<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3821" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3821?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T21:18:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13740">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8e43e5e44779159fe4d794c0e44d95f0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ac8d1fd5c32b6630296f9007665c39d7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13556">
                  <text>•

fage B6 • 'The Daily Sentinel

•
Thund.ay, January 3t aoo8

www .myd~ilysentiilel.com

Ohio State National
Championship edition
inside today's Sentinel

Another way to .describe LStJ's Glenn Dorsey: Clairvoyant
.

ana I'd do it again, especially the way it worked out for
us. It was all worth it."
NEW ORLEANS
With five weeks between
Glen11 Dorsey didn't need to No. 2 LSU's past game- a
play for a national champi- victory in the Southeastern
onship an hour from his Conference championship
hometown to validate his on Dec. I - and its next
decision to pass up a huge contest against No. I Ohio
payday in tfie NFL last year. State in the BCS natioqal
Even after he returned to championship
game
LSU, he certainly could Monday night, Dorsey said
have been excused for sit- he expects to be in top form
ting out a few games after a by kickoff.
""- stomach-turn in~
ill~ gal
His future, meanwhile,
chop block in m1dseason left should be brighter than ever
him nursing a sprained right when the game ends.
knee. .
. At 6-foot-2, 303 pounds,
Still, the way it turned out Dorsey was expected to be
made the Tigers' star defen- taken in the first round of
sive tackle seem almost last year's NFL draft. Then
clairvoyant, didn't it?
he decided to go back to
"A IN of people told me I LSU.
did the wrong thing,"
This season, even while
Dorsey recalled of both his · playing at less than full
decision to return to the strength and battling conTigers, followed by his· stant double-teams, his stainsistence to play hurt. "I tistical line through 13
could have easily sat on the games is impressive: 39 solo
bench because of what I had tackles, 25 assists, 11 l/2
at stake, but it wasn't about .tackles for losses, six sacks,
me. It w~s about my team four pass breakups and four ·
BY BRETT MARTEL
ASSOCIATED

PRE~S

quarterback hurries.
our board, it means a lot."
That got him named to the
Dorsey is from in
All-American team for a Gonzales, a small town
second time. He also won along Interstate 10 between
the Outland, Lombardi, Lott Baton Rouge and New
and Nagurski awards as the Orleans. Like many who
nation's premier defensive grow up in the rural South,
lineman.
he's loved football for as
On a personal level, there long as he can remember.
wasn't much more he could
However, _leg braces he
win, other than the Heisman wore as a youngster preTrophy. Perhaps he might vented him from playing in
have contended for that as the ~ard with friends and
well if not for the midseason relauves. Or if they let him
knee injury and a bruised play, they picked him last.
tailbone that slowed him
What was· an impairment
late in the season.
back then instilled m him a
"lt felt like I won the seemingly
inexhaustible
Heisman,'' Dorsey s!tid. "I drive to excel. That served
won all of those awards and him well after the braces
my team got in the national carne off and when he grew
championship game. I felt into such an imposing preslike my team . won the ence.
Heisman.
· Now, coaches and team"Y'all just- got to under- mates gush when asked to
stand how happy I am we're describe Dorsey or compare
in the · national . champi- him to other greats in the
onship game. You come in. game.
You set goals at the begin- · ''Glenn is at a point now
ning of the year. Just to get where you don't have to
the opportunity to achieve make comparisons. Glenn
that b1g goal, the last goal on Dorsey is Glenn Dorsey,"

said LSU defensive coordi- injuries and the significance
nator Bo Pelini, who will of continuing-go play.
become head coach at
"I was beat up, but everyNebraska after this season. body was beat up," he said.
"I think he is as decorated a "I didn't really dwell on it. I
football player that has ever still had a successful year, so
come through LSU and it is no regrets, no nothing, I'm
with good reasoll .... It is the just enjoying it."
type of person he· i.s. the
There's been' a lot to
character he has and the enjoy.
leadership that he brings to One thing that attracted
the table that makes him Dorsey -to LSU was the fact
special...
Tiger Stadium was about a
"If everyone had his work 20-minute
drive from
ethic, integrity and charac- · Gonzales. His family and
ter, no matter what the talent friends got· to see him play
they would have his sue- with re~ularity.
.
cess."
Wantmg another year of
LSU defensive tackle that, as well as another shot
.Marlon Favorite said the at a national charnpionshi~
example Dorsey set with his made the decision easy.
tou~,;hness and commitment
"I take a lot of pride in it.
dunn~ his injuries was This is where I'm from ._ This
inspinn~.. .
. is my home. I like playinf,
The tnJunes "made h1m for the state of LouiSiana, ·
work harder," Favorite said. Dorsey said. "Just playing
"His work ethic is through for my home state ... It influthe roof... I think he should enced me a lot. ... I feel like
have won the Heisman."
I made the right decision."
When those things are
Almost clairvoyant, some
repeated to Dorsey, he might say. Like he knew
. quickly downplays both the something nobody else did.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-o
,)

ll·· i\ I'S
~- • N 0 ·
· • \ 'ul · .)

SPORTS
• Southern muscles
Miller for second win of
season. See Page 81

Big Ben's throwing may·be Steelers' only chance against Jaguars
BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH - Ben
Roethlisberger,
the
Pittsburgh Steelers' MVP in
the eyes of almost everyone
except his teammates,
couldn't be more irritated.
EveFywliere he goes in·
the Steelers' practice complex, he can't get away
from the Jaguars - much
like he couldn't while bt&lt;ing
sacked five times during
Jacksonville's 29-22 victory in Pittsburgh three weeks
ago.
The tape of the Steelers'
only home loss this season
is being looped constantly
in their meeting rooms, the
pla~ers' lounge, the team
off1ces. It's all Jaguars all
the time as the Steelers ·prepare for Saturday night's
rematch in the AFC. playoffs, and Roethlisberger has
seen enough.
Flipping · the channel
doesn't help. No matter
what TV he turns on,
Roethlisberger keeps · see-

ing Fred Taylor's decisive
TD run in the final two
minutes and his 147 yards
rushing. David Garrard's
three TD passes. The sacks.
Maurice Jones-Drew's 69
yards rushing.
"It's annoying, honestly,"
Roethlisberger
said
Wednesday. "You get tired.
You want to watch
SportsCenter or see something else , CNN, I pon't
know, something. . The
Cooking Channel, some-.
thing."
Roethlisberger suspects
this is coach Mike Tomlin's
brainwashing plot to get the
Steeters so upset, so riled
up, they take out their frus!rations on the Jaguars.
However, the Steelers,
losers of three of four as
they limp into the playoffs
with a patchwork lineup,
know it will take more than
hostility and a hijacked TV
signal to beat Jacksonville.
They almost certainly
need a big game from Big
Ben, whose fourth NFL
season has been easily his

best, even if linebacker to kind of r,ut it more on his Franco Harris days of 30James Harrison unexpect- shoulders,' Pro Bowl guard plus years ago. Yet they
edly. beat him out for · the Alan Faneca said.
crossed up the Colts and
players' MVP award.
With 1,316-yard rusher Broncos in the AFC playDespite being ~acked 46 Willie Parker out with a offs two years ago by using
times, second most in team broken leg and the Steelers Roethlisberger's throwing
history, Roethlisberger has down to their No. 3 left to seize early leads and the
a 65.3 completion percent- tackle in Trai Essex, momentum, then went to
age while throwing a team- Roethlisberger's throwing the run to use up the clock
record 32 touchdown pass- and his proven ability to ·and stay in the lead.
es and 1I interceptions. His win likely represent their
"He played phenomenal,"
! 04.1 passer rating was sec- biggest and best hope ·of Hines Ward said. "He got
ond in the league only to beatin~,;
Jacksonville. us to the Super Bowl."
Tom Brady's ll7.2 .
Roethhsberger is 44-17 as
The Steelers' one dis· He would seem too young an NFL starter, 5-l in the \)ernible
edge
over
at 25' for any comeback playoffs.
Jacksonville, besides the
awards, yet it was a major
The Steelers, throwing_to home-field advantage on
bounce-back year · for win in'the postseason? How their awful field, appears to
Roethlisberger following . th&lt;!t's for a personality be Roethlisberger's playoff
his post-Super Bowl and change?
experience. Jacksonville
motorcycle crash miseries · "It would be nice, but QB David Garrard's postof 2006: an 8-8 record, a we'll . see what happens," season record is 0-0.
league-high 23 intercep- Roethlisberger Said. "I
"The first 'time I went
tions, a 75.4 passer rating. don't think we will just . through this (in 2004), you
Roethlisberger did a lot abandon the running game. didn't know what to
of growing up while carry- I 'know we won't. We've expect"
Roethlisberger
ing the Steelers to a 10-6 thrown the ball when we said. "it was like, 'Oh, this
record and their first AFC need to and we've proven is just another 'game.' You
North title and home play- we can win the game when don't realize that it's not.
off game in three years.
we have to throw it."
It's not just another game.
"I think the whole year,
The Steelers traditionally Every m1stake is magnified.
he's been kind of handed lean on the run during the Everything you do has to be
the offense a little bit more postseason, dating · to the precise.:•

'

~

.

.

\\\\\\,mHiaihst'nlilwl.t·om
.

Man,charged with pedestrian injury, leaving scene
BY BRtAN J. REm.

L. Story on the third-degree

felony . charge. Brothers is
also charged in Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
- A Mayor's Court with.·failure
Pomeroy man is charged to control and leaving the
with aggravated vehicular scene of a crash, according
assault after allegedly injur- to Police Chief Bruce Swift.
ing a pedestrian and striking
Swift said he expects the
five parked cars in down- Pomeroy Police Department
town Middleport early to file additional charges,
Thursday.
including driving under the
William Brothers, 38, · influence and failure to conPomeroy, was released from trol, after officers there
jail on a personal recog- apprehended Brothers on
nizance bond yesterday Liberty Lane.
after appearing before
Michael Dent of North
&lt;;:ount~ Court Judge Steven Second Avenue was treated
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

and later released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital for
head lacerations and other
injuries. He was walking on
the sidewalk near Oftice
Service and Supply when he
was struck by a motor vehicle. Swift said it is unclear
whether Dent·was struck by
Brothers· truck or by one of
the five parked vehicles
Brothers allegedly struck.
Owners of the vehicles
damaged in the incident are
O'Dell Blake, Middleport;
Andrew Adams, address
un·reported; Clare Sisson;

Pomeroy;
John Tillis,
Middleport; and Laura Noel,
address unreported. Blake's
car was .parked on Race
Street, and the others were
parked ori either side of North
Second Avenue between
Race and Coal Streets.
Swift said witnesses
reported seeing Brothers
driving erratically {town'
Race Street just after mid. night, when he lost control
of his truck on the snowy,
icy street and struck Blake's
vehicle, knocking it into the
intersection. Brothers then

allegedly turned onto North
Second toward Pomeroy.
struck the vehicles owned
by Adams, Sisson and Tillis,
before striking Noel's veh,i. cle. Tillis's van and Noel's
car were knocked onto the
sidewalk.
After striking . Dent and
the vehicles, Brothers
allegedly continued traveiing to Pomeroy, where he
was apprehended and jailed.Swift said witnesses. are
still being interviewed and
the i_nvesti~ation into ·the
case IS contmumg.

'Relay' ·
kick•ofT

'

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

//

on the .road two Januarys
ago, only weeks after the
Bengals won in Pittsburgh,
but they did. Nor were they
supposed to win in
Indianapolis, where they
had. lost by three touch·
downs two months before,
but they did.
"It's
intriguing,"
.Roethlisberger said. "It
reminds me of a couple of
years
ago
with
Indianapolis. I hope it turns
out that way. It's good to
pial a home game. That's
big in the playoffs:"

OBITUARIES
Page A3
• Timothy D. Bnnager
1 Pauline S. Grinstead
• Marie Polk Randazzo

INSIDE .
• Seniors alerted about
reserve mortgages by
AARP. See Page A3
1 Ariel auditions.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page A3
• Resolved.
See Page A4
• A Hunger·For More.
See Page A4
• Living wHh cystic
fibrosis and God.
See Page A6

WEATIIER

Details

t: 1-1 &lt;) V I :R

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

PICe A3

2 SECflONS - 12 PAGES

The Daily Sentinel
740-992-2155

Beth Seraont;photo

Yesterday work continued on the new Pomeroy Mason Bridge as the channe·I Is slowly but steadily bridged. A revised cost
estimate and equipment dela)IS made it Pomeroy's top story In 2007.

Bridge 'drama' top Pomeroy story
BETH SERGENT
(Editor's note: The following is the
last in a series of top news stories from
the villages of Racine, Syracuse,
Ru(land and Pomeroy in 2007.)

POMEROY - Delays in equipment. a revised cost estimate and more
than a year past its completion date
makes the ongoing saga of the new
Pomeroy Mason Bridge construction
Pomeroy's top story of 2007 ..
The project has seen its share of
delays with the latest completion date
being fall of 2008 (the original was
Summer 2006) and a revised cost estimate of $64.7 million, up from the $60
million reported in 2006, and nearly
$20' million over the original estimate

of $45 .8 million. At the time that
$45.8 million was roughly three million under the engineer's estimate.
A major equipment delay last year
resulted in a nine-month draught of
working on spanning the channel. The
equipment, a form traveler, was
resigned for . safety precautions. A
form traveler· is a piece of equipment
contractors use to help construct the
span'across the river though it is not a
structurally part of the bridge. ·
Expected to arrive in April, the form
traveler didn't completely arrive until
August, allowing workers to begin the
process of assembly.
Workers did have the form travelers
for both the completed West Virginia
and Ohio towers assembled aod raised
in. October and work continues ·on

bridging the channeL Last year work ·
remained steady on the excavation and
installatiorr.of the retaining wall near
the bridge which is also ongoing ,
Other top stories in Pomeroy last
year include:
• The Community Improvement
Corporation exercised its first right of
refusal on the property where rhe old
Pomeroy Junior High School used to
sit, agreeing to match the $70,000
offer from Grace Episcopal Church to
the Village of Pomeroy. The CICalso
agreed to donate 24 feet of frontage to
the church for parking.
p
• omeroy voted to increase sewer
rates with village officials saying the
Ohio En~iionmental Protection
Please see PoineJOY, Al

BY BRIAN J, REED

-

Annie's Mailbox
A3
,
Calendars
A3,
· Classifieds
B3-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
.A2
Faith • Values
A4-6
Movies
A3
Obituaries
AJ
Sports
B Section
Weather
A3
© aoo8 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

POMEROY ' - Meigs
County is preparing for
another Relay for Life
(RFL) season with a kickoff event.taking place from
5:30p.m. - 7 p.m., Jan . I0 in
the banquet room of the
Wild Horse Cafe.
Current team captains/team
members and anyone interested in forming a team or
participating are encouraged
to stop by to pick up team
captain packets with information about the RFL and fundnosing ideas (including but
not limited to ACS' Daffodil
Days flower and Boyd'sBear
sales) and/or information
abo11t programs sponsored by
the American Cancer Society
(ACS). Light· refreshments
will also be served:
The RFL, which is ACS'
signature. event, i.s :a unique
commumty acuvuy that
allows participants from all
walks of hfe including
patients, medical support
staff, corporations, civic
organizations, churches and
commpnity volunteers to
join the 11ght against cancer.
RFL represents the hope that
those, lost to cancer will
never be forgotten; that those
who face cancer will be supported and that one day cancer will be eliminated.
The 2008 Meigs County
Relay for Life will take
place on May 9-10 at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds:
Teams consisting of family
members, worksites, churcbes community groups, etc.
coordinate · fund-raisers for
the ACS. Support is provided
for team efforts during team
captain meetings which are
scheduled from 5:30 p.m. ,
6:30p.m. on both Feb_7 and
March 6 at Bun's Party Bam.
In 2007, Meigs County .
grossed · approximately
$55,000 via team fund-raisers and corporate sponsorships for the ACS via RFL.
ACS reinvests a portion of
th·e funds back mto local
communities by awarding
Community
Investment
Grants; implementation of
worksite wellness programs;
promotion ofschool health ;
establishment of cancer
resources centers such as the
Ferman E: Moore ACS
Cancer Resource Center,
which is situated within the
Meigs County Health
Department; provision of
the Patient Navigator ,,
Program; support of local
cancer survivors; etc. ACS
supports cancer research ·
and advocates for legislation
to enhance and '(Jromote
health and related services.

member of council. She
served on .the Board of
. Public Affairs until it Wlili
MIDDLEPORT -Jean disbanded in favor of a viiCraig was elected president Jage administrator.
of Middleport -Village
The president of village
Council at a special meeting council presides at the
Wednesday night. '
meetings of village council
It was the first meeting in the absence of the mayor,
of council led by the vii- and conducts mayor's court
!age's new mayor, Michael in his absence, as welL
Gerlach, and ·attended by . Craig and Gerlach began
new council member, Julia state-sponsored training for
Proctor. Gerlach replaces · mayors and council presiSandy Iannarelli as mayor, dents
yesterday
in
. and Proctor replaces Columbus.
Stephen Houchins on•
Council will hold i~s firsi
council.
regular meeting of the xear
Other council members op Jan. 14. At that ume,
are Sandy Brown, Shawn Gerlach will appoint com- ·
Rice , Craig Wehrung, _and mittee members to serve
!he Moore.
for the remainder of 2008.
.
B~an J. Reedjpboto
Houchins'
retirement Council will also adopt
For more information
Middleport
Mayor
Michael
Gerlach
and
Council
President about RFL or to form a
from council left the f!?Si- · rules of council and other
tion or' council president matters , relating to the Jean Craig are pictured after Wednesday night's council ream, contact JoAnn Crisp
open. Craig is in the third co.uncil's organization for meeting, where Craig was appointed president for 2008. at 949-2365 or Courtney
year of her 11rst term as a the new year.
The new council Will hold its first meeting on Jan . 14.
Sim at 992-1/58.
- BREEIJ@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

1

~oint ~leasant l\egister

on

INDEX

..

nw.mydai~tribuae.com
.

·· ·
.._ "'-

,,

scheduled

17,()()() H&lt;&gt;USf1:H&lt;&gt;I_Jl&gt;S!

'

·,.. · ._

:.!UOK

event

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentine~ And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri·County Marketplace!

740-446-2342

1'1'11&gt;\'
' •Jr\''
' "
· •.
• "~~ 1' :\"Y
n.. ..,a.,

.

'

REACH 3 COUNTIES

. ~be ~allipolts iailp lrtbune

111 ,

In their 75-year history,
the Steelers have never lost
twice to the. same team in
Pittsburgh in one season,
much Iess in successive
home games: Still, the
Steelers are a home underdog, partiy because it
seems they have so ·little
left after losing five key
starters to injury. and dropping four of their last seven
game$.
No matter. They weren't
expected to beat Cincinnati

.. ' ..

RI~A

Kansas beats Hokies
in Orange Bowl, B,t

----------·

--

-

-- -·

••

�OPINION

The ·Daily Sentitiel

Friday, January 4,

PageA2
Friday, January 4 1 2008

.,

2008

:~:Obituaries

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydellyeentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich .
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-New's Editor

.

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievanc~s.
-The Flrsi Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

..

.

. Today is Friday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2008. There are
362 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Jan. 4, 1965, President
Johnson outlined the goals of his Great Society jn his State
of the Union Address.
~
On this date: In 1821, the woman who would be named
America's first native-born saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton,
died in Emmitsburg, Md.
In 1896, Utah was admitted as the 45th state.
.In 1904, the Supreme Court, in Gonzalez v. Williams,
ruled that Puerto Ricans were not aliens and could enter the
United States freely; however, the court stopped. short of
declaring them U.S. citizens.
.
In 1948, Burma (now called Myanmar) became independent of British rule.
In 1951, during the Korean War, North Korean and
Communist Chinese forces captured the city of Seoul.
In 1960, French author Albert Camus died in an ;mtomobile accident at age 46.
In 1965,' poet T.S. Eliot died in London at age 76.
. In 1974, .President Nixon refused to hand over tape
recordings and d()!:uments subpoenaed by the Senate
Watergate Committee.
.
In 1987, 16 people were killed when an Amtrak train
bound from Washington to Boston collided with Conrail
locomotives that had crossed into its path from a side track
in Chase, Md.
In 1995, the I 04th Congress convened, the first entirely
under Republican control since the Eisenhower era.
Five years ago: As President Bush put the finishing
touches on an economic ~rowth package costing $674 billion over 10 years, Democrats who wanted his job pledged
to scuttle what they characterized as a plan that would help
the wealthy without reviving the economy. Oscar-winning
cinematographer Conrad L. Hall died in Santa Monica,
Calif., at age 76.
.
One year ago: Nancy Pelosi was elected the first female
speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives; Keith Ellison
of Minnesota's 5th District became the first Muslim member
of Congress. Harriet Miers resigned as White House counsel.
Vincent Sardi Jr., owner of Sardi 's restaurant, the legendary
Broadway watering hole, died in Berlin, Vt., at age 91.
Today's Birthdays: Actress ·Barbara Rush is 81. Football
Hall-of-Fame coach Don Shula is 78. Opera singer Grace
Bumbry is 71. Country singer Kathy Forester (The Forester
Sisters) is 53. Actress Ann Magnuson is 52. Country singer
Patty Loveless is 51. Rock singer Michael Stipe (R.E.M.)
is 48. Actor Patrick Cassidy is 46. Actqr Dave Foley is 4~.
Singer-musician Cait O'Riordan is 43. Actress Julia
Ormond is 43. Teimis player Guy Forget is 43. Country
singer Deana Carter is 42. Rock musician Benjamin Dl\fVill
(Crash Test Dummies) is 41. Actor Jeremy Licht is 37.
Actress-singer Jill Marie Jones is 33.
Thought for Today: "Our civilization is still in a middle
sta_ge, no longer wholly guided by instim,:t, not _yet wholly
gutded by reason." - Theodore Pretser, Amencan author
(1871-1945).

It was a simple commercial, with Mike Huckabee
posed in front of a set of
scandalously· empty whit.e
bookshelves that, when
framed just right beside a
Christmas tree, formed a
glowing cross behind the
candidate.
And, lo, the former
Southern Baptist pastor told
the voters: "Are you about
worn out by ·all the television commercials you've
been seeing, mostly about
politics? I don't blame you.
At this time of year, sometimes it's nice to pull aside
from aU of that and just
remember that what really
matters is a celebration of
the birth of Christ and being
with our family and our
friends. I hope that you and
your family will have a
magnificent Christmas season. And on behalf of all of
us, God bless and merry
Christrims."
This caused a firestorm
among the political elites
that symbolized the year's
biggest trend in religion
news - the revenge of the
infamous "values voters"
who, apparently, remain
alive .and well in church
pew's across the heartland.
But will the Republican
Party win this . "pew gap"
contest again? That was the
question that dominated the
Religion
Newswriters
Association poll to determine the top 10 religion
news stories m 2007. There
were plenty of new signs
that the so-called religious
right exists, but that it isn't a
monolith after all.
Here.' s how America's
religion-beat
specialists

'
Terry
MaHingly

c;Iescribed the year's top
story: "Evangelical. voters
ponder whether they will be&lt;
able to support the eventuaf
Republican candidate, as
they'did in 2004, because of
questions about the leaders'
faith and-or platform. Many
say they would be reluctant
to vote for Mormon Mitt
Romney."
Then, in the No. 2 slot,
was .the flip side of that
political coin: "Leading
Democratic
presidential
candidates make conscious
efforts to woo faith-based
voters after admitting failure to do so in 2004."
The rise of Huckabee was
the strongest sign that the
"values voters" are still out
there, but that they are not
meshing well with the
Republican Party establishment. The latest Southern
Baptist from Hope, Ark.,
has been preaching a blend
of conservative morality
and populist economics that
made him sound like an oldfashioned · Bible
Belt
Democrat from the days
before Roe v. Wade .
"The Huckabee surge represents a break with what
has been standard operating
procedure within the GOP
for more than a generation,"
argued columnist E.J.
of
the
Dionne. Jr.,

THEytRE

GONE.
..

The Daily Sentinel
(UsPs 213-880)
Ohio Valley Publlahlrig Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy. Ohio. $econd,-cla&amp;a postage
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) ·paid at Pomeroy.
992·2t56 .
-bor: Tho Aesoclated Pr098 and

Our main number Ia
(740) 992-2156.
Department extension• are:

News
Editor: Chanene Hoetlich, Exl. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E~. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

the Ohk) Newspaper Association.
Poltmnter: Send address correc·
lion&amp; to The Dally .Sentinel, 111 Court

StrO.t, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

.

Subecrlptton Retea
By cerrler or motor route
One month .•• • •.. ....'1 0.27
One ye11r .. . .. .......'115.84
Dally .. ....... .. .... .. .50'

Senior Citizen ratea
One month .. . .. . .. ...'1 0.27
One year . . .. . .... .. .'103.90

Advertising
Sullocribef8 ahould rvrnit In advance
Outalde 5alea: Dave .Harris, Ext. 15 -toltellollySentlr.o. No subscrip·
Outolde 5aleo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 tlon by mal pennltted in areas where
home carrier oervtc:e 18 available.
ClatoJCirc.: ~udy Clark, Ext. tO .
'

General Manager
Chariene Hoetlich; Ext. 12

·

E-mail:

news Omydailysentinel.com

Weli:
www.mydailysentinel.com

Marie
Lorena
Polk
Randazzo was the daughter
of the · late Claren ce and
. Agnes Rector Polk of Long
Bottom, born Oct. 28, 1918.
Marie was the youn gest of
'five
si sters:
Gladys
Lightfritz.,
Robert a
Richbloom ,
Garnet
Haymond ,
and
Mable
. , Whitney and three, brothers:
Otmer Polk, Ernest Polk and
Claude Polk. Marie was the
mother of Dean, and Wayne
'County Deputy Sheriff
William " Jay" Ho.lman, and
James P. and Ted Scott ;
Marie Polk Randazzo
grandmother of Rachel
. Scott. ·Linda (Scott) Moore and Sonya (Scott) Kowalski ;
great grandmother of Seth Scott, Megan , Matthew and Scott
Moore and Grace Kowal ski. Marie migrated to Wayne,
Mich., after World War 11 with her hu.sban~. William
Holman, and they made their home there for many years.
Funeral Will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 6, 2008, at
. Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va., with Rev.
Bob · Robinson officiating. Burial will follow at
Ravenswood Cemetery.
·
Friends may vi sit the funeral home from .5: 30 to 8 p.m.
on Saturday, and may e~pre ss condol ences to
roush I us2000 @yahoo.com.
.

Timothy D. Brinager
Timothy D. 'Tim" Brinager, 46, of Racine, died Dec. 30,
·. 2007 at his home ..
· Bnrn on Jan. 27 in Chicago, Ill. he was the son of Cecil
.D. and Ruby Muncy Brinager of Racine. He was the sales
and shipping manager for Tye Brinager and Sons Produce .
Tim was saved and baptized in September 2~Js and
·When he went home to be with the Lord he was s
und. ed by his loving family. He was a 1979 graduate o Racine
'Southern High School where he excelled playing basketball and received numerous awards including state honors
for his basketball talent.
Tim was a member of the Racine Gun Club for 28 years
and also a member of the Forked Run Gun Club. He was an
. avid hunter and an avid NASCAR fan. He will always ne
• remembered for his kind and generous heart and his close. ness to his friend s.
'. In addition to hi s parents, he is survived by three sons,
Timothy Scott Brinager and hi s wife Janie of Racine, Cory
Dalton ·Brinager of Syracuse, and Braxton Autry Brinage[
· of Michigan ; a grandson, Cruz Brinager of Racine; a loving
COfJipanion, Chanda Russell of Racine; a sister, Camellia
Huddleston arid her husband, Michael of Racine; a brother,
Tye Brinager and his wife Lori of Portland; two nieces,
· Ashley and Jordan, three -nephews, Mitchell, Dustin and
· :Cameron, and many aunts, uncles cousins and friend s.
· · · Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 5,
· ·2008 at the Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with burial in·Greenwood Cemetery, Racine . Friends may visi't the
family at Roush Funeral Home Friday, Jan . 4, from 6 to 9
p.m. Friends m~y express their condolences to the Brinager
family at roushlu s2000,@yahoo.com.

Pauline S. Grinstead, 95, of New Haven, W.Va. died on Jan.
2, 2008 at the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehab Center.
She was preceded in death by her husband Walter "Pete"
Grinstead .
-Funeral services will be held on Sunday Jan . 6, 2008 at 2
p.m. at the Anderson Funeral Hoine in New Haven with
Rev. Cliff West officiating. Burial will follow at Graham
Cemetery. Visiting hours are on Saturday 5 to S p.m. at the
funeral home. A registry is available online by vi siting
www.andersonlh.com .

Local Briefs
Tournament set

Mllll Subscription
,lnalde Mtolgo County
13 Weeks ..... . .......'32.26
26 Weeks ............ '64.20
52 Weeks ..... . ......'127.11
'

.

O,ulelde Mtolga County
13 Weeks . .. . . . . . : . .. .'53.55
26 Weeks •. ·. .. . .. ....' 107.10
52 Weeks . ... . .• . . ...'214.21

. There is always much
about the future - that is
obscure, but of one thing we
can be reasonably certain:
In 2008, the United States
will be involved militarily
in Iraq. It may be a largely
peaceful involvement, centering on the military occupation of key areas, or it
may have a major combat
component, depending on
the enemy's capability and
intentions, but that America
be there, there is no
doubt at all.
The occasional politician
demanding prompt an!l· total
withdrawal from Iraq is
simply fantasizing , and the
Democrats know this, as
well as the Republicans.
Such a withdrawal would
merely turn the ,1whole
region over to othQf'l'lations
and forces . with their own
fish · to fry. Miqdle Eastern
oil, which the United States
itself could do without, is
absolutely vital to our allies
in ·Europe and elsewhere.
For it to fall into the hands
, of Russia,. or some consor. tium of regional powers,
would alter ·the whole balance of global power
overnight.
Similar consiqerations
will dominate America's
Middle Eastern policies not
only in 2008 bj.lt thereafter
and quite regardless of

will

William
Rushin

whether (as seems likely)
the Demoerats take over the
White House in 2009. A
Democratic president would
undoubtedly make a bigger
display of deference to our
allies, and perhaps modify
this or that aspect of U.S.
policy in the Mideast, but he
or she would know very
well that a U.S . presence in
the Middle East IS an indispensable factor in the diplomatic picture there. .
. What is harder to assess is
whether U.S. involvement
will continue to have a
major military compont;nt.
In 2008 , the war there may
well be winding down. AI
Qaeda no longer has (if it
ever had) the capability to
be a centrally directed and
militarily effective force. It
may sti II occupy individual
towns, and put to death hundreds or even thousands of
civili an Iraqis. But U.S.
forces effectively dominate
the country, and will continue to do so. ,

Beyond 2008, however,
the United States m11st
make a major effort to shift
the battle more decisively
into a political context. As
the military weakness of )\]
Qaeda •becomes
more
apparent, the politicians in
Baghdad must be pressed
even m,ore strongly to come
to political terms among
themselves. This has been
said before, but the urgency
increases daily. ·
A politician with disposable influence is important
only as long as he retains
the power to exert it. Once
he commits himself to a
policy, his relevance is a~to ­
matically reduced. There is,
therefore, on the part of
Iraqi politicians a powerful
inducement to remain
uncommitted, on any subject, for as long as poss ible.
This is natural enough. but
must be rec9}nized and
resisted as ,r.;trongly as
Washington can manage.
Only a political consensus
· in Iraq will create an atmosphere in whic'h military success can be transformed into.
political tranquility.
So the odds are that we are
in for a prolonged period of
political bargaining among
the Iraqis, with each faction
trying to advantage itself in
the di stributiop of the country 's assets notably

REEDSVILLE - Eastern High School freshmen class'is
sponsoring a fonrth gfade girls basketball tournament Jan.
26-27 at Eastern Elementary. The fee is $50. For more
information contact Jeff at 740-378: 6476 .
'
including oil.. Well, there are
worse things than political
bargaini~g especially
warfare. And if the United
States can continue, in 2008,
the gradual wind-down of ,
militarY operations that we
have seen in 2007, we will
~ able to count the year as a
success.
Politically, the Democrats
-have long since abandoned
their earlier position, .so
neatly summarized last
spring by Senator majority
leader Harry Reid as, "The
war is lost.'' They know better now, and their rhetoric
reflects it. They will continue to condemn it, but will .
not demand that it be ended
- or end it themselves, if it
comes to that.
The Republicans, conversely, have dodged the
worst bullet - responsibility for a lost war. The military campaign in Iraq con·
tinues, as one indispensable
part of U.S. strategy in the
Middle East. But the
American people · have
never fully reconciled themselves to our involvement in
Iraq., and the Republican
party must shoulder responsibility for it.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
St!{dy of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)
\

\

.

Local Weather·
Saturday night...Cloudy
' Friday...Sunny. Not as
cool with highs in the lower with a 50 percent chance of
40s. Southwest winds 5 to showers. Not as cool with
low s in the upper 30s.
10 mph ..
Friday
night ... Partly Southwest winds 5 to I0
cloudy. Not as cold with mph.
through
lows in the mid 20s. . Sundaynight ••• Mostly
Southwest winds 5 to . I0 Monday
cloudy. Highs in the upper
mph.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy 50s. Lows in the lower ,40s.
'1\tesday... Mostly cloudy,
· with a 40 percent chance of
· . rain . Highs in the mid 40s. with a 30 percent chance of
Southwest winds 10 to 15 showers. Highs in the lower
60s.
, mph .

'

Pomeroy·
from PageA1
:·,
·.
:
·

Agency required it to raise
the rates for sanitary sewage
services to a mimmum of
approximately two percent
·of the median household
·: mcome.
··
·
:·: · If pomeroy didn' t comply
· · the OEPA can lesson the
· number of years (20) it
, . requires for the village to
·. eliminate its two combined
. : sewer overflow ~ (CSO's).
· CSO's are a source of
.... stream pollution in older

.,

COLUMBUS - On the
20th anniversary of the law
establi shing the reverse
mortgage program. reverse
mortgages are getting a
closer look ' thanks to a
Senate hearing and a new
report by the ~merican
Association of Ret ired
Persons (AARP.)
The AARP's Public Policy
lnstitute·released a report on ·
homeowners' attitudes and
satisfactioll . with reverse
mortgages. The report !inds ·
that while consumers' opinions of reverse mortga~e s
are generally favorable , high
costs are a big deterrent to
purchasing a reverse mortgage . The AARP released

the report at a ~en a te Special
Committee on Aging hearing on the rapid growth of
reverse ·mortgages.
The AARP sur veyed
homeowners who had taken
out loans and homeowners
who had decided again st
loans in addition to survey'ing the ·general public on
their awareness of reverse
mortgages. The report found
rhat, in general , reverse
mortgage borrowers have a
favorable dpinion of their
loans. Ninety-three percent
of borrowers said their
reverse mortgages had a
positive effect on their lives,
and 58 percent of borrowers
indicated ,.that the loan had

.

completely met their needs. the elderly who warn ccl that
According to the report , the . umcrupulous sa le' agcm'
biggesr reason for not pur- someti ines promote reverse
cha•.ing a reve rse mortgage mortgages in order to gc:he ris the high cost.
ate fund ing to purc hase
The AARP report al ;o prod uct» li~e ann uit ies. as
highlighted a probl em with well as testimony from fumsn1r1e reverse mortgage---rTy mei'nbcrs of tho se
companies. which is overl y harm ed by reve rse moriaggresS ive
marketin g. gage hrokers.
According to the report,
The AARP report con . lenders offered 9 per~em of ~ l u des with recommendaburrowers additional finan - tion' to make reverse mort·
cia! products, such as annu- gages a more mainmeam
ities and .long-term care opli on for homeow ner'.
in surance, which may not 1ncluding recummendatin ds
be good · in vestment choices for red ucing cost&gt; . upgradgiven the high ·cost of the ing co n ~ u m c r co unse ling
mortgages. In add ition, the ai1d
inl'or m&lt;llion .
and
Senate panel al so heard tes- impro ving the marke ting
timony frnm advocate s . for . practi ces of lenders.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Supporting daz.lghter not best thing to do
'•

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I began seeing my husban&lt;;l when his
dau ghter, "Ellis," was 15
years old. Ellis has been a
constant challenge, in trouble on a regular basis,
befriending the wrong people , abusing alcohol and
drugs and just plajn refusing
to get a job. My . husband
pays all her bills, including
her house payment. Ellis is
now in her 30s and sti II does
not have a job.
My husband tells me he is
going to quit giving her
money; but he continues to
enable her. This is causing
probl'ems in our marriage. I
want Ellis to find work and
move out of a house she
· cannot afford. We are getting on in age and s.hould be
preparing for our retirement, but because of Ellis'
bills, we are living paycheck to paycheck. She has
threatened suicide many
times. which is what really
prevents my husband from
getting tough with her.
Please don' t say she needs
counseling. We already
know that. She has been to
many counselors but ulti-

' ri'lately quits going, and no
· Dear Annie: I'm a fufl- prin ted a letter from " l n w ~l
one can make her go back. timc coll ege student with &lt;I Editor." who chasti sed you
What complicates the prob- full-time job. I' ve been dat - for
recomm end ing
lem is my daughter, who is ing "Matt" for seven c r a i gsl i ~t. org as a rcso urc~
buying her own place. She months . He rece ntly had with out uho memiu n i n~
gets very angry with me some financial setbacks . newspaper ads. You said. " IT
because I don' t have the which means we often go we could figure out how tn
money . to help her as much Dutch. That's fine with me. .say ·mea culpa ' in plura l
as she needs since it's all
The problem is, lately form . we 'd plaster it all over
going to Ellis.
·
Matt will suggest we go out the ~o lumn . "
I've told my husband on to eat, only to get 10 the regTile pl ura l of "mea culpa··
. several occasions that I will ister - holding ..;t wad of (my fault) is "nnstra culpa"
not continue living this way money, saying, "This. is all I (our fault ). - . Muriel
rnuf h longer. yet I keep doing have." Then I end up footing Garcia Former Teach er
it -ft's reached a point where I the entire bill. While I under- . of Latin'
feel he and I need to go our stand his reasons, I don't like
Dear Muriel Garcia:
separate ways. What do you how he goes about it. I don't Thank s for the Latin lesson.
suggest?- Had Enough
want to break up with Matt, We knew we could count on
Dear Had Enough: Your so how can I get him 10 stop · our readers to tell us how to
hu sband needs to under- taking my money for gramed say we were wrun g in an y
stand that supporting Ellis is without hurting hi s feelings? language. We hope we don 't
not in her best interests. It -Feeling Used
have to use it too often.
undercuts her ambition, proDear Used: Matt shouldA1111ie 's Mailbox is writ·
longs her immaturity, makes n't put you in the position of tell by Katllj Mitcllell a11d
her feel incompetent and paying for every date with· Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime edi·
reinforces her dependency. out warning you in advance . tors of the Ann Landers
She will never get a job, not He's taking advantage of co/um11. Please e-mail your
only because Dad supports you. When .he suggests questions to antliesmail·
her, but because his cod- going out for dinner or a box@cmncast.llet, or write
dling has made her fear she movie, offer to do some- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
cannot succeed. A truly lov- thing less pricey. Rent a Box 118190, Cllicago, IL
ing parent helps his child be movie and watch it at vour 60611. To find out more
a responsible adult, even if place. Go 'to a museum. about A1111ie 's Mailbox,
he isn' t popular doing it. Have an indoor picnic. Tell· and read features by other
Before walking out, ask him you. know going out Creators Sy11dicate writers
your husband to go with can be expensive and you arld cartao11ists, 1•isit the
you for counseling so both want him to save his money. Creators Syndicate Web
of you can work on this.
Dear Annie: You recently page at www.creators.com.

Ariel schedules auditions ·Community Calendar

Pauline 5. Grinstead

Iraq in 2008

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be l'ess
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address (md telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste,. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
. thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

Correction Polley

Marie Polk Randazzo

Deaths

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

'washington Post, an out7.
Conservative ·
spoken Catholic
who ·Episcopalians kept leaving
remains a Democrat. "The the U.S . church in order to
former Arkansas governor align with traditionalist
has exposed a fault line Anglican bishops in Africa
within the Republican coali- and elsewhere in the global
tion . The old religious right South, initiating yet another
is dying because it subordi- round of legal disputes
· nated the view~ of its fol· about church endowmenr
lowers to short-term politi- funds anti property.
cal calculations. The white
8. In another round of 5-4
evangelical electorate is votes; the U.S. Supreme ·
tired of taking orders from Court took conservative
politicians who care more stands on three cases with
about
protecting
the religious
implications:
wealthy than ending abor- upholding a ban on partiallion, more about deregula-· birth abortions, allowing
tion than family values." .
public schools to establish
Here is the rest of the some limits on free speech
RNA top 10 list:
and rejecting a challenge to
3. The Anglican wars con- the government's Office nf
tinued, as an Epi scopal Faith-based .
· and
Church promise to exercise Community Initiatives.
restraint on homosexual.
9. Transitions continued
issues failed to bring peace at the top of major
in the global Anglican 'Evangelical Protestant instiCommunion. · Doctrinal · tutions, as · symbolized by
debates ·about marriage and the deaths of Jerry Falwell,
sex continued to cause ten- Rex . Humbard, Ruth Bell
sions in other flocks as well, Graham, D. James Kennedy
both Christian and Jewish.
and Tammy Fa~t! Messner,
4. Debates aboui global the ex-wife of Jtm Bakker.
warming increased in
10. Roman Catholic leadimportance, with many old- ers in the United States
line Protestant leaders gi v- wrestled with the high cost
ing the topic a high priority. of settling legal cases linked
Meanwhile, some evangeli- to decades' of clergy sexual
cal .leaders argued about its abuse of children and
importance iri comparison teenagers. The price tag
with other social and ·moral reached $2.1 billion, with a
issues.
record ' $660 million settleS. Religious leaders on ..&lt;ment in tile Archdiocese of
both sides of the aisle ques- Los Angeles.
(Terry Mattingly is direc·
tioned what to do about illegal immigration, with some tor of the Washington
clergy daring to shelter Journalism Center at the
undocumented immigrants. Council for
Christian
6. Thousands of Buddhist Colleges and Universities
monks led a pro-democracy and
leads
ihe
movement in Myanm~, GetReligion.org project to
which was then crushed by tru{y religion and the
the government. •
new,.) ·

The Da ily Sentinel • Pag·e A3

Seniors alerted about.reserve
mortgages byAARP
.

••

A
look
at
the
~ew gap' and other top .stories·oj·2007
The~Oaily Sentinel

WWw.mydailysentinetcom

Cities and are outlets that
dump excess water (such as
after a large rainfall) from
the sewers into streams and
rivers, keeping sewers from
backing up into homes,
businesses and streets.
• Pomeroy put $83 ,600 of
its $300,000 distress grant to
use by demolishing around
12 condemnt;d homes and
used 73,100 to repair and
replace sidewalks.
•
In
September
Millennium Tel eserv ices
closed its Pomeroy facility
l,ocated on East Main Street
and with it went 3!0Und 75
. full and part-time positions.

GALLIPOLIS
- The
Ariel Jr. Theatre is holding
auditions tor the production
of "Night of January 16th"
which is a courtroom
drama/murder mystery written by Ann Ryimd.
Audition s will be held
Jan., IO between 6-8 p.m.
and also Jan. 12 at I p.m.
Cast members between the
ages of 15-21 years of. age

experienced with mock trials would be a plus but is
not necessary .for audition .
Audi lion packs can be
picked· up at The Ariel Data
Box Office for those who
wo1'd like to try-out for the
"~
1t of January 16th." For
more informaiion contact
The Ariel Data Box Office
between 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. at
740-446-ARTS(2787).

Public meetings

6 p.m. on the 'bandroom.

Thesday, Jan. ll
POMEROY
- Meig s
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m., re gular monthly
board meeting.

Clubs and
organizations

Other events
Saturday, Jan. 5
POMEROY
- Liv e
gospel ' Bluegrass musi c,
with four bands performing,
6::10
p.m. ,
Mulberr y
Center.
Community
Freewill offering .

Birthdays

Friday, .Jan. 4
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Pomona Grange
Monday, .Jan. 7
Paul and Jill Maynard, #46 , 7:30 p.m. , Hemlock
POM
EROY
Mae
and Ben, Jessica, · Bay lee Grange Hall, with Hemlock
Yo
lmg.
lorlgtime
teacher
i 11
and Brecken Loudin, all of as hosts. ·
Meigs
County
will
obsen
e
Pt. Pleasant.; David and
Saturday, Jan. 5
her 87th birthday. J ~uL 7.
Ann Zirkle of · Racine:
SALEM CENTER
Bruce and Terri Hysell of Star Grange #778 and Star Her address is OllerheinNitr.o; Roger, Samantha, Junior Grange #878 meet in Lebanon Rcti remcill H&lt;lllh'.
Bradley arid Austin Smith, regular form , with potluck 585 N. State Rotlle HI .
and Greg, Jessica and at 6:30 p.m, followed by Phillippi Hall. Room ~( H .
Lebaunn, Oh io 450.16.
Zackery King, Joe and meeting at 7:30.
Debbie Quivey, all of .
Monday, J~n. 7
. "&gt;."~ \ c j;,,
Jesse
and
Pomeroy;
RACINE
- Regtilar
Gretchen Maynard of meeting Racine OES i 34.
~
I
~
-~
Cheshire; Arnie, Amber 7:30p.m.
.•'
.. .
and Lily
Dugan of
POMEROY Mei gs
~
'
.
.......""
Zanesville: and Mike and Band
Boosters will mecl at
.. ...
Brenda Seagraves and
t'tHl l iJ(\fl\ 1. \I.. I '.• I \ I k/
Kyrie
Swann
of
Ballroom Dance
Middleport.

Swishers celebrate Christmas
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. The Roberta Maynard
Swisher family gathered at
the Church of God fellowship hall in New Haven on
Christmas day to celebrate
the birthday of Christ.
They visited, took pictures, opened presents and
after a prayer by Patty
Maynard, enjoyed a·potluck
dinner. Attending were
Roberta Swisher and Marge
Blake of New Haven, Russ
and Patty Maynard, Rusty
and Cody Maynard, and
Samantha, J.D. and Allison
ffolley and Roy Estep , all
of Mason.

.'f.."'
-

·~

·8 wk classes
Jan.B

Local Stocks
· AEP (NYSE)- 46.44
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80
48.74
Ashtanll Inc. (NYSE) · Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
46.13
Big Lots (NYSE)- 14.71
8BT (NYSE) - 29.12
· Peoples (NASDAQ)- 23.13
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 25.59
PeP'Sico (NYSE)- 75.78
BorgWamer (NYSE)Premier (NASDAQ)45.54
12.52
Century Aluminum ( NA5Rockwell (NYSE) - 66.80
DAQ)- 54.83
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Champion (NASDAQ) 5.85
5.59 .
Royal Dutch Shell - 85.87
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -5.37
.
..
.
106.22
City Holding (NASDAQ)Wa~Mart (NYSE) - 46.38
Wendy's (NYSE)- 24.86
32.51
CoHins (NYSE) :_ 71.62
Worthington (NYSE) DuPont (NYSE)- 44.08
17.79
US Bank (NYSE) -: 30.33
Dally 1tock reports are the ·
Gannett (NYSE)- 36.50
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
General Electric ( NYSE) transactions for Jan. 3,
36.80
2008, provided by Edward
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mitts In Gallipolis at
45.15
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.88. ( 740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Kr.oger (NYSE) .,... 25.83
Marrero In Point Pleasant at '
(304) 674-0174. Member
Umlted Brands ( NYSE) , SIPC.
17.27

' '

~

~

•

•

Auditions ·
Court Room Drama
Jan. 10 6-8 pm
Jan.12 1 pm
Box OHice : 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

~

Shouldn't Your Number #I
New Years Resolution Be:

I

Start Saving Money On
My Insurance

~

....... ..

Auto- Horne • Life - Business

1111 JuUCI tr PIUII $0411J

to sun

.m., 111

Reecf&amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Street ·
. Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-3600
Or vis it us on the web - www.reedbaur.com ·

�•

PageA4

FAITH • VALUES.
A Hunger For More
Resolved

The Dai~y Sentinel

'

I had to start a new calendar this week. I would guess
that's true for most everyone
It's now 2008! Happy t:'Je~
Year'! One thing I have
learned as I have gotten older
~~ how much more quickly
ttme goes by now. I'm still
having a hard time remembering that the year no longer
start with a "I," much less
getting it right, that it now
ends in an "8." Is this one of
the first signs of senility?
. While all of us had to get
new calendars started 'this
week, many of us also probably made new commitments to
improve ourselves. "New
Year's Resolutions" are almost
as tradition·al as · "Yankee"
sauerkraut or "Southerner"
black-eyed PeaS. (I say Yankee
and Southerner because to me
sauerkraut is a new thing that I
never encountered in Texas.)
But another thing I've
learned as I've gotten older is
that New Year's Resolutions
are about as effective and long
tenn as blowing soap bubbles
during a thunderstonn. We
will resolve to exercise .more,
to eat less sweets or fats, to eat
more vegetables and fruits~ to
quit smoking, drinking or
swearing. Or we may resolve
to show more patience with
our families, to read that book
we keep putting off, or to
finally fix the broken lamp in
the spare bedroom. We want
to ·do more, be better, or look
better in the coming year than
we did in the previous year.
It's no accident that you're
seeing a lot of commercials
on TV right now for Jenny
Craig, Weightwatchers and
NutriSystems. They're right
there in the middle of beer
and car. commercials during
the bowl games and NFL
playoffs. The weight-loss
industry knows that we're a
bunch of couch potatoes
who will attempt to change
this time of year, and there's
lots of money to be mac!e
from those attempts.
I've certainly· made my
share of New Years
Resolutions. I want to lose
weight, pray more, study my
Bible more, be a better husband, father, friend. I want
to exercise patience, kindness, and self-control. I want
better time management
skills, a more organized
home and office. In shon,
I'd like 'to be better at a· lot. of
things than I am right now.
So with all of these resolutions, how come I'm still the
same ol' me?
We know the success ·. stories. Bill Gates goes from
geeky nerd to world's wealthiest man. Michael Jordon, who
was rejected from a junior high
school basketball team,

Friday, January 4,

2008

Friday, '

Fellowship
Apostolfe

As 2008 dawns' on us, one
sleeping" (2 Peter 2:1-3 NIV).
the dead. he cannot die again;
may
be
certain
of
two
things.
And because some prefer to
death no longer has mastery
let others simply tell them
over him. The death he died, The first is that the future canwhat .to believe and what to
he died to sin once for all; but not be fended off no matter
do, as opposed to personally
the life he lives. he lives to how one may try to hold on to
Pastor
Pastor
the
joys
and
comfons
of
the
becoming students of God's
God. In the same way, count
Thom
Kerry
Word, there are those who
·yourselves dead to sin but present, or how he or she may
Mollohan even· today fall pre}'-,to such
Wood
alive to God in Christ Jesus." dread the implications of the
future.
The
second
is
simply
lia.rs, becoming participants in
(Romans 6:6-11 NIV)
that
the
God
of
the
past
and
the deceit that some practice
That's not simple self-help,
for evil gain. Sadly, I would
but life transfonnation 1 No the present is also the God of
like to point out that even
New Y.:ars Resolution is the future. Days come but
though
one may be only a folbecomes the world\ most rec- capable · of that kind of then they go as fast as the,y · God sow His Word in my life.
ognizable athlete (and a fabu- change. In fad, nothing we came. What a sorrow it ts , then the fruitfulness that wiiJ lower of a lie, and not the lie's
lous basketball player!) And can do will make that kind of when we squander those days be harvested through my life maker, he or sh~ is sti ll
there's Jared Fogle - the change. If we want to become over the course of a lifetime will be gaunt and barren. We accountable to God. This is
Subway guy. He used to weigh the best people that we can not heeding the Lord\ can also see that a man or true even more today in our
more than 400 pounds. bt!l two he, we have to give up trying instruction on how we should woman can squander his or highly literate society where
l.owfat Subway sandwiches to do it ourselves and instead, consider' the handling of our her time by selfishly living Bibles are plentiful but not
and a mile-and-a-half-long cooperate with the work God time on earth. tet us be life "to the fullest." But, as in . often read, than in times and
reminded that no one who has the case of what appears to be places where people could not
walk everyday helped him is already doing'
This doesn't mean, howev- ever lived has ever done all pointless labor (or mere sur- read or Bibles were not in the
drop 245 pounds and shrink a
60-inch waist down to 34 inch- er, that we· re off the hook for that he or she should and vival mentality). refusing our hands of ordinary people. But
es. A national celebriry is born 1 life change. Just because we could. have with all the time hearts no pleasure result~ also of greater impm1ance than all
How come none of their can not do it alone. doesn't given him or her (with the in a "chasing after the wind" the various ways we could
possible squander our days. is
mean we don't do it at all. Jt:s · exception of the Lord Jesus (from Ecclesiastes 2:10-11).
stories are my .story?
Alt the people I've ever the truth that God is God of
New Years Resolutions truly a cooperative effort during the days of His earthly
cannot bring me - . or anyone between • me and God; ministry). But even so, in known who have prescribed the future. Within the awe- success. Most of the time between you and God. As one spite of occasional mistakes to this philosophy either some knowledge that God is
they're nothing ~ore than person put it: God provides or missed opportunities, our ended in tragic son·ow or are God for all time is contained
wishful thinking'. And they ' re the inspiration. we provide hearts surrendered in trusting tragedies in the making. the hope that we need to
no better than a lottery ticket. the perspiration. Then God obedience to God can yield us Whether they really didn't secure our anxious hearts in
not only an existence in the helieve that life holds any spite of our reluctance to part
Yeah, somebody's goi ng to creates the transformation.
I saw a transformation in here-and-now, but an eternity meaning beyond pleasure in with what we have right now
win the jackpot, but it's such
a low probability that it'll be 2(XJ7. A man about my age had full of sweet victory as the the immediate moment or or our various fe:m and worme. Lightning is more likely lived a hard life: drug abuse, fruit of our walk with God is . they repeatedly put God off in ries for the future.
"In the course of my life
order to accommodate more
to strike me twice while I'm divorce. strained family rela- fully given light.
For there is more than one pleasure for themselves (hop- (God) broke my strength;. He
wearing a pink flamingo suit tionships. Then he was diagnosed with cancer. It was bad way in which one can squan- ing to "get . to it one day"), cut short my days. ·So I said:
-in Kenya.
So what should we do with stuff: inoperable. .That man der his or her life. He or she "Jiving life to the fullest" is an 'In the beginning You laid the.
New Years Resolutions' . could have retreated into bit- may, for example, simply · empty lie with one's destntc- foundations of the earth, and
Resolve not to make them terness and self-pity. Bui he accept drudgery and point- lion wound up inside it. And the heavens are the work of
anymore? There's quite a few didn't. He gave himself over to lessness as inevitable and how sad that one would ·lie Your hands. They wil'l perish,
folks who've done that. But I Jesus Christ. As he lost weight simply ·'survive," seeing life willing to sacrifice not only but You remain; they will all
have a better idea in mind.
from the cancer, he gained as merely a "series of unfor- his own eternal joy but also wear out like a garment. Like
Our
New
Years · peace. As he fought disease, he tunate . events." Yet this the joy of others as his life clothing You will change
Resolutions need to become found joy. Not everything got human point of view isn't in fails to yield anything of them and they will be discard'our religious vocations. What better for him, but the priorities touch wiih the reality of wmth that might have ledoth- ed. But You remain the same,
I )llean by that is that we need changed. What truly mattered God's enduring . grace. • ers also to God! "Do not boast and Your years will never end.
to give our resolutions for did gel better.
"When I surveyed all that ITlY about tomorrow, for you do The children of Your servants
self-improvement to God and
I saw him just before hands had done and what I not know what a day may will live in Your presence;
take back from God what our Christmas. He shared some had toiled to achieve, every- bring forth ... Riches do not their descendents will be
REAL goal should be. Jesus deer jerky with me from his thing . was meaningless, a endure forever, and a crown is established before You"'
Christ gave us a lifestyle for · successful
hunt
after chasing after the wind; noth- nul secure for all generations" (Psalm 102:23-28 NJV).
improvement.
But
his . Thanksgiving. We talked ing was gained under the sun (Proverbs 27: I, 24 NJV). And
Is a new year upon us? Yes.
improvements won't make about life, death; what hap- ... What does the worker gain another way that ·. one can Are things going to change
me rich, or the world's great- pens next. lie looked death from his toil? ... God has devote himself to a lie is to for you and your family? Yes, ·
est athlete, or the next great in the face and found he made everything beautiful in "buy into" something that somehow they'll change. Is
sandwich· spokesman. The wasn't scared, anymore.
its time. He has also set eter- promises to give meaning, this something that should
kind of'improvements Jesus
I learned thi s week that he nity in the hearts of men ... fulfillment, and disguises make you afraid or cause you
can make are the kin4 that died peacefully in his sleep. Everyone may eat and drink. itself as truth, yet is only a alarm? No. Not if your heart
will last long after the com- But he had given himself over and find satisfaction in all his counterfeit, sent by our spin- rests in the hand of God and
puter age, long after the bas- to Jesus' transfonning change toil- this is the gift of God. tual enemy to detour us from . you see!&lt; to walk with Him
ketball is out of air, way past -and now he's got more life I know that everything that the Truth of God (see throughout all •366 days of
lunchtime. His improve- than we can imagine.
God does will endure forev- John 14:6). "There were also this year (yes, it's a Leap
ments are eternal and divine.
If you only make one reso- er; nothing can be added to it false prophets among the peo- Year, folks!). Why s!Jould I
Jesus wanis to make us lution this year, let it be this: and nothing taken from it. pie, just a~ there will be false not be afraid? Because "Jesus
·brand-new - from the inside "It is no longer I who live, God does it so that men will teachers among you. They Christ is the same yesterday
out. The Apostle Paul but Christ lives within me. revere Him" (Ecclesiastes "will
secretly ·introduce and today and forever"
described this as a mysterious The life I live in the body, I I 2: II, 13:9, II , 13-14 NIV). destructive heresies, even (Hebrews 13:8 N IV). Amen.
dying and living: "For we live by faith in the Son of
God has set e~ernity in our denying the sovereign .. Lofl!
(Thorn Mollohan and his
know that our old self was God, who loved me and gave hearts so that we may be · Who bought them- bnngmg family have ministered in
crucified with him so that the himself for me. Therefore, I "eternity minded." You can swift destruction on them- southern Ohio the past 12body of sin might be done will live this year for Him, be certain that what we do selves. Many will follow their 112 years. He is the nastor
away with, that' we should no with Him, l:recause He lives!" here affects our future beyond shameful ways and :ow ill bring of Pathway Community
longer be slaves to sin (Kerry Wood !~(the pastor the grave: while our works do the Way of Truth into dis[e- Church, which meets on
because anyone who-has died of Racine United Methodist not procure salvation for us pute. In their greed these Sunday mornings at 455
has been freed from sin. Now Church, 818 Elm Street in (see Ephesians 2:8-9), they teachers will exploit ·you with Third Ave. He may be
if we died with Christ, we Racine. Sunday worship is at DO impact the cosmic signif- stories they have made up. reached for comments or
believe that we will also live 11 a.m. Pastor Kerry can be icance of our salvation in the Their condemnation has long questions by email at pas·
with him. For we know that reached at racineumc@siul- :eternal Kingdom of God. In been hanging over them, and torthom@pathwaygalliposince Christ was raised from 1enlink.net.)
other words, if I refuse to let their destruction has not been lis.com). ,

r r r

r r

r

r r r

r

r r

r

r

r r

r r

r r

r

r

·r ·r

'

C•urch of Jaus Christ ApostoUc
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pa~tor : James ·
Miller, Sunday School
10:30 am.
Evenmg - 7:30p.m.
River Valley
River Valley Apostolic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd AvC, Middleport. Rev .
Michael Brodford , Pastor. Sunday, 10·30
am. l,'Ues.'6:30 prayer. Wed. 7 pm Bible
StudY
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabemac:k Inc.
loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland.
Sen·ices: Sun 10·00 am . &amp; 7· 30 p.m..
Thun. 7:00p.m .. Pastor Mwty R. Hutton

Assembly

Looking Back. Looking
.
. Forward.
.
.

::
••
••••
,

l•
••

•
t

••
•
t

•

~r
~
~

•t
t

,.
r

't• .

Work out your own !'lal vation w)th fear
and trembling: for God is at work ill you ,
both to will and to work for his good
pleasure.

R.S.V. Philippians 2:12-13

tr
r
t
,,•

The mo~th of January is named after the
Roman god, Janus , the god of gates and
doorways, who is usually depicted w'ith
two faces, each looking in opposite
directions. Just as every doorway looks
o.utward and inward, the month of
January looks backward and forward.·
January is a good time to take stock of
how far we've come during the previous
year and to also took forward to the
coming year. Many of us do thi s with
New Year's resolutions and superficial
commitments to lose .weight or save
mon~y in 'lhe coming year. But, if we are
to have a successful year, we should do
some serious soul-searching, asking
ourselves how God would evaluate our
previous year. How did we do in th~
' really impmtant areas of our ·lives? That
is, how did we treat our families, friends,
and co-workers over the past year? How
is our present relationship with God'' Arc
we a _bette'r person !han we were twelve
month~ ago? IF we really want to have a
better year th is year. why not start by
try1ng to be a heuer pcrMm. A~ Gandhi :-.o
rightly said, ·;Be the change you wish to
see in the world ." And to do this. it really
requires more than J ll ~l think ing back on·
the previous year.and'looking forward 'to
the coming one. We nocd to have a plan
with a direclion. and hrm rc,olvc as we
cross lhe threshold into the New Year.

We Sell Homes at

P.O. BO"- 467. Dudding Lane, Mason.
WVa ., Pastor: Nell Tennant , Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1p m. ~

Baptist
Pagevlllr FnewiU Baptist Church
Pastor: Floyd Ross. Sunduy School 9:30 to
10 30 am. Worshlp service 10'30 to II :00
am. Wed . preaching 6 pm
Car(M!flter lndepertdent Baplist Church
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preac hing
Service !0:3 0am, Eve ning Service
7 OOpm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm.
Paslor. Whiu Akers
Cheshire Bapdst Church
Pastor: Steve linle, Sunday School: 9:30
am. Morning · Wonhip: 10:30 am.
Wed~~sday Btble Study 6:30pm. choi r
practkc 7;30; ymnh and Bible Buddies
6.30 p.m. Thurs. l pm book study
Hupe Baptist ChUrch (Southern)
510 Gnl.llt St .. Middleport, Sunday school
-9:30a.m., Worship- II a.m. and fi p.m ..
Wednesday Servil:e - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gar}
Elhs
Rud11nd First Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pustor Jon Broden, East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am
Flnt Sout!Hrn Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike . PastOr: . Sunday
S~.:buol - 9 30 a.m., Worship- 8 15 a.m ..
9:45am &amp; 7.00 p.m .. Wednesday Scn-' i~.:es
·7:00p.m.
Fint B11ptlst Church
Pastor Bi lly Zu~pan 6th and Palmer St ..
Middleport. Sunday Sl:hool- 9:15a.m.,
Worship • 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
R11cine First B11plist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton, pastor , StJnday
School-9:30a.m., Worship· 10:40 a.m.,
6:00 p.m , Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
PastOr: John Swanson. Sunday School IOa.m., Worship - lla .m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services--7:00pm.
Mt. Union Baptl!it
Pastor Dennis Weave r Sunday School9:45 a.m., Even1ng - 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptl!il Churc:h
Great Bend. Route 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor Ed Caner, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worship - ·10 30 a.m ..&amp; 7
pm; Wednesda~ Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport . Sunday
Service · 10 11.m., 6·00 p.m., Tuesday
Services -6:00

r

HiUslde Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev
James R Acree, Sr, Sunday Umfied
Service, Worship- 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Sel'\lices -7 p.m.
Vlttory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd Si. Middlepon , Pastnr: Jame:~t
E Keesee:. Worship • IOa .m. 7 p.m..
Wednesday Sen·ices- 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy

=:u:=.-•209 Third
Racine, OH

Members of the MLS and REALTOR'

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

'740-949-2210

740.992-3325

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

www.teafordrealestate.net

_
J.'allh Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday Schnol · 10
a.m ., Wor ship • II a .m ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- ~ p . m.

DireCtor of Marketing and Admissions

Warm Friendly

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

~f God

Liberty Assembly of God

. The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed tire the pure
in heart; for they .
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

-· ---·

Atmosphere

Forest Rua Raptis!- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday' School - 10
ll .m., Worship- II :30 a.m

Hours
6am-8pm

MI. Moriah Oaptl~t
Foonh &amp; Main St .. M1ddleport. Sunday
School-9:30a.m., Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Mif{ie)s 1(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Antiquity Bapthl
Stmday School ·• 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10.45 a.m , Stmday lh·ening • 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Don Walker .

Home Cooked Mttrls- &amp;. Daiiy Spt!ciul~·

· Open 7 days a week
740,992· 7713

www.mydallysentinel.com

Rutland Free WUI Baptist
Salem S1 , Pas1or: Ed Barney , Sunday

School • 10 a.m., Evening - 7 p.m.. ·
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .
Seco•d B~~ptlst Church
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am• Morning won;hip II am Evemng. 7 pm,
Wednt'sday 7 p.m.
First Baptitl Church of Mason 1 WV
(Independent Saplist)
SR 652 and Anderson St . PaSior: Roben
Grady, ~u~day school 10 am. Morning

church II am, Sunday e~ni ng 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Stt~dy 7 pm

Catholic
Sacred Heart C1thollc Chun:h
16 1 Mlllberry Ave .• Pomeroy. 992-5898,
Pa~tar: Re\·. W&lt;~.Her E Heinz, S&lt;~.t. Con .
4:45-5: 15p.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun
Con. -K:45-9: 15 a.m ... Sun Mm - 9 30
am .. Dnily Mug- K:30 a.m.

29670 Bashan Rd .
Racine, OH

740-949-22f7

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15)

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

'

DanYille HOliness Chun:h
' 31057 Stute Rollte 325. Lnngsvllc. Pastor:
~Benjamin Crawford. Sunday school - 9:30
am., Sunday worshiP - 10:30 a.m &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday pray~r service · 7 p.m.

Keno Chul'(:h of Christ
WorSh1p - 9:30 a:m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .• Pa§tor-Jcffrey Wallace, I st and,
3rd Sunday
Bearwallow Ridge Church nr Chrl!it
Pastor:Drucc Terry. Sllnday School -9:311
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Zion Chun:h of Christ
Pomero), Harmonville Rd . {Rt .l43).
Pastor Roger Watson, Sllnday School IJ:30 a.m., Worshtp - 10·30 a.m .. HID
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Tuppers PI• in Church M Christ
Instrumental , Worship Service· Q a.m ..
Comm union • 10 a.m • Sunday School 10:15 a "'!.··.Youth-5:30pm Sunday, 8 1hle
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Church of Chrl~t
Mmistcr: 1om Runynn , 3955M Bradbury
Road , M1ddleport. Sunday School - 9:30
• a.m.
Worshtp • 10:30 a.m .
Rutland Church orChri5t
Sunday School • i:l :30 a.m .. Worshi p and
Commumon - 10:30 a.m .. Hob J. Werry.
Mimstc:r
Bradford Chw'th of Chrlsl
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Mimster: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
BtU Amberger. Sunday School- 9,30 a.m.
Worship - 8 00 a.m r. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m ..Wednesday Servrces - 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Church of CbliJt
- T\lppen Plains, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
clan, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed .
Reed.nille Church of Ckrlst
Pastor: Philip Sturm. Sunday 'School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 ll m., Bible
Study, wednesday, 6:30p.m.

or

Dext~r Chun:h
Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worsh1p
- 10:30 a.m.
The Chun:h or Cbrl!ll of Pomt&gt;roy ,
lntme~.: ti u n 7 and 124 W. Evangelist·
Denrus Sargent. Sunday Bible Study 9.30 ll.m., Wursh1p 10:30 a.m. ocnd 6:30
p m.. WeUnesd ay Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartfurd Church of Cbritl in
Cbrlstlan Union
Hartford. W.Va .. Pa~tor : David . Greer.
Sunday S~.:hool • 9:]0 a m.. Worship •
10:30- u.m .• 7:00 p.m , Wednesday

The Hppllance man
740-985-l561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·I'M:\
(740) 992-3279
'-!!.V
Tot Free 1-877-583-2433

•

.·

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128.
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more
uardrail, Fence &amp;

7:00p.m.

Matthew 5:

--~·-- - · --

---~- --!...,,

'I

-·~.- ~--

...-...

-~

--- ...

-~---·-

.

··---~

.....

~-

'

Mlne..Svine •
Pastor: ,Bob Robinson . Sun~y School - 9 .
a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m .
Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m .• Worship - 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m.,S\Inday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rock Sprillp
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9:15
a.m .• Worship - 10 a.m., Yollth
Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m

Rose of Sharon Holiness Chun:b
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev,
Dewe~ King, Sunday sc hool- 9:30a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7p.m.

·,

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne, Sunday School •
9 30 a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Servkes- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: Wtlliam K. Mmball , Sunday
School ·- 10:15 am., Wollihip- 9:15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowvlle
Sunday ~chool- 10 a.m., Wo!lhip- 9 a.m.

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Chureh
112 mile off Rt. 325, Pas10r: Rev. O'De ll
Manley, Sutiday School - 9:30 am.,
Warship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl S!., Middlepon. Pastor: Doug
CoK, Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Bt1ha.o'
Pastor: John Gilmore , S!indaY ~hool· 10
a.m., Worship • 9 a.m., Wednesday
Servkes- 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor. Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:3Q am .. Worship- 10:45 a.m. , 7 p.m.,
Thursday B1ble SJlXly and Youth- 7 p.m.

...._
CarmeJ.Suttoa
Carme l &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine , Ohio,
Pastor: John 'Gilmore, Sunday School 9:45a.m., Wo,u:hip ~ 11:00 a.m. , Bzble
Study Wed. 7:30p.m,

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Cburch
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School·
9:30 n.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
,p.m.,Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Mornlna Star
P&amp;stor: John Gilmore, SWlday School- II
a.m • Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Eut ~tart

Tbe Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Sainb
St. .Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20-1 1 a.m.; Reltef
Society/Priesthood . II :O.S- 12:00 noon.
Sal.:rament Service 9-10.15 a.m .,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thun.- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Bill Mars.hall Sunday School ·
9a.m .• Worship • I~ am., Is! Sunday
every month eftn,ing service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday - 1 p.m.
. Raclae
Pa5tor: KelT)' Wood. Sunday School - 10
a.m, Worship - 11 a..m.Wednesday
Srrvices 6 pm; Thill' B1ble Study 7 pm

Lutheran.
Sl. Jolla Lutheran Chon:h
Pine Grove, Worship- 9 OO~ a.m., Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

'Coolville Unlled·Mdh.odllt Parlab
Pastdr Helen Kline, Coolville Church,
Matn &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m.,
Wor&amp;hip - 9 a.m., Tues. Services - 7 p.m.

Our Sa~lour L•theran &lt;;burch
Walnut and Henry Sts., Rn·e nswood,
W.Va. , Pastor: David Ruuell. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m, Worship· 11 a.m

BelhtiChurdl
Township Rd .. 4!'i8C. Sunday Sc;hool - 9
a.m. Worship - 10 a.m .. Wednesday
Sel'\'ices- JO a.m.

St. Paul Lutberan Cbun:b
Comer Sycainorc &amp;. Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sun. School -9:45a.m .. Worship- II a.m.

Hodel._. Ctwreh
Grand Street, SuJtday School -9:30a.m.,
Wollihip- 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bell

United Methodist
Graham Uaited Methodist
Worship- II a.m Pastor: Richard Nease
Bechtel United Mtlbodlst
New Hllven, Richmrd Nease, Pastor,
Sunda) worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Torch' Ch01th
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School-. 9:30 am.,
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

Mt. Oliye Uniled Methdist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pasmr: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m..
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m .. Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Point Roc:k Chun:h uftbe Nuareae
~oute 689. AlbaJly, Re\1. Lloyd Gnmm.
pastor. Sunday School to' am; worhsip
iervice II am, evening service 7 pm Wed .
prayer meeting 7 pm

&gt;

Nazarene

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Nonheast Cluiner. Alfred, Pa stor: Jim
CorbH~, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., ,
Worship. II a.m ., 6:30p.m

Middleport Cbun:h of the Nazanne
P..stor: Leonard 'Powell , Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m .•WorShip ~ 10:30 am .• 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.,

Chester
Pastor: Jim Corbitt , Worship - 9 a.m.,

Reednllle FeU(IlfshJp
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor: Ruuell

41111

141-112-1141

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333

••rt•

HIIIIIIIIIIIIMI• ......

1-8011·451-9806

J411-112-M44

~rogan-Warner

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

Johnl5:7

sign erection

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

•

REHABI~ITATiON

S)'nalle Church of the Nuartne
Putor Mike Adkins, Sunday SctK;.ol - 9:30
a.m .. Wonhip • 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Semces- 7 p m.

••III

.'

·Pomeroy

Fairview Bible Chun:b
letan, W.Va. R1 . I, Pastor. .Brian May,
Sunday Sci\OCll - 9:30 a m , Worship - 7:£11
p.m.. Wedne§day Bible Study-7:00p.m.
FaHh Fellowship Crusade for Chrill
Pastor: Rev Franklin Dickens, Service:
Fnday. 7 p.m.

Sync.,. Commually Cburch
2480 Second St .. Syracuse, OH
Sun. ScbooiiO am, Sundy niaJtt6:30 pm
Pastor: Joe Gwtnn
A New Bea&amp;nnlnc
(ful Gospel CbP.rth) Harrisonvtlk.
PastoR: Bob and Kay Marshmll,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Calvary Bible Churth
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pm!itor: Rev.
Blackwood. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .•
Worshtp 10 :30 am .. 7 30 p .m .•
Wednesduy Semce- 7:30p.m.

AIIUIZIIII Grace Communi~} Churtb
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, Stat~ Rt. 681,
Tuppers Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

Sdversvllle Communit)' Cburft
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Worsbip
11:00 am. Wedne,sday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

Ollis Chrtsllan Fetlowsblp
(Non-denomin•tiona1 f~l!owship)
Meeting in the Me1gs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am - Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship, Children's min1stry

Rejoldn&amp; Life Cburda
500 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, Paatm-:
Mike Foreman, Pastor Ememus Lawrence
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesdiy Services- 7 p m.

Colllllllllllly of Christ
Portland-Racine Rd., Pastor: Jim Proffitt,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Serv1ccs- 7:00

Clifton Tabernacle Cburcb
Clifton, W.Va ., Sunday School- 10 a.m.,
Worshtp- 1 p.m .. Wednesday Service - 1
p.m.
New Life Victory Ceater
3773 Oemges Creek Road, Gallipoli11. OH
PastoF. Bill Staten, Sunday Sel\'kes - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - 1 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

p.m.
Betbel Wonblp CcDitr
St. Rt. 7, 2 miles south of Tuppers
Plains. OH. Non-denominallonal with
Contemporary Praise &amp; Worship Pastor
Rob Barber, Assoc. Pa1tor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Beuy Fulks . Sunday
services: lO am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
LiFe Classes, Wed &amp; Thur tught Life
Groups at 7 pm, Thurs rooming ladies'
Ufe Group at 10. Outer Limits YoutH Life
Group on Wed. evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit us online at www.bethelwc.org.
3978~

Full Gospel Chon:h
of the Living Saflor
Rt .338. Antiquity, Pastor; leslie Morris ,
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

AohStn&lt;IChun:h
A5h St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m , MominJ
Worship - 10:30 am. &amp;. 7:00 pm .
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m., Y~uth
Serv1ce- 7:00 pro.
Appr Life Center
"Full·Gospel Church", Paston John &amp;:
' Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason , 7735017, Service time: Sunday 10.30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Saltm Communky Chwdt
Back ofWe~t Columbia, W.Va.om lieving
Road, PaStor. Charles Roush (304) 67~2288:Sunda.y School 9:30am, Sunday
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly ~tudy
Wednesday servtce 7:00pm

Abundant Grace R.F.I.
923 S. Third St., Mirldlepon, Putor Teresa
Davis, Sunday serv1ce. 10 a.m.,
WednesdAy iien'ice, 7 p.m.

Restoration Christial\ Fellowlhip
9365 Hooper Road. Athens, Pal'litor:
lonnte Coats. Sunday Worshtp 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm

Flltb Full Gospel Chun:ll

House orHealia&amp; Mlnistria
St.llt. ll4 Langs,iBe, OH

~98

long Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed , Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m .
and 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m.. Friday fellowship aervtce 1 p.m.

lfarrloia.we Commlllllly C~ordt
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday - ?:30
a.m. and 1 p.m.. Wednesday - 7 pm.

Pentecostal

Anderson. Suaday School 10 a.m.,
Evenina- 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Follh V.Uey Tabemode Cb~~rth '
Bailey Run Road, Panor: Rev. Emmett
,Rawson, Sunday Evenin&amp; 1 p.m .,
Thundai Sen'ice- 7 p.m .

lWei Coouou.all)&lt; Chun:h
Off, Rt. 124, Pastor: ~I Han. Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m.,
7:30pm.
Dymille Community Cbun:b
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
MOrse Chapel Cburth
Sunday school- 10 a.m.. Worship- . 11
a.m .• Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Folllo Goopet Cbrdl
Lon&amp; Bouom, Sunday School - 9:30a.m·.•
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Filii G'"pet Ltahlh....,
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sulldny School - 10 a.m .. Evening
7:30p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs. - 7:30 pro.

Let your light so shine before

Matthew 5:16

John3:16

Full Gospel-Cl Pastors Robert&amp;: Roberta
Musser. Sunday School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Servtce 7:00 pm

Tl!am Jesus Ministries

Mlddkpon Community Chordt

Syntc:UH MINion
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse, Sunday
School • 10 a.m, Evening - 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Senice • 7 p..m.

Hoblon Christian Fell0wsblp Cbun:ll
Pastor: Herscllel Wh.ite. Sunday School10 am, Sunday Church service • !5:30 pm ·
Wednesday 7 pm

Meetmg in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymnasium. Pastor Eddie Baer.
Service every TUesday 6:30pm

57$ ~earl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbe·tw;rten son ...
992-2955

WIUte's Chapel Wt!leyu
Coolville Road, Pastor: Rev. Charles
Martindale.·Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.:
Worship- 10·30 a.m ., Wednesday Service
-7p.m.

Other Churches

CENTER men, that they may see your

Prescriptions

Frttdom Gospel Millloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31, Pastor: Rc".
Roger Wtllford, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m . Worship., 7 p.m.

ClltolerCbordtollht Nazmat
Ptstor: Rev. Curtis Randolph. Sunday
Sc~t?&lt;&gt;l- 9:30a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday evening 6 pm
•
Rutland Cburtb of tbe Nuart11t
Pa~tor· Isaac Shupe, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Wonhip - 10·)0 a.m ., 6:30 p.m ,
Wedntsday Services - 1 p.m.

cart you deserve, close ro home gqod works and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father iii heaven."

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740.992-6606

toileiOnlnttnltllllllllaalioul Cbwdl
kingsbury Road, Pastor: Robert Vaace,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evenina Service 6
p.m ..

Pomeroy CburdtoCthe Nazarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .. Wonh1p - IO· 30 a.m. and 6
p.m .. Wednc~y Services- 7 p.m.

Th~

IIIICII.fl*r:.._

Full line of
·
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
be done unto you. •
. .ENCIES Inc. Services

j

Pastor: Bljan Dunham, Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Worship- 11 :00 a.m. ·

Colnr)' Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 11 a.m., 7.00 p.m., Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m.

..... Stclltlllll·•n

{IUb====~=-;-=--~===~~~~~~~~~
---- - - , - - - - ·

Heath (Mlddltporl)

;fisbrr .1unrr al ~omr

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My

(740) 992-6451

Forut Run
Pastor- Bob RobmliOn, Sunday School- 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.

Holiness

Pomeroy West.&lt;ilde Churth of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
Schoo l - II a .m., ~nrship- IOtt.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne~day Scrv1ces - 7 p.m

your light so shine hef'n..,l
that they may see
works and glorify
IF:ath,er in heaven.'.'

Episcopal

Community Churdt
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Mrun Street.
Rutland, Sun'day Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Serv icc-7 p.m

Middleport Church of Christ'
5th and MaLn, Pastor: Al Hnrtso n.
Children~ Director. Sharun Sayre. Teen
Dm:ctor: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday School
-9:30a.m .. Worshtp- 8:15, 10 :30 a.m., 7
p.m .. Wednesday Serv1ices - 7 p m
Chnstmas Eve Candle Light Smke 6:30
pm We invllc you to celeb rate the binh of
our Savtor everyday.
. "ww mJddlcportchurch.ort:

Enterprhe
Pastor Arland King, Sunday Schodl - 9:30
a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 33105 Hiland
Rd, J'omeroy
F.atwoods
Pastor· Keith ~ader, Sunday School'. 10
a.m., Worsl'lip- II a.m .

Grace Episcopal Church
3~fJ E. Mam St., Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m. Rev.
Edw11rd Payn e •

Chun-h ot Christ
2 12 W Main Sl., Sunday School - 9 30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 aftL, 6 p m.,
Wednesday Sf=rvices • 7 p.m
Pom~roy

Tuppen Plmu St. Paul
Pastor: lim Cf?rbiu, Sund11y School • 9
u.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., Tuesday Services .
-7:30p.m.
Central Clulter
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robin500,
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Worship - 1I
a.m., Wednesday Se""ices -7:30p.m.

Church uf God of Propbw:y
OJ : White Rd. off St Rt . 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 ltJn.,
Worship- ll·a.m., Wednesday Sel"ices • 7
r .m.

Trinity Church
Second &amp; lynn, Pomemy. P11stor: Re_v
Jonathan Noble, Worship 111:25 a.m .
Sunday School9 15 a.m.

Hemlock Grove&gt;Christlan Church
Minister Larry Brown, Wo,-,hip - 9.30
am Sunday School - 10:30 a.m, Bible
StOOy- 7 p.m.

Lon&amp; Boatom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30•.m.
Reedsville
Worship - 9:30 a.m ., Sunday Sd\ool 10:30 a.m., First Sun(iay of Monlh - 7:00
p.m. service

--;

.SO.tb lktbel Community Cbllttb
Silver Rtdge- Pastor lmda Damewood.
Sunday ScOOol - 9 a.m .. Worship Service
10 am. 2nd and 4th Sunday

Joppo .
Pastor: Denzil Null, Wo11hip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m

Syncuse Flm Church of God
Apple and Second Sts., PitStor: Rev. David
Russell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
u.m. EHning S.ervices- 6 : ~0 p.m..
Wednesda) Services-6:30p.m.

Congregational

Servke~-

Hills Self Storage

Mt. Moriah Cburda of' God
Mile Hill Rd. Racine, Pastor: James
Satterfield, Sunday School - 9:45 am.,
Evening ·_6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 1 ·
p.m.
RuUand Cburch of God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m ., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Westside Chun:h of Cbrlsl
33226 Children's Home Rd, P~roy, OH
Contact 740-44!-12% Sunday mommg
10:00. Sun morning Bible study,;
followmg worship, Sun . eve 6:00 pm .
Wed bible study 1 pm

Canon , Sunday· Scllool • 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhlp- 10:45 a.m.. 6 p.m., Wednesday
Scrvi~s- 7 pJn.

Su!lday School - 10 a.m .• Thursday
Scrvtces- 7 p.m.

Church of God

Church of Christ

The Dally Sentinel ·

PenteeOital Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt . 124, Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School - 10 a.~. , Evening - 7
p.m .• Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Presbyterian
llarrll:onrille Pnsbylerlan Cburcb
Pastor: Roben Crow, Worship- 9 a.m.

Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday Sthool 10
a.m., worship service 11 am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seveath-Day A'd.-entist
Mulberry Hts R4 , Pomeroy, Saturday
Service1: Sabbath Schdol • 2 p.m ,
Wouh1p • 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Uaited Brethren
In Christ Church

Texas Community 3641 1 W1ckham R.d.
Pastor: l'ctcr Mwtindale. Sunday School9:30 a.m.. Worshtp- 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Servtces : 7:00 p .m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
.
Eden United Brttlma bl-cbrlst
State Route 124. between Reedsville &amp;:
Hockmgport. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Sunday Worship - II :00 a.m. Wednesda~
Servtces · 7:00 p.m.. Pastor- M. Adam
Will

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Alhens, Pomeroy &lt;&gt;r Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156
"Still small

~

�(

Page-t\6

FAITH • FAMILY
Living With cystic fibrosis and God
How faith
.saved a marriage

The Daily Sentinel

Step outside on a chilly
morning, watch the sun
come up over a dew-covered meadow, take a deep
breat' and be thankful.
Unfortunately, for those like
David Brandeberry, who
have the genetic birth defect ·
known as Cystic Fibrosis
(CF), taking a deep breath is
not always an optton!
As a matter of fact, just ·.
breat~ing is a struggle.
Before we go too far, you
have to understand that
there is no cure for CF, it is
a terminal illness. And there
is no such thing as a typical
- day in the life of a person
with CF. This disease is a
whole body disease mainly
affecting the lungs and the
digestive system, making it
hard to breathe and digest
food. Each CF case varies
from one person to another;
ranging from mild to severe.
This is Dave's story, a
person with Cystic Fibrosis,
who relies on friends, family and his faith in Christ to
get him through. David was
born on the 4th of July
1967, and was diagnosed
with CF during the first year
of his life. Forty years ago
not much was known about

Friday, January 4,

the disease, as a matter of Jesus th~t started when he close to Jesus but when you
fact, doctors told Dave's was very young. At the age face death things tend to be
parents not to expect him to of 35, chronic heartburn, of seen differently. Dave
live through his teens.
all things, finished off his knows for certain what
BY JOHN
From then on, Dave's life lungs. Dave found himself many of us really don 't and
AND VIRGINIA HUGHES
was one of daily medica- on oxygen, living a le ss that is that God has been
tions, chest drainage tech- active· lifestyle and in need with him through all that he
My_ husband and I were
niques called percussions of a double lung transplant. hjls been through. And that asked to share what the Lord
and that never ending cough On April t , 2004 (April God will be with him when has done in our life. In
that has dominated his life: Fool's · Day), Dave was he goes through the things February of this year I filed
He has continually. battled rolled into surgery where he will face tomorrow and for divorce. I filed ' on reathrough t""'o to three serious doctors performed a success- the next day.
sons that I · felt I. would not
illnesses a year that required ful double lung transplant
Listen to Dave 's words ... be able to forgive my hushospitalization for mtra- and it wasn't long before "'{hings happen but He band· for. I wanted my marvenous medications . The Dave went back to part time (God) will not give you a riage to be over. I got a
hospital stays ranged from a work, hobbies and hving life hu rden you can not bear. I lawyer to begin the divorce
couple of days to months at . with
his wife, Tina. remember the nurse asking process. Everything had
a time and each of those ill- Although Dave ha~ never ·as I was going into the oper~ been filed and was being
nesses 'took their toll on rejected his new lungs they ating room , for my t~ans­ · sent out to end the 11-year
Dave's lungs; depositing a have been plagued by infec- plant, if I was all right; if I marriage that we had shared.
little more scar tissue and tions and illnesses and the was scared? No, just anxious
In the meantime. John had
leaving Dave with . a little new lungs are beginning to and kind of excited. Because accepted the · Lord into his
less lung capacity. In Dave's' fail. So, at the age of 40, the whatever the outcome I life and was filled with the
lifetime, he has been testing and approval process know it will be better!"
. Holy Ghost. John began to
through more than you and I to be placed on the transplant
Can you say that in the pray and claim his family
probably ever have to go list begins all over again ..
struggles that you face ? Can back and our marriage to be
through. He has had riumerWow! What a way to~~ you say that whatever the reconciled. No matter what I
ous surgeries to clear sinus your life. in the knowledge outcome, with God .on my done to end the marriage he
passage~ne, so severe that that one. day, 1f there 1s no side I know things will be sti II stood on the word that
1t was cate~rized as open significant medical break- better?
the Lord gave him. I myself
brain surgery). He sue- through, all this battle, all
Dave lives in Rio Grande, was praying to be closer to
cumbed to pulmonary fail- . ·this time of struggle will l:)e Ohio with his wife Tina, he the Lord and do exactli what
ure and was placed on a res- lost. Dave knows that one works as an office manager the Lord wanted me to do.
pirator for a week.
day Cystic Fibrosis will for a local surveying and
One night I was lying in
Through it all, Dave has win. Most of us who are fol- . engineering company and is a bed and being so confused I
sought strength and under- lowers of Jesus· want to member of the First Christian asked the Lord what he
standing through his faith in think that we live our lives · Church of Rio Grande.
wanted me' to do about my
marriage. The Lord spoke to
me and said "Walk on the
water with me." Still con-

Religious news in brief

2008

fused l said, "but Lord I
don 't want to walk on the
water." 'The Lord spoke to .
me again and said "Walk on .
the water with me and I will
" .
restore your mamage.
So, .I began to walk and
the Lord began the. healing
process. John and I reconciled our differences. John
and I both will tell you that
it is so mething only the
Lord can do. Our marriage
is based on the Lord now. It
is a marriage that· is only
dreamed about. We actually
have people tell us that they
want a marriage like ours.
We have more love for each
other than you could ever
imagine . I prayed and
prayed for a Christian home
to raise our children in.
The
Lord
surely
answered my prayer. I just
had to go through the storm
to get it, I thank God every
day for what he has done in
my life and in my marriage.
I am so thankful for a praying church family and that ·
God is still in the prayer
an~wering busirless: l love
the Lord with all my heart. I
can truly say that for me
and my house, we will
serve the Lord.

Always There

Papal envoy
seeks meeting

Monday the government Jennifer Kocher said.
was reciting from memory.
"It's different than some- He couldn't read it at all."
has reversed its decision to
ban the publication over its thing occasional, like takHoly Family, a Slovenian
In spring and summer, winter and fall
use of the word Allah~ eas- ing a neighbor to a grocery parish, drew parishioners
God is in control of all,
·
VATICAN CITY (AP)- ing tensions that had store," Kocher said. "We're who shared Mejak's theoAnd though sometimes our way grows dim,
The Vatican's No. 2 officii!l strained racial harmony in targeting roptine trips logical conservatism. He
All things work for good if we will trust in Him.
where people who are (cer- resisted attempts to have
said he hopes to meet with the multiethnic country.
So let us not worry nor complain,
In a surprising turnabout, tified) and are following the laymen
serve
Holy
Raul Castro, Cuba's acting
But rest in the calm assurance of His holy· name.
the
government
renewed
rules
are
saying,
'Wait
a
Communion.
and
said
it
· president, when he visits the
- Keith E. Peck
The Herald weekly's 2008 minute here."'
should be served only from
1sland early next year. ·
Drivers must pay a one- a priest's hand, not in the
The trip by Cardinal permit without any condiTarcisio Benone, the Holy · lions, said its editor Rev. time fee of $350 to be state
of thealso
recipient.
See's secretary of state, will Lawrence Andrew. "There certified to carry passengers, hand
Mejak
ignored . a
f v
be the highest level visit by are no conditions, there was and submit proof. of insur- Second Vatican Council
, I have beim out on the raging sea thinking I was all alone.
a Vatican official to Cuba no mention of the Allah ance annually after that. recommendation for parishban,"
he
told
The
Vehicles
must
also
be
certiThere was darkness all around me and nowhere else to turn.
ioners to shake hands or hug
during Pope Benedict XVI' s
tied, either as metered taxis as a sign of peace during
And then J cried out with deep despair, "Is there anybody
tenure. It will mark the lOth . Associated Press.
Internal security officials or as paratransit vehicles. Mass, saying it distracted 1lUt there to help me through this storm?"
anniversary of the historic
And then out of nowhere I saw a bright and shining light
pilgrim11ge there by the late declined to comment. All Commercial insurance ftes · from the Eucharist.
publications
in
Malaysia
vary
for
paratransit
vehicl~s
In addition to his religious
1 felt two arms reach out and hold me tight.
Pope John Paul II.
I heard Jesus saying, "Do not fear 'cause I am here. I will
"I really hope to meet require a governn;tent permit, but can cost up to $6,000 duties, he carried out repairs
annually, Kocher said. ·
in the church, cut the grass, help you through this storm.".
Fidel Castro's brother, Raul, which is renewed'anmially.
The government had said
Six people have obtained managed the finances and
So every time you're out on the raging sea, just get down
who runs the country
All@,
an
1\fabic
word
the
required
certificat~s
from
that
today," Benone told the
ebv e ne't'lpnr.epared t~e ~~~kiX, on your knee.
.
on1y be u'sed .. the PUC's Altoona ' office,
1111
·' ' Christ will be there. He will help you through this storm.
Italian religious affairs for God,'
Officials which covers . Clearfield,
- Yolanda Renea Matheny
weekly Famiglia Cristiana. by Muslims.
Allah
in
Indiana
and
Jefferson
coonfeared
that
using
~xcei'pts of the interview.
were released Dec. 29, Christian literature would ties. Since the enforcement
confuse the Malays and campaign, another 13 people
ahead of publication.
have applied for certificaIt was not clear whether draw them to Christianity.
Malaysian
Christians
said
tion,
Kocher said.
Bertone P.lanned to visit
ST. JOSEPH, Mich. (AP)
The PUC has issued 95 -A man who wants to build
with the ruling Fidel Castro, that Allah that was used by
who welcomed John Paul in Christians before Islam was warning letters and is con-' a 30-foot, illuminated cross
established.
Even . in sidering fining scofflaws up on property he owns on .a
Havana in January 1998.
CLEVELAND (AP) · the historic;al society. ·
The trip will take place in Malaysia, Malay-speaking to $1,000. The agency may bluff facing Lake Michigan Some of the earliest known
"We're
very excited
February, Bertone said, but Christians have used the soon target Amish enclaves is being blocked by the city depictions of Jesus are because it will bring a lot of
no
date
has
been word Allah for generations. in Beaver, Butler, Lawrence because of zoning rules.
among the items in a collec- out-of-town visitors, and
Mercer
counties,
announced. The cardinal Allah also means God in and
Ervin Wagner's cross tion of Vatican art and arti- that's a nice way for a nonsaid he will attend the inau- Bahasa Melayu, the Ian- Kocher said.
would stand atop a stone facts that will be on view in 'profit institution to have an
.
guration in the central city guage of Malays.
foundation across from his the city this year.
economic impact on its
of Santa Clara of a monuhome. He wants to place a
A reliquary containing community."
ment dedicated to John Paul
camera nearby to provide bone fragments of St. Peter
She
said
Evergreen
that marks the anniversary
streaming online video of and personal belongings of Exhibitions, which produces
of the late pope's visit.
the view.
Michelangelo are also the Vatican exhibit, had
· · Many predicted that John
KANSAS CITY, Kan.
"I feel like it's a kind of among the 200 items slated heard about the society's
Paul's pilgrimage would
LUTHERSBURG, Pa. · (AP) - A Roman Catholic sacred ground to me," for exhibit at the Western succ"ess with its· previous
trigger changes in .the (AP) - The state Public priest died Christmas Day Wagner, a retired construc- Reserve Historical Society exhibit en Princess Diana.
Communist-run state. The Utility Commission is after leading his parish for tion worker, said. "The bord in May.
·:They
liked
our
pope urged Castro to crackm,\1 down on operators 63 years, ending what is has been after me to do this
"They (the Vatican) don't Midwestern location and
mcrease freedom on the of "Am1sh taxis" who regu- believed to be the longest for many years."
·
let their treasures out very the building's ability to pro- .
Caribbean island for both larly serve as drivers ' for active tenure at a U.S.
But John l-'odgson, the often. So when they put vide a positive visitor expe-'
the church and society, and members of the religious Catholic ·church. He was 98. assistant city manager, said them out on display, it's rience," she said.
denounced U.S. :effons to group out are not certified
Monsignor
Heliodore the land is considered a part quite an extraordinary expeThe hi~torical socieiy had
isolate Cuba.
to carry passen~ers.
Mejak became a priest in of the property's front yard, rience," said historical soci- negotiated for months to host
But in the decade that has
The PUC th1s fall began 1935. He said his first Mass and such accessory stru.c- ety board Chairman Gary the exhibit and needed the
passed; Cuba's Catholic targeting . t.he unlicensed at Holy Family Church on tures are propibited in a res- Adams.
.....,
approval of the Vatican and
Church has made only some "English" or non-Amish Aug. l., 1944, and never idential area.
"Vatican · Splendors from the Cleveland Catholic
gains. Catholic leaders can taxis serving mare than 350 left. The Archdiocese of · 'The city also has a 14-foot St. Peter's Basilica, the Diocese and support from the
speak or write in state Amish families in Clearfield, Kansas City 1n Kansas limit on accessory structures. Vatican Museums and local"Catholic community.
media at times, but religious · Indiana and Jefferson coun- believes Mejak was the
Hodgson said the z.oning Swiss Guard" will st()p at
But Adams said the event .
schools remain closed as ties. Amish religious beliefs nation's oldest active priest. issue raised by Wagner's only two other cities during
is not just for Catholics.
they have been since ·the bar owning or operating
He celebrated Mass until cross plans has come up its North American tour.
Civic leaders are excited
early 1960s when hundreds motor vehicles, so they rely about a week before his before. Several years ago, The show will arrive in at the prospect of the show's
of foreign priests were on outsiders to drive them death despite failing hel!lth · ihe city denied a man's Cleveland after its debut in impact. Organizers expect it
expelled.
long distances or along roads and eyesight.
plans to build a deck on a St. Petersburg, Fla. ·The will draw 140,000 visitors.
that are too dangerous for
"He couldn't see," said · detached front yard across exhibit will run here from
'
"This exhibit has tli.e
horse-drawn buggies. ·
Kevin Fogarty, a Wyandotte the street from his home.· May 31 to Sept. 7.
.
potential to be one of our top ·
The
commission
is· County firefighter who had The religious significance
"This exhibit is artifact- draws for Cleveland tourism
· respOnding to complaints, attende-d the church for of the cross is not at issue, rich and also has a great his- for
2008,"
Positively
including some from drivers about l 0 years. "He wore Hodgson·said.
torical element that makes it Cleveland President Dennis
KUALA
LUMPUR, who paid .to become state- 'welding goggles' with
Wagner is considering his a good fit for .us," said Roche said. "It just adds to
Malaysia (AP)- A Roman cenified to carry passen- huge magnifiers. When ile legal options for fighting Angie Coehenour, director the museum 's history of
Catholic newspaper said gers, PUC spokeswoman said Mass, it was obvious he the decision.
of sales and marketing for bringing great exhibits here."

Thv.n_ugh th.e stonn

can

Zoning rules
block cross

Pa. targets
'Amish taxis'

Vatican art collection to
arrive in Cleveland this year

Priest led
parish 63 years

Newspaper
will print

,
d,,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Stew~ named WVU coach, Page 82

Tomlin cheers Stewart's hiring, Page 82
Dolphins fire Cam (',.. neron, Page. 86

F~ay, January

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY- A schedule of upcoming ~igh
school varsity sponlng events involving
IINlma from Meigs and Gallia Counties

FddiY. Jan 4
Boys Basketball
Marietta at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Rock HMI at River VaHey, 6
South Gallia at Ironton St. Joseph, 6:30

P.m.

p·.m.

.

Southam at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 6:30p.m.
v'intOn County at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
Satyrday, Jan. 5
Ol~o Baoketbalt
Academy at Marietta. 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastern at WaJ;lama, 6 p.m.
Wreotltng
Gallia Academy, River Valley at River
Valley Invitational, 10 a.m.
G~lia

Mondn Jen. 7
Baoketbalt
River Valley at Chesapeake. e p.m.
South Gallla at Hannan, 6 p.m. •
Belpre at Eastern, 6.p.m.
Ol~o

ru,.ay

Jan 8

Boyo Book-It
Gallla Academy at Chillicothe, e p.m.
Fairland at Al11er Valley, 6 p.m.
South Gatlla at Southern, 6 p.m ..
Wahama at Eastern , 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Meigs, 6 p.m.

NEW ORLEANS (AP)Craig Steltz blitzed through
his words, clearly ready and
eager to play in the big
,
game.
"We've worked all season
for this. This is exactly
where we want to be," the
L~U All-American safety
said. "The Sugar Bowl."
Uh, Craig, not quite.
Monday _night's matchup
between LSU and Ohio
St~te has a way more snazzy
name.
The BCS' national championship game.
Snooze·a-rama. At that.
rate, might as well · call it
'whl\t it reall¥ is: the Bowl
Championship
Series
national
championship
game of the National
Collegiate
Athletic
Association's Football Bowl

~Dfldi~Jin I
Gl~oBIIkltbalt

Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.

Louisiana, Ohio
governors wager
king cake, wine
over BCS game

.

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone(740)446-1711
Open 7 Days A Week!

4, 2008

BCS Championship goes
bowling for a catchy moniker
Ohio State
coach Jim
Tressel
watches
kicker Ryan
Pretorius
during footb,all practice
Thursday in
Metairie,
La. Ohio
State will
play LSU in
the BCS .
cham pi·
onship foot·
ball game
Monday.

Subdivision.
The
BCSNCGNCAAFBS, for
short.
"It kind of needs something," LSU coach Les
Miles said. "Like the Title
Bowl."
Any title, really. In a sport
that prides itself on tradition, something is definitely
missing here.
.
The Orange Bowl, that's
classic. The Fiesta Bowl,
that's catchy. The long-gone
LA Christmas Festival, that
was clever.
. Way ba\;k when, the
R.humba Bowl and the
Refrigerator Bow I had a
nice ring. -The Salad Bowl
and the Oil Bowl were distinctive, as · were the Raisin
Bowl and the Aviation

APphoto

PleeHIH lowllnJI. 82

Southern muscles Miller for second win of season
Bv Scon WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

scs Notebook

Robiskie
has fam.ily
ties to LSD
football

RACINE - Placing four
players in double-figures,
the ever-improving Southern
Lady Tornadoes (2-Il)
BATON ROUGE, La. whisked to . a 55-40 Tri(AP) - The governors of Valley Conference Hocking
Ohio and Louisiana h'ave Division girls' varsity basplaced a friendly wagercon ketball win over the Miller
NEW ORLEANS (AP)Monday's BCS national Lady Falcons Thursday
Ohio
State wide receiver
championship game.
night in Hayinan gymnasiBrian . Robiskft: is plenty
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland um.
familiar with LSU football.
said he's offering Ohio- . Southern Coach Alan
Robiskie 's father, Terry
made wine to Louisiana Crisp said, "This was a great
Robiskie, grew up in the
Gov. Kathleen Blanco in team win. We played very
N e w
the "unlikely" event of an unselfishly (season .high 14
Orleans
LSU victory over Ohio assists) and . ran .the floor
area. played
State.
very well. This was a much~unning
· If the Buckeyes prevail, needed win for our tournaback for the
Blanco said she'll offer ment draw. I was pleased
Tigers
and
Strickland a king cake witli tonight's effort.'
rushed
for
an oval.-shaped purple,
Southern was led by
I
,000
yards
as
a
senior
over
green and gold sugar sophomore Kasey Turley
in 1976.
topped pastry celebrating with 21 points and 10
''Hopefully, he'll be out
Mardi Gras.
rebounds for the doublethere in a Robiskie jersey, a
"I'll be anxious to double, while the sophoBuckeyes Robiskie jersey,"
receive his wine to cele- more trio of Lindsay
Brian said Thursday.
brate our win," Blanco Teaford, Breanna Taylor and·
Brian Robiskie, who
said, laughing, when ques- Cheyenne Dunn all had dou~raduated from high school
tioned about the bet ble digits with II, 10 and 10
m Cleveland, has never
respectively. Lynzee Tucker
Thursday.
been to a game· at Tiger
Strickland also sounded added three. Whitney WolfeStadium, but he's been .
Riffle didn't hit the scoring
confident:
down to Louisiana a lot to
"Come Monday night, column, but was praised by
visit family.
we hope to have our cake Crisp for notching a team"It kind of reminds me a
and eat it, too," he said in a high six assists to go with
lot of Ohio State in how
six rebounds.
statement.
they suppon their team," he
Miller was led by Cheryl
said.
Bourne with 13, Randi Toth
· After a short playing
with 10, Rikki Houk four,
Strickland to pass
career with the Oakland
Kelsey Hinkley four, Dacyan
Raiders
and
Miami
New Orleans trip Wood three, Mariah
Dolphins, Terry Robiskie
Thompson two, Meghan ·
· has been coaching in the
COLUMBUS (AP) Walters
two
and
Michelle
NFL for 25 years. He was
Gov. Ted Strickland is
wide receivers coach 'with
skipping an invitation to Carney two.
Southern.
led
from
the
the
Dolphins this season
watch
Ohio
State
and
17.
he
also was an interim
onset,
jump-started
by
a
University play in the
6
frrst
quarter
spread..
Turley
head
coach
for the Redskins
football national champiand
Browns.
'
onship game in New paved the way for the
Brian Robiskie is one of
Tornadoes with eight points,
Orleans.
several
Ohio State juniors
while
Taylor
anchored
the
Strickland, a Democrat,
who has said he'll look into
opposite flank with six
will watch Monday's
jumping to the NFL after
pomts. Lynzee Tucker added
game against Louisiana three in the mix.
this season, though he said
State University with famEric Randolph/photo it's not likely he will take
The Triple "T" Express
ily and friends at home.
Southern's Lindsay Teaford (center) looks to pass during the second quarter of a girls basStrickland's spokesman
Please see Notebook. 81
Plelse SH Southern. 86 ketball game against Miller on Thursday night in Racine.
·
Keith Dailey says the governor will- watch the game
like most of the rest Qf
Ohio residents.
The university says 285
people accepted its offer
BY STEVEN WINE
won in its first Bowl after 23 minutes.
AP SPORTS WRITER
-tp -go to New Orleans,
Virginia Tech closed the
Championship Series game
including Lt. Gov. Lee
to set a team record for vic- deficit to 17-14 before Sean
MIAMI - The surprising tories. A year ago the Glennon was intercepted by
Fisher, Secretary of State
:Jennifer Brunner . and Kansas Jayhawks achieved Jayhawks werit 6-6.
Thornton, whose 30-yard
unexpected
again · "Peo~le kept telling us we return gave Kansas the ball
·Aitorney .G eneral Marc the
. Thursday - they won the couldn t win against this at the 2 with II minutes left.
Dann.
·
·
· Nearly 45 percent ' of Orange Bowl with defense. team, that we couldn't win Reesing scored on the next
While their high-powered th~ big game, that we had no play.
.those invited by Ohio
offense was stymied most of chance," quarterback Todd
Chris Harris also had an
:State will go for free.
the
night,
the
Jayhawks
Reesing
said.
"We
took
that
in\erception
to set up a field .
: The university says the
others will pay $1,800 for came up with three intercep- to heart. We like being goal, and the Jayhawks
tions and beat Virginia Tech underdogs.''
totaled five sacks while
a VIP package.
24-2! in the Orange Bowl to
The No. 5 Hokies (11-3) allowing only two scoring
cap one of the finest seasons lost their fourth consecutive drives.
in school history.
BCS game. It was a bitter·
Virginia Tech drove 78
The turnovers led to 17 sweet finish for the Hokies, yards to score with 3 minKansas points, including· who revived campus spirits utes left on Glennon's 20: : 1-740·446-2342 ext. 33 ·
Aqib Talib's 60-yard return this season following the yard pass to Justin Harper.
for the game's first score. He April 16 massacre that left The Jayhawks' Raimond
:,.,. - I·7-.aoDS
6-moll- oportoOmydallyoentlnetcom was chosen the game's most 33 students and professors Pendleton fielded the ensuvaluable player.
:.
dead.
ing onside kicJ-, and they ran
'!lll!lllLfillll .
"Everybody talks about
"I think we still accom- · out the clock.
"It feels really great,"
:Ertc Rlndolph, Spo(le Writer Virginia Tech's defense," plished something this sea·
~?40) 4-16-2342, ext. 33
said safety Justin Thornton, son," tackle Duane Brown Kansas tackle Anthony
:aportsOmydallysentlnel.com
who. also had an intercep· said. "We couldn't finish off Collins said. "Now I feel
like USC and Florida and
'aryan Walters, Sports Writer tion. "We came out to show on a high note.''
AP photo
we can play defense at
The Jayhawks played in them feel every day. They
:(740) 446·2342. exl. 33
bWaltersOmydallylribune.com
Kansas, too."
their first major bowl since don't get any better than Kansas wide receiver Marcus Henry (86) avoids a tackle by
No. 8 Kansas (12-1), per- the 1969 Orange Bowl, and this. I know it ain't 'the Virginia Tech's Nekos Brown (47) and Vince Hall during the
.Larry Crum, Sports Writer
second quarter of the Orange Bowl football game at Dolphin
haps the biggest surpris~ in they made a big splash at the
{!40) 446-2342, ext. 33
Please see K•nsas, Bl
Stadium in Miami on Thursday.
10rum 0 mydailyreglster.com
college football this season, start, racing to a 17-0 lead

on

Jayh~wks fend

off Va. Tech, 24-21

.CoNfAcrUs

Two Convenient Locations:.
1/4 mile north of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, West VIrginia
(304) 773-5323

Inside
.

.

....

----·

----·~ ---------------- ;-

--

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 4.

. .Friday, January 4, 2008

2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bill Stewart promoted to.West Virgiriia footb~ll coach
BY Boa BAUM
AP SPORTS WRITER
SCOITSDALE, Ariz.
Bill Stewart didn't need an
actual job interview. His perforrnance in the 2 1/2 weeks
since
Rich
Rodriguez
resigned, punctuated by
West Virgi nia's resounding
victory over Oklahoma in
the Fiestal Bowl, was
enough.
Now he's the coach of the .
Mountaineers, a promotion
for a man who calls himself
a "West Virginian all my
life."
"I had the longest job
interview in America,"
Stewart joked Thursday,
hours after the 48-28 victory
· over the Sooners and before
the team boarded a flight
home.
·
The 55-year-old coach
agreed to a five-year contract worth $800,000 a year,
plus ,incentives. The base
salary totals $4 million, the
same amount West Virginia
is seeking in a buyout of the
seven-year contract, · worth
almost $2 million a year, that
Rodriguez signed in August.
Stewart was appointed
interim
coach
when
Rodriguez left Dec. 16 to
coach Michigan. West
Virginia formed .a search
committee that, according to
athletic
direct9r
Ed
Pastilong, interviewed "a
large number of candidates."
Central Michigan coach
Butch Jones, a West Virginia
native, was considered a
leading contender.

Bu~ the comn1ittee had its
eyes On SteWart all along.
"In reality, he was being
interviewed every day," said
Pastilong. who has known
Stewart for nearly four
decades. "I heard somebody
say that last night he had the
ultimate interview. But he
always was one of our most
serious candidates."
Gov. Joe Manchin was
among the enthusiastic
group , of boosters who
attended the announcement
at the Scottsdale · resort
where the Mountaineers had
stayed.
"I couldn't be more
happy," Manchin said. "I've
watched this team come
together and this gentleman
right here, Billy Stewart,
bring it together. He 's the
glue. There's not a mother or
father watching today that
wouldn't be proud to have
their son play for this man."
Pastilon11 called Stewart to
his room m the wee hours
'I)lursday to offer him the
job. Stewart has not signed a
contract but agreed to terms
with a handshake.
"I don't have a lot of experience. in these ~egotiations
and thmgs. That s my agent
right down there,". he said,
pointing to his wife, Karen.
Stewart had the backing of
the team, including Pat
White. The quarterback
began stumping for Stewart
on the field after running for
150 yards and thruwing for
176 and two touchdowns in
the victory over the No. 3
Sooners.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Don't tell this to anyone at
Pitt: One of new West
'Virginia coath Bill Stewart's
biggest fans coaches right
next door to the Panthers.
Pittsburgh Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin is only two
days away from coaching
his first NFL playoff game,
but he took a fe'¥ minutes
Thursday to praise Stewlirt
- the man who ·gave him
his first assistant's job, as
the wide receivers coach at
VMI in 1995.
Tomlin spent only one
season under Stewart, who
was so impressed with
Tomlin as a player at
WilHam &amp; Mary that he
added him to his staff only a
few months after Tomlin's
college career ended.
Tomlin said he learned
much in that single season
froin Stewart, a longtime
assistant coach who was
unexpectedly hired by West
Virginia hours after leading

the Mountaineers to a 48-28
rout of Oklahoma in the
Fiesti Bowl on Wednesday
night.
Stewart appeared to hug
everyone in sight who was
wearing Mountaineers gold
and blue after the stunningly
one-sided game, displaying
the passion and love for the
sport that, to Tomlin, is
Stewart's biggest strength.
"He's a special man in my
life for a lot of reasons. He
gave me my first job. He
showed me·\how to express
the love and enthusiasm I
have for this game as a
coach," Toinlin said. ' "He
cares about people. It oozes
out of his everyday existence. He's an awesome
coach, an awesome man,
.and I'm extremely happy for
h'tm. "
•
.
Stewart, formerly the
assistant head ~oach, was
expected to coach West
Virginia on an interim basis
only for the bowl game and

was_n 't considered to be in
the running for the fufl-time
job. ·•
Still, Tomlin isn't surprised that Stewart, wh&lt;Y is
much liked by th'e West
YIC8inia players, was able to
refocus the Mountaineers so
quickly after a tumultuous
and distraction-filled month.
·Despite all that unrest and
unhappiness, West Virginia
rallied for what arguably is
the best victory in school
history, and with a coach
who was running his first
game at a BCS school.
Tomlin couldn't have been
happier that a self-described
football lifer like Stewart, a
loyal assistant for most of
his 33 years in coaching,
finally gets to be a head
coach on one of college
.football's biggest stages.
"It was football justice, if
you will," Tomlin said. "If
you know Bill Stewart, you
love Bill Stewart and last
night was football justice."

Kansas

own," Kansas coach Mark
Mangino saic;l.
The game was among the
chilliest Orange Bowls ever,
with a temperature of 57
degrees at kickoff and
winds gusting at up to 25
.
m~ Jayhawks were the
nation's
highest-scoring
offense this season at 44
points per game, and they
· took a wide-open approach
in the first s~ries. Once they
lined up with both tackles
flanked wide alongside the
receivers, and 9n another
play Reesing threw a lefthanded shovel pass for a 9yard gain. ·
Kansas split a·tackle wide
again when Reesing completed a pass to convert a
fourth-and-1
situation,
w.hich led to a touchdown
for a 17-0 lead. Reesing hit
Marcus Henry with a · 13yard pass for the score, capping a 59-yard drive.
But that was
the

Jayhawks' lone scoring
drive of more than 17 yards,
leaving most of the big
plays to their defense. The
biggest was by Talib, w~o
stepped in front of the
intended receiver to intercept freshman Tyrod Taylor
and ran along the Virginia
Tech sideline untouched for
a touchdown.
It was the first interception return for a touchdown
in the Orange Bowl since
1968.
'
On Virginia Tech's next
possession, Josh Morgan
dropped a potential touchdown pass, and Jud
Dunlevy missed a 47-yard
field goal attempt.
Virginia Tech mounted a
68-yard drive late in the
first half, and Branden .Ore
scored on a 1-yard rnn to
cut the deficit to I 7-7. Ore
was suspended for the first
quarter for being late to a
practice but still finished
with 116 yards rushing.

Thursday. "We got hundreds of suggestions from
the public last year, but not
fro.p Page 81
so many. this year. Maybe
people have run out of
tdeas.
B&lt;'wl.
"Names are a funny thing.
"The Astro-Biuebonnet You
could probably hire all
Bowl, that was a good one," the PR folks in the world,
Miles said. "We played in it and they might come up
when I was a graduate assis- with a moniker that would
tant at Michigan, against be disliked by a lot of peoUCLA. I liked that name."
ple."
·
·
The NFL took the Super
Besides, some like it just
Bowl, Division ill owns the fme.
Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl.
"I mean, the Sugar Bowl
Fact is, the BCS knows it's and the Rose Bowl are
great,'' Ohio State receiver
trailing in the name game.
"We're all hoping that Brian Hartline said. "But
something evolves - we we're playing for the chamreally are," BCS adminis- pionship, · that's what our
trator Bill Hancock said game ts called. It's not

named for a plant." ·
Former Notre Dame
coach Bob Davie would
keep it, too .
·
"I think the problem is
you're playing it in a site.
Like last year, you had the
.Fiesta Bowl. What are you
going to call it? Fiesta Bowl
II? Are you going to come
up with some complete
name that's meaningless?"
he said.
"In some ways, maybe it's
refreshin!l that it's ·not a
commerctalized name. And
at least when you say it, you
know exactly what it is.
There's no explaining what
it is . When you say, 'BCS
championship,' it's the JM:,:S
championship."
p

national championship, but
it doesn't get any better. We
·wori the Orange Bowl." .
. Yirginia Tech's. biggest
gam came on spectal teams.
Harper . scored on an ~4yard punt return after taking
a la!eral on a reverse from
Eddt~ Royal, who fielded
~e ktck. .
,
. Otherwtse, Kansas speeta! teams played well. Joe
Mortel)sen blocked a 25. yard field-goal attempt to
preserve a 17-14 Kansas
lead. The Jayhawks pulled
o~ a fake punt to keep one
dnve gomg, and Kyle
Tucker's booming punts
kept the Hokies pinned
deep.
"We were supposed to be
. outclassed on special teams,
and I think we held our

Bowling

•'

"·

'

•'

..j
,

CLASSIFIED

coach in January 2000 after
two seasons as offensive
coordinator in the'Canadian
Football League.
Don Neh~.D. the retired
Mountaineer! coach who
hired Stewart, was glad his
former assistant had 1a~ded
the job.
"He's just such a good person and the kids love him,"
Nehlen said. "It 's such a
good fit with the program."
. Pittsburgh Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin got his first
coaching job when Stewart
hired him as an assistant at
Virginia Military Institute.
Tomlin was elated to ·see
Stewart g~t the We st
Virginia job.
"Bill Stewart!" Tomlin
said at the Steelers' practice
when told of the hiring.
"That's the best news of the
day!"
A message left for
Rodriguez early Thursday
was
not
immediately
returned.
Stewart was head coach at
VMI
from 199.4 to 1996,
AP photo
compiling
an 8-25 record.
West Virginia interim head coach Bill Stewart is carried off the field by his team after defeatHe
also
had
stints as an
ing Oklahoma 48-28 in the Fiesta Bowl college football game Wednesday in Glendale , Ariz.
at Salem College,
Stewart was named head coach at a news confernece Thursday after his Resta Bowl win. assistant
North· Carolina, Marshall ,
"He deserves it," White ond'ary coach and recruiting now have a coach who truly William &amp; Mary, Navy,
said. "A great man. A great coordinator, was the only values the opportunity to Arizona State and Air Force.
coach. All the players assistant who has resigned · work as the head f?otball
Stewart acknowledged he
respect him and all the play- so far, Pastilong said.
co~ch at , West Vtrgtma had mellowed since his diffiers love him. You couldn't
WVU president Mike Umverstty.
cult years at VML
ask for a better man to lead Garrison said Stewart as a
Stewart earned $139,000
"I'm a little more settled
us to victory today."
'
this- year in his position that in. I'm a little more laid back
Stewart said he wanted the native West Virginian, fully 'also included coaching tight · and I'm a little more wise,"
e_nds and fullbacks and being he said. "It's called maturity.
entire staff . to return, appreciates the school.
"At this university, loyalty the special teams coordina- I'll be as demanding, but I
although some are expected
to join Rodriguez in and trust are important," tor. He came to West found out there's other ways
Michigan. Tony Gibson, sec- Garrison said. "We know we Virginia as quarterbacks to get the results ." •

Oklahoma.
Steelers' Tomlin cheers Stewart's hiring Notebook - enough
"I've been fortunate
that this is my sec-

fromPageBl

{[ribune - Sentinel - l\egt!)ter

I

fromPageBl

the plunge.
Robiskie · led
the
Buckeyes in ·receiving with
50 catches for 885 yards
and 10 touchdowns.
With an NFL coach in the
family, he should have a
very good idea of where he
stands in the eyes of NFL
scouts.
"When the time comes,
I'm going to sit down and
talk to him, hopefully he's
~oing to have a lot of good
mformation for me and I
think that either way he's
going to help me make the
decision,"
TIGER TALES: LSU
defensive end Kirston
Pittman has become a real
popular storyteller lately.
Pittman played on the
Tigers tel!lll that beat
Oklahoma
at · the
Superdome for the 2003
BCS national champi.
onship. In the weeks leading up to LSU's game
against Ohio State, several
current teammates sought
him out, wondering what
to expect.
"I've been asking a lot
of
questions,"
AllAmerican defensive tackle
porsey
said
Glenn
Thursday. "Before we got
down here, I asked him
what type of environment
we were getting into."
"He said there's going to
be a lot of distractions, but
just stay focused and know
you're on a business trip.
You're · down here for a
reason, not to have fun ,"
he said.
Pittman played a lot on
third · downs as a true
freshman in 2003. He
missed the last two years
because of injuries, and
returned to start every
game this season.
Pittman and tight end
Keith Zinger are the two
holdovers who played in
that
big
win
over
The title game will be
rotated .each,. year. It was
played at Glendale, Ariz.,
last season and will he held
at Dolphin Stadium soon
after the Omnge Bowl in

2009.

Chances are, it won 't be
tlie Big Bowl, the Bucks
Bowl or the College Bowl
by then.
That certainly appeals to
sponsors, making it easier to
plaster their ads all over the
game. Without a spiffy
name to get in its way,
Allstate' s logo appears
prominently
at
the
Superdome.
Some bowl names sprung
up naturally.
A sports editor in New

ond go-round," Pittman
.said. "[just try to tell the
guys we have. to · take
advantage of eyery opportumty and don. t let tt pass
you by, because you may
never get the chance
again."
CAUTIOUS
CONSUMERS: Ohio State fans
will give you the shirts off
their backs - particularly
if it reminds them of a
painf!Jl defeat.
Buckeyes fans are taking
a
more
conservative
approach to . buying Tshirts, hats and sweat
shirts that commemorate
Ohio State's second consecutive trip to the B!;:S
national
championship
game against LS U ·on Jan.

7.

expect LSU fans to be
more subdued with their
shopping this time, compared to 2003, when the
school won a national
. championship said Alan
Wallace, a st~re manager
at Tiger Mania in Baton
Rouge.
Should Ohio State win
· the game, then sales will
pick up - as will production.
One company will produce T-shirts for 18
straight hours after the
game and will churn out
100,000 shirts.
IT'S GETTING A BIT
DRAFTY: Ohio State OT
Alex Boone confirmed
Thursday that he has filed
the paperwork to receive
an evaluation from NFL
scouts. He said he will disctrss the report and his
draft prospects with his
family soon after Monday
night's game.
Boone, a 6-foot-8, 313pound junior, said it isn't·
as hard as ~veryone might
think to concentrate on
next Monday's game with·out being distracted by his
decision.
"It's not as hard as you
think," · Boone
said.
"Obviously this game
comes first right now. This
is the most important thing
there is."

A year ago the Buckeyes
'were beaten 41-14 by
Florida and fans were
stuck with merchandise
that did nothi.ng but
brought back images of the
lopsided loss .
"You don't want to buy
stuff and be stuck with
those bad memories,"
Ohio State grad Steven
Seeberg said.
Retailers around Ohio
report that orders for
silkscreened championship
T-shirts are down . The1 . QUICK-HITTERS:
Buckeyes' loss to Florid\(( LSU All-American safety
.
coupled with the prd- · Craig Steltz sat ' in the
gram's third run to the stands at the Superdome
Championship for the 2003 BCS title
Bowl
.series title game in the game, watching brother
pru;t six years, has cut into Kevin play for the Tigers.
sales.
.. . The rapper Juvenile has
"Normally, our phoqes asked for and'been granted
are ringing off the hook a pass by _Ohio State to
about bowl merchandise, _watch the game, even
but this year, there was though he's a New Orleans
kind of a lull," said Judi native. Juvenile went to
Mormol, co-owner of school with Buckeyes
Conrads College Gifts , defensive lineman Nader
just off the Ohio State Abdallah .... Ohio State 's
main campus. "People are honorary captain· for the
waiting to see wh'at hap- game is former player and
'pens ."
current New Orleans
Along the same line s, Saints defensive lineman
retailers · in Loui siana Will Smith.
Orleans came up .with the
Sugar
Bowl
because
Louisiana produced so
much sugarcane. An oilman
saw a certain crop growing
around Dallas and picked
the Cotton Bowl.
The Rose Bowl's origin
came. from farther away. A
"Battle of the Flowers" festival in Nice, France, led to
the Tournament of Roses
parade, and the game followed.
The NFL got plain lucky.
Officially, they started out
with the AFL-NFL World
Championship
Game.
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
wanted to call it "The Big
One," but that got rejected.
Lamar Hunt, one of the

AFL's foundc;rs, proposed
"Super Bowl" as a temporary solution.
Where did he gel that
idea? From watching his
daughter
bounce
a
SuperBall.
Ohio State tackle Alex
Boone is set to play .in his
second straight BCS title
game. He's perfectly happy
with the name.
"It's sim~le and says it
all," he smd. "You could
call it the Formula One
Bowl, but nobody would
know what you're talking
about."
AP Sports . Writer Jeff
Latz/re m Glendale, Ariz..
contributed to this report.

WeCov

'•

,

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason

Counties Like

Noone

Galli a
County,
OH

Else Can!

Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
.
www.mydailysentinel.com
.classified@ mydailytribune .com REACH ·OVER 285,000 PROSPEC;J"S
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW N
To Place
{[ribune
Sentinel ·
l\egister
ca~r;r
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

0

:d,ay...

Or Fax To

446·3008

0( Fax To (740) 992·2157

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AM A!2
Successrut Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
'

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
1he right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must 8
eported on the firs
IllY of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglster will b
esponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occupia
y the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable lo
ny loss or opens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
ion of an advertise
ent. Corrections wil
made in the firs
alleble edition.

\\'\01 \I I \ II '\IS

·r

i

Oearllfir~

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

£1i

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
oddedtoyourclosslfiedods
Borders $3.00/per ad

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .

All Display : 12 Noon 2

Monday- Friday for ln•ertlon
In Next Diity'• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p.m .
Thursday tor §_undays

Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword •' Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

WANTFD

675-5234

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng r...NII the rlghi lo edit , reject , or cancel any ad at an~ time Errore must be repor1ed en the first day pf
Trlbun•Sentlnei-Reglsler will be re1pon1lble fo r no more than tha coat olthe apace occupied by th e
and only th e t1rst insertion We
any loaa Of eJipllllH that reaultalrom the
or omlnlon of an advertisement. Correction will be mede In the
aveliablel!dlhon • Bel
are alw1y1 ccntldentiil. • Current rite
applle'a. • All rHI estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fa11 Ho!lsmg
of 1968. •
n
accepts only
wanted ada meeting EOE st~~rrdards. Wa Mil not
accept any advertising In viol ation of thelnw

error

publication
card

help

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

'ro Buy

10

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

GIVEAWAY
------·
1L,~------··,.J S1
Absolute
Dollar.Coins,
U.S.
lver andTop Gold

1yr old Shih-Tzu/Yorkle
Welch mix, with Kennel304·
674·5889
-------Free Chihuahua Blue 4yrs
old 740-645-6987, leave
message.

AttentioO!
Local company otfenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to t&gt;uy your
home instead of renting
• 100% fmancmg
· Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Pa~m ent could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367·0000

Prootsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre1935 U S Currency,
Sohta1re Diamonds· M T.S
Co1n Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-4462842.
I \1 1'11 1\'11'\ 1

t ~en~ I=-----.,
"l

I~\

HOMI.'l

IURSALE

II I . . ,

first

Acl

"";;::;,:::1

Thrs

MOIIILF. HOMES

MOiliiJ : I{OM!"'

1-llRSAI.I-:

IURRENT

2008 sect1onal home 3
Bedroom 2 Bath deliVered
ana set up $38,695 740·
385·9948 .

Racine area 2 br carport.
porch, good cond1t1on, elec·
Inc heat, m to~n . near
school, park &amp; l1bra'y $400
dep .$400 per month. water,
95 Srngle wide 14"'60, 2 sewer. garbage mcluded, no
bed, '1 bath &amp; all apPt pets. t740)949-22H
$8700 740·208·1535
Ai'AKrM ll.'l'fS
New 3 Bedroom homes fr()(l"\ 1""0
IUR RE~T
$214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades. delivery &amp;
1 and 2 bedroom a~ari ·
set-up (740)385~2434
m~nts, furnished and unfurNice used 3 Bedroom 1 Bath niShed. and houses in
Home $5995 delivered 740· Pomeroy and Middteport,
385·7671
'
security deposit required, no

110
Cross Creek Auction BuHalo 1
liFJJ' WANIT.D
A
uctiOn
Saturday
6pm
Estate Sale thiS Saturday ,
u~-DH .
consisting of 3 bedroom 100 WORKERS NEEDED
pets, 740-992·2218
suites, Cedar Chest. Cast Assemble Crafts, wood
Lars&amp;
Iron Skillets, Cedar Items.To $480/wk Materials
~CREAGl:
2BR renovated downtown
Wardrobe, w/skelton key, prov•ded Free mformat•on
AU real estate advertising
pkg
24Hr.
801-428·4649
G
,allipolis. C/A.HNA. water.
In this newspaper is
China Cabinet, A'mencan
subject to lhe Federal MOBILE HOME LOT FOR sewer. trash $525/mo +dep
Fostoria Glassware &amp; much An Excellent way to earn
RENT, 1031 Georg~s Creek 740-709·1690
Fair tiouslng Ac:t of 1968
more also 8p1eces of Blue money. The New Avon
which
makes
it
Illegal
to
Ad,44t-1111
Cast Iron Cookware Local Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
Apt. for rent in Racine. 3
advertise "any
Cons1gnment 8 gal Stone
HI \I \I.S
bedroom. Call 740-247preference, limitation or
Bo11 number ads ar
Cro ck. 4 gal. Churn. ·Old Appalachian T1re Products,
discrimination based on
~;:::~======~ 4_2_9_2.____________
Apple Butter Pot . Couch, Inc. 1s currently seek•ng an
lwa~s confidential.
race, color, religion, sex
10
HOUSf);
Apt for Rent No Pets. 740·
Ctiair &amp; Recliners, Don Ho A-2 Service Tech for our
familial status Or national
fOR RENT
992-5858
Crock marked Arbu ckle, WV Point Pleasant. WV location.
)Current rate car
',
origin, or any Intention to
(has been painted)
V1sa Wages based onexperience
ppllos.
make any such
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
114
and Master Card (304) 550· and benelils including 401K, www.comics.com
preference, limitatiOn or
3 Bdrm all electnc on 371 Estates. 52 Westwood
@
2008
by
NEA,
Inc.
1616
Auctmneer
Stephen
Health Insurance and Pa1d
dlscrlminaUon."
Broadway St ,Midd ,s 425 Drive, from $365 to $560.
)&gt;All Real Estat
iiRei:ie::!:.-';,:'6~39;...__...., Vacation are also available.
per
month plus deposit 1 _ 740·446·2568
Equal
dvertlsements ar
This newspaper will not , 740-416·1354.
WANrnU
Valid CDL required Please
Housing
Opportunity.
This
bjact to the Fadera
110
I
MONEY
knowingly accept
ro
BUY
apply
1
n
person
For
more
institution
IS
an
Equal
•
•
HELl'
WANTFlJ
•
~
m
LoAN
11
air Houolng Act o
advertisements tor real
3 BR house m Galf1 pohs, Opportumty Prov•der and'
Information
contact
Teddy
estate which is in
1168.
·
Lambert at 304-675·3930.
WI
D conn
$425/mo Employer
violation of the !aw. Our l
Want to' buy Junk Cars, call
Medical Assistant needed Truck Drivers COL Class A
'
$150/dep
You
pay
all utili- Beech St ,Middleport. 2 Br
readers
are
hereby
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 32-40 hrs per week at Required, m1mmum of 5
1,.
.:.
·'
This newspape 74Q·38B·0884
ties.
Cal
l
Wayne
404-456informed
thai all
furmshed apt. uhlllles pa1r1,
-======--, Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Doctor's Off1ce experience years driving exp'
ceopll only hel
r::
dwellings advertised In
3802
no pets, deposit &amp; refer675-1429.
preferred.
Must
be
w
illing
to
Experience
on
Borrow
Smart.
Contact
anted ads meetln
lhls newspaper are
ences
740-992-0165 ·
BSS
work
evening,
hours
3-1
1
,
4
O
verdeimenslonal
loads.
the
Ohio
Division
of
3 br house, Pomeroy, 2 full
available on an equal
OE'Imtndards.
days
per
week,
benefits
M
h
od
d
.
.
Fmanc1al
tnslitutlog's
opportunitv
baaes.
b
ath,
garage,
full
basement
1
BEHAVIOR SUPPORT
Clean &amp; qu1et apts. ROdney
Send Resumes to record.
us ave
go
nvlng OH1ce of Consumer
new
carpet.
very
clean
We will not knowln
SPECIALIST. Work wilh offered
E
arn
up
to
$2 .000
&amp; Gallipolis ,area Refldep
cJo Pomt Pleasant weekly. For applicahon Call Affa1rs BEFORE you refi·
hand1cap
access1ble,
S635
a
accept any adver
Individuals wilh develop- CLA-t
req. No Pets Call for appt &amp;
Reg1ster 200 Main St. Pt.
flance your home or For sale by owner 38R
app. 446-1271 01 709-1657
Iseman! In wiolatlo
l~;~~~~j mentaldisabilities assessing Pleasant, WV 25550
(304)722·2t84
M·F obtain a loan. BEWARE Ranch. 1 bath. Fam11y month, (740)949·2303
t the law.
behav101' problems. develop8:30am·4pm
Room, Stove/Fridge, W/D 3BA 15 bath house m CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
1ng
effectiVe
In
te
rventions,
Middleton
Estates
IS
accept111!11"""-~---.,
advance
~~~~~~:~::::;:~====~ tram1ng staff and monltonng mg applications for DireCt
of requestspayments
for any la1geof mcluded. Ask1ng $70,000. town $575/rent + sec dep ED &amp; AFFOROABLE!
ScJ.Kx)rs
fees or msurance.Call the Call740·709·6339
Townhouse apartments
446·3644
., .
CLASSIFIED INDEX
lm p lement~llon ol •nterven· Care Staff. II you would like Lw-oiiNiii·s· ri Ri iUf.:'i ilii'IONiiiio_.l OH•ce of Consumer
and/or small houses FOR
Affairs toll free at 1-866- HouseAfor sale m Racme House for rent ion Gall 1polis, RENT Call (740)441-1 1 ~ 1
4x4,8 For Sale .............................................. 725 , ~~~~;0:~:: is~~:,n i~~~= to ta~e 1 ~d.vantage .of th:s
nforma110n
Announcement. ........................................... 030 BA/BS and 2 ye.ir experi ~~~0 ~ ~YrlY~ m~~~~Pj.Y
Gallipolis Career College 278·0003 to learn if the aref. _ppr~ll - 4 acres, all 2BR, 2 bath, LA, DR, large forapplication &amp; 1
0
Antlques ....................................................... 530 ence working With MAO~ 0
a a r.,
•s. (Careers Close To Home) mortgage brok.er or pro ess1ona ly landscaped krtchen, unfllilshed base·
h1o 45631
Monday,
Call Todayl 740·446·4367,
lender is properly Ranch
style house wilh 4 menl. detached
garage
Ellm View
Apartment. for Rent ................................... 440 individuals. E"'perience and through
Fnday,· sam
1·
Auction and Flea Market .............................OBO
-4pm ·
1·800·2 14-04:~2
hc"ensed. (This 1s a public bed rooms, 1IVIng room, den- w/small fenced
yard
Auto Parts It AcCeasorlea .......................... 760 :o~kmg I knowl ~~g e o~ An equal opportumty wwwgtrllipollscaraarColle[J8 oom service announcement lng room, kitchen, large fam· $575/month. utillli(1s not Apartments
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
e havlora pr~nCI~e~ ~n _em_p_lo.'-ye_r_F_IM_ID_N_,-- Accredilell Member Accrediting from the OhiO Valley ily room,centralair, gas heat included Sec. dep reo. •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Autos for Sale.............................................. 710 tee n~qubles bpre edrr aary OhiOValley Home 'Hea"h
Cou~~~ tor lnd!IJ)enderll Colleges Publi Shing Company)
and1 fireplace AdditiOnofa Sorry, NO PETS. Call 740- •Cen1ral heal • AIC
11
174
large Flonda room com- 339·11 o1. Leave a m•s· •w h ld "1 ,
. Inc hiring STNA CNA • and
1110,..flOOI• 2 6
· · Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750 negottaAe ~ ase onBexhpenBuilding
Supplles
................................
:
.......
S50
ence.
ep
y
to:
e
avlor
H
H
I~
A
'd,
d
.
WANTED
pletely cedar opens onto sage.
as er ryel loc up
. ''
111
PAIS
ome eaCare
I es an 1
..,aO Do
PRolmiONAL
electrtc· averagmg
1
Bpalneas and Buildings .............:............... 340 Support
Inc , POSpecialist,
Box 1''10 Personal
Aides.
Full,
patiO &amp; poo1area Heated 1n -:-,- - - - -- - •All
$50·$60/montn
·
SERVI~
ground
pool
enclosed
by pn· Very n1ce 3 Br duple)(. 1n
Bu.Inell Op p'ort un lty................................. 210 Charleston, WV 25339.~· Par1 Time and Par D•'em
~~,
1 ·
d d s rae se 740 992 3702 •o
t
Business Training ....................................... 140
positions available. Apply George's Portable Sawmill,
vacy enc:1ng an an · y u ~~- - wner pays wa er sewer
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..................... ,..... 790 Elks Lodge In Gallipolis, at 1480 Jackson Pike, don't haul your Logs to the TURNED DOWN ON scaped Finished 2 car j420 MDIULE Ho~u:-.;
trash
pamplng Equipment ................................... 780 Bar1enders needed, expari· GalhpoiiS, phone 441·1393 Mill just call304-675·1957. SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? garage attached to house
fOR RFNr
(304)882-3017
arda of Thank&amp; .................................;........ 010 anced preferred, please for Skilled OffiCe or applyat
No Fee Unless We W•n' and flmshed ~ heated 3car ·--iiiitiiiiiiiio-pl
Chlld/EiderlvCare ....................................... 190 send resu~e ' 0 POBox i 456 J ck Pke
Professionally
Clean,
1·888·582-3345
garage·
unattached
~~
1 · Ph0~ 9 Homes
a
. Electrlca11Refrlgeratlon ............ ................... 840 303 Attn· Mike
son
&amp;
Busmess
Excellen
t
condi
t
ion
ready
to
2
B
edroom
1n
A1o
G
rande
•
Equipment for Rent .....................................480 --·-,--·--·- - - - 441 -9263
or Reasonable
Rates,
move 1n $255 000 00 Call· area Weekly or bl ·week·
- Excavatlng ................................................... 830
'FEDERAL
6~f~~.~~~~~~i~~ve W;;~: References 740-446-2262 l!rT.10;--':'H:"OMES---., .:.17'1!40~19~4~9--22_1_7·~~·- · ....,· ly rent Depos•t IS40o 740·
,,.,.~vt~
Farm Equlpment..........................................&amp;10
POSTAL JOBS
"
245·5671 or 740· 645-5429
Farms for Ront ............................................. 430
and Bonefl1s •ncluding S&amp;M Home Repair. Paln1ing, L--aiFOIIiiRaiSAiiiiiLEO...,I
Moun..: UOME.~ ------~- Gracious L"mg 1 &lt;~nd ,
Farms for Sale ..... ,, .. :...,.............................. 330 $17.33-$27.58/hr , now hir- health 1nsurance and Decks, Finish work, yard ,•
FOR SALE
.2 BR tra 11er located 1n Bedroom Apls ctt Villayl'
· . For Lease .....................................................490 •ng. For appl1cat1on and free m1leagere~mbursement .
care,' Free Estimates 0 down payment. 4 bed- .___iiiiriiiiiiiio-pl B•dwell
$360/month. Manor and R.v,')rs•Uo Apts 1
For Sale ........................................................ 585 governement JOb info, call PAIS. eakng
(740)446-3682
rooms.
Larne
yard.
Covered
14X70
Mob
1e
Home
with
$360/dep
+ f1rst months Middleport, from $327 to
1
1 ..
~:~.
For Sala or Trade.......... ...............................590 Amencan Assoc of Labor 1· LPN sadm 1n1ster/momtor
deck. Attached
garage. 740· 50X95 corner tot in New rent References reqUired $592. 740-992-5064. E~u.:~l
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO 913·599·8226, 24/hrs emp patient med•cat1on prepara·
367-7129.
Haven. wv askmg 740-441 -5551
Housmg Oppo1tu l1tv
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450 _se_r'-----~- tiOn for IndiVIduals With
8~
----~~-- 28,000.00 call 304-675·
2BA 1n R1o Grande area. Immaculate I be::l room apl
, . General Haullng ...........................................850
d 1
d b11 1
OPPo
3-4 bdr completely remod· 0517 or 304 550 3716
1ty,,.
Giveaway ...............
:
......................................
040
Guard1
ng
Angels
Child
Care
M
eve
opmcenta
1d11es
n
;:::
·
:;;tmJNfJY;:;:~ eled home s.n•ng on 114 ____·_·___ $350/mon $350 dsp.Trash&amp; · Ntt~ Cdlpet &amp; Ccihrn»f&lt;:
·
050 Center
accepting
ason oun an surHappy Ads....................................................
r t,is now
t
't h , rounding areas S13-$15 per
acre, paved driveway. call lor 1970 12)(65. 2BR Tongue &amp; water pd. Depos1t + lsi n.on 'rcsnlv pmntcd&amp; oecoratcrl
rent to move 1n Gas set up WIDroo ku ~ Bt-&lt;l 't-'- 'lin
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640 applca 1011s or 8 eac ers
more mfo. asking. $78,000
Help Wanted ................................................. 110 POSihOn. Th1s Pos1110n IS a hour based on expenence.
call 304 _675 _0517 or 304 . ~~~s 9 ~:~ched $500 740· on budQet 256-5B71
hy :.elt1ng 011ly 10 m1nu1e,,
Home lmprovements...................................810 full lime position Th1s pasi- Please call (304) 373·1011
_3716
·
hom town. Must see 1cr
550
2BA,
i bdth, all clectnc appr~&gt;
~. m o
Homes for Sala............................................ 310 tion IS for a lead teacher in or toll free at t-877 -373·
,
t6x80 OakwoOd 3bed (AEP,I CrA, no pels. 1624 t614 , ~~ 173 or$321·800Household Gooda ....................................... 510 the preschool room. If you 1011
v
~Builder/Dealer
Over 2000 sq.ft. M
aste1BR 22n02
1999 16x80 Fortune
O.mlerOBrlghtnat
&amp;2 n1ce size BR's. 2 balhs, 3 bath,
Ave. 740·446 79B-408G 740-6~5-59 5 3
r HDU.eslor Rent .......................................... 410 are self motivated. depend· Personfor hve 1n w1lh elderly
bed 2 b.:~1n a more to Chatharn
In Memorlam ........ ,....................................... 020 able and enjoy working w1th lady Gall 740_367 _7129
14()..222-6031 _ LA, Foyer, Kit, lots ofcabmet choose
4234
or
7
40-206-7861
from. Day 740-388Modern I Bedroomapt" C&lt;i!l
· lnaurance ..................................................... 130 childre n, then th1s is the
space, Log FP on 1 acre. 0000 Evenmg
740
245·9213
446-0390·
N1ce
2BR
at
Johnsons
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660 position for you :vou must be POST OFFICE NOW
GaH1a Co SchOols
llveatock ...................................................... 630 18 years or age and have a
HIRING
tNOTICE•
$1 10,000 080 441-7842 2008 sect1pnal ,home 3 Mob1le Home P.ark.740-446· Modern I BR Apt Call &lt;1 ~ 63736
LLoot"sta&amp;nAdcFraouag"ad ...... ..................................... 063500 lh~gh•· schootlhd•hplomha olr certiAvg$57PaKyan$n2uOalhllryor
HIO VALLEY ·PUBLISH- Middleport, brick ranch, 8 Bedroom 2 Bat h delivered 2003
1
00
............................................
1\,ia ono 9 sc eqwvlNG CO. recommends
35
ld II and set up $38 695 740- Trailer for rent, 3BR. 2 BA f'ilce 2BR apt on St At r:i~8
rooms,
yr o · ca
Ml• CBII. neous ........................................ :.....170 .Ieney IGEDI by 'he Slate lncludlnnw Federal Benel•'ls that you do businesS with (740)992-4197
385·9948
Call367-7762 or 446·4060 No pets 419·359-1 768
Mlscallaneoue Merchandlse .......................540 board of election. You must and OT.Pa1d Traming,
~
~~~~
.. Mobile Home Repa tr ..............................,.....
also have 2 years experiVacations-FT/PT
NO't to send money
Mobile Homea for Rent ............................... 420 ence 1n a Ch1ldcare Center
1-866-542-1531
, Mobile Homes for Sale................................ 320 or have a CDA. Vocational
USWA
through the mail until you
Money to Loan ........................................ ..... 220 ~ra •n• ng 1.0 Early Childhood ::---.c.:_____ have invest•gated the
offenan
. Motorcycle&amp; &amp; 4 Wheelers .. ,.......................740 EducatiOn or an ASSOCI&amp;Ies TrainerPosition
r~~~~~j;;;;;~~
, . Musical Instruments ................................... 570 Degree m Early Childhood Are you inte rested in a
Personals ..................................................... OOS Education 11 you are l~ter· reward1ng poSition? PAIS IS
Pet&amp; tor Sale ................................................ 560 ested In this. position ou currently seek1ng a part tiTTle
on
-r ' application
· Yat staff for Mason end Po1nt
PI urn bl ng a• Heatlng ....................................820 can pick up an
Professional Servlces .................................230 11818 State Roule 160, Pleasant. WV providing resi·
SAVINGS
. . Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160 Vinton, Ohio or call 740_388 . dent1allcommunity skill train' · Real Estate Wanted ............. ,....................... 380 8671 lor more information. mg with 1nd1vlduals with
Schoolelnotructlon ..................................... 150 Deadline tor receiving app,ll· MRIDD H1gh school diplo·
, . Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
cations IS Jtinuary S. zooa. ma or GED required. No
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
experience
necessary,
Space fOr Rent........................................ ..... 460 McCiures Restaurant { Cr~m1nal background check
Sporting Good&amp; ........................................... 520 Gallipolis Only) now hmng required. Must ha11e reliable
SUV'a ror Sale.............................................. 720 part &amp; full t1me . dayshift transportation and valid auto
Trucks tor Sale ............................................ 715 ava11able Apply between 10 Insurance Paid training
1
Upholetery ................................................... 870 and 11AM Monday - Hourly (ate starting at $7Van• For Sale...............................................73D Sa1u 1day
$8 00/hour. Please call t
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
304-373-1011 or loll frtle at
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620 Welders needed lyr expen- 1.877.373.1011
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180 ence Good wages &amp; beneWanted to Rent .................................... ~....... 470 fits. Send resumes to: CLA Wanted. Local semi truck
Shop
' . ' Yard Sate. Galllpolle ....................................072 Box 103. rio Gallipolis Daily driver, with COL &amp; good
, · · -Yard Sai•Pqmeroy/Middla ......................... 074 Tribune, PO Bo11. 469, record. Please can 740-992· Closslfleds!
Y1rd Sole-PI: Ploaoent ........................:....... 076 Gallipolis. OH 45631
3020
L , .- - - - - - - '

i
·------pi

·------pi

I

"

·------pi

0

i

~*:*:,.,:O:T:IC:"':*:*~

~

1

i

I·

1

!!)
1•

1'\

'"

r•o

11

1

{

~

..

I

•

�· Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

New Haven,1
apt.
has

Friday, J~nuary 4, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, January 4, 2008
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page BS

Br. furnished

Trailer lot for rent tn New NEW AND USED STEEL 1978
Ford F-150, 4x4 ,
W/O,no Haven.Tr. must be 1990 or Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar automatic:, VB, 96,000
pets,dep.&amp;ref, 992-0165.
newer &amp; good. shape $125 For
Concrete,
Angle , actual miles. Some rust

Nice 28R Apt, Frig, Stove,
: Water Pd, C&amp;ntenary Ad, No
•_ Pets, Call (740)446·9442

~ ·after~-

Month. 740-4 16-6622.

r

=~

r

SpaciOUs SBCOnd-lloor apt
F"day, Bam-4:30pm. Closed 740"992 "6159 ·
" overlooking Gallipolis C1ty
Thursday. Saturday &amp;
4x4
1984 Chev, 4 wheel drive. s'lnd (740)446-7300
Park and river. LA. den, w/4 Inch l1f1, 79 1 ton, 25,000 u ay.
Fo"SALE
ft
~... )arge kitchen-dining area miles 1940 John Deere !rae-

~

with all new apPliances &amp; tor

e~~:c ..

shape

3~·458-

; cupboards, 38R, la undry 1541
· 8/ea, 2 112 baths. $900 per
. mont~ . Call 446-4425. OJ
SHOP
446·2325
. Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 For sale used pool table.

r---::;==----,
CLASSIFIEDS

ACROSS

Phillip

Channel. Flat Bar, Steel $1750. Call 740·446-4053

Grating
For . Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L 1991 FORO 314 T. 6 CYL.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, loaded 4 WD, low mileage.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Runs e~ecellent. $1900.00

r ,__ I
..-~•"

FOR SALE

AKC Reg. Blue Tick
B•agles. 9wksotd. tst shots
&amp; wormed. $75. 740·388·
9327
--:-:-------:--::-

Shariff Salel
·
Case Number 07CV057
Deutsche
· Bank
National Trust Co .

.Anna
Caroline
&amp;
Stephen
Gordon
MOTORCYa.Elil Cheney
4 WIIEELERS
Defendants
Court of Common
2000 Honda CBR BOO F4 Pleas, Meigs County,
custom fiber exhaust,·wind- Ohio
screen ,k&amp;n, new llres,new In pursuanct of an

r«l

I

Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Mizerak Chicagoan full size AKC Shitzu puppies w/ fi rst
Pool, Patio, Start $4251Mo. Sit
1ncludes
sial ron shots &amp; wormed. Only $400 chain &amp; sprockets.Looks &amp; ordor of
No Pets. Lease Plus bed.matching leg and rail kit Call367-7124
runs exc. 10,000 ml..$3800 directed

(HUC05030202~- The
review of'tho appllcatlon will be co....
ucted,
, ....
and
a
declalon
whether to grant or

deny the application
Public Notice will be made. , In
accordanca
with
PUBUC NOTICE
Chaplora 3745-1 and
NOTICE OF RECEIPT 3745-32 of the Ohio
OF 401 APPLICATION Administrative Code
Public notlcala hereby (OAC). In accordance

given that the Ohio wit OAC 3745-1-05, and
E n v 1r o n m e n t a 1 atrtldegradatlon review
frQtn said Protection
Agency of the application will
court In the aliove enll- (Ohio EPA~. Division of be conducted before
(h

s

sale to me

reeort

Hill"s Self
Stor·8ge
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

llllet5'110'
to 10'130'

IlBERT

Nortb
• J 8
• AJ 4

BISSEll
CIIISTIIcniN
• Complete
Remodeling

• A7

er

• •--··
Had lo purchase sep good
f11m. 740-416·6622 .
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
~-urJty Deposit Required,
d 1
00
·11 CKC M1·n. Dachshunds 2
111&lt;11
pd
1
(7401367 0547
con
.sel
BOO.
new·
•
lied
action,
1
will
Surface
Water
(DSW~
deciding
Whe
to
~==::::~:
m:•·~
·
·
11
1
""
1
1304
882
female
Choc/
tan
&amp;
2002
Honda
Racing
4
::--:-.:.._---'-"'-'--~-- se "'4~. oo ca
· ·
· expose to sale at pub- has received an appll- allow a lowering of the

•

'8partment.for

the

AERATION MOTCRS

elderly/disabled ca ll 675· Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Doberman pups. "'AKC. 7
-"· c 11 A E
1 weeks old shots. black/rust
6679 &gt; E 1 H 1

ous ng st~" · a on vans. ·
800-537-9528.
and red/rust M &amp; F. Ready
10 740 379 2140
go!
. .
fn Memory
In Memory
Mini Pinctlers. Females. 1
blkllan, 1 rust/red tail. Dew

qua
Opportunity

claws cut. wormed, shots. 8
'·WI&lt;S

$300. 740-388-8 t24

·vorkie , Male, 3 yrs old. 41bs.

$350 740-645-6987
I \1&lt;\l " l 1'1'111..,
'\11\I\IOih.

FARM
EQUIPMENT

1995 John Deer
Compact Tractor with loader.
$6700. 740-645-8262
MF 23, .s with 6' Brush Hog
only 154•hrs. Excellent unit,
ready towOrk.$11 ,500 740·

367-7755
II~

•.

\\"'I'ORl-\110\

Auros

!tt•cabm ~ lll8lidaye
tjfi"OQiirm nil Sunday

I"ORSAu:
Ot
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,810 miles,' good condition . needs catalytic converter. Asking $2600. Call 740·

709-6339.

"Let

and Let God"

Family Support Group
Meetings: Mondays at 7:00 pm
Krodel Park Clubhouse #1
www.nar-anon.org
Your
will be

Broad Run Gun Club
660/Siug Match
Sunda~Jan:6,2006

at 12- NOON
Meeting before match.

1999 Toyota Corolla, auto,
well maintained. 160,000 mi,
illiiQ, 82700 740-446-9555
or 740.339-0315
2000 Ford Focus 2 Di.
Automatic 59,000 miles

$4,000 OBO 740-992-5876
We have quality vehiCles

warranty. Toyota,
Nfssan, Suzuki. Mazda,
Cavalier, Grand-Am, Focus,
Saturn, Regal, Camara. Full
size and small trucks. Stop
or call Cook Motora 328
Jackson Pike 740..446·0103
with

[
~

15

TRUCKS
FORSALE

05 Chevy Avalanche 4x4,

red 61,000 ml, mostty highway. Good Cond. 1 owner.

$19,000. 740-339-9983

on Frldav, Jan. 25. 2008 deny, a Clean Water
at 10 a.m. of said dav, Acl Section 401 certifi·
1:11'::--~---., the
following calion lor the subject
10
HOME
described real estate: transportaloln project.
IMPIIOVIlltENrS
Parcel One: 15-0Q477 The proposea project,
Being the following MEG-124-56.02, PID
real estate situated In 79807 consists of the
BASEMENT
tho
county of Meigs relocation of SR 124
WATERPROOFING
approximately
Unconditional lifetime guar- and State of Ohio, and lor
antee. Local references fur- In tho VIllage of 6,900 linear leal In
nished . Establis!"'ed 1975. Middleport, to-wit: Lot Olive Township, Meigs
Can 24 Hrs. (740) 44.6· Number One (1 ~. In County, Ohio. Work
0870 , Rogers Basement JOEL JONES ADDI- associ11led with the
TION, to the town of proposed
project
Waterproofing.
SheHield
now
In would Involve the perMiddleport In said manent placement of
County and State and 1111
material
In
, lor a l'nore definite unnamed tributaries
description thereof ref- on the Ohio River
erence Is hereby make (HUC 05030202~- The
to the record of plats Ohio EPA 10 Number
of said Town of lor this project Is
Middleport, Ohio.
SWIMS 1073276. As
PsrceiTwo: 15-00478 · required
by
the
Th~
f!&gt;llowlng real Antldegradatlon Rule,
. eatate situated In the throe alternatives have
Village of Middleport, been submitted lor tho
County of Meigs and project. Tho applicant's
State of Ohio: Lot proposed
preferred
Number Two (2~ In J.W. alternative,
if
Jones Addition to . approved,
would
Sheftiold now lncorpo- Involve tho permanent
rated in tho Village of placement of 1111 mateMiddleport.
rial Into 0.52 acres
,Property address: 109 (5750 linear feet~ of
S.
Third
Stroot, unnamed tributaries to
Middleport, Ohio 45760 the Ohio River. The
Currant Owner: Anna applicant's proposed
Carolina Cheney &amp; minimal degradation
Gordon alternative,
II
Stephan
Chenav
approved,
would
PPt 15-00478.000 15- Involve the placement
00477
•
of 1111 material 0.0345
Prior Deed Reference: aero (456 linear teet~ of
Volume 241, Page 429 unnamed trlbutarlaa to
.Appraised at $55,000 the Ohio River. Tho
Terma of Sale: Cannot applicant's proposed
be sold lor looa than non-degradation elter213rds of the appralllad native, II approved,
value, 10% down on would have nn direct
day of sale, cash or Impacts on streams or
cor'!Hied check, be~ wetlands.
ance due on confirms- ·The applicant Is seektion of sale.
lng authorization lor
The appraisal did not the minimal degradeInclude an Interior tlon alternative.
examination of ·the Th~ discharge from the
house.
activity, II approved,
Robart E. Boogie, would result In dograMolga County Sherlft. dation to, or lowering
Attorney
lor
tho of, the water quality to
Plalntlft
streams and wetlands
Moqulre &amp; Schneider In the Upper Ohio-

Stop &amp; Compare

,.

~~=::::~250~C;I;vl~c~C;ontor Drive

Shade

dilllon, or lowering of
the water quality, will
be considered by Ohio
EPAdurlng the review
process.
No exclusions or
waivers, as outlined by
H&amp;H
Paragraph 3745-105
Guttering
(D~
of
tho
Anlldegradlon Rule
Seamless Gutters
(eHectlve aa of May 1,
•
Roofing , Sid1ng, Gutters
1998~. apply or mav be
Roger Monley Insured &amp; Bonded
granted by the Director
740·653-9657
Ow
ner
of Ohio EPA. Starting
January
4,
2008,
copies of the appllcalion lor "the certnlcalion and technical support Information mav
be Inspected at Ohio
EPAIDSW,
Lazarus
Government Center, 50
West Town Street,
Suite 700, Columbus,
Ohio, by first calling
(614~
644-2001.
www.tbriberonekcBbtutrY.com
Applications can be
made available at Ohio
EPA District Offices by
calling tho same num·
ber.
Written
comments
must be received by
I I \1 IS
the Ohio EPA-DSW,
&lt; II\( IH II·
Attention:
Permits
Processing Unit, P.O. ! 0\"o IIH ! II&lt; 1\
Box 1049, Columbus,
Concrete Removal
Ohio 43216-1049 by
and Replacement
tho close of business
on February 4, 2008.
Comments received
after this date may not ' .V. -~ .!Irk ,
be considered as part 26 Years Experience
of tho oftlclal record . .
Parsons wlahlng to 1~
be on Ohio EPA'slnter740·992·6971
ested parties mailing
Insured
list for thla project, 2~
Free
Estimates
request a public hearlng, or 3~ eubmH written comments lor Ohio
EPA 'a consideration In
rovietl!lng the applicalion should do
so writing to Ohio
EPAJDSW, Attention:
Permits Proeasslng
Unit, P.O. Box 1049,
Columbus,
Ohio
43216-1049 within 30
days of the date this
public notice.
(1~ 4, 08.

Afi11PesQC

w '

FRANK &amp;.EARNEST

XJVfo,t.MATIOIV

Ttlf ONLY TIMf

-",.-,..._ /

~

WAS

A~Ml&gt; OF T~t GU~VE-

wAS WtltN

~

. PLAYfl&gt;

rAStrALL..

-

BARNEY
WHEN ME . AN' LUKEY ARGUE,
1 'TEND TO LASH OUT WIF
WHATEVER I'M
,_-------;
HOLDIN' !!
THAT'S NOT
GOOD,
ELVINEY

Advertise
in this
space

SHORE AIN'T--TURNS OUT
THEM AIN'T AS

NON•STICIC

!!

AS , THEY

CLAIM I!

THE BORN LOSER

for

"i CAAT \&amp;to\'( liD( . ...-----,

$60 per

David Lewis

month

p-t&gt;O YOU 1-\to.'l€ NN

'iT WOULt&gt; MAAf-.

C.~LL PI-\OO(,&amp;Uo,U~

~(,(,(~no~~

~~CiNE:

t CAA'T C£\ AA'&lt;

C-1-\IEt?'

~i~!

lm:e:P\1~

11-1 OUR

WHAT A DEAL!!
Feed

U~DECILLION ...

S.'l" ZEROES.
IS

U Z.ER.OES IS A
VIGINTILLION, ANt&gt;
100
IS A
r

"

SEPTENDECt LLION ..

Stanley TreeTrimming"
&amp; Removal

'·

Dealer: Eut
Vulnerable: North-South
Weat Nortb

P&amp;Bo

Pass

2NT
3 NT

Pass
Paso

Pus

u

••
,.
Pa.,

EUI

Paso

Palls

Pus

Pass
Paas

An unkoo(ln person saki, 'A magician
p!Ais rabMs out of lvlts. An experimental
psychologist pula habits out ol rals.'
Sidney Lazard, wcotd championship winner ollhree p~ medals (one ~lver
and 1wo bronze) and three nonplaying
captain medals (two gold and one siver~. tound a rabbity play in th~ ' deal
from the quarterfinals of this year's !rial~
to select lha USA-2 learn for lhe
Shanghai Bermuda Bowl.
Take Lazard's East hand. South is in
lhree ·no-lrump. West leeds a fourth·
hl!ttesl spade lwo. How woold you plan
the defense?
AI the other ~e. John Kranyak (North~
· opened one rio-trump in the lourth position and ended in three no-lrump. When
Easl led a heart, declarer immedalely
claimed 10 tricl&lt;s.
Note North'~ carelul three-heart bid,
showing three-card support and the val·
ues 10 bid game.
IJ.azard,loolting at all those red-suit winners on the board. realized thai h~ Side
had to lake tlvl first five lricl&lt;s. ANI thai
was not likely lo happen ~ he plugged
away at spades So. afler taking lite first
trick wilh his spade ace, he sh~ed to the
club kingl
When Eesl continued with lhe club eighl
at Irick threa. South understandaljy put
up the queen and los! tha first ~x lrlcl&lt;s:
I'Ml spades and four clubs.
'Understandably'? Pemaps not n East
had begoo wrth ace-king-tourlh ol dubs.
1 think he would have sl1fled to a low
club, not the king.

WELCOME BACK, M~AM! IT'S
GOOD TO SEE 'IOU A&amp;AIN ..

V.C. YOUNG Ill
q~l2

r.
( v,

II

6215

1\H"Pt

Dtlr

l , If ~P'

r"'"'

•
•

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
GallipoHs Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE Irr
The Tri-County Marketplace!

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
EIBCtric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-Q544
Froo Estimates

740·367·0536

J&amp;L

5~E STEPPED OUT OF'
~E ROOM. SIR .. THAT'S
TI-lE CliSTODIAN.,
•

PARENTS WORK
TOO MUCH. THE
KIDS AilE ALWAYS ON
MYSPACE 011 TEXTING
THEIII BFF'S, NOBODY
EVEI1 SITS DOWN
- - - ANDDOES
ANYTHING
AS AFAMILY
A.NYMCXZE.

Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
. Windows
• Roofing
• Deck&amp;
• Garages
• Polo Buildings
• Room AddHiona
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

'

Manley's
Recycling

~
GARFIELD
S"f!LL GOT 1"HE WIIII"TER

BLAHS, I SEE

Ill .Ill• lUll lilt. 01451111
J40-812-3114
........,.,..........:11111
SIIIIIIIII:II&amp;12:M 1•

place.
PiSCES (Feb. 20-Maroh 20) -It Is very
easy to look around for .a scapegoat if
you fall to a_
chieve your designated
objective, but It Isn't wise. Your fall
guyfgal Is likely to prove ~t Ia you who
faUed. "

.............

740-446·2342

•
•

.

www.mydailytribune.com

304·675·1333

www.mydailyreg~ter.com

740·992·2155

All types of ~.:om:ret e
Owner- Rick Wi~e

SOUP TO NUTZ

. 740-992-59Z9
740-416-1698

www.mydailysentinel.com . . ~

.lOOt LIJXUR't ,
Ntw &lt;:ond,

..

--- - --------·~-

~ - · -- -ll_. .

...;

--~-

-----

I

'

,IF 1 KNEW WHERE
YOU Hit' MY ~C:ORC'ION/

22) -

Don't

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) -

Wise Concrete

joint jleasant l ·egister The Dally Sentinel

A LITTLe~...

Because you're a trank and open ptriOfl,
you're pretty up front about where you
atand with others. But you get In troub•
when you try to please everyone.

lllllr.Cirl'lll Prlcal

~ge ~alltpolis -~ailp ijtrtbune

I COULl' PLAY YOU

yourseH as not being able to measure up
to competition, you'll prova yourBelf right.
Jumping to negative conclusions berore
you even tried Is futile.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - Being
wishy-washy about yOur funds Is akin to
asking someone to come along and lake
·advantage ol you. Don't let a person whO
sees your weakness put a hit Oil you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - It's great
to want to ae&lt;:omplish many thing•, but
y-ou need to guard against establl!lhlng
too many objectives, which makes the
completion of any of them Impossible.
Start only what you can finish.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- "To thine
own self be true.• But also be loyal to the
person who Is elq)&amp;Cting sincerity from
you. ~esilfte to say what needs to
be said, aim~ it Isn't '*)I Interesting.
LEO (Ju~ 23-Aug. :!:!) - II you have a
wandering, romantic eye, you will end up
lacking good judgment and will get
trapped In a situation that i8 dlfllcult to
extricate yourself from. Don't be foolish.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) • Tho antlcl·
pation of negative reactions betore anything negative haa even taken place Is
your worst enemy. This will cause ~ou to
wrongly react to situations that you have
erroneously judged.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - " flights of
fancy become a creative perclae for
your fer1ile imaginaUon, you'll set yourself up tor failure. lfs OK to be wlahtul, if
your thoughts are based upon practical
considerations.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov,

111-IICIII••••••w••
CIUIIIICCIII.IIri•CII. .

_.,

· DOWN

12 Farm
machine
13 Big lllard
18 Before
22 Seofs23 Ouchl
24 Fury
25 Princeu

perturber

27 Lap dog
29 Joan Auel

llorolrlt

41 Kotm
dltclpllne
42 TlmeJC
cornpollfor

43 Bowler'•

1111ng0u1
45 Plarillln INy
46 ln., II •
46 Sllchow
reltlllve
49 Suehllleh

50 Tho IIMM

31 Caddle't
BOll Song
offering
{hyph.~ '
32 VCR
54 tyrannohoolcupa
-~~~~ 33MoNover
35 More
suggestive
37 Ramp
40 Spockt

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by ~uls Campos

Celebrity Cirt'* Ct'flic9'arns we crealed from ~ b'f falrous people, put nJ ~
Eactlle!ter in the ~ D1d.s lOr atllill!l'

•

"H'Y
UTM

Today'scluo:.OequalsS

K BURSSV

K ZTS

TU

FTOSXRM " H'Y

'

FTXWRXHRXS
BATBZR." •

SNA

YTXSN." " , JRTMJR

UTHZ

GRWHX

UZKWTM

TU

SNR

FZTTXRV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The function of the creative artist oonsisls in
making laws, not in following la.ws already made. • • Ferruccio Busoni

Sllunloy,Jon.5,2008

take anything for granted, especially concerning your financial affairs, because
there Is too strong of a chance you would
be wrong. Make sure everything is
defined and put In writing.

PIYINBTUP PIICEI fOI ·

.

Whlte-

llenglly
21 Veldt graz• 1 Alphlbot
23 Omi!IOihl
26 Chef'• tllllra 2 Maul neigh28 llawche or
bar
galena
3 Kick out
29 Dazzle
4 "Marla -"
30Tillltrad
5 Unwlnlng
34 Exhauolad
tool
36 Yaung gaol 6 All, In com38 Festive
bot
7 Look down
39
pliot
on
41 Lemon peel 8 U.K. monty
42 T.reewhh
9 Emmeta

EGRAYT

By a.m;.,. OOGI
The chld&lt;ens will come home to moat In
the year ahead: You wil be rewarded for
your accomplishments as well as yoUr
aspiratklns. Clean up all loose ends
betore any fingers of blame can be
pointed at you.

ARtES{March 21-April19)- tf~ IH

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

20 Chat.

T

lpol
80 Chicago

~~g'

Mislead declarer,
not partner

get upSet about a situation thai h8a yet to
occur. Don't allow apprehenaive thln~S-Ing
that you've baaed on unfounded premia·
es get you all shook up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19)- When
ou1 shopping, It you run Into a salesperson whOSe pitCh sounds too good to be
true, It Ia. Don't rush into a purch8se,
espectally If the aforementioned it taking

PEANUTS

740-742-2293

melody
17 Forte or
spoon
18 Ttllv81H

I f Iz I I
WHS I S

CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan. 19) • Don't

I • P'rom'nt and Quality
Work

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

111bltance
58 Tofu bose
16 Gourmancl'l 59 ·Paetorel

cano

........ u...,

3!. Z.Eii:OES
15. AN

watershed

REACH 3 COUNTIES

K 73
7 6 32
10 4
K J 98

handle
55 nckellnlo
56 Potted •
parcel
57 Cl"-'lc

•Graph

BIG NATE

$10.50/100

.:-:::-::::-1

13 Mouae
target?
14 Short
queriH
15 Active vo1-

QIOf

Soulb

53 Pltchto'

•

GAstro-

12% All Stock

ri r.w~.oo

n

52 Gt'lllh part

parson

Opening lead: 4 2

Hardwood Ca.inetry And Furnttur•

'mtc

6
•
•
•

•

Twin Rivers :rower is accept· 3632
Blackl!an. 1 short haired red wheeler, KN air filter, 2 new lie auction on the front cation for, and has water quality._. Other
• _ing appllca1ions tor wait1ng - - - - - - - - ma!e asking $275.00 each back tires, very nice $ 2·000 steps of' the Meigs begun to consider alternatives resulting
• IIS1 for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
JET
30 4·593-3820
Make E!est Offer 30 4' 675 · County Court House whether to issue or in lesser or no degraa

- - - - - - . , - - 3824

11

Soulll
•Q1084
• K Q a'
• Q2

'
140-992-1611

Hours

Ol-.ot-ot

-·

w...
6 A 9 52
• 10 t
•• 7 5

oc-

10-de
~:Jne

•AKJ' 8fl3
• 3 2

• New Homes
• Garages

Anewer to PrevkKII Puzzle

47. Uku hawk
51 Dol on the

7 Luxury

SuHe 500
Columbua, OH43215
614-224-1222
(12 1I 21, 2",
(1 1I 4
p

POd•

44 Emuto

1 Hoctic pl1q41
Guevara
4 Kind of
46 Santlcrll
...,
diiiK!

Alder

NOTICES

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee. PlalntHf vs

• 4w0 53495 _740_.313

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

I I I I'
TAL N I

I

"Remember dear," lhc mother
confided to ber ~ly mimed
daughter, "a smile is a ctne
lbatwtseteverythiog-."

e
l
~ I I I• I I
CORTER

•

A PI!INT NUMBERED
~ lEnERS IN SQUARES

I

1 UNSCR..:MBI.E
LETmsl
ANSWER
FOR

Complete file cllud&lt;le quotod
by filling in the missing words
'"" dSYtiop lrom llep No. 3 bolow.

IIIIIIII

SCRAIMETS ANSWIIS 1- 3- oa
Thrush'- Wlll:h-Apy- Wapiti- WllHOUT
"~ Dlisllbs," the dad &lt;:0111forted his dcj~ 11011. "life
would be dull WI1liOUT them.ft

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�.
,.

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 4 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

Cam canned: Dolphins fire Cameron after 1-15 season·
personnel with the Dallas
Cowboys.
Parcells, the Cowboys'
DAVIE, Fla.- Unlike his coach in 2003-06, may tap
boss, Bill Parcells didn'·t the Dallas pipeline again.
need to go to Costa Rica. He The early front-runner to
stayed right at home and replace
Cameron · is
decided Cam Cameron had Cowboys assistant head
go, along with just about coach Tony Sparano, who is
everyone else on the Miami scheduled to interview
Dolphins.
Friday for the head coaching
A year ago Thursday, vacancy in Atlanta.
Dolphins owner Wayne
"Tony's an 011tstanding
Huizenga embarked on a coach," Dallas head coach
two-week coaching search Wade Phillips said this
that took him as far as week. "He's got all the
Central America to inter- attributes, I think, to be a
view at least a dozen candi- · head coach. He works well
dates..
with people. His players
Now the · Dolphins are play for him; I think that's
starting over.
tmportant. And he's a really
Cameron
was
fired sharp, sharp guy as far as Xs
Thursday after winning only and Os. And I tbink he'd
one game in his first year as work well certainly ·putting a
an NFL head coach. The staff together."
move means Miami will
All but two members ·of
have its fifth coach in five Cameron's coaching staff
. seasons.
were also fired, although
Such instability has con- some might be rehired by
tributed to the Dolphins '" tbe new head coach, Ireland
decline. This season they said. Retained were assistant
·lost tbeir first 13 games and special teams coach Steve
finished 1-15, the worst ·Hoffman and linebackers
coach George Edwards.
record in franchise history.
Late last month, tbey · Cameron was under conbrought in Parcells to run tbe tract through 2010. A perorganization. He hired Jeff ceived difference in philosoIreland as general manager phy witb the new regime
tbis week, and they fired ranked as a bigger factor in
most of the coaching staff J:tis firing tban Miami's 1-15
Thursday.
record, Ireland said. ·
''They were struggling on
"We just :ell in order to
both sides. of the ball," move forward and not look
Ireland said. "Looking at it back, we needed someone in
from afar, we've just got to place who shared the same
put the right person in philosophical compatibiliplace."
ties we shared," Ireland said.
Parcells made the decision ·"We didn't really know the
to fire Cameron in consulta- guy that well. We were
tion witb Ireland, who spent gomg to try to get someone
the last seven years in 'player that does share those things,
BY STEVEN WINE
ASSOCIATED P~s·

to

•

AP photo

Miami Dolphins head coach Cam Cameron leaves the field
after the Dolphins defeated the Baltimore Ravens In a foot·
ball game at Dolphin Stadium, to iwprove their 'record to 1·
13 In Miami, in this Dec. 16 file photQ. Cameron was fired
Thursday by new Dolphins' boss Bill Parcells, which means
(he reeling franchise will have its fifth head coach in five
seasons In 2008.
·
and we weren't completely
sold that he did."
Ireland said the philosophy he and Parcells share
involves creating a culture
of winning. That would be a
change for the Dolphins,
who missed the playoffs for

the sixth consecutive season,
extending a franchise record.
· "We want strong charaCter
around here," said Ireland,
who added. he'll have final
say regarding ail player personnel decisions . "The
vision of the team will be

discipline, passionate players, highly competitive. And
. we'll be a big team ."
Plans for the coa_£hing
search were ·still being formutated. Ireland said.
~'We're going ·to try to
make a qutck decision, but
we don 't have a timetable,"
he said. "We' ll have a broad
range of candidates. We 'II
look into every possibility."
Tbe search last year was
. the most extensive since the
franchise's first season in
1966, but Cameron quickly
'became a disappointment.
Until Miami beat Baltimore
in overtime Dec. 16, he was
in danger of betoming tbe
first NFL coach to go 0-16.
Throughout the worst sea.son in team history,
Cameron won prai se for
maintaining
a
calm
demeanor with the media
· and his players. But as the
losses mounted, players
became coy when asked jf
they believed in their coach.
Defensive end Jason
Taylor, Miami's only Pro
· Bowl player, took a neutral
stance on the firing.
"We've had a difficult
year, and it's one of those
times when it's a little unsettling," he said. "As a player
011 the team; you can only
control what you can, and
for other thin,gs, you have to
Jet others do n."
Cameron was hired after
five years as offensive coordinator .for the high-scoring
San Diego Chargers, and the
Dolphins' offense improved
early in the season. But
when John Beck became the
third starter at quarterback
this year, the unit failed to

score a touchdown in three
consecutive games, and the
rookie returned to the bench . .
Cameron took over a team
that had gone 19-29 the' previous three years and was in
decline following a series of
bad drafts. Poor depth made
thi s · season's wave of
injuries catastrophic.
Running back Ronnie
Brown led the league in
yards from scrimmage when
he was sidelined for the season by a knee injury, and
quarterback Trent Green and
linebacker · Zach Thomas
also went on injured reserve.
When 2002 NFL rushing
champion Ricky Williams
returned from a suspension,
he lasted only six carries
before a chest injury ended
his season.
In addition, top receiver
Chris Chambers was traded
after six games.
·
The coach's office became
a -revolving door in. 2004,
when Dave Wannstedt quit
after nine games and was
replaced by Jini Bates. Nick
Saban became the coach in
2005, but 'lasted only two
bef
1 ·
~
years
ore; · eavmg ,or
Alabama.
His
departure
was
announced by Huizenga on
Jan. 3, 2006. One year later
to the hour, Ireland was at
the same lectern to discuss
the start of yet another
coaching search.
"My commitment is to try
to .rebuild this franchise,"
Ireland said. "It's a great
chance for me, and it's a
great chance for tlie .
Dolphins, in my opinion."

~

Unbeaten regUlar season lifts Belichick to second AP Coach of Year honor .
BY BARRY WILNER

ASSOCIATED PRESS
. NEW YORK - Spygate
be damned! Bill Belichick
of the unbeaten New
England " Patriots is The
Associated Press 2007 NFL
'Coach of the Year.
Witb the Patriots motivated by a spying scandal and owning the deepest talent base in football Belichick guided ~is team to
the first 16-0 regular season
in league history.
That was enough to offset
the major blemish on
Belichick's resume: a
$500,000 personal fine,
$250,000 fine for tbe team
and the loss of a ftrst-round
pick in tbe upcoming draft
after the Patriots were
caught videotaping New
York Jets coaches during the
.Season opener.
Spygate didn't stop 29 of
,the 50 voters on a nationwide panel of media members who cover the NFL
from voting for Belichick on
Thursday. In a season highjighted by many strong
.coaching
performances,
Belichick beat out Green
Bay's Mike McCarthy, who
received 15 votes for lead: ing tbe Packers to a 13-3
record and the NFC North
title.
; "This is definitely a team
recognition, but one · that I
·appreciate \!Cry much on a
personal level:" Belichick
said in a statement issued by
the club.
. He also won tbe award in
2003.

Southern
fromPageBl
continued with good second
,(juarter play, as Taylor made
some good passes in the
canto and Turley and
Teaford tango-ed for seven
lpld six points respectively.
Riffle made a cou pie btg
assists in the mix as
Soutbeni raced to a 15-point
halftime lead, 33-18.
Coach
Crisp.
was
~mpressed
· with
the
tmproved play from his
younger cast. Not only did
the Southern gals hold
Miller to 18 points, but
thel held the visitors to
jus tbree second quarter
rebounds.
The two clubs played
even most of the second
half with Southern establishing a 49-31 lead after
three rounds - the biggest
lead of the night. The
hosts held on for the 55-40
win.
Southern hit 25-of-57

'

"If anyone is deserving of
such an award it really is
Bill," Patriots ownel' Robert
Kraft said. "I know the ener·
gy and effort and planning
and time (he puts m). He's
had his foot on .the pedal all
year, just working so hard
and always doing everyt~ing
he can to put the team in a
.
position to win first."
Does Kraft believe this
award will silence the critics?
"What I've tried to say is ·
the only way.that'll go away
is if we just keep on winning, and winning convincingly, and I think he did it,"
Kraft said. "He did it and · I
think tbe fact tbat he got this
award spe3ks to. tbat."
The fust coach since Don
Shula in 1972 to lead · his
team through a s~tless regular season, Behchick won
the award for the second
time in four years. In 2003,
the Patriots went 14-2 and
won their final 12 games.
This time, Belichick's team
rampaged through the first
part of tbe schedule, then
won a handful of close.
games on the way to 16-0.
"You know, I think back to
sitting in the stands," Kraft
said of his days as a fan
before he owned the team,
"when we went 1-15 and 214. And, you know, I saw
the '72 Dolphins, and to see
this team perform the way it
did this year, and in the end,
he is the conductor. And he's
got some great players, but
he's the conductor and I just
think tbe job he di(l was

superb."
While the perfect journey
this season seemed somewhat joyless as the Patriots
followed the lead of their
detached coach, there was
no denying Belichick's ability to motivate. His players
used Spygate as a rallying
point, cultivating an usagainst-them mentality that
clearly worked. .
Belichick is involved in all
personnel decisions, meaning the additions of Randy
Moss, Wes Welker and
Donte' Stallworth to the
receiving corps had his
touch.
Plus, Belichick is a master
at game-planning. Add that
skill to the deepest offense
in the league (a record 51(~
points, includmg an NFL
mark of 75 TDs) and a
stingy defense that yielded
274 points, fifth in the
league, and there's, well,
perfection.
.
"There are three things
that get better with age:
good cigars, red wine and to
me it looks like coaches who
have the ability," Kraft said.
"He's really hit his sweet
spot and I'm really happy
for him personally."
Also getting votes were
Dallas coach Wade Phillips
and Jacksonville's Jack Del
Rio (t~o each), and
Indianapolis' Tony Dungy
and Tampa Bay's Jon
APpholo
Groden (one eaclJ).
The ·only other Patriots New England Patriots head coach Bill Bellchick smiles during a news conference Thursday
coach to win the award was at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass~ New England's undefeate~ season now includes
Belichick's mentor, Bill yet another achievement: Bill Belichick is The Associated Press· 2007 NFL Coach of the
Year. It's the second time he's won the award in the last four seasons.
Parcells, in 1994.

two's, 0-of-4 three's, and
5-of-16 at the line.' Miller
hit 13-of-45 two's, 3-of·
II three's, and 3-of-7 at
the line. Southern had 35
. rebounds (Turley I 0,
Dunn 8, Riffle 6), · 16
turnovers,
II
steals
(Turley 3, Riffle 3), 14
assists (Riffle 6) and 17
fouls . Miller had 29
rebounds (Toth 7), 20
turnovers, ~ steals, five
assists and 18 fouls.
Southern
. hosts
Waterford next Thursday.
louthlm II, Miller 40
Mllltr
8 12
sou111em 17 18

13 8
18 8

-

40
e8

MILLER- Rand! T01h • ~ 10, Cheryl
Boumt 8 2·2 13, Oaryan Wood 1 1-3 3,
Mariah Thompaon 1 0.0 2, Kallen
Gambit o 0.0 0, Moghan Wlltero 1 o.o
2. Michelle C.may 1 0-1 2, Rlkkl Houk 2
0-1 • . KoiHy Hlnklt 2 ~ 4. TOTALS:
17 G-7 40. Thrn Point Goals: Randi
Toth two, Cheryl Boumt one.
SOUTHERN - WhiNy Wc&gt;le·Rifllt 0
0-2 1, Klloey Turwy 10 1-2 21, Breanna
Taylor 5 o-2 10, Cheyenne Dunn 4 2-6
10, Llndolly Teaford 5 1·3 11 . Chetol
Ritchie o 0-0 o, Lynzee Tucker 1 1-1 3,
Ga~ Johnaon 0 o-o .0, Jaylin Snldet 0
0-0 0, Vada Cooots 0 ~ 0. TOTALS: 25

5-16 55. T~ree ~oint "Goals: None
----\'

-·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="539">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9990">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13558">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13557">
              <text>January 4, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="896">
      <name>brinager</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="707">
      <name>grinstead</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1048">
      <name>polk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3980">
      <name>randazzo</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
