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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

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Dr. Brothers .... A2

Snow showers.
High near 33. Low
around 25......... A2

Girls basketball
action .... B1

Rodney W. McComas, 66
Helen Clark Russell, 95
Johnnie E. Russell, 62
50 cents daily

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 232

Grand jury returns indictment against Gardner
Meigs man charged
with father’s murder,
aggravated robbery
Sarah Hawley

shawley@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Grand Jury returned an
indictment against a Middleport
man accused of murdering and
robbing his father.
James E. Gardner, 40, of Wells
Road in Middleport, was indicted on one count of aggravated

murder and three counts of aggravated robbery.
Gardner is accused of murdering his father, James W. Gardner,
at his residence on Wells Road in
Middleport on Nov. 11.
According to Meigs County
Prosecutor Colleen Williams,
the three counts of aggravated
robbery involve stealing a truck,
four-wheeler and credit cards
from his deceased father.
James W. Gardner’s body was
found at the residence where the
two lived in on Wells Road near
the Meigs-Gallia County line in
the evening hours of Nov. 11. In
the days following the death, the
younger Gardner was labeled a

person of interest in the
Gallia County over the
suspicious death.
course of the past month.
Meigs County Sheriff
Gardner remained on
Robert Beegle stated, at
the run from authorities
that time, the unofficial
until Dec. 7 when he was
cause of death was blunt
taken into custody by Galforce trauma.
lia County Sheriff’s depuThe truck, with a red
ties.
ATV in the bed, was miss- James E. Gardner Last week, Gardner aping from the property
peared in Meigs County
when the elder Gardner’s body Court on one count of theft and
was found. Witnesses claimed to was charged in the same court
have seen the younger Gardner with murder. The theft charge
driving the truck across the Sil- was bound over to the grand
ver Memorial Bridge just hours jury, while the initial murder
following the apparent homicide. charge has now been dismissed
Those vehicles, in addition to a due to the filing of the indictmotorcycle and a yellow ATV, ment.
were recovered in southern
Bond in Meigs County Court

was set at $500,000 on the murder charge and $100,000 on the
theft charge.
The younger Gardner is currently housed in the Washington
County Jail.
James E. Gardner is scheduled to be arraigned at 10 a.m.
on Friday, Dec. 21, in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Details of Friday’s arraignment will appear in The Daily
Sentinel, The Gallipolis Daily
Tribune and The Point Pleasant Register websites as they
become available, and in the
Sunday Times-Sentinel print
edition.

Funding woes for
senior services
prompt local action
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

Submitted photo

This living nativity scene in a picture taken last year will be repeated both Saturday and Sunday night at Emi’s Place
in Pomeroy.

Emi’s Place to feature living nativity scene
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel

POMEROY — Again this year,
there will be a living nativity
scene from 6 to 8 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday nights at Emi’s
Place — the Emily Grace Deem
Remembrance Park on East Main
Street — for the public to enjoy.
Titled “Away in a Manger”, the
scene and program will include
scripture readings, a candle lighting ceremony in remembrance of
a loved one, and special music
by Emi’s Angel Choir. The choir
was organized by Sharon Hawley
and Paulette Harrison especially

for the nativity program. Seven
selections by a group of 11 girls
attired in angel costumes will be
presented just after 6 p.m. and
again at 7 p.m.
The choir was organized in October and has been practicing every week since in preparation for
their part of the program. The inspiration for organizing an angel
choir came from Harrison who
traditionally attends the presentation and felt live music would be
an addition. The plan is to make
the choir an annual part of the celebration of our Savior’s birth.
As in past years, the Grace

Episcopal Church has opened its
doors to participants who might
need to move inside to get warm
. Members will also be serving
warm soup and beverages to the
participants and the public.
There is no admission fee to
the event.
Many of those participating in
the nativity scene were friends
of Emily, band students, softball
girls and church friends. She was
the daughter of Jamie and David
Deem, and the park was built in
her memory. The play area where
the equipment is will be closed
during the nativity celebrations.

One arrested following discovery of meth lab
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

LANGSVILLE — Meigs County
Sheriff’s deputies responded to the
21st methamphetamine lab of 2012
on Wednesday evening on Hampton
Hollow Road.
According to a news release by
Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle,

Herbert “Boomer” Bare, III, 29, of
Langsville was taken into custody
by Sgt. Scott Trussell and Sgt. Bill
Gilkey.
Two, one-pot meth labs were located.
Bare is being charged with third
degree felony assembly or possession
of chemicals with intent to manufacture a controlled substance and a

second degree felony illegal manufacture of meth.
Salem Township Fire Department
was on the scene in case of fire. Middleport officers, trained in meth lab
neutralization, were on scene to neutralize chemicals.
Bare is currently in the custody
of the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
pending hearings.

Vigil planned for Sandy Hook victims
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

MEIGS COUNTY — A
candlelight vigil will be
held on Sunday evening in

memory of those killed at
Sandy Hook Elementary.
The vigil will be held
at 5 p.m. on Sunday, Dec.
23 at Meigs Elementary
School near Rutland. Bal-

loons will be released and
the names of the victims
read according to Pam
Napper. Prayer will also be
held from the victims and
their families, as well as

local students and teachers. Donations, cards,
books and other items will
be collected at the vigil to
be sent to Sandy Hook Elementary.

POMEROY — Concern about cuts in federal funding
for services to the elderly should Congress allow sequestration (falling over the ‘fiscal cliff’) to happen on Jan.
2, has prompted Beth Shaver, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging, to initiate a letter writing campaign to Ohio’s Congressional representatives.
Shaver said that if that happens the cuts which will automatically take place will be devastating to many senior
citizens who live on limited funds and depend on some
assistance from agencies like the Council on Aging to stay
in their homes and remain independent.
She is asking Meigs Countians to write their representatives and tell them how badly these cuts will affect them
and the people around them and request that action be
taken now to stabilize the country’s finances.
“It has been estimated that the results of no action from
Congress will result in $54.5 billion in cuts,” said Shaver,
“and if that happens it will have devastating effects on
programs, such as those provided by Councils on Aging
(which operate under the Older Americans Act) and help
maintain older adults’ independence, health and wellbeing.”
On the federal level she said figures released by the
government’s aging agency show that the direct effects
that the sequestration would have on the millions of low
income or vulnerable older adults would be a reduction
of 17 million congregate and home delivered meals to seniors in need; 1.9 million senior transportation rides to
medical appointments, grocery shopping and other primary needs; 290,000 older adults will no longer receive
the case management that coordinates care essential to
remaining at home, 1.2 million older adults will lose access to homemaker services that help them with basic
daily housekeeping needs, and 1.5 million people will lose
personal care services such as in-home assistance with
bathing, toileting and dressing.
Shaver said action needs to be taken now to stop the reduction in funding for programs of assistance like services
to older adults. She asks that letters of concern be sent to
Rep. Sherrod Brown, 3480 E. Fulton St., Columbus, Ohio
43215; Rep. Bill Johnson, 246 Front St., Marietta, Ohio
43750; and Rep. John Boehner, 7969 Cincinnati-Dayton
Road, Suite B, West Chester, Ohio 45069.
Turning to the local situation, Shaver said there has
been so many reductions in funding from the Older Americans Act over the past several years that it’s been difficult
to keep up.
“Now we’re threatened with even more reductions,”
she added.
Referring to the local home-delivered meal program,
she said in the past year the figure for support of that program has dropped from $37,345 to $31,929. According to
Shaver, if the fiscal problem isn’t resolved, it will go down
another eight percent next year.
“It’s happening so rapidly that we can’t keep up. The
number of meals we deliver stays about the same, but as
the federal money goes down we have to use more (local)
levy money and do more fund raising to make up the difference.”
She said there has been a steady decline over the past
several years in federal funding for programs for senior
citizens, but that despite the decrease, the Meigs Center
has supplemented with local levy funds and through fund
raising efforts in the community to be able to continue it
programs. However, she said with an additional cut it will
become much more difficult to take meals to some who
really need them.
“We’re not delivering any less meals now than we were
several years ago, it’s just that when cuts come we have
to add more of the levy funds and have more fund raisers in order to support the program. We’ve not discontinued any services, we’ve just raised money through other
sources to provide them.”
She added that if the agency loses eight percent more of
its funding on Jan. 3, it could mean having to consider reducing services or finding some new way to finance them.
About 85 meals are being delivered now to home-bound
Meigs County seniors.
As for providing transportation to local seniors to go
see their doctor, to pick up groceries, to come to the
Center — that money too is threatened. Shaver said that
in 1999 transportation funding was $58,000. Today it’s
$28,000 with probable cuts coming.
“This is the worst it’s ever been,” said Shaver, “and now
I’m at the point of being not just worried, but scared, because I’m not sure what we can do.”

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Meigs County Local Briefs
Free holiday movies
MIDDLEPORT — This Saturday at 2 p.m. the Middleport
Community Association is sponsoring two children’s Christmas
movies for free. They will be
shown on the big screen in the
auditorium at Middleport Village Hall. On Saturday evening
at 7 p.m. there will be a classical
Christmas movie for adults. The
Community Association invites
everyone to come and have a
nice time watching some classics for free. Those attending are

encouraged to bring there own
snacks.
Holiday office closures
POMEROY — The offices of
Meigs County Treasurer and
Recorder will be closing at noon
and the Meigs County Auditors
office will be closing at 11:30
a.m. on Friday, Dec. 21. All three
offices will be closed Dec. 24 and
25 for the observance of Christmas. They will reopen on Dec.
26 for normal hours, 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.

Church Calendar
Christmas Cantata
POMEROY — Trinity Congregational Church
will hold its Christmas
Cantata at 10:25 a.m. on
Sunday, Dec. 23.
Christmas Program
LONG BOTTOM —
The Long Bottom United
Methodist Church Christmas program will be held
at 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 23.
Christmas Services
RACINE — A Christmas
Candlelight Worship Service will be held at 7 p.m.
on Dec. 23 at the at Carmel-Sutton Worship Center
on bashan Road. Special
music by Truly Saved,
Sherry Wagner and Tasha
Werry, Addie McDaniel,
Tara Rose and Brenda
Johnson, Debbie Wolfe,
Edie Hubbard and others.
Pastor Arland King invites
everyone to come and join
in this special service.
POMEROY — A Candlelight service will be held at
St. Paul Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy on Monday
evening beginning at 7
p.m. Public is invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT — First
Baptist Church of Middleport, located at 211 S. Sixth
Ave., Middleport, will have

its traditional Christmas
Eve candlelight service
from 7 to 8 p.m. Dec. 24.
The service will be led by
Pastor Billy Zuspan with
the choir and congragation Christmas singing to
be included. The public is
invited to attend.
POMEROY — Trinity Congregational Church
will hold its Christmas Eve
Service with music beginning at 7 p.m. and worship
service at 7:30 p.m. on
Dec. 24.
PINE GROVE — St.
John Lutheran Church,
33441 Pine Grove Road,
will hold a Christmas Eve
Candlelight Service at 8:30
p.m. on Dec. 24. Pastor is
Linea Warmke.
Christmas Day Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Presbyterian
Church will host a Christmas Day dinner from 1-3
p.m. on Christmas Day.
MIDDLEPORT — A
Christmas Day Dinner
will be served at 1 p.m.
on Christmas Day at the
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Dinner will include baked
ham, sweet potatoes, green
beans, apple sauce, rolls
and dessert.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Friday: Snow showers likely with areas of blowing
snow. Cloudy, with a high near 33. Breezy, with a west
wind 18 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 39 mph. Chance
of precipitation is 70 percent. New snow accumulation of
1 to 3 inches possible.
Friday Night: Scattered snow showers, mainly before
3 a.m. Cloudy, with a low around 25. Breezy, with a west
wind 13 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 38 mph. Chance
of precipitation is 50 percent.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 36. West
wind 10 to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 22.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 43.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 27.
Monday: A chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high
near 43. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of rain. Cloudy, with a low
around 34. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Christmas Day: Partly sunny, with a high near 42.
Tuesday Night: A chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 34. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

‘Food for Fines’
POMEROY — The Meigs

County District Public Libraries
will be accepting non-perishable
food items in lieu of fines during
the month of December. These
items will be distributed to area
food banks. For more information please contact (740) 9925813.
Potential boil advisory
POMEROY — The hydrant replacement project in the Village
of Pomeroy began on Dec. 3. Water customers within the village
may experience a boil advisory

or temporary water shut off for
repair and connection of water
lines. Anyone with questions is
asked to contact Village Administrator Paul Hellman.
Upcoming blood drives
MEIGS COUNTY — Two upcoming blood drives have been
scheduled in Meigs County. The
first will be from 1-6 p.m. on Dec.
26 at the Mulberry Community
Center. The second is scheduled
from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. on Dec. 31 at
the Middleport Church of Christ

Community Calendar
Friday, Dec. 21
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High
School Class of 1959 will be having
their “3rd Friday” lunch at Fox’s Pizza Den, 518 E. Main Street, Pomeroy
at noon.

Birthdays
Saturday, Dec. 22
CHESTER — Harold Newell will
celebrate his 80th birthday on Dec.
22. a celebration will be held from 2-4
p.m. at the Chester United Methodist Church. No gifts please.

112B, Columbus, Ohio 43220.

Thursday, Dec. 27
RUTLAND — The Rutland Township Trustees will hold their year end
and organizational meetings on 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

Monday, Dec. 24
RACINE — Vinas Lee will celebrate her 98th birthday on Dec. 24.
Cards may be sent to her at Mayfair
Village, 3000 Bethel Road, Room

Saturday, Dec. 29
POMEROY — Kathleen Wells will
celebrate her 94th birthday on Dec.
29. Cards can be sent to her at 34719
Ball Run Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Tuesday, Dec. 25
RACINE — Patty Shain will celebrate her 92nd birthday on Dec. 25.
Cards can be sent to her at 47836 St
Rt 124, Racine, Ohio 45771.

Doomsday hot spots draw believers
The Associated Press
Though the Mayans never really
predicted that the world would end
on Friday, some New Agers are convinced that humanity’s demise is indeed imminent. Or at least that it’s
a good excuse for a party.
Believers are being drawn to
spots where they think their chances of survival will be better, and accompanying them are the curious,
the party-lovers and people wanting
to make some money.
Here are some of the world’s key
doomsday destinations and other
places marked by fear and fascination.
Mexico
About 1,000 self-described shamans, seers, stargazers, crystal
enthusiasts, yogis, sufis and swamis are gathering in a convention
center in the city of Merida on the
Yucatan peninsula about an hour
and a half from the Mayan ruins at
Chichen Itza, convinced that it was
a good start to the coming “New
Era” supposed to begin around 5:00
a.m. local time Friday. These are
not people who believe the world
will end on Friday: the summit is
scheduled to run through Dec. 23.
Instead, participants say, they want
to celebrate the birth of a new age.
Meanwhile, Mexico’s self-styled
“brujo mayor,” or chief soothsayer, Antonio Vazquez Alba, who
warned followers to stay away
from all gatherings on Dec. 21.
“We have to beware of mass psychosis” that could lead to stampedes or “mass suicides, of the

kind we’ve seen before,” he said.
Star gazers are planning to welcome in the new era with a dawn
ceremony Friday at Uxmal, the
only major Mayan pyramid that has
rounded edges. Others will spend
the day at the more famous Chichen
Itza archaeological site.
Also, organizers of Yucatan’s
broader Mayan Culture Festival
saw the need to answer some of the
now-debunked idea that the Mayas,
who invented an amazingly accurate calendar almost 2,000 years
ago, had somehow predicted the
end of the world. The Yucatan state
government asked a scientist to talk
about the work of Large Hadron
Collider in Switzerland to debunk
the idea it could produce worldending rogue particles.
France
According to one rumor, a rocky
mountain in the French Pyrenees
will be the sole place on earth to
escape destruction. A giant UFO
and aliens are said to be waiting
under the mountain, ready to burst
through and spirit those nearby
to safety. But here is bad news for
those seeking salvation: French
gendarmes, some on horseback, are
blocking outsiders from reaching
the Bugarach peak and its village of
some 200 people.
One believer, Ludovic Broquet, a
30-year-old plumber, made his way
to the mountain after a year of preparation, hoping to find a “gateway,
the vortex that will open up here
(at) the end of the world.”
Local residents, instead, are skeptical — and angry at having their

peace disturbed. “What is going on
here is the creation of an urban legend,” fumed resident Michele Pous,
who blamed those who spread
Internet rumors. “They created a
media frenzy, they created a false
event, they manipulated people.”
Russia
For $1,500, a museum is offering salvation from the world’s end
in former Soviet dictator Josef Stalin’s underground bunker in central
Moscow — with a 50 percent refund if nothing happens.
The bunker, located 65 meters
(210 feet) below ground, was designed to withstand a nuclear attack. Now home to a small museum,
it has an independent electricity
supply, water and food — but no
more room, because the museum
has already sold out all 1,000 tickets.
China
A fringe Christian group has
been spreading rumors about the
world’s impending end, prompting
Chinese authorities to detain more
than 500 people this week and seize
leaflets, video discs, books and other material.
Those detained are reported to
be members of the group Almighty
God, also called Eastern Lightning,
which preaches that Jesus has reappeared as a woman in central
China. Authorities in the province
of Qinghai say they are waging a
“severe crackdown” on the group,
accusing it of attacking the Communist Party and the government.

Ask Dr. Brothers

Is it okay to end a bad date early?

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 43.60
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.88
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 80.79
Big Lots (NYSE) — 27.96
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 41.43
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 68.56
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.53
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.19
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.71
Collins (NYSE) — 58.40
DuPont (NYSE) — 45.33
US Bank (NYSE) — 32.44
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 21.05
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 48.93
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 44.53
Kroger (NYSE) — 26.63
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 48.67
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 62.97
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.60

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Clerk of Courts legal office and title office will be closed
on Dec. 24, 25 and Jan. 1.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will
be closed on Dec. 24 and 25.
Normal business hours will resume at 8 a.m. on Dec. 26.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County TB Clinic will be closed
on Dec. 24 and 25 for Christmas.

BBT (NYSE) — 29.64
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.50
Pepsico (NYSE) — 70.11
Premier (NASDAQ) — 10.92
Rockwell (NYSE) — 82.95
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.89
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.74
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.27
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 69.00
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.80
WesBanco (NYSE) — 22.09
Worthington (NYSE) — 25.51
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for December 13, 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.

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have a question about first
dates. When you are meeting someone for the first
time, like at a restaurant
or cafe, and you can tell
that you have absolutely no
interest in him, is it OK to
make an excuse and end the
date? I don’t see a reason to
waste anyone’s time, but on
the other hand, I don’t want
to be mean and rude. I can
get a friend to call me with
an “emergency” if need be.
Nothing is worse than sitting through a whole date
with a dud of a guy. — W.S.

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ice, but even
Dear W.S.:
if you never
Does this hapwant to see
pen to you
him again,
often? If so,
you’ll
feel
I think a lot
better about
of your angst
fulfilling the
could be avoidsocial coned if you take a
tract, followlittle more care
ing the goldon the front end
en rule and
— spend more
staying till
time talking to
the end. For
your potential
those really
dates
online
awful times,
through emails,
are
instant messag- Dr. Joyce Brothers there
phone apps
es or webcam
Syndicated
now to send
communication,
Columnist
you
fake
or chatting on
e m e rge n c y
the phone. You
should not meet up with a calls. No need to drag a
guy you’ve had time to get friend into it.
to know unless he seems
***
simpatico on whatever levDear Dr. Brothers: I
els are important to you. It was wondering if my sister
may be that you are rushing could be “addicted” to her
into meeting. There’s re- boyfriend. She’s lived with
ally no excuse, with today’s him for a couple of months,
technology, not to be able but they are constantly
to avoid most of the perils breaking up and getting
of the unknown when you back together. She’s spent
finally come face-to-face the night with me many
with your blind date.
times when they were
I would hope only a mad at each other, but she
true emergency would always goes back. They
leave you with a clean con- are both insanely jealous,
science about ditching a and I just don’t see how
guy. Manufactured ways this is good for her, longof opting out usually are term. She’s 25, and he is
done with the intention of 29. Please tell me if there
sparing the date’s feelings, is any way I can get her to
but they rarely work. Un- end all the drama. — E.B.
Dear E.B.: It sounds
less the date had taken a
truly unpleasant or unsafe like your sister and her
turn, I would suggest that boyfriend are in the midst
you stick it out. You may of a toxic relationship that
have yet to hit on that one revolves around fighting
thing that could break the and making up because

both actions feel so good.
You’ve known your sister
your whole life — surely
this can’t be the first time
she’s revealed herself as a
drama queen, but perhaps
she’s never been drawn to
someone so much like her.
To this type of individual,
making the sparks fly is
the way to experience life
to the fullest. They are unable to be content with the
mundane, “boring”work
that drives successful relationships, feeding off the
thrill of constant tension
between them instead.
This kind of attraction can
indeed be addicting.
There are many couples
who can thrive through
months or years of screaming breakups and exciting
makeup sex. However,
these are not the kind of
relationships that make for
a happy life or an appropriate setting in which to
raise a family. They often
deteriorate into abusive
and dangerous scenarios.
The boyfriend may move
on to other women. Having
a supportive family around
her with plentiful examples
of good relationships may
help your sister. A man who
treats her with love and respect would help, too. Donrescue her each time she
fights with her man, but
help her to gain some selfrespect. Your sister could
benefit from counseling,
not enabling.
(c) 2012 by King
Features Syndicate

�Friday, December 21, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Rodney William McComas

Rodney William McComas, 66, formerly of Glenwood,
W.Va., died Monday, December 10, 2012, in a Fort Worth,
Texas hospital, after a short illness.
An informal memorial service will be held at noon, Saturday, Dec. 22 at the Red Men Lodge Hall on Ohio River
Road, just outside of Huntington. In lieu of flowers, the
family requests that a donation be made to a charity of
one’s choice.

Helen Clark Russell

Helen Clark Russell, 95, of Dayton, died Thursday

morning, December 20, 2012, at Bethany Village in Dayton.
Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday, December 23, 2012, in Pine Street Cemetery with Rev. Leslie Fleming officiating.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Dana
Beekman, 2300 East Stroop Road, Kettering, Ohio
45440, to purchase a permanent memorial in Helen’s
memory for Oakview Elementary School.
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral home is assisting the family with Helen’s arrangements.

Johnnie Eugene Russell

Johnnie Eugene Russell, 62, of Bidwell, Ohio, Wednesday, December 19, 2012, in the Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m., Sunday
December 23, 2012, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton, Ohio, with Pastor H. Michael Goodnite officiating. Burial will follow in the Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call from 3-8 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral
home. Masonic services will be conducted by Vinton
F&amp;AM Lodge #131 at 7:45 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral home.

Donor pays off toy
Federal judge upholds
layaways at W.Va. store
Ohio’s new exotic animal law
The mysterious Santa
got his wish. Three other
people paid off layaways
after they heard about his
donation.
“It’s an incredible thing.
You know, it really brings
back the true meaning
of the Christmas season
for us … and allows us to
remember as a group of
workers what it means
to celebrate Christmas,”
Chester said.
Store employees called
the customers whose layaways were paid to tell
them about the man’s
generosity. Erin Sims
was skeptical when she
received a message from

the store on her cell
phone at work.
“Sure enough, I called
back and it was the real
Kmart,” she said. “I almost
cried when I found out.”
Sims said the mysterious Santa’s donation paid
off her layaway gifts for
her three children, ages 1,
5 and 9.
“This is the best Christmas present I could have,”
she said. “Now I wish I could
go out and pay-it-forward.”
Chester said it is not unusual for people to request
to pay off others’ layaway
items. But this was the biggest donation he has seen
in his six months at the
store.

Sentencing delay denied
in W.Va. mine blast case
BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) — The January
sentencing of a former superintendent at
West Virginia’s Upper Big Branch mine
will go on as planned.
U.S. District Judge Irene Berger denied
a postponement Wednesday, saying prosecutors failed to give good reason.
Gary May is set to be sentenced Jan. 17
in Beckley. He pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge in March.
May is cooperating with prosecutors
in the ongoing criminal investigation of

the 2010 explosion at the former Massey
Energy mine, where 29 men died. It was
the worst U.S. mining disaster in four
decades.
U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin argued
he needed more time to develop May’s
cooperation.
Former UBB security chief Hughie Elbert Stover is currently in prison for his
conviction on charges that he lied to investigators and ordered a subordinate to
destroy documents.

Big Midwestern snowstorm
leads to 25-vehicle crash
DES MOINES, Iowa
(AP) — The first widespread snowstorm of the
season began a slow crawl
across the Midwest on
Thursday, creating treacherous driving conditions
that, in Iowa, led to a 25-vehicle pileup that killed one
person.
Drivers were blinded by
blowing snow and didn’t
see vehicles that had
slowed or stopped on Interstate 80 about 60 miles
north of Des Moines, state
police said. A chain reaction of crashes involving
semitrailers and passenger
cars closed down a section
of the highway.
Drivers throughout the
Midwest were harried by
heavy snow and strong
winds that combined for
blizzard conditions in areas
from Kansas to Wisconsin.
Those who planned to fly
before the Christmas holiday didn’t fare much better. Snow, wind and thunderstorms forced delays
and cancellations at some
of the nation’s busiest airports, including those in
Dallas and Chicago. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of
people lost power as heavy
snow and strong winds
pulled down lines.
While the snow had tapered off by sunrise in Des
Moines, Iowa transportation officials had advised
drivers to stay off highways
until midnight, and police
repeated that warning after
the crash north of the city.
“It’s time to listen to
warnings and get off the
road,” said Col. David Garrison, of the Iowa State Patrol. “Iowa’s highways and
interstates remain in poor
condition for travel.”
Conditions
weren’t
much better on city streets.
Thomas Shubert, a clerk
at a store in Gretna near
Omaha, said his brother
drove him to work in his
4-by-4 truck but that some
of his neighbors weren’t so
fortunate.
“I saw some people in
my neighborhood trying
to get out. They made it
a few feet, and that was
about it,” Shubert said. “I
haven’t seen many cars on
the road. There are a few

brave souls out, but mostly
trucks and plows.”
The heavy, wet snow
made some unplowed
streets in Des Moines
nearly impossible to navigate in anything other
than a four-wheel drive
vehicle. Even streets that
had been plowed remained
snow-packed and slippery.
Jackknifed
semitrailers
were reported on sections
of Interstates 80 and 35
east and north of the city,
with portions of the roads
closed until the accidents
could be cleared.
While the snow had tapered off by sunrise in Des
Moines,
transportation
officials warned drivers
to stay off highways until
midnight. Strong winds
were creating whiteout
conditions. The airport at
Creston, Iowa, recorded
the highest winds, with a
gust of 53 mph, said Kevin
Skow, a National Weather
Service meteorologist in
the city.
Strong wind contributed
to tens of thousands of
power outages in Arkansas, Iowa and Nebraska.
While snow pulled down
most lines in Iowa, others
were felled by big gusts,
said Justin Foss, a spokesman for Alliant Energy,
which had 13,000 customers without power in central Iowa.
“The roads have been
so bad our crews have not
been able to respond to
them,” said Justin Foss,
a spokesman for Alliant
Energy, which had 13,000
customers without power
in central Iowa. “We have
giant
four-wheel-drive
trucks with chains on them
so when we can’t get there
it’s pretty rough.”
Utilities reported more
than 33,000 customers
without power in the Des
Moines area, more than
36,000 outages in eastern
Nebraska and more than
41,000 without power in
Arkansas, where thunderstorms took out lines.
Smaller outages were reported in Alabama, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and
Louisiana.
Meteorologist Scott Dergan said the snow cover

would drag temperatures
much lower in Nebraska
and Iowa.
“We’re talking single digits,” Dergan said. “We may
even see some sub-zero
temperatures in Nebraska.
This cold weather will
stick around for several
days, maybe until the day
after Christmas. So we’re
definitely going to have a
white Christmas.”
Before the storm, several cities in the Midwest
had broken records for
the number of consecutive
days without measurable
snow.
Chicago commuters began Thursday with heavy
fog and cold, driving rain,
and forecasters said snow
would hit the Midwestern
metropolis by mid-afternoon. Officials at O’Hare
International Airport reported some flight delays
and more than 90 cancellations. United Airlines said
it would waive change fees
for travelers who have to
change their plans for travel through O’Hare because
of the storm.
American Airlines reported 120 cancellations in
Dallas because of thunderstorms there. There also
were delays, most involving smaller regional planes
that have more flight restrictions, spokeswoman
Andrea Huguely said.
“We are trying to delay
as much as we can, instead
of canceling, because we
know that we have many
customers who are trying
to make their holiday travel plans,” Huguely said.
Along with Thursday’s
fatal accident in Iowa, the
storm that swept through
the Rockies earlier in
the week was blamed for
deaths in Wisconsin and
Utah. At least two people
died Wednesday in a fatal crash on slick roads
in southeastern Wisconsin, sheriff’s officials said.
In southeastern Utah, a
woman who tried to walk
for help after her car became stuck in snow died
Tuesday night. Search and
rescue crews on snowmobiles found her buried in
the snow just a few miles
from her car.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A federal judge upheld Ohio’s new restrictions on exotic animals Thursday after
several owners sued the state over the
law, which was enacted after a man released dozens of his wild creatures last
year before committing suicide.
U.S. District Court Judge George
Smith in Columbus sided with the
state, saying that the court recognizes
some businesses may be negatively affected and some owners may not be
able to keep their beloved animals but
that the owners failed to prove constitutional rights were violated.
The court said the case came down
to the public interest and protecting
the public from potential dangers of
exotic animals.
“While the named Plaintiffs may
be responsible dangerous wild animal
owners, there are some that are not,”
the ruling said.
Ohio officials have defended the
law as a common-sense measure to
address the growing safety problem of
private ownership of exotics animals.
The state “felt all along like this law
was in the best interest of the public
and public safety, and in the health
and the welfare of these animals, and
the judge reaffirmed that,” Ohio Department of Agriculture spokeswoman Erica Hawkins said.
The attorney for the seven owners
who sued the state wasn’t immediately available to comment.
Those owners said the new regulations force them to join private associations and possibly give up their
animals without compensation. They
also challenged a requirement that animals be implanted with a microchip
before being registered with the state,
so the creatures can be identified if
they get lost or escape.
The Humane Society of the United
States, which joined the case to de-

fend the law, praised the ruling.
Lawmakers worked with a renewed
sense of urgency to strengthen Ohio’s
regulations after a suicidal owner released dozens of creatures last year
from an eastern Ohio farm in Zanesville. Authorities killed 48 of the
animals, which included black bears,
Bengal tigers and African lions, fearing for the public’s safety.
Owners, animal experts and state
authorities were among those who
testified before the judge during a
three-day hearing in mid-December.
Owner Cyndi Huntsman told the
judge the microchip requirement
amounted to a death sentence for
some of her creatures because of the
anesthesia required for the procedure.
She feared animals with health problems or those who are older won’t
wake up from sedation.
The state argued in court documents that a microchip is “no larger
than one or two grains of rice” and is
typically injected in a minimally invasive procedure no different than vaccinating.
While the law took effect in September, some aspects have yet to kick
in. For instance, a permit process for
owners won’t begin until next October.
Current owners wanting to keep
their animals must obtain the new
state-issued permit by Jan. 1, 2014.
They must pass background checks,
pay fees, obtain liability insurance or
surety bonds and show inspectors that
they can properly contain the animal
and care for it. Otherwise, they will be
banned from having them.
The law exempts sanctuaries, research institutions and facilities accredited by some national zoo groups,
such as the Association of Zoos and
Aquariums and the Zoological Association of America.

Visit us for your health care
needs during the busy holiday!
Urgent Care Holiday Hours
Monday, December 24 — Christmas Eve
Gallipolis
Meigs
Jackson
Athens
Wal-Mart

1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Closed

Tuesday, December 25 — Christmas
Gallipolis
Meigs
Jackson
Athens
Wal-Mart

Closed
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Closed
Closed
Closed
For more information, call your
local Holzer Urgent Care location:
Gallipolis: 740-446-5287
Meigs: 740-992-0060
Jackson: 740-395-8871
Athens: 740-589-3120
Walmart: 740-593-3594
60375907

VIENNA, W.Va. (AP)
— Santa has paid an early
visit to families in the Vienna area.
Media outlets report
that a customer paid off 41
layaway contracts containing mostly toys and gifts
for children at the Kmart in
Vienna on Wednesday. The
total cost topped $8,600.
“First he wanted to just
do toys,” said Kyle Chester,
the store’s manager. “We
explained to him that most
people have a vast array of
merchandise in layaway.”
Chester said the man,
who wants to remain anonymous, hopes his gift will
move others to take similar
actions.

�The Daily Sentinel

Faith And Family

Page A4
Friday, December 21, 2012

A reflection on a horrible tragedy
his malicious and
This past Frimerciless murders
day, a young man
of his own mother
named Adam Lanza
plus 27 others, most
achieved notoriety
of whom were chiland became somedren, he is now with
one whose name
Herod … in hell, for
will forever live in
all eternity — and
infamy
alongside
deservedly so!
that of Herod the
Such is the GosGreat. I realize he
pel truth: Hell is for
entered and exited
those who do evil,
this world long beun-God-like things,
fore we ever came
but then never reon the scene ourpent of having done
selves, but Herod
was seriously bad Thomas Johnson them. Call me “politically incorrect,” but
— as in bad-to-thePastor
I am hereby throwbone!
The Bible tells us Herod was ing down the gauntlet on politithe King of Israel when the time cal correctness and other such
came for the Christ Child to be nonsensical pontifications, and
born. If Herod had been aware asserting the Biblical hell in lieu
of this prophesied event before- of political niceties and spiritual
hand, the arrival of the Magi “warm fuzzies” to the contrary.
with their inquiries concerning
Of course, it matters not what
the whereabouts of this new- anyone else believes as regards
born King of the Jews amounted the reality of Hell, per sé; the Bito a most unwelcome punch in ble plainly states it exists, and Jehis gut.
sus spoke more about this single,
Suddenly, Herod had to con- specific entity, and the eternal
tend with the fact the pedestal he damnation it signifies, than He
imagined himself on was more did about any other particular
than just a little wobbly, and the topic. Those churches and clergy
source was a not-so-ordinary who dismiss hell as a myth, and/
baby somewhere. When Herod’s or water-down sin so as to make
advisors surmised that baby it other than an evil act are, to
could be anywhere between a say the very least, “in denial.”
To say the very most, they’re
new-born to a two-year-old male,
Herod ordered what history perpetrating spiritual fraud and
since has termed “the slaughter denying Jesus — the Christ of
God, who gave up his life for our
of the innocents.”
For that which Adam Lanza sins, that we might enjoy heaven
chose to do — and the opera- in eternity rather than suffer it in
tive word here is “chose” — for hell. And eternity is, like, a really,

really long time — forever and
ever, even.
Think about it: we live in a
day and age when it’s quite common for people to have their own
“shrink.” Taken all together, conceivably we might refer to them
as mental health experts; needless to say, a short list of these
yields counselors, psychologists,
psychiatrists, psycho-therapists,
psychoanalysts, and others.
Now, let’s drop back 2,000
years in time, and acknowledge
John the Baptist as the one who
preceded Jesus, but whose message was identical to that of Jesus. John’s calling wasn’t to be a
man of many words but, rather,
to be a man of one, and that word
was … repent!
Repent — as in God doesn’t
approve of you and the things
you are doing, so get yourselves
cleaned up and get right with
God. You’ve had it your way long
enough; now, turn around and let
God’s will be done — or else!
There was nothing in John’s
message about people needing to
get themselves an appointment
with their own personal shrink,
let alone any other mental health
expert. Their problem wasn’t
mental; their problem was spiritual in its nature — and God,
in Jesus, was making available
to His people their solution and
their salvation.
God still is. Those 20 children executed as they were in
cold blood last Friday, were instantaneously embraced by the
loving arms of this same Jesus

— though this fact might yet
require some time to sink in before their parents will derive any
comfort and consolation from it.
Heaven is for children and
saints; hell is for evil-doers, the
“aint’s” in our midst. Have you
sought for a “why” of last Friday? The answer is … evil. Adam
Lanza chose to commit evil, as
did Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold at Columbine High School,
in April, 1999; these three boys
wanted to kill others, as much
as Adolph Hitler wanted to kill
Jews — and obviously did!
If what is happening in America is something of a proliferation of evil in our midst, then let
us who are the Lord’s disciples
make war against it! I realize
there is even now a “rush-tojudgment” on the part of antigun types, aiming to restrict gun
ownership. Whoa!
I remember the standard response to such thinking back
in the ‘60s, that … “If guns are
outlawed only outlaws will have
guns.” That was as true then as it
is now, but it really doesn’t make
sense to insist that civilians owning hunting rifles need clips capable of holding an excessive
number of shells.
After all, it isn’t the nature of
deer to sneak up upon or surround a hunter, so as to attack
him or her! As I understand it,
deer are as timid and prone to
run away from hunters here in
Ohio as ever they were back in
my home state of Pennsylvania.
In closing, I’m compelled to

say again that the guns used by
Adam Lanza had no life of their
own; they were inanimate things,
and therefore there was nothing
inherently “evil” about them.
The evil was done by Lanza
himself, as the perpetrator of the
vile act. The guns were nothing
more than the instrument, the
means he chose for the rain of
death he brought down upon the
defenseless and unsuspecting
victims and their families, and
the townspeople there.
In a manner of speaking a
Bible, though it is the Word of
God, is of no use even when it is
opened … unless it is read, and
studied, and most of all believed.
Think about that. An unopened,
unused Bible is virtually worthless: a bunch of words and precepts; no more, no less.
Of course, if you really want
to do something about the evil
in our Land … pray. Nothing so
puts the fear of God into the devil as does a Christian when he or
she is praying, for prayer is the
open portal whereby the Lord’s
disciple reports for duty — and
gets his or her orders.
Those orders will always have
something to do with the Lord’s
ongoing war against evil; but you
know this already. Unfortunately,
some “do-gooders” unwilling to
concede the presence of evil-doers likewise oppose Christmas.
Go figure! Even so, to all —
“Merry Christmas!”

Don’t let the world pull your string
Something
sus’ birth.
extraordinary
As
these
happened
three transin the First
formed mariChurch when
onettes were
three
mariled to exit the
onettes were
church buildgiven life from
ing, the anan angel sent
gel reminded
from God. Evthem about
ery Christmas
the
strings
season these
still attached.
stringed pup“You
are
pets were used
granted spein plays by the
cial privilege
church to tell
to celebrate
Ron Branch
the true meanthe truth of
Pastor
ing of ChristChristmas
mas. Each in
with a group
their puppet hearts were of Christians. Today is
thrilled to be manipulat- Christmas Eve. Make
ed by the church people your way to the Bethleto re-create the Nativity, hem Church in town that
and, when alone together will be meeting at 3 p.m.
on their storage shelves, for a Christmas service.
their puppet conversation There you will have opusually expressed desire portunity to worship the
to be human so they, too, birth of Christ as you have
could worship in spirit the wanted. Keep your strings
truthful significance of Je- tucked in closely, remem-

bering just one thing:
don’t let the world pull
your string!” Instantly, the
angel flew back to Heaven’s hallowed presence.
One can only imagine
the sense of joy that filled
them. For years, they had
only acted out the threeMagi search. They had
only re-created the Shepherds’ field experience.
But, now in this miraculous moment, there were
no strings to manipulate
their hearts. No strings
were attached to orchestrate grateful acknowledgement of God’s gift to
mankind. Just the strings
that had always been attached to them for puppet
purposes.
On the outskirts of
town, they could see the
steeple of the church. Its
bell-tower clock signaled
2 PM, and its chimes
filled the air with “O Little Town of Bethlehem.”

Their eyes were focused
on their destination.
They
hustled
into
the bustle of downtown
Christmas Eve activity.
Their quick pace, however, became decidedly more
deliberate at the sights and
sounds before them. For a
while, one did not realize
that he had dropped his
strings, which dragged behind. Suddenly, his head,
arms, and legs were jerked
around with a sturdy tug
of his strings by a street
merchant. Dazzled by the
lavish display of Christmas gift items, the former
marionette forgot his intended purpose as he got
caught up in the pull and
the prices of Christmas
commercialism.
Along the way, the
second of these special
young men was affected
by a sign and toy display
in a nearby store window:
“THIS YEAR’S MOST

POPULAR TOY! PERKY
THE PUPPET PUP ON
SALE, 2:30 PM. SPECIAL PRICE! HURRY—
SUPPLIES LIMITED!”
Remembering how he
and his two friends had
always wanted a pup as a
part of their team, his own
puppet strings pulled him
right in line with the frenzied Christmas shoppers.
Undeterred, the third
made his way to the
Christmas Eve service.
For hours afterward in the
sanctuary, he basked in
the glow that any spiritual
participant gains when
Christ is pre-eminent in
the affairs of life.
The afternoon was finally fading into the feint
light of evening when he
emerged from the church.
There were his companions plopped on the
church steps in disgust.
Both were disheveled
with raveled and knot-

ted strings. The one was
depressed for not having
money to buy, and the
other was disgruntled because he lost in the competition for the toy. The
world had successfully
pulled their strings. The
joy of spiritual opportunity was wasted. Christ
had become lost in the
cold and crass exercise of
special purchase prices
that had garnered them no
more than exasperation of
the emotion and excavation of the soul.
By the time Christmas
morning bells chimed,
they had made their way
back to their church, and
the angel was there to
set them back on their
shelves. Each face told a
compelling story.
Do not let the world pull
your string away from the
story about the purpose of
the Christ of Christmas.

A Hunger for More Christmas Lovin’
It’s that time of year
proclaim to you the eteragain. Carols are being
nal life, which was with
sung with no one carthe Father and was made
ing if they’re off key or
manifest to us” (1 John
not; presents are being
1:1-2 ESV).
purchased (if not being
Christmas is the celefought over); lights are
bration of the appearance
blinking and winking
of the Life of God into the
from our houses, lamp
human experience. In a
posts, and departmoment, the Word of God
ment stores; and claswas spoken into physical
sic Christmas specials
form as His essence took
are on our televisions
on human flesh. The hisstrumming the chords
torical fact of His arrival
of our sentimentality.
on planet earth proved the
Christmas is that speindomitable intent of God
Thom Mollohan to reconcile His rebellious
cial time of year when
Pastor
hearts can’t help but
creation with Himself. He
seem to overflow and
came. He lived. He loved.
elves again figure highly in our cul- He suffered. He died. He rose again.
tural mythos.
And now He reigns.
But, when all has been said and
Christmas is when we celebrate the
done, what is it really that we’re cel- Christ child’s advent into the world
ebrating? Just what is all the hubbub but it’s about so much more than a
about anyway?
baby in a stable. It’s about God’s love
Many a “Merry Christmas” is for you and the unthinkable extremes
thrown around with such a casual- He would go to in order to rescue us
ness that it skirts dangerously close from the cruel bondage of our pasto triteness. Traditions largely ignore sions, prides, and hatreds as well as
the holy significance of the occasion, their tyrant offspring, disease, deallowing it to be so eclipsed by plea- spair, and fear.
surable trivialities that many who
For most of us, there are certain
celebrate Christmas don’t even really symbols that we associate with the
know what it’s all about.
holiday that we call Christmas. For
It’s even possible that many who many, the symbols are largely secuthink they know what it’s all about lar. Santa, his sleigh, reindeer, candy
somehow are really missing the awe- canes, twinkling lights, a decorated
some point of Christmas. They al- tree with presents under it. But then
low the sum total of their religious we have the stable, a star, shepherds,
perspective to rest in a manger filled wise men, a manger with a proud
with hay, failing to notice that the couple gazing contentedly into its
One Who once occupied it moved on contents: a babe lying in a pile of
to a cross, then a grave, and then, be- straw. But just as connected to this
ing resurrected, an eternal throne.
holiday is the cross on which Jesus
“That which was from the begin- was crucified, the borrowed tomb in
ning, which we have heard, which we which His body was laid, and sight
have seen with our eyes, which we of the Son of God ascending into the
looked upon and have touched with clouds, signifying the manner of His
our hands, concerning the word of second great advent which is yet to
life – the life was made manifest, and come.
we have seen it, and testify to it and
What is it that we’re really celebrat-

ing? We are celebrating the message
of Christmas. Why is this season a
season of hope and joy and peace?
It’s because the message of Christmas is the message of salvation for all
who place their faith in Jesus Christ.
It is a party celebrating that God has
remembered us and not despised us,
helping us by atoning for our sin in
the gift of His Son. That’s why we
celebrate. Christmas is, when all is
said and done, about worship: a season of unrestrained focus and delight
in our God.
“For in Him all the fullness of God
was pleased to dwell, and through
Him to reconcile to Himself all
things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of His
cross. And you, who once were alienated and hostile in mind, doing evil
deeds, He has now reconciled in His
body of flesh by His death, in order
to present you holy and blameless
and above reproach before Him” (Colossians 1:19-22 ESV).
So enjoy the season. Enjoy it by
coming to Him, being forgiven of
your sin, and being made new. Enjoy
the significance of the holiday, which
is not about our gift-giving, time off
from school, or even family gatherings. Enjoy with a heart full of appreciation and wonder the incredible
love of God that moved Him from
His throne to a temporary respite
in a humble animal stall and then on
to a cruel cross on which He would
die for you, only to then resume
His place on His throne forever! “O
come let us adore Him! O come let us
adore Him! O come let us adore Him,
Christ the Lord!”
(Thom Mollohan and his family have ministered
in southern Ohio the past 17 ½ years, is the author of The Fairy Tale Parables and Crimson
Harvest, and blogs at “unfurledsails.wordpress.
com”. He is the pastor of Pathway Community
Church and may be reached for comments or
questions by email at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

It is Christmas time, and Lucy
comes in where Charlie Brown
is standing and says, “Merry
Christmas, Charlie Brown. `Tis
the season of peace on earth and
good will toward men. Therefore,
I suggest we forget all our differences and love one another.”
Charlie Brown, whose face
lights up at this, says, “That’s
wonderful, Lucy. I’m so glad
you said that. But tell me, do
we have to love each other only
at this season of the year? Why
can’t we love each other all year
long?” Lucy retorts, “What are
Alex Colon
you, a fanatic or something?”
Pastor
This is the time of the year
where most people demonstrate
lots of love, laughter, smiles, hugs and retail shops willingly
cut their prices even in half. It is a good time of the year.
Gatherings with families and friends over eggnog coupled with all sorts of cookies and more laughter; what can
possibly go wrong, other than a sugar high?
I heard the “Christmas story” of a man at a gas station
who while pumping gas, the gas cap fell to the ground
under the car. The man at the next pump saw what happened, and he willingly went over to retrieve the loss gas
cap as he crawled under the car and handed it to the man.
During Christmas time people demonstrate lots of love,
kindness, peace, smiles and even pick up gas caps for others. For many, this time of the year is a time to forget
some of the struggles, aches and pains of life, while for
others, this time of the year brings all sorts of memories
and insecurities to the surface.
Can I remind you of a “non-Christmas” statement that
Jesus made? He said: “34 “I’m giving you a new commandment: Love each other in the same way that I have loved
you. 35 Everyone will know that you are my disciples because of your love for each other.” John 13:34-35 (GW)
Believers ought to demonstrate love for one another in
a real way, as well as loving others genuinely; the world
will recognize our identity and the reality of a true family
who loves each other.
Jesus made it clear. In other words, He said: “Can you
carry the gift of Christmas all year round?” To the believer Christmas is not a once a year event – but a year-round
reality. We love, we smile, we give, we protect, we pray,
we assist; we give a hand, and yes even pick up gas caps.
Our love for each other promotes unity in Christ — his
bride; revealing that there is a loving God in heaven that
longs to be in the midst of his loving people.
Make it a Merry Christmas!

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
)HOORZVKLS�$SRVWROLF

Please email changes to mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

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6
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7:30and
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NewNew
LimaLima
Road,Road,a.m.;
Hysell
RunWednesday
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Pomeroy
Church
of Christ
Bible
study,
7 p.m.
Township
Road 468C. Pastor: Phillip
ble study,
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Rutland.
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R. Hutton. Pomeroy
Rutland.
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Marty
R. Inc.
Hutton.
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Rev.Run
Larry
Lemley.
Sunday
212 West Main
Street.
Sunday
school,
Wesleyan
Bible
Holiness
Church
Church
of
Christ
Bell.
Sunday
school,
9
a.m.;
worship,
Emmanuel
Apostolic
Tabernacle,
Hysell
Community
Church
Coolville
United
Methodist
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Dyesville
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services,
10 a.m.
and 7:30
school, 9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
a.m.
Coolville
United
Methodist
Church
Dyesville
Community
Church
9:30 a.m.;
worship, Church
10:30 a.m.
6
Rev.
Larry
Lemley.
Sunday
Main
anda.m.
Fifth Street.
Pastor:
Helen Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
Middleport
of and
Christ
Pearl
Street,
Middleport.
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p.m.;
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7 p.m.
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Thursday,
7 p.m. Road,
and
7 p.m.;
Thursday
Bible study
andPastor:Kline.
Main
and
Fifth Street.
Pastor:
Helen
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Worship,
5 p.m.
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
wor10:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.
Fifth
and
Main
Street.
Pastor:
Al
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Doug
Cox.
Sunday
school, 10
a.m.; wor-ship,
a.m.;
worship,
10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m.;
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Hockingport
Pastor: Marty R. Hutton. Sunday ser- 9:30+DUVWRQ��&amp;KLOGUHQ¶V�'LUHFWRU��'RXJ�
youth,
7 p.m.
Kline.
Sunday
school, 10
a.m.;Church
worship,
a.m.
and 7 p.m. Faith Gospel Church
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Thursday
Bible
9
a.m.;
Tuesday
services,
7
p.m.
Harston.
Children’s
Director:
Doug
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a.m.;
Tuesday
services,
p.m. worship, 10:30
Assembly
God
Middleport
Church
of Christ Dodger ship,
10:45
Sunday
services,
7 p.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30 7a.m.;
vices,$VVHPEO\�RI�*RG
10 a.m. andAssembly
7:30
p.m.; ofThursday,
study
anda.m.;
youth,
7 p.m.evening, 6 p.m.; 9D�P���7XHVGD\�VHUYLFHV����S�P�
Morse
Chapel Church
Shamblin.
Teen
Director:
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Long
Bottom.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
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Laurel Cliffservice,
Free Methodist
Church
Morse
Chapel
Church
Fifth
and Main
Street.school,
Pastor:
Al a.m.; Wednesday
Bethel
Church
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11
Vaughan.
Sunday
9:30
7
p.m.
Middleport
Church
of
Christ
a.m.
7 p.m.
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Liberty
Assembly
of
God
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worship,
10:45worship,
Pastor:
Glen
McClung.
Sunday school,
Bethel
Church
Sunday
school, 10service,
a.m.;
Harston.
Children’s
Director:
Doug
Liberty Assembly of God
Laurel
Cliff
Free
Methodist
Church
Township
Road
468C.
Pastor:
a.m.;
Wednesday
7a.m.
p.m.11and 7:30 p.m.;
worship,
8:15
a.m.,
10:30
a.m.,
7
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Dudding
Lane,
Mason,
W.Va.
Pastor:
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Fifth
and
Main
Street.
Pastor:
Al
HarTorch
Church
***
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9:30 a.m.;
worship,
10:30 a.m.
and 6
Township
Road
468C.school,
Pastor: 9Phillip
a.m.; Wednesday
service,
p.m.
Shamblin.
Teen Director:
Dodger
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va. Pastor:
Pastor:
Glen
McClung.
Sunday
Phillip
Bell.
Sunday
a.m.;
p.m.; Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Wednesday,
7:307p.m.
Neil
Tennant.
Sunday
services,
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Latter-Day
Saints
ston. Children’s
Director:
ShamCounty
Road
Sunday
school, 9:30 Faith Gospel Church
p.m.; Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
Bell.
Sunday
school,
9 a.m.;
worship,
Vaughan. Sunday
school,Doug
9:30 a.m.;
Neil
Assembly
ofSunday
God
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
worship,
10:30
a.m.63.
107Tennant.
a.m.
p.m.services, 10 a.m. .HQR�&amp;KXUFK�RI�&amp;KULVW
Full Gospel
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10:30
a.m.
worship,
8:15 a.m.,Dodger
10:30 a.m.,
7 p.m.;
and
p.m.and 7 of
Faith
Gospel
Church
a.m.
andof6Jesus
p.m.; Christ
Wednesday
service,
Long
Bottom.
Sunday
school,Lighthouse
9:30
Church
of Latter-Day
blin.3DVWRU��-HIIUH\�:DOODFH��)LUVW�DQG�7KLUG�
Teen
Director:
Vaughan.
am.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Liberty
Assembly
God
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33045
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy. Pastor:
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
Latter-Day
Saints
Longworship,
Bottom.
Sunday
school,
7
p.m.
Hockingport
Church
a.m.;
10:45
a.m.
and9:30
7:30
Baptist
Saints
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
8:15
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Dudding
Lane,
Mason,
W.Va.
Pastor:
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Hockingport
Church
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.; 10 a.m. and
Baptist
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.; worship,
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7:30
p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Roy
Hunter.
Sunday
school,
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160.
446-6247
or ���
(740)
446-10:30
a.m.,
10:30
a.m.,
7 ofp.m.;
Wednesday
ser- Ohio
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Neil Tennant. Sunday
10 a.m.Church
Latter-Day
a.m.
Pastor:
Jeffrey
Wallace.
First and
Sunday
school, 9:30 Nazarene
a.m.; worship,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Keno
Church
Christ
Church
of(740)
Jesus
ofSaints
Latter-Day
Pagevilleservices,
Freewill Baptist
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
evening,
7:30 p.m.
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Full
Gospel Lighthouse
Third Jeffrey
Sunday.
Worship,
a.m.; 7486.
a.m. Rock Church of the Nazarene
Wallace.
First9:30
and Third
Saints
Pageville
Baptist
Churchschool,
Sunday school, 10:20-11 a.m.; re- 10:30Point
vices, 7 Pastor:
p.m.
and 7 p.m.3DVWRU��)OR\G�5RVV��6XQGD\�VFKRRO��
Pastor:Freewill
Floyd Ross.
Sunday
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South
Bethel
Community
Church
Church
of
Jesus
Christ
of
Latter-Day
Saints
Torch
Church
33045
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy.
PasSunday
school,
10:30
a.m.
Sunday.
Worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Ohio
(740)
446-6247
or
(740)
Full
Gospel
Lighthouse
Pastor:
Floyd
Ross.
Sunday
school,
9:30-10:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30-11
lief
society/priesthood,
11:05
a.m.-12
Keno
Church
of
Christ
Route
689,
Albany.
Pastor:
Rev.
Lloyd
***
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Ohio
160.Sunday
(740)
446-6247
or
Road 63. Sunday school,
tor:
RoySilver
Hunter.
Sunday
school,
school, 10:30 a.m.
446-7486.
school, 10:20-11
a.m.; County
Torch
Church
33045
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
9:30-10:30
a.m.; worship,
10:30-116a.m.;
Ridge.
Pastor:
Linda Damewood.
a.m.;Baptist
Wednesday
preaching,
p.m.
sacrament
service,
9-10-15
Pastor:
Jeffrey
Wallace.
First
andofThird
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Grimm.
Sunday
school,
109:30
a.m.; worship
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446-7486.
Sunday
school,
10:20-11
am.;Road
worship,
10:30
a.m.
10Roy
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bearwallow
Ridge
Church
Christ p.m.;
KRPHFRPLQJ�PHHWLQJ�¿UVW�7KXUVGD\��
relief
society/priesthood,
11:05
a.m.-12 a.m.;9:30
County
63. Sunday
school,
Hunter.
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.worship,
and
Wednesday
preaching, 6 p.m.
Sunday
school,
9
a.m.;
10 a.m.
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a.m.;
relief
society/priesthood,
11:05
evening,
7:30
p.m.
Pastor:
Bruce
Terry.
Sunday
school,
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�����S�P�
��S�P�
homecoming
meeting
fi
rst
Thursday,
7
Sunday.
Worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Pageville Freewill
Baptist
Church
service,
11
a.m.;
evening
service,
6
p.m.;
p.m.;
sacrament
service,
9-10-15
a.m.;
am.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
evening,
7:30
p.m.
Bearwallow
Ridge
Church
of
Christ
Carpenter
Independent
Baptist
Church
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DP���ZRUVKLS��������D�P�
a.m.-12
p.m.;
sacrament
service,
Nazarene
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
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Second
and
fourth
Sundays.
homecoming
meeting
ﬁrst
Thursday,
Pastor:
Bruce
Terry.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Carpenter
Independent
Baptist
Church
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
preaching
p.m.
10:30
a.m.Wednesday services,
Pastor:
Floyd
Ross. Sunday school, 9:30- school,
Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7 p.m. South
9-10-15
Bethel
Community
Church
6:30worship,
p.m.;
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p.m. a.m.; homecoming meeting
a.m.;
10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Nazarene
South
Bethel
Community
Church
Sunday
school,
a.m.;
preaching
service,
10:309:30
a.m.;
evening
Carleton
Interdenominational
Church
Bearwallow
Church
of p.m.
Christ
10:306XQGD\�VFKRRO�������D�P���SUHDFKLQJ�
a.m.;
10:30-11
a.m.;service,
Middleport
Church
the Nazarene
ﬁS�P�
rst Thursday, 7 ***
p.m.
Silver
Pastor:
LindaDamewood.
DamePoint
Rock Church
of the of
Nazarene
6:30 Ridge
p.m. services,
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Wednesday
6:30
SilverRidge.
Ridge.
Pastor: Linda
service,
a.m.;
evening
7 +DUULVRQYLOOH�5RDG��3RPHUR\��3DVWRU��
7 worship,
p.m.;10:30
Wednesday
Bibleservice,
Kingsbury.
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.;
wood.
Sunday
school,
9
a.m.;
Route
689,
Albany.
Pastor:
Rev.
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Lutheran
Pastor:
Bruce
Terry.
Sunday
school,
9:30
6DLQW�-RKQ�/XWKHUDQ�&amp;KXUFK
Wednesday
preaching,
6
p.m.
Pastor:
Daniel
Fulton.
Sunday
school,
Lutheran
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
p.m.;
Wednesday
Point Rock Church of the Nazarene
study,
7 p.m. Bible study, 7 p.m.
Lutheran
worship,
10 a.m.
Second
and
fourth
Lloyd
Grimm.
Sunday
school,
Zion
Church
of Christ
S�P���:HGQHVGD\�%LEOH�VWXG\����S�P�
worship
service,
10:30
a.m.; evening serVHUYLFH�����D�P���HYHQLQJ�VHUYLFH����S�P���
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Second
and
fourth
Sundays.
Zion Church
of Christ
Route
689,
Albany.
Pastor:
Rev. Lloyd
Saint John
Lutheran Church
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
6:30 p.m.;
Carpenter
Independent Baptist Church a.m.;
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m. andSundays.
6:30
10
a.m.;
worship
service,
11
a.m.;
Harrisonville
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor: VFKRRO�����D�P�
:HGQHVGD\�SUD\HU�PHHWLQJ����S�P�
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Cheshire
Baptist
Church
Harrisonville
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Saint
John
Lutheran
Church
Grimm.
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
worship
Cheshire
Baptist
Church
vice, 6 p.m.
Pine
Grove.
Worship,
9
a.m.;
Sunday
Wednesday
services,
6:30
p.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
preaching
serp.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
Saint
John
Lutheran
Church
evening
service,
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
Roger
Watson.
Sunday
school,
9:30
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Pastor:
Steve
Little.
(740)
367-7801, =LRQ�&amp;KXUFK�RI�&amp;KULVW
Roger
Watson.
Sunday
school,
9:307 p.m.; Pine
Pine
Grove.
Worship,
9 a.m.;
Sunday
service,
11 a.m.; evening
6 p.m.; Carleton
Carleton
Interdenominational
Church
Pastor:
Steve
Little.
(740)
367-7801,
Freedom Gospel
Mission
Grove.
Worship,
9 a.m.;
Sunday prayer
Interdenominational
Church
meeting,
7 p.m. service,
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m. and
school,
1010a.m.
Zion
Church
ofa.m.
Christ
vice, 3DVWRU��6WHYH�/LWWOH��
10:30 ���
a.m.;
evening
service,
7 p.m.;
Reedsville
Fellowship
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and
7 p.m.;
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a.m.
Wednesday
prayer
meeting,
7 p.m.
Kingsbury
Road. Pastor:
Robert
Vance.
(740)
992-7542
or
(740)
645-2527.
school,
10
a.m.
Kingsbury
Road.
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Robert
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
Bald
Knob
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County
Road 31. Pastor:
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Our Savior Lutheran Church
Road,
Pomeroy.
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Wednesday Sunday
Bible study,
p.m.
Pastor: Russell
Carson.
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Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Sunday
school, school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship
school,79:30
a.m.; morning Harrisonville
Vance.
Sunday
9:30
a.m.;
Middleport
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Willford.
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10:30
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10:30
a.m.;
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Our Savior
Lutheran
Church Church
Middleport
Church
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andSavior
Henry
Streets,
Ravenswood,Pastor:
Watson.
Sunday
school,
a.m.; Walnut
Cheshire
Baptist
Church
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
a.m. and 7worship
p.m.;
Our
Lutheran
service,
10:30
a.m.;service,
evening
Leonard
Powell.
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6 p.m.
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Ravenswood,
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Powell.
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Walnut
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Henry
Streets,
Raven6
p.m.worship, 7 p.m.
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
Worship
service,
9
a.m.;
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a.m.;
W.Va.
Pastor:
David
Russell.
Sunday
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
WednesPastor:
Jon
Mollohan.
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school,
Wednesday
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7
p.m.
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W.Va.
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Russell.
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9:30
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10:30
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6:30
swood,
W.Va.
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Russell. a.m.5HHGVYLOOH�)HOORZVKLS
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Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Tuppers
Plains
ChurchBible
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porary
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6:30
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Shannon Hutchison. Sunday
11
a.m.
Bald
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Saint Paul
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Pastor:
rev.
Rogerschool,
Willford.
Sunday
Reedsville
Fellowship
Sunday
a.m.;
Syracuse
Worship
service, 9 a.m.; communion, 10 Corner
ble study, 6:30
p.m.
Call:
740-367-7801.
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Baptist
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Pastor: Russell
Russell Carson.
school,
Saint
Pauland
Lutheran
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,Bible
7 p.m.study, 7 p.m.
Carson.Sunday
Sunday
Bradbury
Churcha.m.;
of Christ
570
Grant
Street,
Middleport.
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Wednesday
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.;
wor-Pastor:
a.m.;
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school,
10:15
youth, Pomeroy.
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Pomeroy.
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9:30
worship,
10:45
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and
7
570
Grant
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Corner
Syracuse
and
Second
Street,
school,
9:30
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39558
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tor:Ellis.
Gary
Ellis. Sunday
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9:30 p.m.;
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Wednesday
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Justin
Roush.
Sunday
39558
Bradbury
Road,
Middleport.
worship,
11Sunday
a.m.
p.m.;
Wednesday
services, 7ofp.m.
Chapel
Wesleyan
Gary
Sunday11
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Charles
7 p.m.
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Dickens. Friday, 7
Bradbury
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Ellis.
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United
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Bradbury
Road,
Middleport.
Minworship,
117a.m.
and 6 p.m.; Wednesday, 39558
p.m.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
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6
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Hutchison.
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Graham
Methodist
ister:
Justin
Roush.
7 p.m.
Wednesday
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Graham
United
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service, 7 p.m.Calvary Bible Church
Pastor:
Shannon
Hutchison.
Sunday day
Rutland
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10:30 a.m.
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9:30
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Nease.
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11
worship,
10:30
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and
6
p.m.;
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David
Wiseman.
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Wiseman.
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Sunday
school,
9:30
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worship,
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
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Richard
Nease.
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11
a.m.
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Richard
Nease.
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11
a.m.
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Church of the Nazarene
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Wiseman.
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9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
New
Haven.
Pastor:
Richard
Nease.
SunBechtel
United
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May.
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9:30
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May.
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9:30
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worship,
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New
Haven.
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Nease.
ship,
7 p.m.;
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Bible 7study,
William
Justis.
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9:30
Tuesday
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7 p.m.;
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Bible study,
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Bradford
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Pomeroy.
Pastor:9:30
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m. and 6
Sunday
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9:30a.m.;
a.m.;
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Brocket.
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school,
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6 p.m.
prayer
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Bible
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6:30
a.m.;
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10:30
a.m.9:30
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United
Methodist
6:30
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the
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6
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evening
6
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7
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day
school,
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school,
9:30
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10:30
a.m.;
Off
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124
behind
Wilkesville.
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Moore.
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school,
9:30
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Southern
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evening,
6
p.m.
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Spires.
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school,
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a.m.; worship,
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9:30
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worship,
9:45 a.m.
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a.m.;
worship,
10:30worship,
a.m. and 710:30
p.m.;
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Hickory
Hills
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of
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evening
service,
6
p.m.;
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adult
Brainard.
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school,
9:30
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worNon-Denominational
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services,
7
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7
p.m.
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services,
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Moore.
a.m.
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7:30
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service,
Firstand
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Stadler.
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class,
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9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
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6:30Sunday
p.m.;
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Zuspan.
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10
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school,
9:30
a.m.;
9:15
a.m.;
worship,
10:15
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7
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Goodwin.
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school,
9:30Pastor:
a.m.;
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6:30
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Bryan and
and
Missy
Dailey.
Sunday
worship,
11 and
a.m. and
6:30
p.m.
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Gene
Goodwin.
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school, 9:30
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Dailey.
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Reedsville
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school,
9:15
school,
11
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.;
333
Mechanic
Street,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Chester
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.
and
6:30
p.m.
Non-Denominational
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school,
11
a.m.;
worship,
11
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school,
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First
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Chester
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worship,
7
p.m.;
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service,
7
Chester
Common
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10:30
a.m.;
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Bible
study,
9:30
a.m.;
worship
service,
10:30
a.m.;
Pastor:
Ryan
Eaton.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Pastor:
Jim
Corbitt.
Worship,
9
a.m.;
Pastor:
Dennis
Moore
and
Rick
Little.
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worship,
10:40 a.m.
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10 a.m.
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school,
10
a.m.;
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Little.
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10
a.m.
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Ave.,
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Christ of
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Jesus
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10:30
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Null. Worship, 9:30 a.m.; Team
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Route
338,
Antiquity.
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Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
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Lawrence
Foreman.
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10 a.m.;
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Run
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Joppa
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Street,
Pomeroy.
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service,
7 p.m.
worship,10:30
10:30
a.m.
worship,
a.m.
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
Pastor:
John
Swanson.
Sunday6:30
school,
Pastor:
Denzil Null.
Worship, 9:30 a.m.;
Eddie
Baer.
a.m.
ris. Saturday,
2 p.m.
school,
10
a.m.;
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Union
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school,
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White.
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Hillside
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Mount
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ProfPastor:
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Heath
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Pastor:
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and
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worship,
11
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6
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7 p.m.Worship Center
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Dunham.
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fourth Sunday night is
10
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11
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ministry,
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Wednesday.
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Pastor:
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Robinson.
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school,
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Asbury
Syracuse
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Plains).
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Barber;
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160. Pastor:
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worship
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9:30
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10:30 a.m.
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10
tor:
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teen
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Pearl
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Presbyterian
3RPHUR\��3DVWRU��%ULDQ�'XQKDP��
Worship,
9:25 a.m.; Sunday school,
Pastor:and
Rev.
Tom
Johnson.
Worship, 5RFN�6SULQJV
a.m.;
morning
worship,
10:30
a.m.
10:45
a.m.
Second
Lynn
Streets,
Pomeroy.
398
Ash
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Pastor:
Rev.
David
Faulkner.
Sunday
10:45
a.m.
Pastor
Don
Walker.
Sunday
school,
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ship,(SLVFRSDO
11Pastor:
a.m.; a.m.
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m. a.m.;
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Antiquity Baptist
Life
Center
worship,
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10:45
a.m. 8 and 10 a.m.
10:25
Harrisonville
Church
and
6:30
p.m.; Agape
Wednesday
service,
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Rev. Tom Johnson.
Worship,
Mark
Morrow.
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship
9Harrisonville
a.m. Presbyterian
Presbyterian
Church
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.; Sun- 6HFRQG�DQG�/\QQ�6WUHHWV��3RPHUR\��
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6:30
p.m.;
youth church).
service,
6:30
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D�P� Springs Rutland
Pastor Don
Walker.
Sunday
school, 9:30
(Full
Gospel
603
SecondPastor:
Ave., Rev. David Faulkner. Sunday
Antiquity
Baptist
10:25 a.m. ***
morning
worship,
10:30 a.m.
andp.m.
6:30
Rock
day evening,
6 p.m.
Pastor:
Rev.
David
Faulkner. Sunday
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RockStuttler.
Springs
Episcopal
worship
9 a.m.
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Pastor
Don Walker.
Sunday school,
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
6:30
p.m.;
Middleport
Presbyterian
Pastor:John
Dewayne
Sunday
Congregational
a.m.;6DOHP�6WUHHW��5XWODQG��6XQGD\�VFKRRO��
worship,
10:45
a.m.; Sunday
eveMason.
Pastors:
John
and
Patty
Wade.
Pastor:
Chapman.
Sunday
school,
$JDSH�/LIH�&amp;HQWHU
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Pastor:
Dewayne
Stuttler.
Sunday
Agape
worship
9 a.m.
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3DVWRU��5HY��'DYLG�)DXONQHU��6XQGD\�
5RFN�6SULQJV
9:30 a.m.;Rutland
worship,Freewill
10:45 a.m.;
Sunday
youth
service,
6:30Life
p.m.Center
Episcopal
Pastor:
James Snyder.
Sunday school, 10
school,
a.m.; worship,
10 a.m.;
a.m.;
youth
Baptist
Trinity
ning,���D�P���ZRUVKLS��������D�P���DQG���
6 p.m.
(304)
773-5017.
Sunday
9:30
a.m.;99worship,
10:30
Thursday(Full
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school,
a.m.;
worship,
10 a.m.;
Middleport
Presbyterian
Gospel
church). 603
Second10:30 a.m.;
Grace Church
Episcopal Church
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evening,
6
p.m.
a.m.;
worship
service,
11 a.m. Presbyterian
fellowship,
6
p.m.;
early
Sunday
worship,
Middleport
Salem
Street,
Rutland.
Sunday
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youth
fellowship,
6
p.m.;
early
SunPastor:
James
Snyder.
Sunday
Ave.,
Mason.
Pastors:
John
and
Patty
326
East
Main
Street,
Pomeroy.
Rev.
Second
and
Lynn
Streets,
Pomeroy.
PasRutland
Freewill
Baptist
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
services,
7
p.m.
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Agape
Life
Center
Episcopal Church
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:30 a.m Grace
8 a.m.
Pastor:
Snyder.
school, 10
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���
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day
worship,
8 a.m.Center
3DVWRU��-RKQ�&amp;KDSPDQ��6XQGD\�VFKRRO��
10
a.m.; James
worship
service,Sunday
11
Wade.
(304)
773-5017.
10:30 school,
Leslie
Eucharist,
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tor: Rev.
Tom
Johnson.
Worship,
10:25
Salem
Street,
Rutland.
Sunday
. and
6Freewill
p.m.; Wednesday
services,
Abundant
Grace
Salem
Rutland
Baptist school,
(Full
Gospel
church).
603Sunday
Second
Ave.,
326
EastFlemming.
Main
Street,Holy
Pomeroy.
Rev.
Seventh-Day
Adventist
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a.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
11:30Flemming.
a.m.; Wednesday,
5:30 p.m.
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a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.
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6
p.m.
Salem
Street,
Rutland.
Sunday
school,
Mason.
Pastors:
John
and
Patty
Wade.
Leslie
Holy
Eucharist,
11:30
Rutland
10 a.m.;
worship, 11:30 a.m . and 6 p.m.; a.m.
Pastor:
William Rutland
K. Marshall. Sunday 923 South Third Street, Middleport. Pas- 6HYHQWK�'D\�$GYHQWLVW
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***
10 a.m.; worship, 11:30 a.m . and 6
773-5017.
Sunday
10:30 a.m.;
a.m.; Wednesday,
5:30 p.m.
Seventh-Day
AdventistAdventist
Pastor: John
Sunday
school,
Pastor:
JohnChapman.
Chapman.
Sunday
Abundant
Grace
Holiness
Seventh-Day
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***
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meeting,
Sunday,
7 p.m.;
Wednestor:
Teresa
Davis.
Sunday
service, 10 a.m.;
school,
10:15
a.m.;
worship,
9:15 a.m.; (304)
Second
Baptist
Church
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p.m.;
Youth
meeting,
Sunday,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Mulberry Heights Road,
Pomeroy.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;10:30
Thursday
United
Brethren
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
923
South
Third
Street,
Middleport.
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Episcopal
W.Va.
Sunday school,
day services,
7Ravenswood,
p.m. services,
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.service,
Bible
study,
7 p.m.
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��� �����������6XQGD\�������D�P���
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Wednesday
7 p.m.
HolinessChurch
Sabbath
school, 2 p.m.
Saturday,
services,
7 Monday
p.m. services,
a.m.;
Thursday
7 p.m.
Pastor:
Teresa Davis.
Sunday
Community
Seventh-Day
Adventist
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Mouth
Hermon
United Brethren in
10 a.m.;
worship,
11 a.m.; evening,7RPHN��6XQGD\�ZRUVKLS�����D�P���
7 +ROLQHVV
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Abundant
Grace
worship,
3
p.m.
Grace
Episcopal
Church
Second
Baptist
Church
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
Snowville
10
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7
p.m.
Main
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor:
Steve
Mulberry
Heights
Road,
Pomeroy.
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p.m.; Wednesday,
p.m.
:HGQHVGD\�VHUYLFHV����S�P�
6HYHQWK�'D\�$GYHQWLVW
Church
VHUYLFHV����S�P�
Second
Baptist
Church7
South
Third Street,
Middleport.
Church
Salem
CenterSalem
Center
Tomek.
Sunday
worship, Rev.
10 a.m.;
Sabbath
school, 2 p.m.Christ
Saturday,
Main Street,
Pomeroy.
Les- Sunday
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Sunday
school, 10 326 EastCommunity
Long
Bottom.
Pastor:
Steve Reed. Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m. 923
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Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday school, 10 'DQYLOOH�+ROLQHVV�&amp;KXUFK
Pastor:
Teresa
Davis.
Sunday
service, 10 worship,
Main
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor: Steve
United
Brethren Road. Pastor: Ricky
Pastor: William
K.K.
Marshall.
Sunday
Pastor:
William
Marshall.
Sunday
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
Sunday
services,
7
p.m.
3
p.m.
36411
Wickham
:�9D��5RXWH�����DQG�$QGHUVRQ�6WUHHW��
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lie
Flemming.
Holy Eucharist,
First
Baptist
Church
of7Mason,
W.Va.
a.m.; worship,
11
a.m.; 11
evening,
p.m.;
school,
9:30Pastor:
a.m.;
worship,
9:30 a.m. and
Bethany
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a.m.;
worship,
a.m.; evening,
7 p.m.;
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
Tomek. Sunday
worship, 1011:30
a.m.; a.m.;
school,
10:15
worship,
9:159:15
a.m.;
school,
10:15a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
Long
Bottom.
Steve
Reed.
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Hull.
Sunday
school,
652 and AndersonWednesday,
5:30
p.m. 7Holiness
5DYHQVZRRG��:�9D��6XQGD\�VFKRRO�����
Wednesday,
7W.Va.
p.m. Route
7 /RQJ�%RWWRP��3DVWRU��6WHYH�5HHG��
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.;
Friday fellow3DVWRU��7HUHVD�'DYLV��6XQGD\�VHUYLFH�����
Pastor:
Arland
King.
school, 10Sunday
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Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Sunday
services,
p.m.
Bible
study,
7 Sunday
p.m. 7 p.m.
Mouth
Hermon
United
Brethren9:30
in a.m.; worship,
a.m.;
Bible Monday
study,
Monday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
Danville
Church
United
Brethren
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Street.
Pastor:
Robert
Grady.
Sunday
10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
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Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
Christ
Church
9:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday,
31057
Ohio
325,
Langsville.
Pastor:
***
First
Baptist
Church
of
Mason,
W.Va.
ship
service,
7
p.m.
a.m.;
worship,
9
a.m.;
Wednesday
ser��S�P���:HGQHVGD\�%LEOH�VWXG\����S�P�
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school,
10 Church
a.m.; morning
church,
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First
Baptist
of Mason,
W.Va. 11:HGQHVGD\�SUD\HU�VHUYLFH����S�P�
Bottom.
Steveservice,
Reed. 7
Danville
Holiness
Churchschool, 9:30
36411
Wickham
Road.
Peterin
Snowville
Snowville
7Long
p.m.;
Friday Pastor:
fellowship
Brian Bailey.
Sunday
Mouth
Hermon
UnitedPastor:
Brethren
study,
7 p.m.
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Holiness
0DUWLQGDHO��6XQGD\�VFKRRO�������
a.m.;
evening,
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
W.Va. Route
652
and652
Anderson
Street.
Harrisonville
Community
Church
10 a.m.
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W.Va.
Route
and
Anderson Street.
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 9:30
31057
325,worship,
Langsville.
Pastor:
Martindael.
SundayUnited
school, Brethren
9:30
Sunday school,
1010
a.m.;
worship,
9 a.m.
Sunday
school,
a.m.;
worship,
9
p.m.
a.m.; Ohio
Sunday
10:30
a.m. vices,
Christ
Church
&amp;DWKROLF
Bible
study,
7
p.m.
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Eden
3DVWRU��$UODQG�.LQJ��6XQGD\�VFKRRO��
Community
Church
Pastor: Robert
Grady.
Sunday
school,school,
10 10 ������2KLR������/DQJVYLOOH��3DVWRU��
Pastor:
Theron
Durham.
Sunday,36411
9:30
Carmel-Sutton
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a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
prayer
Wickham
Road.
Pastor:
Peter in Christ
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0RXWK�+HUPRQ�8QLWHG�%UHWKUHQ�LQ�
Pastor:
Robert
Grady. Sunday
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7
p.m.;
Brian
Bailey.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
6QRZYLOOH
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&amp;DOYDU\�3LOJULP�&amp;KDSHO
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Ohio
124, between
Reedsville
Harrisonville
Community
Church
service,
7
p.m.
Martindael.
Sunday
school,
9:30
:�9D��5RXWH�����DQG�$QGHUVRQ�6WUHHW��
VFKRRO�������D�P���ZRUVKLS�������D�P��
a.m.;church,
morning 11
church,
11
a.m.;
evening,
Friday
fellowship
service,
7
p.m.
Sunday
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7
p.m.;
youth
group and HockBethany
&amp;KULVW�&amp;KXUFK
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Main
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor:
Steve
a.m.;6DFUHG�+HDUW�&amp;DWKROLF�&amp;KXUFK
morning
a.m.;
evening,
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
Carmel
and
Bashan
Roads,
Racine.
PasCatholic
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PHHWLQJ�VHFRQG�DQG�IRXUWK�6XQGD\����
VHUYLFHV�����D�P�
Bethany
Pastor:
Theron Durham.
Sunday, Church
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m. school,
and
7 p.m.;
3DVWRU��5REHUW�*UDG\��6XQGD\�VFKRRO�����
6 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible7 study,
Wednesday
prayer service,
7 p.m.
meeting
second
and
fourth
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Adam
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Coolville
Road.
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(740)
992-5898.
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a.m.;
worship,
10
a.m.
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confessional
4:45-5:15
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Sam
Anderson.
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school,
10
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a.m.;
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7
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9:45
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CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS SPONSORED BY THESE LOCAL AREA MERCHANTS
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
��� %AST -AIN 3TREET s 0OMEROY /(

“If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
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it shall be ”
John 15:7

“For God so loved the
world that he gave his
one and only Son..”
John 3:16

“So I strive always to
keep my conscience clear
before God and man”
Acts 24:16

“Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify
your Father in heaven.”
Matthew 5:16

“Commit thy works unto
the Lord, and thy thoughts
shall be established”
Proverbs 16:3

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Sports

FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 21, 2012
mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

INSIDE
Penn State voted
AP sports story
of year again
B2

Murray leads WVU over Oakland, 76-71
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
— Lesson learned.
West Virginia’s Aaric Murray came back from a one-game
suspension with a double-double
Wednesday night as the Mountaineers defeated Oakland 7671 to break a two-game losing
streak.
Murray, who was left home
for disciplinary reasons from
the Mountaineers’ 81-66 loss to
No. 2 Michigan last Saturday
in Brooklyn, N.Y., came back
against the Golden Grizzlies to
score 12 points, pull down 10
rebounds, block five shots and

hand out four assists.
“I definitely took heed to the
message (suspension), but, like
I said, I don’t want to talk too
much about the incident (before)
my last game,” Murray said.
Juwan Staten added 11 points
for the Mountaineers (5-5) and
Keaton Miles and Terry Henderson added 10 apiece.
West Virginia’s victory ruined
an outstanding night by Travis Bader, who entered the game
leading the nation in 3-pointers
made with 42. He finished with a
game-high 25 points, including 6
of 12 beyond the line.

Oakland (4-8) has played four
schools from BCS conferences
on the road this season — Pittsburgh, Michigan State, Tennessee and West Virginia — and has
lost to all four.
Murray said, “I don’t know
what my box score says, I’m
just out there playing to win.
That was just from playing hard.
Hopefully, if I keep working, God
willing, I’ll keep getting better.”
Said West Virginia coach Bob
Huggins, “Aaric will have a
couple good days and then he’ll
have a real bad day. He mirrors
our team in a lot of ways. We get

things going and then we have a
hard time with prosperity.
“Aaric is getting better. Bruce
Pearl (ESPNU analyst) was here
(Tuesday) and he said, ‘You sure
got his attention. He is listening
and he is trying to do what you
ask him to do.’
“I tell you what he does for us;
he has great hands. In the middle
of a team that can’t hold on to
anything, he gets his hands on
it and doesn’t lose much,” said
Huggins.
West Virginia led 66-57 after
a 3-pointer by Eron Harris with
7:44 remaining. That was one of

eight triples made by the Mountaineers, who matched their season best by shooting 52.9 percent from the field (27 of 51).
But Oakland came back on
3-point shots to pull within 6866 with 5:34 to go. The Grizzlies made 10 of 19 from long
range, including two during the
9-2 run. The first was a 30-footer
from the sideline by Bader, who
reached double figures for the
11th time in 12 games.
Oakland, which tired in the
second half, fell behind partially
See MURRAY ‌| B2

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Gallia Academy senior Abby Wiseman (2) dribbles past Jackson
defender Whitney Wills (10) during the second half of Wednesday night’s SEOAL girls basketball contest in Jackson, Ohio.

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels fall
at Jackson, 65-27

Meigs senior Delilah Fish (10) drives past Federal Hocking’s McKenzie Steele (14) during Wednesday night’s 69-43
Lady Marauder victory in Rocksprings.

Bryan Walters

Alex Hawley

JACKSON, Ohio — Host Jackson had nine players
reach the scoring column while remaining unbeaten
Wednesday night following a 65-27 decision over the Gallia Academy girls basketball team in a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League matchup in the Apple City.
The visiting Blue Angels (2-6, 0-3 SEOAL) never led in
the contest and were tied at two 90 seconds into regulation, but the Ironladies (9-0, 3-0 SEOAL) followed with a
15-8 surge over the final six-plus minutes to gain a 17-10
first quarter advantage.
GAHS was never closer the rest of the way, as Jackson
went on a 21-7 run in the second period to establish a
commanding 38-17 lead at the break. The hosts used a
10-2 run to claim a 48-19 edge headed into the finale, then
closed regulation with a 17-8 run to wrap up the 38-point
decision.
The Blue Angels connected on 10-of-50 field goal attempts for 20 percent, including a 2-of-20 effort from
three-point range for 10 percent. The guests had 19 turnovers and also posted team totals of 26 rebounds (eight
offensive), seven assists and three steals.
Kendra Barnes led Gallia Academy with 14 points, followed by Micah Curfman with six points and Hannah
Loveday with four markers. Abby Wiseman and Chelsy
Slone rounded out the respective scoring with two points
and one point.
Loveday hauled in a team-best seven rebounds, while
Curfman had three assists and Barnes added two steals.
The Blue Angels — who have now dropped six straight
decisions — were 5-of-10 at the charity stripe for 50 percent.
Madison Ridout paced Jackson with a game-high 18
points, followed by Kerrigan Hoover with 11 points and
Whitney Wills with 10 markers. JHS was 23-of-26 at the
charity stripe for 88 percent.

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — After dropping their
first six games of the season, the Meigs Girls basketball team has now won two straight games.
The Lady Marauders shot over 50 percent from the
field Wednesday night en route to a non-conference
victory over Federal Hocking in Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium.
The Lady Lancers (3-5) began the game on a 9-to3 run but Meigs quickly answered with eight unanswered points to take the lead. FHHS went on a 5-to2 run to end the first period with a 14-13 lead.
After battling swapping leads to start the second
quarter Meigs regained the upper hand with 5:28
remaining in the half. The Lady Marauders closed
the half with an 8-0 run and took the 30-21 halftime
advantage.
MHS out scored the Lady Lancers 14-to-9 in the
third period and took the 14 point advantage into the
finale. Meigs finished strong scoring 25 points in the
fourth en route to a 69-43 win.
“A win is a win, it was an ugly win but we’ll take
it” said Meigs coach Amber Ridenour. “We’re getting
a little bit better every day and I think it is good for
their confidence level. We started off rough but we’re
climbing back up.”
Brittany Krautter led the Lady Marauders with
22 points on the night including four three-pointers.
Mercadies George finished with 13 points, while
Kelsey Hudson finished with 10 points. All of Hudson’s points came in the fourth period. Ally Maxson
had eight points, Morgan Russell had six and Delilah Fish finished with four. Tess Phelps, Houser and
Hannah Cremeans each finished with two points on Meigs senior Kirsten McGuire (30) drives toward the
the night.
basket during Wednesday night’s MHS victory over FedSee MEIGS ‌| B2 eral Hocking in Larry R. Morrison gymnasium.

bwalters@heartlandpublications.com

Meigs topples Lady Lancers, 69-43
ahawley@heartlandpublications.com

OVP Sports Schedule Top-ranked Steelers defense lacking in big plays
Friday, Dec. 21

Boys Basketball
Van at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Southeastern, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Grace, 7 p.m.
Girls Basketball
OVCS at Grace, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Calhoun County, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Meigs, River Valley at Wahama, TBA
Saturday, Dec. 22
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Nels-York, 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, noon
Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Symmes Valley at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Cabell Midland at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Every
time a pass comes his way, Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Keenan
Lewis is faced with a choice: the ball
or the man?
If Lewis chooses the ball, he knows
he better be sure he can get a hand
on it. If he chooses the man, Lewis
knows he better bring the guy down,
or else.
“You don’t make that tackle, they
score a touchdown on you and you
might be coming out,” Lewis said.
Lewis has proven to be a pretty
shrewd decision-maker. His 21 pass
breakups lead the NFL and he’s rarely been beaten deep while serving
as the backbone of a secondary that
leads the NFL in fewest yards passing allowed.
The one thing Lewis hasn’t done,
is actually catch the ball. Then again,
neither have the rest of his teammates on the league’s top-ranked defense.
For all their responsible tackling,
the Steelers (7-7) have lacked a cer-

tain menace this season, and it could
cost them a playoff spot.
Heading into Sunday’s game
against Cincinnati (8-6), Pittsburgh
ranks 27th in turnovers forced (13)
and is tied for 23rd in sacks (27). Not
exactly the formula that led the Steelers to three Super Bowl appearances
— and two wins — in a six-season
span from 2005 to 2010.
While the lengthy absences of safety Troy Polamalu, linebackers James
Harrison and LaMarr Woodley and
cornerback Ike Taylor have played a
role in the drop, the Steelers insist
there are plays to be made, they’re
just not making them.
“I’ve dropped a ball that hit me in
my face against Kansas City,” said
safety Ryan Clark, who has three
of Pittsburgh’s seven interceptions.
“Keenan dropped one against Tennessee. (Larry) Foote’s dropped
balls. We’ve had opportunities and
that’s on us.”
Hall-of-Fame defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau isn’t complaining.

His job is to design schemes that
slow opponents down. Getting the
ball is a bonus.
“You can talk about a lot of statistics, but leading the league in yardage yielded is an important one,”
LeBeau said. “Do we need more
interceptions? Sure. We need more
turnovers … but every week we’re
trying to keep our football team in
the game, keep the score in a manageable position.”
Something the Steelers have done
as well as anyone in the league. The
game-turning plays, however, have
been sporadic. Pittsburgh is on pace
for its fewest turnovers and sacks
since LeBeau returned for a second
stint as defensive coordinator in
2004.
Some of it is the byproduct of a defense in transition.
A unit that began the season with
seven starters in their 30s now features a secondary with four cornerSee STEELERS ‌| B2

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B2

Penn State voted AP sports story of year
NEW YORK (AP) — The
Penn State child sex abuse scandal was selected as the sports
story of the year by U.S. editors
and news directors in an annual
vote conducted by The Associated Press.
The news broke in November
2011, with a grand jury report
outlining charges against Jerry
Sandusky, and the outrage that
followed led to the firing of Hall
of Fame coach Joe Paterno. But
the aftershocks were felt long
into 2012: Sandusky was convicted in June of assaulting 10 boys,
and the NCAA handed down
brutal sanctions in July.
In both years, the scandal was
picked as the top sports story,
the first time since the AP began conducting its annual vote
in 1990 that the same story was
selected twice in a row. The results of this year’s tally were announced Wednesday.
Even before the Sandusky trial, the State College community
had absorbed another huge blow
as Paterno died Jan. 22 at age 85
of lung cancer.
The year ended with a small
step to normalcy — joy on the
football field. Under new coach
Bill O’Brien, the Nittany Lions
won eight of their last 10 games
to finish 8-4, capped by an overtime victory at home over Wisconsin.
There were 157 ballots submitted from U.S. news organizations. The voters were asked to
rank the top 10 sports stories of
the year, with the first-place story getting 10 points, the secondplace story receiving nine points,
and so on.
The Penn State saga received
1,420 points and 109 first-place
votes. The No. 2 sports story,
Lance Armstrong stripped of his
seven Tour de France titles, had
10 first-place votes and 1,008
points.
Football’s popularity, college
and pro, was unmistakable with
seven of the top 10 stories. But
only two of them involved the action on the field.
Here are 2012’s top 10 stories:
1. PENN STATE: Sandusky,
the former defensive coordina-

tor whose crimes led to such
devastation for his victims and
for his former employer, was
found guilty on 45 of 48 counts.
In October, the 68-year-old was
sentenced to 30 to 60 years in
prison. His conviction provided
some closure, but a messy aftermath remained. Former FBI Director Louis Freeh released the
results of his investigation July
12, saying Paterno and other top
school officials covered up allegations against Sandusky. The
NCAA used that report as a basis
for its sanctions announced later
that month, which included a
$60 million fine, a four-year bowl
ban and scholarship reductions.
2. LANCE ARMSTRONG:
In February, federal prosecutors closed an investigation into
whether the star cyclist doped.
That turned out to be only a
temporary reprieve for a oncerevered figure. In June, the U.S.
Anti-Doping Agency accused
him of using performanceenhancing drugs, and in August, when he dropped his fight
against the charges, USADA ordered his record seven Tour titles
wiped out. A report released in
October laid out vivid details of
the evidence. The year ends with
Armstrong dropped by many of
the companies he endorsed and
no longer formally involved with
the cancer charity he founded,
Livestrong.
3. NFL BOUNTIES: This
much is clear: Saints coach
Sean Payton was suspended for
the entire season and New Orleans started 0-4 to quickly fall
out of playoff contention. Much
else about the bounty scandal
remains in dispute. Players
deny the NFL’s assertions of
a pay-for-injury program. On
Dec. 11, former Commissioner
Paul Tagliabue overturned his
successor’s suspensions of four
players but endorsed the findings of the investigation under
Roger Goodell.
4. FOOTBALL CONCUSSIONS: The deaths of NFL
greats Alex Karras — who suffered from dementia — and
Junior Seau — who committed
suicide — were grim reminders

Christopher Weddle | Centre Daily Times | MCT photo

Jerry Sandusky, center, is escorted from his sentencing at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte on October
9. Sandusky, maintaining his innocence, was sentenced Tuesday to at least 30 years in prison, effectively a life sentence, in the child sexual abuse scandal that brought shame to Penn State and led to coach Joe Paterno’s downfall.

of the angst over head injuries
in the sport and their possible
consequences. Thousands of
retired players have sued the
league, alleging the NFL failed
to protect them from the dangers of concussions.
5. LONDON OLYMPICS: Michael Phelps retired from swimming after setting an Olympic
record with his 22nd medal
at a Summer Games bursting
with memorable performances.
Usain Bolt became the first man
to successfully defend both the
100- and 200-meter dash titles.
And the host country racked
up 65 medals in an Olympics
so successful for Britain that it
barely even rained.
6. COLLEGE FOOTBALL
PLAYOFFS: Instead of complaining about the BCS, soon
we can moan about the selection committee. After years of
carping, fans finally got a playoff
system, which will debut after
the 2014 season. The four-team

bracket will feature semifinals
and a title game to determine a
national champion.
7. REPLACEMENT OFFICIALS: Fans and pundits predicted a blown call would decide
a critical game when the NFL
started the season with replacement officials. Sure enough, in
Week 3, on the national stage
of “Monday Night Football,” a
missed offensive pass interference penalty and a questionable
touchdown catch handed the
Seattle Seahawks a win over the
Green Bay Packers. Two days
later, the league resolved its
labor dispute with the regular
refs.
8. SUPER GIANTS: A team
that had been 7-7 upset the topseeded Green Bay Packers on
the road in the playoffs, needed
overtime to beat the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC title
game, then came from behind
to defeat the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl, 21-17,

an outcome strangely similar to
their matchup four years earlier.
Eli Manning won his second Super Bowl MVP award.
9. SUMMITT RETIRES: Pat
Summitt, the winningest coach
in NCAA basketball history, retired from the Tennessee bench
in April at age 59, less than
eight months after revealing she
had early-onset dementia. Longtime assistant Holly Warlick
took over the Lady Vols. Summitt was 1,098-208 with eight
national titles in 38 seasons.
10. MANNING’S RESURGENCE: Peyton Manning was
released from the Indianapolis
Colts in March after missing
last season because of neck surgery, the future uncertain for
the four-time MVP. John Elway
and the Broncos gambled that
he still had some championship
play left in that right arm, and
so far it’s looking like a brilliant
move as Denver won the AFC
West.

Big 12 basketball lacking depth this season
Luke Meredith

The Associated Press

The top of the Big 12
looks familiar, with Kansas
in first place and ranked in
the top 10.
The rest of the league
doesn’t appear to be nearly
as deep as usual this season, its first with West Virginia and TCU instead of
Missouri and Texas A&amp;M.
No. 24 Oklahoma State
(8-1) is the only other
league team to join the
ninth-ranked Jayhawks (81) in the Top 25 and nobody else received a single
vote for Monday’s poll.
This wasn’t entirely unexpected, of course. Missouri won the conference

tournament before bolting
for the SEC and its currently ranked 12th. But beyond the Cowboys, nobody
has emerged as a serious
threat to the Jayhawks
with non-conference play
winding down.
Big 12 teams are just
2-10 against opponents
ranked in the Top 25 and
the league is seventh in
overall RPI — behind the
Atlantic-10 and the Mountain West. The inconsistent play of Baylor and
Texas has a lot to do with
that.
The Bears (7-3) were
picked to finish second in
the preseason poll, while
the Longhorns (6-4) were
slotted fourth. But Baylor

has been up and down,
while the Longhorns could
find themselves at 6-6 at
the end of the week.
Baylor’s biggest win
was about as big a resume builder as a team
could ask for. The Bears
knocked off Kentucky
in Rupp Arena on Dec.
1, 62-55, snapping the
Wildcats 55-game home
winning streak. But Kentucky later fell out of the
Top 25and Baylor lost at
home to Northwestern.
The Bears have already
lost to Charleston in
Waco. But they’ve got a
chance to pick up a pair of
quality wins before meeting Texas in the league
opener on Jan. 5. Baylor

hosts BYU and plays at
Gonzaga on Dec. 28.
Baylor coach Scott Drew
said he saw positive signs
after his team led by just
two at halftime before rallying to beat USC-Upstate,
73-57.
“Early in the year I think
that you are always adjusting, changing and tweaking,” Drew said. “I’m so
pleased with this effort
though because we were
able to defend and still take
care of the ball and win.
I thought that we made
some extra effort passes.
We made a more conscious
effort to get the ball inside.
We’re learning how to get
more touches inside.”
Texas is scuffling in part

because of a challenging
schedule and the absence
of point guard Myck Kabongo (NCAA eligibility
investigation) and forward
Jaylen Boyd (left foot injury).
If the Longhorns want to
turn their season around,
this would a good week to
get started.
Texas, which doesn’t
have an upperclassman in
its starting lineup, hosts
No. 23 North Carolina on
Wednesday and plays at
No. 20 Michigan State on
Saturday. A pair of wins
would be a massive boost
for a team that has lost
to Division II Chaminade
and by 23 points to No. 15
Georgetown.

“You’ve just got to go
into it with a mindset of
getting better every day.
Build on the positive. And
that’s what we’ve been
trying to do as a young
group,” Texas freshman
guard Javan Felix said.
Of course, not everyone
in the Big 12 is off to a
slow start.
Kansas brought a sevengame winning streak into
this week. Oklahoma State
has already beaten Tennessee and North Carolina State behind freshman
point guard Marcus Smart,
who is averaging 13 points,
seven rebounds and 5.2 assists a game and is on the
short list of the game’s top
freshmen.

Meigs
From Page B1
Cremeans finished with a team
high six rebounds while George
had five. Fish led Meigs with
four steals and three assists. The
Lady Marauders committed 14

turnovers on the night.
“They were on tonight,”coach
Ridenour said. “We had a couple
players come off the bench for
us a do a real good job and that
helps a lot.”

Meigs was 28-of-54 (51.9 percent) from the field including
4-of-7 (57.1 percent) from three.
Meigs was 9-of-15 (60 percent)
from the free-throw line.
Federal Hocking was led by

Carley Tabler with 11 points,
McKenzie Steele with nine and
Megan Thompson with eight.
Zoey Wolfe had seven points,
Ashton Cale had six and Whitney Gillian finished with two

points to round out the FHHS
total. Federal Hocking was 4-of12 (33.3 percent) from the charity stripe.
This is the lone meeting between these teams this season.

Steelers
From Page B1
backs — Lewis, Cortez
Allen, Curtis Brown and
Josh Victorian — 26 or
younger. It’s the same
along the defensive line,
where 26-year-old nose
tackle Steve McLendon is
now basically a co-starter
with 35-year-old Casey
Hampton. Ditto the linebackers, where 24-year-old
Jason Worilds leads the
team with five sacks.
The youth movement
has forced LeBeau to tinker a bit with his game
plan. The Steelers spend
the early portion of the
game letting the young-

sters get their feet set
before unleashing the
complex blitzes that are
LeBeau’s trademarks.
“With the younger guys
back there we hold off a little bit and kind of simplify
and so guys can play a little
bit faster and they kind of
know what they’re doing,”
Hampton said. “At the
same time when it’s simple
there really shouldn’t be no
big plays or anything like
that.”
Big plays haven’t killed
the Steelers this season,
but little ones. The proliferation of short passing attacks give the front seven
less time to get to the quar-

terback and shorter routes
mean fewer opportunities
for defensive backs to get
in front of the ball.
“You look at it we’ve
probably been one of the
best teams in the NFL this
year taking away the deep
ball,” Lewis said. “Teams
ain’t really trying to throw
deep like that no more.
When you don’t have
those plays, those short
plays is (less) of a risk to
make a mistake.”
The Steelers have allowed just 18 passes over
25 yards this season and
opponents are averaging
just 5.9 yards per pass attempt, the lowest in the

league. Yet their inability
to create turnovers has
forced the offense to deal
with long fields almost every time it gets the ball.
Clark pointed to a 3424 loss to San Diego two
weeks ago as proof that
the defense needs to be
more opportunistic. The
Steelers held San Diego
to three straight threeand-outs with the ball
near midfield in the first
half. Each time the Chargers pinned the Pittsburgh offense deep in its
own end. Each time the
Steelers ended up punting and the Chargers finally capitalized on the

great field position.
“We weren’t flipping the
field because we didn’t
make a play, special teams
didn’t make play and the
offense didn’t make a
play,” Clark said. “Flipping the field is a huge
part of the play … if you
look at the games we lost,
that’s why we lost.”
Not exactly. The Steelers have committed 27
turnovers this season, seventh-most in the league.
Those miscues have often
put the defense in difficult
situations, even if Clark
and company refuse to use
it as an excuse.
If Pittsburgh was coast-

ing into the playoffs — as
it did last year when it
created just 17 turnovers
— the lack of takeaways
wouldn’t be an issue. But
the Steelers have dropped
four of five and need to
win out to play past Dec.
30. The season could
come down to one or two
tipped passes that turn
into interceptions or one
fumble that ends up with
a guy in a black helmet on
top of it.
“We definitely need to
get more turnovers and
sacks and things like that
if we want to be successful,” Hampton said.

Murray
From Page B1
because Bader, who came in averaging 19.6 points per game,
missed 2 minutes, 20 seconds of
the second half after incurring
his fourth foul. He re-entered
with his team trailing 61-54 with
9:42 to play.
West Virginia led 71-68 when

Murray hit the second of two free
throws with 3:58 showing.
Bader missed from deep, then
knocked down another 30 footer
that tied the game at 71 with
2:30 remaining.
After a Huggins timeout, West
Virginia guard Gary Browne’s
floater beat the shot-clock buzzer to give the Mountaineers the

points they would need with 51
seconds to go.
Murray finished the game with
two rebounds and three free
throws to ice it.
“The battle is to have them
keep playing,” Huggins said.
“I thought when I came here,
we were probably not going to
have the five best players in our

league. Probably not even close,
but maybe the 10 best. We can
wear people down. We can get
out and pressure and make everything hard and make every
pass hard and just wear them
down.”
Oakland coach Greg Kampe,
in his 29th season at the school,
countered: “We are disappoint-

ed in the outcome. We came
here to win. We are a team
that plays a lot of games like
this. We have a great belief in
ourselves, and we have a belief
that we can win in this type of
place.”
West Virginia has defeated 44
nonconference opponents in its
last 45 games at the Coliseum.

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

Legals

Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, December 22,
2012 at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211 W.
Second St. Pomeroy OH. The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company is selling for cash in
hand or certified check the following collateral:
2006 Dodge Ram
Vin #: 1D7HU18236J147845
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”,
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral, prior to sale date contact Randy at 740-992-4048.
12/19 12/20 12/21

GUN SHOW
Jackson, OH, Dec 22 &amp; 23
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
1362 Caves Rd
Adm $5
Bring this ad for $1.00 off
150 6' tables @ $35
740-667-0412

Notice from Musgrave
Law Office

Be advised that after 112 years
the law firm of Musgrave and
Musgrave will be dissolved.
I wish to thank all persons
and/or clients who have supported me throughout my time
as an attorney in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
You will be able to contact my
office at (304) 675-8806 until
December 27, 2012, and then
my residence at (304) 6752350 if you have any questions.
Raymond G. Musgrave,
Esquire
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
Investigated the Offering.

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
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
OH
Evans
Jackson,
800-537-9528

J &amp; C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small.
304-675-2213
304-377-8547
Repairs
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
FINANCIAL

Help Wanted- General

HELP WANTED
The Athens Meigs Educational
Service Center is searching for a
qualified candidate to become part
of its team as a Full-Time Payroll
Clerk. This is a full-time position
with a full benefit package. Interested
applicants should submit a resume
detailing background and experience
to Bryan Swann at 39105 Bradbury
Rd., Middleport, OH 45760. Deadline
for applicants is December 24, 2012
at 2:00 p.m. This position currently
reports to the Meigs County Office
at the above address. A detailed job
description can be viewed at
www.athensmeigs.com/Employment.aspx.

60379532

Money To Lend

Miscellaneous

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)

HYDRAFLEXIN
Attention Joint &amp; Muscle Pain
Sufferers: Clinically proven allnatural supplement helps reduce pain and enhance mobility. Call 888-602-7109
to try Hydraflexin
RISK-FREE for 90 days.

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

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

ANIMALS

Apartments/Townhouses

MEDICAL GUARDIAN
Medical Alert for Seniors-24/7
monitoring. FREE Equipment.
FREE Shipping. Nationwide
Service $29.95/Month CALL
Medical Guardian Today
877-356-1913
MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections-FIX
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help.
1-877-617-7822
MyION DIABETICS
ATTENTION DIABETICS with
Medicare. Get a FREE talking
meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE
home delivery! Best of all, this
meter eliminates painful finger
pricking! Call 877-310-5568

Pets
CHRISTMAS PUPPIES
Free to good homes
Approx 12 wks old
740-378-6214
CKC registered Shih-Tzu pups.
1 male, 1 female. Ready for
Christmas! 304-593-4705.
GIVEAWAY - 3 female Cats Spayed &amp; litter trained - Indoor
Only. Call 446-3897

PARK AVENUE
Buy Gold &amp; Silver Coins - 1
percent over dealer cost For a
limited time, Park Avenue Numismatics is selling Silver and
Gold American Eagle Coins at
1 percent over dealer cost.
1-888-284-9780

AGRICULTURE

Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884

MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

AAG
Ever Consider a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years old?
Stay in your home &amp; increase
cash flow! Safe &amp; Effective!
Call Now for your FREE DVD!
Call Now 866-935-7730
ACCELLER CLASSIFIED
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone. Packages start at
$89.99/mo (for 12 months.)
Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller
today to learn more!
CALL 1-866-636-5984
CREDIT CARD DEBT
Buried in Credit Card Debt?
Over $10,000? We can get you
out of debt quickly and save
you thousands of dollars! Call
CREDIT CARD RELIEF for
your free consultation
1-888-838-6679
FREE-7' Christmas tree
w/lights, good cond.
740-612-0660
HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK
OR BOAT TO HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day
Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free
Towing, All Paperwork Taken
Care Of. 888-740-6292
HIGH SPEED INTERNET
Highspeed Internet EVERYWHERE By Satellite!
Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x
faster than dial-up.)
Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL
NOW &amp; GO FAST!
1-877-358-7040

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

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
AUTOMOTIVE
Trucks
85 Chevy 1/2 ton 4 wheel drive
350-4 speed - 205 transfer
case. Runs Good $1,000.00
Ph 740-367-0550
REAL ESTATE SALES
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
2 Rm studio Apartment New
paint, floors, toilet &amp; shower.
Mostly furnished with washer.
1 car Garage - 7 miles S. on Rt
7 $ 300 mo. $300 deposit NO
PETS UTILITIES NOT INCLUDED Call 740-446-4514
for Application or more info.
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apartment for rent. Pt. Pleasant. Across from PVH Hospital.
$450/month. $400 deposit. 1304-834-1128
For Rent : Second floor apartment overlooking Gallipolis
City Park. LR 1
bedroom,bath,kitchen-dining
area,washer&amp;dryer. $400 per
month Call 446-4425 or 4462325

Notices

Letart Township

Will be accepting bids for the sale of the following items (sold as is):
• 1996 GMC Ton Truck and Plow with 103,650 miles
• 1969 Distributor Truck J-3000 with 186,580 miles
• Troy-Bilt Lawn Tractor Hydro GTX20 with a Kohler 20 HP engine
• Spreader for a dump truck

Bids will be accepted from Wednesday, December 19, 2012
to Thursday, December 27, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. Items can be
viewed at the Letart Township Building. All items are to
be sold as is. Letart Township reserves the right to accept
or reject any or all bids.

Send bids: Letart Township, Joan Manuel,
49115 Manuel Road, Racine, Ohio, 45771

60380424

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Furnished 2 bedroom Apartment - Racine Oh, NO PETS,
740-591-5174

Middleport, 2 BR furnished apt,
no pets, dep &amp; ref, 740-9920165
NICE - 2 bedroom Apartment. Gallipolis $575.00/mo
w/s/g washer/dryer included.
NO PETS 740-591-5174

Nice 2BR Apartment - water &amp;
trash included - $600mo plus
$600 deposit - 446-9585

Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

Help Wanted- General
The Village Of Syracuse is
Now Hiring A Solicitor,
Anyone Interested In Applying
for the Job should mail their resume to:
The Village Of Syracuse
% Solicitor's Job
P.O. Box 266
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
Deadline to have all resume's
in is Jan 4, 2013.
Medical
WANTED : Full-Time Licensed Practical Nurse for a
community group home for
people with developmental disabilities in Bidwell. Hours 8am
- 4pm M-F Current LPN License and Pharmacology certification required. Salary :
$12.00 / hour. Excellent benefit package including Health /
Dental Insurance and paid
leave time. Pre-Employment
drug testing. Send resume to :
Buckeye Community Services,
PO Box 604, Jackson, Oh
45640 or email to
beyecserv@yahoo.com Deadline for applicants 12/20/12
Equal Opportunity Employer.
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes

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

3 BR 2 bath Mobile home on
farm, All Appliances, $600 mo,
Plus $300 utility allowance,
540)729-1331
Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Houses For Rent
2BR, house for Rent in
Kanauga, $450/month,
$450/Deposit. plus utilities
740-441-2707
4 BR, NO PETS, Syracuse,
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RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Education
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Room. M-F Daytime Hours
$7.85/hr. Limited benefits.
Send resume by December 28,
2012 to Early Education Station, 817 30th Street Pt Pleasant, WV 25550.
Help Wanted- General
Positions Available at
Kimes Steel &amp; Rail, Inc.
New Haven, WV
Seeking qualified individuals to
work in manufacturing environment. Prefer individuals with
prior machining, industrial
maintenance or metal fabrication experience. Also seeking
individuals for plant management and engineering. Individuals interested in part time
delivery and part time production with a Class A CDL are
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Pay commensurate with experience and training. Two years
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Apply online ONLY at:
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www.mydailysentinel.com

COUNTY : MEIGS
The following applications
and/or verified complaints were
received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
APPROVED PERMISSION
FOR OPEN BURNING OAC
CHAPTER 3745-19
THE RACINE VOLUNTEER
FIRE DEPT.
47530 STATE ROUTE 124
RACINE OH 45771 OH ACTION DATE : 12/11/2012
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR
IDENTIFICATION NO. : OB-06
-53-35
This final action not preceded
by proposed action and is appealable
to ERAC. Permission to open
burn a house for instruction in
methods
of fire fighting or for research in
the control of fires pursuant to
OAC rules 3745-19-04(C)(2)
and 3745-19-05(A).
12/21

Grave Blankets $5-$30; live
Wreaths $10 &amp; up; Sue's
47310 Morningstar Rd., Racine, Oh 740-949-2115

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B4

Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim 1 away from 900 wins
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)
— Jim Boeheim has experienced a lot since the
dawn of the new century
— prostate surgery, a
national
championship,
induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame, a pair of
Olympic gold medals, the
firing of a lifelong friend
on his staff.
Yet even though it’s been
50 years since he enrolled
as a freshman at Syracuse,
the 68-year-old Boeheim
just keeps rolling along, as
intense and focused as ever
in his 37th year at his alma
mater, worried only about
the next game when he’s
not recruiting or raising
money for cancer research.
“He hasn’t lost a beat,”
said Boeheim’s wife, Juli.
“Jim’s got an intense edge
at all times.”
One that has brought
him to the doorstep of
another milestone — 900
victories. Sometime soon
— the first chance comes
against Detroit on Monday
night in the Carrier Dome
on the court that bears his
name — Boeheim will join
a most elite fraternity, one
with only two other members — Mike Krzyzewski
(936) and Bob Knight
(902), the only men’s
coaches in Division I history to win that many games.
“The sooner we get
through it, the better we’ll
be able to focus on the season,” said Boeheim, 899304 for his career after his

fourth-ranked Orange (90) beat Canisius 85-61 on
Saturday night. “This team
does not care about how
many wins I have. They
care about getting the next
win. That’s it. Everything
else does not matter. It really doesn’t. I’m happy I’m
still here.”
Even though his Orange
have won more games
the past three seasons
than during any threeyear stretch in his career
and Boeheim’s program is
probably better than it’s
ever been, crossing another threshold on the victory
list isn’t fodder for the dinner table.
“We don’t even mention
it at home,” Juli said.
One of a vanishing
breed, Boeheim has been
head coach at Syracuse
since 1976 and has never
had a desire to go anywhere else. His first victory as a college coach
was against Harvard in
Springfield, Mass., a 7548 triumph on Nov. 26,
1976.
“We were behind at
halftime, not playing well
at all,” Boeheim recalled.
“We just kind of went to
something real simple offensively and outscored
them about 20-something
to six in the second half.”
After taking over for
Roy Danforth, Boeheim’s
Orange went 26-4 in his
rookie season, losing in
the second round of the

NCAA tournament.
“We were a good eastern program,” Boeheim
said. “At that time, St.
Bonaventure, Holy Cross,
and all those programs
were just as good as we
were. We were a little
bit better at that point in
time, but not much. There
was really not much difference between all the eastern schools.”
Boeheim has transformed what was a sound
program — Syracuse was
128-71 in eight seasons
under Danforth, going
23-9 and reaching its first
Final Four in the 1974-75
season — and taken the
Orange into the rarefied
air of three national title
games, winning in 2003 in
New Orleans.
Boeheim holds the Division I record for most 20win seasons at 34, has 48
NCAA tournament victories (fifth all-time and one
behind Jim Calhoun) in
29 trips, and tops the Big
East with 402 wins.
And, clearly, he’s in a
better place than he was
a year ago when former
assistant Bernie Fine was
fired amid allegations
of sexual abuse against
two former ball boys. No
charges were filed, and
last month federal authorities dropped their
investigation. Fine has
steadfastly maintained his
innocence.
Boeheim defended his

lifelong friend and endured criticism and scrutiny, with some activists
calling for him to be fired.
He was questioned repeatedly during news conferences about the case and
was sued for defamation
by the ball boys (the case
was thrown out).
Through it all, Boeheim
simply did what he’s done
for nearly four decades —
prepare for the next game.
The Orange responded by
winning a school-record
34 games, narrowly missing another trip to the Final Four.
“He has so much knowledge and experience. I
write in a journal the way
that he handles certain
situations,” said longtime
assistant Mike Hopkins,
who performs the job Fine
held, coaching the big
men. “Last year was 10
years of education in one,
managing and motivating
— Cool Hand Luke.
“Every year you think
you’ve seen it all, and last
year you saw a whole new
chapter just in terms of
what a great leader he is.”
Boeheim has been part
of Krzyzewki’s staff for the
past two Summer Olympics, and the two have
formed a solid friendship.
“Jim is one of the great
coaches of all time, and
he’s an even better man,”
Krzyzewski said. “It will
be an amazing accomplishment when he reach-

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Ethan Hyman | Raleigh News &amp; Observer | MCT photo

Syracuse head coach Jim Boeheim talks with Syracuse’s Dion
Waiters (3) during the second half against North Carolina
State at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Saturday, December 17, 2011. Syracuse defeated N.C. State, 88-72.

es 900 wins. What is even
more amazing is that he’s
done that at one school.
Jim Boeheim and Syracuse University are synonymous. He has built one
of the great brands in college basketball, one that
has withstood the sport’s
most unrelenting test —
the test of time.”
Knight’s Indiana team
deprived Boeheim and the
Orange of a national championship in 1987 when Keith
Smart’s baseline jumper with

4 seconds left gave the Hoosiers a one-point victory.
Knight could be courtside on the ESPN broadcast crew calling the New
Year’s Eve game in the Carrier Dome against Central
Connecticut. If the Orange
remain undefeated and
beat Central Connecticut, Boeheim would pass
Knight on that day.
And despite what the
coach says, the Orange are
stoked for Monday night’s
game.

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Friday, december 21, 2012

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

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, Dec.
21, 2012:
This year you will want to move in
new directions, but often will trip yourself
up. Feedback from those with whom
you have frequent brainstorming sessions could be instrumental. You might
decide to choose a different path if and
when an obstacle gets in your way, but
you will return eventually. You have
endurance; count on that. If you are
single, you might find it difficult to relate
easily, as you are unlikely to offer the
conventional attitudes and gestures of a
single, available person. Summer 2013
might find you more open to relating. If
you are attached, the two of you might
struggle with the traditional roles of
marriage. Be open to working together
on a progressive level. ARIES can be
passionate.
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 Communication flourishes.
Oddly enough, others could decide
to make themselves vulnerable and
speak about their dreams and/or their
fears. You might gain a great deal of
understanding and empathy as a result
of their openness. Tonight: Be spontaneous.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HH You’ll want to keep a certain
matter under wraps. All indications
show that you are a successful team
player, while others tend to be very meoriented. Detach from the actions and
words of those people. Indulge an inspirational friend. Tonight: A party could
dwindle to two.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Someone you care about is
accommodating beyond what you feel
is even possible. Do not count on this
generosity lasting forever. Invite friends
and loved ones to join you in celebrating
not only the weekend but also the holiday! Tonight: And the fun continues.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Take charge while others run
around and get their errands done. You
actually might like being commander of
the ship, and, as a result, you will have
a good time. Be careful with a very
dominant person in your life. Tonight:
Let your imagination invigorate the
moment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Reach out to someone at a
distance whom you care about. This
is best done now rather than in a few
days. Start your holiday round of visits,
and delightful and meaningful conversations will ensue. You will have an effect
on someone special. Tonight: Pinch

yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH You feel far more comfortable than you have in a considerable
amount of time with partners, loved
ones and friends. You will see the difference in their responses. Someone who
often puts a smile on your face might
share an important secret. Tonight: All
smiles.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Personal and family demands start piling up on you.
Between commitments with your real
family and wanting to touch base with
your “family” of friends, you could feel
stretched to the limit. Someone at a distance lets you know that you are cared
for. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.”
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH Pace yourself, and be aware of
what is about to happen. Conversations
will be lively, but you might be taken
aback by what someone shares. Let
your imagination play more into a
relationship in order to add that magic
touch. Tonight: Under the mistletoe, and
very happy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH The magic of the season
starts to play a bigger role in your life.
You might want to reach out to several
people whom you might not get to see
before Christmas. Get together with
them, whether you all go to a fun party
or meet up individually. Tonight: Be
naughty and nice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH You are energized as a result
of the Winter Equinox taking place. You
might need to go for a walk in order
to let go of your innate need to move.
You are like a kid waiting for Christmas
morning. Start making some of your
holiday calls now. Tonight: Head home
early.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH Much is going on behind the
scenes, but it is not overt enough that
you would notice. Money could slip
through your fingers like water if you are
not careful. Of course, this vanishing
act could be symbolic. Take preventive
measures. Tonight: Get together with
friends.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH You can be so spiritual, that
others could be stunned when your
jealousy emerges. You can’t sit on this
situation forever, but you can take some
time to process it. Ask yourself why
you feel so insecure. Maybe that is an
excuse to do some shopping. Tonight:
Be noticed.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Friday, December 21, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B6

Bama meets Irish in classic title game
ARMED FORCES BOWL – AIR FORCE VS. RICE

Rice won its last four games — over teams with
a total of nine wins — to become bowl-eligible for
the first time since 2008. The Owls have averaged
40.5 points during their winning streak. It was a
down year for Air Force, which won only six
games and defeated only one team (Nevada) that
has a winning record.(Air Force 30–27
PINSTRIPE BOWL – SYRACUSE VS. WEST VIRGINIA

West Virginia is known for its gaudy passing
stats — and rightfully so — but Syracuse also
boasts a potent passing attack. Led by senior quarterback Ryan Nassib, the Orange rank 21st nationally with 301.6 yards passing per game. Expect
Nassib &amp; Co. to pick on a West Virginia defense
that ranks 119th in the country in pass defense
(327.1 ypg).(Syracuse 37–33
KRAFT FIGHT HUNGER BOWL — ARIZONA STATE VS. NAVY

There were some struggles — most notably a
four-game losing streak late in the season — but
it’s fair to call Todd Graham’s first year at Arizona
State a success. The Sun Devils went 7–5 overall
and 5–4 in the Pac-12 and beat rival Arizona 41–
34 in Tucson. Navy won six of its last seven games
to finish with an 8–4 record. Arizona State 30–17
ALAMO BOWL – OREGON STATE VS. TEXAS

While Mack Brown continues to underachieve
with (seemingly) elite talent at Texas, Mike Riley
did a masterful job of coaxing nine wins out of an
Oregon State team that won only three games in
2011. The Beavers lost by three points at Washington, by four at Stanford and by 24 to rival Oregon.(Oregon State 28–20
BUFFALO WILD WINGS BOWL – MICHIGAN STATE VS. TCU

There were a bunch of close losses (five by four
points or less) and some unfortunate calls from the
officials (the Nebraska game comes to mind), but
Michigan State’s 2012 season — which ended with
a 6–6 record — has to be considered a disappointment. TCU’s first season in the Big 12 was a mixed
bag. The Frogs went 4–5 in league play, highlighted
by a Thanksgiving night win over Texas.(TCU 17–13
MUSIC CITY BOWL – NC STATE VS. VANDERBILT

Vanderbilt enters postseason play riding a sixgame winning streak — the longest at the school
since 1955. NC State makes the trip to Nashville
with an interim head coach (Dana Bible) after Tom
O’Brien was fired. Senior QB Mike Glennon is
getting some attention as a possible first-round
draft pick. He will test a Vanderbilt secondary that
gave up only six passing TDs.(Vanderbilt 27–23
SUN BOWL — GEORGIA TECH VS. USC

It’s safe to say that USC didn’t plan on spending
New Year’s Eve in El Paso, Texas. The Trojans, the
preseason No. 1 team in the nation, lost four of their
final five games to finish 7–5. Georgia Tech has
lost seven straight bowl games, including all four
on Paul Johnson’s watch. With several weeks to
prepare, opponents are having success slowing
down the Yellow Jackets’ option attack.(USC 33–20
LIBERTY BOWL — IOWA STATE VS. TULSA

It’s a rematch from Week 1, when Iowa State
topped Tulsa 38–23 in Ames. The Golden Hurricane bounced back from that loss to win 10 games,
capped by a 33–27 overtime victory over UCF in
the Conference USA Championship Game. Iowa
State had its ups and downs in the far more rigorous Big 12, recording a 3–6 mark in league play.
The Cyclones have started three different quarterbacks — Steele Jantz, Jared Barnett and Sam
Richardson. Iowa State 27–26
CHICK-FIL-A BOWL — CLEMSON VS. LSU

There will be a ton of talent on the field at the
Georgia Dome on New Year’s Eve. Clemson
boasts one of the nation’s top offenses, but it’s
worth noting that the Tigers’ two lowest-scoring
games came against SEC opponents — 26 vs.

Peter Brouillet

Oregon RB De’Anthony Thomas

Paul Levy

Tim Clark/Athlon Sports

The BCS National Championship Game will be the seventh all-time meeting between these two storied programs. Notre Dame holds a 5–1 advantage, including wins over the
Crimson Tide in two bowl games — the 1973 Sugar Bowl and Orange Bowl the following season. Alabama’s only win in the series came in 1986 at Legion Field in Birmingham.

Auburn and 17 vs. South Carolina. LSU, as usual,
is loaded on defense and has given up more than
22 points only once this season. This might be the
LSU defense’s toughest test to date.(LSU 31–24
HEART OF DALLAS BOWL – PURDUE VS. OKLAHOMA STATE

Oklahoma State ranked fourth nationally in
scoring, averaging 44.7 points per game. Stopping
the opponent was troublesome at times. The Pokes
gave up just under 30 points per game and allowed
an average of 47.2 in their five losses. Purdue is
one of two teams to play in a bowl game after firing its head coach.(Oklahoma State 48–28
GATOR BOWL – MISSISSIPPI STATE VS. NORTHWESTERN

Northwestern probably deserved a better postseason destination but got shipped to Jacksonville
after the Capital One Bowl picked Nebraska and
the Outback Bowl picked Michigan. The Wildcats
went 9–3 and had double-digit leads in the second
half of each loss. Mississippi State won its first
seven games but faded down the stretch as the
schedule got more difficult.(Northwestern 28–20
CAPITAL ONE BOWL — GEORGIA VS. NEBRASKA

Nebraska gave up 70 points in its last outing —
vs. Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship Game
— after giving up a total of 68 in its previous four
games. The Cornhuskers dropped from 31st to
56th nationally in scoring defense after that game.
Georgia, which was a play away from reaching the
national title game, got squeezed out of the BCS
equation. Motivation could be an issue for Mark
Richt’s club.(Georgia 33–21
OUTBACK BOWL – MICHIGAN VS. SOUTH CAROLINA

South Carolina played its way out of the national
title picture by losing two straight (at LSU, at
Florida) in mid-October, but this is still a very good
team that has been outstanding on defense. Michigan lost four games — twice as many as in the first
year of the Brady Hoke era — but it’s important to
note that the four teams that beat Michigan combined to lose only four games.(South Carolina 27–23
BBVA COMPASS BOWL — PITTSBURGH VS. OLE MISS

Pittsburgh is back in the BBVA Compass Bowl
for the third straight season, with its third different coach. Ole Miss was one of the most improved
teams in the nation under first-year coach Hugh

Athlon Board of Experts

Mitch
Light

This Week’s Games &amp; Experts’ Records

115-61
Air Force by 3
Syracuse by 4
Arizona State by 13
Oregon State by 8
TCU by 4
Vanderbilt by 4
USC by 13
Iowa State by 1
LSU by 7
Oklahoma State by 20
Northwestern by 8
Georgia by 12
South Carolina by 4
Ole Miss by 4
Arkansas State by 8
Texas A&amp;M by 1
Stanford by 4
Florida State by 14
Florida by 18
Oregon by 17
Alabama by 4

Armed Forces Bowl – Air Force vs. Rice
Pinstripe Bowl – Syracuse vs. West Virginia
Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl – Arizona State vs. Navy
Alamo Bowl – Oregon State vs. Texas
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl – Michigan State vs. TCU
Music City Bowl – NC State vs. Vanderbilt
Sun Bowl – Georgia Tech vs. USC
Liberty Bowl – Iowa State vs. Tulsa
Chick-fil-A Bowl – Clemson vs. LSU
Heart of Dallas Bowl – Purdue vs. Oklahoma State
Gator Bowl – Mississippi State vs. Northwestern
Capital One Bowl – Georgia vs. Nebraska
Outback Bowl – Michigan vs. South Carolina
BBVA Compass Bowl – Pittsburgh vs. Ole Miss
GoDaddy.com Bowl – Arkansas State vs. Kent State
Cotton Bowl – Oklahoma vs. Texas A&amp;M
Rose Bowl – Wisconsin vs. Stanford
Orange Bowl – Florida State vs. Northern Illinois
Sugar Bowl – Florida vs. Louisville
Fiesta Bowl – Kansas State vs. Oregon
National Championship – Notre Dame vs. Alabama

Braden
Gall
119-57
Air Force by 4
West Virginia by 4
Arizona St by 7
Oregon State by 1
TCU by 4
Vanderbilt by 10
USC by 10
Iowa State by 3
Clemson by 1
Oklahoma St by 14
Mississippi St by 7
Georgia by 4
South Carolina by 4
Ole Miss by 7
Kent State by 3
Texas A&amp;M by 4
Stanford by 10
Florida State by 17
Florida by 14
Oregon by 7
Notre Dame by 1

Freeze. In 2011, the Rebels were outgained by an
average of 174.2 yards in SEC games en route to
an 0–8 mark in league play. This year, the Rebs
outgained SEC foes by an average of 5.4 yards per
game and went 3–5 in the league.(Ole Miss 27–23
GODADDY.COM BOWL — ARKANSAS STATE VS. KENT STATE

Both teams experienced tremendous success in
2012 — Arkansas State won the Sun Belt title, and
Kent State went 11–1 in the regular season. And
both teams lost their head coach, with Arkansas
State’s Gus Malzahn taking over at Auburn and
Kent State’s Darrell Hazell now the boss at Purdue. Arkansas State 28–20
COTTON BOWL — OKLAHOMA VS. TEXAS A&amp;M

The former Big 12 rivals meet in one of the most
compelling matchups of the 2012 bowl season.
Texas A&amp;M is fresh off of a dream first season in
the SEC. The Aggies went 6–2 in the league thanks
to an offense that averaged an astounding 546.3
yards in conference games. That offense, of
course, was directed by Heisman Trophy-winner
Johnny Manziel. OU entered the season with national championship aspirations, but the Sooners
lost two games — both at home.(Texas A&amp;M 34–33
ROSE BOWL — WISCONSIN VS. STANFORD

Wisconsin is the first five-loss team to play in
the Rose Bowl, but three of the Badgers’ five
losses came in overtime and the other two came
by three points. Stanford, like Wisconsin, is playing in a BCS bowl for the third straight season. The
Cardinal defense has been strong all season —
they rank third nationally in rushing defense (87.7
ypg) — and the offense received a boost when redshirt freshman Kevin Hogan was inserted into the
starting lineup in early November.(Stanford 28–24
ORANGE BOWL – FLORIDA STATE VS. NORTHERN ILLINOIS

Northern Illinois’ roster might not stack up too
well when compared to Florida State’s, but the
Huskies will have arguably the most exciting
player on the field. Quarterback Jordan Lynch
ranks fourth in the nation in rushing (136.2 ypg)
and leads the MAC in passing efficiency. Florida
State’s season has to be considered a disappointment — this team had the talent to compete for a
national title — but the Seminoles did win the ACC
title for the first time since 2005.(Florida State 37–23

SUGAR BOWL — FLORIDA VS. LOUISVILLE

Things are good at Louisville these days. The
Cards held on to coach Charlie Strong — despite a
lucrative offer from Tennessee — and the school
has found some stability (we think) by moving to
the ACC. A win over Florida on a national stage
would do wonders for Louisville’s recruiting efforts. Florida didn’t reach the BCS National Championship Game, but you can argue that no team had
a better résumé than Will Muschamp’s team. The
Gators beat Texas A&amp;M, LSU, South Carolina and
Florida State. That’s strong.(Florida 28–10
FIESTA BOWL — KANSAS STATE VS. OREGON

Kansas State and Oregon have proven that it is
possible to move up on the college football food
chain. Consider the following: These two programs have a combined 11 appearances in the final
AP top 10 since 1995; they combined for one
(Oregon in 1948) prior to ’95. Both teams were
one game away from playing for the BCS National
Championship this season. Oregon lost by three
points at home to Stanford on the same night that
K-State lost at Baylor 52–24. The Ducks’ speed
will be too much for the Wildcats.(Oregon 38–21
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP — NOTRE DAME VS. ALABAMA

Two of the elite defensive teams in college football will meet to decide the national championship. Alabama leads the country in total
defense, allowing only 246.0 yards per game.
Notre Dame leads in the category that means the
most — scoring defense. The Fighting Irish are
allowing 10.3 points per game and have only surrendered 10 total touchdowns in 12 games. And
while some have knocked Notre Dame’s schedule, nine of the 12 teams Irish defeated in 2012
are playing in a bowl game. And that doesn’t include Miami, which had enough wins to play in
the postseason but self-imposed a bowl ban due
to looming NCAA sanctions. We’ve established
that both defenses are outstanding, so this game
could come down to which offense makes the
most plays. And Alabama figures to have the edge
on that side of the ball. The Crimson Tide feature
a fourth-year junior at quarterback, two running
backs who have rushed for 1,000 yards and the
nation’s top offensive line.(Alabama 24–20

Steven
Lassan

Rob
Doster

Charlie
Miller

Nathan
Rush

Patrick
Snow

Consensus

118-58
Air Force by 7
West Virginia by 3
Arizona State by 9
Oregon State by 2
TCU by 5
Vanderbilt by 7
USC by 14
Tulsa by 3
LSU by 6
Oklahoma State by 20
Northwestern by 5
Georgia by 8
South Carolina by 3
Ole Miss by 6
Arkansas State by 2
Texas A&amp;M by 3
Stanford by 1
Florida State by 13
Florida by 14
Oregon by 7
Alabama by 3

120-56
Air Force by 7
West Virginia by 6
Arizona State by 10
Oregon State by 4
TCU by 3
Vanderbilt by 6
USC by 10
Tulsa by 3
LSU by 5
Oklahoma State by 10
Northwestern by 3
Georgia by 7
South Carolina by 4
Ole Miss by 6
Kent State by 3
Texas A&amp;M by 1
Stanford by 3
Florida State by 12
Florida by 10
Oregon by 7
Alabama by 8

118-58
Air Force by 7
West Virginia by 3
Navy by 1
Texas by 4
TCU by 3
Vanderbilt by 6
USC by 3
Iowa State by 4
LSU by 6
Oklahoma State by 10
Mississippi State by 3
Georgia by 3
South Carolina by 3
Ole Miss by 2
Arkansas State by 2
Oklahoma by 3
Stanford by 7
Florida State by 17
Florida by 14
Oregon by 7
Alabama by 11

113-63
Rice by 4
West Virginia by 10
Arizona State by 9
Texas by 3
TCU by 2
Vanderbilt by 8
USC by 10
Tulsa by 3
LSU by 3
Oklahoma State by 7
Mississippi State by 4
Georgia by 13
South Carolina by 2
Ole Miss by 5
Arkansas State by 6
Texas A&amp;M by 7
Wisconsin by 3
Northern Illinois by 3
Louisville by 1
Oregon by 10
Notre Dame by 1

118-58
Air Force by 2
West Virginia by 1
Navy by 5
Oregon State by 2
Michigan State by 3
Vanderbilt by 3
USC by 7
Tulsa by 3
Clemson by 1
Oklahoma State by 7
Northwestern by 1
Georgia by 5
South Carolina by 1
Ole Miss by 5
Kent State by 1
Texas A&amp;M by 3
Stanford by 2
Florida State by 12
Florida by 10
Oregon by 7
Alabama by 8

118-58
Air Force by 3
West Virginia by 3
Arizona State by 6
Oregon State by 1
TCU by 2
Vanderbilt by 6
USC by 10
Tulsa by 1
LSU by 4
Oklahoma State by 13
Northwestern by 1
Georgia by 7
South Carolina by 3
Ole Miss by 5
Arkansas State by 2
Texas A&amp;M by 2
Stanford by 3
Florida State by 12
Florida by 12
Oregon by 9
Alabama by 5

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