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                  <text>On this
day in
history

All-OVC
soccer
teams

NEWS s 2

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

36°

59°

55°

Brilliant sunshine and windy today. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 66° / Low 41°

SPORTS s 5

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 210, Volume 74

Gallia, Mason
report new cases
of COVID-19

Officials issue advisories in 3 Ohio cities

Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — A
total of 47 new COVID19 cases were reported
by the Gallia County
Health Department
on Wednesday, with
20 new cases reported
by the Mason County
Health Department.
The new cases in
Gallia County bring
the active case count
to 171. Mason County
is reporting 82 active
cases. Meigs County
had 60 active cases as
of Tuesday.
Local schools
Eastern Local Supt.
Steve Ohlinger stated
in a letter posted to
the district Facebook
on Wednesday, that
“two students or staff
members of the Eastern
Elementary School
have tested positive for
COVID-19.”
Ohlinger stated that
the district has been
in communication
with the Meigs County
Health Department,
which has completed
contact tracing. The
school remains open.
Buckeye Hills Career
Center, Adult Education, has reported “at
least one conﬁrmed
case of COVID-19 in a
student or staff person”
at the school, according
to a Facebook post on
Wednesday afternoon.
On Tuesday evening,
the Gallia County
Board of Developmental Disabilities stated in
a Facebook post that a
“student or staff member at Guiding Hand
School has tested positive for COVID-19.”
The statement from
Guiding Hand School
Director Laura Johnson
states that “this student
or staff member has not
been on school property since symptoms
were identiﬁed.” The
school is working with
the health department
regarding the case and
contact tracing. Individuals should report to
school as usual unless
notiﬁed otherwise.
Long-term care facilities
The West Virginia
Department of Health
and Human Resources
(DHHR) reported
the PVH Nursing and

Rehabilitation Center
to have two positive
staff cases. Amber
Findley, director of the
facility, said this second
case is a staff member
that reported to work
on Sunday, Nov. 8 and
was turned away from
working after failing
the screening. Findley
said the employee was
tested on the following
day and was positive.
The staff member is
currently quarantined.
Findley previously clariﬁed the ﬁrst reported
positive staff case noted
by DHHR was not an
employee at the facility but a “home ofﬁce”
employee who visited
the building.
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH)
typically updates longterm care facility cases
on Wednesdays, but
as of press time the
COVID-19 dashboard
from ODH stated
updated numbers had
been delayed.
Here’s a closer look
at coronavirus cases
across our area:
Gallia County
The Gallia County
Health Department
reported a total of 588
cases of COVID-19
(since March) in an
update on Wednesday.
Of those, 171 cases
are considered to be
active. The 588 cases is
an increase of 47 since
the health department’s
update on Monday.
“We are reporting
47 additional cases of
COVID-19 for Gallia
County. Seven of these
individuals were diagnosed based on a positive antigen test and
meeting the case deﬁnition of a probable case,
i.e., an epidemiological
link to a positive case
or symptoms consistent
with COVID19 and
diagnosed by a medical
provider. They will be
listed as 40 additional
conﬁrmed cases, and
7 additional probable
cases for a total of 588
cases (526 conﬁrmed,
62 probable),” stated
a Facebook update
See COVID-19 | 2

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permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

Thursday, November 19, 2020 s 50¢

Andrew Welsh-Huggins | AP file

Dr. Mysheika Roberts, Columbus public health commissioner,
speaks at a news conference March 13 in Columbus, Ohio. Columbus
Mayor Andrew Ginther, right, listens. Residents of Ohio’s capital
city and the surrounding county should stay at home as much
as possible and not have guests inside their homes, including on
Thanksgiving Day, according to an advisory stay-at-home order
issued Wednesday by public health directors.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Residents of several big Ohio’s cities and
their surrounding counties should stay at home
as much as possible and
not have guests inside
their homes, including
on Thanksgiving Day,
according to the stay-athome advisories issued
Wednesday by public
health directors.
Ofﬁcials in Columbus,
Cleveland and Dayton
issued stay-at-home advisories for 28 days in an
effort to slow coronavirus spread in those high
incident areas.
People living in those
cities and the surrounding counties are also
advised to avoid travel-

ing in and out of state.
The advisories include
a recommendation that
people forgo having
guests in their homes
during the upcoming
holiday season.
Exceptions would be
for essential needs such
as medical care, groceries, medicine and food
pick-up, according to
the orders. There are no
enforcement measures
included in the health
resolutions; all compliance is voluntary.
Ofﬁcials in Dayton
said they will also close
city buildings and recreation centers starting
Monday.

See CITIES | 2

$15K in
grants
awarded for
COVID-19
relief
Nine Meigs County
organizations receive
grant awards
Staff Report

File photos

Sgt. Brandy King of the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office assists a young shopper in picking out a
bicycle during the 2019 Shop with a Cop event.

Preparing to ‘Shop with a Cop’
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — While
COVID-19 will modify
the event, plans are
still underway for the
annual Shop with a
Cop/First Responder
event.
Loyalty is Forever
and the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce are currently working on plans
to provide Christmas
joy to area children,
while taking necessary
safety precautions.
Cheyenne Martin
Members of several local volunteer fire departments were
explained that the curamong those taking part in the shopping event in 2019.
rent plan is to have
around 20 families
from each of the school the ﬁrst responders and as a McDonald’s card
to purchase breakfast
the children, as well as
districts in the county
or lunch. It is possible
take part, with the kids social distancing from
other shoppers. A sani- Santa could be handing
to arrive at scheduled
out the items to the
tation station will also
times so that their is
kids.
be set up.
not a large group at
One of the main
Martin said she has
once.
fundraisers each year
spoken with the manThe kids would
for the event — the
ager at Wal-Mart to
be dropped off and
Ugly Sweater Games
coordinate a day and
picked up at Wal-Mart
— will not take place,
time which is best for
in Mason, rather than
but numerous fundraisthe shopping to take
at the Meigs County
ers are taking place,
place.
Council on Aging as
including a rafﬂe at a
Since breakfast and
has been the case in
local doctor’s ofﬁce, No
a visit with Santa canprevious years. Arrivnot be provided for the Shave November at the
ing at the scheduled
sheriff’s ofﬁce, fundkids at the senior centime, the child would
then shop with a volun- ter as usual, the current raisers at the Pomeroy
Police Department, a
plan is for the children
teer, picking out their
to receive cookies from quilt rafﬂe and visit by
items as usual.
the Council on Aging
Masks will be
See COP | 8
required at all times for to take home, as well

POMEROY — Sisters
Health Foundation and the
Meigs County Community
Fund have partnered again
to support Meigs County’s
nonproﬁt organizations.
Nine organizations received
more than $15,000 through
this round of funding, as they
step up to meet the changing
needs created by COVID-19.
These awards build
upon more than $25,000
in COVID-19 relief grants
awarded this spring by the
Meigs County Community
Fund with funding from Sisters Health Foundation. Both
rounds of funding welcomed
applications from Meigs
County nonproﬁts working
across the critical areas of
food access and distribution;
the needs of seniors; mental
health and addiction-related
needs; and community health
care infrastructure. The most
recent round of funding also
invited applications for needs
emerging as the pandemic
continues.
“With the Meigs County
Community Fund, we have
seen this challenging period
ﬁlled with incredible generosity and kindness,” said
Jennifer Sheets, president
of the Meigs County Community Fund. “So many
organizations and individuals
have stepped up to meet the
pressing needs facing our
community, and we are very
thankful to support them
in partnership with Sisters
Health Foundation.”
Grant recipients include
Eastern Elementary and
Middle School; God’s Hands
at Work; the Meigs County
Farmers Market and Meigs
Cooperative Parish; the
Golden Harvest Food Pantry;
the Meigs County Council on
Aging; Meigs Middle School;
the Meigs Primary and Intermediate Blessings in a Backpack; and Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church.
See GRANTS | 8

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, November 19, 2020

OBITUARIES

Ohio Valley Publishing

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

KENNETH ‘MIKE’ SWANN
POMEROY — Kenneth
“Mike’’ Swann, 63, of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
Nov. 17, 2020, at his residence.
Born Nov. 20, 1956, in
Oak Hill, Ohio, he was
the son of the late Kenneth R. And Gwenda
Morris Swann.
Mike is survived by
three brothers, Doug
(Darla) Swann, Mark
(Noriko) Swann, and
Bryan Swann; three sisters, Kim (Jeff) Zerkle,
Susan (Tim) Jenkins and
Wendy Long; and several
nieces and nephews.

Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his paternal grandparents,
Lockwood and Gathel
Swann and maternal
grandparents, John and
Nellie Morris.
Graveside services will
be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 21, 2020, in the
C&amp;M Cemetery in Oak
Hill, Ohio. Visitation will
be on Friday afternoon
from 4-6 p.m. at the
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
Friends are invited to
sign the online guestbook
at ewingfuneralhome.net.

POWERS
PROCTORVILLE — Jerry W. Powers, 71, of Proctorville, Ohio, died Tuesday, November 17, 2020 at
home. Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m. Saturday, November 21, 2020 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held 6 to 8
p.m. Friday, November 20, 2020 at the funeral home.

for a person with a disability please contact Bridget
Editor’s Note: Gallia Meigs Briefs will only list
event information that is open to the public and will Gilmore at 740-992-2119 or bridget.gilmore@jfs.
ohio.gov
be printed on a space-available basis.

Holiday closure

Straw available

GALLIPOLIS — The Dr. Samuel L Bossard
Memorial Library will be closed Thursday, Nov. 26,
in observance of the Thanksgiving Day Holiday.
Normal hours of operation will resume Friday, Nov.
27.

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
Society will be providing straw for pet bedding during the months of November, December, January,
and February. Vouchers may be picked up at the
Humane Society Thrift Shop, 253 North Second
Street, Middleport, for a fee of $2. Vouchers are to
be redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For
more information call 740-992-6064.

Transportation planning
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Coordinated Transportation Planning Committee will be
holding a public meeting on the following dates and
times: Monday, Nov. 23, at 11 a.m., Monday, Nov.
30, at 9 a.m. and Wednesday, Dec. 2, at 9 a.m., all
meetings will be held virtually via Microsoft Teams
(or you can call in) All public, private non-proﬁt,
and private for-proﬁt transportation providers, as
well as the general public are invited to attend, participate and provide comment on the Meigs County
Coordinated Transportation Plan. For a copy of the
plan prior to the meeting, to gain the access code
for each meeting or to request an accommodation

The Associated Press

ADDISON TWP. — Addison Township Trustees announce Nibert Road will be closed starting
Monday, Nov. 9, for slip repairs.
CHESHIRE TWP. — The Cheshire Township
Board of Trustees announces Township Road
317/Grover Road, will be closed starting Monday,
Sept. 28 and will reopen on or about Monday,
Nov. 30, due to construction on a slip area. Any
questions please contact the township ofﬁce at
740-367-0313.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Talk show host Larry King is 87. Talk show host
Dick Cavett is 84. Broadcasting and sports mogul
Ted Turner is 82. Former Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa,
is 81. Former Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy G. Thompson is 79. Fashion designer Calvin Klein is 78. Sportscaster Ahmad Rashad is 71.

TODAY IN HISTORY

Road construction, closures

Actor Robert Beltran is 67. Actor Kathleen Quinlan
is 66. Actor Glynnis O’Connor is 65. Broadcast
journalist Ann Curry is 64. Former NASA astronaut
Eileen Collins is 64. Actor Allison Janney is 61.
Rock musician Matt Sorum (Guns N’ Roses, Velvet
Revolver) is 60. Actor Meg Ryan is 59.

Today is Thursday, Nov. 19, the 324th day of 2020.
There are 42 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln dedicated a national cemetery at the site of the Civil War
battleﬁeld of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania.
On this date
In 1600, King Charles I of England was born in
Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland.
In 1850, Alfred Tennyson was invested as Britain’s
poet laureate.
In 1919, the Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles
(vehr-SY’) by a vote of 55 in favor, 39 against, short of
the two-thirds majority needed for ratiﬁcation.
In 1942, during World War II, Russian forces
launched their winter offensive against the Germans
along the Don front.
In 1959, Ford Motor Co. announced it was halting
production of the unpopular Edsel.
In 1969, Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad and
Alan Bean made the second manned landing on the
moon.
In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat became
the ﬁrst Arab leader to visit Israel.
In 1985, President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Gorbachev met for the ﬁrst time as they
began their summit in Geneva.
In 1995, Polish President Lech Walesa (vah-WEN’sah) was defeated in his bid for re-election.
In 1996, 14 people were killed when a commuter
plane collided with a private plane at an airport in
Quincy, Illinois. The United States vetoed U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali’s bid for a second
term.
In 1997, Iowa seamstress Bobbi McCaughey (mihkKOY’) gave birth to the world’s ﬁrst set of surviving
septuplets, four boys and three girls.
In 2017, Charles Manson, the hippie cult leader
behind the gruesome murders of actor Sharon Tate
and six others in Los Angeles in 1969, died in a
California hospital at the age of 83 after nearly a halfcentury in prison.
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama, attending a
NATO summit in Lisbon, Portugal, won an agreement
to build a missile shield over Europe, a victory that
risked further aggravating Russia. Twenty-nine miners
were killed by a methane explosion in a southern New
Zealand coal mine.
Five years ago: A study by the Pew Research Center
found that more Mexicans were leaving than moving into the United States, reversing the ﬂow of a
half-century of mass migration. Marcus Ray Johnson,
convicted of killing Angela Sizemore, a woman he’d
met at a Georgia nightclub, was put to death after
losing a last-minute round of appeals. Bryce Harper,
23, became the youngest unanimous MVP winner in
baseball history, capturing the NL award despite his
Washington Nationals missing the playoffs.

SUPPORT

BASHAN
VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENT

The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department is sponsoring a fund raising program
to raise money. These funds will be used to improve service to our community.
Department representatives will be contacting all homes in the area over the
coming weeks asking for a donation of $20. Department representatives will
be going door to door and will carry identiﬁcation or an ID badge.
The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department wishes to THANK everyone for their
donation by giving a complimentary certiﬁcate for a 8x10 color portrait to
be taken at the station.
OH-70213651

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
All content © 2020 Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel
edition. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be
reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except as
permitted by U.S. copyright law.

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

Cities

but those kickoff times have been
moved up slightly to help ensure
they end by the 10 p.m. curfew.
“We’ll need a sense of urgency
From page 1
to leave the facility after those
games, but we don’t want to take
“We understand the sacriﬁce
away from the postgame experiand inconvenience experienced
by residents and businesses, and ence,” OHSAA Executive Director Doug Ute said in a statement
we will keep working with the
community to reduce the impact sent Wednesday.
Republican Gov. Mike DeWine
of the virus as much as possible,”
on Tuesday announced a threeDayton City Manager Shelley
week statewide 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.
Dickstein said in a statement
sent Wednesday by the adminis- general curfew.
“Our state is on ﬁre,” he said
tration.
Wednesday in Columbus, one of
Ohio High School Athletic
several cities — including ToleAssociation ofﬁcials said state
do, Cleveland and Youngstown
championship football games
— that he visited during the day
scheduled Friday and Saturday
to promote the need for the curin Obetz won’t be impacted by
few, along with strict mask wearthe Franklin County advisory,

COVID-19
From page 1

from the Gallia County
Health Department on
Wednesday.
The 588 cases reported by the Gallia County
Health Department are
reﬂected below:
0-19 — 75 cases (3
new cases)
20-29 — 98 cases (10
new cases, 1 hospitalization)
30-39 — 75 cases (4
new cases)
40-49 — 90 cases (7
new cases, 2 hospitalizations)
50-59 — 86 cases (6
new cases, 1 new hospitalization, 6 total hospitalizations)
60-69 — 81 cases (11
new cases, 1 new hospitalization, 12 total hospitalizations)
70-79 — 52 cases (5
new cases, 1 new hospitalization, 18 total hospitalizations)
80-89 — 22 cases (1
new case, 1 new hospitalization, 12 total hospitalizations)
90-99 — 9 cases (6
hospitalizations)
Age unreported — 13
deaths
The health department reported a total of
404 recovered cases and
171 active cases as of
Wednesday afternoon.
There are 13 current
hospitalization and 44
previous hospitalizations.
The Gallia County
Health Department has
reported a total of 13
deaths.
Gallia County remains
at an Orange level-2 advisory level on the State of
Ohio Public Health Risk
Advisory System, which
is deﬁned as “increased
exposure and spread;
exercise high degree of

caution.” Gallia County
was noted as a “high
incidence” county during the Governor’s news
conference on Thursday.
Meigs County
The Meigs County
Health Department
reported 60 active cases,
and 339 total cases (297
conﬁrmed, 42 probable)
since April on Tuesday.
The next update is
expected on Thursday
afternoon.
Age ranges for the 339
Meigs County cases, as
of Tuesday, are as follows:
0-9 — 11 cases
10-19 — 37 cases
20-29 — 41 cases
30-39 — 41 cases (2
hospitalizations)
40-49 — 53 cases (1
hospitalization)
50-59 — 40 cases (2
hospitalizations)
60-69 — 38 cases (5
hospitalizations)
70-79 — 36 cases
(8 hospitalizations, 3
deaths)
80-89 — 27 cases
(6 hospitalizations, 5
deaths)
90-99 — 14 cases
(3 hospitalizations, 3
deaths)
100-109 — 1 case (1
hospitalization)
There have been a
total of 268 recovered
cases, a total of 28
hospitalizations and 11
deaths.
There have been seven
positive antibody tests in
Meigs County. Antibody
tests check your blood
by looking for antibodies, which may tell you
if you had a past infection with the virus that
causes COVID-19.
For more data and
information on the cases
in Meigs County visit
https://www.meigshealth.com/covid-19/ .
Meigs County at the
“Orange” Level-2 health

ing and social distancing. “We’re
seeing spread everywhere.”
Just minutes before DeWine
spoke in Columbus, Republican
lawmakers in the House passed
legislation that declares all Ohio
businesses essential and hence
immune from shutdown or curfew. DeWine called it a “horribly
misguided” attack on public
health and said he would veto it
should it reach his desk.
The 7-day rolling average of
daily new cases in Ohio has risen
over the past two weeks from
3,343 new cases per day on Nov.
3 to 7,280 new cases per day on
Nov. 17, according to an Associated Press analysis of data provided by The COVID Tracking
Project.

advisory level. The color
is updated each week
during the Thursday
news conference by
Governor Mike DeWine.
Meigs County was noted
as a “high incidence”
county during the Governor’s news conference
on Thursday.
Mason County
The Mason County
Health Department
reported 286 total
cases (since March) on
Wednesday, 20 more
than Tuesday. Of those,
82 cases are active,
198 are recovered and
ﬁve are currently in the
hospital. There have
been six total deaths in
Mason County due to
COVID-19.
The West Virginia
Department of Health
and Human Resources
(DHHR) reported
274 total cases (since
March) for Mason County in the 10 a.m. update
on Wednesday, 14 more
than Tuesday. Four of
these cases are probable.
According to DHHR,
the age ranges for 260
of the COVID-19 cases
DHHR is reporting in
Mason County are as
follows:
0-9 — 3 cases
10-19 — 18 cases
20-29 — 33 cases
(plus 1 probable case, 3
new conﬁrmed cases)
30-39 — 31 cases
(plus 1 probable case, 5
new conﬁrmed cases)
40-49 — 48 cases
(plus 1 probable case, 1
new conﬁrmed case)
50-59 — 48 cases
(plus 1 probable case, 1
death, 3 new conﬁrmed
case)
60-69 — 33 cases (2
new conﬁrmed cases)
70+ — 56 cases (5
deaths, 1 new conﬁrmed
case)
On Wednesday, the
“County Alert System

Map” has Mason County
designated as “orange”
(15-24.9 cases per
100,000 people). Surrounding counties were
listed as red (Jackson)
and orange (Cabell and
Putnam) on the state
map.
Mason County was
gold on the West Virginia Department of
Education map, which is
updated every Saturday
evening. Mason County
will report to school on
the normal schedule this
week, unless the county
turns “red.”
Ohio
The COVID-19 dashboard from the Ohio
Department of Health
reported it was experiencing a delay in reporting updated numbers on
Wednesday afternoon.
As of press time, new
data was not available.
West Virginia
As of the 10 a.m.
update on Wednesday,
DHHR is reporting a
total of 36,277 cases
with 612 deaths. There
was an increase of 953
cases from Tuesday
and 14 new deaths.
DHHR reports a total
of 955,928 lab test have
been completed, with a
3.35 cumulative percent
positivity rate. The daily
positivity rate in the
state was 5.66 percent.
Kayla (Hawthorne)
Dunham, Sarah Hawley and Beth Sergent
contributed to this story.
(Editor’s Note: Statistics reported in this
article are tentative
and subject to change.
This was the information available at press
time with more to be
added as it becomes
available.)
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Thursday, November 19, 2020 3

Trump pushes new environmental rollbacks
By Matthew Brown
and Ellen Knickmeyer
Associated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. —
Down to its ﬁnal weeks,
the Trump administration is working to
push through dozens of
environmental rollbacks
that could weaken century-old protections for
migratory birds, expand
Arctic drilling and hamstring future regulation
of public health threats.
The pending changes,
which beneﬁt oil and
gas and other industries,
deepen the challenges
for President-elect Joe
Biden, who made restoring and advancing protections for the environment, climate and public
health a core piece of his
campaign.
“We’re going to see
a real scorched-earth
effort here at the tail end
of the administration,”
said Brian Rutledge,
a vice president at the
National Audubon Society.
The proposed changes
cap four years of unprecedented environmental
deregulation by President Donald Trump,
whose administration
has worked to fundamentally change how federal agencies apply and
enforce the Clean Water
Act, Clean Air Act and
other protections.
Most of the changes
are expected to sail
through the approval
process, which includes
the White House releasing the ﬁnal version and
publication in the Federal Register.
Some decisions, if
they go into effect, will
be easy for Biden to simply reverse. He already
has pledged to return
the United States to the
Paris climate accord
as a ﬁrst step in his
own $2 trillion climate

David Goldman | AP file

Ice is broken up by the passing of the Finnish icebreaker MSV Nordica as it sails through the Beaufort
Sea off the coast of Alaska. Down to its final weeks, the Trump administration is working to push
through dozens of environmental rollbacks that could weaken century-old protections for migratory
birds, expand Arctic drilling and hamstring future regulation of public health threats.

plan. But he faces years
of work in court and
within agencies to repair
major Trump cuts to the
nation’s framework of
environmental protections.
One change that
Trump wants to push
through would restrict
criminal prosecution for
industries responsible
for the deaths of the
nation’s migratory birds.
Hawks and other birds
that migrate through the
central U.S. to nesting
grounds on the Great
Plains navigate deadly
threats — from electrocution on power lines, to
wind turbines that knock
them from the air and
oil ﬁeld waste pits where
landing birds perish in
toxic water.
Right now, the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of
1918 is a vital tool for
protecting more than
1,000 species of birds
including hawks and
other birds of prey. Federal prosecutors use the
act to recover damages,
including $100 million
from BP for its 2010
oil-rig spill into the Gulf
of Mexico, which killed

more than 100,000 seabirds.
But the Trump administration wants to make
sure companies face
no criminal liability for
such preventable, unintentional deaths.
Federal ofﬁcials
advanced the bird treaty
changes to the White
House, one of the ﬁnal
steps before adoption,
two days after news
organizations declared
Biden the winner of the
presidential race.
For industry, “that’s
an important one,”
said Rachel Jones, vice
president of the National
Association of Manufacturers. Jones lobbied
for the changes in the
Migratory Bird Treaty
Act at a meeting last
year between privatesector representatives
and staff from the White
House and Interior
Department. “It really
matters in relation to the
infrastructure we need
for a modern society.”
Earlier moves by the
Trump administration,
which are now facing
court challenges, remove
protections for millions

of miles of waterways
and wetlands, narrow
protections for wildlife
species facing extinction, and open more of
the hundreds of millions
of acres of public land to
oil and gas drilling.
Asked about the push
now, as Trump and many
of his supporters continue to deny his election
loss. Environmental Protection Agency spokesman James Hewitt
said, “EPA continues
to advance this administration’s commitment
to meaningful environmental progress while
moving forward with
our regulatory reform
agenda.”
Pushing to get new
rules on the books
before the end of a
president’s term is not
unusual — former Presidents Barack Obama and
George W. Bush both did
it, said Cary Coglianese,
an expert on administrative law and rule-making
at the University of
Pennsylvania Carey Law
School.

Lawmakers consider
new expansion of
Ohio gun laws
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohioans’ ability to
carry guns would be further expanded under a legislative proposal being considered in the Republican-controlled House, according to a report.
One proposal would expand Ohioans’ ability to
“stand their ground” from residences and cars to
businesses, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer,
which obtained an analysis of the proposed changes to a current pending weapons-related bill.
Another provision would allow 18-year-olds to
receive a concealed carry license and with that, to
buy ﬁrearms. An additional measure would ban
schools and universities from penalizing employees or students who carry a concealed weapon
legally. Another change would allow Ohioans to
have guns while drinking in bars.
The proposal comes despite Republican Gov.
Mike DeWine’s regular plea for fellow GOP lawmakers to enact proposals to try to reduce gun
violence.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce would oppose
measures that take away businesses’ ability to
set workplace rules. “Employers should be free
to make the decision that works best for them,”
Kevin Shimp, the chamber’s director of labor and
legal affairs, told the newspaper.

IN BRIEF

Congo announces end to its
11th deadly Ebola outbreak
KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Congo has
declared an end to its 11th Ebola outbreak, this
one in western Equateur province, nearly six
months after cases were reported and amid the
rise of COVID-19 in the Central African nation.
This is the ﬁrst time Congo is Ebola-free in about
two and a half years.
Congo’s minister of health, Dr. Eteni Longondo,
along with the World Health Organization made
the ofﬁcial declaration Wednesday with no new
cases recorded in more than 48 days.
More than 55 deaths were recorded, 119 conﬁrmed cases and 75 recoveries since the declaration of the outbreak on June 1, according to the
WHO and the health ministry.
The outbreak in western Congo emerged shortly
before eastern Congo marked an ofﬁcial end on
June 25 to the second deadliest Ebola outbreak in
history, which killed 2,280 people over nearly two
years. The two strains were not related, ofﬁcials
said.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday November 21st
@10am, doors open @9am!
On-site auction 3440 Little Bullskin Road
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manages all facets of care for patients with the diagnosis of cancer and hematologic disorders. In addition to his formal educational and research activities, Dr.
Shenouda served as Chief Fellow throughout the third year of his fellowship training at Marshall University School of Medicine. Dr. Shenouda earned his medical
degree at the Alexandria University School of Medicine in Alexandria, Egypt. He
completed his internal medicine residency and oncology/hematology fellowship
at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine in Huntington, WV.
He also completed a postdoctoral fellowship in radiation oncology at the Department of Radiation and Oncology at Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston,
Massachusetts.
“We are extremely fortunate to have someone of Dr. Shenouda’s caliber here
on a full-time basis to serve patients in the Ohio Valley Region,” states Jeff
Noblin, FACHE, CEO of PVH. “He will elevate the level of cancer services we
are able to provide to patients in both West Virginia and Ohio.”
Dr. Shenouda is accepting new patients at the Edwards Comprehensive Cancer Center
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Call 304.675.1759 today to schedule your appointment.

Featured Items:
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with 16LA front loader; has only 628 hours. 5' King
Kutter Brush-hog, a low mile 2009 GMC Sierra
single cab one owner 2x2 Truck, 37K miles! Kenmore
Washer and Dryer, Very nice Furniture, Household
items. More items and pictures will be added.
All items will be sold AS-IS to highest bidder.
Must have a valid ID and a bidder number to
bid. Everyone can bid that has a bidder number
including our staff.
Tractor, Truck, and Brush-hog does have a reserve.
We except Cash, Good Check, and Credit Card. We
will waiver a 4% Buyers Premium if paid with Cash
or Good Check. All items must be paid for before
removing items from the premises. All items must be
removed after the sale, unless approved by our staff.

For more info email us at
pattersonauctioneering@gmail.com
or call Auctioneer Randy L Patterson
740-577-8732. Auctioneer ID#: 49552,
License: 2019000116.
Follow us on Facebook!
All items are sold AS-IS to the highest bidder! Must have valid ID and a bidder
number to bid. Everyone can bid with a number including our staff. All items must
be paid for before removing from premises. We except Cash, Good Check, Credit
Card. We will waiver a 4% buyers premium if paid with cash or good check. Must
remove all items from premises after sale, unless approved by our staff.

OH-70212914

Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to welcome Edwards Comprehensive
Cancer Center oncologist and hematologist Mina Shenouda, MD, as its
newest board-certified physician to its highly specialized medical staff.

�NEWS/CLASSIFIEDS

4 Thursday, November 19, 2020

OU offers certainty
to seniors with the
admission promise
ATHENS — Ohio University is
offering a new option to provide
certainty and support for fall 2021
applicants during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Through the new OHIO Admission
Promise, qualifying fall 2021 applicants to Ohio University’s Athens
campus will be offered general University admission when they:earn a
minimum 3.0 cumulative grade point
average on a strong college prep curriculum;
apply by the extended application
deadline of January 15, 2021 (application fee will be waived); and
enroll in fall 2021 as a full-time,
first-year, degree-seeking student on
the Athens campus.
“The high school graduating class
of 2021 will have persevered through
one of the most uncertain and challenging seasons in the history of
education,” Ohio University President M. Duane Nellis said. “Through
the OHIO Admission Promise, we
want to provide some peace of mind
to prospective students and their
families as they consider college
plans. We want to encourage them
to continue to prioritize pursuit of a
high-quality education, despite these
most trying times.”
To help alleviate financial pressures on students and their families,
the program also includes a minimum $2000 renewable OHIO Admission Promise Award for qualifying
Athens campus freshmen whose
FAFSA results reach Ohio University
by January 15 when they enroll in
fall 2021.
Students who met OHIO’s November 15 Early Action deadline for the
Athens campus will be eligible for
the OHIO Admission Promise Award
as well, and all fall 2021 admitted
students will still be considered for
OHIO’s generous merit- and needbased scholarship programs.
OHIO’s regional campuses offer
admission to any qualifying applicants who have earned a high school
diploma or equivalent, as well as
generous regional-specific scholarships.
For more information about the
OHIO Admission Promise, visit
www.ohio.edu/promise.

Ohio Valley Publishing

DeWine deflects questions on public utility official
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Gov. Mike DeWine at a
news brieﬁng to discuss the
latest measures in the state’s
effort to control the coronavirus epidemic on Tuesday
deﬂected questions about an
FBI search of the Columbus
home of his appointee as the
state’s top utility regulator.
DeWine announced in
February 2019 the appointment of Sam Randazzo, a
longtime utility attorney
and lobbyist, as chair of the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio.
In response to a question,
the Republican governor
said there were no indications that Randazzo was
under investigation or the
target of an investigation.
“We’re waiting for additional information, quite
candidly,” DeWine said.
“I hired him. I think he’s a
good person. If there’s evidence to the contrary, we’ll
act accordingly. But I’m not
going to act without the
facts.”
The FBI has not provided
any details about Monday’s
search. A PUCO spokesper-

son declined to comment
and said Randazzo was not
available for an interview on
Monday.
The PUCO chair is one
of the most powerful positions in state government,
wielding extraordinary
inﬂuence on matters
regarding the regulation
of utilities in the state to
include utility proﬁts and
rates charged to customers.
As PUCO chair, Randazzo
also is chair of the Ohio
Power Siting Board, which
has oversight approval for
new electric-generating
facilities.
The search came nearly
four months after the FBI
arrested then-Ohio House
Speaker Larry Householder
and four others in connection to a $60 million
bribery scheme funded by
Akron-based FirstEnergy
Corp., which was seeking a
$1 billion legislative bailout
for its two aging nuclear
power plants in the state.
Householder and four
others were subsequently
indicted on racketeering
charges in federal court.

Householder has pleaded
not guilty. Two of the men
indicted with Householder
have pleaded guilty to
charges. The FBI would
not say whether Monday’s
search was related to that
bribery probe.
A coalition of consumer
and environmental groups
on Tuesday called on DeWine to immediately remove
Randazzo from the PUCO,
citing his “well-known” ties
to FirstEnergy. The governor has the sole authority
to remove PUCO commission members.
“We have adamantly
opposed Randazzo’s
appointment since February 2019. He does not hold
an elected position, so the
power to remove him rest
squarely on the shoulders
of the governor,” the coalition said in a joint statement.
The groups, including
Ohio Citizen Action, Black
Environmental Leaders,
Evangelical Environmental
Network and Moms Clean
Air Force, said Randazzo
can’t oversee utilities in a

fair and ethical way if he is
being investigated by the
FBI.
On Monday, a former
chair of the Ohio Republican Party who is among
those charged in the
alleged bribery scheme,
denied wrongdoing in an
interview.
“I did not break the law,”
lobbyist Matt Borges, who
served as party chair from
2013 to 2017, told The Cincinnati Enquirer. “I did not
conspire to break the law. I
did not intend to break the
law. I was not aware of anyone else breaking the law if
it was happening.”
Borges pleaded not guilty
in August to a charge of
racketeering following a
July indictment.
Borges’ attorney asked
a Franklin County judge
Monday to dismiss a lawsuit ﬁled by Republican
Ohio Attorney General
Dave Yost that seeks to
stop money from being collected from nearly all Ohio
electric ratepayers beginning in January to pay for
the nuclear plant subsidies.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Thursday, Nov. 19

MIDDLEPORT — The November
Free Community Dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ Family Life CenPOMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp;
ter. Take-out meals will be passed out
Water Conservation District Board
beginning at 5 p.m. while supplies last.
of Supervisors will hold their regular
monthly meeting at noon at the district Please note: only 1 meal will be given
to each person present until everyone
ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
is served. This month they will be servMemorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
ing turkey, mashed potatoes &amp; gravy,
noodles, green beans, roll, and dessert.
Everyone is welcome.
OHIO TWP. — Ohio Township
GALLIPOLIS — Regular monthly
special meeting to discuss and pass
board meeting of the O. O. McIntyre
Park District has been rescheduled for required legislation for an USDA loan/
11 a.m., in the Park Board ofﬁce at the grant and equipment bond, 7:30 p.m.,
at the Fire Station at 63 Waugh Road.
Gallia County Courthouse, 18 Locust
Craig Taylor will be celebrating his
birthday on Nov. 21, cards may be sent St., ﬁnd the Park Board on Facebook.
KANAUGA — Ohio AFSCME
to: 2516 State RT 218 Gallipolis, OH,
Retirees, Subchapter 102, Gallia and
45631.
Jackson Counties, meets 2 p.m., at the
Lou Long will be celebrating her
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Fire
State Route 7 N, Rest Area in Kanauga, Department will be having a ﬁsh fry
90th birthday on Nov. 30, cards may
be sent to Holzer Assisted Living 300 members asked to wear a mask and fol- and hot dog with lunchroom sauce at
low all CDC guidelines.
Briarwood Dr. Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
ﬁre station. Serving starts 11 a.m.
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
and Gallipolis Daily Tribune 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:
TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com or
GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Friday, Nov. 20

Card Showers

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

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

Saturday, Nov. 21

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

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

Probate Court of Meigs County, Ohio
Thomas S. Moulton, Jr., By Assignment, Judge
In the matter of the Estate of Rosalie Dawn Story
Case No. 20191079
To: Unknown heirs of Rosalie Dawn Story and Ruth Ann Norris,
defendant, and her unknown heirs, administrators, successors
and assigns, whose addresses are unknown: The Probate
Court of Meigs County, Ohio, 100 East Second St., Rm 203,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Plaintiff has brought this action naming you as the defendant
in the above-named court by filing his complaint on 8/21/2020.
The object of the plaintiff's complaint is to obtain permission
from the Probate Court to sell real estate belonging to the
Estate of Rosalie Dawn Story that is located in Meigs County
Ohio. You are required to answer the complaint within 28 days
after the last publication of this notice which will be published
once per week for six consecutive weeks. In the case of your
failure to answer or respond as permitted by the Ohio Civil
Rules within the time stated, a judgement by default will be
rendered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint.
10/29/20,11/5/20,11/12/20,11/19/20,11/26/20,12/3/20

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

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

-2% 3267,1*
The Gallia County Engineer, Brett A. Boothe, would like to
announce that the Gallia County Engineer's Office is now
seeking one qualified individual to fill an open job as Assistant
Engineer. Applications and job description are available at
the Gallia County Engineer's Office, 1167 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Those interested should drop off the completed application, resume, and references to the Engineer's
Office by Friday, November 20, 2020.

LEGALS

EMPLOYMENT
Legals

LEGAL NOTICE - ANNUAL
FINANCIAL REPORT
Notice is hereby given that
the GAAP-Basis Annual
Financial Report for fiscal
year ending June 30, 2019,
of the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
Joint Vocational School District, Rio Grande, Ohio, has
been filed with the Auditor of
State.
These unaudited financial
statements are available for
public inspection at the Office
of the Treasurer of the
Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District
during normal business
hours, pursuant to Ohio
Revised code Section 117.38.
11/19/20

Help Wanted General
3DUW WLPH JHQHUDO IDUP
ZRUNHU FDOO ������������
AUTOS
Autos For Sale
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, November 20,
2020 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
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2007 Honda Pilot

�Sports
Ohio Valley Publishing

Thursday, November 19, 2020 5

2020 All-OVC golf teams
GAHS lands 12 selections between boys, girls teams

By Bryan Walters

coming away coach of the year
honors.
Nine of the 11 Gallia Academy athletes collectively named
CENTENARY, Ohio — A
to the two squads were ﬁrst
delectable dozen.
Gallia Academy had a total of team honorees, while each program also secured a single hon12 people earn all-league honorable mention choice each.
ors on the Ohio Valley ConferThe Blue Devils — who
ence golf teams for both boys
and girls this past 2020 fall sea- ﬁnished second in the league
son, which were based on ﬁnal and eventually qualiﬁed for the
placements at the annual OVC Division II state tournament
— led all OVC boys programs
championship meet.
with six selections.
Both the Blue Devils and
Senior Cooper Davis, juniors
the Blue Angels came away
with six selections apiece, with Hunter Cook and Will Hendrickson, and sophomores
GAHS girls coach Mark Allen

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy sophomore Beau Johnson hits a chip shot onto the ninth green
during the Division II sectional tournament held on Sept. 29 at the Elks Country
Club in McDermott, Ohio.

Laith Hamid and Beau Johnson
all ended up winning ﬁrst team
honors. Sophomore Cody Bowman was also named to the
honorable mention team.
Davis, Hamid and Hendrickson were repeat honorees on
the All-OVC boys golf team for
GAHS.
Bryan Ward of Fairland was
named the coach of the year in
the boys division.
Senior Lilly Rees was the
lone Blue Angel to make a
repeat appearance on the
See GOLF | 6

No. 12 Knights
too much for
RedStorm
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — Christian Stewart
scored 10 of his 15 points after halftime as 12thranked Marian University pulled away in the second half for a 78-56 win over the University of Rio
Grande, Tuesday night, in non-conference men’s
basketball action at Marian Arena.
The Knights improved to 3-0 with the victory.
Rio Grande dropped to 1-2 with the loss.
The RedStorm trailed just 34-30 at halftime, but
came undone over the ﬁnal 20 minutes.
Rio shot just 35.7 percent overall (10-for-28)
after intermission, including a 1-for-11 performance from beyond the three-point arc.
Marian went 16-for-28 from the ﬂoor (57.1%)
in the second half, including 4-for-8 from threepoint range, while also enjoying a 22-10 edge in
rebounding after the break.
Still, the RedStorm found themselves knotted
in a 36-all deadlock after a pair of free throws by
freshman Andrew Shull (Milton, WV) with 17:27
remaining in the contest.
But the Knights responded with a 16-4 run over
the next 4-1/2 minutes to take control once and
for all, leading by no less than nine points the rest
of the way. Stewart had a pair of three-point goals
See KNIGHTS | 6

Washington has virus
case, 3 other teams
add to COVID list
By Stephen Whyno
The Associated Press

The New York Giants, Atlanta Falcons and Las
Vegas Raiders put players on the NFL’s COVID19 list Tuesday, while Washington had its ﬁrst
instance of someone in the organization testing
positive for the coronavirus since the season
began.
Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Rams announced
they will hold their team meetings from home
Wednesday after an unidentiﬁed player tested
positive for coronavirus Tuesday night.
The player is self-quarantining, and the Rams
say they are “entering intensive protocol.” The
team was scheduled only for a light walkthrough
practice Wednesday with an extra-long week of
preparation for their game at Tampa Bay on Monday night.
The NFL said there were 17 new conﬁrmed
positives among players and 35 among other
personnel during testing from Nov. 8-14. That
brought the league’s total to 95 players and 175
other personnel since Aug. 1, not counting new
cases this week.
“It reﬂects the continued uptick that we’re seeing in places around the country,” said Dr. Allen
Sills, the NFL’s chief medical ofﬁcer. “We’ve seen
that throughout the course of our season, as our
players, coaches and staff are exposed to others
outside the team facility, we’re going to see these
cases.”
After New York announced an unidentiﬁed
player tested positive, Giants kicker Graham Gano
landed on the reserve/COVID-19 list. Washington
also placed injured defensive lineman Matt Ioannidis on the list after announcing a positive test.
See VIRUS | 6

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

GAHS sophomore Maddux Camden (13) tries a shot around a Unioto defender, during the Division II district final on Oct. 31 at Zane Trace
High School in Kinnikinnick, Ohio.

All-OVC soccer teams feature 11 from GAHS
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

The Gallia Academy
soccer programs collectively produced 11
selections, including a
coach of the year honor,
following the release of
the 2020 All-Ohio Valley
Conference soccer teams
for boys and girls, as
voted on by the coaches
within the league.
The Blue Devils went
a perfect 10-0 in league
play for the second
straight season, while the
Blue Angels were fourth
in the conference with
a 2-4-2 record, but the
GAHS girls were responsible for the lone blemish
on league champion Rock
Hill’s 7-0-1 record.
GAHS boys coach Cory
Camden was named
Coach of the Year for the
second straight fall, leading the Blue and White
to their ﬁrst ever district
runner-up ﬁnish.
Rock Hill girls coach
Summer Collins also won
the Coach of the Year
award for a second year
in a row.
GAHS junior Brody
Wilt was named to the
ﬁrst team for a third year
in a row. Senior Colton
Roe and sophomore
Maddux Camden are
both ﬁrst team selections
after appearing on the
honorable mention portion of the list last year.
Blue Devils senior Bode
Wamsley is on ﬁrst team
for his ﬁrst career allleague honor.
Honorable mentions
for the Blue Devils were
senior Dalton Vanco and
junior Ayden Roettker,

HONORABLE MENTION
Gallia Academy: Ayden
Roettker, Jr. Dalton Vanco,
Sr.
Rock Hill: Blake Wilson, Jr.
Tyler Brammer, Jr.
South Point: Mason Kazee*,
Jr. Erikai Jackson, So.
Fairland: Rion Chafin, Jr.
Zach Stewart*, Sr.
Chesapeake: Jacob Spears,
Jr. Jake Anderson, Sr.
Portsmouth: Alonso
Salinas#, Jr. Zach Roth, Fr.

All-OVC Girls Soccer Team
FIRST TEAM
Rock Hill (7-0-1): Brianna
Reynolds*, So. Paige Bailey*,
Sr. Emmi Stevens, Jr. Aleigha
Matney, Jr.
Fairland (4-2-1): Maddie
Miller*, Jr. Nina Miller, Sr.
Olivia White, Jr.
South Point (4-3-0): Kylee
Ellison#, Sr. Sarah Roach#,
Sr.
Gallia Academy (2-4-2):
Preslee Reed*, Jr. Kaylie
Clark*, Sr.
GAHS senior Kaylie Clark (13) brings the ball across midfield in Chesapeake (0-8-0):
front of a Fairland defender, during an Ohio Valley Conference Kandace Pauley, Jr. Carolina
Jamie, Jr.
match on Sept. 10 in Centenary, Ohio.
COACH OF THE YEAR
sophomore year.
both ﬁrst time choices.
Summer Collins, Rock Hill.
On the girls side,
HONORABLE MENTION
Rock Hill: Allison Rogers, Jr.
GAHS senior Kaylie
All-OVC Boys Soccer Team
Ashlie Howard, Jr.
FIRST TEAM
Clark was named to the
Fairland: Lexi Hall#, Sr. Lexi
Gallia
Academy
(10-0-0):
ﬁrst team for a third
Steele, Jr.
straight year, while junior Brody Wilt*, Jr. Colton
South Point: Keilanee
Roe#,
Sr.
Bode
Wamsley,
Sr.
Preslee Reed was on the
Montgomery, Jr. Jaycie
Maddux
Camden#,
So.
ﬁrst team for a second
Walters*, So.
Rock Hill (6-3-1): Sam
year in a row, after an
Gallia Academy: Kyrsten
Simpson*, So. Parker
honorable mention as a
Sanders*, Jr. Koren
Knipp#, Sr. Mason Parkes,
freshman.
Truance#, Sr.
Sr.
This season, senior
South Point (6-2-1): Braylon Chesapeake: Jasmine Young,
Koren Truance and
Balandra, So. Tyler Lilly*, Sr. So. Sarah Ellis, Jr.
Kyle Badgett, Sr.
junior Kyrsten Sand* — indicates first team
Fairland (4-5-0): Jacob
ers represent the Blue
selection in 2019.
Polcyn*, Sr. Clayton Bloss,
Angels on honorable
# — indicates honorable
Sr.
mention. Sanders was
mention selection in 2019.
Chesapeake
(2-8-0):
Lucas
also honorable mention
Shepard, Jr. Bryson Haynes,
as a freshman, while
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Sr.
landing on ﬁrst team last Portsmouth (0-10-0):
Publishing, all rights
year. This is Truance’s
reserved.
Treyvin Craft, Sr.
second year in a row on
COACH OF THE YEAR
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740honorable mention after Cory Camden, Gallia
446-2342, ext. 2100.
a ﬁrst team spot her
Academy.

�SPORTS

6 Thursday, November 19, 2020

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Hunting licenses soar as Americans head outdoors

RSC honors
Rio Grande’s Tadic

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP)
— Hunting was a big part of Zane
Goucher’s youth, when he pursued
whitetail deer and ruffed grouse in
the Maine woods with his father.
He eventually drifted away from
the sport but has returned after a
22-year absence, inspired by the
coronavirus outbreak.
Many Americans appear to be
doing likewise, as sales of hunting
and ﬁshing licenses are spiking in
much of the U.S. Weary of being
cooped up at home — and of masking and social distancing when
they go elsewhere — they’re taking
refuge in outdoor sports that offer
safety and solitude.
The trend has abruptly reversed
a steady decline in hunting’s popularity that once appeared permanent and provided a potential new
source of food for families and food

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — University of Rio
Grande guard Miroslav “Miki’ Tadic had a
30-point game to claim River States Conference
Men’s Basketball Player of the Week for Nov. 9-15.
Tadic, a sophomore from Hilversum, The Netherlands, poured in 33 points in his debut for the
RedStorm - an 87-78 win over Goshen (Ind.). His
performance included making 11 for 16 shots from
the ﬁeld overall, 6-for-10 from beyond the arc and
5-of-6 free throws.
Tadic also grabbed ﬁve rebounds in Rio’s only
game of the week.

Garrett home sick, team
places 3 more on list
CLEVELAND (AP) — Star defensive end
Myles Garrett stayed home feeling sick and the
Browns placed three more players, including
starting right tackle Jack Conklin and kicker
Cody Parkey, on the COVID-19 list as the team
prepares for this week’s home game against Philadelphia.
The team also placed dependable long snapper Charley Hughlett on the growing list. Andy
Janovich and offensive lineman Chris Hubbard
are already on the list after testing positive.
Browns coach Kevin Stefanski couldn’t elaborate on whether Conklin, Parkey or Hughlett
tested positive for coronavirus, but it’s believed
they’ve been identiﬁed as high risk due to close
contact with a non-staff member who tested positive.
If they continue to test negative, they’ll be able
to play Sunday against the Eagles.
Stefanski said Garrett has not tested positive.
But because he’s not feeling well, the team is
keeping him away from the facility as an added
safety measure. The team did something similar
with receiver Odell Beckham Jr. several weeks
ago.
Garrett has 9 1/2 sacks and been a force all
season for the Browns (6-3), who have already
matched their win total from last season.
The Browns have had to shut down their headquarters twice since Friday in order to do contact
tracing after being informed of positive tests.
They also put quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld on the
COVID list for a few days after he had contact
with a staffer who tested positive.

Virus

ﬁrst team girls squad, but
was joined on the ﬁrst
team by classmate Avery
Minton, sophomore Addy All-OVC Boys Golf Team
FIRST TEAM
Burke and freshman JorClayton Thomas, Fairland;
dan Blaine.

Blevins (South Webster,
OH) had 12 points
and a team-best seven
rebounds.
Junior Cam Harris
(Amelia, VA) ﬁnished
with 11 points and a
team-high three assists
in a losing cause, while
sophomore Miki Tadic
(Hilversum, The Netherlands) had 10 points.
Rio ﬁnished 22-of-54
overall (40.7%), but was

just 4-for-20 from threepoint range (20.0%).
Rio Grande returns to
action on Friday night
when it entertains Campbellsville University-Harrodsburg in the opening
round of the Bevo Francis
Classic.
Tipoff is set for 8 p.m.

Landon Thomas, Fairland;
Jackson Stephens,
Chesapeake; Laith Hamid,
Gallia Academy; Brayden
Sexton, South Point; Jacob
Lemley, Chesapeake;
Christian Hall, Chesapeake;
Cooper Davis, Gallia
Academy; Hunter Cook,
Gallia Academy; Jackson
McComas, Chesapeake;
Will Hendrickson, Gallia

Adkins, South Point.

Academy; Beau Johnson,
Gallia Academy.
Coach of the Year:
Bryan Ward, Fairland.
HONORABLE MENTION
Drey Osborne, Coal
Grove; Issac Doolin, Rock
Hill; Daewin Spence,
Portsmouth; Max Gleichauf,
Ironton; Carter Collins,
Chesapeake; Cody Bowman,
Gallia Academy; Brayden

O
T
O
PH TEST
CON
Ca$h Prize$!
Submit photos on the web:
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailyregister.com
Submissions 10/30 thru 11/10
Voting 11/11 thru 11/20

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Mark Allen, Gallia Academy.
HONORABLE MENTION
Emily Horn, Coal Grove;
All-OVC Girls Golf Team
Kylee Cook, Gallia Academy;
FIRST TEAM
Brianna Stokley, South
Abbi Zornes, South Point;
Addy Burke, Gallia Academy; Point; Lexi Hall, Fairland;
Makyla Collins, Ironton.
Jordan Blaine, Gallia
Academy; Sidnea Belville,
© 2020 Ohio Valley
South Point; Lilly Rees,
Gallia Academy; Avery
Publishing, all rights
Minton, Gallia Academy.
reserved.
Coach of the Year:

OH-70211267

From page 5

for the game, were led by
Luke Gohmann with 16
points.
From page 5
Luke Heady had a
game-high eight rebounds
and three assists in the
during the game-changwinning effort, while
ing spurt.
Christian Harvey also had
Marian’s largest lead of
25 points, 74-49, came after three assists.
Shull led a quartet
a layup by Gavin Bizeau
of double-digit scorers
with 3:14 left to play.
for Rio Grande with a
The Knights, who ﬁngame-high 17 points,
ished with a dominating
43-21 edge in rebounding while sophomore Shiloah

tive last month. Brown
was taken off the list
brieﬂy before going back
on it when symptoms
returned.
Rams players and
coaches will hold their
normal meeting schedule
from home Wednesday.
They haven’t determined
their schedule for the rest
of the week.
Los Angeles center
Brian Allen was the ﬁrst
NFL player to conﬁrm
he had tested positive for
coronavirus back in April.
Other Rams players who
have already recovered
from COVID-19 infections include left tackle
Andrew Whitworth and
linebacker Terrell Lewis.
The Rams (6-3) beat
the Seattle Seahawks
23-16 last Sunday to
move into a ﬁrst-place tie
atop the NFC West.
Sills said the NFL has
identiﬁed nine people in
recent weeks who were
identiﬁed as “high-risk”
close contacts who later
tested positive after being
isolated. But in a much
larger number of cases,
there have been no “highrisk” contacts in a sign
teams are following the
protocols, Sills said.
Sills also said the
league has done whole
genome sequencing on
players who test positive

Knights

Sophomore Kylee Cook
was also chosen to the
honorable mention team
on behalf of GAHS.
The Blue Angels won
both the OVC and D-2
sectional titles this fall.

in 2019, according to the state
Department of Natural Resources.
Signiﬁcantly, the number getting
licenses for the ﬁrst time in at least
ﬁve years — if ever — has jumped
80 percent, to nearly 84,500.
The state’s total is up 20 percent
for female hunters and 18 percent
for those ages 9 and younger.
In neighboring Wisconsin,
archery license sales have risen
12 percent and gun license sales
9.5 percent. Maine reports a state
record for deer hunting permits,
and Vermont and Nevada have had
double-digit hunting increases.
Fishing license sales also have
soared. Louisiana’s total in April,
shortly after the governor issued a
stay-at-home order, nearly doubled
that of the same month in 2019. In
Idaho, new hunters and anglers are
up nearly 30 percent over last year.

testing positive for the
virus, Washington coach
Ron Rivera jokingly called
that a jinx. He credited
senior director of player
development Malcolm
Blacken for reminding
guys of their responsibilities during the pandemic.
“When you have a guy
who’s constantly (saying): ‘Hey guys, don’t
forget we have this. Hey
guys, don’t forget we have
that,’ there’s that constant
reminder,” Rivera said. “I
think, for whatever reason, our guys have been
very diligent about it,
which we really do appreciate.”
Washington announced
Monday no fans will be
allowed for the Bengals
game after hosting 3,000
on Nov. 8 against the
Giants. FedEx Field is
in Landover, Maryland,
and the nearby Baltimore
Ravens also took the step
of barring fans for their
next game as cases spike
around the U.S.
There have been 19
teams that have had fans
at games this season.
“We have been tracking
case trends at the local
and state level with public
ofﬁcials and no local case
clusters have been reported or traced back to NFL
games,” spokesman Brian
McCarthy said.

The other players put
on the list Tuesday were
Falcons wide receiver
Laquon Treadwell, and
Raiders defensive end
Clelin Ferrell and defensive back Lamarcus
Joyner.
Gano is the second
Giants player in three
weeks to go on the
COVID-19 list after
guard Will Hernandez on
Oct. 29, who was activated Nov. 10 and played
Sunday against Philadelphia. The Giants, who
have a bye this week, said
two staff members were
told to remain home after
coming into contact with
the player who tested
positive.
Treadwell is the second
Atlanta player on the
COVID-19 list, joining
defensive end Dante
Fowler Jr., who was put
on it last week. Treadwell
has spent the past 10
weeks on the practice
squad.
The Raiders put Ferrell
and Joyner on the list
Tuesday, joining linebacker Cory Littleton, who
tested positive last week,
and right tackle Trent
Brown, who tested posi-

The NFL will have an all-Black ofﬁciating crew
for the ﬁrst time in league history when the Rams
play the Buccaneers on Monday night.
“This historic Week 11 crew is a testament to
the countless and immeasurable contributions of
Black ofﬁcials to the game, their exemplary performance, and to the power of inclusion that is the
hallmark of this great game,” said Troy Vincent,
NFL executive vice president of football operations.
The crew consists of: referee Jerome Boger,
umpire Barry Anderson, down judge Julian Mapp,
line judge Carl Johnson, side judge Dale Shaw,
ﬁeld judge Anthony Jeffries and back judge Greg
Steed.
Five members of the crew work together regularly. Johnson and Steed will join the group for this
game. The crew has a combined 89 seasons in the
league and has worked six Super Bowls.
The league has assigned crews based on geography this season to limit travel due to the coronavirus pandemic. Crew assignment guidelines
have also been relaxed to assign ofﬁcials to games
closer to their homes when feasible.
The ﬁrst Black ofﬁcial in any major sport was
Burl Toler, hired by the NFL in 1965.

banks pressed by the pandemic.
“I’d been meaning to get back
into it and just never did,” said
Goucher, now a resident of Grand
Ledge, Michigan, who headed into
the ﬁeld Sunday with 12-year-old
daughter Annabelle as the state’s
ﬁrearm deer hunting season
opened. Lifestyle changes forced
by the pandemic, especially online
schooling for his four children,
“gave me that boost to make it happen.”
“They were getting a lot more
screen time than normal, so this
was a way to get them outside,” he
said. For his part, “it’s a reawakening, kinda gets me back to my
roots.”
More than 545,000 hunters in
Michigan had bought licenses
through Nov. 11, nearly 10 percent more than at the same point

and most of the transmission has come from contacts in the community.
Washington’s positive
test result was the team’s
ﬁrst since July. A person
with direct knowledge
of the situation said the
player who tested positive did not travel with
Washington for its game
at Detroit last weekend.
The person spoke to
The Associated Press on
condition of anonymity
because the team did not
release speciﬁc details
about the positive case.
Ioannidis has been
on injured reserve since
Sept. 29.
The Giants and Washington were notiﬁed of
their respective positive
test results Monday
night. The players selfisolated, and contact tracing began.
Washington, which is
set to host Cincinnati on
Sunday, was one of the
few teams that hadn’t
had a positive and is now
in the NFL’s intensive
protocols. Meetings will
be conducted virtually
this week, and the practice facility will only be
open to staff with limited
access for players.
Asked last week about
his team getting through
the ﬁrst nine weeks of the
season without someone

From page 5

NFL assembles all-Black
officiating crew for first time

Golf

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�NEWS/WEATHER

8 Thursday, November 19, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Grants
From page 1

“As the pandemic continues, we know how crucial
it is that we all continue to do what we can to make
a difference,” said Renee Steffen, executive director
of Sisters Health Foundation. “We are so grateful to
partner with the Meigs County Community Fund
to support all those working day-in and day-out for
Meigs County.”
Three projects were funded by Sisters Health
Foundation:
Eastern Elementary and Middle School received
funding to support its Eagle Pack Program, which
provides free weekend meals to 80-100 students
every month.
God’s Hands at Work received funding to support a mobile food pantry, which will help meet the
increased need for food assistance in Meigs County.
The Meigs County Farmers Market received funding to start a community garden in collaboration
with Meigs Cooperative Parish. The garden will
increase access to healthy foods among the residents
of ten towns and villages in Meigs County.
Two projects were funded jointly by Sisters Health
Foundation and the Meigs County Community
Fund:
The Golden Harvest Food Pantry received funding
to purchase a new refrigerator, which will help meet
increased demand for services during the pandemic.
The pantry servers about 450 people each month.
The Meigs County Council on Aging received
funding to continue meeting increased need for
the delivery of healthy, nutritious meals to seniors
through its Meals on Wheels program.
Three projects were funded by the Meigs County
Community Fund:
The Meigs Middle School received funding from
the Meigs County Community Fund to support its
Care Cubby, a place where kids can go to discreetly
get socks, personal hygiene items, feminine products, shoes, and other needed items.
The Meigs Primary and Intermediate Blessings in
a Backpack received funding from the Meigs County
Community Fund to support weekend meals for 375
K-5 students facing food insecurity.
Pageville Freewill Baptist Church received funding
from the Meigs County Community Fund to provide
winter boots and coats to seniors in Scipio Township.
The Meigs County Community Fund is a local
community fund of the Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio (FAO). The Meigs County Community Fund
provides a way for anyone to give back to the community and invest in nonproﬁts, schools and community organizations through grants.
If you are interested in making a gift to support
the Meigs County Community Fund and build the
resources necessary to address this crisis and future
needs in the community, please contact FAO at
740.753.1111 or info@ffao.org. To learn more about
the Meigs County Community Fund, visit www.
AppalachianOhio.org/Meigs.

File photo

Pomeroy Police Chief Chris Pitchford helps a child shop during the 2019 Shop with a Cop event.

Cop

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

36°

59°

55°

Brilliant sunshine and windy today. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 66° / Low 41°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
1.76
2.02
43.22
37.97

Today
7:16 a.m.
5:12 p.m.
11:58 a.m.
9:36 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Fri.
7:17 a.m.
5:11 p.m.
12:43 p.m.
10:41 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Nov 21 Nov 30

Last

Dec 7

New

Dec 14

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

Major
Today 3:04a
Fri.
4:06a
Sat.
5:02a
Sun. 5:51a
Mon. 6:34a
Tue. 7:12a
Wed. 7:48a

Minor
9:19a
10:20a
11:14a
12:02p
12:45p
1:02a
1:38a

Major
3:33p
4:33p
5:26p
6:14p
6:55p
7:33p
8:08p

Minor
9:48p
10:46p
11:39p
------1:23p
1:58p

WEATHER HISTORY
Copious amounts of snow fell in
the mountains of Arizona on Nov.
19, 1993. Mt. Lenunon received 24
inches of snow. Up to 17 inches accumulated in Red River.

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

0

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Logan
64/42

Chillicothe
63/44

Lucasville
64/44

AIR QUALITY

Sun followed by
increasing clouds

0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.95
15.79
21.72
13.08
13.17
24.60
12.33
26.03
34.25
12.45
18.20
34.50
17.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.22
-0.84
+0.25
+0.19
+0.02
+0.24
+0.04
+0.11
-0.07
+0.04
+0.30
+0.10
-0.20

Partly sunny

Marietta
65/44
Belpre
66/44

Athens
64/42

St. Marys
65/44

Parkersburg
64/45

Coolville
65/43

Elizabeth
66/43

Spencer
66/42

Buffalo
67/40
Milton
67/41

Clendenin
69/39

St. Albans
68/41

Huntington
65/43

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
49/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
60/46
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
68/52
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

53°
37°
Considerable
cloudiness

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
67/43

Ashland
68/44
Grayson
67/43

WEDNESDAY

53°
37°

Cooler; rain and
drizzle in the a.m.

Wilkesville
65/40
POMEROY
Jackson
66/42
65/40
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
66/42
66/40
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
62/45
GALLIPOLIS
66/41
66/42
66/41

South Shore Greenup
67/43
65/41

49

TUESDAY

51°
30°

Murray City
64/41

McArthur
65/42

Waverly
62/45

MONDAY

65°
44°

Mostly cloudy

Adelphi
64/42

Portsmouth
66/42

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

OH-70211309

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

SUNDAY

64°
43°

Mostly sunny, breezy
and pleasant

0

Q: What are the freezing and boiling
points of water on the Celsius scale?

SUN &amp; MOON

SATURDAY

A: Zero is freezing and 100 is boiling

Precipitation

FRIDAY

65°
43°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

45°
27°
56°
36°
82° in 1958
15° in 1959

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

the children to Wal-Mart
as busing is not being
provided due to the
pandemic. Anyone interested in volunteering
can contact Cheyenne
Martin at the Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce at 740-992-4650
(leave a message).
Anyone who wishes
to donate to Shop with
a Cop may contact any
sheriff’s deputy, the
Pomeroy Police Department or make a donation at any Farmer’s
Bank location.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

department to support
the program. A Facebook
auction will run Nov.
23-29 with items that
have been donated for
the fundraiser. Donations of items will be
accepted until Nov. 22.
Current items include a
Joe Burrow autographed
football, a Nintendo
Switch and much more.
Items can be view on
the “Shop With A Cop
Auction by Pomeroy
Police Department”
Facebook page where
the bidding will take
place.
Volunteers are also
needed to shop with the
kids, and possibly assist
with transportation of

Primary Care Racine,
the ofﬁce of Douglas
Hunter, MD, Morgan
Gordon, DO and Nicole
From page 1
Humphrey, CNP, will
be rafﬂing off an Ohio
the Grinch.
State ﬂeece blanket.
The Grinch will be
Tickets can be purchased
making an appearance
at the ofﬁce, 207 5th
on Saturday, Nov. 21
St., Racine. Contact the
from noon-2 p.m. at
Powell’s Foodfair as part ofﬁce at 740-949-2683 to
arrange ticket purchase.
of a Shop with a Cop
Deputies are accepting
fundraiser organized by
sponsorship donations
Albert Profﬁtt. A ﬁrst
responder quilt which is for No Shave November.
being rafﬂed off as a ben- Contact any deputy to
sponsor them in the funeﬁt for the program will
draiser competition.
also be on display, with
Ofﬁcer Leif Babb
ticket available. The quilt
drawing will take place in of the Pomeroy Police
Department has been
mid-December.
organizing fundraisOhioHealth Physician
ing efforts at the police
Group Heritage College

Charleston
66/41

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
31/15

Billings
49/29

Montreal
42/37
Minneapolis
53/35

Detroit
60/49

Toronto
55/48

Chicago
65/52
Denver
66/33

New York
48/44
Washington
54/42

Kansas City
73/51

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
74/45/s
21/15/s
61/42/s
52/41/s
54/38/s
49/29/pc
48/27/c
45/41/pc
66/41/s
57/35/s
55/29/pc
65/52/pc
63/46/s
60/49/pc
62/45/s
73/58/s
66/33/pc
70/43/pc
60/49/pc
84/75/pc
79/63/pc
63/48/s
73/51/s
70/50/s
70/51/s
68/52/pc
65/47/s
79/72/pc
53/35/pc
67/46/s
74/62/pc
48/44/s
71/56/s
74/63/pc
51/41/s
85/61/s
60/46/s
38/35/pc
56/36/s
56/38/s
71/55/s
50/34/c
60/46/pc
49/44/sh
54/42/s

Hi/Lo/W
70/46/pc
25/21/pc
67/45/s
65/49/s
64/44/pc
44/26/s
44/26/s
58/45/pc
65/44/s
67/42/s
42/29/pc
60/41/pc
61/49/pc
60/45/pc
60/46/pc
77/60/pc
52/33/pc
57/37/c
63/39/c
86/75/pc
79/62/pc
59/48/pc
61/44/c
69/50/pc
71/49/pc
70/53/pc
65/50/s
80/73/pc
43/27/c
69/43/s
74/62/pc
61/48/s
73/56/s
77/65/pc
62/45/s
86/62/pc
60/44/pc
56/41/pc
66/40/s
65/39/s
66/52/c
48/31/pc
61/44/s
51/42/c
63/46/s

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
61/42

High
Low

El Paso
83/54

Chihuahua
78/47

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

91° in Tucson, AZ
5° in Silver Bay, MN

Global
High
Low

Houston
79/63
Monterrey
78/50

Miami
79/72

110° in Zumbo, Mozambique
-50° in Oymyakon, Russia

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

�Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 19, 2020 9

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