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                  <text>Love
has
limits

Ohio
Valley
Business

High
school
basketball

OPINION s 4

BUSINESS s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 13, Volume 74

Thursday, January 23, 2020 s 50¢

Commissioners hear from FFA officers
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Racine Southern FFA officers Kristin McKay and Raeven Reedy are pictured with
Meigs County Commissioners Jimmy Will, Randy Smith and Tim Ihle during the
recent Commissioner meeting.

POMEROY — Racine
Southern FFA President Raeven Reedy and Vice President
Kristin McKay addressed the
Meigs County Commissioners during last week’s regular
meeting, updating the board
on the activities of the organization.
The ofﬁcers stated that
they wanted to let the commissioners know what the
Racine Southern FFA Chapter
does throughout the year with
activities, community service,
fundraising and other items.
They also hoped to become
more involved in government
and to add the commissioners

as members of the FFA support group.
Currently their are 100
students involved in the FFA
program at Racine Southern,
including all eighth graders
who are taking an agriculture
class for the ﬁrst time this
school year. The eighth graders are working toward their
FFA Discovery Degree.
Teacher Jenna Meeks told
the commissioners that both
Reedy and McKay will be
applying for their State Degree
this year.
Among the community service activities the FFA Chapter
takes part in are food baskets
at the holidays, trash pickup in
the district, the angel tree at
Southern and with a local nurs-

ing home.
The Chapter also conducts
fundraising activities throughout the year including the fruit
sale, beef jerky sale, strawberry sale, ﬂower sale and other
activities.
FFA members have the
opportunity to earn scholarships. College visits and
information on apprenticeships are also presented to
the FFA members. They take
part in ﬁeld trips, State and
National Convention and other
activities to meet with other
chapters, network, and work
on skills.
The FFA members work to
promote a healthy lifestyle in

See FFA | 2

Two people
injured in
vehicle crash
Staff Report

CHESTER/ROCKSPRINGS — Two people
were ﬂown to the hospital following a two vehicle
crash near Chester on Wednesday morning.
According to a news release from the Gallipolis
Post of the Ohio State Highway Patrol, Arlene S.
Downer, 58, of Pomeroy and Jack Downer, 56,
of Pomeroy were ﬂown by MedFlight to Cabell
Huntington and St. Mary’s Hospitals, respectively,
with incapacitating injuries. Both were wearing
safety belts at the time of the crash
Arlene Downer was the driver of a 2013 Ford
Fusion which was traveling southbound on State
Route 7 when it reportedly went left of center
See CRASH | 3

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor presents a check to County Court Judge Mick Barr for the technology grant received by the court. Also
pictured are county court staff Kelly Milam, Regina Life, Penny Elam and Angie Bissell.

Racine Village Chief Justice presents grant funds
Council holds
meeting
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Staff Report

RACINE — Racine Village Council recently
held its organizational meeting with council members Chad Hubbard and Mony Wood being sworn
in by Mayor Scott Hill.
Hubbard was reelected to council, while Wood
is a new member of council.
Ian Wise was selected to serve as President Pro
Temp of council. Appointments made by Hill and
See MEETING | 3

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

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

POMEROY — Chief
Justice of the Ohio
Supreme Court Maureen
O’Connor was in Meigs
County on Wednesday
morning, presenting
grant funds to Meigs
Count Court and Meigs
Common Pleas Court for
technology upgrades.
As previously reported
by The Daily Sentinel,
Meigs County Court
received $217,733.90 to
upgrade the court’s existing case management
system. The award is the
second largest amount
awarded according to the
information provided by
the Ohio Supreme Court,
with only Wyandot County Common Pleas Court
receiving more funding.
In addition, the Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court, Clerk of Courts
ofﬁce, received $53,972
to upgrade the court’s
existing case management system. The
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, general
and domestic relations
division, also received
$24,929.93 to upgrade
systems that support
case management.
Judges Mick Barr and
Linda Warner, along with
Clerk of Courts Sammi
Mugrage, and court staff
accepted the ceremonial

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor presents a check to Clerk of Courts Sammi Mugrage and Judge Linda
Warner for the technology grant received by Common Pleas Court.

checks from Chief Justice
O’Connor on Wednesday.
O’Connor explained
that the grants allow
for “upgrades to create
easier access to justice”
in the courts around the
state. Any court of record
in the state is eligible to
apply for the technology
grants, with the Supreme
Court awarding $3.2 million in funding this year
to 54 courts in 19 counties. Over the ﬁve years
for the program around
$17 million in funding
See FUNDS | 3

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor presents a check to County Court
Judge Mick Barr for a technology grant received by the court.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Thursday, January 23, 2020

DEATH NOTICES
SCARBERRY
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Christine Cookie
Spurlock Scarberry, 74, of Proctorville, Ohio, died
Monday, January 20, 2020 at her home with her
family by her side. Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Saturday, January 25, 2020 at Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, with
Pastor Gordon Simpson ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in Locust Grove Cemetery, Willow Wood,
Ohio. Visitation will be held 1 to 2 p.m. Saturday,
January 25, 2020 at the funeral home.
DILLON
CHESHIRE — Violet Lee Dillon, 90, Cheshire,
died January 21, 2020.
A celebration of her new life will be Saturday,
January 25, 2020 at Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany. Friends and family may call at the funeral
home from 11 a.m. to services at 1 p.m. Burial will
be at Athens Memory Gardens, Route 50, Athens,
Ohio.
HIGGINS
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Robert Keith Higgins, 75, of Willow Wood, Ohio, died Tuesday,
January 21, 2020 at home. Funeral service will
be conducted 2 p.m. Sunday, January 26, 2020 at
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio. Burial will follow in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Willow Wood. Visitation will be held 1 to
2 p.m. Sunday, January 26, 2020 at the funeral
home.
MITCHELL, SR.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Norman Lee Mitchell,
Sr., 82, of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Monday, January
20, 2020 surrounded by his family at Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be Saturday, January 25,
2020 at 1 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor
Aaron Young and Pastor Carroll Roberson ofﬁciating. The family will receive friends from 11 a.m.-1
p.m. prior to the service. Burial will be in Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.
MILLER
CROWN CITY — Kimberly Jane Gooderham
Miller, 61, of Crown City, died Tuesday, January
21, 2020.
The funeral service for Kim will be held at 2
p.m. on Sunday, January 26, 2020 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Mark Leist ofﬁciating. Her
burial will follow in Crown City Cemetery. Friends
may call Sunday prior to the funeral from noon-2
p.m. at the funeral home.
BRADLEY SR.
Keith Roger Bradley Sr., 70, died January 16,
2020 at Adena Regional Medical Center in Chillicothe, Ohio. He was born in Gallipolis, Ohio.
A memorial service will be held at a later date.
EDWARDS
POMEROY — Penny Edwards, 61, of Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2020, at her residence. Funeral arrangements will be announced
by the Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
DYE
GLENWOOD, W.Va. — Phyllis Jean Dye, 85, of
Glenwood, W.Va., died January 21, 2020.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., Monday, January
27, 2020, at 1 p.m. Friends may visit the family at
the funeral home from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. prior to the
service.
ADKINS
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Tilda J. Adkins, 83 of
Southside, W.Va., died January 21, 2020 at home.
Graveside service and burial will be 11 a.m.
Friday, January 24, 2020 at Pineview Cemetery,
Orgas, W.Va. Friends may call a half hour prior
to the service at the cemetery. Leonard Johnson
Funeral Home, Marmet, W.Va. is in charge of
arrangements.

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CONTACT US
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GROUP PUBLISHER
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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
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mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
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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.

Daily Sentinel

Hallmark media CEO leaves
NEW YORK (AP) —
The head of Hallmark’s
media business is leaving
the company after 11
years, just a month after
its ﬂagship Hallmark
Channel faced an outcry
over a decision to pull an
ad with a lesbian couple
kissing.
No reason was given
for Bill Abbott’s departure, and no replacement

was immediately named.
In a statement, Mike
Perry, president and CEO
of Hallmark Cards Inc.,
said that with immense
competition from TV
networks and streaming
services, it is important
for the company to ﬁnd
“relevant new ways to
grow our business.”
Abbott was CEO of
Crown Media Family

Networks, a company
controlled by Hallmark
Cards. Crown Media’s
ﬂagship cable channel is
The Hallmark Channel,
known for family-friendly
programming, particularly made-for-TV Christmas-themed movies.
In December, the Hallmark Channel’s decision
to pull an ad featuring
the same-sex couple led

to an outcry online. The
company later reversed
the decision.
Crown Media also
operates the Hallmark
Movies &amp; Mysteries,
Hallmark Drama networks, subscription
streaming service Hallmark Movies Now and
e-book publishing division Hallmark Publishing.

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

Meigs library storytimes

DAR Scholarship available

MEIGS COUNTY — Storytime returns to each
branch of the Meigs County Library beginning on
The Daughters of the American Revolution awarded Jan. 6. Days, locations, and times are as follows:
over $1.4 million in scholarships in 2019. The Nation- Mondays – Racine Library at 1 p.m., Tuesdays –
Eastern Library at 1:30 p.m., Wednesdays – Pomeroy
al Society DAR has over 30 different scholarships.
Library at 1 p.m., Thursdays – Middleport Library at
Most of these do not require that you be related to a
1 p.m.
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
The Meigs County Humane Society will be providor Secondary Teacher Education 1, Horticulture 1,
ing straw for animal bedding during the months of
Music 1, Chemistry 1, English 1, Math 1, Science 1.
November, December, January, and February. VouchStudents with American Indian heritage have two
ers may be picked up at the Humane Society Thrift
general areas. All Scholarship applications are due
Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport, Ohio, for
Feb. 15, 2020, and are submitted online only. Infora fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be redeemed at
mation is available at www.dar.org/national.society/
Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more information
scholarships. Questions should be directed to scholar- call 992-6064.

Straw available for animals

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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 print on
a space-available basis and in chronological order.
Events can be emailed to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

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.

Friday, Jan. 24
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 sandwiches, and
dessert. Everyone is welcome.

Saturday, Jan. 25
POMEROY — Intro to True Crime Podcasts –

From the hosts of the podcast Hello My Name Is: True
Crime, 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

Sunday, Jan. 26
POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim Church, Pomeroy,
Ohio, will host special singers Majesty at 6:30 p.m.

Monday, Jan. 27
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.
POMEROY — The Organizational and regular
meetings of the Meigs County Library Board will be
held at 3:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

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

IN BRIEF

3 kids dead,
mom suspect

mother’s slaying. An afﬁdavit signed on Tuesday
said he waives the right
to be executed by lethal
injection and chooses
PHOENIX (AP) —
electrocution.
A woman arrested on
Tennessee is one of six
suspicion of killing her
states where condemned
three young children told
inmates can choose the
investigators that she sufchair, but it’s the only
focated her son and two
state where they’re actudaughters with her hands,
ally doing so. They have
police said in court
argued unsuccessfully in
records.
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
court that the way TenInvestigators say
(AP) — A Tennessee
nessee carries out lethal
Rachel Henry, 22, told
inmate has chosen the
injection results in a
them that she thwarted
electric chair for his
an attempt by her 3-year- scheduled execution next prolonged and agonizing
death.
old son to protect his
month, opting like four
Expert witnesses have
1-year-old sister. The boy other inmates in little
testiﬁed that midazolam,
kicked and punched his
more than a year for
which is used to render
mother and yelled for her electrocution over the
the inmates unconscious,
to stop, but Henry chased state’s preferred execuwouldn’t prevent them
him away, according to
tion method of lethal
from feeling pain and
court records released
injection.
that Tennessee’s threeTuesday after her ﬁrst
Nicholas Sutton, 58,
drug combination would
court appearance.
is scheduled to be put
cause them sensations
Prosecutors said Henry to death Feb. 20 for
of drowning, suffocation
acknowledged having a
the stabbing death of a
and chemical burning
history of methamphetfellow inmate decades
while being unable to
amine addiction and that ago while serving a life
move or call out.
her children had previsentence for his grand-

Pipeline can
use US land

FFA

John Rinaldi of Green
Cab spoke to the commissioners about medical
transportation through
the Department of Job
and Family Services.
Rinaldi invited Commissioner Randy Smith to
meet with him further to
discuss the matter.
The commissioners
meet each Thursday at
11 a.m. in their ofﬁce
on the third ﬂoor of the
Meigs County Courthouse.

ously been removed from
their home by child-welfare authorities in Oklahoma due to issues related to her drug problem.
Henry’s family moved to
Phoenix in June.

Inmate picks
electrocution

From page 1

the whole school through
Ag Olympics and other
games.
The commissioners
expressed their support
for the group and invited
them to stop in the ofﬁce
at any time.
In other business, the
commissioners provided
a 30 day notice to Sheriff

Keith Wood that they
intend to work on a quarterly budget for the sheriff’s ofﬁce. A resolution to
move toward the quarterly budget approval could
be presented at the Feb.
20 meeting of the commissioners. Sheriff Wood
stated that he has been
meeting with the administrative staff and will
continue to meet with
staff and the commissioners to work toward budget solutions. He noted

that housing and the
items related to housing
are the primary budget
issues. This includes not
only housing costs, but
transportation of inmates
to outside facilities and
medical care for inmates.
Long-term housing of
inmates is also a concern, something that
the sheriff and commissioners expressed that
they could work with the
court and prosecutor to
help with.

BILLINGS, Mont.
(AP) — The Trump
administration on
Wednesday approved a
right-of-way allowing the
Keystone XL oil sands
pipeline to be built
across U.S. land, federal
ofﬁcials told The Associated Press, pushing the
controversial $8 billion
project closer to construction though court
challenges still loom.
The approval signed
by Interior Secretary
David Bernhardt covers 46 miles of the
line’s route across land
in Montana controlled
by the Bureau of Land
Management and the
U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, said Casey
Hammond, assistant
secretary of the Interior
Department.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Crash
striking a 2018 Kenworth T680 driven by Anthony A. Sapp, 62, of Milton,
West Virginia.
The crash occurred at 9:33 a.m.
near mile post 14 on State Route 7.
According to the news release,
drugs and alcohol are not factors in
the crash, which remains under investigation by the post.

Meeting

from the vehicles. Pumper 1 personnel
blocked trafﬁc in the debris lane, and
cleared the roadway after OSP conducted their photographs and investigation. Crews were released after the
vehicle that was in the roadway was
removed by the wrecker company.
Minor injuries were reported from
the crash.
Responding to the scene was Pomeroy Pumper 1, Meigs County EMS,
the Ohio State Highway Patrol, 33
Auto Towing, Racine Service Center
Towing, and ODOT.

A second crash also occurred
around the same time on Wednesday
morning, this one a two vehicle crash
at the intersection of State Route 7
and US Route 33 near Rocksprings.
According to a run report from the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department,
upon arrival of personnel on-scene,
one vehicle was partially in the roadway, while a second had went over a
small hill, into a rock ﬁlled ditch line.
One occupant was assisted from their
vehicle by EMS and ﬁre crews, while
all other occupants had self-extricated

From page 1

Thursday, January 23, 2020 3

From page 1

approved by council included: John
Holman, village administrator; Boyd
Bailey, ﬁre chief; Doug Little, village
solicator; Michael Hupp, village marshal, subject to the probation period
required by state code.
Council readopted the rules of
council and set the regular monthly
meetings for the ﬁrst Monday of each
month at 6:30 p.m. Should that day be
a holiday, the meeting would be held
the next Monday.
Council members Kevin Dugan and
Chad Hubbard were selected to serve
with ﬁre department representatives on
the Firemen’s Dependency Board.
During the regular meeting, which
followed the organizational meeting,
Ray McComas with Kinder Insurance
went over the village’s insurance coverage. This is Racine’s 31st year in the
Ohio Plan. Council approved the plan
and payment of $22,038, with the village receiving a discount of $2,024.
Council approved a resolution authorizing the hiring of Ohio First Responders Group to be the grant writer for
the various grants available to the ﬁre
department.
Village administrator and water
operator John Holman reported that
the difference between water pumped
and treated to water billed is down to
4.1 percent. He requested and council
approved to contract for GPS mapping
of the water meters.
Hubbard, who recently attended
a meeting of SOPEC (the electrical
group recently selected to handle village resident electric service), brought
a plaque recognizing Racine as joining
the group. Hubbard advised that the
village buildings will be able to take
advantage of the electrical cost savings
with SOPEC in July.
Mayor Hill was authorized to obtain
engineering information on several
projects for future grants.
Minutes of the previous meeting
were approved, and council acknowledged receipt of the list of paid bills
and a ﬁnancial statement.
Attending the meeting were council
members Bob Beegle, Kevin Dugan,
Chad Hubbard, Ian Wise, and Mony
Wood. Council member Ashli Peterman
was absent from the meeting.
The next meeting is scheduled for
6:30 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 3.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Common Pleas Court staff are pictured with Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor as she presents a check for grant funding or technology upgrades.

Funds
From page 1

has been awarded.
Of the funding, O’Connor
explained that the funds
come directly from the
Supreme Court budget.
The money is dollars which
would have had to go back
to the general fund if not
used by the court, so rather
than return the money to
the general fund, O’Connor
decided to spread the funding out to the courts in the
state to help with technology needs.
Commissioner Randy
Smith thanked the Chief

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

41°

38°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

Precipitation

41°/14°
42°/25°
76° in 1999
-9° in 1984

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed.
0.00
Month to date/normal
2.55/2.09
Year to date/normal
2.55/2.09

Snowfall

(in inches)

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

0

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed.
0.0
Month to date/normal
Trace/4.7
Season to date/normal
1.0/9.3

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: Has snow been observed on every
continent?

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Fri.
7:41 a.m.
5:40 p.m.
7:41 a.m.
5:31 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
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
10:14a
11:04a
11:27a
12:18p
1:13a
2:02a
2:49a

Minor
4:00a
4:51a
5:43a
6:34a
7:24a
8:13a
8:59a

Major
10:40p
11:30p
---12:46p
1:35p
2:23p
3:10p

Minor
4:27p
5:17p
6:08p
6:57p
7:46p
8:34p
9:20p

WEATHER HISTORY
Browning, Mont., had a world record
100-degree-plus change on Jan. 23,
1916. After a morning reading of 44,
arctic air dropped the temperature to
56 below zero overnight.

41°
34°

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

Portsmouth
47/37

41°
30°

Cloudy and chilly

AIR QUALITY
68
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Belpre
46/32

Athens
46/31

St. Marys
46/33

Parkersburg
49/32

Coolville
46/31

Elizabeth
47/32

Spencer
48/32

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. Wed.

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

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

Level
12.67
19.44
23.42
12.66
12.95
25.71
12.13
29.47
36.18
12.61
27.30
36.40
29.30

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.29
-1.17
-1.08
+0.15
-0.02
-0.95
+0.06
-1.18
-0.61
+0.08
-2.70
-0.10
-0.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

Buffalo
48/36

Ironton
48/38

Ashland
48/38
Grayson
48/37

Milton
48/36

Clendenin
50/36

St. Albans
49/37

Huntington
50/36

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
55/50
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
59/49
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
73/52
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly cloudy

Marietta
46/31

Wilkesville
46/32
POMEROY
Jackson
47/33
46/34
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
47/35
47/34
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
45/35
GALLIPOLIS
47/34
49/35
47/33

South Shore Greenup
47/37
46/36

WEDNESDAY

48°
33°

Remaining cloudy

Murray City
44/31

McArthur
45/32

Lucasville
46/36

TUESDAY

57°
38°
Cloudy to partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
45/32

Adelphi
45/33

Waverly
45/35

MONDAY

40°
33°

A couple of rain or
snow showers

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

Chillicothe
44/33

SUNDAY

Information provided by councilman Bob Beegle.

A: Yes.

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

SATURDAY

Rain

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

FRIDAY

Mostly cloudy today. Considerable clouds tonight
with a shower late. High 47° / Low 34°

ALMANAC

Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of
The Daily Sentinel.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

47°
35°
27°

with out political afﬁliation.
Two justices, Judi French and
Sharon Kennedy, are up for
re-election in 2020.
O’Connor added that
there is a new program
called “Under Advisement”
which is geared toward high
school students. The program includes lesson plans
for teachers which match up
to two cases the students
can watch oral arguments
for. The lesson plans are for
approximately three days
of class time and allow the
students to learn in a more
hands on way how the court
works.

All seven justices listen to
the oral arguments in cases
presented before the court.
She explained that there are
several types of cases that
go before the court, including appeals from the Court
of Appeals, tax appeals,
Public Utility Commission
cases and others. While
some are more interesting
than others, all are given the
same amount of attention
and treated equally in the
eyes of the court, explained
O’Connor.
Judges and Supreme Court
Justices in Ohio take part in
the primary elections on a
partisan ballot (Republican,
Democrat, etc.), in the general election they are listed

Justice for providing the
county with the grant funds
to allow the court to move
into the 21st century with
the technology upgrades.
In attendance for the
event were students from
Mid Valley Christian School
in Middleport, as well as 4th
District Court of Appeals
Judge Mike Hess, several
ofﬁce holders and members
of the community.
O’Connor took time for
questions from those in
attendance, explaining how
the Ohio Supreme Court
functions. She told the
students there are seven
justices on the court which
are elected in a state-wide
election for a six year term.

Charleston
51/36

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
18/4
Montreal
34/21

Billings
43/32
Minneapolis
Detroit
35/29
38/30

Toronto
37/28

Chicago
34/31
Denver
45/26

New York
46/34

Washington
46/34

Kansas City
37/27

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
51/30/s
5/-4/pc
56/36/t
50/41/s
48/39/c
47/33/c
49/35/sh
47/36/pc
52/35/r
52/37/r
47/30/pc
37/33/sn
45/33/r
44/35/r
43/33/r
61/41/s
53/30/s
34/26/sn
38/33/sn
83/69/pc
66/41/s
42/32/r
34/24/sn
66/47/pc
45/28/c
73/52/s
48/36/r
79/62/pc
34/30/sn
46/36/r
65/46/s
48/37/s
52/32/s
79/58/c
49/37/s
72/48/pc
44/33/r
39/29/pc
58/44/r
55/45/c
38/32/sn
45/35/c
60/51/pc
54/47/r
51/45/c

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
62/35

Monterrey
76/51

Today
Hi/Lo/W
50/29/c
9/-5/pc
49/43/sh
47/36/pc
46/29/pc
43/32/pc
50/39/pc
46/32/s
51/36/c
49/37/c
41/27/c
34/31/sn
47/35/c
44/33/c
45/32/c
59/38/pc
45/26/pc
36/29/c
38/30/c
81/63/s
66/42/pc
41/34/c
37/27/c
66/47/pc
42/33/r
73/52/s
48/40/c
78/66/pc
35/29/sn
46/42/r
68/50/t
46/34/pc
52/31/pc
73/60/c
45/29/pc
70/48/s
43/27/c
40/24/pc
50/37/pc
48/33/pc
39/32/c
46/32/c
59/49/pc
55/50/r
46/34/pc

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
Atlanta
49/43

Chihuahua
65/39

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

76° in Weslaco, TX
-4° in Stanley, ID

Global
Houston
66/42

High
Low
Miami
78/66

110° 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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Thursday, January 23, 2020

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Citrus albedo
is better than
you thought
Citrus fruits are among the world’s most popular fruits. Oranges are the king of the juicy orbs.
They have grown on orange trees for thousands of
years. Their true origin is a mystery
which originates in eastern Asia.
Today, they are grown in most
warm regions and are enjoyed either
as fruit or juice. A 4-ounce orange
contains mainly carbohydrates and
water, with very little protein, fat,
and few calories.
Bobbie
Oranges are a healthy source of
Randall
ﬁber, vitamin C, thiamine, folate,
Contributing potassium and antioxidants. They
columnist
have multiple health beneﬁts.
But let’s face it, before devouring
any citrus fruit most people meticulously pick off the stringy, spongy white stuff or
so-called, pith, which lies beneath the peel and the
fruit itself. Urban legend has it as bitter and thus,
not good. That white stuff has a name: albedo, and
believe it or not, it is an extremely healthy thing
to eat.
Albedo is a very rich source of pectin. Pectin is
primarily a helpful aid for GI function and blood
sugar control. It also ﬁghts against the bad LDL
cholesterol in the blood. Pectin is a soluble ﬁber.
The whiteness of the citrus fruit helps the body
absorb vitamin C easily. Thus, vitamin C from an
actual orange is more efﬁciently absorbed from
the fruit than juice.
The pithy albedo also counteracts the aging
process of many cells. It is like a facelift from the
underside of the skin. Albedo freshness and radiance makes the skin glow.
The high ﬁber of the white stuff aids in the
feeling of fullness after eating citrus. Albedo is
also rich in antioxidant power, useful for blood
circulation. Research connects it with antiseptic
and anti-inﬂammatory effects to ﬁght respiratory
infections.
An easy way to peel an orange is to rinse it off
ﬁrst then start with a sharp knife to cut the top
and bottom of the peeling off. Score the rind being
careful to not cut into the actual fruit. Using your
ﬁngers or a spoon tear the scored rind away from
the juicy fruit. Separate or cut with a knife.
Save time and gain the true beneﬁts of the
orange by leaving the pith on the orange. When
cracking open a peeled orange, snatch the fuzzy
albedo post from the center and pop it into your
mouth. If chewing on orange slices, include the
albedo into each bite.
Purchasing citrus sections in a jar from the grocery store may seem like a luxury but you are paying a lot of money for fewer health beneﬁts. Studies reveal that orange albedo is almost tasteless.
Lemon white stuff is nearly sweet, but grapefruit
pith is the most bitter.
Citrus fruits are harvested in warm locations
during the coldest months of other locales. Mother Nature is offering a prevention and remedy for
respiratory and cold symptoms. Take advantage
of the overwhelmingly positive beneﬁts of citrus
fruits.
Citrus fruits not only good; they support good
health. You can have your orange and your albedo,
too.

THEIR VIEW

Love has its limits
them at the same time.
American needs more
love, there is no doubt
about that. We need to
love our country more,
we need to love our
neighbors more, we
need to love our school
systems more, we need
to love our people struggling economically, with
mental illness, with
addiction, more. But,
that love has to be paid
for with reciprocity and
action is needed along
with that love.
You cannot conquer
hate just by loving
people. That is like saying you are going to
conquer societal hunger issues by eating a
cheeseburger. You have
to work to make sure
that before we depend
on love to solve things
we get rid of hate, bias,
oppression, ignorance,
prejudice and discrimination.
Then we can all hold
hands and sing and hug.
Not before.

There is a new movement afoot variously
calling for love or understanding or cooperation.
Sounds good on the
surface. Loving people,
caring for people, trying
to understand people,
cooperation with different people, what could
be wrong with that?
Lots. We live in a country where some animals
have always been considered more equal than
others. The categories
are many , varied and
changeable, but there
are always categories of
them vs us. Always have
been, more than likely
there will always be.
Competition is part of
human nature.
The first problem I
have with this new love,
peace and harmony
position is that it is
encouraging us to do
what is the equivalent
of staying in a toxic,
abusive relationship
and trying to solve the
issues of abuse by loving the abuser. I am
fairly confident that that
does not, will not, cannot work.
The second problem

any other opinion.
I have with that
However, believis that it implies
ing, and acting as
that everyone is
if some people are
at fault, that we
inferior because
should all simply
you do not like
find ways to love
their personal
each other and
lifestyle or charget along. I was
Cookie
acteristics is not
taught at an early Newsom
age that hating
Contributing an opinion, it is
a prejudice. The
someone, or con- columnist
dictionary defines
sidering them my
prejudice as “ a
inferior, because
preconceived opinion
of their personal charthat is not based on
acteristics, their age,
their race, their country reason or actual experience.” Note the word
of origin, their income,
their sexual orientation “preconceived.” As with
any kind of notion that
or any other thing that
might be different from is preconceived bigotry
is not based on logic,
mine was wrong and
experience or reason, it
ignorant.
is based in wanting to
People who were
believe it because it fits
not raised that way, or
with what you want to
who have rejected such
teachings are not going be true.
You cannot know all
to be made better by
love and understanding members of any group,
you probably know
and cooperation. They
fewer than 100. To
are going to feel vindimake assumptions about
cated in their bigotry.
Love has to be a two- “those people”, however
that is defined, is abysway street. For far too
mally ignorant, illogical,
long Americans have
and just plain wrong.
tried to portray being
biased against someone Love will not change
that because you cannot
as having a different
opinion, one that is pre- love someone and look
sumably just as valid as down on them or hate

Cookie Newsom is a Greene County
resident, Ohio and guest columnist.
This column shared through the
AIM Media Midwest group of
newspapers.

North Koreans.)
In 1973, President Richard Nixon
announced an accord
had been reached to end
the Vietnam War, and
would be formally signed
four days later in Paris.
In 1977, the TV miniseries “Roots,” based on
the Alex Haley novel,
began airing on ABC.
In 1989, surrealist artist Salvador Dali died
in his native Figueres,
Spain, at age 84.
In 1998, a judge in
Fairfax, Virginia, sentenced Aimal Khan Kasi
(eye-MAHL’ kahn KAH’see) to death for an
assault riﬂe attack outside CIA headquarters
in 1993 that killed two
men and wounded three
other people. (Kasi was
executed in November
2002.)
In 2002, John Walker
Lindh, a U.S.-born Taliban ﬁghter, was returned
to the United States to
face criminal charges
that he’d conspired to

kill fellow Americans.
(Lindh was sentenced to
20 years in prison after
pleading guilty to providing support for the
Taliban; he was released
in May, 2019, after serving more than 17 years.)
In 2009, President
Barack Obama quietly
ended the Bush administration’s ban on giving
federal money to international groups that performed abortions or provided information on the
option. New York Gov.
David Paterson chose
Democratic Rep. Kirsten
Gillibrand (KEHR’-sten
JIL’-uh-brand) to ﬁll the
Senate seat vacated by
Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Ten years ago: Abby
Sunderland, 16, left
Marina del Rey, California, on her ﬁrst attempt
to become the youngest person to sail solo
around the world. (The
voyage ended a week and
a-half later because the
boat experienced power
problems; Sunderland

7-6 (5), 4-6, 7-6 (5).
One year ago: After
a week-long showdown
with House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, President
Donald Trump said he
was postponing his State
of the Union address
until the partial government shutdown was
over. Venezuela’s political crisis escalated as an
opposition leader backed
by the Trump administration, Juan Guaido
(gwy-DOH’), declared
himself interim president; President Nicolas
Maduro responded by
breaking off relations
with the United States.
(The opposition failed
to oust Maduro, who
retained the backing of
the country’s military).

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Thursday, Jan.
23, the 23rd day of 2020.
There are 343 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Jan. 23, 1964, the
24th Amendment to the
United States Constitution, eliminating the poll
tax in federal elections,
was ratiﬁed as South
Dakota became the 38th
state to endorse it.
On this date
In 1368, China’s Ming
dynasty, which lasted
nearly three centuries,
began as Zhu Yuanzhang
(zhoo whan-zhahng)
was formally acclaimed
emperor following the
collapse of the Yuan
dynasty.
In 1845, Congress
decided all national elections would be held on
the ﬁrst Tuesday after
the ﬁrst Monday in
November.
In 1932, New York

Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt announced his
candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1950, the Israeli
Knesset approved a
resolution afﬁrming
Jerusalem as the capital
of Israel.
In 1962, Jackie Robinson was elected to the
Baseball Hall of Fame
in his ﬁrst year of eligibility. Tony Bennett
recorded “I Left My
Heart in San Francisco”
in New York for Columbia Records.
In 1968, North Korea
seized the U.S. Navy
intelligence ship USS
Pueblo, commanded by
Lloyd “Pete” Bucher,
charging its crew with
being on a spying mission; one sailor was
killed and 82 were taken
prisoner. (Cmdr. Bucher
and his crew were
released the following
December after enduring
11 months of brutal captivity at the hands of the

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“It’s not what you are, it’s what you don’t
become that hurts.”
— Oscar Levant
pianist-composer-actor (1906-1972)

then made a second
attempt, but that, too,
fell short.) Rachael Flatt
won her ﬁrst title at
the U.S. Figure Skating
Championships in Spokane, Washington, ﬁnishing more than 10 points
ahead of Mirai Nagasu
(mih-RY’ NAH’-guh-soo).
Five years ago: King
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, 90, the powerful
U.S. ally who’d fought
against al-Qaida and
sought to modernize
the ultraconservative
Muslim kingdom, died
in Riyadh. Chicago Cubs
Hall of Famer Ernie
Banks, 83, died. Roger
Federer was ousted from
the Australian Open in
the third round, beaten
by Andreas Seppi 6-4,

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 23, 2020 5

OhioHealth O’Bleness Hospital raises minimum wage
Increase benefits more than 225 associates
the non-bargaining unit
associates in southeast
Ohio. The vote yesterday
ATHENS — Ohiobrings the number of
Health O’Bleness Hoscurrent OhioHealth assopital announced that on
ciates impacted in our
Jan. 16, AFSCME 1252
bargaining unit members region to 400.
“One of the most
ratiﬁed a proposal by the
important things we can
hospital to increase the
do for our associates and
current contract minifor the health of our commum wage from $12.07
to $15 per hour. Addition- munity is to make sure
we pay people fairly,”
ally, associates earning
said Mark Seckinger,
just above the $15 minipresident of OhioHealth
mum starting wage will
receive a pay adjustment. O’Bleness Hospital. “That
means each and every
In total, more than 225
associate – regardless of
associates will receive a
where they work or the
pay increase in February
as a result of this change. job they perform.”
Groups most impacted
In November 2019,
include areas of highest
OhioHealth brought
voluntary turnover such
a $15 minimum wage
as Environmental Serto associates across its
vices, Patient Escorts and
entire system, including

Submitted story

Patient Support Associates (PSAs).
This minimum wage
increase initiative was
part of a larger review
of compensation at
O’Bleness.
Earlier in 2019, recognizing the nationwide
shortage of bedside nurses, O’Bleness approached
AFSCME Local 1252
with a plan for a new,
increased compensation
model for O’Bleness
nurses. The increased
compensation model was
voted on and accepted
in June 2019 and 135
O’Bleness nurses have
received increased compensation as a result. The
new compensation system will help O’Bleness
retain its current nurses

and attract talented new
nurses to southeastern
Ohio.
OhioHealth deﬁnes fair
pay as compensation that
is equitable within OhioHealth and competitive
with its external market.
For some jobs, however,
the external market rate
may be insufﬁcient.
Ohio’s state minimum
wage of $8.70 per hour is
not enough to enable people to support themselves
and their families.
“As one of the largest employers in Athens
County, we are happy and
proud to be able to offer
this increase,” said Seckinger. “I want to thank
the AFSCME leadership
for their partnership and
for ultimately helping
improve the economic
status of our associates
and our communities.”

About OhioHealth
OhioHealth is a
nationally recognized,
not-for-proﬁt, charitable,
healthcare outreach of
the United Methodist
Church.
Based in Columbus,
Ohio, OhioHealth has
been recognized as one
of the top ﬁve large
health systems in America by Truven Health
Analytics, an honor it
has received six times.
It is also recognized by
Fortune as one of the
“100 Best Companies to
Work For” and has been
for 13 years in a row,
2007–2019.
Serving its communities since 1891, OhioHealth is a family of
30,000 associates, physicians and volunteers, and
a system of 12 hospitals
and more than 200 ambu-

latory sites, hospice,
home health, medical
equipment and other
health services spanning
a 47-county area.
OhioHealth hospitals
include OhioHealth
Riverside Methodist
Hospital, OhioHealth
Grant Medical Center,
OhioHealth Doctors Hospital, OhioHealth Grady
Memorial Hospital,
OhioHealth Dublin Methodist Hospital, OhioHealth Hardin Memorial
Hospital, OhioHealth
Marion General Hospital,
OhioHealth O’Bleness
Hospital, OhioHealth
Mansﬁeld Hospital,
OhioHealth Shelby Hospital, OhioHealth Grove
City Methodist Hospital
and OhioHealth Berger
Hospital. For more information, please visit OhioHealth.com.

Wolfe promoted to OVP HEALTH Recovery Center to open
personal banker
successful transition to
outpatient treatment and
BURLINGTON, Ohio counseling.”
The press release
— OVP HEALTH will
open a new, 48-bed inpa- continued, “The OVP
HEALTH Recovery Centient substance abuse
ter, which will operate 24
treatment center at the
site of the former River’s hours a day, is licensed
by the State of Ohio to
Bend Health Care facility, in Burlington, Ohio, accommodate 20 inpatient beds for women,
this spring.
20 inpatient beds for
According to a press
men, and eight beds for
release from OVP
HEALTH, the new facil- patients experiencing
ity, called OVP HEALTH acute detox, or severe
and active withdrawal
Recovery Center, will
symptoms and complicabring an investment
tions from substance
of well over $1 million
abuse. Treatment will
and approximately 25
be provided by a team
new jobs to Lawrence
County, Ohio, as well as of physicians and other
address a signiﬁcant and advanced practice providers who are trained
growing need for local
inpatient care and treat- and experienced in
addressing the comprement for people suffering from severe drug and hensive medical needs of
patients suffering from
alcohol addiction.
the effects and complica“Through our extentions of substance use
sive experience in
disorder, including any
providing outpatient
of their accompanying
substance abuse treathealth care needs.”
ment throughout West
“OVP HEALTH has
Virginia, Kentucky and
Ohio, we have seen, ﬁrst- been on the front lines
of the war on addiction,
hand, the need in this
and on the leading edge
area for more intensive
of medication assisted
services and a higher
treatment and counlevel of care for these
seling services, since
patients,” said Paul
2011,” said Stacey Shy,
Cowsar, OVP HEALTH
OVP HEALTH chief
chief operating ofﬁcer.
executive ofﬁcer. “In
“The OVP HEALTH
2019, we received our
Recovery Center will
second consecutive,
provide them with the
safe, secure, therapeutic three-year accreditation
from the Commission
environment they need
on the Accreditation of
to regain their health
Rehabilitation Facilities,
and stability, while layor CARF, which means
ing the foundation for a

Submitted story

MIDDLEPORT — Home National Bank has
announced the promotion of Betsy Wolfe to personal
banker.
Wolfe joined Home National Bank in
2016 upon her graduation from the University of Rio Grande, where she earned
her bachelor’s degree in marketing. In
the opening of the Middleport branch,
Wolfe played a key role as head teller
and worked closely with the community.
In her new role as personal banker,
Wolfe
Wolfe can assist customers with anything from basic transactions to new
accounts and loans. Outside of work, Wolfe enjoys
spending time with her family and being outdoors,
she is also a member and youth leader at Antiquity
Baptist Church.
“Visit Betsy at our Middleport branch for all your
banking needs. Please join us in congratulating Betsy
on her promotion to Personal Banker,” stated the
bank in a news release.
Home National Bank is a full service community bank, led by a local Board
of Directors. We are focused on meeting the banking needs of Meigs
County and surrounding communities by offering local, personal service.
Home National Bank provides a full range of financial services including
business, personal, and mortgage loans. HNB currently operates three full
service locations in Racine, Syracuse, and Middleport. Find out more about
us at www.homenatlbank.com and find us on Facebook as, Home National
Bank.

Multistate settlement
with giving fund
Submitted story

COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost
and charity regulators from 21 other states and the
District of Columbia have reached an agreement with
PayPal Charitable Giving Fund (PPGF), requiring the
organization to boost transparency for donors on its
online fundraising platform.
“Mixing secrecy with charity hardens the hearts of
would-be donors,” Yost said. “This promise of transparency means donors will now have the information
they need to guide their giving.”
Users of the platform pay money electronically to
PPGF, which aggregates the donations and distributes
them to charities selected by each donor. But in some
cases, PPGF redirected contributions from selected
charities to other organizations with similar purposes
without telling donors. PPGF also failed to adequately
disclose that charities that have PayPal accounts can
receive donations faster than those that do not.
Charity regulators nationwide joined the effort to
investigate PPGF’s fundraising activities, including its
disclosures, vetting practices and treatment of charitable contributions. To address the states’ concerns,
PPGF agreed to reform its disclosures to ensure that
donors know:
That they are contributing to PPGF
The timeframe in which a selected charity can
receive funds from PPGF
The implication of being an enrolled charity rather
than an unenrolled charity on the PPGF platform
PPGF also agreed to notify donors when it redirects
charitable contributions to organizations other than
those they selected. PPGF will provide regulators with
future campaign data to ensure the organization is
complying with its obligations under the agreement.
Additionally, PPGF agreed to pay $200,000 to the
National Association of Attorneys General for deposit
into the NAAG Charities Enforcement and Training
Fund. This fund was established to defray costs associated with the investigation and litigation of cases
brought by state charities regulators, and to provide
training and education to those regulators.
States and territories participating in the settlement
include Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, District of
Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina Secretary
of State, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Texas and Wisconsin.
Submitted by the office of Attorney General Dave Yost.

our outpatient services
and facilities meet or
exceed the most rigorous
standards in the industry. The OVP HEALTH
Recovery Center will
also have that level of
accreditation.”
While the majority
of patients at the OVP
HEALTH Recovery Center will be housed in private rooms, some rooms
will be designated for
double occupancy. The
center will also feature
a fully-equipped commercial kitchen, dining
rooms, recreation rooms,
individual and group
counseling rooms, and a
chapel.
While treatment and
length of stay will be
individualized according
to each patient’s needs,
no stay will exceed a
maximum of 30 days. To
qualify for inpatient care
at the OVP HEALTH
Recovery Center,
patients will be required
to meet the criteria for
residential treatment
established by the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM).
The center will accept
patients from West
Virginia, Kentucky and
Ohio, and will accept
all forms of insurance,
including Medicaid.
Patients will be admitted to the OVP HEALTH
Recovery Center by
self-referral, but also by
referral from local law
enforcement agencies,

local court systems,
hospital emergency
departments, primary
care providers, and other
agencies that provide
substance abuse or
health care services.
Before opening, the
center will undergo signiﬁcant upgrades and
renovations, including
the installation of security cameras and fencing
around the perimeter of
the facility to monitor
and limit access. Patients
will be conﬁned to the
center for the entire
course of their stay to
ensure their safety, as
well as the safety of the
neighboring community.
OVP HEALTH will also
hire a team of security
guards to provide on-site
security, 24 hours a day.
OVP HEALTH provides an extensive range
of emergency department and hospitalist
services for hospitals;
operates primary care
and after-hours facilities;
and offers an accredited medication-assisted
treatment and counseling program for people
suffering from opioid
addiction in a growing
number of communities
across West Virginia,
Kentucky, Ohio, South
Carolina and, soon, Virginia.
For more information
about OVP HEALTH, go
to ovphealth.com.
Submitted by OVP HEALTH.

Stocks flat as authorities focus on China virus
By Alex Veiga
AP Business Writer

Technology companies led
stocks to a ﬂat close on Wall
Street Wednesday, erasing
the market’s early gains. The
topsy-turvy day comes as health
authorities around the world take
steps to monitor and contain a
deadly virus outbreak in China
to keep it from spreading globally. The international measures
have helped reassure Wall Street
following Tuesday’s decline. The
S&amp;P 500 index gained 1 point
or less than 0.1% to 3,321. The
Dow Jones Industrial Average
lost 9 points, or less than 0.1%,
to 29,186. The Nasdaq rose 0.1%.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller
company stocks lost 0.1%. European markets were mostly lower

and Asian markets climbed.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS
UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.
Technology companies led
stocks higher on Wall Street in
afternoon trading Wednesday,
erasing the market’s losses from
the day before.
The rebound came as health
authorities around the world
took steps to monitor and contain a deadly virus outbreak in
China to keep it from spreading
globally. China and other countries ramped up screenings for
fever on aircraft and at airports,
and the World Health Organization was expected to meet to
determine whether the virus is a
health emergency.
The international measures
helped reassure Wall Street a day

after ﬁnancial markets sold off
over fears that the outbreak in
the world’s second-largest economy could spread, hurting tourism
and ultimately economic growth
and corporate proﬁts.
The coronavirus has been
conﬁrmed in ﬁve countries,
including China, the U.S., Thailand, Japan and South Korea. As
of Wednesday, more than 500
people were conﬁrmed infected
with the virus and 17 had died
from the illness, which can cause
pneumonia and other severe
respiratory symptoms.
IBM led the gains in the technology sector Wednesday after
the company reported solid quarterly results. Many of the companies in the sector are reliant on
China for sales and could suffer if
that nation’s economy slumps.

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ).…...............................$21.99
Walmart Inc(NYSE).…...............................................$116.10
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE).…................................................$27.07
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)…....................................$35.17
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)…........................................$143.38
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)….............................$35.41
Kroger Co(NYSE)…....................................................$28.37
City Holding Company(NASDAQ).….........................$80.42
American Electric Power(NYSE)….........................$100.00
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ).…...........................$37.17

Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)……...........................….$6.66
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)……...............................$28.63
Apple(NASDAQ)….....................................................$317.70
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)…….....................................$57.61
Post Holdings….........................................................$110.13
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE) …...............….$29.40
McDonald’s(NYSE)…................................................$211.44
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on
Jan. 22.

�Sports
6 Thursday, January 23, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Rebels roll past Wahama, 62-43
By Bryan Walters

The Red and White — after
missing their ﬁrst shot attempt
of the second frame — ﬁnally
reached the scoring column 15
MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
seconds in as Josiah Lloyd burStingy from the start.
ied a trifecta.
The South Gallia boys
Lloyd added another 3-pointbasketball team held visiting
Wahama without a point on its er at the 5:59 mark, capping a
quick 6-2 run that trimmed the
ﬁrst 19 possessions and ultimately cruised to a wire-to-wire deﬁcit down to 13-6. WHS was
also never closer the rest of the
62-43 victory Tuesday night
during a Tri-Valley Conference way.
The Red and Gold netted
Hocking Division matchup in
10-of-18 shot attempts in that
Gallia County.
second stanza, which eventualThe Rebels (8-7, 5-5 TVC
ly resulted in a 20-15 run that
Hocking) forced 10 turnovers
gave the hosts a commanding
and limited the White Falcons
31-15 edge at the break.
(0-13, 0-10) to 0-of-8 shooting
SGHS led by as many as
in the ﬁrst quarter, allowing the
25 points on three different
hosts to storm out to an 11-0
cushion through eight minutes occasions in the third period,
including a 51-26 advantage
of play.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

South Gallia defenders Kyle Northup, left, and Jared Burdette (5) apply pressure
to Wahama’s Abram Pauley during the first half of Tuesday night’s boys
basketball game in Mercerville, Ohio.

entering the ﬁnale.
A Tristan Saber bucket at
the 5:35 mark of the fourth
gave the Rebels their largest
lead of the night at 57-28.
Wahama ended the ﬁnal 5:21
of regulation with a 15-5 surge
to complete the 19-point outcome.
South Gallia outrebounded
the guests by a 37-27 overall
margin, including a 19-11
edge on the offensive boards.
The Rebels committed nine of
their 17 turnovers in the ﬁrst
quarter, while Wahama had 17
of its 25 giveaways in the ﬁrst
half.
The hosts also claimed a
season sweep of WHS after

See REBELS | 7

Blue Devils
avenge Coal
Grove, 53-35
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

COAL GROVE, Ohio — The Blue Devils ultimately made their move in the middle.
The Gallia Academy boys basketball team
outscored host Coal Grove by a combined 36-20
margin in the second and third frames while cruising to a 53-35 victory on Tuesday night in an Ohio
Valley Conference matchup in Lawrence County.
The visiting Blue Devils (7-8, 3-6 OVC) notched
their second straight win while also salvaging a
season split with the Hornets (3-11, 2-7) after suffering a 51-48 setback in Centenary back on Dec.
13, 2019.
Both teams produced just two ﬁeld goals apiece
in the opening frame, but the Blue and White used
free throws to build a slim 7-4 edge through eight
minutes of play.
Logan Blouir entered a bit of a zone from there
as the senior poured in eight points during a 15-9
second quarter push that resulted in a 22-13 halftime advantage.
Blouir continued his hot hand into the second
half after scoring 11 points during a pivotal 21-11
surge that gave GAHS a comfortable 43-24 cushion entering the ﬁnale.
The Red and Black received ﬁve points from
Evan Gannon down the stretch run as part of a
11-10 ﬁnish that wrapped up the 18-point outcome.
The Blue Devils nailed 20 total ﬁeld goals —
including three trifectas — and also went 10-of-15
at the free throw line for 67 percent.
Blouir paced Gallia Academy with a game-high
25 points, followed by Isaac Clary with 12 points
and Reece Thomas with ﬁve markers. Devin Lee
and Ben Cox were next with four points apiece,
while Damon Cremeens completed the winning
tally with three points.
CGHS made 11 total ﬁeld goals — including a
pair of 3-pointers — and also went 9-of-24 at the
charity stripe for 38 percent.
Gannon paced the Hornets with 11 points, followed by Malachi Wheeler with nine markers.
Jarren Hicks and Ethan Short were next with four
points each.
Trevor Hankins and Trevor Carey chipped in
three markers apiece, while Perry Kingery completed the scoring with a single point.
Gallia Academy returns to action this weekend
as it hosts South Point on Friday in an OVC contest, then welcomes Logan (OH) on Saturday for
a non-conference tilt. Both events will start at
approximately 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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 NelsonvilleYork, 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 Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Jordan Burns (42) passes out of a triple-team for an assist, during the Raiders’ 50-38 victory on Tuesday in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

Raiders win at Point Pleasant
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Revenge on the
road, thanks to some stiﬂing second half defense.
The River Valley boys
basketball team — which
dropped a 50-45 decision to Point Pleasant on
Dec. 27 in Gallia County
— avenged that setback
on Tuesday at ‘The Dungeon’ in Mason County,
holding the hosts to just
nine points after halftime
to seal a 50-38 victory.
The Big Blacks (4-7)
— who had won back-toback games headed into
play — held a 16-15 lead
after ﬁve ties and a trio of
lead changes in the opening period.
PPHS was up by four
after a Kyelar Morrow
three-pointer to open
the second quarter, but
River Valley (5-10) scored
the next nine points and
never trailed again. The
hosts fought back to tie it
at 29 with 35 seconds left
in the half, but a Jordan
Lambert free throw gave
the Raiders the lead for
good 18 seconds later.
River Valley led 32-29
at halftime, and then held
Point Pleasant to 0-of-10
from the ﬁeld in the third,
stretching the margin to
39-32 with eight minutes
to play.
The Silver and Black
led by as many as 14
points in the ﬁnale, and
settled for a 50-38 victory,
ending a three-game skid.
Second-year RVHS
head coach Brett Bostic
pointed to his team’s

said. “We had some
bright spots defensively,
I thought Jovone (Johnson) played pretty well,
played hard. I think the
kids for the most part
played as hard as they
could, but I think River
Valley just had a different level of wanting it
tonight. They beat us
down the ﬂoor a couple
times, and Lambert killed
us on the boards and
in the paint, we had no
answer for him.
“Offensively, we just
couldn’t get in rhythm all
night. Some of the credit
goes to their defense,
and some falls on us.
Every time we needed
something big to fall, we
were just one step slow.
Defensively, overall I
don’t think we were that
PPHS senior Jovone Johnson (11) sends an outlet pass up court
after a steal, during Tuesday’s non-conference game at ‘The bad, but you just can’t
have that kind of output
Dungeon’ in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
offensively and expect to
win.”
ing tough shots, and we
defensive intensity,
The Raiders’ reboundknew if we played with
as well as its 36-to-21
ing edge included a
rebounding edge as what intensity on defense off
10-to-7 margin on the
the shooters, we’d get a
led to the victory.
offensive glass, while the
“We had a couple tough lot of rebounds. We talkBig Blacks had just nine
ed about long rebounds,
games on Friday and
turnovers, eight fewer
Saturday, we turn around and we talked about tryhere on a short week, and ing to get the ball out, the than RVHS. The Raiders
ﬁrst thing to end a defen- combined for 14 assists,
we talked to them about
ﬁve steals and a pair of
sive possession is the
intensity,” Bostic said.
rejections, while the hosts
rebound. We also talked
“Coach Sheets said in
about offensive rebounds, tallied 13 steals, seven
there at halftime, ‘guys,
assists and one blocked
and I think we did an
let’s pick the intensity
shot.
excellent job there.”
up and start playing a
River Valley hit 21-ofEighth-year Point
little bit. Let’s mix their
42 (50 percent) ﬁeld goal
Pleasant head coach
defenses up a little bit,
Josh Williams also talked attempts, including 4-oflet’s see what we’ve got,
let’s go, let’s play,’ and we about the Raiders’ inten- 11 (36.4 percent) threepoint tries, while Point
sity, and acknowledged
did a heck of a job.
Pleasant shot 13-of-49
“We really concentrated that his squad’s offense
(26.5 percent) from the
just wasn’t in sync.
a lot on rebounding,
ﬁeld, including 5-of-26
“I feel like River Valbecause we wanted control. We talked a lot about ley made all the energy
See RAIDERS | 7
plays tonight,” Williams
defensive pressure, forc-

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

NFL details draft plans

Ripley edges
Lady Knights

By Barry Wilner

hotel. The main stage
for the draft will be constructed beginning April
3 next to Caesars Forum.
Here comes another
It will include a viewing
big show to Las Vegas.
zone in front of the High
The NFL on Tuesday
Roller observation wheel
detailed its draft plans
to watch the ﬁrst-round
for April 23-25 on the
selections on Thursday
city’s glittering Strip,
night, the second and
complete with a red
carpet stage on the lake third rounds on Friday
night and the remaining
in front of the Bellagio
hotel with boats ferrying four rounds on Saturday.
That stage also will
players and VIPs to the
host daily performances
action.
by a variety of entertainThe league knows it
has a long ways to go to ers throughout the three
match the previous road days.
Teams will make their
shows, particularly in
selections at the Caesars
Philadelphia and NashForum conference center
ville. It believes it has
in what the league and
found the right place in
city are dubbing Selecthe Nevada desert.
tion Square.
“The success of the
Adjacent to the main
planning and execution
stage will be the NFL
of draft relies heavDraft Experience where
ily on the support and
fans can participate in
enthusiasm of the local
leadership and communi- interactive games, view
ties,” says Peter O’Reilly, the Vince Lombardi Trothe NFL’s executive vice phy, attend autograph
sessions with NFL playpresident of club busiers and former players.
ness and league events.
There also will be a
“Fortunately, we have
had exceptional partners stage at the Experience
along the way to help us for performances by
local talent, all available
grow the draft to what
without charge.
it is today. Las Vegas is
A red carpet area will
no different. This is a
city that understands the be constructed beginimportance of attracting ning April 8 at the fountains of Bellagio, one of
and delivering largethe city’s more famous
scale events and has a
attractions.
talented team in place
Portions of the Strip
to help support those
will be closed to vehicuefforts.”
lar trafﬁc during the
Those efforts will
three days of the draft.
center around a prime
That’s a big deal in Las
area of the Strip across
from Caesars Palace and Vegas usually reserved
for New Year’s Eve and
in front of the Bellagio

Associated Press

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — They had a shot to
win it, but it just wasn’t to be.
Trailing by two, the Point Pleasant girls basketball team tried a three-pointer just before the ﬁnal
buzzer sounded in Tuesday’s non-conference tilt
in Mason County, but the potential game-winning
shot rimmed out and visiting Ripley escaped with
the 36-34 victory.
RHS (9-3) led the Lady Knights (1-12) 24-11 at
halftime after a 12-to-6 ﬁrst quarter and a 12-to-5
second.
Point Pleasant snapped out of it in the second
half, going on a 15-to-8 run in the third period,
trimming the Lady Viking lead to six points, at
32-26, headed into the ﬁnale.
The Red and Black held their guest without a
ﬁeld goal in the fourth quarter, but Ripley led 35-32
with 30 seconds to go after a trio of free throws. A
ﬁeld goal by Brooke Warner got the Lady Knights
to within one point, but the Blue and White sank
their fourth foul shot of the stanza with nine seconds left for the 36-34 win.
Of the Lady Knights’ 15 ﬁeld goals, two came
from three-point range. Meanwhile, RHS had four
of its 13 ﬁeld goals come from deep, while claiming
a 6-to-2 edge in free throws.
Warner led the hosts with a dozen points, 10
of which came after halftime. Morgan Miller was
responsible for both of the Lady Knights’ triples
and ﬁnished with eight points. Tayah Fetty was
next with six points, followed by Tristan Wilson
and Baylie Rickard with four apiece.
Ripley was led by Katlyn Sarver with 14 points,
nine of which came from beyond the arc. Kaylei
Blackburn hit the team’s other three and ﬁnished
with 10 points. Mckennan Hall ended with eight
markers, while Taylor Moore and Kyanah Baldwin
both scored two.
This gives the Blue and White a season sweep
in the series, as they won their Dec. 11 meeting
with the Lady Knights by a 48-25 tally in Jackson
County.
Next, Point Pleasant will host Symmes Valley on
Saturday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Pro Bowl to let scoring
team keep possession

From page 6

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

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The Pro Bowl is adding
a new twist that could reward teams for taking a
risk.
The NFL announced Tuesday that its upcoming
all-star game in Orlando will feature a rule change
that allows a team to keep the ball after it scores.
The scoring team can retain possession at its own
25-yard line and face a fourth-and-15 play. Pick up a
ﬁrst down, and the offense gets a new set of downs.

Raiders

and while we won’t host
the draft itself at the
Stadium, we’re working
closely with the Raiders
to highlight Allegiant
Stadium both locally and
nationally during each
day of the draft.”
The NFL began moving the draft around
in 2015, going to Chicago for two years, then
Philly, then Dallas and
Nashville. Most of the
league’s cities, particularly those that won’t likely
host a Super Bowl, have
shown interest in having
it. Next year, Cleveland
gets the assignment, and
Kansas City has it in
2023. The 2022 “selection meeting” is still up
for grabs.
“Each new draft city
offers a unique landscape
to produce an exciting and unforgettable
draft,” O’Reilly notes.
“We focus on embracing
the city’s personality
and iconic locations to
intertwine the event and
broadcasts with the host
city to make it feel local
and connected. Whether
it is Nashville’s Lower
Broadway, the Rocky
Steps in Philadelphia or
Chicago’s Grant Park,
each has afforded us the
ability to celebrate these
cities and create an
event that captures the
spirit and energy of our
hosts.”
Of course, only fans
who think their teams
did well in the draft will
likely be singing “Viva
Las Vegas.”

Fail to gain 15 yards, and it’s a turnover on downs
and good ﬁeld position for the other conference.
The scoring team also could elect to give the
opponent the ball at the opponent’s 25-yard line,
much like a kickoff that results in a touchback.
The 2020 Pro Bowl also tweaked rules regarding
pre-snap penalties.
It is no longer a a false start if a ﬂexed, eligible
receiver in a two-point stance ﬂinches or picks up
one foot as long as his other foot remains partially
on the ground. He also must reset for a second
before the snap. A receiver who ﬁts this exception is
not considered to be in motion.

THURSDAY EVENING
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31 (NICK)
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35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

defense, each claiming a
steal and a block.
PPHS was led by Hunter Bush with 19 points
From page 6
and ﬁve rebounds. Trey
(19.2 percent) from deep. Peck had nine points and
a game-high four steals
Both teams tried 10 foul
shots, with RVHS making in the setback, Morrow
added eight points and
four and PPHS sinking
ﬁve rebounds, while Eric
seven.
Chapman ﬁnished with
Lambert led the Raiders with a double-double two points. Braxton Yates
contributed two assists,
of 27 points and 14
as well as two steals and a
rebounds, to go with a
block to the hosts’ cause.
game-high ﬁve assists.
Both teams are slated
Brandon Call ﬁnished
to return to the court
with 11 points and six
boards in the win, Mason on Friday, with Point
Rhodes added six points, Pleasant at George Washwhile Cole Young scored ington, and River Valley
four and Dylan Fulks tal- hosting Vinton County.
lied two.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740Lambert and Chase
446-2342, ext. 2100.
Caldwell paced the RVHS

for the city’s marathon.
The Strip will turn into
a giant gathering area
outside Bellagio and
Caesars.
The league notes that
it is working closely with
local government agencies as well as the resort
properties, businesses
and their employees to
build the draft locations
with the least amount
of impact to trafﬁc as
possible. The NFL is
working with Las Vegas
ofﬁcials to identify additional parking and transportation options for
both locals and visitors
attending the draft.
For decades, the NFL
had a virtually nonexistent relationship with
Las Vegas. But then the
Raiders announced they
were moving there from
Oakland, and sports betting became legalized in
much of the country.
Voila, Vegas was on
the league’s map. Don’t
bet against it hosting
a Super Bowl in this
decade.
One of the newest
attractions will be the
Raiders’ stadium, located
just off the Strip.
“The driving factor for
the league selecting Las
Vegas to host the 2020
draft is the Raiders (and
the NFL) entering the
market and the Raiders
playing their ﬁrst game
there just months later,”
O’Reilly says. “The draft
is an incredible way to
help make a splash in
the Raiders’ new home,

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Rebels
earning a 60-23 decision at Gary Clark Court back
on Dec. 13, 2019. The 43 points scored by Wahama
Tuesday night matched the program’s third-highest
output of the year.
SGHS netted 28-of-62 ﬁeld goal attempts for 45
percent, including a 3-of-13 effort from behind the
arc for 23 percent. The Red and Gold made only
3-of-12 free throw attempts for 25 percent.
Brayden Hammond led the Rebels with 26 points
and nine rebounds, both of which were game-highs.
Kyle Northup was next with 10 points, followed by
Jared Burdette with eight points and Jaxxin Mabe
with seven markers.
Saber and Ean Combs respectively contributed
ﬁve and four points to the winning cause, while
Andrew Small completed the tally with one point.
Mabe, Combs and Burdette also hauled in eight, six
and ﬁve caroms respectively.
The White Falcons made 15-of-50 ﬁeld goal
attempts for 30 percent, including an 8-of-18 effort
from behind the arc for 44 percent. The Red and
White also netted 5-of-6 charity tosses for 83 percent.
Abram Pauley led WHS with 15 points, followed
by Lloyd with eight points and Michael VanMatre
with seven markers. Ethan Barnitz and Harrison
Panko-Shields each chipped in ﬁve points, while
Brennan Grate completed the tally with three
points.
Panko-Shields grabbed a team-best six rebounds,
with Barnitz, Pauley and VanMatre also hauling in
four caroms apiece.
South Gallia returns to action Friday when it
hosts Eastern in a TVC Hocking contest at 7 p.m.
The White Falcons are back on the hardwood
Tuesday, Jan. 28, when they host Belpre in a TVC
Hocking matchup at 7 p.m.

Thursday, January 23, 2020 7

(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

Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Columbus

7 PM

7:30

M*A*S*H

M*A*S*H

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Superstore GoodPlace
(N)
"Patty" (N)
Superstore GoodPlace
(N)
"Patty" (N)
Station 19 "I Know This
Bar" (SP) 1/2 (N)
Song of the Mountains
"Carolina Blue/ Moron
Brothers"
Station 19 "I Know This
Bar" (SP) 1/2 (N)
Young
Unicorn "No
Sheldon
Small Parts"
Last Man
Outmatched
Standing (N) "Pilot" (N)
A Place to Call Home "And
the Blind Shall See"
Young
Sheldon

8 PM

9 PM

10 PM

10:30

Will &amp; Grace Perfect
(N)
Harmony (N)
Will &amp; Grace Perfect
Harmony (N)
(N)
Grey's Anatomy "Help Me
Through the Night" 2/2 (N)
Refuge: SelfhelpHome
Community of refugees and
Holocaust survivors.
Grey's Anatomy "Help Me
Through the Night" 2/2 (N)
Mom
Young
Sheldon
Deputy "10-8 Firestone" (N)

Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "I'm
Going to Make You a Star"
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "I'm
Going to Make You a Star"
A Million Little Things "The
Kiss" (N)
Reaching West Beijing high
schools prepare students for
study abroad.
A Million Little Things "The
Kiss" (N)
The Gayle King Grammy
Special (N)
Eyewitness News at 10:00
p.m. (N)
John Fogerty: My 50 Year Trip A musical journey through
Fogerty's hit parade with Creedence Clearwater Revival.

Unicorn "No Young
Small Parts" Sheldon

8:30

9:30

9 PM

Mom

9:30

The Gayle King Grammy
Special (N)

10 PM

10:30

M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
NCAA Basketball Virginia at Louisville Women's (L)
The Dan Patrick Show (N)
NCAA Basketball Tennessee vs. Connecticut Women's (L) NFL Football
Winter X Games Aspen (L)
NCAA Basketball Belmont vs. Murray State (L)
ITF Tennis Australian Open (L)
Wife Swap "Wiggins/ Felix" Supernanny "Richardson
Married at First Sight: Couples Couch "One Night
Supernanny: Supersized
Family"
Spouse" The couples to spend their first night alone. (N)
"Ostler Family" (N)
Grown-ish
Everything's The Bold Type "Legends of Grown-ish
Everything's
Mr. Deeds (2002, Comedy) Winona Ryder, Peter
Gallagher, Adam Sandler. TV14
"Damn" (N) Gonna B (N) the Fall Issue" (SP) (N)
"Damn"
Gonna B
Two and a
2½ Men "Pie Two and a
Two and a
The Italian Job (‘03, Act) Mark Wahlberg. Thieves plan the heist of The Italian
their lives by creating the largest traffic jam in L.A. history. TV14
Job TV14
Half Men
Half Men
Hole, Herb" Half Men
Loud House It's Pony (N) /(:45)
How to Train Your Dragon TVPG
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
SVU "December Solstice"
SVU "Chasing Theo"
SVU "No Good Reason"
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Dare" Modern Fam Modern Fam
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 The Big Bang
(12:30) Impeachment (L)
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Bones
NBA Pre-game Show (L)
NBA Basketball Los Angeles Lakers at Brooklyn Nets (L)
NBA Basket.
(5:30)
Jack the Giant Slayer (2013, Fantasy) Ewan
Ghostbusters (‘84, Com) Harold Ramis, Bill Murray. Three
Ghostbusters
McGregor, Stanley Tucci, Nicholas Hoult. TV14
parapsychologists open a ghost removal business in New York. TVPG
II TVPG
Rescue "Moose Mayhem" Homestead Rescue (N)
Homestead Rescue (N)
Reclaimed (N)
Off Grid "Island Getaway"
The First 48: 15th Anniversary "Chain of Death"
The First 48 "The Invader" Alaska PD "Arctic Survival" 60 Days In "Program In
(N)
(N)
Peril" (N)
Star Law "Owl Gone Bad" Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law: Uncuffed "Bloodied Tracks" (N)
Lone Star Law (N)
Murdered by Morning "Last Snapped "Valerie Pape"
Snapped "Helen Moore"
Snapped "Susan Baker"
An Unexpected Killer
"Deadly Betrayal" (SF) (N) Call"
(5:45) Law:CI (:45) Growing Up Hip Hop
(:45) Growing Up Hip Hop
BootCamp
Growing Up Hip Hop (N)
(:15) Growing Up Hip Hop
Very Cavallari
Very Cavallari
Very Cavallari
Cavallari "Crystal Clear" (N) Nightly (N) Cavallari
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
King-Queens King-Queens
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Wild Russia "East of Eden" Wild Russia "Siberia's
Alaska State Troopers
"Asleep at the Wheel"
"Caught Blue-Handed" (N) "Summer Patrol"
Frozen Heart"
(5:00) USFSA Figure Skating ISU Figure Skating European Championship Free
USFSA Figure Skating U.S. Championships (L)
Tip-Off
NCAA Basketball Minnesota at Ohio State (L)
NCAA Basketball Michigan State at Indiana (L)
Hoops Extra
Swamp People "Legends of Swamp People "Rolling
Swamp People "Tag Out or Swamp People "Raging
(:05) Swamp People
"Voodoo Python"
the Swamp"
With the Punches"
Die Trying"
Bulls" (SP) (N)
(5:30) B.Deck Below Deck
Project Runway "There Is Only One You" Project Runway (N)
Watch (N)
Movie
Set It Off (1996, Action) Queen Latifah, Vivica A. Fox, Jada Pinkett Smith. TV14
New Jack City Wesley Snipes. TVMA
B. Hunters
B. Hunters
House (N)
H.Hunt (N)
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Christin (N) Christina on Flip or Flop Flip or Flop
(4:25)
King Arthur:
(:10)
Edge of Tomorrow Tom Cruise. A soldier in a war against an (:40)
R.I.P.D. (‘13, Action) Jeff Bridges,
Legend of the Sword TVPG alien race becomes caught in a time loop after he is killed. TV14
Mary-Louise Parker, Ryan Reynolds. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

Shutter Island The New Pope
400 (HBO) (‘09, Myst) Mark Ruffalo,
Leonardo DiCaprio. TVMA
(:05)
Ocean's 8 (2018, Action) Cate Blanchett, Mindy
450 (MAX) Kaling, Sandra Bullock. Ex-con Debbie Ocean puts together
a crack team to pull of the heist of the century. TV14
(5:15)
Misery (‘90,
(:15) Shameless "Location,
500 (SHOW) Hor) James Caan, Kathy
Location, Location"
Bates. TVMA
(4:40)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Crazy, Stupid, Love. (‘11, Com/Dra) Ryan
Gosling, Steve Carell. A man whose life is beginning to fall
apart meets and befriends a young bachelor. TV14
Die Hard With a Vengeance (‘95, Act) Samuel L.
Jackson, Bruce Willis. A mad bomber holds New York City
hostage while carrying out a vendetta against a cop. TVMA
(:15)
The Wedding Guest (2018, Drama) Radhika
Apte, Jim Sarbh, Dev Patel. A man travels to Pakistan for a
wedding, with the intention of kidnapping the bride. TVMA

10 PM
Curb Your
Enthusiasm

10:30
(:40) The

Outsider

Contagion (‘11,
Action) Kate Winslet, Jude
Law, Matt Damon. TV14
The L Word "Lose It All"
Bette is conflicted about
some old feelings.
(:10)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, January 23, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Jeter 1 vote shy of unanimous, Walker also elected to Hall
NEW YORK (AP) —
Known for two decades
as No. 2, Derek Jeter is
now linked to the number
1 — as in, who was the
lone Hall of Fame voter
who didn’t put a check
mark next to his name?
Jeter came within one
vote of being a unanimous pick, falling just shy
of the standard set when
longtime New York Yankees teammate Mariano
Rivera became the ﬁrst
unanimous selection last
year. Larry Walker also
earned baseball’s highest
honor Tuesday in his last
chance on the ballot.
For now, the identity
and motivation of the
non-conformist remains a
mystery.
“Well, I look at all the
votes that I got,” Jeter
said. “Trying to get that
many people to agree
on something is pretty
difﬁcult to do. So that’s
not something that’s on
mind.”
Longtime shortstop
and captain of the Yankees, Jeter appeared on
396 of 397 ballots cast
by the Baseball Writers’
Association of America.
His 99.7% moved above
Ken Griffey Jr. (99.3%)
for the second-highest

share.
Jeter was listed on all
219 ballots made public
by Ryan Thibodaux’s
vote tracker before the
announcement. The
BBWAA will release
additional ballots on Feb.
4 of writers who chose a
public listing.
“Everyone told me it
was a foregone conclusion. I didn’t buy it. So
it was not a relaxing day.
There was a lot of anxiety,” Jeter said. ”I was
nervous, sitting around
waiting for a phone call
is something that is
completely out of your
control.”
Walker got 304 votes,
six above the 75% needed
and up from 54.6% last
year. He was making his
10th and ﬁnal appearance
on the BBWAA ballot
and tweeted earlier in the
day “I believe I’m going
to come up a little short
today” after checking the
vote tracker and projecting he would ﬁnish at
73.3%.
As the announcement
time approached, Walker
had just about given up.
“I had it when they’re
going to call, a roundabout time, and that time
had come and gone,” he

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

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

Ballot holdovers could
beneﬁt next year, when
the most prominent
ﬁrst-time eligibles are
Torii Hunter and Mark
Buehrle. The 2022 ballot
will include David Ortiz
and Alex Rodriguez, who
served a season-long
suspension in 2014 for
violations of the drug
program and baseball’s
collective bargaining
agreement.
Slick-ﬁelding shortstop
Omar Vizquel could be a
riser after getting 52.6%
in his third year on the
ballot. The 11-time Gold
Glove winner with 2,877
hits has seven more
years to earn 75%. Other
potential movers include
third baseman Scott
Rolen (35.5%), reliever
Billy Wagner (31.7%)
and slugger Gary Shefﬁeld (30.5%).
The 397 total votes
cast were the fewest
since 1985.
A ﬁve-time World
Series champion, Jeter
became a face of baseball as he starred in the
nation’s largest media
market from 1995-2014.
He was the AL Rookie of
the Year in 1996 as the
Yankees won the World
Series for the ﬁrst time

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

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

LEGAL NOTICE AUDITOR’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Ohio Revised Code Section 2329.26
General Code Section 11681
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Peggy Yost, Meigs County Treasurer,
Plaintiff,
-vsHoward Russell, et al.,
Defendant.

said. “And there was two
minutes after that when
the call actually came.”
When Walker’s phone
rang, he uttered a profanity and then: “Oh my
God!” He answered, and
BBWAA secretary-treasurer Jack O’Connell was
on the line.
“You didn’t come up
short this year. You
passed the 75% threshold, and welcome to the
Hall of Fame,” Walker
remembered O’Connell
telling him.
Pitcher Curt Schilling
was third with 278 votes
(70%) in his eighth
ballot appearance, an
increase from 60.9%
but still 20 votes shy.
The steroids-tainted
pair of Roger Clemens
(61%) and Barry Bonds
(60.7%) both showed
slight increases in their
eighth tries. Clemens
rose from 59.5% last year
and Bonds from 59.1%.
Jeter and Walker will
be inducted on July 26 at
the Hall in Cooperstown
along with catcher Ted
Simmons and former
players’ association head
Marvin Miller, who were
voted in last month by
the Hall’s Modern Era
Committee.

Case No. 13 DL 005

Whereas, judgment has been rendered against certain parcels
of real property for taxes, assessments, penalties, costs and
charges as follows:
Being Real Estate located at 52010 TR 1054 Second Street,
Tuppers Plains, OH 45783 and bearing Auditor’s Parcel ID#
09-00696.000 and 09-00697.000. A more particular description
can be found in Volume 4, Page 155, Meigs County Official of
the Official Record located at the Meigs County Recorder’s Office.
NOW, THEREFORE, Public Notice is hereby given that I, Mary
T. Byer-Hill, Meigs County Auditor, will sell such real property,
in separate parcels, at public auction, for CASH to the highest
bidder for an amount sufficient to satisfy the total judgment,
minimum opening bid will be $604.75, between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 10:05 a.m. at the front door of the Meigs County
Courthouse, 100 East Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
on the 31st day of January, 2020. If any parcel does not receive
a sufficient bid, it shall be offered for sale, under the sale terms
and conditions of the first sale at the same time of day and at
the same place, on the 28th day of February, 2020, for an
amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment against the parcel.
ALL AUDITOR’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR AND NO WARRANTY IS MADE REGARDING THE TITLE OR DESCRIPTION OF THE PREMISES. PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT ALL SUCH
REAL PROPERTY TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION MAY BE SUBJECT TO A FEDERAL TAX LIEN THAT MAY NOT BE EXTINGUISHED BY THE SALE. PURCHASERS OF ANY SUCH
REAL PROPERTY ARE URGED TO HAVE A TITLE SEARCH
CONDUCTED WHICH INCLUDES THE FEDERAL TAX LIEN
INDEX THAT IS KEPT BY THE COUNTY RECORDER TO DETERMINE IF THERE ARE ANY LIENS AND IF NOTICE OF A
FEDERAL TAX LIEN HAS BEEN FILED WITH RESPECT TO
ANY SUCH PROPERTY.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% of sale price by Certified Check by
2:00 p.m. on Day of Sale. Balance due within 10 days of contact from Auditor’s Office.
MARY T. BYER-HILL, AUDITOR Meigs County, Ohio
JAMES K. STANLEY
Prosecuting Attorney of Meigs County, Ohio
1/16/20,1/23/20, 1/30/20

since 1978, then led New
York to three straight
titles from 1998-2000,
the only team to accomplish the feat since the
1972-74 Oakland Athletics. The rebuilt Yankees
added their 27th title in
2009.
Still, Jeter’s resume
lacked a coda.
“I had a great relationship and still do with
Reggie Jackson,” Jeter
said. “And Reggie used
to constantly remind me
when he when he came
to the park, he’d always
tell me, `You’re not a
Hall of Famer yet.’”
Jeter deﬁned himself
by moments more than
numbers: his unexpected
backhand ﬂip from foul
territory to throw out
Oakland’s Jeremy Giambi
in the 2001 AL Division
Series; his Mr. November home run in the 10th
inning that won Game 4
of the 2001 World Series;
his face-ﬁrst leap into
the stands after catching a 12th-inning popup
by Boston’s Trot Nixon
in 2004; his home run
into the left-ﬁeld bleachers for his 3,000th hit
as part of a career-best
5-for-5 game in 2011;
his ninth-inning walkoff

single in his ﬁnal home
game in 2014; his last
at-bat single three days
later that lifted his career
average to .310.
Drafted sixth overall
in 1992 after he was
spotted by Yankees scout
Dick Groch as a high
school junior a year earlier, Jeter was bypassed
by Houston (Phil Nevin),
Cleveland (Paul Shuey),
Montreal (B.J. Wallace), Baltimore (Jeffrey
Hammonds) and Cincinnati (Chad Mottola). He
debuted for the Yankees
on May 29, 1995, and
was installed at shortstop the following spring
training by new manager
Joe Torre.
Jeter became a 14-time
All-Star and ﬁve-time
Gold Glove winner
despite defensive metrics that were maligned.
He was appointed captain by owner George
Steinbrenner in June
2003, ﬁlling a position
that had been open since
Don Mattingly’s retirement after the 1995
season. He ﬁnished with
3,465 hits, 260 homers,
358 stolen bases and
1,311 RBIs, earning
$266 million from the
Yankees.

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

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

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: LV KHUHE\ JLYHQ WKDW RQ Friday, January 24, 2020
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2011 GMC Sierra VIN# 1GTR2UEA9BZ371215
2004 Dodge Dakota VIN# 1D7HG38N74S640142
2001 Hyundai Elantra VIN# KMHDN45D81 U96391
2006 Chevrolet Uplander VIN# 1GNDV23L66D211619
2002 Kia Spectra VIN#KNAFB121X25151169
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AUCTIONS

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
EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General

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Ave. Call Wiseman Real
Estate - 740-446-3644

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, January 23, 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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jobmatchohio.com

�10 Thursday, January 23, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Excellence in General &amp;
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Surgical Capabilities:
4��((�&amp;���,'%1
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OH-70162628

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Capable, quality surgical care. You don’t
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>01. January</text>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
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        <name>Interviewer</name>
        <description>The person(s) performing the interview</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
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        <name>Interviewee</name>
        <description>The person(s) being interviewed</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
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        <name>Location</name>
        <description>The location of the interview</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="5">
        <name>Transcription</name>
        <description>Any written text transcribed from a sound</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="6">
        <name>Local URL</name>
        <description>The URL of the local directory containing all assets of the website</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="10">
        <name>Physical Dimensions</name>
        <description>The actual physical size of the original image</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>Duration</name>
        <description>Length of time involved (seconds, minutes, hours, days, class periods, etc.)</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
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      <element elementId="12">
        <name>Compression</name>
        <description>Type/rate of compression for moving image file (i.e. MPEG-4)</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="13">
        <name>Producer</name>
        <description>Name (or names) of the person who produced the video</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="14">
        <name>Director</name>
        <description>Name (or names) of the person who produced the video</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="15">
        <name>Bit Rate/Frequency</name>
        <description>Rate at which bits are transferred (i.e. 96 kbit/s would be FM quality audio)</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="16">
        <name>Time Summary</name>
        <description>A summary of an interview given for different time stamps throughout the interview</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="17">
        <name>Email Body</name>
        <description>The main body of the email, including all replied and forwarded text and headers</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="18">
        <name>Subject Line</name>
        <description>The content of the subject line of the email</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="19">
        <name>From</name>
        <description>The name and email address of the person sending the email</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="20">
        <name>To</name>
        <description>The name(s) and email address(es) of the person to whom the email was sent</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="21">
        <name>CC</name>
        <description>The name(s) and email address(es) of the person to whom the email was carbon copied</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="22">
        <name>BCC</name>
        <description>The name(s) and email address(es) of the person to whom the email was blind carbon copied</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5268">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="23">
        <name>Number of Attachments</name>
        <description>The number of attachments to the email</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5269">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="24">
        <name>Standards</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5270">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
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      <element elementId="25">
        <name>Objectives</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="26">
        <name>Materials</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5272">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="27">
        <name>Lesson Plan Text</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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        <name>URL</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>Event Type</name>
        <description/>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
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        <description>Names of individuals or groups participating in the event</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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        <name>Birth Date</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>Birthplace</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="33">
        <name>Death Date</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="34">
        <name>Occupation</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5280">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <element elementId="35">
        <name>Biographical Text</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="36">
        <name>Bibliography</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="79">
              <text>January 23, 2020</text>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Contributor</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Creator</name>
          <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="43">
          <name>Identifier</name>
          <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Relation</name>
          <description>A related resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="48">
          <name>Source</name>
          <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="80">
      <name>bradley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="77">
      <name>dillon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="82">
      <name>dye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="81">
      <name>edwards</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="78">
      <name>higgins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="76">
      <name>scarberry</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
