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                  <text>Employees
of the
Month

Supporting
the pediatric
fund

All-TVC
golf
teams

NEWS s 4

NEWS s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 214, Volume 74

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 s 50¢

Ribbon cutting held for trail

COVID-19
cases increase
prior to
Thanksgiving
Latest from Gallia,
Meigs, Mason
Staff Report

ODOT | Courtesy photos

A small ribbon cutting event was recently held for Phase 2 of the multi-use trail in Middleport.

Phase 2 connects
previous trail to Marina
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — An
ofﬁcial ribbon cutting
was recently held for
Phase 2 of the Middleport-Pomeroy Multi-use
Trail, which in Middleport is known as The Yellow Jacket Trail.
Due to COVID-19
restrictions, only a small
number of local ofﬁcials
and those involved in
the project were permitted to attend the event,
which was live streamed

on the Ohio Department
of Transportation Southeastern Ohio District 10
Facebook page.
Middleport Councilman Brian Conde
welcomed those in attendance, as well as those
watching online, thanking all of those who made
the project possible.
Phase 2 of the trail
goes from the previously
constructed portion from
the former Dairy Queen
through a portion of
Middleport, extending
the trail to the Marina

area of Middleport.
Conde stated, that he
and his wife use the new
trail daily, which is in
a scenic area along the
river and through nature
in the village.
Local businessman
Tim King, who was a
driving force behind the
trail projects in the village, explained that four
years ago this month, he
along with ODOT and
other representatives met
that the site of trail to
discuss the project.
Phase 2 of the trail,
stated King, was “four
years in the making.”
King explained that the
ultimate goal is to “make
Middleport the most
Local businessman Tim King holds a rendering of The Yellow

See RIBBON | 12 Jacket Trail project which was done five years ago.

Holzer: Offering tips for Thanksgiving
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Thanksgiving will look much different
for most of us this year. Due to
increases in COVID-19 cases,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is
recommending that we all stay
home and enjoy Thanksgiving
with the people that live in our
household, which is much different than what many are used
to.
Holzer Health System Clinical Dietitian, Lorie Siders, MS,
RD, LD, offers tips to help you
plan for a smaller Thanksgiving.
- Keep your table beautiful.

Since it will be a more
intimate dinner, this is
the time that you can
use the good dishes and
cutlery instead of disposable items. Decorate
with fragrant candles and
rosemary.
Siders
- Buy a smaller turkey,
turkey breast, or possibly
a chicken to roast. This will
take less time to prepare, leaving more time to spend on side
dishes or with family.
- Prepare fewer side dishes,
and instead, choose your favorite dishes to make. This might
be the year that you have time
to make that favorite dish that
may require more preparation.

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All content © 2020 The Daily Sentinel, an edition
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any form without
permission from the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

OHIO VALLEY —
Active cases of COVID19 in Gallia, Meigs and
Mason Counties continue
to rise in advance of the
Thanksgiving holiday.
The Gallia County
Health Department
reported a total of 292
active cases on Tuesday
morning. The health
department listed a total
of 709 cases since March,
although it noted that all
cases from Nov. 22-24
were not included in the
update. The Ohio Department of Health reported
a total of 735 cases in
Gallia County during it’s
Tuesday update. ODH
has stated in recent days
that thousands of tests
are pending review leading to delays in reporting.
In Meigs County, 15
additional conﬁrmed
cases were reported,
bringing the county’s
active case total to 112
as of Tuesday afternoon.
A total of 427 cases have
been reported in the
county since April.
The Mason County
Health Department
reported 376 total cases
(since March) on Tuesday, 12 more than Monday. Of those, 141 cases
are active and 226 are
recovered.

- Many restaurants will
offer takeout options.
If a local restaurant has
your favorite dessert,
order it for a special holiday treat.
- Simplify the menu.
With less people, you
will not need as much.
Choose your favorites
and make those.
- And most importantly,
we all will be missing family
members. Pick up the phone or
video chat with those important people in your life.
According to a news release
from Holzer, “To keep your
mind and body healthy, try to
make your plate of delicious

Thanksgiving foods a little bit
more colorful this year. According to the CDC, foods such as
leafy greens that may be a part
of your traditional meal may be
added to your favorite leftover
stew or snack. These foods,
such as collard greens, broccoli,
and onions, contain vitamins,
ﬁbers, and minerals.”
“Eating and enjoying a wellbalanced meal will keep your
mind and ease and nourish
your body in the process,” Siders said.
The CDC notes that dietary
supplements can help your
body, but most of the vitamins

the coronavirus because of medical
problems, teachers and school staff
members, and others. The governor
did not identify which company’s vaccine the state would receive.
The state’s preference is to provide
the ﬁrst vaccine batches to local health
departments for initial distribution,
according to a draft plan of Ohio’s vaccination plan released last month.
DeWine and health experts continued to urge Ohioans to limit Thanksgiving gatherings. The governor also

Gallia County
In an update on Tuesday, the Gallia County
Health Department
reported a total of 709
cases of COVID-19, with
292 of those cases considered to be active.
“We are reporting
121 additional cases of
COVID-19 for Gallia
County. Eight of these
individuals were diagnosed based on a positive
antigen test and meeting
the case deﬁnition of a
probable case, i.e., an
epidemiological link to
a positive case or symptoms consistent with
COVID19 and diagnosed
by a medical provider.
They will be listed as
113 additional conﬁrmed
cases, and 8 additional
probable cases for a total
of 709 cases (639 conﬁrmed, 70 probable),”
stated an update from
the Gallia County Health
Department posted to its

See VACCINE | 2

See COVID-19 | 10

See HOLZER | 12

Ohio governor: State’s first
vaccine batch coming by Dec. 15
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
could see its ﬁrst batches of a coronavirus vaccine by Dec. 15, Gov. Mike
DeWine said Tuesday, citing calls his
ofﬁce has had with federal ofﬁcials.
The Republican governor called
the announcement good news even
as COVID-19 cases skyrocket in Ohio
along with a record number of hospitalizations.
The state’s distribution plan is
expected to put a high priority on
ﬁrst responders such as health care
workers, nursing home residents,
people considered at high-risk for

Local schools
Buckeye Hills Career
Center reported one conﬁrmed case at the center
in a statement posted to
the center’s Facebook
page on Tuesday. Case
totals at Buckeye Hills,
according to the statement, are as follows:
Secondary Education
(high school), 9 students,
7 staff; Adult education, 6
students, 4 staff.
Here’s a closer look at
coronavirus cases across
our area:

�NEWS

2 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Hearing trouble more obvious with masks
By Jamie Stengle
Associated Press

Carolyn Kaster | AP

President-elect Joe Biden introduced his nominees and appointees
to key national security and foreign policy posts at The Queen
theater Tuesday in Wilmington, Del.

Biden signals stark
shift with new
national security team
By Matthew Lee
and Alexandra Jaffe
Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del.
— Declaring “America
is back,” President-elect
Joe Biden introduced
selections for his national security team Tuesday, his ﬁrst substantive
offering of how he’ll
shift from Trump-era
“America First” policies
by relying on foreign
policy and national security experts from the
Democratic establishment to be some of his
most important advisers.
Biden’s Washington
veterans all have ties to
former President Barack
Obama’s administration
as the president-elect
has sought to deliver a
clear message about his
desire to reestablish a
more predictable engagement from the United
States on the global
stage.
“It’s a team that
reﬂects the fact that
America is back, ready
to lead the world, not
retreat from it,” said
Biden, at an introductory event at which
his selections stood on
stage, at least six feet
apart and masked.
The president-elect’s
team includes Antony
Blinken, a veteran foreign policy hand wellregarded on Capitol Hill
whose ties to Biden go
back some 20 years, for
secretary of state; lawyer
Alejandro Mayorkas to
be homeland security
secretary; veteran diplomat Linda ThomasGreenﬁeld to be U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations; and Obama
White House alumnus
Jake Sullivan as national
security adviser.
Avril Haines, a former
deputy director of the
CIA, was picked to serve
as director of national
intelligence, the ﬁrst
woman to hold that post,
and former Secretary
of State John Kerry will

make a curtain call as a
special envoy on climate
change. Kerry and Sullivan’s position will not
require Senate conﬁrmation.
With the Senate’s balance of power hinging
on two runoff races in
Georgia that will be
decided in January, some
Senate Republicans have
already expressed antipathy to Biden’s picks as
little more than Obama
world retreads.
Sen. Tom Cotton, an
Arkansas Republican
and potential 2024 GOP
presidential hopeful,
derisively accused Biden
of surround himself with
“panda huggers” who
will go soft on China.
Sen. Marco Rubio, who
sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that will consider
Blinken’s nomination,
broadly wrote off the
early selections as uninspiring.
“Biden’s cabinet picks
went to Ivy League
schools, have strong
resumes, attend all the
right conferences &amp;
will be polite &amp; orderly
caretakers of America’s
decline,” Rubio tweeted.
But Biden’s transition
team hailed the president-elect’s selection as
a group of “crisis-tested
leaders” who will be
ready to hit the ground
running in the new
administration.
Outside the realm of
national security and
foreign policy, Biden is
expected to choose Janet
Yellen as the ﬁrst woman
to become treasury secretary. She was nominated by Obama to lead the
Federal Reserve, the ﬁrst
woman in that position,
and served from 2014 to
2018.
Biden said his choices
“reﬂect the idea that we
cannot meet these challenges with old thinking
and unchanged habits.”
He said he tasked them
with reasserting global
and moral leadership.

Vaccine

sive care units and more
than 570 on ventilators,
according to state Health
Department data.
From page 1
The seven-day rolling
average of daily new
asked schools moving
cases in Ohio has risen
forward with winter
over the past two weeks
sports to do so without
from 4,724 on Nov. 9 to
fans.
8,277 on Nov. 23, accordNearly 4,500 people
ing to an Associated
are currently in the
hospital with COVID-19 Press analysis of data
provided by The COVID
symptoms, including
more than 1,000 in inten- Tracking Project.

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
All content © 2020 Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel
edition. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be
reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except as
permitted by U.S. copyright law.

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

DALLAS — As nurse
Teri Wheat made her
rounds at a Texas maternity ward, she began to
realize she was having a
hard time understanding
the new mothers who
were wearing masks due
to the coronavirus pandemic.
So she got her hearing
tested and now wears
hearing aids.
Her hearing loss
“became more noticeable the more barriers
that we had to have,”
said Wheat, 52, who
wears a mask and a face
shield at work to protect herself and others
against the virus.
Hearing specialists
across the U.S. say they
have seen an uptick in
visits from people like
Wheat, who only realized how much they
relied on lip reading and
facial expressions when
people started wearing
masks that cover the
nose and mouth.
“More than likely,
these are people that
had some kind of hearing loss prior to all this
starting but they were
adapting,” said Andrea
Gohmert, director of
the hearing clinic at the
University of Texas at
Dallas’ Callier Center for
Communication Disorders.
Most of the time,
hearing loss happens
gradually and people
will often wait around

LM Otero | AP

Andrea Gohmert, right, director of the hearing clinic at the University of Texas at Dallas’
Callier Center for Communication Disorders, prepares Lynne Perler for a hearing test during a
demonstration at the Callier Center for Communication Disorders. Hearing specialists across
the U.S. are seeing an uptick in visits from people who only realized how much they relied on lip
reading and facial expressions when people started wearing masks because of the coronavirus
pandemic.

seven years to get their
hearing tested, according to audiologists, the
professionals who assess
hearing.
“We would have seen
these people eventually
but it could have been
quite a few years from
now,” said Catherine
Palmer, audiology director for the western
Pennsylvania health care
system UPMC.
Wheat, who had
her hearing tested at
the Callier Center in
August, said that even
before the pandemic,
she frequently asked her
kids to repeat what they
said, and people pointed
out how loud she listened to programs on

her computer or television. But, she said, her
hearing loss hadn’t been
obvious to her.
Audiologists say it’s
not just the lack of visual clues that’s making
hearing difﬁcult: masks
and plastic barriers also
reduce the sound level.
And standing closer to
the person you are talking to — another coping mechanism — has
also been eliminated in
most settings because
of recommendations to
socially distance during
the pandemic.
Palmer, who just
ﬁnished a stint as president of the American
Academy of Audiology,
said people with normal

hearing can manage if
voices are mufﬂed a bit,
but those with some
hearing loss have a
much harder time.
Nancy Tye-Murray, a
professor at Washington
University in St. Louis,
said the visual is a “powerful supplement” to
hearing.
“Most people with
hearing loss don’t realize they rely on it so
much, and even people
with normal hearing
rely on it, say, when you
are in a noisy restaurant,” Tye-Murray said.
Palmer said adults can
usually ﬁll in the blanks
and ﬁnd words they
aren’t hearing, but it’s
exhausting.

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

Card Showers
Lou Long will be celebrating
her 90th birthday on Nov. 30,
cards may be sent to Holzer
Assisted Living 300 Briarwood
Dr. Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Wednesday, Nov. 25
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Commissioners will hold
their weekly meeting at 11 a.m.

instead of Thursday due to the
Thanksgiving holiday.

Thursday, Dec. 3
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
&amp; Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
noon at the district ofﬁce. The
ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

Friday, Dec. 4
MARIETTA — Buckeye Hills
Regional Council Executive
Committee will hold its regular
meeting by remote videoconference at 10:30 a.m. Buckeye
Hills Regional Council serves
as the Council of Governments,
Area Agency on Aging, and
Regional Transportation Planning Organization (RTPO) for
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry, and
Washington counties. Citizens

are encouraged to attend the
meeting via Facebook Live.
Visit the Buckeye Hills Regional
Council Facebook page to watch
the livestream: www.facebook.
com/BuckeyeHills. The meeting
agenda will be posted to buckeyehills.org. Public comment
may be submitted until Dec. 2
by emailing info@buckeyehills.
org.
MIDDLEPORT — Meigs
County Veterans Service Ofﬁce
will be holding their last meeting of the year at 9 a.m. All
emergency grant applications
must be submitted prior to the
meeting. Applications submitted
after Dec. 4 will not be reviewed
until the end of January 2021.

Tuesday, Dec. 8
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District will hold its monthly
board meeting at 7 p.m. a the district ofﬁce.

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
nated Transportation Planning Committee will be
Editor’s Note: Gallia Meigs Briefs will only list
event information that is open to the public and will holding a public meeting on the following dates and
times: Monday, Nov. 30, at 9 a.m. and Wednesday,
be printed on a space-available basis.
Dec. 2, at 9 a.m., all meetings will be held virtually
via Microsoft Teams (or you can call in) All public,
private non-proﬁt, and private for-proﬁt transportation providers, as well as the general public are invitGALLIPOLIS — The John Gee Black Historical
ed to attend, participate and provide comment on
Center will be closed from Nov. 20 - Jan. 2, 2021.
This is due to the increased spread of COVID-19 in the Meigs County Coordinated Transportation Plan.
For a copy of the plan prior to the meeting, to gain
the area.
the access code for each meeting or to request an
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — To ensure the
accommodation for a person with a disability please
health of the community, Ohio Valley Bank has
contact Bridget Gilmore at 740-992-2119 or bridget.
decided to close its Point Pleasant Ofﬁce lobby for
gilmore@jfs.ohio.gov
deep cleaning due to COVID concerns. The lobby
is currently closed and will remain closed until Saturday, Nov. 28. The drive-thru will continue to be
open during normal hours. Those who need assistance are asked to visit the drive-thru or call the
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
bank at 1-800-468-6682.
Society will be providing straw for pet bedding during the months of November, December, January,
and February. Vouchers may be picked up at the
Humane Society Thrift Shop, 253 North Second
Street, Middleport, for a fee of $2. Vouchers are to
GALLIPOLIS — The Dr. Samuel L Bossard
Memorial Library will be closed Thursday, Nov. 26, be redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For
more information call 740-992-6064.
in observance of the Thanksgiving Day Holiday.
Normal hours of operation will resume Friday, Nov.
27.
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County government
ofﬁces, including the health department and the
ADDISON TWP. — Addison Township Trustees
ofﬁces in the courthouse, will be closed on Thursannounce Nibert Road will be closed starting Monday, Nov. 26 and Friday, Nov. 27. The weekly Meigs day, Nov. 9, for slip repairs.
County Commissioner meeting will be held on
CHESHIRE TWP. — The Cheshire Township
Wednesday at 11 a.m.
Board of Trustees announces Township Road 317/
Grover Road, will be closed starting Monday, Sept.
28 and will reopen on or about Monday, Nov. 30,
due to construction on a slip area. Any questions
please contact the township ofﬁce at 740-367-0313.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Coordi-

Temporary closures

Straw available

Holiday closure

Road construction, closures

Transportation planning

�Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 3

Have fun coloring this page for Thanksgiving! Clip it out and hang it
in your home or submit it for a prize (12 years old and younger)!

All entrants 12 and under will win a prize!
NAME ____________________________________________ AGE ________ PHONE __________________
SOMETHING I’M THANKFUL FOR: ____________________________________________________________

OH-70213448

OH-70213447

Drop off or mail your coloring page to: Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, OH 45631
or Point Pleasant Register, 510 Main St, Pt Pleasant, WV 25550

�NEWS

4 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

PVH ‘Employees of the Month’ announced
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— Pleasant Valley Hospital
(PVH) has announced the
Customer Service Employee
of the Month as Wendy Lilly
from the surgery department,
and Debbie Monson from case
management department,
for September and October,
respectively.
The Employee of the Month
at Pleasant Valley Hospital is
nominated for “taking extra
steps to provide excellent customer service to our patients
and family members at PVH,”
according to a news release
from the hospital.
“Lilly has been employed
since May 1992 as a registered nurse,” the news release
stated. “She is well known
throughout the hospital for
her compassion and energy.
She is always courteous and
helpful to others, clearly demonstrated in her act of care to
a visitor in need. A visitor was
having difﬁculties, and Wendy
went out of her way to help
this individual until they were

September’s Employee of the Month, Wendy Lilly, is pictured with Jeff Noblin,
FACHE, PVH CEO.

taken care of.”
Monson has been employed
since August 2018 as a social
worker.
“Debbie was nominated
because she always goes above
and beyond for every patient
and staff at Pleasant Valley
Hospital,” the news release
stated. “She always has a smile

on her face and is ready to do
whatever is needed to make
sure our hospital and patients
have what they need. Debbie
is always encouraging others.
She will send cards to patients
and family members after they
leave the hospital, and she will
also do follow-up calls just to
check on them. She is what

Photos courtesy of PVH

October’s Employee of the Month, Debbie Monson, is pictured with Cherilyn
Ramey, director of Revenue Cycle (left) and Jeff Noblin, FACHE, PVH CEO (right).

a true team player and role
model should be.”
Both Lilly and Monson are
both “an excellent example
of the PVH Employee of the
Month,” according to PVH,
which further stated it was
“grateful” to have them both
on their “team.”

In this recognition, both
received a $100 check and a
VIP parking space. Both will
also be eligible for the Customer Service Employee of the
Year award with a chance for
$500.
Information provided by PVH.

Holzer Medical Center recognizes
November pediatric sponsors

Carl Bernstein says 21 GOP
senators contemptuous of Trump

The Earl Neff Pediatric Fund at Holzer Medical
Center continues to be supported by area businesses
and organizations.
The Pediatric Fund, in existence for over 45 years,
has supplied needed toys, equipment and entertainment to the thousands of pediatric patients who have
received care from Holzer Health System’s Pediatric
Units.
Tom’s Auto Clinic, represented in the photo by
Manager Rick Jones, and Finley and Eachus Attorneys at Law (not pictured) are the November sponsors.
The entire staff of Holzer joins in expressing our
gratitude, along with the young children and their
families, for these generous contributions to the Earl
Neff Pediatric Fund. Anyone who would like more
information or is interested in donating may contact
Abby Greer at the Holzer Heritage Foundation 740446-5878.

NEW YORK (AP)
— Former Watergate
sleuth Carl Bernstein
took to Twitter to list
the names of 21 Republican senators who he
says have “repeatedly
expressed contempt”
for Donald Trump and
his ﬁtness to be president.
Bernstein’s post was
condemned Monday by
some of those involved.
It was an eyebrowraising modern twist
on journalism from
the former Washington Post reporter
who, with partner
Bob Woodward in the

Information provided by Holzer Health System.

Holzer | Courtesy

Tom’s Auto Clinic, represented
in the photo by Manager Rick
Jones, is one of this month’s
sponsors for the Earl Neff
Pediatric Fund.

1970s, penned scoops
that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon.
Bernstein said he
wasn’t violating any
conﬁdentiality pledges
in listing the senators.
He said he learned of
the politicians’ supposed private feelings
through conversations
with some of their colleagues, staff members,
lobbyists and White
House aides.
“With few exceptions, their craven public silence has helped
enable Trump’s most
grievous conduct —

including undermining
and discrediting the
U.S. electoral system,”
he tweeted late Sunday.
Bernstein, a CNN
political analyst,
declined a request to
talk about his posts.
Many Washington
reporters have talked
about lawmakers
who have privately
expressed reservations
about Trump but rarely
attached names to their
stories. Bernstein said
he believed several of
the Republicans on
his list were privately
happy about Democrat
Joe Biden’s victory.

Time with family, staying active, doing what you love. We understand how important it is to live your best life, even
as times are changing. At Holzer, we strive to help every patient achieve their best health during every stage of life. With more options for
care through in-person and virtual visits, we are dedicated to providing you with excellent care, every time. Live Your Best Life with Holzer!

OH-70213338

Call to schedule with a Holzer Primary Care Provider!

1-855-4HOLZER (1-855-446-5937)
www.holzer.org

�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

BLONDIE

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 5

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

Lady Eagles drop opener to NYHS, 45-30
By Alex Hawley

second half.
Eastern trailed 40-19 at the
start of the fourth quarter, and
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — outscored NYHS 11-to-5 in the
stanza, falling by a ﬁnal tally of
A tough test to open the year.
45-30.
The Eastern girls basketball
Each team claimed 34
team began the season with a
rebounds in the game, with the
45-30 setback to non-conference guest Nelsonville-York on Lady Buckeyes earning a 15-to12 edge on the offensive glass.
Monday at Meigs County.
EHS committed 21 turnovers,
The Lady Eagles (0-1) —
who never led in the contest — while the guests gave the ball
away 10 times. Collectively,
tied the game twice, at 2-2 in
the opening minute, and at 4-4 the Lady Eagles tallied seven
assists, three steals and two
with 3:43 left in the ﬁrst quarter. Nelsonville-York led 13-8 by rejections, while Nelsonvillethe end of the ﬁrst period, and York recorded 15 steals, 10
then scored 13 straight to start assists and three blocked shots.
Eastern shot 14-of-52 (26.9
the second.
percent) from the ﬁeld, includThe Lady Buckeyes were
ing 0-of-7 from three-point
ahead 29-12 at halftime, and
range, while NYHS made
led by a game-high 22 points,
18-of-62 (29.0 percent) ﬁeld
at 39-17, six minutes into the

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

EHS sophomore Ella Carleton (42) drives past a NYHS defender, during the Lady
Buckeyes’ 45-30 victory on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

goal attempts, including 3-of15 (20 percent) from deep. At
the foul line, the Lady Eagles
made 2-of-4 (50 percent), and
the Lady Buckeyes sank 6-of-10
(60 percent).
EHS freshman Hope Reed
led the hosts with 10 points
and a pair of assists, followed
by Juli Durst with six points.
Jennifer Parker and Sydney
Reynolds scored ﬁve points
apiece, with Reynolds pulling
in a dozen rebounds and dishing out a pair of assists. Whitney Durst and Ella Carleton
scored two points each in the
setback.
Leading the Lady Eagle
defense, Reed had two steals,
while Whitney Durst rejected
See EAGLES | 7

Injury to rookie
Burrow ‘kind of tore
everybody apart’
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — If it wasn’t bad
enough already, 2020 took a terrible turn for the
Cincinnati Bengals and their prized rookie quarterback Joe Burrow.
The Heisman Trophy winner and top draft pick
brought excitement and hope to the franchise
and its long-suffering fans that was drained in
an instant when Burrow’s left leg was bent in an
unnatural angle in the second half of Sunday’s
game against Washington.
Cincinnati lost Burrow for the season, then lost
the game.
“It just kind of tore everybody apart,” receiver
Tyler Boyd said.
Shortly after the game, Burrow tweeted:
“Thanks for all the love. Can’t get rid of me that
easy. See ya next year.”
Coach Zac Taylor would say only that Burrow
will have surgery and should be ready for 2021
season. Burrow was placed on injured reserve on
Monday.
“He was a tremendous leader for us, and he gave
us a lot of energy the way he led the unit,” Taylor
said. “I can’t be robot coach and say that we’re not
going to be missing that, because we will.”
Boyd said he saw Burrow on Monday and
reported the quarterback’s mood to be “positive.”
“His spirits are up,” Boyd said. “He’s not walking around with his head down. He’s a true believer, and he knows he’ll be back ready and better
than ever.”
The esteem felt for Burrow in his southeastern
Ohio hometown, and in Louisiana where he won
a national championship at LSU, and in Cincinnati was displayed in an uptick of donations to an
Athens, Ohio, hunger relief fund that was inspired
by his Heisman Trophy speech and now bears his
name.
It started shortly after he was taken off the
ﬁeld. Many people were donating $9 to match his
uniform number, and dozens left messages on the
website wishing him well.
“We are proud of you Joe,” an anonymous donor
wrote Monday. “We know you are a Super Bowl
champion in the making. Every great story has
adversity… this is just another chapter for you!”
Taylor, whose ﬁrst season in 2019 ended at 2-14,
could see the progress and potential with Burrow,
who was on track to break several rookie passing
records and already had thrown for 300 yards ﬁve
times.
“He handled everything like a professional from
day one, and to be voted a captain just speaks to
everything that you need to know about the guy,”
Taylor said. “The players have responded to him,
the coaches have responded to him, the city has
responded to him and all that is equally as important.”
Before Burrow was carted off Sunday, his Cincinnati teammates gathered around in support,
and Chase Young, Dwyane Haskins Jr. and Terry
McLaurin — Washington players who were Burrow’s teammates at Ohio State — also came over
to have a word.
Now the attention turns to backup QB Ryan
Finley, a fourth-round pick in 2019 who played
See BURROW | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 27
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Meigs,
7:30
River Valley at Eastern,
7:15
Saturday, Nov. 28
College Football

Bowling Green at Ohio,
noon
Oklahoma at West
Virginia, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Rock Hill at River Valley,
6:30
Eastern at Shenandoah,
1 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Caitlin Cotterill hits a chip shot as MHS coach Alyssa Andrews watches on in the background at the 2020 Division II
Southeast Sectional golf tournament held at Franklin Valley Golf Course on Sept. 28 in Jackson, Ohio.

2020 All-TVC golf teams
OVP area lands 11 total selections;
Cotterill named girls MVP
By Bryan Walters

team had eight repeat
selections on the squad.
The Marauders came
away with two ﬁrst-time
The Ohio Valley Pubselections on the All-TVC
lishing area had a total
Ohio squad in Bailey
of 11 people honored
Jones and Payton Brown.
as members of the 2020
All-Tri-Valley Conference Jordan Lambert was also
golf teams, as decided by named to the All-TVC
Ohio team for the ﬁrst
individual rounds over
time on behalf of the
the course of the fall
Raiders.
campaign.
Athens senior Ben
All four area programs
Pratt was the player of
— Meigs, River Valley,
Southern and Eastern — the year and Rod Burgess
had at least one selection of Athens was the coach
of the year in the TVC
within their respective
Ohio Division. There
boys divisions, but a
pair of schools were also were ﬁve repeat selections on the TVC Ohio
well-represented on the
boys team.
all-girls squad.
Southern had three
The Lady Marauders
ﬁrst-time selections on
captured the program’s
the All-TVC Hocking
third consecutive TVC
team in Tanner Lisle,
girls championship this
Jacob Milliron and Ryan
fall and came away with
a trio of repeat selections Laudermilt.
Ethan Short of East— including a pair of
ern was also a ﬁrst-time
special honorees.
Senior Caitlin Cotterill selection to the All-TVC
Hocking squad.
ended up being named
Connor Copeland of
the player of the year
and Alyssa Andrews was Belpre and Mitchell
Roush of Federal Hockchosen as the coach of
the year for the All-TVC ing shared player of the
girls team, both of which year honors in the TVC
Hocking, while Kyle
were repeat selections
Scott of Belpre was again
from last fall. Senior
Kylee Robinson was also named the coach of the
selected to the squad for year in the TVC Hocking
Division.
MHS.
Only two players were
Sophia Gee was also
repeat selections on this
named to the All-TVC
year’s TVC Hocking
girls team on behalf of
squad.
the Lady Raiders for a
Below is a look at the
second year in a row.
complete list of each AllExcluding the special
honors, the All-TVC girls TVC golf team.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Southern senior Ryan Laudermilt, right, hits a tee shot on the
ninth hole during a non-conference quad golf match at Riverside
Golf Course on Sept. 22 in Mason, W.Va.

2020 All-TVC Golf Teams

HOCKING DIVISION
Connor Copeland,
OHIO DIVISION
Belpre; Zach North,
Will Briggs, Wellston; Trimble; Mitchell Roush,
Bailey Jones, Meigs; T.J. Federal Hocking; Ethan
Short, Eastern; Tanner
Vogt*, Alexander; Jack
McDonald*, Nelsonville- Lisle, Southern; Gavin
York; Brock Hamon, Vin- Brooker*, Waterford;
ton County; Ben Pratt*, Jacob Smeeks, Belpre;
Athens; Jordan Lambert, Blake Church, Belpre;
Mason Jackson*, Federal
River Valley; Payton
Brown, Meigs; Matthew Hocking; Jacob Milliron,
Southern; Ryan LauderMorris*, Alexander;
milt, Southern; Braxton
Landon Atha, AlexLeister, Waterford.
ander; Tyson Smith*,
Co-Players of the Year:
Athens; Nathan Shadik,
Connor Copeland (BelAthens.
pre) and Mitchell Roush
Player of the Year:
(Federal Hocking).
Ben Pratt, Athens.
Coach of the Year:
See TEAMS | 7
Rod Burgess, Athens.

�SPORTS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 7

Rio Grande men start fast, take down Pioneers
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of
Rio Grande jumped to a
22-point ﬁrst half lead,
but had to survive a
second half comeback
attempt by Campbellsville
University-Harrodsburg
before pulling away again
late for a 79-58 win over
the Pioneers, Saturday
evening, in the ﬁnal
round of the Bevo Francis
Classic at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
The RedStorm moved
beyond the .500 mark for
the ﬁrst time this season
with the victory, improving to 3-2.
CU-Harrodsburg, which
had its opening game
in the Classic on Friday
against Ohio Christian
cancelled by COVIDrelated issues, slipped to
1-2 with the loss.
Rio Grande appeared to
be headed for a blowout

win, opening up a 32-10
advantage after a threepointer by sophomore
Miroslav “Miki” Tadic
(Hilversum, The Netherlands) with 5:40 left in
the opening half, but the
Pioneers sliced the deﬁcit
to 14 by the intermission
and closed the gap to
just seven, 46-39, after
a bucket by Aamaj Platt
with 11:29 remaining in
the game.
The RedStorm responded with a ﬁve-point swing
less than a minute later,
thanks to a conventional
three-point play by sophomore Shiloah Blevins
(South Webster, OH)
and a pair of free throws
by freshman Andrew
Shull (Milton, WV) after
a technical foul against
Platt, to regain a 12-point
cushion.
Rio Grande led by no
less than 10 points the
rest of the way and even
pushed their edge to as
many as 26 points, 76-50,

following a three-point
goal by senior Bobby
Anderson (Catlettsburg,
KY) with 1:40 left.
Blevins led a quartet of
Rio players in double ﬁgures with 20 points, while
Shull and Tadic tossed in
16 and 15 points, respectively.
Freshman Reedetris
Richardson (Atlanta, GA)
added a career-high 12
points, a game-high nine
rebounds and two blocks
to the winning effort,
while Shull added ﬁve
assists and three steals.
The RedStorm shot 45
percent overall (24-for53), while going 11-for-22
from three-point range
and 20-for-28 from the
free throw line.
CU-Harrodsburg shot
just 25 percent in the ﬁrst
half (8-for-32) and 35
percent for the game (23for-65), while going just
2-for-16 from beyond the
three-point arc.
Chris Rawlins led the

at Waller Gymnasium in
Rio Grande is slated
Portsmouth.
to return to action on
Wednesday afternoon at
Shawnee State University. Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
Tipoff is set for 3 p.m.
University of Rio Grande.

Pioneers with 18 points,
while Tyron Duncan
ﬁnished with 15 points
and a team-best eight
rebounds.

H O L Z E R

W I S H E S

YO U

A

S A F E

Thursday, November 26

Friday, November 27

(Thanksgiving Day)

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The Emergency Department at our locations in
Gallipolis, Pomeroy, and Jackson are

OPEN 24 hours a day,
7 days a week.
Courtesy|Allison Jeffers

Burrow

tiple injuries.
Taylor said the line
was playing well in the
ﬁrst half Sunday and
From page 6
noted that on the play
that resulted in the injusome as a rookie last
ry, Burrow had a “clean
year when Andy Dalton
was benched. He’ll be the pocket” to get the ball
away and then got his
starter Sunday against
leg bent sideways after
the New York Giants,
pass-rushers collapsed
and Brandon Allen will
on him.
move up from the pracIt’s been one thing
tice squad to No. 2.
after another for the
As ﬁngers were being
Bengals this season.
pointed all around
Injuries up and down the
Monday in the wake of
offensive line, defensive
Burrow’s injury, Taylor
line and in the secondinsisted it was the right
move to start the rookie ary. Starting running
from the beginning, even back Joe Mixon went on
injured reserve with a
given the questionable
state of an offensive line foot injury.
Now this.
that became even more
“We always say, and I
unsure because of mul-

always preach, that we’re
going to be the team this
year to beat,” said Boyd,
who is in his ﬁfth season
with the Bengals. “It
never goes that way. We
take blow after blow.”

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

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7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

Eagles
From page 6

two shots.
Mackenzie Hurd led
the Lady Buckeyes with
16 points, eight rebounds
and six assists, to go
with four steals and two
rejections on the defensive end. NYHS freshman Airah Lavy — who
marked a game-high
ﬁve steals — tallied 13
points for the victors.

Teams
From page 6

Coach of the Year:
Kyle Scott, Belpre.
GIRLS TEAM
Caitlin Cotterill*,
Meigs; Lisa Liv, Athens; Jaya Booth, Vinton
County; Caitlin Hall*,
Nelsonville-York; Halle
Martin*, Wellston; Sophia
Gee*, River Valley; Kylee
Robinson*, Meigs; Mad-

Ashleigh Cantrell and
Brooklyn Richards scored
six points apiece, Alivia
Speelman came up with
three, while Kaina Hernandez marked one point.
Next, the Lady Eagles
visit Shenandoah at 1
p.m. on Saturday for
their ﬁrst road trip of the
season.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

die Whiting*, Athens;
Olivia Kaiser*, Athens;
Liz Lambert*, Vinton
County; Ryleigh Grifﬁn,
Nelsonville-York; Hallie
Shea, Wellston.
Player of the Year:
Caitlin Cotterill, Meigs.
Coach of the Year:
Alyssa Andrews, Meigs.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

6 PM

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

OH-70214212

Rio Grande’s Bryanth Farr makes a move toward the basket on Campbellsville-Harrodsburg’s Aamaj
Platt during Saturday’s 79-58 win over the Pioneers at the Newt Oliver Arena.

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�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

18-03135
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
STATE OF OHIO, GALLIA COUNTY
U.S. Bank National Association, as indenture trustee, for the
CIM Trust 2016-2, Mortgage-Backed Notes, Series 2016-2,
PLAINTIFF
vs
Scott MacClinchy aka Scott D. MacClinchy, Wanda
MacClinchy aka Wanda L. MacClinchy,
DEFENDANT
CASE NUMBER:19CV000055
In pursuance of an Order of Sale appraisal in the above titled
action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on the
second floor meeting room of the Courthouse in Gallapolis,
Ohio on 12-11-20 at 10:00 a.m. the following described real
estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF HUNTINGTON, COUNTY OF GALLIA AND
THE STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION
ON THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN
THE GALLIA COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE 18 Locust
Street, Room 1265, Gallipolis Ohio 45631;
Phone 740-446-4612 Ext. 246; Fax 740-446-4804;
Email: records@gallianet.net
Prior Deed Information: November 7, 2001 Book 356, Page
616
Said premises also known as: 1486 Alice Road, Vinton OH
45686
PPN: 01500105203, 01500105202
SAID PREMISES APPRAISED AT $150,000.00 AND CANNOT BE SOLD FOR LESS THAN TW0-THIRDS OF THAT
AMOUNT. NO EMPLOYEE OF THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE OR
ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES HAVE ACCESS TO THE INSIDE OF
SAID PROPERTY. THE PURCHASER SHALL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR COSTS, ALLOWANCES, AND TAXES THAT THE
PROCEEDS OF THE SALE ARE INSUFFICIENT TO COVER.
IF THE PROPERTY ISN'T SOLD AT THE ABOVE SALE
DATE, IT WILL BE OFFERED FOR SALE AGAIN ON 1-8-21
AT THE SAME TIME AND LOCATION ABOVE.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash, money order, certified check or
cashier's check. If the appraisal is less than or equal to
$10,000 deposit $2,000; greater than $10,000 but less than or
equal to $200,000 deposit $5,000; great than $200,000 deposit
is $10,000. Deposits due at the time of sale and made payable to the Sheriff.
Balance Due within 30 days of the confirmation of sale.
M.D. Champlin, Gallia County Sheriff
CLUNK HOOSE CO., LPA
/s/ Robert R. Hoose
Robert R. Hoose #0074544
Attorneys for Plaintiff
4500 Courthouse Blvd.
Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436-0300 - telephone
(330) 436-0301 - facsimile
notice@clunkhoose.com
File No. 18-03135
11/18/20,11/25/20,12/02/20
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
State of Ohio, Gallia County
James Dean Hess, Plaintiff
Vs.
Bertha Fay Kinner, et al., Defendants
Case: 19 CV 13
Pursuant to an Order of Sale directed to me in the above entitle
action, I will offer for sale at public auction, in the second floor
meeting room of the Courthouse in Gallipolis, Ohio, in the
above named county on Friday, December 18, 2020 at 10:00
a.m. The real estate to be sold is more particularly described
as follows:
Situate in the Township of Huntington, Section 3 in the County
of Gallia and State of Ohio: Beginning for reference at the
Southwest corner of said section; Thence South 83 deg. 20'
East 1394.44 feet to an iron pin; Thence North 0 deg. 32' East
897.34 feet to a railroad spike in the centerline of the Alice
Road and the true place of beginning for the real estate hereinafter described; Thence South 89 deg. 00' West 110.37 feet to
a nail in the centerline of said road; Thence North 89 deg. 33'
West 501.92 feet to a nail in the centerline of said road; Thence
North 87 deg. 01' West 146.89 feet to a railroad spike in said
road; Thence leaving said road North 4 deg. 20' 315 feet to an
in iron pin; Thence North 74 deg. 47' West 512.99 feet to an
iron pin; Thence North 4 deg. 49' East 339.09 feet to an iron
pin; Thence North 7 deg. 03' East 449.57 feet to an iron pin;
thence South 82 deg. 29.5' East 1326.29 feet to an iron pin;
Thence South 5 deg. 51' West 55.17 feet to an iron pin; Thence
South 55 deg. 15' East 338.15 feet to a railroad spike in the
centerline of the aforementioned Alice Road; Thence South 29
deg. 21' West 141.51 feet to an iron spike in the centerline of
said road; Thence South 22 deg. 02' West 447.07 feet to an
iron spike in the centerline of said road; Thence South 19 deg.
00' West 210.06 feet to a railroad spike in the centerline of said
road; Thence South 37 deg. 50' West 55.95 feet to a railroad
spike in the centerline of said road; Thence South 66 deg. 17'
West 46.36 feet to a spike in the centerline of said road;
Thence South 82 deg. 38' West 57.84 feet to the place of beginning, containing 34.188 acres, more or less, said description
being based upon magnetic North calls.
Subject to all legal easements, leases and rights of way.
The above description being surveyed and furnished by Earl F.
Holley, West Virginia Licensed Surveyor No. 219.
RESERVING to the grantor in Deed of record in Volume 218,
page 513, the right to farm the above described premises as
farming practices will allow for and during his natural life only.
EXCEPTING thereout and therefrom 1.01 acres heretofore conveyed to Chester L. Hess, et ux., by Deed of Record in Volume
353, page 281, Deed Records of said county.
FURTHER EXCEPTING thereout and therefrom 2.289 acres
heretofore conveyed to James Dean Hess, et ux., by Deed of
Record in Volume 357, page 219 and re-recorded in Volume
357, page 535, Deed Records of said county.
Parcel Number: 015-001-035-08
The above described real estate being part of the real estate
described in Deed of record at Volume 218, page 513, Deed
Records of Gallia County, Ohio. Also being the same real estate described in Affidavit for Transfer of Real Estate of record
at Book 586, page 479, Official Records of Gallia County, Ohio.
Being the same real estate conveyed to Bertha Fay Kinner
(1/3rd) James Dean Hess (1/3rd) and Chester Lee Hess (1/3rd)
by Certificate of Transfer No. 1 from the Estate of Eddie Dean
Hess, Deceased, of record in Book 604, page 53, Official
Records of Gallia County, Ohio.
Property Address: 1526 Alice Road, Vinton, Ohio 45686
Said real estate was appraised at $105,000.00 and cannot be
sold for less than two-thirds of the appraised value.
TERMS OF SALE:
The successful purchaser, as soon as his bid is accepted,
shall be required to deposit on the date of the sale, in cash or
by check payable to the sheriff, 10% of the amount of such
accepted bid but in no event less than $1,000.00. The balance
of the purchase price shall be due and payable to the Sheriff
within thirty (30) days from the date of confirmation of sale.
The purchaser shall be required to pay interest on said unpaid
balance at 10% per annum from the date of confirmation of the
sale to the date of payment of the balance unless the balance
is made within eight (8) days from the date of sale. "Ohio Revised Code Section 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders pay
recording and conveyance fees to the sheriff at the time of
sale". In addition Purchasers will be responsible for those
costs, allowances and taxes that are not covered by the proceeds.
Matt Champlin, Gallia County Sheriff
Mark E. Sheets, Attorney for Plaintiff
11/18/20,11/25/20,12/2/20

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

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

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

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

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
OF GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
Notice by Publication
Civil Rule 4.4(A)(2)
CATO LYALL
Plaintiff
vs
BRITTNEY LYALL
Defendant

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

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

Check
out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV�
for
bargains!

EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted General
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Case No. 20DR000032
To the Defendant, BRITTNEY LYALL, whose address is
unknown.
Plaintiff has brought this action, naming you the Defendant, in
the Gallia County Common Pleas Court by filing a complaint for
divorce on JUNE 16, 2020.
The Plaintiff has prayed for a divorce based on the grounds of
PLAINTIFF AND DEFENDANT HAVE LIVED SEPARATE AND
APART WITHOUT COHABITATION FOR ONE YEAR and has
asked the Court to order an equitable division of property.
You are required to answer to the complaint within 28 days
after the last publication of this notice, which will be published
once a week for six (6) consecutive weeks, and the last publication will be made on December 9, 2020.
In case of your failure to answer or otherwise respond, as
permitted by the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure within the time
stated, judgment for divorce will be rendered against you for the
relief demanded in the complaint.
A copy of the complaint may be obtained in the Clerk of Courts'
office.
CATO LYALL, PLAINTIFF
A TTORNEY, PRO SE
11/4/20,11/11/20,11/18/20,11/25/20,12/2/20,12/9/20
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
State of Ohio, Gallia County
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IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
OF GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
Tammy L. Griffith,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Roy A. Smith, et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 20 CV 46
NOTICE OF SALE BY PUBLICATION
Now comes the Plaintiff, Tammy L. Griffith, by and through
counsel, and hereby notifies this Court and all parties that a
Sheriff's Sale for 74 Midway Road, Bidwell, Ohio 45614, has
been scheduled for December 11, 2020 at 10:00 a.m. at the
Gallia County Courthouse Second Floor Meeting Room, 18
Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio. The real estate which is the
subject of this action has been appraised with a value of
$20,000.00, with bidding to begin on said real estate at
two-thirds that amount, or $13,333.33.
David C. Evans #0073316
CHERRINGTON, MOULTON AND EVANS
463 Second Avenue, P. O. Box 409
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740)446-1737
Attorney for Plaintiff
11/18/20,11/25/20,12/2/20

Case No. 20 CV 6
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Brent A. Saunders, Attorney for Plaintiff
��������������������������

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
In the State of Ohio, Gallia County, Court of Common Pleas
Wilmington Savings Fund Society dba Christiana Trust, not
individually, but solely as Trustee for NYMT Loan Trust I
(Plaintiff)
vs.
Robin Franklin, AKA Robin Gina Franklin, AKA Robin Gina
Murphy, et al.
(Defendants)
No. 20CV000004
In pursuance of an Order of Sale directed to me in the above
entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on the
front steps of the Gallia County Courthouse in the above
named county, on Friday, the 18th day of December, 2020,
at 10:00 a.m. the following described real estate, and if the
property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered
for sale at auction again on Friday, the 8th day of January,
2021, at 10:00 a.m.:
Situated in Harrison Township, Section 9, Township 4, Range
15, Gallia County, Ohio and being more particularly described
as follows: Beginning at a point in the centerline of State route
218 which is N 32° W 1065.00' form the intersection of the
south line of section 9 and the centerline of State route 218.
Thence, following said centerline N 30° W 208.73' to a nail.
Thence, leaving said centerline N 60° E 208.73' to a iron pipe.
Thence, S 30° E 208.73' to a iron pipe, thence, S 60° W
208.73' to a nail in the Centerline of State Route 218 and also
the point of beginning containing 1,000 acre and being part of
the property belonging.
Property Address: 6108 State Route 218, Gallipolis, OH
45631
Parcel Number: 01300106001
Prior Instrument Reference: dated May 14, 1982, filed
September 27, 1982, recorded as Official Records Volume 245,
Page 285, Gallia County, Ohio records
Current Owners' Names: Robin Gina Franklin aka Robin Gina
Murphy
Said Premises Appraised At: $50,000.00.
The appraisal was completed based on an exterior view of the
property only. Neither the Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have
access to the inside of the property.
Terms of Sale: First Sale - to be sold for not less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Second Sale - if the property
does not sell at the first auction, a second sale of the property
will be held on January 8, 2021. The second sale shall be made
without regard to the minimum bid requirements in ORC §
2329.20.
A deposit in the amount of $5,000.00 is due by the close of bids
on the property. The balance is due within thirty days after confirmation of sale.
The purchaser shall be responsible for those costs, allowances,
and taxes that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
ORC § 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to pay recording
and conveyance fees at the time of sale.
Matt Champlin Sheriff
Gallia County, Ohio
Attorney
11/25/20, 12/2/20,12/9/20

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 9

RedStorm women cruise to first win
By Randy Payton

ﬁve players in doubleﬁgures as the RedStorm
rolled to a 110-51 win
over Great Lakes ChrisRIO GRANDE, Ohio
— David Smalley said he tian College, Saturday
could never recall an 0-3 afternoon, in the Bevo
start to the season in his Francis Classic at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
previous 28 campaigns
Rio Grande led from
as the head coach of the
University of Rio Grande start to ﬁnish against
women’s basketball team. the Crusaders (0-3),
Fortunately, Smalley’s a National Christian
Collegiate Athletic
squad made sure he
Association school from
wasn’t forced to ponder
a fourth straight loss out Lansing, Mich. which,
because of injuries,
of the gate.
dressed just six players
A trio of freshmen
for the contest.
established new careerFreshman Caitlyn
highs and were among

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Brisker (Oak Hill, OH)
scored a career-high 22
points in just her second
collegiate start, going
11-for-14 from the ﬂoor.
She also had a careerhigh six assists.
The duo of fellow frosh
Aleea Crites (Parkersburg, WV) and Jocelyn
Abraham (Exchange,
WV) had big performances of their own
with 18 and 14 points,
respectively, combining
to go 14-for-16 from the
ﬂoor.
Sophomore Lexi
Woods (Waverly, OH)

added 18 points and a
game-high 11 rebounds
in just over 17 minutes
of playing time, while
sophomore Kaylie Apperson (McConnelsville,
OH) had a season-high
11 points and senior
Chyna Chambers
(Columbus, OH) had
nine assists and four
steals in the winning
effort.
Junior Avery Harper
(Seaman, OH) also had
four steals in the win.
Rio Grande shot better
than 60 percent from the
ﬁeld in each half, ﬁnish-

ing the game at 46-for-75
(61.3%), while piling up
31 assist and also out
rebounding the Crusaders, 54-34.
The RedStorm scored
nine of the game’s ﬁrst
11 points and gradually
increased their advantage, leading by 15
points at the end of the
ﬁrst quarter, by 28 at
halftime and 40 points
entering the ﬁnal period.
Rio’s largest lead of the
day came with the ﬁnal
margin of victory.
Great Lakes Christian
shot just 26.7 percent

for the game (20-for-75),
including 8-for-30 from
three-point range, while
also committing 26 turnovers.
Staisha Hamilton
scored a game-high 24
points and had three
assists in a losing cause,
while Ja’Shanek Brooks
had 14 points and two
blocked shots.
Tanaesha Daniels
added 10 rebounds and a
pair of blocked shots for
the Crusaders.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

NBA players hailed by pope at Vatican for demanding justice
By Tim Reynolds

ling Brown, Jonathan
Isaac, Kyle Korver and
Anthony Tolliver —
Pope Francis met with were joined in the delNBA players at the Vati- egation by NBA players’
can on Monday, lauding union executive director
Michele Roberts and
them as “champions”
and saying he supported two other union executives, Sherrie Deans and
their work on social
Matteo Zuretti.
justice.
“We’re here because,
The five players —
frankly, we’re inspired
Marco Belinelli, Ster-

Associated Press

by the work that you do
globally,” Roberts told
the pope during the
meeting in the papal
library.
The union said the
players spoke about
their “individual and
collective efforts
addressing social and
economic injustice and
inequality occurring

in their communities.”
Belinelli addressed the
pope in Italian, and
the group presented
the pope with a commemorative basketball,
a union-produced book
highlighting efforts
players have taken and
an Orlando Magic jersey.
“You’re champions,”

the pope said. “But
also giving the example
of teammork, you’ve
become a model, giving
that good example of
teamwork but always
remaining humble …
and preserving your
own humanity.”
The audience was
held days before a
book comes out in

which Francis supports
demands for racial
justice, specifically the
actions taken following
the killing of George
Floyd, a Black man who
died in May. A police
officer in Minneapolis
pressed a knee against
his neck for minutes
while Floyd said he
couldn’t breathe.

Classifieds
REQUEST FOR BIDS

Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
The State of Ohio, Gallia County
CASE NUMBER 19CV00095
Peoples Bank,
Plaintiff
vs.
Marcus E. Sheets, et al.,
Defendants
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above-entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the Township of Clay, County of Gallia and
State of Ohio, to wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE GALLIA
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1976 Teens Run Road, Crown City,
Ohio 45623
PARCEL NOS.: 00500152500 &amp; 00500152600
Auction will take place in the Second Floor Meeting Room of
the Gallia County Courthouse on December 18, 2020 at 10:00
a.m. If the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will
be offered for sale at auction again on January 8, 2021, at the
same time and place.
Said premises appraised at $145,000.00
The Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside
of said property.
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.
TERMS OF 2ND SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of sale
are insufficient to cover.
McGINNIS LESLIE, PLLC
Attorneys for Plaintiff
M.D. Champlin, Sheriff
Gallia County, Ohio
11/25/20,12/2/20,12/9/20

Hungry for a new opportunity?
General Mills, located in Wellston,
Ohio is hiring Production Operators for
their 2nd and 3rd shift teams. Pay rates
start out between $16.70 and $18.30
per hour, with excellent beneﬁts.
Apply online today at
http://careers.generalmills.com
OH-70211928

Bid InformationOwner:Board of County Commissioners GalliaCounty, OH
Project:New JailProject
ProjectLocation: Gallipolis,OH
Pre-Bid:11/23/2020
Pre-BidLocation:Virtual Teams Meeting (Additional Information forthcoming on Building Connected)
Bid Due: MondayDecember7, 2020@ 2:00pmESTBid
Delivery:Email to Granger: bstoops@grangerconstruction.com
Bidding Work Categories: 03-01Concrete 03-02 Precast Concrete 04-01 Masonry 05-01 Structural and Misc.Steel 06-01
General Trades 07-01 Weatherproofing &amp; Joint Sealants 08-01
Aluminum Windows and Glazing 08-02 Overhead Coiling Doors
09-01 Metal Studs, Drywall, and Acoustical 09-02 Resilient &amp;
Tile Flooring 09-04 Painting11-01 Detention Equipment11-02
Kitchen Equipment14-01 Hydraulic Elevator 21-01 Fire Suppression 23-01 Plumbing &amp; Mechanical 26-01 Electrical 31-01
Earthwork &amp; Utilities32-01 Asphalt Paving 32-02 Landscaping
Note: Subcontractor PrequalificationPackets must be submitted to Granger Construction prior to or with official Bids
for the Project.
Brief Project Description:The scope of work includes a new,
approximate 40,000SF jail and administrative Areas.This project will be constructed to take over correctional operation from
the existing facility which is outdated. The project will be located
and constructed adjacent to the Gallia County Couthouse located at 18 Locust Street, Gallipolis Ohio
Granger Contact Information
Name:Jamie Brundrett, Sr. Project Manager
E-Mail: jbrundrett@grangerconstruction.com
Phone:(614) 601-8046
Architect/ Engineer DLZ Company
Plans Available At: DC Reprograohics –1254 Courtland Ave.
Columbus, Oh 43201Granger Construction Company –400
Lazelle Rd. Suite 18A. Columbus, Oh. 43235
Building Connected
Please email bstoops@grangerconstruction.com and let us
know whether you plan to submit a bid on this project. Thank
you.
Remarks:Granger Construction Company is the Construction
Manager at Risk acting on behalf of Gallia Countyon this
project.We are requesting subcontractors to submit responsive
bids for the listed work categories. We encourage all interested
bidders to contact our Project Manager(listed above) to discuss
this project. We will help in any way we can to enable you to
submita quotation. Thank you for your interest.
GrangerConstruction Company is an Equal Employment
Opportunity Employer. We strongly encourage all Native American, minority,small business, and women owned companies to
participate, and we will be glad to assist this effort in any way
possible. Please contact us to discuss these opportunities.
11/24/20,11/25/20,12/1/20,12/2/20

General Mills – Making Food
the World Loves and Needs.
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate

Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate

The State of Ohio, Gallia County
CASE NUMBER 19CV000138

The State of Ohio, Gallia County
CASE NUMBER 19CV000130

U. S. Bank National Association as Trustee for CMALT REMIC
2007-A6 - REMIC Pass-Through Certificates. Series 2007-A6
Plaintiff
-vsRoyal F. Martin, Sr.
Defendants

Lakeview Loan Servicing LLC
Plaintiff
-vsRoy L. Bickle
Defendants

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the County of Gallia and state of Ohio, and in
the Township of Addison to-wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE GALLIA
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3490 Addison Pike, Gallipolis,
(Addison Township) OH 45631
PPN#: 00100176902
Auction will take place in the basement of the Gallia County
Courthouse on December 11, 2020, at 10:00 a.m.. If the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for
sale at auction again on January 8, 2021 at the same time and
place.
Said Premises Appraised at $84,000.00
The Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside
of said property.
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.
TERMS OF 2ND SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover.
REIMER LAW CO.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
M.D. Champlin, Sheriff
Gallia County, Ohio
11/11/20,11/18/20,11/25/20

In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at public auction the following described real
estate, situate in the County of Gallia and state of Ohio, and in
the Township of Green to-wit:
LEGAL DESCRIPTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE GALLIA
COUNTY RECORDER'S OFFICE
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 277 Arbuckle Road, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631
PPN#: 00800115102
Auction will take place in the basement of the Gallia County
Courthouse on December 11, 2020, at 10:00 a.m.. If the property remains unsold after the first auction, it will be offered for
sale at auction again on January 8, 2021 at the same time and
place.
Said Premises Appraised at $125,000.00
The Sheriff's Office nor any affiliates have access to the inside
of said property.
Required Deposit: $5,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: Property cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of the appraised value. Required deposit in cash or
certified funds due at the time of sale and balance in cash or
certified check upon confirmation of sale. If Judgment Creditor
is purchaser, no deposit is required.
TERMS OF 2ND SALE: Property to be sold without regard to
minimum bid requirements, subject to payment of taxes and
court costs; deposit and payment requirements same as the
first auction.
Pursuant to ORC 2329.21, purchaser shall be responsible for
those costs, allowances and taxes that the proceeds of the sale
are insufficient to cover.
REIMER LAW CO.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
M.D. Champlin, Sheriff
Gallia County, Ohio
11/11/20,11/18/20,11/25/20

�NEWS

10 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

IN BRIEF

TODAY IN HISTORY

Trevor Noah to host Grammys

The Associated Press

Patricia,” but lost to Dave Chappelle.
“Despite the fact that I am extremely disapNEW YORK (AP) — “The Daily Show” host and pointed that the GRAMMYs have refused to have
comedian Trevor Noah has been tapped to host the me sing or be nominated for best pop album, I am
thrilled to be hosting this auspicious event,” Noah
2021 Grammy Awards.
The Recording Academy made the announcement said in a statement. “I think as a one-time GRAMMY nominee, I am the best person to provide a
hours before the nominees for the upcoming show
shoulder to all the amazing artists who do not win
are revealed. It would mark Noah’s ﬁrst time hoston the night because I too know the pain of not
ing the Grammys, which will be held Jan. 31.
winning the award! (This is a metaphorical shoulEarlier this year, Noah competed for his ﬁrst
der, I’m not trying to catch Corona). See you at the
Grammy Award: The 36-year-old Emmy winner
was nominated for best comedy album with “Son of 63rd GRAMMYs!”

COVID-19

caution.” Gallia County
was noted as a “high incidence” county during the
Governor’s news conference on Thursday.

100-109 — 1 case (1
hospitalization)
There have been a total
of 304 recovered cases (4
From page 1
new), a total of 33 hospitalizations (2 new) and
Facebook page.
11 deaths.
The update does not
Meigs County
There have been seven
include all cases from
The Meigs County
positive antibody tests in
Nov. 22-24, stated the
Health Department
Meigs County. Antibody
health department in the reported 15 additional
tests check your blood
update. The Ohio Depart- conﬁrmed cases of
by looking for antibodment of Health update on COVID-19 in the county
ies, which may tell you if
Tuesday afternoon lists
in an update on Wednesyou had a past infection
Gallia County at 735 total day afternoon.
cases.
These cases of COVID- with the virus that causes
COVID-19.
Age ranges for the 709 19 bring Meigs County
“There has been a drascases reported by the
to 112 active cases, and
tic increase of COVID-19
health department are as 427 total cases (385
cases, not only in Meigs
follows:
conﬁrmed, 42 probable)
County but across over
0-19 — 85 cases
since April.
20-29 — 121 cases (1
Age ranges for the 412 the past few weeks. The
hospitalization)
Meigs County cases, as of Meigs County Health
Department urges resi30-39 — 95 cases
Monday, are as follows:
dents to continue follow40-49 — 107 cases (2
0-9 — 15 cases
ing federal, state, and
hospitalizations)
10-19 — 41 cases (1
local orders and guidance
50-59 — 99 cases (6
new case)
to prevent the spread of
hospitalizations)
20-29 — 60 cases (5
COVID-19. This guidance
60-69 — 102 cases (12 new cases)
includes practicing social
hospitalizations)
30-39 — 52 cases (3
70-79 — 65 cases (18
new cases, 2 hospitaliza- distancing, washing your
hands, and wearing facial
hospitalizations)
tions)
coverings,” stated a news
80-89 — 26 cases (13
40-49 — 68 cases (2
hospitalizations)
new cases, 1 hospitaliza- release from the health
department.
90-99 — 9 cases (6 hos- tion)
For more data and
pitalizations)
50-59 — 51 cases (1
information on the cases
The Tuesday update
new case, 2 hospitalizain Meigs County visit
lists a total of 58 hospitions)
https://www.meigstalizations, with 14 of
60-69 — 51 cases (2
health.com/covid-19/ .
those currently hospitalnew cases, 1 new hospiMeigs County at the
ized. There have been 13 talization, 6 total hospi“Orange” Level-2 health
deaths and 404 recovered talizations)
advisory level. The color
cases reported in Gallia
70-79 — 43 cases
is updated each week durCounty.
(10 hospitalizations, 3
ing the Thursday news
Gallia County remains deaths)
conference by Governor
at an Orange level-2 advi80-89 — 30 cases
Mike DeWine. Meigs
sory level on the State of (7 hospitalizations, 5
County was noted as a
Ohio Public Health Risk
deaths)
“high incidence” county
Advisory System, which
90-99 — 15 cases (1
is deﬁned as “increased
new case, 1 new hospital- during the Governor’s
news conference on
exposure and spread;
ization, 4 total hospitalThursday.
exercise high degree of
izations, 3 deaths)

Family Nurse Practitioner Damia Hayman has joined the medical professionals at Pleasant Valley Hospital and is welcoming patients at Pleasant Valley
Family Healthcare located at 995 Jackson Pike, Suite 102 in Gallipolis, Ohio.

“I believe family medicine is the cornerstone of healthcare. It is a gateway
into all other areas of medicine and many patients’ first point of contact
for their health and wellness. Through personal experience, I know how
important medical providers can be, and I strive to be a helpful and positive presence in patients’ lives,” explains Hayman.
Hayman earned her Masters of Science in Nursing in 2005 from Graceland
Univesity in Independence, Missouri. Hayman brings 29 years of nursing
H[SHULHQFH�ZLWK����\HDUV�DV�D�&amp;HUWLȴHG�)DPLO\�1XUVH�3UDFWLWLRQHU�
Hayman provides same day appointments, as well as appointments for paWLHQWV�DJHV���DQG�ROGHU��+HU�RɝFH�KRXUV�DUH������D�P��WR������S�P��0RQGD\�
through Friday.

ɗɷ¡�n.ɷ%�Íɷ�xRpªn.pª¡
ɗɷþĪÚĞŊŒŻąɷÚŊþɷƄŵąÚƄɷÚøƊƄąɷÚŊþ
chronic conditions

ɗɷűŵąŻøŵĪöąɷňąþĪøÚƄĪŒŊŻɷÚŊþɷ ɷ
other treatments
ɗɷŵąĜąŵŵÚŁŻɷƄŒɷŻűąøĪÚŁĪŻƄŻɷ

ɗɷňÚŊÚĞąɷűÚƄĪąŊƄŻɮɷŒƠąŵÚŁŁɷøÚŵą ɗɷơÚŁĽɣĪŊɷøÚŵą
ɗɷňĪŊŒŵɷŒĜĜĪøąɷűŵŒøąþƊŵąŻ

ɗɷ%xªɷűĦƧŻĪøÚŁŻ

ɗɷŒŵþąŵɎɷűąŵĜŒŵňɷÚŊþɷĪŊƄąŵűŵąƄɷ
diagnostic tests

ɗɷűĦƧŻĪøÚŁŻɷɝŻűŒŵƄŻɎąňűŁƧŒňąŊƄɎɷɷ
&amp; insurance)

OH-70208936

Having trouble getting in to see your doctor?
Call 740.925.9035 to see Damia Hayman, FNP-BC TODAY!

Mason County
The Mason County
Health Department
reported 376 total cases
(since March) on Tuesday, 12 more than Monday. Of those, 141 cases
are active and 226 are
recovered. There have
been nine total deaths
in Mason County due to
COVID-19.
The West Virginia
Department of Health
and Human Resources
(DHHR) reported 367
total cases (since March)
for Mason County in the
10 a.m. update on Tuesday, 18 more than Monday. Seven of these cases
are probable.
According to DHHR,
the age ranges for 367
of the COVID-19 cases
DHHR is reporting in
Mason County are as follows:
0-9 — 6 cases (1 new
conﬁrmed case)
10-19 — 27 cases (2
new conﬁrmed cases)
20-29 — 42 cases (plus
1 probable case, 4 new
conﬁrmed case)
30-39 — 38 cases (plus
3 probable cases, 2 new
conﬁrmed cases)
40-49 — 61 cases (plus
2 probable cases, 2 new
conﬁrmed cases)
50-59 — 64 cases (plus
1 probable case, 1 death,
4 new conﬁrmed cases)
60-69 — 53 cases (1
death, 4 new conﬁrmed
cases)
70+ — 69 cases (6
deaths, 3 new conﬁrmed
cases)
On Tuesday, Mason
County was designated as
“orange” (15-24.9 cases
per 100,000 people) in
the DHHR county alert
system map. Surrounding counties were “gold”
(Cabell) and “orange”
(Jackson and Putnam).
Ohio
The Ohio Department
of Health reported a
24-hour change of 8,604
new cases on Tuesday
(21-day average of 6,941).
(Editor’s note: The
COVID-19 dashboard
states, “Today’s data is
incomplete. Thousands
of reports are pending
review. Additionally,
today’s data includes
two days of positive
test results that were
delayed because of technical issues related to lab
reporting.”). There were
98 new deaths (21-day
average of 35), 364 new
hospitalizations (21-day
average of 260) and 29
new ICU admissions (21day average of 27).
West Virginia
As of the 10 a.m.
update on Tuesday,
DHHR is reporting a
total of 42,083 cases with
682 deaths. There was
an increase of 969 cases
from Monday and 15 new
deaths. DHHR reports
a total of 1,048,077 lab
test have been completed,
with a 3.51 cumulative
percent positivity rate.
The daily positivity rate
in the state was 4.80 percent.
Kayla (Hawthorne) Dunham and Sarah Hawley
contributed to this story.
(Editor’s Note: Statistics reported in this article are tentative and subject to change. This was
the information available
at press time with more
to be added as it becomes
available.)
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 25, the 330th day of
2020. There are 36 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 25, 2002, President George W. Bush
signed legislation creating the Department of
Homeland Security, and appointed Tom Ridge to
be its head.
On this date
In 1783, the British evacuated New York during
the Revolutionary War.
In 1915, a new version of the Ku Klux Klan,
targeting blacks, Jews, Catholics and immigrants,
was founded by William Joseph Simmons.
In 1947, movie studio executives meeting in
New York agreed to blacklist the “Hollywood Ten”
who’d been cited for contempt of Congress the
day before.
In 1961, the ﬁrst nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, USS Enterprise, was commissioned.
In 1963, the body of President John F. Kennedy
was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery;
his widow, Jacqueline, lighted an “eternal ﬂame”
at the gravesite.
In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair erupted as President Ronald Reagan and Attorney General Edwin
Meese revealed that proﬁts from secret arms sales
to Iran had been diverted to Nicaraguan rebels.
In 1999, Elian Gonzalez, a 5-year-old Cuban
boy, was rescued by a pair of sport ﬁshermen off
the coast of Florida, setting off an international
custody battle.
In 2001, as the war in Afghanistan entered its
eighth week, CIA ofﬁcer Johnny “Mike” Spann
was killed during a prison uprising in Mazar-eSharif, becoming America’s ﬁrst combat casualty
of the conﬂict.
In 2009, Toyota said it would replace the gas
pedals on 4 million vehicles in the United States
because the pedals could get stuck in the ﬂoor
mats and cause sudden acceleration.
In 2014, attorneys for Michael Brown’s family vowed to push for federal charges against the
Ferguson, Missouri, police ofﬁcer who killed the
Black 18-year-old, a day after a grand jury declined
to indict Darren Wilson. (The Justice Department
later declined to prosecute Wilson.) President
Barack Obama sharply rebuked protesters for
racially charged violence in Ferguson, saying there
was no excuse for burning buildings, torching cars
and destroying other property.
In 2016, Fidel Castro, who led his rebels to victorious revolution in 1959, embraced Soviet-style
communism and deﬁed the power of 10 U.S. presidents during his half-century of rule in Cuba, died
at age 90.
In 2018, U.S. border agents ﬁred tear gas on
hundreds of migrants protesting near the border with Mexico after some of them tried to get
through the fencing and wire separating the two
countries; U.S. authorities temporarily shut down
the border crossing from Tijuana, Mexico, where
thousands were waiting to apply for asylum.
Ten years ago: Incumbent Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki cemented his grip on power,
bringing an end to nearly nine months of political deadlock after he was asked to form the next
government. South Korea’s defense minister, Kim
Tae-young, resigned amid intense criticism two
days after a North Korean artillery attack killed
four people on a small island near the Koreas’ disputed frontier.
Five years ago: Vice President Joe Biden attended an urgent summit of southeast European leaders in Zagreb, Croatia, focusing on tensions and
security concerns over a surge of asylum-seekers
and migrants crossing the region. Pope Francis
arrived in Kenya on his ﬁrst-ever trip to Africa
and urged Kenyans to work for peace and forgiveness amid a wave of extremist violence on the continent that threatened to disrupt his trip.
One year ago: A federal judge said former White
House counsel Donald McGahn would have to
appear before Congress to testify in the impeachment investigation. (An appeals court later undid
that ruling, ﬁnding that federal judges had no role
to play in the subpoena ﬁght.) Defense Secretary
Mark Esper said President Donald Trump had
ordered him to stop a disciplinary review of a
Navy SEAL, Edward Gallagher, who was accused
of battleﬁeld misconduct. The Supreme Court
rejected the bid of a Maryland man, Adnan Syed,
for a new trial based on information uncovered by
the hit podcast “Serial”; Syed had been sentenced
to life in the strangling death of a high school
classmate. Charles Schwab announced that it was
buying rival TD Ameritrade, which would combine two of the biggest players in the online brokerage industry. London’s transit authority refused
to renew Uber’s operating license over concerns
about impostor drivers. (Uber appealed, and won
an 18-month license with conditions.)
Today’s Birthdays
Actor Kathryn Crosby is 87. Actor Christopher
Riordan is 83. Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Joe
Gibbs is 80. Singer Bob Lind is 78. Author, actor
and economist Ben Stein is 76. Actor John Larroquette is 73. Actor Tracey Walter is 73. Movie
director Jonathan Kaplan is 73. Author Charlaine
Harris is 69. Retired MLB All-Star Bucky Dent
is 69. Dance judge Bruno Tonioli (TV: “Dancing
with the Stars”) is 65. Singer Amy Grant is 60.
Former NFL quarterback Bernie Kosar is 57. Rock
musician Eric Grossman (K’s Choice) is 56. Rock
musician Scott Mercado is 56. Rock singer Mark
Lanegan is 56. Rock singer-musician Tim Armstrong is 55. Actor Steve Harris is 55. Actor Billy
Burke is 54. Singer Stacy Lattisaw is 54. Rock
musician Rodney Sheppard (Sugar Ray) is 54.
Rapper-producer Erick Sermon is 52. Actor Jill
Hennessy is 51. Actor Christina Applegate is 49.
Actor Eddie Steeples is 47. Actor Kristian Nairn
is 45. Former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb
is 44. Actor Jill Flint is 43. Actor Jerry Ferrara is
41. Actor Joel Kinnaman is 41.

�OH-70211250

Ohio Valley Publishing

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 11

�NEWS/WEATHER

12 Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Daily Sentinel

Ribbon

Keep the mask: Vaccine won’t end the US crisis right away

From page 1

By Candice Choi
Associated Press

cycle friendly village in the state of
Ohio.”
“This is a great project for
Middleport,” said Mayor Fred
Hoffman. Hoffman thanked the
commissioners for their assistance
with funding the design work of
the project; Village Administrator Joe Woodall for his work on
the project; and King for his work
toward making the project happen.
Council President Ben Reed said
that he is excited about the path
and the investments taking place
in Middleport, with the projects
“hopefully connecting Middleport
and Pomeroy one day.”
Project manager Eric Reed
said that the trail projects in the
area originated several years
ago, beginning with the Pomeroy
walking path and then Phase 1 in
Middleport.
Reed stated that the trail project
is a “great work and collaboration
between the village and our team.”
“There is momentum toward
another phase which will take
us closer to Pomeroy,” explained
Reed.
Phase 3 is in the beginning stages, with that phase to run from the
former Dairy Queen to the Bridge
of Honor.
As for Phase 3, a consultant
for the project was selected in
October, with a detailed plan for
development for 0.7 mile, 10 foot
wide multi-use trail scheduled to
begin in December. The new section of trail will travel along the
river from the former Dairy Queen
in Middleport to the intersection
of Main Street and the Bridge of
Honor which connects Pomeroy
and Mason. Construction is likely
to begin in Spring 2022.
“We are not done yet,” concluded Conde. “It will be nice to connect up river, across the river.”
Phase 4 of the trail project
would complete the MiddleportPomeroy connection, with funding
awarded in Sept. 2019 for the project. Construction of the 0.5 mile
trail to connect the end of Phase 3
to the Pomeroy Business District
is likely to begin in the summer of
2023.

NEW YORK — Don’t even
think of putting the mask
away anytime soon.
Despite the expected
arrival of COVID-19 vaccines
in just a few weeks, it could
take several months — probably well into 2021 — before
things get back to something
close to normal in the U.S.
and Americans can once
again go to the movies, cheer
at an NBA game or give
Grandma a hug.
The ﬁrst, limited shipments
of the vaccine would mark
just the beginning of what
could be a long and messy
road toward the end of the
pandemic that has upended
life and killed more than a
quarter-million people in the
U.S. In the meantime, Americans are being warned not to
let their guard down.
“If you’re ﬁghting a battle
and the cavalry is on the way,
you don’t stop shooting; you
keep going until the cavalry
gets here, and then you might
even want to continue ﬁghting,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the
nation’s top infectious-disease
expert, said last week.
This week, AstraZeneca
became the third vaccine
maker to say early data
indicates its shots are highly
effective. Pﬁzer last week
asked the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration for emergency
authorization to begin distributing its vaccine, and Moderna is expected to do the same

8 AM

2 PM

44°

54°

58°

Rain and a thunderstorm today. Rain and drizzle
tonight. High 59° / Low 51°

HEALTH TODAY
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.

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.06
2.73
43.52
38.68

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:23 a.m.
5:08 p.m.
3:28 p.m.
3:40 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

Full

Nov 30

Dec 7

New

First

Dec 14 Dec 21

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

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

Major
7:48a
8:23a
8:58a
9:37a
10:18a
11:05a
11:56a

Minor
1:38a
2:13a
2:48a
3:26a
4:07a
4:53a
5:43a

Major
8:08p
8:43p
9:19p
9:58p
10:41p
11:29p
----

Minor
1:58p
2:33p
3:09p
3:47p
4:30p
5:17p
6:08p

WEATHER HISTORY

OH-70211309

The Great Appalachian Storm of 1950
began Nov. 25. Wind gusted to 76
mph at Central Park in New York City
and past 100 mph in New England.
West of the storm, the temperature
sank to zero in Nashville, Tenn.

Shots in arms
Once federal ofﬁcials give
a vaccine the go-ahead, doses
that are already being stockpiled will be deployed with
the goal of “putting needles
in people’s arms” within 24 to
48 hours, said Paul Mango,
a U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services ofﬁcial

primary care provider or a clinical
dietitian,” the news release stated.
Holzer Health System offers Register Dietitians at our locations in
Athens, Gallipolis, and Jackson, Ohio.
Dietitians are able schedule appointments upon physician referral to discuss weight management, diabetes,
and more. For more information or
to speak with a registered dietitian at
Holzer, call 1-855-4-HOLZER.

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
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.

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

56°
32°

55°
37°

Increasing amounts
of sun

Clouds and sunshine

Cloudy with a touch
of rain

Logan
56/50

Adelphi
56/50

Lucasville
57/51
Portsmouth
59/50

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Murray City
56/50
Belpre
57/53

Athens
57/51

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

St. Marys
57/53

Elizabeth
58/53

Spencer
61/51

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

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

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

Level
13.06
16.44
21.74
13.02
13.20
24.33
12.11
25.76
34.42
12.55
16.70
34.00
15.90

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.13
+0.19
+0.25
+0.20
+0.02
-0.04
-0.16
+0.34
+0.31
+0.15
+1.10
+0.40
-0.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

Buffalo
63/50
Milton
62/51

St. Albans
63/52

Huntington
60/50

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
49/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
60/46
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
67/50
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Cloudy

Parkersburg
56/54

Coolville
56/52

Ironton
62/50

Ashland
63/51
Grayson
61/51

TUESDAY

40°
25°

Marietta
56/53

Wilkesville
58/50
POMEROY
Jackson
60/51
58/50
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
60/52
59/51
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
58/50
GALLIPOLIS
59/51
61/51
59/51

South Shore Greenup
62/50
59/50

49

MONDAY

44°
26°
Mostly cloudy with
ﬂurries

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
57/50

Waverly
56/51

SUNDAY

61°
40°

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

Chillicothe
56/51

SATURDAY

Information submitted by Holzer Health System.

A: George Washington

Today
7:22 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
3:04 p.m.
2:43 a.m.

FRIDAY

Mostly cloudy and
comfortable

2

Q: Which U.S. president was also an
avid weather observer?

SUN &amp; MOON

THURSDAY

61°
42°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
50°
31°
53°
34°
76° in 1931
9° in 1950

say the logistical challenges
of the biggest vaccination
campaign in U.S. history and
public fear and misinformation could hinder the effort
and kick the end of the pandemic further down the road.
“It’s going to be a slow
process and it’s going to be a
process with ups and downs,
like we’ve seen already,” said
Dr. Bill Moss, an infectiousdisease expert at Johns Hopkins University.

sure to speak with your health care
provider before adding them to your
diet.
As you continue to plan your menu,
From page 1
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration suggests being aware of nutriin your dietary supplements can be
tion labels. Food labels can help you
acquired through the foods you eat.
quickly and easily learn just what you
Vitamin C is in many fruits and vegetables. Vitamin D is in many low-fat are consuming and make it easier to
plan for meals that are healthy and
and fortified milk alternatives and
seafood. Zinc is in lean meat, seafood, balanced.
“For any questions about your diet,
nuts, and seeds. If you are considerwe encourage you to speak with your
ing taking a dietary supplement, be

TODAY

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

any day. Federal ofﬁcials say
the ﬁrst doses will ship within a day of authorization.
But most people will probably have to wait months for
shots to become widely available. The Pﬁzer and Moderna
vaccines also each require
two doses, meaning people
will have to go back for a second shot after three and four
weeks, respectively, to get the
full protection.
Moncef Slaoui, head of
the U.S. vaccine development effort, said on CNN
on Sunday that early data
on the Pﬁzer and Moderna
shots suggest about 70% of
the population would need
to be vaccinated to achieve
herd immunity — a milestone
he said is likely to happen in
May.
But along the way, experts

Holzer

Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The
Daily Sentinel.

WEATHER

Matt Slocum | AP, File

Despite the expected arrival of COVID-19 vaccines in just a few weeks, it
could take several months — probably well into 2021 — before things get
back to something close to normal in the U.S. and Americans can once again
go to the movies, cheer at an NBA game or give Grandma a hug.

involved in the Operation
Warp Speed effort to develop
COVID-19 vaccines.
Those ﬁrst shipments are
expected to be limited and
will be directed to high-risk
groups at designated locations, such as front-line health
care workers at hospitals.
Federal and state ofﬁcials
are still ﬁguring out exactly
how to prioritize those most
at risk, including the elderly,
prison inmates and homeless
people. By the end of January,
HHS ofﬁcials say, all senior
citizens should be able to get
shots, assuming a vaccine
becomes available by the end
of 2020.
For everyone else, they
expect widespread availability of vaccines would start a
couple of months later.
To make shots easily accessible, state and federal ofﬁcials
are enlisting a vast network of
providers, such as pharmacies
and doctor’s ofﬁces.
But some worry long lines
won’t be the problem.
“One of the things that may
be a factor that hasn’t been
discussed that much is: ‘How
many will be willing to be
vaccinated?’” said Christine
Finley, director of Vermont’s
immunization program. She
noted the accelerated development of the vaccine and the
politics around it have fueled
worries about safety.
Even if the ﬁrst vaccines
prove as effective as suggested by early data, they won’t
have much impact if enough
people don’t take them.

Clendenin
64/46
Charleston
65/51

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
31/25
Montreal
35/33

Billings
45/29

Minneapolis
41/32

Toronto
44/42
Chicago
50/43

Denver
52/25

Detroit
49/47

New York
56/50
Washington
58/54

Kansas City
48/32

Monterrey
82/55

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
56/33/s
29/20/pc
73/52/sh
66/54/r
67/46/r
42/30/pc
42/24/pc
53/45/r
62/44/c
72/51/r
37/18/pc
49/37/pc
55/44/c
55/45/r
55/45/sh
73/57/pc
43/22/pc
51/30/s
54/41/c
85/73/pc
77/68/pc
52/40/c
56/36/s
58/42/s
62/45/s
68/47/pc
57/43/pc
82/69/pc
44/28/pc
64/41/s
79/66/sh
58/51/r
67/38/s
82/62/pc
63/48/r
71/46/s
57/45/c
44/39/r
72/51/r
68/48/r
55/40/s
40/23/pc
62/45/s
49/43/c
67/48/r

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

91° in Kingsville, TX
2° in Lake Yellowstone, WY

Global

Houston
75/53

Chihuahua
73/43

Today
Hi/Lo/W
54/31/s
31/25/sn
70/61/c
60/51/pc
57/52/c
45/29/pc
42/29/pc
48/45/pc
65/51/r
61/56/c
51/26/s
50/43/r
58/50/r
51/50/r
54/51/r
65/43/s
52/25/s
44/31/r
49/47/r
84/74/pc
75/53/pc
58/48/r
48/32/r
63/44/s
61/38/pc
67/50/pc
65/50/r
81/71/pc
41/32/pc
69/45/t
80/67/t
56/50/pc
59/38/s
81/62/pc
57/52/c
72/47/s
54/50/r
39/36/pc
65/57/c
62/55/c
60/45/r
48/29/s
60/46/pc
49/42/r
58/54/c

EXTREMES TUESDAY
Atlanta
70/61

El Paso
68/42

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

High
Low
Miami
81/71

112° in Tete, Mozambique
-50° in Oymyakon, Russia

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

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