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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Fan
experience
to change

NEWS s 3

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

70°

88°

86°

Partly sunny today. A thunderstorm in spots
tonight. High 94° / Low 73°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 94, Volume 74

Shooting investigation
currently underway in
Cheshire Township
Staff Report

CHESHIRE TWP. —
Gallia County Sheriff
Matt Champlin released
information on Friday
in regards to a shooting
incident which reportedly occurred on Thursday, June 4, in Cheshire
Township.
“At approximately
8:27 p.m, my ofﬁce
received a call to
respond to a residence
on Zuspan Road in
Cheshire Township
in regards to a male
victim, identiﬁed as
Stanley L. Little, age
76, who had sustained
a gunshot wound during a confrontation at
his residence. Mr. Little
was transported to Holzer Medical Center’s

Meigs branch where
he was reported to be
in stable condition. At
this time, this incident
remains under investigation. Gallia County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce investigators, assisted by
crime scene technicians
from the Ohio Attorney
General’s Bureau of
Criminal Investigation,
remained on scene
throughout the night
and through much of
the morning hours
processing the scene
of the incident and
conducting follow up
investigative efforts.
Further details pertaining to this investigation will be released
as they become available,” stated Sheriff
Champlin.

Gallia adds another
case to ‘probable’
COVID-19 total
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — On Saturday, the Gallia County Health Department reported an additional probable case of COVID-19, bringing the county’s case
total to nine.
Via its Facebook page, the health department
stated the case was from a positive reportable antibody test.
This mean Gallia has now had six conﬁrmed
COVID-19 cases, with three probable. Of these
cases, there’s been one death, one current hospitalization, one home isolation and six recovered.
Cases statistics include: Affected ages 30 to 70
years of age with a median age of 45; four males
and four females; four had underlying conditions
and four did not.
According to the Ohio Department of Health, an
antibody test can detect the immune response to
the virus, not the virus itself, and can help healthcare professionals identify individuals who have
overcome an infection in the past and developed
an immune response.
As of Friday, all six Meigs County COVID-19
cases (ﬁve conﬁrmed, one probable) are listed as
“recovered” from the virus. No new cases have
been reported in the county since May 22.
According to information provided by local
health ofﬁcials, a conﬁrmed case is deﬁned as an
individual with a positive laboratory result for
COVID-19.
A probable case is deﬁned as an individual who
has not been tested for COVID-19, but is likely
to have the illness based on close contact with
a conﬁrmed or probable case, symptoms, and/
or exposure to an area with ongoing community spread. A probable case must also have no
alternative diagnosis, such as inﬂuenza or strep
throat.
In Mason County, W.Va., as of Monday
afternoon, the county’s conﬁrmed case count
remained at 15 with all 15 cases considered
recovered. Mason County announced it had zero
active COVID-19 cases on May 27.
For Ohio data and other information visit
https://coronavirus.ohio.gov
© 2020 Ohio Valley Publishing, all rights
reserved.

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Tuesday, June 9, 2020 s 50¢

Making their voices heard

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

A large crowd gathered on Friday evening for a Black Lives Matter protest in Pomeroy.

Local Black Lives Matter protest held
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — Area
residents took part in
a peaceful protest and
march on Friday evening
in Pomeroy in support of
the Black Lives Matter
movement, voicing concerns over the death of
George Floyd, as well as
racism in America.
Organized by Isaiah
English, with help from
Cornelius English and
others, the protest began
at the Pomeroy Levee
before marching along
the walking path. Some
chanted as they walked,
while others held signs
along the way.
Floyd’s May 25 death
has gained national attention after viral internet
videos displayed a Minneapolis policeman pinning him to the ground
with a knee on his neck.
Floyd died while in
police custody. Since
that moment, protests
and riots have appeared
across the country to pull

attention to what many
say are years of systemic
racism and police brutality targeting the black
community.
Isaiah explained he
wanted to plan something small to encourage
people, particularly the
next generation, to stand
up for what they believe
in and let their voices be
heard.
“Thank you,” he said,
addressing the crowd
before the march. “This
is great. This is what
matters right here. This
will open up a lot of
people’s eyes and a lot of
people’s minds to what
really matters in this
world.”
Ramond Johnson Sr.
also spoke, offering a
prayer and addressing
the Black Lives Matter
movement.
“Black lives matter … I
hear people say ‘All lives
matter’ and that’s right,
all lives matter. But as
long as we’re standing
here today and ﬁghting
for the rights of every-

body, I don’t care white,
black, I don’t care what
color you are as long as
we don’t minimize anybody. We need to make
sure we say ‘black lives
matter’, ‘Asian lives matter’, ‘young lives matter’
… because we need to
focus sometimes on one
thing so we can get to
the bigger things,” said
Johnson. “When we
say black lives matter
and someone says well
what about this life or
that life. Those lives are
important. Right now
we’re focusing on this,
and tomorrow we’ll focus
on this, and we’ll work at
it. … And we’ll become
a better society but we
need to work on it. Isaiah
said it has to be peaceful.
It’s because of peace we
are able to do what we
need to do.”
Noting that there may
be people who yell out
in opposition, Johnson
quoted Michelle Obama,
saying, “They go low, we
go high.”
Johnson said, “I have

police ofﬁcer friends …
they’re friends and most
of them are. Sometimes
when they pull somebody
over they are just as
scared as you are because
I’ve seen the news where
somebody got hurt. I’ve
seen the news where
something happened. …
Don’t give that person
a reason to be nervous.
Support that person.
Now if they’re doing
their job wrong, they’re
doing it wrong, but don’t
you do wrong because,
what did I say, ‘When
they go low we go high.’”
Before the march,
Johnson asked for a
moment of silence for
those “not here because
of some kind of violence,
because of some kind
of inequality toward
them, for George Floyd,
Ahmaud Arbery, for ofﬁcers who are fallen who
are trying to keep you
protected, the same ones
that are going to be out
here today.”
He asked that those
who were able to kneel in
support.
See VOICES | 4

For the Record: Meigs County Sheriff ’s Office
June 1
9:39 a.m. — A man on Bigley
Ridge Road reported that he was
assaulted with a tire iron and the
individual was on the porch and
refusing to leave. Parties were
seperated.
11:29 a.m. — A woman on
Pageville Road called to report
that someone across the road from
her camper was yelling for help.
10:40 p.m. — Deputies responded with EMS to a residence
in Reedsville for a report of a
deceased individual.
June 2
3:53 a.m. — A 911 call was
received from a woman on Peack
Fork Road who advised someone
was shooting at her daughter’s
residence. Deputies and Middleport Police Department responded
to the scene.
9:10 a.m. — A report was
received regarding a father having
vandalized his son’s truck at the
gas station in Syracuse. An alleged
assault also occurred in Gallia
County and has been reported
there. A report was taken.
2:06 p.m. — Deputies responded with the prosecutor’s ofﬁce
investigator regarding picking up
to children and returning the to

their father.
4:22 p.m. — A female advised
she is staying at Meigs Motel with
a female in another room. The
female was advised to leave the
other guests alone.
5:03 — A well-being check was
requested on a man on State Route
833 who had missed an appointment that morning. Deputies were
advised by the resident of the
address that the person no longer
resides there.
5:12 p.m. — A man advised
someone called to tell him men
without shirts were outside the
church on Zuspan Hollow and
they had the trunk open to the
car. Upon arrival of a deputy, the
vehicle and individuals had left.
The property was checked and
everything found to be secure.
5:14 p.m. — Hopewell requested a
well-being check on a female on Zuspan Hollow Road. The female was
transported to O’Bleness by deputies.
9:56 p.m. — Sheriff’s ofﬁce
received a call of a vehicle broken
down on Sugar Run. A Subaru
pulled the vehicle to a residence
on Eagle Ridge Road.
June 3
12:10 a.m. — A female called to
advise the father of her children,

whom she has a protection order
against, is alleged to be under
the inﬂuence and took off driving
with their children in the car and
was making threats to her that he
would not bring them back.
8:10 a.m. — Sheriff’s ofﬁce
received a call of a license plate stolen off a vehicle on New Lima Road.
June 4
A nurse from O’Bleness advised
that they had a patient come in
with a stab wound to the right
thigh. The patient reported to the
nurse that he was riding his motorcycle, was jumped, stabbed and
had his bike stolen on Wednesday
evening around 7 p.m. The individual reportedly kept changing
his story to the nurse. Athens
County was going to get a statement from the patient and send
it to the Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce.
4:37 a.m. — A male called to
request a well-being check on a
child. He stated that he had witnessed the woman have abusive
behavior toward the child while at
a friend’s residence. He was concerned for the child’s safety. The
mother of the child advised that
See RECORD | 8

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, June 9, 2020

OBITUARIES

BOBBY JOE RATHBURN

JAMES MICHAEL ‘MIKE’ BAYS

ters, Bonnie Skidmore
POMEROY — Bobby
Joe Rathburn of Pomeroy and Joan (Dano) King;
chronic deprespassed away on Saturday, special friend, Ottie JarMike was born
sion. Mike main- June 6, 2020, at the Holvis and several nieces and
March 31, 1962 in
tained a great
nephews.
zer Emergency DepartGallipolis, Ohio to
attitude through- ment in Pomeroy. He was
He is preceded in
Jim and Sue Bays.
out these misdeath by his parents; son,
born on May 2, 1939, to
He was a simple
fortunes, even
the late Cecil and Frances Terry Rathburn; sisters,
yet complex man.
leading up to
Betty Manley, and Susie
(Durst) Rathburn. Mr.
One who loved his
his last days. He Rathburn was a member
Graham; brother, Bill
solitude but famRathburn; grandparents,
of the Victory Baptist
ily as well. Mike’s circle knew the pain was only
temporary. He experiJasper and Dolly Durst.
Church.
was small. The need
enced more personal and
Funeral services will be
He is survived by
for physical connection
held on Thursday, June
was never there because emotional growth in the his wife, Mary Rathweek before his death
11, 2020, at 1 p.m. at
burn; children, Chuckie
he was connected to
than most people do in a (Tammy) Rathburn,
the Anderson McDaniel
friends and family in
lifetime.
Funeral Home in PomeRobin Rathburn, Bobby
heart. Mike graduated
Mike’s heart was
roy with Pastor Jim Kee(Heather) Rathburn,
from Gallia Academy
see ofﬁciating. Burial will
High School in 1980. He devoted to his mom and Mark Rathburn, Teresa
follow at the Miles CemRathburn; step chilthen went on to receive he simply couldn’t live
without her. He took his dren, Richard (Alina)
etery. Visitation will be
a degree in electronlast breath in his sister’s VanHouten, Ted (Deb)
held from 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
ics from the University
arms on June 6th. He is VanHouten; several
the day of the service.
of Rio Grande. While
reunited with his famA registry is available
grandchildren, great
attending Rio, Mike
ily and friends who had grandchildren and great
at www.andersonmcdanmaintained a higher
iel.com.
grade point average than passed away before him. great grandchildren; sisMike is preceded in
most of his professors
JUNE W. VANVRANKEN
there. He had numerous death by his parents,
grandparents and
job offers after college
numerous family memPOMEROY — June W. ken; grandchildren, Amy
but chose to remain at
bers.
VanVranken of Pomeroy, (Martin), Clay, Andrew,
home with his family.
He is survived and
Erik; great grandchilOhio, passed away on
Mike was great with
numbers and was a math missed by his sister, Kim Sunday, June 7, 2020, at dren, Madeline, Max,
Blackburn, his nephew
Heath, and Mary.
the Ohio State Wexiner
whiz. He inherited his
She is preceded in
Center in Columbus.
sense of humor from his Andy Blackburn, niece
She was born on August death by her parents and
dad and his live life with Amanda (Andy) Nibert
a sister, Janet Whaley.
3, 1930, in Nelsonville,
no regrets outlook from and his great nephews.
Private funeral serFuneral services will
to the late Tracy H. and
his mom. Mike enjoyed
vices will be Friday June Grace M. (Pugh) Whaley. be held on Friday, June
watching his favorite
12, 2020 at the Waugh12, 2020, at 11 a.m. at
June was a member
TV shows and playing
Halley-Wood Funeral
the Anderson McDanof the Beta Sigma Phi
cards. He was a fan of
Home with Pastor
sorority, she was a piano iel Funeral Home in
wrestling and baseball.
Alfred Holley ofﬁciatPomeroy with Pastor
teacher in Pomeroy for
He always said the Cining. Burial will follow
Walt Goble ofﬁciating.
many years. She was an
cinnati Reds were his
Burial will follow in the
active member of the
ﬁrst love. Though Mike at Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.
Beech Grove Cemetery.
New Beginnings United
never married or knew
Pallbearers: Homer
Methodist Church, where Visitation for family and
the joy of being a parBays, David Strait,
she played the organ for friends will be held on
ent, he had no regrets
Andy Blackburn, Billy
Thursday, June 11, 2020,
many years.
and was satisﬁed with
Bays, Andy Nibert, John
She is survived by her from 6-8 p.m. at the
the life he led. His love
Blackburn
husband of 67 years Har- funeral home.
language was showerIn lieu of ﬂowers, con- vey Vanvranken; sons,
A registry is available
ing the people he cared
tributions can be made
Scott (Sandie) VanVran- at www.andersonmcdanabout with cards and
iel.com.
gifts. He overcame many to the American Cancer ken, Matthew VanVranobstacles in his life such Society.
An online guest regis- HARDEN
as scoliosis, alcoholism,
try is available at waughpancreatitis, a previous
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. — Bernice Justine Wolfe
halley-wood.com
bout with cancer and
Harden, 92, of Ravenswood, W.Va., died June 7, 2020
at her home.
Service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 9, 2020 at
Casto Funeral Home, Ravenswood. Entombment will
JORDAN
follow in Jackson County Memory Gardens Mausoleum. Visitation will be from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday
MASON, W.Va. — Valerie Jean Jordan, 62, of
at the funeral home.
Mason, W.Va., died June 7, 2020 at her home.
Service will be 8 p.m. Friday, June 12, 2020, at
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason, with Pastor
WRIGHT
Randy Parsons ofﬁciating. Visitation will be from 6-8
p.m. Friday.
GALLIPOLIS — Evelyn Wright, 86, of Gallipolis,
Ohio, died Friday, June 5, 2020 at Holzer Medical
WHITE
Center. A graveside service will be held at 1 p.m. on
Wednesday, June 10, 2020 in Pine Street Cemetery
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Nancy Jewel White, 79,
with Pastor Eugene Harmon ofﬁciating. Willis Funeral
of Huntington, W.Va., died Friday, June 5, 2020 in
Home is in care of the arrangements.
Cabell Health Care Center, Culloden, W.Va. Funeral
service will be conducted 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 9,
THOMAS
2020 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio with Rev. Eddie Salmons ofﬁciating. Burial
LETART, W.Va. — Charles Ray “Chuck” Thomas,
will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio. 83 of Letart, W.Va., died Friday June 5,2020 while
Visitation will be held 10 to 11 a.m. Tuesday, June 9,
staying with his daughter in Missouri. At his request,
2020 at the funeral home.
there will be no public services.

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

Road construction, closures
GALLIA COUNTY — Williams Creek Road will
be closed from State Route 218 to the stone portion
and Wells Run Road will be closed from State Route
218 to the stone portion, beginning Monday, June 8 Friday, June 19, for culvert replacement. Local trafﬁc
will need to use other County roads as a detour.
RACINE — Beginning June 8, State Route 124
will be closed between Tanners Run Road (Township
Road 131) and Tornado Road (County Road 124) for
a culvert replacement project. Estimated completion:
June 18, 2020
GALLIPOLIS — Kriner Road (CR-26) will be
closed .5 mile from Neighborhood Road beginning
7 a.m., Monday, May 18 for approximately 75 days
for slip repair, weather permitting. Local trafﬁc will
need to use other state and county roads as a detour.
OLIVE TWP. — Mt. Olive Road in Olive Township is currently closed due to slip repair by Olive
Township Trustees.
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Engineer
Brett A. Boothe announces Woods Mill Road will be
closed beginning Monday, April 20-Friday, June 19,

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

weather permitting. The road is closed from Ohio
State Route 325 to Deckard Road for slip repair.
Local trafﬁc will need to use other county roads.
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one lane
of SR 124 will be closed between Old State Route
338 (Township Road 708) and Portland Road (County Road 35) for a bridge deck overlay project on the
bridge crossing over Groundhog Creek. Temporary
trafﬁc signals and a 10 foot width restriction will be
in place. Estimated completion: November 20, 2020
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one
lane of SR 7 will be closed between Storys Run
Road (County Road 345) and Leading Creek Road
(County Road 3) for a bridge deck overlay project
on the bridge crossing over Leading Creek. Temporary trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot width restriction
will be in place. Estimated completion: November
20, 2020.

Scholarship applications
SYRACUSE — Applications for the 2020-21 Carleton College Scholarship for Higher Education are
available for legal residents of the village of Syracuse.
Residents can pick up applications from Gordon
Fisher, 1402 Dusky St., Syracuse. Applications are due
back by June 24, 2020. Legal residents of Syracuse
can qualify for scholarship awards for a maximum of
two years.

Meetings canceled
GALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME Retirees, Subchapter 102, Gallia and Jackson Counties, has canceled
its June 19 meeting, due to virus concerns. For more
information, 740-245-0093.
POMEROY — The June meeting of Meigs County
Public Employee Retires Chapter 74 has been cancelled. No meetings for the group are scheduled until
further notice due to COVID-19 guidance from the
state PERI association.

Ohio Valley Publishing

IN BRIEF

Tourist rescued after being
trapped 6 days in well
DENPASAR, Indonesia (AP) — A Ukrainian
man who fell into an abandoned well and broke his
leg while being chased by a wild dog on Indonesia’s tourist island of Bali was rescued after being
trapped for nearly a week, police said Monday.
Roberts Jacob Matthews, 29, stumbled into the
nearly empty 4-meter (13-foot) -deep concrete
well and was unable to get out for six days until a
farmer in Pecatu village heard his weak voice asking for help on Saturday, police said.
He informed other villagers, who gave Matthews food and water and tried to help by throwing him a rope, but he said he couldn’t be pulled
up because of his injuries.
Police chief Yusak Agustinus Sooai said a team
from a local search-and-rescue agency, wearing
personal protective equipment because of the
coronavirus outbreak, went down into the well
and lifted Matthews out late Saturday and took
him to a nearby hospital for treatment.
“He told authorities that he had been trying to
evade a wild dog that chased him,” Sooai said.
“He survived only by drinking water in the well.”
Matthews, who has been vacationing on Bali
since March, holds a Ukraine passport and a
driver’s license issued by the United Kingdom,
Sooai said.

Panda escapes from
enclosure at Danish zoo
COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — One of
Copenhagen Zoo’s giant pandas escaped from
its enclosure early Monday and roamed the park
before staff were able to sedate it and bring it
back.
Xing Er, a 7-year-old male who arrived at the
zoo last year, was seen on surveillance video
breaking out of the newly built, 160 million-kroner
($24.2 million) Panda House that also houses
female panda Mao Sun.
Zoo spokesman Bengt Holst said that on the
video staff could see how “the male panda crawls
up a metal pole, which is studded with three rows
of electrical wires ... and then crawls out into the
garden.”
He said the park now was looking at making
changes to security around the enclosure “to
ensure that it does not happen again. ”
Zoo staff reacted “quickly and efﬁciently,” the
animal was corned and sedated with a dart without being harmed, he said. Monday’s incident
happened before the animal park opened to the
public.
“It doesn’t change the fact that we want to avoid
that kind of situation in the future,” Holst said.
The enclosure to house the pandas from China’s
southwestern city of Chengdu, was inaugurated by
Queen Margrethe and other dignitaries in April
2019.
Beijing lends out pandas as a sign of goodwill.
Any cubs born during the 15-year loan period are
considered China’s property.

Officer charged in Floyd’s
death held on $1M bail
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A judge on Monday
kept bail at $1 million for a former Minneapolis
police ofﬁcer charged with second-degree murder
in George Floyd’s death.
Derek Chauvin, 44, said little during an
11-minute hearing in which he appeared before
Hennepin County Judge Jeannice M. Reding on
closed-circuit television from the state’s maximum
security prison in Oak Park Heights. He wore a
mask and handcuffs as he sat at a table, where he
answered yes or no to routine housekeeping questions and conﬁrmed the the spelling of his name
and address. He did not enter a plea; a step that
usually comes later in Minnesota courts.
A judge raised Chauvin’s bail from $500,000 to
$1 million when a second-degree murder charge
was added on Wednesday. Monday’s hearing was a
chance for arguments over the higher bail. Prosecutor Matthew Frank argued for keeping the higher
bail, saying the seriousness of the charges and the
“strong reaction in the community, to put it mildly,”
made Chauvin a ﬂight risk. The judge agreed with
the state’s request for $1.25 million unconditional
bail, or $1 million with standard conditions including surrendering ﬁrearms, remaining law-abiding
and making all future court appearances.
Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, did not contest
the bail amount and didn’t address the substance
of the charges, which also include third-degree
murder and second-degree manslaughter.

Prosecutors spar with
Prince Andrew in probe
ONDON (AP) — U.S. prosecutors and attorneys for Britain’s Prince Andrew sniped at one
another across the Atlantic on Monday, each
saying the other side was to blame for the duke’s
failure to participate in the Jeffrey Epstein sex
trafﬁcking probe.
Andrew’s lawyers said in a statement that he
has offered three times this year to speak with
U.S. investigators after being assured that he “is
not and has never been a ‘target’ of their criminal
investigations into Epstein.”
That offer, though, came with a request that
“our co-operation and any interview arrangements
would remain conﬁdential,” said the ﬁrm Blackfords LLP in London.
“Unfortunately, the DOJ has reacted to the ﬁrst
two offers by breaching their own conﬁdentiality
rules and claiming that the Duke has offered zero
cooperation. In doing so, they are perhaps seeking
publicity rather than accepting the assistance proffered,” the lawyers said.

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

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

Card showers
Mabel Halley will be celebrating her 90th birthday on June 10, cards may be sent to 254 Lanes
Branch Rd., Crown City, Ohio 45623.
Charlene Hoeﬂich, former general manager of
The Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy, will celebrate her
birthday on June 19, cards may be sent to her at
109 High Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

Tuesday, June 9
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County District
Library Board of Trustees will hold its regular
monthly meeting at 5 p.m. at the Library.
POMEROY — The Meigs County 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. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio. A call-in option
is available for this open, public meeting in
response to the COVID 19 Pandemic and resulting declared national, state and local emergency.
+1.202.602.1295 Conference ID: 537-248-268 #
SUTTON TWP. — The monthly meeting of
the Board of Trustees of Sutton Township will be
held in the Racine Village Hall Council Chambers
beginning at 7 p.m.

Wednesday, June 10
HARRISONVILLE — Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly meeting, 7 p.m., Harrisonville
Fire House. Due to COVID-19, if visitors need
or want to ask questions, feel free to call during
meeting at 740-742-2110. Thank you for understanding.
GALLIA COUNTY — The Records Commission
meeting of the Gallia-Vinton Educational Service
Center (ESC) Governing Board will be held 4:45
p.m. and the regular monthly meeting will follow
at 5 p.m. via Zoom meeting. Join the Zoom Meeting using the link https://us04web.zoom.us/j/78491
585663?pwd=N2JiTVZ1OHpXMHFBYytDa1RVW
Uw5Zz09 and enter with the Meeting ID: 784 9158
5663. Email ecrabtree@galliavintonesc.org for
meeting password information or for more details.

Thursday, June 11
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of Directors will meet at
3:30 p.m. at the district ofﬁce in Wellston.

Friday, June 12
GALLIPOLIS — Regular monthly Board meeting of the O. O. McIntyre Park District, 11 a.m,
Park Board ofﬁce at the Gallia County Courthouse, 18 Locust St.

Saturday, June 13
POMEROY — Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
NSDAR will meet at 1 p.m. The meeting will be
held at the home of Opal Grueser, 36192 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy (1/2 mile south of Arbors).
Social distancing space will be available during
the picnic. Jordon Pickens will talk about his book,
Ofﬁcer installation will be held and a general catch
up is planned. Feel free to wear a mask. For information please call Opal.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Dire Department
will be having a ﬁsh fry/hot dog with lunch room
sauce lunch with serving to begin at 11 a.m.

Wednesday, June 17
POMEROY —A blood drive will be held at the
Mulberry Community Center from 1:30-6 p.m.
Call 1-800-733-2767 or visit RedCrossBlood.
org and enter MeigsCommunity to schedule an
appointment.
CHESHIRE — The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency Board of Directors will hold their
bi-monthly meeting on at 11:30 a.m. via virtual
meeting. If you would like to attend, please email
Lora Rawson at lrawson@galliameigscaa.org to
receive meeting access information.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Kindergarten registration
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis City Schools Early
Childhood programs are taking registering students between the ages of three and ﬁve. A drivethrough registration will be held at Washington
Elementary between 9 a.m.and 2:30 p.m. on June
15. Rio Grande Elementary, 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.,
June 17, and Greene Elementary June 16, from 9
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Families are encouraged to call
the schools to schedule an appointment. Families
will need to bring birth certiﬁcates, social security
cards, health insurance, shot records and proof
of income. Enrollment packets can also be picked
up and dropped off at 61 State Street, Gallipolis.
If there are any questions, call the Gallipolis City
Schools Board Ofﬁce at 740-446-3211.

Ohio University establishes scholarship
ATHENS, Ohio — Ohio University and The Ohio University
Foundation have established the
George Floyd Memorial Scholarship Fund in response to the June
4 call from the president of North
Central University, Scott Hagan,
who asked universities to consider
creating this scholarship during
Mr. Floyd’s memorial service in
Minneapolis.
“As leaders across our nation call
for change with regard to senseless
acts that have plagued our African
American community for centuries, we, too, at Ohio University
are committed to taking actionable
measures to help inﬂuence racial
injustice reforms,” Ohio University
President M. Duane Nellis said.
“By establishing the George Floyd

Memorial Scholarship Fund at
Ohio University, we are creating
positive measures that will impact
the lives of current and future
student leaders working with an
interest in civic responsibility and
social justice to help them achieve
their academic goals.”
The George Floyd Memorial
Scholarship Fund will be available for student leaders who
demonstrate leadership through
multicultural student organizations
and diversity initiatives at Ohio
University or who have a history
of inclusion and diversity-related
leadership in their high schools or
communities. Incoming and current students are eligible, and the
fund will be administered by the
Division for Diversity and Inclu-

sion.
“This scholarship program that
we have created is just one way
that we can take a stand against
racism,” Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion Gigi Secuban
said. “Ohio University is committed to diversity and inclusion, and
we stand strong in solidarity with
our community members of color,
especially African American community members.”
The George Floyd Memorial
Scholarship Fund at Ohio University has already received generous
contributions from members of
the University community. Anyone
who wishes to make a gift in support of the George Floyd Memorial
Scholarship Fund can do so now
online.

ODOT renews call to slow down for road workers
COLUMBUS — In
the span of eight days,
motorists have struck
ﬁve Ohio Department
of Transportation crews
working on the road. Two
of those crashes resulted
in ODOT workers being
injured.
“As more and more
Ohioans get back on the
road, it’s important that
they remember to move
over and slow down for
our men and women
working hard on the
road,” said ODOT Director Jack Marchbanks.
“These people have families they want to safely
get home to when their

vital work is done.”
The ﬁrst of the recent
crashes occurred on
Wednesday, May 27th
when a semi slammed
into the back of an ODOT
truck hauling an arrow
board as part of a rolling work zone on U.S.
30 in Crawford County.
An ODOT employee in
the truck was ﬂown to
a Columbus hospital for
treatment.
On Monday, an ODOT
employee was struck
by a motorist as he was
outside of his truck closing a ramp. He was taken
to the hospital with an
injury to his arm.

Just before 1 a.m.
Wednesday, an ODOT
crew working along I-490
in Cleveland was hit by
a vehicle. A few hours
later, an ODOT pickup
truck on U.S. 224 in Putnam County was struck
as the employee was out
placing signs for a work
zone. No one was injured
in either crash.
The latest incident
occurred this morning
when a semi clipped
the front bumper of an
ODOT dump truck on
I-77 in Cleveland. The
crew was working to
open a ramp after an
overnight closure. There

were no injuries.
“These crashes are
100% preventable.
Our workers and their
vehicles are highly visible when they’re on the
road,” added Marchbanks.
So far this year, 16
ODOT crews have been
struck while working to
make our roads safer.
Ohio’s Move Over law
was enacted in 1999. It
was expanded in December 2013 to apply to
every stationary vehicle
with ﬂashing lights,
including road construction, maintenance and
utility crews.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Technologies announced
not guilty in Chicago
almost fatal burns at his
that they would merge
to charges that he had
San Fernando Valley,
to create a massive aeroviolated banking rules
Today is Tuesday, June Calif., home while freeand lied to the FBI about space and defense compa9, the 161st day of 2020. basing cocaine.
ny. “Hadestown,” a broodpromising to pay $3.5
In 1986, the Rogers
There are 205 days left in
million in hush money to ing musical about the
Commission released its
the year.
report on the Challenger conceal misconduct from underworld, won eight
trophies at Broadway’s
Today’s Highlight in History disaster, criticizing NASA his days as a high school
Tony Awards, including
teacher. (Hastert later
and rocket-builder MorOn June 9, 2004, the
one for best new musipleaded guilty to violatton Thiokol for managebody of Ronald Reagan
ing banking law in a case cal. Rafael Nadal beat
ment problems leading
arrived in Washington
that revealed accusations Dominic Thiem in the
to the explosion that
to lie in state in the U.S.
men’s ﬁnal for his recordclaimed the lives of seven of sexual abuse, and was
Capitol Rotunda before
extending 12th French
sentenced to 15 months
astronauts.
the 40th president’s
Open championship.
in prison.) President
In 2008, retail gas
funeral.
Today’s Birthdays:
Barack Obama, addressprices rose above $4 per
Comedian Jackie Mason
ing the annual Catholic
gallon.
On this date
is 92. Media analyst
Health Association ConTen years ago: The
In A.D. 68, Roman
Marvin Kalb is 90. Forference in Washington,
Emperor Nero committed U.S. and its allies scored
mer baseball manager
declared his health care
suicide, ending a 13-year a long-sought victory by
and player Bill Virdon is
law a ﬁrmly established
pushing through new
reign.
In 1860, what’s consid- U.N. sanctions over Iran’s “reality” of American life. 89. Sports commentator
One year ago: Former Dick Vitale is 81. Author
ered the ﬁrst dime novel, nuclear program, punishLetty Cottin Pogrebin is
Boston Red Sox slugger
ments Tehran dismissed
“Malaeska: The Indian
81. Rock musician Mick
David Ortiz was shot
as “annoying ﬂies.” The
Wife of the White HuntBox (Uriah Heep) is 73.
Chicago Blackhawks won in the back in his native
er” by Ann S. Stephens,
Retired MLB All-Star
Dominican Republic by
their ﬁrst Stanley Cup
was published.
Dave Parker is 69. Film
a man police said was
in 49 years, as Patrick
In 1940, during World
composer James Newton
a hired gunman whose
Kane’s overtime goal
War II, Norway decided
intended target was sup- Howard is 69. Mystery
to surrender to the Nazis, delivered a 4-3 win over
the Philadelphia Flyers in posed to be another man; author Patricia Cornwell
effective at midnight.
is 64. Actor Michael J.
Ortiz recovered after
Game 6.
In 1943, President
surgery in the Dominican Fox is 59. Writer-producFive years ago: ForFranklin D. Roosevelt
Republic and later in Bos- er Aaron Sorkin is 59.
mer U.S. House Speaker
signed the Current Tax
ton. Raytheon and United Actor Johnny Depp is 57.
Dennis Hastert pleaded
Payment Act of 1943,
which reintroduced federal income tax withholding from paychecks.
POSITION AVAILABLE
In 1954, during the
The Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services is seeking qualified
Senate Army-McCarthy
applicants to fill a Mobility Management Coordinator’s position. The goal of the
hearings, Army special
Mobility Management program is to increase access to mobility for Ohioans by
counsel Joseph N. Welch
increasing understanding and awareness of transportation needs, coordination
berated Sen. Joseph R.
of transportation options to meet needs, and building sustainable and healthy
McCarthy, R-Wis., asking: communities by integrating transportation into planning and programs.
“Have you no sense of
decency, sir? At long last,
Program Goals:
have you left no sense of
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down a 148-year-old
P O Box 191-175 Race Street, 3rd floor
policy of excluding black
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
men from the Mormon
priesthood.
The envelope should be clearly marked Mobility Management.
In 1980, comedian
Deadline June 12, 2020 at 1:00pm
Richard Pryor suffered
The Associated Press

OH-70190743

GALLIA, MEIGS
CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Tuesday, June 9, 2020 3

�NEWS

4 Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Thousands mourn George Floyd in Texas amid calls for reform
By Juan A. Lozano and
Nomaan Merchant

up. Others traveled for
hours or drove in from
Associated Press
other states. Those
who couldn’t make it
HOUSTON — The last whipped up their own
tributes: In Los Angeles,
chance for the public to
a funeral-style procession
say goodbye to George
of cars inched through
Floyd drew thousands
downtown as the viewof mourners Monday to
ing began in Houston. In
a church in his native
Houston, as his death two Tennessee, residents of
Memphis held a moment
weeks ago continues to
stoke protests in America of silence.
Bracy Burnett
and beyond over racial
approached Floyd’s casket
injustice, and spurred
wearing a homemade
France to abruptly halt
denim face mask scrawled
the use of police choke
with “8:46” — the length
holds.
of time prosecutors say
Under the searing
Floyd, who was black,
Texas heat at The Founwas pinned to the ground
tain of Praise church,
under a white ofﬁcer’s
mourners wearing
T-shirts with Floyd’s pic- knee before he died.
“All black people are
ture or the words “I Can’t
not criminals. All white
Breathe” — the phrase
people are not racists.
he said repeatedly while
All cops are not bad.
pinned down by a MinAnd ignorance comes in
neapolis police ofﬁcer
all colors. That’s what
— waited for hours to
see Floyd’s body, dressed I thought about when I
viewed the body,” Burin a brown suit in an
open gold-colored casket. nett, 66, said.
Floyd’s death on May
One man in line fainted,
while others waiting sang 25 has inspired international protests and drawn
“Lean on Me.”
new attention to the treatSome knew Floyd
ment of African Ameriin the nearby housing
cans in the U.S. by police
projects where he grew

cans at the hands of law
enforcement.
“With this happening to him, it’s going to
make a difference in the
world,” said Pam Robinson, who grew up with
Floyd in Houston and
handed out bottled water
to mourners waiting
outside the church. One
man in the line, which
had no shade, collapsed
as temperatures spiked
above 90 degrees and
was taken by stretcher to
a cooling station in front
of the church.
Comill Adams said she
drove more than seven
hours from Oklahoma
David J. Phillip | AP City with her family,
Mourners pass by the casket of George Floyd during a public visitation for Floyd on Monday at the
including two children
Fountain of Praise church in Houston.
ages 8 and 10. They
wore matching black
come under renewed
a maximum-security
and the criminal justice
T-shirts with “I Can’t
criticism after Floyd’s
prison.
system.
Breathe” on the back —
death. And in WashingTwo weeks after
Hours into the viewshirts she made up speFloyd’s death, the impact ton, Democrats in Coning, a judge in Minnegress proposed a sweep- cially for the memorial.
apolis kept bail at $1 mil- continued to resonate
“We had been watching overhaul of police
both at home and
lion for Derek Chauvin,
oversight and procedures ing the protests on TV.
the police ofﬁcer charged abroad.
We’ve been at home
that would include a
In Paris, France’s top
with second-degree
nationwide ban on choke feeling outraged. At
murder in Floyd’s death. security ofﬁcial said
times it brought us to
holds in a potentially
Chauvin, 44, said almost police would no longer
tears,” Adams said. “The
far-reaching legislative
conduct choke holds
nothing during the
fact this one is causing
response to the mass
11-minute hearing while that have been blamed
protests denouncing the change, we had to come
for multiple cases of
appearing on closedbe a part of it.”
deaths of black Ameriasphyxiation and have
circuit television from

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The group, led by organizer Isaiah English, made its way down the Pomeroy walking path carrying
signs.

Several people carried signs as they walked, while others chanted “Black Lives Matter.”

TUESDAY EVENING
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More from the Black Lives Matter march in Pomeroy along the
walking path.

Voices
From page 1

“For those who have
come before us and
those who will come
after us. So that one day
we will be able to simply
say ‘All Lives Matter’
because all the other
stuff is taken care of,”
said Johnson.
Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood, Pomeroy
Police Chief Chris
Pitchford and Pomeroy
Ofﬁcer Leif Babb met
with organizers before
the event, and were stationed along the march
path in case anyone tried
to disrupt the protest or

cause issues of any kind.
“The police ofﬁcers
are here for us. They are
here to help us,” said
Isaiah of the ofﬁcers stationed along the route.
The protest march
stayed on the walking
path, with some passersby waiving or honking horns to show their
support, while some
even pulled off the side
of the road to watch as
the group walked by.
Another event is being
planned for Saturday
evening in Gallia County.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

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�Sports
6 Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Harvick cherishes win, looks to help off the track

Brynn Anderson | AP

Kevin Harvick (4) gets ready before a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Atlanta
Motor Speedway, in Hampton, Ga., on Sunday.

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) —
After another dominant performance at one of his favorite
tracks, Kevin Harvick relished
the past and looked ahead to
the future.
He wasn’t entirely focused
on what he can do behind the
wheel.
Harvick cruised to victory
Sunday over Kyle Busch and
Martin Truex Jr. in the NASCAR Cup race at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, leading the ﬁnal 55
laps on a day that began with
the series acknowledging the
social unrest in the country.
Before taking the green
ﬂag, the 40 cars stopped in
front of the towering, empty
grandstands on the front
stretch to listen to a message
from NASCAR president Steve
Phelps and observe a 30-second
moment of silence in the wake

of George Floyd’s death while
in police custody.
Harvick also joined other
drivers in making a video that
promised to push for muchneeded changes in the fractured nation.
“Something has to change.
When you look at what happened in Minneapolis, it’s just
disgraceful to everyone,” he
said. “It’s just unbelievable
to sit and watch these things
happen. It’s really confusing. It
makes you confused and mad.
Now we know what we need to
do and where to start.”
Harvick won for the second
time since NASCAR returned
from the shutdown caused by
the coronavirus pandemic, adding to his emotional victory
at Darlington in the ﬁrst race
back.
Harvick came into the day

having led 1,138 laps on the
1.54-mile Atlanta trioval, far
more than any other driver in
the 40-car ﬁeld.
This one was more of the
same. Harvick was out front for
151 laps — more than twice
as many as anyone else — and
claimed his a third victory in
Atlanta, where he got ﬁrst Cup
triumph in 2001 and another
win two years ago.
“For me, this place is pretty
special,” said Harvick, who
beat Busch by more than 3 1/2
seconds, with Truex nearly 5
seconds behind. “It brings back
a lot of memories.”
On a reverse victory lap,
Harvick held three ﬁngers
outside his car, a tribute to the
late Dale Earnhardt. Harvick
was the driver who replaced
See HARVICK | 7

NFL players both
eager &amp; anxious
to return
DENVER (AP) — Seasonal colds and the ﬂu
spread through NFL locker rooms just about every
year, sending some players home sick while others
slog through practices hoping they’ll feel better by
game day.
Last December, the Patriots ﬂew two airplanes
to Houston to keep the healthy players apart from
sick ones, which included seven starters. On the
ﬁnal weekend of the 2016 season, the Raiders
were ravaged by a bug that swept through their
entire roster and waylaid hopes of a deep playoff
run.
Now, teams have COVID-19 to worry about.
Offseason workout programs have been entirely
virtual since the league closed team facilities
in March because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Coaches began returning to their ofﬁces Friday
but players not seeking treatment for injuries
probably won’t be allowed to return until training
camps open next month.
Many players polled by The Associated Press
say they’re scared to return to work without a cure
or a vaccine for the coronavirus that has infected
millions worldwide and killed more than 100,000
Americans. But they’re putting their trust in the
health protocols the NFL’s medical staff is developing for practices to resume and games to return.
Safeguards are expected to include daily temperature checks and frequent virus tests, with sick
players quarantined for two weeks.
The only players allowed into team headquarters over the last three months are those rehabbing from serious injuries. One of those is Broncos
edge rusher Bradley Chubb, who missed most of
last season with a torn knee ligament.
“To be honest, playing football is like my No.
1 goal right now just because of the whole injury
thing,” Chubb told The AP, “but I feel like when it
comes to the coronavirus, the NFL has great leaders in place to make sure we’re going to be back
in the safest way possible. I know these guys are
going to come up with a solution.”
That appears to be a common sentiment across
the league.
“I’m not too concerned,” Bears wide receiver
Allen Robinson said. “I think that if we’re going
to be put back in the facility, I think measures are
going to be taken. I think that a plan will be had
and I think that enough research and stuff will
have been done to put everybody in the best kind
of situation.”
Robinson said being in a locker room is no different than ofﬁce, restaurant or factory workers
who have returned to their jobs recently under
new rules designed to mitigate the spread of the
virus that has devastated the global economy.
“People are close upon each other every day
that are working together, so I think that as everyone kind of gets back to work, I think that with
a good plan … everything will be ﬁne,” Robinson
said. “I’m not too worried. It’s not anything in my
control, so if I’m back in the locker room and back
playing, my level of concern will be pretty low.”
Staying safe and healthy is more important than
ever, suggested Falcons center Alex Mack.
“It’s deﬁnitely a concern this year,” Mack said.
“Every year during cold and ﬂu seasons, they
harp on us to get our ﬂu shot. We’re aware of the
risks of that. It’s always in the mind of the team to
make sure guys are healthy. You’re don’t want half
a team missing practice time. You don’t want a
bunch of guys sick on game day.”
As a rookie in 2009, Mack was clobbered by the
swine ﬂu during the world’s last pandemic.
“I had to sit home for three or four days, then I
had to jump into a game with no practice. It didn’t
turn out well,” Mack said. “That’s not what I want
See NFL | 7

Gerry Broome | AP, File

In this Dec. 8, 2018, photo, Duke fans cheer as Yale’s Jordan Bruner (23) waits to inbound the ball during the first half of an NCAA college
basketball game in Durham, N.C. As lock-downs are lifted, restrictions on social gatherings eased and life begins to resemble some
sense, sports are finally starting to emerge from the coronavirus pandemic. Many sports business experts believe those hardy fans will
be the first to return.

Fan experience to change profoundly
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) — Dayton Moore
remembers so clearly the
vast sections of empty
seats inside Kauffman
Stadium when he took
over as general manager
of the Kansas City Royals, and he remembers
just as vividly — nearly
a decade later — how
those seats ﬁlled and
fans roared as the longsuffering club won the
World Series.
Those dueling memories make the thought of
playing games in empty
stadiums hard for Moore
to fathom.
“I know how much
strength all players draw
from the fans and environment,” he said, when
asked about plans to
play a shortened season
without crowds, “and
you need that support
to get through an entire
Major League Baseball
schedule.”
As lockdowns are lifted
and restrictions eased,
sports are ﬁnally starting
to emerge in the coronavirus pandemic. But in
virtually every situation,
fans are not yet being
allowed to attend and the
only consensus for now
is that there could be a
long period of empty or
nearly empty seating.
Some U.S. universities
are modeling for 25%
capacity for the upcoming football season or
maybe half-full arenas for
the ensuing basketball
season.
“I think for most
sports, a reduced crowd
wouldn’t negatively
impact the overall expe-

rience, especially in a
situation like baseball
or even the NFL,” said
Katy Lucy, a digital
marketing agent from
Atlanta whose fandom is
split between all things
Georgia Bulldogs and
the Washington Capitals.
“But it would be different
for sure for those who
attend in person.”
Count her family
among those who would
pause before heading to
the ballpark.
“For me personally,
I’m not sure I would feel
comfortable attending a
live sporting event until
there is a known treatment or widely available
vaccine,” Lucy said. “I
trust the institutions to
put the proper measures
in place; however, making sure that they are
enforced is another matter.”
Many college and pro
sports teams already
were dealing with
declining ticket sales.
Watching at home or
streaming games are
factors, as is the changing social makeup of fan
bases. Dynamic pricing,
increases in parking and
concession prices, and a
push toward luxury seating have exacerbated the
problem.
Major League Baseball
attendance has declined
six of the past seven seasons. In college football,
13 of the 130 schools
that played in the Football Bowl Subdivision
reported average crowd
sizes of 50% or less last
season. Even the NFL
has seen an increase in

empty seats despite its
generally rock-solid popularity.
So as coronavirus
concerns linger, how are
teams going to lure fans
back when stadiums do
reopen?
Loyalty and engagement apps, widespread
around the major leagues
and colleges even before
the pandemic, will
become even more common and interactive as
teams try to recapture
lost revenue. There also
will be more behindthe-scenes content and
enhancements available
via smartphones that will
only be available to those
in the stadium or arena,
offering fans something
unique over fans watching at home.
“Fans want that experience to be top-notch,
period. That’s why teams
are thinking about this,”
said Britton Stackhouse
Miller, senior vice president at Fortress U.S., a
developer of engagement
and integration systems
with clients in European soccer, baseball, the
NBA, NFL and NHL.
Temperature checks,
hand sanitizer distribution stations and touchless vending will become
the norm for a while.
Even concessions will
change, though one big
difference — gulp —
could lead to a lot of
grumbling.
“If you don’t sell beer
the number of visits
to the bathroom drops
dramatically,” said Marc
Ganis, the director of
sports consulting ﬁrm

Sportscorp. “So for a
time we may have to
think about not selling
beer.”
It won’t just be the
vast oceans of bench
seats left open, either.
Many experts believe
those hardy fans will
be the ﬁrst to return.
It’s the corporate suites
from which many colleges and pro franchises
derive so much of their
gameday revenue that
may end up being
empty until long after
games have resumed.
Economic woes may last
for some time.
For fans who stay
home, leagues are looking for ways to keep
them engaged, too.
When Germany’s top
soccer league returned
without fans, broadcaster Sky knew it had
a problem with silence
coming through the TV.
Engineers created “carpet audio” from previous games between the
same teams, then teased
out roars for speciﬁc
events such as goals and
red cards, giving those
watching at home the
option of a more realistic experience.
“This was the only
idea that we thought
could be most respectful to the fans,” said
Alessandro Reitano,
vice president of sports
production for Sky
Deutschland. “To be
honest, it’s a major success.”
Old crowd noise is
a bit like an old game,
See EXPERIENCE | 7

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Ohio Valley Publishing

NFL
From page 6

to do ever again. This year, it’s going to be
the utmost concern. Being a novel virus,
there’s no real history. If you get the ﬂu,
people know what happens. You recover
and get better. With the coronavirus,
there’s a lot of scary things going on in
terms of a scarring of the lungs and things
like that. (So) playing it safe is the smartest move.”
Staving off outbreaks of COVID-19 is
essential for the NFL to play a full schedule
this season as planned.
“It’s just doing the little things that you
already should be doing,” Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “Hope you taking a shower. Hope you wash your hands.
And don’t be all up in everybody’s face.”
What’s not an option, he stressed, was
ignoring the risk.
“It’s real. It’s not something that you can
walk away from or something that you hide
from,” Wagner said. “It’s going to make the
season a little interesting. We don’t know
how interesting.”
The pandemic hit home for a lot of players in April when Super Bowl 50 MVP
Von Miller announced he had contracted
COVID-19. He has since recovered.
“When Von got sick, it was like OK,
this thing is serious,” Chubb said. “I can’t
just be out here doing whatever. I’ve got
to make sure I’m staying in my house and
doing everything I can to prevent getting
this illness and spreading this illness.”
Bears defensive tackle Akiem Hicks said
he’s both eager and anxious to play football
again.
“I have been quarantining for a really
long time. I even made a drink. It’s called
the ‘quarantini,’” Hicks said, adding that
he quit quafﬁng his tequila-infused creations after reading somewhere that alcohol
wasn’t the best idea at this time. “But I will
say this: It’s scary. It’s scary to think that
most of my job is physical contact. You
know what I’m saying? With other players.
“And so, boy, I don’t know. I don’t know.
I want to be safe, and I’m sure that they’re
going to do their best to make sure we’re
in the best possible situation on the ﬁeld
to play this game and do it right. But it’s
scary.”

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

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Harvick

engines” command to
his fellow drivers. The
speedway also renamed
a grandstand in honor of
From page 6
Johnson, who is retiring
as a full-time competitor
Earnhardt after the
seven-time champion was at the end of the year.
A ﬁve-time winner on
killed in a crash at Daythe 1.54-mile trioval,
tona in 2001.
Three weeks later, Har- Johnson had another
strong run in Atlanta. But
vick took the checkered
his seventh-place showing
ﬂag in Atlanta.
extended a winless that
“To celebrate the life
stretches back more than
of Dale Earnhardt and
three years.
everything he meant to
NASCAR returned
our sport, is obviously
to Atlanta to make up
pretty special to me,”
a race that was initially
Harvick said.
He now has 51 wins — scheduled for March 15.
It became the ﬁrst race
breaking a tie with Ned
to be postponed as U.S.
Jarrett and Junior Johnsports largely shut down
son for the 12th spot on
to deal with a pandemic
the career list.
that has now claimed
“You just shake your
more than 110,000 Amerhead and say, ‘Man, I
ican lives.
can’t believe this is hapThis time, it was the
pening,’” Harvick said.
spot where NASCAR
“It’s pretty crazy when
you think about. I’ve been waded into the debate
over the injustices
very lucky to drive cars
endured by African Amerfor a living.”
icans — a striking move
Seven-time Cup chamfor a sport that once
pion Jimmie Johnson, in
embraced Confederate
what may have been his
ﬁnal Atlanta appearance, symbols and still struggles to overcome its perwas given the honor of
delivering the “start your ception as a conservative

bastion reserved largely
for whites.
Bubba Wallace, the
only African American in
the Cup series, donned
a black T-shirt with the
words “I Can’t Breathe”
and “Black Lives Matter”
while standing on pit
road before the race.
Wallace ﬁnished 21st
and appeared to faint
after climbing from
his car on a blistering
day when temperatures
climbed into the mid-80s.
He said he was OK and
did a portion of a television interview, but then
was wasn’t able to speak.
Wallace was taken by
ambulance to the inﬁeld
care center, where to was
sitting up as he was taken
inside on a stretcher. He
was treated and released
a short time later, though
no additional details were
provided on what caused
his problem.
Maybe it was the heat.
Maybe it was just the
emotion of becoming the
sport’s most outspoken
voice since Floyd died
while in the custody of
Minneapolis police.

Phelps spoke to the
drivers over their radio
sets before they took the
green ﬂag.
“Our country is in pain
and people are justiﬁably
angry, demanding to be
heard,” Phelps said. “The
black community and
all people of color have
suffered in our country,
and it has taken far too
long for us to hear their
demands for change. Our
sport must do better. Our
country must do better.”
All 40 crews stood on
the wall in front of their
pit boxes. One of Wallace’s crew member held
up the T-shirt, which the
driver removed before
climbing into his car.
Floyd’s death has
sparked massive protests in all 50 states
and around the world
demanding an end to law
enforcement brutality
against people of color.
Harvick said he’s ready
to join the cause.
“There’s things we can
do to try to help our communities, help the conversation,” he said. “We need
to change.”

Experience

Anderson, adding the system could soon handle as
many as 150,000 fans for
each game.
Sound is one element
of the fan experience.
Optics is another.
“When it was clear
there would be no audience this season, the fans
had the idea of bringing
their images to the stadium,” said Lubbo Popken,
deputy press secretary

for German soccer club
Borussia Monchengladbach, which afﬁxed fan
likenesses to their seats.
“We were surprised how
many people wanted to
be part of this idea and
have their images in the
stadium. It really changed
the atmosphere in the
empty stadium.”
Of course, none of that
is the same as having real
fans creating real noise.

into a single stream. That
stream is then returned
to the viewer using proprietary algorithms to
From page 6
provide the broadcast with
though. It lacks a certain real-time sound, which is
then immediately erased to
authenticity. So along
came ChampTrack, which ensure personal privacy.
“Once they press play
created an app that utilizes
the microphones of fans. It on our web app, they can
hear what everyone else is
captures their every roar
cheering about and their
and groan and sends the
own cheer,” said Champaudio to its server, which
Track chief executive Elias
then aggregates the noise

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EMPLOYMENT

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Bids will be received at the above named office until 12:00
noon, local time, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020 and publicly
opened at that hour and place.
Bids specifications and forms may be obtained at the above
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�NEWS/WEATHER

8 Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Record
From page 1

she had recently broken
up with the male and that
he was making threats
towards her and accusing
her of child abuse and
drug use and going to try
to get her to lose her job.
Deputies will review the
information on how to
proceed.
11:15 a.m. — Deputies
responded to Bigley Ridge
Road for a neighbor dispute. The neighbor allegedly hit the caller with an
ATV and then took off on
the vehicle.
12:55 p.m. — Pomeroy
PD advised a woman
reported that she was
being held against her
will and had escaped.
The sheriff’s ofﬁce went
to Pomeroy PD to take a
report as it was outside of
Pomeroy’s jurisdiction.
2:02 p.m. — A call was
received from a home
health agency reporting
that one of their clients
had his stimulus check
stolen from his account.
The check was deposited
on May 14, but was gone
on May 15. The only
person with access to the
bank card other than the
client was the home health
aide who quit work for the
company on May 14. The
client reported the theft to
his case manager. A copy
of bank records were being
retrieved and dropped of
at the sheriff”s ofﬁce.
2:43 p.m. — A call
was received regarding a
young child (maybe 2 or 3
years old) running around
carrying a blanket with no
adult present in Racine.
Deputies made contact
with Children Protective
Services to handle the
case moving forward.
4:23 p.m. — Deputies
responded to an address
in Portland after a female
called 911 and stated “help
me”. Deputies advised
EMS that the female was

because they were out of
gas and someone was on
the way.
2:03 p.m. — A resident
of Township Road 382
called in reference to items
which were stolen in October or November, and that
his insurance company
now wanted a report.
4:12 p.m. — A call
was received regarding
a young child walking
around at the Racine Park.
Children Services was
advised of the call similar
to the day before. Grandpa
picked up the child and
was check on by CPS and
a deputy.
8:16 p.m. — Sheriff’s
ofﬁce received a call from
Highway Patrol of a pursuit in Vinton County by
the sheriff’s ofﬁce which
was entering Meigs County on Bowles Road. The
blue truck was traveling in
excess of 70 MPH. Vinton
County advised the pursuit moved to Dye Road
and stopped at the intersection of Side Hill Road
and Dye Road where the
male ﬂed into the woods.
Two females, age 12 and
17, were in the vehicle.
Deputies, along with the
K9 unit, attempted to
June 5
track the suspect in the
4:15 a.m. — Deputies
woods. Deputies, along
responded to a call on
Bigley Ridge for a possible with Children Services,
transported the juveniles
domestic complaint after
a 911 call with screaming to their grandmother.
8:21 p.m. — Depuand yelling in the backties responded to a call
ground.
of a suspicious truck on
12:59 p.m. — EMS
property where items had
received a call of a subpreviously been stolen on
ject on White’s Hill Road
punching glass and cutting Gilkey Ridge. The subjects
left prior to the arrival
his hand. EMS advised
of deputies. There were
the subject allegedly got
tracks back to the barn,
in an argument with the
but nothing appeared to
grandmother who no
be missing. The suspect
longer wants the juvenile
there. The call was further vehicle is a blue ﬂat bed
truck.
handled by the juvenile
probation ofﬁcer.
1:46 p.m. — A call was June 6
received a a vehicle that
12:56 a.m. — A resident
had been parked on 124
on State Route 684 called
near the Hot Spot gas
to report that his neighbor
station for a while and
had shot his windshield
it looked like a female
out and busted it out. On
passed out inside. Subjects scene, deputies advised
advised they parked there that there was debris
having chest pain and difﬁculty breathing.
8:06 p.m. — The Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
along with Middleport PD
and Pomeroy PD, responded to a report of a shooting on Zuspan Hollow
Road. The individual had
been shot in the foot by
a suspect who reportedly
ﬂed from the scene after.
The incident occurred at a
residence in Gallia County,
with dispatch contacting
Gallia County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce to have ofﬁcers
come to the scene. Meigs
County Deputies located
the male suspect in a vehicle near the end of Zuspan
Hollow and detained
him. A female was also
reportedly injured and was
detained for questioning
after going to the ER.
The suspects vehicle was
towed from the scene. The
case is being handled by
Gallia County.
10:26 p.m. — Sheriff’s
ofﬁce responded with
EMS to a possible overdose on Howell Hill Road.
The individual was transported to the ER by Meigs
County EMS.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

70°

86°

Partly sunny today. A thunderstorm in spots
tonight. High 94° / Low 73°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

84°
55°
81°
60°
100° in 1933
41° in 1977

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.91
1.17
23.92
19.36

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
none
9:41 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Jun 13 Jun 21 Jun 28

Full

Jul 5

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

Major
Today 3:30a
Wed. 4:28a
Thu. 5:21a
Fri.
6:08a
Sat.
6:51a
Sun. 7:31a
Mon. 8:08a

Minor
9:43a
10:40a
11:32a
12:19p
12:41a
1:21a
1:58a

Major
3:56p
4:52p
5:44p
6:30p
7:12p
7:51p
8:28p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
10:09p
11:05p
11:55p
---1:02p
1:41p
2:18p

WEATHER HISTORY
The storm that spawned one of
Cleveland’s rare killer tornadoes on
June 8, 1953, moved on to cause
New England’s worst tornado disaster
ever on June 9. The storm struck
Worcester, Mass., and took 90 lives.

82°
58°

A shower and
thunderstorm around

Nice with sunshine

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY

Portsmouth
93/75

300

500

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. Mon.

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
13.18
16.74
22.00
13.14
12.87
24.93
12.29
26.55
34.70
12.56
21.80
34.20
21.90

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.67
+0.46
+0.43
+0.45
-0.35
+0.52
+0.03
-1.88
-1.23
-0.65
-2.20
-1.50
-1.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

85°
58°

OH-70189005

Information as provided by the
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
through call logs.
© 2020 Ohio Valley Publishing, all
rights reserved.

MONDAY

82°
57°

A t-storm in spots in Clouds and sun with a
the afternoon
t-storm possible

Sunny and pleasant

Marietta
92/72
Belpre
92/72

Athens
91/72

St. Marys
93/72

Parkersburg
92/72

Coolville
92/73

Elizabeth
93/72

Spencer
92/72

Buffalo
92/72
Milton
93/73

St. Albans
91/73

Huntington
92/74

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
62/56
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
76/55
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
93/69
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

June 7
1:57 a.m. — The sheriff’s ofﬁce responded with
Meigs County EMS for a
possible overdose on Briar
Ridge Road. The male was
transported by EMS to
the ER.
3:24 p.m. — A hit-skip
in the Taco Bell parking
lot in Pomeroy resulted
in a pursuit through
Pomeroy with the suspect
reportedly striking a light
pole and signs, while leaving the roadway multiple
times before crashing near
Powell’s Foodfair. Deputies deployed a taser on
the driver, who was taken
into custody. He was
transported to the ER and
then to Middleport PD.
6:21 p.m. — A deputy
conducted a trafﬁc stop
on Peach Fork near
Rocksprings Road. The
driver reportedly had a
suspended license. Consent to search was given
and drugs were reportedly
located in the vehicle.
The driver was taken into
custody on an outstanding warrant and taken
to Middleport Jail. The
plates on the vehicle were
reportedly stolen and did
not return to the vehicle
they were on. The vehicle
was towed from the scene.
7:12 p.m. — Deputies
conducted a trafﬁc stop
near Hartwell Storage.
Both women in the vehicle
were taken into custody
on warrants out of other
agencies/counties.
8:45 p.m. — A male
called in regard to his
15 year old wanting to
confess to vandalizing a
dugout.
10:15 p.m. — A female
came to the sheriff’s
ofﬁcer to report a sexual
assault.

SUNDAY

77°
56°

Murray City
90/73

Ironton
93/74

Ashland
93/74
Grayson
92/74

Primary pollutant: Ozone

SATURDAY

Wilkesville
91/72
POMEROY
Jackson
93/73
92/73
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
94/73
93/73
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
90/74
GALLIPOLIS
94/73
93/73
93/73

South Shore Greenup
92/74
92/74

48

FRIDAY

the statement had disappeared.

81°
57°
Times of sun and
clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
90/72

Lucasville
92/74

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
91/74

Very High

Primary: pine,walnut
Mold: 2374

Logan
91/73

Adelphi
91/74

Waverly
91/74

Pollen: 259

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

THURSDAY

89°
61°

4

Primary: basidiospores, unk.

Wed.
6:03 a.m.
8:53 p.m.
12:36 a.m.
10:44 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

thing was found to be
secure. The female, who
reportedly has dementia
issues, believed someone
broke in and set off the
alarm.
5:52 p.m. — A woman
called and reported that
she, along with her husband and kids, had been
at her mother-in-law’s to
drop off an item and the
mother-in-law allegedly
said to her that she would
“cave her skull in”. The
caller spoke with a deputy,
who then went to the
mother-in-law’s residence
to speak with her.
8:33 p.m. — A resident
of Cremeans Road called
and stated that his neighbor told him his ex-wife
was on the callers property again and that she
had been there previously
and was asked to leave.
Upon arrival, the female
reportedly became hostile
and told deputies she was
going to “swing on them”
if they tried to remove
her from the property.
The female reportedly
attempted to ﬁght deputies who deployed a taser.
The female was checked
by EMS, arrested and
taken to the Middleport
Jail. She was arrested earlier in the week as well for
the same action.
11:54 p.m. — A call was
received from a woman on
Buddy Road, Albany, that
there were people outside
her house and that she
had called the night before
but no one came (there
is no report of a previous call on the log). She
advised the she would like
someone to speak to her.
Deputies on scene advised
the female appeared to
have drug induced paranoia. She later called back
and advised that while
deputies were there someone came in and took
her Kindle and receipts.
The female called back
again and stated that the
individual then reportedly went to her uncle’s
telling that she called and

on the roadway. The
alleged subjects involved
were reportedly walking
around Harrisonvill with
a BB gun on their hip.
The caller did not want a
report and was guessing
on who the suspects may
be. Deputies patrolled the
area looking for any suspicious activity.
8:12 a.m. — A man
called and reported that
earlier that morning he
had went to get his cat
from his neighbor’s property and that when he was
coming back up the road
the neighbor stopped him,
had a gun in his pocket,
and confronted him about
being on the property.
The neighbor called in
as well and stated that
about six months ago the
original caller had come
to his property with a shot
gun and tried to run him
off. He came to the ofﬁce
then and wanted someone
to talk to the man about
staying off his property.
He stated that when the
man came to get his cat he
confronted him and said
he was going to call the
cops. Deputies spoke with
both individuals.
11:52 a.m. — A woman
called and stated that her
husband had gone to Dollar General in Rutland
and that another man had
started a confrontation
with him and tried to
assault him and her husband had to defend himself. A report was taken.
1:56 p.m. — A caller
advised of a possible
domestic situation on
State Route 143 at a residence near MiBoyz. The
caller stated it looked
like the female had been
assaulted and was running
down the road while a
male was throwing rocks
at her. On scene, both parties advised that they were
just looking for keys and
had a verbal argument.
4:30 p.m. — Deputies
responded to an alarm
activation call on Union
Street in Rutland. Every-

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

88°

Daily Sentinel

Clendenin
92/71
Charleston
92/73

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
65/49

Billings
66/49

Montreal
72/59

Minneapolis
83/58
Chicago
88/70

Denver
69/45
Kansas City
86/56

Toronto
87/67
Detroit
90/74

New York
86/69
Washington
93/76

CRISTOBAL

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

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
78/50/s
57/47/c
85/73/t
79/68/s
93/70/s
66/49/pc
69/50/c
80/62/s
92/73/pc
86/73/pc
62/39/pc
88/70/t
89/75/pc
91/74/pc
91/73/pc
96/65/s
69/45/pc
77/57/r
90/74/pc
87/73/pc
98/74/s
86/70/t
86/56/t
88/68/s
92/63/pc
93/69/s
87/76/t
90/79/c
83/58/t
87/73/t
92/78/t
86/69/s
86/56/s
91/74/t
89/70/s
95/73/s
94/73/s
73/57/s
88/73/pc
91/72/pc
87/66/t
68/51/s
76/55/s
62/56/r
93/76/s

Hi/Lo/W
85/58/s
63/48/c
85/69/c
80/70/pc
94/74/pc
72/49/pc
82/57/s
80/64/pc
89/64/t
85/71/c
70/44/pc
78/62/t
83/60/c
89/63/t
87/61/t
91/67/s
77/49/pc
71/58/pc
86/58/t
87/75/pc
94/67/pc
80/60/c
76/56/pc
96/72/s
81/59/s
92/64/s
85/63/pc
88/77/pc
69/58/r
88/62/c
90/74/c
88/70/pc
86/58/s
89/72/t
91/74/pc
103/78/s
91/64/t
67/59/pc
88/72/t
89/73/pc
73/61/pc
79/57/pc
77/56/s
71/56/c
93/74/pc

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
85/73

High
Low

El Paso
89/60

103° in Del Rio, TX
25° in Eureka, NV

Global
High
Low

Houston
98/74

Chihuahua
91/62
Monterrey
102/73

Miami
90/79

117° in Bilma, Niger
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

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