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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

67°

75°

75°

Humid today; an afternoon thunderstorm.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 82° / Low 66°

Humid,
chance of
t-storms

Wrapping
up fair
season

Area
football
schedules

NEWS s 4

SPORTS s8

C_ZZb[fehj��Fec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 147, Volume 74

Saturday, August 22, 2020 s $2

Latest COVID-19
active, recovered
cases reported
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY —
Area COVID-19 cases
increased slightly across
the area on Friday and
in addition to those new
cases, newly recovered
individuals were also
added to county totals.
Here is a look at coronavirus cases around
our area:
Gallia County
On Friday, the Gallia
County Health Department announced two
additional cases of
COVID-19, stating one
of these individuals was
connected to current
cases, which includes
active outbreaks. Gallia
has reported a total of
102 cases of the virus
since March.
“We’re also excited
to announce that of 194
individuals that were
swabbed from our free
testing event that all
194 were negative,”
stated a Facebook post
from the health department, also on Friday.
As of Friday evening,
the following are updated age ranges in the 102
cases reported by the
health department:
0-19 — 12 cases
20-29 — 14 cases (2
new cases, 1 hospitalization)
30-39 — 10 cases
40-49 — 17 cases
50-59 — 15 cases (3
hospitalizations)
60-69 — 10 cases (5
total hospitalizations, 1
death)
70-79 — 13 cases (7
hospitalizations)
80-89 — 7 cases (6
total hospitalizations)
90-99 — 4 cases (4
hospitalizations)
80+ — 1 death (ODH
does not breakdown age
over age 80)
Of the 102 cases, 67
of the individuals are
listed as recovered/not
active, with 33 of the
cases active and two
total deaths. Nine of the
active cases remain hospitalized, with 17 previous hospitalizations.
Gallia County reported
its ﬁrst COVID-19 death
in March and its second
Aug. 14.
Gallia County
remains at an Orange
level-2 advisory level
on the State of Ohio
Public Health Risk
Advisory System, which

is deﬁned as “increased
exposure and spread;
exercise high degree of
caution.”
Meigs County
On Friday afternoon,
the Meigs County
Health Department
reported one additional conﬁrmed case
of COVID-19 in Meigs
County. This case of
COVID-19 bring Meigs
County to 29 active
cases, and 77 total cases
(62 Conﬁrmed, 15
Probable) since April.
This latest conﬁrmed
case is a male in the
20 to 29-year-old age
range, who is not hospitalized. This case was
previously listed as a
probable and has undergone testing to conﬁrm
COVID-19, according to
the health department.
Also on Friday, the
Meigs County Health
Department announced
ﬁve recovered cases of
COVID-19, bringing the
total recovered cases
to 46.
Age ranges for the 77
Meigs County cases are
as follows:
0-19 — 12 cases
20-29 — 12 cases
30-39 — 7 cases (1
hospitalization)
40-49 — 10 cases
50-59 — 10 cases (1
hospitalization)
60-69 — 9 cases ( 2
hospitalizations)
70-79 — 7 cases (1
death)
80-89 — 8 cases (1
death, 3 total hospitalizations)
90-99 — 2 cases
There have been
three positive antibody
tests in Meigs County.
Antibody tests check
your blood by looking
for antibodies, which
may tell you if you had
a past infection with
the virus that causes
COVID-19.
Meigs County
remains at an Orange
level-2 advisory level on
the State of Ohio Public
Health Risk Advisory
System.
Mason County
The Mason County
Health Department
reported 78 total cases
on Friday morning, one
more than the previous
day. The department
said that 21 of those are
See UPDATE | 2

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except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Jaycie Jordan (left) and Jacob Jordan (right) took top honors in the Meigs County Junior Fair Hog Show on Friday morning. Jaycie was
named Grand Champion Showman and Grand Champion Market Hog, with Jacob taking Reserve Champion in both categories. Also
pictured are Meigs County Fair Queen Kristin McKay and Livestock Princess Nevada Johnson.

Jordans sweep Hog Show awards
By Sarah Hawley

Monroe.
Class 1 — Cooper
Jude, Kristina Weakley,
Kathryn Ryan and Steven
ROCKSPRINGS —
Fitzgerald.
The Jordan siblings
Class 2 — Clay
— Jaycie and Jacob
Buckley, Whitney Durst
— made it a sweep of
and Adyn Monroe.
honors in the Meigs
Class 3 — Jaycie
County Junior Fair Hog
Show on Friday morning. Jordan, Ashton Jude,
Dominique Butcher and
Jaycie Jordan earned
Logan Caldwell.
Grand Champion Hog
Class 4 — Jacob
Showman and Grand
Jordan, Parker Durst,
Champion Market Hog,
with older brother Jacob Chloe Rizer and Brady
Colburn.
Jordan earning Reserve
Showmanship results
Champion Hog Showman
by class were as follows:
and Reserve Champion
Senior — Jacob
Market Hog.
Jordan, Whitney Durst,
Rounding out the top
Steven Fitzgerald,
ﬁve in the Market Hog
Show were Ashton Jude, Dominique Butcher and
Cooper Jude and Parker Logan Caldwell.
Junior — Brady
Durst.
Colburn.
Market Hog Show
Intermediate — Jaycie
results by class were as
Jordan, Cooper Jude,
follows:
Ashton Jude, Chloe
Under/over weight
Rizer, Ashton Monroe
(not placed) — Simon
and Kathryn Ryan.
Spires and Ashton

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Brothers Ashton Jude (right) and Cooper Jude (left) placed third
and fourth overall, respectively, in the market hog show on Friday
morning.

Publishing, all rights
Novice — Kristina
reserved.
Weakley, Clay Buckley,
Parker Durst, Simon
Spires and Adyn Monroe. Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
© 2020 Ohio Valley

Rowe, Will top Market Rabbit Show
Brown, Dillon
named top
showmen

Jozalynn Tucker and
Kylee Will.
In the Rabbit Breeding
Show, Alexis Grubb
earned Overall Grand
Champion Best of Breed
for her Californian Senior
Doe and Missouri Brown
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
earned Overall Grand
Champion Best Opposite
ROCKSPRINGS —
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel for her New Zealand
Brycen Rowe and Kylee
Brycen Rowe (third from left) earned Grand Champion honors in Senior Buck.
Additional Rabbit
Will earned the top spots Thursday’s Market Rabbit Show, while Kylee Will (second from
left) earned Reserve Champion honors. Also pictured are Livestock Breeding Show results
in Thursday’s Meigs
Princess Nevada Johnson and Fair Queen Kristin McKay.
were as follows:
County Junior Fair RabCalifornian — Alexis
others in no particular
Davis.
bit Show.
Grubb, Best of Breed.
order):
Class 4 — Brycen
Rowe was named
Dutch — Missouri
Senior — Missouri
Rowe, Sidney Dillon,
Grand Champion and
Brown, Best of Breed.
Brown and Gabrielle
Michael Brown, Alexis
Will was named Reserve
Holland Lop —
Champion. Rounding out Grubb and Emilie Smith. Beeler.
Elizabeth Spires, Best of
Junior — Michael
Class 5 — Arielle
the top ﬁve were Arielle
Breed; Alexis Grubb, Best
Brown, Nathaniel
Beeler, Dustin Vance and Beeler, Hunter Clary,
Opposite.
Minshall, Arielle Beeler
Gabrielle Beeler, Brenen
Dana Card.
New Zealand —
and Shawna Joseph.
Rowe and Missouri
Market Rabbit Show
Intermediate — Sidney Missouri Brown, Best
Brown.
results by class were as
of Breed; Sidney Dillon,
Dillon, Elizabeth Spires,
In Rabbit
follows:
Best Opposite.
Brycen Rowe, Alexis
Showmanship, Missouri
Class 1 — Dustin
Red New Zealand —
Grubb, Dana Card, Avery
Brown was named the
Vance, Avery Patterson
Patterson, Dustin Vance, Shawna Jospeh, Best of
Grand Champion Rabbit
and Kase Nelson.
Breed.
Colton Minshall, Gaven
Showman and Sidney
Class 2 — Dana Card,
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Smith, Joseph Boyd and
Colton Minshall, Jozalynn Dillon was named the
Publishing, all rights
Hubter Clary.
Tucker, Joseph Boyd and Reserve Champion
reserved.
Novice — Brody
Market Showman.
MacKenzie Arms.
Davis, Kase Nelson,
Showmanship results
Class 3 — Kylee Will,
Sarah Hawley is the managing
Brenen Rowe, Emilie
by class were as follows
Nathaniel Minshall,
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
(top two placed in order, Smith, MacKenzie Arms,
Gaven Smith and Brody

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Saturday, August 22, 2020

OBITUARIES

Ohio Valley Publishing

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

ROGER ALLEN WESTFALL
REEDSVILLE
— Roger Allen
Westfall, 67 years
old, left this
earth peacefully
on August 20,
2020 with the
love of his life,
Sheila, laying in his
arms, his daughters and
nephew by his side.
He was born August
21, 1952, in Reedsville,
son of the late Virgil
and Margaret Brawley
Westfall.
He is survived by his
wife Sheila King Westfall of 47 years, that he
shared his life and legacy with. Sheila was his
best friend, caregiver
and his reason for having so much strength.
He was the proud father
of four daughters, who
were all his favorites.
He loved his girls more
than life and would
do anything for them.
Tracey (Victor) Chevalier, Michelle Bartimus
(Friend Jonathan Dickens), Heather (Zach)

Smith and Heaven (Joey) Vales.
He was a
proud grandpa,
whose grandkids
could do no
wrong. Nicole
(Austin) Lute,
Katelynn Chevalier
(Chris Lipps), Taylor
(Preston) Denney,
Brooklyn Vales, Dylan
Chevalier, Mckylee
Westfall and Zachery
Westfall. He had three
great-grandkids that lit
up his life. Remington
Lute, Kaislee Lipps and
Levi Denney.
Graveside services
will be held at noon,
Monday, Aug. 24, 2020
at the Heiney Cemetery
with Pastor George
Horner ofﬁciating.
Visitation will be held
at Sunday, from 5-8 p.m.
at White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in
Coolville.
You are invited to
sign the online guest
book at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com

WILLIAMS
RUTLAND — Patricia Ellen Williams of Rutland, died Wednesday, August 19, 2020 at Dublin
Methodist Hospital. Funeral services will be held
on Monday, August 24, 2020 at noon at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held one hour prior to the service.
PHILLIPS
GALLIPOLIS — Hester Jane Elkins Phillips,
71, of Gallipolis, died Thursday, August 20, 2020
at Ohio State University Hospital. A celebration
of life will be held at a later date. Willis Funeral
Home is assisting the family.
WILES
CROWN CITY — Billy Ray Wiles, 31, of Crown
City, died Thursday, August 13, 2020. Graveside
service will be held at 2 p.m., Saturday, August 22,
2020 at Good Hope Cemetery, Crown City. Visitation will be held one hour prior to the service at
the funeral home. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is assisting the family with
arrangements.
CHAPMAN
CHESAPEAKE — Steven Chapman, 71, of
Chesapeake, died Thursday, August 20, 2020 at
home. Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m.,
Monday, August 24, 2020 at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory, Proctorville.

Lee graduates OSU
College of Pharmacy

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

has been canceled for 2020.

Saturday, Aug. 22
MIDDLEPORT — Fish fry and
hot dog with lunchroom sauce at
the Middleport Fire Department.
Serving starts 11 a.m. Lunchroom
sauce for sale as well.

&amp; Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
noon at the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

Friday, Aug. 28

MIDDLEPORT — The monthly
Free Community Dinner at the
Middleport Church of Christ
POMEROY — The regular meet- Family Life Center. Take-out
meals will be passed out in
ing of the Meigs County Library
their parking lot at 5 p.m. while
Board will be held at 1 p.m. at the
supplies last. This month they are
Pomeroy Library.
serving meatloaf, mashed potatoes
and gravy, green beans, roll, and
dessert. Everyone is welcome.
GALLIPOLIS — The annual
Rev. Samuel Lewis Reunion, that
ROCKSPRINGS — The reguwould have been scheduled for
larly scheduled meeting of the
Sunday, Sept. 6 at Raccoon Creek Meigs Local Board of Education
Park has been canceled this year will take place on Thursday,
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
August 27, instead of Wednesday, County Veterans Service CommisMEIGS COUNTY — Meigs
August 26, at Board Ofﬁce at
sion will meet at 8 a.m. at their
County Cleanup Day, which had
6:30 p.m.
ofﬁce located at 97 North Second
been rescheduled for Sept. 26,
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
Ave., Suite 2 in Middleport.

Cancellations

Monday, Aug. 24

Thursday, Aug. 27

Monday, Aug. 31

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s
Company(NASDAQ)…..$21.79
Walmart Inc(NYSE)…..$131.63
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)…..$51.48
Harley-Davidson
Inc(NYSE)…..$27.61
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)…..$136.46
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)…..$20.78

Update
From page 1

currently active, 56 are
recovered, four are currently hospitalized and
there has been one death.
The West Virginia
Department of Health
and Human Resources
(DHHR) reported 81
cases in Mason County
in the 10 a.m. update on
Friday, which is one less
than the previous day.
According to DHHR,
the age ranges for the 81
COVID-19 cases DHHR
is reporting in Mason
County are as follows:
0-9 — 2 cases
10-19 — 5 cases
20-29 — 16 cases (1

Kroger Co(NYSE)…..$35.91
City Holding
Company(NASDAQ)…..$63.31
American Electric
Power(NYSE)…..$79.08
Ohio Valley Bank
Corp(NASDAQ)…..$23.81
Century
Aluminum(NASDAQ)…..$9.07
Rocky Brands

new)
30-39 — 8 cases (1
less)
40-49 — 9 cases
50-59 — 12 cases (1
death)
60-69 — 12 cases
70+ — 17 cases (1 less)
Mason County is currently deﬁned as “yellow”
according to DHHR as
it relates to its “County
Alert System” map. Counties deﬁned as “yellow”
are reporting 3.1 - 9.9
cases per 100,000 people.
In regards to schools,
in-person learning is suspended when a county
reaches “red” which is
25-plus cases per 100,000
people.
Ohio
As of the 2 p.m. update

Inc(NASDAQ)…..$22.62
Apple(NASDAQ)…..$497.48
Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)…..$47.28
Post Holdings…..$85.25
Far Eastern New Century Corp
(TPE)…..$26.25
McDonald’s(NYSE)…..$211.57
Stock reports are the clossing
quotes of transactions on Aug. 21.

on Friday, the Ohio
Department of Health
reported a total of 1,043
new cases, slightly
above the 21-day average of 1,042. Above the
21-day average was ICU
admissions, new hospitalizations and deaths.
Twenty-six new deaths
were reported (21-day
average of 22), with 104
new hospitalizations (21day average of 92) and 20
new ICU admissions (21day average of 15).
West Virginia
As of the 10 a.m.
update on Friday, DHHR
is reporting a total of
9,066 cases with 170
deaths. There was an
increase of 84 cases
from Thursday, and four

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new deaths. The West
Virginia DHHR reports a
total of 384,143 lab test
have been completed,
with a 2.36 cumulative
percent positivity rate.
The daily positivity rate
in the state was 1.98
percent.
Sarah Hawley, Kayla
(Hawthorne) Dunham
and Beth Sergent
contributed to this
report.
(Editor’s Note:
Statistics reported in this
article are tentative and
subject to change. This
was the information
available at press time
with more to be added as
it becomes available.)
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

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Conference Quarter-final Game 6 Site: Scotiabank Arena -- Toronto, Ont. (L)
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British Baking "Cakes" The Last Tango in Halifax Alan Austin City Limits "Run the
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Boxing Premier Champions Shawn Porter vs. Sebastian
Eyewitness News at 10:00
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Professor T. "Ring of Fire"
Father Brown "The Great
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39

Courtesy photo

Kendra Lee, daughter of Donald and Christy Lee and
granddaughter of Max and Sallie Carsey and Robert and
Donna Lee graduated from The Ohio State University College
of Pharmacy PharmD Class of 2020. Dr. Lee graduated with
honors via a virtual doctoral convocation in May 2020. She is
currently a pharmacist with the Rite Aid Corporation.

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All content © 2020 Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel.
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except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

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Fatal Flip (2015, Thriller) Mike Faiola, Michael Steger,
Secrets in the Basement (2020) Nick Cassidy, Micah
(:05) My Nightmare
Dominique Swain. TV14
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Landlord TV14
(5:25)
Pitch Perfect (2012, Comedy) Brittany Snow, Love in the (:35) Love in (:15)
Cinderella (2015, Family) Helena Bonham
Rebel Wilson, Anna Kendrick. TV14
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Shooter (2007, Action) Michael Peña, Danny
White House Down (‘13, Action) Jamie Foxx, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Channing Tatum.
Glover, Mark Wahlberg. TVMA
A man finds himself protecting the President after being denied the very same job. TV14
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DangerF (N) (:35) Danger F DangerF
SpongeBob Friends
Friends
American Sniper (2014, War) Sienna Miller, Luke Grimes, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Death Wish (‘18, Act) Bruce Willis. TVMA
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (‘14, Adv) Martin Freeman. TV14
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CNN Newsroom
The Situation Room
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CNN Special Report (N)
All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite
Transformers (2007, Action) Megan Fox, Josh Duhamel, Shia LaBeouf. TV14
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Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986, Comedy)
Police Academy (1984, Comedy) Michael Winslow, (:15)
First Blood (‘82,
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Bubba Smith, Steve Guttenberg. TVMA
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Alaskan Bush People
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Dodgeball Thunderdome
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Live Rescue: Rewind (N)
Live Rescue Rescue workers putting their lives on the line.
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Sex &amp; City
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Wicked "Family Pride" (N) Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks: (:05) Gathering Storm
"Clash of the Titans"
"Stick' em"
Extra Reel "Pay to Play" (N) "Super Typhoon Terror" (N)
(4:00) NASCAR Auto Racing NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs (L)
(4:00) MLB Baseball (L)
MLB Baseball Minnesota Twins at Kansas City Royals Site: Kauffman Stadium (L)
Boxing Premier Champions
Unidentified "Planetary
Unidentified "Airline
Unidentified "The UFO
Unidentified: Inside America's UFO Investigation
Threat"
Encounters"
Cover-Up"
"Sightings Surge/ Extraterrestrial Encounters" (N)
(:10)
Catch Me If You Can (‘02, Adv) Tom Hanks, Leonardo DiCaprio. TV14
(:20)
Catch Me If You Can TV14
(5:00)
Jumping the Broom Paula Patton. TV14
The Single Moms Club (‘14, Com/Dra) Wendi McLendon-Covey, Amy Smart. TV14
Property "Come on Over" Property Brothers: F
Vacation House Rules (N) Backyard Takeover (N)
House "Puppy Paradise"
(4:30)
Sharknado (2013, Horror) Cassie Scerbo, Ian
Twister (‘96, Act) Bill Paxton, Helen Hunt. A team of storm chasers
Sharknado... Ziering, Tara Reid. TV14
trail tornadoes in hopes of creating an advanced warning system. TVPG

6 PM

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Harriet (2019, Biography) Leslie Odom Jr., Joe
Queen &amp; Slim (‘19, Dra) Jodie Turner-Smith, Daniel (:15) Lovecraft Country
"Sundown" A man travels in
Alwyn, Cynthia Erivo. The story of Harriet Tubman, who
Kaluuya. Two people on a first date are forced to kill a
search of his missing father.
escaped from slavery and freed hundreds of slaves. TV14 violent police officer who attacks them. TVMA
(:55)
Long Shot (‘19, Com) Seth Rogen, Charlize
Ma (‘19, Hor) Octavia Spencer. A
(:40)
Greta A lonely young woman
Theron. A Presidential candidate impulsively hires a
woman befriends a group of teenagers, and bonds with an older widow who hides a
childhood friend as her speechwriter. TV14
her nature starts to unravel. TVMA
dark and sinister agenda. TV14
(:15) The Chi "Lackin'"
(:15)
Peppermint (‘18, Act) Tyson Ritter, Jennifer
Run This Town A young reporter
(:40) We
Garner. A grieving mother takes justice for her murdered comes across scandalous information about Hunt
husband and daughter into her own hands. TVMA
the Toronto mayor. (P) TVMA
Together
(5:50)

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Saturday, August 22, 2020 3

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Contact tracing in the time of COVID-19
have come into contact
with and potentially
exposed to your illness.
Limiting contacts means
the virus isn’t able to
infect other people. The
virus lives in people.
Limiting contacts means
the virus has nowhere
to live. For COVID-19, a
close contact is anyone
who was within six feet
of an infected person
for at least 15 minutes.
An infected person can
spread COVID-19 starting from 48 hours (or
two days) before the
person had any symptoms
or tested positive for
COVID-19.
If you were around
someone who has been
diagnosed with COVID19 and are a Meigs County resident, someone from
your MCHD may call you.
During contact tracing,
the MCHD staff will not
ask you for money, Social
Security number, bank
account information, salary information, credit
card numbers.

care provider.
If someone from
If you were
the MCHD calls
around someone
you, answer the
who has been diagcall to help slow
nosed with COVIDthe spread of
19, stay away from
COVID-19 in your
others, especially
community. Tell
the health depart- Courtney people who are at
higher risk for getment staff if you
Midkiff
develop symptoms Contributing ting very sick from
COVID-19, such as
of COVID-19. If
columnist
older adults
your symptoms
and people with
worsen or become
other medical conditions,
severe, you should seek
emergency medical care. if possible. If you have
been around someone
Any information you
with COVID-19, stay
share with your MCHD
staff is conﬁdential. This home away from others
for 14 days (self-quarmeans that your name
and personal and medical antine) after your last
contact with that person
information will be kept
and monitor your health.
private. Your name will
not be shared with those If you have a fever,
you came in contact. The cough or other symptoms
of COVID-19, stay
MCHD will only notify
home and away from
people you were in close
others (except to get
contact with (within 6
medical care or testfeet for more than 15
minutes) that they might ing, if recommended).
If you need support or
have been exposed to
COVID-19. Your informa- assistance while in selfquarantine, your MCHD
tion will only be shared
with those who may need or other community orgato know, like your health nizations may be able to

provide assistance. For
instance, your MCHD
has assisted two positive
COVID 19 cases by shopping for and delivering
groceries during their
quarantine.
Finally, we all need to
be monitoring our health
by:
· Watching for fever,
cough, shortness of
breath, or other symptoms of COVID-19.
Remember, symptoms
may appear two-14 days
after exposure to COVID19.
· Staying home
· Practicing Social Distancing
· Getting adequate
sleep and eat well-balanced meals
· Washing hands often
with water and soap (20
seconds or longer)
· Drying hands with

a clean towel or air dry
your hands
· Covering your mouth
with a tissue or sleeve
when coughing or sneezing
· Avoiding touching
your eyes, nose, mouth
with unwashed hands or
after touching surfaces
· Cleaning and disinfect
“High-Touch” surfaces
often
· Calling before visiting
your doctor
· Practicing good
hygiene habits
For more information
about COVID 19, please
contact your MCHD at
740-992-6626 MondayFriday from 8AM-4PM or
visit www.meigs-health.
com or www.coronavirus.
ohio.gov.
Sources: Centers for
Disease Control, Ohio
Department of Health

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OH-70199356

Unfortunately, Meigs
County presently is seeing increasing community
spread of COVID-19. This
is documented daily
by your Meigs County
Health Department
(MCHD) which reports
the number of conﬁrmed
and probable cases,
hospitalizations and,
most recently, COVID19-related deaths at www.
meigs-health.com and
via local media outlets.
While the declared global,
national, state and local
pandemic certainly has
increased the amount
of contact tracing being
done by your MCHD staff
(including evenings and
weekend), local health
departments (LHDs)
such as your MCHD
conduct contact tracing
for various infectious
diseases.
Contact tracing is key
to slowing the spread
of COVID-19 and helps
protect you, your family
and our communities.
Your MCHD is grateful
to be the recipient of
grant funds via the Ohio
Department of Health to
support response efforts
resulting from COVID-19.
Contact tracing slows
the spread of COVID-19
by letting people know
they may have been
exposed to COVID-19
and should monitor their
health for signs and
symptoms of COVID-19;
helping people who may
have been exposed to
COVID-19 get tested; asking people to self-isolate
if they have COVID-19 or
self-quarantine if they are
a close contact.
If you’re sick, LHD
workers (nurses and
other healthcare professionals) interview you
and ﬁnd out who you may

�4 Saturday, August 22, 2020

ALONG THE RIVER

Ohio Valley Publishing

Cloverbuds in the Spotlight
Future 4-Hers show projects, graduate
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS — Thursday afternoon was time
for the youngest 4-Hers to shine at the Meigs County
Fair with Cloverbud Show and Tell followed by Cloverbud Graduation.
Cloverbud Show and Tell gave the kids a change
to tell about the projects they have worked on as a
Cloverbud and what they have learned during the past
year.
During graduation, the Cloverbud Class of 2020
received their certiﬁcates, t-shirts, and a 4-H bandana. As they each received their items, 4-H educator
Nancy Sydenstricker asked them about their time as
a Cloverbud, what they learned and enjoyed the most,
and want project they thought they wanted to take
next year.
Graduates in the Meigs County Cloverbud Class of
2020 were Daniel Barnhart, Nick Bauerbach, Paige
Smith, Taylor Varian, Cayden Stethem, Weston Smith,
Gauge Clary, Allysa Wallace, Jamie Cremeans, Jackson Nottingham, Beau Durst, Colten Grubb, Jaelynn
Curtis, Victoria Bailey, Nina Blackhurst, Alana Buckley, Porter Webb, Kensley Karr and Ella Bailey.
© 2020 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights reserved.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Members of the Cloverbud Class of 2020 line the show ring after receiving their certificates.

Allysa Wallace discusses her Cloverbud project, a rabbit, with 4-H
educator Nancy Sydenstricker.

Alana Ridenour shows her quilt she made for her Cloverbud project
during Thursday’s Cloverbud Show and Tell.

Members of the Cloverbud Class of 2020 line the show ring after receiving their certificates.

Landon Colburn discusses the owl box he made as part of his
Cloverbud project.

Curtis Weakley discusses his Cloverbud experience with 4-H
educator Nancy Sydenstricker.

Cloverbud Kiley Meeks and 4-H educator Nancy Sydenstricker
watch the video of Meeks’ Cloverbud horse project.

Taylor Varian talks with 4-H educator Nancy Sydenstricker about
her Cloverbud experiene.

Reece Davis shows off his Cloverbud project, a Hereford Heifer.

Victoria Bailey walks her Cloverbud project, her lambs, around the
Cloverbud Weston Smith talks about his bow shooting Cloverbud Alexis Schaefer brought along her dog Mickey to Cloverbud Show show arena. Bailey said she is looking forward to showing sheep
and Tell to discuss her pet project.
project with 4-H educator Nancy Sydenstricker.
next year.

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Saturday, August 22, 2020 5

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
MEIGS COUNTY — A tree trimming project
begins on Aug. 24 on State Route 124, between the
Vinton County line and Rutland. This section will be
closed from 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Estimated completion: Sept. 30.
SPRINGFIELD TWP. — The Springﬁeld Township
Board of Trustees announces Hemlock Road will be
GALLIA COUNTY — A precautionary boil adviclosed from State Route 850 to Green Valley Drive
sory was issued on Friday for Kerr Road from Harrisbeginning at 9 a.m., Monday, Aug. 10 - Thursday,
burg Road to Ohio 554, to 17258 Ohio 554, including
Sept. 10, for repair of a road slip.
Hoover Road and the community of Kerr. According
MEIGS COUNTY — A landslide repair project
to a news release, “The Gallia County Rural Water
begins on Aug. 31 on State Route 124, between
Association has no evidence at this time the water
Barr Hollow Road (Township Road 402) and Eden
system is contaminated. The possibility does exist,
Ridge Road (County Road 50). One lane will be
however, that the water system is contaminated and
closed. Temporary trafﬁc signals and a 10 foot width
is issuing this boil advisory as a precaution.” Call 740restriction will be in place. Estimated completion:
446-9221 for more information.
POMEROY — The Pomeroy Police Department is
accepting donation of new items to be auctioned as a Oct. 30.
OLIVE TWP. — Mt. Olive Road in Olive Township
fundraiser for the Shop with a Cop program to beneﬁt
Meigs County youth. Items may be dropped of at the is currently closed due to slip repair by Olive
Pomeroy Police Department, Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.-3 Township Trustees.
POMEROY — The Southeast Ohio Foodbank, a
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one lane of
program of Hocking Athens Perry Community Action, p.m. If outside those hours or for other arrangements,
will be hosting a mobile food distribution at the Meigs contact Patrolman Leif Babb via e-mail at lbabb@vil- SR 124 will be closed between Old State Route 338
(Township Road 708) and Portland Road (County
County Fairgrounds on Friday, Aug. 28 from 10 a.m.- lagepomeroy.us or by phone at (740)992-6411. MonRoad 35) for a bridge deck overlay project on the
etary donations can be made to Loyalty is Forever at
12 p.m. Food items will be given to families who are
bridge crossing over Groundhog Creek. Temporary
Farmers Bank.
residents of Meigs County. Photo I.D. and proof of
trafﬁc signals and a 10 foot width restriction will be in
residency no more than 60 days old is required. No
place. Estimated completion: Nov. 20.
pre-registration is required for this event. This distriMEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one lane of
bution is sponsored by Indivisible Appalachian Ohio.
Please contact the Southeast Ohio Foodbank at (740)
POMEROY — A landslide repair project begins on SR 7 will be closed between Storys Run Road (County
Road 345) and Leading Creek Road (County Road
385-6813 with questions.
Aug. 17 on State Route 124/833, between Rose Hill
3) for a bridge deck overlay project on the bridge
Road (Township Road 200) and Chester Road/State
Route 733. One lane will be closed. Temporary trafﬁc crossing over Leading Creek. Temporary trafﬁc
signals and an 11 foot width restriction will be in
signals and an 11 foot width restriction will be in
place. Estimated completion: Nov. 20.
place. Estimated completion: Oct. 15.
HARRISONVILLE — The 12th annual HarrisonEditor’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.

Precautionary boil advisory

ville Presbyterian Church School Supply Giveaway,
Saturday, Aug. 29 at the church on State Route 143
in Harrisonville. This year the format will be different. There will be no food or games. All pick-ups will
be drive through only. The church asks you drive to
the church and follow directions to receive supplies.
Please bring children and remain in your car. Please
observe all safety precautions. Backpacks are provided
by First Presbyterian Church of Athens and $25 shoe
coupons by Harrisonville Church. All supplies and
certiﬁcates will be given out on a ﬁrst-come, ﬁrstserved basis.

Shop with a Cop fundraiser

Food distribution for Meigs

Road construction, closures

School supply giveaway

Martin receives FAO Scholarships
NELSONVILLE —
The Foundation for
Appalachian Ohio (FAO)
recently announced, this
year, more than $536,000
in scholarships have been
awarded through over
550 awards so far to support more than 320 students in achieving their
dreams.
According to a news
release from FAO, these
awards were made possible by the people and
friends of Appalachian
Ohio, who know that
setting students up for
success is one of the most
beneﬁcial things they
can do for the region’s
young people and their
communities. That’s why
many FAO donors have
together created scholarship funds focused on
encouraging the pursuit

of post-secondary education. This year, 217
donor-established FAO
scholarship funds have
awarded grants to Appalachian Ohio students.
One student was awarded 2020 FAO scholarships
in Gallia County.
Peri Martin, a graduate
of Gallia Academy High
School, was awarded the
Bob Evans and Wayne
White Legacy Scholarship. The Bob Evans and
Wayne White Legacy
Scholarship remembers
the legacy and commitment of these two friends
to Appalachian Ohio
by supporting graduating high school seniors
throughout the 32 Appalachian Ohio counties.
In the fall, Martin will
attend West Virginia State
University.

Coronavirus testing expanded
to assisted-living facilities

Martin was also
awarded the AK Steel
Scholarship. The AK
Steel Foundation Student
Scholastic Award for Science, Technology, Math
and Engineering was
established by the AK
Steel Foundation to provide a permanent source
of scholarship support for
students pursuing studies
in STEM ﬁelds of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
The full list of FAO’s
2020 scholarship recipients is available at www.
AppalachianOhio.
org/2020Scholarships.
For more information
regarding FAO’s scholarships, visit www.AppalachianOhio.org/Scholarships.
Information provided
by FAO.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Staff members
at all Ohio assisted
living facilities must
undergo coronavirus
testing under a public
health order issued
Friday that expands
testing already being
done in nursing
homes.
The order, signed
by interim Health
Director Lance
Himes, requires staff
in such facilities to
be tested and any
residents who wish

it. Ohio licences 771
assisted living facilities
statewide.
The pandemic has
struck the elderly
living in Ohio’s longterm care facilities
especially hard. More
than 2,500 residents in
such settings have died
from the coronavirus
in Ohio, or more than
six of every 10 deaths
statewide.
DeWine was also
expected to issue
an order Friday
on guidelines for

performing arts
facilities.
Also Friday, the
state reported Ohio’s
unemployment rate fell
to 8.9% in July, down
from 11% in June, as
the economic shock of
the pandemic continues
to ease. Ohio’s
unemployment rate
stood at 4.2% in July
2019 in pre-pandemic
days.
Ohio’s current July
rate is lower than the
national unemployment
rate of 10.2%.

TODAY IN HISTORY
release by Columbia Pictures.
In 1989, Black Panthers
Today is Saturday, Aug.
22, the 235th day of 2020. co-founder Huey P.
There are 131 days left in Newton was shot to death
in Oakland, California.
the year.
(Gunman Tyrone
Today’s Highlight in History: Robinson was later
sentenced to 32 years to
On August 22, 1972,
President Richard Nixon life in prison.)
In 1992, on the second
was nominated for a second term of ofﬁce by the day of the Ruby Ridge
Republican National Con- siege in Idaho, an FBI
vention in Miami Beach. sharpshooter killed Vicki
Weaver, the wife of white
separatist Randy Weaver
On this date:
In 1846, Gen. Stephen (the sharpshooter later
W. Kearny proclaimed all said he was targeting
of New Mexico a territory the couple’s friend Kevin
Harris, and didn’t see
of the United States.
Vicki Weaver).
In 1851, the schooner
In 1996, President
America outraced more
Bill Clinton signed
than a dozen British
welfare legislation
vessels off the English
coast to win a trophy that
came to be known as the
America’s Cup.
In 1862, French composer Claude Debussy
(deh-byoo-SEE’) was
born in Saint-Germain-enLaye.
In 1910, Japan annexed
Korea, which remained
under Japanese control
until the end of World
War II.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war against
Belgium.
In 1978, President
Jomo Kenyatta, a leading
ﬁgure in Kenya’s struggle
for independence, died;
Vice President Daniel
arap Moi (ehr-uhp MOY’)
was sworn in as acting
president.
In 1986, Kerr-McGee
Corp. agreed to pay the
estate of the late Karen
Silkwood $1.38 million,
settling a 10-year-old
nuclear contamination
lawsuit. The Rob Reiner
coming-of-age ﬁlm “Stand
By Me” was put into wide
OH-70200243

ending guaranteed cash
payments to the poor and
demanding work from
recipients.
In 2003, Alabama’s
chief justice, Roy Moore,
was suspended for his
refusal to obey a federal
court order to remove
his Ten Commandments
monument from
the rotunda of his
courthouse. Texas Gov.
Rick Perry pardoned
35 people arrested in
the 1999 Tulia drug
busts and convicted on
the testimony of a lone
undercover agent. (The
agent, Tom Coleman,
was later found guilty of
aggravated perjury and
sentenced to 10 years’
probation.)

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OH-70199378

The Associated Press

�NEWS/CLASSIFIEDS

6 Saturday, August 22, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

CDC study suggests inmates should have been tested
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

days or weeks before the
ﬁrst identiﬁed case of
COVID-19 and the beginning of mass inmate testCOLUMBUS, Ohio
ing, the study found.
— Correctional faciliMass testing was
ties that resisted mass
expensive and ate up
coronavirus testing for
staff time, and rearinmates erred in their
ranging living space for
decision to only test
inmates with symptoms, inmates based on the
results wasn’t always posleading to large initial
sible, corrections ofﬁcials
undercounts, a recent
told researchers.
study by the Center for
Yet only testing
Disease Control and Preinmates with coronavirus
vention suggested.
The study released this symptoms “likely underestimated” the number
week examined 13 prisof infected prisoners, the
ons and jails in Califorstudy found. Symptomnia, Colorado, Ohio and
based testing also runs
Texas, and three federal
the risk of inmates hidprisons in states that
ing symptoms out of fear
weren’t identiﬁed.
of being removed from
Most of the instituthe regular prison poputions waited several

Associated Press

Official: Man wanted
for 2018 Ohio slaying
arrested in W.Va.
RIPLEY, W.Va. (AP)
— A man wanted for a
2018 slaying in Ohio was
arrested in West Virginia
during a trafﬁc stop,
authorities said.
Deputies found Duane
Eugene Grifﬁn Jr., of
Akron, Ohio, in the
passenger seat of a car
when they stopped the
vehicle for a violation
in Jackson County on
Wednesday morning,
Jackson County Chief
Deputy Ross Mellinger
told WSAZ-TV.
Deputies said Grifﬁn
gave them a false name
during the stop, leading
them to bring him and
the driver, Stephan
Green, also from
Akron, in for further

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

gested that multiple retesting of inmates after
initial negative tests
could help curb transmission rates.
Mass testing “irrespective of symptoms,
combined with periodic
retesting, can identify
infections and support
prevention of widespread
transmission in correctional and detention
environments,” the study
concluded.
In a second CDC
study focused on Puerto
Rico, only two cases of
COVID-19 and no deaths
have been reported in
state prisons.
Puerto Rico restricted
admission of all new
inmates to a single facil-

By Farnoush Amiri

moments after the deadline.
West publicly supported
Republican President Donald
Trump before announcing his
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
own presidential bid on July
Kanye West won’t appear on
4. On July 25, West tweeted,
Ohio’s ballot as an unafﬁliated
“I CAN BEAT BIDEN OFF IN
presidential candidate
WRITE INS #2020VISION.”
this November because of
The Ohio decision pulled
mismatched information on the
the rapper and business mogul
rapper’s signature-gathering
documents, Ohio’s elections chief farther from his goal of taking
away votes from Biden. A
said Friday.
message was left with a West
Republican Secretary of
representative Friday seeking
State Frank LaRose rejected
comment.
the nearly 15,000 signatures
Trump’s reelection campaign
and other paperwork West
has denied involvement, but
submitted earlier this month in
GOP lawyers and activists
an attempt to run for president,
an effort apparently supported by have helped him qualify for
presidential ballots in several key
Republicans to draw votes from
states, including Utah, Wisconsin
Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
and Colorado, adding to the
LaRose’s announcement was
suspicions that he’s trying to
the second setback for West
siphon support away from Biden.
in two days. On Thursday,
Democrats, braced for a close
Wisconsin election ofﬁcials
race, are anxious about any thirddecided to keep West off the
party candidate drawing voters.
battleground state’s presidential
But the status of West’s
ballot because his campaign
presidential campaign and
turned his nomination papers

Report for America/Associated Press

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

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

Section 307.981 of the Ohio Revised Code authorizes the
Board of Commissioners of Gallia County, (Commissioners),
to designate any private or government entity within the State
of Ohio to serve as a public children services agency.
For many years, the Gallia County Children Services Boards
(CSB) was designated that responsibility. CSB Resolution
#2020-02 dated April 20, 2020 stated the CSB's intent to
dissolve and relinquish said designation requiring the
Commissioners to designate a new agency to serve as a
public children services agency. After careful consideration,
on August 20, 2020, the Commissioners approved, by resolution, to designated Gallia County Department of Job and
Family Services to serve as the public children services
agency effective December 1, 2020.

ity, mass tested everyone
regardless of symptoms,
and adopted strict
quarantining until tests
results were available,
the study found.
Puerto Rico’s efforts
should serve as a case
study to protecting
imprisoned people
from the coronavirus,
researchers concluded.
As of mid-August,
more than 95,000 people
in prison had tested positive for the illness, a 10%
increase from the week
before, according to data
compiled by the Marshall
Project, a nonproﬁt news
organization focusing on
criminal justice, and The
Associated Press.
New cases among

prisoners reached an
all-time high as of Aug.
14 after slowing down
in June. The growth in
recent weeks was driven
by big jumps in prisoners testing positive in
California, Florida and
Texas and the federal
Bureau of Prisons, along
with outbreaks in Idaho,
Iowa, Oregon and South
Carolina.
Of prisoners testing
positive, more than
62,000 have recovered,
and at least 803 inmates
have died, the Marshall
Project/AP data showed.
Among prison staff,
more than 21,000 cases
of coronavirus have been
reported, including 65
deaths.

Kanye fails to qualify on Ohio ballot

investigation. They found
Grifﬁn’s real identity
when they took his
ﬁngerprints, the news
outlet reported.
Deputies also seized
drugs, and a ﬁrearm they
said could have been used
in the 2018 homicide of
Jordan Hopson.
Grifﬁn has been
booked on drug charges
stemming from the trafﬁc
stop. Authorities also
have begun the process
necessary to extradite
him back to Ohio to
be charged in Jordan’s
slaying, Mellinger said.
It was not immediately
clear if Green was also
charged, or if Grifﬁn had
an attorney who could
comment.

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

lation and being shunned
by other inmates.
“Broad-based testing
can provide a more accurate assessment of prevalence and generate data
to help control transmission,” researchers said.
In one unidentiﬁed
federal prison where
mass testing was delayed
nearly six weeks after
the ﬁrst coronavirus case
was identiﬁed, mass testing found 77% of inmates
were positive.
In an Ohio prison
where mass testing was
delayed almost two
weeks after the ﬁrst case,
mass testing found 87%
of inmates tested positive.
The study also sug-

LEGALS

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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EMPLOYMENT
Legals

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Best Deal New &amp; Used
MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

OH-70004516

www.markporterauto.com

whether he is truly seeking
the White House still remains
unclear less than three months
from election day.
Earlier this month, West
without explanation withdrew
his petition to appear as a
presidential candidate on New
Jersey’s ballot.
Kim Kardashian West asked
for empathy for her husband
and said he is bipolar after West
delivered an unconventional
campaign introduction speech in
South Carolina, proposing a $1
million payout to mothers and
decrying Harriet Tubman for
her work on the Underground
Railroad.
Andrew Welsh-Huggins in
Columbus contributed to this
report. Farnoush Amiri is a corps
member for the Associated Press/
Report for America Statehouse
News Initiative. Report for
America is a nonproﬁt national
service program that places
journalists in local newsrooms to
report on undercovered issues.

Help Wanted General
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REAL ESTATE

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Amy Carter
Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
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amycarter@markporterauto.com

Land (Acreage)
*DOOLD &amp;R� �� DFUHV &amp;R[ 5G�
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MERCHANDISE
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollarsilver/gold coins, any
10k/14k/18k gold jewerly,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop 151
2nd Avenue, Gallipolis.
446-2842

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Saturday, August 22, 2020 7

Environmental groups
challenge Ohio gas
storage permits

Golden State Killer sentenced to life

By Mark Gillispie

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
— A former California
police ofﬁcer dubbed
the Golden State Killer
told victims Friday he
was “truly sorry” before
he was sentenced to
multiple life prison
sentences for a decadelong string of rapes and
murders that terrorized a
wide swath of the state.
Joseph James
DeAngelo, 74, pleaded
guilty in June to 13
murders and 13 raperelated charges under a
plea deal that avoided a
possible death sentence.
The punishment
imposed by Sacramento
County Superior Court
Judge Michael Bowman
means DeAngelo will die
in prison for the crimes
committed between 1975
and 1986.
“When a person
commits monstrous
acts, they need to be
locked away so they can
never harm an innocent
person,” the judge said.
DeAngelo also publicly
admitted dozens more
sexual assaults for
which the statute of
limitations had expired.
Prosecutors called the
scale of the violence

Associated Press

CLEVELAND — Environmental groups
have asked an Ohio appeals court to revoke
drilling permits granted by a state agency
for construction of massive underground salt
caverns to store natural gas liquids along the
Ohio River, according to a lawsuit.
The complaint ﬁled Thursday with the 10th
District Court of Appeals in Columbus accuses
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources of
not following its own rules by failing to require
public notice of company drilling applications,
create draft copies of the permits or allow for a
public comment period before granting permits
July 20.
The lawsuit asks the appeals court to order
ODNR to restart the application process and
follow its rules.
ODNR spokesperson Stephanie O’Grady said
the department does not comment on pending
litigation.
The caverns will be created by injecting
millions of gallons of fresh water underground
into an underground salt formation in Ohio’s
Monroe County. After construction, Powhatan
Salt Company will turn the project over to
Denver-based based company Mountaineer NGL
Storage to store ethane, propane and butane,
which are byproducts of natural gas drilling.
Salt solution created during construction
would be transported by a pipeline beneath
the Ohio River to an alkaline plant in West
Virginia.
Mountaineer NGL Storage is ﬁnalizing a
deal with a U.S. subsidiary of a Thailand-based
company, PTT Global Chemical America, to
provide ethane storage for a proposed multibillion dollar petrochemical plant that would
produce plastic pellets in nearby Belmont
County.
Whether the petrochemical plant will be
built is uncertain. PTT Global’s partner, a U.S.
subsidiary of South Korea’s Daelim Industrial
Co., quit the project in mid-July. A long-delayed
decision on whether PTT will move forward
with a new partner is expected sometime next
year.
The Ohio lawsuit was ﬁled on behalf
of individuals by Concerned Ohio River
Residents, FreshWater Accountability Project,
Buckeye Environmental Network, Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition and Sierra Club.
The complaint says construction and
operation of the caverns could lead to spills that
would harm private and public water supplies,
become a hazard for “potential explosiveness”
after natural gas liquids are stored, and would
create an eyesore along the Ohio River.

Holzer is proud
to welcome
Jacob Pessia, DO,
Pediatric &amp;
Adolescent Medicine,
to our team of highly
skilled professionals!

By Don Thompson
Associated Press

Santiago Mejia | San Francisco Chronicle via AP, pool

Joseph James DeAngelo, sitting in a wheelchair, is brought out of the courtroom for a break in the
schedule for the third day of victim impact statements at the Gordon D. Schaber Sacramento County
Courthouse on Thursday in Sacramento, Calif. DeAngelo, 74, a former police officer in California,
eluded capture for four decades before being identified as the Golden State Killer. DeAngelo pleaded
guilty in June to 13 murders and 13 rape-related charges stemming from crimes in the 1970s and
1980s.

“simply staggering,”
encompassing 87 victims
at 53 crime scenes
spanning 11 California
counties.
Before sentencing,
DeAngelo rose from a
wheelchair, took off his
mask and said to the
court: “I listened to all
your statements, each
one of them, and I’m
truly sorry for everyone
I’ve hurt.”

Applause erupted
when DeAngelo was
remanded to the custody
of sheriff’s ofﬁcials for
transfer to the state
prison system.
“The defendant
deserves no mercy,” the
judge said.
Bowman sentenced
DeAngelo in a university
ballroom large enough
to hold all the survivors
and family members

of victims. The
sentencing followed an
extraordinary three-day
hearings in which they
told in excruciating
detail how he had
upended their lives.
DeAngelo sat
silently through those
hearings, expressionless
in a wheelchair that
prosecutors contended
is a prop to hide his still
vigorous health.

Judge rebuffs Trump again on tax records
By Jennifer Peltz

The developments
came a day after U.S.
District Judge Victor
Marrero ruled — as
NEW YORK — A
he had before in a case
federal judge turned
that has been to the
down President Donald
U.S. Supreme Court and
Trump’s newest move
Friday to keep New York back — that Manhattan’s
top prosecutor could
City prosecutors from
subpoena the records for
getting his tax records,
but Trump’s lawyers have a criminal investigation.
Trump’s lawyers
already asked higher
immediately appealed
courts to step in.
Thursday’s ruling.
They also asked
Marrero to delay
enforcement of the
subpoena while the
appeal plays out.
Marrero said no to that
Friday.
“The president has not
demonstrated that he will
suffer irreparable harm”
if the records are turned
over for a grand jury

Associated Press

probe that would keep
them secret, he wrote.
However, Trump’s
lawyers noted in a court
ﬁling Thursday that they
were making the same
request of an appeals
court and the Supreme
Court.
“The president raises
serious arguments,”
Trump attorney William
Consovoy wrote in an
appeals court ﬁling
Friday, adding that
it’s “implausible” that
Manhattan District
Attorney Cyrus R. Vance
Jr. “needs these records
so badly that there’s
no time for appellate
review.”
Vance’s ofﬁce, which
has agreed to hold off
enforcing the subpoena
for a week, declined to

comment Friday.
Messages seeking
comment were sent
Friday to Trump’s
lawyers.
Marrero has refused
multiple times to block
the subpoena. The
U.S. Supreme Court
last month upheld one
of his rulings, ﬁnding
that the presidency in
itself doesn’t shield
Trump from Vance’s
investigation.
But the high court
returned the case to
Marrero’s courtroom to
allow Trump’s lawyers
to raise other concerns
about the subpoena.
They did, arguing that
it was issued in bad
faith, might have been
politically motivated and
amounted to harassment.

In the response to the Pandemic Outbreak of COVID-19, Gallia County
Department of Job and Family Services will make assistance available to families
affected by this health crisis that have had an increase in their water
consumptions and sewer usage due to school closure and families now working
from home to help protect themselves and their families from being exposed to
the COVID-19. In order to promote a stable family home by continue3d access to
these essential humanitarian services, GCDJFS will offer assistance to those lowincome families who have delinquent water and/or sewer accounts as it relates
to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Only Phone Call Applications will be taken!! Please call 740-578-3380 Monday
thru Thursday 8am-4pm beginning Monday August 31, 2020. NO PAPER
APPLICATIONS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED so do not come to/into the agency. This
program will cease at 4pm on September 14, 2020 and no applications will be
accepted after this time. Please have all household members social security
numbers and last 30 days of household’s gross income readily available prior
to calling.
Eligible Services:
x

x

A one-time payment of $300.00 to pay towards delinquent water bills
that occurred or have not�been paid during the Pandemic period of
March 9, 2020 though July 31, 2020 payable directly to�their local
Water Company.
A one-time payment of $300.00 to pay towards delinquent sewer bills
that occurred or have not�been paid during the Pandemic period of
March 9, 2020 through July 31, 2020 payable directly�to their local
Sewer Company.

Eligibility
Jacob Pessia, DO, provides Pediatric &amp; Adolescent care including:
. Well-child care
. Preventive health including
immunizations and screenings
. Support

.
.
.
.

Education
Guidance for caregivers
Care for illnesses and injuries
Referrals to specialists as needed

Dr. Pessia received his Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine at Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine in Athens, Ohio, and completed
his pediatric residency at University of South Alabama in Mobile, Alabama.
He is accepting new patients at our locations in Gallipolis, Athens, and
Pomeroy, Ohio, and in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.

Call 1.855.4HOLZER (1.855.446.5937) to schedule an
appointment.
5HTXHVW�DQ�DSSRLQWPHQW��UHÀOO�D�SUHVFULSWLRQ�
�PXFK�PRUH�ZLWK�0\+RO]HU�3DWLHQW�3RUWDO��

x
x
x
x
x

x

The affected household must be a Gallia County resident and US Citizens.
Must have at least one child in the home
Must have an active account wi8th a local water and/or sewer company
This program must serve persons in a TANF-eligible family (See Section
1200 Eligibility and�Application of current PRC Plan)
The household income cannot exceed 200% of the Federal Poverty Level
(see link Federal�Poverty Level http://jfs.ohio.gov/ofam/
OWFPaymentStandards.stm
A special application will be used for this COVID-19 Special Program
Amendment #3

The applicant must call the agency to complete the application from
8am-4pm. Self-Attestation may be used for verification of income during
the March 9, 2020 through July 31, 2020. This guidance only applies to
COVID-19 PRC program.
Funds are approved on a first come, first serve basis and approval is
based on limited funding. Once funding is exhausted, this special
program will cease. This service will be a one-time non-reoccurring benefit.
Notice of approval/denial will be sent within 30 days.

OH-70201329

�S ports
8 Saturday, August 22, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Fox says Brennaman won’t announce NFL games

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Reds broadcaster Thom Brennaman used a gay slur
during the broadcast of Cincinnati’s game against the Kansas
City Royals on Wednesday, moments after the Fox Sports Ohio
broadcast returned from a commercial break before the seventh
inning in the first game of a doubleheader. Brennaman, who did
not seem to realize he was already on air, has been suspended
from working Cincinnati’s games, and Fox Sports also issued a
statement that Brenneman will no longer announce its NFL games.

LOS ANGELES (AP)
— Thom Brennaman
will not be calling NFL
games on Fox after using
an anti-gay slur on air
during a Cincinnati Reds
broadcast.
Fox Sports issued a
statement Thursday
that said “we are moving forward with our
NFL schedule which will
not include him.” Fox
also said Brennaman’s
remarks were “abhorrent,
unacceptable, and not
representative of the values of Fox Sports.”
Brennaman had been
a part of Fox’s NFL
announcer lineup since
it started televising
the league in 1994. He

was part of the No. 3
announcer team last season and was paired with
analyst Chris Spielman
and reporter Shannon
Spake. He had also called
Major League Baseball
games for the network
from 1996 to 2014.
The Reds announced
late Wednesday that the
56-year old broadcaster
was suspended. The team
also issued an apology for
the “horriﬁc, homophobic
remark.” The Reds closed
their statement by saying
they would be addressing their broadcasting
team for the remainder of
the season and possibly
beyond in the coming
days.

Brennaman, who had
been a part of the Reds
announcing team since
2007, used the slur
moments after Fox Sports
Ohio’s feed returned
from a commercial break
before the top of the seventh inning in the ﬁrst
game of a doubleheader
Wednesday at Kansas
City. Brennaman did
not seem to realize he
was already on air. The
remarks prompted a ﬁrestorm on social media.
“It was extremely disturbing to hear Brennaman’s homophobic comments wielded so nonchalantly,” said Barbara
Simon, head of news and
campaigns for GLAAD,

an LGBTQ advocacy
organization. “Those in
the room with Brennaman should clarify if that
level of casual homophobia existed as a constant
in the booth, or if anyone
stepped in.”
“Players, MLB and the
network have acted swiftly to call out Brennaman’s
behavior, stand beside the
LGBTQ community, and
send the message that it’s
inexcusable to use such
hateful language — mic
on or off,” she said Thursday.
Brennaman opened the
ﬁfth inning of the second
game with an apology
spoken directly to the
camera before handing

Wahama 4th at
LKC Invitational
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

ELIZABETH, W.Va. — The defending Class A
state champions certainly looked the part Thursday.
The St. Marys golf team claimed a 7-shot victory over the ﬁeld during the 11-team Little
Kanawha Conference Invitational held at Mingo
Bottom Golf Course in Wirt County.
The Blue Devils received a solid 1-2 punch that
resulted in a pair of the top four individual scores
on the day while rolling to a winning tally of 328.
Ritchie County was the overall runner-up with a
335, with Roane County (354) and Wahama (386)
completing the top four positions in the ﬁeld.
Williamson was ﬁfth with a 416 and Calhoun
County followed in with a 435. Gilmer County
(437) edged out Webster County (440) for the
seventh spot.
Braxton County, Ravenswood and Parkersburg
Catholic also competed, but none of the three
schools had enough participants for a team ﬁnish.
Grant Barnhart of St. Marys claimed medalist
honors with a 5-over par effort of 77. Teammate
Brandon Lawhorn joined Logan Hilkey of Ritchie
County and Emerson Simons of Roane County for
runner-up honors with identical rounds of 78.
Connor Ingels paced the White Falcons with an
84, followed by Brycen Bumgarner with a 96 and
Ethan Gray with a 98.
Ethan Mitchell completed the Wahama scoring
with a 108, while Mattie Ohlinger added a 114 as
well.
See LKC | 9

Blue Angels win
Cliffside tri-match
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — An all-around win.
The Gallia Academy girls golf team posted the
top three individual rounds and ultimately rolled
to a 10-shot victory over visiting Logan and
Jackson on Thursday during a non-conference trimatch at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallia County.
The host Blue Angels ended up recording half of
the top eight individual scores while cruising to a
winning tally of 185. Logan ended up second with
a 195, while the Ironladies wrapped up the standings with a 221.
Lilly Rees led GAHS and won medalist honors
with a 7-over par round of 44. Teammates Maddi
Meadows and Avery Minton shared runner-up
honors with identical efforts of 45.
Abby Hammons completed the winning tally
with a 51. Emma Hammons and Kylee Cook also
added respective scores of 55 and 65 for the Blue
Angels.
Ashley Aldridge and Lauren Johnson paced the
Lady Chieftains with matching efforts of 46, with
Tessa Luicart and Lia Poling completing the team
score with respective rounds of 47 and 56.
Lauren Begley and Jaiden Pippen also carded
respective scores of 69 and 76 for LHS.
Madeline Lewis led Jackson with a 46, followed
by Kaltra Woltz and Libby Allison with respective
efforts of 51 and 61. Makenna Folden completed
the JHS tally with a 63.
Isabella Scully-Tenpenny and Schuler Murray
also shot a 64 and 68 for Jackson.
© 2020 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Photos by Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Members of the Hannan football team take the field before the start of a Senior Night contest against Tolsia on Nov. 8, 2019, at the
Craigo Athletic Complex in Ashton, W.Va.

Revised W.Va. football schedules
By Bryan Walters

league home opener.
WVU and Marshall
also beneﬁt from playing
six of their 10 scheduled
games this year in their
respective home stadiums.
Here’s a look at the
updated football schedules on the West Virginia
side of the OVP area.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

With kickoff less
than two weeks away, it
appears that everything is
once again in place on the
southern side of the Ohio
River.
Point Pleasant, Wahama and Hannan have all
tweaked and completed
their respective fall football schedules for the
2020 campaign, barring
any possible changes
brought along during the
coronavirus pandemic.
Both Marshall and
West Virginia have made
replacements to their
respective slates as well,
although the Thundering
Herd could still possibly
add another non-conference opponent to the
schedule.
Here’s a brief look at
some of the major changes to the football schedules within the Ohio Valley Publishing area.
Point Pleasant went
from having nine games
to eight games with the
loss of Gallia Academy
after Ohio reduced its
regular season down to
six weeks.
The Big Blacks now
open the 2020 campaign
at home against Oak Glen
on Friday, Sept. 4. PPHS
won’t play again until
three weeks later when it
welcomes Lincoln County
on Sept. 25.
Wahama also had to
replace an opponent on
its schedule due to Ohio’s
shortened regular season.
The White Falcons now
open the year at Weirton
Madonna on Friday, Sept.
4, instead of hosting

A trio of Wahama defenders take down a South Gallia ball carrier
during an Oct. 18, 2019, football contest in Mercerville, Ohio.

Southern on that same
original date.
Instead of hosting Parkersburg Catholic in the
season opener on Friday,
Sept. 4, Hannan will now
welcome Clay-Battelle in
Week 1.
Marshall had its
Aug. 29 opener at East
Carolina moved back to
Saturday, Sept. 12. The
Herd now opens the year
at home against Eastern
Kentucky on Saturday,
Sept. 5.
Marshall lost original
non-conference games
against Ohio and Boise
State due to leagues shutting down fall sports, but
MU did pick up a home
matchup with Appalachian State on Saturday,
Sept. 19.
The entire Conference
USA East Division —

POINT PLEASANT BIG BLACKS
Date
Opponent
Time
9-4
vs. Oak Glen
7:30
9-25 vs. Lincoln County
7:30
10-2
at Bluefield
7:30
10-9
vs. Keyser
7:30
10-16 at Wyoming East
7:30
10-23
at Man
7:30
10-30
at Ripley
7:30
11-6
vs. Winfield
7:30
WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
Date
Opponent
Time
9-4
at Madonna
7:30
9-11
vs. Ritchie County
7:30
9-18
vs. Gilmer County
7:30
9-25
at Hannan
7:30
10-2
at Hundred
7:30
10-9
at Ravenswood
7:30
10-16
vs. Wirt County
7:30
10-23 at Calhoun County
7:30
10-30 at Federal Hocking
7:30
11-6
vs. Buffalo
7:30
HANNAN WILDCATS
Date
Opponent
Time
9-4
vs. Clay-Battelle
7 p.m.
9-11
at Tug Valley
7:30
9-18 vs. Trinity Christian
7:30
9-25
vs. Wahama
7:30
10-2 vs. Federal Hocking
7:30
10-9
at Sherman
7:30
10-16
at Montcalm
7 p.m.
10-23
vs. Van
7:30
10-30
at Manchester
7:30
11-6
at Tolsia
7:30
MARSHALL THUNDERING HERD
Date
Opponent
9-5
vs. Eastern Kentucky
9-12
at East Carolina
9-19
vs. Appalachian State
10-3
vs. Rice
10-10
at Western Kentucky
10-17
at Louisiana Tech
10-24
vs. Florida Atlantic
10-31
at Florida International
11-14
vs. Middle Tennessee State
11-21
vs. Charlotte
WEST VIRGINIA MOUNTAINEERS
Date
Opponent
9-12
vs. Eastern Kentucky
9-26
at Oklahoma State
10-3
vs. Baylor
10-17
vs. Kansas
10-24
at Texas Tech
10-31
vs. Kansas State
11-7
at Texas
11-14
vs. Texas Christian
11-28
vs. Oklahoma
12-5
at Iowa State

Marshall’s speciﬁc division — will be one opponent short as Old Dominion recently decided to
postpone fall sports.
The Thundering Herd
was originally slated to
ﬁnish the regular season
at ODU on Nov. 28.
West Virginia still has
its original home opener
against Eastern Kentucky
slated for Sept. 12, but
that was the only game
that survived in its original place.
When the Big 12 decided to go to a 9-conference
game plus-1 scenario,
the league also redid the
entire league docket.
The Mountaineers
© 2020 Ohio Valley
now open Big 12 play on Publishing, all rights
Saturday, Sept. 26, when reserved.
they travel to Oklahoma
Bryan Walters can be reached at
State before facing Bay740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
lor a week later in their

�SPORTS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Saturday, August 22, 2020 9

Tornadoes topple Meigs in golf dual

Hargraves maintains
Riverside Seniors lead

By Bryan Walters

Staff Report

night during a nonconference dual at Meigs
Golf Course.
The visiting
POMEROY, Ohio
Tornadoes had all four
— The weather was
of their scorers shoot
surprisingly pleasant
sub-50 rounds on the
and sunny during this
par 34 course, with Ryan
tornado surge.
Laudermilt leading the
The Southern golf
team posted the top four way with a medalist
effort of 9-over par 43.
individual scores and
Teammate Tanner Lisle
cruised to a 28-stroke
was the overall runnervictory over host
up with a 44.
Meigs on Thursday

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

David Shaver
and Lance Stewart
completed the winning
tally of 185 with
identical efforts of 49.
Jacob Milliron and
Kelsey Lewis also ﬁred
respective rounds of 52
and 57 for SHS.
The Marauders —
who ﬁnished with a
ﬁnal score of 213 —
were led by Gunnar
Peavley with a 50.

Payton Brown was next
with a 52 and Bailey
Jones added a 55,
while Coen Hall
completed the team tally
with a 56.
Zack King also shot a
58 for the hosts.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Blue Devils top Logan at Cliffside
By Bryan Walters

dual held at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallia
County.
The host Blue Devils
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Some pretty good depth. posted a winning score
of 182, ﬁnishing well
The Gallia Academy
ahead of the 258 put up
B team claimed the
by the Chieftains.
top ﬁve individual
Cody Bowman led
scores and cruised to
GAHS and claimed
a 76-stroke victory
medalist honors with
over visiting Logan on
Thursday night during a a 5-over par round of
non-conference boys golf 41. Teammate Carson

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Call was the overall
runner-up with a 42.
Nathanael Baird and
Evan Pope completed
the winning tally with
respective scores of 49
and 50. Kael O’Brien
and Abraham Dixon also
shot a 55 and a 68 for
the Blue Devils.
Sawyer Magditch
paced Logan with a 57,
followed by Jaxon Novak

with a 65 and Stewart
Travis with a 67. Zach
Aldridge completed
the LHS scoring with
a 69, while Coleman
Leach added a 78 as
well.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

MASON, W.Va. —
Charlie Hargraves of
New Haven still holds
an 11.5-point lead
over the ﬁeld through
a dozen weeks of play
at the 2020 Riverside
Seniors Golf League
being held every Tuesday at Riverside Golf
Club.
Hargraves has accumulated 136 points,
which leaves him well
ahead of the competition. Kenny Pridemore
of Point Pleasant is the
current overall runnerup with 124.5 points.
A total of 54 players
took part in Tuesday’s
round, making up 12
teams of four players each and a pair of
3-man squads.
The foursome of
Kenny Pridemore,
Larry Davis, Tom
McNeely and Mike
Fetty posted winning
score of 15-under par
55. There was a 2-way

tie for second place
with matching rounds
of 12-under par 58.
Charlie Hargraves,
Bill Rood, Doug Hendrixson and Dave
Seamon made up one of
the runner-up squads,
while the other consisted of Jim Gress, Haskel
Jones, Dale Miller and
Larry Legg.
The closest to the pin
winners were Phil Burgess on the 9th hole and
Jimmy Joe Hemsley on
the 14th hole.
The current top 10
in the standings for the
season are as follows:
Charlie Hargraves
(136.0); Kenny Pridemore (124.5); Dewey
Smith (116.0); Doug
Hendrixson (112.5);
Carl Stone (110.5);
Gene Thomas (109.5);
Jim Gress (107.5);
Albert Durst (106.5);
Bill Yoho and Mike
Fetty (103.0).
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

Big Ten parents at protest want details on no-play decision
By Eric Olson
Associated Press

Parents of Big Ten
football players, upset
over the process that
led to the postponement
of the fall season, held
a protest near the conference’s Chicago-area
headquarters Friday
while an attorney in
Nebraska demanded
Commissioner Kevin
Warren turn over material illustrating how the
decision was made.
The Big Ten and Pac12 announced Aug. 11
that health and safety
concerns over the coro-

LKC
From page 8

The following is the
list of scores for every
participant, by team, at
the event.
ST MARYS (328):
Grant Barnhart 77, Brandon Lawhorn 78, Ethan
Bennett 86, Brayden Hall
87, Kyle Jones 96.
RITCHIE COUNTY
(335): Logan Hilkey 78,
Anthony Rader 80, Dalton Edwards 85, Andrew
Freeman 92, Gavin Britton 115.
ROANE COUNTY
(354): Emerson Simons
78, Garret Simon 85,

navirus led them to shut
down football this fall.
The other three major
conferences, the Atlantic
Coast, Big 12 and Southeastern, are planning to
play.
Groups of player
parents from several
Big Ten schools have
complained that Warren
was not forthcoming in
explaining the process
that led to the school
presidents’ decision. A
more detailed explanation Warren offered in an
open letter this week was
not to their satisfaction.
“We’ve got a voice. We
want to use it,” said Jay

Kallenberger, father of
Iowa offensive lineman
Mark Kallenberger. “Our
kids may not be comfortable speaking out or the
programs may say, ‘Hey,
just sit back, there’s not
a lot you can say right
now.’ Transparency,
that’s what we want.”
Randy Wade, father of
Ohio State cornerback
Shaun Wade, organized
the protest in suburban
Rosemont. About two
dozen parents representing Iowa, Illinois, Ohio
State and Wisconsin
showed up. A few carried
“Let Them Play” signs
and the group chanted,

Cole Ellis 93, Bryson
Watson 98, J.W. Stover
100.
WAHAMA (386): Connor Ingels 84, Brycen
Bumgarner 96, Ethan
Gray 98, Ethan Mitchell
108, Mattie Ohlinger 114.
WILLIAMSON (416):
William Barniak 97,
Trevor Powell 103, Payton Stevens 106, Maggie Siley 110, Logan
Borkowski 116.
CALHOUN COUNTY
(435): Chase Blair 101,
Jaden Swearington 108,
Josie Montgomery 112,
Landen Bennett 114,
Drue Good 117.
GILMER COUNTY
(437): Adam Stewart 83,
James Mohr 98, Logan

Arden 126, Mya Hough
130.
WEBSTER COUNTY
(440): Reese Williams
100, Zac Carpenter 100,
Colton Short 104, Cody
Carpenter 136.
BRAXTON COUNTY
(N/S): Liston 100, Dobbins 107, Criner 113.
RAVENSWOOD
(N/S): Cameron Taylor
94, Jacob Coberly 102,
Mason Freeman 140.
PARKERSBURG
CATHOLIC (N/S): Blake
Lewis 86.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

“Let us play!”
The protest started
with a 17-second
moment of silence to
recognize the 170,000
Americans who have
died from COVID-19.
“We do respect there’s
a pandemic out here,”
Wade said, waving off
critics of the parents’
movement who say the
moms and dads are willing to put their sons at
risk so they can play
football.
Wade called on Warren
to set up a videoconference with parents and
athletic directors to
discuss in detail how the

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

2 ABSOLUTE REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
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25 ACRES

REAL ESTATE: Selling to the highest bidder is
25 acres of great rural living in a very beautiful
setting. The property features a 3,400 square
feet two-story home with 5 bedrooms and 2
COUNTRY HOME &amp; OUTBUILDINGS
full baths. The buildings include a detached 2
�������������$����������
car garage with additional guest quarters and a
��� ��������������������������
� pole building with plenty of room for livestock
and storage. Situated to the west of the homestead is a retail store that has been successfully run by the
current Amish owners. This property offers open pasture as well as some woods with excellent wildlife
habitat more than ideal for hunting and capable of producing giant deer and lots of turkeys.
Parcel 1: 15.5 Acres with the home and buildings.
Parcel 2: 9.5 Acres with retail store.
TAXES – LEGAL: Gallia County parcel #02100103500, taxes are estimated at $2,400 annually and will be
prorated to the day of closing. Auction by order of Christopher and Amelia Yoder

������

REAL ESTATE: Selling to the highest bidder is this
fantastic hunting property with living quarters and
buildings. 98 acres of outdoorsman
LIVING QUARTERS &amp; OUTBUILDINGS
paradise in an area known for quality
FANTASTIC HUNTING
shooter bucks. Most of the acreage
�� �������������"������������������
is wooded with some mature timber
adding to the soundness of this investment. Mixed with the wooded acreage is some open land that
would make ideal food plots. The property features a barn that was converted into a home with approximately 2,000 square feet of living area, country water, plumbing, and septic allowing for year-round living
or that weekend getaway that you have dreamed of. The home is heated with wood but does have access
to gas as well. A large barn and additional outbuildings add to the possibilities of farming or equipment
storage. Selling to the highest bidder regardless of price.
TAXES – LEGAL: Property is Gallia County parcel #03100144100 and 03100144102. Annual taxes are
approximately $850 and will be prorated to the day of closing. All owned mineral rights transfer to the new
owner subject to rights of record. Auction by order of Ammon and Salome Yoder

Andy White – Joseph Mast
Seth Andrews, Broker
Brian Whitt
937-545-7764

(833) 765-3737 | More Info @ www.RES.bid

OH-70200562

In Cooperation With

decision was reached.
Kallenberger said the
parents also want Warren to provide clarity on
whether there was a vote
of presidents and, if so,
how each school voted.
Warren wrote in his
letter this week that the
presidents’ vote “was
overwhelmingly in support of postponing fall
sports and will not be
revisited.”
However, Minnesota
president Joan Gabel
said last week, “We
didn’t vote, per se. It’s
a deliberative process
where we came to a decision together.”

Attorney Mike Flood
of Norfolk, Nebraska, in
a letter sent to Warren
on Friday, threatened a
federal lawsuit if documents and other materials related to the decision aren’t turned over
by Monday.
Flood, a former speaker of the Nebraska Legislature, said he represents
the parents of 11 Cornhuskers players. Flood
also is owner of Flood
Communications, which
operates eight radio stations in the state, ﬁve of
which broadcast football
games as part of the
Husker Sports Network.

�SPORTS

10 Saturday, August 22, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Minnesota wins NBA draft lottery, rights to No. 1 pick
impact player who could
immediately complement
our young, strong core,”
The NBA draft lottery Timberwolves President
Gersson Rosas said.
was delayed three
Chicago had a 32%
months. The Minnesota
chance of moving into
Timberwolves are
the top four spots,
certainly feeling like the
Charlotte about a 26%
wait was worthwhile.
chance. They leapfrogged
The Timberwolves
won the lottery Thursday four teams that had
better top-four odds
night, giving them the
— Cleveland, Atlanta,
No. 1 pick. The lottery
Detroit and New York.
was conducted virtually
“I’m pretty sure
because of the pandemic,
whoever we get, it’s
with NBA ofﬁcials
doing the actual draw in going to be exciting,”
Hornets guard Devonte’
Secaucus, New Jersey.
Graham said.
Golden State holds
The draft, originally
the No. 2 pick, Charlotte
scheduled for June,
got the No. 3 pick and
Chicago will pick fourth. is set for Oct. 16. But
nobody knows yet when
The Hornets and Bulls
the new draft picks will
both bucked some odds
make their NBA debuts,
to move into the upper
since the start of the
echelon.
2020-21 season is not yet
“We know with the
determined.
No. 1 pick we have the
The NBA had been
opportunity to draft an

Associated Press

hoping for a Dec. 1 start
to the 2020-21 season,
though Commissioner
Adam Silver said on the
ESPN telecast of that
draft lottery that date
now “is feeling a little bit
early to me.”
Without fans at games,
a major revenue stream
is obviously lost for the
league and its teams.
There have been talks
about starting next
season with one or
multiple bubbles, like
the one where the league
is playing now at Walt
Disney World in Lake
Buena Vista, Florida, but
the obvious preference is
to have fans returning to
games.
“Our No. 1 goal is
to get fans back in our
arenas,” Silver said on
the telecast. “My sense
is, in working with the
players association, if we

OH-70200492

HELP WANTED
Meigs County Health Dept. (MCHD) seeks a Registered
Nurse (BSN preferred) to perform public health nursing
services including, but not limited to COVID 19 response,
ŵŝƟŐĂƟŽŶ�ĂŶĚ�ƌĞĐŽǀĞƌǇ�ĞīŽƌƚƐ�ŽŶ�Ă�ĨƵůůͲƟŵĞ�ďĂƐŝƐ�;ϯϱ�ŚŽƵƌƐ�
per week Monday through Friday with some weekend and
ĞǀĞŶŝŶŐ�ǁŽƌŬ�ƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚ�ĂƐ�ĂƐƐŝŐŶĞĚͿ�ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ�ϲͬϯϬͬϮϭ�ǁŝƚŚ�
ƚŚĞ�ƉŽƐƐŝďŝůŝƚǇ�ŽĨ�ĐŽŶƟŶƵŝŶŐ�ĞŵƉůŽǇŵĞŶƚ�ĐŽŶƟŶŐĞŶƚ�ƵƉŽŶ�
the availability of funds. The beginning salary range for
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;ĚĞƉĞŶĚŝŶŐ� ƵƉŽŶ� ƚŚĞ� ƐƵĐĐĞƐƐĨƵů� ĐĂŶĚŝĚĂƚĞ͛Ɛ� ĞĚƵĐĂƟŽŶ�
ĂŶĚ� ĞǆƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞͿ� ǁŝƚŚ� ĨƌŝŶŐĞ� ďĞŶĞĮƚƐ͘� �� ĐŽŵƉůĞƚĞ� ũŽď�
ĚĞƐĐƌŝƉƟŽŶ� ĐĂŶ� ďĞ� ůŽĐĂƚĞĚ� Ăƚ� ǁǁǁ͘ŵĞŝŐƐͲŚĞĂůƚŚ͘ĐŽŵ͘�
/ŶƚĞƌĞƐƚĞĚ�ĂƉƉůŝĐĂŶƚƐ�ƐŚŽƵůĚ�ƐƵďŵŝƚ�ĞůĞĐƚƌŽŶŝĐĂůůǇ�Ă�ůĞƩĞƌ�
of interest; resume; copy of college degree/transcript and
valid Ohio nursing license; three professional reference
ůĞƩĞƌƐ� ƚŽ� &gt;ĞĂŶŶĞ͘ĐƵŶŶŝŶŐŚĂŵΛŵĞŝŐƐͲŚĞĂůƚŚ͘ĐŽŵ� ďǇ� Žƌ�
ďĞĨŽƌĞ�ϰWD�ŽŶ�ϬϴͬϯϭͬϮϬ͘�KŶůǇ�ĐŽŵƉůĞƚĞ�ĂƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶƐ�ǁŝůů�
ďĞ�ĐŽŶƐŝĚĞƌĞĚ͘�EŽ�ƉĂƉĞƌ�ĂƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶƐ�ǁŝůů�ďĞ�ĂĐĐĞƉƚĞĚ͘�
MCHD is an equal opportunity employer and provider.

could push back even a
little longer and increase
the likelihood of having
fans in arenas, that’s what
we would be targeting.”
The Timberwolves
were 19-45 this season,
marking the 14th time in
15 years that they failed
to make the playoffs and
ﬁnished with a losing
record. And a month
ago, Glen Taylor — who
has owned the franchise
since 1994 — said he
“will entertain” offers
for the Timberwolves
WNBA’s Minnesota
Lynx.
It’ll be Minnesota’s
ﬁrst time holding the No.
1 pick since 2015, when
it took Karl-Anthony
Towns.
The Warriors have
another asset — either
to trade or perhaps
keep — now as they look
toward next season. The

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Summer Sizzlin' Sale!!

OH-70199416

Warriors went from ﬁvetime defending Western
Conference champions to
an NBA-worst 15-50 this
season, having two-time
MVP Stephen Curry for
only ﬁve games largely
because of injury and not
having Klay Thompson
at any point while he
recovered from the ACL
tear he suffered in the
last game of the 2019
NBA Finals.
“I have no idea what
the value is of that pick,
how much people covet
it and I don’t think
I’ll know that anytime
soon,” Warriors general
manager Bob Myers said.
“But usually the No. 2
pick is pretty good. So
I think we’ll be happy
what whatever options,
whatever route we take.”
Unlike a year ago,
when Zion Williamson
was clearly going to

OH-70198304

By Tim Reynolds

be the ﬁrst selection,
there is no consensus
about the No. 1 pick.
Top candidates include
Georgia’s Anthony
Edwards, Memphis’
James Wiseman and
LaMelo Ball — the
brother of New Orleans
guard Lonzo Ball.
Edwards, a 6-foot-5
guard, averaged 19.1
points in 32 games for
Georgia in his lone
college season. Wiseman,
a 7-foot-1 center, played
in only three games for
Memphis and averaged
19.7 points before giving
up what had been a
lengthy ﬁght with the
NCAA over his eligibility.
Ball, a 6-foot-7 guard,
averaged 17 points in 12
games while playing in
Australia’s top pro league
this past season.
Cleveland got the ﬁfth
pick, followed by Atlanta,
Detroit, New York,
Washington, Phoenix,
San Antonio, Sacramento
and New Orleans at No.
13.
Memphis, which had
200-1 odds of winning
the No. 1 pick and was
97.6% certain of ﬁnishing
14th, ended up in exactly
that spot — a pick that
will now be conveyed to
Boston as part of a trade
that happened in 2015. It
means the Celtics could
have three ﬁrst-round
picks on draft night,
barring any moves by
Boston beforehand.
The rest of the ﬁrstround order, starting
with the No. 15 pick
and going to No. 30,
as of now is: Orlando,
Portland, Minnesota,
Dallas, Brooklyn, Miami,
Philadelphia, Denver,
Utah, Milwaukee,
Oklahoma City, Boston,
New York, the Los
Angeles Lakers, Toronto
and Boston.

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�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

BLONDIE

Saturday, August 22, 2020 11

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

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By Bil and Jeff Keane

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DENNIS THE MENACE

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�NEWS

12 Saturday, August 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Hog Show awards

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Alana Buckley shows a hog during Peewee Showmanship at Friday
morning’s hog show.
Janie Jordan shows her sister’s hog during Peewee Showmanship.

Kristina Weakley shows her hog during Friday’s hog show.

Jaycie Jordan (left) and Kristina Weakley (right) compete in the
showmanship final drive on Friday morning.

Chloe Rizer shows her hog during Friday’s Meigs County Junior
Fair Hog Show.

Whitney Durst and Steven Fitzgerald show their hogs in the
showmanship competition on Friday morning.

Scenes from the Market Sheep Show

Market Rabbit Show

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Brycen Rowe holds his rabbit during showmanship judging in
Thursday’s rabbit show.
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Showmen take part in judging for their 4-H projects.

Sidney Dillon and Alexis Grubb take part in showmanship judging
during Thursday’s Meigs County Junior Fair Rabbit Show.
Jessica Parker and Braden Watson lead their sheep around the
ring.

Matthew Garrett Parry enters the ring with his lamb.

OH-70199153

Nevada Johnson and Matthew Garrett Parry show their sheep Senior Showmen take part in the sheep showmanship
contest.
during Wednesday’s show.

Dustin Vance looks on as the judge examines his rabbits.

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>August 22, 2020</text>
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      <name>williams</name>
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