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                  <text>On this
day in
history
NEWS s 4

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 27, Volume 75

COVID-19
death reported
in Gallia Co.

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 s 50¢

Senate agrees to hear Trump case

Mason Co. returns to
‘yellow’ designation
ODH has reported a
total of 33 deaths (one
new), 124 hospitalizaOHIO VALLEY —
tions (2 new), and
One additional death
1,902 presumed recovwas reported in Gallia
ered individuals (14
County on Tuesday as
new) as of Tuesday.
single-digit additional
Age ranges for the
cases were reported in
2,108 total cases reporteach of the three couned by ODH on Monday
ties.
are as follows:
The Ohio Depart0-19 — 274 cases
ment of Health (ODH)
reported one new death (1 hospitalization)
20-29 — 346 cases
associated with COVID19 and three new cases (6 hospitalizations)
30-39 — 285 cases
in Gallia County on
(3 hospitalizations, 1
Thursday.
new case)
The Meigs County
40-49 — 306 cases
Health Department
reported four additional (6 hospitalizations)
50-59 — 314 cases
COVID-19 cases on
(13 hospitalizations
Tuesday.
(1 new), 2 deaths
The West Virginia
(1 new), 2 new cases)
Department of Health
60-69 — 263 cases
and Human Resources
(25 hospitalizations
(DHHR) reported ﬁve
(1 new), 3 deaths)
additional cases of
70-79 — 181 cases
COVID-19 on Tuesday
(34 hospitalizations,
in Mason County.
11 deaths)
Here’s a closer look
80-plus — 142 cases
at coronavirus cases
(36 hospitalizations,
across our area:
17 deaths)
Gallia County is curGallia County
rently “Orange” on the
ODH reported a
Ohio Public Health
total of 2,111 cases
Advisory System map
of COVID-19 (since
March) in Gallia Coun- after meeting two of
the seven indicators on
ty as part of Tuesday’s
Thursday.
updates. This is an
increase of three since
Monday’s update.
See COVID | 2
Staff Report

Child reportedly
struck by vehicle
in road, injured
waiting on the school
bus.
Boyer stated the
GALLIPOLIS — A
nine year old suffered
nine-year old boy was
reportedly injured after incapacitating injuries
and was transported by
being struck by a vehipersonnel with Gallia
cle on Monday.
County EMS to a local
According to Galhospital for treatment.
lipolis Police Chief Jeff
Boyer said the driver
Boyer, the child appears
of the pickup remained
to have been struck in
on the scene.
the roadway by a 2000
At this time, no citaChevrolet Silverado
pickup in the area of the tion has been issued
and the incident
intersection of Chestnut and Gallia Avenue. remains under investigation, Boyer added.
Ofﬁcers were alerted
shortly after 8 a.m. on
Monday and the child
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all
is believed to have been rights reserved.

Staff Report

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

Jose Luis Magana | AP

Members of the National Guard patrol the area outside of the U.S. Capitol during the impeachment trial of former President Donald
Trump at Capitol Hill in Washington on Tuesday.

Graphic video opens trial

Trump is the ﬁrst president to face impeachment
charges after leaving
ofﬁce and the ﬁrst to be
against his reelection
By Lisa Mascaro,
defeat, followed by graph- twice impeached. The
Eric Tucker,
Capitol siege stunned
ic video of the deadly
Mary Clare Jalonick
the world as hundreds
attack on Congress that
and Jill Colvin
Associated Press
of rioters ransacked the
came soon after.
building to try to stop the
The lead prosecutor
certiﬁcation of Biden’s
told senators the case
WASHINGTON —
would present “cold, hard victory, a domestic attack
Senators in Donald
on the nation’s seat of
facts” against Trump,
Trump’s historic second
government unlike any
impeachment trial agreed who is charged with
inciting the mob siege of in its history. Five people
Tuesday to consider the
died.
case, rejecting an attempt the Capitol to overturn
Acquittal is likely, but
by the former president’s the election he lost to
the trial will test the
Democrat Joe Biden.
defense team and some
Senators sitting as jurors, nation’s attitude toward
Republican allies to halt
his brand of presidential
the trial because he is no many who themselves
power, the Democrats’
ﬂed for safety that day,
longer in ofﬁce.
The vote was 56-44 on watched the jarring video resolve in pursuing him,
of Trump supporters bat- and the loyalty of Trump’s
the question of whether
tling past police to storm Republican allies defendthe Senate has jurisdicing him.
the halls, Trump ﬂags
tion and could proceed.
Trump’s lawyers are
waving.
House Democrats
insisting that he is not
“That’s a high crime
opened Donald Trump’s
guilty of the sole charge
historic second impeach- and misdemeanor,”
of “incitement of insurrecment trial Tuesday show- said Rep. Jamie Raskin,
tion,” his ﬁery words just
D-Md., in opening
ing the former president
whipping up a rally crowd remarks. “If that’s not an a ﬁgure of speech as he
impeachable offense, then encouraged a rally crowd
to march to the Capito “ﬁght like hell” for his
there’s no such thing.”
tol and “ﬁght like hell”

Ohio to give nursing
home workers 2nd
chance at vaccine
By Andrew
Welsh-Huggins

residents and employees
of nursing homes and
Associated Press
assisted living facilities now that the initial
COLUMBUS, Ohio — round of shots is over.
Details are coming next
Nursing home workers
week.
who declined the coroThe goal is “continuing
navirus vaccine during
access to this life-saving
the ﬁrst round of shots
vaccine,” DeWine said.
will be given another
More than 1 million
opportunity to take it,
Ohioans received at least
Gov. Mike DeWine said
the ﬁrst vaccine shot as
Tuesday as he outlined
plans for providing ongo- of Tuesday, or about 9%
ing access to the vaccine of the population, according to the state Departin the state’s long-term
ment of Health.
care facilities.
Also Tuesday, the govOnly about four of
every 10 employees nurs- ernor said he wants Ohio
schools to develop plans
ing home and assistedliving facility employees by April 1 for addressing educational setbacks
have received it, the
governor has said. Work- experienced by children
ers have cited distrust of during the pandemic,
the vaccine and concern and he’s making $2 billion in federal aid availabout side effects.
Providing that second able to help.
Steps to close the
opportunity is part of the
state’s plan to make vacSee WORKERS | 2
cines available for new

presidency. But prosecutors say he “has no good
defense” and they promise new evidence.
Security remained
extremely tight at the
Capitol on Tuesday, a
changed place after the
attack, fenced off with
razor wire with armed
National Guard troops on
patrol. The nine House
managers walked across
the shuttered building to
prosecute the case before
the Senate.
White House press
secretary Jen Psaki said
Biden would not be
watching the trial of his
predecessor.
“Joe Biden is the president, he’s not a pundit,
he’s not going to opine
on back and forth arguments,” she said.
With senators gathered
as the court of impeachment, sworn to deliver
“impartial justice,” the
See TRUMP | 12

Ohio Senate bill targets
health dept. authority
By Tyler Buchanan

Health by passing a concurrent resolution. Lawmakers could similarly
Some Ohio lawmakers strike down any execubelieve the health orders tive order or emergency
issued over the past year declaration issued by the
governor.
are unconstitutional
SB 22 would also
and reﬂect an executive
create an “Ohio Health
branch of government
overstepping its bound- Oversight and Advisory
Committee” made up
aries.
of 10 state lawmakers
A proposed bill to
who could rescind health
solve that problem may
orders, executive orders
itself be unconstituand emergency declarational.
tions by a majority vote.
That’s the opinion of
If an order is rescindthe Legislative Service
ed, executive branch ofﬁCommission, a noncials would have to wait
partisan group which
provides legal and policy at least 90 days before
research to Ohio legisla- attempting to issue it
again.
tors.
Concurrent resoluSenate Bill 22 was
tions differ from bills in
introduced last month
that resolutions do not
by state Sens. Rob
head to the governor’s
McColley, R-Napoleon,
desk to either be signed
and Terry Johnson,
into law or vetoed.
R-McDermott. The bill
DeWine has pledged
would give the Ohio
to veto any bill targeting
General Assembly
authority to rescind any the authority of ODH to
public health order from
See BILL | 12
the Ohio Department of

Ohio Capital Journal

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

OBITUARIES

Ohio Valley Publishing

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

PENNY LYNN HARRISON
CHESHIRE
— Penny Lynn
Harrison, 58 of
Cheshire, Ohio
passed away
on February 8,
2021. She was
born on July 20,
1962 in Gallipolis, Ohio,
daughter of Ann Rife of
Cheshire and the late
James A. Rife.
She is survived by her
mother, Ann Rife; her
husband, John Harrison;
children, James and
Katie Harrison; grandson, James Michael
Oshel Patterson; sister,
Terry Rife; special
friends, Gary and Bert

Stover; son-inlaw, Richard N.
Patterson Jr.;
and all of her
friends and family of Arbor’s at
Gallipolis.
In addition
to her father, James A.
Rife, she was preceded
in death by her sister,
Debby Rife.
Graveside funeral services will be held on Friday, February 12, 2021
at 11 a.m. at Gravel Hill
Cemetery.
Arrangements are
under the direction of
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home.

STEVEN R. FULLER
BIDWELL — Steven
R. Fuller, 79, Bidwell,
Ohio passed away Monday, February 8, 2021 in
the Holzer Senior Care
Center, Bidwell.
Steven was born
August 20, 1941 in
Lawrence County, Ohio,
son of the late Paul
and Virginia “Ding”
(nee Wilks) Fuller. A
1959 Rio Grande High
School graduate, he
attended Tri-State Bible
College in South Point,
Ohio. He married Ruth
Dauber Fuller August 4,
1961, who survives.
Steven retired from
the Gallia County
Highway Department
and was a Christian of
the Baptist Faith. He
Pastored three local
churches over the years
– Cheshire Baptist
Church, Pomeroy Baptist Church and Racine
Baptist Church.
Ruth is left to cherish
his memory with their
daughter, Lisa (Randy)
Corbin, Rockbridge,
Ohio and three grandchildren: Christina (Justin) Halfhill, Lancaster,
Ohio; Katie (Tim)
Reid, McArthur, Ohio
and Daniel (Bethany)
Corbin, Bidwell. Oth-

ers surviving Steven
are eight great-grandchildren; brother, John
Fuller, Marble Falls,
Texas and sister, Betty
McNeely, Springboro,
Ohio as well as sisterin-law, Hazel Persinger,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by brothers
Vernon “Buddy” Fuller,
Dale Fuller and Danny
Fuller.
Graveside services
will be conducted noon
Thursday, February
11, 2021 in the Vinton
Memorial Park with
Larry Camden ofﬁciate.
PLEASE NOTE:
To respect the safety
of the family and in
accordance with CDC
regulations and current
COVID-19 pandemic
protocol, face coverings
are required, and social
distancing is requested
in the cemetery during
services. We respectfully ask that visitors
not linger following the
service. We and the family thank you for this
consideration.
Online registry is
available to leave condolences for the family via
www.mccoymoore.com

JACK ROOD
BELPRE — Jack
Rood, 74, of Belpre,
passed away Monday,
Feb. 8, 2021 at CamdenClark Memorial Hospital.
He was born Nov. 1,
1946 in Wellsville, son
of the late Albert and
Iola Burns Rood.
Jack is survived by a
son, Chris and Tammy
Rood; special friend,
Kathy Smith and her
sons, Josh, Zach and
John; 6 grandchildren;
5 great-grandchildren; 2
brothers, Mike Wilson
and Terry Wilson; 2
sisters, Fran Putman
and Shirley Barber and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his

parents, he was preceded in death by a son,
Brett Rood; grandson,
Michael and 2 brothers,
Roger Rood and Dave
Wilson.
Funeral services will
be held at 7 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 11, 2021 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville,
with Gary Reed ofﬁciating. Burial will be in the
Eden Cemetery,
Visitation will be held
Thursday, from 5-7 p.m.
at the funeral home.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations can be made
to the funeral home.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com

IN BRIEF

Obama teams with puppets
NEW YORK (AP) — Michelle Obama is launching a Netﬂix children’s food show with a pair of
puppets “to bring a bit of light and laughter to
homes around the world.”
The new show, called “Wafﬂes + Mochi,” launches March 16 and will be “all about good food: discovering it, cooking it, and of course, eating it,” the
former ﬁrst lady posted on Instagram on Tuesday.
The 20-minute episodes will combine live action
and puppets, and Obama will be a series regular.

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
All content © 2021 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

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

Library closing
for holiday

and categories: 80 years and older,
75-plus and those with severe congenital conditions, 70-plus, 65-plus.
To schedule an appointment, call
740-441-2018, 740-441-2950, or
740-441-2951. The health department stresses a scheduled appointment is required to receive the
vaccine.

Meigs vaccine
registration

GALLIPOLIS — The Bossard
Memorial Library will be closed on
Monday, Feb. 15 in observance of
President’s Day. Normal hours of
operation will resume on Tuesday,
The Meigs County Health
Feb. 16.
Department is compiling a list of
Meigs County residents who wish
to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.
The following age groups and categories are currently being accepted: 80 years and older, 75-plus
and those with severe congenital
The Gallia County Health
Department is scheduling COVID- conditions, 70-plus, 65-plus. To be
placed on the list for an appoint19 vaccine appointments for resiment, call 740-444-4540. Individudents in the following age groups

Gallia vaccine
registration

als are asked to utilize this number
and do not call the Health Department’s main line to be placed on
the waiting list. Your call will be
returned to acknowledge receipt
within 24-48 hours during normal
business hours (Monday-Friday
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m.). Appointments
will be made based on the availability of vaccine and in compliance
with guidance issued by the state
of Ohio.

Conservancy
officers elected
RUTLAND — Leading Creek
Conservancy District held their
organizational board meeting on
Jan. 26 with Collin Roush elected
president and John Hood as vice
president. Regular board meetings
will be held the fourth Tuesday of
each month at 4 p.m.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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 spaceavailable basis and in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.
com or GDTnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Card shower
Garnet Schwarz will be celebrating her 100th birthday on Feb. 18.
Cards may be sent to Garnet at
906 27th Street, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550.

COVID
From page 1

Meigs County
The Meigs County Health
Department reported three
additional conﬁrmed cases and
one additional probable case of
COVID-19 on Tuesday. The new
cases bring the county to 96
active cases and 1,308 total cases
(1,174 conﬁrmed, 134 probable)
since April, according to the
update. There have been a total of
27 deaths, 1,185 recovered cases
(7 new), and 67 hospitalizations
since April.
Age ranges for the 1,308 Meigs
County cases, as of Tuesday, are as
follows:
0-9 — 48 cases
10-19 — 122 cases (1 hospitalization, 1 new case)
20-29 — 184 cases (1 hospitalization, 1 new case)
30-39 — 163 cases (3 hospitalizations, 1 new case)
40-49 — 191 cases (4 hospitalizations)
50-59 — 184 cases (4 hospitalizations)
60-69 — 190 cases (17 hospitalizations, 3 deaths, 1 new case)
70-79 — 138 cases (22 hospitalizations, 9 deaths)
80-89 — 58 cases (9 hospitalizations, 12 deaths )
90-99 — 28 cases (5 hospitalizations, 3 deaths)
100-109 — 2 cases (1 hospitalization)
To date, the Meigs County
Health Department has adminis-

Workers
From page 1

pandemic schooling gap
could including tutoring, summer programs,
extended school years or
school days, DeWine said.
Schools have two years to
use the money.
Ohio has paused its
age-group delivery of vaccines to focus on people
65 and older, a large
group of about 2 million
Ohioans. The governor
said Tuesday that once
a third phase of vaccinations begins for people
younger than 65, other
needy groups could be
considered. Funeral home
workers, day care employ-

Thursday, Feb. 11
WELLSTON — The GJMV
Solid Waste Management District
Board of Directors, meeting 3:30
p.m., district ofﬁce.

or visit the Meigs SWCD at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D, across
from the old Veterans Memorial
Hospital building. Packets will be
available for pickup in late March/
early April.

Friday, Feb. 12

Monday, Feb. 15

GALLIPOLIS — The Regular
Monthly Board meeting of the O.
O. McIntyre Park District will be at
11 a.m., in the Park Board ofﬁce at
the Gallia County Courthouse, 18
Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio.
POMEROY – The deadline for
ordering trees or seed packets from
the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District’s 2021 Tree Sale at
4:30 p.m. For more information
or for an order form visit www.
meigsswcd.com or call 740-9924282 weekdays from 8-4:30 p.m.

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will be
closed in observance of President’s
Day.

tered 755 COVID-19 vaccinations
since Dec. 29.
For more data and information
on the cases in Meigs County visit
https://www.meigs-health.com/
covid-19/ .
Meigs County remained “Red”
on the Ohio Public Health Advisory System after meeting two of the
seven indicators on Thursday.

Wednesday, Feb. 17
Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency Board of Directors meeting, 11:30 a.m. via virtual media.
If you would like to attend, please
contact Lora at lrawson@galliameigscaa.org to obtain access
information.

on the West Virginia County Alert
System map. Mason County’s latest
infection rate was 25.86 on Monday with a 3.90 percent positivity
rate. Surrounding counties are
orange and gold.

Ohio
The Ohio Department of Health
reported a 24-hour change of
3,207 new cases on Tuesday (21day average of 4,252). There were
Mason County
DHHR reported 1,714 total cases 98 new deaths (21-day average of
69), 181 new hospitalizations (21(since March) for Mason County
day average of 202) and 22 new
in the 10 a.m. update on Tuesday
ICU admissions (21-day average
morning, ﬁve more than Monday.
of 23) reported in the previous
Of those, 1,666 are conﬁrmed
24 hours, according to Tuesday’s
cases and 48 are probable cases.
update.
DHHR has reported 35 deaths in
Mason County.
According to DHHR, the age
West Virginia
ranges for the 1,714 COVID-19
As of the 10 a.m. update on
cases DHHR is reporting in Mason Tuesday, DHHR is reporting a
County are as follows:
total of 125,522 cases with 2,150
0-9 — 36 cases (plus 3 probable deaths. There was an increase
cases, 1 new conﬁrmed case)
of 416 cases from Monday and
10-19 — 135 cases (plus 3 prob- 19 new deaths. DHHR reports a
able case)
total of 2,007,316 lab tests have
20-29 — 292 cases (plus 9 prob- been completed, with a 5.60
able cases)
cumulative percent positivity
30-39 — 287 cases (plus 10 prob- rate. The daily positivity rate in
able cases)
the state was 4.80 percent. There
40-49 — 241 cases (plus 10 prob- are 14,756 currently active cases
able cases)
in the state.
50-59 — 248 cases (plus 3 probDHHR reported on Tuesday
able cases, 3 deaths, 1 new con221,347 ﬁrst doses of the COVIDﬁrmed case)
19 vaccine have been administered
60-69 — 218 cases (plus 5 proba- to residents of West Virginia. So
ble case, 6 deaths, 1 new conﬁrmed far, 108,870 people have been fully
case)
vaccinated.
70+ — 209 cases (plus 5 probKayla (Hawthorne) Dunham contributed to this
able cases, 26 deaths, 2 new constory.
ﬁrmed cases)
On Tuesday, Mason County
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights
reserved.
changed/downgraded to “yellow”

ees and police ofﬁcers are
among those who have
lobbied for vaccines.
Last week, the chief
judges of Ohio’s two federal court districts asked
the Health Department
director to include judicial workers on the list
of essential employees
eligible for a vaccine.
Those workers would
include not just judges
but employees with
direct access to the public, including probation
ofﬁcers, deputy U.S. marshals and pretrial services
ofﬁcers.
“They are on the front
lines and they have to be
out in the community visiting with defendants and
discharging their responsibilities,” said federal

Judge Algenon Marbley,
chief judge of the Southern District of Ohio.
The federal court for
the Southern District of
Ohio has recorded 47 positive coronavirus cases at
its courthouses in Cincinnati, Columbus and Dayton. Federal courts also
have a backlog of both
criminal and civil cases
and can’t begin to reopen
until frontline judicial
workers are vaccinated,
Marbley said.
The state’s current
vaccination plan doesn’t
include judicial workers, but they could be
included in other priority
groups, said Ohio Health
Department spokesperson
Melanie Amato. Those
currently eligible in Ohio

include front line medical
workers, people over 65,
people with severe congenital conditions such as
cerebral palsy, and school
employees.
The Health Department said 1,974 patients
were hospitalized with
COVID-19 as of Tuesday,
the eighth day with hospitalizations falling below
2,500. That should signal
the elimination of the
state’s 11 p.m. to 5 a.m.
curfew starting Thursday,
though DeWine said it
could be reimplemented if
case numbers rise again.
The seven-day rolling
average of daily new cases
in Ohio did not increase
over the past two weeks,
going from 5,370 on Jan.
25 to 3,295 on Feb. 8.

�Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 3

GALLIPOLIS AND MASON
OFFICES OFFERING

COVID-19 TESTING
WITH VISIT

If you’re not feeling well and are worried you may
have COVID-19, Damia Hayman, FNP-BC in Gallipolis and Brandon DeWees, FNP-C in Mason and their
staff can help you get tested and provide medical
management of your symptoms. Damia and Brandon
will make sure you get the care you need.
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GET TESTED. GET RESULTS. GET TREATMENT.
Call to schedule an appointment TODAY!

OH-70220768

740.925.9035 - Gallipolis
304.773.5179 - Mason
Monday through Friday | 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
995 Jackson Pike, Suite 102 | Gallipolis, Ohio
2007 Second Street | Mason, WV

�4 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

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Ohio Valley Publishing

‘QAnon Shaman’ apologizes
By Jacques Billeaud

half day before Trump’s
impeachment trial was
scheduled to begin in the
U.S. Senate.
PHOENIX — An
Arizona man who parWatkins, who had unsucticipated in the Jan. 6
cessfully sought a pardon
insurrection at the U.S.
on Chansley’s behalf from
Capitol while sporting
Trump, said the Senate
face paint, no shirt and a didn’t take up his offer to
furry hat with horns now have his client testify on
says he regrets storming
how he was incited by the
the building, apologized
former president.
for causing fear in others
The defense lawyer
and expressed disappoint- said his client’s apology
ment with former Presiwasn’t self-serving, but
dent Donald Trump.
rather a genuine expresIn a statement released sion of culpability. Still,
he said he doesn’t think
late Monday through his
it’s right for the governattorney, Jacob Chansley
ment to prosecute people
said he has re-evaluated
who were incited.
his life since being jailed
“If you believe the
for over a month on charggovernment is correctly
es stemming from the
prosecuting the (former)
riot and now realizes he
shouldn’t have entered the president, you can’t at
the same time hold crimiCapitol building. Chansnally culpable those who
ley, who previously said
Trump inspired him to be were incited, because the
people incited become
in Washington on Jan. 6,
victims,” Watkins said in
said Trump “let a lot of
an interview.
peaceful people down.”
No one picked up the
Chansley said he’s comphone at the U.S. Attoring to terms with the
ney’s Ofﬁce in the Disevents leading up to the
trict of Columbia when
riot and asked people to
The Associated Press
“be patient with me and
called on Tuesday seeking
other peaceful people
comment on Chansley’s
who, like me, are having
a very difﬁcult time piec- apology.
Chansley was among a
ing together all that hapgroup of hundreds of propened to us, around us,
Trump supporters who
and by us. We are good
charged past outnumpeople who care deeply
bered police ofﬁcers and
about our country.”
stormed the Capitol as
Chansley’s attorney,
Congress was meeting to
Al Watkins, released
vote to certify Joe Biden’s
the statement about a
Associated Press

electoral win.
Authorities say Chansley was among the ﬁrst
people in the Capitol
building, disobeyed
orders by an ofﬁcer to
leave, refused the ofﬁcer’s
request to use Chansley’s
bullhorn to tell rioters to
leave the Senate chamber and wrote a note to
then-Vice President Mike
Pence saying, that said:
“It’s only a matter of time,
justice is coming.”
Prosecutors said the
spear on top of a ﬂagpole
carried by Chansley was a
weapon, though his attorney has characterized the
spear as an ornament.
Since being jailed,
Chansley has had two
instances in which he
wasn’t eating because the
detention facilities where
he was being held didn’t
serve organic food.
He lost 20 pounds during the latest starvation
episode. Chansley, who
calls himself the “QAnon
Shaman,” said he has
been following such a diet
for eight years while practicing Shamanism.
Last week, a judge
ordered corrections ofﬁcials to provide Chansley
with organic food. He was
later moved to a jail in
Virginia after the District
of Columbia Department
of Corrections said it
couldn’t honor the court’s
order to feed him organic
food.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Associated Press

weapons.
In 2006, Dr. Norman
Shumway, who performed
Today is Wednesday,
the ﬁrst successful U.S.
Feb. 10, the 41st day of
2021. There are 324 days heart transplant, died in
Palo Alto, California, at
left in the year.
age 83.
In 2014, former ﬁlm
Today’s Highlight in History:
star and diplomat Shirley
On Feb. 10, 1967, the
Temple Black, 85, died at
25th Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution, dealing her home near San Franwith presidential disabil- cisco.
In 2015, the parents of
ity and succession, was
ratiﬁed as Minnesota and Kayla Jean Mueller and
U.S. ofﬁcials conﬁrmed
Nevada adopted it.
the death of the 26-yearold aid worker who had
On this date:
In 1763, Britain, Spain been held captive by the
Islamic State group (IS
and France signed the
said Mueller had been
Treaty of Paris, endkilled in a Jordanian airing the Seven Years’
strike). NBC announced
War (also known as the
French and Indian War in it was suspending Brian
Williams as “Nightly
North America).
News” anchor and managIn 1840, Britain’s
ing editor for six months
Queen Victoria married
without pay for misleadPrince Albert of Saxeing the public about his
Coburg and Gotha.
experiences covering the
In 1933, the ﬁrst singIraq War. Jon Stewart
ing telegram was introduced by the Postal Tele- announced he would step
down as host of “The
gram Co. in New York.
Daily Show” on Comedy
In 1936, Nazi GermaCentral later in the year.
ny’s Reichstag passed a
law investing the Gestapo
secret police with absoTen years ago:
lute authority, exempt
Egyptian President
from any legal review.
Hosni Mubarak refused
In 1959, a major torto step down or leave the
nado tore through the
country and instead handSt. Louis area, killing 21
ed his powers to his vice
people and causing heavy president, stunning prodamage.
testers in central Cairo
In 1962, the Soviet
who waved their shoes in
Union exchanged capcontempt and shouted,
tured American U-2 pilot “Leave, leave, leave.”
Francis Gary Powers for
(Mubarak resigned the
Rudolf Abel, a Soviet spy next day.)
held by the United States.
In 1992, boxer Mike
Five years ago:
Tyson was convicted in
Senate Democrats
Indianapolis of raping
and Republicans united
Desiree Washington, a
behind tougher sanctions
Miss Black America con- on North Korea for violattestant. (Tyson served
ing international law by
three years in prison.)
pursuing nuclear weap“Roots” author Alex
ons. President Barack
Haley died in Seattle at
Obama took a nostalgic
age 70.
trip to the Illinois capital
In 1997, a civil jury
of Springﬁeld where he
heaped $25 million in
launched his national
punitive damages on O.J. political career nine years
Simpson for the slayings earlier. For the 15th time,
of his ex-wife and her
ofﬁcials denied parole
friend, on top of $8.5
for Sirhan Sirhan, the
million in compensatory
assassin of Sen. Robert
damages awarded earlier. F. Kennedy. Former
In 2005, Britain’s
Transportation Secretary
Prince Charles announced Drew Lewis, 84, died in
he would marry his
Prescott, Arizona.
divorced lover, Camilla
Parker Bowles, in April.
One year ago:
North Korea boasted
U.S. health ofﬁcials
publicly for the ﬁrst time conﬁrmed the ﬁrst case
that it possessed nuclear of the novel coronavirus

among the hundreds of
people who’d been evacuated from China to military bases in the United
States; it was among the
13 conﬁrmed cases in
the U.S. Britain declared
the new coronavirus a
“serious and imminent
threat to public health”
and said people with the
virus could now be forcibly quarantined. U.S.
prosecutors charged four
members of the Chinese
military with breaking into the computer
networks of the Equifax
credit reporting agency
and stealing the personal
information of tens of millions of Americans.
Today’s Birthdays:
Opera singer Leontyne
Price is 94. Actor Robert
Wagner is 91. Rock musician Don Wilson (The
Ventures) is 88. Singer
Roberta Flack is 84.
Singer Jimmy Merchant
(Frankie Lymon and the
Teenagers) is 81. Rock
musician Bob Spalding
(The Ventures) is 74.
Olympic gold-medal
swimmer Mark Spitz
is 71. Walt Disney Co.
executive Robert Iger is
70. Rock musician and
composer Cory Lerios
(Pablo Cruise) is 70.
World Golf Hall of Famer
Greg Norman is 66.
Actor Kathleen Beller
is 65. Country singer
Lionel Cartwright is 61.
Movie director Alexander
Payne is 60. ABC News
correspondent George
Stephanopoulos is 60.
Political commentator
Glenn Beck is 57. Actor
Laura Dern is 54. Writerproducer-director Vince
Gilligan (TV: “Breaking
Bad”) is 54. Country
singer Dude Mowrey is
49. Actor Jason Olive
is 49. Actor Elizabeth
Banks is 47. Actor Julia
Pace Mitchell is 43. Reggaeton singer Don Omar
is 43. Actor Uzo Aduba
is 40. Actor Stephanie
Beatriz is 40. Actor Max
Brown is 40. Actor Barry
Sloane is 40. Rock singer
Eric Dill is 39. Actor
Trevante Rhodes is 31.
Actor Emma Roberts is
30. Actor Makenzie Vega
is 27. Actor Chloe Grace
Moretz is 24. Actor Yara
Shahidi is 21.

�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

BLONDIE

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 5

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk

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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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6 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Ohio Valley Publishing

Boys basketball postseason set
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

The sectional tournament
brackets for boys basketball
were released by the Ohio
High School Athletic Association on Sunday, with action
for teams in the Ohio Valley
Publishing area set to begin
on Feb. 22.
River Valley and Meigs —
both in Division III — kick
things off for local teams,
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
River Valley senior Dylan Fulks dribbles through South Gallia defenders Tristan playing fellow Tri-Valley ConSaber (23), Jaxxin Mabe (10) and Andrew Small (14) during the second half of a ference Ohio Division teams
in sectional semiﬁnals on Feb.
January 12 basketball game in Bidwell, Ohio.

22. The 14th seeded Raiders
(7-4) are set to welcome 19th
seeded Alexander (5-8), while
the 20th seeded Marauders
(4-7) travel to 13th seeded
Wellston (8-7).
All-3 Division IV teams —
Eastern, Southern and South
Gallia — begin postseason
play in sectional semiﬁnals
on Feb. 24. The Rebels (9-5)
earned the No. 10 seed and
will host 23-seed Sciotoville
East (0-11), the Tornadoes
(2-12) were seeded 19th and
will travel to 14th-seeded
Green (6-8), while the Eagles

(0-11) picked up the No. 21
seed and will visit 12th seeded
Western (6-8).
Gallia Academy — in Division II — is the last local team
to start the postseason, as the
14th seeded Blue Devils (6-7)
visit third-seeded Hillsboro
(14-2) for a sectional semiﬁnal
on Feb. 25.
All games are scheduled to
for a 7 p.m. tip.
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

Kobe crash pilot
was disoriented
flying in clouds
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The pilot of the helicopter that crashed last year in South California,
killing Kobe Bryant and seven other passengers,
made a key error by ﬂying through thick clouds
that ended up disorienting him, U.S. safety ofﬁcials said Tuesday during a hearing aimed at pinpointing probable causes of the crash.
Pilot Ara Zobayan violated federal standards
that required him to be able to see where he
was going before the helicopter crashed during
a roughly 40-minute ﬂight, said members of the
National Transportation Safety Board. Zobayan
was among the nine people killed, including Bryant’s 13-year-old daughter, Gianna.
The pilot went against his training by becoming
spatially disoriented in thick clouds, a condition
that can happen to pilots in low visibility, when
they cannot tell up from down or discern which
way an aircraft is banking, board members said.
Just before the Jan. 26, 2020 crash, Zobayan
told ﬂight controllers he was climbing in the helicopter and had nearly broken through the clouds.
But NTSB investigators said that the Sikorsky
S-76 helicopter was in fact banking and beginning
to descend at increasing magnitude, investigators
said.
There was 184 aircraft crashes between 20102019 involving spatial disorientation, including 20
fatal helicopter crashes, the NTSB said.
Tuesday’s federal hearing focused on the longawaited probable cause or causes of the tragedy
that unleashed worldwide grief for the retired
basketball star, launched several lawsuits and
prompted state and federal legislation.
“I think the whole world is watching because it’s
Kobe,” said Ed Coleman, an Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University professor and aircraft safety
science expert.
Bryant, Gianna and six other passengers were
ﬂying from Orange County to a youth basketball
tournament at his Mamba Sports Academy in Ventura County on Jan. 26, 2020, when the helicopter
encountered thick fog in the San Fernando Valley
north of Los Angeles.
There was no sign of mechanical failure and the
crash was believed to be an accident, the National
Transportation Safety Board has said previously.
The helicopter did not have so-called “black box”
recording devices, which were not required.
The board during its hearing Tuesday is likely
to make nonbinding recommendations to prevent future crashes when it meets remotely and
announces its ﬁndings about the crash.
The NTSB is an independent federal agency that
investigates transportation-related crashes but has
no enforcement powers.
It submits suggestions to agencies like the Federal Aviation Administration or the Coast Guard,
which have repeatedly rejected some board safety
recommendations after other disasters.
Over the past year, experts have speculated that
the crash could lead to requiring Terrain Awareness
and Warning Systems, devices that signal when aircraft are in danger of crashing, on helicopters.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

GAHS freshman Emma Hammons (right) steals the ball and passes to junior teammate Preslee Reed (13) during the first half of the Blue
Angels’ 60-29 setback on Monday in Centenary, Ohio.

Lady Dragons down Gallia Academy, 60-29
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— The Lady Dragons
weren’t to be denied.
The Fairland girls basketball team clinched its
share of the Ohio Valley
Conference championship
with a 60-29 victory over
host Gallia Academy on
Monday in Gallia County.
The Lady Dragons
(17-2, 13-1 OVC) — who
share the league crown
with Coal Grove — never
trailed on Monday, scoring 12 in a row to start
play.
GAHS (6-9, 5-8) ended
the drought on a twopointer from Maddy
Petro with 47 seconds
left in the opening stanza,
but the guests were in
front 15-3 by the end of
the period.
FHS outscored the Blue
Angels 17-to-11 in the
second, and led 32-14 at
halftime.
Fairland led by as many
as 18 points in the third
quarter, and settled for a
48-21 advantage headed

made a 12-6 second quarter surge
that turned a 1-point contest into
a 3-possession cushion of 19-12 at
the break.
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — It just
The Red and Gold received six
gradually slipped away.
points from Jessie Rutt — all at the
Host Chesapeake used a 42-29
free throw line — during a third
run over the ﬁnal three periods
period that saw SGHS go without
and ultimately turned a the narrowest of ﬁrst quarter leads into a a successful ﬁeld goal. CHS made a
49-35 victory over the South Gallia small 11-8 spurt during that canto
and eventually held a 30-20 advangirls basketball team on Monday
night in a non-conference matchup tage entering the ﬁnale.
South Gallia cracked double digin Lawrence County.
The visiting Lady Rebels (10-12) its down the stretch, including six
points from Sanders, but the Lady
received four quick points from
Panthers closed regulation with a
Macie Sanders in the opening
frame, but the Lady Panthers (14- 19-15 run to wrap up the 14-point
outcome.
6) managed to claim a 7-6 edge at
The Lady Rebels made 10
the end of that span.
Blake Anderson poured in eight total ﬁeld goals — including one
3-pointer — and also sank 14-ofpoints as the Purple and White

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Wednesday, Feb. 10
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Eastern,
7:30
Meigs at Nelsonville-York,
7:30
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
South Gallia at Waverly,
6 p.m.
Eastern, Meigs at Trimble,
6 p.m.
River Valley at Warren,
6 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 11

Girls Basketball
Caldwell at Southern, 7:15
Nelsonville-York at River
Valley, 7:30
Wrestling
TVC Championships at
Waterford, 11:30
OVC Championships at
Fairland, 6 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 12
Boys Basketball
Southern at Eastern, 7:15
River Valley at Meigs, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Chillicothe at Meigs, 7:30

into the ﬁnale.
The guests were ahead
by a game-high 35 points
with 2:36 left in the contest, and cruised to the
60-29 victory.
For the game, Gallia
Academy made 10 ﬁeld
goals, including one
three-pointer, to go with

Chesapeake rallies past Lady Rebels, 49-35
By Bryan Walters

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

GAHS freshman Mary Howell
during the second half of the
Monday in Centenary, Ohio.

ﬁeld goals, with a 4-for6 performance at the
charity stripe. Preslee
Reed was next with nine
points, followed by Emma
Hammons and Asia Grifﬁn with two each.
Leading Fairland, Bree
Allen scored 17 points,
Tomi Hinkle posted 13,
while Reece Barnitz tallied 10. Libby Judge was
next with ﬁve points,
followed by Miaa Howard with four, and Katie
Brumﬁeld with three.
Kylee Bunce, Brenna
Reedy, Hannah Taylor
and Kirsten Orsbon
rounded out the winning
total with two points
apiece.
drives past a Fairland defender,
This gives Fairland the
Blue Angels’ 31-point setback on season sweep of GAHS,
as the Lady Dragons won
79-35 on Jan. 21 in Proctorville.
an 8-for-16 (50 percent)
The Blue and White are
day at the foul line.
slated to wrap up league
Fairland made just 3-ofplay on Wednesday at
14 (21.4 percent) free
Portsmouth.
throws, but hit 25 ﬁeld
goals, including seven
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all
trifectas.
rights reserved.
GAHS senior Maddy
Petro led the hosts with
Alex Hawley can be reached at 74016 points, combining six 446-2342, ext. 2100.

23 free throw attempts for 61
percent.
Rutt paced the guests with 15
points, followed by Sanders with
11 points and Tori Triplett with
six markers. Ryleigh Halley and
MaKayla Waugh completed the
scoring with two points and one
point, respectively.
Chesapeake netted 18 total ﬁeld
goals — including three trifectas
— and also went 10-of-14 at the
charity stripe for 71 percent.
Anderson led the hosts with a
game-high 23 points, followed by
Maddie Ward with 10 points and
Brooklyn McComas with eight
markers. Emily Duncan was next
with six points.
See RALLIES | 7

�SPORTS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 7

RedStorm women roll past Carlow
By Randy Payton

Head coach Albert
DeSalvo’s team opened
the season in late October, played another game
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
one week later and then
— All teams — even
didn’t play again until
those riding a long winJan. 30. The nine opt-outs
ning streak — can use
came after the ﬁrst two
the kind of game where
games.
everybody gets to play
Still, the Celtics hung
and everybody gets a
tough early and even had
chance to score.
a 14-13 lead after Keagan
For the University of
Rio Grande, that’s exactly Brownlee hit one of two
what Saturday afternoon’s free throw attempts with
meeting with Carlow Uni- 2:15 left in the opening
quarter.
versity turned into.
But Rio Grande
The RedStorm shook
responded with a 25-4
off a slow start before
dropping the hammer on run over a span of 8:02,
bridging the end of the
the outmanned Celtics
ﬁrst stanza and nearly the
and cruising to a 94-53
victory at the Newt Oliver ﬁrst six minutes of the
second period, to open
Arena.
up a 38-18 cushion after
Rio Grande improved
a bucket by freshman Jocto 14-7 with its seventh
elyn Abraham (Exchange,
consecutive victory.
WV) with 4:13 remaining
Carlow fell to 2-4 with
in the half.
the loss.
Carlow cut the deﬁcit
The Celtics, who began
to 13 points on two occathe season with 19 players on the roster, dressed sions before the intermission, but got no closer the
only 10 players after the
remaining nine opted out rest of the way.
In fact, Rio Grande
of ﬁnishing the season
over COVID-19 concerns. sealed the rout by out-

For Ohio Valley Publishing

scoring the Celtics, 32-12,
in the third quarter for a
76-40 advantage heading
to the ﬁnal period.
The RedStorm’s largest
lead of the game can in its
ﬁnal margin of victory.
All 12 players who
dressed for Rio Grande
played and all but one
scored.
Junior Avery Harper
(Seaman, OH) led a
trio of double-digit scorers for the RedStorm
with 18 points, while
sophomores Lexi Woods
(Waverly, OH) and Regan
Willingham (Ashville,
OH) netted 11 points
each. Woods also had 10
rebounds and four steals.
Abraham grabbed a
game-best 11 rebounds
in the winning effort,
while Willingham and
sophomore Mickale Bates
(Pickerington, OH) had
four assists each.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
with 23 assists as a team
and ﬁnished 33-for-61
from the ﬁeld overall
(54.1%).
The RedStorm also

enjoyed a whopping
56-27 edge in rebounding, helping to offset 26
turnovers.
Carlow shot just 17.6
percent from the ﬂoor in
the second half (6-for-34)
and just 21.9 percent (14for-64) for the game.
The Celtics also hit just
eight of their 41 threepoint attempts and committed 18 turnovers of
their own.
Angelica Orozco had
a game-high 20 points
and ﬁve steals in a losing cause, while Caitlyn
Trombley and Brownlee ﬁnished with 10
points apiece. Trombley
also pulled down ﬁve
rebounds and Brownlee
handed out three assists.
Rio Grande, which has
now won 13 of 15 games
since a 1-5 start, will
return to action next Saturday when it hosts Ohio
Christian University.
Tipoff is set for 1 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Rio baseball earns second straight split
By Randy Payton

6-1 after 2-1/2 innings
against Thomas More,
but rallied for three runs
in the home third, anothJOHNSON CITY,
er run in the ﬁfth and
Tenn. — There’s an oftparaphrased Biblical prov- three more markers in the
sixth to take an 8-6 lead.
erb that says “He Who
The Saints scored once
Lives by the Sword, Dies
in the seventh inning and
by the Sword”.
had the would-be tying
For the University
run at third base, but Rio
of Rio Grande baseball
team, the phrase provided held on to get the ﬁnal
two outs and preserve the
the perfect summation
victory.
for Friday’s ﬁnal day of
Senior Jon Erhard
action of Milligan Univer(Newark, OH) had two
sity’s “Clash of the Conhits and drove in three
ferences”.
runs to lead the RedThe RedStorm
Storm’s offensive effort,
mounted a late comewhile senior Jesse Watson
from-behind rally to
(Las Cruces, NM) had
defeat Thomas More
two hits — including
(Ky.) University in their
a double — and a run
opening contest, before
succumbing to a late rally batted in. Senior Caden
Cluxton (Washington
by the host school in the
Court House, OH) also
ﬁnal game of the twoﬁnished 2-for-4 in the
day event at TVA Credit
win, while sophomore
Union Ballpark.
Rio Grande ﬁnished the Clayton Surrell (Carroll,
weekend at 3-5 after post- OH), freshman Albert
Bobadilla (Bronx, NY)
ing an 8-7 win over the
Saints and dropping a 4-2 and junior Billy Cooper
decision to the Buffaloes. (Jackson, OH) all drove
in one run each.
The RedStorm trailed

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Freshman Zach Price
(Delaware, OH) tossed
2-1/3 innings of scoreless
relief to pick up the win,
while Surrell worked out
of the seventh inning
scrape to earn a save.
Brady Baldock went
3-for-4 with a triple and
a double in the loss for
TMU, while Bailey Martin went 3-for-4, Brett
Berzinger had two hits
and Gavin Pearson ﬁnished with a triple and
two RBI.
Ty Grimes suffered
the loss in relief for the
Saints.
In game two, Rio
Grande erased a 1-0 ﬁrst
inning deﬁcit with single
runs in both the third and
fourth frames, but Milligan rallied in the ﬁfth
inning with a two-out,
three-run home run to
take the lead for good.
Cluxton and freshman
Trey Carter (Wheelersburg, OH) had two hits
each in the loss for the
RedStorm, while senior
Juan Familia (Reading,

PA) drove in a run.
Senior Trey Meade
(Seaman, OH) started
and took the loss for Rio,
allowing eight hits and
all four runs over 4-2/3
innings.
Braden Spano ﬁnished
2-for-3 and drove in all
four runs for Milligan,
including the go-ahead
three-run homer.
Anthony Guzman had
three hits for the Buffaloes, while Justin Greene
added a triple in the winning effort.
Graham Hooker picked
up the win in relief, while
Brian Baxa retired the
side in order in the seventh inning — including
two by strikeout — to
earn a save.
Rio Grande is scheduled to return to action
next Friday and Saturday
with a pair of doubleheaders at Brewton-Parker
College in Mount Vernon,
Ga.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Young leads Buckeyes past Maryland, 73-65
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP)
— As he heads toward the end of
his college basketball career, Kyle
Young is determined to expend all
his energy during every minute
he’s on the court.
If he keeps playing this way, the
Ohio State senior and his teammates just might keep running
deep into March.
Young scored a career-high 18
points, Duane Washington Jr. also
had 18 and the fourth-ranked Buckeyes used a relentless defensive
effort to wear down Maryland in a
73-65 victory Monday night.
Young, a spirited 6-foot-8 forward, went 7 for 12 from the ﬂoor
and grabbed four rebounds over
34 minutes. Coming off a 16-point
effort against Iowa, Young sparked
several key runs to help the Buckeyes (16-4, 10-4 Big Ten) secure
their ﬁfth straight win.
“It’s my fourth year, and I’ve
been through a lot with these
guys,” Young said. “As my time
here is winding down, you don’t
want to take anything for granted.
I want to give it all I’ve got.”
Washington played well, too, but
his face lit up when asked to talk
about his feisty teammate.
“Kyle Young is the hardest-working dude I’ve ever played with,”
Washington said. “Tonight he got
his career high. I’m super happy for
him.”
Young scored six points during an 11-2 run that turned Ohio
State’s ﬁve-point halftime lead into
a 46-32 advantage. After Maryland
got within 10, Young scored ﬁve
points and Washington popped a
3 during a 10-4 spurt that made it

Rio Grande men
clobber Celtics
PITTSBURGH, Pa.
— This time, a dramatic ﬁnish wasn’t needed.
After defeating West
Virginia UniversityTech at the buzzer
on Wednesday night,
the University of Rio
Grande jumped to a
12-0 lead to begin Saturday afternoon’s game
against Carlow University and cruised to an
88-61 win over the Celtics at Oakland Catholic
High School’s Donahue
Pavilion.
The RedStorm ﬁnished a season sweep
of their host, pushing
their season record to
12-8 in the process.
Carlow dropped to
0-9 with the loss.
Rio Grande hit four
of the ﬁrst ﬁve shots
it took in the contest,
including a pair of
three-pointers, and led
from start to ﬁnish.
The Celtics did manage to close the gap to
six points, 28-22, after
a three-pointer by Tre’
Harvey with 6:05 left
in the ﬁrst half, but the
RedStorm responded
with eight of the next
12 points to regain at
10-point lead and maintained a double-digit
advantage the rest of
the way.
Rio’s biggest lead
of the afternoon came
with the game’s ﬁnal
margin of victory.
Five players ﬁnished
in double ﬁgures for the
RedStorm, including
sophomores Shiloah
Blevins (South Webster,
OH) and Miki Tadic
(Hilversum, The Neth-

erlands), who netted
21 points each. Blevins
also had a team-high
10 rebounds and a
game-high two blocked
shots, while Tadic had a
game-high three steals
and shared team-high
honors with freshman
Andrew Shull (Milton,
WV) by handing out
four assists.
Senior Cam Schreiter
(Mason, OH) added 14
points to the winning
effort, while Shull had
13 and fellow frosh
Caleb Wallis (Jackson, OH) tossed in 11
points.
Rio Grande shot 51.5
percent from the ﬂoor
overall (34-for-66) and
outrebounded the Celtics, 42-35.
Carlow shot just
under 37 percent overall (24-for-65), but was
only 4-for-24 from threepoint range (16.7%).
Harvey led Carlow
with 20 points, while
Marcus Millien ﬁnished with 12 points, a
game-high 12 rebounds
and game-high four
assists. Darien Matthew chipped in with
11 points in a losing
cause — all in the second half.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Thursday
night when it travels to
Circleville, Ohio to face
Ohio Christian University.
Tipoff is set for 5
p.m. at the Maxwell
Center.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Super Bowl on CBS draws
audience of 96.4M viewers
NEW YORK (AP) — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ rout of the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super
Bowl drew a total audience of 96.4 million viewers.
CBS said Tuesday the audience included record
digital numbers for a game that had lost its competitive edge by halftime — Tampa Bay won
31-9 — and was marked by limited watch parties
because of the pandemic.
The most watched Super Bowl was in 2015.
The New England-Seattle game drew 114.4 million viewers.
CBS said Sunday’s championship was the most
live-streamed NFL game, averaging 5.7 million
viewers per minute, up 65% from last year’s Super
Bowl. It was also the ﬁrst NFL game to deliver
more than 1 billion total streaming minutes.
Kansas City led all metered markets with a 59.9
rating, an increase of 8% over its Super Bowl rating from last year. The Boston market, buoyed by
Tampa Bay and ex-Patriot quarterback Tom Brady,
was second at 57. Tampa was third at 52.3
The total viewership came across all platforms,
including the CBS Television Network, CBS
Sports and NFL digital properties, Buccaneers
and Chiefs mobile properties, Verizon Media
mobile properties and ESPN Deportes television
and digital properties.

Schottenheimer, NFL coach
with 200 wins, dies at 77
Julio Cortez | AP

Ohio State guard CJ Walker, center, loses the ball while going up for a shot against
Maryland guard Hakim Hart, left, and forward Galin Smith during the first half Monday in
College Park, Md.

58-42 with eight minutes left.
From there, Ohio State coasted
to its ﬁrst victory in College Park
since the 1979 NIT.
The Buckeyes limited Maryland
to 40% shooting and a 5-for-19
performance from beyond the arc.
That, along with 10 3-pointers on
the offensive end, was enough to
get Ohio State its eighth win in
nine games.
Aaron Wiggins scored 17 points
and Eric Ayala had 13 for the Terrapins (10-10, 4-9), who didn’t
have enough ﬁrepower to rally
after going 0 for 9 to start the second half and falling behind by 14.
“Give them credit, they’re a good
team,” coach Mark Turgeon said
of Ohio State. “We couldn’t make
a shot to start the second half. We
go through some lulls. That’s who
we are.”

Wiggins ﬁnished 6 for 15 from
the ﬂoor and Ayala missed nine of
his 12 ﬁeld goal tries.
The Buckeyes went 8 for 16
from 3-point range in the ﬁrst half
and took a 35-30 lead at the break
despite being outrebounded 17-14
and outscored 18-4 in the lane.
Ohio State trailed 13-5 in the
early going before rattling off a trio
of 3-pointers in the span of 57 seconds to take the lead. Then, after
Maryland went ahead 25-19, Washington connected from beyond the
arc to spark a 14-1 run that ﬂipped
the momentum.
E.J. Liddell, Ohio State’s leading
scorer, had two fouls and no points
in eight minutes before halftime.
He ﬁnally got his ﬁrst points by
making two free throws with 16:48
remaining to put the Buckeyes up
41-32.

Marty Schottenheimer, who won 200 regular-season games with four NFL teams thanks to his “Martyball” brand of smash-mouth football but regularly
fell short in the playoffs, has died. He was 77.
Schottenheimer died Monday night at a hospice in Charlotte, North Carolina, his family said
through Bob Moore, former Kansas City Chiefs
publicist. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in
2014. He was moved to a hospice on Jan. 30.
Schottenheimer was the eighth-winningest coach
in NFL history. He went 200-126-1 in 21 seasons
with the Cleveland Browns, Kansas City Chiefs,
Washington Redskins and San Diego Chargers.
Schottenheimer was 44-27 with the Cleveland
Browns from 1984-88, 101-58-1 with Kansas City
from 1989-98; 8-8 with Washington in 2001 and
47-33 with San Diego from 2002-06.

Rallies
From page 6

South Gallia’s next
scheduled contest is a
Division IV sectional
ﬁnal contest at home

against Green on Saturday, Feb. 20. The 8-9
matchup will tipoff at
7 p.m.
© 2021 Ohio Valley Publishing, all
rights reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Ohio Valley Publishing
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 19 CV 015
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for First
Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-FF13 ,
Plaintiff
-vsBonnie Pooler, et al.,
Defendants
Court of Common Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction in the above county on the
5th day of March, 2021 at 10:00 a.m. at the door of the courthouse steps.

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

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

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

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

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

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

$35,000.00. The appraisers DID NOT gain entry to the house
for appraisal. This property IS NOT a mobile Home.
The THREE run dates for the ads in the Daily Sentinel are:
2-10-21, 2-17-21, and 2-24-21
Per H.B. 390, if the above property is a NO BID on 3-5-21, the
second sale date is 3-12-21 @10:00 a.m. This will also have
no minimum bid.
All Third-Party Purchasers Shall Make Sale Deposits As
Follows:
&lt;/= $10,000 = Deposit of $2,000.00
&gt;$10,000&lt;/= $200,000 = Deposit of $5,000.00
$200,000 = Deposit of $10,000.00
Payment shall be made in the form of a certified/cashier's
check (cash and personal checks are not accepted).
No deposit is required by the bank. All properties are as is and
not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser's possession.
SEE LEGAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHED HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A"

LEGALS

EMPLOYMENT
Legals

The 2020 Huntington Township Annual Financial Reports
are complete and available
for viewing. The township will
hold regular monthly meetings the third Thursday of
each month at 7 PM.
The meetings will be held at
313 Ewington Rd,Vinton,
Ohio.
Ashly K. Alley,
Fiscal Officer
2/6/21,2/9/21,2/10/21

Help Wanted General
3DUW WLPH JHQHUDO IDUP
ZRUNHU FDOO ������������
YARD SALE
Garage/Yard Sale
Moving Sale: Everything
must go at 522 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis Tues.-Weds.-Thurs.
10am - ??

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
TAX EASE OHIO LLC
Plaintiff,
vs.
ELSIE B. CRAIGO, et al.
Defendants.
CASE NO.: 19 CV 108
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
Defendants, Elsie B. Craigo and any unknown spouse, next
of kin, heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of Elsie B.
Craigo, are hereby notified that they have been named Defendants in the above entitled action wherein the Plaintiff is requesting the Court that it be granted the following relief:
A. On all Tax Certificates and accrued interest as stated in paragraph 8 of the amended complaint filed herein;
B. Costs and attorney's fees in accordance with RC §5721.30
through §5721.43, or otherwise;
C. Judgment be rendered in favor of the Plaintiff and/or Gallia
County Treasurer for any delinquent taxes, assessments, penalties, interest and charges on the parcel not covered by the
above-mentioned Tax Certificates which accrues prior to the
entry of Confirmation of Sale;
D. The Tax Certificates be deemed a valid first statutory lien on
the Property pursuant to ORC §5721.10 and §5721.35, and otherwise, for the amount owing, together with Plaintiff's advances
for demolition and other costs, the amount owing on subsequent tax certificates acquired by Plaintiff concerning the Property, taxes, assessments, and other charges, costs and
attorney's fees;
E. Such lien(s) be foreclosed, that the Court make findings in
accordance with ORC §5721.39 (A) and (B), and that unless
the amount found due, including Plaintiff's attorney's fees and
costs relating directly or indirectly to the Tax Certificates, be
tendered to the Plaintiff prior to the filing of an Entry of Confirmation of Sale in this matter, the equity of redemption of all
Defendants be foreclosed;
F. All Defendants in this action be required to answer as to any
claim they may have in or to the Property or be forever barred
from any such claim;
G. An order be issued to the Sheriff to sell the Property, as provided by ORC §5721.19 and §5721.37 or otherwise according
to any applicable procedures provided in ORC §323.65 to
§323.79; or in the alternative, if the County Auditor or Fiscal Officer determines that the true value of the Property is less than
the redemption price on the Tax Certificates, a decree transferring and vesting fee simple title to Plaintiff free and clear of all
liens, pursuant to ORC §5721.37 (F), and that the right of redemption of any part hereto be forever barred;
H. The Property be ordered advertised and sold by the Sheriff
according to law;
I. The Plaintiff be paid from the proceeds of the sale, the
amount due it and in accordance with ORC §5721.37 (F) and
§5721.39 (D);
J. The costs of this action, including the cost of the Preliminary
Judicial Report and the Final Judicial Report, as provided in
ORC §5721.37 and 5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from
the proceeds of such sale;
K. The fees and costs of the private attorney representing the
Plaintiff in this action, as provided in ORC §5721.37 and
5721.39 be taxed as costs and paid from the proceeds of such
sale;
L. Upon the fulfillment of all conditions for forfeiture of the Property as provided in ORC §5721.40, the Court issue an order forfeiting the Property to the Plaintiff, and directing the County Auditor, Treasurer, and/or Fiscal Officer, to remove and cancel all
property tax and other liability imposed upon the Parcel prior to
the date of recording the deed as specified in ORC §5721.40;
and
M. That the Court grant such additional relief as Plaintiff may
be entitled to at law and/or in equity.
The within case has been filed in the Common Pleas Court,
Gallia County, Ohio, located in the Gallia County Courthouse,
18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 in the case number
shown above.
Defendants, Elsie B. Craigo and any unknown spouse, next of
kin, heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of Elsie B.
Craigo, must file a response in the above captioned case within
twenty-eight (28) days after the last publication hereof. If said
Defendants fail to file such response, judgment by default may
or will be granted for the relief demanded.
Jenny M. Evans (#0089201)
Attorney for Plaintiff
463 Second Avenue, P.O. Box 1231
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph: (740) 446-4344 / F: (740) 446-1738
jmevanslaw@gmail.com
1/6/21,1/13/21,1/20/21,1/27/21,2/3/21,2/10/21

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OH
The State of Ohio, Meigs County
Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC Plaintiff
VS.
Unknown Heirs, Fiduciaries, Beneficiaries, Devisees and
Donees of Tommy Smith Defendant
(Case No. 19-CV-027)
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction, at
https://meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov/, on Friday, the 5th
Day of March 2021, at 10:00AM, the following described real
estate:
SEE ATTACHED LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Said Premises Located at 32923 Sidehill Road, Rutland, OH
45775
Said Premises Appraised at $25,000.00
And cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of that amount.
In the event that the property remains unsold after the above
scheduled sale, this property shall be offered again at a second
sale without regard to the minimum bid requirement in
§2329.20 on March 12, 2021 at the same place and time.
TERMS OF SALE: Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code §2329.211,
if the appraised value is less than or equal to $10,000.00 the
deposit shall be $2,000.00. If the appraised value of the property is greater than $10,000.00 and less than or equal to
$200,000.00, the deposit shall be $5,000.00. If the appraised
value is greater than $200,000.00, the deposit shall be
$10,000.00 and shall be due the day of sale. The purchaser
shall be responsible for all costs, allowances and taxes that the
proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover. Ohio Revised
Code §2327.02 (c) requires successful bidders pay recording
and conveyance fees to the sheriff at the time of sale. The
balance of the purchase price is due within 30 days of the confirmation of sale.
DISCLAIMER: The Meigs County Sheriff's Office is not responsible for the condition of the buildings or property and
therefore there are no guarantees. Neither the Sheriff's Office
nor any affiliates have access to the inside of said property.
There was not an inside inspection of the property and Sheriff is
not liable for the condition of the property upon confirmation of
the sale. Property is sold as is/where is.
Sheriff of Meigs County
Stacey M. Piepmeier
LOGS Legal Group LLP
Attorney
EXHIBIT A
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
SITUATED IN RUTLAND TOWNSHIP, MEIGS COUNTY,
IN THE STATE OF OHIO, IN SECTION 36, TOWNSHIP 6N,
RANGE 14W, OF THE OHIO COMPANY PURCHASE AND
BEING A PARCEL OUT OF THE RODIE R. AND LENA
J.HATFIELD PROPERTY (VOLUME 270, PAGE 737, MEIGS
COUNTY DEED RECORDS) BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING IN THE CENTER OF SIDE HILL ROAD (COUNTY
ROAD 7) AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID HATFIELD PROPERTY, FROM WHICH A STONE FOUND AT
HATFIELD'S SOUTHWEST CORNER BEARS SOUTH 03
DEGREES 17 MINUTES 09 SECONDS WEST 655.62 FEET;
THENCE ALONG THE CENTER OF SAID ROAD, SAID CENTER BEING HATFIELD'S NORTH BOUNDARY, THE FOLLOWING FIVE COURSES:
1) SOUTH 82 DEGREES 21 MINUTES 22 SECONDS EAST
76.69 FEET;
2) SOUTH 85 DEGREES 17 MINUTES 20 SECONDS EAST
141.22 FEET;
3) SOUTH 83 DEGREES 22 MINUTES 05 SECONDS EAST
97.05 FEET;
4) SOUTH 75 DEGREES 29 MINUTES 19 SECONDS EAST
120.50 FEET;
5) SOUTH 67 DEGREES 53 MINUTES 02 SECONDS EAST
25.85 FEET;
THENCE ALONG A NEW PARCEL LINE SOUTH 25 DEGREES 57 MINUTES 09 SECONDS WEST 249.55 FEET
TO THE THREAD OF A CREEK, PASSING IRON PIN SET
BY THIS SURVEY AT 14.22 AND 236.12 FEET;
THENCE ALONG THE THREAD OF SAID CREEK, SAID
THREAD BEING A NEW PARCEL BOUNDARY AND BEING
APPROXIMATED BY THE FOLLOWINGSEVEN COURSES:
1) NORTH 68 DEGREES 59 MINUTES 44 SECONDS WEST
47.20 FEET;
2) NORTH 85 DEGREES 03 MINUTES 42 SECONDS WEST
80.59 FEET;
3) NORTH 41 DEGREES 06 MINUTES 58 SECONDS WEST
55.01 FEET;
4) NORTH 70 DEGREES 31 MINUTES 59 SECONDS WEST
66.36 FEET;
5) NORTH 28 DEGREES 10 MINUTES 59 SECONDS WEST
94.46 FEET;
6) NORTH 67 DEGREES 46 MINUTES 25 SECONDS WEST
53.23 FEET;
7) NORTH 71 DEGREES 05 MINUTES 17 SECONDS WEST
36.32 FEET TO THE WEST LINE OF SAID HATFIELD PROPERTY;
THENCE ALONG SAID WEST LINE NORTH 03 DEGREES 17
MINUTES 09 SECONDS EAST 118.47 FEET TO THE POINT
OF BEGINNING, PASSING AT AN IRON PIN SET BY THIS
SURVEY BESODE A POST AT 53.48 FEET, AND CONTAINING 1.890 ACRES.
SUBJECT TO ALL LEGAL EASEMENTS.
THE ABOVE DESCRIPTION WAS MADE IN ACCORDANCE
WITH AN ACTUAL SURVEY CONDUCTED BY JAMES
STEWART PS 7426 ON MAY 31, 1994.BEARINGS ARE
BASED ON THE OHIO STATE PLANE GRID DIRECTION
ASOBTAINED BY CELESTIAL OBSERVATION.
SUBJECT TO ALL LEGAL HIGHWAYS, EASEMENTS, RIGHT
OF WAYS, ZONING ORDINANCES, RESTRICTIONS AND
CONDITIONS OF RECORD.
2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21

Said premises also known as 36384 New Hope Road, Long
Bottom OH 45743
PPN: 0301116000
Terms of Sale: ALL THIRD PARTY PURCHASER'S
DEPOSIT(S) SHALL BE MADE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
GUIDELINES AS SET FORTH IN OHIO REVISED CODE
SECTION 2329.211
Keith Wood
Sheriff of Meigs County
CLUNK, HOOSE CO., LPA
/s/ Robert R. Hoose
Robert R. Hoose #0074544
Attorneys for Plaintiff
4500 Courthouse Blvd., Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
notice@cphlpa.com
Exhibit A
PARCEL ONE:
SITUATED IN THE TOWNSHIP OF CHESTER, COUNTY OF
MEIGS AND STATE OF OHIO:
BEING SECTION 24, TOWN 3, RANGE 12, BEING A PART
OF A TRACT OF LAND LAID OUT IN LOTS AND SOLD TO
G.W. MCCLENATHAN, GUARDIAN OF MINOR HEIRS OF
LYMA STEDMAN, DECEASED, AND DESIGNATED ON THE
PLOT OF SAID LOTS, AS LOT NO. 3 AND TRANSFERRED
FROM JOHN P. KIMES AND WIFE TO MILO RIDENOUR,
JANUARY 3, 1895.
BEGINNING AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SUSIE
FOSTER'S LOT 150 FEET FROM THE OLD CHESTER KENO
ROAD; THENCE SOUTH 80 FEET ALONG EMMA REIBEL'S
LOT TO A CORNER; THENCE EAST 110 TO A STONE;
THENCE NORTH 80 FEET TO A STONE; THENCE WEST
ALONG SUSIE FOSTER'S LINE TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING.
THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE, TO-WIT:
SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF MEIGS, IN THE STATE OF
OHIO, AND IN THE TOWNSHIP OF CHESTER AND IN THE
OHIO COMPANY'S PURCHASE AND FURTHER BOUNDED
AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEING IN SECTION 24,
TOWN 3, RANGE 12, BEING IN A PART OF A TRACT OF
LAND LAID OUT IN LOTS AND SOLD BY G. W.
MCCLENATHAN, GUARDIAN OF MINOR HEIRS OF LYMAN
STEADMAN, DECEASED, AND DESIGNATED ON THE PLOT
OF SAID LOTS AT LOT NO. 3, AND TRANSFERRED FROM
JOHN P. KIMES AND WIFE TO MILO RIDENOUR, JAN. 3,
1895. BEGINNING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF
EMMA REIBELS LOT AND THE CHESTER AND LONG BOTTOM ROAD TO FOLLOW THE ROAD IN A NORTHERLY DIRECTION FOR 24 FEET; THENCE IN A NORTHEAST DIRECTION 130 FEET TO A STAKE 16 FEET FROM THE OF
THE CORNER OF THE FOSTER HOUSE; THENCE IN A
SOUTHERLY DIRECTION 80 FEET TO A STONE; THENCE
IN A WESTERLY DIRECTION 110 FEET TO THE EMMA
REIBEL LOT; THENCE IN A NORTHERLY DIRECTION 150
FEET TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING.
BEING THE SAME REAL ESTATE CONVEYED BY FRED W.
CROW, JR., COMMISSIONER OF JAMES L. WICKHAM, DECEASED, TO ELIZABETH WICKHAM BY DEED RECORDED
IN DEED BOOK 191, PAGE 293 OF THE MEIGS COUNTY
DEED RECORDS.
REFERENCE DEED: VOLUME 312, PAGE 339, MEIGS
COUNTY DEED RECORDS.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE HAS BEEN CORRECTED BY THE NEW SURVEY MORE ACCURATELY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
THE FOLLOWING REAL ESTATE SITUATED IN CHESTER
TOWNSHIP, MEIGS COUNTY, STATE OF OHIO, SECTION
24, TOWNSHIP 3, RANGE 12 OF THE OHIO COMPANY
PURCHASE; BEING THE RUTH SAMATOWITZ PROPERTY
(VOLUME 312, PAGE 339. MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS) BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT A STONE FOUND AT THE SOUTHEAST
CORNER OF SAID SAMATOWITZ PROPERTY THENCE
NORTH 84 DEGREES 8' 0" WEST 107.77 FT. TO A STONE
FOUND ON THE EAST LINE OF THE HENRY &amp;amp;/OR
NARA HARMAN PROPERTY (VOLUME 313, PAGE 797,
MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS, FORMERLY EMMA
REIBEL'S LOT); THENCE NORTH 1 DEGREE 46' 22" EAST
237.19 FEET ALONG THE EAST LINE OF SAID HARTMAN
PROPERTY TO AN IRON PIN FOUND ON THE SOUTH SIDE
OF NEW HOPE ROAD AT A WESTERN CORNER OF THE
LEWIS E. &amp; amp; BARBARA A. PULVER PROPERTY
(VOLUME 275, PAGE 331, MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS); THENCE SOUTH 45 DEGREES 37' 48" EAST 128.59
FEET ALONG THE SOUTHERLY SIDE OF THE EXISTING
DRIVEWAY TO AN IRON PIN SET 16 FEET FROM THE OLD
EASTERLY CORNER OF THE FORMER SUSIE FOSTER
RESIDENCE; THENCE SOUTH 2 DEGREES 52' 39" EAST
158.37 FEET ALONG THE EAST LINE OF TWO PARCELS
CONVEYED TO SUSIE FOSTER IN VOLUME 146, PAGE 173
AND VOLUME 146, PAGE 562 TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING CONTAINING 0.451 ACRE. SUBJECT TO ALL LEGAL
EASEMENTS.
THE ABOVE DESCRIPTION WAS PREPARED IN ACCORDANCE WITH AN ACTUAL SURVEY CONDUCTED BY EUGENE TRIPLETT RS 6766 ON MARCH 12, 1991. BEARING
ARE ASSUMED AND ARE INTENDED TO DENOTE ANGLES
ONLY.
A COPY OF A PLAT IS ATTACHED HERETO AND MADE
APART HEREOF.
THE OLD DESCRIPTION REFERRED TO ABOVE IS ALSO
SUBJECT TO TERMS OF A BOUNDARY LINE AGREEMENT,
RECORDED IN VOLUME 3223, PAGE 687 OF THE MEIGS
COUNTY DEED RECORDS, WHICH BOUNDARY LINE
AGREEMENT IN EFFECT ESTABLISHES THE NORTHEASTERLY LINE OF .451 ACRE SURVEY DESCRIPTION
ABOVE.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE HAS BEEN
ASSIGNED AUDITOR'S PARCEL NUMBERS: 03-01116.
THE GRANTOR FURTHER STATES THAT FRANK
SAMATOWITZ, THE GRANTOR IN A DEED DATES OCTOBER 19, 1988, AND RECORDED IN VOLUME 312, PAGE 339
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS, AT THE TIME
OF THE SIGNING OF THAT DEED WAS SINGLE
PARCEL TWO:
ALSO A 15-FOOT RIGHT OF WAY EASEMENT FOR INGRESS AND EGRESS TO NEW HOPE ROAD (T-91) MORE
FULLY DESCRIBED IN INSTRUMENT RECORDED IN VOLUME 323, PAGE 689 OF THE MEIGS COUNTY DEED RECORDS, WHICH IS INCORPORATED AND MADE A PART
HEREOF AS IF FULLY REWRITTEN HEREIN.
Said premises also known as:
36384 New Hope Road, Long Bottom, OH 45743
PPN: 0301116000
2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21

�CLASSIFIEDS

Ohio Valley Publishing

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
LIVE-AUCTION NEWSPAPER ADVERTISEMENT
THE STATE OF OHIO, MEIGS COUNTY
THE OHIO VALLEY BANK COMPANY
Plaintiff,
vs

GEORGE R

CASE NO. 20 CIV 047
By virtue of an Order of Sale issued from the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio in the above entitled action, I will
offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the County of Meigs and State of Ohio to wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE MEIGS
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE.
Address of Property: 31919 Welchtown Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Parcel ID: #18-00627.000 and 18-00629.000
Auction will take place online at
www.meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov on March 5, 2021 at
10 am. If property remains unsold after first auction, per H. B.
390, it will again be offered for sale on March 12, 2021 at the
same time and place without regard to minimum bid requirements.
Said premises appraised at $40,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of said amount at first auction.
Required deposit: $5,000.00. TERMS OF SALE: Property
cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value
at first sale. Required deposit shall be made in the form of a
certified/cashier's check (cash and personal checks are not
accepted) at the time of sale and balance due upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor is purchaser, no deposit is
required.
FOR BIDDING INSTRUCTIONS SEE:
www.meigssheriff.org/sheriff-sale.

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
NEWREZ LLC D/B/A SHELLPOINT MORTGAGE SERVIC
laintiff
vs.
CAROL H. CANTRELL, et al.
Defendants
CASE NO. 20CV000071
JUDGE: Margaret Evans
LEGAL NOTICE FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION
To: Unknown Administrator, Executor or Fiduciary, Unknown
Heirs, Next of Kin, Unknown Spouses, Devisees, Legatees,
Creditors and Beneficiaries of Estate of William O. Cantrell,
Deceased, you will take notice that on the 15 day of September, 2020, Plaintiff, filed a Complaint for foreclosure in the
Gallia County Court of Common Pleas, being Case No.
20CV000071, alleging that there is due to the Plaintiff the
sum of $38,013.54, plus interest at 5.875% per annum from
September 1, 2019, plus late charges and attorney fees
applicable to the terms of a Promissory Note secured by a
Mortgage on the real property, which has a street address of
662 4TH ST., GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631, being permanent
parcel number Parcel Number: 007-019-015-00.
Plaintiff further alleges that by reason of a default in payment
of said Promissory Note, the conditions of said Mortgage have
been broken and the same has become absolute.
Plaintiff prays that the Defendant named above be required
to answer and assert any interest in said real property or be
forever barred from asserting any interest therein, for foreclosure of said mortgage, marshalling of liens, and the sale of
said real property, and that the proceeds of said sale be
applied according to law.
Said Defendant is required to file an Answer on or before the
28th day following the last date of Publication.
Robertson, Anschutz, Schneid, Crane, &amp; Partners, PLLC

Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover. All properties are as-is and not to be
entered until the deed is in the purchaser's possession.

Benjamin M. Rodriguez, 0079289
Brady J. Lighthall, 0079428
2400 Chamber Center Dr., Suite 220
Ft. Mitchell, KY 41017
Telephone: (470) 321-7112
Facsimile: (833) 310-1332
Email: blighthall@raslg.com

THIS SHERIFF'S SALE OPERATES UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. THE MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS TO STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR
TO SALE.

2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21
KEITH O. WOOD, SHERIFF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
REBECCA D. L. WAIGAND
OTHS HEISER MILLER WAIGAND &amp; CLAGG, LLC
Attorney for Plaintiff
2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21
SHERIFF'S SALE, CASE NO. 20-CV-008, PEOPLES BANK
FKA PEOPLES BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, PLAINTIFF, VS. BRUCE CALDWELL AKA BRUCE A. CALDWELL,
ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuan
in the above action, I will offer for sale at public auction,
which will take place online at
http://meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov/ on Friday, March
5, 2021, at 10:00 a.m., the following described real estate,
to wit:

SHERIFF'S SALE, CASE NO. 20-CV-009, HOME NATIONAL
BANK, PLAINTIFF, VS. MARY J. EDWARDS AKA MARY EDWARDS NKA MARY J. STALLINGS, ET AL., DEFENDANTS,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuanc
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction, which will
take place online at http://meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov/ on
Friday, March 5, 2021, at 10:00 a.m., the following described
real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF CHESTER, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE, VOLUME 341,
PAGE 595 AND VOLUME 320, PAGE 377, OFFICIAL RECORDS.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 03-00309.001

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF SALISBURY, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN
THE MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE, VOLUME 250,
PAGE 829, OFFICIAL RECORDS.
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO.: 14-00430.000
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 38332 Storys Run Road, Cheshire,
OH 45620
Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.
Also a 2007 Clayton manufactured home, Identification
#CHO002775KYAB, Ohio Certificate of Title #8400651936.
Sold subject to accrued 2021 real estate and manufactured
home taxes and to any ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.
The above described real estate is sold "as is" without
warranties or covenants.
Said premises and personal property appraised at
$35,000.00 and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of
that amount. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by
the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to
cover.
No employees of the Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates
have access to the inside of said property, and no interior
inspection may have been made by the appraisers. All
properties are as is and not to be entered until the deed is
in the purchaser's possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be
offered for sale again on March 12, 2021, at the same time
and place above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible
for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the
Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to
cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Interested bidders should immediately
refer to http://meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov/ for registration and deposit requirements and bidding instructions.
Final payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier's check (cash and personal checks are not
accepted), unless directed otherwise by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office. If the appraisal is less than or equal to
$10,000.00 = deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but
less than or equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00;
greater than $200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Balance
due within 30 days of confirmation of sale.
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Michael L. Barr, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 48152 State Route 248, Long Bottom,
OH 45743
Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.
ALSO A 2007 CLAYTON MANUFACTURED HOME, IDENTIFICATION #CHO002775KYAB, OHIO CERTIFICATE OF TITLE
#8400651936.
Sold subject to accrued 2021 real estate and manufactured
home taxes and to any ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.
The above described real estate is sold "as is" without
warranties or covenants.
Said premises and personal property appraised at $55,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds of that amount. In
addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds
of the sale are insufficient to cover.
No employees of the Sheriff's Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as
is and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser's possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on March 12, 2021, at the same time and
place above. The second sale will start with no minimum bid.
In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those costs,
allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Interested bidders should immediately
refer to http://meigs.sheriffsaleauction.ohio.gov/ for registration
and deposit requirements and bidding instructions. Final payment shall be made in the form of certified/cashier's check
(cash and personal checks are not accepted), unless directed
otherwise by the Meigs County Sheriff's Office. If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 = deposit $2,000.00;
greater than $10,000.00 but less than or equal to $200,000.00
= deposit $5,000.00; greater than $200,000.00 = deposit is
$10,000.00. Balance due within 30 days of confirmation of
sale.
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Michael L. Barr, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFF'S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21

ALL SHERIFF'S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
2/10/21,2/17/21,2/24/21

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Wednesday, February 10, 2021 9

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The following matters are the subject of this public notice by
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete
public notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Draft NPDES Permit Renewal - Subject to Revision
Quail Creek MHP
437 Cora Mill Rd, Gallipolis, OH
Facility Description: Wastewater-Mobile Home Park
Receiving Water: Mud Creek
ID #: 0PV00002*HD
Date of Action: 02/10/2021
2/10/21
NOTICE OF PRIVATE SELLING OFFICER SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT OF FORECLOSURE OF LIENS FOR
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES, PURSUANT TO SECTION
5721.39 OF THE OHIO REVISED CODE
In the Common Pleas Court of Gallia County, Ohio.
Whereas, judgment has been rendered against certain parcels
of real property for taxes, assessments, charges, penalties,
interest, and costs as follows:
The Common Pleas Court Case No.; the case caption; the
street address (for guidance only); the permanent parcel
number; minimum acceptable bid; auction end date and second
auction end date for each parcel, as defined by the Statutes of
Ohio are set forth below as follows:
19CV000137; TAX EASE OHIO, LLC WITH U.S. BANK AS
CUSTODIAN V. LINDSEY WISEMAN, ET AL; 8 ALLEN DR.,
GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631, GALLIPOLIS TWP; 00705700600;
MINIMUM ACCEPTABLE BID $14620.83 (PLUS 10%
BUYER'S PREMIUM); AUCTION END DATE: February 18,
2021; SECOND AUCTION END DATE: March 18, 2021
20CV000009; TAX EASE OHIO, LLC WITH U.S. BANK AS
CUSTODIAN V. UNKNOWN ADMINISTRATOR, EXECUTOR
OR FIDUCIARY, UNKNOWN HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN, UNKNOWN SPOUSES, DEVISEES, LEGATEES, CREDITORSA
AND BENEFICIARIES OF ESTATE OF DAVID A. MULLINS
SR., ET AL; 1181 WHITE OAK RD., GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631,
MORGAN TWP; 019-001-005-02; MINIMUM ACCEPTABLE
BID $19,845.77 (PLUS 10% BUYER'S PREMIUM); AUCTION
END DATE: February 18, 2021; SECOND AUCTION END
DATE: March 18, 2021
NOTE: All parcels will be auctioned online at
www.OhioForeclosures.com. All auctions will begin at least
seven (7) days prior to the auction end date. If any parcel does
not receive a sufficient bid, it shall be offered for sale, under
the same terms, on the same website, with the second auction
beginning at least seven (7) days prior to the end date of the
second auction. A ten percent (10%) Buyer's Premium will be
added to the high bid to determine the sale price. Full legal
description of parcels, and other sale details, are available at
www.OhioForeclosures.com.
TERMS OF SALE: Purchaser shall be required to pay a buyer's
premium, in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the high
bid price, which shall be added to the high bid and included in
the full purchase price. Deposit of 10%, with a minimum
deposit of $1,000.00, shall be wire transferred to Standard Title
Co. no later than 2:00 pm EST the day following auction end.
Balance of the FULL purchase price shall be wire transferred
to Standard Title Co. no later than thirty (30) days following the
confirmation of sale. Failure to pay deposit, buyer premium or
balance of purchase price timely will result in private selling
officer moving the court for a contempt citation against purchaser. The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs,
allowances, and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT PARCELS TO BE
SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION MAY BE SUBJECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LIEN THAT MAY NOT BE EXTINGUISHED BY
THE SALE.
NOTE: Prospective bidders are responsible for knowing what
they are bidding on prior to the time of sale by first having
reviewed the records of the City wherein the parcel is located,
and the records of the County, and further, by personally viewing the parcel at its location.
NOTE: Per Section 5721.38 of the Ohio Revised Code, an
owner of a parcel may redeem his property by payment in full of
all taxes and costs until the sale of such parcel is confirmed by
the Court.
This advertisement is prepared and published pursuant to the
provisions of Section 5721.37 and 5721.39 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
1/27/21,2/3/21,2/10/21

�NEWS

10 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Ohio Valley Publishing

OU lecture series presents an ‘Evening with Al Roker’
ATHENS — Ohio University’s Kennedy Lecture
Series will present “An
Evening with Al Roker,” a
virtual event at 7:30 p.m.,
March 2.
The Ohio University
community will have the
opportunity to virtually
see, hear from, and submit questions to Roker,
a longtime news and TV
personality most notable
for his role on the Today
Show. To adapt to the
current limitations of the
pandemic, “An Evening
with Al Roker” will be
live streamed at www.
ohio.edu/kennedylecture.

According to a news
release from OU, the
evening will allow for the
community to learn from
and engage with the highly talented Roker, who
has a vast array of experiences to share, from the
comfort of their home,
ofﬁce, or any COVID-safe
location. Dr. Eddith A.
Dashiell, director of the
E. W. Scripps School of
Journalism, will moderate
the evening, asking questions from the audience,
as well as some additional
questions of interest for
Roker to address.
Roker, a host and

weatherman of NBC’s
Today Show, which
reaches over 32 million
viewers per week, has
earned 13 Emmy Awards
in addition to numerous
other accomplishments
in his 35-year career. He
not only starts people’s
mornings sharing the
weather forecast but
conducts interviews with
celebrities and newsmakers from around the
world, as well as participating in a wide variety
of segments.
An accomplished television producer, Roker
owns and runs Al Roker

Entertainment, Inc.
(ARE), which creates
compelling, targeted stories for multiple distribution platforms. Additionally, Roker is involved in
the development and production of network, cable,
digital, and distribution
platforms and home
video content. ARE produces programming for a
diverse clientele including NBC News, MSNBC,
Twitch, Facebook, TLC,
Lifetime, A&amp;E, The
History Channel, E!, Discovery Networks, PBS,
TV ONE, Oxygen, The
Cartoon Network, The

Weather Channel and
NBC Television Stations
Group.
Roker also recently
launched Roker Media
(@RKRMedia), a creative consortium combining talent, production,
ampliﬁcation, and brand
building for digital and
live streaming platforms,
leveraging audiences
where they live online.
Working with the latest
media technology, Roker
Media produces a new
generation of shareable
social video content for
an on-the-go, mobile-ﬁrst
audience.

Aside from his work
in media, Roker is a
bestselling author with
11 acclaimed books to
his credit, with his latest
book, You Look So Much
Better in Person: True
Stories of Absurdity and
Success, released on July
28, 2020.
The Kennedy Lecture
Series Committee looks
forward to having you
log on and join us at 7:30
p.m. on March 2 as we
share “An Evening with
Al Roker.”
Information provided by Ohio
University.

Yellen: Biden’s plan
could restore full
employment by ’22
By Martin Crutsinger
and Alan Fram
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen said Sunday the country was
still in a “deep hole”
with millions of lost
jobs but that President
Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion
relief plan could generate enough growth to
restore full employment
by next year.
Republican senators
argued that Biden’s proposal was too expensive
and they cited criticism
from Larry Summers,
a treasury secretary
under President Bill
Clinton, that passage of
the measure could run
the risk of triggering
runaway inﬂation. Summers also contended
that Biden’s plan would
make less money available for other initiatives
such as improving the
nation’s infrastructure.
Yellen, a former
Federal Reserve chair
who is the ﬁrst woman
to lead the Treasury
Department, said the
central bank had the
tools to handle any
potential inﬂationary
threat. She said the
urgent need now is to
deal with the problems
raised by the pandemicinduced recession:
joblessness, lost small
businesses and reopening schools.
“We face a huge economic challenge here
and tremendous suffering in the country.
We have got to address
that,” Yellen said.
“That’s the biggest risk.”
The House and
Senate this past week
approved the legislation necessary to
pass Biden’s package
through a process
known as reconciliation,
which only requires 51
votes in the Senate. The
Senate is split 50-50,
with Vice President
Kamala Harris the tiebreaking vote.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., has
said she said she hopes
to approve the speciﬁc
budget details of the
Biden proposal over
the next two weeks,
aiming to get the measure through Congress
before current unemployment beneﬁts run
out in mid-March.
House Democrats
plan to propose boosting the child tax credit,
now at a maximum of
$2,000, to as much as
$3,600 per child annually, according to information obtained Sunday by The Associated
Press. The proposal will
be part of the COVID19 relief bill they are
writing that is expected
to largely follow Biden’s

plan.
The House Ways and
Means Committee has
jurisdiction over about
half of Biden’s $1.9 trillion proposal, including
support for workers,
the jobless and people’s
health care costs. The
committee’s Democrats were expected to
release their full plan
Monday.
The child tax credit
increase is expected to
help about 20 million
lower-earning people.
The Democrats’ bill will
follow Biden’s proposal
to increase the child
credit to up to $3,600
for each child under
age 6 and as much as
$3,000 for those up to
17.
Under the House
Democrats’ plan, those
amounts would begin to
phase out for individual
parents earning $75,000
yearly and couples making $150,000. All families would receive the
full amount, even if they
owe no federal income
taxes, and payments to
families would be made
monthly.
“This money is going
to be the difference in
a roof over someone’s
head or food on their
table,” the committee
chairman, Rep. Richard
Neal, D-Mass., said in
a written statement.
The child tax credit
proposal is supported
by the White House
and Senate Democrats,
according to House
Democratic aide who
was not authorized to
publicly discuss private
deliberations and spoke
on condition of anonymity.
The child tax credit
details were ﬁrst reported by The Washington
Post.
Republicans cited
the warnings raised by
Summers that the $1.9
trillion plan was too
large and that Biden
was violating his campaign promise to work
with Republicans once
elected.
“Larry Summers is
a liberal Democrat …
in favor of big government spending and he
has said, this is way too
much,” said Sen. Pat
Toomey, R-Pa.
Biden and his team
have argued that a big
economic package is
needed to avoid the
mistakes made in 2009
when the Obama administration was unable to
get increased support
through Congress,
resulting in a long, slow
recovery after the 2008
ﬁnancial crisis.
The government
reported Friday that the
economy only created
49,000 jobs in January
after having lost jobs in
December.

Joshua A. Bickel | The Columbus Dispatch via AP

Former Columbus police officer Adam Coy makes his initial appearance via television Friday at the Franklin County Common Pleas
Courthouse in Columbus, Ohio. Coy was arraigned on four charges in the December 2020 police shooting death of Andre Hill, a Black
man. Coy was charged with one count of murder, one count of felonious assault, and two counts of dereliction of duty, one of which was
for failure to render aid to Hill after he was shot.

Bond for officer reduced to $1M
By Farnoush Amiri

In addition to one murder charge, Coy, a 19-year
member of the force, also
faces charges that include
failure to use his body
COLUMBUS, Ohio
camera and failure to tell
— The judge in the case
another ofﬁcer he believed
of an Ohio police ofﬁHill presented a danger.
cer charged with fatally
shooting Andre Hill
He pleaded not guilty
reduced the high bond
to all four charges Friday.
of $3 million Tuesday
Collins told reporters
after the defense called it last week that he was
unconstitutional.
planning to ﬁle a motion
Franklin County Judge for bond reconsideration,
Stephen McIntosh lowciting the amount as inapered the bond during
propriate in comparison
a hearing for former
to the bail set in the cases
Columbus Police Ofﬁcer
of other on-duty police
Adam Coy to $1 million. killings in the past year.
Defense attorney Mark
“Even the ofﬁcer in the
Collins had ﬁled a motion George Floyd case was
Sunday in an effort to
given a $1 million bond,
reduce the bond for Coy, and this case is nothing
who is white, and is
like that in any way, shape
charged in the Decemor form,” Collins said
ber shooting death of
after the Friday hearing.
47-year-old Hill, who was “Our client had a good
Black. Hill was shot as he faith basis to believe that
emerged from a garage
the individual had a silver
holding a cellphone with revolver and he respondhis left hand and his right ed. He’s done everything
hand not visible.
that’s been asked of him.

Report for America/Associated
Press

And this $3 million bond
is just what we feel inappropriate.”
The defense attorney
made the case in the ﬁling that Coy has no past
criminal history, has lived
most of his life in Ohio,
and did not ﬂee while
knowing for weeks that
charges were coming. Collins also offered to surrender his client’s passport
“should this court believe
surrendering the passport
would bolster his already
proven track record of not
being a ﬂight risk.”
Coy, 44, was arrested
Wednesday after a Franklin County grand jury
indicted him following a
monthlong investigation
by the Ohio Attorney
General’s ofﬁce into the
fatal shooting. Collins
said his client has voluntarily complied with state
investigators from the
beginning and voluntarily
surrendered himself to
law enforcement shortly

after being indicted.
During the hearing Friday, the attorney general’s
ofﬁce, which is prosecuting Coy, argued that the
high bond was necessary.
Republican Attorney General Dave Yost, Ohio’s top
law enforcement ofﬁcial,
said he was pleased with
the bond.
“The Ohio Attorney
General’s Ofﬁce cannot
argue in good conscience
that Adam Coy is a ﬂight
risk all of sudden when
he has cooperated with
their ofﬁces from the very
beginning of their investigation and has done
everything the police
department and the
Ohio Attorney General
has asked of him,” the
defense’s motion read.
Franklin County Court
Magistrate Elizabeta
Saken also ordered Coy
on Friday not to have contact with any witnesses in
the case, including other
police ofﬁcers.

Ohio man who killed 11 women dies in prison
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Anthony
Sowell, sentenced to death for
killing 11 women and hiding their
remains in and around his home in
a case that raised concerns about
authorities downplaying the plight
of missing Black women, has died
in prison of an illness.
Sowell, 61, had been receiving
end-of-life care at Franklin Medical Center for a terminal illness
when he died Monday, said JoEllen
Smith, spokesperson for the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction. The death was not
related to COVID-19, she said.
Cleveland police were investigating a rape case in October 2009
when they searched Sowell’s house
and discovered two bodies. They
eventually uncovered the remains
of 11 women.
Most of the victims had struggled with addiction and died of
strangulation, prosecutors said.
Some had been decapitated, and

Amy Sancetta | AP file

Anthony Sowell, sentenced to death for
killing 11 women and hiding their remains in
and around his home in a case that raised
concerns about authorities downplaying
the plight of missing Black women, has died
in prison of an illness.

the bodies of others were decomposed to such an extent that
coroners couldn’t be sure how they
died.
In interviews with police, Sow-

ell said he targeted women who
reminded him of his ex-girlfriend,
who had been addicted to cocaine
and left him shortly before the killings began.
Neighbors had blamed a stench
from the rotting bodies on an adjacent sausage factory, which spent
$20,000 on new plumbing ﬁxtures
and sewer lines to try to make the
smell go away.
The case was a moment of
reckoning for Cleveland. Relatives
of the slain women, who were
Black, and many Black residents
said police didn’t take the disappearance of the victims seriously
because of their race and troubled
backgrounds, and complained
about how ofﬁcers handled missing-person reports. Police said
some victims were never reported
missing.
In response, Cleveland police
overhauled how they handled
missing-person and sex crime
investigations based on recommendations issued after the remains
were found.

�Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, February 10, 2021 11

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OH-70223314
OH-70219971

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�NEWS/WEATHER

12 Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Trump

the certiﬁcation of the
Electoral College vote,
only to have his daughter

and son-in-law hiding in
an ofﬁce, fearing for their
lives.
“Senators, this cannot
be our future,” Raskin
said through tears. “This
cannot be the future of
America.”
Trump attorney David
Schoen turned the trial
toward starkly partisan
tones, the defense showing its own video of
Democrats calling for
the former president’s
impeachment.
Schoen said Democrats
are fueled by a “base
hatred” of the former
president and “seeking to
eliminate Donald Trump
from the American political scene.”
It appears unlikely that
the House prosecutors
will call witnesses, in part
because the senators were
witnesses themselves.
At his Mar-a-Lago club
in Florida, Trump has
declined a request to
testify.
Presidential impeachment trials have been
conducted only three
times before, leading to
acquittals for Andrew
Johnson, Bill Clinton

and then Trump last
year.
Timothy Naftali, a
clinical associate professor at New York University and an expert on
impeachment, said in an
interview, “This trial is
one way of having that
difﬁcult national conversation about the difference between dissent and
insurrection.”
The ﬁrst test Tuesday
was to be on a vote on
the constitutionality
of the trial, signaling
attitudes in the Senate.
The chamber is divided
50-50 between Democrats and Republicans,
with a two-thirds vote,
67 senators, required for
conviction.
A similar question was
posed late last month,
when Sen. Rand Paul of
Kentucky forced a vote to
set aside the trial because
Trump was no longer
in ofﬁce. At that time,
45 Republicans voted in
favor of Paul’s measure.
Just ﬁve Republicans
joined with Democrats
to pursue the trial: Mitt
Romney of Utah, Ben
Sasse of Nebraska, Susan

Collins of Maine, Lisa
Murkowski of Alaska and
Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.
The House prosecutors argued there is no
“January exception” for
a president on his way
out the door. Rep. Joe
Neguse, D-Colo., referred
to the corruption case of
William Belknap, a war
secretary in the Grant
administration, who was
impeached, tried and
ultimately acquitted by
the Senate after leaving
ofﬁce.
Trump’s case is hardly
a run of the mill corruption charge, he said, but
incitement of insurrection. If Congress stands
by, “it would invite future
presidents to use their
power without any fear of
accountability.”
In ﬁlings, lawyers for
the former president
lobbed a wide-ranging
attack against the House
case, suggesting Trump
was simply exercising his
First Amendment rights
and dismissing the trial
as “political theater” on
the same Senate ﬂoor
invaded by the mob.

makers who take issue
with the department’s
authority could simply
pass a bill stripping away
that authority. A dozen
House Republicans proposed doing so last May.
As written, SB 22 leaves
the existing framework
mostly in place — ODH
would still be able to issue
health orders to prevent
the spread of disease.
Lawmakers would then
be able to rescind health
orders as they see ﬁt.
During sponsor testimony, McColley and
Johnson said their bill is
not meant to target DeWine or ODH but instead
address a broader issue of
the separation of powers.
“Granting statutory
authority to the General
Assembly to act on behalf

of the citizenry of the
state to protect their
rights and liberties is a
sensible safeguard against
state overreach,” their testimony reads. “It is important that we, the legislative branch, are engaged
when it comes to making
decisions that so powerfully affect the health safety,
welfare and freedom of
our constituents.”
This “sensible safeguard” to protect the separation of powers might
in fact be a violation of
the separation of powers,
the LSC attorneys wrote.
The legislative branch
enacts laws and the executive branch carries them
out. It’s unclear if the
Ohio legislature can both
provide the executive
branch authority to issue

orders and determine
which resulting orders
are valid — the latter step
taken by concurrent resolution instead of passing
a new bill.
Ohio courts have not
directly addressed this
issue, according to the
LSC analysis, but there is
a precedent at the federal
level. The LSC quotes a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling that reads, “once Congress makes its choice
in enacting legislation,
its participation ends.
Congress can thereafter
control the execution of
its enactment only indirectly — by passing new
legislation.”
Critics of DeWine and
ODH gave their support
for SB 22 during its ﬁrst
hearing last week before

the Senate Government
Oversight and Reform
Committee. The next
hearing is slated for
Wednesday morning,
with lawmakers scheduled to hear testimony
from bill opponents and
neutral interested parties.

From page 1

trial was starting with
debate and a vote over
whether it’s constitutionally permissible to
prosecute Trump after he
is no longer in the White
House.
Trump’s defense team
has focused on the question of constitutionality,
which could resonate
with Republicans eager
to acquit Trump without
being seen as condoning
his behavior.
Lead lawyer Bruce Castor said that no member
of the former president’s
defense team would do
anything but condemn
the violence of the
“repugnant” attack, and
“in the strongest possible
way denounce the rioters.”
Yet Trump’s attorney
appealed to the senators
as “patriots ﬁrst,” and
encouraged them to be
“cool headed” as they
story of bringing his famassess the arguments.
ily to the Capitol the day
At one pivotal point,
of the riot, to witness
Raskin told the personal

Bill

concurrent resolution
“might be vulnerable to a
constitutional challenge.”
ODH has cited Ohio
From page 1
Revised Code section
respond to the pandemic. 3701.13 as explaining its
authority to issue sweepHe has vetoed several
such bills to date, the lat- ing pandemic orders,
such as the initial stay-atest example coming in
home order. The relevant
December.
portion of 3701.13 reads:
SB 22 reads like an
“The (health) departattempt to sidestep
ment may make special
gubernatorial approval,
or standing orders or
said Micah Berman, an
rules … for preventing the
associate professor of
public health law at Ohio spread of contagious or
infectious diseases.”
State University.
The Ohio General
Doing so may be unconAssembly has the power
stitutional, two research
attorneys with LSC wrote to completely rewrite this
in a bill analysis. Because section of code and thus
establish a new framelegislators cannot enact
work for how the governany law “except by bill,”
ment can respond to a
they wrote, an effort to
pandemic, Berman noted.
instead rescind health
In other words, lawand executive orders by

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

30°

31°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

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.

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
Trace
Month to date/normal
0.49/0.96
Year to date/normal
3.31/3.93

Snowfall

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
Trace
Month to date/normal
3.0/2.6
Season to date/normal
12.6/14.1

Today
7:26 a.m.
6:01 p.m.
7:02 a.m.
4:51 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:24 a.m.
6:02 p.m.
7:42 a.m.
5:58 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

First

Full

Feb 11 Feb 19 Feb 27

Last

Mar 5

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
10:26a
11:17a
11:40a
12:34a
1:23a
2:11a
2:57a

Minor
4:12a
5:04a
5:55a
6:45a
7:34a
8:21a
9:07a

Major
10:53p
11:43p
---12:57p
1:44p
2:31p
3:17p

Minor
4:39p
5:30p
6:20p
7:08p
7:55p
8:42p
9:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Feb. 10, 1980, snow closed
interstate highways in Alabama and
Dallas. Exactly one year later, springstyle tornadoes damaged schools
and shopping centers from Texas to
Alabama.

OH-70219587

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.

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is snowburn?

SUN &amp; MOON

FRIDAY

Cold with snow;
storm total 2-4”

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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. Tue.

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

Level
12.74
15.98
21.35
12.67
13.27
24.92
12.50
26.35
34.75
12.69
18.00
34.40
18.20

Lucasville
32/24
Portsmouth
32/24

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Waverly
30/22

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.40
-0.06
-0.55
-0.32
none
-0.37
-0.50
+0.03
+0.10
+0.09
-1.40
+0.20
-1.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021

Very cold with snow
showers possible

Murray City
29/21
Belpre
32/25

Mostly cloudy and
cold

Milton
34/26

St. Marys
32/25

Parkersburg
32/24

St. Albans
33/26

Huntington
33/25

Elizabeth
33/26

Spencer
31/24

Clendenin
33/26
Charleston
35/27

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
-7/-27

Billings
-6/-18

Denver
35/14

45°
26°
Not as cold with a
chance for snow

Today

Buffalo
32/25

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
41/30
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
60/48
20s
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
65/50
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Wilkesville
31/24
POMEROY
Jackson
33/26
31/24
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
33/27
32/26
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
27/18
GALLIPOLIS
33/27
32/24
33/27

Ashland
34/26
Grayson
33/25

Tyler Buchanan is an award-winning
journalist who has covered Ohio
politics and government for the
past decade. A Bellevue native and
graduate of Bowling Green State
University, he most recently spent 6
1/2 years as a reporter and editor of
The Athens Messenger and VintonJackson Courier newspapers. He is
a member of the BG News Alumni
Society Board and was a 2019
fellow in the Kiplinger Program in
Public Affairs Journalism.

35°
21°

Marietta
31/24

Coolville
31/24

Ironton
34/25

This story shared for republication
by, and with permission from,
the Ohio Capital Journal, an
independent, nonprofit news
organization. For more information
go to www.ohiocapitaljournal.com

MONDAY

21°
6°

Very cold with low
clouds

Athens
30/23

McArthur
29/22

South Shore Greenup
34/25
31/23

118

Logan
28/20

SUNDAY

26°
15°

Cold with times of sun
and clouds

Adelphi
28/19
Chillicothe
28/19

SATURDAY

40°
22°

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

0

A: A burn caused by the sun’s rays
reﬂected off snow cover

Precipitation

37°/32°
45°/27°
74° in 1937
-24° in 1899

THURSDAY

Cold today with a ﬂurry; some snow at times at
night. High 33° / Low 27°

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

33°
29°
25°

Daily Sentinel

Montreal
21/4
Minneapolis
7/-10

Detroit
21/9

Toronto
23/13
New York
32/23

Chicago
16/5

Washington
39/30

Kansas City
15/8

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
59/35/c
60/37/s
22/20/sn 29/17/c
62/54/r
65/55/r
36/35/c 41/29/sn
39/30/c 36/28/sn
-6/-18/c -8/-23/sn
47/29/s 43/32/sn
31/17/s 27/10/pc
35/27/i
32/30/i
58/45/c
55/37/r
28/13/pc
18/-3/c
16/5/sn 20/10/sn
29/19/i 25/19/sn
22/15/sn 24/16/c
27/19/sn 27/20/c
45/27/sh 36/25/c
35/14/pc
30/5/pc
10/-1/sf
7/-5/sn
21/9/c 22/14/c
80/67/s
81/68/s
72/60/sh
62/46/r
24/15/sn 22/12/c
15/8/sn 13/-1/sn
68/48/pc 71/52/c
40/30/sh
34/25/i
65/50/pc 68/53/pc
31/24/i 32/21/sn
82/73/pc 81/71/pc
7/-10/pc 0/-10/sn
47/36/sh
38/30/r
74/66/sh
74/58/r
32/23/pc 30/21/sn
28/18/i
28/12/i
82/63/pc
83/64/t
36/28/c 32/25/sn
73/51/s
76/52/s
26/18/sn 28/20/sn
31/10/s
25/3/pc
51/41/c
48/34/r
42/35/c
37/29/r
21/16/sn
20/9/sn
49/37/pc 49/39/c
60/48/s
59/51/r
41/30/pc 35/26/sn
39/30/c 35/28/sn

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
62/54

El Paso
72/44

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

High
Low

88° in Immokalee, FL
-42° in Cotton, MN

Global
Chihuahua
78/42

Houston
72/60
Monterrey
80/64

High
Low
Miami
82/73

114° in Vioolsdrif, South Africa
-57° in Carmacks, Canada

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

�</text>
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