gallia Academy Soccer
August
22 at Fairland, 7 p.m.
29 vs. Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
31 vs. Rock Hill, 7 p.m.
September
5 at Jackson, 7 p.m.
7 vs. South Point, 7 p.m.
9 at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
12 at Chesapeake, 7 p.m.
14 at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
16 vs. Alexander, TBA
21 vs. Fairland, 7 p.m.
23 at Circleville, TBA
28 vs. Chesapeake, 7 p.m.
30 vs. Ohio Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
October
3 at South Point, 7 p.m.
5 at Alexander, 7 p.m.
10 at Rock Hill, 7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian Soccer
August
21 vs. Belpre, 6 p.m.
25 at Wood County Christian, 5 p.m.
29 vs. Pike County Christian, 6 p.m.
September
1 at Grace Christian, 5:30 p.m.
7 vs. Ironton St. Joseph, 5:30 p.m.
9 vs. Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
12 at Pike County Christian, 5:30 p.m.
15 vs. Calvary Christian, 6 p.m.
19 vs. Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
22 vs. Teays Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
26 vs. Grace Christian, 5:30 p.m.
28 vs. Rock Hill, 5 p.m.
30 at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
October
7 at Teays Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
10 at Calvary Christian, 5 p.m.
12 at Rock Hill, 5 p.m.

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

Briefs

limit on the number of tickets which
may be purchased.

Your participation supports all of the
athletic programs in Gallipolis City
Schools.
The cost is $25 for all home games.
From page 1B
Reserve parking for the 2017 Gallia
Academy High School football season
beneﬁt the Meigs football team. If
will go on sale starting on Tuesday,
registered by Tuesday, Aug. 1, you
Aug. 8, for the Gallia Academy Athletic
will be guaranteed a camp t-shirt.
POMEROY, Ohio — The Eastern
Registration will also be held at 9 a.m.
boys and girls golf teams will host a golf Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity
on the day of the camp.
scramble on Saturday, Aug. 5, at the
football players, Gallia Academy MarchFor more information, call 740-645Meigs County Golf Course.
ing Band members, and varsity and
4479 or 740-416-5443.
The 18-hole tournament will be a
junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
bring your own team, four-man, bestto purchase reserve parking on Wednesball scramble. The cost is $40 per
day, Aug. 9.
golfer, with additional fees to buy into
Reserve parking for the general public
the skins game or buy mulligans.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. with will be available on Thursday, Aug. 10.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Reserve seats a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Prizes will be
given for skills contests, including closfor the 2017 Gallia Academy High
est to the pin and longest drive, and
School football season will go on sale
starting on Tuesday, Aug. 8, for the Gal- lunch will be provided. All proceeds will
go directly to the Eastern High School
lia Academy Athletic Super Boosters.
boys and girls golf teams.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity
RACINE, Ohio — The 6th Annual
The tournament is limited to 10
football players, Gallia Academy MarchJohn Gray Memorial 5k will be held on
teams. To register early, contact EHS
ing Band members, and varsity and
Friday, Aug. 11, at Star Mill Park.
golf coach Jeremy Hill at 954-254-2562.
junior varsity cheerleaders will be able
The race will begin at approximately
to purchase reserve seats on Wednes9 p.m. and will go through the town of
day, Aug. 9.
Racine.
Reserve seats for the general public
Race registration is $20 with prowill be available on Thursday, Aug. 10.
ceeds going to the John Gray Memorial
The price is $35 per ticket.
Scholarship Fund.
Tickets may be purchased in the AthYou may register online at www.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
letic Director’s ofﬁce at Gallia Academy Academy High School Athletic Depart- johngraymemorial5k.com and, to
High School between the hours of 8
ment is offering reserved parking spac- guarantee an event t-shirt, please prea.m. and 3 p.m.
register by July 24.
es for varsity football games only.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super BoostThere will also be day of registration
These reserved spots are located on
ers will be limited to 10 tickets purthe lower lot of the softball ﬁeld to pro- at the park until 8:30 p.m.
chased on the ﬁrst day of sales.
Contact Kody Wolfe at 740-416-4310
vide an environment to tailgate prior to
After the ﬁrst day, there will be no
or visit the web at www.johngraymemothe game.

Eastern golf
scramble

Gallia Academy
football reserve seats

rial5k.com for more information.

MYL baseball/
softball signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — The Middleport Youth League will be having signups for boys and girls ages 7-16 that are
interested in participating in the 2017
Fall baseball and softball leagues.
Signups will be held from 11 a.m.
until 3 p.m. at the Middleport Ball
Fields on Saturday, July 22.
Signups are also available for either
teams or individuals.
For more information, contact Dave
at 740-590-0438.

6th Annual John Gray
Gallia Academy
Memorial 5K
Athletics 5K run

Gallia Academy
football parking

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallia
Academy Athletics ‘Finish on the 50’ 5K
run is set for Saturday, Aug. 19.
Registration is set for 5 p.m. at
Memorial Field in Gallipolis, with the
race set to begin at 6:30 p.m.
It will conclude on the 50-yard line at
Memorial Field.
Cost is $25 for pre-registration and
$30 after pre-registration.
Age groups will include ages 9-andunder, 10-to-19, 20-to-29, 30-to-39,
40-to-49 and ages 50-and-over.
Go online to www.tristateracer.com
for registration.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 3B

Kyrie Irving asks Cavs to trade him
CLEVELAND (AP) — Kyrie
Irving wants the stage for himself.
Cleveland’s All-Star point
guard has asked the Cavaliers
to trade him, two people familiar with the situation told the
Associated Press on Friday.
Irving made the request last
week to owner Dan Gilbert,
said the people who spoke on
condition of anonymity because
the team is not commenting on
the star’s demands.
Irving’s appeal was ﬁrst
reported by ESPN.
A four-time All-Star, Irving
has spent six seasons with the
Cavs, who selected him with
the No. 1 overall pick in 2011.
The 25-year-old has overcome
injury issues and blossomed
into one of the league’s elite
point guards and biggest stars.
And now that he’s ﬁnally
established himself playing
alongside LeBron James, Irving
wants out.
He’s under contract for two
more seasons with Cleveland
(he has a player option in

2020), but the Cavs could be
inclined to move Irving now
and begin another rebuild
around James, who can opt out
of his contract next summer
and leave Ohio for the second
time.
The bombshell about Irving
adds to what has been a tumultuous offseason for the Cavs
following their loss in ﬁve
games to Golden State in the
NBA Finals. General manager
David Grifﬁn parted ways with
the club after failing to work
out a new contract with Gilbert
and while other teams have
been active in signing free
agents the Cavs have been limited in their ability to revamp
their roster because of salarycap issues.
Also, the Cavs courted
former NBA star Chauncey
Billups but couldn’t get him to
join their front ofﬁce.
Irving’s request to be dealt
perhaps sheds some light on
the Cavs’ recent pursuit of former league MVP Derrick Rose.
The team has talked to Rose

about a one-year contract in
recent days, a source familiar
with the negotiations told the
AP on Thursday.
Rose was thought to be a
potential backup, but now it
appears he could be needed to
start if the Cavs and Irving are
indeed breaking up.
There is certain to be major
interest in Irving, who averaged a career-high 25.2 points
and 5.8 assists in 72 games
last season. Irving averaged
25.9 points in his third straight
Finals, but he and James
couldn’t do enough to match
the Warriors, who took back
their crown after adding Kevin
Durant last summer.
A potential trade partner for
the Cavs could be the New York
Knicks, who have been trying
to unload Carmelo Anthony,
a close friend of James. Irving
is from New Jersey and would
welcome a chance to go back
to his home area. However, the
Knicks may not have enough
assets to intrigue the Cavs and
there is a sizeable imbalance in

contracts, so the Cavs would
have to include other players in
any potential deal.
It’s strange that Irving would
choose now to ask for a trade.
After all, he has ﬁnally developed into a bona ﬁde superstar
following three tough seasons
following James’ departure to
Miami in 2010. Irving had no
help during those years and the
Cavs were in a state of disarray before James came back in
2014.
In his second year alongside
James, Irving made the biggest
shot in franchise history, draining a 3-pointer in the closing
moments of Game 7 to give the
Cavs their ﬁrst title — and the
ﬁrst for any Cleveland pro team
since 1964.
By all accounts, Irving and
James got along but there
were times when they didn’t
quite see eye to eye.
James was demanding of his
younger teammates but he was
always adamant that Irving
would grow into a superior
player. Following Cleveland’s

Game 5 loss in the Finals,
Irving credited James for leading the way.
“He’s freaking awesome,”
Irving said. “As a student of
the game, it would be a disservice to myself if I didn’t try
to learn as much as possible
while I’m playing with this
guy. Every single day demanding more out of himself,
demanding more out of us, the
true testament of a consummate professional. And understanding how things work, not
only just in the game but off
the court, things that matter,
just taking care of your body,
understanding the magnitude
of what the goal is at hand and
what steps it takes in order to
achieve that goal.”
Moments earlier, James had
walked off the court at Oracle
Arena where Irving was waiting
They made their signature
handshake and James told
Irving, “We’ll be back.”
Now, they may be headed in
opposite directions.

Browns coach launches foundation to combat human trafficking
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Cleveland
Browns coach Hue Jackson is tackling
a disturbing problem that’s not always
visible.
Jackson and his wife, Michelle, have
launched a foundation to support organizations that combat human trafﬁcking and aid its victims, women who
are exploited, abused and scarred for
life.
“We’re all in,” Jackson said during a
kickoff event at the team’s headquarters. “We want to make a difference in
this area.”
On Thursday, The Hue Jackson

Panels

Foundation announced a partnership
with the Salvation Army of Greater
Cleveland to provide secure housing
for women who have been victimized
by human trafﬁcking — modern-day
slavery that involves the use of force,
fraud or coercion to obtain some type
of labor or commercial sex act.
Jackson’s afﬁliation will raise awareness to an issue that often goes unreported and undetected.
“I’m not afraid of a challenge,” said
Jackson, who went just 1-15 during his
ﬁrst season with the Browns. “We’ve
seen the impact of what this creature

rial used on 75 buildings
failed combustibility
tests.
Solomon said the use
From page 1B
of Reynobond PE on the
conference that followed Baltimore Marriott and
Browns stadium in particthe publication of The
ular should be reviewed
Associated Press’ story
on the use of the cladding because of their height.
On buildings that are
material in the U.S.,
Cleveland’s chief building “higher than the ﬁreﬁghters’ ladders,” incombusofﬁcial conﬁrmed that
panels on the city-owned tible material must be
used, Arconic advises in
Cleveland Browns’
a ﬁre-safety pamphlet. It
football stadium are
warns that choosing the
“similar if not identical”
right product is crucial
to those used on the
“in order to avoid the ﬁre
doomed London tower,
to spread to the whole
but said they pose “zero
building” and that ﬁre
risk to the fans.”
can spread extremely
Thomas Vanover said
the panels were installed rapidly “especially when
it comes to facades and
differently and the
roofs.”
venue’s overall cladding
No one has declared
includes many materials.
the U.S. buildings unsafe,
“From these panels
nor has the U.S. governand this installation,
ment initiated any of
there’s no risk of anythe widespread testing
thing remotely close to
of aluminum paneling
the Grenfell tragedy,”
that British authorities
Vanover said.
ordered after the London
The International
disaster.
Building Code adopted
Arconic declined to
by the U.S. requires more
give further details about
stringent ﬁre testing of
the buildings in the bromaterials used on the
chure, and hasn’t said
sides of buildings taller
how many U.S. buildings
than 40 feet. However,
contain the product.
states and cities can set
The company is coopertheir own rules, said
ating with building ownKeith Nelson, senior
ers and others involved,
project architect with
Intertek, a worldwide ﬁre such as the Baltimore
hotel, spokesman Steven
testing organization.
Lipin said. The product
The National Fire
is “certiﬁed for use in the
Protection Association
UK and US” and the comconducts ﬁre resistance
tests on building materi- pany “will continue to be
als to determine whether here to answer any questions about its products,”
they comply with the
Lipin said in a statement
international code. Robert Solomon, an engineer to the AP.
He did not indicate
with the association, told
whether Arconic is conthe AP that the group’s
tacting all the contracrecords show the U.S.tors, builders and others
made Arconic panels
that used the material.
never underwent the
Baltimore City Housing
tests. For that reason, he
Authority spokeswoman
said, the group considered the products unsafe Tania Baker said the city
for use in buildings high- doesn’t keep detailed
records of building mateer than 40 feet.
Tests conducted by the rials but added that, if
British government after used, the material would
have been compliant with
the Grenfell ﬁre found
samples of cladding mate- local ﬁre codes because

the Marriott is equipped
with sprinklers. Harbor
East, a development company that owns the building, referred all inquiries
to the Marriott, whose
spokesman Jeff Flaherty
said results of testing on
the hotel’s exterior panels
could be received as early
as this week.
“We can tell you that
the hotel passed building
inspection at the time it
opened in 2001 and that
the hotel’s ﬁre and life
safety systems meet local
code requirements,” he
said.
The Arconic website
stated that the Browns
stadium used 100,000
square feet of the bright
silver aluminum composite material in its
exterior.
One option for building
owners who are unsure of
the product’s use would
be to remove a section
of paneling and have
it tested at a lab, said
Vickie Lovell, president
of InterCode Inc., a consulting ﬁrm on building
codes and standards.
Building records kept
by cities can include
construction blueprints,
inspection logs and ﬁre
safety plans. But local
agencies don’t require
that an applicant seeking
a building permit submit a list of materials or
speciﬁc products. In the
case of the Marriott, Baltimore’s housing department holds the building’s
original plans, which
don’t say what cladding
was used.
The architect of record
would have known what
materials were used during construction. But
Peter Fillat, an architect
who worked on the 2001
Marriott construction,
said he destroyed his
records pertaining to
the property six years
ago because his contract
requires him to keep ﬁles
for only 10 years.
Construction and

does to people.”
The 12-bed recovery facility, named
in honor of Jackson, will offer a safe
environment for victims to heal and
focus on treatment. Ofﬁcials say there
are less than 100 beds available nationwide for the estimated 100,000 identiﬁed trafﬁcking victims annually.
Jackson said the foundation believes
safe housing is essential to survivors
in order to break trafﬁcking’s circle.
Jackson, who has three daughters, was
joined at the foundation’s kickoff by
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine.
“Human trafﬁckers target the most

contracting ﬁrms that
worked on the Marriott
also said they no longer
had those records.
For decades, the U.S.
has required sprinkler
systems to be installed in
new high-rise buildings,
as well as multiple ways
for people to exit in the
case of a ﬁre. Grenfell
Tower had none of those
safeguards.
But ﬁre safety experts
caution that indoor sprinklers can’t stop a ﬁre that
ignites on a building’s
exterior and spreads
across the coating that
encases it.
The danger is that “the
whole outside of your
building could be on ﬁre,
yet the internal sprinkler heads may never
activate!,” Oklahoma ﬁre
safety consultant John
Valiulis wrote in a 2015
research report on the
ﬂammability of exterior
walls. He pointed to highrise ﬁres that began on
building exteriors where
indoor sprinklers were
completely ineffective at
stopping ﬂames from racing up the outside walls.
Some of the buildings
Arconic lists as using
Reynobond PE:
Anchorage, Alaska:
South Anchorage High
School used 20,000
square feet of Reynobond
Aluminum Cladding
Material on the exterior
of its science classrooms,
according to Arconic’s
website. Anchorage
Public Schools Superintendent Deena Bishop
conﬁrmed to the AP that
the material was used
at the high school. “We
are looking at options,
studying it more, understanding what the risks
are,” Bishop said, adding
that the cladding was
installed according to
code. “Presently, we’re
ﬁnding that the use of it
on single-story buildings
is appropriate according
to the manufacturer.”
Dallas: Arconic’s web-

vulnerable members of our society
who need the most help and use them
for their own proﬁt and advancement,” said DeWine, who has formed
a commission to ﬁght human trafﬁcking. “The work that the Hue Jackson
Foundation will do to help combat this
will be invaluable in providing awareness and prevention to help protect
our children and loved ones from falling victim to this heinous crime.”
According to the National Human
Trafﬁcking Resource Center, human
trafﬁcking cases in Ohio are some of
the highest in the nation.

site says Reynobond PE
was used in Dallas-Fort
Worth International Airport’s 2-million-squarefoot Terminal D facility,
which opened in 2005.
Reynobond PE formed
the walls of the terminal’s
shopping and dining
areas, the company’s
project report states. The
panels were installed in
parts of the interior and
exterior of the terminal,
airport spokesman Casey
Norton said. “We’ve
been aware that we have
these panels for a long
time and it’s part of the
equation that we use
every time we inspect the
airport for ﬁre safety,” he
said.
Detroit: Arconic’s website reported 26,000 feet
of the paneling was used
in six Early Childhood
Development Centers for
the Detroit Public School
System. Detroit Fire
Marshal Gregory Turner
said no speciﬁc buildings
had been identiﬁed using

the material applied to
Grenfell Tower but that
the city was continuing
to investigate.
Denver: The top two
ﬂoors of 1899 Wynkoop,
a nine-story ofﬁce and
retail building in downtown Denver’s historic
warehouse district, were
clad with the product to
lighten its appearance
and keep it from dominating the surrounding
warehouses, Arconic
advertises in promotional
materials. About 13,000
square feet of Reynobond PE was used, the
company said. Ofﬁcials
in Denver’s community
planning and development ofﬁce have been
looking into the matter,
but haven’t been able
to locate the original
building plans. “Our
expectation is that it was
purged as part of our
normal records retention
process,” spokeswoman
Andrea Burns said in an
email.

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4B Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

4 locals earn SEDAB scholarships
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Recent Gallia Academy graduate Miles Cornwell is pictured with
OHSAA Commissioner Dr. Dan Ross, left, and SEDAB member
Courtesy photo Wayne Horsley in receiving a $500 scholarship on behalf of the
Recent Eastern graduate Jett Facemyer is pictured with OHSAA Commissioner Dr. Dan Ross, left, and SEDAB.
SEDAB member Stephanie Evans in receiving a $500 scholarship on behalf of the SEDAB.
Recent Eastern
graduate Laura
Pullins is
pictured with
SEDAB member
Rick Barrett,
left, and OHSAA
Commissioner
Dr. Dan Ross
in receiving
a $1,000
scholarship on
behalf of the
SEDAB.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Courtesy photo

High School and the
same from Eastern High
School.
�J^[�I;:78�_i�
pleased to announce
Laura Pullins of Eastern
High School has been
awarded the OHSAA
$1,000 Scholarship in
the amount of $1,000.
Laura plans to enroll at

For the best local

Otterbein University in
the fall and study Biology.
�J^[�I;:78�_i�
pleased to announce Jett
Facemyer of Eastern
High School has been
awarded the SEDAB
$500 Scholarship in the
amount of $500. Jett
plans to enroll at Otter-

bein University in the fall
and study Pre-Dentistry.
�J^[�I;:78�_i�
pleased to announce
Miles Cornwell of Gallia
Academy High School
has been awarded the
SEDAB $500 Scholarship
in the amount of $500.
Miles plans to enroll at
Otterbein University in

the fall and study Biology.
In conjunction with
the OHSAA, the SEDAB
recently announced the
2017 Scholar-Athlete
Scholarship awards at
their annual ScholarAthlete Banquet held
on June 22 in the Apple
City.

Cavs to promote Altman to full-time GM

news coverage, visit
mydailytribune.com

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CLEVELAND (AP) — Koby Altman’s next move with the Cavaliers
will be personal.
Altman, who has been serving
as Cleveland’s interim general
manager during a strange summer of activity, will be named
the team’s full-time GM, a person
familiar with the decision told
The Associated Press on Friday.
The deal is being ﬁnalized and
Altman’s promotion is expected to
be announced in “the next several
days,” said the person who spoke
on condition of anonymity because
of the sensitive nature of the talks.
Altman has been with the Cavs
since 2012 and had worked as
David Grifﬁn’s assistant since
after the 2016 NBA championship
season. Grifﬁn left the club last
month after he couldn’t work out a

contract extension with owner Dan
Gilbert, who has a track record for
discarding GMs.
Altman will be his ﬁfth since
2005 and the 34-year-old impressed
his boss by navigating the Cavs
through some rough waters this
offseason. With little ﬂexibility
to sign players because the Cavs
are so far over the salary cap, Altman re-signed sharpshooter Kyle
Korver and secured deals for free
agent forward Jeff Green and Jose
Calderon. Altman also signed Turkish forward Cedi Osman, who was
drafted by the Cavs in 2015.
The Cavs are also in contract
talks with former MVP Derrick
Rose, who played for the New York
Knicks last season and is looking
for another fresh start.
Gilbert, who tried unsuccess-

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fully to add former NBA All-Star
Chauncey Billups to his front
ofﬁce after Grifﬁn left, has been
impressed with the job Altman and
others have done to keep the Cavs
competitive.
Altman now has to deal with a
surprising issue, as All-Star guard
Kyrie Irving has asked the club to
trade him, a person familiar with
the request told the AP. Irving
informed Gilbert last week that he
wants to play elsewhere and his
demand has put Altman in an interesting spot early in his tenure.
There will surely be strong interest in Irving, one of the league’s
premier point guards. But because
he’s under contract for two more
seasons, the Cavs don’t have to
rush into any deals and Irving may
not be going anywhere soon.

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Marietta College in the
fall and study Sports
Management.
�J^[�I;:78�_i�
pleased to announce
Mary Watts of Gallia
Academy High School
has been awarded the
SEDAB $500 Scholarship
in the amount of $500.
Mary plans to enroll at

Recent Gallia Academy graduate Mary Watts won both the 1,600m
and 3,200m events during the 2017 Ohio Valley Conference
championship track and field meet held at GAHS in Centenary,
Ohio.

60727525

JACKSON, Ohio —
The Ohio High School
Athletic Association annually provides scholarships
for outstanding studentathletes from its member
schools. Each member
high school may submit
one senior male and one
senior female candidate
for scholarship consideration.
Each member high
school may also submit
one senior female minority and one senior male
minority candidate. The
scholarships are awarded
to student-athletes who
have excelled in the
classroom as well as high
school sports.
At the state level,
the OHSAA provides
48 scholarships across
the six OHSAA athletic
districts. Thirty-six students receive $1,000
awards – including one
student from each of the
six OHSAA athletic districts that will receive an
Ethnic Minority Scholarship – and the remaining
scholarships are awarded
proportionately according
to the number of schools
in each athletic district.
In addition to the four
scholarships awarded by
the Ohio High School
Athletic Association the
Southeast District Athletic Board (SEDAB) is
proud to award an additional twenty-one scholarships to the deserving
scholar-athletes in Southeast Ohio.
The OHSAA and
SEDAB scholarships are
awarded to student-athletes who have excelled
academically and athletically.
To be nominated by
their high school students must meet the following criteria: must be
a graduating senior; have
a grade point average of
3.25 or higher on a 4.0
scale; must have taken
either the ACT or SAT;
must have received a
minimum of three varsity
letters in one OHSAA
sanctioned sport or four
varsity letters in a combination of any two or
more OHSAA sanctioned
sports.
This year, four different
student-athletes from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
area were honored with
scholarships on behalf of
the SEDAB — a boy and
girl from Gallia Academy

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 5B

Cincinnati Bengals’ ‘Pacman’ Jones suspended 1 game
CINCINNATI (AP) — Bengals cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones has been suspended for the regular-season opener against Baltimore for his role
in an altercation at a downtown
hotel earlier this year.
Jones had pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge stemming
from the January incident, the
latest in a history of off-theﬁeld legal issues for the NFL
veteran. The NFL said Friday
that the suspension was for a
violation of its personal conduct policy.
Police said Jones kicked and
used head-butting as he was
arrested for allegedly assaulting a hotel employee. He was
arrested outside the hotel,

and police video showed him
protesting that he hadn’t done
anything to deserve it, loudly
demanding, “Let me go!”
and at times struggling with
ofﬁcers while yelling obscene
insults. Video of Jones in the
back of a police cruiser at one
point showed him telling an
ofﬁcer: “I hope you die tomorrow.”
Jones apologized in court for
his behavior and speciﬁcally to
Cincinnati police Sgt. Jarrod
Cotton. His attorneys said he
had been receiving treatment,
including for anger management.
In exchange for Jones’ plea,
Municipal Court Judge Dwane
Mallory dismissed misde-

meanor counts of assault and
disorderly conduct at the prosecutor’s request. He sentenced
Jones to time already served
— two days — on the obstructing ofﬁcial business count. The
Hamilton County prosecutor
had earlier dismissed a felony
count alleging Jones spit on a
jail nurse.
In a letter to Jones, the NFL
said it considered the “extensive video documentation of
the tone, tenor and nature of
your interactions with law
enforcement at the site of your
arrest, during transportation to
the jail, and during the booking
process. As you acknowledged,
your post-arrest words and
actions reﬂected poorly on you

and your family, the Cincinnati
Bengals football club, and the
NFL.”
“While it is our understanding that appropriate apologies
have been publicly extended,
they do not completely negate
your behavior and admission
of culpability for the underlying conduct,” the league said.
Jones can appeal the suspension within three days. Otherwise, he will be eligible to
return to the active roster on
Sept. 11 following the opener
against the Ravens. Jones may
participate in all preseason
practices and games.
Jones was suspended as a
Tennessee Titan by the NFL
throughout the 2007 season,

then was suspended again during the 2008 season as a member of the Dallas Cowboys.
Jones pleaded an equivalent of
no contest to a misdemeanor
charge of conspiracy to commit disorderly conduct in a
2007 Las Vegas strip club
melee. Jones was blamed for
instigating violence that led to
the shooting by someone else
of two club employees, one
left paralyzed from the waist
down. He was ordered to pay
more than $12.4 million in
damages.
The Titans made the Atlanta
native the sixth overall pick
out of West Virginia in the
2005 draft. The Bengals
signed him in 2010.

Coaching swaps sparked by scandal have led to sorry seasons
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

Mississippi coach Hugh
Freeze resigned instead of
being ﬁred Thursday for what
Ole Miss called a pattern of
personal misconduct.
Preseason practice is set to
open in Oxford, Mississippi, in
weeks. The Rebels are a month
and a half away from starting
the season against South Alabama.
This is no time for a coaching change, but offensive line
coach Matt Luke is being
thrown into an interim position. He will try to save a
season that already had been
scarred by a self-imposed bowl
ban for NCAA violations that

Ole Miss said had nothing to
do with Freeze being forced
out.
These types of scandaldriven offseason coaching
changes have become somewhat common in college football. History shows teams that
endure unusual upheaval do
not fare well.
Here are some notable
offseason changes and how
those seasons turned out.
Art Briles, Baylor. After an
external investigation found
the school mishandled sexual
assault claims, some against
football players, Baylor’s
board of trustees began the
process to ﬁre Briles on May
26, 2016.
Temporary replacement:

Jim Grobe.
Result: The Bears opened
the season ranked No. 23 and
started 6-0, and then lost six
straight. They won their bowl
game to ﬁnish 7-6.
Tim Beckman, Illinois. Fired
on Aug. 28, 2015, after an
external investigation found he
mishandled player injuries.
Temporary replacement:
Bill Cubit.
Result: The Illini had shown
some progress in the previous
season under Beckman and
started 4-1, but dropped six
of their ﬁnal seven games to
ﬁnish 5-7.
Jim Tressel, Ohio State.
Resigned on May 30, 2011,
after it was revealed he lied
about NCAA violations,

McGregor completes community
service for pre-fight fracas
LAS VEGAS (AP) — UFC star Conor
McGregor has completed the 25 hours
of community service imposed by
Nevada ofﬁcials following a profanitylaced, bottle-throwing fracas with a rival
during a pre-ﬁght news conference last
year in Las Vegas.
A document obtained by The Associated Press shows McGregor talked with
children and teenagers in Dublin about
physical, verbal and online bullying. But
anti-bullying experts say his efforts may
have been canceled out by the profanities he recently exchanged with his next
opponent, Floyd Mayweather Jr., for
which neither will be disciplined.
“He has been showing up earlier to
our kids and teens classes, to interact
with them and instill values of loyalty,
commitment and camaraderie,” according to a letter dated Thursday and
signed by McGregor’s coach, John Kavanagh. “… He is undoubtedly the greatest
role model for the kids in our gym, and
for the people of Ireland of all ages.”
The Nevada State Athletic Commission disciplined McGregor and Nate
Diaz after the men and members of
their groups yelled at each other and
eventually hurled water bottles at an
Aug. 17 press conference ahead of UFC
202. McGregor’s original penalties
consisted of a $150,000 ﬁne and 50
hours of community service. That was
reduced in March to 25 hours and a
$25,000 ﬁne.

Last week, however, neither
McGregor nor Mayweather held back
on profanities and exchanged racially
insensitive and homophobic remarks
during a four-city promotional tour for
their upcoming ﬁght in Las Vegas.
Mayweather at one point used a
homophobic slur during a tirade against
McGregor.
McGregor twice told Mayweather
“Dance for me, boy! Dance for me, son!”
during the news conferences. That’s an
insult to black men that dates back to
slavery.
Per regulations, the athletic commission may ﬁne or discipline an individual
licensed to ﬁght in the state of Nevada
if the person behaves “at any time or
place in a manner which is deemed by
the Commission to reﬂect discredit to
unarmed combat.”
Executive director Bob Bennett told
The Associated Press on Friday that the
athletic commission “in no way, shape
or form condones homophobic, racist
or inappropriate sexual comments,” but
the board does not plan to take disciplinary action against Mayweather and
McGregor “at this point.”
He said the board would investigate
and consider appropriate action if
unsportsmanlike conduct that could
physically hurt someone took place in
Las Vegas, such as when bottles were
thrown during the McGregor-Diaz press
event.

involving players trading
equipment and memorabilia
for cash and tattoos.
Temporary replacement:
Luke Fickell.
Result: The Buckeyes went
6-6 and 3-5 in the Big Ten.
The administration did not
self-impose a bowl ban when
it had the opportunity and the
Buckeyes lost the Gator Bowl
to Florida to ﬁnish with a losing record. The next year Ohio
State had to serve an NCAAhanded-down postseason ban
when Urban Meyer’s ﬁrst team
went 12-0.
Bobby Petrino, Arkansas.
Fired on April 11, 2012, for
lying to school ofﬁcials about
his relationship with a woman
who was involved in a motor-

cycle accident with him.
Temporary replacement:
John L. Smith.
Result: The Razorbacks
had high hopes coming off
an 11-win season, but they
tanked, going 4-8.
Butch Davis, North Carolina. Fired on July 27, 2011,
amid an NCAA investigation about players receiving
improper beneﬁts and academic misconduct.
Temporary replacement:
Everett Withers.
Result: The Tar Heels started 5-1 before losing four of six
to ﬁnish the regular season.
They completed a lackluster
year by losing to Missouri in
the Independence Bowl and
ended up 7-6.

mydailytribune.com

MARK’S

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

1-800-767-4223
Commercial &amp; Residential
Free Estimates
Covering all of Ohio &amp; West Virginia
Available 24 Hours

Serving our communities for over 20 years

AP: Wall, Wiz agree to $170M extension
WASHINGTON (AP) — All-Star
point guard John Wall and the Washington Wizards have agreed to a $170
million, four-year contract extension
that will start with the 2019 season, two
people with knowledge of the deal told
The Associated Press on Friday night.
The people conﬁrmed the terms of
the agreement to the AP on condition
of anonymity because the Wizards have
not ofﬁcially announced the deal.
The extension includes a player
option for the ﬁnal season in 2023, and
a 15 percent trade kicker, according to
one of the people.
Wall is a four-time Eastern Conference All-Star who was the No. 1 overall
pick in the 2010 NBA draft out of
Kentucky. He becomes the third player
to agree this summer to a designated
player “supermax” extension, joining
Houston’s James Harden and Golden
State’s Stephen Curry.

Wall’s deal was ﬁrst reported by NBA.
com. The expensive extension comes
shortly after the Wizards matched a
$106.5 million, four-year, max-contract
offer forward Otto Porter Jr. signed
with the Brooklyn Nets, which temporarily made him Washington’s highestpaid player. Now Wall will top that.
Wall, 26, and Porter, 24, join shooting
guard Bradley Beal, 24, to give the Wizards a young core of talent.
The mechanics for Wall’s extension
are new to the NBA in the latest version
of the collective bargaining agreement
and were put in place to help teams
hold on to their star players. A player
has to reach certain parameters to
qualify, including making an All-NBA
team the prior season. A player can also
become eligible by making All-NBA in
two of the prior three seasons or being
named MVP or Defensive Player of the
Year.

WV003690 - OH34636
Backﬂow Certiﬁed #5202

P.O. Box 116
65876 St. Rt. 124
Reedsville, OH 45772

l -740-378-6571
Fax: 740-378-6572

60727804

�6B Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Notices

Apartments/Townhouses

Excavating

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.

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

Reese Excavating

Animal Supplies

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)

Automotive

VEHICLE: 1970s C2015 Toyota Corolla LE 4-door with 4,000 original miles in excellent condition.

Large or Small Jobs Since 1963

"/5*26&amp;4���$0--&amp;$5*#-&amp;4�t�)064&amp;)0-%�'63/*4)*/(4�t�500-4���.*4$&amp;--"/&amp;064�*5&amp;.4�

FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 245-9921

ADDED TO AUCTION FROM FROM RUTH INGRAM ESTATE:
4-LADIES DIAMOND RINGS, COINS:5--Gold 2-1/2 Dollar Coins dated 1843, 1850, 1853, 1854, 1878
POST CARDS &amp; STAMPS dated 1870’s.

Use Happy Jack Mange
Medicine to treat horse mane
dandruff &amp; lice. Dettwiller
Lumber 740-992-5500
(kennelvax.com)

TERMS: Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyer’s
premium on all sales; 4% waived for cash or check payment. All sales are final. Food will be available.

08/&amp;3��+PIO�.D2VBUF

4)&amp;3*%"/�4�4)".30$,�"6$5*0/�4&amp;37*$&amp; �--$

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

WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
AUCTIONEER: John Patrick “Pat” Sheridan - Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Want To Buy

Auctions

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

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE AUCTION

���� ���"$3&amp;4����� ����426"3&amp;�'005�6/%&amp;3�0/&amp;�300'�o�
0''*$&amp;�41"$&amp;�o�."/6'"$563*/(�41"$&amp;�o�8"3&amp;)064&amp;�41"$&amp;�
o�-6/$)�300.�o�$-&amp;"341"/�%&amp;4*(/�o�.6-5*1-&amp;�%0$,�%0034�
o�3"*-�4163�o�1"35*"--:�'&amp;/$&amp;%�o�0654*%&amp;�5)&amp;�$*5:�-*.*54�
0'�$04)0$50/�o�0110356/*5:�,/0$,4���
�"--�4&amp;--4�0/�-0$"5*0/�!�����#6$,&amp;:&amp;�45��o�$04)0$50/ �0)*0

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church

Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD

LEARN THE
TRUE WORDS
GOD GAVE ALL

Amy Carter
Product Specialist

�����.BZIFX�3E�t�+BDLTPO �0)������

�������������t��������������
Fax: 740-286-5728

We study Old King James
chapter by chapter
verse upon verse

5)634%": �"6(645��RD�45"35*/(�!�������"�.�

60726959

Home of the Car Fairy

Sunday 9:30 am Wednesday 6:30 pm
40964 SR 684 Pageville, Ohio

BNZDBSUFS!NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN
XXX�NBSLQPSUFSBVUP�DPN

LEGALS

Help Wanted General

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

HELP WANTED

60728746

EXPERIENCED EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
&amp; CDL TRUCK DRIVER
Pick up application at
Pullins Excavating
33334 SR 833
Pomeroy, Ohio
For Sale By Owner

The Meigs Local Board of Education wishes to receive bids for
the following:
Bread/Bakery, Milk/Dairy, and Fuel/Oil products for the 2017-18
school year.
All bids shall be received in, and bid specifications may be
obtained from: TREASURER'S OFFICE, 41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, on or before 11:00 A.M., Wednesday,
August 2, 2017.
The Meigs Local Board of Education reserves the right to reject
any and all bids, and the submitting of any bid shall impose no
liability or obligation upon the said Board.

Auctions

Houses For Sale
Newly remodeled 2 bedroom
home 1 full bathroom and full
basement fenced in backyard
1 car garage
2813 Jackson Ave
Call 304-675-7531

VERY LARGE PUBLIC AUCTION
Auction Conducted at the Country Home of ANNA &amp; ARLEN SAUNDERS, both
retired educators, who will soon relocate.

11250 Rosewood Lane, THE PLAINS, OH 45780

Just northwest of Athens exit U.S. Rt. 33 onto St. Rt. 682-South, near center of town turn
onto Connett Rd (opposite The Plains U.M. Church), go ½ mile to stop sign, left onto LeMaster
Rd, follow 1-mile, left onto Rosewood Lane &amp; auction. Field Parking.

SATURDAY, JULY 29, 2017 @ 10:00am

Land (Acreage)
23 Acres off Redmond Ridge.
Nice woods with lots of level
areas. Very private, $29,000.
Financing with $2900 down &amp;
$344//mth for 10 yrs. Call for
maps, (740)989-0260.
www.brunerland.com.

ANTIQUES….FURNITURE: Fabulous wal. long mirror Vict étagère, wal. Vict bookcase, Globe Wernicke
metal grained oak file cabinet, as-is Eastlake bookcase &amp; Vict file cabinet….Extra Nice DISPLAY
CABINETS: Fancy French style curved glass china cabinet, fine Martinsville corner cabinet, excellent
china cabinet w/carvings. 3-like new Jewelers 4’ showcases. 3-OLD ANVILS. Like New Heritage Traditions
Special GUN SAFE. 5-Old Combination SAFES. Several Old CLOCKS including a Mission Oak tall clock by
Oscar Onken-Cincinnati, others. Lots of Misc. ANTIQUES-See internet. 40 GUNS….17-Percussion full
&amp; half stocks some w/silver inlays &amp; signed by various makers. Flintlock full stock, 15 percussion rifles
sells for parts. Muzzle Loaders not in the best of condition, stored in a damp area resulting in rust. Plus:
3-L.C. Smith 20ga doubles, Baker Batavia Special 12ga double, Ithaca 20ga double, Winchester 94 30-30,
Winchester 12 &amp; 97 12ga pumps, nearly new SKS 7.62 &amp; AKS 7.62 rifles, other rifles, AMMO: 1100 Rounds
7.62x3mm Ammo ... GLASS &amp; CHINA: Abt 140pcs pink Depression glass, lots more. china…Good
Selection of QUALITY MODERN FURNISHINGS &amp; Accessories. FISHER WOOD BURNING Stove….
West Coast INFRARED SAUNA w/full interior. Very brief listing! Many Quality Items! Terms: Cash or good
check auction day. NO Buyers Fee, Positive Id. Food.

AUCTIONEERS: OTTIE OPPERMAN &amp; CHRIS COLLINS
Ottie: 740-385-7195. Website flyer &amp; pictures:
www.opperman-auctions.com or Auction Zip #12726

60728852

Notices

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Meigs Local Board of Education wishes to receive bids for the following:

60728732

Bread/Bakery, Milk/Dairy, and Fuel/Oil products for the 2017-18 school year.
All bids shall be received in, and bid specifications may be obtained from,
TREASURER'S OFFICE, 41765 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, OH 45769,
on or before 11:00 A.M., Wednesday, August 2, 2017.
The Meigs Local Board of Education reserves the right to reject any and all
bids, and the submitting of any bid shall impose no liability or obligation
upon the said Board.
All envelopes must be CLEARLY MARKED according to the type of bid.
Roy W. Johnson, Treasurer/CFO
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
������1PNFSPZ�1JLF�t�1PNFSPZ �0)������
PH(740) 992-5650

0110356/*5:� ,/0$,4 w/ this offering of
commercial real estate located just outside the city
limits of Coshocton, Ohio. This 21,000 square foot,
manufacturing facility is conveniently located with 2
hours of Columbus, Pittsburgh, and Cleveland. This
facility was most recently used as a corrugated paper/fiber manufacturing operation.
It was open and running till the early part of 2017. This commercial offering would
make an ideal distribution center, warehousing, or small manufacturing facility.
This property offers a rail spur, multiple loading/unloading docks, and fencing for
security. If you are an investor, small business owner looking to expand, or large
corporation with growing needs – you will want to check this commercial offering
out. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS!!!
INSPECTION DATES:
MONDAY, JULY 17TH FROM 10:00 A.M. TILL 11:00 A.M.
MONDAY, JULY 31ST FROM 1:00 P.M TILL 2:00 P.M.
�1301&amp;35:�*/'03."5*0/�1"$,&amp;54�"7"*-"#-&amp;�610/�3&amp;26&amp;45�
TERMS: There will a 10% buyer’s premium added to your bid price to make up the
contract price. A 10% non-refundable deposit of the contract price will be due the
day of the auction, balance at close (within 45-60 days). Property sells “as-is, whereis” w/ no warranties implied or expressed. Property sells w/ no contingencies. Any
desired inspections must be made prior to bidding. Any and all information contained
herein was derived from sources believed to be correct, but not warranted. Any
announcements sale day take precedence over any and all printed material.

EIKLEBERRY REAL ESTATE AUCTION

All envelopes must be CLEARLY MARKED according to the
type of bid.
Roy W. Johnson, Treasurer/CFO
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION
41765 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, OH 45769
PH(740) 992-5650
7/16/17, 7/19/17, 7/23/17

Prowler 5th Wheel
camper 18th
sleeps 4 1985 model
with the 5th wheel hitch
$2000.00 or best offer
740-645-2224

Gallia Co. Fairview Rd.
5 acres $13,900 or 24 acres
$49,900. Meigs Co. 7 acres
$21,500– more
@ www.brunerland.com or
call 740-441-1492,
we finance!

Moved To: American Legion Pavilion, 520 West Union St., Athens, OH
DIRECTIONS: US-50 W/US-33 E/OH-32 W less than a mile, exit onto St. Rt. 682 N via exit 17 towards Athens, at roundabout, take the 2nd exit
onto OH-682 follow 1.5 mile to stop light, turn right onto W. Union Street (Rt. 56), short distance to building on the left, auction held at Pavilion
in the rear parking area, watch for signs.

60729131

Money To Lend

Thursday, July 27– 4:00 p.m.

��#&amp;%300.�o�3"/$)�)0.&amp;�o�'6--�#"4&amp;.&amp;/5�o���$"3�
"55"$)&amp;%�("3"(&amp;�o�/*$&amp;�-05�o�3*7&amp;37*&amp;8�4$)00-4�o�
0110356/*5:�,/0$,4���
�4&amp;--4�0/�-0$"5*0/�!��������43�����8�o�$04)0$50/ �0)*0������

'3*%": �"6(645��TH 45"35*/(�!�������"�.�
Opportunity knocks w/ this offering of real estate.
This 2 bedroom/1 bath home will appeal to many
different buyers. Whether you are looking for a
starter, retirement, or income producing home – you
will want to check this property out. This home offers
approx. 1000 square feet of living space with a partially
finished full basement. Home has electric and wood heat, central air conditioning, 2
water sources and more. The home has a one car attached garage, a foyer entrance,
eat-in kitchen, living room, 2 bedrooms and a bath – all nice situated on a 1/3 of an
acre lot. You will love the location of this property has it is just located few miles
from downtown Coshocton, Ohio. Come bid your price on Friday morning, August
4th. Opportunity Knocks!!!
INSPECTION DATE:
SUNDAY, JULY 30TH FROM 1:00 P.M. TILL 2:00 P.M.
TERMS: There will a 10% buyer’s premium added to your bid price to make up
the contract price. A 10% non-refundable deposit of the contract price will be
due the day of the auction, balance at close (within 45-60 days). Property sells
“as-is, where-is” w/ no warranties implied or expressed. Property sells w/ no
contingencies. Any desired inspections must be made prior to bidding. Any and
all information contained herein was derived from sources believed to be correct,
but not warranted. Any announcements sale day take precedence over any and all
printed material.
08/&amp;3��.*,&amp;�&amp;*,-&amp;#&amp;33:
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

ED AND BEN SCHAFER AUCTIONEERS
BEN SCHAFER REALTY
740-305-5054
740-584-SALE
SHAWN J. DOSTIE, AUCTIONEER
�������������t�������������
WWW.EDANDBENSCHAFER.COM

6072323

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

EVENING AUCTION

�Dozer  Backhoe
�Trenching  Trucking
 Septic Systems
�Basements
 Land Clearing
 Site Prep  and More!

60727889

Spacious 1 Bdrm house.
Custom Kitchen, located near
Gallipolis 1 yr lease &amp; dep.
$750 month
740-208-0437

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.

60725689

Rentals

Auctions

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 7B

All vehicles rebuilt on site, over 100 years of combined experience. Selling the best used vehicles since 1989.

LUNSFORD’S
SARDIS AUTO

2571 Sardis Rd, Oak Hill, OH 45656�t�740-682-7232�t�.PO�'SJ����BN��QN�t�XXX�MVOTGPSETBSEJTBVUP�DPN
Nothing like getting all your automotive needs taken care of in one stop! Quality, honest service you can rely on.

D
L
SO

DEAL of
THE WEEK

44K Miles

Chrysler
Town &amp; Country

$11,995

$9,995

reduced

reduced

2013 Dodge Avenger

2008 Pontiac G6

2014 Toyota Camry

Touring, Really Nice

Blue (RT), 27K Miles

Blue, 78K Miles

$8,995

$4,595

reduced

2005 F-150 Ford Lariat

2013 Dodge Avenger

All Leather, Sun Roof, All Power Features, 5.4Triton

Black, 90K Miles

2006 Chevrolet
Malibu SS
Loaded, Sunroof

$10,495

$5,995

$4,495

reduced
2010 Buick Lucerne
62K Miles, Very Nice,
All Leather

2015 Dodge Dart SE

2006 Ford Taurus

2011 Chevrolet
Impala

14k Miles, Like Brand New

119K Miles

White, 50K Miles

$9,995

$2,495

$6,995

$8,995

2011 Ford Edge SEL

D
L
D
L
O
O
S
S

2006 Nissan Altima

AWD, All Leather, 97k miles

All Leather,
Only 72k miles

$10,500

$4,995

2006 Jeep
Grand Cherokee

2013 Ford Focus

Laredo, 4x4, 126k miles

44k miles

$5,995

$6,995

D
L
SO
2012 Jeep Liberty Jet
4x4, Limited, Leather, Loaded, 70kmiles

2013 Dodge Ram
1500

$14,495

reduced
2002 Ford Ranger

Hemi 63K, 4x4, Vaca Ready

2006 Honda
Ridgeline

$19,995

$6,995

$3,495

V6 Auto, 4 Door

reduced
2010 Nissan Altima S
Sunroof, Bose stereo,
110K Miles

$5,995

2006 Pontiac G6
Gray, GTP, 6 Speed, Loaded,
87K Miles

$4,595

2010 Chrysler Town &amp; Country
103K Miles

$7,495
60728579

�8B Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

“We make car dreams come true!”

2017 Dodge Journey SXT

2017 Jeep Wrangler Sport

2017 Jeep Compass Latitude

C17032

C17064

C17000

MSRP $26,385

UP TO
$9,000 OFF

2017 Ram SLT Crew 4x4

Buy for $24,888

UP TO
$8,500 OFF

2017 Dodge Caravan SE

2017 Dodge Charger SE AWD

UP TO
$6,500 OFF

UP TO
$6,500 OFF

C17022 5.7 Hemi, Heated Seats, All The Nice Options

OVER
$12,000 OFF

“We make car dreams come true!”

MARKPORTER

308 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH 45769

�ZZZ�PDUNSRUWHUIRUG�FRP��ZZ�PDUNSRUWHUJP�FRP��ZZZ�PDUNSRUWHUIRUG�FRP��ZZ�PDUNSRUWHUJP�FRP��ZZZ�PDUNSRUWHUIRUG�FRP��ZZ�PDUNSRUWHUJP�FRP��ZZZ�PDUNSRUWHUIRUG�FRP

2017 Chevrolet Silverado
LT Crew Cab

2017 Chevrolet
Traverse LT

2017 Chevrolet
Equinox LT

$12,000 OFF

$10,000 OFF

$6,500 OFF

2017 Buick Envision

2017 Buick Lacrosse
Essence Package

UP TO
$9,000 OFF

$9,000 OFF

MARKPORTER

2017 GMC Acadia

2017 GMC Sierra Crew Cab

UP TO
$10,000 OFF

UP TO
$12,000 OFF

������&amp;KDUOHV�&amp;KDQFH\�'ULYH��3RPHUR\��2+
1-740-992-6614 or 1-800-837-109
Showroom Hours: Mon.-Thurs.9-7, Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5 Sat. Service 8-5
&amp;ORVHG�6XQ�

ZZ�PDUNSRUWHUJP�FRP

2017 Ford Escape S
#F17514

2017 Ford Edge

2017 Ford F-150

#F17448

#F17304

$18,999

Starting at $25,999

2017 Ford F-350 Superduty

2017 Ford Focus

#F17351

Up to $7,500 off

40
in stock

Up to $10,000 off

75
in stock

2017 Ford Fusion

#F17519

#F17010

$13,999

0% for 72 months
plus 2000 trade assistance

Sales: (877) 436-1284 Service: (877) 407-1600
Parts: (877) 408-3253

Go Further

Mark Porter
$W�5W�����DQG�0D\KHZ�5G���-DFNVRQ��2+�����������������
+RXUV��0RQ��7KXUV������)UL�������6DW��������6HUYLFH�����0RQ��)UL���6DW�������&amp;ORVHG�6XQ�
Ford
ZZZ�PDUNSRUWHUIRUG�FRP
60729228

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�A long the R iver
Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, July 23, 2017 s Section C

Courtesy photos

Country musician William Michael Morgan will perform on the Wade Jarrell performs at the Gray Pavilion at 5 p.m., followed by Jacob Gilmore performing at 6 p.m. and Devin Henry at 7 p.m.,
Holzer Main Stage at 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 2.
Wednesday, Aug. 2.

Gallia Fair returns July 31
Offers family fun,
entertainment for all
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

p.m. Market Swine will
be available for watch
in the Show Arena at 4
GALLIPOLIS — The
p.m. Boy Scout Awards
sounds of crowing and
will be held at the Gray
mooing, along with the
smell of fried foods will Pavilion at 5:30 p.m
once again linger in the with Girl Scout Awards
air as the Gallia County following at 6 p.m. The
Horse Award Ceremony
Junior Fair gets underand barnyard games will
way July 31.
be held at the Horse
Gallia County Night
will be the ﬁrst Monday Arena at 6 p.m. A fourwheel drive truck pull
of the fair with Horse
will be held at the pullShows taking off in the
ing track at 6:30 p.m.
Horse Arena at 8 a.m.
Jeff and Sheri Easter
with Rabbit Judging in
will perform on the
the Dairy Barn at 8:30
Holzer Main Stage at 7
a.m. Tobacco Judging
will be held in the Show p.m. with Tenth Avenue
North following at 8:30
Arena at 9 a.m. and
p.m.
demonstrations will be
The Beef Breeding
held at the Ag Center
at 9 a.m. Poultry events Show will kickoff Aug.
will be held in the Dairy 2 in the Show Arena at
9 a.m. Pet Rabbit JudgBarn at 11 a.m. The
ing will be held in the
Miniature Goat Show
will be held in the Show Gray Pavilion at 9 a.m.
Arena at 1 p.m. and the and the Extreme 4-H
Cowbow Trail CompetiCloverbud Show and
tion will be held in the
Tell will be held at 2
Horse Arena at 10 a.m.
p.m. at the Gray PavilA helicopter will again
ion. Market Goat Show
be on display around the
will get under way in
pit area from 11 a.m.
the Show Arena at 3
p.m. and the South Gal- to 1 p.m. Wade Jarrell
performs at the Gray
lia High School Band
Pavilion at 5 p.m., folwill play on the Holzer
lowed by Jacob Gilmore
Main Stage at 3 p.m.
performing at 6 p.m.
Field Crops events will
be held in the Activities Sheep Showmanship
will be held in the Show
Building at 4 p.m. and
Arena at 3 p.m. and
Gallia Academy High
Market Lambs at 6 p.m.
School Band will take
A costume contest will
the Holzer Main Stage
at 4 p.m. The River Val- be held for horses in the
Horse Arena at 6 p.m.
ley High School Band
will follow on the Holzer and followed by Cowboy Polo at 6:30 p.m.
Main Stage at 5 p.m.
Field Stock Tractor and
and the fair will hold
Semi Pulls will be held
its ofﬁcial opening at 6
at the pulling track at
p.m., also on the main
6:30 p.m. Devin Henry
stage. Also at 6 p.m.,
performs at 7 p.m. at
it’s the Livestock Skillthe Gray Pavilion. CounA-Thon at the pavilion,
try musician William
followed by Little Miss
Michael Morgan will
Gallia County Contest
at 6:30 p.m. on the main perform on the Holzer
Main Stage at 8:30 p.m.
stage. Then at 7 p.m.
On Aug. 3, the Steer
it’s Extreme Bull Riding
and Barrel Racing at the Show will be held in the
Show Arena at 8:30 a.m.
pulling track, followed
by the Little Mister Gal- and Exhibition Cowless
Cutting will be in the
lia County Contest at
Horse Arena at 10 a.m.
7:30 p.m. on the main
stage and ﬁnally, at 9:30 A helicopter will once
again be on display from
p.m., the Gallia County
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the
Queen Contest, also on
pit area. The Kiwanis
the main stage.
Youth Program will be
Religious and Senior
held at 12:30 p.m. on
Citizens Night well be
the Holzer Main Stage.
held Tuesday, Aug. 1.
Steer and Feeder Calf
The Horse Production
Showmanship Contest
and Contest Show will
participants will strut
be held in the Horse
Arena at 8 a.m. the same the Show Arena at 2
p.m. with the Dairy
day. Swine ShowmanShow taking place in the
ship will be held in the
Show Arena at 8:30 a.m. Show Arena at 4 p.m.
At the Horse Arena, a
and a helicopter will be
Fun Show will be held
on display near the pit
at 6 p.m. and the Pony
area from 11 a.m. to 1

At 7 p.m. Riverside Cloggers perform followed by Deep Creatures, pictured, which will perform on the Holzer Main Stage at 7:30 p.m.,
Friday, Aug. 4.

ZZ Top tribute band Eliminator KC will perform on the Holzer Main Stage at 8:30 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 5.

Tenth Avenue North performs at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 1.

and Horse Pull will start
at 6 p.m. at the Pulling
Track. A master exhibitor event will be featured in the Show Arena
at 7 p.m. The Livestock
Judging Contest will
follow at 8 p.m. Little
Texas will cap the evening with a performance
on the Holzer Main
Stage at 8:30 p.m.
Aug. 4 marks the
35th annual tobacco
sale in the Show Arena
at 9 a.m. with the 59th
annual market lamb sale
at 9:15 a.m. The Holzer
Main Stage will host the
Pretty Baby Contest at
10 a.m. The 66th annual

market steer sale will be
held in the Show Arena
at 11 a.m. with the 5th
annual market goal
sale following at noon.
Cloverbud Graduation
will be held in the Gray
Pavilion at 3 p.m. Holzer
Health System will hold
its small animal awards
in the Gray Pavilion at 5
p.m. Muddy Night’s mud
volleyball tournament
will be held in the Horse
Arena at 5:30 p.m. Holzer Health System Activity Building Awards
will be held in the Gray
Pavilion at 6 p.m. An
OSTPA Sanctioned Tractor Pull will be held at

Little Texas will perform on the Holzer Main Stage at 8:30 p.m.,
Thursday, Aug. 3.

the pulling track, at 7
p.m. Riverside Cloggers
followed by Deep Creatures will perform on the
Holzer Main Stage at
7:30 p.m.
On Saturday, Aug. 5,
the ﬁnal day of the fair,
the 57th annual market
hog sale will take place
in the Show Arena at 9
a.m. Demolition derbies

will take place at the
Pulling Track at 5 p.m.
and a corn hole contest
will be held in the Show
Arena at 7 p.m. ZZ Top
tribute band Eliminator
KC will perform on the
Holzer Main Stage at
8:30 p.m. to end the fair
season.
Dean Wright can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2103.

�ALONG THE RIVER

2C Sunday, July 23, 2017

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Williams honored for work with Operation Christmas Child
Submitted

MIDDLEPORT — A
local woman who severed
10 years working with
the Operation Christmas Child was recently
honored for her contributions.
Bronwynn Williams has
faithfully served as the
drop-off center coordinator for Operation Christmas Child at Hope Baptist Church in Middleport
for ten years. Since 2006,
Bronwynn has allowed
herself to be the hands
and feet of Jesus as she
has collected thousands
of gift-ﬁlled shoeboxes for
children in desperate situations around the world.
Last year, Hope Baptist
collected 785 shoeboxes
for Operation Christmas
Child. Together with
150,000 additional dropoff centers in the United
States alone, over 9.1
million boxes were collected and distributed
to children ages 2-14 in
more than 100 countries.
Worldwide, participants
donated a total of 11.5

Jesus Christ. Since 2010,
more than 11 million children have participated in
the program. Every child
who graduates is given a
New Testament in their
own language.
Many children who
receive shoebox gifts will
also enroll in Operation
Christmas Child’s 12-lesson discipleship program,
The Greatest Journey.
This program teaches
children about God’s
amazing love and guides
them through what it
means to faithfully follow
Jesus Christ. Since 2010,
more than 11 million children have participated in
the program. Every child
who graduates is given a
Courtesy New Testament in their
Pictured making the presentation are Ruth Brown, Bronwynn Williams, Pastor Gary Ellis, Jerry Brown. Ruth and Jerry Brown are the area own language.
coordinators for Operation Christmas Child in SouthEast Ohio.
National Collection
Week begins on Monday,
Nov. 13 and runs through
also enroll in Operation
a tangible way to children president of Samaritan’s
million shoebox gifts.
Christmas Child’s 12-les- Monday, Nov. 20. For
in need around the world. Purse in a news release.
Operation Christmas
son discipleship program, more information about
“For many of these boys
“I’ve seen it ﬁrsthand
Child, a project of Samarihow you can get involved,
tan’s Purse, is the world’s for more than 20 years — and girls, it is the ﬁrst gift The Greatest Journey.
you can call Bronwynn
This program teaches
largest Christmas project these shoebox gifts bring they have ever received,
at Hope Baptist Church
and they will never forget children about God’s
hope to children around
of its kind. Operation
amazing love and guides (740) 992-5334 or Jerry
the world and show them it.”
Christmas Child uses
and Ruth Brown at (740)
them through what it
Many children who
the love of Jesus Christ,”
gift-ﬁlled shoeboxes to
receive shoebox gifts will means to faithfully follow 332-1642
demonstrate God’s love in said Franklin Graham,

Falling water

College campus
named for
Pomeroy native
Submitted

Matt Rourke | AP

A young person plays in the water Thursday at the Swann Memorial Fountain in Philadelphia. The National Weather Service issued an
excessive heat warning for the area through Friday evening.

Glaze-Foster Engagement

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers Inc., livestock report of sales from July 19.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $150-$172.50, Heifers,
$118-$150; 425-525 pounds, Steers, $125-$170,
Heifers, $110-$150; 550-625 pounds, Steers,
$105-$155, Heifers, $105-$138; 650-725 pounds,
Steers, $100-$140, Heifers, $100-$130; 750-850
pounds, Steers, $100-$130, Heifers, $90-$128.
Cows
Well-muscled/ﬂeshed, $64-$87; Medium/
Lean, $50-$63; Bulls, $80-$101.
Back to Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $1125-$1400; Bred Cows,
$850-$1085; Goats, $30-$122.50; Hogs, $30$55; Lambs, $130-$141.
Upcoming specials
Manure to give away. Will load for you.
Direct sales or free on-farm visits.
Contact Ryan Vaughn (304) 514-1858, or visit
the website at www.uproducers.com.

served. Scott’s leadership helped the District
DETROIT, Mich. —
achieve unprecedented
Theodore (Ted) Scott,
growth in enrollment
former Trustee of Wayne and expansion of its
County Community
programs and offerings,
College District was
marking WCCCD’s rise
honored recently with
to the largest
the naming of the
urban community
WCCCD Western
college district in
Campus as the
the state and one
“Ted Scott Camof only 16 multi
pus.”
campus communiThe naming of
ty college districts
Ted Scott Campus
in the nation.
will honor Scott’s Scott
Scott is a
service as a Trust1953 graduate of
ee from January
Pomeroy High
1989 through May 26,
School, attended Ohio
1999. Scott served as
University, and served in
chairperson from 1995
the Army. Afterwards,
to 1999; and as chair of
he moved to Michigan,
the Academic/Student
becoming a ﬁreﬁghter
Affairs Standing Comand continuing to the
mittee in 1994.
rank of the City of West“We’re proud to recog- land Fire Chief and Safenize and honor the outty Director for Wayne
standing commitment
County, and was known
and contributions of Ted for his dedication to the
Scott,” said WCCCD
safety and security of
Chancellor Dr. Curtis L. the communities that he
Ivery. He spoke about
served for decades.
Scott’s leadership and
Members of the colcharacter during the cer- lege board of trustees,
emony and stated that
area dignitaries, college
without Scott’s involveofﬁcials, along with
ment, he had doubts
Scott’s family and friends
that the college would
were in attendance durbe functioning today.
ing the ceremony, and
“I don’t know if we
granddaughter, Grace
would be here today if it Kowalski, made special
weren’t for Ted. I truly
remarks. Scott’s wife
believe that you could
of 58 years, Sharon,
look for a hundred years currently serves on the
and never ﬁnd a better
WCCCD Board of Trustperson than Ted Scott,” ees as Treasurer.
Ivery added.
Situated on 117 acres,
Scott served on the
the Ted Scott Campus
WCCCD Board of Trust- is located just north
ees, eventually chairing
of the Haggerty Road/
it, during a period when Interstate 94 intersection
the District introduced
in Belleville. Completed
a bold new set of strate- in 1981, the campus
gic directives to introfeatures state of the art
duce the then troubled
computer labs, a large
District to long-term,
multipurpose room, and
sustainable and transpar- additional conference and
ent growth built around career program spaces.
the needs of the 36
For more information,
cities and townships it
visit www.wcccd.edu.

Pomeroy resident graduates from RIT
Courtesy

Pam and Robbie Reeves of Coolville, Ohio, along with Bill and
Bonnie Glaze of Tuppers Plains, Ohio, announce the engagement
and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Erin Glaze to Matthew
Foster. Matthew is the son of Ryan and Rhonda Foster of Pomeroy,
Ohio. Erin is a 2015 graduate of Eastern High School and Matthew
is a 2015 graduate of Meigs High School. The wedding will be held
on Nov. 4, 2017 at Kountry Resort Campground with reception to
follow. The couple will reside in Racine, Ohio.

ROCHESTER, NY
— Maggie Smith of
Pomeroy graduated
from Rochester Institute
of Technology with a
Bachelor of Science in
psychology.
Some 3,500 undergraduate and graduate
students received their
degrees during RIT’s

132nd commencement
celebration in May.
Rochester Institute of
Technology is home to
leading creators, entrepreneurs, innovators and
researchers. Founded in
1829, RIT enrolls about
19,000 students in more
than 200 career-oriented
and professional pro-

grams, making it among
the largest private universities in the U.S.
The university is internationally recognized
and ranked for academic
leadership in business,
computing, engineering,
imaging science, liberal
arts, sustainability, and
ﬁne and applied arts.

RIT also offers unparalleled support services
for deaf and hard-ofhearing students. The
cooperative education
program is one of the
oldest and largest in the
nation. Global partnerships include campuses
in China, Croatia, Dubai
and Kosovo.

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, July 23, 2017 3C

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
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Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�ALONG THE RIVER

4 Sunday, July 23, 2017

A look at homebirth
pace and in their
For most parown way. They
ents, the choice
want to develop a
of where to have
deep relationship
a baby is easy: the
with their care
hospital. That’s
provider. And,
where 99 percent
they are willing
of births take
to take an active
place, according
Meigs
part in their own
to the National
Health healthcare and
Center for Health
Matters to uncover their
Statistics. MeanCourtney
C. fears about giving
while, a small but
Midkiff
birth and their
steadily growing
new and impendnumber of couing roles as mothers.
ples choose to deliver
The Meigs County
their babies at home.
Health Department’s
Birthing at home is a
(MCHD) Ofﬁce of Vital
practice as old as time.
In fact, it is only recent- Statistics is responsible
for registering births
ly that women began
that take place within
to turn to the medical
the County. The MCHD
establishment and hospitals to give birth. And may register no or few
this, only in the U.S., as home births a year as
indicated: 2016 – 3;
worldwide most babies
2015 – 3; 2014 – 4; 2013
are still born at home.
– 3; 2012 – 0.
According to Ohio
Since there is no hosFriends of Midwives,
pital/birthing facility
women who choose
homebirth are generally within Meigs County,
in minimal risk pregnan- these births could be at
home intended or unincies and feel that pregnancy and birth are not tended; take place in a
illnesses, which require vehicle in route to a hosmedical attention. They pital/birthing facility; at
the Holzer Emergency
trust in themselves to
Room or other medical
give birth and to know
that they can turn to the clinic; or any location
outside of the mother’s
medical system in the
place of residence.
event of an emergency.
Births occurring outside
They choose to take
a hospital/birth facility
responsibility for their
must be ﬁled with the
pregnancy and birth
local health department
and to be empowered
by its experience. They within 10 days of the
aren’t comfortable in the birth or else an afﬁdavit
must be executed. Such
hospital environment
births must be ﬁled
and they don’t want
with the local health
to be conﬁned to rules
department within one
and procedures which
year of the birth or be
impede them from givregistered as delayed via
ing birth at their own

Probate Court.
If you are planning
a home birth or have
had an out of institution birth in Meigs
County, please contact
me at 740-992-6626 or
via email at courtney.
midkiff@meigs-health.
com to obtain a home
birth packet. In addition
to completing the information requested in the
home birth packet, you
must provide the local
health department with
evidence of pregnancy;
evidence that the infant
was born alive; evidence
of the mother’s presence
in Ohio and proof of
residence and, if applicable, evidence that the
birth occurred outside
the mother’s place of
residence.
After the information
is entered locally into
the Ohio Department
of Health’s Integrated
Perinatal Health Information System and the
aforementioned documentation is forwarded
to and approved by
ODH Vital Statistics,
the birth certiﬁcate is
registered.
This is a relatively
quick process, if the
parent(s) provide the
local health department
with all the information
that is required. A certiﬁed copy of your child’s
birth certiﬁcate then
can be purchased from
the MCHD for $25.
Courtney C. Midkiff, BSC, is the
Administrator/Registrar for the
Meigs County Health Department.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dali to be exhumed
in paternity lawsuit
FIGUERES, Spain (AP) — Salvador
Dali’s eccentric artistic and personal
history took yet another bizarre turn
Thursday with the exhumation of his
embalmed remains in order to ﬁnd
genetic samples that could settle whether one of the founding ﬁgures of surrealism fathered a girl decades ago.
Pilar Abel, a 61-year-old tarot card
reader, claims her mother had an affair
with Dali while working as a domestic
helper in the northeastern Spanish
town of Figueres, where the artist was
born and where he had moved back to
with his Russian wife Gala.
After two decades of court battles, a
Madrid judge last month granted Abel
a DNA test to ﬁnd out whether her allegations are true.
“I am amazed and very happy
because justice may be delivered,”
she told The Associated Press at the
time, adding that a desire to honor her
mother’s memory was motivating her
paternity lawsuit. “I have fought a long
time for this and I think I have the right
to know.”
Her lawyer, Enrique Blanquez, said
a judicial victory for Abel would give
her a chance to seek one-fourth of Dali’s
estate in further lawsuits, in accordance
with inheritance laws in Spain’s Catalonia region.
Dali and his wife had no children
of their own although Gala — whose
name at birth was Elena Ivanovna Diakonova and who died seven years before
the painter — had a daughter from an
earlier marriage to French poet Paul
Eluard.
Upon his death in 1989 at age 84,
Dali bestowed his estate to the Spanish state. His body was buried in his
hometown’s local theatre, which had
been rebuilt to honor the artist in the
1960s. The building now hosts the Dali
Theater Museum.
When the gates of the premises close
Thursday, forensic experts are expected

to remove a 1.5-ton heavy stone slab for
the ﬁrst time in 27 years and evaluate
the state of the remains to see if any
genetic material can be obtained.
It remains to be seen if the chemicals
used for preserving the artist’s body
have damaged his genetic information, said Narcis Bardalet, the forensic
expert who embalmed Dali.
Regional Catalan ofﬁcials said the
two coroners in charge of the exhumation will be extremely cautious about
handling Dali’s remains out of respect
and to avoid any contamination of the
samples. The plans include removing
four teeth, some nails and the marrow
of a long bone only if the corpse’s status
allows it.
The process could take up to 11
hours, the regional Justice Department
said, and the samples would then travel
to a forensic lab in Madrid, where an
analysis could take weeks.
The public foundation that manages
Dali’s estate failed to halt the exhumation but convinced the judge to reschedule it out of visiting hours. Extra
measures have been taken to avoid any
imagery of the process, including covering the museum’s glass dome to avoid
any possible photography or video
taken by drones.
Dali’s paternity lawsuit was a topic of
discussion Thursday among the lines of
visitors at the museum.
“I think that the woman has the right
to know who her father is,” said 33
year-old Miguel Naranjo. “But I think it
is surreal that they have to unearth his
body after such a long time.”

Wickline

Edelmann

Burns

Charnoch

Edelmann

Gillespie

McGhee

Rees

“I think that the woman has the
right to know who her father is.
But I think it is surreal that they
have to unearth his body after
such a long time.”
– Miguel Naranjo

Long-distance motorcycle
trips seek to empower women
By John Kekis

was epic — something
I’ll never forget. It was
very emotional for me.”
The ride also helped
A year ago Alisa
Clickenger helped orga- Clickenger demonstrate
what her ﬂedgling comnize a cross-country
pany, Women’s Motormotorcycle trip for
cycle Tours (http://
women to commemowww.WomensMotorrate the 100-year anniversary of a most amaz- cycleTours.com ), could
accomplish.
ing ride by two sisters
“For me, part of ridfrom Brooklyn, New
ing motorcycles still is
York.
the challenge of embracThe Sisters’ Centening the unknown, the
nial Motorcycle Ride
honored the exploits of mastery of machine and
also facing my fears and
Augusta and Adeline
Van Buren, who in 1916 meeting the challenges
of an extended motorrode motorcycles more
than 5,000 miles (8,000 cycle adventure,” said
km) across the country Clickenger, whose company focuses solely on
to prove that women
could be military motor- tours for female motorcyclists. “It was the ﬁrst
cycle couriers, able to
time I’ve seen so many
endure long distances
and harsh conditions as manufacturers (Indian
and BMW among them)
well as men.
For Clickenger, it was come together for a
common goal — proa breakthrough.
“The ride was impor- moting women and
tant to me,” Clickenger motorcycling. It was
wonderful.”
said. “It was the realWomen own about 14
ization of a long-held
dream of mine to lead a percent of registered
group of women across motorcycles, up from 8
percent in 1998, accordthe United States on
ing to the Motorcycle
motorcycles. Seeing
Industry Council’s latest
nearly 250 women on
motorcycles in my rear- numbers. But Genevieve
view mirror riding over Schmitt, founder and
the Golden Gate Bridge editor of online maga-

AP Sports Writer

zine “Women Riders
Now” , says those numbers count only new
registrations. She says
women comprise nearly
25 percent of those who
ride (including passengers), and that makes
them major players in
the riding business.
“Personally, I feel
we’ve kind of seen an
exponential growth
in the 11 to 12 years
that I’ve had the site,”
Schmitt said. “There
is a whole new market
of young girls in their
20s who have taken up
riding that we haven’t
seen, really, in history.”
Why are more women
taking up motorcycling? Schmitt calls it
the “copycat effect. A
woman sees another
woman riding a motorcycle and says, ‘If she
can do it, so can I!’”
Manufacturers such
as Harley-Davidson
produce entry-level
motorcycles but it can
still seem “intimidating
getting on a powerful
vehicle,” said Pam Kermisch, a novice rider
who works for Polaris,
the company that owns
Indian and Victory
motorcycle brands.

Emblem scholars awarded
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis Emblem Club
199 recently announced
the recipients of the 2017
supreme, state and local
Emblem Club scholarships.
Aaron Wickline
received a $2,000 scholarship from the Supreme
Emblem Club. Aaron will
be completing his nursing
degree at the University
of Cincinnati this coming
school year. His grandmother is Emblem Club
member, Ann Wickline.
MiKayla Edelmann, an
Emblem club member
received a $500 scholar-

ship from the Ohio State
Association of Emblem
Clubs. Mikayla will be
starting her freshman
year at the University of
Rio Grande where she is
majoring in early education.
Madison Burns, Sydney
Charnoch, Kimberly Edelmann, Eric Gillespie, Allison McGhee, and Olivia
Rees each received a $500
scholarship from the local
Emblem Club. Madison
Burns is majoring in nursing at Marshall University. Her mother is Emblem
Club member, Angie
Burns. Sydney Charnoch,

daughter of Emblem Club
member Lori Fischer,
plans to major in nursing
at Ohio University. Eric
Gillespie is majoring as
a systems developer at
Ohio University. Eric is
the grandson of Emblem
Club member, Noretta
Gillespie. Member Allison
McGhee will be majoring
in the chiropractic ﬁeld
at Marshall University.
Member Olivia Rees is
majoring in mechanical
engineering at Ohio University.
Submitted by Becky Carroll,
Emblem Club Scholarship
chairperson.

Apollo 11 bag laced with moon dust sells for $1.8 million
NEW YORK (AP) — A bag
containing traces of moon
dust sold for $1.8 million at
an auction on Thursday following a galactic court battle.
The collection bag, used
by astronaut Neil Armstrong
during the ﬁrst manned mission to the moon in 1969, was
sold at a Sotheby’s auction
of items related to space voyages. The buyer declined to
be identiﬁed. The pre-sale
estimate was $2 million to $4
million.
The artifact from the Apollo
11 mission had been misidentiﬁed and sold at an online

government auction, and
NASA had fought to get it
back. But in December a federal judge ruled that it legally
belonged to a Chicago-area
woman who bought it in 2015
for $995.
Sotheby’s declined to
identify the seller. However,
details of the 2015 purchase
were made public during the
court case.
Investigators unknowingly
hit the moon mother lode
in 2003 while searching the
garage of a man later convicted of stealing and selling
museum artifacts, including

some that were on loan from
NASA.
The 12-by-8½-inch bag was
misidentiﬁed and sold at an
online government auction.
Nancy Carlson, of
Inverness, Illinois, got an
ordinary-looking bag made of
white Beta cloth and polyester with rubberized nylon and
a brass zipper.
Carlson, a collector, knew
the bag had been used in a
space ﬂight, but she didn’t
know which one. She sent it
to NASA for testing, and the
government agency, discovering its importance, fought to

keep it.
The artifact “belongs to the
American people,” NASA said
then.
U.S. District Judge J.
Thomas Marten, in Wichita,
Kansas, said that while it
shouldn’t have gone up for
auction he didn’t have the
authority to reverse the sale.
He ordered the government to
return it.
The judge said the importance and desirability of the
bag stemmed solely from the
efforts of NASA employees
whose “amazing technical
achievements, skill and cour-

age in landing astronauts
on the moon and returning
them safely have not been
replicated in the almost half
a century since the Apollo 11
landing.”
When it comes to moon
landings, Thursday’s auction
is far from the ﬁnal frontier.
A group called For All
Moonkind Inc. mentioned
the moon bag this week while
campaigning for “measures to
preserve and protect the six
Apollo lunar landing sites.”
It plans to take up the issue
next month at the Starship
Congress 2017 in California.

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