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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

Mostly sunny
today. High of 62.
Low of 36 .
....... Page A2

At the foot of the
cross .... Page A4

OBITUARIES

SPORTS
High school
baseball, softball
........ Page B1

Arthur W. Allison, 76

John W. Proffitt, 53

Clarence S. Church, 66

Justin D. Smith, 33

Justice P. Clark, infant

Oscar T. Smith, 76

Mildred L. Coughenour, 59

Daniel R. Stone, 56

50 cents daily

FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 64

Meigs ‘Think Pink’ program funded by Komen
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative’s “Think
Pink” program to provide breast
health programming for Meigs
County Women has been funded
for another year by the Columbus
Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for
the Cure.
An award of $42,673 to the local program will be used to provide breast health screenings and
education to 150 women in Meigs
County. Meigs County’s “Think
Pink” program was one of 34
breast health programs to receive
more than $1.9 million in funding

from Komen Columbus.
“We’re thrilled to be funded for
year seven,” said Norma Torres,
RN-BSN, director of the local program.
“We are happy to award these
grants to programs and organizations in our 30-county service area
that directly impact thousands
of women who are underserved
and uninsured. Our grantees use
the money awarded for many programs including screening, education, treatment, survivor support
and outreach programs,” said Katie Carter, executive director of
Komen Columbus. “Together, we
are driven by Komen’s mission to
save lives and end breast cancer

forever, and every dollar raised
takes us one step closer to achieving that goal.”
“Think Pink” plans to use the
Komen funds to provide free mammograms, follow-up diagnostic
procedures, breast self-awareness
education and gasoline vouchers
(to reduce transportation barriers) for Meigs County women,
according to Torres. She noted
that the program has served well
over a thousand women through
mammograms and educational
sessions.
Torres said “Think Pink” services are possible because of the
See PINK |‌ A3

Submitted photo

Katie Carter, chief executive officer of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Columbus Affiliate, center, presents a facsimile check to Carolyn Grueser, administrative assistant of Meigs County’s “Think Pink” program, left, and Norma
Torres, local program director.

‘Yesteryear’
programming
to continue

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

Sarah Hawley/photos

Mustard Seed ReSale Shop organizers Shelia Hill, center, and Opal Hupp, along with Hill’s granddaughter Vivian Allen, work
at the shop each week to provide clothes and household items to people in the area.

If you have faith as small as a mustard seed …
Locals giving back to help those in need

RACINE — With a group of volunteers
and a lot of faith, the Mustard Seed ReSale
Shop is now serving the Racine community and surrounding areas.
The shop takes its name from Matthew
17:20, which says (in part), “Truly I tell
you, if you have faith as small as a mustard
seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘move
from here to there,’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.”
Organizers Shelia Hill, Opal Hupp and
Barb Lane lead a group of 10 volunteers
who keep the shop open five days a week.
It is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Volunteers are from several of the local churches in the Racine area,
including Bethany, East Letart, Racine
UMC, Carmel Sutton and Morning Star.
The shop provides a variety of items,
including clothing, household items and
See SEED ‌| A3

CHESTER — While
the Yesteryear program
— where students were
brought into a central location to learn about the
lifestyle and skills of generations past — was discontinued by the Meigs County
Council on Aging this year,
the Chester-Shade Historical Association has taken it
over.
Due to funding cuts and
the necessity to eliminate
some programming, the
Meigs County Council on
Aging recently eliminated
the Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) from
its agenda of activities.
The Chester-Shade Historical Association has long
been active with volunteers
and financial assistance
in the Yesteryear program
and felt it was too good a
program to discontinue.
Over the past 10 years, the
Historical Association has
donated $1,000 to the Yesteryear program for use in

purchasing materials and
the cost of transporting
students by bus to the program site. A few weeks ago,
the Association decided to
assume the leadership and
take on the financial obligations of the traditional sixweek activity to be offered
to all fifth graders in Meigs
County schools.
The program will continue to be held at the Bradford
Church of Christ activity
building, with the children
being bused to that location.
Skills of yesteryear, many
now becoming lost arts, will
be taught by volunteers —
many of whom have shared
their skills with local children over the past 25 years
of its existence.
Yesteryear got under
way on March 27 and will
continue two days a week
through May 21. A total of
280 students will be learning about the life skills of
their ancestors — including everything from making
candles to weaving baskets
— in the program taught by
30 volunteers.

Golden egg found
Sarah Hawley/photos

Vivian Allen looks at the wedding dresses the shop has for sale.

USDA helping finance home repair loans
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

MARIETTA – With the
spring season upon us, USDA
Rural Development is gearing
up to help local homeowners
finance home improvement
loans.
“Now is a good time for
homeowners to evaluate the
need for necessary repairs or
replacement of items such as
a roof, electrical, plumbing,
siding or to improve energy efficiency through replacement

windows and insulation,” said
USDA Rural Development
Area Director Mike Rutherford. “Funds also may be available to replace a furnace or
sanitary disposal system and
can be used to modernize a
home or make it accessible for
disabled household members.”
Rutherford said applicants
must own and occupy the
home, and their income may
not exceed income guidelines
established by county and
household size. Income limits
vary by county. For example,

some counties set income
limits for a one-person household at $18,850, while the twoperson limit is $21,500. Rutherford recommends checking
with the local USDA Rural
Development office for income
limits in your county.
Applicants must also have
an acceptable credit history,
show repayment ability and be
unable to afford a conventional
loan.
Low-interest loans are also
available to homeowners in rural areas. For the purposes of

qualification, “rural” is defined
as those communities with a
population of 20,000 or less.
USDA Rural Development’s
mission is to increase economic opportunity and improve the
quality of life in Rural America.
For information contact the
USDA Rural Development at
(740) 373-7113, Ext 200, visit
the office at 21330 SR 676
Suite A, Marietta, Ohio 45750,
or visit our website at http://
www.rurdev.usda.gov.

Sarah Hawley/photo

The annual hunt for The Daily Sentinel’s Golden Easter Egg has
come to a close with Emily and Sarah Bunce finding the egg on
Wednesday evening and winning the $250 prize. The two students from Eastern Elementary School found the egg located
at the Marina in Middleport on Wednesday evening. Sarah and
Emily are pictured with their cousin Frankie Bunce.

Best Deals of the Season
Mon-Thurs 9am-7pm

250 N. Columbus Road
Athens OH 45701

Friday 9am-6pm

www.visittaylor.com

Sat 9am-5pm

PH: 740-594-8555
800-772-8993

�Friday, April 6, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Local Briefs
Dog Shelter benefit
SYRACUSE — A donation
drive to benefit the Meigs
County Dog Shelter will be
held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Saturday, April 7, at the Home
National Bank in Syracuse.
Donations of towels, bleach,
mops, blankets, straw or hay,
fencing or pens, cages, toys,
collars and leashes will be accepted. The donation drive is
sponsored by the Vital Ventures 4-H Club.
Childhood
immunization offered
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department
will conduct a childhood immunization on Tuesday, April
10, from 9 to 11 a.m. and 1
to 3 p.m. at the office, 112 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Parents/guardian are to accompany all children. Shot
records and medical cards, if
applicable, are to be brought
along. A $10 donation for
administration is appreciated
but no one will be denied service because of an inability to
pay.
Republican Executive
Committee meeting
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Republican Executive
Committee will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the
courthouse. If anyone knows
of anyone who would like to
be on the executive committee, please bring a letter saying so to the meeting.
New church opening
SNOWVILLE — A -gospel
church. The service will be at

10 a.m. Robert Vance is the
pastor. His telephone number
if 698-7238.
Special Easter services
SYRACUSE — Easter
services at the Syracuse First
Church of God will begin on
Maundy Thursday with communion and foot washing at
5:30 p.m. followed by Good
Friday services at 6:30. The
Easter morning worship services will be at 10 a.m. and
there will be an egg hunt immediately following Sunday
School about 11:45 a.m.
RACINE — Maundy
Thursday services for the
Racine United Methodist
Church charge will be held at
6 p.m. Thursday at the Bethel
Church, while Good Friday
services will be held at 7 p.m.
at the Morning Star United
Methodist Church.
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board
GALLIPOLIS — The April
16 meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services has been cancelled. The Board will hold
a special meeting, 8 p.m. on
Monday, April 23.
The Board usually meets
on the third Monday of each
month at 7 p.m. at the Board
Office (53 Shawnee Lane,
Gallipolis).
MCCA trip to Savannah
POMEROY — A motorcoach trip to Savannah and Jekyll Island is being planned by
the Meigs County Council on
Aging. It will take place June

3-9. Reservations are currently being taken by Chandra
Shrader at the Senior Center,
992-2161. Cost of the sevenday, six-night trip is $520
which covers 10 meals, six
breakfasts, and four dinners.
Tours include Jekyll and St.
Simon’s Island, Beaufort, S.
C. and a visit to Parris Island,
along with tours of historic
homes in Savannah.
Meigs plat books available
POMEROY — The Meigs
County 4-H Committee is selling 2011 Meigs County Plat
Books for $20 each. They can
be purchased at the Meigs
County Extension Office,
Meigs County Soil and Water
Office and the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office in the Courthouse on the second floor. To
have one mailed send a check
for $25 to Meigs County
4-H Committee, PO Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. All
profits from the sale of these
books benefits Meigs County
4-H youth for camp, scholarships and awards.
Southern Alumni Banquet
RACINE — The annual
reunion of the Racine/Southern Alumni banquet will be
held on Saturday, May 26 at
6:30 p.m. at the Southern
High School. Tickets are $15
and available now at Southern High School and Racine
Home National Bank.They
will be $25 at the door. Flags
are $30. The website is www.
tornadoalumni.net.

Local stocks
Farmer’s Market
POMEROY — Anyone
interested in taking part in
the Farmer’s Market on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot this
Summer is asked to contact
Derek Brickles at (740) 5904891.
Wanted: old
computers
POMEROY — The Invincible Industries Teen Center
at the Mulberry Community
Center is in need of old computers, both PCs and Macs,
for repair or use of parts.
Mike Tipptin, a computer
specialist, has volunteered
to see what he can do to get
some working computers for
the teen center. He has volunteered to pick up old computers. Call 740-444-5599 and
leave a message so that he can
call back. Beth Clark is the
lead volunteer at the youth
center and says she has long
recognized the need for computers for the kids to use for
study and/or entertainment.
Preschool
registration
MASON COUNTY —
Mason County Schools Preschool Registration will be
taking place from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. on the following days,
April 20 at New Haven Elementary, and April 26 at
the Nazarene Church on Mt.
Vernon. April 26 will also be a
make up day. For information
call (304) 675-4956.

Meigs County Community Calendar
Friday April 6
POMEROY — St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
will hold Good Friday Worship Services at 7 p.m. The
public is invited.
RUTLAND — Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church Good
Friday Hymn Sing, 7 p.m.,
featuring Borrowed Tyme,
Atonement, The Victory River Quartet and others. Everyone Welcome.
Saturday, April 7
SALEM CENTER — Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will meet in regular form with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. Junior Baking
Contest will be held.
HARRISONVILLE
—
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
meet at 6:30 p.m., with refreshments being served. The
meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m.
HARRISONVILLE — Easter Egg Hunt and pictures
with the Easter Bunny will
be held at 1 p.m. at the Scipio
VFD. Picture packages will be
available, and will serve as a
fundraiser for the July 7 fireworks in Pageville. For more
information call Rhea Lantz at

(740) 416-9083 or Dan Lantz
at (740) 236-3371.
PORTLAND — The Portland Community Center Easter Egg Hunt will be held at
1 p.m. Kids ages 1-12 are invited to attend.
Sunday, April 8
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Easter sunrise services at the
St. Paul United Methodist
Church at Tuppers Plains will
be held at 6:30 a.m. The adult
choir will present “O What a
Savior.”
POMEROY — Easter service at the St. John Lutheran
Church, Pine Grove Road.
will be held at 9 a.m. with a
brunch to follow. The public
is welcome.
POMEROY — Easter sunrise service 7 a.m. at the New
Beginnings United Methodist
Church, Second Street, Pomeroy, followed by a breakfast.
MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise
service, Ash Street Church,
7 a.m. service with breakfast
to follow. Sunday school at
9:30 a.m.; morning worship
10 a.m.
Monday, April 9
SYRACUSE — Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Village Hall.

Tuesday, April 10
HARRISONVILLE
—
Harrisonville 255, O.E.S.,
7:30 p.m. at the hall. Inspection practice. Refreshments
served before the meeting.
BEDFORD TWP. — The
Bedford Township Trustees
will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs
Humane Society will hold a
general meeting at 4 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library. A board
meeting will follow.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health meeting will take place at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of the
Meigs County Health Department.
Thursday, April 12
CHESTER — Shade River
Lodge 453, 7:30 p.m., at the
hall. Refreshments following
meeting.
POMEROY — St. Paul Lutheran Church will hold their
Soup and Sandwich Meal
from 5:30 -7 p.m. The public
is invited to come and enjoy
the food and fellowship.
Friday, April 13
POMEROY — The Meigs
County P.E.R.I. will hold their

April meeting at 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Diane Jeffers from Holzer Clinic will be our guest
speaker.
Monday, April 16
LETART — Letart Township Trustees meeting, 5 p.m.,
in the township building.
Card Showers
MIDDLEPORT — Mary
Lou Hawkins, who has been a
patient at Pleasant Valley Hospital and its Rehabilitation
Center has returned to her
home in Middleport. Cards
may now be sent to her at 667
South Second Ave., Middleport Ohio, 45769
POMEROY — Genevieve
Burdette will observe her
87th birthday on April 7.
Cards may be sent to her at
the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Road, 36759 Rocksprings
Road, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.
MIDDLEPORT — Pauline Mayer will observe her
91st birthday on April 16.
Cards may be sent to her at
the Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center, Room 203, 333 Page
St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Middleport First Baptist
MIDDLEPORT — Maundy Thursday communion
service will be held at 6
p.m. Thursday; Community
Good Friday service at 7
p.m. Friday, and Easter services, sunrise at 6:30 a.m.
followed by breakfast served
by the men of the church
and the morning Easter service at 10:15 a.m. with communion to follow.
Burlingham Baptist
Church
BURLINGHAM — Jonathan Owen will be speaker
at the Easter Sunday service
at the Burlingham Baptist
Church, 2:30 p.m. There
will be special music by LaDonna Stevens.
St. Paul Lutheran
POMEROY — St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy will hold Good Friday
Worship Services at 7 p.m.
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
RUTLAND — Good
Friday hymn sing, 7 p.m.,

featuring Borrowed Tyme,
Atonement, The Victory
River Quartet and others.
St. Paul United Methodist
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Easter sunrise services at
the St. Paul United Methodist Church at Tuppers Plains
will be held at 6:30 a.m. The
adult choir will present “O
What a Savior.”
First Southern Baptist
POMEROY — Easter
musical “O What a Savior”
will be presented by the
choir of the First Southern
Baptist Church on Friday at
7 p.m. The church is located
at 49872 Pomeroy Pike near
Meigs High School. Pastor
David Brainard invites the
public to attend.
Syracuse First Church
of God
SYRACUSE — Easter
services at the Syracuse
First Church of God will
begin on Maundy Thursday with communion and
foot washing at 5:30 p.m.
followed by Good Friday

services at 6:30. The Easter
morning worship services
will be at 10 a.m. and there
will be an egg hunt immediately following Sunday
School about 11:45 a.m.
Racine United Methodist Church Charge
RACINE — Mound
Thursday services for the
Racine United Methodist Church charge will be
held at 6 p.m. Thursday at
the Bethel Church, while
Good Friday services will be
held at 7 p.m. at the Morning Star United Methodist
Church.
Grace Episcopal
St. John Lutheran
Church
POMEROY — Congregations of Grace Episcopal
Church and St. John Lutheran Church will join for
Thursday Maundy services
and Good Friday services,
7 p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church.
Easter Sunday service at
St. John Lutheran Church,
Pine Grove Road will be at 9

a.m. with a brunch to follow.
Rock Springs United
Methodist
POMEROY — Sunrise
services Sunday 6:30 a.m.
followed by a breakfast at 7
a.m. and the morning Easter service.
Endtime House of
Prayer
SNOWVILLE — Endtime House of Prayer will
have its first of regular services in the old Snowville
Church located on S.R. 681
on Easter Sunday. Regular time for services at the
church are Sunday school 10
a.m.; morning worship, 11
a.m., and evening service,
6 p.m. Thursday evening
Bible study will be held at
7 p.m. Robert Vance is the
pastor. His telephone number is 698-7238.
Syracuse Community
Church
SYRACUSE — Sunrise
service will be held at 6
a.m. on Sunday, April 8, at
the Syracuse Community
Church located on Second
Street in Syracuse with Pastor Markco Pritt.
Community Lenten
services
MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Ministerial
Association is hosting community Lenten services
each Thursday during Lent.
An offering is received to
help those in need in Meigs
County. Refreshments will
be served following the
services. All Thursday evening services will be held
at 7 p.m. The Good Friday
service will be held at noon
with The Stations of the
Cross to be presented at Sacred Heart Catholic Church
in Pomeroy.

Local Easter services announced

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

AEP (NYSE) — 37.99
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 18.37
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 61.38
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.75
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 37.08
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 84.35
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.27
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.60
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 6.05
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 34.57
Collins (NYSE) — 56.19
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.70
US Bank (NYSE) — 31.35
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 19.49
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 48.39
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 44.34
Kroger (NYSE) — 23.84
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 48.25
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 67.83
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 17.79

BBT (NYSE) — 31.30
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.62
Pepsico (NYSE) — 66.15
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.75
Rockwell (NYSE) — 79.27
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.48
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.81
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 62.19
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 60.67
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.99
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.93
Worthington (NYSE) — 18.75
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for April
5, 2012, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley Marrero
in Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Friday: Sunny, with a
high near 62. North wind
between 7 and 11 mph.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 36.
Saturday: Sunny, with a
high near 68.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
35.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 67.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
40.
Monday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny, with

a high near 64. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance
of showers. Partly cloudy,
with a low around 38.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny, with
a high near 60. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Tuesday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
36.
Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 60.

Ask Dr. Brothers

Mother wants
pregnant
daughter to marry
Dear
Dr.
Dear
Dr.
Brothers: My
Brothers: I just
daughter, who
moved in with
is in her 20s but
my boyfriend,
not married, just
and it’s not going
became
pregwell. He’s acting
nant. She has a
completely pascommitted and
sive-aggressive
reliable
boyabout a lot of
friend, who’s the
things
around
father, but as far
the
house,
as I can tell, they
mostly chores or
have no plans
cleaning up, but
to get married.
also about how
Maybe I’m being
we spend money
old-fashioned,
on joint items for
but I think they Dr. Joyce Brothers the house and
should get marhaving friends
Syndicated
ried. Every time
over. He hasn’t
Columnist
I bring it up,
ever been like
though, it just
this before, and
upsets my daughter. I only he acts pretty normal when
want what’s best for her. we’re not at home. What is
How can I convince her that it about living in the same
getting married is the right house that makes him so
choice? — S.S.
awful, and is there anything
Dear S.S.: Actually, it I can do about it? — A.M.
seems like you, as well as
Dear A.M.: It sounds like
your daughter, may be a you may be going through a
little internally conflicted perfectly normal adjustment
about this situation. You say period, now that you and
you want what is best for your boyfriend are living
your daughter, but it seems together and not just datlike the best thing you can ing. It’s possible that your
do is give her the freedom to boyfriend has acted this
decide for herself what that way at home before, and you
is. If she and her boyfriend just didn’t realize it since
want to get married, that is you weren’t sharing a livbetween the two of them. ing space with him; but it’s
You can offer suggestions also possible that this new
and support, but there’s no experience is bringing out a
use in trying to persuade new part of his personality
her to do something that that was not evident before.
she may not want to do, Additionally, the dynammuch less try to have con- ics of a relationship tend to
trol over. If her boyfriend change when a couple move
doesn’t want to get married, in together, and maybe part
forcing him into it only will of this changing dynamic is
backfire in the end.
leading your boyfriend to be
Instead, you should focus less forthcoming with you.
on helping her achieve the
While it’s possible to
happiness she’s seeking. speculate on the causes of
Having a baby is a great his passive-aggressive bejoy, but also a lot of work. havior, you might get better
Rather than concentrat- results by talking to him diing on the circumstances, rectly about it. Ask him to
which are less than ideal, come to you with problems
remember that you can have or concerns he has about
a great effect on your daugh- the house, so that you’re not
ter and grandchild’s happi- left feeling like you’ve done
ness simply by building a something wrong without
good relationship with the realizing it. Passive-aggreschild. Spend your time pre- sive behavior usually indiparing for the baby’s arrival, cates a lack of confidence
rather than trying to per- or comfort, so reassure your
suade your daughter’s boy- boyfriend that you’re happy
friend to propose. By allow- and are enjoying living toing your daughter to make gether, and that you won’t
her own decisions when it be upset if he confronts you
comes to her romantic re- directly. You also should set
lationship, you’re also giv- a good example and talk to
ing her the confidence to him right away with your
be a good mother to your own concerns when they
grandchild when he or she come up. This way, you
arrives. Perhaps that event both can reap the benefits
will even prompt the new of clearer communication.
parents to make it legal.
(c) 2012 by King Features
***
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�Friday, April 6, 2012

Obituaries
Oscar Thomas Smith

Oscar Thomas Smith, 76,
of Pomeroy, passed away at
12:45 p.m. on Wednesday,
April 4, 2012, at his residence. Born August 16, 1935,
in Pomeroy, he was the son of
the late Lawrence Ambrose
and Gladys Marie Dill Smith.
He retired from the Kaiser
Aluminum plant where he
was employed as a crane operator. He was a member of
the Shade River Coon Hunters Association and attended
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene. His lifetime passion was his Ohio Valley Bluetick
Kennel which resulted in being recognized with a Lifetime
Achievement Award by the Bluetick Breeders of America
Association.
He is survived by his children, Diane (Vince) Smith, of
Mason, W.Va., Laura (Neil) Proudfoot, of Hurricane, W.Va.,
John Smith, of Middleport, and Anita (Dallas) Sayre, of
Rutland; his grandchildren, Jeremy, Kyle and Evan Smith,
Jessica and Staci Proudfoot, Jennifer, Stephanie and Eric
Smith, Bryan Wilson, and Austin Sayre; his sister, Donna
Jean (Dan) Smith, of Racine; a brother, Larry Marshall
(Fona) Smith, of Middleport; a special niece, Mary Lou
(Gene) Hawkins, of Middleport; a special nephew, James
Allen Smith, Middleport; a friend, Marjorie Fetty; and a
special comforting companion, Scooter.
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by
his brothers, Lawrence Homer Smith and Willard James
Smith; his sisters, JoAnn Smith, Emily Sue Smith; and a
special niece, Carolyn Sue Smith.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, April
10, 2012, at the Cremeens- King Funeral Home, 800 West
Main Street, Pomeroy. Rev. Don Balis and Rev. Lloyd
Grimm will officiate. Interment will follow in the Gilmore
Cemetery. Jeremy Smith, Kyle Smith, Evan Smith, Austin
Sayre, Eric Smith and Aaron Gillilan will serve as casketbearers. Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Monday at the
funeral home.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensking.com.

John W. Proffitt

John W. Proffitt, 53, of Syracuse, passed away at 3:56
p.m. on Wednesday, April 4, 2012, in Mason, West Virginia.
Born May 22, 1958, in Pomeroy, he was the son of Dixie Clark (Delbert) McCray of Roseville, Ohio, and the late
Homer L. Proffitt, who preceded him in death on October
21, 2008. He was a student at the Carlton School.
In addition to his mother and step-father, he is survived
by his brothers, Michael L. Proffitt, of Ozark, Alabama,
Mark E. (Irish) Proffitt, of Syracuse, and Thomas B. (Marianne) Proffitt, of Pomeroy; his sister, Connie S. Metz, of
Elizabeth, Ohio; and his maternal grandmother, Martha
Clark, of Chester.
Also surviving are his aunts and uncles, James (Betty)
Proffitt, of Portland, Chester (Stella) Proffitt of Lisbon,
Ohio, Roy Proffitt of Racine, Faye Proffitt of Belpre, Ohio,
Homer (Janice) Mills, of Syracuse, David (Kim) Clark of

Chester, Roger (Linda) Clark of Brazoria, Texas, Jerry (Julie) Clark, of Lancaster, Ohio, Eleanor Bateman, of Buchtel, Ohio, Joann Proffitt, of Canton, Ohio.
In addition to his father, John is preceded in death by his
paternal grandparents, John and Pearl Proffitt; and maternal grandfather, William Clark; and a nephew Paul Alley, Jr.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 7,
2012, at the Cremeens-King Funeral Home, 800 West Main
Street, Pomeroy. Rev. Janice Danner and Rev. James D.
M. Proffitt Sr. will officiate. Interment will follow in the
Bicknell Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday at the Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers memorials may
be made to the John Proffitt Memorial Fund PO Box 677,
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensking.com.

baby weight check and discuss topics such as: what is
normal for a breastfeeding
mother and what to expect,
how to overcome difficulties, breastfeeding management issues and any additional questions or concerns
of breastfeeding mothers.
The class is provided free
of charge and no registration is required. Participants may attend more than
once. For more information,
contact Michele Biddlestone at (740) 592-9364.

Clarence S. Church, 66, Gallipolis, died Wednesday,
April 4, 2012, at his residence.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, April 7,
2012, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call from 11 a.m.
until the time of service on Saturday at the funeral home.
POMEROY — Tickets for
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the fu- the annual Pomeroy High
neral home to help offset funeral expenses.
School alumni banquet to
be held at 6:30 p.m. on SatJustice Paul Clark
urday, May 26, in the Meigs
Justice Paul Clark of Gallipolis, Ohio, was stillborn April High School cafeteria, are
5, 2012, at Cabell Huntington Hospital.
now on sale.
Arrangements will be announced by Deal Funeral Home,
Tickets are $20 and can
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
be purchased at Swisher &amp;
Mildred L. Coughenour
Lohse Pharmacy or Francis
Mildred Lorraine Johnson Coughenour, 59, Gallipolis, Florists in Pomeroy, or by
died Tuesday, April 3, 2012, at her residence.
mailing a stamped, self-adServices will be held at 1 p.m., Monday, April 9, 2012, at dressed envelope to PomeWillis Funeral Home with Pastor Randy Carnes officiating. roy Alumni Association,
Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio
may call at the funeral home on Monday from 12-1 p.m. 45769. The banquet is open
prior to the service.
to Pomeroy High School
alumni and their guests. A
Justin David Smith
social time will be held at
Justin David Smith, 33, Gallipolis, died Tuesday, April
5:30 p.m. and after the ban3, 2012, at his residence. Willis Funeral Home is assisting
quet. Deadline for purchasthe family.
ing tickets is Saturday, May
18. Classes having reunions
Daniel Ray Stone
this year are 1932, 1937,
Daniel Ray Stone, 56, Fourth Street, Syracuse, died
1942, 1947, 1952, 1957,
Thursday, April 5, 2012, at his residence.
1962 and 1967.
In keeping with his wishes there are no calling hours or
This year, the Alumni Asfuneral services. Burial will take place in the Howell Hill
sociation will offer a $1,000
Cemetery in Pomeroy at a later date.
Bob and Sheila Strauss EastCremeens Funeral Home, Racine, is in charge of arrangeman Scholarship, a $1,000
ments.
Dan and Robert Morris
Scholarship, two $800 Bob
Roberts Scholarships and a

Charles Gibbs (for Education Majors) Scholarship
to worthy students who are
either a child, grandchild or
great-grandchild of a Pomeroy High School graduate.
Applications for scholarships are to be made by
submitting a transcript of
grades, recent photo, and a
letter stating the college to
be attended and career to
be pursued, mailed to the
Pomeroy Alumni Association at Box 202, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Officers this year are Bill
Young, President; Joanne
Jones Williams, Vice-President; Marcia Grueser Arnold and Thelma Davis Jeffers, Secretary-Treasurers
and Necrology, Lila Terrell
Mitch. It was noted that the
Pomeroy High School trophy case, formerly housed
in the old senior high school
building, has been moved
to the Pomeroy Municipal
Building at 650 West Main
Street and can be viewed
there anytime.

Arthur W. Allison

Arthur W. Allison, 76, Gallipolis, Ohio, died Thursday,
April 5, 2012, in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be announced by the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, who are honored to be handling the arrangements for the Allison Family.

Clarence S. Church

Deer hunters have until noon the following day to check in their deer
Statewide muzzleloader
season — Jan. 5-8, 2013
Bag Limits: Deer bag limits are zone specific by permit type. A hunter may take
one deer from Zone A, two
deer from Zone B and three
deer from Zone C during
the entire 2012-2013 season
using the either-sex deer
permit. Only one antlered
deer may be taken regardless of zone.
Additionally, a hunter
may take one antlerless
deer from Zone A, two
antlerless deer from Zone
B and three antlerless deer
from Zone C during the archery season from Sept. 29
to Nov. 25 using the antlerless deer permit.
Those hunting in urban
units and at Division of
Wildlife-authorized
controlled hunts may use the
antlerless deer permits during all deer hunting seasons.
Urban units and controlled
hunts will again have a sixdeer bag limit, and those
deer will not count against
the hunter’s zone bag limit.
Deer Hunting Zones:
Zone A — The zone includes six counties: Erie,
Fayette, Madison, Ottawa,
Sandusky and Wood.
Zone B — The zone includes 44 counties: Allen,
Ashland, Ashtabula, Auglaize, Butler, Champaign,
Clark, Clinton, Crawford,
Cuyahoga, Darke, Defiance,
Fulton, Geauga, Greene,
Hancock, Hardin, Henry,
Huron, Lake, Logan, Lorain, Lucas, Mahoning,
Marion, Medina, Mercer,
Miami, Montgomery, Paulding, Portage, Preble, Putnam, Seneca, Shelby, Stark,
Summit, Trumbull, Union,
Van Wert, Warren, Wayne,
Williams and Wyandot.
Zone C — The zone includes 38 counties: Adams,

O’Bleness offers
breastfeeding
program
ATHENS — O’Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens offers free breastfeeding follow-up sessions for
breastfeeding
mothers.
The class takes place every
Wednesday from 11 a.m.
until noon in the hospital’s
lower level conference room
4. There will be a class on
April 11.
O’Bleness’ international
board certified lactation
consultant Michele Biddlestone conducts the sessions. She will provide a

Ohio Wildlife Council approves 2012,
2013 hunting and trapping regulations
COLUMBUS — The
Ohio Wildlife Council approved hunting and trapping regulations for the
2012-13 hunting seasons,
during the April 4 meeting, according to the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources’ (ODNR) Division
of Wildlife.
Seven west-central Ohio
counties will move from
deer Zone A to Zone B;
those counties are Auglaize,
Darke, Mercer, Miami,
Montgomery, Preble and
Shelby. Madison County,
currently in Zone B, will
move to Zone A.
Antlerless deer permits
will no longer be valid the
first week of deer-gun season in Zone C. The antlerless permits will be valid
until Nov. 25 in deer Zones
A, B and C. This is a return
to regulations adopted in
2007.
Deer hunters will have
until noon the following
day to complete the automated game check process.
The only exception will be
on the last day of any season when automated game
check must be completed
by 11:30 p.m.
A hunter may take only
one buck in Ohio, regardless of zone, hunting method or season. Either a $15
antlerless deer permit or
$24 either-sex deer permit
and a valid hunting license
are required to hunt deer in
Ohio.
Seasons and Dates for
2012-13:
Archery season — Sept.
29 through Feb. 3, 2013
Special area muzzleloader hunts — Oct. 15-20
Youth deer-gun season —
Nov. 17-18
Statewide deer-gun season — Nov. 26 through
Dec. 2 and Dec. 15-16

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Athens, Belmont, Brown,
Carroll, Clermont, Columbiana, Coshocton, Delaware, Fairfield, Franklin,
Gallia, Guernsey, Hamilton,
Harrison, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Knox, Lawrence,
Licking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Morrow, Muskingum, Noble, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Richland, Ross,
Scioto, Tuscarawas, Vinton
and Washington.
Hunting seasons for rabbit, pheasant, quail, squirrel, crow and wild turkey
were approved as proposed.
In addition, trapping seasons for beaver, mink,
muskrat, and river otter,
along with the hunting and
trapping seasons for fox,
raccoon, skunk, and weasel,
were also approved.
2012-13 Hunting and/
or Trapping Seasons and
Dates
Squirrel — Sept. 1
through Jan. 31, 2013
Ruffed grouse — Oct. 13
through Jan. 31, 2013
Fall Wild Turkey — Oct.
13 through Nov. 25, in specified counties
Youth Upland Season —
Oct. 20-21 and Oct. 27-28
Cottontail rabbit — Nov.
2 through Feb. 28, 2013
Ring-necked Pheasant —
Nov. 2 through Jan. 6, 2013
Bobwhite Quail — Nov.
2-25, in specified counties
Fox, raccoon, skunk,
opossum, and weasel —
Nov. 10 through Jan. 31,
2013
Mink and muskrat —
Nov. 10 through Feb. 28,
2013
Mink, muskrat, raccoon,
skunk, opossum and weasel
(Lake Erie Marsh area) —
Nov. 10 through March 15,
2013
Beaver — Dec. 26
through Feb. 28, 2013

River Otter — Dec. 26
through Feb. 28, 2013
Youth Spring Wild Turkey Season — April 20-21,
2013
Spring Wild Turkey —
April 22 through May 19,
2013
Crow (Friday, Saturday
and Sunday only) — June
1 through March 10, 2013,
and June 7, 2013, through
March 9, 2014
Coyote and woodchuck
— No closed season
Rules and season dates
for migratory birds including mourning dove, Canada
goose, rail, moorhen, snipe,
woodcock and waterfowl
hunting will be set in August, in compliance with
the U.S. Fish &amp; Wildlife Service’s 2012-13 framework.
All hunting and trapping
season dates and rules can
be found at wildohio.com.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use and
protection of our natural
resources for the benefit of
all. Visit the ODNR website
at ohiodnr.com.

PHS Alumni banquet
set for May 26

Seed

From Page A1
knick-knacks. Some items
are new with the tags still
on them, while others are
gently used. Hill added that
there are several brandname clothing items available. Many of the items in
stock are priced at 50 cents
or a dollar.
Wedding and formal
(prom) dresses are also
available for purchase at the

shop for a low price.
Donations are accepted
during regular business
hours or can be placed in
a drop box any time. Small
furniture items are accepted, but the shop can not
accept large furniture items
due to limited space.
The Mustard Seed ReSale
Shop is located at 407 S.
Third Street in Racine, and
can be reached by phone at
(740) 949-2400.

Pink
From Page A1
generosity of Komen Columbus supporters — notably the more than 50,000
people who participated in
the 2011 Komen Columbus
Race for the Cure.
Komen Columbus has
raised more than $19 million
since it began in 1993 — 75
percent of which stays in its

30-county service area and
is used to conduct breast
cancer education, screening
and treatment programs.
The other 25 percent goes
to Susan G. Komen for the
Cure to fund national breast
cancer research programs.
For more information, visit
www.komencolumbus.org
or call the Komen Columbus
office at (614) 297-8155.

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�Friday, April 6, 2012

At the foot of the cross
This is Holy Week, particularly today is Good Friday. It is
a time to reflect on the events
leading up to the crucifixion
of Jesus and the resurrection
celebration more commonly
known as Easter.
Often people go to church
on Palm Sunday and skip all
the rest of the services during
the week and go straight for
Easter services. It is like going
to a restaurant and skipping
the meat and potatoes to go
straight for the coconut cream
pie or the hot fudge cake.
While it may be good and filling at the time, without the
main course, you get hungry
soon after. I often think that
has happened with Christianity. We are so quick to skip
through without slowing
down to take the time to really
dwell on the things which will
truly help us grow.
I like coffee, no, I really
love coffee. I take my coffee
straight, without cream or
sugar. I like it rich and dark.
I like coffee with a bark to it
and decaf is just not right. (I
had to brew some while writing this.) Coffee is great, but
what if all I ever drank was coffee? What if that was all I lived
on? It would sustain me for
awhile, but eventually I would
wither. Either I would have to
eat something real or I would
continue to become weaker. I
could eventually wither away
to death. So what happens
when we focus so much on one
particular part of the faith and
not receive the fullness of it?
Sure, the resurrection is a
big deal. I am not down playing that at all, but what about
the events leading up to it?
The anointing of Jesus prior to
His burial with costly perfume,
a great sacrifice I am sure
from the woman who did so?
The disciples being humbled
by Christ washing their feet?

The Daily Sentinel • Page A4

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of vision, our insecurities, our
despair, our nightmares, our
pain, our anger, our guilt, our
shame, our afflictions, our sorrows, our hate, and most of all,
our disobedience to the Living
Almighty God the Father. It
reaches out through the ages
to reflect our inner most being
back to us. When we see that,
we can truly fall on bended
knee at the foot of the cross
and then we can receive the
grace offered there through
the blessed sacrifice of Jesus.
This week I was privileged
to attend a special service.
Following the service there
were cookies, punch and coffee (yes!) in the fellowship
hall under the sanctuary. As
we descended the stairs, before us was a very large crucifix. It was almost life size
and painted to be realistic
looking. As I went down the
steps, I hesitated at the feet of
Christ. I looked up, but it was
almost more than I could bear.
I looked at the feet again. They
were cracked and glued back
together. I wanted to touch it,
but did not. It was obvious so
many others had. There was
a great crowd behind me, so
I could not linger, but I think
I could have stayed at the foot
of that cross for hours. I realize it was not the actual cross
and it was a statue, but it put
me there. Oh the wonder of
the faith! Do we realize what
beauty we have been given?
Or do we squabble it away on
vanity?
May you have a very
blessed Easter, but more than
anything may you truly experience the grace and sacrifice
of the crucifixion. He has paid
the debt we could not pay. Jesus the Christ is Lord. May
you experience Him anew
with fresh love and steadfast
desire so you may truly live
Grace Out Loud!

Let nothing be done
through selfish ambition

Exactly when the Apostle
Paul wrote his epistle to the
Christians at Philippi is a
matter of conjecture, something for scholars and theologians to quibble about.
To them, too, I concede the
domains of debate and discussion as regards the more
esoteric details of this letter.
However, there is one parCarrie Wolfe
ticular portion Philippians I
Pastor
find especially noteworthy,
one so simple and straightThe questioning and failure
forward it speaks for itself.
of Judas? The denial of Christ
As succinct as the followby Peter? Why is it we are so
ing two verses are, make no
quick to glance over these
mistake: they are “loaded,”
events?
and pack a punch!
Perhaps it goes to one very
“Let nothing be done
important thing that many
through selfish ambition or
have forgotten. We often
conceit, but in lowliness of
glance over the importance
mind let each esteem othand connection of the Lord’s
ers better than himself. Let
Supper, Holy Communion, or
each of you look out not
the Eucharist. It should be at
only for his own interests,
the heart of the faith, and yet it
but also for the interests of
is often treated like a side dish
others” (2:3-4).
of woebegone veggies. You
See what I mean?!? Putpoke at, maybe try it, but eventing others down is for
tually you do not partake of it.
some like a way of life, and
It is in the Last Supper, we can
anyone who has watched
see the connection and fullness
professional sports—footof the crucifixion. Though
ball immediately comes to
time and space separate us
from the actual event, we can
mind—has been privy to a
stand at the foot of the cross.
display of what is known as
We can encounter Christ
“trash talking.”
anew. It is not something to
I read something the othjust do, it is vital and sacred.
er day to the effect that only
It is a blessing, not a church
those athletes who are meobligation. We should rejoice
diocre players actually enat every opportunity to receive
gage in this practice. Morethe body and blood of Christ
gifted athletes, it seems,
through Holy Communion.
know their capabilities and
It is at the foot of the cross
their limits, and therefore
we find to be most uncomfortare less inclined to engage
able. For at the foot of the cross
in verbally abusing competwe see our Savior, but we see
ing players.
the price for our sin. Our selfAgain, I’m sharing this
ishness, our vanity, our lack
with you based on an article
I came across, the source of
which I cannot recall right
now. For what it’s worth, I
like to read, but generally
find more to read than I do
the time to read everything
I find!
Needless to say, most articles are pithy. Not so the
In all issues of “Search the Scriptures,” ing of a new creation of mankind by Jesus book I’m currently reading,
the goal is to point readers to God’s Word, risen from the dead was probably an invenstressing the importance of knowing what tion of later times…The custom may have its
God requires of us today. The past weeks origin in paganism, for a great many pagan
have seen much effort and interest in “giving customs, celebrating the return of spring,
up” something for “Lent,” and the coming gravitated to Easter…The rabbit is a pagan
April 3rd, AD 33 is the
Sunday will see many celebrating “Easter.” symbol and has always been an emblem of
most
frequently suggested
A search of the scriptures will find no ref- fertility.”
date of Christ’s death on
erence to Easter, nor to the fast of “Lent,”
Scanning through the information above,
which precedes Easter. Excerpts from The we learn Lent was not an apostolic institu- the Cross. Regardless of the
Catholic Encyclopedia give the following tion; the church in the apostolic age com- scholarly debate about the
date, His crucifixion was on
facts concerning Lent and Easter:
“Lent: The Teutonic word Lent, which we memorated the remembrance of Christ Friday, and the time of His
employ to denote the forty days’ fast preced- weekly; the term “Easter” springs from pa- death was at 3 PM.
His death stirs my soul,
ing Easter, originally meant no more than gan roots; and a great many pagan customs,
the spring season…Some of the Fathers as celebrating the return of spring, “gravitated because I know He died to
early as the fifth century supported the view to Easter.”
pay the redemptive price
The word “Easter” appears one time in the that the salvation of God
that this forty days’ fast was of Apostolic institution…But the best modern scholars are New Testament: “Now it was during the days could be extended as a
almost unanimous in rejecting this view… of unleavened bread. So, when he[Herod] free gift, when received by
And there is the same silence observable in had arrested him [Peter], he put him in personal response, to all
all the pre-Nicene Fathers, though many had prison, and delivered him to four squads of the people of the world,
occasion to mention such an Apostolic insti- of soldiers to keep him, intending to bring which includes you and me.
tution if it had existed. Further, there seems him before the people after Passover [KJV: To honor our Lord, three
much to suggest that the Church in the Ap- Easter]” [Acts 12:1-4]. The King James Ver- facts about His death on the
ostolic Age designed to commemorate the sion translates the word for “Passover” as Cross should be worshipResurrection of Christ, not by an annual, but “Easter,” and language scholars overwhelmfully noted.
by a weekly, celebration.
ingly agree the event under discussion was
First, Christ walked every
“Easter: The English term relates to Estre, Passover.
inch
of the Calvary way.
a Teutonic goddess of the rising light of day
Most of today’s column has focused on
“Every inch” refers to the
and spring. Easter was celebrated in Rome human history, rather than passages from
and Alexandria on the first Sunday after the God’s Word. Let’s close with a reminder of truth that the plan of the trifirst full moon after the spring equinox,…and Jeroboam. He set up a religious practice une Godhead involved a detailed walk for God the Son.
the Roman Church claimed for this observance the authority of Sts. Peter and Paul… which, God says, “he had devised of his own It began when the Lord
The Apostolic Fathers do not mention it… heart…”[1 Kings 11:28-30,32,33]. Ever after, Jesus Christ left Heaven to
The First Council of Nicaea (325) decreed Jeroboam is known in the Scriptures as he start His physical life via
that the Roman practice should be observed “who made Israel to sin.” Hear Jesus’ words: Incarnation in the flesh for
“For laying aside the commandment of God, His life here on earth. Aposthroughout the Church.”
The Catholic Encyclopedia further men- you hold the tradition of men…; making the tle Paul says two significant
tions two symbols often seen during the word of God of no effect through your tradi- things about this first step:
Easter holiday: “Because the use of eggs was tion, which you have handed down” [Mark for our sakes, He became
forbidden during Lent, they were brought to 7:8a,13]. Visit the assemblies of the church poor, and that this first step
the table on Easter Day, coloured red to sym- of Christ, 234 Chapel Drive; search the scrip- took place in the “fullness of
bolize the Easter joy…The symbolic mean- tures with us.
time.”
Every year of His life and
every event in His life, unknown or known, represent
His progressive walk to the
The Bible tells us that Christ was
that the sentence has been fully Cross. Regardless of the opdelivered up for our sins and raised
served. You will know that you are position, always in the face
from the dead for our justification,
now justified and no one can bring of seditions and murderas Paul said in Romans 4:25 “who
a charge against you for your old ous plots, He never devi[Jesus] was delivered up because of
crime.
ated from the course. He
our offenses, and was raised because
Beloved, Jesus, your substitute, was always on time and in
of our justification.”
paid the price for your crime. On line with the agenda for the
You may already know why Jesus
the cross, He bore the sins of your Cross in mind wherever He
died for our sins, but do you know
entire life, which includes poverty, went and whatever He did.
the significance of God raising Him
sickness, deceases, sin, and much
Second, Christ endured
from the dead?
more. God put it all on Jesus and every minute of Calvary
Let me give you an illustration to
then He punished Jesus for every pain.
help you understand the significance
single one of those sins until He
of Jesus’ resurrection.
was fully satisfied.
Let’s say that you are living in a
Along with His satisfaction and
foreign country. One day, you hapHis power, God raised Him from
Alex Colon
pen to break a law of the land. You
the dead defeating and conquerPastor
appeal to the king for mercy. He
ing hell, death and the grave. This
says, “A rule is a rule. I cannot bend
was done so that death would not
the rule for you. What will others say
reign over our lives, but giving us
about my integrity? However, if you can find the calling of His will so that we would reign in
a substitute to take your punishment of three life by Christ.
months in jail then I will allow it.”
Jesus rose again and his tomb remains empty.
By God’s grace, you find a willing substitute. He is not there for He has risen! His resurrection
He goes to prison on your behalf and you don’t and empty tomb will forever be our assurance
see him for a very long time.
that we have been fully justified. You no longer
Now, how or when will you know that your have to be afraid of God judging you for your
crime has been fully paid for? When will you sins. His justice is on your side today and now
be able to rest easy regarding your crime? It is you can reign in life over every sin, sickness, and
when you see your substitute walking free again! suffering.
When you see him out of prison, you will know
Make it a Great Resurrection Day!

Search the scriptures
“…these were more noble…they
searched the scriptures daily…”

Thomas Johnson
Pastor

which is about the papacy
and the various popes of the
Roman Catholic Church—
which is, by the way, an
excellent read, very downto-earth and enlightening,
too.
Now recall those two
verses from Paul’s Epistle
to the Philippians, and likewise accept that they are as
credible and relevant today
as ever they were. Indeed,
they’re
timeless—never
out-of-date and forever
binding upon God’s people.
Unfortunately, the history of the Christian
Church—and the book I’m
reading documents the papacy is no exception!—includes numerous instances
of greedy and self-serving
individuals, primarily men,
who, if they knew of Paul’s
exhortations, or preached
them to others, never practiced them themselves!
Fortunately for Christendom, the vast majority of
all those who have served
the Lord have been saints;
sad to say, the mix also includes many scoundrels!
Should we be unduly
shocked or surprised there
are those who see us as
their patsies to patronize
and exploit, instead of our
being their equal and someone they ought to be considerate of and sensitive
to? Given the sinful nature

of the world in which we
live, I think not.
We can wish it were otherwise, but neither should
we lower ourselves to their
level and behave like them!
The last I knew, virtually every religion known to man—
bar none!—employs some
precept akin to “The Golden
Rule” as it is found in our
Bible.
“Do unto others as …” The
saying is NOT that we should
do unto others before they do
it unto us! Rather, we ought
to do what we can for the betterment of others—when we
can … where we can … however we can … as often as we
can.
This isn’t rocket science! The concept is simple
enough, but I suspect too few
people are possessed of the
“lowliness of mind” which
the Apostle Paul exhorted
the Philippians to acquire
and employ in their own interpersonal relationships.
How about you? Are you
willing to acknowledge others as being not just your
peer or colleague, and not
just your immediate superior or supervisor—but your
“better,” as well?!?
Ask anyone in this church,
and I’m sure they’ll tell you
these weekly literary efforts
on my part tend to be superior to the sermons I preach
on Sundays. Not that the
one is meant to supersede
the other, but it isn’t within
my power to be “all things
to all people.”
As it now stands, “God’s
still working on me, to make
me what I ought to be.” I
have my faults and foibles,
and an ego, too—so think of
me as “a work in progress,”
because I am!
For now I surrender myself anew to the Perfect
One, God’s Son. I don’t have
to be perfect, or able to do
anything—just available.
May my Savior always find
me ready.

Christ died at 3 p.m.

The Reason for The Resurrection

Ron Branch
Pastor

Calvary pain involved
emotional pain. He was
ridiculed. He felt sorrowful
compassion even for those
who made fun of Him. “Father, forgive them, for they
know not what they do.”
Furthermore, He was cut
to the core for those present at the Crucifixion who
loved Him, and for those
who were even confused
as to why such an innocent
and precious person as He
should suffer death in such
manner.
Calvary pain involved
physical pain. He was beaten and scourged. He was
nailed to the Cross and
subjected to its suffocating
posture. Crucifixion is regarded as one of the most
cruel and painful forms of
inflicting death on a person.
Calvary pain involved
spiritual pain. He was the
divine lightening rod hanging between Heaven and
earth on whom God poured
out His righteous wrath on
sin. Apostle Paul says that
Christ was made sin for us,
and, during those moments
and minutes on the Cross,
Christ endured the divine

penalty for every sin that
has been committed, for
every sin that is being committed, and for every sin
that will ever be committed.
This amounts to innumerable sins. This amounts to
amazing suffering.
Third, Christ bled every
drop of Calvary blood. Having opportunity to be right
with God is predicated
on the shedding of blood.
“Without shedding of blood
there is no remission.” “Remission” refers to release
from guilt and condemnation. There would never be
for us any hope of gaining
release from the punishable
guilt and eternal condemnation of sins in the eyes
of holy God were it not for
Jesus Christ shedding the
necessary blood for our salvation.
A visitor to Mexico at a
certain festival saw a vendor with a hand-crafted
cross lifted high in his
hand, and heard him calling
out, “Cheap cross! Cheap
cross! Who will buy a cheap
cross?” So many people, by
contrast, treat what Jesus
Christ did as cheap and insignificant by way of continual rejection of Christ to
be the Lord and Savior of
their lives.
BUT, IT WAS NOT A
CHEAP SACRIFICE HE
MADE WHEN HE DIED
ON FRIDAY AT 3 PM!
Rather, it should be valued
and revered as one costly
in personal sacrifice, rich in
mercy and grace for those
lost before God in trespasses and sin, and accepted
into hearts and souls without further delay.

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�to describe the different motives for love.
“Eros”
is the
Greek
word for sexual or
Friday,
March
9,
2012
Friday,
March
2012
Friday,
April
6,30,
2012
Friday,
February
17,
2012
Friday,
March
23,
2012
Friday,
March
2,
carnal love. It is simply pleasure of the
flesh that is left for the married couple.
“Philio” is family or friendship love.
The third word used for love is “storge,”
which is when you love something like
pizza. The Greeks also distinguished
another kind of love, which they called

God says to give.
thing on that list is that ultra-concentration work key to pluck, but this was
Love is a law and Godwww.mydailysentinel.com
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Register
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of love in us in that while
we were yet
off is if I actually do it. Af- time for nonsensical chit- rather stunned tone to my
sinners, Christ died for us so that we
ter all, that list is not sup- chat. My time is valuable; voice I ask, “Whatever
may be saved and complete lacking nothposed to be stared at but I have work that needs to happened to January?”
ing. What love! The law of love is what
rather to inspire activity be done. I cannot be side
It was then the laughter
Jesus has for you – one that can not be
on my part.
tracked by every little started. I must say it has
changed. He loves you regardless.
The other night I was noise that comes up.
not subsided appreciably
Make it a Great Day!
busy with my to do list
I take great pride in since. She has a way of
going over each and ev- working through my to- rubbing things in when
ery item with Liberty
the utmost
do-list each month. It I am wrong. If the tables
Methodist
Episcopal
Assembly of God
Mason County Church Directory
Wednesday,
10 a.m.;
mid-week
service,
study &amp; youth fellowship, Wednesday,
Building,
Neal Road.
Pastorthey
Dan
Main St., Leon. Pastor Basil R. Hudson.
2222 Jackson
Ave. Point that
Pleasant.
Fa-Nick
Baptist
TheofArk FOP
Church
Rt. 1,St.
Dudding
Lane
Mason,
across
from
care
hoping
were
turned,
and
gives
me
a675-2338.
great
sense
Thursday,
10 Neil
a.m.Tennant.
fisher- 3773 Georges
7:30 p.m.
757-2622. SundayChrist
school,
9:45 a.m.;
Wellman.
Sunday,
10 a.m. &amp;Ohio.
6 p.m.;
Hickory Chapel
Episcopal
Church ther David Schmitt. 675-4602.
Creek
Rd., Gallipolis,
Riverside
Golf Course.
Pastor
Sunday
would
soon beSunday
there.
Each10mansnetministries.com
never
are,p.m.;
I would
not 10:30
take
satisfaction
knowing
that Jamie
First Baptist Church of Mason (Independent
Rt.
2 - Pastor Joe Hammack. Sunday school, 10
Main
St.evening
Point Pleasant.
675-3120.
Pastor
Wireman.
Sunday
worship,
service,
a.m.;
evening service,
7
Methodist
morning worship,804
10:45
a.m.;
Tuesday,
6:30
446-6788.
mass,
11 a.m.;Rev.
Reconciliation,
before
Fundamental)
a.m.; Morning worship, 10:45 a.m.; Bible Study,
Ray Hage
&amp; Rev
Marie Mulford.
Holy Day
Eucharist
a.m.; Wednesday worship 7 p.m.; Thursday
p.m.; Wednesday prayer, 7 p.m. 773-5501.
Mount Union
worship, 7 p.m.; prayer
&amp; Bible
study,
mass; Holy
Mass, as announced.
item
that list needs to Family
advantage
of such
a ages
situaI am
actually
2nd &amp;
Anderson
Mason, 458-1754.
Rev. 7 p.m.Rite I, 8 a.m.; adult education, 9:30
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
a.m.;on
Holy
Prayer &amp;Oma
Praise,
6 p.m.;
Classes
for all
Hickory Chapel
Worship
Center accomplishPliny. Pastor
Randall
Sites.St.,
Sunday
Wednesday,
Chapel
Church
Rob
Grady.
Sunday
school,1110 a.m.; Sunday
Communion, 11 a.m.
Church of
God,
Anderson
every Sun.
&amp;62Wed.
www.thearkchurch.net
Rt. 2 - Pastor Joe Hammack. Sunday
2416
Lincoln
Ave.Ind.
Point Pleasant.
Passchool, 10
a.m.;
morning
worship,
Nazarene
Rt.
to Arbuckle
Creek Road, Grimms
be
carefully
scrutinized
tion.
ing
something
and
I
have
Creston
United
worship,
11 a.m.;
evening
service, 6Harmony
p.m.;
school, 10
a.m.;Methodist
Morning worship,
tor Travis Schultz, wife, April. Sunday
a.m.; Sunday
evening,
7 p.m.;
WednesBaptist (Abcusa)
Landing. Pastor James Arthur. Sunday
Rt. 87 - Leon. Pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
Seventh-Day Adventist
Church of God
Wednesday, 7 p.m. 773-5981
Denominational
and sometimes
INonswallowed
pride,
the 10:30
records
to prove
10:45 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday,
a.m.; Sunday
evening, it. school,
day &amp; Sunday night, 7 p.m.; youth
Corner of US Rt. 35 &amp; Little 16 Mile
First Church
of the Nazarene even un- morning,
10 a.m.; Sunday my
evening,
7
Morning worship, 11 a.m. 1st and 3rd Sunday
5th &amp; Layne St. New Haven. Pastor Glen
7 p.m.
6 p.m.; 304-812-4658, 304-812-7077.
fellowship, 7 p.m.
Creek
Rd.
Pastor
David
Radcliff.
Mt.
Vernon
Ave.,
25th
St.
Point
Pleasp.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.; Youth &amp;
Seventh-Day Adventist
Faith Gospel Mission (Independent Baptist
Leon Community
Church
morning each month; Sunday evening worship,
Lambert.
Sunday morning
worship, 9:30 a.m.;
derlined
for
emphasis.
which
I
have
had
a
lot
of
If
somebody
would
ever
Everyone9:45
welcome.
Sunday school, 9:45
a.m.; worship,
ant. Pastor
M. Ellis. youth/children’s
895-3018.
children’s
church,
p.m.;
586-2649
Saturday
Sabbath school/ Bible
class, James
11 a.m.;
Fellowship)
Leon. Sunday,
10 a.m.
and 76:30
pm;
Wednesday
7 p.m.; Wednesday evening Bible Study &amp;
worship,
a.m.; evening
Creston
United
Methodist
Bachtel
United
Methodist
10:45
a.m.;
evening
service,
7
p.m.;
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.;
worship
&amp;
I have toworship,
recalculate
doing, and began
uppraise
to meservice,
and askBible
mestudy,practice
Saturday worship service, 12:30 Often
p.m., Prayer/
Hannan-Trace Rd. Glenwood, W.Va. Paster Dale
7 p.m.
Youth classes, 7 p.m.
6 p.m.; Biblecome
study and
Rt. 87 - Leon. Pastor. Sunday school,
Layne St.,
Pastorschool,
Richard10 a.m,Wednesday,
7 p.m.Bible study, 6:30 p.m. 675-4620.
children’s church, 11 a.m.; Wednesday,
evening
Pleasant Valley Community Outreach
R. New
HartHaven.
DD. Sunday
Sunday
7 p.m.Trinity Tabernacle
and
sort
out
the
items
and
to
realize
I had
been
to
prove
that
I
have
been
9:45 a.m.;United
Morning
worship, 11 a.m. 1st
Barton Chapel Rd., Ashton, WV. Pastor:
Nease. Worship
a.m.;and
Sunworship, 6:30 p.m.; prayer and praise
2 Rollinstown.
Pastor
Doug workGarten..
ElmwoodRt.
Community
Church
Hartford
Methodist
morningservice,
church;9:30
Sunday
Tuesday 7 p.m.
and 3rd Sunday
morning
eachSunday
month; worship,
Ron Robertson; Secretary, Francis Friday service,
day school, 10:30 a.m.; evening service,
Palestine Baptist
service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.;First
missionary
Presbyterian
7 p.m.;
Sunday
worship,
10 a.m.,
Hartford.
Rev. Rex
A. Young.
Church of God
Saturday
worship,
7 p.m.;
Sunday
give
them
new
priorities.
ing
on
a
false
premise.
It
busily
engaged
in
profitRiverview
by Sunday
school;
Sunday
evening
9:45
a.m.;evening
Sundayworship,
school, 710:45
PointSunday
Pleasant.
Pastor
Sunday
p.m.;a.m.
Stone;
school,
9:30Bob
a.m.; followed school,
7 p.m.; Bible
study,Baptist
Wednesday, 7 p.m.;
Palestine Creek Rd., Ashton. Pastor
service, 2nd Wednesday, 7 2401
p.m.; Jefferson
Youth Ave.
10 a.m.;
Tuesday
night
prayer
No
honest
observer
doubts
was
Peter,
thus
attempting
sion;
onePoint
group
mayPresbyterian
teach ho-ministries,
Pleasant
Kingtown
Merle
worship,
7
p.m.;
Bible
study,
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
Patterson.
SundaySunday
worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Wednesday evening Bible Study &amp;
evening,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
Youth group,
7 p.m.Add., Point Pleasant. Pastor
Wayne
Brammer.
Sunday
school,
10
Wednesday,
7 p.m.;
choirbusily
service,
7
p.m.
I
must
have
been
ableservice,
activity,
allor 576-3299.
I would was actually February,
&amp;evening
Main St.service,
Point Pleasant.
Rev. John
S.
Graham
United7Methodist
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11
school,
11 a.m.; evening
p.m.; Bible
Youththere
classes,
p.m.
evening,
7 p.m.;6674-0093
worship,
11 8th
a.m.;
rehearsal,
Wednesday,
8 p.m.
For inforis division
today amongBroadtoRunWood.
justify
theChurch
exalted
placea.m.;
mosexual
activity
is7approved
Holland.
675-2170.
school,
9:30675-5925
a.m.;fororI 895-3018.
ChristianWilling
Community
Rt. 33 - Pastor Richard Nease. Sunday worship,
a.m.;
evening worship,
7 p.m.; Wednesday
study,not
Wednesday,
(affiliate
of Anderson,
engaged
did
hear 7 p.m.
time
hadChurch
gone byfor so
quick
have
to
do
is
show
them
Community
(Inde7 p.m.; Bible study,
Wednesday,
p.m.Sundaymation
call,
Heart
Outreach
Christ
worship, 11 a.m.
FOP Building, Neal Road. Pastor Dan Wellman.
11
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.themselves
evening,
7 p.m.
576-2374.
those
call
Peter
holds
within
the group. by God; another
Hartford
Unitedwho
Methodist
Faith Gospel Church
pendent)
group says it the Gracious Ind.)
1081
Oshel
Road,
Point
Pleasant.
Mistress of Hannan-Trace
soTuesday,
busy I6:30
didp.m.;
not
my wellRoad,
documented
to- 10and
Sunday,
a.m. I&amp;was
6 p.m.;
Hartford. Rev. Rex A. Young. Sunday
Glenwood. Pastor
Community. Pastor Charlie
Baptist
Lutheran
seriousBroad
Churchmulof Christ
Asbury“Christians.”
United Methodist No
Gospel
(Independent
446-6788.Pastors William Smith Sr. and Zenobia
Pentecostal
ARunFaith
brief
glance
into a Fundamental)
Greek-Faith
is
not;
one
group
says
worship, 9:45 a.m.; Sunday school,
Harold
Pardue. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
Kearns. Sunday School, 10:30 a.m.;
2nd St.,
Mason.
Pastor
Ronald
Branch.
Smith.
Sunday,
10
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
the
Parsonage
address
realize
how
fast
it
was
godo-list.
Rt. 33, Letart. Rev. A. Young. Sunday school,
Gallipolis Ferry. Pastor Jim Hadinger, 675-5954.
10:45
a.m.
Sunday morning church; Sunday &amp; Oma Chapel
morning
worship, 9:30
a.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
11of Christ
St. Paul Lutheran Church Pentecostal Lighthouse
student
such
Wednesday,
English
dictionary
shows
Henderson
Church
Church 7 p.m.
10
a.m;Bible
Worship
1st and 3rdbelieves
Sundays, 11
a.m.;
Associate
Pastor
Sanders Rulen.
Sunday
school,
tiple
divorce
and
re-marriage
me.
ing.
“IRev.
hate
to7 p.m.
bust your bubTuesday
evening,
a.m.;Sunday
evening service,
6 p.m.;&amp;
Bible
5th &amp;
George
Streets New 4th
Haven.
Henderson
Walnut St. Min.
George
Topping.
Rt. 62 to Arbuckle Creek Road, Grimms
Youth every Sunday, 6 p.m.
&amp; Main St. Hartford.
Randy
L. Par9:45 a.m.; Sunday worship, 10:45 a.m.;
division
is acceptable to God.St. Paulthere
are7 p.m.;2 Wednesday
Greek night
words
Graham
United Methodist
United
study,is
Wednesday,
7 p.m.,
R.A.’s,
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.; worship
acceptable
tostudy,
God;
another
Ridge
Church Sunday
Sunday
10 a.m.;
worship,
10:50
a.m.;
eveLanding.Pleasant
Pastor
James
Arthur.
sons. Sunday
worship,
10 a.m;
evening service,
evening,Methodist
prayer
&amp;
Finally,
it
dawned
on
me
In evening,
Ecclesiastes
3:1,school,
the
ble,
but…”
Rt. 33
- Pastor
Richard
Nease.
Sundaypray 2423
Collegeare
Hilloffered,
ChurchThursday,
Jackson
Pleasant.
Pas- The
G.A.’s, Y.A.’s. ning service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service,service,
11 a.m.7(Handicapped
facilities)
p.m.
New
Haven
United
Methodist
10 a.m.; Sunday
7 p.m.;Raymond
Wednesday,
6 p.m.;
free bible studies
Bible Ave.,
study,Point
7 p.m.
Gallipolis
Ferry. Pastor
NibHear
Jesus:
“Neither
I
translated
“rock”
in
v.18.
group
says
sexual
unfaithfulworship,
11
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10
165
Wood
School
Road,
GallipoContact:
Mike
Lieving 882-2290.
511 5th St. Pastor Annette Carper. Worship,tor Matthew Dotson. Sunday school, 10
p.m.; Youth
&amp; children’s
church,
7 p.m.;
5867:30
p.m. Call
593-1000
for more
that
somebody,
other
than895-3641 Iorhate
ert.
Saturday
service,
7 p.m.;
Sunday
man
of God
says,
“To
evwhen
people 7say
for Sunday
these school,
alone10:45
[thea.m.;
apostles]
a.m.a.m.;
lis Ferry. Pastor Darrell Johnson. 2649 morning, 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening,
11 a.m.;
prayer
meeting,
word
which
refers toMt. Zion
Missionary
Baptist
Church
ofGod-accepted
Christ
9:45
UMYF,a.m.;
6 worship,
Main “rock”
Street
Baptist
Church
information.
ness
is
the
only
my
inner
conscience,
was
theymorning
hate worship,
to do something
Sand Hill
Rd. Minister
Bible Church Wyoma Pentecostal
p.m.; Vespers, 7 p.m.; Bible study, Wednesday,
11001 Main
St., Point Pleasant. Pastor
Dr. Sunday school,
Sunday
10 a.m.;
p.m. 675-5452
Upland.
10 a.m.;
wor- PeteSt.Allinder.
Peter Lutheran
6ery
p.m. thing there is a season,
for Methodist
them also which shallWednesday,
Peter
[“and
I Sunday
say also
untoworship,
study,
9:45 a.m.;
worship,
10:30
evening
Pleasant Valley Community Outreach
7Asbury
p.m.but
Richard
Sargent.
morning
7 miles out Redmond
Ridge.
Pastor
Roger
28th &amp;a.m.;
Parrish
Ave. Point Pleasant.
United
Sunday
night,
6 p.m.;
Prayer meeting,
ship, 11
a.m.; evening
service,
7one
p.m.;
cause
for
divorce;
group
addressing
me.
I
looked
and
a Pastor
timeDoug
to Garten..
every purand
then
they
go
right
service, 6 p.m.;
service,
7 p.m.
10:30 a.m.;
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday
Bonecutter. Sunday
school, 107a.m.;
6
Pastor
Sherrie
Hofmann. Worship
Rt. 33,believe
Letart. Rev.
Young.
Sunday their
Wednesday,
p.m.;worship,
740-446-9957
orRt. 2 Rollinstown.
West Columbia
United
Methodist
meeting, Wednesday,
7:30 Wednesday
p.m.,
onA.me
through
thee,
that
thou
art
Peter…”]prayer
Haven of Rest Church
Trinity
Saturday worship, 7 p.m.; Sunday school, 10
evening
worship,
6:30Glenn
p.m.; Wednesday
prayer
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Concord Baptist
Hickory Chapel Rd. Point Pleasant. Sunday
St. Mark Lutheran
Viand St. Point Pleasant. Pastor Steve
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Ashton.
Pastor
Justin
Moran.
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1081 Oshel
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7 p.m.Sunday
Prayerschool,
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Hofmann.
Worship
service,
9
a.m.;
511 5th St. Pastor Toni Beecher. Wor10
a.m.;
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evening
6
p.m.;
Youth, 1st
Wednesday
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service,
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study,
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675-1876.
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of Praise &amp; Worship
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week.
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whatever
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Pleasant
Ridge
Church
Rt. 1, Letart.
Pastor Jack
Mayes.
Worship
Full Gospel Fisherman’s Net Ministries
the
world
may
believe
thatBaptistJohn speak, and followedNew Hope Bible Baptist
Kingstown.
915 1st St. Point Pleasant.
Zion
Lutheran
Bible
study,
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
The
Gospel
Lighthouse
(Independent)
Church
Cisco. Sunday Bible
study,
10 a.m.; evening
GallipolisYouth
Ferry.Pastor,
PastorRonnie
Jerry Colburn.
service, 1st Sunday morning, 3rd Sunday night;
Old Town Board Baptist Church
104 Main St. Point Pleasant. Pastor Anetta
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Sand Hill Rd.
Pastor
Brian
Durst.
Sunday worship
10 Pleasant,
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Neal Road,
David
End
of Robinson St.
(Bellmeade)
Point
Marshallservice,
Sunday, 10 a.m;
these
contradicting
teachings
6
p.m.
Sunday,
7:30
p.m.
Ross.
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.;
study
&amp;
prayer
meeting,
Wednesday,
10
a.m.;
Hofmann.
Worship service,
9:30 a.m.;
Trinity United Methodist
Sunday
school, the
9:30 a.m.;
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December
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ily of God
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service, 7 p.m.;
7 p.m. 10 a.m.; worship, 10:50 a.m.;
Thursday,
10 a.m.
675-2338.
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882-3111.service,morning
615 Viand St., Point Pleasant. Pastor
worship
10:30
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under
the
title,
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Wesleyan
Oak
Grove
United
Methodist
40
Warwick
Road,
Point
Pleasant.
Sunday FL
675-6620.
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said with a touch of irrita- evening
man7 p.m.;
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I am, Iworship,
allowed Box 831313, Ocala,
masonjacksonlutherans.org
Richard
DeQuasie.
Contemporary
Anderson
Mason,
458-1754.
speaks
through
Paul:
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brother
Simon,evening service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
Oak
Grove
Rd., Letart.
Pastor
Jack -Mayes. Rev. Rob Grady. Sunday school, 10
school, 10 a.m.; Evening worship, 6 p.m.;
worship
service,
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7 p.m.
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you,9:30
brethren,
and
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p.m.
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2300
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Pleasant. Pastor Dan
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2816 Jackson Ave. 675-5278. Pastor Joe Nott.
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an
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Interdenominational
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6
p.m.;
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7
p.m.
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the month;
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675-7883.
school,which
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morning
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April. Sunday
morning, 10:30
Henderson
Tabernacle
Youth, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday knitting
Rt. 62.
Rev. Paul
Browning. SundayKingstown.
10 a.m.;
evening,
7 p.m.
St. Point
Pleasant.
Youth
a.m.;
evening
service,
7:30delicate
p.m.; prayer
915 1Sunday
worship, 11 a.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.;“union,”10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening,
6 p.m.;
304-812-4658,
but
not
“unity.”
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meditation.
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Shores.
Call
him
“I
hate
to
bust
your
bubthat
ye all7 p.m.,
speak the being
interpreted,
Christ.
Pastor William (Sonny) Mayes.
Sunday Everyone
group,Christ,
1 p.m.;
Prayer
service,
school, welcome.
10 a.m.; Sunday evening, 7p.m.;
New Beginnings
Baptist
Pastor, Ronnie McDaniel, Pastor, Marshall
service,Church
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Bellmead
United
Methodist
Wednesday
Bible study,the
6 p.m.;
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7
304-812-7077.
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7:45St.
p.m.
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Faith Gospel
Mission
(Independent
8443 Sandhill
Rd.
Point Pleasant,
675foxes
whose
tails
Samson
Sunday,
10
a.m;
Wednesday,
6
Corner
of
Burdette
&amp;
Howard
Ave.,
Point
p.m.
jacksonavebaptist.wordpress.com.
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“You’re working
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at 352-687-4240
or p.m.;
enot Services,
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Wednesday, 7 p.m.
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Sunday Methodist
Wednesday 6 p.m.
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Pleasant. Rev. James W. Lawson. Sunday Baptist Fellowship)
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morning,
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school,you;
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a.m.;
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(Independent
Barton Chapel Rd., Ashton,
WV. Pastor: Ron
what?”
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And
when
Jesus
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him,school,tied
mail
jamessnyder2@att.
December.”
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Will Tabernacle
Rt. 1, Letart.
Pastor
JackWednesday
Mayes. Wor-eveningPaster Dale
Balls’s
Chapel
(Independent)
Sunday
school,Jon Pinson.
Hambrick
Church
service,
7evening
p.m.; no
Bible
study,
service,
6:30
Wednesday
evening
Sunday
worship,
7 p.m.;
Rt. R.
62,Hart
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River
Rd. Pastor
Robertson; Secretary,
Francis
Stone;
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Apple
Grove. Pastor Charles McCalhad
“union”;
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Southside.
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school,
10
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school,
9:30
a.m.; Ashton,
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evening,
7 p.m.;
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Leon.
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Larry
ship service,
Sunday
morning,
3rd
WV.
Pastor
Markwas
Mayes,
Asst.
morning
church;
Sun- service,
Wednesday,
7 p.m.service, 7 p.m.
lister. Sunday school, 10 a.m.; Sunday
Isaiah
Crump.
Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; Sunday
657-2637
or
675-1337.
a.m.;
evening
service
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
prayer,
Wednesday
evening,
7
p.m.;
674-0093
or
576Kapp. Sunday school, 10 a.m.; evening
Sunday
night; Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.; and
Pastor Darren EIlis. Sunday school, 10
day and
Tuesday
7 p.m. thou shalt be
have
“unity”!
Reader,
are
gether
in
the
same
mind
son
of
Jona;
worship,
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
meeting,
I said trying
to get a.m.;from
my end of the room.
evening, 7is
p.m.www.whatafellowship.
Roman Catholic list,”
7 p.m. 675-1921.
3299. meet7 p.m.; young people’s
Prayer meeting, Sunday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday worship 7 p.m.; WednesGraham Baptist
7 p.m.
Masonin
United
Methodist
“Whatschool,
does Godworship,
the
same
judgment.
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ing, Tuesday,
7into
p.m.; evening
worship, of dayBeing
called
Cephas,
which
is
by
prayer meeting,
7 p.m.
Riverview
Baptist
Pastoryou
Mikeasking,
Hatcher. Sunday
back
my
sphere
com.
the
good-natured
Other
St.10:30
Joseph
Catholic
Pastor
ScottUnited
Knowlton.
Sunday worship service,
Davies
Baptist Pastor
Faith Gospel Church
Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Oak Grove
Methodist
Kingtown
Add.,Grove
Point Pleasant.
9:30 a.m.; worship,
a.m.;
Wednes- of
That
isPomeroy
the
question
Chestnut Ridge Gospel Lighthouse
it hath
been
declared
3rd &amp;
Streets Mason. Father
David
9:45
Sunday
school,
11
a.m.;
Group, interpretation,
Long Hollow Rd., a
Letart.
Sunday service,say?”
10
Hannan-Trace
Road, Glenwood.
Pastor Harold
stone
super-sensitive
concentraOak a.m.;
Grove
Rd., Letart.
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JackYouthunto
Mt.person
Carmel that I am, I just
Merle Wood. Sunday school,
10
a.m.; {ASV,
day, 6:30 p.m.
Church
Pine Grove
Church
Schmitt. Sunday mass, 9 a.m.; Holy Day Vigil
Wednesday night dinners and service schedule
a.m.; evening service, 6:30 p.m.; Bible study,
Pardue. Sunday school, 10 a.m.; Sunday
Life Line Apostolic Church
Mayes.
service,
Sunday
1631 Mt. Carmel Road, Gallipolis
11 a.m.; evening
worship,
vital interest
meWorship
of you,
my1st brethren,
byworship,
Peter}.”
The
Leon. Pastor
Chris
Thomas.
Sunday
10
Mass, 7 to
p.m.any person
at www.masonumc.com
Wednesday,
6:30word
p.m. “rock” in
morning church; Sunday &amp; Tuesday evening,
Located
Chestnut
Ridge
RoadSchool,
Mt. Alto.
P.O. BOX 547 - 4 Mi. N. Rt.
2
Point
night, 7 p.m., 2nd Sunday, 11 a.m. and
Ferry.
Pastor
Jim
SeIvig.
Home
address,
7 p.m.; Wednesday evening, 7 p.m.
Lifespring Community Church
a.m.; Sunday
worship,
p.m.; Wednesday
7 p.m.
Pastornight
Jimmy
Jordan.7 Sunday
school,
who
wants
to
be
acceptable
them
which
are
of
the
house
the
phrase,
“upon
this
rock
Pleasant. Pastor Charles Birchfield, 6754th Sunday
morning,
11 a.m.
1840 Litchfield Rd., Gallipolis Ferry.worship/Bible study, 7 p.m.
576-2374.
A ministry of the Sacred
South Parkersburg
Heart Catholic Church
Vernon
United
Methodist
RT.of2,the
Letart. Pastor
Wolfe Valley
10 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.;
7253. Church,
Sunday
month;
Sunday
10morning,
a.m.
304-675-7168, Sunday morning, 10
Baptist
Church,
meeting
at Christ
Acad2222 Jackson
Ave.
Point
Pleasant.
Father675-1881
David Home.
Jack
Mayes.
2ndschool,
Sunday
10:30cona.m.,
Tribble
Rd. Pastor
Ronald
Hall. Sunday
school,
College
Hill Church
of
Chloe,
that
there
are
to
God.
The
scriptures
in
this
I
will
build
my
church,”
is
10 a.m.;
a.m.; worship, 7:30
Evening,
p.m.; Thursday
(Independent
emy —6old Save-A-Lot
store
on Rt. 62.
MillstoneEddy
Church
Schmitt.
675-4602.
Sundayschool,
mass, 11
4th Sunday night, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday school Faith Gospel
10 a.m.;
service, 11Fundaa.m.; evening service,
165 p.m.;
Wood School a.m.;
Road,Sunday
Gallipolis
Ferry.6Pastor
Chapel Church
7:30 p.m.
Bellmead
Unitedfellowship,
Methodist
worship,morning
7 p.m. Everyone
tentions
among6 p.m.
you. Nowmental)translated
services &amp;Reconciliation,
children’s
ministry,
fromevening
theservice,
Greek
Apple Grove. Pastor Charles McCallister.
before
Holy Day Mass,
as
9:30
a.m.;
Youth
p.m.; Wednesday
7Sunday
p.m. column
Darrell Johnson. Sunday
worship, welcome.
10
make
clear
whatmass;
HeWednesday,
1 mile off end of Greer Road. Sunday
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; Sunday worship, 6 p.m.;
announced.
Corner of Burdette St. &amp; Howard Ave.,
a.m.; Sunday night, 6 p.m.; Prayer meeting,
Gallipolis Ferry. Pastor Jim Hadinger,
10:30 a.m.; refreshments
start at 10 a.m.
evening services, 6 p.m.
I say,
that W.every
one of675-5954.
word
“petra,”
meaning
a says: He requires of Jesus’Church of Christ in ChristianWednesday,
Wednesday meeting, 7 p.m.
Moore’s
Chapel
Zion
Missionary
Baptist
Church
740-446-9957
or 304-675Union 7 p.m.;
Point this
Pleasant.
Rev. James
Lawson.
Shiloh
Community
Associate
Pastor
Sanders
RuNazarene
Rocky
Fork
Rd.,
Ashton.
Pastor
Justin
Berry.
Crab
Creek
Rd.
Gallipolis
Ferry.
Sunday
school,
2880
Sunday
morning,
9:45
a.m.;
Sunday
Leon-Baden
Road.;
Sunday
morning,
10
len.
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.;
Sunday
Episcopal
you
saith,
I am
of worship,
Paul;
and massive
rock
foundation.
House Lighthouse
Church (Independent)
ChestnutFather’s
Ridge Gospel
Church
Sunday
10 a.m.;
Sunday
a.m.;a.m.;
morning
service,
11 a.m.;
eveningfollowers unity of teaching,
Evangelical Christian Union
school, school,
10:45 a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
7 11 worship,10
a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
10:45
Sunday
evening,
7
Hartford. Pastor
Mike Mt.
Finnicum.
SunLocated Chestnut
Ridge Road
Alto. Pastor
First
Church of the
Nazarene
a.m.;
Sunday
&amp;
Wednesday
evening
services,
7
service,
7
p.m.;
Bible
study,
Wednesday,
p.m.
Gospel
I
of
Apollos;
and
I
of
Cephas;
Continuing
to
look
at
the
sin206 Main St. Point Pleasant.
PastorTabernacleWednesday evening, 7 p.m.
p.m.; Wednesday evening Bible study,
p.m.; Wednesday night prayer &amp; Bible
Christ7worship,
Episcopal
Church
lifestyle,
etc.
He
day service,
10school,
a.m.; evening
Jimmy Jordan.
Sunday
10 a.m.;worship,
Sunday7
Mt.
Vernon675-3120.
Ave., 25th St. Point
Pleasant.
Pasp.m.;
fellowship,
Viand St. Point Pleasant. Pastor Steve Tucker.
Charles
Staats. 675-5328.
Sunday
youthYouth
and junior
choir, 6:30
6:30 p.m.
p.m. 657study, 7 p.m.
804 Main St. Point
Pleasant.
and I of Christ. Is Christ di- gular
natureBaptist
of “my”
church,Rev. Ray
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
evening, p.m.;
6 p.m.;
James M.the
Ellis.
895-3018. Sunday school,
New Haven
(Independent)
Sunday school, worship service, 10 a.m.;
saysHageit is&amp;tor
through
oneness
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.;
2637 or 675-1337.
Morning Star Advent Christian Church
Rev
Marie Mulford.
9:45 a.m.; worship &amp; children’s church, 11 a.m.;
Heights United Methodist
104 Rollins St. New Haven. Pastor Danny
Sunday evening 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study,
evening
service,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
Rt.
62
S
Charleston
Rd.
(beside
Indian
Main
Street
Baptist
Church
Holy
Eucharist
Rite
I,
8
a.m.;
adult
vided?
was
Paul
crucified
for
God
tells
us,
“And
he
[Jesus]
Eddy Chapel
Church
worship,
p.m.; prayer and praise
2016 N. Main, Point Pleasant. Pastor Rev.
Davis. Sunday morning worship, 10:30 a.m.;
7 p.m.
He sets evening
forth
that
the6:30world
Pleasant
View Church
7 p.m.service,
MasonSmith.
UnitedSunday
Methodist
Museum). Pastor James Balser. Sunday
1100 Main
St., Point
Pleasant.
education, 9:30 a.m.;
HolyWednesday,
Communion,
1 mile offPastor
end ofTed
Greer
Road.
Sunday
evening
service,
7 p.m.;prayer,
missionary
Janice
morning
worship, 10:30
evening
service,
6 the
p.m.Pastor
882-2246,
882-2900,
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675-7253.
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Penielyouth
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Methodist7 p.m.
ant. Pastor
Steve
Sanderson.
Sunday
school,Bible study,
p.m.;
fellowship,
10 a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.; 675-5524.
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a.m.;
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11
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10 a.m.; Bible study &amp; prayer meeting,
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6 p.m.; Prayer meeting, Bible
Christian Community Church
Leon Baptist
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
444-7591.
Toler. 304-444-7591.
Clifton

Worship God this week
Search the Scriptures
“…these were more noble…they
searched the scriptures daily..”

st

Gingrich hits Romney,
Obama, on Catholic rights

US judge: Baroque artwork
to return to man’s heirs

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mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

Sports

Blue Devils double up Jackson, 12-6

Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

JACKSON, Ohio — Better late
than never.
After spotting host Jackson a
6-0 lead through four complete,
the Gallia Academy baseball team
rallied with a dozen unanswered
runs over the final three frames
Wednesday night to claim a 12-6
victory in a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League matchup at Haller
Field.

The visiting Blue Devils (6-3,
3-0 SEOAL) outhit the Ironmen
(2-1 SEOAL) by a comfortable
15-4 margin, which also included
a sizable 10-1 discrepency over
the final three innings. JHS also
had two of the three errors in the
contest.
Jackson led 2-0 after two and
5-0 through three complete, then
tacked on an insurance run in the
bottom of the fourth to secure a
6-0 advantage through four complete. GAHS outhit the Ironmen

Wahama edges
Eagles, 3-2
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

MASON, W.Va. — The
Wahama baseball team
scored what turned out
to be the winning run on
an error in the bottom of
the fifth inning during
Wednesday night’s 3-2
victory over Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division foe Eastern in Mason
County.
The White Falcons (56, 3-1 TVC Hocking) got
on the board first in the
bottom half of the opening frame after Isaac Lee
singled and then scored.
After a one-out EHS single
and a walk in the second
Wahama’s Tyler Roush got
the next two batters out to
maintain the one run lead.
Josh Shook sat the White
Falcons down in order in
the second with a little
help from catcher Jacob
Parker who threw a runner
out trying to steal second.
Wahama got back on the
board in the third inning
after drawing two walks, a
hit batsman, and an error.
WHS held a 2-0 lead going
into the top of the fourth.
Without the support of a
hit in the fourth the Eagles brought two runners

around to score and tie the
game at two all.
WHS took the 3-2 lead on
an error in the bottom fifth
and it was up to Tyler Roush
to hold on to the victory. He
struck out four batters over
the final two frames and
held on for the 3-2 victory.
Tyler Roush earned the
win and gave up two runs,
both unearned, three hits,
six walks, and two hit batsman over seven innings of
work. He struck out five
batters.
Josh Shook was credited
with the loss after pitching six innings and giving
up three runs, one earned,
eight hits, two walks, and a
hit batsman. Shook struck
out five.
Isaac Lee, Tyler Nutter,
and Kane Roush each had
two hits to pace the White
Falcons, while Wesley Harrison and Matt Stewart each
had one hit.
Ethan Nottingham, David
Warner, and Zach Scowden
each had a hit for the Eagles.
Wahama returns to action
when they host Belpre on
Monday at 5 p.m.
Eastern travels to Miller
Monday at 5 p.m looking to
snap their four game skid.

by a 5-3 margin up to that point
and had also stranded six runners
on the bases.
But all of that changed in the
fifth, as the guests plated three
runs after sending eight batters
to the plate. Gallia Academy sent
eight more batters to the plate in
the sixth, which also resulted in
three scores — tying the game at
6-all through six complete.
The Blue Devils then sent 12
hitters to the plate in the seventh,
which led to six scores and a 12-6

Bryan Walters/photo

Lady Knights hammer Ravenswood, 11-0
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

Alex Hawley/photo

Dunlap with three safeties. Ty
Warnimont and John Faro both
added two hits, while Bailey,
Drew Young and Gus Graham
rounded things out with one safety each. Dunlap drove in a gamehigh five RBIs, while Warnimont
and Faro both scored three times
in the triumph.
Neal, Abrams, Parks and
Spriggs each had a hit for Jackson. Spriggs drove in two runs
and Parks scored twice in the setback.

Point Pleasant junior Megan Davis (23) produces a two-RBI single in the first inning of Wednesday night’s non-conference
softball game against Ravenswood in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Bryan Walters

Wahama’s Isaac Lee (right) hustles back to first base beside
Eastern’s Zach Scowden (20) during Wednesday night’s 3-2
White Falcons victory in Mason.

lead headed into the finale. Jackson went down in order, giving
GAHS sole possession of the lead
early in the SEOAL standings.
Gallia Academy starter Justin
Bailey went the distance for the
winning decision, allowing two
earned runs, four hits and seven
walks while fanning eight. Massie
took the loss for Jackson, allowing
six earned runs, five hits and four
walks in an inning of relief.
Jimmy Clagg led the guests
with five hits, followed by Bobby

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
Turnabout is fair play.
Less than 24 hours after producing just one hit in an 8-0 loss at
Wayne, the Point Pleasant softball
team did a complete 180-degree
turn Thursday night following an
11-0 mercy-rule decision over visiting Ravenswood in a non-conference
matchup in Mason County.
The Lady Knights (8-4) limited
the Red Devilettes (1-7) to just two
hits and four total baserunners, and
the hosts also pounded out eight hits
in the triumph. Both teams committed one error apiece in the contest.

RHS left runners stranded at second and third in the opening half of
the first, then PPHS countered by
sending 13 batters to the plate in the
bottom half of the inning. The end
result led to nine runs, which came
from six hits, two walks, an error
and a hit batsman.
Ravenswood went down in order
during the second, then Point produced two runs on two hits and a
walk — giving the hosts a commanding 11-0 edge through two complete.
The Red Devilettes started the
third in style after Kaci Sullivan
singled, but Sullivan was thrown out
trying to stretch that base hit into
a double. Savana Casto followed
by reaching safely on an error, but

Point recorded the next two outs to
wrap up the double-digit decision.
Kaci Riffle was the winning pitcher of record, allowing zero runs, two
hits and one walk over three innings
while striking out two. Callie Snodgrass took the loss for RHS after
allowing eight hits and three walks
while fanning one.
Megan Davis and Kaitlin Liptrap
paced PPHS with two hits apiece,
while Sarah Hussell, Josie Fisher,
Brooke Fisher and Bekah Darst
rounded things out with one safety
each. Davis, Darst and Liptrap all
drove in two RBIs, while Davis and
Hussell each scored twice.
Sullivan and Callie Snodgrass had
the lone hits for the guests.

OVP Schedule Southern rolls past Lancers, 10-0

Friday, April 6
Baseball
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley,
5 p.m.
Meigs vs Ironton at
URG, 1 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley,
5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Glenville
Tourney, TBA
Boys Tennis
Ironton at Gallia Academy, noon
Saturday, April 7
Baseball
Gallia Academy at Valley (DH), noon
Point Pleasant at Man,
2 p.m.
South Webster at
Southern (DH), noon
Softball
Gallia Academy at
Leesburg Fairfield (DH/
Clay), 12:30 p.m.
River Valley at Oak Hill
(DH), 11 a.m.
Point Pleasant at Lincoln County (DH), 10
a.m.

Wahama at Glenville
Tourney, TBA
Track and Field
Southern, Eastern at
Belpre Shrine, 10 a.m.
Monday, April 9
Baseball
Chillicothe at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Tolsia at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 5
p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 5
p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 5
p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5
p.m.
Softball
Chillicothe at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 5:30 p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 5
p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 5
p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 5
p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5
p.m.

Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

RACINE, Ohio — Danny Ramthun struck out 11 as the Southern
baseball team shutdown Tri Valley
Conference Hocking Division foe
Federal Hocking 10-0 in Star Mill
Park Wednesday night.
Southern (8-0, 5-0 TVC Hocking)
took advantage of the free passes
the Lancers (4-3, 2-2) gave them in
the first inning, scoring three runs
on four walks and two hits. Southern added two more runs in the sec-

ond to expand their lead to 5-0.
The Tornadoes sent 11 batters to
the plate in the fourth on their way
to five runs in the inning. Federal
Hocking was unable to get on the
board yet again in the fifth and fell
victim to the mercy rule. Southern
keeps its undefeated streak alive
with the 10-0 win.
Danny Ramthun threw five shutout innings and gave up just three
hits and two walks while striking
out 11 to earn the win.
Roane Casey was credited with
the loss for FHHS after pitching

four innings and giving up 10 runs
on eight hits and nine walks. Casey
struck out three batters.
Hunter Johnson and Trenton
Deem each had two hits to pace
the Tornadoes followed by Andrew
Roseberry, Ethan Martin, Adam
Pape, and Marcus Hill who each finished with one hit apiece.
Wes Dxon led the Lancers with
two hits.
The Tornadoes return to action
Saturday when they host South
Webster in a doubleheader at noon.

Ironladies fend off Gallia Academy, 3-2

Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The
road was unkind to the
Gallia Academy softball
team Wednesday night
during a 3-2 setback to
Jackson in a Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
matchup in the Apple City.
The three-time defending league champion Blue
Angels (4-3, 2-1 SEOAL)
trailed 2-0 through three
complete, but the guests
rallied with two runs in
the fourth to knot things
up at two through four full
frames.

The score remained
that way until the bottom
of the sixth, when the
host Ironladies (6-1, 3-0)
made their big move of
the night.
Kelly Hughes led the
inning off with a double,
then advanced to third on
a one-out single Samantha Humphreys. Jenzen
Oberholzer was issued
a free pass to load the
bases and Kacee Jenkins
delivered a sacrifice fly
to center — allowing
Hughes to score the eventual game-winning run.
The Blue Angels led the

seventh off with a leadoff
walk to Rachel Morris,
but Jackson followed with
three consecutive outs to
secure the one-run decision and sole possession of first place in the
SEOAL standings. Both
teams had five hits and
one error in the contest.
Kacee Jenkins was the
winning pitcher of record,
allowing two earned runs
and one walk over seven
frames while striking out
four. Heather Ward took
the loss after surrendering two earned runs and
six walks over six innings

while fanning six.
Kendra Barnes, Kanessa Snyder, Mattie Lanham, Maggie Westfall and
Chelsy Slone each had a
hit in the setback. Snyder
and Lanham both drove
in a run, while Snyder
and Barnes scored on run
apiece.
Hughes,
Humphreys,
Jessica Webb, Whitney
Wills and Kari Jenkins
provided a hit apiece to
the winning cause. Kari
Jenkins and Kacee Jenkins
each drove in an RBI, while
Webb, Wills and Hughes
scored one run apiece.

�Friday, April 6, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Marauders hold
off Belpre, 8-2
Alex Hawley

ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The Meigs baseball
team scored five runs
in the second inning
Wednesday night during a
8-2 victory over Belpre in
Meigs County.
The Marauders (9-1)
manufactured a run in the
bottom of the first to take
the early 1-0 lead. Meigs
broke into the hit column
in the second inning with
six hits which led to five
runs and expanded the
MHS lead to 6-0.
It took Belpre (2-2) until the fifth inning to get
its first hit of the game.

Meigs added one to their
lead in the home half of
the fifth and had the 7-0
advantage.
Belpre scored it’s first
run in the sixth but the
Marauders answered back
with a run in the bottom
of the sixth.The Golden
Eagles pushed a run
across in the seventh but
could not get a rally going
and Meigs emerged victorious 8-2.
Treay McKinney was
the winning pitcher after
throwing seven innings
and giving up two runs on
three hits and two walks
while striking out seven.
The loss went to Belpre’s Johnson after pitch-

ing just 1.2 innings and
giving up six runs on six
hits and a walk.
Taylor Gilkey led the
Marauders bats with three
hits in the contest. Treay
McKinney had two hits
to go along with two stolen bases, while Nathan
Rothgeb, Zach Sayre,
TyPhelps, Charles Barrett,
and Matt Casci each had
one hit.
Three Golden Eagles
had a hit in the contest.
Meigs returns to action
Saturday against Ironton
at 1 p.m. on the Campus
of the University of Rio
Grande.

Lady Marauders blast
Belpre Eagles, 8-1
Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The Meigs
softball team rallied back from an early 1-0
deficit with eight unanswered runs Wednesday night during an 8-1 victory over visiting Belpre in a non-conference matchup in
Meigs County.
The Lady Marauders (5-3) outhit the
Lady Golden Eagles by a 10-4 margin, and
both teams committed two errors apiece
in the contest. BHS also managed just two
hits after the second inning, the frame in
which the guests took their 1-0 advantage.
MHS countered with four runs and three
hits in the third for a 4-1 advantage, then
the hosts tacked on two runs in each of the
fifth and sixth frames for a sizable 8-1 lead.
Belpre produced a hit in its finale, but never

managed to get that runner into scoring position.
Haley English was the winning pitcher
of record, allowing one earned run, four
hits and one walk over seven frames while
striking out six. Natalie Perry took the loss
for Belpre after surrendering eight runs, 10
hits and one walk over six innings while
fanning five.
Allyson Davis paced Meigs with two
hits, followed by Destiny Mullen, Hannah
Porter, Harley Fox, Devan Dugan, Emalee
Glass, Cheyenne Beaver, Tanisha McKinney and Suzy Cox with one safety apiece.
Porter had the lone RBI for the victors,
while Davis scored twice in the decision.
Stephanie Boso led BHS with two hits,
followed by Kelsey Pratt and Destiny Bell
with one safety each. Boso had an RBI and
Pratt scored once in the setback.

Southern
rolls
past
Lancers,
10-0
Point baseball tops
Alex Hawley

Niagara Falls, 5-1
Staff Report

mdrsports@mydailyregister.com

AYNOR, S.C. — Keeping a good thing
going.
The Point Pleasant baseball team has another game to play at the 2012 Mingo Bay
Tournament following Thursday’s 5-1 victory over Niagara Falls (NY) during Day 4
action in the Palmetto State.
The Big Blacks (9-4) improved to 3-1
overall at the week-long event and now advance to the championship round Friday.
Both teams produced six hits on Thursday,
with Niagara Falls committing three of the
five errors in the contest.
Point Pleasant led wire-to-wire in the
contest, as the hosts plated two runs in the

third for a 2-0 edge through three complete.
NFHS countered with an unearned run in
the fifth to cut the deficit in half, but Point
followed with two runs in the fifth and another score in the sixth to claim a 5-1 edge
after six full frames.
Austen Toler was the winning pitcher of
record, while Mike Colosi was saddled with
the loss.
Toler and Eric Roberts both paced the
Big Blacks with two hits each, followed by
Jason Stouffer and Alex Somerville with
one safety apiece. Toler, Stouffer and Josh
Hudson each drove in an RBI for the victors. Ricky Bailey had a double for Niagara
Falls.

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and giving up 10 runs on
eight hits and nine walks.
Casey struck out three
batters.
Hunter Johnson and
Trenton Deem each had
two hits to pace the Tornadoes followed by Andrew
Roseberry, Ethan Martin,
Adam Pape, and Marcus
Hill who each finished
with one hit apiece.
Wes Dxon led the Lancers with two hits.
The Tornadoes return
to action Saturday when
they host South Webster
in a doubleheader at noon.

South Point’s Murmahan.
RVHS was paced by
Alexis Hurt with two hits
followed by Mary Waugh,
Libby
Leach,
Ashley
Cheesebrew,
Mercedes
Combs, Ciara Layne, and
Ashley Morgan with one hit
apiece.
South Point’s Whaley led
their offense with four runs
scored.
River Valley returns to
action Saturday at 11 a.m.
when they tra to Oak Hill
for a doubleheader.

Rebels fall to Trimble, 15-1
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

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CHESHIRE, Ohio — The
River Valley softball team
scored eight runs in the
fourth inning but it wasn’t
enough as Ohio Valley Conference foe South Point
emerged victorious 16-8
Wednesday night in Gallia
County.
South Point got on the
board first with two runs
in the top of the second
inning. The Lady Pointers
added two more runs in the
top of the fourth to expand

their lead to 5-0. River Valley took advantage of four
SPHS errors in the fourth
to score eight runs and take
the 8-5 lead.
South Point brought the
lead within one in the fifth
with two runs in the inning.
The Lady Pointers went
into the seventh inning
down one and after all their
hitting was over they were
up eight. RVHS was unable
to answer and fell 16-8.
Noel Mershon was the
losing pitcher after giving
up 16 runs in seven innings.
The winning pitcher was

Bryan Walters

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their lead to 5-0.
The Tornadoes sent 11
batters to the plate in the
fourth on their way to five
runs in the inning. Federal
Hocking was unable to get
on the board yet again in
the fifth and fell victim
to the mercy rule. Southern keeps its undefeated
streak alive with the 10-0
win.
Danny Ramthun threw
five shutout innings and
gave up just three hits and
two walks while striking
out 11 to earn the win.
Roane Casey was credited with the loss for FHHS
after pitching four innings

Lady Raiders fall to South Point, 16-8
ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

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RACINE, Ohio — Danny Ramthun struck out 11
as the Southern baseball
team shutdown Tri Valley
Conference Hocking Division foe Federal Hocking 10-0 in Star Mill Park
Wednesday night.
Southern (8-0, 5-0 TVC
Hocking) took advantage
of the free passes the
Lancers (4-3, 2-2) gave
them in the first inning,
scoring three runs on four
walks and two hits. Southern added two more runs
in the second to expand

Alex Hawley

www.mydailysentinel.com
John got in the game
with a wide range of
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ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —The South Gallia baseball team managed just three hits
and committed five errors Wednesday night
during a 15-1 setback to visiting Trimble in
a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
matchup in Gallia County.
The Rebels (2-4, 1-4 TVC Hocking)
trailed 7-0 through an inning and a half of
play, but the hosts responded with their
lone score in the bottom of the second to
pull within six runs through two complete.
The Tomcats added a run in the third and
two more scores in the fourth, then closed
things out with a five-run fifth to wrap up
the 14-run outcome.

THS outhit SGHS by a 6-3 count and
committed three errors in the triumph. R.J.
Losey was the winning pitcher of record
after allowing zero earned runs and a walk
over five frames while striking out five.
Seth Jarrell took the loss after surrendering
seven runs (four earned), three hits and five
walks over two innings while fanning two.
Ethan Spurlock, Cory Haner and Alex
Stapleton each had a hit for the Rebels. Stapleton had the lone RBI and Danny Matney
scored the hosts’ lone run.
Storm Rushing, J.D. Chesser, Jacob
Hooper, Austin Downs, John Voido and Jacob Koons each had a hit for the Tomcats.
Losey and Chesser each scored twice, while
Chesser and Hooper drove in two RBIs
apiece.

Meyer’s reaction mixed to
first Buckeyes workouts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Five practices into his
tenure at Ohio State, coach
Urban Meyer is both impressed with some things
he’s seen and also realizes
the Buckeyes have a long
way to go.
“You have such high expectations,” he said after the
defense won an in-practice
scrimmage on Wednesday,
before adding, “It’s not fair
to the players to say that.”
Ohio State is coming off
a 6-7 season which ended
with a four-game losing
skid. Still, the Buckeyes
return nine starters on defense and seven on offense.
After the Buckeyes’ first
practice last Wednesday,
Meyer had pinpointed the
two biggest areas of concern this spring.
“I think (it) is installation
of the offense, then identifying the playmakers, in that
order,” he said. “We are in
a sprint for that. We are in
a journey for the other stuff.
The immediacy is installaSee MEYER |‌ B4

Kyle Robertson/Columbus Dispatch/MCT photo

Urban Meyer is introduced as the new head football coach of
Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, Monday, November
28, 2011.

�Friday, April 6, 2012

SERVICES
Business

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • Experienced
• References Available

740-591-8044
Please leave a message

Window Dresser

Custom made Window Blinds

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740-591-6460 740-985-4187
47290 St Rt 248 Long Bottom OH 45743
Legals
Lebanon
Township,
Portland,Ohio is accepting
sealed bids for a culvert (20ft
long x 8ft diameter/3ft bevel on
one end)
Bids accepted till Saturday,
April 28th.
Mail sealed bids to:
Sherry Wilcox
Lebanon Township
30220 Lovett Rd
Portland, Ohio 45770
(4) 6, 13, 20, 2012
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

OF

L.SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF KELLY JAMES SNYDER
TO: JIMMY JAMES JENKINS
CASE NO. 20126007
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME

Legals

Notices

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Title IV of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, 30 U.S.C.
1201 et seq., the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources
Management, hereby gives
notice of the availability of a
CATEGORICAL EXCLUSION
CERTIFICATION for an Abandoned Mined Land reclamation
project in the State of Ohio.
The Division of Mineral Resources Management prepared and the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement, United States
Department of the Interior,
concurred that the activities
being undertaken by the proposed project qualify as a
category of actions which
would not have significant effects on the environment, either individually or cumulatively. The certification was
submitted by the Division in
application for Title IV financial
assistance in reclaiming and
restoring land and water resources adversely affected by
past mining. A copy of the
certification is available from
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mineral Resources Management,
280 East State Street, Athens,
Ohio 45701.
The project covered by this action is titled “Dowell Mine
Drain” (#MG-Sb-77) and is located north of the Village of
Pomeroy in Fraction 30, Salisbury Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. The project will consist
of the collection and conveyance of mine drainage, which
is causing periodic flooding of
the crawl space in a close by
home, through a combination
of pipe and surface channels
to a nearby stream. All disturbed areas will be vegetated.
This project is 100% federally
funded. If you have any questions or concerns about the
project, please contact Mr.
Terry VanOfferen at the Division's address listed above or
at (614) 265-1094. (4) 6, 2012

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

The applicant has filed an Application for Change of Name
in the Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, requesting the
change of name of Kelly
James Snyder to Jimmy
James Jenkins .
The hearing on the application
will be heard on the 7th day
of May
, 2012, at 1:30
oʼclock p . m., in the Probate
Court of Meigs County, Ohio,
located at Courthouse, 100
East Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769.
Applicantʼs signature:
James Snyder

Kelly

Address: 42812 SR 124,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 (4) 6,
2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

AGRICULTURE

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
SERVICES
Donestics/ Janitorial

Lawn Service
Lawn Care Service, Mowing,
Trimming, Free estimates. Call
740-441-1333
or
740-645-0546
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience
insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
FINANCIAL
Money To Lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

SERVICES

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

ANNOUNCEMENTS

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Notices
"A place to Call Home" FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED IN
YOUR COUNTY!!! $25-$45 a
day for the care of a child in
your home. Can be single or
marred. Call Oasis to help a
child find a place to call home.
TRAINING BEGINS April 14 at
Albany, Call 740-698-0340 for
more information or to register
for training.

Furniture
9 drawer maple dresser with
matching night stand &amp; mirror
$300, light tan velour sofa
$350, located in New Haven,
304-971-0049
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy

For all your cleaning needs,
call Dust to Shine, homes,
offices,
rentals,
RV's,
740-992-6708, 740-416-7666

300

MERCHANDISE

ANIMALS
Pets
FREE KITTENS to a good
home, 3 grey, 1 white,
304-895-3013
FREE to a good home: grey
female kitten &amp; 6 mo old grey
male tiger stripe cat.
304-593-2676

Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Yard Sale
HUGE YARD / BAKE / HOT
DOG SALE April 7th Daylight
to Dusk at the Vinton Park
Shelter House, All proceeds
go to the Vinton Summer
Youth League Baseball
Teams.
INSIDE YARD SALE-2416
Lincoln Ave, Fri 4/6 &amp; Sat 4/7,
3 heating stoves(1 wood, 1
elec, 1 gas), elec miter saw,
tool box, books, glassware,
misc

Lg Yard Sale April 6 &amp; 7 from
8am until 6pm some thing for
everyone located @ 10544
State route 141.
Yard Sale April 6th 9am to
4pm at 116 Kineon Drive

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
AUTOMOTIVE
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00
388-0011
or
441-7870
REAL ESTATE SALES

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740-988-6130
2 BR, full dry basement, NICE,
Mt Vernon Ave, Pt Pleasant,
$600
mo
plus
dep.
304-634-3467
2 BR, furnished, $600 deposit,
$600 Rent, Electric. Small
dogs
considered
740-446-9595
2 Rm efficiency Apt. with 2 car
garage, W &amp; D - in country setting, 7 miles from Gallipolis on
St Rt 7 S Furnished. Utilities
not included. $ 300 mo. NO
PETS, Dep &amp; 1st mo. rent required &amp; References. Call
4464514
2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing
Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail.
Rent plus dep &amp;
elec. Minorities
encouraged to apply. No pets.
304-674-0023 Equal Housing
Opportunity.

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Upstairs Apt. for Rent @ 46
Olive St. Stove &amp; Ref. Utilities
Pd. $475mo N/S &amp; No Pets
446-3945
Upstairs Apt. on Viand St.
$400 + Deposit. Call for details
304-812-4350.
Houses For Rent

For Sale By Owner
8.62 Acres of Land, Green
Twp.Gallipolis School Dist. Excellent Building Lot, Pond,
Elec. &amp; water service. 2 entrances to property. Call
740-446-3568
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
Middleport- 2 br. furnished
apartment., No Pets, deposit &amp;
references, 740-992-0165

1 BR &amp; 4 BR, NO PETS,
Syracuse, OH 304-675-5332
or 740-591-0265
Very nice home for rent in Middleport, good neighborhood.
Newly remodeled. New appliances, 2 Bedrooms, 1 bath,
Large Kitchen, Sun room.
Central Air &amp; Heat, NIce outdoor spaces. No pets, non
smoking. Call 740-992-9784
for more details.
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

Administrative/Professional
Gallipolis Career College is
looking for a qualified Admissions Representative. Some
college experience preferred,
as well as previous sales experience preferred. Cover letters and resumes can be
dropped off at the college, also
can
be
emailed
to
bshirey@gallipoliscareercollege.edu.
Help Wanted- General
LSW needed for Oasis Foster
Care, Albany. Assessor training a plus or willing to take the
assessor training classes.
Home studies and some case
management. Fax resume to
Oasis at 740-698-0821.
Office help wanted for busy
eye practice in Pt Pleasant.
Send resume to: Anwar Eye
Center, Attn: Brenda, 1500 Lafayette Ave, Moundsville, WV
26041
Mechanics
MECHANIC NEEDED:
R &amp; J Trucking Co,
14530 State Route 7
Marietta, Ohio 45750
Tractor, Trailer &amp; Welding Repairs.
3 Years Experience needed.
Must have own tools. Clean
drivers
license needed. CDL a plus.
401k, Health, Dental, Rx options.
For information call Jeff;
(800) 462-9365 X 206,
fax (740) 374-3059, e-mail to;
jcaltrider@rjtrucking.com
Medical
Dental office has opening for
entry level dental assistant.
We will train. Send resume to:
PO Box 704 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
Handyman
Driveway crack repair, seal
coating, repair pot holes, pressure washing. 304-882-3959
Manufactured Homes
2-BR 1 bath small mobile
home for rent. 1-2 persons
only. Water/Trash paid. NO
PETS! Great Location @
Johnsons Mobile Home Park!
Call 740-446-3160.
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Miscellaneous

FRIDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

12

(WPBY)

13

(WOWK)

18
24
25
26
27
29
30
31
34
35
37
38
39
40
42
52
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
67
68
72
73
74
400
450
500

(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(NBCSN)
(SPEED)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SYFY)
(HBO)
(MAX)
(SHOW)

PM

6:30

FRIDAY, APRIL 6
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Who Do You Think You
Dateline NBC
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
Grimm "The Thing With
News
Fortune
Are? "Edie Falco" (N)
Feathers" (N)
Tonight
Show (N)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Who Do You Think You
Dateline NBC
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
Grimm "The Thing With
at Six
News
Fortune
Are? "Edie Falco" (N)
Feathers" (N)
at 11
Show (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World
Primetime: What Would
ABC 6 News (:35) News
Entertainm- Access
Shark Tank
20/20
at 6
News
You Do?
at 11
Nightline
ent Tonight Hollywood
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
The State of American Masters "Harper Lee: Hey,
Closer to
Inside E
Washington Need to
Bobcat
Street
Business
Week
Know
Ohio
Boo"
Sports
Truth
Eyewitness ABC World
Primetime: What Would
Eyewitness (:35) News
Judge Judy Entertainm- Shark Tank
20/20
News at 6
News
You Do?
News 11PM Nightline
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
CSI: NY "Kill Screen" (N)
Blue Bloods "Some Kind
10TV News / (:25) News /
Under Boss "Taylormade
HD
News
Fortune
Golf Company" (N)
of Hero" (N)
(:15) Sports X (:50) LateS
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
The Finder "Life After
The
Excused
The Big
Fringe "Everything in Its
Eyewitness News at 10
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory Death" (N)
Right Place" (N)
p.m.
Simpsons
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Gefilte Fish Chronicles
BBC News
Washington Need to
Telling Amy's Story
Charlie Rose
America
Business
Week
Know
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
CSI: NY "Kill Screen" (N)
Blue Bloods "Some Kind
News 13 at (:35) Mast/
Under Boss "Taylormade
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Golf Company" (N)
of Hero" (N)
11:00 p.m.
(:50) LateS
30 Rock
30 Rock
Funniest Home Videos
Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother WGN News at Nine
30 Rock
Scrubs
Cavaliers
Access
Insider
Boys/ Hall
Boxing '11 Oscar De La Hoya's Fight Night Club
The Dan Patrick Show
Action Sports World Tour
(3:00) Golf Masters Tournament (L)
SportsCent. Golf Masters Tournament Round 2 Site: Augusta National Golf Club -- Augusta, Ga. SportsCenter
Baseball Tonight (L)
MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants vs. Arizona Diamondbacks Site: Chase Field (L)
MLB Baseball Kansas City vs L.A. Angels (L)
I Survived...
I Survived...
I Survived...
America's Most Wanted
America's Most Wanted
America's Most Wanted
(4:30) Practical Magic
++ Bewitched ('05, Com) Will Ferrell, Nicole Kidman. +++ Nanny McPhee ('05, Fant) Emma Thompson.
The 700 Club
Gangland
Gangland
++ Crank 2: High Voltage ('09, Act) Jason Statham.
The Ultimate Fighter
The Ultimate Fighter
Big Time R. iCarly
Victorious
Victorious
FREDShow
SpongeBob G. Lopez
G. Lopez
'70s Show
'70s Show
Friends
Friends
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Trade"
SVU "Confession"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Unstable"
FLegal "Shine a Light" (N) In Plain Sight (N)
Suits "Bail Out"
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Payne
Payne
Payne
Payne
++++ Mean Girls ('04, Com/Dra) Lindsay Lohan.
John King, USA
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Law &amp; Order "By Perjury" Law &amp; Order "Return"
Law &amp; Order "Wannabe" ++ Rush Hour 3 ('07, Act) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. Hornet's Nest
(5:30) +++ The Chronicles of Riddick Vin Diesel.
++ Halloween H2O: Twenty Years Later
++ Halloween H2O: Twenty Years Later
To Be Announced
Monsters in Alaska
Alaska: Most Extreme
Deadliest Catch "Best of Season 7"
Deadliest Catch
The First 48
Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War Storage War
RivMon "Hidden Predator" O. Wild
O. Wild
WoodsLaw "Gun Country" North Woods Law
Rattlesnake Republic
North Woods Law
Brooklyn 11223
Best Ink
House "Locked In"
House
House "Saviors"
House "House Divided"
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
Frasier
E! News
The Soup
E! News
THS "Giuliana Rancic"
Fashion Star
Fashion Police
C. Lately (N) E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Home Imp
Home Imp
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Lockdown
Border Wars "Fog of War" Hard Time "Prison City"
Hard Time
Hard Time "The Hustle"
Hard Time "Prison City"
NBC Sports Talk (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers vs. St. Louis Blues (L)
NHL Live!
NBC Sports Talk
Overtime
(2:00) Barrett-Jackson "Palm Beach" (L)
Barrett-Jackson Automobile Auction "Palm Beach" From the South Florida Expo Center in Palm Beach, Florida.
Modern Marvels
Marvels "Mega Meals"
American Pickers
The Real Face of Jesus?
Decoding the Past
Housewives Atlanta
H.Wives "Under the Knife" The Real Housewives
+++ Enchanted ('07, Adv) Julie Andrews.
+++ Enchanted
106 &amp; Park "Freestyle Friday" (L)
++++ Dead Presidents ('95, Susp) Keith David, Larenz Tate.
++++ Boyz 'N the Hood Laurence Fishburne.
House
House
House
House
House
House
House
House
HouseH (N) House (N)
House
House
Malibu Shark Attack (2009, Thriller) Heather Wilson.
WWE Smackdown! (N)
Monster Man
Being Human
+++ The Losers Jeffrey Dean Morgan. (:45) 1stLook + Green Lantern ('11, Act) Ryan Reynolds.
Bill Maher
Bill Maher
(5:30) +++ Dinner for Schmucks
++ Hard Rain Morgan Freeman.
(:15) ++ Hall Pass ('11, Com) Owen Wilson.
Girl's Guide Sex Games
(:55) ++ The Preacher's Wife Denzel Washington.
++ Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life
++++ Red ('10, Act) Bruce Willis.

�Friday, April 6, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B4

Goodell hears appeals from
Saints’ Payton, Loomis
NEW YORK (AP) —
Sean Payton slipped out
a back entrance from NFL
headquarters and directly
into to a waiting car.
The
New
Orleans
Saints’ Super Bowl-winning coach now must wait
for Commissioner Roger
Goodell to decide whether
he will reduce any of the
penalties in the team’s
bounty scandal.
Payton declined comment
Thursday
after
meeting with Goodell to
discuss the season-long
suspension he received
for his role in the bounty
system. Earlier, the commissioner heard appeals
from general manager
Mickey Loomis and assistant coach Joe Vitt.
Goodell suspended Payton for all of next season,
while Loomis was suspended for eight games
and Vitt for six. The Saints
were fined $500,000 and
docked two second-round
draft picks.
Goodell spent six hours
Thursday hearing appeals, meeting separately
with team representatives, Loomis, Vitt and
finally Payton. Goodell
plans to make a decision
quickly but has not specified a timetable.
Vitt, with lawyer David
Cornwell, was the only
Saints official to speak to
the media gathered outside the league offices,
where a lone fan held up
a “Free Sean Payton” sign.
Cornwell said Vitt understood he had to be
held accountable, but they
wanted to convey that the
coach did not participate
in a strategy to injure
players.
“I thought the commissioner was extremely receptive,” Cornwell said.
Asked if he thought his
punishment would be reduced, Vitt said: “I have
no feel for that.”
“The
commissioner’s
got a tough job,” he added. “I’ve worked hard to
earn the respect of my
players and now I want to
earn his respect.”
The former New Orleans defensive coordinator at the center of the
bounties case, Gregg Williams, was suspended indefinitely and did not appeal. Williams was hired
by the St. Louis Rams on
Jan. 23 as their defensive
coordinator.
NFL investigators concluded that from 2009-11,
the Saints offered improper cash bonuses for big
hits that either knocked
opponents out of games
or left them needing help
off the field.
The appeals came on a
day when a documentary

Doug Kapustin/MCT photo

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Jerome Simpson attempts to shed defender Lardarius Webb
after making a catch in the first half. The Ravens defeat Cincinnati 13-7 on Sunday, January 2,
2011, at M&amp;T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, Maryland.

Ron Jenkins/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT photo

Commissioner of the National Football League, Roger S.
Goodell, meets with line judge Tom Symonette (100) before the
start of Super Bowl XLV where the Green Bay Packers face the
Pittsburgh Steelers at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas,
Sunday, February 6, 2011.

maker released what he
said was an audio recording of Williams speaking
before the Saints’ playoff loss to the 49ers. In a
speech filled with profanities, Williams tells his defense to go after specific
San Francisco players.
Filmmaker
Sean
Pamphilon, who had access to Saints meetings
for a documentary on football, posted the audio on
his web site. Pamphilon
initially shared the content with Yahoo Sports,
telling the website that
while he was not bothered by much of Williams’
profanity-laced
speech,
he was troubled by comments about a previously
concussed player.
Cornwell said Payton
viewed Williams’ comments on the recording as
“a rogue coach about to
get fired.”
“He was fired two days
later,” said Cornwell, the
executive director of the
NFL Coaches Association.
“He was on the way out.”
But when Williams left
New Orleans for the Rams
in January, nobody with
the Saints characterized
it as a firing. At the time,
Payton said it was apparent shortly before the season ended that Williams,
with his contract expiring, was likely going to
join new St. Louis coach
Jeff Fisher, an old friend.
The Saints and Williams
never discussed an extension, Payton said then.
The league informed
the Saints at the start of
the playoffs that it was
reopening its bounty investigation. Cornwell said
Loomis and Payton then
told Williams, “There’s no
place for this in this orga-

nization or this league.”
The NFL, however, in
its statement last month
announcing the penalties
for team officials, said the
GM and coach made only
“cursory inquiries” into
the possible presence of a
bounty program.
Payton’s suspension —
due to start last Sunday
— has been on hold pending his appeal, allowing
him to get in a few extra
days of work as he rushes
to create a plan that’s as
detailed as possible for
the Saints’ 2012 season.
The results of the appeals could affect whether
Bill Parcells, who turns
71 in August, comes out
of retirement to take over
as interim coach while his
former offensive assistant
and protege is suspended.
Beyond the punishment
for Saints coaches and
executives, the NFL still
has to determine whether
players who were involved
in the bounty program
will also be disciplined.
The NFL has said as many
as 27 players also could be
sanctioned for their role
in the scandal.
The NFL’s investigation
in New Orleans found that
Payton initially lied to
league investigators about
the existence of a bounty
program and instructed
his defensive assistants
to do the same. It also
found that Loomis did not
do enough to put a stop
to the enterprise after
he was informed that the
league was looking into it.
Payton twice apologized for his role in the
bounty program, saying
he takes “full responsibility” for a system that operated for three years under
his watch.

said. “So as long as we keep
doing that, it means there’s
still the bar is being raised.”
There are bright spots,
such as the inspired spring
play of defensive lineman
John Simon and quarterback Braxton Miller.
He said he’s learned one
big thing about his players
in the opening week.
“They’re really good people,” he said. “I don’t see
(many) defiant attitudes.
They’re very eager, really
good kids.”
During a fundraiser on
Tuesday, he joked that the
team would vote on captains but he would have
veto power. Then he added
that Simon — a high-intensity quarterback chaser and
team leader— would be a
captain.
Meyer is picking up the
reins of a program that has
just gone through a tumultuous year. Jim Tressel
stepped down in disgrace
last May after admitting he
had known that players had
violated NCAA rules but
he did nothing about it. He
subsequently received an
NCAA show-cause penalty,
all but banning him from

coaching for the next five
years.
After several player suspensions, defections and
other embarrassments, the
Buckeyes stumbled down
the stretch before losing
their final three regular-season games and then getting
beat by Meyer’s former employer, Florida, in the Gator
Bowl.
The Buckeyes have been
banned from going to a
bowl game after the 2012
season in addition to facing
scholarship limitations and
other sanctions.
Last year’s interim coach,
Luke Fickell, is now back
as a defensive coordinator.
Meyer brought in several
new coaches and a new attitude to practice this spring.
Asked if ever looks out at
the field and wonders if the
Buckeyes’ situation is better
or worse than he might have
expected, Meyer said he has
moments of each.
“There’s times where
I’m, we all do, like, ‘That
was pretty good,’” he said.
“Then you take a look again
and you say, ‘No, I see the
issues.’ That happens during practice. I see both.”

Meyer
From Page B2

tion of the offense and identifying a guy who can take
the ball and do something
with it.”
A week later, those two
goals remain unmet.
“I just wish we would
make more plays,” he said.
Almost pleadingly, he added, “Some guys just make
some plays.”
Asked if the offense was
making progress learning the hurry-up attack he
helped popularize at Utah
and Florida, it is clear that
that is not the case.
“We’re not where we need
to be. But I’m not upset. I
just wish we would grasp
it a little faster,” he said.
“There’s not one position.
It’s like offensive football,
anytime you install, anytime you do something new,
nine guys do it right and
two guys do it wrong and
it just looks like the most
disgusting thing you’ll ever
see. So we’ve just got to get
a little more consistent.”
Meyer said that the problems need to be resolved
slowly but surely.
“We’re a lot better today
than we were yesterday,” he

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740.992.2155

Ky. judge sentences Bengals’
Jerome Simpson to 15 days
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)
— Cincinnati Bengals wide
receiver Jerome Simpson
was sentenced Thursday
to 15 days in jail and three
years’ probation on a drugrelated charge.
A judge in Covington
reduced the jail time from
the 60 days recommended
by prosecutors in their plea
agreement with Simpson,
now a free agent after four
seasons with the Bengals.
Simpson pleaded guilty
March 1 to the felony
charge resulting from about
2 pounds of marijuana
shipped to his northern
Kentucky home in September. He was indicted on a
felony charge of marijuana
trafficking, but the plea
agreement changed the
charge to a prohibited act
relating to controlled substances, also a felony.
Simpson, clad in a dark
suit, took the stand briefly
and apologized to his family, the community and his
team.
“I take full responsibility
for my actions,” he said.

Simpson told the judge
that he would try through
community service to help
others not to make the same
mistake that he did.
Several people testified
at the hearing on his behalf,
including his agent and a
woman who works with him
as a volunteer at a church in
Covington that feeds the
homeless and needy. They
praised Simpson for his
community service, a point
that the judge noted in his
remarks before sentencing.
Judge Gregory Bartlett
of Kenton County Circuit
Court said that he was impressed with the testimony
and letters sent to him on
Simpson’s behalf. He said
the case was difficult because “Mr. Simpson appears to be “a good person”
who made a “serious lapse
in judgment. “
But despite the community service Simpson was
doing long before he was
charged, he still committed
a felony, the judge said.
‘We can’t ignore that,” the
judge said.

Both the prosecutor and
the judge said that they
don’t believe Simpson was
trafficking in marijuana but
that it was for the use of him
and his friends.
The judge agreed to the
defense request to allow
Simpson to wait until 6 p.m.
to turn himself in at the jail.
Simpson also will have to
serve 200 hours of community service, undergo drug
testing and pay a $7,500
fine plus court costs.
He had been under investigation since agents from
California tracked the package shipped to his home.
They said it contained 2
1/2 pounds of marijuana.
Authorities said a search
of Simpson’s home turned
up one more pound of marijuana.
Simpson was a secondround draft pick from
Coastal Carolina. He caught
53 passes for 758 yards and
four touchdowns last season.
Simpson’s attorney and
agent say he faces discipline
from the NFL.

Audio: Williams wanted
big hits on specific 49ers
NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
On the same day the NFL
heard the Saints’ appeals in
their hits-for-cash scandal, a
recording of Gregg Williams
emerged that purports to
capture the disgraced defensive coordinator telling players to “put a lick” on 49ers
receiver Kyle Williams to see
if he had lingering effects
from a concussion.
Filmmaker Sean Pamphilon, who had access to Saints
meetings for a documentary
on football, posted the audio
on his web site.
Pamphilon initially shared
the content with Yahoo
Sports, telling the website
that while he was not bothered by much of Williams’
profanity-laced speech, he
was troubled by comments
about the previously concussed player.
“I thought, ‘Did he just
say that?’” Pamphilon said
in an article posted Thursday. “That was the red flag
for me.”
Williams, who is suspended indefinitely for his admitted role overseeing a bounty
system that offered Saints
defenders payment for painful hits, did not respond to
a phone message and email
left with his foundation in
Missouri on Thursday.
Williams left New Orleans
after last season — his third
with the Saints — and was
hired as defensive coordinator by the St. Louis Rams.
Pamphilon made the recording of Williams’ speech
during a meeting before the
Saints lost to San Francisco
in a divisional playoff last
January, the final game Williams coached.
When the New York Giants defeated the 49ers a
week later in the NFC title
game, several Giants players made similar comments
about wanting to get hits on
Kyle Williams, who fumbled
twice in the game, because
they knew he had previous
concussions.
In Pamphilon’s recording,
Williams also tells his players to set their sights on
running back Frank Gore,
quarterback Alex Smith and
receiver Michael Crabtree.
“We need to decide on

how many times we can beat
Frank Gore’s head,” he says.
Williams also implores his
charges to “lay out” Smith
and later adds, “We need
to decide whether Crabtree
wants to be a (expletive)
prima donna or he wants to
be a tough guy. He becomes
human when we … take out
that outside ACL.”
Pamphilon also described
Williams pointing to his chin
when he said, “We hit (expletive) Smith right there.”
Pamphilon said Williams
then rubbed his fingers together as one might do when
doling out cash, saying, “I
got the first one,” which
Pamphilon understood to
mean the defensive coordinator had placed a cash
bounty on Smith.
The NFL has said Williams’ bounty system offered
off-the-books cash payments
of $1,000 or more for hits
that either knocked targeted
opponents out of games or
left them needing help off
the field. The Saints have
been punished heavily for
allowing such a program to
continue for three seasons,
from 2009 when they Super
Bowl through 2011.
NFL Commissioner Roger
Goodell suspended Saints
head coach Sean Payton for
the entire 2012 season, while
handing down additional
suspensions of eight games
to general manager Mickey
Loomis and six games to assistant head coach Joe Vitt,
who also coaches linebackers. The Saints, meanwhile,
were fined $500,000 and
docked second-round draft
picks this year and next.
It is not clear whether
Pamphilon
had
earlier
shared the recording with
the NFL. He did not immediately respond Thursday to
email requests for additional
comment.
The recording was released hours before Payton,
Loomis and Vitt went to
NFL headquarters in New
York for an appeal hearing
regarding their unprecedented punishments.
After Vitt’s appeal was
heard, his lawyer, David
Cornwell, was asked about
the audio tape. Cornwell

said Payton viewed Williams’ comments as “a rogue
coach about to get fired.”
“He was fired two days
later,” said Cornwell, who
also serves as executive director of the NFL Coaches
Association. “He was on the
way out.”
However, when Williams
left New Orleans for the
Rams in January, nobody
with the Saints characterized it as a firing. At the
time, Payton said it was apparent shortly before the
season ended that Williams,
with his contract expiring,
was likely going to join new
St. Louis coach Jeff Fisher,
an old friend. The Saints and
Williams never discussed an
extension, Payton said then.
The league informed the
Saints at the start of the
playoffs that it was reopening its bounty investigation.
Cornwell said Loomis and
Payton then told Williams,
“There’s no place for this
in this organization or this
league.”
The NFL, however, in its
statement last month announcing the penalties for
team officials, said the GM
and coach made only “cursory inquiries” into the possible presence of a bounty
program.
Pamphilon told Yahoo
Sports that Payton and
Loomis were not in the
room when the recording
of Williams was made. The
filmmaker did not return
messages seeking comment
from The Associated Press.
Williams can be heard using metaphors he has often
used throughout his coaching career, such as, “kill the
head and the body will die.”
That was Williams’ way of
urging players to disrupt opposing teams’ star players
with intimidating and nasty
physical play. Another of
Williams’ mantras was that
“respect comes from fear,”
which he repeats in the recording.
“We’ve got to do everything we can in the world
to make sure we kill Frank
Gore’s head,” Williams says.
“We want him running sideways. We want his head sideways.”

�Friday, april 6, 2012

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Friday, April 6, 2012

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday,
April 6, 2012:
The Full Moon marks your year.
You often will juggle your intellect
and your feelings. You could go back
and forth when deciding what you
should do as opposed to what you
want to do. You will choose which
voice works for you. If you are single,
your charisma attracts people like a
magnet. Maintaining a relationship
will take a lot of understanding and
compassion on both your parts. If
you are attached, you will be a little
inconsistent in your relationship,
as your mind floats to other issues.
Learn to respect the differences
between you rather than fight about
them. LIBRA admires you and wants
to be with you.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH You might be busy juggling two different interests. Avoid
someone who reads you cold,
which could cause a problem at this
moment. Think in terms of gains.
You might be questioning whether
you are giving enough or giving too
much. Tonight: Worry less.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Pace yourself, and understand that you easily could be
drained. News from a distance could
be problematic. You might feel like
you are being stretched too thin.
Walk away from the problem for a little while. Answers will come up soon
enough. Tonight: Whatever makes
you feel good.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Your creativity seems
to handle what your mind cannot.
Pressure builds and creates a somewhat touchy situation. Lo and behold,
your intuitive reaction will provide a
solution. Tonight: Lead the Fridaynight celebrations.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Basics do count. You might
want to rethink a decision or move
a situation in a different direction.
You could be feeling high-strung
and pressured. Squeeze in plenty of
physical activity. Walk a little more.
Tonight: Find a stress-buster.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH You say what you feel, but
reactions come in from left field. You
could feel pressured by an associate
or someone you deal with every day.
Remember, it is a judgment you are

making about the situation that creates stress. Tonight: Hang out with
friends.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHHH You can play around
with your finances all you want,
but realize that you still will need to
stop excessive spending. A risk will
not pay off. A close loved one has
a different outlook on the situation.
Tonight: Treat a friend to dinner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Your hands are full, as
many seem to need your help or
attention. Trying not to look rushed,
even when you are, takes talent.
Recognize that a friend or associate
could be intentionally slowing you
down. Tonight: Where the gang is.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH You might want to deal with
a situation directly. The problem is
that it could backfire if you are not
careful. Others are unusually touchy
and could misinterpret your words.
Stay centered. Play the waiting
game. Tonight: Vanish.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH A meeting or discussion
might force you to do some searching in your memory to see if you
have missed someone’s warnings.
Know that everything will pass.
Do not forget a child or loved one.
Tonight: Relish the change of pace.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH You feel today’s Full Moon
more than others. How you handle a
personal matter might change substantially after you witness what goes
on with a key person. You might
have overlooked a certain quality of
this person. Tonight: All eyes turn to
you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH If you do not overreact to a
comment and take it personally, you
might enjoy all the intense communication happening around you. You
might need to sort through messages
and make a judgment call. Tonight:
Flow into the weekend.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You might wish you were
the only one involved in dealing
with a money matter. Quite clearly,
you discover that two people with
different ideas might have difficulty becoming one voice, especially
today. If you can postpone this matter, do. Tonight: Make it OK to let go
and enjoy.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Friday, April 6, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page B6

www.mydailysentinel.com

LA NFL stadium developer releases impact plan
LOS ANGELES (AP)
— A group seeking to
bring the NFL back to Los
Angeles unveiled a massive environmental plan
Thursday, laying out ways
to deal with the traffic
nightmare that throngs of
fans could create around
the proposed $1.4 billion
downtown stadium on
game days.
Required under a state
agreement to make the
planned 72,000-seat Farmer’s Field environmentally
friendly, Anschutz Entertainment Group said it
will spend about $35 million to reduce the traffic
footprint by, among other
things, expanding the
nearby U.S. 101 freeway
and a commuter train station.
The environmental impact report has a goal of
having 25 percent of fans
use alternative transportation, with 5,000 people
estimated to walk or bike
to games.
“We have to change
people’s habits from the
day they buy their first

ticket,” AEG President
Tim Leiweke said at a
City Hall news conference.
Leiweke stressed the
stadium’s green credentials in unveiling the
10,000-page document,
which is a key step in returning professional football to Los Angeles for
the first time since 1994.
Leiweke said he hopes
the stadium will be ready
in time for the 2017 season and added that if an
NFL team arrives before
the stadium is ready, it
can use temporary venues
such as the Rose Bowl in
Pasadena or the Los Angeles Coliseum.
The report, which took
two years to complete, is
a milestone on the way to
luring back a team to Los
Angeles, which lost both
the Raiders and Rams in
1994. After a 45-day public comment period, the
report goes to the City
Council. It also could face
legal challenges but Leiweke praised the completion the $27 million re-

port, which he called “the
world’s most expensive
piece of paper.”
“In terms of football,
we are now in the offensive zone, not the defensive zone,” Leiweke said
at the news conference
where he was surrounded
by helmeted construction workers, janitors and
other union laborers who
back the stadium.
The report estimates
the stadium could provide 11,000 permanent
new jobs in addition to
thousands of construction
jobs, and generate $1.7
billion for the local economy. However, some analysts have argued that the
benefits are overstated.
Traffic is a crucial concern. The report itself
says the stadium will have
“unavoidable significant
impacts,” including nearly 20,000 additional car
trips downtown on weekends.
Leiweke said he was
confident that the mitigation plans could deal with
the upsurge and even the

crush from a Super Bowl,
noting that 365,000 people currently travel in and
out of downtown every
day.
“We can do that on a
Sunday for 68,000 people,” he said. “We can do
this. We just have to teach
people and reward them
for using mass transportation.”
One idea would be to
give mass transit users
first crack at tickets, he
said.
But some critics were
skeptical. Kevin James,
who is running for mayor
next year, said football’s
tailgate party culture is
hard to change. He said
the percentage of fans
who take public transportation to games in other
cities has been low.
“You can’t put your barbecue on the subway,” he
said.
The environmental review could be approved by
late this year or the first
quarter of 2013, Leiweke
said. With a political plan
and $1 billion in private

funding in place, Leiweke
said, “we’ll be able to look
the NFL in the eye and
tell them there is no more
excuse, there is no more
reason, there is no more
delay, and there should be
no more negotiation on
why we cannot bring football back to Los Angeles.”
A rival group, Majestic Realty, has proposed
building a stadium in the
City of Industry, outside
Los Angeles.
Farmer’s Field got help
from the state in September with the passage of a
law that will help it quickly resolve legal challenges
to the project by sending
lawsuits over its environmental impact directly to
the California Court of
Appeal and bypassing the
Superior Court. The appeals court would have to
make a ruling within 175
days.
In return, AEG pledged
to build a “green stadium”
and make it public-transit
friendly.
Earlier in the week, Leiweke addressed reports

that the company and the
NFL were at odds over
team ownership and stadium revenue, saying developer Philip Anschutz
is willing to buy a team
himself in order to make
the deal work.
Leiweke told the Los
Angeles Times that Anschutz is ready to write a
check for both the downtown stadium and a team
as long as he can get a
“reasonable” deal out of
the football league.
Reports, including one
from Yahoo sports, said
the NFL was unhappy
with Anschutz’s proposal
that he own just a small
part of the team but collect stadium revenues
usually reserved for owners.
Leiweke has said he
has spoken with several
teams about moving to
Los Angeles, but declined
to specify which ones. He
said he plans to follow the
guidance of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
about which teams would
be candidates.

Jeb Burton hoping to carry on family tradition

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
— Ward Burton’s transition
from race car driver to parent of
a race car driver hasn’t always
been easy.
In at least one instance,
watching as son Jeb, now 19, as
he tore up the track was downright frightening.
“On his first go kart race, the
first lap he made, Ward said,
‘My chest. I don’t know if I can
take this. I feel like I’m going
to have a heart attack,’” Ward’s
wife, Tabitha, recalled, laughing at her husband, who raced
13 years in the Sprint Cup Series. “And I said, ‘Welcome to
my world. This is what it’s like.
Wait until he’s in a car and
someone’s wrecking him. You
want to kill somebody.’”
Being a spectator has gotten
easier over time, and last weekend the Burtons had to travel
only about 60 miles from their
South Boston home to see Jeb
take his next big step forward
as he made his debut in the
Camping World Truck Series.
In perhaps the tamest race at

Martinsville Speedway in the
history of the truck series, he
started seventh, finished 13th
and finished all 250 laps, essentially meeting his goals of a
good qualifying run, a respectbuilding clean race and a top-15
finish.
The race was the first of five
Jeb will make in the truck series
this year, sponsored by State
Water Heaters, and while the
Burtons hope to find sponsorship for more races, they are
still adjusting to being bystanders, and in Ward’s case, parttime coach.
“Coach,” Jeb said when asked
if his father is more father than
coach. “Sometimes me and him
don’t agree on everything.”
Ward, who always tried to be
in command of his car when he
was racing, admittedly struggles to keep quiet sometimes.
“The problem with me is I’m
real quick to assume things
when I need to sometimes slow
down because he may be saying
something different than what
I think he’s saying,” Ward said.

“But the big picture is, this is a
good opportunity for Jeb.”
During his career, Ward Burton won five times in the Sprint
Cup Series, including the 2002
Daytona 500. He also won the
prestigious Southern 500, but
got out of racing after the 2007
when he decided he would take
a well-funded ride, or none at
all.
By then, Jeb was already well
on his way up the racing ladder. He started at 12, and progressed from motocross to go
karts, then limited late models
and finally late models before
the family decided he was ready
to go on to more ambitious
things.
To ease the transition, Ward
teamed Jeb up with Trip Bruce,
who was crew chief for Ward
later in his career. It’s an arrangement Bruce said he and
Ward discussed in 2000, and
one that has helped Ward step
back, at least a little bit.
“You have to learn to kind of
sit back and watch, be not as involved,” Bruce said, “and Ward

said, ‘You know, I was always
nervous before a practice session or qualifying as a driver,
but nowhere near as much as he
is standing here watching Jeb
do it.’”
Jeb would have raced in the
season-opening
truck
race
at Daytona, but hadn’t been
cleared yet by NASCAR, so
Ward drove the truck and finished eighth. That was just fine
with Tabitha, who wasn’t ready
to see her son driving on a 2 1/2
mile trioval.
During the race, Jeb was in
radio contact with his dad, offering some coaching of his
own.
“He told me on the radio,
‘Ride in the back and watch
them wreck,’” Ward said, laughing at the role reversal. “And
then at the last restart, he
said, ‘OK dad, now it’s time to
go. You can’t be dilly-dallying
around any longer.’”
By the time the team unloaded at Martinsville, Tabitha was
confident Jeb was ready, and
that helped her, too.

“It’s so much more emotional for me,” she said. “I was
always a supporter of Ward, a
big cheerleader, but I quietly
supported him. I stayed with
the kids. We were there, we
were always cheering for him,
but that was his job, his career.
Now with Jeb, I feel like I’m
involved. We’re in the middle
of it. He’s our child and we’ve
done nothing but this the last
four, five years. We’ve sacrificed a lot.”
And the way she supports her
son is more than a little bit different than that demure racer’s
wife of old.
“I feel like I was pretty graceful throughout Ward’s career. I
don’t think I embarrassed myself but maybe a couple of times,
but with Jeb, I get furious,” she
said, speaking of when another
driver causes problems for her
son. “We were somewhere and
someone wrecked Jeb, and we
were both on top of the trailer
and I said (to Ward), ‘Go get
him!’, and he said, ‘I’m trying
to get down!’”

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