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Nancy “Judy” Griffith, 80, Borden

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Nancy “Judy” Griffith, age 80, of Borden, Indiana passed away Friday, August 28, 2020 at her residence. 

Born July 16, 1940 in Borden, she was the daughter of the late Abb Callam and Velma (Wagoner) Callam.

On March 8, 1974, she married Phillip Tony Griffith, who survives.

Judy was the former owner and operator of the Valley Dairy Barn in Borden and was a member of the First Christian Church in Borden.

She is survived by her husband, Tony; 1 daughter:  Shelly (Russ) Whitaker; 2 sons: Jody (Susan) Wheeler, and Joshua Griffith; 1 brother: Jerry Callam; 5 grandchildren; and 7 great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents and 2 brothers: Donald Callam and George Callam.

A funeral service will be held Tuesday, September 1, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. at the First Christian Church in Borden with Brian Combs officiating. 

Visitation will be from 2:00 p.m. until time of service at the church.

www.hughestaylor.net

Hardinsburg Man Killed in Saturday Morning Accident

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Photo Courtesy of Washington County Sheriff's Department
Police responded to this head-on colission on US-150 Saturday morning.

A 72-year-old Hardinsburg man was pronounced dead at the scene after a two-vehicle crash Saturday morning on US 150. 

The Washington County Sheriff’s Department, fire and EMS responded to a call at approximately 10:23a Saturday. 

According to police, upon arrival evidence at the scene indicated that there was a head-on collision between a White Ford F350 driven by Donald Mattox, 72, Hardinsburg. 

Shaylah Spehard, 29, of Bedford, was the driver of this vehicle. She was taken to U of L Hospital for treatment of serious injuries. Photo Courtesy of Washington County Sheriff’s Department

The other vehicle, a black Chrysler 200, driven by Shaylah Spehard, 29, of Bedford. 

Shepherd was transported by Washington County Ambulance to U of L Hospital for treatment of serious injuries. 

The crash is still under investigation by the Washington County Sheriff’s Department and the Indiana State Police reconstruction team. 

ISP, Indiana Conservation, Washington County EMS, Posey Township Volunteer Fire Department, Palmyra Fire Department, Ramsey Fire Department and the Washington County Coroner’s Office assisted in the accident. 

IU takes action to stop COVID spread at Greek houses

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Indiana University’s COVID-19 mitigation testing has detected an alarming increase of positive tests within Greek, Evans Scholars, and Christian Student Fellowship house at IU Bloomington.

Because these are cases of community transmission (within the houses), the university has directed all houses to suspend in-person organizational activities other than dining and housing for live-in members until at least Sept. 14, 2020. No IU residence halls are included in these measures.

The Monroe County Health Department has given notice to eight Greek houses that members must quarantine, meaning all members must stay in their houses for 14 days. The IU Bloomington Division of Student Affairs has issued a directive reinforcing this notice.

Around 2,600 students live in Greek, Evans Scholars and Christian Student Fellowship houses on campus out of the more than 40,000 students at IU Bloomington.

A list of houses directed to quarantine can be found here. IU’s public health officers are monitoring other houses to discern spread within those communities.

IU leadership has been working with fraternity and sorority chapters since the onset of COVID-19 given the special risk factors associated with this specific type of communal living. As residences not owned or operated by the university, housed Greek and student organizations were instructed to develop their own specific isolation and quarantine plans following guidance and recommendations from IU and the Monroe County Health Department. IU will continue to work with the Monroe County Health Department to support chapters during this time.

IU administration anticipated positive COVID-19 cases and created plans and procedures to mitigate the virus on all IU campuses. IU continues to closely monitor the number of cases and conduct mitigation testing and contact tracing, alongside other prevention efforts. This action taken early in the fall semester, which began this week, is critical to taking control of this type of community transmission.

While IU may continue to see additional cases identified in congregate housing locations, the risk of transmission will be greatly reduced by students and others in the IU community avoiding parties and gatherings as well as complying with other health and safety practices required by the university. 

East Washington Reports Another Covid case; Silver Creek Goes Virtual

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East Washington School Corporation Superintendent Dennis Stockdale reported on the school’s social media site that another student has tested positive for COVID-19.

This new positive case will not change the school’s current plans. 

East Washington Elementary will continue in-person instruction, while the middle and high schools will continue remote instruction through September 2.

“We have already contacted all students and staff who were in direct contact with this student so they may begin proper quarantine procedures,” said Stockdale. 

Salem went to virtual instruction on Monday, August 24, and will tentatively come back to in-person instruction on Sept. 8. 

West Washington reported a case of Covid early Sunday morning and has been in virtual learning all this week. 

They identified 12 students who had been in close contact and seven of those students tested negative. The school is waiting for the results of the other five. 

They intend to return to in-person instruction on Monday, August 31. 

Superintendent Keith Nance posted comments online yesterday about how everyone can work together to help schools remain open. 

“If we sanitize, social distance and wear masks at school that is great and it protects our teachers and our kids within our walls,” Nance wrote. “If kids and families leave our school and travel outside of our community to restaurants, stores, etc, and do NOT practice social distancing, sanitizing, and mask-wearing then our school is vulnerable to closure. Sleepovers, parties and large gatherings have been the biggest culprits of bringing Covid into schools across the state.”

“If you are like us, and you want our schools to be open and stay open, then we need your help. We need our community to partner with us and practice safety measures, not just during school but outside of schools and on the weekends also,” noted Nance. 

“No matter what your opinion is about Covid-19, we are all subject to the same regulations from the state department of health,” he wrote. “If we have cases we will be quarantining students. If we have several cases we will be closing and utilizing virtual instruction. Please take the same precautions outside of the school that we do at school. Do it for our school, do it for our staff and do it for our children.”

Silver Creek High School closed its building and switched to e-learning from Aug. 26 to Sept. 8, superintendent Clemen Perez-Lloyd wrote in a memo to staff and parents of the school earlier this week.

The decision came after discussing “the current absenteeism and staffing shortage” with the Clark County Health Department.

Multiple cases of coronavirus have been confirmed at the high school in the past week.

The district announced on Aug. 20 that two students had tested positive for COVID-19, and both were linked to a non-school related event.

It announced Monday morning that two additional students had tested positive.

“An absentee rate of greater than 25% and continued transmission of COVID-19 in the community were considered,” Perez-Lloyd wrote in the memo. “The decision is based on the best interest of students, faculty, and staff of the school system.”

During the period, Silver Creek High School will serve lunches in a drive-thru pick-up setting.

They will be provided from Monday to Friday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The lunches can be picked up at Door R.

The Salem Lions Varsity Football team will play the Dragons tonight at Silver Creek High School at 7p. You can listen to the pre-game show at 6:40p on WSLM 97.9 FM with the kickoff at 7p. 

 

Melba “June” Kinney, 85, of Scottsburg

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Melba “June” Kinney, 85, of Scottsburg, Indiana, passed away on Friday, August 21, 2020 at the Salem Crossing Nursing Home in Salem, Indiana. 

She was born on May 31, 1935 in Austin, Indiana, the daughter of the late Homer  Gardner and Lila (Baker) Gardner.

June was raised on a large farm near Austin, Indiana, graduated from Austin High School in 1953 where she was a member of the High School Girl’s Quartet. 

She was a former member of the Phi Beta Psi Sorority. 

June was married on July 2, 1955 to Clifford H. Kinney, who preceded her in death on January 4, 2010.

They were often quoted saying, “We met at a roller skating rink and have been going round and round ever since.”  

They dearly loved and adored each other and God was always at the center of their marriage of 54 years. 

June was the former manager of the Scottsburg License Branch, under the leadership of her father, Homer M. Gardner. 

She became a full-time mother in 1959, 1962, and again in 1971. 

June was completely committed and dedicated to raising her children, being a faithful, loving wife and Godly woman. 

She took great delight in spoiling her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. They were the apple of her eye. 

June was a member of the First Christian Church in Scottsburg, Indiana, where she taught children’s Sunday School. 

She spent many hours in the kitchen to prepare the exceptional meals she was known for by her family and friends. June was most certainly born with a green thumb. 

Her home always surrounded by an array of beautiful flowers. She inherited a special talent for sewing from her mother and played the piano by ear.  June would often play the piano at family gatherings. 

She enjoyed the beautiful birds often perched on the well-filled bird feeder she maintained throughout the year. 

June loved to laugh with others which came naturally through her incredible sense of humor!  

In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, Marvin Homer Gardner, and a sister, Norma Louise Vincent. 

Survivors include a son, David Gardner Kinney of Scottsburg, Indiana; two daughters, Brenda June Naugle of Sellersburg, Indiana and Karen Marie (Chris) Petty of Scottsburg, Indiana; five grandchildren, Andrea Mae England (Jason), Allison June Sellers (Joel), Emma Marie Naugle, Grant Christopher and Chase David Petty and two great-grandchildren, Adler Ryan England and Isabella “Bella” Marie Naugle.  

Private services were held on Sunday, August 23, 2020 at Collins Funeral Home with Phil LaMaster officiating. 

Interment was in Scottsburg Cemetery. 

Donations in memory of June may be given to Living Hope Ministries c/o Collins Funeral Home in Scottsburg, Indiana or to Living Hope Ministries, 5683 S Boatman Road, Underwood, Indiana 47177. 

Online condolences:www.collinsfuneralhome.net.

 
 

Charles Nathan Prewitt, 70, of Paoli

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Charles Nathan Prewitt, 70, of Paoli, Indiana, passed away on Thursday August 27, at Spring Meadows.  He was born September 19, 1949, in Dixon, Tennessee to Alton and Marie Dahl. He married Debra Olvey and she preceded him in death.

He was preceded in death by his mother.

Charles was raised on a farm, Cash Bottema Farm & Dairy and got into a lot of mischief, like getting caught smoking a cigarette once.

He was a union man. Charles worked doing what he loved straight from high school to the print shop, as a print shop machine operator. He loved his family and friends. Charles was a loving husband, father, brother, grandfather, and great-grandfather. He was the type of man that would have given the shirt off his back if you need it. Charles loved his cats dearly. They were just like one of his kids to him and made him happy and kept him laughing on so many different occasions.

Charles absolutely loved going fishing with his friends every Summer to Patoka Lake out on the boat telling jokes and just being one of the guys. He loved being the life of the party, telling jokes, making people laugh, listening to music, and playing that air guitar he did not have. He also liked playing pool and cards with his friends, son-in-law’s, and grandchildren. Charles loved to watch NASCAR and Formula One Racing. His favorite NASCAR driver was Dale Earnhardt Sr. He loved to go with his brother, Mike to the Formula One Races. Charles always talked about those outings for days after, with a s mile on his face. He was a beer drinking, hardworking, Chevy driving, bass fishing, Earnhardt loving man.

Even as memories started to slip away, one thing always stayed with Charles is family. He loved his family dearly and that never changed.

5-Children, 11-Grandchildren, 8-Great-Grandchildren, his father Alton, spouse Debra, brother Michael Prewitt, sister Debbie Dattilo, sister Betty Harness, and several aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews survive Charles Nathan Prewitt.

Cremation was chosen with a celebration of life to held at a later date.

Harrison County Inmate Roster – 8-27-20

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     Tharp, Lisa

  • Poss of needle
  • Poss of meth
  • Poss of paraphernalia
  • Hold for Clark

    Minter, Troy

  • Poss meth
  • Poss paraphernalia
  • Poss of hypo needle

    Pearson-Mcatee, Deonte

  • Poss of needle
  • Poss of meth
  • Poss of paraphernalia

    Mcabe, Corry

  • Poss of needle
  • Poss of meth
  • Poss paraphernalia

    Paxton, Robert

  • Poss of a legend drug
  • Poss of needle

    Davidson, Robert

  • Poss of needle

Clark County Inmate Roster – 8-27-20

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BOOKING HISTORY 080-27-2020

Lawrence County Inmate Roster – 8-27-20

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Lawrence Co bookings

Two More West Washington Students Test Positive For Covid-19

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Two students from the West Washington Schools contact tracing that were considered “close contact” have received positive Covid-19 tests.
 
That brings to three the total of West Washington students who have so far tested positive for Covid-19. 
 
There were 12 individuals considered “close contact” from the school’s investigation of the individual that tested Covid positive this weekend.
 
Sunday morning, the school announced it was moving to an online virtual education setting on Monday, August 24 for one week only. 
 
Seven of the “close contact” individuals have tested negative. The remainder are awaiting results, according to the school’s social media site. 
 
Regardless of test results anyone determined to be in “close contact” must be quarantined for 14 days from the last contact and cannot return to school until the 14 days have passed.
 
Superintendent Keith Nance said earlier this week the school intends to be back for in-person education on Monday, August 31. 
 
After contacting the Washington County Health Department about the two additional positive results, the school was instructed that no additional contact tracing needed to be completed due to the timeline.
 
“We will continue to follow up with those that are awaiting test results,” Superintendent Keith Nance wrote on social media.
 
Changes have recently been made by the state department of health about symptom screening and return to school protocols. (see graphic below)
 
As a result of the initial positive case, West Washington’s game with Crawford County was canceled due to the decision of Crawford County Health Officer Dr. Devi K Pierce, MD.“Pierce said that since WW wasn’t in school due to Covid 19 they couldn’t come here to play sports of any kind,” according to Crawford County AD Jerry Hanger. “We have to follow her rules.”

The Senators have been searching for another team to play this Friday night. 

Nance said he hopes to make an announcement by this afternoon (Thursday).