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                  <text>Shriners
recognize
supporters

Visiting
the fish
hatchery

Prep
basketball
results

NEWS s 7A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 2, Volume 54

Sunday, January 12, 2020 s $2

Honors in the arts

File photo

In this file photo, Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre Executive Director Lora Snow (left) discusses the McIntyre Suite inspired by Oscar Odd McIntyre, the
famed passed Gallipolis columnist and reporter, with McIntyre biography writer Scott Williams (center) and area actor Seth Argabright (right).

Local arts leaders
receive 2020
Governor’s Awards

located in Meigs County. Guided by the belief in the power
of music to promote peace and
change lives for the better, Fur
Peace Ranch supports local artists, farmers, and businesses
and promotes the reach of the
Staff Report
arts throughout Southeast Ohio
and beyond.
COLUMBUS — Two local
Other award winners are as
arts leaders were among eight
follows:
selected to receive 2020 GoverArts education: Nigel Burnor’s Awards.
goine (Holland, Lucas County).
Lora Lynn Snow of GallipoHe is the artistic director at the
lis and Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur
Ballet Theatre of Toledo.
Peace Rance near Pomeroy
Arts patron: The Charles H.
were selected for the prestiDater Foundation (Cincinnati,
gious arts honors.
Hamilton County).
Snow has been selected as the
Business support of the
winner in the Arts AdministraJorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace Ranch near Pomeroy was among the recipients of the arts: Nicolettecinemagraphics
tion category.
2020 Governor’s Awards.
(Columbus, Franklin County).
Snow is the founder and
Community development
Ranch in Pomeroy has been
in 1990.
executive director of the Arieland participation: Joan Perch
selected as a winner in the
Having a holistic view of the
Ann Carson Dater Performing
(Elyria, Lorain County). Perch
Community Development and
Arts Centre in Gallipolis, home arts, Snow also established a
is the program and outreach
Participation category.
music education program, a
of the Ohio Valley Symphony,
Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace coordinator at the Campana
double reed festival, a commuthe only professional orchestra
Center for Ideation &amp; Invention
Ranch was initially built in
in the Ohio River Valley. Snow, nity theatre troupe, and OVS
at Lorain County Community
an oboist, was inspired in 1987 woodwind and dance programs 1989 as “a ranch that grows
guitar players,” but it has since College.
to form a professional orchestra at the Ariel. An active recitalIndividual artist: Jesse Ayers,
transformed into so much
ist, clinician, and consultant,
in Gallia County and recogDMA (Canton, Stark County).
more. Founded by Jorma and
Snow has taught at several
nized the amazing acoustics in
Ayers is a composer and a
universities and public schools. Vanessa Kaukonen, the former
the long-neglected 1895 Ariel
of whom performed with Jeffer- professor of music at Malone
She is principal oboist for the
Opera House that had been
Ohio Valley Symphony and OVS son Airplane and still performs University.
abandoned for 25 years. She
Individual artist: Andy Snow
regularly with Hot Tuna, Fur
Woodwind Quintet, a member
spearheaded the restoration
(Dayton, Montgomery County).
of the West Virginia Symphony, Peace Ranch is an immersive
and set about to organize the
music camp, conference center,
and a freelance musician.
community toward the grand
See ARTS | 5A
Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace concert venue, and art gallery
reopening of the historic Ariel

B SPORTS
Comics: 5B
Classifieds: 6B

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
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thoughts.

Banners
to honor
armed forces
personnel
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

See DISTRICT | 5A

See BANNERS | 5A

Courtesy photo | Buckeye Hills

Pictured left to right: Tim Bartee with BHCC Culinary Prep
Students: Sully Woodie, Keith Hersman, Colton Jones, Lydia
Greer, Autumn McComas, Breanna Belcher and Abigail Ball.

2020. The dinner was
provided by the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Culinary Prep students
under the direction of
their instructor, Timothy Bartee.
“Our school board
members are citizen-

VINTON — A search
was conducted north of
the Village of Vinton, said
Gallia Sheriff Matt Champlin around 2:30 p.m.,
Friday afternoon on State
Route 160 for a missing
child with
“autism”
where she
was eventually found
by ﬁrst
responders.
Joanna
Gilliam
Gilliam
walked
away from her residence,
which is in a heavily
wooded area near 19323
State Route 160.
“We found her with a
little bit of luck coupled
with God, I think,” said
Champlin. “She was in
a heavily covered underbrush area. A paramedic
heard something and
went to inspect and found
her. It gave us a good resolution to the situation.”
Gilliam was found
around 4:35 p.m. said the
sheriff.

servants who shoulder
critical responsibilities
and often make difﬁcult
choices for our district,
all with minimal pay,”
Superintendent Jamie L.
Nash said. “Their focus

Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY —
The Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocational
School District joins
more than 700 school
districts throughout
Ohio to celebrate January as School Board Recognition Month.
Certiﬁcates of service
from the Ohio School
Board Association were
presented and an appreciation dinner was held
for the Board on the
Buckeye Hills Career
Center campus prior to
the onizational and regular January meetings on
Wednesday, January 8,

Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY
— “As we express our
gratitude, we must never
forget that the highest
appreciation is not to
utter words, but to live by
them.” — President John
F. Kennedy.
It is to honor and thank
the men and women of
the United States Armed
Forces that local residents and veterans have
launched the “Meigs
County Armed Forces
Banner Project”.
The goal of the project
is to create and place banners to honor past and
present Armed Services
personnel with the display to begin on Memorial Day 2020. Banners
will be approximately 18
inches by 36 inches in
size.
“We believe this project
is a way to thank and
honor those great men
and women who have
served and are currently
serving to make our country great. It will instill a
sense of duty and honor
of Country to our younger generations, which
will aid them in becoming productive future
citizens,” said project
organizers. The project
board is comprised of two
civilians and four veterans from the county.
In just the short time
since the Facebook page
associated with the
project has been active,
the responses have been
pouring in.

District celebrates Board Recognition Month

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A

Missing
girl found
by first
responders

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

OBITUARIES
ELSIE CRAIGO

SHARI ‘MAMMIE’ A. EBLIN
RACINE — Shari
“Mammie” A. Eblin, 56,
of Racine, died Thursday,
Jan. 9, 2020, at the Meigs
Holzer ER in Pomeroy.
Born April 12, 1963, in
Gallipolis, Ohio, she was
the daughter of the late
Melvin and Linda Rigney
Freeman.
Shari is survived by
one son, Robert (Brittany) Eblin; one daughter,
Linda Eblin; nine grandchildren, Markus, Roy,
Kaylee, Gaven, Eddie,
Kahne, Emma, Draven
and Meah: one brother,
Joe (Rhea) Freeman;

and one sister Jeanette
“Nutty” (Jim Quillen).
Besides her parents,
she was preceded in
death by her husband,
Roy Eblin in 2007; a
son, Chad Freeman; two
brothers, Doug and Donnie Freeman; and one
sister Judy Hawley.
A memorial service
will be held at 2 p.m. on
Sunday, Jan. 26, 2020,
at the Ewing-Schwarzel
Family Center in Pomeroy. Friends are encouraged to sign the online
guestbook at ewingfuneralhome.net.

POWELL
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Janice Lane Powell, 80, of
Charleston, W.Va., died on January 9, 2020.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. on Monday, January 13, 2020
at 1 p.m. Burial will follow in Beale Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may visit the family from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
prior to the service at the funeral home.

GALLIPOLIS — Elsie
Craigo, 81, of Gallipolis,
died Thursday, Jan. 9,
2020.
She was born Sept.
14, 1938, in Snow Shoe,
Pennsylvania, to Eversley
T. and Agnes B. Haynes.
She married Donald
Ray Craigo, Sr., and he
preceded her in death on
Dec. 17, 1997.
She graduated in 1956
from Snow Shoe High
School and then studied
nursing at Philipsburg
State Hospital School of
Nursing.
Elsie gave of herself
during a lifetime career

US dismisses Iraq
request to work on a
troop withdrawal plan
By Samya Kullab
and Qassim Abdul-Zahra

call Thursday night, he
told U.S. Secretary of
Associated Press
State Mike Pompeo that
recent U.S. actions were
BAGHDAD — Iraq’s unacceptable breaches
of Iraqi sovereignty
caretaker prime minisand a violation of their
ter asked Washington
to work out a road map security agreements, his
ofﬁce said.
for an American troop
He asked Pompeo to
withdrawal, but the U.S.
“send delegates to Iraq
State Department on
to prepare a mechaFriday bluntly rejected
nism” to carry out the
the request, saying
Iraqi Parliament’s resothe two sides should
instead talk about how lution on withdrawing
foreign troops, accordto “recommit” to their
ing to the statement.
partnership.
“The prime minister
Thousands of antisaid American forces
government protesthad entered Iraq and
ers turned out in the
drones are ﬂying in
capital and southern
its airspace without
Iraq, many calling on
permission from Iraqi
both Iran and America
authorities, and this
to leave Iraq, reﬂectwas a violation of the
ing their anger and
frustration over the two bilateral agreements,”
the statement added.
rivals — both allies of
Abdul-Mahdi signaled
Baghdad — trading
blows on Iraqi soil. The he was standing by the
push for U.S. forces to
request from Prime
leave despite signs of
Minister Adel Abdulde-escalation by TehMahdi pointed to his
ran and Washington
determination to push
after Iran retaliated for
ahead with demands
for U.S. troops to leave Soleimani’s death by
ﬁring missiles that hit
Iraq, stoked by the
two Iraqi bases where
American drone strike
on Jan. 3 that killed top American troops are
based but caused no
Iranian Gen. Qassem
casualties.
Soleimani. In a phone

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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
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Survivors
include her son,
Donald Ray
Craigo, Jr., of Gallipolis; her daughters, Brenda Erdy
of Greensboro,
North Carolina,
Donna Craigo of Orlando, Florida, and Karen
Craigo and husband
Michael Czyzniejewski
of Springﬁeld, Missouri;
ﬁve grandchildren,
Joanna Erdy of Lodi,
California, Travis and
Kevin Erdy of Greensboro, North Carolina,
and Copernicus and
Keats Czyzniejewski of

Springﬁeld, Missouri; a
sister, Nancy Bjerke of
Clemmons, North Carolina; a brother, George
Haynes of Snow Shoe,
Pennsylvania; and her
beloved dog, Buddy.
She was preceded in
death by two brothers
and four sisters.
A celebration of life
will be held at 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 15,
2020, at American
Legion Post 27, 1839
McCormick Road, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.

JAMES W. NELSON

POMEROY — James
W. Nelson, 76, of Pomeroy, died Friday, Jan. 10,
2020, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
Born Feb. 9, 1943,
in Gallipolis, Ohio, he
FERRIS
was the son of the late
CHESAPEAKE — William Leonard Ferris, 87,
James F. and Mary Agnes
of Chesapeake, died Friday, January 10, 2020 at St.
Comer Nelson.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Private
He is survived by his
family service will be held. Burial will be in Highland
wife of 37 years Sandy
Memorial Gardens, South Point. Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio is assisting the fam- Wolfe Nelson; four daughters, Kelly Burke (Michael
ily with arrangements.
DEVANEY
PROCTORVILLE — Jeffrey Todd Devaney, 52,
of Proctorville, Ohio, died Friday, Jan. 10, 2020, at
home. Visitation will be held 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan.
14, 2020, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.

of nursing that
spanned more
than 50 years.
She helped heal
the sick and comfort the dying.
The Craigo family would like to
thank nurses everywhere
for the losses in their
own lives that occur as a
result of giving so much
of themselves.
Elsie also loved animals
and rescued many of
them over the years. She
loved to read and to laugh
with friends, and she
was also a loving and fun
mom and grandmother.

Gleason), Janna
(Michael Lee)
Keney, Mary Buffy
Nelson and Alesha
(Bob) Day; one
son, Michael Lee
Keney; ﬁve grandchildren, Joshua,
Mikey, Krista,
Jaela, and Madison; eight
great grandchildren; one
god son, Corey (Tosh)
Putman, one brotherin-law, Hubert (Marcia)

Wolfe; a son-in-law,
Sherman Mike
Kirby; and several
nieces and nephews.
Beside his
parents, he was
preceded in death
by one grandson,
Derek Kirby; one sister,
Janet Shepherd; and
his grandmother, Janie
Comer.
Visitation will be from

6-8 p.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. 14, 2020, at EwingSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. A funeral
service will follow at 8
p.m. with Adam Will ofﬁciating. Burial will held
at the convenience of the
family at Mount Herman
Cemetery in Chester.
Friends are encouraged to sign the online
guestbook at ewingfuneralhome.net.

DEBRA LEE ‘DEBBIE’ PERROUD
GALLIPOLIS —
Debra Lee “Debbie” Perroud, 64, of Gallipolis,
passed away on January
10, 2020 in her home
surrounded by her family
and friends after a courageous battle with cancer.
Debbie was born to the
late Lloyd and Garnet
Engle Hess on May 19,
1955 in Gallipolis.
Debbie was a 1973
graduate of Gallia Academy High School. She
was a member of Fellowship of Faith Church.
Debbie retired from
Holzer Health systems,
where she started her

career in the Lab. She
went on to become an
LPN and worked on the
Maternity Unit until her
retirement in 2019.
Debbie was a devoted
mother and grandmother. She is survived
by her children, Tony
(Cheryl) Perroud of Gallipolis, Cory Perroud
and Christa Simmons of
Gallipolis, and Cassie
(Brandon) George of
Vinton; grandchildren,
Austin and Aubrei Perroud, Karsyn and Kynlee
George, and Olivia,
Zach, Taylor, and Abby
Thomas; two great

grandchildren, Nora and
Jude Hall; three sisters,
Carolyn (Chuck) Cox
of Gallipolis, Rosetta
Moore of Ripley, West
Virginia, and Terri
(Andy) McQuaid of
Canal Winchester; several nieces, nephews, and
close friends; and two
special travel friends,
Kayla Burns and Christi
Burns.
The funeral service
for Debbie will be held
at 11 a.m. on Tuesday,
January 14, 2020 at Fellowship of Faith Church
in Rio Grande, with
Pastor Jamie Sisson and

Steve Sisson ofﬁciating.
Her burial will follow
in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends and
family may visit and
pay their respects from
4-8:30 p.m. on Monday,
January 13, 2020 at the
church.
The Nurse Honor
Guard of the Ohio Valley
will begin the funeral
service on Tuesday, January 14, 2020 at 11 a.m.
by honoring Debbie who
dedicated her life to the
Nursing Profession.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.

Pelosi to send impeachment to Senate

By Lisa Mascaro
and Mary Clare Jalonick
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Speaker Nancy Pelosi
said the House will
take steps next week to
transmit the articles of
impeachment against
President Donald Trump,
ending a three-week
standoff but confronting
the Senate with only the
third trial in U.S. history
to remove a chief executive.
In a letter to her
Democratic colleagues,
Pelosi said Friday she
was proud of their ‘’courage and patriotism” and
warned that senators
now have a choice as
they consider the charges
of abuse and obstruction
against the president.
“In an impeachment
trial, every Senator takes
an oath to do ‘impartial
justice according to the
Constitution and laws,’’’
Pelosi wrote. “Every
Senator now faces a
choice: to be loyal to the
President or the Constitution.”
The trial could begin
next week. The Constitution gives the House the
sole power to impeach a
president, but the Senate
the ability to render a
verdict when it convenes
as the Court of Impeachment.
Pelosi was particularly upbeat Friday as
she strode through the
Capitol, despite the
mounting pressure on her
to quit delaying the trial.
Her decision to end the
showdown with Senate
Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell does not
fully bring closure to the
question of whether the
Senate will consider new
witnesses, as some want,

J. Scott Applewhite | AP

Laura Albinson of Pasadena, Md., displays a message for members of the House as they leave the
Capitol in Washington on Friday. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday the House will take steps
next week to send articles of impeachment to the Senate for President Donald Trump’s Senate trial.

shifting pressure on senators to decide.
Trump swiftly signaled
his intention of blocking
any testimony from John
Bolton, the brash former
national security adviser
who could be a wildcard
witness in the trial.
Bolton has said he would
appear before the Senate
if he received a subpoena.
At the same time, a key
centrist GOP Sen. Susan
Collins of Maine, whose
vote is among those most
watched, announced
Friday she was in discussions with other Republicans on a strategy that
would allow the Senate to
hear new testimony.
While the rules of Senate trial remain unsettled,
the outcome is not.
Trump is widely expected
to be acquitted of the
charges that he abused
power by pressuring
Ukraine to investigate
Joe Biden, then obstructed Congress in its investigation. No president has
ever been removed by the
Senate.

“Ridiculous,” Trump
told Fox News’ Laura
Ingraham about the
speaker’s gambit. “Nancy
Pelosi will go down
as the least successful
speaker of the House
in the history of our
nation,” he said.
Asked if he would
invoke executive privilege
to block Bolton’s testimony, Trump said, “Well
I think you have to for
the sake of the ofﬁce.”
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, who
has been working closely
with the White House
on strategy, said Friday
afternoon that the Senate is “anxious to get
started.”
Republicans have the
leverage, with a slim
53-47 Senate majority, if
McConnell can keep GOP
senators on board with
his strategy. So far, they
are supportive of modeling the trial after the one
used in the last presidential impeachment, of Bill
Clinton, 20 years ago. It
set out a path for starting

the trial and voting on
witnesses later.
Despite McConnell’s
wishes for a speedy trial,
some Republicans in his
caucus have indicated
that they are open to witnesses. It takes just 51
senators to set the rules,
and Democrats have been
trying to win over wavering GOP senators to vote
with them on hearing
new testimony.
“I am hopeful that we
can reach an agreement
on how to proceed with
the trial that will allow
the opportunity for witnesses for both the House
managers and the President’s counsel if they
choose to do so,” Collins
said. “It is important
that both sides be treated
fairly.”
Since the House vote
on Dec. 18 to impeach
the president, the showdown between Pelosi
and McConnell, the two
power centers in Congress, has consumed Capitol Hill and scrambled
the political dynamics.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 12, 2020 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

Employee spotlight: Jessica Snoke
My name is Jessica
Snoke. The Meigs County
Board of Health hired
me as the full-time ﬁscal ofﬁcer for the Meigs
County Health Department (MCHD) in February 2019. As a life-long
resident of Meigs County,
I enjoy working in my
home county. I have
always loved math and
numbers so deciding to
work in the ﬁnancial ﬁeld,
as I have done the past
several years, was a perfect ﬁt for me.
As a public entity,
the MCHD maintains
a strong operational
infrastructure in order to
administer public health
services efﬁciently and
effectively to meet the
needs of the population.
By maintaining a strong
organizational infrastructure, the MCHD
can assess and improve
its operations, stafﬁng,
and program support
systems. Sound ﬁnancial
practices are basic to
any organization because
they are required to manage resources wisely,
to analyze present and

ing/Agreement
future needs, to
or other written
sustain operations,
agreements that
and demonstrate
have been executed
accountability.
with other organiThe MCHD
zations or departreceives funding
ments. I maintain
from a variety
executed contracts
of sources. Each
Jessica
on behalf of the
funding source has Snoke
speciﬁc requireContributing MCHD.
My position
ments for the use
columnist
is responsible
of the funds and
for coordinating
for reporting to
and monitoring many
the funding agency. It is
other ﬁscal activities in
important that funds are
collaboration with the
used appropriately and
county auditor and trealegitimately and that the
surer. My duties include,
MCHD has systems for
but are not limited to
accountability. I work
accounts payable/receivwith MCHD grant proable, preparing the yearly
gram directors to report
budget, reviewing and
to funders.
Meanwhile, the MCHD vouchering expenses,
providing a monthly ﬁscal
may not directly deliver
or provide all services and report to be reviewed by
administrative activities. Senior Management and
approved by the Board of
Sometimes we depend
Health. I also do employon other entities to act
on our behalf for services ee payroll, maintain sick
related to organizational, and vacation time accrual
management, and admin- and assist with employee
beneﬁts such as healthistrative functions, or to
program services or inter- care, dental, vision and
ventions delivered to the life/AD&amp;D insurance
public. The MCHD enters because the MCHD does
not have a staffer solely
into contracts or Memodedicated to Human
randums of Understand-

Resource Management.
Audits are formal examinations of the MCHD’s
ﬁnancial accounts. Audits
are performed by external auditors. I soon will
be working to prepare
documentation needed by
State examiners for the
MCHD’s upcoming 20172018 audit.
In addition to my Fiscal
responsibilities, I am a
member of the MCHD’s
team preparing for
national accreditation via
the Public Health Accreditation Board as well as
the MCHD’s Performance
Management/Quality
Improvement team.
In conclusion, one of
the MCHD’s values is
Accountability: We are
open and honest in our
relationships and good
stewards of available
resources. We also practice transparency.
For more information,
contact the MCHD at
740-992-6626 Monday
through Friday from 8
a.m.-4 p.m.
Jessica Snoke is the fiscal officer
at the Meigs County Health
Department.

Red Cross,
PALS partner

Courtesy photo | Gallia PALS

PALS Gallia County opened their facility on January 2 to host
a blood drive for the American Red Cross. During the course
of the day, community members stopped by to donate blood
as well as get a chance to meet several of the PALS Gallia
County participants who assisted the American Red Cross
team in hosting, passing out snacks and sharing conversation.
Participants considered the blood drive a success and the
American Red Cross met their target goal of donations.
This event continues on with the PALS vision of integration
and community partnership. Enough productive units were
created to save up to 87 lives.

American Legion recognizes For His Glory news report
Americanism tests
Submitted

Submitted

VINTON — The
American Legion and
Auxiliary #161 Vinton
and guests met at the
American Legion Hall
on December 14, 2019
to celebrate their annual
Christmas Dinner. After
the dinner, the boys and
girls from River Valley
High School, along with
their parents, were recognized for their outstanding achievements on the
Americanism Tests.
They were as follows: Tyler Hess who is
a senior scored 94 out
of a possible 100. Isaac
Barrett who is a junior
scored 94 out of a pos-

sible 100. Rebecca Pearce
who is a junior scored
94 out of a possible 100.
Payton Crabtree who is a
senior scored 88 out of a
possible 100.
The three scoring
94 scored the highest
in the district and will
now compete at the
state level. They were
recognized and awarded
certiﬁcates and an
Americanism pin as well
as a monetary gift. This
test is sponsored through
Post #161 and is taken
voluntarily.
Auxiliary #161 sponsored Shayla Sanger, who
is a senior at River Valley
High School, to attend

Buckeye Girls State in
June 2019. All expenses
were paid by the Auxiliary and her parents
assisted in getting her
to and from the event.
Shayla gave an speech
in which she shared how
much she learned and
accomplished in her brief
time at Girls’ State and
how much she enjoyed
the experience.
The Auxiliary awards
one or more scholarships
to a senior at River Valley
High School each year.
The few active members work each year in
order to achieve such
previously mentioned
activities.

GALLIA COUNTY
— Meeting was called
to order on October 20,
2019 at 3:30 p.m. by
Aubrey Cox, president,
and was held at the
First Baptist Church,
Gallipolis.
Twenty-one members
and two guests were
present. Role call was
taken by Katie Maynard, secretary. Meeting
started with pledges to
the American ﬂag and

the 4-H Pledge was also
recited. Prayer was led
by Lori Miller, advisor.
Project book money
and premium checks
were disbursed to
members. Flyers were
handed out to the group
for the third annual
Glassburn’s Fun Farm.
The group collected
donations of paper
goods and bottled water
as their service project
for the month.
After the business

meeting, the club members visited the Gallipolis RR Freight Station
Museum, located at 918
3rd Avenue, Gallipolis.
The group had a fun
time learning about
the history of the station and the train cars.
Special thanks to our
tour guides Jerry Davis
and Jim Love. The
4-H group donated the
items from their service
project to the freight
station.

Your Guide To

MEIGS COUNTY 2020

White House considering
dramatic expansion of travel ban
A different person
said the expansion could
include several counAssociated Press
tries that were covered
in the ﬁrst iteration of
WASHINGTON — The Trump’s ban, but later
White House is consider- removed amid rounds of
contentious litigation.
ing dramatically expandIraq, Sudan and Chad,
ing its much-litigated
for instance, had origitravel ban to additional
countries amid a renewed nally been affected by the
order, which the Supreme
election-year focus on
immigration by President Court upheld in a 5-4 vote
Donald Trump, according after the administration
to six people familiar with released a watered-down
version intended to withthe deliberations.
stand legal scrutiny.
A document outlining
Trump, who had ﬂoated
the plans — timed to
a banning all Muslims
coincide with the third
from entering the country
anniversary of Trump’s
during his 2016 camJanuary 2017 execupaign, criticized his Justive order — has been
tice Department for the
circulating the White
House. But the countries changes, tweeting that
DOJ “should have stayed
that would be affected
with the original Travel
if it moves forward are
blacked out, according to Ban, not the watered
down, politically correct
two of the people, who
version they submitted to
spoke to The Associated
S.C.”
Press on condition of
The countries on the
anonymity because the
proposed expansion list
measure has yet to be
include allies that fall
ﬁnalized.
It’s unclear exactly how short on certain security
many countries would be measures. The additional
included in the expansion restrictions were proposed by Department of
if it proceeds, but two of
the people said that seven Homeland Security ofﬁcials following a review
countries — a majority
of them Muslim — would of security protocols and
“identity management”
be added to the list. The
for about 200 countries,
most recent iteration of
according to the person.
the ban includes restricWhite House spokestions on ﬁve majorityman Hogan Gidley
Muslim nations: Iran,
Libya, Somalia, Syria and declined to conﬁrm the
Yemen, as well as Venezu- plan, but praised the
travel ban for making the
ela and North Korea.

country safer.
“The Travel Ban has
been very successful in
protecting our Country
and raising the security baseline around the
world,” he said in a statement. “While there are
no new announcements
at this time, commonsense and national security both dictate that if
a country wants to fully
participate in U.S. immigration programs, they
should also comply with
all security and counterterrorism measures
-- because we do not want
to import terrorism or
any other national security threat into the United
States.”
Several of the people
said they expected the
announcement to be
timed to coincide with
the third anniversary of
Trump’s ﬁrst, explosive
travel ban, which was
announced without warning on Jan. 27, 2017 —
days after Trump took
ofﬁce. That order sparked
an uproar, with massive
protests across the nation
and chaos at airports
where passengers were
detained.
The current ban suspends immigrant and
non-immigrant visas to
applicants from the affected countries, but it allows
exceptions, including for
students and those who
have established “signiﬁcant contacts” in the U.S.

The ofﬁcial tourism guide to
Meigs County
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel and
Meigs Chamber of Commerce
OH-70167574

By Jonathan Lemire,
Lisa Mascaro
and Jill Colvin

Contact Brenda or Sarah at 740-444-4293

�Opinion
4A Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Could we
borrow
an egg?
Maybe it’s because I’m getting older and more nostalgic. Maybe it’s because I live in a more rural area
now and neighbors’ homes are separated by more
than a few feet. Or maybe it’s because it came up in a
conversation at work the other day, and we wondered
if neighbors still share like they once did.
When I was young, and my mother was busy preparing another homemade meal, it was not at all
unusual for her to ask one of my siblings or myself to
run to next door, in either direction, and borrow an
egg, some bread, or whatever it was that
she had ran short of.
Maybe it’s because people were more
frugal and cooked more at home back
then, but it seemed to happen somewhat often, and I do not remember ever
returning without whatever it was that
my mother needed.
Prior to moving after my ﬁrst week in
Jeff
ﬁfth grade — just days after I broke my
Gilliland
Contributing arm in a backyard football game and a
crowd of friends from the neighborhood
columnist
gently escorted me home — my family lived in an area where many of the
other families were much the same, with lots of young
couples raising children.
It was a good place to learn and grow.
The neighbors on one side of us had several kids,
all of them older than me. But the youngest was only
a two or three years older and he spent lots of time
teaching a brother and I the intricacies of football,
baseball, sled riding and more. He also taught me how
to ride a bike. I did not have my own bike at the time,
so he cobbled one together from pieces of several old
bikes, brought it over to our house, and told me it was
mine. It was not exactly pretty, but it served its purpose just ﬁne, and I was tickled to have it.
The neighbors on the other side had a daughter one
year older than me and a son a couple years younger.
If I look closely in a mirror, I can still see scars from
the time the girl ran her ﬁngernails down one side of
my face after some type of disagreement. But those
kind of things happen when you’re a kid, they were
good people, fun to be around, and after we moved
away and grew up, I came to know all of them even
better.
My dad built a small basketball court behind that
house on Josie Street. A couple of the neighborhood
boys played on it from time to time. After a while, the
net became frazzled. One day, completely out of the
blue, the boys showed up at our front door asking if
they could put a new net they had purchased on our
hoop. I thought that was really cool, and it left a lasting impression.
I was not happy the summer between fourth and
ﬁfth grade when my parents told us we would be
moving. For a while they looked at a home in the
country. I did not like that idea at all, knowing there
would be few, if any, kids nearby. But my parents
eventually decided on a place on Pleasant Street,
where we found a lot more friends and good neighbors.
So, when I told a co-worker the other day about
sharing eggs, bread, milk and such with neighbors
back in the day, she said that was pretty neat.
Some people would have you believe that those
days are gone, that no one really cares about their
neighbors anymore. But I can tell you that in my case
at least, that is far from the truth.
While it may not be eggs, bread, milk and such
anymore, the neighborhood I moved to a little over
17 years ago has often reminded me of that one when
I was a kid.
Until last spring, I was too cheap (or maybe I just
could not convince my wife) to buy a good mower. So
I used old ones. They broke down often. When they
did, I’d push them across the road to my late neighbor. He’d quickly take care of whatever was wrong,
and never charge anywhere to close to what his time
and the parts were worth. I also borrowed his mower
once when I was dire need, and a time or two he
mowed our yard for us.
When the snow gets too deep in my driveway,
another neighbor comes and plows it clear. He has
also pulled me out of the mud with his tractor when
I got too close to our little stream and got the mower
stuck. His wife has fed our pets when we are away,
and she and my wife keep in contact whenever something unusual is going on in our neighborhood.
Another neighbor, who just moved after the passing
of his wife, hosted our grandson many times after the
school bus dropped him off and we had accidentally
locked him out. He and his wife also collected our
mail and watched over our home while we were away.
Other neighbors have helped in similar ways.
Maybe times have changed. Maybe there is more
bad in the world than there once was. But at least in
my little corner of the world, you can still count on
your neighbors.
Jeff Gilliland is the editor of The Times-Gazette. He can be reached at
jgilliland@timesgazette.com or 937-402-2522. This column shared
through the AIM Media Midwest group of newspapers.

THEIR VIEW

Apples, tomatoes square off in Ohio
I like both apples and
tomatoes. But my palate
does not like the juice
from either. Does my
taste preference disqualify me from penning this
column?
Ohio House Bill
393, introduced on
11/05/2019, may be the
beginning of a fruit fracas. Hmmm. Would you
rather be hit in the face
by an apple or a tomato?
Depends on the ripeness. A rotten tomato
would hurt less. Hmmm.
Depends on the thrower.
No baseball players from
the Cincinnati Reds
allowed. Eek. Ripe or
unripe, apples may be
the victor in a food ﬁght.
Tomatoes, get ready for
a tiff and tussle. By the
way — tomato is considered a fruit.
HB 393. “Long Title
To amend section 5.08
of the Revised Code
to make apple cider
instead of tomato juice
the ofﬁcial beverage of
the state.” Sponsored by
State Rep. Tavia Galonski (D-Akron) District 35.
I am imagining
Galonski’s initial conversation to ﬁnd a cosponsor. “My fellow politicians, hot apple cider is
the favorite non-alcohol
and legal beverage of
most Ohioans at Christmas. And the cinnamon
stick looks so cute in

fresh and processed
the mug. Are
tomatoes. The
you with me or
state has 3,700
against me?”
acres dedicated to
State Repregrowing tomatoes
sentative Sara
that are sold fresh,
Carruthers
and 5,000 acres to
(R-Hamilton)
growing tomatoes
might have
Melissa
for processing. The
replied, “Yes!
Martin
Apple pie is very Contributing combined crop has
a net worth of $60.4
American. And
columnist
million.” Ottawa
Johnny AppleCounty is the top
seed worked so
grower of tomatoes in
hard. I’d be Ohio proud
to be the cosponsor. May Ohio.
The ﬁrst known usage
the best fruit juice win.”
of proclaiming a speMy questions: What
ciﬁc beverage a “state
qualiﬁes a fruit to be
beverage” within the US
selected as the ofﬁcial
began in 1965 with Ohio
beverage? A tart/sweet
taste? Happy taste buds? designating tomato juice
Not being that knowl- as their ofﬁcial beverage.
History buffs may rebel
edgeable or educated
if apples win the title.
in agriculture and com�Feii_Xb[�iebkj_edi
merce, maybe an ofﬁcial
Can Ohio constituents
title is a big deal. Maybe
a sparkly title sells more prevent an argy-bargy?
Bring in the negotiators.
fruit juice.
Adults teach and tell
�7ffb[i
The Buckeye State’s 18 toddlers and kindergarbiggest cash crops. Ohio teners how to share.
Could apples and tomaapple orchards accounttoes share the limelight
ed for 3,400 acres in
by taking turns being
2015, a crop valued at
$20.6 million, according the ofﬁcial beverage of
Ohio? Even years belong
to a 2016 article in The
Cleveland Plain Dealer. to apples while odd years
The top apple-producing belong to tomatoes.
Or Galonski and Carcounty in Ohio is Lickruthers could introduce
ing, just east of Columa House Bill making
bus.
tomato a vegetable.
�JecWje[i
Then tomato juice can
The Cleveland Plain
carry the title of Ohio’s
Dealer also reported,
“Ohio ranks third nation- Ofﬁcial Vegetable Beverage. Apple cider can
wide for production of

shine as the ofﬁcial fruit
juice. But Ohio grapes
may take issue with
that. Would you rather
be hit in the face with
a bunch of grapes or an
apple? What do you call
a grape and apple clash?
A grapple.
The most popular
choice for state beverage designation is milk.
Would Ohio consider
cow juice? Kids would
vote chocolate milk for
sure.
The ﬁtness and wellness clique would vote
water as our ofﬁcial beverage. No taste, but it’s
healthy.
My vote goes to coffee.
Of course, coffee comes
from a tropical plant and
no coffee farms in Ohio.
But that’s what will make
it interesting as Ohio’s
ofﬁcial beverage. You can
sip it hot or cold.
I ﬁnd Ohio House
Bill 393 to be fruity, yet
frivolous. But seriously
folks, our elected politicians need to focus on
more important matters
like opioid addiction, suicide prevention, infant
mortality, solar energy,
healthcare, and jobs to
name a few.
Reach:Melissa Martin, Ph.D,
is an author, columnist,
educator, and therapist. She
lives in Scioto County. www.
melissamartinchildrensauthor.
com. Contact her at
melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

In 1932, Hattie W.
Caraway became the
ﬁrst woman elected to
the U.S. Senate after
initially being appointed to serve out the
remainder of the term
Today’s Highlight in
of her late husband,
History:
Thaddeus.
On Jan. 12, 1828,
In 1948, the U.S.
the United States and
Mexico signed a Treaty Supreme Court, in Sipuel v. Board of Regents
of Limits deﬁning the
of University of Oklahoboundary between the
two countries to be the ma, unanimously ruled
that state law schools
same as the one established by an 1819 treaty could not discriminate
against applicants on
between the U.S. and
the basis of race.
Spain.
In 1959, Berry Gordy
Jr. founded Motown
On this date:
In 1519, Holy Roman Records (originally
Tamla Records) in
Emperor Maximilian I
Detroit.
died.
In 1965, the music
In 1915, the U.S.
variety show “HulHouse of Representatives rejected, 204-174, labaloo” premiered on
NBC-TV with host-ofa proposed constituthe-week Jack Jones;
tional amendment to
give women nationwide guests included Joey
Heatherton, the New
the right to vote.
Today is Sunday,
Jan. 12, the 12th day
of 2020. There are 354
days left in the year.

Christy Minstrels and
Woody Allen.
In 1966, President
Lyndon B. Johnson
said in his State of the
Union address that the
U.S. military should
stay in Vietnam until
Communist aggression
there was stopped. The
TV series “Batman,”
starring Adam West
and Burt Ward as the
Dynamic Duo, premiered on ABC, airing
twice a week on consecutive nights.
In 1969, the New York
Jets of the American
Football League upset
the Baltimore Colts of
the National Football
League 16-7 in Super
Bowl III, played at the
Orange Bowl in Miami.
In 1971, the groundbreaking situation
comedy “All in the Family” premiered on CBS
television.

Thought for Today:
“Necessity does the
work of courage.”
— Nicholas Murray
Butler,
American educator and
Nobel laureate (1862-1947)

In 1995, Qubilah
Shabazz (keh-BEE’-lah
shuh-BAZ’), the daughter of Malcolm X, was
arrested in Minneapolis
on charges she’d tried
to hire a hitman to kill
Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan (the
charges were later
dropped in a settlement
with the government).
In 2000, in a 5-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme
Court, in Illinois v.
Wardlow, gave police
broad authority to stop
and question people
who run at the sight of
an ofﬁcer.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 12, 2020 5A

Opioid-dependent kids’ guardians seek to form class in suit
By Mark Gillispie

pain medication, lawyers
argued in a motion ﬁled
in federal court in Cleveland.
CLEVELAND —
In addition to certifyGuardians caring for
ing the guardians as a
hundreds of thousands
class, the attorneys who
of children born depenﬁled the motion Tuesday
dent on opioids since
want U.S. District Judge
2000 should be grouped
Dan Polster to create a
together as part of the
national registry to idenclass action lawsuit ﬁled
by local governments and tify children diagnosed
others against the manu- with neonatal abstinence
syndrome, form a medical
facturers, distributors
and sellers of prescription panel to recommend the

Associated Press

best ways to treat such
children, and provide
money for those efforts as
quickly as possible.
“The urgency of this
is, the longer we wait,
the more difﬁcult it is
to help these children,”
said Cleveland attorney
Marc Dann, who ﬁled
the motion along with
attorneys from Texas and
Louisiana.
There currently are
about 400 guardians for

children born dependent
on opioids who have
ﬁled individual claims in
the pending lawsuit that
Dann said could be folded
into the larger group. The
motion ﬁled this week
was made initially on
behalf of a handful guardians in Ohio and California and seeks to include
guardians from across the
country, he said.
The total number of
children born dependent

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

FAC reception

Middleport Library at 1 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS — Rachel Harper
has been named the executive
director of the French Art Colony,
and a public reception to welcome
her to the position is planned for
Sunday, Jan. 12 from 2-4 p.m. at
Riverby, the home of the FAC,
located at 530 First Avenue.

Ag society
memberships

GALLIPOLIS — The 2020
memberships for the Gallia County
Agricultural Society are now on
sale at Brown’s Insurance Agency
on State Rt. 160. Memberships are
$2 and may be purchased during
regular business hours, Monday
- Friday, from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Membership into the society entitles
the member to vote at the annual
SCIPIO TWP. — The 2019
Annual Financial Report for Scipio election held in September. The
membership does not entitle the
Township is complete and availmember to admission to the fair.
able for review at the ofﬁce of the
Fiscal Ofﬁcer, Tina Cotterill 35198 To be eligible for membership, an
individual must purchase his/her
S.R. 143 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The township trustees have elected own membership ticket in person,
be at least 18 years of age or older,
Randy Butcher as President and
and reside in Gallia County.
Tammy Andrus as Vice-President
for ﬁscal year 2020. The trustees
will hold their monthly meetings
on the second Wednesday of each
month at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire Department
RIO GRANDE — The CadotBlessing Camp #126 Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War will have
its next meeting Jan. 20 in the Bob
Evans Homestead House at Bob
MEIGS COUNTY — Storytime Evans Farms beginning at 1 p.m.
This is the annual reorganization
returns to each branch of the
Meigs County Library beginning meeting to plan activities for 2020.
The SUVCW is the legal heir to the
on Jan. 6. Days, locations, and
GAR (Grand Army of the Repubtimes are as follows: Mondays
– Racine Library at 1 p.m., Tues- lic) the nations ﬁrst Congressionally chartered veterans’ organization
days – Eastern Library at 1:30
and is for the purposes of Patriotic
p.m., Wednesdays – Pomeroy
and Educational programs dediLibrary at 1 p.m., Thursdays –

Scipio Twp.
Trustees

Cadot-Blessing
Camp meeting

Meigs library
storytimes

member must have been
born in, lived in or be a
current resident of Meigs
County; and must have
From page 1A
served and have been
honorably discharged of
currently serving in the
“It is obvious this is
Army, Navy, Air Force,
a project near and dear
Marines, Coast Guard,
to Meigs County. The
National Guard or Meroverwhelming interest
chant Marines.
and support is amazing.
Once made, the banMeigs County loves its
Veterans and Active Duty ners will be placed on
Military,” said organizers. poles along the walking
path in Pomeroy, as well
Applications are curas along the main streets
rently being accepted
in Chester, Middleport,
through Feb. 28 for the
Racine, Reedsville,
banners.
Honorees must meet a Rutland, Syracuse and
few requirements in order Tuppers Plains. Applicants may request a
to have their photo and
information displayed on banner placement location (village), but the
the banners. The service

Banners

cated to the memory of the Veterans of the American Civil War. Any
male that has ancestry who served
during the war is invited to attend.
New members are needed. You do
not have to be a uniformed reenactor to become a member of the
SUVCW, just have an ancestor that
helped save the Union.

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

Gallia Rural Water
announcement
GALLIA COUNTY — Water
service to all customers from 1232
Ohio 7 (Gallia Rural Water’s Treatment Plant) to 228 Upper River
Road, including all side roads off
Ohio 7 will be discontinued from
midnight until 4 a.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. 14, for the connection of a
new pressure regulating station in
our plant yard. A boil advisory will
be in effect until 9 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 15.

locations cannot be
guaranteed due to space
limitations.
Applications can be
found online on the
Meigs County Armed
Forces Banner Project
Facebook page, at all
Farmers Bank locations in
Meigs County and at the
Clerk of Courts ofﬁce in
the Meigs County Courthouse. Applications will
soon be available at other
businesses and location
within the county.
Funding for the banners
is coming from donations
and corporate sponsorships as to be completed
at no cost to the service
member or their families.
Donations can be made

at all Farmers Bank locations. Online payments
can be made through the
donor’s own online bill
pay. Checks may be made
payable to the Meigs
County Armed Forces
Banner Project and sent
to any Farmers Bank location.
For more information
visit the Meigs County
Armed Forces Banner
Project on Facebook,
contact Shilo Little at
740-992-7260 or Sammi
Mugrage at 740-416-0505,
or email questions to banners4meigsvets@gmail.
com.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Courtesy photo | Buckeye Hills

Pictured left to right: 2020 Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD Board Members: Mr. Jamie Nash - Superintendent, Stephanie Mulford, Beth
James, Lynn Angell, Brian Moore, Pat McDonald, Robert Cornwell – Vice President and Legislative Liaison, Michael P. French, Jeffrey A.
Thacker - President, Jennifer Pittman, and Stephanie Rife-Treasurer.

District
From page 1A

is always on the future
success of the children
in our district. Celebrating School Board Recognition Month is one way
to say thanks for all they
do.”
Serving as a link
between the community
and classroom, school

board members are
elected to establish the
policies that provide the
framework for public
schools.
Board members serving the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocational
School District for
2020 are: Lynn Angell
and Robert Cornwell
(representing Gallipolis
City School District),
Michael P. French (representing Oak Hill Union
Local School District),

Beth James and Stephanie Mulford (representing Gallia County Local
School District), Pat
McDonald and Brian
Moore (representing
Jackson City School District), Jennifer Pittman
(representing Wellston
City School District)
and Jeffrey A Thacker
(representing Vinton
County Local School
District).
“It’s more important
than ever that commu-

nities support public
education so that today’s
students are prepared to
be productive citizens
and the leaders of tomorrow,” Nash said. “Please
take a moment and tell
school board members
‘thanks for caring about
our children and giving
so much to our community.’ Let them know we
support them and that
their dedicated service
is recognized and truly
appreciated.”

on opioids since 2000
is around 400,000 with
between 20,000 and
30,000 NAS babies born
each year, Dann said
Some states have created registries for children diagnosed with NAS
while others have not,
Dann said. In most cases,
the children’s guardians
are grandparents or
someone who has been
appointed to that role.
A national registry

would allow scientists to
accumulate more data to
reﬁne how best to treat
these children at each
stage of their development, Dann said.
Research has found that
children born dependent
on opioids suffer from
developmental delays,
medical problems and are
susceptible to becoming
addicts themselves as
they grow older, Dann
said.

Authorities: Trooper
kills man holding
woman at gunpoint
POWHATAN POINT,
Ohio (AP) — Ohio
State Highway Patrol
troopers shot and killed
a Pennsylvania man
holding a woman at
gunpoint after a lengthy
chase that topped 100
mph, authorities said.
The shooting
occurred Thursday
morning along Ohio
Route 7 in Belmont
County. Joshua Roberts, 41, of Meadville,
Pennsylvania, died at
the scene after being
shot by two troopers,
said Lt. Craig Cvetan, a
highway patrol spokesman. The chase began
in Monroe County after
troopers checked a
license plate on an SUV
at a rest area in Monroe
County and discovered
the vehicle had been
stolen in Pennsylvania.
Troopers tried to

stop the SUV driven
by 34-year-old Kristen
McCoy, of Greenville,
Pennsylvania, after it
left the rest area. A
19-minute-long chase
at speeds of more than
100 mph ended when
the SUV ran over spiked
stop sticks and crashed
into a guardrail.
After initially refusing to leave the vehicle,
Roberts emerged
from the SUV holding
McCoy at gunpoint.
The troopers shot him
when Roberts ignored
orders to drop his
gun and continued to
approach them. McCoy
was grazed in the shoulder by the troopers’
gunﬁre, Cvetan said.
McCoy was jailed
in Belmont County on
an arrest warrant and
will likely face charges,
Cvetan said.

Arts

excellence, awardees
will be honored at a
luncheon and ceremony
on Wednesday, March
25, at 11 a.m. at the
Columbus Athenaeum
in downtown Columbus. Eight winners have
been selected to receive
awards at the 2020
Governor’s Awards for
the Arts in Ohio, the
State of Ohio’s most
prestigious annual arts
event.
A tradition since
1971, the Governor’s
Awards showcase and
celebrate exceptional
Ohio artists, arts organizations, arts leaders
and patrons, and business support of the arts.
Award recipients will
be presented with the
only arts award in the
state that is conferred
by the governor. Each
of the winners will
receive an original work
of art by Clevelandbased artist Barry
Underwood, which they
will accept on stage
during the event.
For more information
about the Governor’s
Awards, visit oac.ohio.
gov/governorsawards.
Information provided
by the Ohio Arts Council.

From page 1A

Snow is a professional photographer
and artist.
“Ohio is lucky to have
individuals and organizations who are committed to transforming
communities and touching lives through creative leadership, artistic
accomplishments, and
enthusiastic support
of the arts in our great
state. The Governor’s
Awards are a special
opportunity to celebrate
Ohioans who exemplify
what it means to make
a difference through the
power of the arts. On
behalf of the Ohio Arts
Council, I congratulate
this year’s award recipients and thank them
for the great work they
do for the arts and culture in Ohio each and
every day,” stated Ohio
Arts Council Executive
Director Donna S. Collins in a news release.
In recognition of their
impactful and visionary
leadership in Ohio’s
creative sector and
sustained dedication
to promoting artistic

The Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center is seeking
applicants for the
position of Treasurer.
Candidates should possess a Treasurer
License from the Ohio Department of
Education or be able to acquire one.
Start date negotiable.
An application, letter of interest, resume
and copy of Treasurer License should be
submitted to:
Helen Douglas, AMESC
P.O. 40, Chauncey, Ohio 45719
helen.douglas@athensmeigs.com
Deadline to apply is noon on February
7, 2020. Applications may be found at:
www.athensmeigs.com
OH-70168293

�A long the River
6A Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hatching a plan

Touring Apple
Grove Fish
Hatchery
By Kayla Hawthorne
khawthorne@aimmediamidwest.
com

APPLE GROVE —
Located beside the Robert C. Byrd Locks and
Dam below Gallipolis
Ferry is the Apple Grove
Fish Hatchery — and
potentially millions of
ﬁsh.
The hatchery, owned
by the West Virginia
Department of Natural
Resources (WVDNR),
was built in 2000, according to Hatchery Manager Ryan Bosserman.
The ﬁrst ﬁsh eggs were
hatched in the spring of
2001.
Currently, walleye,
bass, catﬁsh, musky, sauger, and other requested
varieties and species are
raised at the warm-water
ﬁsh hatchery.
“We raise ﬁsh for stocking and reintroduction,”
Bosserman said. “The
ﬁsh are for use all around
West Virginia for public
use. Everything we raise
here will eventually go
out for the ﬁshermen.”
Bosserman said the
hatchery is used as a
management tool to
increase the native ﬁsh
population.
The process begins in
March when the water
warms up. Bosserman
and his team go in the
Ohio River, Kanawha
River and lakes throughout the state to collect
male and female ﬁsh. In
2019, the group logged
28 hours on the water
collecting ﬁsh, said
Bosserman.
The pairs of ﬁsh
are brought back to
the Apple Grove Fish
Hatchery to beginning
the spawning period —
where the female ﬁsh
broadcast their eggs
for the male to fertilize.
Bosserman said they take
DNA samples from the
ﬁns to be analyzed. The
tests look to see if the
ﬁsh are native or if they
belong to the Great Lake
strains. Bosserman said
they focus on the native
strains that inhabited the
rivers and lakes historically.
In 2019, the hatchery
took 3.2 million eggs.
“The walleye eggs run
about 1,000-1,600 eggs
per ounce,” Bosserman
said. “From some of these
ﬁsh, we’ll get 60-70 ounces of eggs from one. The
majority of it is about 30
ounces. So we’re pushing
40,000 eggs from one
ﬁsh.”
The eggs do not always
have a great chance of
life.
“We get about 40-75
percent fertilization rate,”
Bosserman said. He
added that the hatched
eggs have about a 10 percent chance of survival.
“You hope for 10-20
percent recruitment,”
Bosserman said. “So
10-20 percent of the ﬁsh
survive to a bigger size.”

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | OVP

These catfish were hatched late last spring at the Apple Grove Fish Hatchery. They’re classified as “age one,” because the fish are given the birthday of Jan. 1.

Minnows are sometimes brought in from other hatcheries to keep up with demand. The larger catfish pictured here are “age two” meaning they were from the 2018
They are used to feed larger fish species.
babies.

On the property of Apple Grove Fish Hatchery, there are 34 ponds, After the eggs hatch, they are then put into a series of tanks inside
which total 43 acres. The fish will continue to grow there before before being released outside. These tanks keep the water flowing
being released into rivers, lakes and ponds.
while the fish grow.

“The walleye eggs
run about 1,0001,600 eggs per ounce.
From some of these
fish, we’ll get 60-70
ounces of eggs from
one. The majority of
it is about 30 ounces.
So we’re pushing
40,000 eggs from
one fish.”
Ryan Bosserman

mouth bass in there,”
Booserman said. “If we
stock four-to-six-inch
channel catﬁsh in there,
Some of the “age one” catfish seen here are going to New Haven Elementary. Students there will be there’s just feeding the
able to care for the fish in tanks while learning about them.
bass. If you put a 12-inch
one in there, not a whole
ponds in 30 days. By fall, take a much longer time
Bosserman said that
lot can eat it.”
to grow large enough to
some species are being
in the wild, the hatched
The fries, or baby ﬁsh,
stocked into rivers, ponds be released. At the hatcheggs have a two percent
are kept in troughs inside
and lakes throughout the ery now, Bosserman has
chance of survival.
catﬁsh that were hatched the facility before being
Bosserman said it only state. Bosserman said
relocated to the outdoor
in 2018.
takes the eggs one to two sometimes he will trade
“Krodel Lake, they get ponds. The Apple Grove
weeks to hatch and some ﬁsh with other states if
Hatchery has 34 pounds,
a good dose of (catﬁsh),
there is a need.
of the smaller ﬁsh are in
totaling 43 acres of water.
but there’s a lot of largeThe catﬁsh typically
the hatchery’s outdoor

There are currently
“age one” catﬁsh in some
of the ponds. Age one
refers to the ﬁsh being
one year old — Bosserman said all ﬁsh are
given the birthday of
Jan. 1. So these ﬁsh were
hatched in the spring
2019.
Warm-water ﬁsh grow
if the water is above 50
degrees, according to
Bosserman. The growing season for them
is typically seven to
eight months, or March
through October.
Bosserman was scheduled to take some of the
age one catﬁsh he had in
the facility, which were
about four to ﬁve inches
long, to New Haven Elementary on Friday. The
school has an aquarium
they use to grow some of
the ﬁsh. Bosserman said
he does some educational
things, such as this, for
students throughout the
state.
“We usually have plenty of catﬁsh, so we give
them to a few schools,”
Bosserman said. “I think
last year I gave them to
ﬁve or six schools.”
The 2020 season will
begin in March when
Bosserman and other
WVDNR employees start
collecting the mature ﬁsh
to begin spawning.
Kayla Hawthorne is a staff writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach
her at (304) 675-1333, extension
1992.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 12, 2020 7A

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Card showers

er.osu.edu/about or contact Michelle
Stumbo at stumbo.5@osu.edu or 740Margaret Pope will be celebrating her 992-6696
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Com101st birthday on Jan. 14. Cards can be
sent to her at 2600 German Hollow Rd., munity Center Board of Directors will
meet at 7 p.m.
Patriot, Ohio 45658
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at
the Library, 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. All skill levels and listeners
are welcome. Bring an instrument and
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford
Township trustees will hold their regu- play along.
SUTTON TWP. — The regular
lar meeting at 7 p.m. at the Bedford
monthly meeting of the Trustees of
Town Hall.
Sutton Township will be held at 6
RUTLAND TWP. — The Rutland
Township Trustees will hold their Janu- p.m. in the Racine Village Hall Council Chambers.
ary meeting at 7:30 a.m. at the TownPOMEROY — The Meigs County
ship Garage.
Board of Health meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department, which is located at 112 E.
GALLIPOLIS — The Bossard
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Library Board of Trustees will have
their 2020 Organizational meeting
at 5 p.m. at the library. Immediately
following the 2020 Organizational
meeting the trustees of Dr. Samuel L
MIDDLEPORT — Get Healthy
Bossard Memorial Library will hold
Meigs! will convene at 10:30 a.m. in
their regular monthly meeting.
the 3rd ﬂoor conference room of the
POMEROY — A meeting to gauge
Meigs County Department of Jobs
community interest in restarting the
and Family Services. RSVP by Jan.
Extension Master Gardener Volunteer 13 to Courtney Midkiff at the Meigs
program in Meigs County will be held County Health Department.
at 1 p.m. at the Extension Ofﬁce, 113
East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. If
you would like additional information
about the program before the meetMIDDLEPORT — Snack and Caning, please visit https://mastergarden- vas with Michele Musser will take

Monday, Jan. 13

Tuesday, Jan. 14

Thursday, Jan. 16

Friday, Jan. 17

Man convicted of
assault for hitting
Trump protester
CINCINNATI (AP) —
A man accused of punching a protester outside a
rally for President Donald
Trump has been found
guilty.
A jury convicted Dallas Frazier, 30, Thursday
of misdemeanor assault
for hitting Michael Alter,
61, outside the U.S. Bank
Arena in Cincinnati in
August.
Thousands attended
the rally at the Cincinnati
arena.
Frazier, of Georgetown,
Kentucky, jumped out of
his vehicle near a group
of protesters and shouted,
“You want some,” before
repeatedly punching the
61-year-old protester in
the face, police and prosecutors said.

Frazier’s attorneys
argued it wasn’t an
assault but a mutual ﬁght
worthy of a disorderly
conduct charge. They
argued that Alter instigated the confrontation
by taunting Frazier and
making a “come on” gesture after Frazier got out
of the truck.
A witness who stepped
in to push Frazier away
testiﬁed he was the
aggressor. Prosecutors
said Alter did not punch
back.
The attack tore an
artery in Alter’s eye that
required surgery.
Sentencing is scheduled
for Jan. 17. Frazier faces
as many as 180 days in
jail for the misdemeanor
charge.

place at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Arts
Council. The theme is “Love you
more”. Call Michelle at 740-416-0879
or Donna 740-992-5123 to reserve a
space.
GALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME
Retirees, Subchapter 102, Gallia and
Jackson Counties, will meet 2 p.m.,
Gallia County Senior Resource Center, 1165 State Route 160.

Saturday, Jan. 18
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Fire
Dept. will be hosting a ﬁsh fry with
serving to begin at 11 a.m.
POMEROY — The Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter NSDAR will meet at 1
p.m., Middleport Library basement.
Joe Barnhart will present “The Life
of a Soldier”. Barnhart is a member
of the 7th Ohio Volunteer Cavalry
and participates in numerous reenactments. All members are encouraged to
attend, interested guests are welcome.
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878
will hold their Fun Night with potluck
at 6:30 p.m. followed by fun activities.
RACINE — Carmel Sutton UMC,
31435 Pleasant View Road, Racine,
Ohio, is hosting a Community Dinner
from 4:30-5:30 p.m. Menu will include
smoke pork roast, mac and cheese,
baked beans, cole slaw, desserts. Eat
in or carry out. Everyone is invited.

Monday, Jan. 20
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs
Library locations are closed in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Tuesday, Jan. 21
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County
Board of Developmental Disabilities
will hold an organizational meeting
and regular monthly board meeting for
the month of January at 4 p.m. at the
administrative ofﬁces, 77 Mill Creek
Road.

Saturday, Jan. 25
POMEROY — Intro to True Crime
Podcasts – From the hosts of the podcast Hello My Name Is: True Crime, 1
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

Monday, Jan. 27
POMEROY — The Book Club will
discuss The Second Mrs. Hockaday
by Susan Rivers, 6 p.m. at Pomeroy
Library.

Tuesday, Jan. 28
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the
Library, 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
All skill levels and listeners are welcome. Bring an instrument and play
along.

Supporters recognized by area Shriners

Courtesy photo | Matt Easter

Area Shriners recognized the Village of Rio Grande and Joe Brown of Brown’s Market for continued support and donation efforts to
Shriners Hospitals for Children. Rio Grande Mayor Matt Easter said he was humbled and honored to know the town’s cooperation
had helped the hospital do good work. A Shriner representative said that Brown often kept a donation jar for the hospitals near its
register market and would put several hundreds of dollars just in collected change back to the hospitals every year.

Report questions expanded Ohio inmate electronic monitoring
COLUMBUS, Ohio
— There’s limited evidence that expanding
the electronic monitoring of inmates in Ohio
would reduce the rates at
which ex-offenders commit new crimes or that
it would enhance public
safety, according to a

new report. In addition,
creating a system that
would allow real-time
monitoring of inmates in
the hopes of placing them
near crimes would still do
nothing to prevent such
crimes from happening,
though it could help aid
investigators and parole
ofﬁcers, according to the
report released Monday.
Such a system is known

OHIO BRIEFS

Volunteers to search for teen
PORT CLINTON, Ohio (AP) — Volunteers plan to
search this weekend for a 14-year-old Ohio boy who
went missing three weeks ago. Police in Port Clinton
have released little new information over the past two
weeks about the disappearance of Harley Dilly. He
was last seen leaving home on the morning of Dec. 20,
but he never showed up for school. Authorities have
carried out several searches in the city along Lake
Erie with help from K-9 teams and helicopters. Volunteers plan to go out Saturday. Authorities ﬁrst thought
the teen may have run away from home because they
said he sometimes spends a night away from home if
he gets upset.

Suffrage honor sought
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A permanent memorial
to the women’s suffrage movement would be erected
on the grounds of the Ohio Statehouse, under a proposal to be made to the Statehouse governing body
next week. Fund-raising for the memorial would likely
top $1 million, members of the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission told the Capital Square Review
and Advisory Board on Wednesday. If approved,
memorial construction could follow after a ﬁve-year
waiting period.

as “crime scene correlation technology.”
“The daily operations
required for such a system are exceedingly complex and would require
careful planning and
consistent oversight,”
according to the report,
which was given to a
state taskforce looking at
all aspects of supervising

inmates upon release.
“Additionally, the costs
associated with developing and operating such an
initiative would be substantial and recurring.”
Gov. Mike DeWine
created the taskforce
last year after a recently
released inmate in Dayton allegedly stabbed
his father, stole a police

cruiser, and then crashed
it into a van, killing two
6-year-old girls and injuring others. The inmate
had recently been paroled
on a robbery conviction.
The report itself grew
out of the 2017 slaying
of an Ohio State University student who was
kidnapped after leaving
her restaurant job, raped

Fresh Meat Market, LLC

The Village of Pomeroy has
an opening on Village
Council. If you are interested
in the future of the village;
are a resident of Pomeroy and
have any experience in municipal matters, please submit
a letter of interest to Mayor
Don Anderson. The mailing
address is 660 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Letters of interest will only
be accepted until January
17th, 2020

and killed in suburban
Columbus.
Her killer had been
released from prison two
months earlier and was
wearing an electronic
monitor at the time. A
2018 sentencing law
required the GPS feasibility study that was conducted by the University
of Cincinnati.

HILLTOP MEATS

Pomeroy Village
Council Opening

436 South Church Street
Ripley, WV 25271
304-372-4460

Dallas and
Phyllis Harris

PAYDAY SPECIAL

MONTHLY FREEZER

$49.99

$169.99

2 lb. sausage
(mild, sage or hot)
2 lb. bacon
3 lb. ground beef
4 New York strip steaks 5/8”
1 lb. deli meat ($5.99 value)
1 lb. cheese ($4.99 value)

(Allow 24 hours
to have ready)
5 lb. bacon
5 lb. sausage
(mild, sage or hot)
3 lb. beef/pork weiners
4 ribeye steaks 5/8”
4 New York strip steaks 5/8”
4 lb pork chops
1 pork roast
10 lb. ground beef
3 lb. boneless pork ribs
1 beef roast

AMISH: LOCALLY,
FRESH HOMEMADE
Bread
Cookies
Candy
Pepperoni Rolls

NO SUBSTITUTING ON PACKAGES
hilltopmeatsfreshmeatmarket@facebook.com/april52017/
OH-70167550

Associated Press

OH-70167634

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Business hours: Mon.-Fri. 10am-6pm
��������������� ���� �����
ALL MAJOR CREDIT, DEBIT &amp; EBT CARDS ACCEPTED!

�NEWS/WEATHER

8B Sunday, January 12, 2020

$200K OK’d
for review
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The State
Medical Board of Ohio
has approved spending
up to $150,000 more on
a review of about 2,000
closed cases of alleged
sexual misconduct or
impropriety by doctors.
It previously approved
$50,000 to pay former
prosecutors or other
law enforcement agents
to determine whether
any of those old cases
were improperly closed
or involved evidence
of criminal misconduct
that was ignored.
The additional funding approved this week
was sought to hire
more reviewers as the
board aims to have that
work ﬁnished by summer.
A state working
group reviewed that
investigation and found
no evidence the case
was intentionally buried.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Virginia lawmakers ban guns at state Capitol
By Alan Suderman
and Sarah Rankin

about planned Jan. 20
rallies that are set to
Associated Press
draw huge crowds of
pro-gun and gun-control
advocates. Gun advocates
RICHMOND, Va. —
Virginia lawmakers voted from around Virginia and
Friday to ban ﬁrearms at even out of state have
the state Capitol, the ﬁrst pledged to turn out in
force to highlight their
in what’s expected to be
resistance to proposed
many contentious gun
gun-control measures.
votes in coming weeks.
Democrats initially indiNewly empowered
Democrats who made up cated that the new ban
had been recommended
a majority of a special
rules committee voted to by law enforcement.
“I just have to say that
ban guns at the Capitol
this is something that’s
and a legislative ofﬁce
been recommended by
building despite bitter
our Capitol Police. And
protests from RepubliI think there are times
cans, saying the move
when we sort of have
was needed to protect
to trust what our law
public safety.
enforcement ofﬁcers are
“Our focus here is to
telling us,” House Majorkeep everybody safe,”
ity Leader Charniele Hersaid House Speaker
ring said.
Eileen Filler-Corn.
But Capitol Police Col.
“These are policies and
Anthony Pike said after
rules that should have
passed a long, long time the vote that he made
no recommendations on
ago.”
whether guns should be
Public ofﬁcials have
banned, only on how to
expressed concerns

the new rules.
Virginia’s Constitution
blocks lawmakers from
being arrested during legislative sessions except
for egregious crimes, and
Pike said Capitol Police
will not arrest any lawmakers who violate the
gun ban.
Previously, anyone with
a valid concealed handgun permit was allowed
to bring a gun into the
Capitol. Weapons were
banned in certain parts of
the building, which was
designed by President
Thomas Jefferson, including the Senate gallery
and the governor’s ofﬁce
on the third ﬂoor.
One Democratic committee member cited two
past incidents in arguing
for the new ban.
In 2006, a Republican
delegate’s handgun accidentally discharged in his
ofﬁce and was stopped
by a bulletproof vest
hanging on the door. And

implement the ban Democrats wanted. The new
policy will require that
everyone entering the
Capitol, except for lawmakers, must go through
a metal detector.
GOP lawmakers
accused Democrats
of rushing through an
unnecessary policy and
then trying to lay it at the
feet of Capitol Police.
“That was a deliberate misrepresentation,”
said GOP Del. Kirk Cox.
“There’s just no way
around that.”
The new policy takes
effect at the end of Friday. Republicans said
visitors to the Capitol
and lawmakers should be
able to choose to protect
themselves as they see
ﬁt. Some GOP lawmakers routinely carry guns
while at the legislature.
One of them, Republican
Sen. Amanda Chase,
would not say whether
she would comply with

in 2017, a Republican
state senator left his gun
behind in a conference
room.
Virginia Gov. Ralph
Northam has banned
guns from other state
buildings, continuing
a policy started by his
predecessor, former Gov.
Terry McAuliffe, in 2015.
The debate on whether
to ban guns in the Capitol is part of a larger ﬁght
over guns that’s set to
dominate this year’s legislative session.
With a full majority at
the state house for the
ﬁrst time in a generation,
Democrats have promised signiﬁcant new gun
restrictions, including
universal background
checks, a ban on assault
weapons and a red ﬂag
law that would allow
authorities to temporarily take guns away from
anyone deemed to be
dangerous to themselves
or others.

COLLEGE NEWS AND NOTES

Bob Jones University students
named to President’s List

We are committed to the truth of Scripture and to
pursuing excellence in all we do.

Local student named Capital
University Dean’s List at

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Two local students are
among approximately 670 Bob Jones University
students named to the President’s List for high
academic achievement during the Fall 2019 semester.
To qualify for the President’s List, students must
earn a 3.75 or higher grade point average for the
semester.
Deborah Reed, a junior elementary education major
from Gallipolis, was named to the President’s List.
Jonathan Young, a senior engineering major from
Gallipolis, was named to the President’s List.
Located in Greenville, South Carolina, Bob Jones
University provides an outstanding regionally
accredited Christian liberal arts education purposely
designed to inspire a lifelong pursuit of learning,
loving and leading. BJU offers over 100 undergraduate
and graduate programs in religion, education, ﬁne
arts and communication, arts and science, health
sciences, and business. BJU has nearly 3,000 students
from nearly every state and more than 40 countries.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

50°

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.

Snowfall

Trace
1.04/0.95
1.04/0.95

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

0.0
Trace/2.0
1.0/6.6

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

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:46 a.m.
5:28 p.m.
8:57 p.m.
10:05 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Jan 17 Jan 24

First

Feb 1

Full

Feb 9

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

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

Major
12:33a
1:37a
2:39a
3:38a
4:33a
5:24a
6:13a

Minor
6:48a
7:51a
8:52a
9:50a
10:45a
11:37a
12:01a

Major
1:02p
2:05p
3:05p
4:03p
4:58p
5:49p
6:38p

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What was the warmest presidential
inauguration?

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:47 a.m.
5:27 p.m.
7:44 p.m.
9:23 a.m.

0

Minor
7:17p
8:19p
9:19p
10:16p
11:10p
---12:25p

WEATHER HISTORY
A cold snap in the Paciﬁc Northwest
spread eastward on Jan. 12, 1888,
spawning the “Blizzard of ‘88.” The
storm affected an area from northern
Texas to the Dakotas and killed 200
people.

A: 55F. President Wilson. March 1913.
Also Reagan, January 1981.

Friday
Month to date/normal
Year to date/normal

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Mild with times of
clouds and sun

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. Fri.

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

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

Level
12.42
18.48
22.66
12.80
12.93
25.07
12.18
27.69
35.00
12.14
23.40
35.00
24.50

Waverly
47/39
Lucasville
47/38
Portsmouth
50/40

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.20
-0.64
-0.22
+0.09
+0.05
-0.23
+0.10
-1.52
-0.99
-0.25
-2.70
-0.30
-2.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

Logan
47/36

THURSDAY

66°
30°
Cloudy with a little
rain; warm

48°
35°

48°
23°

Sunshine and much
colder

Cloudy and cold; ice
at night

Cloudy with a couple
of showers

Marietta
53/38

Murray City
45/35
Belpre
50/37

Athens
51/37

St. Marys
54/39

Parkersburg
53/38

Coolville
48/36

Elizabeth
54/39

Spencer
55/39

Buffalo
54/40

Ironton
53/42

Milton
55/41

Clendenin
55/40

St. Albans
57/41

Huntington
55/42

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
44/27
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
55/47
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
64/43
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

39°
22°

Wilkesville
48/36
POMEROY
Jackson
53/39
51/38
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
54/40
50/37
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
44/37
GALLIPOLIS
53/40
54/40
53/40

Ashland
54/42
Grayson
53/42

FRIDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
49/36

South Shore Greenup
53/42
49/39

26

Mostly cloudy and
mild

Adelphi
44/35
Chillicothe
46/38

WEDNESDAY

60°
46°

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

EXTENDED FORECAST

46°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

BEXLEY — Capital University recently announced
its President’s List honorees for the fall 2019
semester.
Local students named to the President’s List
include, Hope Diehl of Pomeroy, Megan Douglas of

Mostly cloudy today. Partly to mostly cloudy
tonight. High 53° / Low 40°

Statistics for Friday

68°/53°
42°/25°
68° in 2020
-9° in 1982

Capital University announces
President’s List honorees

8 PM

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

BEXLEY — Justin McClelland, of Bidwell, was
named to the Dean’s List at Capital University for the
fall 2019 semester.
In order to be named to the Dean’s List, full-time,
degree-seeking students must have achieved a grade
point average of at least 3.5.

56°
39°
50°

Coolville, Hayley Lathey of Vinton, and Graci Rifﬂe of
Pomeroy.
Capital has three lists denoting academic
distinction among full-time, degree-seeking students:
the President’s List, Provost’s List, and Dean’s List.
The President’s List indicates the highest level of
academic distinction. To be named to the President’s
List, students must have achieved a grade point
average of at least 3.85.
Located in the Columbus, Ohio, neighborhood
of Bexley, Capital University is a private, four-year
undergraduate institution and graduate school.
Capital prepares students for meaningful lives and
purposeful careers through a relevant liberal arts
core curriculum and deep professional programs.
Inﬂuenced by its Lutheran heritage, Capital places
great emphasis on the free and open exchange
of ideas, seeking out diverse perspectives, active
participation in society, leadership and service.
With a focus on rigor and experiential learning,
the University capitalizes on its size, location, and
heritage to develop the whole person, both inside and
outside the classroom.

Charleston
58/41

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
12/2

Billings
33/16

Denver
43/20

Minneapolis
22/17
Chicago
30/24

Montreal
22/7
Toronto
33/19
New York
64/38

Detroit
31/26

Kansas City
36/18

Washington
70/45

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

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
44/24/s
12/6/c
67/56/pc
66/46/r
66/38/pc
33/16/c
41/26/sn
66/36/r
58/41/pc
71/55/pc
35/15/pc
30/24/pc
46/38/c
41/32/pc
45/37/pc
61/42/pc
43/20/pc
26/14/sn
31/26/pc
80/71/r
63/47/pc
40/33/pc
36/18/pc
54/35/pc
51/34/pc
64/43/s
50/40/pc
83/73/pc
22/17/sn
56/43/pc
65/57/c
64/38/r
53/30/s
84/67/pc
66/38/r
64/41/s
51/36/pc
47/21/r
73/54/pc
72/50/r
41/32/pc
36/29/sf
55/47/pc
44/27/r
70/45/pc

Hi/Lo/W
52/25/s
10/0/s
68/61/r
54/43/c
54/40/c
18/0/sf
36/30/c
44/35/pc
57/41/pc
68/57/sh
37/19/s
38/28/pc
52/40/pc
46/34/c
50/36/c
63/51/pc
43/24/s
34/29/pc
43/30/c
80/73/sh
64/60/sh
49/37/pc
45/34/pc
56/40/s
56/46/pc
63/46/pc
55/44/pc
82/73/s
30/24/pc
60/50/pc
72/65/r
48/39/pc
59/38/pc
83/66/pc
53/40/c
66/44/s
50/33/pc
32/24/pc
67/57/sh
65/46/c
51/40/pc
35/30/c
56/47/pc
34/22/sf
60/43/c

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
El Paso
59/34

High
Low

Atlanta
67/56

88° in Zapata, TX
-22° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
Chihuahua
70/41

High
Low

Houston
63/47
Monterrey
70/51

Miami
83/73

118° in Wilcannia, Australia
-64° in Delyankir, Russia

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

OH-70107875

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Right At Home.
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�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM��+8?+&lt;C�� M� � ��s�#/-&gt;398��

Eagles edge Ohio Valley Christian, 44-42
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian freshman Bradley Haley goes in for a layup in front of
senior teammate Joel Daugherty (55), during the Defenders’ two-point loss on
Friday in Gallipolis, Ohio.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
hosts had a shot to win it, but
it just wasn’t to be.
The Ohio Valley Christian
boys basketball team fell to
visiting Covenant by a 44-42
clip on Friday night in Gallia County, with the potential
game-winning three-pointer
missing its mark.
The Defenders (5-11) scored
the ﬁrst ﬁve points of the night
and were ahead 10-6 eight minutes into play.
Covenant (5-5) claimed the
ﬁrst ﬁve points in the second
quarter for its ﬁrst lead of the
night, but Ohio Valley Christian was back in front after a

two-pointer by Mark Oliver
with 5:34 left in the half. The
Eagles took the lead back 20
seconds later, and led for the
rest of the half, taking a 22-17
edge into the break.
The guests started the second half with a 5-0 run for
their largest lead of the night,
at 27-17. OVCS answered with
a 7-to-2 run, and trailed by
ﬁve points with 1:41 left in
the third. Covenant, however,
claimed four of the ﬁnal six
points of the period and took a
33-26 edge into the ﬁnale.
Ohio Valley Christian started
the fourth with a 10-to-2 spurt
and took its ﬁnal lead, at 36-35,
on a free throw by Bradley
Haley with 2:53 left in regulation. Covenant immediately

answered with a two-pointer by
Nate Beilstein and the guests
never trailed again.
The Defenders tied the game
at 37, 39 and 42, but a pair
of free throws by Tyler Farley
with nine seconds remaining
gave the Eagles the 44-42 victory.
OVCS connected on 13-of50 (26 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, including 3-of-16
(18.8 percent) three-point
tries, while Covenant shot
19-of-64 (29.7 percent) from
the ﬁeld, including 1-of-11 (9.1
percent) from deep.
The Blue and Gold were
12-of-20 (60 percent) from
the free throw line, where
the guests were 5-of-17 (29.4
See EAGLES | 3B

RedStorm
men edge
Brescia, 70-67
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

OWENSBORO, Ky. — If you’re ever charged
with ﬁnding a perfect example of a “gutsy” effort
from a collegiate basketball team, you need not
look further than the performance of the University of Rio Grande men on Thursday night.
The already injury-riddled RedStorm lost their
top offensive threat just before the midway point
of the second half, but somehow erased a pair of
11-point deﬁcits after halftime and upended Brescia University, 70-67, in River States Conference
action at the Moore Center.
Rio Grande improved to 9-10 overall and 2-3 in
league play with the win, snapping a three-game
losing slide in the process.
Brescia dropped to 4-11 overall and 1-4 in the
RSC.
Rio Grande shot just 20 percent from the ﬂoor
in the opening half, yet trailed only 27-23 at the
intermission.
The Bearcats opened up leads of 38-27 and
40-29 inside the ﬁrst ﬁve minutes of the second
stanza, but the RedStorm reeled off nine straight
points and pulled within 40-38 following a pair
of free throws by senior Hadith Tiggs (Mayﬁeld
Heights, OH) with 13:11 left in the contest.
Less than a minute later, though, sophomore
Gunner Short (Catlettsburg, KY) was helped from
the ﬂoor after an apparent leg injury. He did not
return, ﬁnishing with just eight points and a pair
of rebounds.
But head coach Ken French’s club, which has
played all season without preseason All-RSC pick
Cameron Schreiter (Mason, OH) and who recently lost junior guard Kyle Lamotte (Mason, OH) to
a hand injury, did not fold after Short’s departure.
Instead, it locked in a tooth-and-nail battle with
its host over the ﬁnal 12 minutes - a span which
saw ﬁve ties and just as many lead changes.
The ﬁnal lead change came with 56.8 seconds
remaining when a three-pointer by junior Trey
Kelley (Minford, OH) gave Rio a 67-66 advantage.
See REDSTORM | 3B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, Jan. 13
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 7:30

Tuesday, Jan. 14
Boys Basketball
Southern at Eastern, 7:30
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 7:30
Meigs at Fort Frye, 7:30
Wahama at Miller, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Calvary Baptist, 7:30

Wednesday, Jan. 15
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Logan at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Athens, 6 p.m.

�&lt;C+8�'+6&gt;/&lt;=n�&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;=

Wahama freshman Amber Wolfe dives on a loose ball during the first half of Thursday night’s girls basketball contest against Eastern
in Mason, W.Va.

Lady Falcons outlast Eastern, 38-33
By Bryan Walters

Eastern, however,
had eight turnovers in
the third quarter and
committed 15 turnovers
MASON, W.Va. — The
after halftime, yet
defenses stepped up,
somehow found itself
making free throws all
clinging to a 27-25 lead
the more relevant.
with under four minutes
The Wahama girls
left.
basketball team netted
EHS shot a higher
14 more charity tosses
percentage from the
to offset a pair of coldﬁeld, committed fewer
shooting performances
turnovers and didn’t
Thursday night during
allow a single 3-pointer,
a 38-33 victory over
but Wahama still
visiting Eastern in a
managed to get the win.
Tri-Valley Conference
Sometimes, as EHS
Hocking Division
coach Chuck Robinson
matchup at Gary Clark
mentioned afterwards,
Couty in Mason County.
you just cannot catch a
Neither the Lady
lucky bounce down the
Eagles (4-8, 2-6 TVC
stretch.
Hocking) nor the host
“It’s not the ﬁrst time
Lady Falcons (5-3, 5-3)
that we’ve let a halftime
shot better than 30
lead get away this year,
percent from the ﬁeld,
but I still think we are
but the Red and White
Eastern junior Kennadi Rockhold, left, dribbles past Wahama getting better at taking
ultimately made their
defender Mikie Lieving during the second half of Thursday night’s care of things over
living at the free throw
girls basketball contest in Mason, W.Va.
the course of a game.
line.
We’re young, but we
do with that,” Toth said.
netted 8-of-14 free
Wahama ended up
are deﬁnitely showing
“Both teams played well
throws as part of 14-8
going 20-of-38 at the
improvement,” Robinson
enough to win and they
fourth quarter run that
charity stripe over the
said. “We put together
overturned a 25-24 deﬁcit out-quicked us for most
course of 32 minutes,
of the game, but our girls three-plus quarters of
entering the frame.
while the Green and
found a way to get it done solid basketball in a
Despite attempting 11
White managed a 6-of-9
spirited environment.
fewer shots from the ﬂoor in the fourth quarter. It
effort at the line.
Our kids got a little
than Eastern, WHS coach wasn’t perfect, but it’s a
There were ﬁve ties
rattled and didn’t show
and seven lead changes in James Toth believed that win … and we’ll take it.”
enough patience at times
After building a 10-6
regulation, most of which his girls were able to
on the offensive end,
ﬁrst quarter lead that
win this game because
occurred during the
but the girls gave a great
increased to as much as
of their fourth quarter
second half of action.
effort. Things just didn’t
15-9 late in the second,
energy … rather it was
Tied at 29-all in
Eastern was able to enter end up going our way.”
getting to the stripe or
the fourth quarter,
Wahama helped its
the break with a 17-14
making a stop.
Hannah Rose converted
cause by claiming a 43-26
edge.
“This was a game that
the eventual gameadvantage in rebounds,
The Lady Eagles
really could have gone
winning basket with
probably had chances slip including a 15-7 edge on
either way. We missed
2:43 remaining. That
the offensive glass. The
away after limiting the
some shots that we
bucket also sparked a
hosts committed 21 of
hosts to just three ﬁeld
should have made and I
9-4 surge the rest of the
the 38 turnovers in the
felt like we really weren’t goals while also forcing
way, allowing Wahama
10 turnovers. The guests, contest.
on top of our game
to sneak away with the
conversely, had only two
tonight, but Eastern
5-point triumph.
See FALCONS | 3B
miscues at the break.
also had a whole lot to
The Lady Falcons

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

�OH-70159148

2B Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 12, 2020 3B

Covenant drops Lady Defenders, 38-11 Carter completes
Capital career
with awards

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— A rough night on the
home front.
The Ohio Valley Christian girls basketball team
came out on the wrong
end of a 38-11 decision
at the hands of visiting
Covenant on Friday in
Gallia County.
The Lady Defenders
(1-9) trailed 10-5 eight
minutes into play, with
Kassie Venoy scoring all
of the guests’ ﬁrst period
points. A 4-to-2 second
quarter gave the Lady
Eagles (2-7) a 14-to7 halftime edge, and
guests went on an 8-to-2
run in the third for a
22-9 lead headed into
the ﬁnale.
Ohio Valley Christian
was held to just a pair of
free throws in the fourth,
as Covenant sealed the
38-11 victory with a
16-to-2 spurt.
For the game, OVCS
made four ﬁeld goals,
including one threepointer, while hitting
2-of-8 (25 percent) free
throws. Meanwhile,
Covenant made 6-of-10
(60 percent) free throws,
and had two of its 15
ﬁeld goals come from
downtown.
Leading the Lady
Defenders, Lalla Hurlow

Eagles
From page 1B

percent), not making
two free throws in the
same trip to the stripe
until their ﬁnal visit.
The Defenders won
the rebounding battle
by a 43-to-35 count,
despite giving up a
20-to-15 edge in offensive boards. OVCS
turned the ball over 30
times, 12 more than
Covenant. The hosts

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian freshman Kirsten Groves attempts a shot in between a trio of Lady Eagles,
during Covenant’s 38-11 win on Friday in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Courtesy photo

Venoy led the Lady
Eagles with 25 points,
featuring six from long
range. Samantha Lucas
was next with six points,
followed by Faith Jackson with four, Emily
Nichols with two and

scored ﬁve points, with
one three-pointer and
one two. Marcie Kessinger tallied three points
for the hosts, Christina
Dong added two, while
Lauren Ragan came up
with one.

combined for 12 steals,
nine assists and two
blocked shots, while the
Eagles had 26 steals,
nine rejections and
eight assists.
Oliver led Ohio Valley
Christian with a double-double of 23 points
and 20 rebounds, to go
with two steals and a
rejection. Haley scored
six points and claimed
a team-best six steals,
while Conner Walter
and Austin Beaver
scored ﬁve each, with
Walter corralling nine
rebounds. Jeremiah

Swab recorded three
points and a team-best
four assists for the Blue
and Gold.
Beilstein led the
guests with 13 points,
followed by Josh Roten
with nine points and
eight rebounds. Myles
Dickinson recorded
eight points and eight
boards in the win,
D.J. Scarberry added
seven points and nine
rebounds, Farley ﬁnished with four points,
and Mackey Herbert
scored three.
Leading the guests

SUNDAY EVENING
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Liz Kelly with one.
The Lady Defenders
return to action at Teays
Valley Christian on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

on defense, Beilstein
had eight steals and
one block, Josh Roten
marked six steals and
three blocks, while
Dickinson tallied a trio
of steals and a quartet
of blocks.
Covenant also defeated OVCS earlier this
season, winning 66-35
on Dec. 2 in Barboursville.
Next for Ohio Valley
Christian, a trip to Belpre on Tuesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 12
7

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MLK Concert Honoring the Masterpiece "Howards
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anniversary of Dr. Kings'
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families are intertwined. (N)
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ABC World America's Funniest Home Kids Say "A Thousand
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God Friended Me "BFF" Ali NCIS: Los Angeles "High
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game (L)
Masterpiece Classic
Washington The Crimson Field A hostile Masterpiece "Howards
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receives important news. (N) Society" (N)

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Ellen's Game of Games
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Shark Tank Relief for those
who get bug bites.
Masterpiece "Sanditon"
Charlotte and Sidney have
an awkward encounter. (N)
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FBI: Most Wanted
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Masterpiece "Sanditon"
Charlotte and Sidney have
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FBI: Most Wanted

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24 (ROOT) NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at Arizona Coyotes (L)
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34 (USA)
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(5:05)
Star Wars: The Force Awakens TV14
Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017, Action) Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley.
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
Impeachment Trump (L)
Impeachment Trump (L)
CNN Special Report
(5:00)
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice TVPG
Wonder Woman (2017, Action) Chris Pine, David Thewlis, Gal Gadot. TVPG
The Hunger Games ('12, Act) Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence. The Capitol
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire ('13, Dra) Josh
selects a boy and a girl from the twelve districts to fight to the death. TV14
Hutcherson, Donald Sutherland, Jennifer Lawrence. TV14
Naked "Primal Fear"
Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked and Afraid "Gary's Journey" (N)
Naked and Afraid (N)
(5:30)
S.W.A.T. (2003, Action) Colin Farrell, Michelle
Hacksaw Ridge ('16, Bio) Sam Worthington, Andrew Garfield. Army medic
Rodriguez, Samuel L. Jackson. TVPG
Desmond Doss enlists in WWII, but refuses to carry a weapon into battle. TVMA
Star Law "Saving the Herd" Lone Star Law "Lying Dogs" Star Law "In the Crosshairs" Lone Star Law (N)
(:05) Lone Star Law (N)
Snapped "Betty Neumar"
Criminal Confessions
Snapped "Betty Neumar"
Snapped "Wanda Stanley" Snapped "Neola Robinson"
(N)
"Killer Friends"
LawOrder "Girl Most Likely" Law &amp; Order "Equal Rights" Law &amp; Order "Slaughter"
Law &amp; Order "Dazzled"
Law &amp; Order "Foul Play"
(4:30) He's Just Not That ...
Sweet Home Alabama ('02, Com) Reese Witherspoon. TV14
Sweet Home Alabama TV14
King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens King-Queens Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Secrets of Area 51
CIA Secret Experiments
Inside North Korea: The
Cyber North Korea embraces Inside North Korea: The
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cyber-crime for profit. (N)
Kim Dynasty
(4:30) Basket. Rally
Mecum Auto Auctions: Muscle Cars &amp; More "Kissimmee, Fla." The Mecum Auction crew heads to Kissimmee. (N)
(5:30) Boxing Classics 2019 Premier Champions
PBA Bowling 2019 Clash
NCAA Basketball (L)
American Pickers
American Pickers "Million- American Pickers: Bonus Buys "Pickers Sign Off" The Pickers gamble on circus banners,
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Dollar Cars"
a 1956 Chevy and more great picks. (N)
Housewives Atlanta
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Atlanta "Snake Bye"
Watch What Atlanta
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New Jack City ('91, Cri) Ice-T, Wesley Snipes. TVMA
Buying and Selling
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(4:30)
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Laurence Fishburne, Keanu Reeves. Former hitman John Wick, pursued by Barrel" (P) (N)
TVMA
assassins, attempts to have the bounty on him removed. TVMA
(5:45)
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Dick Tracy Warren Beatty. Big Boy (:45)
Ocean's 8 Sandra Bullock. Ex-con
John David Washington. A black detective infiltrates the Ku Caprice is reuniting the mob and Dick Tracy Debbie Ocean puts together a crack team to
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Captain"
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Bette and Dani reckon with
justice from the Sullivans.
his name. (N)
the fallout of a scandal. (N)
(4:30)

(:40)

Former Gallia Academy football standout and current Capital
University player Kole Carter, right, completed his senior season by
being named the Crusaders’ Defensive Player of the Year, as well as
being named an All-Ohio Athletic Conference player for the second
year in a row. Pictured with Kole, a 2016 GAHS graduate, is Capital
University defensive coach Wes Lynch.

RedStorm

Simmons (Grand Turk,
Turks &amp; Caicos) ﬁnished
with 14 points and a
career-high 11 rebounds
From page 1B
in the winning effort.
All but one of his points
Tiggs hit one of two
and four of his rebounds
free throw attempts 22
seconds later to push the came in a seven-minute
stretch of the second half.
lead to two points, but
Kelley, senior Greg
Brescia sliced the deﬁcit
Wallace (Montego Bay,
in half when Kayode
Jamaica) and freshman
Daboiku nailed the ﬁrst
Shiloah Blevins (South
of two free throws with
Webster, OH) all tossed
8.8 seconds left to make
in 11 points in the vicit 68-67.
tory. Blevins also tied for
Daboiku missed his
game-high honors with
subsequent try from the
four blocked shots.
charity stripe and the
After its 7-for-35 showRedStorm came away
ing from the ﬂoor in the
with the rebound, with
Kelley ending up back on ﬁrst half, Rio Grande
connected on 16 of its
the free throw line with
29 second half tries
5.5 seconds remaining.
(55.2%).
Kelley hit the ﬁrst
Daboiku paced Bresattempt and missed the
second, but junior Bobby cia with a game-high
24 points, in addition
Anderson (Catlettsburg,
KY) tapped the loose ball to pulling down 10
rebounds and ﬁnishing
rebound back out front
with a game-best ﬁve
where Kelley was fouled
yet again with .7 seconds steals. He also had four
blocked shots.
left.
Ricky Shuford added
Kelley connected on
11 points and nine
the back end of the twoshot opportunity to give rebounds in a losing
cause, while Damontae
Rio a three-point cushBarnhill handed out four
ion and, after a Brescia
assists.
timeout, the Bearcats’
Rio Grande returns to
last chance length-of-thecourt game-tying attempt action on Saturday when
it travels to New Albany,
ended in a turnover as
Ind. to face Indiana Unitime expired.
versity Southeast.
Tiggs led ﬁve doubleTipoff is set for 3 p.m.
digit scorers for Rio with
15 points. He also had
Randy Payton is the Sports
a game-high ﬁve assists
Information Director at the
and a team-best four
University of Rio Grande.
steals. Junior Dwaine

remaining in regulation.
Eastern netted 13-of-50
ﬁeld goal attempts for 26
percent, including a 1-ofFrom page 1B
12 effort from behind the
The Lady Falcons made arc for eight percent.
Olivia Barber led
9-of-39 shot attempts for
the Lady Eagles with
23 percent, including
misses on all ﬁve of their 13 points and eight
rebounds, followed
3-point attempts.
Rose led Wahama with by Erica Durst with
12 markers. Sydney
a game-high 19 points,
followed by Emma Gibbs Reynolds, Kennadi
Rockhold, Jen Parker and
with six points and
Torre VanMatre with ﬁve Whitney Durst wrapped
up the EHS scoring with
markers. Amber Wolfe
two points each.
and Lauren Noble also
Wahama returns to
added four points apiece
action Wednesday when
to complete the winning
it travels to Meigs for a
tally.
non-conference matchup
Gibbs hauled in a
at 7 p.m.
game-high 17 rebounds
Eastern is back on the
to go along with three
hardwood Monday when
blocked shots. Noble
it travels to Trimble for a
and Wolfe also grabbed
TVC Hocking contest at
eight and seven caroms,
6:30 p.m.
respectively.
Wahama’s biggest lead
Bryan Walters can be reached at
of the game came at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
38-31 with 45.1 seconds

Falcons

�SPORTS

4B Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Miller storms past Lady Tornadoes, 52-46
By Alex Hawley

The Purple and Gold
claimed the ﬁrst ﬁve
points of the second half,
and led 32-24 with 5:22
RACINE, Ohio — It
left in the third period.
was all ﬁne until the
Miller closed the quarter
fourth.
with a 9-to-4 spurt, howThe Southern girls
basketball team led guest ever, leaving SHS with a
36-33 edge to start the
Miller by three points
fourth.
headed into the ﬁnal
The Lady Falcons tied
stanza of Thursday’s
the game at 38, before
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division contest eventually taking the lead
in Meigs County, but the for good at 41-40 with a
Jace Agriesti two-pointer
Lady Falcons pulled in
at the 5:16 mark. Miller
ﬁve offensive boards in
also claimed the next four
the fourth quarter and
escaped with a 52-46 vic- baskets after Agriesti’s,
and led 49-40 with 2:22
tory.
to play.
Southern (2-10, 1-8
Back-to-back threeTVC Hocking) never
pointers from Kelly
trailed in the opening
Shaver and Phoenix Clequarter, leading by as
land cut the MHS lead
many as 10 points, at
to three points with 31
16-6, 5:33 into play.
Miller (8-6, 4-4) was back seconds left, but the Lady
Falcons sealed the 52-46
to within six points, at
win by making 3-of-5 free
18-12, by the end of the
throws in the ﬁnal 30
period, and then scored
seconds.
the ﬁrst eight points of
For the game, Souththe second for its ﬁrst
ern shot 19-of-54 (35.2
lead of the night with
percent) from the ﬁeld,
5:51 until halftime.
There were three more including 4-of-20 (20
percent) from deep, while
lead changes in the next
Miller made 20-of-58
two minutes, and the
(34.5 percent) ﬁeld goal
Lady Tornadoes wound
attempts, including 6-ofup with a 27-24 advan30 (20 percent) threetage headed into the
point tries. At the foul
break.

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Cleland both marking
two steals and a block.
Leading the Lady
Falcons were Ashley
Spencer with 12 points
and Alaina Boyden with
10. Askya McFann, Josie
Crabtree and Haille
Joseph ﬁnished with
eight points apiece in
the win, with McFann
claiming a game-best
eight assists, and Joseph
pulling in a game-high
13 rebounds. Agriesti
ended with ﬁve markers
for Miller, while Emma
Joseph scored one.
Miller’s defense was
led by Boyden with three
steals, Haille Joseph with
three blocks, and Spencer
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports with two steals and a
SHS senior Shelby Cleland (2) hits a shot from the paint, during the Lady Tornadoes’ 52-46 loss to block.
Miller on Thursday in Racine, Ohio.
These teams are scheduled to ﬁnish the regular
season against each
line, SHS was 4-of-6 (66.7 collected 15 assists, nine lee Wolfe posted three
points each for SHS, with other on Feb. 6 in Perry
steals and four blocked
percent) and MHS shot
County.
Cleland earning a teamshots.
6-for-12 (50 percent).
Now halfway through
SHS was led by Jordan best ﬁve assists.
The Lady Falcons won
its league schedule,
Phoenix Cleland led
the rebounding battle by Hardwick with 17 points,
Southern — which hostthe hosts on the glass
a 38-to-28 clip, including featuring one triple, six
ed River Valley in a nontwo-pointers, and a 2-for- with seven boards, fol17-to-9 on the offensive
lowed by Evans with six, league bout on Saturday
2 day at the line. Kayla
end. Both teams had 20
— begins its second trip
as well as Wolfe, Hardturnovers in the contest, Evans scored 13 points
wick and Shelby Cleland through the TVC Hockin the setback, Shaver
with nine apiece in the
ing on Monday at Belpre.
with ﬁve apiece. Evans
fourth quarter. The hosts added six on a pair of
led the defensive effort
trifectas, while Shelby
combined for 13 assists,
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740Cleland ended with four. with three steals, with
11 steals and two rejec446-2342, ext. 2100.
Phoenix Cleland and Bay- Hardwick and Phoenix
tions, while the guests

Bulldogs bite River Valley, 74-48
By Bryan Walters

The visiting Raiders
(4-8, 1-4 TVC Ohio) put
up a noble ﬁght through
THE PLAINS, Ohio — the better part of three
The Raiders couldn’t keep quarters, but the Bulldogs
(8-2, 5-1) did just enough
up with the early pace,
then ran out of gas down in the opening two frames
to provide themselves
the stretch.
with a little bit of breathHost Athens built a
ing room.
12-point halftime lead
Isaiah Butcher netted
and ultimately cruised to
seven ﬁrst quarter points
a 74-48 victory over the
River Valley boys basket- as part of a 15-9 AHS run,
ball team on Friday night then Andrew Stephens
in a Tri-Valley Conference poured in eight markers
during a 21-15 surge in
Ohio Division matchup
at McAfee Gymnasium in the second that gave the
Green and Gold a 36-24
Athens County.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

intermission advantage.
Jordan Lambert scored
eight points for RVHS
during the third frame,
but both squads eventually ended up trading
16 points apiece while
extending the score out
to 52-40 entering the
ﬁnale.
The Silver and Black
were never closer as
Butcher tacked on seven
points during a 22-8
fourth quarter push that
wrapped up the 26-point
outcome.
Athens outrebounded

the guests by a slim 30-28
overall margin, but the
Raiders did claim an 11-9
edge on the offensive
boards. RVHS also committed 22 of the 39 turnovers in the game.
River Valley made 20
total ﬁeld goals — including three 3-pointers —
and also went 4-of-8 at
the free throw line for 50
percent.
Lambert led the Raiders with 12 points and
Brandon Call was next
with 10 points, followed
by Chase Caldwell and

Mason Rhodes with six
markers each.
Jordan Burns and Matt
Mollohan contributed
four points apiece, while
Cole Young and Dylan
Fulks completed the tally
with respective efforts of
three and two markers.
The Bulldogs netted
28 total ﬁeld goals —
including four trifectas
— and also made 14-of20 charity tosses for 70
percent.
Butcher paced AHS
with a game-high 24
points, followed by Ste-

phens with 16 points and
Brayden Whiting with 10
markers.
Brayden Markins and
Reece Wallace were
respectively next with
nine and seven points,
while Nate Trayner and
Joey Moore completed
the winning tally with
ﬁve and three points.
River Valley returns
to action Friday when it
hosts Alexander in a TVC
Ohio matchup at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Blue Devils fall at
Alexander tops Lady Raiders, 60-39
Mace with 11. Taylor
Raiders (6-7, 2-5) 13-to-8 line and made ﬁve of its
Chesapeake, 70-34
in the second for a 30-16 21 ﬁeld goals from three- Meadows contributed
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

outcome. Gallia AcadBy Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.
emy netted 13 total
com
ﬁeld goals — including
a pair of 3-pointers —
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio and also went 6-of-10 at
— It didn’t start overly the free throw line for
well … and it didn’t get 60 percent.
Cremeens paced the
much better after that.
guests with nine points,
Host Chesapeake
followed by Logan
jumped out to an 18-9
Blouir with seven
ﬁrst quarter lead and
points and Clary with
never looked back
six markers. Devin Lee
Friday night during a
and Ben Cox were next
70-34 victory over the
with respective efforts
Gallia Academy boys
of ﬁve and four points,
basketball team in an
Ohio Valley Conference while Reece Thomas
and Cooper Davis commatchup in Lawrence
pleted the Blue Devil
County.
tally with two points
The Panthers (10-1,
and one point.
6-1 OVC) had nine difThe Panthers made
ferent players reach the
26 total ﬁeld goals —
scoring column, with
including seven trifectas
six different players
chipping in points while — and also went a perbuilding that early 2-to- fect 9-of-9 at the charity
stripe.
1 advantage.
Blankenship led CHS
The visiting Blue
with a game-high 15
Devils (4-7, 1-5) were
points, followed by Josh
never closer as CHS
Cox with 13 points.
got eight points from
Travis Grimm, Dilen
Levi Blankenship as
Caldwell, Trent Dearth
part of a pivotal 22-8
and Jacob Lemley were
second quarter surge
that resulted in a 40-17 next with eight markers
each.
intermission edge.
Nathan Cox and AusIsaac Clary and
tin Jackson contributed
Damon Cremeens
four points apiece to the
poured in four points
winning cause, while
apiece for GAHS, but
Ethan Taylor completed
the Purple and White
countered with a 16-11 things with two points.
Gallia Academy
third period run that
returns to action Tuesextended the cushion
day when it travels to
out to 56-28.
Pedro for an OVC conThe Blue and White
mustered only one ﬁeld test against Rock Hill at
goal down the stretch as 7 p.m.
Chesapeake ended reguBryan Walters can be reached at
lation with a 15-6 run
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
to wrap up the 36-point

BIDWELL, Ohio —
The Lady Spartans’
streak hits seven.
The Alexander girls
basketball team won
its seventh consecutive
game, defeating TriValley Conference Ohio
Division host River
Valley by a 60-39 count
on Thursday in Gallia
County.
Alexander (10-3, 6-1
TVC Ohio) led 17-8
after the ﬁrst quarter,
and outscored the Lady

halftime lead.
An 18-to-10 third
quarter gave the Lady
Spartans a 48-30 lead
with eight minutes to
play, and River Valley
saved its best for last,
outscoring AHS 13-to-12
in the ﬁnal stanza.
In the 60-39 setback,
RVHS made 3-of-8 (37.5
percent) free throws,
to go along with four
triples and a dozen twopointers. Meanwhile,
Alexander was 13-of-16
(81.3 percent) from the

point range.
Leading the Lady
Raiders were Hannah
Jacks with 13 points and
Payton Crabtree with
11. Sierra Somerville
was next with six points,
followed by Kaylee
Gillman with ﬁve. Lauren
Twyman and Kasey
Birchﬁeld scored two
points each to round out
the RVHS total.
Marlee Grinstead
led Alexander with 21
points, followed by Kara
Meeks with 20 and Jadyn

six points to the winning
cause, while Chloe Payne
chipped in with two.
This gives AHS the
season sweep of the
Silver and Black, as the
Lady Spartans won their
Dec. 9 meeting with the
Lady Raiders by a 64-33
clip in Albany.
After Saturday’s trip to
Southern, River Valley
will host Point Pleasant
on Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Point Pleasant bullies Bulldogs, 56-15
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Business as
usual. The Point Pleasant
wrestling team landed
eight pinfall wins and
posted a 10-4 mark in
head-to-head matches
Thursday night en route
to a 56-15 victory over
visiting Athens in a nonconference dual held at
The Dungeon in Mason
County.
The Big Blacks found
themselves in a 12-3 hole
after dropping three of
the ﬁrst four matches of
the event, but the hosts
rallied by going 9-1 in the
ﬁnal 10 bouts — which
included eight pinfalls
and a technical fall.
The Bulldogs — the
reigning Tri-Valley Conference champions — did

Bartee (138), Mitchell
Freeman (145), Zac
Samson (160) and Logan
Southall (170) in their
respective divisions.
Wyatt Wilson recorded
a 15-0 technical fall victory at 152 pounds, while
Wyatt Stanley secured a
5-3 decision in his 220pound bout.
The Big Blacks honored
individuals with special
needs during their Special Knight event. The
dual match had a stagBryan Walters|OVP Sports gered start, beginning at
Point Pleasant sophomore Derek Raike maintains leverage on a 182 pounds.
Winfield opponent during a 132-pound match on Dec. 11, 2019, in
Point Pleasant — still
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
the top-ranked team in
Class AA — returns to
decision in their respecmanage a single pinfall
action Saturday when it
tive weight classes.
win as Dylan Wogerman
Point Pleasant received travels to Cabell Midland
defeated Jacob Muncy in
High School for a quad
the heavyweight division. pinfall victories from
Parker Henderson (106), match at 11 a.m.
Brayden Connolly
Mackandle Freeman
(182), Juan Marquez
(113), Isaac Short (120), Bryan Walters can be reached at
(195) and Christopher
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Derek Raike (132), Justin
Smith (126) also lost by

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, January 12, 2020 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

6B Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Marauders fall short of Vinton County, 71-68
By Alex Hawley

their ﬁrst 12 three-point
attempts.
The Marauders (5-6,
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio 2-3 TVC Ohio) trailed
21-13 after one quarter
— The Vikings started
of play, with ﬁve of the
out hot and held on for
VCHS (9-4, 4-2) triples
the win.
The Meigs boys basket- coming in the opening
ball team dropped a 71-68 stanza.
A 23-to-16 second
decision to Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division quarter gave the Vikings
a 44-29 halftime lead, but
guest Vinton County on
the Maroon and Gold
Friday at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium, where came out of the half with
a 21-to-13 run, and trailed
the Vikings hit 11 of

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

57-50 with eight minutes
to play.
The Marauders scored
18 points in the fourth
quarter, 13 of which came
from sophomore Coulter
Cleland, but the Vikings
sealed the 71-68 win with
14 points, including six
from the free throw line.
For the game, Meigs
connected on 13-of18 (72.2 percent) free
throws, while VCHS was
7-of-13 (53.8 percent)

from the stripe. The
Marauders had seven of
their 24 ﬁeld goals come
from three-point range,
while the guests ﬁnished
with a dozen triples to go
with 14 two-pointers.
Cleland led the hosts
with 29 points, featuring
a trio of three-pointers.
Weston Baer hit a pair
of triples on his way to
22 points, while Wyatt
Hoover came up with
nine for the Marauders.

Ethan Stewart and Cory
Cox scored three points
each for MHS, while Morgan Roberts tallied two
points.
For Vinton County,
Gavin Arbaugh hit a
game-best ﬁve threepointers and led allscorers with 32 points.
Lance Montgomery and
Braylon Damron scored
11 points apiece for the
guests, Zayne Karr was
next with seven, followed

by Eli Radabaugh with
six, Aaron Stevens with
three and Will Arthur
with one.
The Marauders will
have another shot at
the Vikings on Feb. 7 in
McArthur.
After Saturday’s bout
with Marietta, Meigs will
travel to Fort Frye on
Tuesday.

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Bearcats surprise Rio women, 76-66
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

OWENSBORO, Ky. —
On paper, it looked like
a mismatch.
Unfortunately, though,
the University of Rio
Grande women’s basketball team found out its
get-together with Brescia University wasn’t
being played on paper.
The host Bearcats
spotted the RedStorm
the game’s ﬁrst two
points and then never
trailed again, posting a
76-66 River States Conference victory, Thursday night, at the Moore
Center.
Rio Grande, which
had a six-game winning

streak snapped, dropped
to 11-7 overall and 4-1 in
conference play.
The loss also cost the
RedStorm a share of
the RSC East Division
lead with West Virginia
University-Tech, which
defeated Indiana University Southeast in
another of Thursday’s
games.
Brescia won for just
the third time in 17
contests overall, while
upping its league mark
to 2-3.
A bucket by freshman
Lexi Woods (Waverly,
OH) on Rio’s opening
possession of the night
gave the RedStorm a 2-0
lead, but Brescia’s Hallie
Fisher countered with a

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

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

tying basket of her own
moments later and the
Bearcats never trailed
again.
Brescia led by as many
as 11 points late in the
opening period, but an
11-2 Rio run - capped by a
conventional three-point
play by Woods - pulled
the RedStorm within
24-22 early in the second
quarter.
Rio got no closer the
rest of the night.
The Bearcats scored
14 of the game’s next
16 points and took what
proved to be their largest
lead of the game, 38-24,
after a conventional
three-point play by Hannah Saltsman with just
over three minutes to

play before halftime.
The RedStorm cut a
10-point deﬁcit at the
intermission down to
ﬁve, 48-43, following a
layup by junior Chyna
Chambers (Columbus,
OH) late in the third
quarter, but Brescia reestablished a 10-point
cushion heading to the
ﬁnal stanza.
The Bearcats equaled
their earlier 14-point lead
after a Cassidy Moss steal
and layup made it 62-48
and a double-digit edge
remained intact the rest
of the way - aside from
three times in the ﬁnal
4-1/2 minutes when Rio
closed the gap to eight
points.
The RedStorm shot just

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

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

WWW.OHIO.EDU

OHIO University’s Ofﬁce of Transportation Services is
seeking individuals for their:

TRANSIT DRIVER

Intermittent Positions
(Hiring up to 6 positions)

For more information and to apply, complete the online
application process at the following link:

http://www.ohiouniversityjobs.com/
postings/33475

OH-70167743

These positions will remain open until ﬁlled. For full
consideration apply by January 16, 2020.

Applications from women, minorities, veterans, and
persons with disabilities are encouraged. Candidates must
have an understanding of and commitment to afﬁrmative
action and equal opportunities.

THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OF CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP
WOULD LIKE TO INFORM
THE PUBLIC THAT THE
MEETING THAT WAS
SCHEDULED FOR TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2020
HAS BEEN CHANGED TO
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
15, 2020. IT WILL BE HELD
AT THE TOWNSHIP BUILDING IN KYGER AT 4:30pm.
AMY EDWARDS
FISCAL OFFICER
1/12/20

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

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

Land (Acreage)

Legals

The Bearcats also had
15 steals among the 20
Rio Grande turnovers.
Moss ﬁnished with
a career-high 25 points
in the win, while also
recording a game-high six
rebounds and ﬁve steals.
Fisher added a careerhigh 22 points of her own
for Brescia, while Alecea
Homer tossed in a careerbest 12 points. Both
shared team honors with
three assists each.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Saturday when
it faces IU Southeast.
Tipoff is set for 1 p.m.
in New Albany, Ind.

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

REAL ESTATE

LEGALS

38 percent overall (23-for60), while going 3-for-17
from three-point range
(17.6%) and committing
20 turnovers.
Woods ﬁnished with a
team-high 19 points for
Rio, while senior Sydney
Holden (Wheelersburg,
OH) tallied 16 points, a
game-high seven assists
and a club-best two
steals.
Chambers added 11
points in a losing cause
for the RedStorm, while
sophomore Avery Harper
(Seaman, OH) had a
game-high six rebounds.
Brescia, which shot 56
percent from the ﬁeld in
the opening half, ﬁnished
at 45.2 percent for the
game (28-for-62).

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FDOO ������������ RU YLVLW
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Auxiliary Equipment Operator Junior (AEO - J)
The Ohio Valley Electric Corporation is seeking Auxiliary
Equipment Operator Juniors in the Operations Department.
This is a full time, entry level position. The work schedule will
be a 12 Hour Rotating Shift.
Position Summary: Perform semi-skilled manual work, including maintenance and operating duties of a minor and/or routine
nature and cleaning work. Job duties can vary but can include
assisting workers of higher classifications in connection with
power plant operation.
Successful completion of the Plant Operator Selection System
(POSS) and the Plant Maintenance Selection System (MASS)
tests are required for this position.
Must be able to work rotating shifts.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments/Townhouses
� %HGURRP DSW
� PL IURP +RO]HU
��������� PRQWK
SOXV GHSRVLW
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25 ������������
Houses For Rent
�%5 KRPH on Sanders Dr
� %5 XSSHU GXSOH[ on First
Ave. Call Wiseman Real
Estate - 740-446-3644

MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Campbell Hausfeld Air Compressor 4 HP 13 Gal tank
$200 Coleman Power Mate
Generator 6250 watts, 5000
watts continues $250 Porter
Cable 14" Band Saw $300
call 740-446-4899
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

ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
8QFRQGLWLRQDO /LIHWLPH *XDUDQWHH
(VWDEOLVKHG ����
%DVHPHQW :DOOV %UDFHG
+XQGUHGV 2I /RFDO 5HIHUHQFHV
/LFHQVHG� %RQGHG ,QVXUHG
FREE ESTIMATES
24 Hours

Wage Information: $26.72/hour
To apply, resumes must be submitted via email to:
hrservices@ovec.com with the job title in the subject line.
(Only resumes submitted to this email address in the correct
format will be considered.)
M/V/F/D - EOE - All qualified applicants will receive consideration without regard to protected veteran or disabled status and
will not be discriminated against.

(740) 446-0870
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 12, 2020 7B

LUNSFORD’S SARDIS AUTO
2571 Sardis Rd, Oak Hill, OH 45656

740-682-7232
Nothing like getting all your automotive
needs taken care of in one stop!
Quality, honest service you can rely on.

PRICE REDUCTION SALE
NOW
$15,995

MUST
SEE

2016 Dodge Ram

2014 Ford Taurus SE

2013 Chevy Silverado LT

4x4 Hemi Power 57k miles Retail $23,000

.35k miles Extra Clean $9,995

4x4 Extra Clean $16,995

LOADED

LOADED

2011 Honda CRV EXL

2019 Jeep Patriot Latitude

Leather, Sunroof, LOADED $7,995

Leather , Sunroof , LOADED $10,995

2017 Hyundi Elantra
41k miles $10,995

Fun
Car

2013 Buick Verano

2012 Honda Accord SE

2013 Hyundi Valero

54k miles $6,995

Leather, New Tires 78k miles $8,495

6-speed, Fun Car 51k miles $7,495

Extra
Clean

2015 Nissan Altima
34k miles Extra Clean $9,500

Like
New

2015 Ford Taurus SE

2013 Hyundi Elantra Limited 52k

37k miles, Like New $10,995

miles $7,495

IMMACULATE

2013 Honda Accord LX

2010 Chevy Silverado LTZ

102k miles $8,495

4x4,47k miles IMMACULATE $15,500

Like
New

2016 Honda Accord EX
33k miles, Like New $14,450

OH-70168002

NOW
$17,995

2014 Ford Flex

2014 Jeep Wrangler Sport

AWD, 3rd row seats, 79k miles $10,750

New Top $13,995
Good Thru Jan 31, 20

2016 Ford Edge SLE,
LOADED, Leather , Sunroof ect..4x4.
Reduced from $22,000

�8B Sunday, January 12, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Excellence in General &amp;
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Surgical Capabilities:
5��))�'���-(&amp;2
5��+��,-��.+!�+2�
(stereotactic biopsy, breast
conserving surgery, sentinel
lymph node biopsy)
5� �%%�%����+��.+!�+2
5� "+('#���(.'�� �+�
5� (%('��.+!�+2
5� (%('(,�()2��'��
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5��#'#&amp;�%%2��'/�,#/���.+!�+2
5��(+-��%���&amp;�'5��$#'���,#(',����,��,,�,��'��
Cyst Removals

OH-70163088

5��( -��#,,.����,,�,

Capable, quality surgical care. You don’t
have to travel to ﬁnd it. At Pleasant Valley
Hospital, we realize that there’s no substitute
for a community having conﬁdence in its
local hospital. We provide that conﬁdence by
offering exceptional care from exceptional
general surgeons Dr. Ronn Grandia and
Dr. Jonathan Sedeyn. When given a quality
surgical choice, it’s true. There’s no place
like home. Our doctors welcome your call for
a consultation today.

Ronn Grandia, MD, FACS
Jonathan Sedeyn, DO, PhD

(304) 675-1666

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        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4903">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="4905">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="34">
      <name>craigo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="36">
      <name>devaney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="31">
      <name>eblin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="33">
      <name>ferris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="37">
      <name>perroud</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="32">
      <name>powell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
