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                  <text>Family
fishing
rodeo

MLB
season in
jeopardy

NEWS s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

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72°

73°

Pleasant today with sunshine and patchy
clouds. Mainly clear tonight. High 78° / Low 60°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 100, Volume 74

One dead, one injured
following incident at
former Sporn Plant
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
— A person who was
reportedly injured
while working at the
former Philip Sporn
Plant on Monday morning, has died as a result
of his injuries.
The conﬁrmation was
made by the Frontier
Group of Companies, a
company that specializes in the redevelopment of large-scale
industrial and commercial property. A second
injured worker remains
hospitalized. The cause
of the incident remains
under investigation.
The company issued
the following statement
Monday night:
“Our thoughts and
hearts are with our
co-workers and their
families at this time.
We mourn with them
and we pray for them.
We will complete a
thorough and exhaustive investigation into
this incident, so that we
can understand what
happened, why it happened, and take every
measure possible to
ensure that something
like this doesn’t happen
again.”
As reported earlier
on Monday by Ohio
Valley Publishing,
Mason County 911 and
EMS Director Dennis
Zimmerman stated
both patients were
“seriously injured,”

with one ﬂown for
treatment to Cabell
Huntington Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va.
The other person was
transported by EMS
to Holzer Meigs ER in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
A spokesperson from
Appalachian Power
stated AEP no longer
has the Sporn property.
The Frontier Group
of Companies lists the
Sporn site as one of its
“projects and holdings.”
Local ofﬁcials had
previously reported
demolition work had
been ongoing at the
site.
A statement shared
by multiple media
outlets earlier in the
day Monday, which
was attributed to the
Frontier Group, read,
in part:
“We are investigating an incident
that occurred at the
former Sporn Plant
earlier today in which
two employees were
injured. The two
workers were preparing a small ancillary
structure at the site for
demolition, when the
structure apparently
collapsed prematurely…”
More on this story as
information becomes
available.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio
Valley Publishing.

Meigs County reports
latest confirmed
COVID-19 case
Staff Report

POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department (MCHD) is reporting a new active
case of COVID-19 in the county.
According to a press release from the MCHD on
Tuesday afternoon, this is Meigs County’s eighth
case with six conﬁrmed cases and two probable,
since April. The patient is reportedly a male in the
60 to 69-year-old age range and not hospitalized.
“At this time, we please ask residents to refrain
from calling the Health Department for questions
regarding this case while we complete our disease
investigation and notify relevant individuals,” the
press release stated. “The case and individuals
identiﬁed as contacts of the case will be advised
to self-quarantine for 14 days. We urge residents
to continue to follow federal, state, and local guidance to prevent the spread of COVID-19.”
As previously reported by The Daily Sentinel,
the MCHD also announced a probable case of
See COVID-19 | 8

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Wednesday, June 17, 2020 s 50¢

State panel okays county fair funds

File photo

Junior Fair participants take part in the 2019 Meigs County Junior Fair Goat Show. The Meigs County Fair Board is currently planning a
full fair for 2020, which is scheduled to take place Aug. 17-22.

Meigs County proceeding with plans for ‘full fair’
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — The
State Controlling Board
has approved a $4.7
million plan to support
Ohio’s county and independent fairs who have
faced uncertainty due to
COVID-19.
Last week, state leaders announced the plan,
which is designed to
help county fairs open
this year and support
youth involved in junior
fair activities such as
4-H and Future Farmers
of America.
“I’ve been a strong
supporter of our fairs
here in Southeast Ohio,”
said State Rep. Jay
Edwards (R-Nelsonville)
in a news release. “This
is a good plan that will
help our local fairs and
celebrate the hard work
of area youngsters.”
“County fairs provide
a great opportunity for
Ohio families to celebrate the hard work
and success of those
who make up our state’s

incredible agriculture
and natural resources
industries,” said Hoagland, who chairs the
Senate Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee. “I am pleased
these funds were
approved this week and
I am grateful for (Senate) President Obhof’s
commitment to help our
local fairs open this summer!”
While others around
the region have cancelled
or modiﬁed their fairs,
the Meigs County Agricultural Society is planning to proceed with the
2020 Meigs County Fair
as planned, releasing a
statement earlier this
month regarding the fair.
“Due to Covid19 there
is still a large uncertainty about the 2020 Meigs
County Fair, the Meigs
County Agriculture
Society has decided to
proceed with a full fair
as normal. Things may
look different but we are
currently working on the
details and will release

more information as it
becomes available,” read
a statement from the fair
board posted to the fair
Facebook page.
To allow fairs to operate in a safe manner consistent with good health
practices, each fair that
conducts a junior fair
this year will receive
$50,000, while those
that do not will receive
$15,000 that can be used
towards next year’s fair.
Local fair boards who
had already announced
cancellations in 2020 can
apply for a new date with
the Ohio Department
of Agriculture, if they
would like to go forward
this year. At least one
county fair has already
reversed its prior cancellation and is going forward with this year’s fair
under the new and more
ﬂexible guidelines.
More information on
safety guidelines for
Ohio’s fairs can be found
here, https://coronavirus.
ohio.gov/static/responsible/County-Fairs.pdf. For

a list of all Ohio county
and independent fairs,
visit www.ohiofairs.org.
State Representative
Jay Edwards is serving
his second term in the
Ohio House of Representatives. He represents
the 94th District, which
includes Athens, Meigs,
Washington, and Vinton
Counties.
Senator Hoagland
represents the 30th District in the Ohio Senate,
which encompasses Belmont, Carroll, Harrison,
Jefferson, Meigs, Monroe,
Noble and Washington
counties as well as portions of Athens and Vinton counties.
A portion of the information provided by the
ofﬁces of State Rep. Jay
Edwards and State Senator Frank Hoagland.
The Daily Sentinel
managing editor Sarah
Hawley contributed to
this report.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

Resilience Fund
Services for
to award grants to
children, families
provided by MCHD struggling businesses
A look at the Meigs
County Health
Department report

Eagle, provides services
to pregnant and breastfeeding women, as well
as infants and children
birth to age ﬁve. The
goal of the program is to
protect and improve the
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com
health status and prevent
health problems and promote good health within
POMEROY — The
the population. The
Meigs County Health
program provides health
Department provides
and diet screenings, indinumerous services and
programs focused on the vidual and group nutrition education sessions,
health and well-being of
the county’s children and breastfeeding education
ad support, referral to
families.
prenatal and pediatric
The Meigs County
health care and other
Health Department
maternal and child health
annual report provides
programs, and nutritiondetails about those seral food assistance.
vices and programs.
In 2019, the Meigs
County WIC Program
Women, Infants and
provided services in
Children (WIC) Program
2019 to the following
The Women, Infants,
groups of individuals:
and Children (WIC)
Program, under the leadSee SERVICES | 8
ership of Director Sherry

Sugarbush Valley Impact
Investments, the Foundation for Appalachian
ATHENS, Ohio —
Struggling business own- Ohio and the Parkersburg Area Community
ers and entrepreneurs
Foundation. A represenin Appalachian Ohio
tative from each institucounties and Mid-Ohio
tion sits on the grant
Valley counties of West
Virginia facing economic committee to assess
applications and decide
challenges from the
COVID-19 pandemic are award winners.
Applications are
encouraged to apply for
reviewed weekly by the
the Resilience Fund.
grant committee, with
Qualiﬁed businesses
the intent to inform
can receive a grant
funding recipients no
amount between $500
later than a month from
and $3,000. Funds can
be used to purchase busi- application.
“Time-consuming
ness inventory, pay rent
and utilities, secure staff bureaucracy is the bane
of any small business’
jobs and support other
existence, since cash
needs that may be hinﬂow is often so tight,”
dering operations.
said Faith Knutsen,
The fund was estabdirector of social innovalished by the Athens
tion and entrepreneurCounty Foundation,
the Voinovich School of ship at the Voinovich
Leadership and Public
See FUND | 8
Affairs, Rural Action,

Staff Report

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, June 17, 2020

OBITUARIES
JUSTIN D. NORTH
GALLIPOLIS —
Justin D. North,
36, Gallipolis,
passed away, unexpectedly on Friday,
June 12, 2020 in
Gallipolis.
Born November
15, 1983 in Gallipolis
he was the son of John
D. and Sheila G. Moore
North III, of Gallipolis.
Justin was a 2002 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and received
his Associate Degree in
Business from the Hocking College. He was an
equipment operator at the
Toyota plant in Buffalo,
West Virginia. He was an
avid Ohio State Buckeyes
fan.
In addition to his parents Justin is survived
by his brother, Jason E.
(Ashley) North, of Gallipolis, his niece, Madisyn
Caldwell, his nephew,
Noah North, both of Gallipolis, his aunt, Debbie
North, of Gallipolis, his
uncle and aunt, Tom and
Beth Moore, of Gallipolis,
his cousins, Ethan Moore

and Evan Moore.
His great aunt and
uncle, William and
Mary Burton, of
Dublin, Virginia
and a great-aunt,
Helen Burton Hinkley, of Radford,
Virginia. Several other
cousins also survive.
Justin was preceded
in death by his maternal
grandparents, Edward
and Lois Moore, paternal
grandparents, J.D. and
Nevolene North Jr. and a
great-aunt, Helen Brumﬁeld.
Private family funeral
services will be conducted on Thursday, June 18,
2020, in the CremeensKing Funeral Home.
Ofﬁciating will be Rev.
Aaron Young and interment will be in the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.
There are no calling
hours. In lieu of ﬂowers,
memorials may be made
in Justin’s memory to
the Freedom House, c/o
The Vertical Church, 25
Court Street, Gallipolis,
OH 45631.

ESCOBAR
GALLIPOLIS — Roberto Lee Escobar, 43, Gallipolis, Ohio, died Monday, June 15, 2020, in the Holzer
Meigs Emergency Department, Pomeroy, Ohio, as a
result injuries received in an industrial accident in
New Haven, West Virginia. Funeral arrangements will
be announced by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home.
BREWER
MASON, W.Va. — Joyce Ann (Roush) Brewer,
67, of Mason, W.Va., died Monday, June 15, 2020, at
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, Ohio, following an
extended illness.
In keeping with her wishes, there will be no public
services at this time. Foglesong-Casto Funeral Home,
Mason, has been entrusted with the arrangements.

Justices revive permit for pipeline
WASHINGTON (AP)
— The Supreme Court
on Monday paved the
way for a critical permit
for a proposed natural
gas pipeline that would
cross under the Appalachian Trail, siding with
energy companies and
the Trump administration.
The justices ruled 7-2
to reverse a lower court
ruling that had thrown
out the permit for the
Atlantic Coast Pipeline.
It would bring natural
gas from West Virginia
to growing markets in
Virginia and North Carolina. Its supporters say
the pipeline would bring
economic development,
thousands of jobs and
reduced energy costs for
consumers.
Justice Clarence
Thomas wrote for a
majority of the court
that the “Forest Service
had the authority to
issue the permit here.”
Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan
dissented.
Other legal issues
remain before construction of the pipeline
could begin. The narrow question before
the Supreme Court was
whether the U.S. Forest
Service has the authority to grant rights-of-way
through lands crossed
by the Appalachian
Trail within national

forests, as project developers Dominion Energy
and Duke Energy and
the Trump administration argued.
The pipeline would
run in part through the
George Washington
National Forest, where
a 0.1-mile segment of
the pipeline would cross
about 600 feet (about
183 meters) beneath the
Appalachian Trail.
Atlantic Coast Pipeline spokeswoman Ann
Nallo said in a statement that the decision
is an “afﬁrmation for
the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and communities
across our region that
are depending on it for
jobs, economic growth
and clean energy” and
that they “look forward
to resolving the remaining project permits.”
The Sierra Club and
other environmental
groups had argued that
because the 2,200-mile
(3,540-kilometer) scenic trail from Georgia
to Maine is considered
a unit of the National
Park System, no federal agency can grant
a right-of-way for the
pipeline. They say only
Congress can approve
such a crossing.
The Richmond, Virginia-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
agreed with the environmentalists in 2018 and

The Associated Press

Airman charged with
murder of federal
officer at courthouse

Today’s Highlight in History
On June 17, 1972, President
Richard Nixon’s eventual downfall
began with the arrest of ﬁve burglars inside the Democratic headquarters in Washington, D.C.’s
Watergate complex.

By Stefanie Dazio

On this date
In 1579, Sir Francis Drake
arrived in present-day northern
California, naming it New Albion
and claiming English sovereignty.
In 1775, the Revolutionary War
Battle of Bunker Hill resulted in a
costly victory for the British, who
suffered heavy losses.
In 1928, Amelia Earhart
embarked on a trans-Atlantic
ﬂight from Newfoundland to
Wales with pilots Wilmer Stultz
and Louis Gordon, becoming the
ﬁrst woman to make the trip as a
passenger.
In 1930, President Herbert
Hoover signed the Smoot-Hawley
Tariff Act, which boosted U.S.
tariffs to historically high levels,
prompting foreign retaliation.
In 1933, the “Kansas City Massacre” took place outside Union
Station in Kansas City, Mo., as
a group of gunmen attacked law
enforcement ofﬁcers escorting
federal prisoner Frank Nash; four
of the ofﬁcers were killed, along
with Nash.
In 1944, the Republic of Iceland
was established.
In 1953, U.S. Supreme Court
Justice William O. Douglas stayed
the execution of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg, originally set for the
next day, the couple’s 14th wedding anniversary. (They were put
to death June 19.)
In 1963, the U.S. Supreme
Court, in Abington (Pa.) School
District v. Schempp, struck down,
8-1, rules requiring the recitation

An Air Force sergeant
already jailed in the
ambush killing of
a California sheriff’s deputy was
charged Tuesday
with murdering
a federal security
ofﬁcer outside
the U.S. courthouse in Oakland Carrillo
during a night of
a sometimes violent protest last month.
In announcing murder
and attempted murder
charges, federal authorities alleged Staff Sgt.
Steven Carrillo had ties
to the right-wing antigovernment “boogaloo”
movement and that
the plot to target law
enforcement ofﬁcers was
hatched during an online
chat among the group
members.
Federal security ofﬁcer
David Patrick Underwood, 53, was killed the
night of May 29 and his
partner was wounded
as they guarded the
Ronald V. Dellums Federal Building in Oakland while a large and
raucous demonstration
over the police killing of
George Floyd was under
way nearby.
Carrillo and an accomplice parked a white
van near the courthouse

and Carrillo ﬁred an
AR-15-style riﬂe at the
guard station where
Underwood and his partner were located. Ofﬁcials said Carrillo
used the protest as
cover for the crime
and for his escape.
“Pat Underwood
was murdered
because he wore
a uniform,” David
Anderson, U.S.
Attorney for the
Northern District
of California, said at a
news conference at the
Dellums building.
Ofﬁcials also charged
the alleged getaway
driver, Robert Alvin
Justus, Jr., with aiding
and abetting the murder
and attempted murder.
Justus turned himself
into the FBI on Thursday while they had him
under surveillance.
Carrillo separately
faces state charges in
the June 6 fatal shooting
of Santa Cruz County
sheriff’s Sgt. Damon
Gutzwiller and the
wounding of four other
ofﬁcers in Ben Lomond,
an unincorporated
community outside
the beachfront city of
Santa Cruz south of San
Francisco. Authorities
have said that Carrillo, a leader in an elite
military security force,
ambushed the ofﬁcers.

CONTACT US
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
740-446-2342
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

sider alternative routes
to avoid national forests.
“The practical, realThe justices ruled
world requirement of
7-2 to reverse a lower
having to look for a
court ruling that had
different route for this
thrown out the permit
thing is still very much
for the Atlantic Coast
on the table,” he said.
Pipeline. It would bring
The project has had
natural gas from West
numerous setbacks
Virginia to growing
since plans were ﬁrst
markets in Virginia and
announced in 2014.
North Carolina.
Legal challenges
threw out a special-use brought by environpermit for the 605-mile mental groups have
(974-kilometer) natural prompted the dismissal
or suspension of eight
gas pipeline.
D.J. Gerken, program permits and halted construction for more than
director for the Southern Environmental Law a year.
The project is more
Center, which represented the environmen- than three years behind
schedule and its origital groups before the
nal price tag has nearly
Supreme Court, said
they were disappointed doubled to $8 billion.
Dominion says the
with the ruling but that
pipeline will bring a
it “doesn’t mean much
critical new gas supply
for this pipeline in the
near term” because it is to Virginia and North
Carolina to support the
still missing a total of
eight required permits. shift away from coal
and toward intermittent
Gerken said the Fornatural resources like
est Service will now
solar. The company also
need to restart the
says greater availabilenvironmental review
process and then decide ity of natural gas will
attract manufacturing
if it will reissue a perbusinesses.
mit for the pipeline.
Environmental
The Forest Service still
groups say the pipeline
needs to address three
would scar pristine
other issues cited by
the 4th Circuit when it landscapes, put numerous rivers and streams
tossed out the permit,
at risk of increased
including the court’s
ﬁnding that the agency sedimentation and harm
sensitive species.
had failed to fully con-

A CLOSER
LOOK

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, June 17,
the 169th day of 2020. There are
197 days left in the year.

Associated Press

Ohio Valley Publishing

of the Lord’s Prayer or reading of
Biblical verses in public schools.
In 1967, China successfully
tested its ﬁrst thermonuclear
(hydrogen) bomb.
In 1986, President Ronald Reagan announced the retirement
of Chief Justice Warren Burger,
who was succeeded by William
Rehnquist.
In 1994, after leading police on
a slow-speed chase on Southern
California freeways, O.J. Simpson
was arrested and charged with
murder in the slayings of his exwife, Nicole, and her friend, Ronald Goldman. (Simpson was later
acquitted in a criminal trial but
held liable in a civil trial.)
In 2009, President Barack
Obama extended some beneﬁts
to same-sex partners of federal
employees. Nevada Sen. John
Ensign resigned from the GOP
leadership a day after admitting
an affair with a former campaign
staffer.
Ten years ago: BP chief executive Tony Hayward told a congressional hearing he was “deeply
sorry” for the Deepwater Horizon
oil spill, but infuriated lawmakers as he disclaimed knowledge
of any of the myriad problems
leading up to the disaster. Israel
agreed to ease its three-year-old
land blockade of the Hamas-ruled
Gaza Strip. The Los Angeles Lakers rallied in Game 7 of the NBA
ﬁnals, defeating the Boston Celtics 83-79 to repeat as champions.
Five years ago: Nine people
were shot to death in a historic African-American church
in Charleston, South Carolina;
suspect Dylann Roof was arrested
the following morning. (Roof was
convicted of federal hate crimes
and sentenced to death; he later
pleaded guilty to state murder
charges and was sentenced to life
in prison without parole.)
One year ago: Iran announced
that it was breaking compliance
with the international accord that
kept it from making nuclear weap-

ons; the announcement meant
that Iran could soon start to
enrich uranium to just a step away
from weapons-grade levels. The
Trump administration followed
Iran’s announcement by ordering
1,000 more troops to the Middle
East. Egypt’s ﬁrst democratically
elected president, Islamist leader
Mohammed Morsi, collapsed in
court while on trial and died;
Morsi had been ousted by the
military in 2013 after a year in
ofﬁce. Gloria Vanderbilt, an heiress and artist who later became a
designer jeans pioneer, died at her
New York home; she was 95. Gunﬁre broke out, and a stampede
developed, as fans in Toronto
celebrated at a rally for the NBA
champion Raptors; four people
were shot and thousands of others
ﬂed, just a block from the rally
stage.
Today’s Birthdays: Actor Peter
Lupus is 88. Movie director Ken
Loach is 84. Actor William Lucking is 79. Singer Barry Manilow
is 77. Former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich is 77. Comedian
Joe Piscopo is 69. Actor Mark
Linn-Baker is 66. Actor Jon Gries
(gryz) is 63. Rock singer Jello
Biafra is 62. Movie producerdirector-writer Bobby Farrelly is
62. Actor Thomas Haden Church
is 60. Actor Greg Kinnear is 57.
Actress Kami Cotler is 55. Olympic gold medal speed skater Dan
Jansen is 55. Actor Jason Patric
is 54. Rhythm and blues singer
Kevin Thornton is 51. Actorcomedian Will Forte is 50. Latin
pop singer Paulina Rubio is 49.
Tennis player Venus Williams is
40. Actor Arthur Darvill is 38.
Actress Jodie Whittaker is 38.
Actor Manish Dayal is 37. Country singer Mickey Guyton is 37.
Actor-rapper Herculeez (AKA
Jamal Mixon) is 37. Actress
Marie Avgeropoulos is 34. Rapper Kendrick Lamar is 33. NHL
forward Nikita Kucherov is 27.
Actor Damani Roberts is 24.
Actor KJ Apa is 23.

IN BRIEF

Virginia governor to propose
Juneteenth as state holiday
RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia Gov. Ralph
Northam announced Tuesday that he will propose
making Juneteenth — a day that commemorates
the end of slavery in the U.S. — an ofﬁcial holiday
in a state that was once home to the capital of the
Confederacy.
Juneteenth, which is also called Emancipation
Day and Freedom Day, is celebrated annually on
June 19. Texas ﬁrst made it a state holiday in 1980.
The holiday would be a paid day off for all state

employees. Northam said he thinks Virginia would
be only the second state to do so.
“It’s time we elevate this,” Northam said of the
June 19 commemoration. “Not just a celebration by
and for some Virginians but one acknowledged and
celebrated by all of us.”
The holiday commemorates June 19, 1865, when
news ﬁnally reached African Americans in Texas
that President Abraham Lincoln had issued the
Emancipation Proclamation freeing slaves living in
Confederate states two years earlier. When Union
soldiers arrived in Galveston to bring the news
that slavery had been abolished, former slaves celebrated.

�NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

OhioHealth to allow one visitor
per patient starting June 16
ATHENS — OhioHealth has announced
that effective Tuesday,
June 16, it will allow
one visitor per patient
at all hospitals, emergency departments,
surgery and invasive
procedure areas and
OhioHealth Physician
Group ofﬁces. Each
patient will select a
designated visitor for
the duration of their
stay, who may visit
daily.
Outpatient centers
including laboratories,
imaging and rehabilitation centers will
continue to not allow
visitors with limited
exceptions.
All visitors will
be required to wear
a mask while in an
OhioHealth facility,
except while eating,
and be asymptomatic of
COVID-19 symptoms.
The following exceptions will be made

for patients in unique
medical situations:
· Patients that have
tested positive for
COVID-19 — No
visitors allowed with
exceptions for end-oflife situations.
· Patients receiving
behavioral health care
— No visitors allowed
for behavioral health
patients.
· Patients receiving end-of-life care
— Acute end-of-life
patients may have up
to three visitors at any
given time, and no
maximum number of
visitors per day.
· Patients receiving
neonatal, pediatric,
adolescent care —
Minor patients may
have two parents or
guardians visit.
· Visitors with disabilities who need
assistance — Caretakers for visitors who are
disoriented, disabled

or in need of an interpreter are permitted.
· Maternity patients
are limited to one support person, who may
stay at the hospital for
duration of the stay, but
if they exit, they will
need to re-enter next
day. If the mother is a
minor, she may have a
parent or guardian visitor in addition to the
father of the baby. Care
sites with NICUs will
follow Nationwide Children’s Hospital visitor
management policy.
This is the ﬁrst easing of visitor restrictions at OhioHealth
since the health system
restricted all visitors
on March 16.
Hours and entrances
may continue to be
limited while visitor
restrictions are in
place. For the latest visitor information, visit
ohiohealth.com/covid19/visitor-restrictions.

Outbreak grows to 28 at W.Va. church
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. (AP) — A coronavirus outbreak at a
West Virginia church
has grown to 28 cases,
Gov. Jim Justice said
Monday.
The outbreak that
occurred last week at
the Graystone Baptist
Church in Lewisburg
has led to additional
available testing for the
public in Greenbrier
County.
Justice said during
his daily news conference that the National
Guard conducted
decontamination efforts
at the church Sunday.
The governor said the
outbreak was close to
his Lewisburg home.
“This could be your
community tomorrow,”
Justice said. “This
could be your church
tomorrow. This could
be your family tomorrow.”
The church said the
source of the outbreak
is unknown.
“Our hearts are heavy
during this time,” the
statement said. “We

love our brothers and
sisters and would in
no way put anyone in
harm intentionally.”
The church had made
previous services available for online viewing.
It has closed for two
weeks and canceled
Sunday services. In a
statement posted on
Facebook, the church
said it adhered to
mandated precautions,
including social distancing and the availability of masks, gloves
and hand sanitizer to
churchgoers.
It marked the
fifth virus outbreak
involving a West Virginia church. Similar
church outbreaks have
occurred in Boone,
Hampshire, Jefferson
and Marshall counties.
At least 88 people
in West Virginia have
died from the virus
and about 2,300 have
tested positive, state
health data shows.
The state has consistently met the goal Justice set for reopening
by keeping the positive

test rate under 3% for
three consecutive days.
The current rate is
under 2%. Justice had
loosened a previous
goal of having the number of cases decline for
14 days.
Justice has already
allowed restaurants
and retailers to resume
business. Fairs and festivals can begin again
July 1 and nursing
homes can accept visitors starting Wednesday.
Next week, youth
sports games with
spectators can resume
along with outdoor
sporting events and
equestrian events with
spectators.
For most people, the
virus causes mild or
moderate symptoms
that clear up within
weeks. but for others,
especiall older adults
and people with existing health problems,
the highly contagious
virus can cause severe
symptoms and be fatal.
The vast majority of
people recover.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020 3

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS
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
and closures

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.
GALLIA COUNTY — Williams
Creek Road will be closed from State
SYRACUSE — Applications for the
Route 218 to the stone portion and
2020-21 Carleton College Scholarship
Wells Run Road will be closed from
for Higher Education are available for
State Route 218 to the stone portion,
legal residents of the village of Syracuse. Residents can pick up applications beginning Monday, June 8 - Friday,
June 19, for culvert replacement.
from Gordon Fisher, 1402 Dusky St.,
Syracuse. Applications are due back by Local trafﬁc will need to use other
County roads as a detour.
June 24, 2020. Legal residents of SyraRACINE — Beginning June 8, State
cuse can qualify for scholarship awards
Route 124 will be closed between Tanfor a maximum of two years.
ners Run Road (Township Road 131)
and Tornado Road (County Road 124)
for a culvert replacement project. Estimated completion: June 18, 2020
GALLIPOLIS — Kriner Road (CR26) will be closed .5 mile from NeighGALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis Pub- borhood Road beginning 7 a.m., Monday, May 18 for approximately 75 days
lic Water System’s 2020 annual Water
for slip repair, weather permitting.
Quality Report is now available. Visit
http://UW.ohioruralwater.org/gallipolis. Local trafﬁc will need to use other
state and county roads as a detour.
html to view. If you would like a paper
OLIVE TWP. — Mt. Olive Road in
copy mailed to your home, please call
Olive Township is currently closed
740-446-0613.
due to slip repair by Olive Township
Trustees.
GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County
Engineer Brett A. Boothe announces
Woods Mill Road will be closed beginning Monday, April 20-Friday, June
19, weather permitting. The road is
POMEROY — The Mulberry Comclosed from Ohio State Route 325 to
munity Center is serving lunches from
Deckard Road for slip repair. Local
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Tuesdays
trafﬁc will need to use other county
and Thursdays. Dine-in and carry-out
roads.
options available.
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.
GALLIA COUNTY — The annual
Temporary trafﬁc signals and a 10
Jacob and Maggie Davis reunion will
not be held this year due to the COVID- foot width restriction will be in place.
Estimated completion: November 20,
19 outbreak and in consideration for
2020
older family members.
MEIGS COUNTY — Beginning
MEIGS COUNTY — Both the Lovett
June 1, one lane of SR 7 will be closed
Reunion, scheduled for June 28th and
between Storys Run Road (County
the Blake/Reed Reunion scheduled for
Road 345) and Leading Creek Road
July 11th will not be held due to the
(County Road 3) for a bridge deck
coronavirus.
overlay project on the bridge crossGALLIPOLIS — Ohio AFSCME
ing over Leading Creek. Temporary
Retirees, Subchapter 102, Gallia and
Jackson Counties, has canceled its June trafﬁc signals and an 11 foot width
19 meeting, due to virus concerns. For restriction will be in place. Estimated
completion: November 20, 2020
more information, 740-245-0093.

Scholarship
applications available

Water report
available

Mulberry
Community Center

Meetings and
reunions canceled

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

VIRGINIA
IRENE BLOOMER

JUNE 24, 1921 -JUNE 17, 2012

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card showers
Rev. Charles Tom and Dottie
(Moore) Curtis recently celebrated
their 56th wedding anniversary. Cards
may be sent to P.O. Box 92, Racine,
OH 45771.
Johnny and Patricia (Malone)
Moore recently celebated their 50th
wedding anniversary . Cards may be
sent to 34135 Sidehill Road, Rutland,
OH 45775.
Charlene Hoeﬂich, former general
manager of The Daily Sentinel in
Pomeroy, will celebrate her birthday
on June 19, cards may be sent to her
at 109 High Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769.

Tuesday, June 16
GALLIPOLIS — American Legion
Ladies Auxiliary will meet at 6:30
p.m., post home on McCormick
Road. Elections for new year ofﬁcers
will be held. All members are urged
to attend.

Wednesday, June 17
POMEROY —A blood drive will be
held at the Mulberry Community Center from 1:30-6 p.m. Call 1-800-7332767 or visit RedCrossBlood.org and
enter MeigsCommunity to schedule
an appointment.
CHESHIRE — The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency Board of
Directors will hold their bi-monthly
meeting on at 11:30 a.m. via virtual
meeting. If you would like to attend,
please email Lora Rawson at lrawson@galliameigscaa.org to receive
meeting access information.

lf raindrops fall in Heaven Lord please take my Mother's hand
And dance with her upon a cloud so high,
Then when the storm is over if a rainbow should appear
Somewhere off in the distant sky,
Gently take her by the hand and lead her on her way
So that she might ﬁnd the rainbows end,
Then as she smiles in wonder at the treasures Heaven holds
Wrap her safely in Your arms and dance with her again,
For you see she was an angel Lord here upon this earth
And though I'll be forever grateful she was mine,
I simply was not ready when I had to let her go
And I still think about her all the time,
So tell her that I Love her Lord more than she'll ever know
Then gently place a kiss upon her cheek.
For though she is in Heaven now I want her to know
She still means the world and all to me.

Thursday, June 18
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid
Waste Management District Board of
Director’s will meet at 3:30 p.m. at the
district ofﬁce in Wellston.

Saturday, June 27
POMEROY — A low cost rabies
shot clinic for cats and dogs will be
held from 10 a.m. to noon at the
Meigs County Health Department.
The cost is $5. The clinic is sponsored
by the Meigs County Health Department and Meigs Veterinary Clinic. For
more information call Dawn or Steve
at 740-992-6626.

Monday, June 29
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at their ofﬁce
located at 97 North Second Avenue,
Suite 2, Middleport.

“And the mother of the child said, As the Lord liveth,
and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee. And he
arose, and followed her.”
— 2 Kings 4:30

OH-70190695

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

LOVE AND MISSING YOU ALWAYS,
YOUR FAMILY

�4 Wednesday, June 17, 2020

NEWS

Ohio Valley Publishing

Families participate in Fishing Rodeo
By Kayla Hawthorne

and enjoy ﬁshing,” Fowler
said.
Participants were sorted into age categories to
compete for the most ﬁsh
POINT PLEASANT
caught, the smallest ﬁsh
— The Fishing Rodeo,
caught and the largest
sponsored by the Famﬁsh caught. Those catily Resource Network
egories and winners were:
(FRN), took place over
Ages 0-5 years — Graythe weekend at Krodel
son Adams caught the
Park in Point Pleasant.
most ﬁsh with 18; Emily
FRN Director Greg
Fowler said that over 100 Short caught the smallest ﬁsh of 3 inches; Beau
individuals participated
Lambert caught the lonin the event on Saturday
gest ﬁsh of 33 inches.
morning.
Ages 6-10 years —
As previously reported
by the Register, social dis- Ethan Grim caught the
most ﬁsh with 53; Lakin
tancing guidelines were
Bush caught the smallest
in place for the safety of
ﬁsh of 2.5 inches; Kaylin
the participants during
Johnson caught the lonthe event. Fowler said
gest ﬁsh of 19.5 inches.
that everyone “honored”
Ages 11-15 years —
the rules for the event
Caleb Jones caught
this year.
“(It) was good for fami- the most ﬁsh with 86;
Emily Edmonds caught
lies to be able to get out

khawthorne@aimmediamidwest.
com

the smallest ﬁsh of 2.25
inches; Braden Robinson
caught the longest ﬁsh of
22 inches.
Ages 16-20 — Loren
Nobel caught the most
ﬁsh with 33; Christian
Hill caught the shortest
ﬁsh of 3 inches; Dom
Kisamore caught the longest ﬁsh of 20 2/3 inches.
Ages 21 and over —
Rob Caripica caught the
most ﬁsh with 32; Bryan
Bentz caught the shortest ﬁsh of 3.25 inches;
Timmy Mayes caught the
longest ﬁsh of 21 inches.
This was the 27th
Annual Fishing Rodeo
hosted by FRN.
© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.
Kayla Hawthorne is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing. Reach her at
(304) 675-1333, ext. 1992.

The winners of the 0-5 year age group are pictured: Most fish caught (18) was Grayson Adams;
Shortest fish (3 inches) was Emily Smith; Longest fish (33 inches) was Beau Lambert.

Photos by Greg Fowler | Courtesy

Fish were stocked at Krodel Park on Thursday before the Fishing Rodeo.

The winners of the 21 and over age group are pictured: Most fish caught (32) was Rob Caripica;
Shortest fish (3.25 inches) was Bryan Bentz; Longest fish (21 inches) was Timmy Mayes.

OH-70191713

The winners of the 0-5 year age group are pictured: Most fish caught (18) was Grayson Adams; The winners of the 11-15 year age group are pictured: Most fish caught (86) was Caleb Jones; Shortest
Shortest fish (3 inches) was Emily Smith; Longest fish (33 inches) was Beau Lambert.
fish (2.25 inches) was Emily Edmonds; Longest fish (22 inches) was Braden Robinson.

�COMICS

Ohio Valley Publishing

BLONDIE

Wednesday, June 17, 2020 5

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

CRANKSHAFT

By Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Ohio Valley Publishing

NASCAR’S Bubba Wallace finds voice

Steve Helber | AP file

Driver Bubba Wallace waits for the start of a NASCAR Cup Series auto race June
10 in Martinsville, Va. Wallace now counts Spike Lee and Demi Lovato — his
admitted celebrity crush — as those loudly in his corner since he’s become the
leader of NASCAR’s push for change.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
— Bubba Wallace can count
Spike Lee and Demi Lovato in
his corner since he became the
leader of NASCAR’s push for
change.
Where he has failed to ﬁnd
support is from corporate
America.
Wallace is the only black fulltime driver at NASCAR’s top
level and has had to scrap for
sponsorship money his entire
career. Since he has taken a
prominent role as an activist
— successfully calling on NASCAR to ban Confederate ﬂags
at its events and leading the
conversation among his peers
about racial equality — the
only new friends Wallace has
are celebrities and fans.

Richard Petty Motorsports
has not heard from a single
potential sponsor looking to
back Wallace on the track.
“Nope. Nothing,” Wallace
said Friday in an interview
with The Associated Press.
“There’s a lot going on and
part of me thinks, ‘Hell, they
always told me winning would
make the sponsors come,’ and
we won a couple times and the
sponsors never came.
“I’m not doing this for
sponsorship,” he added. “I am
doing this because it’s what I
believe in. If sponsors do come
through, then they are showing
support and they believe in the
message and they line up with
the same core values that I
have. That’s important.”

The 26-year-old Wallace was
widely praised at Wednesday
night’s race for running a Black
Lives Matter paint scheme on
the iconic No. 43 made famous
by Hall of Famer Richard Petty,
his boss. The opportunity for
RPM to support Wallace with
the paint scheme was possible
only because no other corporation had bought the hood space
to advertise.
RPM has sponsors including
the Air Force, Coca-Cola and
McDonald’s for 16 races this
year. It has space avaialble for
20 more.
It has been a whirlwind two
weeks for Wallace, who at last
has grown comfortable with
See WALLACE | 7

NFL commissioner
Goodell encourages
signing Kaepernick
By Joe Reedy
Associated Press

Roger Goodell would like to see Colin Kaepernick back in the NFL this season.
The NFL commissioner said during ESPN’s
“The Return of Sports” special on Monday that he
is encouraging teams to sign the 32-year old quarterback, who hasn’t played the past three seasons.
Kaepernick was with the San Francisco 49ers in
2016 when he kneeled during the national anthem
to protest racial injustice.
“If he wants to resume his career in the NFL,
then obviously it’s gonna take a team to make that
decision. I welcome that, support a club making
that decision and encourage them to do that,”
Goodell said during his interview with ESPN’s
Mike Greenberg.
Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said last
week that he received a call from another team
about Kaepernick. Carroll and the Seahawks
brought in Kaepernick for a workout in 2017 and
had another planned in 2018 before it was canceled.
Goodell set up a tryout for Kaepernick in Atlanta last year for scouts of all 32 teams to attend,
See NFL | 7

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs Chamber of
Commerce 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 740992-5005 or email director@meigsohio.com

Rio hosting Jim Marshall
Memorial golf outing
JACKSON, Ohio — The Veterans Association
at the University of Rio Grande will host their
3rd annual Jim Marshall Memorial Golf Tournament on Saturday, Sept. 5, at Franklin Valley Golf
Course in Jackson County.
The event — which has been pushed back from
its original June 13 date — will begin at 9 a.m.
with a shotgun start and the format is a 4-man
scramble. The cost is $50 per player, plus mulligans are available for $10 per individual. There
is also a $20 skins fee per team, with cash prizes
available for skins.
Prizes will be awarded, plus breakfast and lunch
will be provided. Beer will be available for purchase at the event as well.
Hole and tee box sponsorship is available at a
cost of $100 per hole or tee box.
All funds raised from the event helps Rio
Grande honor veterans at the 2020 Jim Marshall
Veteran of the Year Award Banquet — an annual
event held every year the last Saturday of October.
This year’s banquet is slated for Oct. 31.
For more information, to register or to set up a
sponsorship, contact Delyssa Edwards by email at
dedwards@rio.edu or by phone at 740-245-4427.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

An upper deck view of Progressive Field, home of the Cleveland Indians, before the start of a July 13, 2014, baseball game against the
Chicago White Sox in Cleveland, Ohio.

Rob Manfred says baseball season in jeopardy
NEW YORK (AP) —
Baseball Commissioner
Rob Manfred says there
might be no major league
games this year after
a breakdown in talks
between teams and the
players’ union on how to
split up money in a season delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.
The league also
revealed several players
on big league rosters
have tested positive for
COVID-19.
Two days after union
head Tony Clark declared
additional negotiations
futile, Manfred reversed
his position of last week
when he said he was
“100%” certain the 2020
season would start.
Deputy Commissioner
Dan Halem sent a sevenpage letter to players’
association chief negotiator Bruce Meyer asking
the union whether it will
waive the threat of legal
action and tell MLB to
announce a spring training report date and a
regular-season schedule.
These were just the latest escalating volleys in
a sport viewing disagreements over starting the
season as a preliminary
battle ahead of bargaining
to replace the labor contract that expires on Dec.
1, 2021.
“It’s just a disaster for
our game, absolutely
no question about it,”
Manfred said during an
appearance on ESPN. “It
shouldn’t be happening,
and it’s important that we
ﬁnd a way to get past it
and get the game back on

the ﬁeld for the beneﬁt of
our fans.”
Spring training was
stopped because of the
pandemic on March 12,
two weeks before opening
day, and the sides reached
an agreement March 26
on how to revise their
labor deal to account for
the virus.
Since then, the hostility has escalated to
1990s levels as the sides
exchanged offers. MLB
claims teams can’t afford
to play without fans and
pay the prorated salaries
called for in the March
deal, which included a
provision for “good-faith”
negotiations over the possibility of games in empty
ballparks or neutral sites.
“The proliferation of
COVID-19 outbreaks
around the country
over the last week, and
the fact that we already
know of several 40-man
roster players and staff
who have tested positive,
has increased the risks
associated with commencing spring training
in the next few weeks,”
Halem wrote in his letter to Meyer, which was
obtained by the AP.
Halem sent Meyer a letter with a sarcastic tone
Friday accompanying
MLB’s latest offer, and
Meyer responded with a
hostile timbre Saturday
as the sides memorialized positions ahead of a
possible grievance before
the panel chaired by independent arbitrator Mark
Irvings. Halem’s letter
Monday asked the union
for many clariﬁcations of

its positions.
“I note that both the
NBA and NHL, two
leagues which you repeatedly reference in your
letter, do not intend
to resume play until
about Aug. 1, and both
intend to resume play
at a limited number of
sites with a quarantine
approach,” Halem wrote.
“Please let us know the
association’s views on
quarantining players in
league-approved hotels
(like the NBA’s Disney
World model) when they
are not at the ballpark if
conditions worsen over
the next few weeks.”
Clark had issued a
statement Saturday that
told MLB: “It’s time to
get back to work. Tell us
when and where.” The
union then said it might
ﬁle a grievance seeking
additional economic
documents and money
damages that could total
$1 billion or more.
“Players are disgusted
that after Rob Manfred
unequivocally told players
and fans that there would
‘100%’ be a 2020 season,
he has decided to go back
on his word and is now
threatening to cancel the
entire season,” Clark said
in a statement Monday.
“This latest threat is
just one more indication
that Major League Baseball has been negotiating
in bad faith since the
beginning,” Clark added.
“This has always been
about extracting additional pay cuts from players
and this is just another
day and another bad faith

tactic in their ongoing
campaign.”
Manfred said ahead of
last week’s amateur draft
that the chance of a season was “100%.”
He reversed his position Monday.
“I’m not conﬁdent. I
think there’s real risk;
and as long as there’s no
dialogue, that real risk
is going to continue,”
Manfred said on ESPN.
“The owners are 100%
committed to getting
baseball back on the ﬁeld.
Unfortunately, I can’t tell
you that I’m 100% certain
that’s going to happen.”
Players think Manfred
is delaying to shorten the
schedule — and their pay.
“So, Rob, explain to
us how you can be 100%
sure that there’s going to
be baseball but not conﬁdent there will be baseball at the same time?”
Cincinnati pitcher Trevor
Bauer tweeted. “The
tactic is to bluff with `no
season’ again and delay
another 2-3 weeks.”
Halem asked the union
for written permission to
go ahead with the season.
“Rob Manfred and the
owners are walking back
on their word…AGAIN,”
tweeted Washington
pitcher Max Scherzer, a
member of the union’s
eight-man executive subcommittee. “The fans do
not deserve this. So I’ll
say it one more time, tell
us when and where.”
MLB has made three
economic offers, the last
offering to guarantee
See BASEBALL | 7

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Ohio Valley Publishing

From page 6

a pioneering role he never
sought.
He understood early that his
rise through NASCAR gave
him a platform he had to use
responsibly. His 2013 victory in
a Truck Series race was only the
second in a NASCAR national
series by an African American
driver (Wendell Scott, 1963),
and helped push him into the
elite Cup Series. He pinned a
message to his Twitter proﬁle in
2017 that remains there today:
“There is only 1 driver from an
African American background
at the top level of our sport..I
am the 1. You’re not gonna stop
hearing about “the black driver”
for years. Embrace it, accept it
and enjoy the journey.”
It has not always been a comfortable role. It took Wallace a
few days to offer his thoughts on
fellow driver Kyle Larson’s ﬁring
for use of a racial slur. Even after
George Floyd was killed last
month while in police custody
in Minneapolis, Wallace was not
the ﬁrst driver to speak out for
racial equality.
To understand why requires
a look at his childhood. Wallace is of mixed race, born in
Alabama but raised in Concord,
North Carolina, the area most
NASCAR teams call home. He
was drawn to auto racing over
other sports and admittedly was
somewhat sheltered in his youth
from racial discrimination. His
father, who is white, wouldn’t
stand for ignorant or racist comments and handled all negative
experiences his son encountered
at the tracks.
“What I go through and before
all this, I didn’t have it as bad as
other African Americans in the
community,” Wallace said. “The
encounters I had were very few,
but they were powerful. The
negative encounters I’ve had
with law enforcement were very
few, but they stood out.”
Wallace remembers those
comments well, things like “can
you afford this car?” and the suggestion he must sell drugs to pay
for luxuries.
It was not necessarly Floyd’s
death that was a watershed
moment for Wallace. He told AP
he began to ﬁnd his public voice
on racism after watching video

in May of Ahmaud Arbery’s fatal
shooting in Georgia. He said he
now recognizes he must not let
his platform go to waste.
“We are much more than just
drivers who drive a race car,” he
said. “We are ambassadors. We
are leaders of our own brands,
and then in life things are
thrown at you, you have to stand
up for what’s right. That brings
on a whole new role. It’s not on
the front of the agenda that you
see, but if you read the ﬁne print
it’s part of becoming an athlete
and the pedestal you get with
that.”
It’s been challenging for Wallace, who ﬁrst publicly called on
NASCAR to ban the Confederate ﬂag in a live CNN interview.
By the time NASCAR responded
Wednesday, Wallace had two
sheriff’s deputies assigned to
him for security at Martinsville
Speedway in Virginia.
His father, with whom he’s
had a sometimes rocky relationship with, traveled with him
to Atlanta Motor Speedway
where Wallace wore an “I Can’t
Breathe” shirt over his ﬁresuit.
He was part of a driver effort all
last week to make a video calling
for change, and by the end of the
race he was completely drained
and fainted as Fox interviewed
him.
Wallace said his sleep has
been choppy — he ﬁnished a
round of morning television
interviews and crashed for a
four-hour nap — and is trying to
ﬁnd time to focus on Sunday’s
race near Miami while also
answering the overwhelming
crush of attention he’s been
under.
He has leaned on his family
and his girlfriend, Amanda,
who has teased him about pop
star Lovato’s support (“big fan
crush there”). And he is also
noted there’s now worry about
his safety at the track amid a
backlash from fans angry over
the ﬂag ban.
Wallace isn’t sure what comes
next in his role as activist but he
said he is determined to ﬁght for
equality. He has not kneeled during the national anthem, which
is a revered ritual in NASCAR’s
elaborate prerace ceremonies.
He hasn’t ruled it out.
“I’ve thought about it, still
thinking about it,” Wallace said.
“I’m still learning up on it, reading about it, so I’m not clear on
that just yet.”

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

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

YARD SALE
Garage/Yard Sale
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Baseball

Players are angry following ﬁve years of ﬂat salaries,
a lost grievance claiming the
Chicago Cubs manipulated
From page 6
the service time of star third
players 70% of their salaries baseman Kris Bryant in violation of the labor contract
as part a 72-game schedand allegations several teams
ule beginning July 14 and
increasing the total to 80% if did not properly use revenue
the postseason is completed. sharing proceeds, which the
Players previously offered union called “tanking.”
Players hope to see docutwo proposals, holding their
ments detailing regional
position that no additional
sports networks’ agreements
pay cuts were acceptable
with teams, ﬁnancial interbeyond the prorated salaests of MLB owners in RSNs
ries for 2020 that they had
and real estate ventures adjaagreed to in March. That
cent to ballparks, plus MLB
deal called for $170 million
afﬁliated companies such
in salary advances and a
as the MLB Network, MLB
guarantee of service time
credit if no games are played Advanced Media and BAM
Tech. During a grievance,
this year.
Manfred had threatened a they would ask Irvings to
shorter schedule, perhaps of order document production.
In their March agreement,
about 50 games. The union
the sides vowed to “work
could respond by ﬁling a
in good faith to as soon as
grievance, arguing players
is practicable commence,
should be paid for the seaplay, and complete the fullson of 119 games they initially proposed. The union’s est 2020 championship
season and post-season that
ﬁrst plan would result in
salaries of nearly $3 billion. is economically feasible,

consistent with” a series of
provisions.
Absent Manfred’s consent,
the agreement said, the season would not begin unless
there were no travel restrictions in the U.S. and Canada
impacting play, no restrictions on mass gatherings at
all 30 regular-season ballparks and no health or safety
risks in playing in front of
fans at the regular stadiums.
But it also provided that the
sides “will discuss in good
faith the economic feasibility of playing games in the
absence of spectators or at
appropriate substitute neutral sites.”
MLB told the union it
would lose an additional
$640,000 for each regularseason game played with no
gate revenue and does not
want to extend the regular
season past Sept. 27 because
it fears a second wave of the
coronavirus could endanger
the postseason, when $787
million of broadcast revenue
is earned.

NFL

“We all need to be on the same page and
address some of the uncomfortable things
that need addressed,” he said.
Goodell did not answer how the league
From page 6
would respond if President Donald Trump
continued to criticize them if players kneeled
but it unraveled at the last moment due to
for the National Anthem. Goodell also said
lack of media access and what Kaepernick’s
that he wants to include Kaepernick’s voice on
representatives saw as an unusual liability
how the league should approach social issues.
waiver. Instead of the workout taking place
at the Falcons’ training complex, Kaepernick
“I hope we’re at a point now where everyconducted an impromptu session at a high
body’s committed to making long-term, susschool in front of media and scouts from
tainable change,” Goodell said. “If his efforts
eight teams.
are not on the ﬁeld but continuing to work in
The NFL released a video on June 5 in
this space, we welcome him to that table and
which Goodell apologized for the league
to help us, guide us, help us make better decifor not doing a good job of listening to consions about the kinds of things that need to
cerns by players on racial inequality. Goodell be done in the communities.”
though was roundly criticized for the apology
NBA commissioner Adam Silver said when
not mentioning Kaepernick.
the league gathers at the Disney campus it
The video came out a day after many play- would provide an opportunity for the league
ers released a video criticizing the league for to do more to promote social and societal
not condemning racism following the May 25 change — especially since players, who will
death of George Floyd.
be conﬁned to the campus, will have plenty
“We had spent time prior to that underof free time on their hands and with what’s
standing all the frustration, fear and sadness. expected to be a sizable media contingent
present.
When the video came out on Thursday it
was very powerful. It was appropriate for me
“How can we use our larger platform,
to respond,” Goodell said. “We should have
the NBA together with our players, really
listened to our players earlier including Colin to affect change?” Silver asked. “There’s
Kaepernick, Eric Reid, Kenny Stills, Malcolm an appropriate role, of course, for protests.
Jenkins and so many people really brought
There’s an appropriate role for those who
these issues to light.”
choose not to engage in the game of basketAtanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan said ball down in Florida. But … for those who
Goodell’s video was a great step in the right
decide to come, together with the league,
direction.
what are those things we can be doing?”

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

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

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

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

ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
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%DVHPHQW :DOOV %UDFHG
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FREE ESTIMATES
24 Hours
(740) 446-0870
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

GENERAL NEWS
ASSIGNMENT REPORTER WANTED

for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. Must have writing skills and a
passion for telling stories while being fair and accurate. Degree
in journalism or English preferred but not required. Previous
employment in print journalism preferred but not required.
Photography skills a bonus. This is a full-time position with
benefits package. Send resume, along with three writing
samples, to Ohio Valley Publishing Editor Beth Sergent at
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com.

OH-70190400

Wallace

Wednesday, June 17, 2020 7

�NEWS/WEATHER

8 Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Daily Sentinel

COVID-19

Take off Pounds Responsibly resumes meetings

From page 1

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© 2020 Ohio Valley
Publishing, all rights
reserved.

Fund
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8 AM

2 PM

60°

72°

73°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.17
2.21
24.18
20.40

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:03 a.m.
8:56 p.m.
3:47 a.m.
5:34 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Jun 21 Jun 28

Full

Jul 5

Last

Jul 12

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

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

Major
9:21a
10:00a
10:44a
11:32a
12:25p
12:54a
1:54a

Minor
3:10a
3:49a
4:32a
5:19a
6:12a
7:08a
8:08a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
9:43p
10:24p
11:09p
11:58p
12:53p
1:22p
2:22p

Minor
3:32p
4:12p
4:56p
5:45p
6:39p
7:36p
8:36p

WEATHER HISTORY
A strong Santa Ana wind loaded
with ﬁne dust and pulverized clay
roasted Santa Barbara, Calif., on June
17, 1859. Unofﬁcial temperatures
reached 133 degrees.

83°
62°

Mostly cloudy, a
t-storm in the p.m.

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY

Portsmouth
80/59

300

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. Tue.

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

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

Level
12.88
16.01
21.88
13.29
13.02
25.31
13.02
25.83
34.47
12.79
17.30
34.50
15.80

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.12
-0.10
+0.34
+0.33
-0.06
-0.25
-0.22
+0.21
-0.02
-0.08
+0.70
+0.60
+1.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020

89°
65°
A thunderstorm
around in the
afternoon

OH-70189005

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MONDAY

89°
64°

A t-storm in spots in
the afternoon

Chance for a strong
thunderstorm

Belpre
78/60

Athens
78/59

St. Marys
78/60

Parkersburg
77/60

Coolville
78/60

Elizabeth
77/59

Spencer
75/60

Buffalo
75/61
Milton
76/61

Clendenin
74/60

St. Albans
75/62

Huntington
76/59

Charleston
72/59

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
90/61
Montreal
86/61

Billings
57/49

Denver
93/50

Minneapolis
91/71

Chicago
88/64

Toronto
81/58
Detroit
84/60

New York
78/64
Washington
72/67

Kansas City
89/70

87°
66°
Some sun with
thunderstorms
possible

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

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
94/62/s
64/51/r
79/63/pc
69/64/pc
74/66/c
57/49/sh
66/48/s
76/60/s
72/59/c
70/60/sh
83/48/pc
88/64/s
84/60/pc
80/63/pc
83/63/s
95/74/s
93/50/pc
88/69/s
84/60/s
88/75/sh
94/73/s
84/63/s
89/70/s
93/72/s
88/66/s
77/60/pc
85/65/pc
87/77/t
91/71/pc
84/64/pc
92/75/s
78/64/s
92/67/s
90/71/pc
77/63/pc
103/78/s
81/62/pc
75/55/s
72/61/sh
71/67/sh
88/68/pc
66/47/s
79/55/s
71/53/c
72/67/sh

Hi/Lo/W
90/63/s
66/51/c
81/66/pc
73/67/t
77/66/t
65/47/pc
74/53/pc
82/65/pc
77/60/t
80/62/t
71/48/s
90/69/s
82/63/s
80/64/pc
83/64/s
94/75/s
76/49/t
89/68/c
85/62/s
89/75/pc
93/72/s
86/65/pc
92/70/pc
94/73/s
90/69/s
76/60/pc
85/68/pc
86/77/t
90/65/t
86/67/s
92/75/s
79/66/pc
92/68/pc
90/73/t
79/67/t
103/77/s
79/62/pc
82/60/s
78/64/t
79/67/t
92/70/s
72/53/s
81/55/s
75/56/pc
80/67/t

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
79/63

High
Low

El Paso
99/73

Chihuahua
92/67

TUESDAY

89°
64°

Marietta
78/60

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
71/53
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
79/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

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Ze�dej�d[[Z�je�X[�fW_Z�
XWYa$�J^[�H[i_b_[dY[�
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ZedWj_edi"�m^_Y^�Wh[�jWn#
Z[ZkYj_Xb[$�Ceh[�_d\ehcWj_ed�WXekj�j^[�]hWdj�
_i�WlW_bWXb[�Wj�h[i_b_[dY[]hWdji$Yec$

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
77/60

Ashland
77/60
Grayson
78/58

Primary pollutant: Ozone

SUNDAY

Wilkesville
78/59
POMEROY
Jackson
77/60
79/59
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
77/60
79/60
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
83/61
GALLIPOLIS
78/60
77/61
77/62

South Shore Greenup
78/59
79/58

44

SATURDAY

Murray City
79/58

McArthur
79/58

Lucasville
80/59

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
81/60

Very High

Primary: pine, grasses
Mold: 1088

Logan
80/59

Adelphi
81/59

Waverly
79/59

Pollen: 39

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

FRIDAY

79°
61°

3

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
6:03 a.m.
8:57 p.m.
4:16 a.m.
6:35 p.m.

THURSDAY

Pleasant today with sunshine and patchy clouds.
Mainly clear tonight. High 78° / Low 60°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

78°
54°
83°
62°
97° in 1952
47° in 1908

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

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102° in Gila Bend, AZ
29° in Bridgeport, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
94/73
Monterrey
90/73

Miami
87/77

124° in Jacobabad, Pakistan
0° 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.

�</text>
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