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                  <text>Float your
way to
peace

Lady
Eagles
get win

OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

15°

34°

32°

Partly sunny today. Partly cloudy tonight.
High 42° / Low 20°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 12, Volume 74

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 s 50¢

Court rejects use
of system to assess
candidates for bail
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The Ohio
Supreme Court has
rejected a recommendation that tools used
to measure offenders’
suitability for being
released after an arrest
be made available to
all judges as they make
bail decisions.
Requiring the availability of so-called “risk
assessment tools” was
the top recommendation of a task force commissioned by the court
last year to examine
Ohio’s bail system.
The tools — there
are several nationally — look at a variety
of factors, including
defendants’ age, criminal history and past
failures to appear when
analyzing what type of
bond conditions should
be set. More than 70
courts in Ohio already
use them.
Supporters say the
tools are a more accurate way to examine
the two most important
factors that judges
consider when setting
bond: Will the offender
skip out, and will they
pose a public safety risk
if released?
Detractors say the
tools can be racially
biased, costly to smaller courts, and improperly override judges’
own experiences in setting bond.
Despite the task
force’s recommendation, the court voted
5-2 against including the requirement,
according to minutes
of the vote obtained
by The Associated
Press through an open
records request.
Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor and
Justice Michael Donnelly voted in favor of
the assessment tools.
Justices Judi French,
Sharon Kennedy, Pat
Fischer, Pat DeWine,
and Melody Stewart
voted against.
The vote doesn’t preclude judges from using
the tools, O’Connor, a
strong supporter of the
tools, said in an interview.
“There’s many courts
in our state that do
that, and will continue

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3, 5
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

to that, because they
have seen purpose
and usefulness in
it,” O’Connor said.
O’Connor has been
pushing to reduce the
use of cash bail for
years. In 2018, she
sent a letter to more
than 650 judges urging
them to avoid imposing
excessive ﬁnes, fees
or bail simply to raise
money.
Support on the bail
task force was not
unanimous for the
assessment tools but
was overwhelming, said
Judge Mary Katherine
Huffman, a Montgomery County Common
Pleas Court judge and
the chairwoman of the
task force. She said she
was disappointed by
the Supreme Court’s
decision but respected
it.
Some opponents
mistakenly believe such
tools take decisions
completely out of judges’ hands by forcing
reliance on a calculation, which is not true,
Huffman said.
“It is one more tool
in the judge’s toolbox in
terms of information in
helping the judge make
the decision,” Huffman
said. “It does not make
the decision for the
judge.”
Lucas County courts
adopted a public safety
assessment tool in
2015. Since then, the
court has seen drops in
crimes committed by
those out on bail and
a drop in defendants
on bail skipping court
appearances, even as
the number of defendants released without
cash bail has doubled.
Judges recognize
the potential for racial
bias since minorities
are overrepresented in
corrections facilities in
general, and take steps
to keep it as racially
neutral as possible, said
Toledo Municipal Court
Judge Timothy Kuhlman.
Combining a risk
assessment tool and
judicial discretion
“gives us the greatest
possibility of accurately
predicting and letting
See COURT | 5

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

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Loyalty is Forever representatives joined those from the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office in presenting certificates of appreciation to the
Meigs County Council on Aging Close to Home Catering and Wal-Mart of Mason. Pictured (from left) are Shannon Miller of Loyalty is
Forever, Deputy Matt Martin, Sheriff’s Office Administrative Assistant Cheyenne Martin, Tina Wood Richards of Loyalty is Forever, Sheriff
Keith Wood, Wal-Mart representatives Glenda Reitmire and Malinda Casto, Council on Aging Executive Director Beth Shaver, Wal-Mart
of Mason Manager Brian Blain, Wal-Mart representatives Missy Warth, Holly Jenkins, Connie Fish, Pam Trippett, and Kaitlyn Smith and
Lori Miller of Loyalty is Forever.

Working together to support area youth
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MASON, W.Va. — Following another successful year of Shop with a
Cop, Loyalty is Forever
recognized those who
help to make the event

possible for area youth
each year.
Loyalty is Forever
representatives Shannon and Lori Miller and
Tina Wood Richards,
joined by Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood,
Deputy Matt Martin

and administrative assistant Cheyenne Martin,
presented certiﬁcates
of appreciation to Beth
Shaver of the Meigs
County Council on Aging
Close to Home Catering
and Brian Blain Manager
of Wal-Mart in Mason.

Deputy Martin was the
top fundraiser in the
sheriff’s ofﬁce “No Shave
November” fundraiser
for Shop with a Cop.
Lori Miller explained
that for the past two
See YOUTH | 5

Dean Wright | OVP

Educator and Journalist Ella Coleman addresses visitors in the Galllipolis Paint Creek Baptist Church about the importance of looking
to the future of civil rights.

To look ‘Beyond’ the teachings of MLK
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Area residents
and visitors gathered at Paint
Creek Baptist Church Monday
afternoon to remember the lessons
of American Civil Rights Movement leader Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. as part of an annual

tribute held by a coalition of the
Southeastern Ohio Branch of the
NAACP, University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community College and RSVP of the Ohio Valley.
Branch President Mabel Tanner
served as the event’s mistress of
ceremonies. Sabrina Hurt served
as pianist. The invocation was
led by Rev. Dr. D.C. Carter of the

First Baptist Church of Burlington.
Attending youth led the Pledge of
Allegiance.
The congregation joined voices
for “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”
Branch First Vice President
Kyle Gilliland welcomed visitors
to the event. Gallia Sheriff Matt
See MLK | 5

Feds allow use of opioid funds to stem meth surge
WASHINGTON (AP)
— Alarmed by a deadly
new twist in the nation’s
drug addiction crisis, the
government will allow
states to use federal
money earmarked for the
opioid epidemic to help
growing numbers of people struggling with meth
and cocaine.
The little-noticed
change is buried in a massive spending bill passed

by Congress late last year.
Pressed by constituents
and state ofﬁcials, lawmakers of both parties
and the Trump administration agreed to broaden
the scope of a $1.5 billion grant program previously restricted to the
opioid crisis. Starting
this year states can also
use those federal dollars
to counter addiction to
“stimulants,” a term the

government uses for
methamphetamine and
cocaine.
“Meth and cocaine are
making a comeback and
they are more potent
than they were during
the last wave,” said Mark
Stringer, director of Missouri’s Department of
Mental Health. He oversees the state’s efforts to
prevent addiction, get
drug-dependent people

into treatment, and support them in recovery.
“Where meth is much
more prevalent than opioids, this will be a gamechanger.”
About 68,000 people
died of drug overdoses
in the U.S. in 2018, with
opioids involved in about
two-thirds of the cases.
Opioids are a drug class
See FUNDS | 5

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Remains identified as missing Oak Hill man

DEATH NOTICES
MORRISON
LETART, W.Va. — Wesley Marion “Pete” Morrison,
82, of Letart, W.Va., died January 21, 2020, at the
Abbyshire Nursing Center, Bidwell.
There will be no public services at this time. A private graveside will be held at Sunrise Memorial Gardens, Letart. Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason,
has been entrusted with the arrangements.
CARRICO
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Judy Ann Salmons Carrico, 68, of Chesapeake, Ohio, died Tuesday, January
21, 2020 at home. A graveside service will be held 11
a.m. Thursday, January 23, 2020 at Union Hill Cemetery. Burial will follow. No visitation will be held.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio
is assisting the family with arrangements.
BARKER
TROUTVILLE, Va. — Sidney Allen “Sid” Barker,
65, of Troutville, Va., and formerly of Southside,
W.Va., died January 19, 2020, after a brave four-year
battle with pancreatic cancer.
Funeral Services will be conducted at 1 p.m. on
Thursday, January 23, 2020, at Rainbow Forest Baptist Church in Troutville. Visitation will be held from
5 until 8 p.m. on Wednesday, January 22, 2020 and
again on Thursday from noon until the 1 p.m. at the
church. Arrangements by Oakey’s East Chapel, Roanoke, Va.
MITCHELL, SR.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Norman L. Mitchell, Sr., 82,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Monday, January 20, 2020
at Holzer Medical Center. His funeral service will be
1 pm Saturday, January 25, 2020 at Willis Funeral
Home. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
prior to the funeral service. A complete obituary will
be published later.
TAYLOR
RUSSELL, Ky. — William (Bill) Taylor, 61, Russell,
Ky., died after a long illness at Our Lady of Bellefonte
Hospital on January 16, 2020.

Staff Report

JACKSON, OHIO—
An Oak Hill family has
been notiﬁed that their
son, who was reported
missing on his birthday
last year, has been found.
“It’s not the homecoming they have hoped for,”
said Jackson County
Sheriff Tedd Frazier of
the Saylor family. “We
have notiﬁed the family
of Benjamin Michael
Saylor, that it was his
remains that were found
on Saturday, January 11.
Jackson County Coroner
Dr. Alice Frazier notiﬁed the Sheriff of the
conﬁrmation Monday
afternoon.”
The conﬁrmation
came from dental
records submitted to the
Montgomery County
Coroner’s Ofﬁce, according to Sheriff Frazier.
Attorney General Dave
Yost’s ofﬁce continues
to assist in the investigation, Frazier added.
The determination
on Saylor’s identity, in
part, was through dental
records. “The principal basis of the dental
identiﬁcation lies in the
fact that no two oral
cavities are alike and the
teeth are unique to an
individual,” Dr. Frazier
explained.
Investigators with the
Jackson County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, along with investigators of Gallia County
Sheriff Matt Champlin’s

Jackson Co. Sheriff’s Office | Courtesy

Remains recently found in Jackson County have been identified
as Benjamin Michael Saylor, pictured here. Saylor’s last contact
with family was on July 26, 2019.

Ofﬁce, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), and Dr. Frazier
responded to a call on
CH &amp; D Road, near
Jackson, investigating
the discovery of human
remains Saturday, Jan.
11, 2020. The Jackson
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
received a call from an
adult male stating that
two kids discovered,
what they believed, were
human bones.
The remains were then
sent to the Montgomery

County Coroner’s Ofﬁce
in Dayton, and then
to the Ohio Bureau of
Investigation (BCI) for
dental and DNA analysis
to discover the identity,
collection of additional
evidence and a cause of
death.
“We were notiﬁed of
the ﬁndings late Monday afternoon, and then
notiﬁed the family,”
Sheriff Frazier said.
Saylor was last in contact with his family July
26 via text message.

Three days later, on his
30th birthday, Saylor
was reported missing
or endangered. Saylor’s
family had not heard
from him since July 26.
“We are continuing to
investigate how Michael
ended up where he was
discovered, the cause
of death and if any individuals may have contributed to his death,”
said Sheriff Frazier. “We
have been investigating the disappearance
of Michael since July
29, 2019 and have put
in hundreds of hours
searching for Michael
and interviewing
individuals who were
associated with him. We
want to give this family as many answers as
we can on the loss of
their loved one,” Frazier
explained.
Due to the continuing
investigation, no other
information is being
released at this time.
“I understand that
the family and the community want answers,
but we will not release
any further information
until the investigation is
complete,” Sheriff Frazier said.
Anyone with information in this case should
contact the Jackson
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
by calling 7410-2866464.
Information submitted by the
Jackson County Sheriff’s Office.

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

Police close office of Venezuela’s Guaidó

DAR Scholarship available

By Scott Smith

The Daughters of the American Revolution awarded
over $1.4 million in scholarships in 2019. The National Society DAR has over 30 different scholarships.
Most of these do not require that you be related to a
member or have the local Chapter’s support (Return
Jonathan Meigs) although the chapter would be glad
to do this. Scholarship areas are: General 1, Nursing 6, History, Economics, Government or Political
Science 5, Medical (Doctor), OT, PT 5, Elementary
or Secondary Teacher Education 1, Horticulture 1,
Music 1, Chemistry 1, English 1, Math 1, Science 1.
Students with American Indian heritage have two
general areas. All Scholarship applications are due
Feb. 15, 2020, and are submitted online only. Information is available at www.dar.org/national.society/
scholarships. Questions should be directed to scholarships@dar.org.

Meigs library storytimes
MEIGS COUNTY — Storytime returns to each
branch of the Meigs County Library beginning on Jan.
6. Days, locations, and times are as follows: Mondays
– Racine Library at 1 p.m., Tuesdays – Eastern Library
at 1:30 p.m., Wednesdays – Pomeroy Library at 1 p.m.,
Thursdays – Middleport Library at 1 p.m.

Straw available for animals
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.

president, arguing that Maduro’s
2018 re-election was invalid and
marred by fraud. Guaidó, howCARACAS, Venezuela — Secu- ever, has no control over government institution or the military.
rity forces loyal to President
The police action came just
Nicolás Maduro on Tuesday surhours after opposition lawmakers
rounded and closed the building
called off an attempt to hold a
that houses the ofﬁces of opposition lawmaker Juan Guaidó, who National Assembly session in the
was in London as part of an inter- congress building across town,
saying they wanted to avoid clashnational tour seeking to bolster
es with security forces and armed
support for ousting Venezuela’s
government supporters blocking
socialist leader.
entry.
Ofﬁcers from two elite police
Juan Pablo Guanipa, ﬁrst vice
units with their faces covered
president of the National Assemblocked the building’s entrances
bly, said from the headquarters of
and shut off and lined the street
a political party that streets leadwith their vehicles.
ing to their legislative building
It was unclear whether the
police were inside Guaidó’s third had been “militarized” by armed
groups, so they were not going to
ﬂoor ofﬁce. Lawmakers in his
coalition gathered on the sidewalk attempt an entry until next week.
Instead, the lawmakers held a
outside said no legislative staffer
makeshift meeting on a public
were inside the ofﬁce to report
what was happening. The legisla- square in an opposition-friendly
part of Caracas away from
tors, however, said they thought
downtown. They sat on chairs
the ofﬁcers were carrying out an
set up before a stage amid trees
illegal raid.
and backed by their ﬂag-colored
“This is the regime’s arbitrary
streamer and emblem.
actions,” lawmaker Manuela
It was the third consecutive
Bolívar said outside the building.
“Why? Because the interim Presi- week that groups of armed civildent Guaidó is on an international ians known as “colectivos” and
security forces blocked access
tour.”
The United States and about 60 for members of the National
Assembly, which is the last major
other nations recognize Guaidó,
national institution under opposiwho heads the National Assemtion control and the center of the
bly, as Venezuela’s legitimate
Associated Press

struggle over who governs the
crisis-wracked nation.
Last week, a caravan of SUVs
carrying lawmakers toward the
building was struck with rocks
and poles by civilians and gunﬁre
was heard. On Jan. 5, Guaidó
attempted to jump a fence to
get in only to be rebuffed by riot
police.
Guanipa called on supporters to
march with lawmakers to retake
the National Assembly chambers
next week, setting up a potential
clash with the backers of Maduro.
“We are going to show them
that we are ﬁghting for the freedom of Venezuela,” Guanipa said.
“We’ll demonstrate, as we always
have, that we’re absolutely ready
to do whatever is required to
achieve democracy in Venezuela.”
During their remote session,
lawmakers condemned ofﬁcials
for the disappearance of Ismael
León, a deputy in the National
Assembly who they said was
swept up by security forces shortly after leaving the party headquarters headed to the legislative
building.
“His family, colleagues and
fellow party members have
absolutely no idea where he is,”
opposition lawmaker Adriana
Pichardo said. Ofﬁcials have not
commented on León’s whereabouts.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
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
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

es, and dessert. Everyone is welcome.
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
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
POMEROY — Intro to True Crime Podcasts –
print on a space-available basis and in chronologiFrom the hosts of the podcast Hello My Name Is:
cal order. Events can be emailed to: TDSnews@
True Crime, 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
aimmediamidwest.com.

Saturday, Jan. 25

Card Shower
Cordelia Curtis Bentz will turn 100 years old on
Jan. 29. Cards may be sent to her at The Maples,
100 E. Memorial Drive, Room 215, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Wednesday, Jan. 22

Sunday, Jan. 26

POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim Church, Pomeroy, Ohio, will host special singers Majesty at 6:30
p.m.

Monday, Jan. 27

POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Dept.
will be closed to the public for its Public Health
Accreditation Board site visit. Normal business
hours will resume at 8 a.m. on Jan. 23rd.

POMEROY — The Book Club will discuss The
Second Mrs. Hockaday by Susan Rivers, 6 p.m. at
Pomeroy Library.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs Veterans Service
Commission will meet at 9 a.m. in the ofﬁce located
at 97 North Second Avenue in Middleport.

Friday, Jan. 24

Tuesday, Jan. 28

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Church of
Christ’s monthly community free dinner in their
Family Life Center is at 5 p.m. This month they are
serving white chicken chili, chicken salad sandwich-

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.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 3

McConnell backs off, eases impeachment trial limits
By Lisa Mascaro,
Eric Tucker
and Zeke Miller
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell abruptly backed offsome of his
proposed rules for President Donald Trump’s
impeachment trial on
Tuesday, easing plans for
a tight two-day schedule
and agreeing that House
evidence will be included.
He acted after protests
from senators, including
fellow Republicans.
The trial quickly burst
into a partisan ﬁght at
the Capitol as the president’s lawyers opened
arguments in support of
McConnell’s plan. Democrats objected loudly to
his initial rules, and some
Republicans then made
their concerns known in
private at a GOP lunch.
Without comment, the
Republican leader submitted an amended proposal
after meeting behind
closed doors with his senators as the trial opened.
The handwritten changes
would add an extra day
for each side’s opening
arguments and stipulate
that evidence from the
Democratic House’s
impeachment hearings be
included in the record.
There is still deep disagreement about calling
additional witnesses.
“It’s time to start with
this trial,” said White
House Counsel Pat Cipollone, the president’s lead
lawyer in brief remarks as
the proceedings opened
in public.
Chief Justice John
Roberts gaveled open the
session, senators having
taken an oath last week
to do “impartial justice”
as jurors. House prosecutors were on one side,
Trump’s team on the
other, in the well of the
Senate, as senators sat
silent at their desks, no
cellphones or other electronics allowed.
Senators were stunned
by McConnell’s shift,
which came during the
private lunch and brieﬂy
delayed the start of the

Senate Television via AP

Impeachment manager Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., speaks in support of an amendment offered by Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., during the
impeachment trial against President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Tuesday.

historic session.
A spokeswoman for
Republican Sen. Susan
Collins said that she and
others had raised concerns. The Maine senator sees the changes as
signiﬁcant improvements,
said spokeswoman Annie
Clark.
Collins, Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio and a substantial number of other
Republicans from across
the party’s ideological
spectrum wanted to make
the changes, according
to two people familiar
with the matter but unauthorized to discuss it in
public. Some argued that
the two-day limitation
would have helped Democrats cast Republicans
as squeezing testimony
through in the dead of
night.
The turnaround was
a swift lesson as White
House’s wishes run into
the reality of the Senate.
The White House wanted
a session crammed into
a shorter period to both
expedite the trial and
shift more of the proceedings into late night,
according to a person
familiar with the matter
but unauthorized to discuss it in public.
“READ THE TRANSCRIPTS!” the president
tweeted from overseas miles away, as he

returned to his hotel at a
global leaders conference
in Davos, Switzerland.
That’s the transcript of
his phone call in which
he asked new Ukrainian
President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy for “a favor.” A
whistleblower’s complaint
led the House to impeach
Trump on a charge of
abuse of power for pushing Ukraine to investigate
Democratic rival Joe
Biden and his son Hunter
Biden as the White House
was withholding military
aid from the U.S. ally at
war with bordering Russia. The Democrats cite
that transcript as solid
evidence against Trump,
though he repeatedly
describes it as “perfect.”
Senate Democratic
leader Chuck Schumer
of New York was to offer
the ﬁrst amendment to
the rules — a proposal
to issue a subpoena to
the White House for “all
documents, communications and other records”
relating to the Ukraine
matter.
It seeks records about
Trump’s orders to hold off
military aid to Ukraine,
along with White House
communications about
any investigations it
wanted about the Bidens.
In a vote later Tuesday, it
was likely to be rejected
by Republicans.

Democrats had warned
that the rules package
from Trump’s ally, the
Senate GOP leader, could
force midnight sessions
that would keep most
Americans in the dark
and create a sham proceeding.
“This is not a process
for a fair trial, this is the
process for a rigged trial”
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Ca.,
the chairman of the
House Intelligence Committee leading the prosecution, told reporters. He
called it a “cover-up.”
Schiff opened his arguments before the Senate
playing a video of Trump
calling for more witnesses to testify. Schiff
noted the sudden change
in proposed rules, made
moments before he rose
to address the chamber.
“The facts will come
out in the end,” Schiff
told the senators. “ The
question is, will it come
out in time?”
McConnell said, “The
president’s lawyers will
ﬁnally receive a level playing ﬁeld,” contrasting it
with the House impeachment inquiry.
The rare impeachment
trial, unfolding in an
election year, is testing
whether Trump’s actions
toward Ukraine warrant
removal at the same time
that voters are forming

their own verdict on his
White House.
Four senators who are
presidential candidates
are off the campaign
trail, seated as jurors.
“My focus is going to
be on impeachment,”
Sen. Bernie Sanders, the
Vermont independent,
told reporters. He said
his supporters would
keep working “to defeat
the most dangerous
president in American
history.”
The Democrats say
the prospect of middleof-the-night proceedings, without allowing
new witnesses or even
the voluminous House
records into the trial,
would leave the public
without crucial information about Trump’s
political pressure
campaign on Ukraine
and the White House’s
obstruction of the House
impeachment probe.
Trump’s legal team
doesn’t dispute Trump’s
actions — that he called
the Ukraine president
and asked for a “favor”
during a July 25 phone
call. In fact, the lawyers
included the rough
transcript of Trump’s
conversation as part of
its 110-page trial brief
submitted ahead of the
proceedings.
Instead the lawyers for

the president, led Cipollone and a TV-famous
legal team including
Alan Dershowitz, say
the two charges against
the president don’t
amount to impeachable
offenses and Trump
committed no crime.
Legal scholars have
long insisted the framers
of the Constitution provided impeachment as a
remedy for “other high
crimes and misdemeanors,” a particularly broad
deﬁnition that doesn’t
mean simply speciﬁc
criminal acts.
Democrats in prosecuting the case against
the president point in
particular to a General
Accountability Ofﬁce
report that found the
White House violated
federal law by stalling
money to Ukraine that
had been approved by
Congress.
House Democrats,
responding Tuesday to
arguments by Trump’s
legal team, said the
president’s legal ﬁling
conﬁrmed that “his misconduct is indefensible.”
They wrote, “President
Trump’s lengthy brief to
the Senate is heavy on
rhetoric and procedural
grievances, but entirely
lacks a legitimate defense
of his misconduct.”
The president would
“rather discuss anything
other than what he actually did,” the Democrats
wrote.
Roberts administered
the oath to one remaining
senator, James Inhofe,
who was attending a family medical issue in Oklahoma last week when the
other senators vowed the
oath and signed the oath
book.
Also Tuesday, the
House Democratic managers overseeing the
impeachment case asked
Cipollone, the president’s
lead lawyer at the trial, to
disclose any “ﬁrst-hand
knowledge” he has of the
charges against Trump.
They said evidence gathered so far indicates that
Cipollone is a “material
witness” to the allegations at hand.

Documents: Extremist group wanted rally to start civil war
By Michael Kunzelman

belt, Maryland. Their
Mathews and fellow
attorneys didn’t immegroup member Brian
diately respond to the
Mark Lemley Jr., 33,
memo ﬁled Tuesday by
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — A of Elkton, Maryland,
Assistant U.S. Attorney
hidden camera captured mem- discussed the planning
Thomas Windom.
of violence at the Richbers of a white supremacist
Mathews and Lemley
mond rally, according
group expressing hope that
are charged with transMathews
violence at a gun rights rally in to prosecutors. Lemley
porting a ﬁrearm and
talked about using a
Virginia this week could start
ammunition with intent
a civil war, federal prosecutors thermal imaging scope
to commit a felony. Bilbrough
afﬁxed to his riﬂe to ambush
said in a court ﬁling Tuesday.
is charged with “transporting
unsuspecting civilians and
Former Canadian Armed
and harboring aliens.”
police ofﬁcers, prosecutors
Forces reservist Patrik Jordan
Bilbrough’s attorney, Robert
said.
Mathews also videotaped
“I need to claim my ﬁrst vic- Bonsib, said last Thursday that
himself advocating for killhe was “underwhelmed” by
tim,” Lemley said on Dec. 23,
ing people, poisoning water
a prosecutor’s arguments for
according to Tuesday’s detensupplies and derailing trains,
keeping his client detained.
tion memo.
a prosecutor wrote in urging
Bilbrough was the only one
“We could essentially like
a judge in Maryland to keep
of the three men not facing a
be literally hunting people,”
Mathews and two other memﬁrearms-related charge.
Mathews said, according to
bers of The Base detained in
“I think this 19-year-old man
prosecutors. “You could profederal custody.
should be released,” Bonsib
But the 27-year-old Canadian vide overwatch while I get
told reporters.
national didn’t know investiga- close to do what needs to be
Lawyers for Mathews and
done to certain things.”
tors were watching and listenLemley talked about ambush- Lemley declined to comment
ing when he and two other
ing a police ofﬁcer to steal the after last Thursday’s hearings.
group members talked about
Mathews, who was a combat
ofﬁcer’s weapons and tactical
attending the Richmond rally
engineer in the Canadian Army
in the days leading up to Mon- gear, saying, “If there’s like a
Reserve, illegally crossed the
PoPo cruiser parked on the
day’s event, which attracted
U.S. border near Minnesota in
tens of thousands of people and street and he doesn’t have
August after reporting by the
backup, I can execute him at a
ended peacefully.
Winnipeg Free Press led to his
whim and just take his stuff,”
Last month, a closed-circuit
identiﬁcation as a member of
according to prosecutors.
television camera and microThe Base.
FBI agents arrested
phone installed by investigators
Investigators believe BilMathews, Lemley and William
in a Delaware home captured
brough and Lemley, who was
Garﬁeld Bilbrough IV, 19, of
Mathews talking about the
a “cavalry scout” in the U.S.
Denton, Maryland last ThursVirginia rally as a “boundless”
day as part of a broader investi- Army, drove from Maryland to
opportunity.
gation of The Base. Authorities Michigan to pick up Mathews
“And the thing is you’ve got
in Georgia and Wisconsin also and bring him to the Midtons of guys who ... should be
arrested four other men linked Atlantic region, authorities
radicalized enough to know
said.
to the group.
that all you gotta do is start
On Jan. 5, Mathews and
Detention hearings for
making things go wrong and
Lemley returned to the DelaMathews and Bilbrough are
if Virginia can spiral out to
scheduled for Wednesday at the ware home from a gun range
(expletive) full blown civil
in Maryland and began packfederal courthouse in Greenwar,” he said.

Associated Press

ing rations and other material
that investigators believe they
planned to use during and after
the Virginia rally, court documents said.
They packed containers
with food and supplies before
Mathews remarked about needing to bring a gas mask, investigators said. Lemley also said he
thought they’d have food to last
between three and ﬁve months
and that it “might be enough til
the war is over,” according to
the ﬁling.
Lemley had also discussed
loading the truck “for the
war,” the documents said.
Authorities said Lemley had
also bought a 4-foot (1-meter)
metal antenna to attach to his
truck to get a better radio signal to communicate after any
Virginia confrontations.
A day before their arrests,
Lemley told Mathews that
“there cannot be no trust
among a group of murderers,”
the detention memo says.
“I cannot trust you to keep
my murdering secrets. Not
under threat of 30 years in jail
and torture. Why should I trust
you?” Lemley asked.
“You realize that they’re just
going to call us terrorists,”
Mathews said minutes later.
As federal agents moved in
to arrest Lemley and Matthews
on Thursday, the men smashed
cellphones and dropped the
pieces in a toilet, a prosecutor
said.
Bilbrough was arrested in
Maryland. Prosecutors say
Bilbrough has repeatedly
expressed an interest in travel-

ing to Ukraine to ﬁght alongside “nationalists” for several
months.
U.S. and Canadian authorities had been searching for
Mathews after his truck was
found in September near the
border between the two countries. The Canadian military’s
intelligence unit was investigating Mathews for “possible
racist extremist activities” for
several months, according to
the Canadian Department of
National Defence.
The Anti-Defamation League
said members of The Base and
other white supremacist groups
have frequently posted online
messages advocating for “accelerationism,” a fringe philosophy in which far-right extremists “have assigned to their
desire to hasten the collapse of
society as we know it.”
Last Friday, Georgia authorities announced that they
arrested three members of The
Base on charges they conspired
to kill members of a militant
anti-fascist group. The arrests
came after an undercover FBI
agent inﬁltrated the group and
participated in shooting drills
in the mountains of northern
Georgia, according to a police
afﬁdavit.
Separately last Friday, the
Justice Department charged
a Wisconsin man who they
say was also a member of The
Base. That man is accused
of spray- painting swastikas,
the group’s symbol and antiSemitic words on a synagogue
in Racine, Wisconsin , in September.

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Float your
way to peace
and quiet
Adam didn’t know how good he had it.
There he was in the Garden of Eden, with the
trees, pleasing to the eye and good for food. He
had the livestock, the birds in the
sky and all the wild animals. Most
of all, he had peace and quiet.
Ever since God introduced Eve
into his life, there’s been no peace
and quiet. Ever since, we’ve all pursued different ways to ﬁnd peace
and quiet.
David
Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge
Trinko
fan of God’s feminine creation.
Contributing They truly are the fairer sex. They
columnist
also bring onto us children, which
is really when the peace and quiet
disappears.
I lived by myself for nearly a decade before
I got married. While it truly was a lonely existence, the one beneﬁt was the silence that
came whenever you decided there needed to be
silence.
Now I’m happily married with four children at
home, and I’m desperately in search of silence,
no matter how ﬂeeting.
One year for a gift, my children gave me a box
of earplugs for Father’s Day, marked “peace and
quiet.” Another year for Christmas, they gave
me noise-canceling earmuffs. My wife gifted me
massages several times, which I probably appreciated as much for the 60 minutes of quiet as for
untangling the knots in my back.
They all fall short of true peace and quiet,
though, so we continue to look. I moved my
home ofﬁce, where I usually write these columns, into a far back corner of our basement
in hopes of ﬁnding it. I’ll sit quietly on a closed
commode in the bathroom, too, in search of a
moment to myself. In either instance, I’m usually found by one of my girls within 10 minutes
and coaxed back into the carnival that is our
lives.
When my wife suggested we take a day off
work together and try something quiet and
relaxing, she didn’t have to ask me twice. Peace
and quiet is my white whale, after all. That’s
how I ended up “ﬂoating” for an hour near
Toledo.
I’d never heard of this before, but apparently
it’s a thing to put a bunch of salt (1,000 pounds,
they claim) into a pod ﬁlled with water, about
10 inches deep. With so much salt in so little
water, it makes your body feel extremely buoyant, as you ﬂoat atop the water with minimal
effort.
Then you lay there, with a soft colored LED
light showing you the way for an hour in an
enclosed capsule that’s roughly four times the
size of your body.
The instructional video suggests you count the
number of your breaths or meditate on something. I said a handful of “Hail Mary” prayers.
Mostly I meditated on how long that hour might
last and how loud the music that played with ﬁve
minutes remaining might be. (The answer to that
last one is it’s a lot louder than I expected, and it
surely would’ve woke me if I ever fell asleep.)
I found myself incredibly bored and occasionally worried about drowning in 10 inches of water.
I didn’t feel much relief from the tension in my
neck and back.
My wife, on the other hand, loved her hour.
She and said it relaxed her aches and pains more
than she could ever expect. She claims to have
extra mobility and stamina from it.
I will give my ﬂoating experience a thumbs up
on one count: It was deﬁnitely an hour of peace
and quiet, and I’ll take that anywhere I can ﬁnd
it, even ﬂoating atop 10 inches of salty water.
David Trinko is managing editor of The Lima News, a division of AIM
Media Midwest.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actress Piper Laurie is 88. Celebrity chef
Graham Kerr (TV: “The Galloping Gourmet”)
is 86. Author Joseph Wambaugh is 83. Singer
Steve Perry is 71. Country singer-musician Teddy
Gentry (Alabama) is 68. Movie director Jim
Jarmusch is 67. Actor John Wesley Shipp is 65.
Hockey Hall of Famer Mike Bossy is 63. Actress
Linda Blair is 61. Actress Diane Lane is 55.
Actor and rap DJ Jazzy Jeff is 55. Country singer
Regina Nicks (Regina Regina) is 55. Celebrity
chef Guy Fieri is 52. Actress Olivia d’Abo is
51. Actress Katie Finneran is 49. Actor Gabriel
Macht is 48. Actor Balthazar Getty is 45. Actor
Christopher Kennedy Masterson is 40. Jazz
singer Lizz Wright is 40. Pop singer Willa Ford is
39. Actress Beverley Mitchell is 39. Rock singermusician Ben Moody is 39. Actor Kevin Sheridan
is 38. Actress-singer Phoebe Strole is 37. Rapper
Logic is 30. Tennis player Alize Cornetis 30.

THEIR VIEW

Pruning in late winter
Winter is the time to
work on pruning your
trees and shrubs. Once
the sap starts to rise
in spring and the buds
on your woody plants
start to swell, you could
cause “bleeding” by cutting your shrubs and
trees. Get it done now.
Black walnut, Birch and
Maple trees should ideally be pruned in fall,
but most woody plants
respond best to winter
pruning. I like to prune
when there’s snow on
the ground; I can see the
branches better and spot
where the problems are.
Pruning is done
in three steps: First,
remove all dead or
diseased wood. You
can tell this even in
winter because healthy
branches have a vitality
that’s easy to spot, and
dead or diseased limbs
really stand out. Next,
take out limbs that are
rubbing or interfering

erwise, the tree
with each other.
could split down
Cut off the lower
the middle in the
limbs of shade
future. On fruit
trees if they intertrees, branches
fere with walkthat are crowding
ing underneath.
toward the center
Next, you need
of the plant should
to cut off water
Steve
be thinned out, so
sprouts or suckers Boehme
(the long straight Contributing that sunlight can
reach the fruit.
shoots that stick
columnist
To encourage a
up or grow from
compact, dense
the lower trunk).
crown it helps to “tip
These should be cut
cleanly right at the base back” the outer branches
on young trees so that
or they’ll sprout two or
they’ll fork. Wherever
three more.
you cut off a limb, a fork
Now step back and
will develop as several
look at the plant. Is
new sprouts form. This
it balanced and wellﬁlls out the plant and
proportioned? If not
keeps it from getting
this is the time to make
“leggy”. You just have to
some corrections. Most
avoid leaving a stub, so
important is to keep
cut just above a branch
shade trees from “forking”, developing narrow or bud.
Dogwoods, maples,
crotches with two or
and fruit trees (including
more main trunks. One
ornamental crabapples
of the trunks should be
and cherries) tend to
selected and the others
develop lots of extra
eliminated before they
limbs along the trunk
get too big to ﬁx, oth-

and beneﬁt from being
thinned. Opening up the
center helps sunlight
reach inside the crown
so you’ll get more bloom
and fruit, and less dead
branches inside where
the sun can’t reach.
If you’re not sure of
yourself, look at a book
on basic pruning for
information about the
speciﬁc tree you have.
Most importantly, use
quality pruning tools and
make clean cuts. Cut just
above new limbs or buds,
to encourage forking.
Never leave a stub longer
than a half-inch, because
the bark can’t heal over
your cut and this invites
tree problems.
Steve Boehme is a landscape
designer/installer specializing
in landscape “makeovers”. “Let’s
Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice”
page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available
at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at
(937) 587-7021.

TODAY IN HISTORY
larly scheduled commercial ﬂight of the Boeing
747 began in New York
Today is Wednesday,
and ended in London
Jan. 22, the 22nd day of
2020. There are 344 days some 6 1/2 hours later.
In 1973, the U.S.
left in the year.
Supreme Court, in its
Today’s Highlight in History Roe v. Wade decision,
On Jan. 22, 1998, The- legalized abortions using
odore Kaczynski pleaded a trimester approach. Former President Lyndon B.
guilty in Sacramento,
Johnson died at his Texas
California, to being the
ranch at age 64.
Unabomber responsible
In 1987, Pennsylvania
for three deaths and 29
treasurer R. Budd Dwyer,
injuries in return for a
sentence of life in prison convicted of defrauding
the state, proclaimed his
without parole.
innocence at a news conference before pulling out
On this date
a gun, placing the barrel
In 1498, during his
in his mouth and shootthird voyage to the
ing himself to death in
Western Hemisphere,
front of horriﬁed onlookChristopher Columbus
arrived at the present-day ers.
In 1994, actor Telly
Caribbean island of St.
Savalas died in Universal
Vincent.
City, California, a day
In 1901, Britain’s
after turning 72.
Queen Victoria died at
In 1995, Rose Fitzgerage 81 after a reign of 63
years; she was succeeded ald Kennedy died at the
by her eldest son, Edward Kennedy compound at
Hyannis Port, Mass., at
VII.
age 104.
In 1944, during World
In 1997, the Senate
War II, Allied forces
conﬁrmed Madeleine
began landing at Anzio,
Albright as the nation’s
Italy.
ﬁrst female secretary of
In 1953, the Arthur
Miller drama “The Cruci- state.
In 2007, a double car
ble,” set during the Salem
bombing of a predomiwitch trials, opened on
nantly Shiite commercial
Broadway.
In 1970, the ﬁrst regu- area in Baghdad killed 88
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“I know there’s a proverb which that says ‘To
err is human,’ but a human error is nothing to
what a computer can do if it tries.”
— Dame Agatha Christie
English mystery writer (1890-1976)

people. Iran announced
it had barred 38 nuclear
inspectors on a United
Nations list from entering
the country in apparent
retaliation for U.N. sanctions imposed the previous month.
In 2009, President
Barack Obama signed
an executive order to
close the Guantanamo
Bay prison camp within
a year. (The facility
remained in operation as
lawmakers blocked efforts
to transfer terror suspects
to the United States;
President Donald Trump
later issued an order to
keep the jail open and
allow the Pentagon to
bring new prisoners
there.)
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama tried
to revive his battered
agenda and rally Democrats with a renewed
emphasis on jobs during
a town hall meeting in
Elyria, Ohio. The “Hope

for Haiti Now” telethon
raised more than $66
million. Conan O’Brien
ended his brief tenure
of only seven months
on “The Tonight Show”
after accepting a $45 million buyout from NBC
to leave the show he’d
long dreamed of hosting.
Actress Jean Simmons,
80, died in Santa Monica,
California. Actor James
Mitchell, 89, died in Los
Angeles.
Five years ago: With
thousands of abortion
protesters swarming
Washington in their
annual March for Life,
the House voted 242-179
to permanently forbid
federal funds for most
abortion coverage, even
though the legislation had
no realistic chance of passage. Yemen’s U.S.-backed
president, Abed Rabbo
Mansour Hadi, quit
under pressure from rebels holding him captive in
his home.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 5

Washington man 1st in US to catch new virus

Funds

By Carla K. Johnson
and Mike Stobbe

From page 1

Associated Press

that includes fentanyl,
heroin, certain prescription painkillers,
and various chemical
combinations concocted for street sales. But
the national numbers
also hide dramatic differences in the deadliest drugs across the
land.
In most states west
of the Mississippi
meth is the biggest
killer, according to
government data for
2017. Meanwhile, the
highly lethal opioid
fentanyl maintains its
grip on the East and
Midwest. Cocaine
ranks third overall
nationally in druginvolved deaths.
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., whose
state has been hard-hit
by the opioid epidemic, said she was hearing from all quarters
last year that the drugaddiction scourge is
gradually changing.
“They were seeing
much more impact
from meth and from
cocaine, substances
they couldn’t address
because of speciﬁc language in the law,” said
Shaheen, referring to
previous restrictions in
the federal grant program aimed at opioids.
As a member of the
Senate Appropriations
Committee, which
writes spending bills,
Shaheen said she
worked with Republican and Democratic
leaders to add “stimulants” — not only opioids — to the language
of the 2020 spending
bill.
White House drug
czar James W. Carroll said the Trump
administration was
also hearing calls for
more ﬂexibility from
state ofﬁcials, and supported the change.
“I know the term
‘opioid crisis’ is used
a lot, and it’s not
my preferred way of
describing what we’re
up against,” said Carroll. “I say what we
really have is an addiction crisis.”
Other senators pushing to broaden the
grant program included Republicans Rob
Portman of Ohio and
Shelley Moore Capito
of West Virginia, also a
member of the Appropriations Committee.
Their states have been
ravaged by opioids.
Federal lawmakers don’t want to be
caught ﬂat-footed if
another drug crisis
breaks out in an election year. The nation
has been starting
to see progress on
opioids, with deaths
declining slightly.

SEATTLE — The U.S.
on Tuesday reported its
ﬁrst case of a new and
potentially deadly virus
circulating in China, saying a Washington state
resident who returned
last week from the outbreak’s epicenter was hospitalized near Seattle.
The man, identiﬁed
as a Snohomish County
resident is in his 30s,
was in good condition
and wasn’t considered a
threat to medical staff or
the public, health ofﬁcials
said.
U.S. ofﬁcials stressed
that they believe the
virus’ overall risk to
the American public
remained low.
“This is certainly not a
moment of panic or high
anxiety,” Gov. Jay Inslee
said.
The newly discovered
virus has infected about
300 people, all of whom
had been in China, and
killed six. The virus can
cause coughing, fever,
breathing difﬁculty and
pneumonia. The U.S.
joins a growing list of
places outside mainland
China reporting cases,
following Thailand,
Japan, South Korea and
Taiwan.
Airports around the
world have stepped up
monitoring, checking
passengers from China
for signs of illness in
hopes of containing the
virus during the busy
Lunar New Year travel
season.
Late last week, U.S.
health ofﬁcials began
screening passengers
from Wuhan in central
China, where the outbreak began. The screen-

Ng Han Guan | AP

People wear face masks as they ride an escalator at the Hong Kong International Airport in Hong
Kong on Tuesday. Face masks sold out and temperature checks at airports and train stations became
the new norm as China strove Tuesday to control the outbreak of a new coronavirus that has reached
four other countries and territories and threatens to spread further during the Lunar New Year travel
rush.

ing had been underway
at three U.S. airports
— New York City’s Kennedy airport and the Los
Angeles and San Francisco airports. On Tuesday,
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced it would
add Chicago’s O’Hare
airport and Atlanta’s airport to the mix later this
week.
What’s more, ofﬁcials
also will begin forcing all
passengers from Wuhan
to go to one of those ﬁve
airports if they wish to
enter the U.S.
The hospitalized U.S.
resident had no symptoms when he arrived at
the Seattle-Tacoma airport last Wednesday, but
he started feeling ill on
Thursday and contacted
doctors on Sunday, ofﬁcials said. Lab testing on
Monday conﬁrmed he
had the virus.
“The gentleman right
now is very healthy,” said
Dr. Nancy Messonnier of

Youth
From page 1

years Close to Home Catering at
the Council on Aging has provided
breakfast for the children who take
part in the Shop with a Cop event.
When Close to Home Catering
was asked to be part of the event
in 2018 they quickly got on board.
As soon as it was over, Executive
Director Beth Shaver said the
agency asked to take part again for
2019. They plan to take part again
in 2020.
Wal-Mart in Mason is not only
the location where the children
shop with the ﬁrst responders, but
also worked with Loyalty is Forever to secure a grant from the WalMart Community Grants Team to
beneﬁt Shop with a Cop. Shannon

Miller completed the grant application, along with applications for
other grants, submitting it to the
Wal-Mart Community Grants team
for review. Those applications are
then sent to the local store managers for review before approval.
Lori Miller explained that the
team at Wal-Mart help to make the
event a good experience for the
kids who are participating, making
them a priority.
“We look forward to it (Shop
with a Cop). That time that we see
those kids means so much to our
folks. We look forward to it too and
get excited,” said Blain.
In 2019, there were 103 kids who
took part in the event, with $150
spent on each child.
Sheriff Keith Wood said that
when he took ofﬁce one of his
goals was to work with the children
of the county and show them that

winning PURPOSE
Magazine, an inspirational and motivational
monthly newsstand pubFrom page 1
lication. She serves on
the board of directors for
Champlin was invited to
the Columbus NAACP,
share remarks and then
Purpose For Life and
the University of Rio
Promisedland Orphanage,
Grande and Rio Grande
Community College Pres- among others. Her honors include: the Dr. MLK
ident Ryan Smith. Both
, Jr. Governor’s Award,
noted the importance of
the highest of its kind
supporting community
in Ohio supporters say;
and uniﬁcation, regardless of one’s race or creed. the Eldon Ward Minority
Business Award; the Blue
Elma Johnson recogChip Award for Excelnized area dignitaries.
lence in Communication;
After, the assembled
sang “Battle Hymn of the the United Negro College
Fund’s Distinguished
Republic.”
Event Keynote Speaker Leadership Award and
a Long Street Bridge
Ella Coleman was introCultural Wall honoree in
duced by friend and
Columbus.”
colleague Dr. Robert
Coleman read her
Lawson.
poem “Beyond” out of
According to a news
her book “Poetic Overrelease previously
ﬂow” to the assembled.
obtained by Ohio Valley
Coleman’s poem disPublishing, “Coleman’s
cussed the importance
journalism experience
of examining principles,
began as a writer and
compassion, thoughts
editor for various newsand seeking revelations
papers and magazines.
She entered broadcasting beyond one’s understanding of life.
as a media producer for
“What is required
numerous radio and TV
stations and organization. of us is to go beyond,”
said Coleman. “Dr. MarShe founded the award-

MLK

the CDC.
The hospital, Providence Regional Medical
Center in Everett, said
in a statement that it
expected the man would
remain in isolation and
under monitoring there
at least until Thursday.
CDC ofﬁcials said they
sent a team to Washington to try to track down
people who might have
come in contact with the
man. The hospital also
said it was contacting
“the small number of
staff and patients” who
may have been with the
man at a clinic.
The man is originally
from central China, lives
alone in the U.S. and
made the trip solo, ofﬁcials said. There were
relatively few people who
came in contact with him
since he got back, health
ofﬁcials said.
Last month, doctors in
Wuhan began seeing the
new virus in people who
got sick after spending

time at a wholesale seafood market. More than
275 cases of the newly
identiﬁed virus have
been conﬁrmed in China,
most of them in Wuhan,
according to the World
Health Organization.
The count includes six
deaths — all in China,
most of them age 60 or
older, including at least
some who had a previous
medical condition.
Ofﬁcials have said the
virus probably spread
from animals to people,
but this week Chinese
ofﬁcials said they’ve concluded it also can spread
from person to person.
Health authorities
this month identiﬁed
the germ behind the
outbreak as a new type
of coronavirus. Coronaviruses are a large family
of viruses, some of which
cause the common cold;
others found in bats,
camels and other animals
have evolved into more
severe illnesses.

law enforcement and other ﬁrst
responders are there to help and
to interact with them in positive
ways.
“It is a positive thing throughout
the schools,” said Deputy Martin,
who is the school resource ofﬁcer
at Meigs Middle School and High
School. He added that when the
kids are brought in and told about
the opportunity to take part they
are excited, and while they do not
have to tell others about what they
will be doing, many are excited to
tell others.
Loyalty is Forever is continuing
with it’s “Firehouse 12” fundraising campaign and planning for the
“March Bagness” games to be held
on March 5 at the Syracuse Community Center.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily
Sentinel.

tin Luther King went
beyond. He went beyond
what was regular. He
went beyond what was
acceptable. Beyond what
was popular into what
was right. Rosa Parks
said, ‘It’s always the
right time to do the right
thing.’ No matter what
your situation, you can
always do what’s right.
There’s never a wrong
time to do the right
thing. Today, that’s what
I want us to think about
as we continue to celebrate and carry this on
into the year.”
“We have to decide and
make the decision to go
beyond,” said Coleman.
“There are a few people
that I know of that went
beyond in history and
what they did is still
affecting us today. They
changed the course of
events for the better. That
is what God wants us to
do.”
“…I can’t ignore that
there are many who are
still being shot down for
no reason,” said Coleman.
“We have churches being
shot and we have public
places being shot into.

What would Dr. Martin
Luther King do?… What
would he think about
what’s going on. I personally think we need to
revisit his six principles
of nonviolence. He told
us how to deal with grievances. That’s why we
celebrate him because
he showed us how to do
it without being violent.
Violence is not the way
to get a point across. It’s
not the way to make a
change.”
Coleman challenged
the assembled youth to
go “beyond” and to make
a difference in the world
and to remember the lessons of the Civil Rights
Movement.
Susan Rogers of RSVP
of the Ohio Valley presented Martin Luther
King Junior Day Essay
Contest winners before
the assembled shared
the event’s closing song,
“God Bless America.”
Paint Creek Baptist
Church’s Rev. Christian
Scott led closing remarks
and prayer.
Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342.

Last week the House
Energy and Commerce
Committee sent letters to federal agencies
requesting detailed
information on evolving patterns of cocaine
and meth use.
“We are concerned
that while the nation,
rightly so, is devoting
so much of its attention and resources to
the opioid epidemic,
another epidemic —
this one involving
cocaine and methamphetamine — is on the
rise,” wrote committee leaders Chairman
Frank Pallone, D-N.J.
and ranking Republican Greg Walden of
Oregon.
Meth, which was
once cooked in makeshift labs in the U.S.,
is now produced by
Mexican cartels and
smuggled across the
border. The price of
the drug has dropped
even as its purity has
risen.
The increased prevalence of cocaine is
being driven by greater
supply, as cultivation
of the coca plant has
become more widespread in Colombia.
Cocaine can also be
laced with fentanyl,
contributing to overdose deaths. As with
meth, government
data show the price of
cocaine has dropped
while its purity has
risen.
Treating people
addicted to meth or
cocaine is different
from treating opioid
dependence. There
are FDA-approved
medications for opioid
addiction, but not for
cocaine and meth.
Instead, treatment
relies on counseling
and support to try to
help people overcome
their drug habit. It’s a
labor-intensive effort
that carries a signiﬁcant risk of failure.
Access to more federal
dollars will help pay
for treatment, particularly in states that have
held out on accepting
Medicaid expansion
under the Affordable
Care Act. Expanded
Medicaid for lowincome adults is a
mainstay of treatment
in states that embraced
it.
The federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration is preparing to notify states
of the newly available
grant ﬂexibility.
Ultimately, state
ofﬁcials want Congress to consider folding the opioid money
into a larger block
grant program administered by the same
agency, creating a big
pool of federal money
to treat addiction,
with fewer restrictions on its use.

Court
From page 1

the right people out of jail and keeping the right
people in jail,” Kuhlman said.
Though the court rejected the assessment tool
recommendation, it did send another recommendation to lawmakers, that judges set bail at
the lowest amount possible that ensures a defendant will return to court but without imposing a
ﬁnancial burden on the offender.
Roughly 57% of inmates in Ohio jails are not
there serving a sentence, but instead are awaiting trial, locked up because they can’t afford bail,
according to Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction data cited by the bail task force.
Jail in Ohio is more expensive than supervised release, with the average jail bed costing
almost $65 per day, compared to $5 per day for
maximum supervised release, the report said.
In New York state, a law took effect this year
that does away with cash bail for the wide
majority of misdemeanor and nonviolent felony
cases. In California, the nation’s ﬁrst law eliminating bail for suspects awaiting trial is on hold
until California voters decide whether to overturn it.

�Sports
6 Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles soar past Meigs, 53-37
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern freshman Juli Durst drives past Meigs junior Jerrica Smith (23), during
the first half of the Lady Eagles’ 53-37 victory on Monday in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio.

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
— After a sluggish start,
there was no slowing the
Lady Eagles.
The Eastern girls basketball
team made just one of its ﬁrst
10 ﬁeld goals on Monday at
‘The Nest’, but the hosts shot
60 percent from the ﬁeld the
rest of the way to a 53-37
victory over non-conference
guest Meigs.
The Lady Eagles (7-9)
— winner of three straight
— never trailed in the game,
with Jaymie Basham breaking the scoreless tie 1:52 into
play.
Eastern led the Lady

Marauders (4-13) by a 5-4
tally after one quarter of play,
and then broke the game wide
open with a 15-0 run over the
ﬁrst 4:15 of the second period. Meigs ended the cold spell
with a free throw, but was
outscored 10-to-5 over the
rest of the stanza and went
into halftime down 30-10.
The Green and White outscored MHS 15-to-10 in the
third quarter, and headed into
the ﬁnale with a 45-20 advantage, equaling their largest
lead of the game.
The Lady Marauders got as
close as 15 in the fourth quarter, but surrendered the ﬁnal
point and fell by a 53-37 tally.
For the game, Eastern shot
22-of-45 (48.9 percent) from

the ﬁeld, including 2-of-7
(28.6 percent) from threepoint range, while Meigs
made 15-of-44 (34.1 percent)
ﬁeld goal attempts, and came
up empty on six three-point
tries. Both teams made seven
free throws, EHS in 16 tries
for 43.8 percent and MHS in
20 attempts for 35 percent.
The hosts — who committed 17 turnovers, two
fewer than the Maroon and
Gold — won the rebounding
battle by a 30-to-27 count,
with Meigs claiming a 9-to8 edge in offensive boards.
The Lady Eagles combined
for 18 assists, 13 steals and
three blocked shots, while the
See EAGLES | 7

Lady Falcons
take down
Buffalo, 60-35
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

BUFFALO, W.Va. — You can’t win a game in a
half, but that didn’t stop the Lady Falcons from
trying.
The Wahama girls basketball team led nonconference host Buffalo 28-10 midway through
Monday’s contest in Putnam County, and the
Lady Falcons cruised to the 60-35 victory.
Wahama (7-5) — which has now won backto-back games — was ahead 12-8 eight minutes
into play after connecting on ﬁve ﬁeld goals in
the opening stanza.
WHS held the Lady Bison (7-4) to just two
points in the second period, while pouring in 16
for the 28-10 lead.
Buffalo — which had won three in a row
headed into play — snapped out of it in the
third quarter, scoring 16 points, but the Red
and White posted 20 in the period and led 48-26
with eight minutes to play.
The Lady Falcons capped off the 60-35 victory
with a 12-to-9 fourth quarter run.
Wahama — which had six of its 23 ﬁeld goals
come from beyond the arc — hit 8-of-13 (61.5
percent) free throws in the win. Meanwhile,
BHS made 7-of-9 (77.8 percent) free throws, to
go with 11 two-pointers and a pair of trifectas.
The freshman duo of Mikie Lieving and
Amber Wolfe led the Lady Falcons with 15
points apiece, with Wolfe making a game-best
three triples. Hannah Rose sank a pair of threepointers on her way to 14 points, while Emma
Gibbs scored 11 in the win. Victoria VanMatre
and Morgan Christian both marked two points
for the victors, while Lauren Noble chipped in
with one.
Abby Darnley led the Lady Bison with 14
points, followed by Lillian Wyant with eight.
Hailey Williams and Kaylee Bowling scored four
points apiece for Buffalo, Krissi Campbell added
three, while Baylee Hudnall ended with two.
After four in a row on the road, the Lady Falcons ﬁnally return to Gary Clark Court to meet
Miller on Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Jan. 23
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Team Ignite, 7 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Trimble at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Southern, 6 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Wahama at Miller, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 24
Boys Basketball
Eastern at South Gallia, 7:30
Vinton County at River Valley, 7:30
South Point at Gallia Academy, 7:30
SCCA at Ohio Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 7:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:30
Wrestling
Gallia Academy, Point Pleasant, Wahama at WSAZ INV,
5 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy senior Alex Barnes, left, rips the ball away from River Valley’s Kaylee Gillman (20) as teammate Regan Wilcoxon (10)
looks on during the second half of Monday night’s girls basketball game in Centenary, Ohio.

Blue Angels avenge RV in OT
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio —
The Blue Angels found
their measuring stick …
and it was much larger
than a standard-sized
ruler.
After dropping a 56-32
decision in the season
opener at Bidwell, the
Gallia Academy girls basketball team exacted a little revenge Monday night
with a 60-56 overtime victory over visiting River
Valley in a non-conference
matchup of Gallia County
programs.
The host Blue Angels
(6-11) trailed only once in
regulation and led by as
many as 14 points early
in the fourth quarter, but
the Lady Raiders (9-8)
countered with a furious
20-6 surge over a 7-minute window — knotting
things up at 53-all while
also eventually forcing
overtime.
The Silver and Black
struck ﬁrst in the extra
4-minute session as
Lauren Twyman sank a
basket at 3:18, giving the
guests their second and
ﬁnal lead of the night.
Maddy Petro followed
with consecutive buckets
over the next 52 seconds,
allowing the Blue and
White to secure a permanent cushion of 57-55
with 2:25 remaining.
Sierra Somerville made
the second of two free
throw attempts with 30
seconds left to cut the
deﬁcit down to one, but
Alex Barnes sank 3-of-4
charity tosses the rest of

River Valley junior Hannah Jacks (2) releases a shot attempt
between Gallia Academy defenders Maddy Petro, left, Alex Barnes
(4) and Kaylie Clark, right, during the first half of Monday night’s
girls basketball game in Centenary, Ohio.

the way to complete the
4-point triumph.
In a rivalry game that
featured 43 personal
fouls and 53 free throw
attempts, Gallia Academy’s extra motivation
proved to play a vital role
in the ﬁnal outcome.
GAHS coach Jordan
Deel noted afterwards
that the ‘chip’ — which
dates back to the Nov. 25,
2019 opener — shows
just how far his relatively
young squad has come in
the 15 games in between.
And, as the second-year
mentor noted, a lot of it
has to do with the leadership being put forth by
his team captains.

“We knew River Valley was going to come in
with a solid game plan,
and they did. We also
felt good about our game
plan, and we had a little
bit of a chip on our shoulder. We just felt like we
had something to prove
about how far we’d come
since that ﬁrst outing,”
Deel said. “We’ve seen
a lot of growth from our
underclassmen, especially
in starting two freshmen
and a sophomore … but
our upperclassmen have
helped set the tone. Alex
and Maddy have taken
on a lot of responsiblility
for this team, especially
in close situations like

tonight, but they keep the
team level-headed so that
we can play to win.
“Tonight was a very
rewarding win for us for a
lot of reasons. The most
rewarding thing is seeing
just how far we’ve come
since the season started.
I’m very proud for our
girls tonight.”
The Blue Angels beneﬁted from attacking the
basket and getting to the
free throw line, which
generated 21 additional
chances at the stripe than
the River Valley.
The Lady Raiders, on
the other hand, ended up
taking 24 shot attempts
from the ﬁeld — the same
number of extra 3-point
shot attempts than Gallia
Academy.
Both ended up playing
a very large role in the
ﬁnal 12 minutes of the
contest.
With GAHS clinging to
a 43-32 lead entering the
fourth quarter, the hosts
opened things with a
Barnes basket 15 seconds
in … and didn’t make any
of their remaining three
shot attempts the rest of
the period.
The Blue Angels ultimately made 8-of-17 free
throw attempts to balance
out their offense, but it
also opened the door for
River Valley’s comeback
attempt.
The Lady Raiders —
who netted just 13-of-45
shot attempts through
three quarters — hit
three trifectas and went
6-of-14 from the ﬂoor
See ANGELS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Point places 2nd at Top Gun

Eagles
From page 6

guests collected six assists, six blocks and ﬁve
steals.
Olivia Barber paced the hosts with 14 points, followed by Jennifer Parker with 12 points and ﬁve
assists. Erica Durst ﬁnished with six points and
ﬁve assists in the win, Juli Durst added ﬁve points,
while Jaymie Basham and Whitney Durst both
scored four, with Basham grabbing a team-best
seven rebounds.
Kennadi Rockhold contributed three points and
six rebounds to the winning cause, while Sydney
Reynolds chipped in with two points.
Leading the EHS defense, Basham had four
steals, Parker claimed three steals, and Juli Durst
added a steal and a block.
Meigs was led by Mallory Hawley with 16 points,
eight rebounds and two assists, scoring 13 of her
points after halftime. Rylee Lisle posted nine points
for the guests, while Hannah Durst came up with
ﬁve points, two assists and game-best 10 rebounds.
Bre Lilly, Meredith Cremeans and Olivia Haggy
scored two points each, while Jerrica Smith marked
one.
Leading the guests on defense, Hawley had three
steals and three blocks, while Lisle blocked two
shots.
Both teams return to action at home in their
respective leagues on Thursday, with Alexander at
Meigs, and Waterford at Eastern.

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

ALLIANCE, Ohio — It took
the top guns from various states
to ﬁnally knock Point Pleasant
off.
The Point Pleasant wrestling
team landed nine top-8 ﬁnishes
and a single weight class champion en route to a runner-up
effort on Friday and Saturday at
the 34th annual Top Gun Wrestling Tournament at Harry Fails
Gymnasium inside of Alliance
High School.
The Big Blacks had come
away with top honors in every
other event they had competed
in before last weekend, but the
Red and Black were really close
to keeping that impressive streak
intact.
PPHS had three grapplers end
their respective weekends in
championship ﬁnals, plus had a
half-dozen top-4 efforts by the
end of the 2-day affair.
Point Pleasant completed the
event with a combined 54-24
overall mark that included 24
pinfall wins while ﬁnishing weekend with 224.5 points.
Defending Top Gun champion
Aurora — the reigning Division
II runners-up in Ohio — ultimately repeated after claiming
a tournament-best three weight
class champions en route to a
winning tally of 230 points.
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary
was third overall with 140.5
points, while Austintown (138)
and Highland (133.5) rounded
out the top-5 spots in a 51-team
scoring ﬁeld.
West Virginia-based programs
Huntington (88), Herbert
Hoover (56) and Ripley (32) also
respectively placed 11th, 27th
and 44th overall at the event.
Derek Raike was the lone
PPHS grappler to come away
with a title after going 6-0 with
two pinfalls and a technical fall
on his way to winning the 132pound division.
Parker Henderson and Justin
Bartee both came away with
runner-up efforts in their respective weight classes. Henderson
went 4-1 with one pinfall at 106
pounds, while Bartee was 5-1
with two pinfalls at 138 pounds.
Isaac Short went 5-1 overall
with ﬁve pinfalls while ﬁnishing third at 120 pounds, while

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Angels
From page 6

while capping a 21-10
surge in the fourth.
Gallia Academy took
its largest lead of the
night at 47-33 following a
pair of Preslee Reed free
throws with 7:13 left in
regulation, but the guests
completed the epic climb
with a Hannah Jacks
bucket with 1:50 remaining — tying things up at
50-all.
Barnes tacked on a
trio of free throws over
the next 90 seconds for
a 53-50 edge, but Payton
Crabtree nailed a corner
trifecta with 11 seconds
showing to again tie
things up at 53.
Crabtree went for a
steal on the ensuing
inbounds pass, but was
whistled for her ﬁfth foul
while sending Barnes to
the line with 6.1 seconds
left on the clock.
Barnes missed the
front end of the 2-shot
sequence, then GAHS
decided to call a timeout
just before the senior
released the second
attempt — which ultimately came off of the
board after hitting nothing but net.
Barnes missed her second chance at the eventual game-winner out of
the timeout, but neither
team managed a shot
attempt before the regulation buzzer sounded.
There were three ties
and three lead changes in
the opening frame, with
GAHS jumping out to a
7-2 lead before the Lady
Raiders took their only
lead of regulation at 9-7
on a Crabtree trifecta
with 3:05 left.
The Blue Angels built a
19-13 advantage through
eight minutes and took a
28-23 lead into the break.
The hosts also led by as
many as a dozen points
twice in the second
canto.
After being on the
wrong end of a 28-point
end swing, RVHS coach
Stephen Roderick was
obviously frustrated with
the outcome afterwards.
The third-year mentor,
however, did note that
there were positives to
take away from this —
particularly the way his
troops continued to ﬁght
in the face adversity.
“It’s a disappointing
loss, but give credit to
Coach Deel because his
kids came back hungry
after what happened in
the ﬁrst meeting at our
place. They took it to us
tonight from the start,”
Roderick said. “Our girls
dug a pretty big hole
and fought back, but we
just never managed to

get ourselves out of that
hole. We did some positive things, like coming
back from a 14-point
fourth quarter deﬁcit,
but we didn’t have
enough energy at the
start … and it cost us.
“It’s a rivalry game,
so this one does sting a
little bit more, but we
have to shake this one
off and get ready for the
next one. We’ve had a
good run of late and we
need to keep that going
with the tournament
approaching.
Gallia Academy outrebounded the guests by
a 40-32 overall margin,
but the Lady Raiders
claimed a 12-11 edge on
the offensive glass. The
Silver and Black also
committed only 10 of
the 28 turnovers in the
contest.
The Blue Angels netted 19-of-42 ﬁeld goal
attempts for 45 percent,
including a 1-of-4 effort
from 3-point range for 25
percent. The hosts also
made 21-of-37 free throw
attempts for 57 percent.
Petro led GAHS with
25 points, followed by
Barners with a doubledouble effort of 21 points
and a game-high 12
rebounds. Regan Wilcoxon was next with six
points, followed by Reed
and Chanee Cremeens
with three markers each.
Kaylie Clark completed
the winning tally with
two points. Petro and
Cremeens also hauled in
nine and seven caroms
for the victors, respectively.
River Valley made
20-of-66 shot attempts
for 30 percent, including a 7-of-28 effort from
behind the arc for 25
percent. The guests were
also 9-of-16 at the charity
stripe for 57 percent.
Crabtree led the Lady
Raiders with a gamehigh 26 points, followed
by Twyman with 14
points and Jacks with
nine markers. Jacks and
Twyman also led the
guests with eight and six
rebounds, respectively.
Somerville was next
with four points, while
Kaylee Gillman completed the tally with
one point. Gillman also
hauled in ﬁve boards.
Gallia Academy
returns to action Thursday when it hosts Fairland in an Ohio Valley
Conference contest at
7:30 p.m.
The Lady Raiders
return to the hardwood
Thursday when they travel to Nelsonville-York for
a Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division matchup
at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 7

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior Christopher Smith locks in a hold on a Winfield opponent during a
126-pound match held on Dec. 11, 2019, at The Dungeon in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Christopher Smith was 6-1 with
two pinfalls and a technical fall
en route to a third place effort at
126 pounds.
Mitchell Freeman ended up
fourth at 145 pounds with a 5-2
mark that included two pinfalls.
Juan Marquez placed ﬁfth at 195
pounds with a 4-2 record and two
pinfalls.
Zac Samson was sixth at 160
pounds with a 5-3 record that
included one pinfall and a single
major decision. Logan Southall
was eighth at 170 pounds with a
4-3 mark and two pinfalls.
The remaining ﬁve Point Pleasant grapplers did not place, but
the quintet at least came away
with a win apiece in their respective divisions.
Wyatt Wilson was 4-2 overall
at 152 pounds and Wyatt Stanley
ﬁnished the weekend 3-2 with
one pinfall at 220 pounds.
Mackandle Freeman (113),
Brayden Connolly (182) and
Nick Ball (285) all posted identical marks of 1-2. Only Freeman
did not record a pinfall win out
of that trio.
“It was a dog ﬁght all weekend.
Aurora has a very tough team
and that tournament had a lot
of great teams and individual
wrestlers,” PPHS coach John
Bonecutter said following the
tournament. “Our guys wrestled
hard and we are proud of that.
We wanted to win it, but it’s hard
not to be pleased with where we
ended up.”
Point Pleasant led the event
after Day 1 by 4.5 points. The
Big Blacks had 143 points follow-

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant sophomore Brayden
Connolly lifts a Winfield opponent during
a 182-pound match held on Dec. 11, 2019,
at The Dungeon in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

ing Friday’s round, with Aurora
sitting right behind them with
138.5 points.
Akron SVSM joined Aurora
with multiple weight class champions after claiming two divisional titles.
Point Pleasant was joined by
Hawken, Austintown, Newcomerstown, Nordonia, Worthington
Kilbourne, Massillon Perry and
Ellwood City (PA) with one
weight class champion apiece.
The Big Blacks return to the
mats on Friday and Saturday as
they travel to Big Sandy Superstore Arena in Huntington to
defend their team title at the
WSAZ Invitational.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

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Modern
Single
Family (N)
Parents (N)
Nature "Wild Way of the
Nova "Saturn" NASA's
Vikings"
Cassini explores Saturn for
13 years.
Goldberg (N) Schooled (N) Modern
Single
Family (N)
Parents (N)
Undercover Boss "Dippin' Criminal Minds "Saturday"
Dots" (N)
(N)
9-1-1: Lone Star "Yee9-1-1: Lone Star "Pilot"
Haw"
Nature "Wild Way of the
Nova "Saturn" NASA's
Vikings"
Cassini explores Saturn for
13 years.
Undercover Boss "Dippin' Criminal Minds "Saturday"
Dots" (N)
(N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago P.D. "The Devil
You Know" (N)
Chicago P.D. "The Devil
You Know" (N)
Stumptown "Dirty Dexy
Money" (N)
Expedition With Steve
Backshall "Arctic: Frozen
Frontier" (N)
Stumptown "Dirty Dexy
Money" (N)
S.W.A.T. "Good Cop" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10:00
p.m. (N)
Expedition With Steve
Backshall "Arctic: Frozen
Frontier" (N)
S.W.A.T. "Good Cop" (N)

10 PM

10:30

Cops
18 (WGN) Cops
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball In Depth (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Daily Wager (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
NCAA Basketball Georgia Tech at Louisville (L)
NCAA Basketball Boston College at Pittsburgh (L)
NBA Basketball Philadelphia 76ers at Toronto Raptors (L)
NBA Basketball Denver vs Houston (L)
NCAA Basketball Syracuse at Notre Dame (L)
ITF Tennis Australian Open (L)
Married at First Sight "One Night Spouse" The couples to Supernanny "Ostler Family"
Married at First Sight "I Married a
Married at
Stranger"
First Si. (N) spend their first night alone. (N)
(N)
The Notebook (‘04, Romance) Rachel McAdams, Gena Rowlands, Ryan Gosling. Party of Five "Authentic
Good Trouble "Gumboot
A man tells the story of a woman who is torn between her fiancé and her first love. TV14 Mexican" (N)
Becky" (N)
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
68 Whiskey "Finger Lickin'
Two and a
John Wick (2014, Action) Adrianne Palicki,
Bridget Moynahan, Keanu Reeves. TVMA
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Good" (N)
Loud House Casagrandes It's Pony
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends 1/2 Friends 2/2 Friends
Friends
NCIS "Déjà Vu"
NCIS "Decompressed"
WWE NXT (L)
(:10) Miz
(:40) Miz
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
(12:30) Impeachment (L)
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
Battleship (‘12, Sci-Fi) Taylor Kitsch. TVPG
All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite (N)
2 Guns TVMA
(5:30)
A Walk Among the Tombstones (2014,
Taken (2008, Thriller) Famke Janssen, Leland Orser,
Taken (‘08, Thril)
Action) Dan Stevens, Boyd Holbrook, Liam Neeson. TVMA Liam Neeson. TV14
Liam Neeson. TV14
Alaskan Bush People
Alaskan Bush People (N)
Bush "Noah's Animal Ark" Naked "Gary of The Jungle" Naked "Lacey's Journey"
PD Cam
PD Cam
PD Cam
PD Cam
PD Cam (N) PD Cam (N) America's Top Dog "Small Live PD:
Live PD:
Dog, Big Bite" (N)
Police Patrol Patrol (N)
I Prey "Attacked in Alaska" I Was Prey "Close to Home" I Was Prey "Another Day in the Neighborhood" (N)
Prey "Surviving for my Son"
Snapped "Shayne Lovera" Snapped "Courtney
Snapped "Kelly Ryan"
Snapped "Monique
Snapped "Wendi Andriano"
Schulhoff"
Berkley"
Law &amp; Order "Illegal"
Law &amp; Order "Executioner" Law &amp; Order "Tango"
Law &amp; Order "Betrayal"
Law &amp; Order "Submission"
(5:30) Botched Botched
Botched
Botched
Botched
Nightly (N)
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Loves Ray "Fairies"
(:55) Queens King-Queens
Locked Up Abroad "Party's Locked Up Abroad "Pop
Locked Up Abroad
Locked up "Undercover
To Catch a Smuggler
Over"
Star Smuggler"
"Betrayed and Afraid" (N) Arms Dealer" (N)
"Cocaine Crackdown" (N)
Men/Blazers Mecum10
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Detroit Red Wings at Minnesota Wild (L)
(:45) Overtime
Big East
NCAA Basketball Georgetown at Xavier (L)
NCAA Basketball Providence at Seton Hall (L)
Hoops Extra
Forged in Fire "The Spanish Vikings "Valhalla Can Wait"
Forged in Fire "The Steel
Forged in Fire "The
Forged in Fire
"Charlemagne's Sword" (N) Conquistador Sword" (N)
Takedown Bow"
Barbarian Spatha"
(N)
Wives NJ "Abs and Jabs"
Wives NJ "Mama Drama" Housewives/NewJersey (N) Watch (N)
WivesNJ "Clearing the Heir" Atlanta
Movie
This Christmas (‘07, Com) Idris Elba, Delroy Lindo. TV14
Tyler Perry's the Oval (N) Sistas "All I Got" (N)
Property Brothers
House (N)
H.Hunt (N)
Property Brothers: F
Property Brothers: F (N)
House (N)
H.Hunt (N)
(4:10)
The Magnificent (:10)
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (‘17, Act) Charlie Hunnam. After pulling a The Magicians "The Wrath
Seven TV14
sword from a stone, Arthur must defeat a corrupt king and face his legacy. TVPG
of the Time Bees" (N)

6 PM

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Fast Five (‘11, Action) Paul Walker, Dwayne
Johnson, Vin Diesel. The crew find themselves on the
wrong side of the law as they try to get out of Brazil. TVPG
(4:40)
(:25)
The Ruins Jena Malone. Tourists
The Darkest in Mexico are trapped in an old temple with
Minds TVPG a flesh-eating vine. TVMA
(:15)
Moon (‘09, Sci-Fi) Kevin Spacey, Sam
Rockwell. An astronaut on the moon begins to breakdown
as he nears the end of his solo mission. TV14
(5:45)

8 PM
The Outsider

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019, Sci-Fi) Vera
Farmiga, Millie Bobby Brown, Kyle Chandler. The agency
Monarch battles the monsters known as Titans. TV14
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when the man she was with wants nothing owner is haunted by her ex-husband's
to do with her. TV14
novel, which symbolises their past. TVMA
Real Steel (2011, Sci-Fi) Evangeline Lilly, Dakota
(:05)
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Goyo, Hugh Jackman. A robot boxing promoter re-connects (‘90, Sci-Fi) Arnold
with his son while training a discarded robot. TV14
Schwarzenegger. TVMA

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Rio’s Somerville earns honors Rio’s Inaba grabs win
By Randy Payton

ished fourth with 6,061 pins.
Muskingum University
took team honors with 6,976
pins, while Miami University
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
(6,297 pins) and Walsh UniChris Somerville earned
versity (6,206 pins) rounded
all-tournament honors and
the University of Rio Grande out the top three.
Muskingum’s Joshua
men’s bowling team posted
Hoffer won the individual
a fourth place ﬁnish in the
championship with 862 pins
Ohio Bowling Conference
in four games for a 215.5
#3 Tournament, Saturday
average.
afternoon, at Wayne Webb’s
Also competing for Rio
Columbus Bowl.
Grande were freshman Reece
Somerville, a junior from
Gallipolis, Ohio, toppled 805 Collins (Columbus, OH),
who placed 11th with 714
pins over four games for an
pins in four games for an
average of 201.3, earning
fourth place in the ﬁeld of 52 average of 178.5; senior Zachary Morris (Vinton, OH_,
participants.
Somerville also was respon- who was 15th with 692 pins
in four games for an average
sible for the RedStorm’s
single-game high with a 235. of 173; junior Isaiah Pickell
As a team, Rio Grande ﬁn- (Logan, OH), who placed

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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

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

41st with 433 pins in three
games for a 144.3 average;
senior Jacob Morris (Vinton,
OH), who was 42nd with 321
pins in two games for a 160.5
average; sophomore Colin
Little (Bidwell, OH), who
ﬁnished 44th with 300 pins
in two games for an average
of 150; and freshman Andrew
Ladd (Columbus, OH), who
toppled 165 pins in his only
game.
Rio Grande will return to
action on Saturday at the
American Heartland Intercollegiate Bowling Conference
Tournament No. 3 at Mt.
Lebanon Lanes in Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

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

at Snow Globe Invite
By Randy Payton

other top 10 performances at
the meet, which was not a team
scored event.
Senior Adam Champer (MalWESTERVILLE, Ohio —
vern, OH) placed sixth in the
Fabio Inaba picked up a victory
shot put with a heave of 12.31m,
and Zack Collins had a top ﬁve
while senior Daulton Duvall
outing of his own, leading the
University of Rio Grande men’s (Flatwoods, KY) was seventh in
the shot (12.25m) and 10th in
track &amp; ﬁeld team in the Otterthe weight throw (13.34m).
bein Snow Globe Invitational,
Other top efforts came from
Saturday afternoon, at the Clefreshman Josiah Edwards (South
ments Recreation Center.
Webster, OH), who was eighth
Inaba, a sophomore from
in the shot put with a toss of
Sao Paulo, Brazil, ﬁnished ﬁrst
among the 31 competitors in the 11.68m and freshman Chase
McClary (McDermott, OH),
200-meter dash with a time of
who took 10th place in the 40023.64, while Collins - a senior
from Newark, Ohio - was fourth meter dash with a time of 58.08.
Rio Grande returns to action
in the weight throw with an
on Saturday at Capital Univereffort of 14.61m.
sity.
The RedStorm managed ﬁve
For Ohio Valley Publishing

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

VILLAGE OF POMEROY WATER METER REPLACEMENT
LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete a project known as
Village of Pomeroy Water Meter Replacement at the Village
of Pomeroy Office (the “OWNER”), 660 E. Main Street, Suite
A, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 2:00 P.M. local time on February 3rd, 2020, and at said time and place, publicly opened and
read aloud. Bids may be mailed or delivered in advance to the
Village of Pomeroy at the above address.
The project consists of: Contract #1 – Water Meter Supply
Contract #2 – Water Meter Installation
A copy of the Bid Documents containing the Bid Requirements
and Contract Documents (including all bid sheets, specifications and any addenda) can be obtained from IBI Group, 5085
Tile Plant Road, New Lexington, OH 43764 with a
non-refundable payment of $75 each. Checks should be made
payable to IBI Group. This legal ad will be available for viewing
at Builders Exchange and Dodge Data &amp; Analytics.
Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the
fully completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance
with Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form (Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said surety. Those
Bidders that elect to submit bid guaranty in the form of a certified check, cashier’s check, or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter 1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in accordance with Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio Revised Code. Any such letter of
credit shall be revocable only at the option of the beneficiary
OWNER. The amount of the certified check, cashier’s check, or
letter of credit shall be equal to ten (10) percent of the Bid and
the Successful Bidder will be required to submit a bond in the
form provided in 153.57 of the Ohio Revised Code in conjunction with the execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons interested
therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences
on projects of similar size and complexity. The OWNER intends
that this Project be completed no later than the time period as
set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of Agreement between OWNER and CONTRACTOR on the Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.
All CONTRACTORS and subcontractors involved with the project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials,
services and labor in the implementation of their project. DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPLY
TO THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF
THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Additionally, CONTRACTOR compliance with the equal employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the Governor’s Executive Order of 1972, and
Governor’s Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders must comply with the prevailing Davis-Bacon wage
rates on Public Improvements in Meigs County as determined
by the U.S. Department of labor, Federal Wage and Hour Division.
The ENGINEER’s estimate for this project is:
Contract #1 - $336,000.00
Contract #2 - $47,500.00
The Village of Pomeroy reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities. The Village of Pomeroy reserves the
right to reject any or all bids or to increase or decrease or omit
any item or times and/or award the bid to the lowest and best
bidder.
1/15/20, 1/22/20, 1/29/20

AUCTIONS

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

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Auto Auction

The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, January 24,
2020 at Dave's Supreme Auto
Sales LLC, 1393 Jackson
Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
9,1� .1'-'������������
2007 Kia Sorento
VIN: 2A4GP44R36R634597
2006 Chrysler Town
&amp; Country
9,1� :'%5)��-��)������
2005 Mercedes C240

Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
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EMPLOYMENT

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PUBLIC NOTICE
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2004 Dodge Dakota VIN# 1D7HG38N74S640142
2001 Hyundai Elantra VIN# KMHDN45D81 U96391
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7KH )DUPHUV %DQN� DQG 6DYLQJV &amp;RPSDQ\� 3RPHUR\� 2KLR�
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CLASSIFIEDS

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, January 22, 2020 9

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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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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see what’s brewing on the

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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Rio Grande’s Lyne Center celebrates 50th anniversary
By Randy Payton

nies took place on May 12,
1968 and just under two
years later, the Lyne Center
became a reality.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
For those members of the
The University of Rio Grande
men’s basketball team, its
will celebrate the 50th anniopening was a welcome sight.
versary of the Lyne Center
“There was a tremendous
when the RedStorm entersense of pride in finally havtains Midway University in a
ing a home and not having to
River States Conference basride a bus just to practice,”
ketball doubleheader on Sat.,
said Charlie Baker, then the
Jan. 25th.
starting point guard for the
Members of the 1968-69
Redmen. “You could really
men’s basketball team - the
see the happiness among my
first to call the building their
teammates, the community,
home - will be introduced in
our coaches, our fans and our
between games of the twinstudent body.”
bill, which gets underway
Before the opening of the
with the women’s contest at
Courtesy photo Lyne Center, Redmen bas1 p.m.
The ceremony itself, which The University of Rio Grande will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the opening of the Paul R. Lyne Center on Saturday in ketball practiced and played
its home contests at nearby
will also include family mem- between games of the RedStorm’s basketball doubleheader against Midway University.
Gallia Academy High School
bers of the building’s nameonce again in 1954 to serve as - something Baker and his
Lyne was a coach and
ulty offices, was built for
sake - former Rio Grande
teammates weren’t particuphysical education instructor the school’s 10th president.
football coach, athletic direc- $600,000.
larly proud of.
During Lyne’s nine-year
at Rio Grande College from
“The tradition of sports at
tor and president Paul R.
“Having a home made us
the University of Rio Grande 1923-28, before being named tenure, the school’s student
Lyne - will begin at approxifeel whole as college players
body more than tripled and
an assistant professor of
has had such a huge impact
mately 3 p.m., just prior to
physical education and direc- the size of the campus nearly at the next level. We didn’t
on so many. The many days
the start of the men’s game.
have to tell people we played
doubled.
tor of athletics in 1929.
The Lyne Center opened on and nights of celebrations at
our college games in a high
Lyne’s successor as presiLyne left Rio Grande in
the Paul R. Lyne Center resoSaturday, Jan. 31, 1970 and
school gym,” Baker said. “I
dent, Dr. Alphus R. Chriswas christened with a victory nate in the memories of hun- 1930 for a similar position
can still see Coachman (Rio
tensen, initiated the moveat Defiance College, but
dreds of athletes throughout
by the then-Redmen over
ment to build a facility where Grande head coach Art Lanreturned to Rio two years
the country,” said Jeff LanCampbellsville (Ky.) Univercourses in physical education ham) - the excitement and the
later as the school’s director
ham, Rio Grande’s current
sity.
could be taught, where inter- pleasure of having an arena
of physical education and a
The building, which housed athletic director. “When the
that we could call home was
collegiate athletic events
professor of history.
facility was erected in 1970,
two full-sized basketball
written all over his face.”
could be played and where
After later becoming the
courts, an Olympic-size swim- it was considered state-of-theart and it remains a pillar for principal at Cambridge High students could participate in
ming pool, handball courts,
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
intramural events.
School in Cambridge, Ohio,
events throughout all of our
a weight-lifting room, locker
Director at the University of Rio Grande.
Groundbreaking ceremoLyne returned to Rio Grande
community.”
rooms, class rooms and facFor Ohio Valley Publishing

Kirts, Orr lead Rio Grande women at OBC#3
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Rena Kirts and Tylor
Orr each earned a Top
10 ﬁnish in leading the
University of Rio Grande
women’s bowling team to
a ﬁfth place performance
in the Ohio Bowling Con-

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

15°

34°

32°

Partly sunny today. Partly cloudy tonight. High
42° / Low 20°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
0.00
Month to date/normal
2.55/2.00
Year to date/normal
2.55/2.00

Snowfall

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Tue.
0.0
Month to date/normal
Trace/4.4
Season to date/normal
1.0/9.0

Today
7:43 a.m.
5:38 p.m.
5:58 a.m.
3:37 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:42 a.m.
5:39 p.m.
6:53 a.m.
4:32 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Jan 24

First

Feb 1

Full

Feb 9

Last

Feb 15

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

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

Major
9:24a
10:14a
11:04a
11:27a
12:18p
1:13a
2:02a

Minor
3:10a
4:00a
4:51a
5:43a
6:34a
7:24a
8:13a

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.

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: Do all snowﬂakes have six sides?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
9:51p
10:40p
11:30p
---12:46p
1:35p
2:23p

Minor
3:37p
4:27p
5:17p
6:08p
6:57p
7:46p
8:34p

WEATHER HISTORY
A record 17.4-inch snowfall on
Jan. 22, 1902, in Buffalo, N.Y., was
dwarfed by 30 inches in Philadelphia,
Pa., on Jan. 8, 1996.

FRIDAY

Cloudy most of the
time

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Waverly
39/24
Lucasville
40/25
Portsmouth
41/25

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.96 -0.04
Marietta
34 20.61 -1.53
Parkersburg
36 24.50 -0.06
Belleville
35 12.51 -0.09
Racine
41 12.97 -0.13
Point Pleasant
40 26.66 -0.26
Gallipolis
50 12.07 +0.02
Huntington
50 30.65 +1.28
Ashland
52 36.79 +1.05
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.53 +0.47
Portsmouth
50 30.00 +1.10
Maysville
50 36.50 +0.90
Meldahl Dam
51 29.80 +2.00
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

Logan
38/21

Ashland
43/27
Grayson
43/24

SUNDAY

41°
31°
Cloudy with spotty
showers

TUESDAY

42°
31°

Morning ﬂurries;
cloudy and chilly

Mostly cloudy

53°
31°
Mostly sunny and not
as cool

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
40/20
Belpre
41/21

St. Marys
41/21

Parkersburg
43/21

Coolville
40/20

Wilkesville
40/18
POMEROY
Jackson
41/19
40/19
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
42/21
41/20
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
37/28
GALLIPOLIS
42/20
43/22
42/19

Elizabeth
41/21

Spencer
42/21

Buffalo
43/21

Ironton
43/26

(Vinton, OH), who was
30th with 218 pins in
four games for an average of 54.5..
Rio Grande will return
to action on Saturday at
the American Heartland
Intercollegiate Bowling
Conference Tournament
No. 3 at Mt. Lebanon
Lanes in Pittsburgh, Pa.

MONDAY

39°
27°

Murray City
38/19
Athens
39/19

McArthur
39/19

South Shore Greenup
42/26
40/24

39

Cloudy with rain in
the afternoon

Adelphi
38/22
Chillicothe
38/23

SATURDAY

44°
37°

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

2

A: Yes. This is due to the structure of a
water molecule

Precipitation

31°/20°
42°/25°
70° in 1935
-16° in 1985

THURSDAY

47°
32°

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

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

were Brianna Eberle (St.
Marys, OH), who placed
12th in the 32-bowler
ﬁeld with 586 pins in
four games for an average of 146.5; freshman
Kaci Bell (Portsmouth,
OH), who was 23rd with
450 pins in four games
for a 112.5 average; and
freshman Ashley Morris

University (5,489 pins)
and Tifﬁn University
(4,810 pins) rounded out
the top three.
Emily Kiss of Walsh
captured the individual
championship with 672
pins in four games for a
164 average.
Others representing the
RedStorm in the tourney

took down 592 pins in
four games for an average
of 148.
Orr had Rio’s singlegame high with a 183.
As a team, Rio Grande
grabbed ﬁfth place with
4,430 pins.
Walsh University took
team honors with 5,641
pins, while Muskingum

ference #3 Tournament,
Saturday afternoon, at
Wayne Webb’s Columbus
Bowl.
Kirts, a sophomore
from London, Ohio, ﬁnished ninth with 592 pins
toppled in four games for
an average of 148, while
Orr - a sophomore from
Chillicothe, Ohio - also

Milton
43/22
Huntington
44/25

St. Albans
44/22

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
48/47
90s
Winnipeg
22/13
80s
70s
Billings
60s
44/25
Minneapolis
50s
37/31
40s
30s
Denver
Chicago
20s
San Francisco
54/24
35/28
10s
58/45
0s
Kansas City
-0s
37/32
Los Angeles
-10s
66/50
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
63/36
Flurries
Houston
Chihuahua
Ice
57/54
71/38
Cold Front
Monterrey
Warm Front
68/54
Stationary Front

Clendenin
45/24
Charleston
46/22

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

Toronto
35/25

Montreal
34/23
New York
40/31

Detroit
33/25

Washington
43/27

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

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
50/30/c
16/0/pc
49/35/s
42/27/s
42/23/s
44/25/c
44/37/c
39/27/s
46/22/s
49/26/s
45/20/c
35/28/pc
41/28/pc
38/26/s
37/24/pc
47/44/r
54/24/c
36/29/sn
33/25/pc
81/65/pc
57/54/r
38/28/pc
37/32/sn
61/45/s
41/31/sh
66/50/s
42/31/pc
67/60/sh
37/31/c
46/34/pc
58/52/c
40/31/s
44/36/r
63/53/pc
41/25/s
65/46/s
38/19/s
33/17/pc
47/26/s
45/22/s
41/33/c
43/32/sn
58/45/pc
48/47/sh
43/27/s

Hi/Lo/W
49/28/c
6/-5/pc
50/41/c
47/32/pc
46/27/pc
41/31/pc
49/38/pc
47/31/s
50/33/c
49/35/c
39/25/c
35/31/sn
46/34/c
44/28/c
45/30/c
56/38/r
46/24/pc
35/28/c
37/28/c
81/67/s
67/43/r
43/33/c
38/27/c
65/47/pc
41/33/r
72/51/s
49/39/c
78/64/pc
36/30/sn
50/41/c
67/52/t
46/33/pc
50/31/r
74/57/c
45/27/pc
70/48/s
43/25/c
41/24/pc
51/35/pc
48/30/pc
37/33/sn
46/33/c
58/47/pc
56/50/r
46/30/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
49/35

High
Low

69° in Flafurrias, TX
-28° in Ely, MN

Global
High
Low
Miami
67/60

108° in Telfer, Australia
-66° 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-70107872

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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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Middleport

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          <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="5245">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="5246">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="5248">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="42">
      <name>barker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="73">
      <name>carrico</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="72">
      <name>morrison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
