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of COVI

“Without a vaccine, face coverings
and social distancing are really the
only ammunition you have.”
—Marc Barr, Meigs County Health Commissioner

Meigs County Health Department | 112. E. Memorial Drive, Ste A | Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 | 740-992-6626 | www.meigs-health.com

C_ZZb[fehj��Fec[heo"�E^_e

Issue 124, Volume 74

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 21, 2020 s 50¢

Meigs, Gallia,
Mason report new
COVID-19 cases
By Sarah Hawley
and Kayla Hawthorne

will be advised to selfquarantine for 14 days,”
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com stated Meigs County
khawthorne@aimmediamidwest. Health Department PIO
com
Brody Davis in a news
release. “The Meigs
County Health DepartOHIO VALLEY
ment continues to urge
— Meigs, Gallia and
residents to continue
Mason Counties each
reported four additional to follow federal, state,
and local guidance to
COVID-19 cases since
prevent the spread of
Friday afternoon.
COVID-19.”
The Meigs County
Twelve of the cases
Health Department
reported a total of four in Meigs County have
recovered, with none
new COVID-19 cases
of the 22 requiring hosbetween Saturday and
pitalization as of this
Monday, bringing the
time.
county’s total to 22
The Gallia County
cases (16 conﬁrmed, 6
Health Department
probable) since April,
reported three cases of
including 10 active
COVID-19 on Friday
cases.
evening and one addiThe conﬁrmed case
tional case on Monday.
is a female in the 40
All of the new cases are
to 49-year-old age
conﬁrmed, bringing
range, who is a direct
the county’s total to 29
contact of a conﬁrmed
case reported in Meigs cases (26 conﬁrmed, 3
probable) with 15 being
County on July 16th
and is not hospitalized. active and 13 recovered.
According to the
The ﬁrst probable
Gallia County Health
case is a female in the
Department three indi20 to 29-year-old age
viduals are not contacts
range, who is a direct
of the county’s current
contact of a conﬁrmed
cases and not connected
case in Athens County
and is not hospitalized. to one another. One
The second probable case is a contact from
one of the current cases
case is a male in the
20 to 29-year-old range in Gallia County.
Current case age
who is a direct contact
ranges in Gallia County,
of an Athens County
case and is not hospital- according to the health
department, are as folized.
lows:
The third probable
0-19 — 6 cases (two
cases is a male in the
10 to 19-year-old range new)
20-29 — 2 cases
who is a direct contact
30-39 — 7 cases (one
or a Meigs County case
and is not hospitalized. new)
40-49 — 5 cases (one
Age ranges for the 22
Meigs County cases are new)
50-59 — 5 cases (2
as follows:
hospitalizations)
0-19 — 4 cases (one
60-69 — 2 cases
new probable case)
20-29 — 5 cases (two (2 hospitalizations, 1
death)
new probable case)
70-79 — 2 cases (2
30-39 — 3 cases
40-49 — 3 cases (one hospitalizations)
Editor’s Note: The
new conﬁrmed case)
Ohio Department of
50-59 — 3 cases
Health database is
60-69 — 2 cases
reporting 30 cases in
70-79 — 2 cases
Gallia County, with one
“At this time, we
additional case in the
please ask residents to
refrain from calling the 30-39 age range as of 2
Health Department for p.m. on Monday. The
questions regarding
Gallia County Health
these cases while we
Department statistics
complete our disease
show 29 cases.
investigations and
In Mason County,
notify relevant indithe West Virginia
viduals. The cases and
Department of Health
individuals identiﬁed
See COVID-19 | 4
as contacts of the cases

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 145-966)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Tuesday through Saturday.
Subscription rate is $208 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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All content © 2020 The Daily Sentinel. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any form without
permission from the publisher,
except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

First responders and friends high-five kids as they board the bus to go shop during the 2019 Shop with a Cop event.

File photos

Fundraisers to benefit Shop with a Cop
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — There
may be a little more
than ﬁve months until
Christmas, but area law
enforcement and others
are already preparing for
the annual “Shop with a
Cop” event.
The annual Shop with a
Cop co-ed softball tournament will be held on Aug.
8 and 9 at the Middleport
ball ﬁelds. The adult
tournament will take
place on Aug. 8, with the
teen co-ed tournament on
Aug. 9.
You must be 18 years
of age or younger to
participate in the teen
co-ed tournament. For
both tournaments, there
is a $125 entry fee, with
proceeds going toward
the local Shop with a
Cop progams. Teams are
allowed seven guys and
three girls or eight guys
and four girls, stated one
of the event organizers
Katie Gilkey.
For more information
or to register a team contact Gilkey via Facebook
or drop off information at
the Meigs County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce or Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce.

enforcement ofﬁcers take
area youth shopping with
efforts to brighten their
Christmas season. This
program is an amazing
experience for the children and is very rewarding for those involved
in every fundraising
aspect,” stated a Facebook post from Gilkey.
More than 100 Meigs
County children took
part in the 7th annual
Shop with a Cop event
in December 2019. What
began as a small group
of children shopping
with sheriff’s deputies a
few years ago has grown
to a “Shop with First
Pomeroy Chief of Police Chris Pitchford (then a lieutenant with the Responders and Friends”
Middleport Police Department) is pictured during the 2019 Shop
event made possible by
with a Cop event.
the donations of local
businesses and individuthe Facebook auction
The Pomeroy Police
als, as well as Loyalty is
through donated items,
Department is also conForever fundraisers. More
rather than seeking
ducting a donation drive
than 50 ﬁrst respondto beneﬁt the Shop with a donations from local
ers, family members and
businesses who have
Cop program.
been ﬁnancially impacted friends took part in the
Patrolman Leif Babb
event.
through the COVID-19
stated that the departDonations can also be
pandemic.
ment is accepting donaItems may be dropped made through Loyalty is
tions of items which will
Forever at any Farmers
be auctioned off as part of off from now through
Bank location.
Aug. 31 at the Pomeroy
a Facebook auction with
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Police Department or
the proceeds beneﬁting
Publishing, all rights
by contacting Babb at
the program. Monetary
740-992-6411 or lbabb@ reserved.
donations are also being
villagepomeroy.us.
accepted.
“Through Shop with a Sarah Hawley is the managing
Babb explained that
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
Cop, Meigs County law
his goal is to complete

DeWine: Mask order
may cover ‘a lot more
counties’ this week
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — An Ohio order
requiring masks to be
worn in public may
include “a lot more counties” next week as the
coronavirus continues
to spread in the state,
Gov. Mike DeWIne said
Sunday.
DeWine said on NBC’s
“Meet the Press” that
he is still considering
a statewide mask mandate. On Thursday, the
Republican governor
ordered Ohio residents
in 19 counties, which
include almost 60% of
the state’s population,
to wear a mask in public.
“We’re going the
wrong way. We’re at a
crucial time,” DeWine
said when asked about

the possibility of a
statewide order. “And
so this week, you may
see a lot more counties under that mask
requirement. So we
certainly would not rule
out going statewide.
We’re certainly looking
at that.”
DeWine said health
departments in the
state indicate that the
increase is occurring in
bars, churches and from
people traveling out of
state “but a lot of it,
frankly, is just people in
casual settings, 20, 30,
40, 50 people gathering
together.”
“And so it’s not all
about orders,” he said.
“Orders are important.
See DEWINE | 5

Man arrested
after allegedly
threatening deputies
Suspect had
multiple warrants
for his arrest

that King was the
subject of several warrants for his arrest, she
requested assistance
from other deputies,
with Deputies Clinton
Staff Report
Patterson and Rick
Smith responded to
POMEROY — A man assist.
When deputies arrived
wanted on multiple warrants was taken into cus- at the property, they
reportedly found King in
tody on Saturday after
a camper there. Initially,
allegedly threatening
he refused to communiofﬁcers.
Meigs County Sheriff cate with deputies, but
eventually he allegedly
Keith Wood reports
that on Saturday around attempted to order deputies off the land, saying
10:35 a.m. a call came
he would “send his dog”
into the Meigs County
after the deputies.
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce alleging
When that was unsucthat J.B.King was trescessful, King allegedly
passing on some propsaid he would shoot himerty on Pageville Road.
self if the deputies did
Dep. Brittni Joy
responded to the resiSee DEPUTIES | 8
dence, and recognizing

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

OBITUARIES

TODAY IN HISTORY

JACK ‘JAY’ BOSTICK, JR.
SYRACUSE — Jack
“Jay” Bostick, Jr. passed
away the morning of July
17, 2020, at his residence
in Syracuse, Ohio. He
was born July 8, 1968, in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia, to Jack Bostick and
Polly Bostick.
Jay was preceded in
death by his mother,
Linda “Polly” Bostick;
maternal grandparents,
Floyd “Buster” Cummins
and Addie Adams Cummins; paternal grandmothers, Lizzie Johnson
Wood and Laura “Mutt”
Johnson Circle. And also
by, uncles Paul Bostick,
Howard Bostick, Bobbie
Roy, George Cummins,
Bobby Cummins (an
infant); aunts, Shirley
Cummins (an infant),
Coralee Cummins, Florence Cummins Thornton,
Opal Bostick and Margie
Bostick; special greatnephew, Josiah Doyle;
and several cousins and
friends.
Jay is survived by his
father, Jack Bostick;
brothers, Nick (Kay) Bostick, of Bidwell, Ohio, and
Chris (Sharon) Bostick,
of Hurricane, West Virginia; and sister, Angela
Bostick-Doyle, of Ironton,
Ohio.
Nephews, Brandon
(Emily) Doyle, Brady
Doyle; Nieces, Maddison

Bostick, Cheyenne Doyle,
and Jessica (David)
Elkins; maternal uncles
and aunts, Jackie (Vicki)
Cummins, Sam (Nancy)
Cummins, Russell Cummins, Hazel Roy, Evelyn
Stewart; several greatnephews, cousins and
friends. Paternal uncles
and aunts, Romaine
(Milford) Frederick, Deb
(Lee) Hysell, and Pam
McLaughlin.
Jay enjoyed watching
sports, especially NCAA
March Madness with his
Dad, and his nephews,
Brandon and Brady, and
whatever sport was in
season. He loved the
North Carolina Tarheels.
Jay worked for AEP in
different capacities. His
current job was in the
lab at Kyger Creek Power
Plant. He was his Dad’s
best friend.
Funeral services will
be held on Tuesday, July
21, 2020, at 1 p.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Duke
Holbert ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Visitation
for family and friends will
be held on Monday, July
20, 2020, from 5-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DANIEL (DAN) J. POLCYN
OAK HILL — Daniel
(Dan) J. Polcyn, 68, Oak
Hill (formerly of Gallipolis), passed away Thursday, July 16, 2020 in Ohio
State University Medical
Center, Columbus.
He was the son of the
late Martin and Elsie
(Walker) Polcyn, born
June 17, 1952 in South
Charleston, W.Va. Dan
was a 1970 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School,
Cheshire. He attended
Marshall University,
Huntington, W.Va., where
he was a member of the
Young Thundering Herd
football team following
the 1970 plane crash.
He was a retired
employee of the Goodyear
Tire and Rubber company. Dan also coached
football and track and
ﬁeld at both Kyger Creek
and River Valley High
Schools. He attended
Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, Pomeroy, and St.
Louis Catholic Church,
Gallipolis.
Daniel is survived by
his children: Daniel Polcyn II, Portsmouth; Matt
(Raymond Clark) Polcyn,
Grove City; Paul (Erin)
Polcyn, Bidwell; Nate Polcyn, Oak Hill and Thomas Polcyn, Portsmouth,

and grandchildren:
Stephanie and Madeleine
Polcyn; Tanner Dennison,
Hannah Polcyn; Jennah
Polcyn and Leah Polcyn.
Additionally, he is
survived by three brothers and three sisters: Ed,
John, Robert, Margie
Johnson, Carol Zelechowski, and Virginia
Donnet.
He was preceded in
death by his wife of
forty-ﬁve years, Debra
E. Polcyn (Neal) and by
two sons: Timothy Polcyn
and Adam Polcyn and a
daughter, Rachael Polcyn
Blankenship. He was
also preceded in death
by three brothers, Mike,
Jimmy and Don, and
three sisters, Sally, Rosemary and Phyllis.
In accordance with his
wishes there will be no
visitation or funeral service. Cremation service is
under the direction of the
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, Ohio who
is honored to serve the
Polcyn Family.
Private graveside services will be conducted
in St. Louis Cemetery,
Gallipolis, where he will
be interred next to his
beloved Debra.

In Memory of

Mary Louise Syrus

OH-70196484

Beloved
Mother
Born July 5, 1935
Died July 21, 2007

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631

The Associated Press

LINDA SUE (FRICK) PULLINS
POMEROY — Linda
Sue (Frick) Pullins of
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed
away on July 20, 2020,
after a brave battle with
cancer. Linda was born
and raised on her family farm in Browntown.
Although she was a small
town girl, she traveled
extensively over the USA.
This was a reward for her
hard work in helping her
husband G. W. “Bill” Pullins establish a successful
construction company.
Linda was an excellent
piano player, seamstress,
cake decorator and cook.
She volunteered for Cub
Scouts, PTA, and as a
Sunday School instructor.
More so she was the best
mother, grandmother and
great grandmother anyone could ask for.
Linda is survived by
her loving husband of 64
years, G.W. “Bill” Pullins;
sons, Rodney Pullins, Ste-

Today is Tuesday, July 21, the 203rd day of
2020. There are 163 days left in the year.

ven (Roberta) Pullins and
Kevin (Angie) Pullins;
special granddaughters,
Stephanie Pullins and
Stacy Pullins (who helped
care for her); additional
granddaughters, Sarah
Coffman, Chelsey Pullins
and Emily Pullins. She
also had 12 great grandchildren of which was a
special great grandson,
Dustin Vance. She is also
survived by her sisters,
Jerri (Charles) Ball, Paula
(Carl) Hall, and a brother
Robert “Ed” (Sue) Frick.
Linda was preceded
in death by her parents,
John Paul Frick and Ruby
(Curtis) Frick; brother,
Bill Brown; and beloved
daughter, Lori Ann Pullins, whom she grieved
over since 2009 and is
rejoicing with her in
heaven.
Services will be held
at the convenience of the
family privately.

Today’s Highlight in History
On July 21, 1925, the so-called “Monkey Trial”
ended in Dayton, Tennessee, with John T. Scopes
found guilty of violating state law for teaching
Darwin’s Theory of Evolution. (The conviction
was later overturned on a technicality.)
On this date
In 1796, Scottish poet Robert Burns died in
Dumfries at age 37.
In 1861, during the Civil War, the ﬁrst Battle of
Bull Run was fought at Manassas, Virginia, resulting in a Confederate victory.
In 1944, American forces landed on Guam during World War II, capturing it from the Japanese
some three weeks later. The Democratic National
Convention in Chicago nominated Sen. Harry S.
Truman to be vice president.
In 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong
and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin blasted off from the
moon aboard the ascent stage of the lunar module
for docking with the command module.
In 1980, draft registration began in the United
States for 19- and 20-year-old men.
In 1990, a beneﬁt concert took place in Germany at the site of the fallen Berlin Wall; the concert,
which drew some 200,000 people, was headlined
by Roger Waters, a founder of Pink Floyd. (The
concert ended with the collapse of a mock Berlin
Wall made of styrofoam.)
In 1998, astronaut Alan Shepard died in Monterey, California, at age 74; actor Robert Young
died in Westlake Village, California, at age 91.
In 1999, Navy divers found and recovered the
bodies of John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife, Carolyn,
and sister-in-law, Lauren Bessette (bih-SEHT’), in
the wreckage of Kennedy’s plane in the Atlantic
Ocean off Martha’s Vineyard.
In 2000, Special Counsel John C. Danforth
concluded “with 100 percent certainty” that the
federal government was innocent of wrongdoing
in the siege that killed 80 members of the Branch
Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, in 1993.
In 2009, prosecutors in Cambridge, Massachusetts, dropped a disorderly conduct charge against
prominent Black scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr.,
who was arrested by a white ofﬁcer at his home
near Harvard University after a report of a breakin.
In 2011, the 30-year-old space shuttle program
ended as Atlantis landed at Cape Canaveral, Florida, after the 135th shuttle ﬂight.
In 2008, former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic (RA’-doh-van KA’-ra-jich), one of the
world’s top war crimes fugitives, was arrested
in a Belgrade suburb by Serbian security forces.
(He was sentenced by a U.N. court in 2019 to life
imprisonment after being convicted of genocide,
crimes against humanity and war crimes.)
Ten years ago: A triumphant President Barack
Obama signed into law the most sweeping overhaul of U.S. lending and high ﬁnance rules since
the 1930s.
Five years ago: The Defense Department said
a U.S. airstrike in Syria on July 8, 2015 had killed
Muhsin al-Fadhli, a key ﬁgure in the Khorasan
Group, a dangerous al-Qaida offshoot. Ohio Gov.
John Kasich became the 16th notable Republican
contestant to enter the U.S. 2016 presidential
race. After a nearly decade-long steroids prosecution, Barry Bonds emerged victorious when
federal prosecutors dropped what was left of their
criminal case against the career home runs leader.
One year ago: Clashes involving Hong Kong’s
protest movement escalated violently, with police
launching tear gas at protesters who didn’t disband after a march, and subway riders being
attacked by masked assailants who appeared to
be targeting the pro-democracy demonstrators.
Disney’s photorealistic remake of “The Lion King”
wiped out opening-weekend box ofﬁce records for
the month of July, while “Avengers: Endgame”
crept past Avatar to become the highest-grossing
ﬁlm of all time. As a sellout crowd cheered him
on, Irishman Shane Lowry won the British
Open by six shots at Royal Portrush, a course in
Northern Ireland that had last hosted the Open
in 1951.
Today’s Birthdays: Movie director Norman
Jewison is 94. Actor Leigh Lawson is 77. Singer
Yusuf Islam (also known as Cat Stevens) is 72.
Cartoonist Garry Trudeau is 72. Actor Jamey
Sheridan is 69. Rock singer-musician Eric Bazilian (The Hooters) is 67. Comedian Jon Lovitz is
63. Actor Lance Guest is 60. Actor Matt Mulhern
is 60. Comedian Greg Behrendt is 57. Rock musician Koen Lieckens (K’s Choice) is 54. Soccer
player Brandi Chastain is 52. Rock singer Emerson Hart is 51. Rock-soul singer Michael Fitzpatrick (Fitz and the Tantrums) is 50. Actress Alysia
Reiner is 50. Country singer Paul Brandt is 48.
Christian rock musician Korey Cooper (Skillet)
is 48. Actress Ali Landry is 47. Actor-comedian
Steve Byrne is 46. Rock musician Tato Melgar
(Lukas Nelson &amp; Promise of the Real) is 43.
Actor Justin Bartha is 42. Actor Josh Hartnett
is 42. Contemporary Christian singer Brandon
Heath is 42. Actress Sprague Grayden is 42. Reggae singer Damian Marley is 42. Country singer
Brad Mates (Emerson Drive) is 42.

DEATH NOTICES
ALTIZER
GALLIPOLIS — Donna Jane Altizer, 76, Gallipolis,
died Saturday, July 18, 2020 at Holzer Senior Care
Center, Bidwell, following an extended illness.
According to her wishes, there will be no visitation
or funeral services. Private entombment will be conducted in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, Gallipolis. A Memorial Mass will be held at a later date. The
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis, has been entrusted with the arrangements.
HUSSELL
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Orpha Audrey Hussell, 86, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died July 18, 2020.
Graveside services will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, July 23, 2020 at Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Deal Funeral Home is serving the family.
KLEIN
BIDWELL — Lisa Marie Klein, 34, of Bidwell,
Ohio, died Thursday, July 16, 2020, at Ohio State University Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m., Friday,
July 24, 2020, at Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Burial will follow in the Meigs County
Memory Gardens. Visitation will be held at the funeral
home Friday, from 9 a.m. until time of service.
COBB
PORTLAND, Ohio — Russell Daniel Cobb, 78, of
Portland, Ohio, died July 17, 2020 in Holzer Hospital,
Gallipolis, Ohio, following a brief illness.
There will be no public services at this time.
Arrangements provided by Casto Family Funeral
Homes, Ravenswood, Evans, Mason and New Haven,
W.Va.
VICKERS
MASON, W.Va. — Harry Langley Vickers, 81,
of Mason, W.Va., died July 20, 2020 in the Hershel
“Woody” Williams VA Medical Center, Huntington,
W.Va.
Service will be 1 p.m., Friday, July 24, 2020 at
Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home, Mason. Burial will
follow in the Sunrise Cemetery, Letart, with military
honors provided by VFW Post # 9926 Mason, and
American Legion Post #140 New Haven. Visitation
will be Thursday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
WHITE
GREENUP, Ky. — David Allen White, 60, of Greenup, Ky., and formerly of Gallipolis, passed away, at
4:10 a.m. on Sunday, July 19, 2020 in the Community
Hospice, Ashland, Ky.
A memorial service will be held at 1:00 p.m. on
Thursday, July 23, 2020 in the Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Gallipolis.
STEVENS
INWOOD W.Va. — Adam Michael Stevens, 31, of
Inwood, W.Va., died Thursday, July 16, 2020, at his
home surrounded by family and friends after a long
battle with Brain cancer.
No funeral or memorial service will be held at this
time. A celebration of life will be scheduled at a later
date.
HIGGINBOTHAM
LEON, W.Va. — Vermont Junior Higginbotham, 77,
of Leon, W.Va., died Friday July 17, 2020 at Hubbard
Hospice House in Charleston following a long courageous battle with Alzheimer’s disease.
Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday
July 22, 2020 Raynes Funeral Home, Buffalo. Burial
will follow in Creston Cemetery, Leon. The family will
receive friends from 5-8 p.m. Tuesday July 21, 2020 at
the funeral home.

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

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EDITOR
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shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card Shower

opmental Disabilities, regular monthly board meeting,
4 p.m., administrative ofﬁces, 77 Mill Creek Road.

Robert “Bob” White will be celebrating his 90th
Birthday on July 26, 2020. Cards may be sent to
44107 Carr Road, Coolville, Ohio 45723.

Thursday, July 23

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

Tuesday, July 21

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

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

Road construction, closures
CHESTER — Meigs County Road 36,
Sumner Road, will be closed beginning
Tuesday, July 21, and will remain closed for
approximately two weeks. County forces will be
repairing a slip between State Route 7 and State
Route 248.
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Engineer
Brett A. Boothe, announces Little Bullskin Road
will be closed between Lewis Road and Hannan
Trace Road, beginning Thursday, July 9 - July
24, for culvert replacement, weather permitting.
Local trafﬁc will need to use other County roads
as a detour.
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 19,
Peach Fork Road, slip repair project, is now
complete.
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Engineer, Brett A. Boothe announces C.H.&amp;D. Road
will be closed from Pokepatch Road to Keels
Road, beginning at 9 a.m., Friday, July 10, for
gas line replacement, weather permitting. Local
trafﬁc will need to use other County roads as a
detour.
SALISBURY TWP. — Bailey Run Road will
be closed to through trafﬁc approximately .6 of
a mile from State Route 124 going toward State
Route 143 due to a slip repair.
GALLIPOLIS — Kriner Road (CR-26) will be
closed .5 mile from Neighborhood Road beginning 7 a.m., Monday, May 18 for approximately
75 days for slip repair, weather permitting.
Local trafﬁc will need to use other state and
county roads as a detour.
OLIVE TWP. — Mt. Olive Road in Olive
Township is currently closed due to slip repair
by Olive Township Trustees.
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one
lane of SR 124 will be closed between Old State
Route 338 (Township Road 708) and Portland
Road (County Road 35) for a bridge deck overlay project on the bridge crossing over Groundhog Creek. Temporary trafﬁc signals and a 10
foot width restriction will be in place. Estimated
completion: November 20, 2020
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning June 1, one
lane of SR 7 will be closed between Storys Run
Road (County Road 345) and Leading Creek
Road (County Road 3) for a bridge deck overlay
project on the bridge crossing over Leading
Creek. Temporary trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot
width restriction will be in place. Estimated
completion: November 20, 2020

ODH stresses teens are crucial in fight
New guidance available for parents talking
to young people about prevention

ence symptoms or only
mild ones can unknowingly carry the disease
and pass it to parents,
grandparents, or other
family and friends who
may become seriously
ill.
Taking steps to prevent COVID-19 also
shows appreciation
and offers protection
for essential workers
who provide healthcare and deliver food,
packages, and other
items. Further, reducing the spread of the
pandemic is critical to
prevent hospitals from
becoming overcrowded.
Overcrowded hospitals and overburdened
healthcare workers make
it more difﬁcult to care

for patients in critical
need—a grandparent
suffering from COVID19, an aunt having complications delivering a
baby, a father with chest
pain, or a friend hurt in
a car crash.
“Teens and young
people must do everything in their power to
protect themselves, their
families and friends, and
all Ohioans against this
very real and very serious threat,” Himes said.
“You will save lives, prevent suffering, and help
tame a pandemic that
places all of us at risk.”
Information provided
by the Ohio Department
of Health and the Meigs
County Health Department.

and Your Friends
&gt;[bf�Fhej[Yj�OekhCOLUMBUS — Lance self and Others from
D. Himes, interim direc- COVID-19
M^Wj�Oekh�J[ij�
tor of the Ohio Department of Health (ODH), Results Mean
Ibem�j^[�Ifh[WZ�e\�
is calling on Ohio teens
COVID-19
and young adults to take
:e�_j�\eh�Oekhi[b\�
precautions to protect
and Your Friends
themselves and others
IjWo�IW\[�Wj�j^[�
against the dangers of
Pool/Beach
COVID-19.
The average age of
Himes said it is
people with COVIDessential that young
19 in Ohio has been
people stay home and
steadily decreasing,
away from others if
showing that more and
they are sick, adhere to
more young people are
6-foot social distancing
being exposed, and
and wear facial coverhave become ill. Even
ings when they go out.
those who don’t experiAvoid gathering in
large crowds, huddling
in groups, and sharing
hugs or drinks.
“Young people have
given up a great deal
since this pandemic
ﬁrst hit and are eager
The Meigs County Health Dept. (MCHD) will accept sealed bids
to get back to normal,”
for the sale of a Beverage-Air Refrigerator Model KR48-1AS purHimes said. “I thank
chased new in 2009. This is a stainless steel 48 cubic foot commerthem for their sacriﬁces
cial refrigerator that has been used only in a clean, temperature-conand urge them to create
trolled environment for vaccine storage. The Board of Health (BOH)
a new normal in which
set the minimum bid at $1,200 during its 7/14/20 regular meeting.
they ﬁnd ways to safely
socialize, wear masks,
Complete bids (bidder’s name, phone number and/or email address,
keep a safe distance,
bid amount) should be mailed to:
and look out for one
another.”
MCHD
ODH has prepared
112 E. Memorial Drive Suite A
guidelines for parents
and others for talking
Pomeroy, OH 45769
with young people about
�ddE͗��ĚŵŝŶŝƐƚƌĂƚŽƌ��ŽƵƌƚŶĞǇ�DŝĚŬŝī
COVID-19. The guideand be postmarked by or before Aug. 10, 2020. The bids will be
lines include tips for
opened and evaluated for acceptance of the highest bid during the
preventing the spread
and navigating new
Aug. 11th regular BOH Meeting at 5PM at the MCHD. The sucsocial norms. The Cencessful bidder will be notiﬁed of acceptance of bid on Aug 12th via
ters for Disease Control
phone/email. Payment is expected via cash, check or money order
and Prevention also has
payable to the MCHD. Buyer will be required to remove the item
produced a series of fact
from the MCHD within a week of notiﬁcation of bid award during
sheets for young adults:
MCHD normal business hours (Monday-Friday from 8AM-4PM)
M[Wh�W�9bej^�&lt;WY[�
after making arrangements with the MCHD Administrator.
Covering to Protect You

Submitted story

Invitation to Bid
The Meigs County Health Department

OH-70196208

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

Tuesday, July 21, 2020 3

ONLINE AUCTION
SIGN IN, BID OFTEN, AND BUY!

mydailytribune.com
mydailysentinel.com

OH-70195968

and Click on the
Christmas In July Link

�NEWS/WEATHER

4 Tuesday, July 21, 2020

COVID-19
From page 1

and Human Resources
(DHHR) is reporting
30 cases, which is four
more than what was
reported on Friday.
These cases have not
been conﬁrmed by
the Mason County
Health Department.
There are 19 recovered cases, leaving 11
active in the county.
According to
DHHR, the age ranges
for the 30 COVID-19
cases in Mason County are as follows:
10-19 — 2 cases
20-29 — 9 cases
30-39 — 3 cases
40-49 — 4 cases
50-59 — 8 cases
60-69 — 3 cases
70+ — 1 case
In Ohio, as of the 2
p.m. update on Monday, there were a total
of 76,168 cases, an
increase of 1,236 from
Sunday, and slightly
more than the 21-day
average of 1,196
cases. There were 15
new deaths reported,
bringing the total
to 3,189. The new
deaths are below the
21-day average of 18.
Hospitalizations also
were below the 21-day
average, with 55 new
hospitalizations, down
from the average of
89. ICU admissions
did increase, with 29
new ICU admissions,
compared to the
21-day average of 18.
In West Virginia, as
of the 5 p.m. update
on Monday, DHHR
reported a total of
5,142 cases and 100
deaths. These numbers show 359 new
cases and no new
deaths since Friday at
5 p.m.
© 2020 Ohio Valley Publishing,
all rights reserved.

Wrangling over virus relief persists despite high stakes
By Lisa Marie Pane,
Kelli Kennedy
and Ed White

some $25 billion in the
GOP’s plan that would
be devoted to testing and
Associated Press
tracing, said one Republican familiar with the
discussions.
MIAMI — The desThere remains a wide
perate race to corral the
gulf between the GOP
coronavirus pandemic
and Democratic packages,
took on even greater
with Democrats passing
urgency Monday as a
in the House a $3 trillion
burgeoning economic
package, while the Repubcrisis collided with politilican package came in at
cal turmoil. Even as the
about $1 trillion.
latest experimental vacEvan Vucci | AP
“We have to end this
cine appeared to show
President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting Monday with
virus,”
House Speaker
promise, politicians in
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and House
Washington seemed far
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California in the Oval Office of Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
said Monday on MSNBC.
apart in ﬁnding a way to the White House in Washington.
Any attempt by the White
bring ﬁnancial relief to
House to block testing
Even as Republicans
virus ﬁrst appeared on
Americans.
were at odds with Demo- money “goes beyond
the continent.
As the ﬁrst federal
ignorance.”
crats over how much
The political turmoil
relief package was poised
The political stakes are
money was enough, top
to end, Congress was try- was playing out as there
high for all sides before
ing to come to agreement appeared to be good news Republican members
the November election,
on the medical front, with of Congress also faced
on another package to
ease the ﬁnancial burden scientists involved in the pushback from the White especially with the nation
House. GOP leaders met registering more corodevelopment of at least
Americans have dealt
navirus infections and
Monday with President
one vaccine reporting
with as businesses have
deaths than any other
Donald Trump as the
endured repeated shutter- promising results in an
country. With 17 straight
White House panned
early trial.
ings or pauses since the

By Aaron Morrison

2 PM

8 PM

Mostly cloudy with a
t-storm or two

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.

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:21 a.m.
8:49 p.m.
7:05 a.m.
9:56 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Jul 27

Full

Last

New

Aug 3 Aug 11 Aug 18

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
12:35a
1:35a
2:36a
3:35a
4:31a
5:25a
6:17a

Minor
6:50a
7:49a
8:49a
9:47a
10:44a
11:38a
12:03a

Major
1:04p
2:03p
3:02p
4:00p
4:56p
5:50p
6:42p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

Minor
7:18p
8:17p
9:15p
10:13p
11:09p
---12:30p

WEATHER HISTORY
A tornado killed two people in separate mobile homes near Hartly, Del.,
on July 21, 1980. These were the ﬁrst
tornado-related deaths in Delaware
since Aug. 21, 1888.

AIR QUALITY
500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.49 -0.42
Marietta
34 15.25 -1.37
Parkersburg
36 21.06 -0.36
Belleville
35 12.54 -0.36
Racine
41 12.72 -0.84
Point Pleasant
40 25.26 +0.03
Gallipolis
50 14.20 +0.83
Huntington
50 26.05 +0.53
Ashland
52 34.82 +0.45
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.29 +0.35
Portsmouth
50 16.80 +1.00
Maysville
50 34.30 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 14.90 +1.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

OH-70195078

94°
70°

Marietta
88/70
Belpre
89/71

Athens
88/70

93°
71°
Variable clouds with
t-storms possible

Today

St. Marys
89/70

Parkersburg
87/70

Coolville
88/71

Elizabeth
90/71

Spencer
90/71

Buffalo
91/72
Milton
91/73

St. Albans
92/72

Huntington
88/73

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
82/61
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/58
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
82/63
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

Pleasant with partial
Some sun with a
sunshine
thunderstorm possible

Murray City
87/70

Ironton
90/73

Ashland
90/73
Grayson
90/73

Primary pollutant: Ozone

SUNDAY

92°
65°

Wilkesville
89/70
POMEROY
Jackson
91/71
89/70
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
91/71
91/71
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
88/72
GALLIPOLIS
92/71
91/72
91/71

South Shore Greenup
90/73
89/72

42
300

Portsmouth
90/73

vides protective equipment,
essential pay and extended
unemployment beneﬁts to workers who cannot work from home.
It has already been passed by the
House.
“Today, we’re here to demand
from those in power, including
the man whose name adorns
the building, that it’s time to
dismantle white supremacy and
combat police brutality,” said
Kyle Bragg, president of 32BJ,
a union representing more than
170,000 ofﬁce janitors, security
workers and doormen on the
East Coast.
“Until we have racial justice,
we cannot have economic,
climate or immigrant justice,”
Bragg said.
The passing of John Lewis,
the Georgia congressman and
Black civil rights icon, loomed
large over the Manhattan rally.

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
88/69

Lucasville
90/72

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
89/71

Very High

Primary: other
Mold: 3738

Logan
87/70

Adelphi
88/71

Waverly
88/72

Pollen: 6

Low

MOON PHASES

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

4

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
6:21 a.m.
8:48 p.m.
8:15 a.m.
10:35 p.m.

SATURDAY

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Temperature

0.00
0.95
2.88
26.42
24.95

FRIDAY

Some sun with a
85°
85°
Humid today with a thunderstorm. A
heavy t-storm; humid
thunderstorm late tonight. High 92° / Low 71°

73°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

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

THURSDAY

90°
66°

HEALTH TODAY

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

88°
69°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

Precipitation

EXTENDED FORECAST

89°
70°

ALMANAC
92°
73°
86°
66°
105° in 1930
50° in 1947

included delivery men and
women, fast food employees,
ride-share and airport workers.
Glen Brown, a 48-year-old
wheelchair agent at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International
Airport for nearly ﬁve years,
said his job does not give him
the option of social distancing.
Brown and fellow workers called
for a $15 minimum age during
an event in St. Paul, and he
said workers were “seizing our
moment” to seek change.
“We are front-line workers,
(and) we are risking our lives,
but we’re doing it at a wage that
doesn’t even match the risk,”
Brown said.
In Manhattan, more than 150
union workers rallied outside
Trump International Hotel to
demand that the Senate and
President Donald Trump adopt
the HEROES Act, which pro-

protest was organized by labor
unions and social and racial
justice organizations, which
planned a range of actions in
NEW YORK — Hundreds of
workers rallied Monday outside more than two dozen U.S. cities.
the Trump International Hotel in Where work stoppages were not
possible for a full day, particiManhattan and in cities across
the U.S. to protest systemic rac- pants picketed during a lunch
break or observed moments of
ism and economic inequality,
joining a nationwide demonstra- silence to honor Black lives lost
tion demanding improvement of to police violence, organizers
Black Americans’ experiences in said.
About 1,500 janitors in San
the workplace.
Francisco walked off their jobs
Organizers hoped the effort
and planned to lead a march
would grow into a strike inspirto City Hall later in the day,
ing tens of thousands of people
according to Fight for $15, a
to walk off the job. But visible
support came largely in the form labor group that supports raising the U.S. minimum wage to
of smaller protests that drew
people whose jobs in health care, $15 an hour. McDonald’s cooks
and cashiers in Los Angeles
transportation and food service
do not allow them to work from and nursing home workers in
St. Paul were also striking, the
home during the coronavirus
group said.
pandemic.
Participants in local rallies
The “Strike for Black Lives”

Associated Press

8 AM

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

weeks of unemployment
claims topping 1 million,
many households were
facing a cash crunch and
losing employer-backed
health insurance coverage.
The number of cases
was spiking in spots
throughout the United
States, stressing not just
the economy and Americans’ psyche but also its
medical system.
In California, malls
in San Francisco were
ordered closed about a
month after they were
allowed to reopen.
Four months after the
San Francisco Bay Area
became the ﬁrst place in
the nation to issue broad
stay-at-home orders to
prevent the virus spread,
only one Bay Area county
is not on the state governor’s watch list for areas
with rising infection and
hospitalization rates.

Workers protest racial inequality on day of national strike

TODAY

WEATHER

Ohio Valley Publishing

Clendenin
91/71
Charleston
90/71

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
72/52

Billings
90/62

Montreal
79/62

Minneapolis
77/61
Chicago
82/69
Detroit
81/67

Denver
86/58

Toronto
79/67
New York
92/77

Kansas City
85/71

Washington
96/79

EXTREMES MONDAY
High
Low

El Paso
96/76

108° in Palm Springs, CA
32° in Stanley, ID

Global

Houston
88/77
Monterrey
92/72

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
91/66/t
87/66/t
69/55/c
61/52/r
92/74/t 92/74/pc
87/76/pc 87/77/pc
95/75/pc
97/75/t
90/62/s 99/67/pc
100/69/s 99/68/pc
87/68/s 77/70/pc
90/71/t
89/71/t
95/72/t
94/73/t
78/56/t 91/62/c
82/69/c 87/67/pc
88/72/t
86/71/t
83/69/pc
85/69/t
90/73/t
87/71/t
91/76/t 89/78/s
86/58/t 94/63/c
81/68/t 87/68/pc
81/67/pc 82/64/pc
88/74/pc 87/75/pc
88/77/t 92/78/pc
83/70/pc
86/70/t
85/71/t 90/73/c
107/85/s 106/82/s
93/75/t
92/75/t
82/63/pc 78/62/pc
89/75/t
90/73/t
89/81/t
91/81/t
77/61/t 79/63/pc
93/73/t
91/74/t
94/81/s 91/81/pc
92/77/pc 88/75/pc
90/70/t 89/73/pc
90/78/t
90/77/t
93/77/pc
92/76/t
108/88/c 105/89/c
88/70/pc
83/69/t
86/63/s 76/65/pc
95/73/t
95/74/t
96/76/t 95/76/pc
90/75/t
89/76/t
98/73/pc
91/71/t
70/58/pc 72/55/pc
82/61/s 74/56/pc
96/79/pc
95/77/t

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
92/74

Chihuahua
93/68

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

High
Low
Miami
89/81

125° in Saﬁabad, Iran
4° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

�NEWS/CLASSIFIEDS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Tuesday, July 21, 2020 5

UK coronavirus vaccine prompts immune response
By Maria Cheng

that they found their
experimental COVID19 vaccine produced a
dual immune response
LONDON — Scientists
in people aged 18 to 55
at Oxford University say
that lasted at least two
their experimental coromonths after they were
navirus vaccine has been
immunized.
shown in an early trial
“We are seeing good
to prompt a protective
immune response in
immune response in hunalmost everybody,” said
dreds of people who got
Dr. Adrian Hill, director
the shot.
of the Jenner Institute
British researchers ﬁrst
at Oxford University.
began testing the vaccine
John Cairns, University of Oxford via AP
in April in about 1,000
A doctor takes blood samples June 25 for use in a coronavirus “What this vaccine does
particularly well is trigger
people, half of whom got vaccine trial in Oxford, England.
both arms of the immune
the experimental vacsystem,” he said.
cine. Such early trials
of immune response was
In research published
Hill said that neutralare designed to evaluate
provoked, but can’t tell if Monday in the journal
izing antibodies are
safety and see what kind the vaccine truly protects. Lancet, scientists said

AP Medical Writer

produced — molecules
which are key to blocking
infection. In addition,
the vaccine also causes
a reaction in the body’s
T-cells, which help by
destroying cells that have
been taken over by the
virus.
The experimental
COVID-19 vaccine caused
minor side effects like
fever, chills and muscle
pain more often than in
those who got a control
meningitis vaccine.
Hill said that larger
trials evaluating the
vaccine’s effectiveness,
involving about 10,000

people in the U.K. as well
as participants in South
Africa and Brazil are
still underway. Another
trial is slated to start in
the U.S. soon, aiming
to enroll about 30,000
people.
How quickly scientists
are able to determine the
vaccine’s effectiveness
will depend largely on
how much more transmission there is, but Hill estimated that if there were
enough data to prove the
vaccine’s efﬁcacy, immunization of some high-risk
groups in Britain could
begin in December.

DeWine

Columbus to put police civilian review board to voters

From page 1

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
Associated Press

But it’s also about getting people to understand, ‘Hey, this is,
this is very, very serious. And
now, while we did a great job
early on in Ohio, we are now
headed in the wrong direction.’”
When the pandemic started,
DeWine won praise with
aggressive steps to ban spectators from a sports expo and
shut down all schools before
any other state. But since then
he has backtracked from a statewide mask mandate, delivered
mixed messages on large gatherings, and faced a mutiny within
his party over business closures.
With the virus surging again,
he defends what he calls a
“surgical, precise approach”
by requiring masks in just the
hardest-hit counties.
The governor said “getting a
20-year-old to understand that he
or she may, you know, feel invulnerable” but they might carry the
virus home to their grandmother
and “she may end up dying,” is
the message state ofﬁcials are
trying to get out to people.
The governor also said that
though testing in Ohio has doubled over the past ﬁve weeks, it
needs to increase more.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Voters in Ohio’s capital city
would decide on the creation
of an independent civilian
review board to investigate
police misconduct, according
to a proposal Monday by the
Columbus mayor, prosecutor
and city council president.
The board would direct,
fund and staff an independent Inspector General
department that would investigate allegations of misconduct and other police actions.
The board would have
subpoena powers and authority to conduct independent
investigations and recommend disciplinary action,
said Columbus Mayor
Andrew Ginther.
Ginther said Columbus,
the biggest city in Ohio and
among the largest in the U.S.,
is one of the few big cities
without some form of civilian
police overnight.
The City Council was
expected to approve the
measure Wednesday, which
would place it on the November ballot.

Andrew Welsh-Huggins | AP file

Thomas Quinlan, chief of the Columbus Division of Police, discusses the
final recommendations of the Columbus Community Safety Advisory
Commission on Jan. 30 in Columbus, Ohio. One of the commission’s major
recommendations was that the city create an independent civilian review
board.

Ginther has been outspoken on the need for such a
review board since the unrest

that followed the May killing
of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police ofﬁcer, sparking

worldwide protests over racism and police brutality.
But the concept has been
around for a while under the
administration of Ginther, a
second-term Democrat. The
board was a top recommendation in a report released
in January by a Columbus
commission that studied
improvements to community
and police relations following
a spate of violence.
The plan is backed by
Council President Shannon
Hardin and City Attorney
Zach Klein.
The union representing
Columbus police said that
placing the issue on the ballot was a waste of taxpayer
dollars, and Ginther should
bargain directly with the
union instead. Keith Ferrell,
president of the Fraternal
Order Of Police-Capital City
Lodge, accused the mayor of
trying to weaken collective
bargaining rights.
“It is time for the mayor to
communicate with the FOP
and have true dialogue so we
can all work together to better this community instead of
dividing it,” Ferrell said in a
release.

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�COMICS

6 Tuesday, July 21, 2020

BLONDIE

Ohio Valley Publishing

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

ZITS

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PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

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Today’s Solution

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�Sports
Ohio Valley Publishing

Tuesday, July 21, 2020 7

Players plead
with NFL to
address health,
safety concerns
By Rob Maaddi
Associated Press

NFL players are publicly pleading
with the league to address several
health and safety concerns on the
eve of training camp.
The league informed teams on
Saturday that training camps will
open on time even though discussions with the players’ union regarding testing for the coronavirus and
other health and safety protocols are
ongoing.
Rookies for Houston and Kansas
City are set to report Monday and
rookies for other teams are due on
Tuesday. Players for all teams are
scheduled to report by July 28.
Many prominent players
expressed their thoughts in a social
media blitz Sunday.
“We need Football! We need
sports! We need hope!” Saints
quarterback Drew Brees wrote on
Twitter. “The NFL’s unwillingness to
follow the recommendations of their
own medical experts will prevent
that. If the NFL doesn’t do their part
to keep players healthy there is no
football in 2020. It’s that simple. Get
it done NFL.”
Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson said he is concerned because his
wife, Ciara, is pregnant.
He wrote: “My wife is pregnant.
NFL Training camp is about to
start.. And there’s still No Clear Plan
on Player Health &amp; Family Safety.
???? We want to play football but we
also want to protect our loved ones.
(hashtag)WeWantToPlay.”
NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith and
President JC Tretter addressed the
union’s concerns in a 90-minute videoconference call with reporters on
Friday.
They want players tested daily for
the virus. A joint committee of doctors, trainers and strength coaches
formed by the NFL and NFLPA recommended testing every other day.
Other outstanding issues include
number of preseason games. The
league has planned to cut the exhibition schedule from four games to
two while the union wants none.
Players also wanted a 45-day acclimation period to help avoid injuries.
The league asked them to report
early but the union declined. Questions remain on protections for players who want to opt out of playing.
All 32 teams have sent the union
their Infectious Disease Emergency
Response that have been approved
by joint infectious disease experts
and NFL chief medical ofﬁcer Dr.
Allen Sills, according to a person
familiar with the details. The person, speaking to The Associated
Press on condition of anonymity
because protocols haven’t been ﬁnalized, said the union has approved
several and continues to review
them.
On Friday, the league sent players
and teams an Education Protocol
for camp which requires clubs to
distribute joint educational materials and to conduct educational sessions for players, staff and family
members.
Tretter, a center for the Browns,
wrote: “What you are seeing today is
our guys standing up for each other
and for the work their union leadership has done to keep everyone as
safe as possible. The NFL needs to
listen to our union and adopt the
experts’ recommendations (hashtag)
wewanttoplay.”

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy running back James Armstrong, left, breaks away from Point Pleasant defenders during a Sept. 13, 2019, football game at Memorial Field
in Gallipolis, Ohio.

High school sports face many obstacles
By Tim Booth
and Schuyler Dixon
The Associated Press

The same pandemicrelated questions that have
bedeviled professional and
college sports are front
and center for high school
administrators across the
country — and they are far
more complicated.
Setting up expensive,
tightly regimented bubbles
for professional athletes or
setting protocols for thousands of college athletes
who answer to a handful
of coaches is not happening at the high school level.
Instead, more than 13,000
districts, some of them
resource-rich, many of them
not, are trying to ﬁgure how
to safely stage sports for
some 8 million participants,
nearly all of them minors.
Already some states,
including Tennessee, Arizona, West Virginia, New
Jersey and Washington, have
announced fall sports will
have at least a delayed start.
Prep sports heavyweights
like Texas, Florida and California all have big decisions
coming up fast.
Mark Uyl goes through
all the different scenarios,
contingencies and endless
concerns daily as the head
of the Michigan High School
Athletic Association.
“It’s been like walking in
quicksand,” Uhl said. “You’ll
go a week or two and it feels
like you’re taking a step or
two on solid ground where
the number of cases is trending in a certain direction
or some of the metrics that
government leaders are looking at. Then you go to take
that third step and it feels
like you’re almost deeper
than what you were.”
He and other high school
ofﬁcials insist the importance of education-based
athletics makes it a puzzle
worth solving. But it’s a
puzzle unlike any of them

have ever faced.
Safety in the year of the
coronavirus is the overriding
priority. But what does that
look like? Empty stadiums
and gyms? What about
testing? Masks? Can high
school-aged athletes manage social distancing? What
about liability? Are extracurricular activities even worth
the risk as school districts
around the country face
mounting ﬁnancial concerns
with increased costs for
personal protective equipment and expected revenue
shortfalls?
As the clock ticks closer to
the start of the new school
year, the uncertainty is compounded by the complexity.
The ﬁfty states plus the
District of Columbia all have
different governing bodies
for prep sports, different
priorities and different pressures.
“I think people realize
how valuable the experience
of participation is, and they
want to give kids anywhere
that can a chance,” said
Mick Hoffman, executive
director of the Washington
Interscholastic Activities
Association.
While there was optimism
in June that competition
might go on as scheduled in
the fall, it has been replaced
by pessimism in July as the
number of positive cases has
risen across the country.
Even in Texas, where high
school football is religion,
there is growing worry.
Earlier this month, Dallas
Independent School District
Superintendent Michael
Hinojosa said in an interview with MSNBC that in
his opinion it was doubtful
high school football would
be played in 2020. The decision ultimately rests with
the University Interscholastic League that oversees
high school sports in Texas,
but the headline ampliﬁed
the growing concern.
“We’ve got a lot of deci-

sions to make. I wish we
had answers. I wish there
was a silver bullet. There’s
not,” said Tim Teykl, head
football coach at Alvin High
School outside of Houston.
“I don’t know if we’re going
to have a football season. I
don’t know if we’re going
to have school. I’m going to
continue to ﬁght and claw
as if we are. And then if not,
we’ll do what we’re told to
do.”
As deadlines loom in different areas, school decisionmakers are doing jobs they
never anticipated before.
Administrators check in
with public health ofﬁcials
as often as they communicate with coaches.
Coaches serve as a frontline of defense, doing
temperature checks and
sanitizing equipment as they
put players through summer
drills.
Then there are the athletes, some of whom already
had spring seasons wiped
out.
“It’s a very emotional
area for young people and
their parents because the
extracurriculars are at the
heart of the school in many
ways,” said Dave Gordon,
superintendent of the Sacramento County Ofﬁce of
Education. “They’re the
spirit of the school and
frankly a lot of the reason
kids stay in school.”
Aside from concerns
about the virus itself, there
is other fallout. Some
schools were already facing budget struggles due
to a lack of state or local
funding. Now they face
the potential of returning
to the classroom with signiﬁcant increases in costs,
whether it be for protective
equipment, sanitation or
maybe just running more
buses because of restrictions on how many students are on each one.
Extracurricular activities
become easy targets for

cuts when there are budget
shortfalls.
“We are hearing across
the country that schools
are facing anywhere from
20 to 50% budget cuts,
very dire straits,” Karissa
Niehoff, executive director
of the National Federation for State High School
Associations, said during
a webinar with the Aspen
Institute. “State associations looking at anywhere
from $150,000 to over $2
million in losses to support
programming and tournaments and such. So we’re
very worried.”
Important dates and decisions are coming up, especially in states with school
starting in mid-August.
One of the biggest dominoes is likely to fall this
week when the California
Interscholastic Federation
is expected to announce its
sports calendar. The federation could proceed with
the current schedule but it
could also delay the start of
fall sports.
Virginia said recently
that none of its potential
plans include football being
allowed in the fall with a
ﬁnal decision coming later
in the month.
But even reaching a ﬁnal
decision doesn’t mean
there won’t be setbacks.
Some states that permitted summer workouts have
later had to shut down.
Among the most drastic
options being weighed in
some places is a sports
calendar that doesn’t begin
until January.
“Obviously that’s not
the direction I want to go.
It would create a lot of
overlap, forced choices. It
would make it very difﬁcult
obviously to play multiple
sports,” said California
federation executive director Ron Nocetti. “But the
goal is to offer a season, if
at all possible, for all of our
student-athletes.”

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Halley records ace at Meigs GC
POMEROY, Ohio — Gene Halley recorded a holein-1 on Saturday, July 18, at Meigs Golf Course. Halley recorded his ace on the ﬁfth hole while using a
7-wood. The shot was witnessed by Caitlin Cotterill,
Todd Snowden, Wyatt Nicholson and Matt Michaels.

Meigs golf outing
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs County Chamber

of Commerce and Tourism will hold its annual golf
scramble at 9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 8, at Riverside Golf
Club.
The cost is $250 a team for chamber members and
$300 a team for non-members. Each team consists of
four players.
Prizes will be awarded for ﬁrst, second, third and
next-to-last ﬁnishers. There will also be a skins game,
cash pot, mulligan and 50/50 drawings available at the
event.
For more information or to register, call 740-992-

5005 or email director@meigsohio.com

Roush records ace at Meigs GC
POMEROY, Ohio — Mitchell Roush of Tuppers
Plains recorded a hole-in-1 on Thursday, July 16, at
Meigs Golf Course. Roush recorded his ace on the
ninth hole while using a 6-iron. The shot was witnessed by Jeremy Roush, Connor Truax and Jeremy
Merckle.

�NEWS/SPORTS

8 Tuesday, July 21,2020

Daily Sentinel

First COVID, now mosquitoes: Bracing for bug-borne ills

Deputies

By Philip Marcelo

From page 1

Associated Press

not leave, according to Sher­
iff Wood. It was also found
that there was a female in the
camper with him.
After almost an hour of
negotiation, King surren­
dered himself to deputies
and was taken into custody
without further incident.
“It was then discovered
that there was no dog and
no weapons in the camper.
However, there was a female
with Mr. King who later
stated that she was not being
held against her will,” stated
Sheriff Wood in a news
release.
In addition to Meigs Coun­
ty Sheriff’s Deputies, Officers
from Middleport and Pome­
roy Police Departments and
a squad from Meigs County
EMS responded to assist.
Sheriff Keith Wood, who also
responded to the area, would
like to thank everyone who
assisted in making this a suc­
cessful operation.

Sophia Garabedian had been
dealing with a persistent fever
and painful headache when her
parents found her unrespon­
sive in her bed one morning
last fall.
Doctors ultimately diag­
nosed the then-5-year-old Sud­
bury, Massachusetts, resident
with eastern equine encephali­
tis, a rare but severe mosquitoborne virus that causes brain
swelling.
Garabedian survived the
potentially fatal virus after
about a month in Boston hos­
pitals, but her parents say her
ordeal and ongoing recovery
should be a warning as people
take advantage of the outdoors
this summer.
“It’s been a rough year,” said
David Garabedian, her father.
“With any brain injury, it’s hard
to tell. The damage is there.
How she works through it is
anyone’s guess.”
As the coronavirus pandemic

subsides for now in the hardhit Northeast, public health
officials in the region are warn­
ing about another potentially
bad summer for EEE and other
insect-borne illnesses.
EEE saw an unexpected
resurgence last summer across
10 states: Alabama, Con­
necticut, Georgia, Indiana,
Massachusetts, Michigan, New
Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode
Island and Tennessee.
There were 38 human cases
and 15 deaths from the virus,
with many of the cases in
Massachusetts and Michigan,
according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Preven­
tion. Most years, the country
sees just half a dozen cases
of the virus in humans, the
agency said.
In Massachusetts and New
Jersey, officials have already
detected EEE in mosquitoes
this year, the earliest on record
in those states. There have been
no human or animal cases yet.
“It’s unnerving,” said Scott
Crans, who heads up mosquito

control efforts for the New
Jersey Department of Environ­
mental Protection. “It could
signal a busy year.”
Crans and other state health
officials say EEE, which has no
cure in humans, tends to come
in two- to three-year cycles,
but they also stress that mos­
quito borne-diseases are noto­
riously tricky to predict.
A relatively mild winter may
have benefited mosquito popu­
lations, but below-average rain­
fall could have also provided
a welcome counterweight, he
said.
Local health officials are
also warning about the risk of
contracting other insect-borne
illnesses as more people are
spending a longer time out­
doors amid the coronavirus
pandemic.
In Michigan, an invasive
mosquito known to transmit
dengue, Zika and other tropi­
cal viruses has already been
detected for the first time this
season, said Mary Grace Stobierski, the state’s public health

veterinarian.
The state also had its first
case of West Nile virus this
season. A more common but
less severe mosquito-borne
disease than EEE, it can cause
fevers, headaches, body pain
and other symptoms. The
infection was found in a cap­
tive hawk in early June.
Ticks are also expected to be
out earlier and in larger num­
bers this season because of the
relatively mild winter, warned
Aaron Bernstein, a pediatrician
at Boston Children’s Hospital
and a director at Harvard’s
School of Public Health.
That could mean more cases
of debilitating Lyme disease
and other tick-related illnesses
for local health care systems
already feeling the pressure of
responding to the coronavirus,
he said.
“Some of the people going
into the woods more now
might not be experienced with
how to protect themselves in
the forest, and that’s a con­
cern,” he said.

0 BASEBALL PREVIEW
Delay of The Game comes to an end July 24

CINCINNATI REDS SCHEDULE

Cincinnati Reds
• 2019 RECORD: 75-87
• FINISH: 4th in the
N.L. Central
• BATTING AVG.: .244
(12th in N.L.)
• HOME RUNS: 227
(7th in N.L.)
• ON-BASE
PERCENTAGE: .315
(12th in N.L.)
• ERA: 4.18 (4th in
N.L.) (Starters: 4.12;
Relievers: 4.28)
• COMING IN
2B Mike Moustakas, free
agent from Brewers.
RF-LF Nick Castellanos,
free agent from Cubs
CF Shogo Akiyama, free
agent from Japan.
P Wade Miley, free agent
from Astros.
P Pedro Strop, free agent
from Cubs.

Ross D. Franklin | AP Photo
Joey Votto has been a fixture for the Cincinnati Reds since being
called up in Sept. 2007. He is a six-time all-star and has a career
.307 batting average and 284 lifetime home runs.

• GONE
Jose Peraza, to the Red
Sox
Jose Iglesias, to the
Orioles
Alex Wood, to the

Dodgers
• PROBABLE
STARTERS
(Not a batting lineup)
IB: Joey Votto
2B: Mike Moustakas

• AUGUST
Aug. 1 at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 2 at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.
Aug. 3 at Cincinnati, 6:40 p.m.
Aug. 4 at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 5 Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 6 Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 7 at Chicago White Sox, 8:10
p.m.
Aug. 8 at Chicago White Sox, 2:10
p.m.
Aug. 9 at Chicago White Sox, 2:10
p.m.
Aug. 11 Chicago Cubs, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 12 Chicago Cubs, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 14 at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 15 at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 16 at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Aug. 18 at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Aug. 19 at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Aug. 20 at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Aug. 21 Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 22 Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 23 Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Aug. 24 Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.

Aug. 25 Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 26 Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 28 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Aug. 29 at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m.
Aug. 30 at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Aug. 31 at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
• SEPTEMBER
Sept. 1 at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Sept. 2 at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Sept. 4 Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 5 Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 6 Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m.
Sept. 7 Kansas City, 6:10 p.m.
Sept. 8 Kansas City, 6:10 p.m.
Sept. 9 Kansas City, 6:10 p.m.
Sept. 10 Kansas City, 6:10 p.m.
Sept. 11 at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Sept. 12 at Minnesota, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 13 at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m.
Sept. 15 at Chicago Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 16 at Chicago Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 17at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 18 at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 19 at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
Sept. 20 at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Sept. 21 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
Sept. 22 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
Sept. 23 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
Sept. 24 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
Sept. 25 Pittsburgh, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 26 Pittsburgh, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 27 Pittsburgh, 3:10 p.m.

• AUGUST
Aug. 1 at Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 2 at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Aug. 3 Cleveland, 6:40 p.m.
Aug. 4 Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 5 at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 6 at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 7 at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Aug. 8 at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 9 at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.
Aug. 11 Kansas City, 6:40 p.m.
Aug. 12 Kansas City, 6:40 p.m.
Aug. 13 Pittsburgh, 5:10 p.m.
Aug. 14 Pittsburgh, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 15 Pittsburgh, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 16 Pittsburgh, 1:10 p.m.
Aug. 18 at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Aug. 19 at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Aug. 20 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Aug. 21 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Aug. 22 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Aug. 23 at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Aug. 24at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Aug. 25 at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.

Aug. 26 at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Aug. 27 at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Aug. 28 Chicago Cubs, 7:10 p.m.
Aug. 29 Chicago Cubs, 6:10 p.m.
Aug. 30 Chicago Cubs, 1:10 p.m.
Aug. 31 St. Louis, 6:40 p.m.
• SEPTEMBER
Sept. 1 St. Louis, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 2 St. Louis, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 4at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Sept. 5at Pittsburgh,7:05 p.m.
Sept. 6 at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
Sept. 8 at Chicago Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 9 at Chicago Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 10 at Chicago Cubs, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 11 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 12 at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Sept. 13 at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Sept. 14 Pittsburgh, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 15 Pittsburgh, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 16 Pittsburgh, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 18 Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.
Sept. 19 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
Sept. 20 Chicago White Sox, 1:10
p.m.
Sept. 21 Milwaukee, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 22 Milwaukee, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 23 Milwaukee, 6:40 p.m.
Sept. 25 at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Sept. 26 at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
Sept. 27 at Minnesota, 3:10 p.m.

Cleveland Indians

CLEVELAND INDIANS SCHEDULE
•JULY
July 24 Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.
July 25 Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.
July 26 Kansas City, 1:10 p.m.
July 27 Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.
July 28 Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.
July 39 Chicago White Sox, 6:10
p.m.
July 30 at Minnesota, 7:15 p.m.
July 31 at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.

SS: Freddy Galvis
3B: Eugenio Suarez
C: Tucker Barnhart
LF: Shogo Akiyama
CF: Nick Senzel
RF: Jesse Winker
DH: Nick Castellanos
• STARTING
ROTATION
Luis Castillo
Sonny Gray
Trevor Bauer
Anthony DeSclafani
Wade Miley
• CLOSER
Raisel Iglesias
• TOP PROSPECTS
1. P Nick Lodolo
2. P Hunter Greene
3. C Tyler Stephenson
4. 3B Jonathan India
5. SS Jose Garcia

• JULY
July 24 Detroit, 6:10 p.m.
July 25 Detroit, 5:10 p.m.
July 26 Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
July 27 Chicago Cubs, 6:40 p.m.
July 28 Chicago Cubs, 6:40 p.m.
July 29 Chicago Cubs, 6:40 p.m.
July 30 Chicago Cubs, 6:10 p.m.
July 31 at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.

• 2019 RECORD: 93-69
• FINISH: 2nd in the
A.L. Central
• BATTING AVG.: .250
(7th in A.L.)
• HOME RUNS: 223
(8th in A.L.)
• ON-BASE
PERCENTAGE: .323
(8th in A.L.)
• ERA: 3.76 (3rd in
A.L.) (Starters: 3.81;
Relievers: 3.76)
• COMING IN:
2B Cesar Hernandez, free
agent from Phillies.
P Emmanuel Clase, trade
with Rangers.
OF Delino DeShields,
trade from Rangers.
OF-DH Domingo
Santana, free agent
from Mariners.
C Sandy Leon, trade with
Red Sox.
• GONE

IB: Carlos Santana
2B: Cesar Hernandez
SS: Francisco Lindor
3B: Jose Ramirez
C: Roberto Perez
LF: Franmil Reyes
CF: Oscar Mercado
RF: Tyler Naquin/Jordan
Luplow
DH: Domingo Santana
• STARTIN \G
ROTATION
Shane Bieber
Mike Clevinger
Ross D. Franklin | AP Photo
Carlos Carrasco
Francisco Lindor was the first-round pick for the Cleveland Indians
Aam
Plutko
in 2011. He hits with power from both sides of the plate and is a
Zach
Plesac
two-time gold glove winner and a four-time all-star.
CLOSER
Brad Hand
P Tyler Olson, to Cubs
P Corey Kluber, to
• TOP PROSPECTS
C Eric Haase, to Tigers
Rangers
1. 3B Nolan Jones
P Cody Anderson, to
2B Jason Kipnis, to Cubs
2. SS Tyler Freeman
Mariners
OF Yasiel Puig, free agent
3. C Bo Naylor
P A.J. Cole, to Blue Jays
C Kevin Plawecki, to Red
4. OF George Valera
• PROBABLE
Sox
5. P Daniel Espino
STARTERS
P Nick Goody, to Rangers
(Not a batting lineup)
P Dan Otero, to Yankees

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7/l

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