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                  <text>Celebrating
100th
birthday

‘The
Museum’ in
Middleport

Southern
outlasts
Rebels

NEWS s 8A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 3, Volume 54

Sunday, January 19, 2020 s $2

Remembering and raising awareness
Senior project to award scholarship in memory of Winebrenner
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy

MacKenzie Barr is picture with her grandpa
Mick Winebrenner while he was in therapy
following a stroke.

OHIO VALLEY — When it
came time for Wahama senior
MacKenzie Barr to pick her
senior project she knew she
wanted to do something with
physical therapy, the ﬁeld she
hopes to go into.
Barr explained that as a
graduation requirement at
the school, students must
complete a senior project in
an area they hope to pursue
after graduation. For Barr,
this included a research paper
on strokes and rehabilitation,

as well as job shadowing with
Colin Pierce at Mountain
River Physical Therapy in
Point Pleasant.
For the ﬁnal part of her
project, Barr is selling stroke
awareness t-shirts in memory
of her grandfather, the late
Mick Winebrenner. The
proceeds from the shirts will
be used to fund at least one
scholarship for a graduate of
the Southern High School
Class of 2020 in Winebrenner’s memory.
The shirts read, “We don’t
know how strong we are
until being strong is the only

choice we have. Stroke Awareness.”
Winebrenner was a member
of Racine United Methodist
Church and a beloved member of the Racine community.
He was an avid golfer and
gardener. He began teaching history at Southern High
School in 1975. During his 28
year tenure there, he coached
junior high basketball as well
as high school football, track,
baseball and golf. During
his teaching and coaching
career, he touched the lives of
many students and athletes,
explained Barr.

MacKenzie’s mom (Winebrenner’s daughter) Shelly
Barr explained that if there
was something good to come
out of her father’s stroke it
was that he spent the biggest
part of the summer on the
5th ﬂoor at Holzer in therapy
where MacKenzie was able
to go and watch while he was
in therapy. Once the staff
learned that she was interested in physical therapy they
taught her ways to work with
Winebrenner in his therapy.
MacKenzie explained
that she found it rewarding
See AWARENESS | 5A

Deadline to
purchase dog
tags approaching
Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY — The deadline is quickly
approaching to purchase dog tags (licenses) and
kennel licenses for 2020.
Meigs County Auditor Mary T. Byer-Hill
reminds Meigs County residents that the deadline to purchase 2020 dog tags will be Thursday,
Jan. 31. After Jan. 31, an additional penalty fee
will be charged.
The law requires that all dogs be licensed.
Section 955.01 of the Ohio Revised Code states
that every person who owns, keeps or harbors
a dog more than three months of age, shall purchase a license for that dog before the 30th day
of January of each year.
Dog owners have the option to purchase a one
year, three year or permanent tag for their dog.
The one year dog tag is $12 and is valid for the
calendar year in which it is issued (2020). The
State of Ohio allows for County Auditor’s to
provide dog owners the option of purchasing a
dog tag that will be valid for three years as well
as the option to purchase a permanent tag for
your dog. The cost of the three year tag is $36
and $120 for the permanent tag.
Kennel licenses are also available for a person,
partnership, ﬁrm, company, or corporation professionally engaged in the business of breeding
dogs for sale. The cost of a kennel license is $60
and that will include ﬁve tags. Additional kennel tags can be purchased for $1 each.
If you wish to purchase your tags by mail, a
printable application is available for both kennel
license and individual dog license on the Auditor’s website at www.meigscountyauditor.org.
When submitting your license by mail, please
include a self addressed stamped envelope along
with your application and payment made payable to the Meigs County Auditor.
Dog licenses may be purchased at the Meigs
County Auditor’s Ofﬁce during the hours of 8
a.m. to 4 p.m., or at the Meigs County Canine
Rescue and Adoption Center.

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Comics: 5B
Classifieds: 6B

File photo

The Ariel Opera House often hosts performers from across the world and will welcome Ilya Finkelshteyn, principal cellist of the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra, performing Dvorak’s Concerto for Cello on March 21 with Maestro Keitaro Harada on the podium.

The ‘Romantic Cello’ arrives in March
The Ariel to host
performance

recipient of The Solti
Foundation U.S. Career
Assistance Award (2014,
2015, 2016), Bruno Walter National Conductor
Staff Report
Preview (2013), the Seiji
Ozawa Conducting FelGALLIPOLIS — Ilya
lowship at Tanglewood
Finkelshteyn, principal
Music Festival, a student
cellist of the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra, will of Lorin Maazel at Castleton Festival and Fabio
perform Dvorak’s Concerto for Cello on March Luisi at Paciﬁc Music Festival, Harada’s credentials
21 with Maestro Keitaro
Harada on the podium at are exemplary.
In his third season
the Ariel Opera House.
According to The Ariel, as associate conductor
of the Cincinnati SymConductor Harada conphony Orchestra and
tinues to be recognized
Cincinnati Pops, Harada
at the highest levels for
regularly assists Music
his artistic abilities and
passion for musical excel- Director Louis Langrée
and conducts the CSO,
lence. As a three-time

POPS, and World Piano
Competition, and assists
James Conlon and Juanjo
Mena for the May Festival. Harada also holds
the position of associate
conductor of the Arizona
Opera.
With a growing schedule as an international
guest conductor, Harada’s
recent and coming
seasons mark several
high-proﬁle engagements
including the Paciﬁc
Music Festival by invitation of Valery Gergiev,
Tokyo Symphony Orchestra and Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra in Japan
and with Boise Philharmonic, West Virginia

Symphony Orchestra,
South Bend Symphony
Orchestra, Charlotte
Symphony and Music in
the Mountains Festival
in the U.S. Most recently,
he conducted Song from
the Uproar for Cincinnati Opera, debuted with
Louisiana Philharmonic
Orchestra and conducted
a run of Bizet’s Carmen
for Soﬁa National Opera
in Bulgaria that will
reprise with a Japan tour
of the same production
later in 2018.
Past seasons held an
invitation to the Mahler
Competition in Germany
See CELLO | 5A

HEAP winter crisis program continues
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

By Gallia Meigs CAA

10 day or less supply of wood or
coal may qualify. The household
must also have a gross income at
or below 175 percent of the federal
OHIO VALLEY — The GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency poverty level.
The income guidelines for 2019and Ohio Development Services
2020 Winter Crisis Program are
Agency want to remind Ohioans
that heating assistance is still avail- as follows (household size, 30 day
able to eligible households through income limit): 1 person, $1,821.46;
2 people, $2,466.04; 3 people,
the Home Energy Assistance Pro$3,110.63; 4 people, $3,755.21;
gram (HEAP). The program runs
5 people, $4,399.79; 6 people,
from Nov. 1, 2019 until March 31,
$5,044.38; 7 people, $5,688.96; 8
2020.
people, $6,333.54.
Ohioans facing disconnection
Individuals interested in receivfrom their heating source, those
who have been disconnected, those ing Winter Crisis assistance must
that have less than 25 percent sup- have a face-to-face interview at the
ply of bulk fuel and those who have local energy assistance provider.

Special to OVP

To make an appointment we
have our IVR System, (Interactive
Voice Response System) This will
give the customers access 7days
a week/24 hours a day for making
their appointment by telephone
or you can also go online. The toll
free number is 1-866-409-1361 and
the website is https://capappointments.com.
Our system books out for 28
day, which is required by the state,
so if you would happen to get a,
“No appointments available”, you
would need to call the next day as
the system continues with daily
See HEAP | 2A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, January 19, 2020

OBITUARIES

EVOND SMITH

CALVIN RAY WAUGH
CROWN CITY
— Calvin Ray
Waugh, age 85, of
Crown City, passed
away on Friday
January 17, 2020
at Hospice of Dayton in Dayton.
Born May 31, 1934 in
Gallia County, he was the
son of the late Emmett
‘Sport’ and Goldie
Mooney Waugh. In addition to his parents, he
was preceded by his wife,
Connie Lou Spurlock
Waugh; three brothers,
Wilbur Waugh, Otis
Waugh, and Gerald Loren
Waugh; and by one sister,
Janie Neal.
Ray worked at road
construction and retired
from the Highway Paving
Company. He attended
King Chapel Church.
Ray is survived by his
loving daughter, Cristal

Smith of Kettering; three grandchildren, Tiffani
Smith, Brittany
Smith, and Kayla
Smith; six great
grandchildren and
by two sisters,
Luella Sheets of Gallipolis and Betty Parsons of
Crown City. He is also
survived by several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m., Monday January
20, 2020 at the King Chapel Church with Pastor
Donnie Johnson ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
the Victory Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home on Sunday
January 19, 2020 from 4-7
p.m.
An online guest registry is available at www.
waugh-halley-wood.com

THOMAS E. JONES
CROWN CITY
— Thomas E.
Jones, age 91 of
Crown City, died at
home on January
11, 2020, following
a brief illness.
He was born July
2, 1928. After spending
many years in agriculture and as a pig farmer,
Tom dedicated the last
30 years of his life to
silviculture and his passion for all things trees.
He planted and managed
thousands of black walnut
trees on his property as a
memorial to his sons.
Tom is survived by
his sisters, Patsy Nolan
and Carolyn Jones; close
friends, Carolyn, Chip,
and Erica Young, Tyler
and Jassae Young and

their daughters,
Hyndrix and Tyler
Everleigh; as well
as many nieces,
nephews, and cousins.
Many people
who worked for
Tom, and many friends he
made over the years considered him family.
He was preceded in
death by his wife Clara,
and their sons Richard
Edward and Jason Allen,
as well as brother Jim and
sister Ginny.
Tom donated his body
to the Marshall University
Human Gift Registry for
medical research. There
will be no funeral services. A private celebration
of life is planned for the
spring.

BERNICE IRENE GARNES
LANGSVILLE — Bernice Irene Garnes, 83,
Langsville, Ohio passed
away Wednesday, Jan.
15, 2020, at her home.
She was born May 19,
1936, in Salem Center,
Ohio, daughter of the late
Titus Elmer and Alma
Eliza (Strong) Smith. She
is preceded in death by
her husband of 65 years,
Joseph William “Bill”
Garnes, who she married
Aug. 7, 1954. Bernice
attended Salem United
Methodist Church.
To this union she
leaves behind to cherish her memory their
children, Debbie (Lestel)
Ward, Vinton, Ohio;
Connie (Gene) Halley,
Pomeroy, Ohio; Cindi
(Tony) Vaughan, West
Chester, Ohio; Sandy
(John) Colbert, Jackson,
Ohio and Joe (Shari)
Garnes, Pomeroy, Ohio;
ten grandchildren and
sixteen great-grandchildren; brothers, Corwin
(Pat) Smith, Sunbury,
Ohio; Lloyd (Mary)
Smith, Pataskala, Ohio;

Ted (Judy) Smith, Dresden, Ohio; Paul (Maggie)
Smith, Pataskala, Ohio;
Larry Smith, Ray, Ohio
and John (Linda) Smith,
Langsville, Ohio; sister,
Dott Stewart, Overgaard,
Arizona; and several nieces, nephews and extended family members.
In addition to her parents and husband, she
was preceded in death by
brother, Dale Smith and
sisters, Dolores Wallace
and Hope Price.
Funeral services will
be conducted 1 p.m.
Monday, Jan. 20, 2020, in
the Salem Center United
Methodist Church,
Langsville, Ohio. Burial
will follow in the Salem
Center Cemetery. Friends
and family may call at
the church Monday 11:30
a.m. to the service time
of 1 p.m. The McCoyMoore Funeral Home,
Vinton Chapel, is honored to serve the Garnes
Family.
Online condolences can
be sent to www.mccoymoore.com.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
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GROUP PUBLISHER
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Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
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mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
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825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

ADDISON —
Evond Smith, 83,
of Addison, where
she had lived for
63 years, passed
away on Thursday,
January 16, 2020
at Holzer Medical
Center.
Evond was born in
Whitmer, West Virginia,
daughter of the late John
and Mary Reed Dolly.
She was also preceded
in death by a sister and
brother-in-law, Norma
and Orville Thompson.
She loved her family
and friends and sending out greeting cards,
attending church and
gospel sings, and decorating her house for the
holidays. She was a 1954
graduate of Harman High
School where she was
the valedictorian of her
class.
Evond is survived by
a daughter, Jeannette
(Larry) Tate of Cheshire
and a son, James A.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

MARY LOU HARRISON

Smith of Cheshire;
a grandson, Dustin
(Amy) Tate of
Lancaster; two
great grandsons,
Cameron Tate
and Ryan Walker;
three brothers,
Hilbert (Irene) Dolly of
Elkins, West Virginia,
John (Velma) Dolly of
Sandyville, West Virginia, and Jessie Dolly
of Elkins, West Virginia;
and several nieces, nephews, and special friends
and neighbors.
The funeral service for
Evond will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday, January
21, 2020 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Steve
Little ofﬁciating. Her
burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call on Tuesday
from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
prior to the service at the
funeral home.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
email condolences.

GALLIPOLIS — Mary February 23, 1993.
She is survived by
Lou Harrison, 88, Galson, Larry and Lori Harlipolis, passed away Friday, January 17, 2020 in rison, Forest, Virginia;
the Holzer Assisted Liv- daughter-in-law, Jennifer
Harrison, Gallipolis and
ing Facility, Gallipolis.
eight grandchildren and
Born December 30,
nine great-grandchildren.
1931 in Gallia County,
In addition to her parshe was the daughter
ents and husband, she
of the late John “Floyd”
was preceded in death
and Mary (Reynolds)
Leonard. She was a 1949 by her daughter, Sherry
graduate of Gallia Acad- Barker; son, Steve Harrison; brother, Oscar
emy High School and
went to work as a payroll Leonard and sister, Opal
Griggs.
clerk for Kyger Creek
Mary Lou’s family
Plant. Mary Lou then
would like to thank the
spent twenty-four years
staff of Holzer Assisted
of service as a secretary
Living for their care and
to the Addaville School
support during her stay
before her retirement in
1992. She was a member there.
Funeral services will be
of the Addison United
conducted 1 p.m., TuesMethodist Church now
day, January 21, 2019 in
known as the River of
the McCoy-Moore FunerLife United Methodist
al Home, Wetherholt
Church in Addison as
well as the United Meth- Chapel, Gallipolis. Burial
odist Women’s Club. She will follow in Pine Street
Cemetery, Gallipolis.
volunteered her time
with the Holzer Medical Friends and family may
call at the funeral home
Center and the AmeriTuesday 11 a.m. to the
can Cancer Society.
service time of 1 p.m.
Mary Lou married Paul
CAROL M. TRIPLETT
Online condolences
“Chubby” Harrison July
31, 1955 at Gallipolis and may be sent to www.
parents, she was preceded he preceded her in death mccoymoore.com
PORTLAND — Carol
in death by her husband,
M. Triplett, 80, of PortClarence Triplett.
land died Thursday,
Graveside services were
Jan. 16, 2020, at King’s
DAVID A. REEVES
held at 11 a.m. Saturday,
Daughters Hospital in
Jan. 18, 2020 at Bald
Ashland, Kentucky.
siblings Randy (Angel)
POMEROY — David
Born April 23, 1939, in Knob Cemetery.
Reeves, Rodney (Becky)
A. Reeves, 52, Pomeroy,
Arrangements have
Long Bottom, Ohio, she
Reeves, Tony Reeves,
passed away at Doctors
been entrusted to the
was the daughter of the
Hospital West, Thursday Ricky (Teresa) Reeves,
late Harry Alfred and Gar- Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral January 16, 2020.
Darlene (Jimmie)
Home in Pomeroy.
net Faith Polk Hayman.
Older, Mandy (Charles)
Born September 18,
Friends are encouraged to 1967, the son of the
She is survived by her
Neutzling.
sign the online guestbook late Eugene and Juanita
son, Ronald Mullins of
Services will be Tuesat ewingfuneralhome.net. Reeves. He was a former day at 1 p.m. at BigonyPortland. Besides her
employee of Tri-Co. Recy- Jordan Funeral Home,
with Jackie White ofﬁcling.
BRYAN
He is survived by a son ciating. Burial will be in
GALLIPOLIS — Gerald L. Bryan, 91, Gallipolis,
Riggs Cemetery. Friends
Shawn (Savanna Capedied Friday, January 17, 2020 in Abbyshire Place
may call 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
hart) Reeves, daughter
Rehabilitation Center, Bidwell.
on Tuesday.
Bobbie (John) Reeves
In accordance with his wishes, there are to be no
You may sign his regisLandaker; grandchildren
services. Cremation service is under the direction of
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Eden Reeves, Lexi, Layla ter book at www.bigonyjordanfuneralhome.com
Gallipolis, who is honored to serve the Bryan Family. and Leigha Landaker;

HEAP

are all required documents
· Proof of Gross
From page 1A
Income for Everyone
in the household for
appointments after the the past month: Wages,
Weekly – Last 4 payinitial set up. Please
stubs/ Biweekly – last 2
make sure that you
paystubs; Utility Allowlisten to the complete
ance/Lease; SS/SSI/
message from the IVR
SSD – Bank Statement
system. You will be
or Current Award Letgiven a conﬁrmation
ter; OPERS/VA/SERS/
number at the end
PENSION – Copy of
of the message and
Current Award Letter;
you must bring
OWF/TANF/DA- Print
that number along
Out of the Last Month
with you to conﬁrm
or Bank Statement; Self
your appointment.
Employed-needs ﬁled
Appointments will be
2018 completed tax
available starting Oct.
form or IRS tax tran28. However, please
script; Seasonal Employnote, an appointment
ment- must provide 12
may not extend a
months of documented
scheduled utility shutincome; NO INCOMEoff.
IRS tax transcript and
Also, we must have
all documentation pro- proof of family/friend
etc. help
vided for all members
· Child Support,
of the household. With(Ordered to Pay or
out it you will have to
Receive) - if paying
reschedule or come
back as a walkin. Below support this will be a

deduction. If your only
income is child support,
we will need a print out
of receiving.; Print Out
(documented proof for
the last month, verifying
if receiving or not)
· Social Security
Cards for Everyone in
the Household
· Current Heating Bill
or Statement (Columbia
Gas/Knox, Propane,
Fuel Oil, Coal, or Wood)
· Current Electric Bill
(AEP or Buckeye)
· If you pay out of
pocket for HEALTH
INSURANCE, documented proof for 3
months (Aﬂac, AARP,
Blue Cross Blue Shield,
etc.)
· Medicaid Card or
Case Number (if applicable)
· Landlords Name,
Address, and Phone
Number
· If grandparents have
custody of children, we
need the most recent

custody papers
Both Emergency
HEAP and Regular
HEAP applications will
be completed at both
ofﬁces.
Central Ofﬁce, Gallia County 8010 N. SR
7, Cheshire. Appointments times will range
from 9-10:30 a.m. and
from 1-3 p.m., Monday
through Thursday. Friday, 9-10:30 a.m. We
will also see the ﬁrst six
walk-in at our Cheshire
ofﬁce starting at 8:00am
or as time allows.
Middleport Ofﬁce,
1369 Powell Street,
Middleport. Appointments times will range
from 9-10:30 a.m. and
from 1-3 p.m., Monday
through Wednesday
only. We will also see
the ﬁrst two walk-ins at
our Middleport ofﬁce
starting at 8 a.m., or as
time allows.
For appointment call
1-866-409-1361.

Trump assembles made-for-TV defense team
By Eric Tucker
and Zeke Miller

ing arguments begin on
Tuesday.
Associated Press
The two new Trump
attorneys are already
nationally known both
WASHINGTON —
President Donald Trump for their involvement in
some of the more consehas assembled a madefor-TV legal team for his quential legal dramas of
Senate trial that includes recent American history
and for their regular
household names like
appearances on Fox
Alan Dershowitz and
Ken Starr, the prosecutor News, the president’s
whose investigation two preferred television network.
decades ago resulted in
Dershowitz, a former
the impeachment of Bill
Harvard professor, is a
Clinton.
constitutional expert
The additions on
whose expansive views
Friday bring experiof presidential powers
ence in the politics of
echo those of Trump.
impeachment as well as
constitutional law to the Starr is a veteran of
team, which faced a busy partisan battles in
Washington, having led
weekend of deadlines
for legal briefs and other the investigation into
Clinton’s affair with a
documents before open-

White House intern
that brought the president’s impeachment by
the House. Clinton was
acquitted at his Senate
trial, the same outcome
Trump is expecting
from the Republican-led
chamber. Still, the lead
roles for Trump’s defense
will be played by White
House Counsel Pat Cipollone and Trump personal
lawyer Jay Sekulow, who
also represented Trump
during special counsel
Robert Mueller’s Russia
investigation.
There are some signs
of tension between the
president’s outside legal
team and lawyers within
the White House. The
White House would not
conﬁrm the fuller roster

of the president’s lawyers
Friday, and some ofﬁcials
there bristled that the
announcement was not
coordinated with them.
A legal brief laying
out the contours of the
Trump defense, due at
noon on Monday, was
still being drafted, with
White House attorneys
and the outside legal
team grappling over how
political the document
should be. Those inside
the administration have
echoed warnings from
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell that
the pleadings must be
sensitive to the Senate’s
more staid traditions and
leave the sharper rhetoric to Twitter and cable
news.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 19, 2020 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

What we know about E-cigarettes

Cadot-Blessing
Camp meeting

E-cigarettes can
E-cigarettes are
be used to deliver
still fairly new and
marijuana and
scientists are still
other drugs.
learning about
The e-cigarette
them. Here is what
aerosol that users
we know now…
breathe from the
E-cigarettes are
device and exhale
sometimes called
Sherry
can contain harm“e-cigs,” “vapes,”
Hayman
“e-hookahs,” “vape Contributing ful and potentially
harmful substancpens,” and “eleccolumnist
es, including nicotronic nicotine
tine. Ultra ﬁne pardelivery systems
ticles which are inhaled
(ENDS)” and they come
in many shapes and sizes. deep into the lungs that
contain cancer causing
Most have a battery, a
agents. Some ﬂavorings
heating element, and a
contain Diacetyl, a chemiplace to hold a liquid.
cal linked to serious lung
E-cigarettes produce
disease. This aerosol
an aerosol by heating a
liquid that contains nico- can also contain heavy
metals such as nickel, tin
tine and other tobacco
products, ﬂavorings, and and lead. It is difﬁcult for
or chemicals that help to consumers to know what
e-cigarette products conmake the aerosol. Users
tain. For example, some
inhale this aerosol into
e-cigarettes marketed as
their lungs, often called
“vaping”. Bystanders can containing zero percent
nicotine have been found
also breathe in this aerosol when the user exhales to contain nicotine. Nicotine is highly addictive.
into the air. Some e-cigIt is toxic to developing
arettes are made to look
fetuses, it is a health danlike regular cigarettes,
ger for pregnant women
cigars, or pipes. Some
and their babies. Nicotine
resemble pens, USB
sticks, and other everyday can also harm adolescent
brain development.
items. Larger devices
E-cigarettes can and
such as tank systems, or
“mods,” do not resemble have caused unintended
injuries. Defective
other tobacco products.

e-cigarette batteries have
caused ﬁres and explosions, some of which
have resulted in serious
injuries. Most explosions happened when
the e-cigarette batteries
were being charged. The
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) collects
data to help address this
issue. In addition, acute
nicotine exposure can be
toxic. Children and adults
have been poisoned by
swallowing, breathing,
or absorbing e-cigarette
liquid through their skin
or eyes.
If you are interested
in quitting, the Meigs
County Health Department offers tobacco
cessation counseling.
Call Sherry Hayman RN,
CTTS (Certiﬁed Tobacco
Treatment Specialist)
at 740-992-6626 from 8
a.m.-noon or 1-4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday
for an appointment to
arrange a quit plan. It can
take some people several
attempts before successfully quitting so don’t be
discouraged.

RIO GRANDE — The Cadot-Blessing Camp #126 Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War will have its next
meeting Jan. 20 in the Bob Evans
Homestead House at Bob Evans
Farms beginning at 1 p.m. This is the
annual reorganization meeting to plan
activities for 2020. The SUVCW is the
legal heir to the GAR (Grand Army
of the Republic) the nations ﬁrst
Congressionally chartered veterans’
organization and is for the purposes
of Patriotic and Educational programs
dedicated to the memory of the Veterans of the American Civil War. Any
male that has ancestry who served
during the war is invited to attend.
New members are needed. You do not
have to be a uniformed reenactor to
become a member of the SUVCW, just
have an ancestor that helped save the
Union.

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

Sherry Hayman is a public health
nurse at the Meigs County Health
Department.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Calves 300-400 pounds:
$145.00 - $161.00; 400500 pounds: $140.00 $152.00; 500-600 pounds:
$135.00 - $149.00; Heifer
Calves 300-500 pounds:
$110.00 - $130.00; 500600 pounds: $110.00$124.00; Feeder Bulls
250-400 pounds: $135.00Feeder Cattle (#1 Cattle)
$158.00; 400-600 pounds:
Yearling Steers 600$129.00-$144.00; 600700 pounds: $120.00
800 pounds: $100.00- $137.00; 700-800
pounds: $120.00-$130.00; $120.00
Yearling Heifers 600700 pounds: $100.00Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
$107.00; 700-800 pounds:
Comm &amp; Utility:
$90.00 - $100.00; Steer
$30.00 - $65.50; Canner/
GALLIPOLIS — The
latest livestock report as
submitted by United Producers, Inc., 357 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio,
740-446-9696.
Date of Sale: Jan. 15
Total Headage: 230

Cutter: $15.00 - $30.00;
Bred Cows: $440.00
$950.00; Choice Steers
&amp; Heifers: $108.00 $111.25; Holstein Steers:
$81.00 - $93.00

MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs
Library locations are closed in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Dept. will be closed for Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day. Normal business
hours will resume at 8 a.m. on Tuesday.
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the Letart Township Trustees will
be held at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building.
POMEROY — The Pomeroy Council
meeting has been cancelled in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Tuesday, Jan. 21

GALLIPOLIS — The 2020 memberships for the Gallia County Agricultural Society are now on sale at
Brown’s Insurance Agency on State
Rt. 160. Memberships are $2 and may
be purchased during regular business
hours, Monday - Friday, from 9 a.m.
- 5 p.m. Membership into the society
entitles the member to vote at the
annual election held in September.
The membership does not entitle
the member to admission to the fair.
To be eligible for membership, an
individual must purchase his/her
own membership ticket in person, be
at least 18 years of age or older, and
reside in Gallia County.

Rio Nursing
Accreditation Review
RIO GRANDE — University of Rio
Grande, Holzer School of Nursing
announces t it will host a site review
for continuing accreditation of its RN
to BSN Degree Nursing program by
the Accreditation Commission for
Education in Nursing (ACEN). The
public is invited to meet the site visit
team and share comments about the
program in person at a meeting scheduled at 1:45 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb.
19 at the University of Rio Grande
campus McKenzie Hall Room 105.
Written comments are also welcome
and should be submitted directly to:
Dr. Marsal Stoll, Chief Executive
Ofﬁcer, Accreditation Commission for
Education in Nursing. 3343 Peachtree
Road NE, Suite 850, Atlanta, GA
30326. Or e-mail: mstoll@acenursing.
org. All written comments should be
received by the ACEN by Feb. 13.

speciﬁc ﬁgures that the number of
inﬂuenza B cases had risen over the
past several days, The Columbus Dispatch reported. The district said it’s
canceling all weekend activities and
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE,
Ohio (AP) — An Ohio school system will reopen Tuesday after the Martin
on Friday canceled all classes because Luther King Jr. holiday, and is asking
of a high number of ﬂu cases. Miami for people to stay away from school
Trace Local schools in Fayette County buildings. Closing Friday will allow
facilities and buses to be disinfected.
in southwestern Ohio said without

Comments:
#2 &amp; #3 Feeders:
$55.00 - $100.00

Your Guide To
Wednesday, Jan. 22

Cordelia Curtis Bentz will turn 100
POMEROY — The Meigs County
years old on Jan. 29. Cards may be sent Health Dept. will be closed to the pubto her at The Maples, 100 E. Memorial
lic for its Public Health Accreditation
Drive, Room 215, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Board site visit. Normal business hours
will resume at 8 a.m. on Jan. 23rd.

Monday, Jan. 20

Ag society
memberships

Flu closes
school district

Bulls
By Weight: $60.00$73.00
Small Animals
Feeder Pigs: $10.00
- $20.00; Aged Goats:
$90.00

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR

Card Shower

dar.org/national.society/scholarships.
Questions should be directed to scholarships@dar.org.

MEIGS COUNTY 2020

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

Monday, Jan. 27
POMEROY — The Book Club will
discuss The Second Mrs. Hockaday
by Susan Rivers, 6 p.m. at Pomeroy
Library.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs Veterans Service Commission will meet at
9 a.m. in the ofﬁce located at 97 North
Second Avenue in Middleport.

Tuesday, Jan. 28

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia County
Board of Developmental Disabilities
will hold an organizational meeting and
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the
regular monthly board meeting for the
Library, 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
month of January at 4 p.m. at the admin- All skill levels and listeners are welcome.
istrative ofﬁces, 77 Mill Creek Road.
Bring an instrument and play along.

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

OHIO BRIEFS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police
in Ohio’s largest city shot and killed a
coyote after it bit an ofﬁcer who had
stopped to help a stranded motorist, the
police department said.
The coyote appeared out of nowhere
Thursday night and ﬁrst tried to attack
a state road worker also helping the
motorist on an Interstate 70 exit ramp
on the east side of Columbus, police
said.
When the ofﬁcer tried to intervene,
he was bitten, said Sgt. James Fuqua,
a spokesman for Columbus police.
The coyote ran away after the ofﬁcer
punched it, and then returned after
other ofﬁcers arrived.
The original ofﬁcer tried unsuccess-

fully to use pepper spray on the animal,
and responding ofﬁcers also tried
unsuccessfully to use a stun gun on the
coyote before shooting it, Fuqau said.

Student dies after fall
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Authorities are investigating after an Ohio State
University student was found dead Friday at a construction site on campus.
A university spokesman said foul play
is not suspected in the death of Corey
Ray Bias, 20, of Johnstown. Bias was
a third-year student majoring in political science. Columbus ﬁre crews were
called to the site near Neil and West
11th avenues around 6:30 a.m., according to 911 calls obtained by The Columbus Dispatch.

OH-70167574

Coyote bites officer

Contact Brenda or Sarah at 740-444-4293

�Opinion
4A Sunday, January 19, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Bigger,
better, but
not both
Carrie Fisher said some wonderfully pithy
things. One of my favorites is, “Instant gratiﬁcation takes too long.” Another is, “As you get
older, the pickings get slimmer but the people
don’t.” Many other things, as the years go by,
do become slimmer but not in a good way.
What used to be a one pound can of coffee is
now a 13-ounce can of coffee. Bacon used to
come in 16-ounce packages. At my house a
pound of bacon is considered a single serving.
Now, an identical-looking package holds 12
ounces. A 25 percent decrease in bacon constitutes a near emergency.
I am not a physicist by training but I have
come up with Boone’s corollary of altered
dimensions: The new, reduced size of a package’s contents is directly proportional to the
size of the print announcing the change. Bars
of soap are smaller, bottles of
shampoo are smaller, tubes of
lotion are smaller. Bodies, as Ms.
Fisher noted, are becoming ever
larger so this is a real lose/lose
situation for hygiene and skin
smoothness. There’s more square
footage to attend to with skimpier
materials to do the job.
Marla
The most rapidly diminishing
Boone
Contributing bounty, so to speak, comes in
the realm of paper towels. Rolls
columnist
of paper towels have become
noticeably thinner. Let me clarify
that; the roll itself — the cardboard tube onto
which the towels are wound — is larger. The
number of paper towels, however, dwindles
monthly. Everything about paper towels is
smaller. Two ply is unheard of. One ply has
become the norm. If there were such a thing
as one-half ply someone would try to market
it. And, of course, the sheets are a fraction of
the size they used to be. So when the package
states “One hundred ﬁfty sheets” what it really
means is “Seventy-ﬁve sheets if you want to
wipe up anything bigger than a tear drop.”
Someone as frugal as I has no right to say this
but there must be an app somewhere that will
calculate sheets per roll times ply times the
thickness of that ply times the absorbability
factor to uncover the absolute best bargain
in paper towels. Usually I just cut up an old
worn-out tee shirt and use that for a rag.
There is naturally an exception to every rule
and the exception in this case is toilet paper. I
have been doing a little carpentry work lately,
mostly helping out in new home construction.
These were the questions asked at the interview: Can you read a steel tape? Can you run a
sliding compound miter saw? So far I have all
my ﬁngers although they are full of splinters.
Even these elaborately built, thoughtfully
designed houses are not equipped to deal with
the latest version of toilet paper. This product
used to come in rolls. Then in came in giant
rolls. Then it came in double rolls. Now it
comes in mega rolls. The advertising agencies
must be running out of adjectives. Home owners are running out of room … room to store
the enormous packages and room to hang the
rolls. Rolls of toilet paper have become so
huge they no longer ﬁt the little wall-mounted
holders. The spindle still ﬁts through the
cardboard tube. And if you shove hard enough
(an engineer once told me anything will ﬁt if
you get it going fast enough), you can get the
spindle back on the holder. Once it’s there,
however, the roll is too big to, well, roll. It’s
jammed tight. A toilet paper roll that will not
unroll is on the cusp of being useless. Oh sure,
you can manually turn the roll and pull some
paper off and hope it doesn’t tear before an
adequate amount is unwound. Do this often
enough and the roll become small enough to
turn. Eventually. Eventually is not restful. Nor
is starting the roll in the ﬁrst place.
Whatever material they use to adhere the
end of the roll to the rest of the roll should
be used to mortar bricks. This is some good
sticky stuff. If all the good karma in the world
is lined up in your direction, there will be a
little tab of toilet paper to pull to unstick the
starting point and get the ball rolling, so to
speak. Karma is as ﬁckle as anything else.
Many times there is no little tab, absolutely
nothing to grab onto. If you have not had the
foresight to come to the bathroom armed with
a knife or a razor blade or a machete with
which to cut into the roll, you are reduced to
tearing at the toilet paper in an effort to get
some handle on the whole thing. This is not
restful, either.
Marla Boone resides in Covington and writes for Miami Valley
Today. This column shared through the AIM Media Midwest
group of newspapers.

THEIR VIEW

Delivering results for Ohio
fought hard to get.
since we’ve been
Our ofﬁce helped
negotiating them.
secure $3.8 billion
We know why
in federal funding
companies close
to ﬁght addicfactories in Ohio
tion, and the new
and open them in
National Defense
Mexico – they can
Authorization
pay lower wages
Sherrod
Act includes my
and take advantage Brown
of workers. Ameri- Contributing Fentanyl Sanctions
Act, to give us
can workers can’t
columnist
new tools to target
compete, and we
foreign opioid trafget a race to the
ﬁckers in China, Mexico,
bottom on wages. The
only way to stop this is by and other countries.
We also secured new
raising labor standards in
every country with which investment to ﬁght Ohio’s
we trade. That’s what our too-high maternal mortality rate and ﬁght those
Brown-Wyden provision
does, and it’s included in disparities that persist
between black and white
the new USMCA deal.
mothers. We reauthorized
And that wasn’t our
and increased investonly success for Ohio
ment in the Healthy Start
communities. We sent
several bipartisan bills to program, to ﬁght infant
mortality. And we made
President Trump’s desk
to become law, including progress in our ﬁght to
get the president to take
the Water Infrastructure
Flexibility Act, to provide action on behalf of Vietnam veterans living with
Ohio communities with
chronic health conditions,
the ﬂexibility they need
to improve their drinking by expanding the Department of Veterans’ Affairs’
water and reduce pollulist of medical conditions
tion without spreading
associated with exposure
their resources thin, and
to Agent Orange.
our ACE Kids Act with
These successes will
Sen. Portman, to improve
make a real difference
health care for children
in the lives of thousands
on Medicaid with comof Ohioans. But we have
plex medical conditions.
more work to do. At the
Senator Portman and
top of that list must be
I also worked together
to secure full funding for ensuring Ohio retirees
the Great Lakes Restora- can keep the pensions
they earned. In Decemtion Initiative, and to
make sure Ohio’s military ber, we were able to pass
our Bipartisan American
installations have the
Miners Act, to save the
resources they need to
pensions and healthcare
support our national
of thousands of Ohio
defense and our local
miners and their famieconomies.
lies. Now we must ﬁnd
At the end of the
a bipartisan solution to
year, Congress passed a
the larger multi-employer
bipartisan package that
pension crisis that threatmakes investments in
ens 60,000 Ohioans, as
Ohio priorities that we

If you only watched
national cable news,
you’d probably think
not much was accomplished over the past
year, and that Democrats
and Republicans were
mostly at each other’s
throats. But beyond
the national noise, look
across Ohio, and it’s
clear, we were able to
make progress for the
people we serve, often by
working together. From
ﬁghting for children’s
health care, to securing
investments in Ohio communities, to traveling the
state for events like our
manufacturing camps
and Women’s Leadership
Summit, 2019 was a year
of accomplishments for
our state.
One of the biggest victories came in December
when, after months of
effort, we secured in the
new USMCA our BrownWyden provision that
amounts to the strongestever labor enforcement
in a U.S. trade deal. One
of my proudest votes was
against NAFTA, and I’ve
spent every day since
then working for a better trade policy that puts
Ohio workers ﬁrst. The
initial draft of this agreement from President
Trump was another corporate trade deal, which
amounted to a bad deal
for workers and a sellout
to drug companies.
We went to work with
Speaker Pelosi, my colleague Senator Wyden,
and leaders in the union
movement to improve
the deal, and we secured
the ﬁrst improvement to
enforcing labor standards
in our trade agreements

well as thousands of small
businesses around the
country.
We also must protect
health coverage for millions of Ohioans by continuing to ﬁght the president’s efforts to repeal
the Affordable Care Act
(ACA). President Trump
supports a lawsuit that, if
successful, would repeal
the entire ACA, including
ending protections for
preexisting conditions
and undoing Ohio’s
Medicaid expansion. A
new study last fall found
that nearly two million
Ohioans could lose their
health insurance if the
Trump administration is
successful. This is unacceptable. Instead, we
need to work together to
make health care more
affordable for Ohioans
– particularly when it
comes to prescription
drug prices.
On all of these issues,
one of the most important ways we can make
progress is by listening
to the people we serve.
Over the past year,
we hosted roundtable
discussions in every
corner of the state, on
topics ranging from challenges facing student
veterans to women’s
access to health care.
And I’ll do the same in
2020, because the best
ideas don’t come from
Washington – they come
out of conversations
with Ohioans across our
state.
Sherrod Brown is a U.S. senator,
representing Ohio. You may contact
him at his office in Cleveland,
801 W. Superior Ave., Suite 1400,
Cleveland, OH 44113. You may call
his office at 216-522-7272 or 1-888896-6446.Reach

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, Jan.
19, the 19th day of 2020.
There are 347 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Jan. 19, 1937, millionaire Howard Hughes
set a transcontinental air
record by ﬂying his monoplane from Los Angeles
to Newark, New Jersey, in
7 hours, 28 minutes and
25 seconds.
On this date:
In 1807, Confederate

Gen. Robert E. Lee was
born in Westmoreland
County, Virginia.
In 1853, Giuseppe Verdi’s opera “Il Trovatore”
premiered in Rome.
In 1861, Georgia
became the ﬁfth state to
secede from the Union.
In 1915, Germany carried out its ﬁrst air raid
on Britain during World
War I as a pair of Zeppelins dropped bombs
onto Great Yarmouth and
King’s Lynn in England.
In 1942, during World

Thought for Today: “Love without passion is
dreary; passion without love is horrific.”
— Abraham Cowley,
English poet (1618-1667).

War II, Japanese forces
captured the British
protectorate of North
Borneo. A German submarine sank the Canadian
liner RMS Lady Hawkins
off Cape Hatteras, North
Carolina, killing 251
people; 71 survived.
In 1944, the federal
government relinquished

control of the nation’s
railroads to their owners
following settlement of a
wage dispute.
In 1955, a presidential
news conference was
ﬁlmed for television and
newsreels for the ﬁrst
time, with the permission
of President Dwight D.
Eisenhower.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

biennially in an effort
to promote gifted,
emerging conductors to
orchestra industry leadFrom page 1A
ers. In 2012, Harada was
a semi-ﬁnalist at the 9th
Grzegorz Fitelberg Interand his conducting
debut in Japan with the national Competition for
New Japan Philharmonic Conductors in Poland. In
2011, Harada was one of
in a sold out perforten semi-ﬁnalists invited
mance as well as his
debut with Indianapolis by Riccardo Muti and
the Chicago Symphony
Symphony Orchestra.
to participate in the
He led performances
First Chicago Symphony
of Carmen for Arizona
Orchestra Solti InternaOpera and conducted
tional Conducting Comconcerts with Tucson
petition and he made
Symphony, Phoenix
his professional opera
Symphony, Virginia
conducting debut with
Symphony, Sierra Vista
Symphony, and Orquesta North Carolina Opera.
Early in his career,
Filarmónica de Sonora.
Harada served as Music
He held the position of
Associate Conductor for Director of the Phoenix
Youth Symphony. During
Richmond Symphony
from autumn of 2014 to his tenure, he elevated
the organization’s prospring of 2016.
ﬁle, expanded their seaIn 2013, Harada was
son; added challenging
selected by the League
of American Orchestras repertoire, and took the
symphony on a Europeas one of only six conan tour that culminated
ductors for the Bruno
Walter National Conduc- with a master class on
tor Preview, a prominent the main stage of the
Berlin Philharmonic.
showcase that occurs

Cello

A native of Tokyo,
Japan, Harada is a graduate of Interlochen Arts
Academy and Mercer
University. He completed his formal conducting
training at University of
Arizona with Thomas
Cockrell and Charles
Bontrager. He has also
studied under Christoph
von Dohnányi, Robert
Spano, Michael Tilson
Thomas, Oliver Knussen, Herbert Blomstedt, Vladimir Ponkin,
Adrian Gnam and Stefan
Asbury. Harada champions creative programming, development of
the orchestra as a part of
a community’s cultural
fabric, advancement
of each musician he
encounters, and responsibility as an artistic and
civic leader.
Very early in his
career, he was selected
as a guest artist for
National Public Radio’s
From the Top and is featured as a favorite guest
alumnus on their PBS
television documentary.

Sunday, January 19, 2020 5A

Arizona Public Broadcasting produced a documentary on the bright
career of Keitaro titled:
“Music…Language Without Words” for the television series AZ Illustrated in 2013. Harada’s
general manager is JEJ
Artists. Engagements
in Asia are managed by
Japan Arts.
Principal cellist of the
Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra Finkelshteyn
was praised by the
Washington Post as
a “complete master
of his instrument,”
and has performed
throughout the United
States, Canada, Europe
and Japan. In 2002 he
became Principal Cello
of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra under
the direction of Yuri
Temirkanov. Prior to
that, Finkelshteyn was a
member of the St. Louis
Symphony Orchestra for
ﬁve seasons under the
late Hans Vonk.
Prize-winner of such
competitions as the Con-

certino Praga, Russian
Cello Competition, the
WAMSO International
Competition, the Aspen
Concerto Competition
and the Chautauqua
Concerto Competition, Finkelshteyn has
appeared as a soloist
with the Baltimore
Symphony Orchestra,
St. Louis Symphony
Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Mostly
Mozart Festival Orchestra and many other
world-class orchestras
including the National
Repertory Orchestra. As
a winner of the Juilliard
Concerto Competition,
Finkelshteyn was a soloist with the Juilliard
Orchestra on its tours
to France and Bermuda.
He has collaborated
with AndrÃ¡s Schiff,
Kirill Girstein, Hilary Hahn, David Soyer,
Richard Goode, Joseph
Silverstein, Jules Esken,
Steven Ansell, Harold
Robinson and Vadim
Repin. Mr. Finkelshteyn
has been heard on Wis-

consin Public Radio,
Maine Public Radio,
KFUOFM in St. Louis,
and WYPR in Baltimore.
He is an adjunct assistant professor of cello at
the Cincinnati CollegeConservatory of Music.
Finkelshteyn started his
education at the Special
Music School at the St.
Petersburg Conservatory under the tutelage
of Sergei Chernyadiev.
After immigrating to
the United States, he
studied one year at the
University of Minnesota
School of Music with
Tanya Remenikova and
six years at the Juilliard
School with Harvey
Shapiro, where he was
coached by Felix Galimir, Samuel Sanders,
and members of the
Juilliard String Quartet. Finkelshteyn plays
a cello by Domenico
Montagnana circa 1730
courtesy of Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra.
Information for this
article provided by The
Ariel.

Kaylors celebrate
50th anniversary

OHIO VALLEY HISTORY

A look back at ‘Black Tuesday, 1929’
By Chris Rizer
Special to OVP

Last week, I wrote a
bit on Mason County
during the Roaring ‘20s
for the Point Pleasant
Register. This week, it
only makes sense that I
cover what came next.
On October 24th,
1929, the New York
Stock Exchange began
its brutal collapse, losing 11% that day before
a brief recovery. On the
28th, it lost another
13%. Then, on the
29th, despite efforts
by the Rockefeller and
Morgan families, the
stock exchange lost a
further 12%. Known
as Black Tuesday, this
loss cemented the crash
and formally began the
Great Depression.
Over the next four
years, the Depression
continued to get worse.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, a NY
Stock Exchange index,
continued to drop until
hitting a record low of
41.22 on July 8th, 1932.
Over 11,000 banks
failed. Unemployment
increased by nearly
607%, hitting a high of
over 13 million people
unemployed. Over a
million families lost
their farms. In parts of
West Virginia, nearly
90% of children were
starving. And that’s
only a small piece of the
effects.
By 1932, people
were fed up with President Hoover’s poorly
planned combination
of tariffs and taxes that
were, depending on
which economist you
ask, either making the
Depression worse or
doing nothing at all.
They deﬁnitely weren’t
helping. Their response
was to elect Franklin
Delano Roosevelt by a
landslide, giving him
42 of 48 states. Mason
County, and West Virginia, voted for FDR.
Soon after his election, FDR implemented

Courtesy photo

Chris Rizer | Courtesy

Pictured are two men employed by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), once of which was local
Clarence Dailey. This photo was taken in 1935 at a CCC camp, possibly Camp Meigs.

what he called the New
Deal. The idea was
what historians generally call the 3R’s: relief for
the unemployed, recovery of the economy,
and reform to prevent
another Depression.
Under reform, the
Glass-Steagal Act
restricted the banking
policies that had helped
cause the Depression
and established the
FDIC to protect regular
peoples’ bank accounts.
As for the relief and
recovery, they were one
and the same. Putting
people back to work
(relief) helps the economy (recovery). Roosevelt’s idea was that, at
least until the Depression was over, the
government could take
the lead and create jobs
of its own. So, part of
the New Deal included
programs like the Public
Works Administration
(PWA) and Civilian
Conservation Corps
(CCC), with a later bill
establishing the Works
Progress Administration (WPA). Together,
those three programs
employed over 12 million Americans, including quite a few here in
Mason County.
The PWA was focused
mostly on larger proj-

ects, like the Hoover
Dam, so I’ll skip them
for the time being.
The WPA, however,
did quite a bit of work
around here. Their job
was to build infrastructure. Roads, bridges,
post ofﬁces, libraries,
museums, zoos, city
halls, and swimming
pools all fell under
the WPA’s authority.
Around here, perhaps
their most well-known
project was the Pomeroy levee. There is also
a WPA bridge that
survives on Dr. Kyle
McCausland’s farm.
Sadly, these are the only
two I know of that have
been fully documented.
I’m certain there are
more projects that survive, but we need to
ﬁnd them before they’re
lost.
The CCC was the
other organization that
did a lot of work in our
area, focused mostly on
conservation projects
like state parks and forests, erosion and ﬂood
control, and wildlife
management. With over
3 million young men
employed, every state
had dozens of CCC
camps. Our closest
camp in West Virginia
was Camp Jackson near
Ravenswood, but Ohio’s

the end of the current
school year. Applications
will be available in the
spring at the school.
From page 1A
MacKenzie explained
that as part of the application the student will
working with her
be required to write an
grandpa as they taught
essay about why their
him to walk again.
The scholarship which grandparent or “grandparent like ﬁgure” is
results from the shirt
important to them.
sales will be presented
The essays and appliduring the senior awards
assembly at Southern at cations will be reviewed

by a selection committee who will determine
the recipient(s). The
Racine United Methodist Church is assisting
with the handling of the
money for the scholarship.
Shirts are available
at www.customink.
com/fundraising/mickwinebrenner-memorialtshirt-sale. Additional
donations can also be

Awareness

Camp Meigs, just a
couple miles north of
Pomeroy, was closer.
My own 3x-greatuncle, Clarence Dailey,
was employed by the
CCC during the Depression. I don’t know for
certain, but since he
lived in Hartford, we’ve
always assumed he
worked out of Camp
Meigs. That’s him and
a friend of his in the
picture above, taken in
1935 at a CCC camp,
possibly Camp Meigs.
These programs
continued until World
War Two, when the
jobs supporting the war
effort ﬁnally ended the
Depression for most
Americans and made
the New Deal employment programs unnecessary. But if you know
where to look, their
story survives through
their projects.
The next meeting
of the Mason County
Historical and Preservation Society will
be Saturday, Feb. 8 at
5 p.m. at the Mason
County Library in Point
Pleasant, barring bad
weather.
Chris Rizer is president of the
Mason County Historical and
Preservation Society, reach him
at masonchps@gmail.com.

made through the website link. An order form
will be available in the
Southern school ofﬁce,
as well as the shirts
being sold at some of
the Southern home basketball games. Shirts
can also be ordered by
calling Shelly at 740416-6087.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel

The children of Terry and Linda Kaylor are pleased to announce
their parents 50th wedding anniversary. Terry and Linda were
married in Tuppers Plains on January 3, 1970. They celebrated
this event with their children, niece, and grandchildren during
the holidays. Terry worked for Huntsman Chemical Corporation
in Belpre and Linda worked at Farmers Bank in Tuppers Plains.
They are both currently retired and enjoy spending time with
family. They plan to continue their celebration by traveling to
visit friends this spring. Cards of congratulations can be sent
to 42598 Kaylor Road, Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

Ohio prosecutor who
pleaded guilty resigns
amid pressure
FREMONT, Ohio (AP) — A county prosecutor
who was accused of sexual harassment by female
employees and later pleaded guilty to negligent
assault resigned Friday under pressure from state
ofﬁcials.
Sandusky County Prosecutor Tim Braun had
faced a court hearing next week where Ohio’s
attorney general planned to seek to remove him
from ofﬁce. Both Ohio Attorney General Dave
Yost and Gov. Mike DeWine wanted Braun forced
out of ofﬁce. He was suspended by a judge two
weeks ago until a hearing could be held.
Braun’s plea deal in early December allowed him
to keep his $140,000 salary through next June but
also barred him from working in his ofﬁce.
Yost sought to oust Braun due to misconduct in
ofﬁce, arguing that he was unable to perform key
duties of his job. Along with the conviction, the
complaint cited a “pattern of misconduct” toward
female subordinates and other issues.
Braun, who has been the county prosecutor
since 2017, hasn’t commented publicly about his
plea. A copy of his resignation letter released by
the attorney general’s ofﬁce did not include a reason why he stepped down.

The Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center is seeking
applicants for the
position of Treasurer.
Candidates should possess a Treasurer
License from the Ohio Department of
Education or be able to acquire one.
Start date negotiable.
An application, letter of interest, resume
and copy of Treasurer License should be
submitted to:
Helen Douglas, AMESC
P.O. 40, Chauncey, Ohio 45719
helen.douglas@athensmeigs.com
Deadline to apply is noon on February
7, 2020. Applications may be found at:
www.athensmeigs.com
OH-70169374

�A long the River
6A Sunday, January 19, 2020�

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The wooden boat on display was built by Hobart Udell Adams who was a riverboat man for most of his life. He was born in 1907 in Antiquity and died in 1941 of cancer. The model is made from dynamite boxes.

History on display

bell from the Antiquity
‘The Museum’ aSchool
and many other
historic items and photos.
Work continues on the
in Middleport remainder
of the main
building, as well as the
other buildings on the
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
property, including the
1872 Furniture Factory
building.
MIDDLEPORT — As
The Historical Society
the Meigs Historical Sociis currently seeking fundety and Museum settles
ing for phase two of their
into it’s location in Midproject which will finish
dleport many historical
items from the county are the work on the genealogy research part of the
on display for the public
main building. A new
to see.
furnace and air conditionItems on display
ing unit is needed on that
include replicas of sternportion of the building in
wheelers, a more than
order to help regulate the
100-years old piano, an
humidity for the records
Ohio Bicentennial bell,
By Sarah Hawley

which are stored in the
building. The floors will
need to be finished and
windows installed, as
well as the garage doors
sealed.
Historical Society memberships are available for
$15 per person, $25 for
a family, $100 for a business or $200 for a lifetime
membership. Membership
includes a quarterly newsletter and a 10 percent
discount on gift shop
items. Donations are also
being accepted to help
Brycen Miller-King plays at the train table in the kid’s area at the museum.
with the continued renovations.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Several Cats Meow buildings are available in the gift shop at the museum.

The wooden sternwheeler mailbox was donated by Ron and Shirley
Miller.

This White sewing machine on
display at the museum was
used by Doris Martin in 1909.

The Ohio Bicentennial Bell is
on display at the museum.

This upright grand piano stood
for nearly 100 years in the parlor
of the home of Dr. Jacob Schaefer
in Rock Springs. It was donated
in 1974 by his grandson and the
interior was restored in 1980.

The loom on display was donated by the David Caldwell family. It is set up at the museum where “rug weaving” can be demonstrated.

The bell from the Antiquity School
House. The bell was donated by
Rodney and Debbie Gordon and
Emery and Doris Gordon.

The switchboard on display
was donated in memory of
Carl J. Barnhill, who was with
the company from 1946 until
his retirement in 1969.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, January 19, 2020 7A

Grants now available for extradition of wanted offenders
COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Ohio Governor Mike
DeWine announced Friday that funding is now
available to reimburse
local law enforcement
agencies for the cost of
extraditing dangerous
wanted offenders back
to Ohio to face criminal
charges.
Governor DeWine
secured $500,000 in the
2020-2021 biennium
budget to fund Ohio’s
new Prisoner Extradition Reimbursement
Program, which will
reimburse Ohio law
enforcement agencies
that have limited funds
to extradite suspects
arrested out-of-state or
in another jurisdiction

on warrants for Tier I
offenses.

mental in ensuring that
more dangerous offenders return to Ohio to
answer for their crimes,”
Tier I Offenses
said Governor DeWTier I offenses are
deﬁned as felony offens- ine. “We also believe
that this program will
es of violence outlined
enhance public safety by
in ORC 2901.01(A)
(9); felony offenses that increasing the number
of warrants entered into
involve substantial risk
to public or ofﬁcer safe- the state and national
ty; and the misdemeanor warrant databases.”
Governor DeWine
offenses of domestic
violence and aggravated directed the Ohio
Department of Public
menacing.
Safety’s Ofﬁce of Crimi“We know that some
nal Justice Services
law enforcement agencies in Ohio don’t always to develop the grant
program last year after
have the resources to
a study by the Ohio Govtravel across the state
ernor’s Warrant Task
or country to take an
Force revealed that some
offender into custody,
which is why these new local law enforcement
agencies do not enter all
grants will be instru-

felony warrants into the
National Crime Information Center (NCIC) warrant database due to lack
of funding or personnel
to extradite suspects
arrested in another
state.
According to the
study, more than 17,500
Tier I warrants were
entered into Ohio’s Law
Enforcement Automated
Data System (LEADS)
database as of March
2019, but less than half
of those warrants were
also entered into the
national NCIC database,
posing a risk to the public and to law enforcement ofﬁcers who
unknowingly encounter
wanted suspects in other

states.
Although there are
currently no laws in
Ohio requiring that law
enforcement agencies
enter open warrants into
the state or national law
enforcement databases,
Governor DeWine’s
STRONG Ohio plan
includes legislation to
mandate the entry o Tier
I warrants and certain
protection orders into
both LEADS and NCIC
within 48 hours. InnovateOhio, whose mission
includes using technology in government to
improve services, is
working to develop
a system to help law
enforcement quickly and
efﬁciently manage the

proposed new mandate.
Any law enforcement
agency in Ohio that has
limited means to fund an
extradition is eligible for
reimbursement through
the new program. The
grant funding can be
used to reimburse costs
associated with transporting offenders from
another state or another
Ohio jurisdiction,
including mileage, personnel, and other travel
expenses.
Applications will be
accepted until all available funds have been
awarded. More information on the grant, including application information, is available at www.
ocjs.ohio.gov

Retired teachers December meeting
Submitted by Donna DeWitt

VINTON — The Gallia
County Retired Teachers met on December 4,
2019 at the Vinton Baptist Church.
President Gail Belville
called the meeting to
order at noon. Cathy
Elliott led the group in
the Pledge of Allegiance
and Bob Powell gave the
invocation. Mrs. Claus
(a.k.a. Vickie Powell)
visited the group to read
Mountain Christmas,
written by the poet laureate of West Virginia.
She enlisted the help of
elf (a.k.a. Gail Belville)
to ring the sleigh bells
during various intervals
throughout the story.
Karen Polcyn entertained
the crowd with her
harpsicord by playing
and singing Christmas
songs to which many of
the group joined in and
sang along. After a meal

served by the ladies of
Vinton Baptist, the members proceeded with the
business portion of the
meeting.
November and December birthdays were
recognized. Celebrating
November birthdays
were: Karen Polcyn,
Phyllis Mulholand, and
Denise Richards. Those
celebrating December
birthdays are: Vickie
Powell, Debbie North,
and Richard Unroe.
Cindy Graham was
recognized for being
a ﬁrst-time attendee
at the meeting. Phyllis
Mulholand, a retired
bus driver from Gallia
County Schools, was
welcomed as a guest of
Mary Lanier.
The secretary’s report
was in the previous issue
of the newsletter. The
treasurer’s report was
given by Jack James.

Both were approved as
presented. The Snack
Pack donations collected
at the meeting were $16
and $18 for the Scholarship fund.
Members were
reminded to turn in
their volunteer hours
to Belville by the end of
December. She needs
this information to complete the end-of-the-year
report for ORTA. These
can be called in, texted,
or mailed to Belville.
She reminded members
that the NASA - SPACE
exhibit would be at the
Bossard Library until
Jan. 5.
Remember that if reservations are made for a
meeting and the member
is unable to show up
for any reason that the
money for the meal must
still be paid as the organization is committed
to the number of meals

that we order from the
caterer. Reminder notes
will be sent out to those
failing to comply.
Belville provides door
prizes donated by local
businesses at each meeting as an incentive to
encourage members to
attend. Door prizes from
Bob Evans Farms, Super
Eight Hotel, and Ohio
Valley Symphony were
given to two members at
this meeting. The winners were: Denise Payne
and Helenlu Morgan.
The main emphasis of
our group for community
projects in recent years
has been scholarships
and the Snack Pack
program. President Gail
suggested donating $100
to ﬁll treat bags with
candy and personal items
for Holzer Assisted Living. A motion was made,
seconded and approved
to proceed with this

Courtesy photo

Pictured is Vickie Powell, standing and dressed as Mrs. Claus. Elf
Gail Belville (seated) assists her as she reads Mountain Christmas
to the group.

project. Members plan
to meet at the Bossard
Library later this month
to ﬁll the bags with
treats. Phyllis Mulholand
suggested that the organization might consider
providing music or storytelling by Mrs. Claus
when the bags are presented to the residents at
Holzer Assisted Living.

The February meeting
will be on Thursday, Feb.
13 at noon at Golden
Corral in Gallipolis. It
will also serve as the
planning meeting for
2020. The meeting was
adjourned. A fundraiser
auction was held immediately following the meeting to raise money for
the scholarship fund.

COLLEGE NEWS AND NOTES

Jackson named to
Dean’s List at MVNU

Located in Greenville, South Carolina, Bob Jones
University provides an outstanding regionally
accredited Christian liberal arts education purposely
designed to inspire a lifelong pursuit of learning, lovMOUNT VERNON — Matthew James Jackson has ing and leading. BJU offers over 100 undergraduate
been named to the Dean’s List for the 2019 fall semes- and graduate programs in religion, education, ﬁne
ter at Mount Vernon Nazarene University. The dean’s arts and communication, arts and science, health scilist includes all students who carried a minimum of 12 ences, and business. BJU has nearly 3,000 students
from nearly every state and more than 40 countries.
credit hours and have maintained a grade point average of 3.5 or above for the semester.
Jackson, a freshman majoring in accounting, has
attained the Dean’s List for the Fall time. He is a 2019
graduate of Meigs High School, and the son of Tricia
Adams of Racine, Ohio, and David Jackson of Gallipolis, Ohio.
CEDARVILLE — Cedarville University recently
Mount Vernon Nazarene University is a private,
released the fall 2019 Dean’s Honor List. This recfour-year, intentionally Christian teaching university
ognition required students to maintain a 3.75 GPA
for traditional age students, graduate students and
for the semester while taking a minimum of 12
working adults. With a 327-acre main campus in
credit hours.
Mount Vernon, Ohio, and several convenient GraduThe following local students were named to
ate and Professional Studies sites throughout the
Cedarville University Dean’s Honor List for the
state, MVNU emphasizes academic excellence, spiri2019 fall semester: Marshall Hood of Gallipolis,
tual growth and service to community and church.
Ashley Childers of Thurman, Austin Ragan of
MVNU offers an affordable education to more than
Bidwell, Marlee Maynard of Racine, Olivia Neal of
2,200 students from 32 states and 19 countries/U.S.
Bidwell, and Chasity Deckard of Gallipolis.
territories.
Cedarville University, located between Dayton
and Columbus, Ohio is an accredited, Christcentered, Baptist institution with an enrollment of
4,380 undergraduate, graduate, and online students
in more than 150 areas of study. Founded in 1887,
Cedarville is recognized nationally for its authentic
Christian community, rigorous academic programs,
DELAWARE — Hunter Coon of Vinton, Ohio, has
strong graduation, and retention rates, accredited
been named to the 2019 fall semester Dean’s List at
professional and health science offerings, and high
Ohio Wesleyan University.
student engagement ranking. For more information
To earn Dean’s List recognition, Ohio Wesleyan
students must achieve a grade point average of 3.5 or about the University, visit www.cedarville.edu.
better on a 4.0 scale in all applicable classes.
Founded in 1842, Ohio Wesleyan University is one
of the nation’s premier liberal arts universities. Located in Delaware, Ohio, the private university offers
more than 90 undergraduate majors and competes in
25 NCAA Division III varsity sports. Through Ohio
CEDARVILLE — Several Cedarville University
Wesleyan’s signature OWU Connection program,
students were named to the Dean’s List for fall
students integrate knowledge across disciplines, build 2019. This recognition requires the student to have
a diverse and global perspective, and apply their
a 3.5 GPA or higher for the semester and carry a
knowledge in real-world settings. Ohio Wesleyan is
minimum of 12 credit hours.
featured in the book “Colleges That Change Lives”
The following local students were named to the
and included in the U.S. News &amp; World Report and
Cedarville University Dean’s List for fall 2019: Eric
Princeton Review “best colleges” lists. Learn more at Blevins of Bidwell, Isaiah Lester of Patriot, and
www.owu.edu.
Clay Montgomery of Gallipolis.
Cedarville University, located between Dayton
and Columbus, Ohio is an accredited, Christcentered, Baptist institution with an enrollment of
4,380 undergraduate, graduate, and online students
in more than 150 areas of study. Founded in 1887,
GREENVILLE, S.C. — David Young, a sophomore Cedarville is recognized nationally for its authentic
Christian community, rigorous academic programs,
exercise science major from Gallipolis, was among
over 900 Bob Jones University students named to the strong graduation, and retention rates, accredited
professional and health science offerings, and high
Fall 2019 Dean’s List.
student engagement ranking. For more information
The Dean’s List recognizes students who earn a
about the University, visit www.cedarville.edu.
3.00-3.74 grade point average during the semester.

Cedarville University students
named to Dean’s Honor List

Coon named to Dean’s List at
Ohio Wesleyan University

Cedarville students
named to Dean’s List

Young named to the Dean’s
List at Bob Jones University

Students named to honors
lists at Capital University
BEXLEY — Justin McClelland, of Bidwell, was
named to the Dean’s List at Capital University for
the fall 2019 semester.
In order to be named to the Dean’s List, full-time,
degree-seeking students must have achieved a
grade point average of at least 3.5.
Megan Douglas of Coolville and Hayley Lathey of
Vinton were named to the President’s List.
Capital has three lists denoting academic distinction among full-time, degree-seeking students: the
President’s List, Provost’s List, and Dean’s List.
The President’s List indicates the highest level of
academic distinction. To be named to the President’s List, students must have achieved a grade
point average of at least 3.85.
Located in the Columbus, Ohio, neighborhood
of Bexley, Capital University is a private, four-year
undergraduate institution and graduate school.
Capital prepares students for meaningful lives and
purposeful careers through a relevant liberal arts
core curriculum and deep professional programs.
Inﬂuenced by its Lutheran heritage, Capital places
great emphasis on the free and open exchange of
ideas, seeking out diverse perspectives, active participation in society, leadership and service. With
a focus on rigor and experiential learning, the University capitalizes on its size, location, and heritage
to develop the whole person, both inside and outside the classroom.

Jackson named to
Dean’s List at MVNU
MOUNT VERNON – Matthew James Jackson
has been named to the dean’s list for the 2019 fall
semester at Mount Vernon Nazarene University.
The dean’s list includes all students who carried a
minimum of 12 credit hours and have maintained a
grade point average of 3.5 or above for the semester.
Jackson, a freshman majoring in Accounting, has
attained the dean’s list for the Fall time. He is a
2019 graduate of Meigs High School, and the son of
Tricia Adams of Racine, Ohio, and David Jackson
of Gallipolis, Ohio.
Mount Vernon Nazarene University is a private,
four-year, intentionally Christian teaching university for traditional age students, graduate students
and working adults. With a 327-acre main campus
in Mount Vernon, Ohio, and several convenient
Graduate and Professional Studies sites throughout
the state, MVNU emphasizes academic excellence,
spiritual growth and service to community and
church. MVNU offers an affordable education to
more than 2,200 students from 32 states and 19
countries/U.S. territories.

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, January 19, 2020

Bentz to celebrate
100th birthday

Retired teachers discuss floral business changes
Submitted by Donna DeWitt

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Retired
Teachers met on Oct.
10, 2019 at noon at the
Gallipolis Quality Inn.
President Gail Belville
called the meeting to
order. Henry Dillon gave
the invocation prior to
a meal being served by
the staff of the Quality
Inn.
Featured speaker,
Melvin Biars of Floral
Fashions in Gallipolis,
was introduced by Lois
Carter. Melvin spoke
to the group about the
changes affecting the
ﬂoral business. For
example, many ﬂower
shops are dropping their
wire service while others are increasing fees
for wire service and
delivery. Whole sellers
are closing their doors
which presents a challenge for local ﬂoral
retailers. Customers still
do order fresh ﬂowers
but many prefer more
user-friendly items.
These include: candles,
lanterns, wind chimes,
room fresheners, quilts,
and throw blankets.
Metal sign stakes are
another alternative and
are becoming popular.
Melvin had several
examples to show the
group. With the new
millennium and changes
in technology the ﬂower
business has had to
change. Floral Fashions
has a new webpage. It is
ﬂoralfashions.net. Biars
assured the group that
Floral Fashions puts its
service to customers
ﬁrst and foremost, taking pride in their customer service.
As Biars spoke to the
group, he stopped periodically to give away
a door prize. Prizes
included such items

Courtesy photo

Cordelia Curtis Bentz will celebrate her 100th birthday on
Wednesday, Jan. 29. Bentz is a graduate of the Pomeroy High
School class of 1937. A celebration is planned for 2-4 p.m. on the
29th at The Maples Apartments in Pomeroy where Bentz resides.
Additionally, a potluck lunch and birthday celebration is planned
for after church on Sunday, Jan. 26 at New Beginnings United
Methodist Church in Pomeroy. Church begins at 10 a.m., with
lunch expected to start around 11:30 a.m. Cards may be sent to
100 Memorial Drive, Apt. 215 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. At Cordelia’s
request, no gifts please.

State of the State set
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine will deliver his annual State of the State address
on March 31, according to a Friday announcement.
This will be the second address by the Republican
governor to the General Assembly since he took ofﬁce
last year. GOP House Speaker Larry Householder on
Friday formally extended the invitation to DeWine
to make the speech, saying he and House lawmakers
share DeWine’s commitment to Ohio and the future.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

26°

23°

Partly sunny and breezy today. Low clouds
tonight. High 28° / Low 17°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics for Friday

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.

Friday
Month to date/normal
Year to date/normal

Snowfall

0.00
2.27/1.62
2.27/1.62

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

0.0
Trace/3.5
1.0/8.1

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

(in inches)

Friday
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:44 a.m.
5:34 p.m.
2:45 a.m.
1:24 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mon.
7:44 a.m.
5:36 p.m.
3:52 a.m.
2:03 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
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
7:00a
7:47a
8:35a
9:24a
10:14a
11:04a
11:27a

Minor
12:47a
1:34a
2:21a
3:10a
4:00a
4:51a
5:43a

Major
7:26p
8:14p
9:02p
9:51p
10:40p
11:30p
----

Minor
1:13p
2:00p
2:48p
3:37p
4:27p
5:17p
6:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
Snow is rare in Florida. It did not fall
in Miami Beach until 1977; however,
on Jan. 19, snowﬂakes fell for the
ﬁrst time at the famous resort. Tampa
had 0.25 of an inch, and Plant City,
Fla., got 2 inches.

Cold with times of
clouds and sun

3

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: How much water is needed to
produce 12 inches of snow over 1
square mile?

Logan
21/15

Lucasville
25/15
Portsmouth
26/16

Abundant sunshine

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Marietta
25/16
Belpre
25/17

Athens
24/16

St. Marys
26/17

Parkersburg
27/16

Coolville
24/16

Elizabeth
27/17

Spencer
28/16

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Fri.

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

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

Level
12.55
18.66
22.62
12.65
12.86
25.43
12.08
29.04
35.74
12.60
26.30
35.80
27.90

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.13
-0.46
-0.06
+0.28
+0.11
-0.41
none
-1.34
-0.92
+0.14
-2.70
-0.80
-2.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

Buffalo
28/17
Milton
29/17

St. Albans
31/17

Huntington
30/19

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
53/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
56/45
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
74/54
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Rain possible in the
afternoon

52°
34°
Low clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
28/17

Ashland
28/18
Grayson
28/17

SATURDAY

51°
40°

Sun giving way to
increasing clouds

Wilkesville
25/16
POMEROY
Jackson
27/16
25/16
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
27/17
27/17
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
20/15
GALLIPOLIS
28/17
28/17
28/17

South Shore Greenup
27/17
25/15

34

of Betty Finney and the
Graham family.
Several from the GC –
RTA attended a regional
meeting in Jackson.
Belville noted that the
organization is fortunate
to have the scholarship
fund and can be commended for proactively
replenishing it. The
importance of purchasing travel insurance
especially when traveling especially outside of
the US. was discussed.
Birthdays recognized
for September were:
Cheryl DeWitt, Peggy
Huber and Janet Wetherholt. Celebrating
October birthdays were:
Cindy Wilson, Nancy
Hood, Julie Dragoo, and
Donna DeWitt.
It was discussed about
the cost the organization is incurring when
members make a reservation and then do not
show up for the meeting
in order to pay for their
meal. It has always been
the rule that if a member makes a reservation
and does not show up
for any reason that they
are still required to pay
for their meal. When a
reservation is made the
organization is committed to purchasing
that meal so when the
member does not show
then GC – RTA is forced
to pay for the meal. A
motion was made and
seconded to send out
a note to those who
do not show up at the
meeting after making a
reservation reminding
them to reimburse the
GC – RTA for the cost
of the meal. Marlene
Hoffman volunteered to
send these notes when
necessary. A motion was
made, seconded and
approved to purchase
stamps for this purpose.

FRIDAY

50°
25°

Murray City
22/15

McArthur
23/15

Waverly
23/14

THURSDAY

43°
20°

Sunny to partly cloudy
and cold

Adelphi
21/16
Chillicothe
22/16

WEDNESDAY

34°
17°

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

TUESDAY

A: Over 17 million gallons.

Precipitation

36°/25°
42°/25°
74° in 1932
-14° in 1982

MONDAY

position of secretary.
The minutes from the
August 2019 meeting
were in the last issue of
the newsletter and were
approved by the membership. Jack James gave
the treasurers report
and it was also approved
as presented. President
Belville reminded members to record their
volunteer hours for 2019
for church, community,
education, hospital, or
other areas. Hours can
be given to Gail Belville
at the Dec. 5th meeting. The total hours can
be mailed to Gail prior
to Dec. 15 at 6950 SR
7 in Gallipolis, OH or
emailed or texted to her.
The calculation of these
hours is needed for our
end-of-the-year report
for the state RTA. A
Get-Well card will be
sent to Patty Young.
Sympathy cards have
been sent to the family

as wind chimes both
large and miniature,
candles both big and
small, a throw blanket,
room fragrance, and
metal sign stakes. Winners were: Mel Coen,
Sheryl Fallon, Pat Dillon, Marlene Hoffman,
Bob and Vickie Powell,
Nancy Hood, Ruth Snyder, Janet Wetherholt,
Lynn Arnott, Dallie
Forgey, Gail Belville,
Robin Lane, Cheryl
DeWitt, Henry Dillon,
Beth James, Richard
Unroe, Vicki Rose,
Karen Polcyn, Donna
DeWitt, Peggy Huber,
Lorna Nomina, and Jack
James.
The following positions are in need of
being ﬁlled within the
GC-RTA: treasurer at
the beginning of the
new term and publicity as soon as possible.
There may also be a
vacancy soon in the

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

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

Courtesy photo

Melvin Biars of Floral Fashions in Gallipolis holding a fleur di lei
throw blanket given to Sheryl Fallon as a door prize.

31°
16°
24°

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Clendenin
30/14
Charleston
30/18

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
6/-16

Billings
37/23

Montreal
19/2

Minneapolis
10/-2
Chicago
18/11

Denver
48/22

Toronto
27/7
Detroit
26/10

New York
41/23
Washington
42/25

Kansas City
19/4

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
49/26/pc
13/10/pc
47/24/s
44/26/pc
42/23/pc
37/23/pc
40/27/c
46/21/pc
30/18/pc
54/24/s
41/18/pc
18/11/pc
23/15/s
24/20/sf
23/16/pc
54/33/pc
48/22/pc
3/-10/s
26/10/sf
80/71/s
59/36/pc
19/13/s
19/4/s
64/47/pc
49/23/s
74/54/pc
28/17/s
82/65/pc
10/-2/s
37/17/s
58/41/pc
41/23/pc
51/25/pc
78/49/t
40/22/pc
76/54/s
23/16/sf
38/13/sn
54/23/s
49/22/s
22/8/s
40/23/s
56/45/c
53/42/r
42/25/pc

Hi/Lo/W
49/34/pc
20/17/c
41/27/s
34/22/s
36/19/s
42/30/pc
44/36/c
31/16/s
31/17/c
42/21/s
46/26/pc
25/9/s
30/18/pc
27/19/sf
28/15/c
56/34/s
51/27/pc
4/-10/s
25/9/pc
80/69/pc
61/36/pc
27/17/pc
13/5/sn
63/46/c
41/20/s
68/51/pc
32/22/s
77/53/pc
14/-3/s
34/22/s
56/36/s
31/22/s
47/19/s
62/41/pc
33/19/s
75/55/c
26/15/sf
26/3/s
42/21/s
39/19/s
22/11/s
41/32/c
57/48/c
53/43/r
38/22/s

EXTREMES FRIDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
47/24

High
Low

El Paso
61/37
Chihuahua
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

87° in Naples, FL
-33° in Cotton, MN

Global
High
Low

Houston
59/36
Monterrey
62/45

Miami
82/65

115° in Augrabies, South Africa
-60° in Ikki-Ambar, Russia

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

OH-70107875

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Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Marauders win at Nelsonville-York, 65-60
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Meigs sophomore Coulter Cleland (10) drives past a
Marietta defender, during a non-conference game on Jan.
11 in Rocksprings, Ohio.

NELSONVILLE, Ohio
— Back in the win column.
The Meigs boys basketball team snapped its
ﬁve-game skid, defeating
Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division host
Nelsonville-York by a
65-60 tally on Friday
inside Ben Wagner Gymnasium.
The Marauders (6-8,
3-3 TVC Ohio) were up
14-9 eight minutes into
play, holding the hosts
to a single ﬁeld goal in
the opening quarter.
Nelsonville-York (2-9,

0-5) trimmed one off
its deﬁcit in the second period, outscoring
Meigs 13-to-12 and making the Marauder lead
26-22 at halftime.
The Buckeyes exploded for 22 points, 12
from long range, in the
third quarter, but the
Marauders had 20 in the
period and headed into
the fourth with a 46-44
edge.
The Maroon and Gold
capped off the 65-60
win with a 19-tto-16
fourth quarter, hitting
5-of-8 free throws in the
stanza.
For the game, MHS
was 10-of-13 (76.9

percent) from the line,
where NYHS was 11-of19 (57.9 percent).
Meigs — which had
ﬁve of its 25 ﬁeld goals
come from beyond the
arc — had seven players
score in the game, with
two reaching double
digits.
MHS sophomore
Coulter Cleland led the
guests with 18 points,
followed by Weston
Baer with 17. Bobby
Musser was next with
eight points, followed
by Ethan Stewart and
Morgan Roberts with six
each. Wyatt Hoover and
Cory Cox capped off the
Marauder total with ﬁve

points apiece.
Ethan Gail led the
Buckeyes with 16
points, followed by
Mikey Seel with 13 and
Joseph Tome with 12.
Maleek Williams came
up with nine points for
the hosts, Drew Carter
chipped in with seven,
while Austin Thrapp
claimed three points.
These teams will do
battle again on Feb. 14
in Rocksprings.
Next for the Marauders, a trip to Wellston
on Friday to start their
second trip through the
TVC Ohio.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Lady Raiders sweep
Wellston Golden
Rockets, 45-29
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — It’s been a long time
since the Lady Raiders got to break out the
brooms.
The River Valley girls basketball team claimed
its ﬁrst season sweep in league play since the
2015-16 campaign on Thursday night following a 45-29 victory over host Wellston in a TriValley Conference Ohio Division matchup in
Jackson County.
The visiting Lady Raiders (9-7, 3-5 TVC
Ohio) notched their third consecutive victory,
mainly due to a defensive presence that limited
the Lady Golden Rockets to single-digit outputs
in each of the four quarters of play.
Payton Crabtree and Hannah Jacks combined
for seven points during an 11-7 ﬁrst quarter
RVHS run, then Lauren Twyman poured in four
points while sparking a 13-9 spurt that resulted
in a 24-16 halftime lead for the Silver and Black.
Jacks and Twyman chipped in three points
each during a 10-6 third quarter run that
extended the lead out to 34-22, then Crabtree
tacked on ﬁve points during an 11-7 end to regulation that wrapped up the 16-point triumph.
River Valley also claimed a 64-33 victory over
the Blue and Gold in Bidwell back on Dec. 12,
2019.
The Lady Raiders had eight different players
reach the scoring column, with all but one doing
so by the intermission. RVHS made 18 total
ﬁeld goals — including ﬁve 3-pointers — and
also went 3-of-6 at the free throw line for 50
percent.
Jacks, Crabtree and Twyman all paced the
guests with nine points apiece, followed by
Savannah Reese with ﬁve markers. Kasey Birchﬁeld and Kaylee Gillman were next with four
points each, while Brooklin Clonch and Kaylee
Tucker respectively completed the winning tally
with three and two points.
Wellston netted eight total ﬁeld goals — a
half-dozen of which were trifectas — and also
made 7-of-10 charity tosses for 70 percent.
Emma Jadrnicek paced the hosts with a gamehigh 14 points, followed by Daycee Clemons
with eight points and Makenna Kilgour with
See RAIDERS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday, Jan. 20
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 6:30
Swimming
River Valley at Teays Valley MLK, TBA

Tuesday, Jan. 21
Boys Basketball
Wahama at South Gallia, 7:30
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 7:30
Calvary Christian at Hannan, 7:30
Wood County Christian at Ohio Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 7:30
Eastern at Wellston, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Calvary Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Wood County Christian at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30

Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Southern senior Trey McNickle (14) passes out of a double team, during the Tornadoes’ 47-45 victory on Friday in Racine, Ohio.

Southern outlasts Rebels, 47-45
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — The
Tornadoes hit their free
throws when they mattered most.
In the ﬁnal 12 seconds
of Friday’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
game in Meigs County,
the host Southern boys
basketball team hit 4-of-4
free throws, extending its
lead to two possessions
twice to seal a 47-45 victory over visiting South
Gallia.
Southern (7-7, 6-3 TVC
Hocking) — winner of
three straight games
— led initially, but the
Rebels (7-7, 4-5) took
their ﬁrst lead at 11-8
and added another twopointer before the end of
the ﬁrst quarter.
The Purple and Gold
regained the advantage
at 21-20, with 3:27 left in
the half, only to give the
edge right back to the
guests 24 seconds later.
Southern, however, ﬁnished the half with a 5-0
run for a 26-23 halftime
lead.
The Tornadoes — who
never trailed after halftime — led by as many as
eight points in the third
quarter and settled for a
37-30 advantage headed
into the ﬁnale.
SGHS was within three
points, at 38-35, two minutes into the fourth, but
Southern scored ﬁve of
the next eight points and
led 43-38 with 4:20 left
in regulation. A Jaxxin
Mabe three-pointer with
50 seconds left brought
the Rebels to within two

South Gallia senior Jared Burdette (5) fires a three-pointer, during
the second half of the Rebels’ 47-45 loss on Friday in Racine, Ohio.

points, and then the hosts
came up empty from the
foul line eight seconds
later.
The Tornadoes made a
return trip to the stripe
with a dozen seconds
to go, with Cole Steele
making both tries to give
SHS a four-point cushion.
A quick two-pointer by
Andrew Small cut the
Rebel deﬁcit in half, but
then Coltin Parker nailed
a couple of free throws
to give Southern another
four-point edge with three
seconds to go. As time
expired, the Rebels hit a
two-pointer, capping off
Southern’s 47-45 victory.
Following the contest,
12th-year Tornadoes head
coach Jeff Caldwell was
pleased with his team for

winning another close
decision, as well as avenging a 56-51 loss at SGHS
on Dec. 17.
“These games are good
for us, to help us get better, because you do have
to play with some toughness and just ﬁnd a way
to win, and that’s what we
did,” Caldwell said. “We
didn’t play great basketball by any means, but we
found a way to win, we’ll
deﬁnitely take it.
“I think were starting
to get a little bit better,
and we’re going to need
to continue to get better.
We had the lead late and
I fell like we really could
have really extended it if
we would have hit some
free throws. We hit the
big ones when we had to,

Cole (Steele) and Coltin
(Parker), but we also had
a couple turnovers and
things. Overall, I thought
the defense was deﬁnitely
good enough in the second half to help us get a
win there, so I’m proud of
the guys.”
Third-year Rebels
head coach Kent Wolfe
acknowledged his team’s
missed opportunities
down the stretch, and
talked about what gave
Southern the edge in the
contest.
“We had shots to tie the
game, we just made some
really bad basketball decisions,” Wolfe said. “That
was a tough one to lose
because we hung in there.
They got up 8-or-9, and
we fought back, and had
an opportunity to tie the
game up.
“We let (Cole) Steele
have a couple threes.
Our scouting report says
you have to know where
he’s at in the 1-3-1, and
we let him slip by there.
(Arrow) Drummer was
just a big force inside. We
had the ball stripped a
few times and he was the
one that got it and put it
back in, he was like a man
against boys down there.
We just have to get stronger with it. It’s a tough
one to swallow because it
was a great environment
on the road, and we hung
in. We have to get ready,
we have practice tomorrow, and we ﬁnally get a
home game.”
Southern made 14-of38 (36.8 percent) ﬁeld
goal attempts, including
See REBELS | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, January 19, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

South Point slips past Blue Angels, 60-54
By Alex Hawley

lead at 19-17 with 45
seconds left in the half,
when Maddy Petro made
CENTENARY, Ohio — a two-pointer off of an
No revenge, but a whole assist from Alex Barnes.
South Point’s Emilee
lot better than the ﬁrst
Whitt ended the guests’
time.
drought with a layup on
The Gallia Academy
the ensuing possession,
girls basketball team
tying the game at 19
— which fell to South
headed into halftime.
Point by a 53-36 count
GAHS started the
on Dec. 9 in Lawrence
second half with a
County — fell to those
10-to-5 spurt and led
same Lady Pointers
29-24 with 3:30 left in
on Thursday in Gallia
the third period. BackCounty, this time by a
to-back three-pointers
60-54 tally.
gave SPHS a 30-29 lead
After a trio of early
with 3:00 to go in the
lead changes, South
third, but a two-pointer
Point (9-5, 7-3 OVC)
by Petro gave the hosts
opened up a 17-7 edge
eight minutes into play. their ﬁnal lead of the
night 17 seconds later.
The guests came up
With 2:23 remaining
empty on their ﬁrst 16
in the quarter, a triple
possessions of the secby Emilee Carey gave
ond quarter, however,
the Lady Pointers the
going 0-of-13 from the
ﬁeld and turning the ball lead for good, with the
guests stretching the
over three times.
The Blue Angels (5-11, margin to 43-37 headed
into the ﬁnale.
1-9 OVC) regained the

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Rebels
From page 1B

3-of-16 (18.8 percent)
three-point tries, while
the Rebels were 19-of-45
(42.2 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 6-of-18
(33.3 percent) from deep.
At the foul line, SHS was
16-for-24 (66.7 percent)
and SGHS was 1-for-4 (25
percent).
The Red and Gold
claimed a 25-to-22 edge
in rebounding, with both
teams grabbing seven
offensive boards. The
hosts had 12 turnovers,
three fewer than South
Gallia. Collectively, the
Tornadoes had 12 assists,
nine steals and three
blocked shots. Meanwhile, the Rebels combined for 11 assists, three
steals and a block.
Drummer paced Southern with 19 points and
ﬁve rebounds, combining ﬁve ﬁeld goals with
a 9-of-11 day at the foul
line. Landen Hill contributed a dozen points and a
team-best seven rebounds
to the winning cause,
Steele chipped in with
nine points, while Parker
ended with six markers.
Trey McNickle scored
one point for the Purple
and Gold, while earning game-highs of seven
assists, four steals and
two rejections.
Mabe led the Rebels
with 13 points, along
with six boards and three
assists. Jared Burdette
tallied 12 points, all from
beyond the arc, while
Brayden Hammond
claimed seven points and
seven rebounds, while
leading the SGHS defense
with two steals and a
rejection. Kyle Northup
was next with six points,
followed by Layne Ours
with ﬁve and Andrew
Small with two.
Both squads return to
action on Tuesday, with
Southern at Trimble,
and South Gallia hosting
Wahama.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

percent) and SPHS was
10-of-13 (76.9 percent).
The hosts won the
rebounding battle by a
28-to-19 count, including 9-to-7 on the the
offensive end. GAHS
had 15 turnovers, ﬁve
more than South Point.
The Blue and White
ﬁnished with 14 assists,
ﬁve steals and a trio of
blocked shots, while the
Lady Pointers combined
for 18 assists and nine
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports
Gallia Academy junior Maddy Petro (5) tries a two-pointer in steals.
Petro led the Blue
between a trio of Lady Pointers, during the Blue Angels’ six-point
Angels with a doublesetback on Thursday in Centenary, Ohio.
double of 25 points
and 12 rebounds, to go
For the game, the
GAHS made it a
Blue Angels hit 21-of-49 with two steals and two
one-possession game
(42.9 percent) ﬁeld goal blocks on the defensive
ﬁve times in the fourth
attempts, including 4-of- end. Barnes contribquarter, and trailed by
just two points, at 56-54, 12 (33.3 percent) three- uted 12 points and ﬁve
point tries, while South assists to the GAHS
with 40 seconds left.
Point was 20-of-47 (42.6 cause, Koren Truance
South Point sealed the
added eight markers,
win at the line, however, percent) from the ﬁeld,
while Regan Wilcoxon
capping off the 60-54 tri- and 10-of-21 (47.6 perchipped in with four
cent) from deep. At the
umph by making 4-of-4
points. Rounding out
foul shots in the ﬁnal 30 foul line, Gallia Acadthe hosts’ tally were
emy was 8-of-9 (88.9
seconds.

From page 1B

ﬁve markers. Emma
Henry completed the
WHS tally with two
points.
River Valley returns to
action Monday when it
travels to Gallia Academy for a non-conference
matchup at 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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

Belpre blitzes Lady Falcons, 55-28
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

BELPRE, Ohio — All kinds
of trouble on this road trip.
The Wahama girls basketball
team mustered only six points
in the ﬁrst half, while Kyna
Waderker became the latest
Belpre player to reach 1,000
career points on Thursday
night during a 55-28 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
victory in Washington County.
The visiting Lady Falcons
(5-5, 5-4 TVC Hocking) never
led as Kyanna Ray hit a trio of
3-pointers for BHS as part of
a 14-4 ﬁrst quarter surge, then
the Lady Golden Eagles went
on a 7-2 spurt in the second
frame while claiming a 21-6
intermission edge.
WHS — which managed
only two ﬁeld goals and two
free throws in the ﬁrst half —
fared somewhat better after
the break, but still never managed to win either of the ﬁnal
two quarters.
The Orange and Black

Hannah Rose led the Lady
Falcons with 13 points, followed by Emma Gibbs with 10
points and Amber Wolfe with
three markers. Mikie Lieving
completed the visiting tally
with two points.
BHS sank 21 total ﬁeld
goals — including a half-dozen
3-pointers — while also netting 7-of-12 charity tosses for
58 percent.
Waderker led the Lady
Golden Eagles with a gamehigh 18 points, followed by
Halee Williams with 15 points
and Ray with a dozen markers. Curstin Gifﬁn and Kaitlen
Bryan Walters|OVP Sports Bush completed the winning
Wahama junior Victoria VanMatre, right, looks to make a pass from the corner tally with six and four points,
respectively.
during a Dec. 5, 2019, girls basketball contest against Belpre in Mason, W.Va.
Wahama traveled to Racine
back on Dec. 5, 2019. The Red on Saturday for a TVC Hockreceived 11 points from
ing matchup against Southern
Waderker during a 21-10 push and White have also dropped
at 2 p.m. The Lady Falcons are
two consecutive decisions
in the third canto for a 42-16
back on the hardwood Tuesday
overall.
lead, then ended regulation
Wahama made 11 total ﬁeld when they head to Buffalo for a
with a 13-12 run to close out
non-conference game at 7 p.m.
goals — including four trifecthe 27-point outcome.
tas — and also went 2-of-4
Belpre salvaged a season
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446at the free throw line for 50
split after dropping a 48-45
2342, ext. 2101.
percent.
overtime decision at WHS

Ironton avenges Blue Devils, 56-46
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.
com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— Things looked good
on the outside, but the
inside ended up being a
little rotten.
Visiting Ironton used
a 37-12 surge over the
middle frames and
ultimately cruised to a
56-46 victory over the
Gallia Academy boys
basketball team on Friday night in an Ohio
Valley Conference contest in Gallia County.
The host Blue Devils
(5-8, 2-6 OVC) started

well as Isaac Clary and
Logan Blouir poured in
ﬁve points apiece during a 12-8 ﬁrst quarter
run, but the Fighting
Tigers (6-5, 5-3) rallied
with four trifectas as
part of a 21-8 second
period charge that gave
the Orange and Black
a 29-20 intermission
advantage.
IHS all but slammed
the door shut on the
outcome with a 16-4
surge in the third stanza, giving the guests a
sizable 45-24 lead entering the fourth.
The Blue and White
nearly doubled their

offensive output in the
fourth canto with a
22-11 run, but still ultimately ended up falling
by double digits.
Ironton was also able
to avenge an earlier setback to GAHS following
a 62-48 decision back on
Dec. 27, 2019, at IHS.
Gallia Academy made
18 total ﬁeld goals —
including ﬁve 3-pointers — while also sinking 5-of-9 free throw
attempts for 56 percent.
Blouir led the hosts
with 13 points, followed
by Clary with 12 points
and Reece Thomas with
eight markers. Zane

Loveday and Damon
Cremeens were next
with respective efforts
of ﬁve and four points,
while Ben Cox and Cooper Davis completed
things with three points
and one point.
The Fighting Tigers
made 21 total ﬁeld
goals — including seven
trifectas — and also
netted 7-of-13 charity
tosses for 54 percent.
Trent Hacker paced
IHS with a game-high
15 points, followed by
Noah Davidson with
14 points and Brayden
Easterling with seven
markers. Jordan Grizzle

and Reid Carrico
chipped in six points
apiece as well.
Gage Salyers was next
with ﬁve points, while
Collin Freeman and
Landen Wilson completed the winning score
with respective efforts
of two points and one
point.
Gallia Academy traveled to River Valley
on Saturday night and
returns to the hardwood
Tuesday when it travels
to Coal Grove for an
OVC matchup at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Spartans fend off River Valley, 50-36
By Bryan Walters

much in thick of things
early on as the leagueleading Spartans (11-2,
6-0) mustered a slim
BIDWELL, Ohio —
10-8 edge through one
They couldn’t ﬁnish
quarter of play, but the
what they started.
The River Valley boys Red and Black had six
players contribute points
basketball team kept
things competitive in the during a pivotal 15-6
second quarter push that
ﬁrst part of each half,
extended the halftime
but visiting Alexander
ultimately combined for lead out to 25-14.
Brandon Call poured
a 28-11 run in the second
and fourth frames Friday in 11 points for RVHS
night en route to a 50-36 as part of a 17-12 third
quarter surge that
victory in a Tri-Valley
trimmed the deﬁcit
Conference Ohio Dividown to 37-31, but the
sion matchup in Gallia
Silver and Black were
County.
The host Raiders (4-9, never able to get closer
1-5 TVC Ohio) were very than two possessions the

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Raiders

Preslee Reed and Kaylie
Clark with three and two
points respectively.
Carey paced the
guests with 23 points,
18 of which came from
long range. Whitt had 16
points and six rebounds
in the win, Sarah Roach
added six points, while
Maddy Khounlavong
scored ﬁve points,
grabbed six rebounds
and recorded a gamehigh nine assists. Kimrie
Staley and Diamond
Crawley rounded out the
Lady Pointer total with
four and three points
respectively.
Whitt and Khounlavong led the Blue and
Gold on defense with
three steals apiece.
The Blue Angels will
be back on their home
court on Monday against
River Valley.

rest of the way.
AHS converted 7-of11 free throw attempts
down the stretch during a 13-5 run to end
regulation, allowing the
guests to complete the
14-point outcome.
The Raiders outrebounded Alexander
by a 33-28 overall
margin, but the guests
claimed an 8-7 edge on
the offensive boards.
The Raiders also committed 22 of the 34
turnovers in the contest.
River Valley made
15 total ﬁeld goals —
including four trifectas

— and also went 2-of-3
at the free throw line
for 67 percent.
Call paced the hosts
with a game-high 20
points, followed by
Chase Caldwell with
seven points and Jordan Lambert with six
markers. Mason Rhodes
completed the scoring
with three points.
The Spartans netted
18 total ﬁeld goals —
including a quintet of
3-pointers — while also
making 9-of-13 charity
tosses for 69 percent.
Kyler D’Augustino led
AHS with 16 points,
followed by Caleb

Terry with 10 points
and Kaleb Easley with
nine markers. J.K.
Kearns was next with
eight points, while
Trey Schaller and Luke
Chapman respectively
completed the winning
tally with two points
and one point.
River Valley hosted
Gallia Academy on Saturday night and returns
to action Tuesday when
it travels to Point Pleasant for a non-conference contest with Point
Pleasant at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lady Eagles breeze past Miller, 48-35

Lady Tornadoes
topple South
Gallia, 53-24

By Alex Hawley

Falcons to just two
points on 1-of-5 from
the ﬁeld in the second
quarter, all while pourTUPPERS PLAINS,
ing in 15 points for a
Ohio — The middle
quarters made all the dif- 23-13 halftime advantage.
ference.
The Lady Eagles
The Eastern girls baswent on a 20-to-5 run
ketball team outscored
in the third quarter, hitTri-Valley Conference
ting 8-of-15 ﬁeld goal
Hocking Division guest
attempts, including 4-ofMiller 35-to-7 in the
second and third periods 6 three-point tries.
Leading 43-18 headed
combined on Thursday
at ‘The Nest’, leading the into the fourth, EHS
put it in cruise control,
hosts to 48-35 victory.
The Lady Eagles (5-9, being outscored 17-to-5
in the ﬁnal eight min3-7 TVC Hocking) —
utes of the 48-35 win.
who dropped a 61-50
For the game, Eastdecision at Miller on
ern shot 18-of-47 (38.3
Dec. 5 — fell behind
percent) from the ﬁeld,
11-8 eight minutes into
including 8-of-14 (57.1
Thursday’s game.
Eastern held the Lady percent) from beyond

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — Snapping skids and gaining
revenge.
The Southern girls basketball team — which
dropped a 50-39 decision at South Gallia on Dec. 5
— emphatically ended its ﬁve-game skid on Thursday in Meigs County, defeating those same Lady
Rebels by a 53-24 count.
Southern (3-11, 1-9 TVC Hocking) — also snapping a 26-game skid in league play —led 13-3
eight minutes in, and used a 15-to-7 second quarter for a 28-10 halftime lead.
South Gallia (7-9, 2-8) — which was coming
off its second-largest victory of the season — had
its best quarter of the night in the third, scoring
11 points. The Purple and Gold, however, poured
in 18 in the stanza and led 46-21 headed into the
ﬁnale.
Southern sealed the victory on defense, closing
the 53-24 win with a 7-to-3 run.
The Lady Tornadoes grabbed a 46-to-30
rebounding advantage, including 14-to-13 on the
offensive end.
Southern was 21-of-49 (42.9 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 0-of-6 from deep, while South
Gallia shot 9-of-52 (17.3 percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 0-of-17 from beyond the arc. SHS made
11-of-17 (64.7 percent) free throws in the win,
while SGHS was 6-of-14 (42.9 percent) from the
stripe.
The Lady Tornadoes were led by Kayla Evans
with 18 points. Baylee Wolfe was next with 14
points, followed by Jordan Hardwick with 12.
Phoenix Cleland scored ﬁve points in the triumph,
while Shelby Cleland and Ella Cooper claimed two
apiece.
SGHS was led by Jessie Rutt and Christine
Grifﬁth with six points apiece. Amaya Howell
claimed ﬁve points for the guests, Kiley Stapleton
added three, while Makayla Waugh and Ryleigh
Halley both scored two.
On Saturday, the Lady Rebels host Eastern, and
the Lady Tornadoes welcome Wahama. Both teams
will be back in action on Thursday, with Trimble
at South Gallia, and Wellston at Southern.

SANTA CLARA, Calif.
(AP) — The San Francisco 49ers are one win
away from accomplishing a turnaround that’s
been done only once
before in the Super Bowl
era.
With a victory in the
NFC championship
game at home on Sunday
against the Green Bay
Packers, the Niners will
become the second team
in NFL history to make
the Super Bowl a year
after losing at least 12
games.
Only the St. Louis
Rams have done it,
going from 4-12 in 1998
to Super Bowl champs
one year later thanks in
part of an injury to Trent
Green that cleared the
way for Kurt Warner to
take over at quarterback.
The 49ers (14-3) also
can credit an injury to
their quarterback for
part of their turnaround;
the team went only 4-12
last season after Jimmy
Garoppolo went down
with a season-ending
knee injury in Week 3.
The silver lining to
that injury was the No. 2
overall pick in the draft,
which led to the addition

Lady Marauders
fall to Nelsonville
-York, 54-36
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Tough to bounce
back when you stumble
out of the gate.
The Meigs girls basketball team was down
by a baker’s dozen eight
minutes into Thursday’s
Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Division game
inside Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium, where
the Lady Marauders fell
to visiting NelsonvilleYork by a 54-36 tally.
Meigs (4-12, 2-6 TVC
Ohio) tallied just two
points in the opening
stanza, with the Lady
Buckeyes (9-3, 5-1)
coming up with 15.
Both sides scored 17 in
the second period, giving the guests a 32-19
halftime edge.
The hosts got two
points back with a
12-to-10 third quarter,
but Nelsonville-York
closed the 54-36 victory with a 12-to-5 run,
holding Meigs without
a ﬁeld goal in the ﬁnal
stanza.
Following the contest,
ﬁrst-year MHS head
coach Heath Hudson
gave credit to the Lady
Buckeyes, and commended his team for
ﬁghting back after the
slow start.
“Hats off to Nelsonville-York,” Hudson said.
“When they are having
trouble outside, they go
inside, when you shut
down their inside, they
go outside to shoot. I’m
proud of our girls for
the way they handled
themselves. We dug a
hole in the ﬁrst quarter,
and we scratched and
clawed all game to get

back out of it.
“We played them even
in the second quarter, we won the third
quarter, and then our
shooting went ice cold
in the fourth quarter.
We had more even team
scoring this game, with
Bre Lilly hitting some
threes, and Rylee Lisle
getting some much
needed rebounds.”
The Lady Marauders
— who made 12 ﬁeld
goals, including four
triples — went 8-of-11
(72.7 percent) from the
free throw line, where
NYHS was 4-of-8 (50
percent).
Meigs was led by Mallory Hawley with 11
points on ﬁve ﬁeld goals
and a free throw. Lilly
hit a trio of three-pointers for nine points in
the setback, while Lisle
came up with six points.
Olivia Haggy and Hannah Durst scored four
points each for MHS,
while Jerrica Smith tallied two.
Leading the Lady
Buckeyes, Mackenzie
Hurd and Grace Sinnott
scored 16 and 13 points
respectively. Joscelyn
Heller was next with
seven points, followed
by Haley Hurd with six,
Cayleigh Dupler with
ﬁve, Ashleigh Cantrell
with four and Alivia
Speelman with three.
The Orange and
Brown also defeated
Meigs on Dec. 12 in
Nelsonville, by a 56-34
count.
The Maroon and Gold
will be back home on
Thursday against Alexander.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

the arc. Meanwhile,
Miller made 11-of-38
(28.9 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, including 2-of13 (15.4 percent) threepoint attempts. At the
foul line, EHS was 4-of4, and the guests were
9-of-14 (64.3 percent).
The Lady Eagles committed 21 turnovers in
the win, ﬁve more than
MHS.
Eastern was led by
freshman Jennifer
Parker with 21 points,
15 of which came from
beyond the arc. Olivia
Barber was next with
nine points, followed by
Kennadi Rockhold with
six. Sydney Reynolds
and Juli Durst tallied
four points apiece in the

win, while Erica Durst
and Whitney Durst both
scored two.
Ashley Spencer led
the Lady Falcons with
12 points, all of which
came in the ﬁnal quarter and half of which
came from beyond
the arc. Haille Joseph
scored 10 points for the
guests, Josie Crabtree
added six, while Askya
McFann came up with
four and Emma Joseph
chipped in with three.
After Saturday’s trip
to South Gallia, Eastern
will be back at home
against Meigs on Monday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

49ers, Packers look to go from losing seasons to Super Bowl

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

By Alex Hawley

Sunday, January 19, 2020 3B

of defensive end Nick
Bosa, who helped transform the defense into
one of the league’s best.
“Things have a way
of working out,” Garoppolo said. “I always told
myself it was a blessing
in disguise, the ACL and
everything, and yeah, we
got Bosa out of it. That’s
a pretty good trade-off,
I guess. Things have a
way of working out, I
guess. This ride is crazy.
You’ve just got to roll
with the punches.”
The Packers (14-3)
have also had an impressive turnaround after
slumping to a 6-9-1
record last season that
led to the ﬁring of longtime coach Mike McCarthy.
Matt LaFleur came
in and tinkered with
the offense, and general manager Brian
Gutekunst brought in
key additions such as
pass-rushing duo Preston Smith and Za’Darius
Smith, who combined
for 25 1/2 sacks on the
season.
There have also been
some lower-proﬁle pickups such as Tyler Ervin,
Jared Veldheer and Mar-

cedes Lewis that have
helped.
“I think he’s done a
great job. I think he
deserves a lot of credit,
him and his staff,” quarterback Aaron Rodgers said of Gutekunst.
“There’s been a lot of
great pickups, but I think
I said this at my locker
a few weeks ago, the
big-name ones have been
fantastic, but it’s kind of
the other ones that have
been the glue pieces, I
feel like.”
Rematch
These teams played
earlier this season in
Week 12 in what turned
out to be a lopsided
game. Rodgers lost a
fumble on Green Bay’s
ﬁrst possession, setting
up a 2-yard TD drive
that gave San Francisco
the lead. The Niners
then broke it open with
long TD passes to Deebo
Samuel late in the second quarter and George
Kittle in the third quarter for a 37-8 win. Rodgers had the worst day
of his career, averaging
3.2 yards per attempt
and getting sacked ﬁve
times. Niners coach Kyle

SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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Shanahan has a message
for anyone on his team
feeling overconﬁdent.
“Don’t be that stupid
because that’s not real,”
he said. “This is about
Sunday’s game. I can
give a thousand stories
of things like that, playing games in my history
I’ve been a part of.”
There have been
23 times in the Super
Bowl era, excluding one
replacement player game
in 1987, that a team lost
a regular-season game
by at least 28 points to a
team it met again in the
playoffs. In nine of those
cases, the team that got
blown out earlier in the
season came back to win
in the playoffs.
Rich history
These two franchises
that have combined for
nine Super Bowl titles
have a rich history when
it comes to the playoffs.
This will be their eighth
meeting in the past 25
postseasons, three more
than any other rivalry.
In fact, the only other
matchup to occur more
often is Cowboys-Rams,
which happened nine
times.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 19

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�SPORTS

4B Sunday, January 19, 2020

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lady Bison surge past Point, 47-25
By Bryan Walters

ket with 1:18 remaining
allowed Point Pleasant
to close back to within
BUFFALO, W.Va. — A 12-10, but it would also
tale of two halves … with serve as the last points
for the guests over the
the latter starting a bit
next 6-plus minutes.
early.
Darnley capped a 4-0
Host Buffalo made an
run over the ﬁnal 58
11-0 surge over a 6:21
span between the second seconds, allowing BHS
and third periods, which to take its largest lead of
the half at 16-10.
ultimately provided the
The Lady Knights
spark that led resulted in
committed nine of the
a 47-25 victory over the
Point Pleasant girls bas- 19 turnovers in the ﬁrst
ketball team on Thursday half, but also came up
night in a non-conference empty on all 11 of their
3-point attempts in the
matchup at The Barn in
ﬁrst 16 minutes. BufPutnam County.
falo also held a 17-11
Both teams battled
advantage in rebounds
through three ties and
at the break, including a
four lead changes in the
opening frame, with the 6-3 edge on the offensive
glass.
visiting Lady Knights
The Lady Bison reeled
(1-11) building a pair of
off the ﬁrst seven points
small leads in the ﬁrst
of the third stanza
four minutes of play.
The Lady Bison (7-3), before Tayah Fetty ended
Point’s scoring drought
however, overcame a
9-turnover effort by scor- with a basket at the 2:56
ing the ﬁnal three points mark, making it a 23-12
contest.
of initial frame, giving
Lillian Wyant capped
the Blue and Gold a slim
a 7-4 run with an old7-5 edge through one
fashioned 3-point play
complete.
Brooke Warner scored with just three second
left, giving BHS a comon a putback with 6:16
fortable 30-16 cushion
remaining in the half,
entering the ﬁnale.
allowing PPHS to knot
The guests were never
things up at seven. The
Red and Black were also closer as Joelene Lindsey
capped a 17-7 run by hitnever closer the rest of
ting two free throws with
the way.
32 seconds left, allowing
Abby Darnley conBuffalo to take its largverted a putback with
4:31 left for a permanent est lead of the game at
lead at 9-7, plus sparked 47-23. Fetty converted
a 5-1 spurt over the next a layup just before the
buzzer to wrap up the
3-plus minutes.
22-point outcome.
Morgan Miller’s bas-

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

including a 1-of-16 effort
from behind the arc for
six percent. PPHS was
also 6-of-17 at the free
throw line for 35 percent.
Warner led the guests
with 10 points, followed
by Fetty and Miller
with six markers apiece.
Tristan Wilson completed the scoring with three
points and added a teambest seven rebounds.
Warner also hauled in six
caroms.
The hosts shot 52 percent from the ﬁeld in the
second half and ﬁnished
the game 18-of-43 overall
for 42 percent, including
misses on all four of their
attempts from behind the
arc. BHS also went 11-of16 at the charity stripe
for 69 percent.
Darnley paced Buffalo
with a double-double
effort of 18 points and
12 rebounds, followed
by Chloe Hale with nine
points and Kelsey Templeton with six markers.
Wyant chipped in
ﬁve points and Haleigh
Rhodes added three
points, while Kaylee
Bowling and Hailey
Williams completed the
winning tally with two
markers each.
Point Pleasant returns
to
action Saturday,
Bryan Walters|OVP Sports
Point Pleasant sophomore Baylie Rickard, middle, has the ball stripped away by Buffalo defender Jan. 25, when it hosts
Baylee Hudnall, left, during the first half of Thursday night’s girls basketball contest in Buffalo, W.Va. Symmes Valley in a nonconference contest at 2
p.m.
turnovers apiece.
BHS on the offensive
The Lady Bison
The Lady Knights
glass by an 11-10 marclaimed a 32-24 advanBryan Walters can be reached at
gin. Both teams also ﬁn- netted 9-of-43 ﬁeld goal
tage in rebounding, but
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
attempts for 21 percent,
ished the night with 17
the guests edged out

Golden Bears upend Rio women
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

BECKLEY, W.Va. —
The University of Rio
Grande had an opportunity to forge a tie with
West Virginia UniversityTech for the best record
in the River States Conference East Division, as
well as the best record
in the league overall.
Unfortunately, though,
some serious offensive
damage over the middle
two quarters allowed
the Golden Bears to
grab a stranglehold on
the inside track toward
a division title and conference regular season
championship, while
also buckling themselves
into the driver’s seat in
regard to both.
Rio Grande sliced a
21-point third quarter
deﬁcit down to just
six twice in the ﬁnal
three minutes, but Tech
weathered the RedStorm
comeback bid en route
to an eventual 102-89
win, Thursday night,
at the Beckley-Raleigh
County Convention
Center.
WVU-Tech improved
to 14-6 overall and 7-0
in conference play with
the win - its eight consecutive victory and
third straight triumph
over Rio in the all-time
series between the two
schools.
The RedStorm, who
lost for the second time
in three outings on the
heels of a six-game winning streak, slipped to
12-8 overall and 5-2 in
the RSC - two full games
behind the Golden Bears
for the RSC East lead
and the league’s top
record.
The team with the
best regular season conference record earns one
of the RSC’s two bids
to the NAIA Division II
National Championship

within six, 92-86, after
a bucket by Woods with
1:43 left.
But that’s as close as
the rally would get.
WVU Tech went
10-for-10 at the free
throw line in the ﬁnal
two minutes - including
a 6-for-6 showing by Pinnock-Branford - to fuel
a game-ending 10-3 run
which sealed the win.
Pinnock-Branford
scored a career-high 23
points to lead the Golden Bears in the winning
effort. She also ﬁnished
with eight rebounds and
seven assists.
Brittney Justice added
20 points for Tech, while
Whittney Justice scored
16 points, Alexandria
Gray had 15 and Ball ﬁnished with 12. Whittney
Justice and Ball shared
game-high honors with
nine rebounds and Gray
tallied a game-high ﬁve
steals.
Woods had a careerhigh 31 points and ﬁve
assists in a losing cause
for Rio Grande - her
second career-best scoring performance in the
club’s last two games.
Harper and junior
Chyna Chambers
(Columbus, OH) had
15 points each for the
RedStorm, while senior
Sydney Holden (Wheelersburg, OH) ﬁnished
with 10 points. Harper
Courtesy photo had a team-high seven
Rio Grande’s Lexi Woods puts up a shot over WVU Tech’s Alexandria Gray during the second half of Thursday night’s River State rebounds, while ChamConference matchup at the Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center. Woods scored a career-high 31 points, but the RedStorm bers also seven assists,
dropped a 102-89 decision to the Golden Bears.
four steals and a pair of
blocked shots.
Rio Grande returns
Branford jumper with
ued to pull away in the
the opening quarter,
Tournament. WVUto action next Tuesday
9:15 left to play in the
third period, taking a
Tech is the league’s lone but the Golden Bears
when it closes out a
21-point cushion, 75-54, contest before Rio
responded with a 28-8
unbeaten squad, while
Grande began to mount four-game road trip at
after a pair of Brianna
run over the next 10
Rio and West Division
Asbury University.
a furious comeback
Ball free throws with
minutes for a 43-28
leader Midway UniverTipoff is set for 5:30
attempt.
3:05 remaining in the
sity have two conference lead of their own after
The RedStorm closed p.m. at the Luce Activia three-pointer by Kath- quarter.
losses each.
the gap to 90-84 follow- ties Center in Wilmore,
The Golden Bears,
Rio Grande enjoyed a ylee Pinnock-Branford
ing a pair of free throws Ky.
who scored 63 of their
with 3:27 left before
20-15 lead following a
by sophomore Avery
102 points in the midconventional three-point halftime.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Harper (Seaman, OH)
Tech ﬁnished the half dle two stanzas, still
play by freshman Lexi
Information Director at the
enjoyed a 20-point edge, with 2:45 remaining and University of Rio Grande.
with a 14-point advanWoods (Waverly, OH)
again found themselves
tage, 53-39, and contin- 86-66, after a Pinnockwith 2:26 remaining in

�COMICS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

BLONDIE

Sunday, January 19, 2020 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

6B Sunday, January 19, 2020

WVU Tech outlasts RedStorm
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

BECKLEY, W.Va. —
Sophomore standout
Gunner Short was back
in the lineup for the University of Rio Grande
men’s basketball team
on Thursday night, but
his return - and subsequent performance
- were overshadowed by
a Junior and two freshmen.
West Virginia University-Tech’s Junior Arrey
poured in a career-high
35 points, while the
freshman duo of Andrew
Work and Darrin Martin
combined for 35 points
of their own, to fuel
the Golden Bears in a
come-from-behind 84-79
victory over the RedStorm in River States
Conference action at the
Beckley-Raleigh County
Convention Center.
Tech, which won for
a third straight and the
six straight time against
Rio, improved to 11-6
overall and 6-1 in conference play.
The RedStorm fell
to 9-12 overall and 2-5
in league play with the
loss.
Arrey ﬁnished 15-for17 from the ﬂoor, while
also ﬁnishing with a
team-high six rebounds.
He also had a game-high
ﬁve assists and four
steals, while surpassing
the 1,000-point mark
for his career in the
process.
Work equaled a careerhigh with 18 points in
the winning effort, while
Martin scored 10 of his
17 points after halftime.
Short, playing for the

ﬁrst time since suffering a knee injury during
the second half of a win
at Brescia University
last Thursday, paced a
quartet of double-digit
scored for Rio Grande
by equaling his careerhigh of 31 points. The
Catlettsburg, Ky. product went 10-for-16 overall, 4-for-5 from threepoint range and 7-for-11
at the free throw line.
The contest was a
back-and-forth affair for
most of the night, producing 12 ties and 12
lead changes.
Rio Grande led by as
many as seven points,
30-23, with just under
9-1/2 minutes left in the
opening half before settling for a 42-39 advantage at the intermission.
The RedStorm shot 57
percent (16-for-28) in
the opening 20 minutes.
WVU-Tech, which
played without Tamon
Scruggs - its secondleading scorer and top
rebounder - eventually
took the lead for good
when Arrey snapped
the game’s ﬁnal tie with
a layup that gave the
Golden Bears a 70-68
cushion with 6:46 left
to play.
Rio Grande sliced the
deﬁcit in half just under
a minute-and-a-half later
when Short connected
on one of two free
throw chances with 5:19
remaining, but Tech
responded with an 11-3
run to take its largest
lead of the night, 81-72,
following a three-pointer
by Dominik King with
1:39 remaining.
King’s three-pointer
was the Golden Bears’

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

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

only successful attempt
from beyond the arc in
the game.
Short drained consecutive three-pointers
to draw Rio as close as
81-78 with 53.5 seconds
left, but Tech’s Juvante’
Hayes went 3-for-4 at
the free throw line in
the ﬁnal 24.6 seconds to
settle the issue once and
for all.
The Golden Bears
shot 56.7 percent in the
second half (17-for-30)
and 52.5% for the game
(32-for-61), while being
credited with only three
turnovers.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
at an even 50 percent
from the ﬂoor (26-for52) and outrebounded
its host, 39-29. Nine of
the team’s 14 turnovers
came in the second half.
In addition to Short’s
offensive showing, the
RedStorm got 15 points
and a game-high 10
rebounds from freshman
Shiloah Blevins (South
Webster, OH).
Senior Greg Wallace
(Montego Bay, Jamaica)
added 11 points and
eight rebounds in a losing cause, while fellow
senior Hadith Tiggs
(Mayﬁeld Heights, OH)
had 10 points - all in the
second half - and a teambest four assists.
Rio Grande is scheduled to return to action
next Tuesday when it
completes a four-game
road swing at Asbury
University in Wilmore,
Ky. Tipoff is set for 7:30
p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OH-70168607

www.markporterauto.com

By Bryan Walters

building a 30-23 halftime
advantage.
Bailey Coleman scored
ﬁve points as part of a
VAN, W.Va. — They
12-all third quarter push
kept pace for three perithat resulted in HHS
ods, but the Lady Cats
ultimately ran out of gas. entering the ﬁnale faced
with a 42-35 deﬁcit.
Host Van used a 16-4
The Blue and White
fourth quarter surge to
mustered only one ﬁeld
pull away late Thursday
night during a 58-39 vic- and a single free throw
down the stretch, while
tory over the Hannan
girls basketball team in a Karlie Lafauci scored 10
non-conference matchup of Van’s 16 points while
closing out the 19-point
in Boone County.
outcome.
The Lady Bulldogs
The Lady Cats — who
(7-3) received seven
had a 2-game winning
points from Kensley
streak snapped — made
White as part of a 16-11
ﬁrst quarter run, but the 14 total ﬁeld goals, with
three of those coming
visiting Lady Wildcats
from behind the arc. The
(3-6) managed to keep
guests were also 8-of-20
things a bit more competitive over the next two at the free throw line for
40 percent.
frames.
Coleman led HHS with
Julie Frazier poured
12 points, followed by
in seven points for HHS
Frazier with 10 points
in the second stanza,
and Halie Johnson with
but VHS eventually won
six markers. Madison
the quarter by a slim
14-12 margin en route to Plantz and Rachel Ellis

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Amy Carter

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

MIAMI (AP) — The
NBA no longer expects
the league’s board of
governors to vote in
April on whether to
make signiﬁcant changes
to the league’s schedule
in time for the 75th
anniversary season in
2021-22.
The changes remain
a real possibility. The
new twist, as detailed in
a memo the NBA sent
to teams Friday, is that
much of the feedback
the league received on
the ideas for change sug-

gested that more time is
necessary to implement
them correctly.
In the memo, a copy of
which was obtained by
The Associated Press,
the league told its teams
that it is “now working
to develop a more comprehensive proposal and
plan.” The board will
be updated at the April
meeting and more talks
are expected then, but
barring a major change
no vote will occur.
The league sent a
detailed plan to teams

last month, suggesting changes such as a
78-game regular season,
an in-season tournament for all teams and a
reseeding of the playoffs
when the ﬁeld is cut to
the ﬁnal four clubs.
The reseeding after
two rounds of the playoffs was already a hotbutton issue around the
league, since it raised
the potential for daunting travel for teams
and essentially would
eliminate the tradition of
conference ﬁnals.

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

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EMPLOYMENT

REAL ESTATE

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Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
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Starting Hourly Rate: $11.50
Individuals must be registered on OhioMeansJobs.com
For Applications and Job Description refer to OhioMeansJobs.com and
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Kelli. DeWitt@jfs.ohio.gov
OH-70169282

were next with respective efforts of ﬁve and
four points, while Tonika
Coleman and Makenzie
Simmons completed
things with a point each.
Van netted 22 total
ﬁeld goals — including a
trio of 3-pointers — and
also made 3-of-9 charity
tosses for 33 percent.
Lafauci paced the Lady
Bulldogs with a gamehigh 22 points, followed
by Alyssa Sampson with
11 points and White with
nine markers. Abigail
Sampson, Jazmyn Gibson, Maycee Johner and
Autumn Estep completed
the winning tally with
two points apiece.
Hannan returns to
action on Tuesday as part
of a varsity girls-boys
doubleheader against
visiting Calvary, starting
at 6 p.m.

NBA pushes back plans for
April vote on schedule changes

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

MARK PORTER FORD

OH-70004516

Lady Cats fall at Van, 58-39

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Of NFL’s Final 4 coaches,
Andy Reid is the outlier

MLB whistleblower deserves
applause, not criticism
By Paul Newberry

adviser Jessica Mendoza,
who said Thursday the
pitcher should have
reported his concerns to
When future genMajor League Baseball
erations are documentinstead of going to The
ing baseball history,
Athletic with his blockMike Fiers will surely be
remembered as one of the buster story.
“It didn’t sit well with
game’s most signiﬁcant
me,” Mendoza said
ﬁgures.
during an appearance
Not necessarily for
on ESPN’s “Golic and
what he did on the ﬁeld,
Wingo” show. “Honestly,
though tossing a pair of
it made me sad for the
no-hitters is certainly a
sport that that’s how this
worthy achievement.
all got found out.”
Let’s just hope all his
Then, she dug herself
fellow players give him a
an even deeper hole.
big tip of the cap when
“This wasn’t something
he takes the mound this
MLB naturally investiseason.
After all, Fiers blew the gated,” Mendoza said. “It
came from within. It was
lid off one of the most
nefarious schemes in the a player that was a part of
it, that beneﬁted from it
history of the national
during the regular season
pastime, a scandal that
ranks right up there with when he was a part of
that team. That, when I
the Black Sox and the
ﬁrst heard about it, it hits
Steroids Era.
you like any teammate
There will surely be
would. It’s something that
some who view him as
you don’t do. I totally get
a back-stabbing snitch
telling your future teamfor going public with
mates, helping them win,
revelations that Housletting people know, but
ton cheated its way to a
World Series title in 2017 to go public with it and
call them out and start all
by stealing signs, who
of this, it’s hard to swalwill whisper — or even
say right out loud — that low.”
What a crock.
he violated one of baseIf Fiers hadn’t made his
ball’s cardinal rules by
on-the-record allegations
revealing the secrets of
to a journalist, there’s
the clubhouse.
a very good chance the
We already got a
world never would have
sampling of that line of
known the full extent of
thought from ESPN anathe scam.
lyst and New York Mets

Associated Press

If there’s one thing
that sports leagues and
pretty much any for-proﬁt
business try to avoid, it’s
embarrassing publicity.
We’ll never know how
thorough the investigation would’ve been if
baseball ofﬁcials had
known it was all on the
down low, but history is
ﬁlled with foul deeds that
went largely unpunished
until a whistleblower
bravely went public with
the truth.
Chances are, AJ Hinch,
Jeff Luhnow, Alex Cora
and Carlos Beltrán would
still have jobs.
Instead, all were ousted
from the game after Commissioner Rob Manfred
quickly and thoroughly
investigated the report,
singling them out as
most responsible for a
clandestine video system
that allowed the Astros
to signal to their hitters
what pitches were coming — providing a huge
advantage over the guys
on the mound.
Not surprisingly, there
were players who reacted
negatively to the way
Fiers exposed the Astros’
dirty little secret, though
they didn’t have the same
courage to let their be
names be used.
“Give back your ring
and your World Series
share,” a current Houston
player told Yahoo Sports.

By Barry Wilner

rarely back off. While
Reid has been a bit more
conservative — at least
until Patrick Mahomes
Of the coaches in the
showed up — Shanahan
NFL’s Final Four, Andy
and LaFleur rarely get
Reid is the outlier.
shy with the ball.
Only Kansas City’s
Vrabel has a defensive
coach has been the head
background, having won
man in a Super Bowl.
three Super Bowls as a
Only Reid is close to
linebacker in New Enghaving a Hall of Fameland. Though nobody
worthy resume. Only
who saw him catch
Reid has been around
for a couple of decades. passes, including for a
So, while Tennessee’s touchdown in the 2005
game against Reid and
Mike Vrabel, Green
Bay’s Matt LaFleur and the Eagles, can forget
his hand in the Patriots
San Francisco’s Kyle
Shanahan might look up offense.
That’s hardly the only
to Reid and his career
achievements, they also connection among this
quartet.
recognize that whichThe ties between
ever of them wins the
the Niners and Packers
NFL title will be doing
so for the ﬁrst time as a coaching staffs run deep.
LaFleur worked under
coach.
No, despite his longev- Shanahan on staffs in
Houston, Washington
ity as Eagles and then
Chiefs coach, and his 15 and Atlanta before headtrips to the postseason, ing in his own direction.
Reid has never lifted the LaFleur’s brother, Mike,
is the passing game
Lombardi Trophy.
“Listen, you’ve known coordinator in San Francisco and was blocked
me a long time, I’m
thinking more about the by Shanahan this past
offseason when Matt
players than I’m thinkwanted to hire him as
ing about myself,” Reid
says. “That”s now where offensive coordinator in
Green Bay.
I go — I’m trying to
“It’s always a little bit
get the guys ready, I’m
different just because
going to make sure I’m
of how close you are
ready, then i’m going
to go play. I don’t really with the other person,”
Shanahan says. “I know
look at it that way: It’s
Matt and Mike are as
more a disappointment
for the other teams, they close as any brothers
could be just like most
worked their tails off
people are with siblings,
and fell short.”
but it really doesn’t matWhat Shanahan and
ter. There’s a lot of talk
LaFleur certainly can
to it and stuff, but I
admire about Reid is
mean, there’s no feeling
his forward-thinking
when that game goes
approach on offense.
on, there’s no feelings
Both of them are bred
when you’re studying
in offense, and they

Associated Press

Titans, Chiefs battle for AFC title
for a touchdown — and
he led the Eagles to
ﬁve NFC championship
games during his 14 years
in Philadelphia.
“I have done a few of
these,” Reid said, “and
you know, we try to keep
it as normal as we possibly can as far as the
schedule goes for the
players, so they can get
their work done. One
thing that changes is how
fast the game is. I can tell
you from experience, the
magnitude, every time
you take a step up in the
playoffs — it’s single
elimination.”
Experience is great.
Successful experience is
better, and that is where
Reid falls short. His only
conference title came
during the 2004 season,
when the Eagles lost
the Super Bowl to the
Patriots. And who should
be on the New England
roster that night but a
game-wrecking linebacker
named Vrabel, who even
caught a touchdown pass.
Vrabel may not have
any experience in this
position as a coach, but
has plenty as a player. He
lifted the Lombardi Trophy three times with New
England before ﬁnishing
his career — coincidentally — with two seasons
in Kansas City.
“I spent 14 years in
the National Football
League,” Vrabel said,
“and I don’t even know
how many playoff games,
but those were good
experiences about preparation and really focusing
on what got us to this
point from where we were
at different points in the
season. And then, there’s
also things that I have
to do as a coach to make
sure that we’re ready.”
On offense, that means
pounding away with running back Derrick Henry
and getting just enough
production from Ryan
Tannehill, just as the
Titans did during a backand-forth Week 10 win
over the Chiefs.
On defense, it means
slowing down the aerial
assault of quarterback
Patrick Mahomes and his
ﬂeet of game-changing

playmakers: running back
Damien Williams, tight
end Travis Kelce and
wide receivers Tyreek
Hill and Sammy Watkins.
“I think there is a belief
in one another, ﬁrst and
foremost,” Tannehill said.
“We’ve been through a
lot this season, ups and
downs, and won games
in a lot of different ways.
With that comes a lot of
belief and a lot of conﬁdence in one another.”
The Chiefs have plenty
of conﬁdence in their
own right. They haven’t
lost since that game in
Tennessee, and their
comeback last week gave
them the belief they
can overcome anything.
Their offense is still
shattering records and a
retooled defense under
new coordinator Steve
Spagnuolo has been playing as well as any in the
league.
“I think that with the
Titans, the physicality and determination
they play with is big,”
Mahomes said. “They’re
going to get after it and
ﬁght for every single
yard. Their defense is
going to ﬂy around to the
ball and not give up on
anything. We’re just trying to match that. We’re
going to go out there
and give it everything we
have to come out with a
victory.”
Historic run
Henry already made
history as the ﬁrst player
in the Super Bowl era to
run for at least 180 yards
in three consecutive
games, and nobody has
more yards rushing over
the ﬁrst four postseason
games than his 561. He
also has the three best
games in Titans history
for yards from scrimmage, set the franchise’s
single-game postseason
rushing mark in each of
the past two weeks, and
he even threw a jump
pass for a touchdown in
their 28-12 win in Baltimore.
“We always knew he
was a beast,” Titans safety Kevin Byard said. “I’m
just glad the whole world
knows as well.”

and preparing.
“Everyone cares
about the other person.
I know if we weren’t
in it, I know he’d be
pulling for his brother
just like when I wasn’t
going against my dad
(long-time coach Mike
Shanahan), I was always
pulling for him. But,
I know when you go
against each other, that
stuff doesn’t matter.
Everyone’s got a job
to do and everyone is
pretty competitive and
wants to win, also.”
Matt LaFleur also has
a very tight relationship
with 49ers defensive
coordinator Robert
Saleh. They were roommates as graduate assistants at Central Michigan and have been close
friends since. Saleh
recommended LaFleur
for his ﬁrst NFL job as
a quality control offensive assistant with the
Texans in 2008-09, when
Shanahan was offensive
coordinator.
“I was messing with
him the other day,” LaFleur says. “I asked him
to call me. I shot him
a text message. I said,
‘Hey, would you give me
a call? I have a couple
questions about your
defense.’
“That was the last of
the communication.”
Shanahan also spent a
year as offensive coordinator in Cleveland when
Packers defensive coordinator Mike Pettine
was head coach in 2014.
Shanahan resigned from
that job after one season
and left to take the same
position in Atlanta.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) — Andy Reid rarely
digs into his own past,
preferring to stay in the
moment or focus squarely
on the future. It’s an
approach that has served
him well during a coaching career that might
someday land him in the
Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Yet when his Kansas
City Chiefs faced a seemingly insurmountable hole
in the divisional round of
the playoffs, Reid caught
himself thinking back
almost four decades to his
ﬁnal game as an offensive
lineman at BYU. It was
the Holiday Bowl and
SMU had taken a 45-25
lead in the fourth quarter.
Just about everybody in
Jack Murphy Stadium
that night thought it
was over, only to watch,
stunned, as the Cougars
scored three late touchdowns to win the game.
“That kind of stuck in
there. You had that hope,”
Reid said this week when
asked what gave him conﬁdence Kansas City could
rally to a 51-31 win over
the Texans for a spot in
the AFC championship
game. “You had that hope.
Then it’s the feel of your
team. You’re on the sideline, you’ve been down
there long enough, you
can sense what they’re
thinking, where their
mind is at. These guys
weren’t ﬂinching. Let’s
get it right.”
The Chiefs (13-4) got
everything right the rest
of the way. And the comeback from a 24-0 deﬁcit
propelled them into a
matchup Sunday with
Tennessee (11-7), which
has merely knocked off
the Patriots and topseeded Ravens — on the
road, no less — to reach
the precipice of the Super
Bowl.
It will be the ﬁrst time
coaching this deep in the
playoffs for the Titans’
Mike Vrabel, but it’s certainly familiar territory to
his counterpart. Reid had
the Chiefs in the same
position a year ago, when
they lost in overtime
to New England — the
Patriots won the coin toss
and marched downﬁeld

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            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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          <name>Source</name>
          <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="5147">
              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <text>newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
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      <name>bryan</name>
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    <tag tagId="7">
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    <tag tagId="65">
      <name>tripplett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="62">
      <name>waugh</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
