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                  <text>Good Samaritan
fund-raiser draws oyer
30 participants, A7

Emergency Guide
inside today's Sentinel

Printed on 100%
Kecyded Ne-M·sprint

visR

SPORTS
Bv BRIAN

• Lady Eagles .
advance to district
·finals. See Page Bl

J. REED

marily a visit on behalf of
Phillips , who is making her
second run for the 94th
House District, but said it will
also be a rally to encourage
voters to support the
Democratic tickel in the presidenlial race and other races.
The event will begin al
Ted
Sherrod
4:30 p .m., at !he Pomeroy
Strickland
Brown
Parking Lot, just across
from
Democralic headquarPhillips , the party's candidate for the Ohio House of ters al Carpenters HaiL
Representatives .
. "The governor is commitHunter said the event is pri- ted to aiding victory for

·

BAEEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Gov. Ted
Strickland will make a
second campaign-season
visit to Pomeroy Friday
afternoon.
Meigs
County
Democratic Party Chairman
Henry
Hunter ·
said
Strickland will be joined by
U.S.
Senator
Sherrod
Brown and Athens City
Councilwoman
Debbie

Democrats in this important
election year, and this second visit is strong evidence
of that ," Hunter said.
"In the past. Meigs
County has rarely seen the
state 's governor. That
(Strickland) has taken time
to visit here twice this se~­
son says a lot. to me , about
the importance of this community and this area to the
success of the Democrats.
. especially Debbie Phillips ,
on Election Day."
·'

EPA announces
sewer system grant
for Middleport

'

BY BRIAN

i

J. REED

BAEEDiiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

t

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is a popular
candidate
in
Meigs
County. and while he was
a strong supporter of U.S.
Sen .· Hillary Clinton. DN.Y., during the primary~..-,.:
season , he has endorsed
U.S. Sen . Barack Obama
in the general election. He
has also strongly endorsed
Phillips as the party' s candidate for this house district, as the party works to
secure
a
Democratic
majority in the House.

'

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport has
received a $140,169 low-interest loan
from the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency to help plan long-tertn control
of combined sewer overflows.
Su.ch overflows are a major cause Of
water pollution and can have adverse
effect on human health, the EPA said.
The loan itself will come from the Ohio
Water Pollution Control Loan Fund.
The village has S\lbmitted a longtertn control plan for its combined sanitary and storm sewer system to the
EPA. It aims .to reduce ,overflow into
the river to··four or less per year. Th~
plan also calls for capturing 85 percent
Qf,,t4,1l.,.,¥cl.\\Jlle ,of tl)e qverflow dis"'charge~ ·through increased ..~ttveyance
and tr.eatment of combined flows.
Work will include review of existing
sewer and pumping system design, a
survey of manholes. an inspection of
sewers and a year-long monitoring of
flow at multiple locations , as well as
modeling of flow at the main interceptor and regulators in order to size a
relief ·sewer .and force main and
improve a pump station.
If the flow monitoring and modeling
indi.cates a need for improvements at
the wastewater treatment plant or a
need to increase flow capacity at the
plant, additional planning and funding
will be necessary.
According to the EPA, Middleport's
facilities plan is "appropria!e, complete
and approv.able." The village has contracted with URS of Columbus to prepare plans for the project. The EPA is'
now considering public comments a!)d
questions prior to approving the longterm control plan and issuing the per·
mit 'as final.
The. actual cost pf construction has
been estimated at over $1 million, and
could take up to two years to complete.
Preliminary work has already begun.
During the summer, a firtn specializing
in vi\leo inspection of sewerage system
filmed Middleport's entire system to
identify areas where work is needed.

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Proposed _· constitutional Amendment
under tbjs section shall
the a~e of twemy~onc years . . he ~r.mled and renewed
No statute m rcgulatitm
so Jon&amp; Withe ljL~&lt;msce
of the State or any uaency
I,'Omphes wi[h reasqnahle
or subdivision lhen.'Qf.
laws and rCGulations
including any n"Slridion
dcsi,ned to ensure that
such gaming actjvjJies
on or condition f()r the
are l'Onductcd fujrly and
~r40tim~ of any lk-ense
under thjs st;clion. shall
honestly and comply wj!h
all tax and Olhcr regulations
)imiL the amount l.bal PEY
be wagered no ¥3JDins
gc!!Crally applicable 10

acli\ljttcs oermiucd under
lhis

SL~ion

or lhl: days or
hours ofopcrution gfthc

casino.
(f) A .license to conduct

eamin¥ artjvitics f1l the_
casino
_ · - authorized
_____ under
___ •
this SL"CtiOn shall pre-erupt
any locJJI?.onioa resolution.
code. or ordjnance that
would otherwise preclude
a casino from operating on
the nropenv described jn the

res)aurams. h!»els. and
uthcr similar busjnt"is
..
, cstabljsbmepts wilhin

lhe Slate. The Gaming
RegulatoO' CpmmjWon or
. Objo (,Qtkry Commi»ion.
a"'"' "nnlt
....
·L-·hl•
... ~ ,•rw ti•'r•·
d 'lir
&amp;f'4Dt: deny or renew \he

!iq;nsc wilbin njnety (9(h
liays after tb¢ a~kation is
recejyed by lhe aoolicah(c
Commjs)ion. If tD:

. applicable Commjssjon dOG'

TRACf .•
Situated in Chester
Jownship. CJjntnn County.
Ohio. Vir&amp;inia MiJitarv
Suryey Number 1994. and
bcio: all of the rcmajnim:
oans of two liO.OO acre tracls
. rom'cial Record 46.
791 ); all of the remaininH
p1rt of a 30 00 acre tract

race

I'll"'
699&gt;. and all of a S.QQ2 acre

!Official Re.:ord 167.

tr.act qs gmyeyai by "rc9 to
Roger L. Plummer uocl Alma
J. Plummer as recou1cd jo

Volume

139.· PJwc 490 of
the Clinton County Official
JCQruS
R -·•· and •-·
usmg more
particularly descriMI 3$

£oUows:

Commencina f-or reference
11 arailmpd

spjtc foond"

the jntersedioo of Old Denny
Road and State Route 73·
tbeOl--c with the centerline
or St;ne Route 73 s

Schedule to this $ectjon or

not either ap;prove. deny or

that would rcqyirc an)'. Inca!
hearin~. vme, variaOI.'t,
license. or conditional

renew the license within
tliiS!&gt;-Tiod. n JemporaiJ
76"45' 17" E 2SO.Oil'lo
license shaH he granted until the WYtheastcrlf comer of

""' approval for !he
IUI;h time a$ \he Gmnjn~
establishment or a casjoo on Regu!aJON Commj§SjOn
that site.
either ""-PffYCS· renews
If lhc Gam jog
Re.-:ulatOI)' Commission
Lo bC C:ttablished under
division (Q) is 001
oneratjnnal and fUDCiioojpg
within
six. months
--- -·- - -of·
\be -effective
dare of this
----- --- "C'ioo il&amp; rqulawy apd
licensjng dutiett shall be
(G)

nerform&lt;d hy

the Ohio

Midwest Land S1111ply.lnc · 5
~

ltrontl70. Paae 2nl ami
~ denie$ the anpliC3Jjon
also bejos lhc True '!oint
~r the iniligllicensc or
of Beainnin&amp; for tfti5 tmct
liS tell(Wal . A denjal or .
herein described·
rcvoouion of a liCense
thence with the 'eas~.erly line
may be ;wpealed 10 disqkl of yid 4.464 aa;;re tract N
court ,·n ••0" •
u11:: $iUDCj rnaoncriJ'34
... w lpusipg a Ja
u nntv'lUlU
.,., h YIW
1 10
· •rsfQQ
•• 1 mnqnM
· r.
ar J9.80'l
f'f' or an anN from an
&amp;oo.oo· to a 518" iron pin
order of the Liquor Conlml · IszwM1;_
•
•
Commiyjoo. If the Gaming thence conlinujna with lhe

LotteN Commission until
such ljmc as the Gamjog

RcwlmoO' Commissioo .
denies a license reMwa).

northerly hoe of Wd 4 ¥4
acre tJJK.1 N 76°44' 1r• w

ftewbdOQ' Commjujon
i• estJih!jshcd and ahlco to
Nfoan its dutjg OrM..,;

OJ n;vnkeJ an c;sjstirw

250.00' to a 518"' jrpq Din
foood in the lim of IJamel L
PMIIJ!XJD'' 102.933 am; IIJCI

license. the liceox Wall
renwjn in dlf&amp;lgntillbe

licenm
sum:ll!krs• )be
&lt;Official Record 610. "-=e
ur-.
.
I acense IU'i'PrS to the
.mt,
aiid able 1:0 ncrfonn Us
. denial or rcyocatjoo. or WJlil tbcmq: with the line of Sflid
PMJrcgn N (l'IS'.J J ~ W
du&amp;ics. or jn the allcmaJ.ivc all righg ofaprnl baye
been cxhausJn1 unh:s:s a
441.64' 10 a 511,. jmg pip ,
OTM::e the Objo tooca
cn"rt with juricdirtjcm oyct found in lhc ljg: of yMS NoCummission has aswmed
the dutica o( the Gamjng
the anpral dctcnnjpn that 1994 t 4297;
Rei"IHf?Q' Ovnmjgjpn
lhm; is a oompelliQs ooblic thcna; qmtjnu.jqg with the
IL5 provide' hmjoahnyr.
rea:;oo Cw the ljccpsc pot to line of yjd Npng and
~n jn effect during lhe
the gUiiWY $uryey Jjpc N
the QWOCI' or Iosee of the

the Gaming Rcgulalory
Commjssjon is eytaNisbcd

O:al!o"W"rt)' described in
tbQ Sdrdi•lc to lbjs·sccQon
may apply to the Gaming
Rcgulwwy Cmmjgjon w

Objo I nttccy Commission
" appljcable, for a license
l!l condud gamin&amp; !!Wvities
N the CiSi00 'J'bnrjzerl
under this Kdjon. A ljcenx

timcoflhe •l!ll"'N,

z:;"33'29~E

1441.82'

U&gt;a

nnsJ found at tbg corner of
William P, Thoml"i!!!!'' 50
acre tr.tel fDct.&gt;d Rnnj 216,

12Q;()Q feet. So an ima spjk jn the
mNer of pMI S'alr RpJ't D ig
lhe M!''h Jjnc of'" l..ol No.3. ' ..
Page 322):
an: 518" diameter s!n:l and
P in the pJIIt line of""+ of .
tbeoor wjtb the line of sajd
Jg· jn length wjlh a vdlow wbicq owner. thc.tq, wjlh lhc
Tho!JUW!!"s 50 8cre 100
cap stamped ''CLINCO &amp; . SOJJib lioc ofyid I Q No 3 pM . ·
and becoming the line o(
S\JTION":
!he south tine of IIDik ofil"'iN' ·
QWQC(. plggg lhc mil§ of cpjd ;
ThoilJMS A. Collett. Trustee• s 8epriDJ ;m; tu.gd upm
remajninumn ofao oriCinal NAP 83 099M!hi0 sw• Stwr ''"'t n. Wb 76• S6' 06"'
fm m 00 fen. tg the pin of .
82 85 acre tmct·CQfficial
PJnne Coordjn•n &lt;S?rJb
begimjpc.
·
Rccoo!·292, Page 127\S
Zo!lt!l asdcrivcd frorilGPS
3o'4lf58.. e 306 ss· roan
t'll!!crv•; 991 DistjiOCCS
C9'Jiajp'• S 9232 wm, qgr
iron
nin
.....
:
__
.
.
"-I
Ground
or len
~- Jl'l-::!!:..!::
YMfU jVe Pi!Ki! PJ)OO
tbeOL"e cgntiouiQI wjlh. the Di:uang;s.
. Pau;d Ne•mhrr mogucm.t
wtstedy line of cpjd Collett
TRACT II ·
S 6°li.3J"Wl395.99' to
Situe ip lbe Qprqty of
Olllco of the
a 5/S.. iron pin found at
Cljnton S•e!e of Obio..
Sca-iofS.ofOIIio
1bc Jlprtbcpitedy oomc;rpf ToWDJbioofChcstcr jn
I,J--.Sca-y
Aannao l,LC's ~.923 acre
Militao' Survey
!994.
of
certify rbtrtl
tract IO!!jcial ReOOn! 3Jil being a Plllt or IJ!I No.3. u
the
r...,;,.
•...,
r.u ...,of
flee 328!:
dcsipetn' on Pial Beron!
drteaJD!Ii-•
I
•
1)rmcc with lhc IMIJbcdy . Bgo' No, 7. PascJ 385-386,
I"UfX&gt;i"d by joDO ......in. by
line or said 5,923 acre !tad SIII'Ytym Rcm:ds of C1intoQ !he 1271h o.....u
!IJt:r ...
·N 76° 45'59"\Y SOQ 34• to • CpnMy Objp bpenyW eOO
ft!od ia the oftke of !ltlt
518" iron pin fourul:
&lt;kwribcd as foUgws:
of!itM... ttiOAilidoXVI,
thence coorjouine wjrh the Qe£innjog 11 ap jmg mike
SeWoo I of IM.C&lt;ef'l . .,. of !lot
W(Sterly line of said 5.923
jo the CC*' of Sfale Rp•tr
SlMo(Obio, .............
ocre ttact S 66 ()9' 57" W . 73 !llvyeysb!Jrund
. Wlol' z 3 _.apl · • •
oenified .. _by ... Ohio Blllot
IJli!S•ing a\?'' iron pin fOUD!I Wjtminaum Pike!. Dllllrin&amp;
lkwd:..aagaw.u ... ·w
pl689 sJ•) 719
tg a OWl the :K!UJhca:il·qwncroflegk
loiD&lt;by._...
. ~..,. •
•
nail set jn the ccnledine of ofSubjmownq. P"IM'"Wl
·GeaaaJA
'tl)
..tlbc&lt;ltio
swc Route 73;
to lands of MPi• 1)ws...,\f'
BIIJot llolrd. • ....,..;bet~..,
lhc:nct" with the centerline
&amp; Laverne Tqchhcn cyo1.
The fuoCJ.Ui&gt;i .......... ...
of said mpd N 76°
192 P,p 66&gt; bejpg in the
full lalof'!Mu-· r ...
45' 17..W70J 23" to the
spgh line of efm:yjd I pt
smttbeooredy comer of.
No. 3 br.ariO¥ Nqnb 76° st.• .,.,,.,.,. '"''" ,..,. iatioiriw
petitioe...
10 .....
Robert L. &amp; Ceymtd'._
06" We!!. 200,00 rm · from Sectioo
l(ll)ol' ... 0
. ....
BajJey'1 1 syaqel«Mjt
tbcP''t ·oorrc:rofy¥1 uf!MSlreof""'-" I ,.;e,
._ c
(Otljrizjl BrsmJ701. rtwe
·I gt No.3: tbri:!!fr fmm ,
~.
7Q]n&lt;J6l·
.
PPilloflpimjtw lmi•
1110 by . . Oltlo lllllot ..... ...
theru With the han of said the soulb Hoe of yid 1n«
............ CII'.
081
Bailey' 1 I 588 PL!C lt!Q
Ng J Jmjns nitf 5'*
. OJbrailediO- by . . I* •
a)nnr the £ollowin&amp; WI!'X'S RQ!'r 73,aM mooinr wjlbjp
oftk
N 13jJ4'25.. E (nenjqr
yid Lu No 3 pjtb legk of
u p!a&lt;litd
bylaw.
.'
.
a 518" jm pin found at
:ejd Toehbcn Nodh os•
-,,1,' .....
. -...
29.5:;·&gt; 461 27' rp I W"
Jf'f ,,, ·p 00 feel rp . . ~ ............ istkftl!l
iroo pin·fouM; lheDR
i'!K\ pjo;_ttm;c. Smdb 76•
.... olik
. . Sectioo
lol!W •
-Hill4!1
.
. N76•45'1TW"15Q(K)1tga Sj'O['f•• moofiyr rp
..:led
by0
1111
...,,
W" imo pin fnygd· lhmcc an imQ &amp;in in tbc =• Ugr
lied iiiiMaftice . . . . ...
s .aJ"tf-z·r w &lt;•w
of
1,4· No,l; ,._..,
olSireJ*
toAdidtO,
a Ml" illll pjn fpynd at
Jc:avial dJc lph p(pjd.
4302t
Jolbc=='=ot
~~- __ ,
Secliaa
!($)
l!flk
Cc(): : : :
- - - --~- · A~ungmj•1ritb
uflkS...oi'OW..•t
willi
$We Rpfr 73;
lhc . ljpe ct 'Iii' I('* No 3
~- ..... , I i ceniWIO I
Thrnrc
widl the ~~- elbc
.....
---~7 1ir•••qf
•bylk(l ............. . .
ol aejd mtd N 76°4'.1M/ ,.._.. 0W1CJ. Ncitb QS•
d'W

rw

'

ud"

sa·.

,w

••y

'

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7B7;+''. w

.

w~

sa· 14.. rw moo rca ro

Ntfgf

IW!MJD!mnllfQ!Df88.~17

,..,.,.ae .. •:a

. . . . .

. ,

I

.....

I

aoimopiniulbcwatliw
o( l;ph 0( 1 WO A fglk't
'~»raP. &amp;eayin1 the ert line
gf , . , 1pt No, 3 end lbe
hi!Mb o( pjd Cnlktt .,.,

- ' ••
*olS I . BIU545.•JN
1 dbylow.

rfVJtlngturykr lbs

mmj•qUrcly 'w jtNp pjd
I.!!! No.3 · aryl eotiRb' within
M;b of ¥tics' OWII!I' NQm

diR&lt;tioo oCR, l)!lull"
SulUXL ~ Profnsjgrel

fs:ct

-..-

casjno a!!lborizcd by ·

~

.

Nsbnn,

unnn a fjeld syryey

S!trveJor No, 7t24 bY

76" S6' O!S"Wcs!. SOOOQ
ttrnq:
s.efb .S' ~· 34~ WCIL
tg

Ill imp qjn;

IN 'l1iSl1MONY WIIEIII!R!ItB,
lloowCGiuiiDr. Oltio !Iris 19111 ""&gt;' ol
Sepc;nbei~2001.
.
7

fi)

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SI!CRBTAKY 01' STATE

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·' • Hayman-Hobson
:engagement.
: See Page A2
· • Report: Kids le.ss
likely to graduate than
parents: See Page A3
, • Activists see
: 6pening lor poverty
: issue, See Page A6

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'· What !t:l you gat when

. · you take over 1()() ,

·· ~ted pumpkins, ·
throVI-In about that
' 'many kids.and supply .
. . tt,lem with pain)?
. ~ Besides some painted
lingers and clothing,
. · ·you get a lotpf flln. Just
,
ask theSfl 'kids who
,. showed up yesterday
evening at the Pomeroy. ·
Ubrary to receive a free
•1

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WEATHER

pu(IIP~In .to paiiit and

(·'"~:~~~~:~~~be
I 'as
as possible: ·
.Not ~

';

Worry, all ~he

. ' palnt$ were "waShable"

·. llithough ·some.Pu"1Jlkin

' ' · Picfts9s may have

on.' .

, requireq more than
· "washing" after the
1
' : •• Pain~rlg ~as .ail said
.
,l
and done.

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Detallo on Page A2

, ............ .

...

!Officjol

Jhm;e oontinuin• wi!b !l!c
may be Joc•cd on all or any mjJitary H1l)'C)' lipc apd
pan of the two l!&amp;'l:i of real !IO!!Ibedy linc of said 179.21
property more particularly
~ bJcl N 7M5' 44"
dL"5LTibed.as follows:
E 999.22• to a 10"' wood

'

INSIDE

u.

The ooe mivi!Civ1rmoo

Sc!;tioo 6a of AJticlc XV

•""

.....

rqgjcrjqnfi of rrmr(
'Ibisdcscri•ion
ha:;:.!
- - ..
-. -i1516

Rcg&gt;rd 2; PJu

-

.PageA3 .
• Homer L. Proffitt. 76
• James 'Bob' Queen, 76

sr

~ gf lrgd IDDil; ~ 'n'
mNa! to Ill ~cp~
C"CP'CDIJ., fwsti!jgm pi

a

s-.""......,.

Sea_,

SIS" jmp oin frpqrl. the
SCHEQULE TO Sf.CTJQN C!l!!!eT of J!admll aay et
a1 Trua'• 179,21 acg ~rw;t
•

CUNCO &amp;. SUJTON
S!JRVEYORS in JulY 2007,
hun pjos refermf to u SCI

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-'· 1 a SECrloNS -

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16 PAGES

l\imie's Mailbox
Buckeye edition

A2

Meigs County and 'The New Yorker'

AS

· from Athens, into Meigs County
and a town called Pomeroy. which
IISERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
once had been a loading dock for
Classifieds
·POMEROY ,.;_Meigs County is coal barges and now lay prostrate
Comics •
currently mentioned on the website · .and blighted along the Ohio River."
· Editorials
of "The New Yorker" magazine in
P(\cker then quotes Price as sayan article titled "The Hardest Vote" ing: "Meigs County is one of the
Faith • Values
and subtitled "The disaffection of worst. We're going to a racist
Ohio's working class."
area." Price then goes on to
Movies
ln
·the
article
writer
George
describe previous visits to the
B8
NASCAR
('acker describes meeting Latisha county, according to Packer; how
Price who runs· the Service she'd allegedly been cursed at durA3
Obituaries
Employees lntemational Union's ing canvassing for Obama . and
.,B Section Obama
Sports
campaign office in Athens · quotes a derogatory tertn some
,..
A2 and is a member of SEIU Ilx:al residents allegedly used to
Weather
1199. Price is described in thearti- describe Obama as a reason why
· cle as working at a nursing home they would not vote for the senator
as a cook and nursing a8sislant.
from lllinois.
'·
·
In excerpts displayed on ' 'The
Packer 'described walking door
New Yorker's" websile, Packer !o door with Price, writing: "Some
writes: "I drove down Route 33 of the residences were boarded

~\endars

BY BETH SERGENT

.

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shut , some were trailers with
·appliances lying out front One_or
two were large, lavishly decaymg
houses with overgrown gardens. A
front porch was sealed off by .fall en branches ."
Packer and Price found at least
two people mentioned in the article
who said they were voting for
Obama. Meigs County was just a
small part of the article· which also
says even if Obama wins, "he will
stili have to overcome the deep skepticism of struggling Americans."
As for that day of canvassing in
Pomeroy, Pack~r quotes Price as
saying: "Tl)is job is a challenge
and I ijke ttlat, but it's also sad and
all ih
depressmg. ou see
ese poor
.
see Melp. AJ

::!

.

~

Three arrested for
·possession of heroin
' BY DIANE POTIORFF
DPOTIOAFFOMYOAILYAEGISTEA .COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Law
enforcement officers with three agencies made another round of arrests and ·
removed more than $15,000 of drugs
from the streets Thursday.
After receiving a tip about more heroin in the city, officers with the Point
Pleasant Police Department. Mason
County Sheriff's Department and West
, Virginia State Police arrested Jarron
Tabor, 30, and Twyshawn Justice, 23,
both of Dayton , Ohio, and Moneka
Minnis, 24, of Point Pleasant. on at least
three counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.
The arrests came after a search warrant was executed at Mi.rinis ' residence,
where officers found approximately
17.7 grams of heroin, 47 .4 grams of
crack cocaine . 7.1 grams of marijuana
and $1,068 in cash and three handguns,
Point Pleasant Police Chief Ernie
Watterson announced in a news release.
The crack cocaine has an estimated
value of $9,500, with $5.300 estimated
for the heroin.
The arrests were made at 3 a.m .
All three were taken to the Western
Regional 'Jail in Barboursville for holding

Plean-~AJ

...

•

�• ·4:-

Don't give up,on Medicare yet
· Dear Annie: Yesterday,
my doctor said I could no
longer be her patient because
I was oil Medicare and the
reimbursements were too
low. She told me not to bother trying to find another doctpr because they were all
doing the same thing.
: I am now at a stage in life
where having a doctor is
c;xtremely important and I
don't know what to do. Can
doctors be required to take
patients on Medicare? What
about the ethics ·of tossing
old people out ·even when
the patient has medical coverage? When a doctor takes
the Hippocratic oath, is the
oath valid only as long as a
substantial profit is made? I
used .to worry about those
who have no medical insurance , but I should have been
worried about this, - Have
Medical Coverage but No
Doctor
Dear Have Coverage:
Jt'strue that doctors are not
reimbursed for Medicare at
the ·same level that they are
Feimbursed by private insurance companies. We're
sorry to say, for many
physicians, it is simply not
cost-effective to treat
Medicare patients.

However, there are still
many physicians who will,
so don't give up , You also
can ask your doctor about
setting up a sliding-scale fee
so you can pay for some of
the treatment yourself. This
is going to be a tremendous
problem in the near future,
and we hope our next president will add it to the long
list of issues on his'plate.
Dear Annie: October is
Domestic
.Violence
Awareness
Month .
According to the Maine
Family Violence Project
website. nearly one-third of
American women report
being physically or sexually
abused by a husband or
boyfriend at some point in
. their lives, Love should never
hurt, The National Domestic
Violence Hotline says you
may be in an abusive rei ationship if you answer yes to
any of these questions: ,
Does
your
partner:
Embarrass you with putdowns? Look at you or act
in ways that scare you?
Control what you do, whom
you see ar talk to , or where
you .go? Stop you from seemg your friends or family
members? Take your money
or Social Security check,
make you ask for money or
refuse to give you money?
Make all of the decisions?

Tell you you· re a bad parent
or threaten to take away or
hurt your children? Prevent
you from working or attending school ? Act like the
abuse is no big deal. it's
your · fault, or even deny
doing it? Destroy your
property or threaten to kill
your pets? Intimidate you
with gun s, knives or other
weapons? Shove you, slap
.you , choke you ·or, h!t you.?
Threaten to commit SUI cide? Threaten to kill you?
Perhaps this letter will
empower one person to
leave a harmful relationship. I did (with ' three children), and the rewards are
- Priceless in Maine
Dear Maine: Thank. you
for the excellent information,
Anyone who believes she (or
he) may be in an abusive relationship should contact the
National Domestic Violence
Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE
( 1-800-799-723:!),
Dear Annie: The letter
from "No Name as It Will
Cause Arguments" struck a
chord with me, My husband's father is 86 and no
longer drives . His 71-yearold mother is in fine health
but never learned how,· so
for the last four years, my
husband has been driving
them to doctor appointments, grocery stores,

Friday, October 24, aoo8
•

Local Weather

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA2

BYTHEBEND

-The Daily Sentinel

church outings, etc.
I don't mind that he helps
his parents. In fact,- I think
it's respectful and considerate. However, he has a sister
who lives five tninutes from them, plus nieces and
nephews who could help,
but my mother-in-law refuses to ask any of them to
drive her, She only .wants
my husband to do it and it's
taxing hi ~ job and our relationship, We have a 10month-old baby at home .
What can we do?- Florida
Dear Florida: Your husband must learn to say "no"
so Mom will be forced to
rely on others. The next time
she requires his services, he
should reply firmly, "I wish
1
I could, but I can't make it
then. You '11 have to ask
someone else." Period.
Annie's MailbOx is writ•
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the· Ann Landers
column. Please e-JtUJil your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Aunie's Mailbox,
and read features by oiher
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators :com.

Frlday•. .Partly sunny in
the morning __ .Then mostly
cloudy with 'showers likely
in the afternoon. H1ghs m
.the upper 50s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph, Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Friday night ...Rain. Not
as cool with lows in the
upper 40s. East winds 5 to•
10 mph __ .Becoming south
after midnighL Chance of
rain near I00 percenL
Saturday...Cloudy with
rain likely . Highs in the

upper 50s. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph, Chance ofrain
70 percent.
,
Saturday nigbt ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
·
Sunday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday night . and
M_onday ... Mostly cloudy
w1th a 40 percent ~han&lt;;e
of showers. t:ows m the
lower 40s . Htghs m the
upper 40s.

·Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.21
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 34.93
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 2190
Big Lots (NYSE) - 20•.82
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.39
BorgWarner (NYSE)- ,21,02
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.64

·Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.32
Cherming Shops (NASI)AQ) -

Ohio Valllly
DAO)- 20

21.25
JP .Morgan

.

(NYSE) - 31-85
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.96
Umlled Brands (NYSE) - 10,89
NO&lt;folk Sou1hern (NYSE) "- 54,58

Bane Corp. (NAS.
.

BBT (NYSE) - 30~21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.09
. Pepaico.(NYSE) - 53.48
P111111ler (NASDAQ) - 8.20
ROCkwell (NYSE) - 23,n
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) - 3,52
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.19
. S..ra Holding (NASDAQ) 49.98

1.15

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.53
Cotltna (NY$E) - 34.53
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.49
US Bank (NYSE) - 28.68
Gannett (NYSE) - 9.64
General Electric (NYSE) - 18.80
Hartey-Davtdaon (NYSE) -

..

Wai-MIIrl (NYSE) - 52.78
wendy's (NYSE) - 2.11
Weallanco (N'I'SE) - ~.68 • •
Worthington (NYSE) ~ 1! .14
Dally atock reporla are ihe 4 ,
p,m. ET c101tng quota.ot tntn"'.
actlona for Oct ZJ, 2008, pniVkl'
ed by Edw~ Joriea ftnanctal · ·
adviaon r.-ac MUla tn ·GjlltlpoHs
at (740) 441-9441 and 1!41~ ·
,.moro In Paint Ptea..,rt'Ill' •
(304) 674-11114. Member SIPC. .

Justin Robaon and Angela Hayman

Comniimity Calendar
: Church events
Friday, Oct. 24
: GUYSVILLE - . Fall
fevival, 7 p.m. Friday and
Saturday, Carthage Gap
fhun:h, U.S. 50, Guysville.
·,
Sunday, Oct. 26
; CARPENTER - Mt.
' JJnion Baptist Church will
present Jim Eden in con~ert at 6:30 p.m. The
ehurch is located at 39091
{:arpenter Hill Road ,
Pomeroy. For more information call 742-2832 .

.''

Other events

•
•
•
:
Saturday, Oct. 25
• .MIDDLEPORT - Hymn
Sing Along the River, 4 p.m.
~ntil dark, Dave Diles Park.
lawn
chair.
Pring
Performers include Bet
Foster and Pat Neece, Marty
Short, Joe
McCloud,
Charlie ~nd Ellen Rife and
Mike Puckett

POMEROY - · Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
at office, II 7 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs
County District Public
Library Board, 3:30 P·!JI··
Pomeroy Library. .
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee, 1.1:30 a.m,,
Senior Center.

Clubs and
organizations
Saturday; Oct. 25
POMEROY Delta
Kappa Gamma Teacher's
Society, 10:45 a.m., Wild
Horse Cafe, bring intema.
tiona! food recipe, paper
products, school supplies, .

POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Women,
· 9 a.m., Republican headquarters, Call Karen York,
696-1042, or Darlene
Newell, 985-3537 .
·
· Monday, Oct. 27
POMEROY Board
!ll.Ceting of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association, 6 ·
to 8 p.m., Pomeroy Library.
,Plans discussed for annual
Christmas flower show.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Mid&lt;1leport Lodge
#363, 7 p.m., Middleport
Masonic Temple, for work in
Entered Apprentice degree.
All Master Masons invited.
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. , Pomeroy
Public Library. Open to
public.·

•

........ , ..

-~--· · 1110'

Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Street ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
www.reedbaur.conl
jdillon@reedbaur.com

our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who-i.ave proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times•Sentinel will publish a very spe·
.cial tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by includ·
ing the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or Is cur·
rently serving in any branch of the U.S.Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $10.00
· Please Fill Out And Return With
(shown actual size)
Your Payment to: ,

r-----------------,

· In Honor Of

VETERAN SALUTE

Major
Earl Jones

C/0 Dally Sentinel
111 COurt St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
In Honor of (name and rank) ·

Army
'
VietNam
.

,

Dales of Active Duty .

Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $15.00 .
(Shown actual size}

Monday, Oct. 27
• RACINE - Southern
~al School Board, regular
-jneeting, 8 p:m., high school
·m
, edia room.

Branch of Service

~.,--:-::-:-:-------'---- ·1

Confllci/War

1
I
·
1Love, (Name relationship lo veteran)

r

1 · 5:00 PM Tribl)tes must be prepaid. I
1 Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

I

I

I

I Your Name:

1

I
1Address:
I•

I'
1
I

I

'

•

In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your .Famlly

• lnlllri Mlsllglng • - f(lUf buO;ty littl
• 10 Mill . . . . . . wtl'l Wllbmalll
• CWiom Stilt Plge •
ti'ICQ!

1

'

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 court st. ..
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone (740).992-2155.

}Uit'J

...... Up Onllnel www.LOCIINttcom

,..,

~

•

.

... . •:

·~ "

'•\""

.,, ,-. ""·

'

..,.~&amp; ·~

•

....

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

www.mydallysentinel.com

.

Obituaries

Local Briefs

James R. 11ob. Queen

Trick or treat

. BIDWELL - James R.
·:sob" Queen, 76, of
. Bidwell, passed away
Wednesday, Oct: '22, 2008,
at St. Mary's Medical Center
in Huntington, W.Va.
He was born March 12,
1932, in Wayne County,
W.Va., son of the late Perry
and Nettie Cyfer5 Queen.
. He was a U.S .Army veteran of the Korean Conflict.
, Bob retired after nearly 40
years with American Alloys
m New Haven, W.Va. He
enjoyed farm work.
H~ is survived by three
daughters, Cathy (Curt)
James R. 'Bob' Queer.
Matheny of Vinton, Robin
(Donald) Manin (with
.
who~!~ he made his home) and Renee (Gary) Holliday, all
of BtdWell; one son, Matt (Lisa) Queen of McArthur;
eight llrandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; three broth. ers, h1s twin - Bill (Louise) Queen and Buddy (Patty)
Queen, all of Canal Winchester, and Charlie Queen of
Crown City; and ~ sisters, Erma Belle Sisson and
Nancy (Emerson) Unroe, all of Gallipolis, and Ruby
(Dewey) Brewer of Akron.
In.addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by a
son, James Mark Queen; a granddaughter,Ashley Holliday;
and three brothers, Perry Jr., Bernie and 'Basil Queen.
·
'&gt;IV'I8 , at the
Serv1ces
will be 1:30 p.m. sun day, Oct . 26 , ;.vv
Wtllis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Brian Bailey officiating.
Burial will follow in Macedonia Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Saturday, Oct 25,2008, from 5 to 8 pm.
. There will be military services by volunteers of area veterans lodges. '
.
Please visit•www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

REEDSVILLE - Trick or treat will
be held in Reedsville from 6 to 7 p.m.

on Oct. 29. The fire siren will sound at
the start and end. ·
•••
LETART FALLS _ Trick or treat
will be held from 6 to 7 :30 p.m . in
Leiart Falls. Those homes participating should tum on por&lt;;h lights.

with any medical cards. Children
must be accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian.
,
A donation will be accepted but is
not required. Nobody will be denied
because of an inability to pay.
Medicaid ·and Medicare 8 patients
· must present cards prior to, receiving
the flu shot or pay $15.

True Value on East Main Street.
Supplies being collected are blankets,
towels, bleach, dog food, cat food, dog
toys, socks, peroxide, trash bags, leashes, collars, paper towels, dog treats,
office supplies. Monetary donations
will also be accepted. The drive is part
of Make A Difference Day.

Correction

River cruise tomorrow

•••
POMEROY
The Rubles
HARRISONVILLE - Trick or treat
TUPPERS PLAINS - An Ohio Sternwheeler will be offering two'
will be held from 6-7 p.m., Thursday, hunter education course will be -held cruises of the Ohio River tomorrow
Oct. 30 in the Pageville and beginning Nov. 10 at Eastern High as a fundraiser for Jason Smith and
Harrisonville areas. There will be cos- School, not Nov. II. Sessions will be his medical expenses. Smith is a
tume judging and refreshments at the ~eld 6-9 p.m., Nov. 10, II, 13, and 9 · father of five and has had a blood
Harrisonville Fire Department imme- a:m: to noon Nov. 15 .. Class s!ze is clot, open heart, surgery and now a·
diately following trick or treat
. hmlled to 60, For more mformatton or brain aneurysm according to organiz-to regtster call Gilbert Woods and ers of the event The first cruise is a
985-3914.
"kids cruise" at I p.m. Saturday · fol~
lowed by an adult cruise at 7 p.m. The·
adult
cruise is $20 per person for a
POMEROY - Meigs County
three hour dance cruise, the ·kid's
Health Department will conduct a
POMEROY - The Kids and K-9's crui!ie is $5 for kids two-12 and $7 .so·
childhood tmmunization cHnic from
9-11 a.m, and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at 4-H Club will be holding a supplies for 13 and older. Call the Meigs'
the health department. The child's · drive for the Meigs County Dog Shelter County Tourism Office at 992-2239.
shot records must be provided along from 1-4 p.m .. tomorrow at Dettwiller's for more information.
·

Immunization clinic

Benefit for dog shelter

Report· Kids less ll.L\!
1~17'ely to graduate than
· por:l'l"ients
•
BY. LIBBY QUAID

Ul'

.

d
· 1
f
1
e ucatlon aw or ace pena - 2005, the nation's gover- time ~nd with a regular
·
AP eoucATION wRITER
ties. But they got a break on nors made a pact to adopt a diploma,
· Critics have worried that
I . WASHINGTON - Your graduation rates: . Schools common system of tracking
by
judging test scores more
.
graduation
rates.
i'k
d
must meet annual goals, but
h'ld . ,
1
1
heavily
and graduation less
Now -the federal govern,
c 1 ts ess. 1 e y to gra u- the government lets each
ate from h1gh school than state set its own goal.
ment is , poi~ to raise the bar so, No Child Left Behind
you were, and most states . "A lot of states said, on
graduation
rates. encouraged schools to push
are domg httle to hold 'Well, we're under a lot of Education
Secretary weak students out.
schools
accountable, pressure; let's not make this Margaret Spellings is expectBalfan~.
the
Johns
according to a study by a too hard on ourselves,"' ed to issue new rules next Hopkins researcher, said the
children's advocacy group.' Balfanz said. "They were week that will force states to dropout problem is driven
•
•
More than half the states given a loophole, and they use the common tracking by "dropout factories,"
: RACINE - Homer L. Proffitt, 76, Racine, passed away have graduation targets that took it."
system and will judge schools in poor communiat 6:17 p.m.,Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2008 at The Ohio State don't make schools get betSo in North Carolina - ' schools· not only on gradua- ties where kids face chal~.
~edical Center, Columbus. .
.
ter, the Education Trust says which has won praise for a tion rates but on the percent- leoges inside and outsidl!
; Born June 14, 1932, Rolandus, Meigs County, ~e was the in a report released series of innovations to · age of black and Hispanic the classroom.
:·
son of the late John Chester and Jenny Pearl Hams Proffitt, Thursday.
keep kids in school - the students who graduate, too.
He said the government:
He was a US Army veteran of the Korean War, a member
The numbers are dismal: graduation goal has not
could
make a big dent in the·
Among minority students,
(If the Recine American Legion Post 602, a member of the One in four kids is dropping changed. Officials are comdropout
problem by·plowing:
Racine Untied Methodist Church and retired from the . out of school, a rate that ing up with a new ~oal but more than one in three stu- more money - and rmn:
Athens State Hospital. He formerly worked on the emer- hasn;i budged for at least are hoping No Chtld Left dents &lt;Jrops out of school.
guidance on. how to spe11d il'
Spe.llings proposed the - into those schools.
gency squad for the Racine Volunteer Fire Departinent and five years.
·
Behind will be rewritten to
:
new rules earlier this year.
worked and traveled on ships on the Great Lakes. He
"The U.S, is stagnating be less punitive.
~njoyed his family, anitnals and having his morning coffee while other industrialized
"To be candid, we're wait- Final rules may differ someat the Racine Krider's Kountry, Kitchen ~
·
countries are surpassing inll for NCLB to change," what, but Spellings said ear: He is survived by his wife, Juanita Siler Proffitt; his us," · said Anna Habash, satd June Atkinson, Nonh lier that states would be
Children, John W. Proffitt, Racine, Michael L. Proffitt, author of the report by Carolina's state schools required in most cases- to
Alabama, Mark E.· Proffitt, Syracuse, Thomas B: Education Trust, which superintendent.
"Those count graduates as students
(Marianne) Proffitt, Pomeroy, and daughter, Connie S. advocates on behalf o( numbers do not tell the who leave high school on
Metz, Crestline; step children, Judy (Dave) Kinsley, minority and poor children. story. Our mission is that
N,arno, Texas, Randy (Jo Ann) Lake, Sumpter, Mich., "And that is.going to have a I00 percent of our students
Denise (J~n~ Williams,_Ravenna, ,Mi~h., Tl?nya (Mike) dramatic impact on our abil- will graduate, from high
$trey,, N~aygo, Mich., 'Marlc: (Debtne) La:ke, Marley, ity to compete," she said.
school. Needless to say, we
~ich.,, Kellin (Cheryl) Lake, Grant, Mich.; numerous
In fact, the United States have a lot of work to do."
Adam McDaniel
&amp;randchildren, step P.dchildren, great grandchildren, is now the only industrialIn Maryland, officials say
&amp;. Jameto Anderaon
step great grandchildren; . dt~ughter-in-law Kimberly ized country where young their slower goal is more
DlllECTORS
1&gt;roffitt, Chester; brothers, James (Betty) Proffitt; Ponland, people are less likely than realistic.
Chester (Stella) Proffitt, Lisban and Roy Proffitt, Racil)e.
their parents to earn a diplo"If you really want to
: In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by rna, the report said, citing bring about change, you
!:randson Paul Randall Alley Jr.; three brothers, f.J:arold daia compiled by the inter- have to have reachable
Proffitt, Robert Proffitt and Raymond Proffitt; and a sister, national Organisation for goals that people believe
Middlepbd Pomeroy
·
.
Economic Cooperation and they can work toward," said
Florence Wilsoih
992-5141 992-5444
; A funeral servl~ wi!J be held at II a.m., Saturday, Oct Development.
Ronald
A.
Peiffer,
1!5, 2008 at the Racine United Methodist Church.
High schools are required Maryland:S deputy superinOfficiating will be Rev. Bill Marshall. Interment will follow to meet graduation targets tendent fdr _aeademic policy .
in the Bicknell Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. every year as part of the
"By not making these
lQnight at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Military 2002 federal No Child Left numbers pie-in-the-sky, I
8f3Veside services will be conducted 'by Racine American Behind law,
think we have a better
Legion Post 116)2, and Tuppers Plains Post #9053, Veterans
But those targets are set' chance," Peiffer said.
6f Foreign Wars. Expresstons of sympathy may be sent to by states , not by the federal
Graduation rates take
l!ie family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
government. And most longer to improve than test
states allow schools to grad- scores, because a child's
uate low percentages of stu- educational
experience
dents by saying that any must be transfoniled over a
from Page Al
progress, or even the status period of years, Peiffer s11id.
quo
in some cases, is
The U.S . was slow to real'
people that don't have any- the Republican Party. acceptable.
ize it was facing a dropout
Chin$, but they're still sup- Obama's one of us. He
• In · North Carolina, crisis. For years, researchers
portmg the wrong pan~ comes from a blue-collar schools must improve by reported dropouts as the
!hat's the reason they don t family. But people don't 0.1 percentage point each number of k1ds who 9uit
bave an,Ything . . I've can- really see that." ·
year. At that rate, it would school in 12th gni~ faihng
The entire article can be take nearly a century to to capture those who left
vassed smgle mothers with
ihree kids, and tbey still viewed on "The . New raise the graduation rate, high school earlier.
don't see what's wrong with Yorker's" website.
now 72 percent, to the state
States and schools cloudgoal of 80 percent.
ed the picture by using dif• In Maryland, schools · ferent methods to keep track
must improve their gradua- of students who graduated,
fromJ»age Al
tion rate by O.oJ percentage transferred or dropped out.
point each year. At that rate,
Then came the 2002 No
·and to await arraignment. Roush, 19, of Henderson, tt would take most of a mtl- Child Left Behind law with
they were to appear before Phillip Eugene . "P.J." lennium for the gradu!ltion its requirement that ~tales
Magistrate Gail Roush via .Jackson, 21, and Turell rate
among
Afncan- meet graduation goals. In
·
yideo. conferencing, and "Rail" Justice, 22, both of American students, now 71
Roush set bond Ill $70,000 Dayton, and Shawn Edward percent, to reach the state
Swisher, 29, Catherine Lee ·goal of 90 percent. .
· tor each defendant.
• In Delaware and New
: Watterson said the search Browning, 18,. and Thomas
warrant was a result of an Robert Mallette, .27, all of Mexico, schools will never
investigation that started Point Pleasant, were taken . have to meet a state graduawith an anonyl)lous tele- into custody by deputies with tion goal as long as they
phone ·call to . the Point the Mason County Sheriff's maintain the same gradua- ·
· Pleasant Police Department . Department and the Point tion rate. Delaware's gradu11bout drug activity. Officers. Pleasant Police Department arion rate is 76 percent;
·Bal'llck Obama;.... FOR PRESIDENT
involved in the investiga- · lllahomeonLincolnAvenue. New Mexico's is 67. perTurell
'Justice
and
cent.
lion were Lt. Shawn Ross,
Joseph Biden.......FOR VICE PRESIDENT
Sgt. Bryan Morrow and Twyshawn. Justice are · Why are states setting the
·
bar so low?
.
patrolman Ty Ier Deweese of brothets.
·!if Richard Cordray..FOR OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL
Records
show
that
Because
they
can, said
the Point Pleasant Police
!if Charlie Wllaon......FOR US CONGRESS tni DISTRICT
Department; Sg.t. Steven . Mallette, Browning and Bob Balfanz, a researcher at
Swisher
resided
.
at
the
Jobns
Hopkins
Universitr
Greene and Cpl. Billy Gritt
Rk:k Shrlver..........FOR STATE SENATE 20nt ,DISTRICT
State and· school offic1als
of the · Mason County Lincoln Avenue address.
!if Debbie Phllllps.....FOR STATE HOUSE t2nt DISTRICT
Sheriff's Department; and Swisher also was charged ~re under pressure to
tpl. K.M. Gilley of the , with destruction of property improve test scores under
the No Child Left Behind
Tom Lowery..........FOR MEIGS COUNTY COM..ISSIONER
Mason County Detachment and battery.
of the West V'ri'ginia State
Brenda Phalln...... .FOR ..EIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS
police.
·,
•
Ta"lng Applications
!if Joseph Ruaao......FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
· "We app~iate the help
kom the sheriff's departPeter Slkora..........FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
fnent and the West Virginia
HUD SubsldlzJ
$tate Police," Watterson
~aid. "We could not have
Efflclency/1 Bedroom
QUESTlONS: CIH lelp Colllty Democ111ic Heldquartn
4ione this without them:"
50yl'8 or qualifying disability
218 Eut lain Street, Pomeroy, OH •992-4111 or 992-4113
: This was the second set of
Low Income priority
tr£ests in two days as a result
740-992·7022
of search wammts. Six peoSilverheels
ttle; were arrested early
Wednesday. for possession of
A Realty Company-EHO
•
heroin. Brittani Nicole

,..,c. .- .....-

..

Arrest

T
E

2

IIIUSCIIIIV
Da•cradc Partv

ao _
8

The Maples

C~?~6XIam'!J
more

.. . •

·I

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'*""·........ '

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AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 2008 I

I Phone:

•FIBJA/7_,.._

Friday, Oetober 24, 2008

Meigs

1969-1971

Your
Veteran

'•

Our
Heroes

~;;;;:::'"'Honor

Photo of

i• Public meetings

~

HomerL

HAYMAN-HOBSON
.
ENGAGEMENT
LONGBOTTOM - ML Racine, Bonnie Ebersbach
and Mrs . Lawrence Hayman of Middleport and R&lt;!Y and .
of · Longbottom recently the late Lavetta Robs.on,
announced the engagement Newark:
and upcoming marriage of
The open church ceremotheir daughter, Angela ny will take place at 3 p,m.
Dawn, to Justin Bryan tomorrow at Hope Baptist
· Robson,
Church in Middleport. A
The bride-elect is a 2005 co,tume Halloween rece}1graduate of Southern High tion will follow at the home
School. She is the grand- gf the bride's parents in
daughter of TlJelma and the Longbottom.
late Tom White , and the late
Fred and Gamet Hayman.
· The prospective bridegroom is a 200 I graduate of
Meigs High School. He is
the son of Jerrena and Tim
Ebersbach of Middleport,
and · Kelly · and "' Sherry
Robson of Newark . He is
the grandson of Irene and
the late Gerald Dill of
On November 11,

••

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2

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a

fir
fir

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Don't give up,on Medicare yet
· Dear Annie: Yesterday,
my doctor said I could no
longer be her patient because
I was oil Medicare and the
reimbursements were too
low. She told me not to bother trying to find another doctpr because they were all
doing the same thing.
: I am now at a stage in life
where having a doctor is
c;xtremely important and I
don't know what to do. Can
doctors be required to take
patients on Medicare? What
about the ethics ·of tossing
old people out ·even when
the patient has medical coverage? When a doctor takes
the Hippocratic oath, is the
oath valid only as long as a
substantial profit is made? I
used .to worry about those
who have no medical insurance , but I should have been
worried about this, - Have
Medical Coverage but No
Doctor
Dear Have Coverage:
Jt'strue that doctors are not
reimbursed for Medicare at
the ·same level that they are
Feimbursed by private insurance companies. We're
sorry to say, for many
physicians, it is simply not
cost-effective to treat
Medicare patients.

However, there are still
many physicians who will,
so don't give up , You also
can ask your doctor about
setting up a sliding-scale fee
so you can pay for some of
the treatment yourself. This
is going to be a tremendous
problem in the near future,
and we hope our next president will add it to the long
list of issues on his'plate.
Dear Annie: October is
Domestic
.Violence
Awareness
Month .
According to the Maine
Family Violence Project
website. nearly one-third of
American women report
being physically or sexually
abused by a husband or
boyfriend at some point in
. their lives, Love should never
hurt, The National Domestic
Violence Hotline says you
may be in an abusive rei ationship if you answer yes to
any of these questions: ,
Does
your
partner:
Embarrass you with putdowns? Look at you or act
in ways that scare you?
Control what you do, whom
you see ar talk to , or where
you .go? Stop you from seemg your friends or family
members? Take your money
or Social Security check,
make you ask for money or
refuse to give you money?
Make all of the decisions?

Tell you you· re a bad parent
or threaten to take away or
hurt your children? Prevent
you from working or attending school ? Act like the
abuse is no big deal. it's
your · fault, or even deny
doing it? Destroy your
property or threaten to kill
your pets? Intimidate you
with gun s, knives or other
weapons? Shove you, slap
.you , choke you ·or, h!t you.?
Threaten to commit SUI cide? Threaten to kill you?
Perhaps this letter will
empower one person to
leave a harmful relationship. I did (with ' three children), and the rewards are
- Priceless in Maine
Dear Maine: Thank. you
for the excellent information,
Anyone who believes she (or
he) may be in an abusive relationship should contact the
National Domestic Violence
Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE
( 1-800-799-723:!),
Dear Annie: The letter
from "No Name as It Will
Cause Arguments" struck a
chord with me, My husband's father is 86 and no
longer drives . His 71-yearold mother is in fine health
but never learned how,· so
for the last four years, my
husband has been driving
them to doctor appointments, grocery stores,

Friday, October 24, aoo8
•

Local Weather

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA2

BYTHEBEND

-The Daily Sentinel

church outings, etc.
I don't mind that he helps
his parents. In fact,- I think
it's respectful and considerate. However, he has a sister
who lives five tninutes from them, plus nieces and
nephews who could help,
but my mother-in-law refuses to ask any of them to
drive her, She only .wants
my husband to do it and it's
taxing hi ~ job and our relationship, We have a 10month-old baby at home .
What can we do?- Florida
Dear Florida: Your husband must learn to say "no"
so Mom will be forced to
rely on others. The next time
she requires his services, he
should reply firmly, "I wish
1
I could, but I can't make it
then. You '11 have to ask
someone else." Period.
Annie's MailbOx is writ•
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the· Ann Landers
column. Please e-JtUJil your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Aunie's Mailbox,
and read features by oiher
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators :com.

Frlday•. .Partly sunny in
the morning __ .Then mostly
cloudy with 'showers likely
in the afternoon. H1ghs m
.the upper 50s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph, Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Friday night ...Rain. Not
as cool with lows in the
upper 40s. East winds 5 to•
10 mph __ .Becoming south
after midnighL Chance of
rain near I00 percenL
Saturday...Cloudy with
rain likely . Highs in the

upper 50s. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph, Chance ofrain
70 percent.
,
Saturday nigbt ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
·
Sunday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday night . and
M_onday ... Mostly cloudy
w1th a 40 percent ~han&lt;;e
of showers. t:ows m the
lower 40s . Htghs m the
upper 40s.

·Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.21
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 34.93
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 2190
Big Lots (NYSE) - 20•.82
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.39
BorgWarner (NYSE)- ,21,02
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.64

·Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.32
Cherming Shops (NASI)AQ) -

Ohio Valllly
DAO)- 20

21.25
JP .Morgan

.

(NYSE) - 31-85
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.96
Umlled Brands (NYSE) - 10,89
NO&lt;folk Sou1hern (NYSE) "- 54,58

Bane Corp. (NAS.
.

BBT (NYSE) - 30~21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.09
. Pepaico.(NYSE) - 53.48
P111111ler (NASDAQ) - 8.20
ROCkwell (NYSE) - 23,n
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) - 3,52
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.19
. S..ra Holding (NASDAQ) 49.98

1.15

City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.53
Cotltna (NY$E) - 34.53
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.49
US Bank (NYSE) - 28.68
Gannett (NYSE) - 9.64
General Electric (NYSE) - 18.80
Hartey-Davtdaon (NYSE) -

..

Wai-MIIrl (NYSE) - 52.78
wendy's (NYSE) - 2.11
Weallanco (N'I'SE) - ~.68 • •
Worthington (NYSE) ~ 1! .14
Dally atock reporla are ihe 4 ,
p,m. ET c101tng quota.ot tntn"'.
actlona for Oct ZJ, 2008, pniVkl'
ed by Edw~ Joriea ftnanctal · ·
adviaon r.-ac MUla tn ·GjlltlpoHs
at (740) 441-9441 and 1!41~ ·
,.moro In Paint Ptea..,rt'Ill' •
(304) 674-11114. Member SIPC. .

Justin Robaon and Angela Hayman

Comniimity Calendar
: Church events
Friday, Oct. 24
: GUYSVILLE - . Fall
fevival, 7 p.m. Friday and
Saturday, Carthage Gap
fhun:h, U.S. 50, Guysville.
·,
Sunday, Oct. 26
; CARPENTER - Mt.
' JJnion Baptist Church will
present Jim Eden in con~ert at 6:30 p.m. The
ehurch is located at 39091
{:arpenter Hill Road ,
Pomeroy. For more information call 742-2832 .

.''

Other events

•
•
•
:
Saturday, Oct. 25
• .MIDDLEPORT - Hymn
Sing Along the River, 4 p.m.
~ntil dark, Dave Diles Park.
lawn
chair.
Pring
Performers include Bet
Foster and Pat Neece, Marty
Short, Joe
McCloud,
Charlie ~nd Ellen Rife and
Mike Puckett

POMEROY - · Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
at office, II 7 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs
County District Public
Library Board, 3:30 P·!JI··
Pomeroy Library. .
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee, 1.1:30 a.m,,
Senior Center.

Clubs and
organizations
Saturday; Oct. 25
POMEROY Delta
Kappa Gamma Teacher's
Society, 10:45 a.m., Wild
Horse Cafe, bring intema.
tiona! food recipe, paper
products, school supplies, .

POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Women,
· 9 a.m., Republican headquarters, Call Karen York,
696-1042, or Darlene
Newell, 985-3537 .
·
· Monday, Oct. 27
POMEROY Board
!ll.Ceting of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association, 6 ·
to 8 p.m., Pomeroy Library.
,Plans discussed for annual
Christmas flower show.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Mid&lt;1leport Lodge
#363, 7 p.m., Middleport
Masonic Temple, for work in
Entered Apprentice degree.
All Master Masons invited.
Tuesday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m. , Pomeroy
Public Library. Open to
public.·

•

........ , ..

-~--· · 1110'

Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Street ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
www.reedbaur.conl
jdillon@reedbaur.com

our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who-i.ave proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times•Sentinel will publish a very spe·
.cial tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by includ·
ing the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or Is cur·
rently serving in any branch of the U.S.Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $10.00
· Please Fill Out And Return With
(shown actual size)
Your Payment to: ,

r-----------------,

· In Honor Of

VETERAN SALUTE

Major
Earl Jones

C/0 Dally Sentinel
111 COurt St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
In Honor of (name and rank) ·

Army
'
VietNam
.

,

Dales of Active Duty .

Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $15.00 .
(Shown actual size}

Monday, Oct. 27
• RACINE - Southern
~al School Board, regular
-jneeting, 8 p:m., high school
·m
, edia room.

Branch of Service

~.,--:-::-:-:-------'---- ·1

Confllci/War

1
I
·
1Love, (Name relationship lo veteran)

r

1 · 5:00 PM Tribl)tes must be prepaid. I
1 Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

I

I

I

I Your Name:

1

I
1Address:
I•

I'
1
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I

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In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your .Famlly

• lnlllri Mlsllglng • - f(lUf buO;ty littl
• 10 Mill . . . . . . wtl'l Wllbmalll
• CWiom Stilt Plge •
ti'ICQ!

1

'

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 court st. ..
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone (740).992-2155.

}Uit'J

...... Up Onllnel www.LOCIINttcom

,..,

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... . •:

·~ "

'•\""

.,, ,-. ""·

'

..,.~&amp; ·~

•

....

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

www.mydallysentinel.com

.

Obituaries

Local Briefs

James R. 11ob. Queen

Trick or treat

. BIDWELL - James R.
·:sob" Queen, 76, of
. Bidwell, passed away
Wednesday, Oct: '22, 2008,
at St. Mary's Medical Center
in Huntington, W.Va.
He was born March 12,
1932, in Wayne County,
W.Va., son of the late Perry
and Nettie Cyfer5 Queen.
. He was a U.S .Army veteran of the Korean Conflict.
, Bob retired after nearly 40
years with American Alloys
m New Haven, W.Va. He
enjoyed farm work.
H~ is survived by three
daughters, Cathy (Curt)
James R. 'Bob' Queer.
Matheny of Vinton, Robin
(Donald) Manin (with
.
who~!~ he made his home) and Renee (Gary) Holliday, all
of BtdWell; one son, Matt (Lisa) Queen of McArthur;
eight llrandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; three broth. ers, h1s twin - Bill (Louise) Queen and Buddy (Patty)
Queen, all of Canal Winchester, and Charlie Queen of
Crown City; and ~ sisters, Erma Belle Sisson and
Nancy (Emerson) Unroe, all of Gallipolis, and Ruby
(Dewey) Brewer of Akron.
In.addition to his parents. he was preceded in death by a
son, James Mark Queen; a granddaughter,Ashley Holliday;
and three brothers, Perry Jr., Bernie and 'Basil Queen.
·
'&gt;IV'I8 , at the
Serv1ces
will be 1:30 p.m. sun day, Oct . 26 , ;.vv
Wtllis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Brian Bailey officiating.
Burial will follow in Macedonia Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Saturday, Oct 25,2008, from 5 to 8 pm.
. There will be military services by volunteers of area veterans lodges. '
.
Please visit•www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.

REEDSVILLE - Trick or treat will
be held in Reedsville from 6 to 7 p.m.

on Oct. 29. The fire siren will sound at
the start and end. ·
•••
LETART FALLS _ Trick or treat
will be held from 6 to 7 :30 p.m . in
Leiart Falls. Those homes participating should tum on por&lt;;h lights.

with any medical cards. Children
must be accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian.
,
A donation will be accepted but is
not required. Nobody will be denied
because of an inability to pay.
Medicaid ·and Medicare 8 patients
· must present cards prior to, receiving
the flu shot or pay $15.

True Value on East Main Street.
Supplies being collected are blankets,
towels, bleach, dog food, cat food, dog
toys, socks, peroxide, trash bags, leashes, collars, paper towels, dog treats,
office supplies. Monetary donations
will also be accepted. The drive is part
of Make A Difference Day.

Correction

River cruise tomorrow

•••
POMEROY
The Rubles
HARRISONVILLE - Trick or treat
TUPPERS PLAINS - An Ohio Sternwheeler will be offering two'
will be held from 6-7 p.m., Thursday, hunter education course will be -held cruises of the Ohio River tomorrow
Oct. 30 in the Pageville and beginning Nov. 10 at Eastern High as a fundraiser for Jason Smith and
Harrisonville areas. There will be cos- School, not Nov. II. Sessions will be his medical expenses. Smith is a
tume judging and refreshments at the ~eld 6-9 p.m., Nov. 10, II, 13, and 9 · father of five and has had a blood
Harrisonville Fire Department imme- a:m: to noon Nov. 15 .. Class s!ze is clot, open heart, surgery and now a·
diately following trick or treat
. hmlled to 60, For more mformatton or brain aneurysm according to organiz-to regtster call Gilbert Woods and ers of the event The first cruise is a
985-3914.
"kids cruise" at I p.m. Saturday · fol~
lowed by an adult cruise at 7 p.m. The·
adult
cruise is $20 per person for a
POMEROY - Meigs County
three hour dance cruise, the ·kid's
Health Department will conduct a
POMEROY - The Kids and K-9's crui!ie is $5 for kids two-12 and $7 .so·
childhood tmmunization cHnic from
9-11 a.m, and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at 4-H Club will be holding a supplies for 13 and older. Call the Meigs'
the health department. The child's · drive for the Meigs County Dog Shelter County Tourism Office at 992-2239.
shot records must be provided along from 1-4 p.m .. tomorrow at Dettwiller's for more information.
·

Immunization clinic

Benefit for dog shelter

Report· Kids less ll.L\!
1~17'ely to graduate than
· por:l'l"ients
•
BY. LIBBY QUAID

Ul'

.

d
· 1
f
1
e ucatlon aw or ace pena - 2005, the nation's gover- time ~nd with a regular
·
AP eoucATION wRITER
ties. But they got a break on nors made a pact to adopt a diploma,
· Critics have worried that
I . WASHINGTON - Your graduation rates: . Schools common system of tracking
by
judging test scores more
.
graduation
rates.
i'k
d
must meet annual goals, but
h'ld . ,
1
1
heavily
and graduation less
Now -the federal govern,
c 1 ts ess. 1 e y to gra u- the government lets each
ate from h1gh school than state set its own goal.
ment is , poi~ to raise the bar so, No Child Left Behind
you were, and most states . "A lot of states said, on
graduation
rates. encouraged schools to push
are domg httle to hold 'Well, we're under a lot of Education
Secretary weak students out.
schools
accountable, pressure; let's not make this Margaret Spellings is expectBalfan~.
the
Johns
according to a study by a too hard on ourselves,"' ed to issue new rules next Hopkins researcher, said the
children's advocacy group.' Balfanz said. "They were week that will force states to dropout problem is driven
•
•
More than half the states given a loophole, and they use the common tracking by "dropout factories,"
: RACINE - Homer L. Proffitt, 76, Racine, passed away have graduation targets that took it."
system and will judge schools in poor communiat 6:17 p.m.,Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2008 at The Ohio State don't make schools get betSo in North Carolina - ' schools· not only on gradua- ties where kids face chal~.
~edical Center, Columbus. .
.
ter, the Education Trust says which has won praise for a tion rates but on the percent- leoges inside and outsidl!
; Born June 14, 1932, Rolandus, Meigs County, ~e was the in a report released series of innovations to · age of black and Hispanic the classroom.
:·
son of the late John Chester and Jenny Pearl Hams Proffitt, Thursday.
keep kids in school - the students who graduate, too.
He said the government:
He was a US Army veteran of the Korean War, a member
The numbers are dismal: graduation goal has not
could
make a big dent in the·
Among minority students,
(If the Recine American Legion Post 602, a member of the One in four kids is dropping changed. Officials are comdropout
problem by·plowing:
Racine Untied Methodist Church and retired from the . out of school, a rate that ing up with a new ~oal but more than one in three stu- more money - and rmn:
Athens State Hospital. He formerly worked on the emer- hasn;i budged for at least are hoping No Chtld Left dents &lt;Jrops out of school.
guidance on. how to spe11d il'
Spe.llings proposed the - into those schools.
gency squad for the Racine Volunteer Fire Departinent and five years.
·
Behind will be rewritten to
:
new rules earlier this year.
worked and traveled on ships on the Great Lakes. He
"The U.S, is stagnating be less punitive.
~njoyed his family, anitnals and having his morning coffee while other industrialized
"To be candid, we're wait- Final rules may differ someat the Racine Krider's Kountry, Kitchen ~
·
countries are surpassing inll for NCLB to change," what, but Spellings said ear: He is survived by his wife, Juanita Siler Proffitt; his us," · said Anna Habash, satd June Atkinson, Nonh lier that states would be
Children, John W. Proffitt, Racine, Michael L. Proffitt, author of the report by Carolina's state schools required in most cases- to
Alabama, Mark E.· Proffitt, Syracuse, Thomas B: Education Trust, which superintendent.
"Those count graduates as students
(Marianne) Proffitt, Pomeroy, and daughter, Connie S. advocates on behalf o( numbers do not tell the who leave high school on
Metz, Crestline; step children, Judy (Dave) Kinsley, minority and poor children. story. Our mission is that
N,arno, Texas, Randy (Jo Ann) Lake, Sumpter, Mich., "And that is.going to have a I00 percent of our students
Denise (J~n~ Williams,_Ravenna, ,Mi~h., Tl?nya (Mike) dramatic impact on our abil- will graduate, from high
$trey,, N~aygo, Mich., 'Marlc: (Debtne) La:ke, Marley, ity to compete," she said.
school. Needless to say, we
~ich.,, Kellin (Cheryl) Lake, Grant, Mich.; numerous
In fact, the United States have a lot of work to do."
Adam McDaniel
&amp;randchildren, step P.dchildren, great grandchildren, is now the only industrialIn Maryland, officials say
&amp;. Jameto Anderaon
step great grandchildren; . dt~ughter-in-law Kimberly ized country where young their slower goal is more
DlllECTORS
1&gt;roffitt, Chester; brothers, James (Betty) Proffitt; Ponland, people are less likely than realistic.
Chester (Stella) Proffitt, Lisban and Roy Proffitt, Racil)e.
their parents to earn a diplo"If you really want to
: In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by rna, the report said, citing bring about change, you
!:randson Paul Randall Alley Jr.; three brothers, f.J:arold daia compiled by the inter- have to have reachable
Proffitt, Robert Proffitt and Raymond Proffitt; and a sister, national Organisation for goals that people believe
Middlepbd Pomeroy
·
.
Economic Cooperation and they can work toward," said
Florence Wilsoih
992-5141 992-5444
; A funeral servl~ wi!J be held at II a.m., Saturday, Oct Development.
Ronald
A.
Peiffer,
1!5, 2008 at the Racine United Methodist Church.
High schools are required Maryland:S deputy superinOfficiating will be Rev. Bill Marshall. Interment will follow to meet graduation targets tendent fdr _aeademic policy .
in the Bicknell Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. every year as part of the
"By not making these
lQnight at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Military 2002 federal No Child Left numbers pie-in-the-sky, I
8f3Veside services will be conducted 'by Racine American Behind law,
think we have a better
Legion Post 116)2, and Tuppers Plains Post #9053, Veterans
But those targets are set' chance," Peiffer said.
6f Foreign Wars. Expresstons of sympathy may be sent to by states , not by the federal
Graduation rates take
l!ie family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
government. And most longer to improve than test
states allow schools to grad- scores, because a child's
uate low percentages of stu- educational
experience
dents by saying that any must be transfoniled over a
from Page Al
progress, or even the status period of years, Peiffer s11id.
quo
in some cases, is
The U.S . was slow to real'
people that don't have any- the Republican Party. acceptable.
ize it was facing a dropout
Chin$, but they're still sup- Obama's one of us. He
• In · North Carolina, crisis. For years, researchers
portmg the wrong pan~ comes from a blue-collar schools must improve by reported dropouts as the
!hat's the reason they don t family. But people don't 0.1 percentage point each number of k1ds who 9uit
bave an,Ything . . I've can- really see that." ·
year. At that rate, it would school in 12th gni~ faihng
The entire article can be take nearly a century to to capture those who left
vassed smgle mothers with
ihree kids, and tbey still viewed on "The . New raise the graduation rate, high school earlier.
don't see what's wrong with Yorker's" website.
now 72 percent, to the state
States and schools cloudgoal of 80 percent.
ed the picture by using dif• In Maryland, schools · ferent methods to keep track
must improve their gradua- of students who graduated,
fromJ»age Al
tion rate by O.oJ percentage transferred or dropped out.
point each year. At that rate,
Then came the 2002 No
·and to await arraignment. Roush, 19, of Henderson, tt would take most of a mtl- Child Left Behind law with
they were to appear before Phillip Eugene . "P.J." lennium for the gradu!ltion its requirement that ~tales
Magistrate Gail Roush via .Jackson, 21, and Turell rate
among
Afncan- meet graduation goals. In
·
yideo. conferencing, and "Rail" Justice, 22, both of American students, now 71
Roush set bond Ill $70,000 Dayton, and Shawn Edward percent, to reach the state
Swisher, 29, Catherine Lee ·goal of 90 percent. .
· tor each defendant.
• In Delaware and New
: Watterson said the search Browning, 18,. and Thomas
warrant was a result of an Robert Mallette, .27, all of Mexico, schools will never
investigation that started Point Pleasant, were taken . have to meet a state graduawith an anonyl)lous tele- into custody by deputies with tion goal as long as they
phone ·call to . the Point the Mason County Sheriff's maintain the same gradua- ·
· Pleasant Police Department . Department and the Point tion rate. Delaware's gradu11bout drug activity. Officers. Pleasant Police Department arion rate is 76 percent;
·Bal'llck Obama;.... FOR PRESIDENT
involved in the investiga- · lllahomeonLincolnAvenue. New Mexico's is 67. perTurell
'Justice
and
cent.
lion were Lt. Shawn Ross,
Joseph Biden.......FOR VICE PRESIDENT
Sgt. Bryan Morrow and Twyshawn. Justice are · Why are states setting the
·
bar so low?
.
patrolman Ty Ier Deweese of brothets.
·!if Richard Cordray..FOR OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL
Records
show
that
Because
they
can, said
the Point Pleasant Police
!if Charlie Wllaon......FOR US CONGRESS tni DISTRICT
Department; Sg.t. Steven . Mallette, Browning and Bob Balfanz, a researcher at
Swisher
resided
.
at
the
Jobns
Hopkins
Universitr
Greene and Cpl. Billy Gritt
Rk:k Shrlver..........FOR STATE SENATE 20nt ,DISTRICT
State and· school offic1als
of the · Mason County Lincoln Avenue address.
!if Debbie Phllllps.....FOR STATE HOUSE t2nt DISTRICT
Sheriff's Department; and Swisher also was charged ~re under pressure to
tpl. K.M. Gilley of the , with destruction of property improve test scores under
the No Child Left Behind
Tom Lowery..........FOR MEIGS COUNTY COM..ISSIONER
Mason County Detachment and battery.
of the West V'ri'ginia State
Brenda Phalln...... .FOR ..EIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS
police.
·,
•
Ta"lng Applications
!if Joseph Ruaao......FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
· "We app~iate the help
kom the sheriff's departPeter Slkora..........FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
fnent and the West Virginia
HUD SubsldlzJ
$tate Police," Watterson
~aid. "We could not have
Efflclency/1 Bedroom
QUESTlONS: CIH lelp Colllty Democ111ic Heldquartn
4ione this without them:"
50yl'8 or qualifying disability
218 Eut lain Street, Pomeroy, OH •992-4111 or 992-4113
: This was the second set of
Low Income priority
tr£ests in two days as a result
740-992·7022
of search wammts. Six peoSilverheels
ttle; were arrested early
Wednesday. for possession of
A Realty Company-EHO
•
heroin. Brittani Nicole

,..,c. .- .....-

..

Arrest

T
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2

IIIUSCIIIIV
Da•cradc Partv

ao _
8

The Maples

C~?~6XIam'!J
more

.. . •

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I
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 2008 I

I Phone:

•FIBJA/7_,.._

Friday, Oetober 24, 2008

Meigs

1969-1971

Your
Veteran

'•

Our
Heroes

~;;;;:::'"'Honor

Photo of

i• Public meetings

~

HomerL

HAYMAN-HOBSON
.
ENGAGEMENT
LONGBOTTOM - ML Racine, Bonnie Ebersbach
and Mrs . Lawrence Hayman of Middleport and R&lt;!Y and .
of · Longbottom recently the late Lavetta Robs.on,
announced the engagement Newark:
and upcoming marriage of
The open church ceremotheir daughter, Angela ny will take place at 3 p,m.
Dawn, to Justin Bryan tomorrow at Hope Baptist
· Robson,
Church in Middleport. A
The bride-elect is a 2005 co,tume Halloween rece}1graduate of Southern High tion will follow at the home
School. She is the grand- gf the bride's parents in
daughter of TlJelma and the Longbottom.
late Tom White , and the late
Fred and Gamet Hayman.
· The prospective bridegroom is a 200 I graduate of
Meigs High School. He is
the son of Jerrena and Tim
Ebersbach of Middleport,
and · Kelly · and "' Sherry
Robson of Newark . He is
the grandson of Irene and
the late Gerald Dill of
On November 11,

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OP NION·

•·

··The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

•

· Friday, October 24, 2008

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley·Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News 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 l!f the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grieJ&gt;ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Friday, Oct. 24, the 298th day of2008. There are
68 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in . History: On Oct. 24. 1945. the
United Nations officially came 'into existence as its charter
took effect.
.
On this date: In 1537 , Jane Seymour, the third wife of
England's King Henry V.III, died 12 days aftergiving birth
to Prince Edward, later King Edward VI.
In 1648. the Peace of Westphalia enqed the Thirty Years·
War and effectively destroyed the Holy Roman Empire.
In 1861 , the first transcontinental telegraph message was
sent as Chief Justice Stephen J. Field of California transmitted a telegram to President Lincoln.
..
ln I 90 I. widow Anna Edson Taylor became the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a bane I.
In 1931, the George Washington Bridge, connecting New
York and New Jersey, was officially dedicated. (It opened
to traffic the next day.)
In 1939, nylon stockings were sold publicly for the first
time, in Wilmington, Del.
·
··
· ·
·
hl 1940, the 40-hour work week "went into effect under
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 .
· In 1952, Republican presidential candidate Dwight D.
Eisenhower declared in Detroit, "I shall go to Korea" as he
promised to end the conflict. (He made the visit over a
month later.)
·
In 1980, the merchant freighte ! :.) Poet departed
Philadelphia bound for Port Said, Egypt. with a crew of 34
and a cargo of grain; it disappeared en route and has not
been heard from since.
' In 2002, authorities anested. Army veteran John Allen
Muhammad and teenager Lee Boyd Malvo nea·r
· Myersville, Md., 'in connection with the Washington:area
sniper attacks .
· Today,'s Birthdays: Football Hall-of-Farner Y.A. Tittle is
82. Rock musician Bill Wyman is 72. Actor-producer David
Nelson is 72. Actor F. Murray Abraham is 69. Actor Kevin
Kline is 61.. Former NAACP President Kweisi Mfume is 60.
Country musician Billy Thomas (Terry McBride and the
Ride) is 55. Actor B.D. Wong is 48. Rock musician Ben
Gillies (Silverchair) is 29. Singer-actress Monica Arnold is
28. Rhythm-and-blues singer Adrienne Bailon (31w) is 25.
Actress Shenae Grimes (TV: "90210") is 19.
Thought for Today: "Three passions, simple but over:
whelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for
love, the search for knowledge and unbearable pity for the
suffering of mankind." - Bertrand Russell, English
philosopher ( 1872-1970).

'

Terry
Mattingly

ing more . about their fait h
than the Republicans part of a strategic attempt
to· capture a slice of a v6t. ing bloc that was so crucial
in the 2004 elections. But
in the age of talk radio, 14hour cable TV coverage,
blogs and other forms of
niche news, politicos are
learning that they need to
talk to a wider array of
journalists to reach these
values voters.
All kimls of doors are
opening

~ll1d

"you have to

be ready for your close-up,"
Brody told an audience of
in
student journalists
Nashville, mostly from
ChristJ:m campuses across
the Bible Belt.
"Go after it hard. Be
very. very agl!ressive. I
can't tell you th1 s enough,''
he said; "You need to make
multiple phone calls a day
to get your source to talk.
You need to make sure that
you are· constantly really
go ing after the story. Don't
ever let up .. ..
"Make sure you really
find your ni che , and make
sure you know what you are
passionate about."
After two decades · in

broadcasting - mostly in So much of our J?Olitics in
mainstream newsrooms - the age of talk radm is totalBrady has become a go-to ly black and white, but we
commentator inside the really do try to ·avoid polarBeltway, primarily by gain- izing language."
ing a reputation as a fairTake the Obama interminded, even sympathetic views, for example. It"s one
sounding board for politi- "thing, said Brody, to ask
cians on both sides of the Obama specific questions
aisle. Thus. Brody has even about his liberal approach to
started tum ing up on Christianity, his support for
MSNBC , CNN and NBC's abortion rights and commit"Meet The Press."
·
ment to expanding civil
Democrats turn to his rights of gays and lesbians.
occasionally goofy blog, · It's something else to "play
'The Brody File," for judge and jury'' and try to
insights into the views of challen,ge .the reallty of
conservative. centnst and Obama s fatth.
"There is no question that
progressive evangelicals.
Republicans do the same his sincerity shi~es through
thing, often to see how when he's talkmg to you
Democrats answer his fre- about his Christian beliefs
quent questioi1s about hot- and the role that his faith
. plays in his life," said
button sociul questions. .
Brody stressed that he Brody. "This man says
isn ' t . interested in asking what he believes and he
"gotcha questions" about believes what he says.
faith in an attempt to trip Obama has said over an.d
them up: The journalist has over that he. has grven hts
heafd his own share of life to Jesus Christ, and I
loaded questions during hi s think people need to take
lifetime. since he was his word on that. ...
rais.ed as a Jew in New
'"The question is whether
York City before convert- this kind of dialogue with
ing to Ch1;istianity while in Obama will continue.
college. Brody isn 'J fond
Are we going to be able to
of labels.
·
keep talking, without trying
"I don 't have an agenda, to demonize each other?
but I am going to ask ques- That's the big question."
tions about faith" during
(Terry Mattingly is direcCBN news broadcasts, he tor uf the Washington
said. "l-am going to ask per- Journalism Center at the
sonal questions about how COtmcil for Christian
the candidates go about Colleges and Universities
making their decisions. and
leads
the
·Still, I know that there are · GetReligion.org project to
shades of gray when people study religion and the
start talking about faith, ..,. news.)

Chonth ol J,_ CU!ot A...,...U.

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m ..
Evening - 7:30p .m.
River Valley
River Valley Apostolic Worship Center.
· 873 · S. Jrd Ave ., ~iddleport, Rn
Michael Bradford , Pastor, Sunday , 10:30
a.m. Tues . 6:30 prayer. Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

• Salem St ., Pastor: Ed B'amey , Sunday
School - 10 a.m .. Even int - 7 p.m..
WedMrtday Servict"s - 7 p.m.
S«ood Baplb1 Churdl
Rnenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am• Mornina: wonhip I I am Evening - 7 pm .
WedrKsday 7 p.m.
Flnl 8apti8t Churtb of Ma1011, WV
(lodtpendc:nt Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderwn St. Pas10r; Hoben
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, Mornin g
church II am , Sundlly tn·ning 6 pm. Wed .
Bible Study 7 pm

Sacrtd Ht~trt Catholk Cburtb
161 Mulbfny Ave .• .Pomeroy, 992-5898 .
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sal. Con .
4:45· 5:1Sp.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con . -8:45 -q :IS • .m... Sun . Mass · 9:30
a.m., Da ily Mnu • H:30 a.m.

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rulland ,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;: 7:30 p.m .,
Thun .1:00 p.m., Putof MartyR. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty Aio!iembly ol God
P.O. Bnx 4117 , Duddin~ Lane. Muon.
W.Va., Pa~tor : Neil Tennant, Sunday
Service~- \0:00a.m. and 1 p.m.

Church of Christ
Wesblde Churth or Cl\rilt
H226 Children's Home Rd , Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-441- 1296 Sunday morning
10:00. Sun morning Bible st11dy;
fo llowing· worship, Sun . eve 6:00 pm:
Wed, bible study. 7 pm

Baptist
Pqtvllle fr:uwlll Baptist Chun:b
Pll'ilor: Aoyd Ron, Sunday School 9:30 to
10:30 am. Worship sen·ice 10:30 10 11;00
am . Wed. preaching 6 pm

•

Htrnlock Grove Chrlsthm Chlll't'b
Ministc:i-: Lan y Brown . Worship . 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study • 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chu~h or Chrl~t
211 W, Main St., Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worship, ·10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Chnhlrt Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve Lin!e, Sunday Schoo!: 9:l()
am. Morning Wor~hip: 10:30 am.
Wednesday .Bible: Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30: youth and Bible Buddies
(1:30 p.m. Thurs. I pm boOk study .

33226 Childreil's Hom~ 'Rd., Sunday
School - 11 a.m.• Worship - 10a.m..'6 p.m.
Wednesday Sfrvices · 7 p.m.
Middleport Churth ot Christ
5th and Main, Pastor: AI Ha rtson,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre:, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday School
-9:30 a.m .. Worship- 8:15 . 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m.• Wednesday Services . 1 p.m.

Pa~tnr:Drucl' terry. Sundny School -9~ 30
. a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6: .~ 0 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m .

.

su.... R... aop~~st
Pattor: John Swanson , Sunday Scho9l IOa.m. , Worship: • J)a.m., HNJ p.m .
.Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pome:roy:' Harr ison vi \1~ Rd . (Rt. \43).
Pastor:. floger ·Wat~on, Sunday SChool •
9:30 a.m .. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednesday Services - 'I p.m.

1\lpptn Plain Churth or Chri!iol
lnMrumtnt'al, Worshi p Service - 9 a.l;ll.,
Communion - JO a.m.• Sunday School •
iO:I$ a.m.. Youth- $:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Brodbury Chon:h oCChrial
Minister: Tom Runyon. 39SS8 Bradbury
Road , MiddleP,Ort • Sunday School - 9:30
aJn.
Won;hip . 10:30 a.m,

Mt. Ullloll Baptist

Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
9:4~ a .m ., Evening - 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Se~ices ~ 6 :30p.m .

Baplld c......

Here comes .big government

. ul/ers ro the edito• are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/ellen are l(ibJect to editing, must he
signed, and include address an'd telephone number. No
It
was
probably
crawling with fresh ideas to demand that Washington
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ine1 itable.ln small doses, it
steer the economy in a (sup- "do
something,"
and
good rasre. addressing issues, not personalities. Letlers of' 111;1 1 even be desirable .
posedly) more desirable Washington will respond
tlum'ks ro organi~arions and individuals will not be acccpr- Nc·i cr mind that the eco- ·
direction.
with a whole series of proed for publication.
nomic crisis we Iace isn't
But if you get the u·neasy grams, laws and expendinatinnwide', but worldwide,
William
feeling that yqu have heard !Ures allegedly designed to
with causes that are beyond
all this before. you are right. rmprove matters . Few, if
the power of any Ol}e nation,
Rusher
Time after time, every few any, of them will work, but
even this one, to remedy.
years · since
1934, · they w,ill have the collective
The federal goyernment ·
Washington, D.C. , has beeri . effect of putting governReader Services
· (usPs 213-960)
mu
,t,
of
course,
take
what
trotted out as the solution to ment's weight on the scales
· Correc.tlon Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
,
tcp,
it
can
to
correct
matthrough
a
period
of
three
the nution 's problems. But against the. economy's own.
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon. Monday
ter' and keep. the damage decades when the default the New Dealers were still healthy tendency to right
be accurate. If you know of an error tllrough Friday, 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
wi thin boundi.
assumptions were conserva- struggling to pull the coun- itself. In a few years, we
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
paid at Pomeroy.
But
it
was
easy
to
predict
tive assumptions. That try out of the Great will learn all over again
I 992·2156.
'
Member: Tl'le Associated Press and
that the B'ig Government frari1ework has probably Depression when World why we acquired our previthe Ohio .Newspaper Assoc1a110n
hol s would leap on the situ- been torpedoed by events."' War II ohligingly took the ous deep distrust of govemOur main number Is
Postmaster: Send address co rrecto call for their One can practically hear problem off their hands. ment "solutions."
ati;ln
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2t 56.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
fa vorite remedy. "CRISIS Gal~ton exhalin~. "'At last!" And govern ment has proven
That is why the coming
Deportment extensions ore:
INSPIRES RETHINKING
As the Chronicle article no wiser in the ensuing barra~e of new government
Subscription Rates
OF '·REAGANOMICS ,"' notes, "A combination of decades .
·
programs will predictably
By carrier or motor route
News
blared
the
top
headline
in
circumstances,
including
The
truth
is
that
bureaube
such a desperately bad
One month ......... ...110.27
EdHor: Charlene Ho'eflich: Ex1. i2
Oct. t9 San Francisco the resurgence of the crats have no crystal ball 1dea. We cannot legislate our
One year •..... . ..... 115.84 .
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Dally ............... ... .so•
Chronicle . And the subhead DemocratiC PUJty and fall- that can reveal the right eco- . way out of an economic
; .Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext . 13
Senior Citizen rates ·
followed
sui~: "Experts say out from the worst financial ·nomic course J'o r the coun- slump, because an economic
One month ...•. . .. . ... 110.27 . era of small government, cf)sJs
since the Great try. The ~conomy has its ups slump is simply the econoOne year .. . .... . . . ·.. ' 103.90
Advertising
dcregulation
is
over."
Depression.
is giving impe- and downs, based 111 part on rny 's way of exhaling, prior
Subscrtbers should remrt in advance I
Outoldo Solei: Dave HarriS, Ext. 15 '*ect tlthe Daily Sentnel. No subscnpYep, it turns out the tus to wholesale expansion · global factors beyond mere- . to taking a fresh breath. We
Outoldo Sales: Brenda Davis, EX1 16 tion I:Pj mail permitted m areas where
Gipper was wrong. As the of govemment economic ly national control and part- . can take palliative measures,
home carrier service is ava1lable
CI-.ICirc.: Judy Clark, E•l. 10
article's first sentence puts intervention."' "
ly on natwnal trends set m to relieve individual cases of
,
it
,
"Big
government
is
stagAnd
it
's
true.
Government
mot1on by forces sublimely economic discomfort. but
Malt Subscription
' General Manager
ing
a
comeback."
Out
from
is
climbing
all
over
the
m~1fferent to Washington's we cannot repeal the laws of
lnolde' Meigs County
under
their
rocks
are
comWQ,.Odwork,
planning
to
w1s'hes.
It (say) the weather economics.
13 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . ' 32.26
Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
'64.20
26 Weeks . . . .
(William Rusher is . an
ing all the Big ~ovemment make things better. And if. dictates a downtur~ in agrij2 Weeks .......... .. l127.1t
fans
who
rave
.s~nt
th.
e
last
as
seems
likely,
a
~ultu~.al
.
product
Jon
,
no
accomplished
author, forE·mall:
30
years
in
hiding.
In
the
Democratic
admini
stration
czar
m
Wash~ngton
can
mer
publisher
of the
newsOmydallysentin'el.com
Outatde lllelgs County
exultant words of. William and Co11gress sweep to vic- command an uptrck .
.
Nmiona/Reviewandformer
13 Weeks ..... . ...... .'SJ. SS
Galston
a
senior-fellow
at
tory
nexi
month.
you
can
·But
th.e
recent
worldw1de
vtce chairman of the
Web:
26 Weeks
.....' 107. 11l
52
Weeks
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.•
.
Washington's,
Brookings
bet
that
the
new
administrl!IO
economrc
downturn
Will,
Americwr
Ct1llservative
214 21
www.mytai!ysentinei.COI))
Institution, ~·we've gone tion will be positively pred1ctably, generate a Union.)
,

FOI'OII Ron Boplisl·l'om&lt;n&gt;y'
Rev. JoiC'ph Woods. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 11:30 a.m.

1

MI. Morloio Baptist
Fourth 4 Main St. , Middleport , Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Mich~ l L Thompsoo ,Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

AedquJty.Bapdst
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening-6:00p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walter

'l

your light so shine bef1uel
1 m1en, that they may see
works and glorify
lf'aUoer in heaven."
Matthew 5:1
•

Gntce Episcopal Church
]26 E. Main St., Pomeroy .
Holy
Eucharist 11:30 a.m. s.unday &amp; ~:30 pm
Wed. Re\'. Leslie Aemming

Community Churtb
· Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Strett.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Servke- 7 p.m.
·DanviUe Hollnm Chun:h
31057 Stat~ Routt ~25. Langsvlle, Pas1or:
Brian Bailey. Sund ay S(:hodl ·. 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
· Wednesday pniyer service· 7 p.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Cbapel
Hllfli sunvilie Rood, Pastor: Charles
McKen zie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship· II a.m., 7:00p.m .. Wednesday
~er\lice ·?:flO p.m.

Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance

AOE!;CIES Inc.

Minrnvllle'
...
.
Putor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 9
a.m.•Wonhip · 10 am.
Pfarl Cbapd
Sunday School· 9 a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m .
New 8eKianlnp Churth

Hl&lt;kory HUis Chun:h oCChri&gt;l

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Wor~ hip - 9:25
a.m., Sunday School- 10:43 a.m.

Rudand
PastBr: John Chapman, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m., Worship· 10:30 11.m., Th ursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Crnter
Pasmr: William K Marshall , Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship - 9:15. a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snow\11\e ,
Sunday ~hool- 10 a.m .. Worship· 9'a.m .

Llurtl Clift' Free Mtlbodist Chuch
Glen McClung, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10;30 a.m. 111d 6
p.m.,Wedlie$day Sel'\lice- 7:00p .m.

. Morning Star
John Gilmore, ~unday S~h~l • II
1.m., 'N(nhip • 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Eut Letart

United Methodist
GrohamUalk&lt;IMolhodlsl
Wor'5hip - 11 a.m. Pustor. Richard Nease

Reedsvtllt Cbun:h of Chrbl
Pastor: Philip Sturm , Sunday School; 9:30
a.m ., Worship Service: 10~30 a.m., Bible
Stud }. WedneM!ay. 6:3Q p.m.

ll«blel United Milhodlst
New Hnen. Richard Nease, Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Dexter Chun:h oiChrlst
Sundlly school 9:30 ll.m., Sunday wonhip ·
• 10:30 a.m.
Tht Cllurch oi'Christ of Pomrroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Ev~ngelist: ·
Or:nnis Sargent, Sunday Dible Study -~
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wtd~sday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

·Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:h of Christ Ia.
Cluistlan Unloo
Hartford, W.Va .. Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday Schoo l • 9:30 ti.m ,, Worship 10:30 a:m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Sc:NiceS • 7:00p.m .

Church of God
MI. Moriah Chui'C'h of God

Mt. Ollvr Unltrd MethodiSt
Off ll4 behind Wilkesville . Pas1or: Re\1.
Ralph Spires, Sund11y School · 9:30a.m..
Wo1 ship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m ., Thui'Way
Services- 7 p.m .

Mdp CooptraUn hrlsb
Northe,ast Cluster, 'Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship ·. II .a .m.. 6:30p.m.

Ch""'
Pasto r: Jim Corbitt, Worship - 9 a.m .,
Sunday School • 10 11 .m. , Thumlay
Services - 1 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Wouhjp • 9;30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

.

• anbtr~on. flhJlanirl

jfunrral Jlomr
Mldclltport, OH 740-99Z-5141
499 Richland Avenue, Athen~
;48-594-6333 .
1-800-451-91106

Jllne!i AndffSOn, Adam Mt:Da.lel·
Dfrutors

. Polneroy, OH 740-991-5444

If ye abide in Me, and My

words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask wllat ye wiU, and it shall
Financial
be done 111110 you.
Services
·
John 15:7

Other Churches
SyrwlBf Commwtil)' Chur'l'h
2480 So;ond Sl:. Syrac~st . OH ,
Sun. School 10 am. Sundy night6:30 pm
Pastor: Jot Gwinn
A Ntw Bqinlllng
(Full Gosptl Churr:.h) Harri $0nvill~.
Pa1nors: Bob and Kay Manha.ll.
Sunday Servic~. 2 p.m.

.

Pa ~tnr:

Pastor: Bill ~arShall Sunduy School ·
9a.m., ,Worship - 10 a:m.. tst Sunday
ever~ momh evening sen.·ice 7:00 p.m.:
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Racine
.
Pastor: Kerry WOOd. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship • · 11 a.m.Wedne¥1ay
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolville ,United Metlaodlst Parish
Pastor: Helen Klint , C,oolville Chur"h.
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m ..
Wors~ip • 9 a·,m., The s. Servii:es- 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
!owruhip Rd.. 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m. Worship • 10 a.m .. WedntsdHy
SerYic~s- 10 un .
Hockingport Cburtb
Kathryn Wiley. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.,'Worship • 10:30 a.m .. Putor Phillip

·White Funeral Home
Since 1858 ·
9 Fifth Street
. Coolville, Ohio
74o-o67-3110

1!11!!
ANDERSON
fUNERAl HOME

Ow Chn.daa Fdlowsblp

Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Paslor: Chris Sit wart
10:00 am- Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship, Children'~ mini~try

Rfjoicing Life Church

500 N. 2nd A.\·e.. Middleport . P;1s1or

Belhei.Wonhlp Center
31)782 Sr, Rt. f 2 miles snmh of Tuppers
Plains. '01-1 Non-denominational wit h
Contemporary Praise &amp; Worship . Pu s1or
Rob Barber. Assoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Be11y Fulks . Sunday
~~rvices: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Famil y
LiFe Classes. W~d &amp; Thur night Lift
Groups a1 7 pm . Thurs morntng Jadi~~ ·
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Lif~
Group on Wed. evening from 6:JOto 8:30.
Visit us online at www.bethelwc.org .
Ash Street Church
398 Ash St.. Middlepon -Po.sln n; Marl.:
Morrow &amp; Rodn ey Walker Sunday
SchmJl - 9:30 il.m .• ·Morning Wnrsh ip 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pffi. Wednesday Scr\licc
-7:00p.m .. Youth Ser.·ice· 7:00p.m.
Agape Ute Crater .
"Full -Gospel Church". Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second /we. Mason. 77.\5017. Ser"ice tim~ : Sunday IO:JO a.m .,
Wed nesday 7 pm

Abundant Grate R.F, I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davi s, Sunday service. 10 . a.m..
Wednesday servic~. 7 p.m.

Tortb Churth
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday Sc~l · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m:

Nazarene
Point Rock Churclll or the Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. Rev . Lloyd Grimm,
pastor. Sunday School 10 am; Worbsip
servic~ 11 am. ~vening seni~ 7 prri . Wed.
prayer m«ting 7 pn1
M&amp;ddltpor1 Churdt of tht Nlll.aftnt
Leonard Powell. Sunday Sc~ool ·
9:30 a.m ..Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6!30 p.m..
We:dnesday Services· 7 p.m..
Pa~lnr:

Reedsville FellowMlp
Church of lht: Nau'ren~. P!litor: Russell
Carson . SIJnday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wor&amp;hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.. \¥ednesday
~rvices - '7 p,111.
Syracu~~e Church of the Nuarue
Pastor-Mike Adkins. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m.. Worship .. 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,

School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:'30 a.m
and 1 p.m., Wednesday. 7 p.m .. Friduy fellowship service 7 p.m·.

Middleport Commually Church
575 Pearl St., Middkport , Paslor: Sam
Anders on. Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening· 7:30p.m. , Wednesday SerYic~ 7:30p .m.

Morri ~.

Salflll ComrrunUy Church .
Back uf West Coii.J.[Tibia. W.Vu.9,m Lic"ing
Road. Pastor: Charles Roush 1304) 675·
2288, S,unda)' School 9:JO am. Sunda}
eve ning s~rvic~ 7:00 pm. Bibly Stud]
We~nesday servict 7:00pm
Hobson Chrlsdan Fellowship Churth
Pastor: H ~ rschel White. Sunday School·
1011111, Sunday Church service-6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Pentecostal
Penrteostil Assembly
Postor: Sf . Rt . 124. Racine . Tomado Rd .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. E\'ening - 7
p.m.. Wtdnesday Service~- 7 p.m. ·

Falth ValleY Tabtmade Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev: Emmell
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
tlarri!Klnvllle Presb)1erlan Churth
Pastor: ~obert Man;hall. Worship - 9:00
a.m. Sunday

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracuse. Sunday
School - lO a.m , E\lening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Mlddk:porl Prtsbytrriao
Pastor: James Snyder. Sundar School 10
a.m.. worship ~rv ice II am.

Hazel CommunHy Churc:h

Seventh-Day Adventist

School -9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m..
7:30p.m.

Stnnth-Day Adnnlist
Mulberry Hts . Rd., Pomeroy. Sa1urday
S~n· icc~ · Sabhllth School - l p.m.,

Dyesvlllt Community Cburth
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Morse Chaptl Church
Sunday school - 10
Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Service - 7 p.m
.

Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hrrmon Unltrd Brtthrtn

a.m..

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30 p.m .

FuU Goopel Ll&amp;hlb....,
33045 Hiland Road, Pumcroy, Pastor. Roy
Hunter, SWJday School · 10 a.m.. E, ·~oing •
7:30p.m .. Thesday &amp; Thur;. · 7:30p.m.

lpt Christ Church
Texu Community J641l Wickham Rd .
Pastor: Pct~r Martindale. Sunday S.:hool 9:JO ~ . m .. Wlnshtp - 10:]0 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wedne~day Sen· ir~s · 7:00 p.m
Youth group meeli ng 2nd &amp; .Jih Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden United Bftthrtn in Christ
State Route 12-1.. betwee:n Rt"eds\lill~ &amp;
Hockingpon. Sunday School - 10 am ..
Sunday Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wedn~sda~·

Soulh Bethel Community Churth
Sil\ler Ridge- PaJ;tor Lindo Damewo.-)(1.
Sunday .School · 9 a.m .. Wor.;hip Ser\'ice
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday
Car~ Intmleaomln~lkmal

Churth

Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
INSURANCE
PHARMACY
he gave his only
SERVICES
We
Fill
Doctors'
lbevol'ten son ...
214E.Maln ~
Prescriptions
992-5130 ~
John 3:16
Pomeroy ·
··
992·2955
Pomeroy

Acts 24:16

Full Gospel C)lurth
of the Ll,·ing Savior
Rt.338. Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse
s~rvice s: Saturday ~ :00 p.m.

House or fltaltng Ministrlet
St. Rt . 124 LangsliUe, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors RQbert &amp; ~obc:na
~tusser, Sunday 5chool 9:JO am . .·
Worship 10:30 am . 7:00 pm, Wed.
S..:rvicc 7:00 pm
Tram Jesus Ministries
Me~ting 333 M~chanic Stre~l. Pomeroy.
ciH . Pas1or Eddie B a~r. S~rvice every
Sunday 10:00 a.m.

Harrlsonl'llte Community Church
Pastor: Therot1 Durham. Sunday - 9 :30
a.m. and 1 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m.

The ctut you thsem, close lo hoJM good works and glorify your

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear befo~
God and man."

Clifton Tabernacle Churth .
Clift.lft, W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Wor~ uip - 7 p.m .. Wednesday Seivic~ - 7
p.m .
The Ark C}lurt:h
37i3 Georges Creek Rci'ad. Gallipnh~ . OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman . Sunday Servi c e~ .
10:}() a.m. W~dntsday- 7 p.m. Thursda)
Prayer &amp; Praise at 6 pm. Clas s e~ fnr all
ag~s e"ery Sunday· &amp; Wedne'ida;.
www.thearkchurch.net

Rt'Storullon Chri!;llan Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Won;hip 10:00 am .
WCdneMy: 1 prri

• Foll[l Full Gospel ~b""b

ROCKSPRINGS
Ler your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, thar they may see your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Porneroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

Mike Foremon. Pastor Ement u~ Lawrence
Foreman . Worship- 10:00 am
Wedn~sday Ser.·ices . 7 p.m.

Loog' Bonum. Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunduy

Brogan•Warner.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MaUhew5:8

Sdvmvlllt Communily Churt h
Sunday School 10:00 um. Sun~a y Worlhlp
11 ;()() am . Wednesdoy 7:00 pm Past nr
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

(Non-d~nominational fellow'stlip)

'

~

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike . Co , Rd .. P&lt;t)lOr: R~ 1
Blackwood . Sunday School .· 9JO a.m.. ,
Worship 10 :30 a_-m ·. 7·30 .r .m .
W~dnesda&gt;· St;rvict · 7:.l0 p.m

Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edsel Hart. Sunday

11&lt;11

White's Chapel Weslryan
Coohllk Road , Pauor. Rt• . Char\e )
Martindale . Sunduy School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wt;trshlp · 10:30 11,.m ., WediK'!odti~ Sem ~·e
• 7 pm .
falniew Dible Ch!!n:h
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor: Bnan Ma;.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.. Wor ~hip · 7J)IJ
p.m .. Wedne$ ) Bible S1udy • 7:00 p.m
Faith Ff'llowship Crusadt for Christ
Pastnr: R ~ v . FranKlin Didens. Ser\l cl".
Friday. 7 p.m.

p.m

Rock Sprinp
Pllslor: Dewayne Stutler. Sund~y School 9:00 a.m., Wouhip - 10 a.m.. Youth
Fel)owship, Sunduy • 6 p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am lenni Dunham

Hysell kun Community Chun:h.
Pastor: Rev.~- Lemley: Sunday School
• IJ:3U a.m ., Worship- 10;45 a.m .. 7 p.n1.1
ThuMay Bible Study and Youth- 7 p.m.

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churdl
Comer S)·cnmore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sun. School· 9:~ a.m .. Worship · I I a.m.

TUpper&amp; Plain~ . Pu tor Mike Moore. Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

School • Q:JO a.m.. Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday e"ening 6 pm .
RIIJ.Iand Churc:h ottbt Nazarene
Pastor: George Stadltr, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship • 10 :30 a.m.. 6:3()
p m., Wed~y Services - 7 p.m.

Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim PToffit1 .
Sund ay School - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip •
10:30 a.m., Wednesd ay Services • 7.00

Pomeroy ·

· Cl.l'lnd..Sunon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. RaciOe, Ohio,
Pastor: J o~n Gilmore , Sunday School ?:4.5 a.m:. WorShip - 11:00 a.m.. . Bible
Study Wed./:30 p.m .

Pa~tor:

Clltckr Churth ol tM NuartM

AmllZing GnKe CommunJty Church
Pastof: Way ne Dunlap, State Rt . 681 .
Tuppcr;s Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed. Dible Stu~ 7:00p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pa stOr: Dri!in Dunh am, Sund&lt;~y. School ·
9:30a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m. ·

Btthany
Pas1or: John Gilmore, Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wor ship - 9 a.m., Wednesd ay
Services - 10 a.m.

1

I

FOI"a.. Run
Bob Robinson , Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wotship • 9 a.m .
~;'astor:

Wtsleyan Bible HolineSs Chun:h
73 Pearl St., Middleport . PaslOr: Doujj:
Cox, Sunday School - 10 tu n. Worsh ip 10:45 p.m.. Sunday E\·e. 6:00 p.m..
Wednesday Sef\lice ·7:00p.m.

Our S•vlour L•lheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts .. RavensWood ,
W.Va .• Pastor: David Russell. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m .. Worship - II a.m.

•

'

Faith Baptist Churdl
Railroad St. ,' Mason . Sunday School- 10
a.m., Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m ,
' wi-dnesday Services· 7 p.m.

Episcopal

Lutheran

Comer of St. ~t . 124 &amp; a·radbury Rd .,
Minister:.Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 &lt;~.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wed~dll.y Ser\lices -7:00p.m .

Hllhktt Blptilt Churth
Sl. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Ptslor: Rev. .
James R. Acree, Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service, Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

J.,ETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

"

Pastor: Dewayne Stutt!er, Sunday ScOOol 10 a.m ., Worship - 11 a.m.

St. John Lllthtrtn Churd
Pin~ Grove.~Worship · 9:00a .m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pas1or:

Bradford Chul'\:b or Qrist

Oid Bfthtl F~ Will Bapd~t Churth
28601 St. Rt 7, Middleport, Sunday
Service. ·. 10 a.m ., 6:00 p.ni., Tuesday
Servkts -6:00

Victory Bapll§l btdtprndtnt
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport , Pa.'ltor: James
E. Keestt, Wor~hip - !Oa .m., '7 p.m ..
Wednc-!iday Service'- 7 p.m.

Tupptn Plalnl St. Paul
Pa stor: lim Cor~itt, Sunday School • "'
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m.;Tuesday Services
. 7:30p.m . .
Ceatral CIU51tr
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor. Bob ROb inson.
Sunday Scbo(ll - 9:45 a.m.. Worship - II
a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

· F1atwoods

Trtnlty Cburch
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor:
Wol'\hip 10:25 a.m.,

Pomeroy Cll•n.-11 ot lhe Nuarnt'
Pastor Jan Lnender. Sunday S"hool ·
9 30 a.m.. Wor~h1p - 10:30 a.m. 11.nd 6
p.m.. Wednesday Sei""JCes · 1 p.m .

King~bury Road . P11 ~ tor : Robtn Vanct
Sunda y Schoo! - 9:30 a.m .. \lior~tup
SeT\' ICe 10.30 a.m . Evening S~n ICC 6
p.m.
Fl"ftdom Gospel MiNion
Bald Knob , on Co. Rd. 31. Pa ~tor . Rc\
Ruxer Willford . Sund~t) Sch()(ll · 9JO
a.m. WonJ11p- 'I p.m.

Pa~tor : Rev. Curta Raridolph, Sunda~

Congregational

Tht Churth or Jesa~
Chrl!lt of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 44~6247 or 446-7486,
S~pday School 10:20-ll a.m., Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sacramen,t · Service 9-10: 15 a.m ..
Homemiling meeting, 1st Thurs . - 7 p.m.

Rul111.0d Cbun:h ·~Christ
' Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship and
Communio,n - 10:30 a.m .. Davi d
Wiseman, Minister

Great Bend, Roure 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor: Eid Caner, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.• Sunday Worship - IO:JO•a.m.,.t. 7
pm; Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 P·ll'!·

Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up umil 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 24. Lerters
r&lt;'ceived afrer that deadline will nor be published. Letters
should .be 300 words in length or less and musr address
issues, not personalities. Letters e11dorsi11g local or llation a/ candidatrs. or containing personal arracks, will nor 4if
accepted.
· ·
.

Chapma,n. Sunday School . 10 a.m.,
Worship · I I a.m., W~di'ICsday Services. 7
p.m.

Loqllollom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wonh1p •
10:30 a.rn
letdswillt
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Sunda)' School 10:30 a.m .. F,int Sun day of Monlh - 7:00
p.m. servi~

Zion Chllrth of Christ

Radllf Ftnt Baptist
Paslor: ·Ryan Eaton, pasto r , Sunday
School . 9:30a .m .• Woahip. 10:40 a.m.,
6:00 P;.!ll .. Wtdnesda.)' Services - 7:00 ·

Elections letters advisory

Church ftf C'.od or Proph«y

Btarwal\ow Ridge Church of Christ

First U.ptisl Cbun;h
Billy Zuspan 61h and Palmer St.,
Middleport. Sun'day Schoo~ - 9:15a.m.,
Wors hip - 10: 15 a.m .. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Strvicf- 7:00p.m.

'

Syraw• Flnt Cbudl of C'.od
Apple and Second Sn., Pa;tor: Re\'. David
Russell, Sunday Sc-hool and Worship- 10
· a.m. Evening Services- 6 :30 p.m..
Wednesday Service~ · 6:JO p.m.

Pine Grovr Blblt Hollne55 Cburth
1/2 mile Qff Rt. 325, Pa ~t~r : Rev . O'Dell
Manley. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship . 10;30 ci.m., 6:00 p.m..
Wednesday 'seT\' ic e · 7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

8&lt;1~-

Rllllud Churth of God
Pistor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship· 10
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday ~rvices · 7
p.m.
.

Rose of Sharon Hollom Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutbmd, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King , Sunday school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday woahip •7 p.m.. Wedm:sday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Ktno Churth or Christ
Worship • 9:30 a.m., Sundliy School •
10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. lst and
3rd Sunday

First Southern Bap&amp;t
41S72 Pomeroy Pike . Sunday School9:3(i'a. m.. Worship . 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

.

1

Pomeroy Westside Church ol Christ

Hopt BapCkt Churth (Southern)
570 Grant St., Middleport. Sunday school
-9:30a.m. , Wor~hip · II a.m. and 6 p.m ..
Wednesday S~rvice - 7 p.m. Pllstor: Gary
Ellis
Rutlaad Flnl Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy lilrst BapU!it
Pastor Jon Bnx kert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9.30 am. Worship 10:30 am

CONCESSiON SPE.ECH.

Service~ ·

Holiness

· Carpenttr lndeptndeat Baptist ChuKh
Su nday School - SI :JOam, Preaching
Service IO:JOam , Evening Service
7:00pm, Wedntsday Bible Study HJO pm,
Paslor:

' l'·•'p.m. ,

E\·e:ninj! • 6 p.m .. Wrdnnday
pm.

OJ . Whitt Rd . off St R1 . 160, Pastor: PJ .

Catholic

Emmanuel Apoetolic Taberfll:dt Inc.

WE'VE JuST Hf.ARP
1HAT COIPRAPO'S
YoTJI-.lG SYSTEK IS
ABoUT To I'MKEA

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Friday, October 24, ~oo8

{The
700
Club'
isn't
just
for. ~epublicans anymore
The Daily Sentinel
·Washington correspondent David BruJy knew it
was a symbolic moment
when Democratic Partv
Chairman Howard Dean
appeared on the Christian
Broadcasti'ng Network.
Then there was the landmark Nevada trip to interview Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid and his
wife. Landra, at their home.
Landing' a face-to-face
interview with Sen. Hillary
Clinton for "The 700 .
Club''" Say no more.
Finally. after a year of
negotiations, Sen. Barack
Obama 's staff took a leap of
faith and schedule(! an interview with the news team at
the Rev. Pat Robertson's
llagship network. Then
Obarna came back for
anpther interview, then
another and another.
Before that fourth 'interview. Brody expected to
shake hands once again.
But Obama caught him
off guar'd by moving in for
one of those "Hey. how are
you doing?" shoulder-toshoulder bumps that colleagues use when greeting
one another.
. " It was strange," said
Brody . speaking at the
Press
annual
Baptist
Collegiate
Journalism
Conference. "You really
don 't want to be chestbumping White House
candidates. It just doesn 't
look right."
Indeed , these are. strange
times. In the past year,
Democrats have been talk-

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OP NION·

•·

··The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

•

· Friday, October 24, 2008

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley·Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News 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 l!f the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grieJ&gt;ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Friday, Oct. 24, the 298th day of2008. There are
68 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in . History: On Oct. 24. 1945. the
United Nations officially came 'into existence as its charter
took effect.
.
On this date: In 1537 , Jane Seymour, the third wife of
England's King Henry V.III, died 12 days aftergiving birth
to Prince Edward, later King Edward VI.
In 1648. the Peace of Westphalia enqed the Thirty Years·
War and effectively destroyed the Holy Roman Empire.
In 1861 , the first transcontinental telegraph message was
sent as Chief Justice Stephen J. Field of California transmitted a telegram to President Lincoln.
..
ln I 90 I. widow Anna Edson Taylor became the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a bane I.
In 1931, the George Washington Bridge, connecting New
York and New Jersey, was officially dedicated. (It opened
to traffic the next day.)
In 1939, nylon stockings were sold publicly for the first
time, in Wilmington, Del.
·
··
· ·
·
hl 1940, the 40-hour work week "went into effect under
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 .
· In 1952, Republican presidential candidate Dwight D.
Eisenhower declared in Detroit, "I shall go to Korea" as he
promised to end the conflict. (He made the visit over a
month later.)
·
In 1980, the merchant freighte ! :.) Poet departed
Philadelphia bound for Port Said, Egypt. with a crew of 34
and a cargo of grain; it disappeared en route and has not
been heard from since.
' In 2002, authorities anested. Army veteran John Allen
Muhammad and teenager Lee Boyd Malvo nea·r
· Myersville, Md., 'in connection with the Washington:area
sniper attacks .
· Today,'s Birthdays: Football Hall-of-Farner Y.A. Tittle is
82. Rock musician Bill Wyman is 72. Actor-producer David
Nelson is 72. Actor F. Murray Abraham is 69. Actor Kevin
Kline is 61.. Former NAACP President Kweisi Mfume is 60.
Country musician Billy Thomas (Terry McBride and the
Ride) is 55. Actor B.D. Wong is 48. Rock musician Ben
Gillies (Silverchair) is 29. Singer-actress Monica Arnold is
28. Rhythm-and-blues singer Adrienne Bailon (31w) is 25.
Actress Shenae Grimes (TV: "90210") is 19.
Thought for Today: "Three passions, simple but over:
whelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for
love, the search for knowledge and unbearable pity for the
suffering of mankind." - Bertrand Russell, English
philosopher ( 1872-1970).

'

Terry
Mattingly

ing more . about their fait h
than the Republicans part of a strategic attempt
to· capture a slice of a v6t. ing bloc that was so crucial
in the 2004 elections. But
in the age of talk radio, 14hour cable TV coverage,
blogs and other forms of
niche news, politicos are
learning that they need to
talk to a wider array of
journalists to reach these
values voters.
All kimls of doors are
opening

~ll1d

"you have to

be ready for your close-up,"
Brody told an audience of
in
student journalists
Nashville, mostly from
ChristJ:m campuses across
the Bible Belt.
"Go after it hard. Be
very. very agl!ressive. I
can't tell you th1 s enough,''
he said; "You need to make
multiple phone calls a day
to get your source to talk.
You need to make sure that
you are· constantly really
go ing after the story. Don't
ever let up .. ..
"Make sure you really
find your ni che , and make
sure you know what you are
passionate about."
After two decades · in

broadcasting - mostly in So much of our J?Olitics in
mainstream newsrooms - the age of talk radm is totalBrady has become a go-to ly black and white, but we
commentator inside the really do try to ·avoid polarBeltway, primarily by gain- izing language."
ing a reputation as a fairTake the Obama interminded, even sympathetic views, for example. It"s one
sounding board for politi- "thing, said Brody, to ask
cians on both sides of the Obama specific questions
aisle. Thus. Brody has even about his liberal approach to
started tum ing up on Christianity, his support for
MSNBC , CNN and NBC's abortion rights and commit"Meet The Press."
·
ment to expanding civil
Democrats turn to his rights of gays and lesbians.
occasionally goofy blog, · It's something else to "play
'The Brody File," for judge and jury'' and try to
insights into the views of challen,ge .the reallty of
conservative. centnst and Obama s fatth.
"There is no question that
progressive evangelicals.
Republicans do the same his sincerity shi~es through
thing, often to see how when he's talkmg to you
Democrats answer his fre- about his Christian beliefs
quent questioi1s about hot- and the role that his faith
. plays in his life," said
button sociul questions. .
Brody stressed that he Brody. "This man says
isn ' t . interested in asking what he believes and he
"gotcha questions" about believes what he says.
faith in an attempt to trip Obama has said over an.d
them up: The journalist has over that he. has grven hts
heafd his own share of life to Jesus Christ, and I
loaded questions during hi s think people need to take
lifetime. since he was his word on that. ...
rais.ed as a Jew in New
'"The question is whether
York City before convert- this kind of dialogue with
ing to Ch1;istianity while in Obama will continue.
college. Brody isn 'J fond
Are we going to be able to
of labels.
·
keep talking, without trying
"I don 't have an agenda, to demonize each other?
but I am going to ask ques- That's the big question."
tions about faith" during
(Terry Mattingly is direcCBN news broadcasts, he tor uf the Washington
said. "l-am going to ask per- Journalism Center at the
sonal questions about how COtmcil for Christian
the candidates go about Colleges and Universities
making their decisions. and
leads
the
·Still, I know that there are · GetReligion.org project to
shades of gray when people study religion and the
start talking about faith, ..,. news.)

Chonth ol J,_ CU!ot A...,...U.

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m ..
Evening - 7:30p .m.
River Valley
River Valley Apostolic Worship Center.
· 873 · S. Jrd Ave ., ~iddleport, Rn
Michael Bradford , Pastor, Sunday , 10:30
a.m. Tues . 6:30 prayer. Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

• Salem St ., Pastor: Ed B'amey , Sunday
School - 10 a.m .. Even int - 7 p.m..
WedMrtday Servict"s - 7 p.m.
S«ood Baplb1 Churdl
Rnenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am• Mornina: wonhip I I am Evening - 7 pm .
WedrKsday 7 p.m.
Flnl 8apti8t Churtb of Ma1011, WV
(lodtpendc:nt Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderwn St. Pas10r; Hoben
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, Mornin g
church II am , Sundlly tn·ning 6 pm. Wed .
Bible Study 7 pm

Sacrtd Ht~trt Catholk Cburtb
161 Mulbfny Ave .• .Pomeroy, 992-5898 .
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sal. Con .
4:45· 5:1Sp.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con . -8:45 -q :IS • .m... Sun . Mass · 9:30
a.m., Da ily Mnu • H:30 a.m.

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rulland ,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;: 7:30 p.m .,
Thun .1:00 p.m., Putof MartyR. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty Aio!iembly ol God
P.O. Bnx 4117 , Duddin~ Lane. Muon.
W.Va., Pa~tor : Neil Tennant, Sunday
Service~- \0:00a.m. and 1 p.m.

Church of Christ
Wesblde Churth or Cl\rilt
H226 Children's Home Rd , Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-441- 1296 Sunday morning
10:00. Sun morning Bible st11dy;
fo llowing· worship, Sun . eve 6:00 pm:
Wed, bible study. 7 pm

Baptist
Pqtvllle fr:uwlll Baptist Chun:b
Pll'ilor: Aoyd Ron, Sunday School 9:30 to
10:30 am. Worship sen·ice 10:30 10 11;00
am . Wed. preaching 6 pm

•

Htrnlock Grove Chrlsthm Chlll't'b
Ministc:i-: Lan y Brown . Worship . 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study • 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chu~h or Chrl~t
211 W, Main St., Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worship, ·10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Chnhlrt Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve Lin!e, Sunday Schoo!: 9:l()
am. Morning Wor~hip: 10:30 am.
Wednesday .Bible: Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30: youth and Bible Buddies
(1:30 p.m. Thurs. I pm boOk study .

33226 Childreil's Hom~ 'Rd., Sunday
School - 11 a.m.• Worship - 10a.m..'6 p.m.
Wednesday Sfrvices · 7 p.m.
Middleport Churth ot Christ
5th and Main, Pastor: AI Ha rtson,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre:, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday School
-9:30 a.m .. Worship- 8:15 . 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m.• Wednesday Services . 1 p.m.

Pa~tnr:Drucl' terry. Sundny School -9~ 30
. a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6: .~ 0 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m .

.

su.... R... aop~~st
Pattor: John Swanson , Sunday Scho9l IOa.m. , Worship: • J)a.m., HNJ p.m .
.Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pome:roy:' Harr ison vi \1~ Rd . (Rt. \43).
Pastor:. floger ·Wat~on, Sunday SChool •
9:30 a.m .. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednesday Services - 'I p.m.

1\lpptn Plain Churth or Chri!iol
lnMrumtnt'al, Worshi p Service - 9 a.l;ll.,
Communion - JO a.m.• Sunday School •
iO:I$ a.m.. Youth- $:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Brodbury Chon:h oCChrial
Minister: Tom Runyon. 39SS8 Bradbury
Road , MiddleP,Ort • Sunday School - 9:30
aJn.
Won;hip . 10:30 a.m,

Mt. Ullloll Baptist

Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
9:4~ a .m ., Evening - 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Se~ices ~ 6 :30p.m .

Baplld c......

Here comes .big government

. ul/ers ro the edito• are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/ellen are l(ibJect to editing, must he
signed, and include address an'd telephone number. No
It
was
probably
crawling with fresh ideas to demand that Washington
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ine1 itable.ln small doses, it
steer the economy in a (sup- "do
something,"
and
good rasre. addressing issues, not personalities. Letlers of' 111;1 1 even be desirable .
posedly) more desirable Washington will respond
tlum'ks ro organi~arions and individuals will not be acccpr- Nc·i cr mind that the eco- ·
direction.
with a whole series of proed for publication.
nomic crisis we Iace isn't
But if you get the u·neasy grams, laws and expendinatinnwide', but worldwide,
William
feeling that yqu have heard !Ures allegedly designed to
with causes that are beyond
all this before. you are right. rmprove matters . Few, if
the power of any Ol}e nation,
Rusher
Time after time, every few any, of them will work, but
even this one, to remedy.
years · since
1934, · they w,ill have the collective
The federal goyernment ·
Washington, D.C. , has beeri . effect of putting governReader Services
· (usPs 213-960)
mu
,t,
of
course,
take
what
trotted out as the solution to ment's weight on the scales
· Correc.tlon Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
,
tcp,
it
can
to
correct
matthrough
a
period
of
three
the nution 's problems. But against the. economy's own.
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon. Monday
ter' and keep. the damage decades when the default the New Dealers were still healthy tendency to right
be accurate. If you know of an error tllrough Friday, 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
wi thin boundi.
assumptions were conserva- struggling to pull the coun- itself. In a few years, we
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
paid at Pomeroy.
But
it
was
easy
to
predict
tive assumptions. That try out of the Great will learn all over again
I 992·2156.
'
Member: Tl'le Associated Press and
that the B'ig Government frari1ework has probably Depression when World why we acquired our previthe Ohio .Newspaper Assoc1a110n
hol s would leap on the situ- been torpedoed by events."' War II ohligingly took the ous deep distrust of govemOur main number Is
Postmaster: Send address co rrecto call for their One can practically hear problem off their hands. ment "solutions."
ati;ln
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2t 56.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
fa vorite remedy. "CRISIS Gal~ton exhalin~. "'At last!" And govern ment has proven
That is why the coming
Deportment extensions ore:
INSPIRES RETHINKING
As the Chronicle article no wiser in the ensuing barra~e of new government
Subscription Rates
OF '·REAGANOMICS ,"' notes, "A combination of decades .
·
programs will predictably
By carrier or motor route
News
blared
the
top
headline
in
circumstances,
including
The
truth
is
that
bureaube
such a desperately bad
One month ......... ...110.27
EdHor: Charlene Ho'eflich: Ex1. i2
Oct. t9 San Francisco the resurgence of the crats have no crystal ball 1dea. We cannot legislate our
One year •..... . ..... 115.84 .
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Dally ............... ... .so•
Chronicle . And the subhead DemocratiC PUJty and fall- that can reveal the right eco- . way out of an economic
; .Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext . 13
Senior Citizen rates ·
followed
sui~: "Experts say out from the worst financial ·nomic course J'o r the coun- slump, because an economic
One month ...•. . .. . ... 110.27 . era of small government, cf)sJs
since the Great try. The ~conomy has its ups slump is simply the econoOne year .. . .... . . . ·.. ' 103.90
Advertising
dcregulation
is
over."
Depression.
is giving impe- and downs, based 111 part on rny 's way of exhaling, prior
Subscrtbers should remrt in advance I
Outoldo Solei: Dave HarriS, Ext. 15 '*ect tlthe Daily Sentnel. No subscnpYep, it turns out the tus to wholesale expansion · global factors beyond mere- . to taking a fresh breath. We
Outoldo Sales: Brenda Davis, EX1 16 tion I:Pj mail permitted m areas where
Gipper was wrong. As the of govemment economic ly national control and part- . can take palliative measures,
home carrier service is ava1lable
CI-.ICirc.: Judy Clark, E•l. 10
article's first sentence puts intervention."' "
ly on natwnal trends set m to relieve individual cases of
,
it
,
"Big
government
is
stagAnd
it
's
true.
Government
mot1on by forces sublimely economic discomfort. but
Malt Subscription
' General Manager
ing
a
comeback."
Out
from
is
climbing
all
over
the
m~1fferent to Washington's we cannot repeal the laws of
lnolde' Meigs County
under
their
rocks
are
comWQ,.Odwork,
planning
to
w1s'hes.
It (say) the weather economics.
13 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . ' 32.26
Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
'64.20
26 Weeks . . . .
(William Rusher is . an
ing all the Big ~ovemment make things better. And if. dictates a downtur~ in agrij2 Weeks .......... .. l127.1t
fans
who
rave
.s~nt
th.
e
last
as
seems
likely,
a
~ultu~.al
.
product
Jon
,
no
accomplished
author, forE·mall:
30
years
in
hiding.
In
the
Democratic
admini
stration
czar
m
Wash~ngton
can
mer
publisher
of the
newsOmydallysentin'el.com
Outatde lllelgs County
exultant words of. William and Co11gress sweep to vic- command an uptrck .
.
Nmiona/Reviewandformer
13 Weeks ..... . ...... .'SJ. SS
Galston
a
senior-fellow
at
tory
nexi
month.
you
can
·But
th.e
recent
worldw1de
vtce chairman of the
Web:
26 Weeks
.....' 107. 11l
52
Weeks
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.•
.
Washington's,
Brookings
bet
that
the
new
administrl!IO
economrc
downturn
Will,
Americwr
Ct1llservative
214 21
www.mytai!ysentinei.COI))
Institution, ~·we've gone tion will be positively pred1ctably, generate a Union.)
,

FOI'OII Ron Boplisl·l'om&lt;n&gt;y'
Rev. JoiC'ph Woods. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 11:30 a.m.

1

MI. Morloio Baptist
Fourth 4 Main St. , Middleport , Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Mich~ l L Thompsoo ,Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

AedquJty.Bapdst
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening-6:00p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walter

'l

your light so shine bef1uel
1 m1en, that they may see
works and glorify
lf'aUoer in heaven."
Matthew 5:1
•

Gntce Episcopal Church
]26 E. Main St., Pomeroy .
Holy
Eucharist 11:30 a.m. s.unday &amp; ~:30 pm
Wed. Re\'. Leslie Aemming

Community Churtb
· Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Strett.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Servke- 7 p.m.
·DanviUe Hollnm Chun:h
31057 Stat~ Routt ~25. Langsvlle, Pas1or:
Brian Bailey. Sund ay S(:hodl ·. 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
· Wednesday pniyer service· 7 p.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Cbapel
Hllfli sunvilie Rood, Pastor: Charles
McKen zie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship· II a.m., 7:00p.m .. Wednesday
~er\lice ·?:flO p.m.

Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance

AOE!;CIES Inc.

Minrnvllle'
...
.
Putor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 9
a.m.•Wonhip · 10 am.
Pfarl Cbapd
Sunday School· 9 a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m .
New 8eKianlnp Churth

Hl&lt;kory HUis Chun:h oCChri&gt;l

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Wor~ hip - 9:25
a.m., Sunday School- 10:43 a.m.

Rudand
PastBr: John Chapman, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m., Worship· 10:30 11.m., Th ursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Crnter
Pasmr: William K Marshall , Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship - 9:15. a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snow\11\e ,
Sunday ~hool- 10 a.m .. Worship· 9'a.m .

Llurtl Clift' Free Mtlbodist Chuch
Glen McClung, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10;30 a.m. 111d 6
p.m.,Wedlie$day Sel'\lice- 7:00p .m.

. Morning Star
John Gilmore, ~unday S~h~l • II
1.m., 'N(nhip • 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Eut Letart

United Methodist
GrohamUalk&lt;IMolhodlsl
Wor'5hip - 11 a.m. Pustor. Richard Nease

Reedsvtllt Cbun:h of Chrbl
Pastor: Philip Sturm , Sunday School; 9:30
a.m ., Worship Service: 10~30 a.m., Bible
Stud }. WedneM!ay. 6:3Q p.m.

ll«blel United Milhodlst
New Hnen. Richard Nease, Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Dexter Chun:h oiChrlst
Sundlly school 9:30 ll.m., Sunday wonhip ·
• 10:30 a.m.
Tht Cllurch oi'Christ of Pomrroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Ev~ngelist: ·
Or:nnis Sargent, Sunday Dible Study -~
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wtd~sday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

·Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:h of Christ Ia.
Cluistlan Unloo
Hartford, W.Va .. Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday Schoo l • 9:30 ti.m ,, Worship 10:30 a:m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Sc:NiceS • 7:00p.m .

Church of God
MI. Moriah Chui'C'h of God

Mt. Ollvr Unltrd MethodiSt
Off ll4 behind Wilkesville . Pas1or: Re\1.
Ralph Spires, Sund11y School · 9:30a.m..
Wo1 ship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m ., Thui'Way
Services- 7 p.m .

Mdp CooptraUn hrlsb
Northe,ast Cluster, 'Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship ·. II .a .m.. 6:30p.m.

Ch""'
Pasto r: Jim Corbitt, Worship - 9 a.m .,
Sunday School • 10 11 .m. , Thumlay
Services - 1 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Wouhjp • 9;30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

.

• anbtr~on. flhJlanirl

jfunrral Jlomr
Mldclltport, OH 740-99Z-5141
499 Richland Avenue, Athen~
;48-594-6333 .
1-800-451-91106

Jllne!i AndffSOn, Adam Mt:Da.lel·
Dfrutors

. Polneroy, OH 740-991-5444

If ye abide in Me, and My

words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask wllat ye wiU, and it shall
Financial
be done 111110 you.
Services
·
John 15:7

Other Churches
SyrwlBf Commwtil)' Chur'l'h
2480 So;ond Sl:. Syrac~st . OH ,
Sun. School 10 am. Sundy night6:30 pm
Pastor: Jot Gwinn
A Ntw Bqinlllng
(Full Gosptl Churr:.h) Harri $0nvill~.
Pa1nors: Bob and Kay Manha.ll.
Sunday Servic~. 2 p.m.

.

Pa ~tnr:

Pastor: Bill ~arShall Sunduy School ·
9a.m., ,Worship - 10 a:m.. tst Sunday
ever~ momh evening sen.·ice 7:00 p.m.:
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Racine
.
Pastor: Kerry WOOd. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship • · 11 a.m.Wedne¥1ay
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolville ,United Metlaodlst Parish
Pastor: Helen Klint , C,oolville Chur"h.
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m ..
Wors~ip • 9 a·,m., The s. Servii:es- 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
!owruhip Rd.. 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m. Worship • 10 a.m .. WedntsdHy
SerYic~s- 10 un .
Hockingport Cburtb
Kathryn Wiley. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.,'Worship • 10:30 a.m .. Putor Phillip

·White Funeral Home
Since 1858 ·
9 Fifth Street
. Coolville, Ohio
74o-o67-3110

1!11!!
ANDERSON
fUNERAl HOME

Ow Chn.daa Fdlowsblp

Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Paslor: Chris Sit wart
10:00 am- Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship, Children'~ mini~try

Rfjoicing Life Church

500 N. 2nd A.\·e.. Middleport . P;1s1or

Belhei.Wonhlp Center
31)782 Sr, Rt. f 2 miles snmh of Tuppers
Plains. '01-1 Non-denominational wit h
Contemporary Praise &amp; Worship . Pu s1or
Rob Barber. Assoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Be11y Fulks . Sunday
~~rvices: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Famil y
LiFe Classes. W~d &amp; Thur night Lift
Groups a1 7 pm . Thurs morntng Jadi~~ ·
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Lif~
Group on Wed. evening from 6:JOto 8:30.
Visit us online at www.bethelwc.org .
Ash Street Church
398 Ash St.. Middlepon -Po.sln n; Marl.:
Morrow &amp; Rodn ey Walker Sunday
SchmJl - 9:30 il.m .• ·Morning Wnrsh ip 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pffi. Wednesday Scr\licc
-7:00p.m .. Youth Ser.·ice· 7:00p.m.
Agape Ute Crater .
"Full -Gospel Church". Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second /we. Mason. 77.\5017. Ser"ice tim~ : Sunday IO:JO a.m .,
Wed nesday 7 pm

Abundant Grate R.F, I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davi s, Sunday service. 10 . a.m..
Wednesday servic~. 7 p.m.

Tortb Churth
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday Sc~l · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m:

Nazarene
Point Rock Churclll or the Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. Rev . Lloyd Grimm,
pastor. Sunday School 10 am; Worbsip
servic~ 11 am. ~vening seni~ 7 prri . Wed.
prayer m«ting 7 pn1
M&amp;ddltpor1 Churdt of tht Nlll.aftnt
Leonard Powell. Sunday Sc~ool ·
9:30 a.m ..Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6!30 p.m..
We:dnesday Services· 7 p.m..
Pa~lnr:

Reedsville FellowMlp
Church of lht: Nau'ren~. P!litor: Russell
Carson . SIJnday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wor&amp;hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.. \¥ednesday
~rvices - '7 p,111.
Syracu~~e Church of the Nuarue
Pastor-Mike Adkins. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m.. Worship .. 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,

School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:'30 a.m
and 1 p.m., Wednesday. 7 p.m .. Friduy fellowship service 7 p.m·.

Middleport Commually Church
575 Pearl St., Middkport , Paslor: Sam
Anders on. Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening· 7:30p.m. , Wednesday SerYic~ 7:30p .m.

Morri ~.

Salflll ComrrunUy Church .
Back uf West Coii.J.[Tibia. W.Vu.9,m Lic"ing
Road. Pastor: Charles Roush 1304) 675·
2288, S,unda)' School 9:JO am. Sunda}
eve ning s~rvic~ 7:00 pm. Bibly Stud]
We~nesday servict 7:00pm
Hobson Chrlsdan Fellowship Churth
Pastor: H ~ rschel White. Sunday School·
1011111, Sunday Church service-6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Pentecostal
Penrteostil Assembly
Postor: Sf . Rt . 124. Racine . Tomado Rd .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. E\'ening - 7
p.m.. Wtdnesday Service~- 7 p.m. ·

Falth ValleY Tabtmade Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev: Emmell
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
tlarri!Klnvllle Presb)1erlan Churth
Pastor: ~obert Man;hall. Worship - 9:00
a.m. Sunday

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracuse. Sunday
School - lO a.m , E\lening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Mlddk:porl Prtsbytrriao
Pastor: James Snyder. Sundar School 10
a.m.. worship ~rv ice II am.

Hazel CommunHy Churc:h

Seventh-Day Adventist

School -9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m..
7:30p.m.

Stnnth-Day Adnnlist
Mulberry Hts . Rd., Pomeroy. Sa1urday
S~n· icc~ · Sabhllth School - l p.m.,

Dyesvlllt Community Cburth
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Morse Chaptl Church
Sunday school - 10
Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Service - 7 p.m
.

Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hrrmon Unltrd Brtthrtn

a.m..

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30 p.m .

FuU Goopel Ll&amp;hlb....,
33045 Hiland Road, Pumcroy, Pastor. Roy
Hunter, SWJday School · 10 a.m.. E, ·~oing •
7:30p.m .. Thesday &amp; Thur;. · 7:30p.m.

lpt Christ Church
Texu Community J641l Wickham Rd .
Pastor: Pct~r Martindale. Sunday S.:hool 9:JO ~ . m .. Wlnshtp - 10:]0 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wedne~day Sen· ir~s · 7:00 p.m
Youth group meeli ng 2nd &amp; .Jih Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden United Bftthrtn in Christ
State Route 12-1.. betwee:n Rt"eds\lill~ &amp;
Hockingpon. Sunday School - 10 am ..
Sunday Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wedn~sda~·

Soulh Bethel Community Churth
Sil\ler Ridge- PaJ;tor Lindo Damewo.-)(1.
Sunday .School · 9 a.m .. Wor.;hip Ser\'ice
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday
Car~ Intmleaomln~lkmal

Churth

Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
INSURANCE
PHARMACY
he gave his only
SERVICES
We
Fill
Doctors'
lbevol'ten son ...
214E.Maln ~
Prescriptions
992-5130 ~
John 3:16
Pomeroy ·
··
992·2955
Pomeroy

Acts 24:16

Full Gospel C)lurth
of the Ll,·ing Savior
Rt.338. Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse
s~rvice s: Saturday ~ :00 p.m.

House or fltaltng Ministrlet
St. Rt . 124 LangsliUe, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors RQbert &amp; ~obc:na
~tusser, Sunday 5chool 9:JO am . .·
Worship 10:30 am . 7:00 pm, Wed.
S..:rvicc 7:00 pm
Tram Jesus Ministries
Me~ting 333 M~chanic Stre~l. Pomeroy.
ciH . Pas1or Eddie B a~r. S~rvice every
Sunday 10:00 a.m.

Harrlsonl'llte Community Church
Pastor: Therot1 Durham. Sunday - 9 :30
a.m. and 1 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m.

The ctut you thsem, close lo hoJM good works and glorify your

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear befo~
God and man."

Clifton Tabernacle Churth .
Clift.lft, W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Wor~ uip - 7 p.m .. Wednesday Seivic~ - 7
p.m .
The Ark C}lurt:h
37i3 Georges Creek Rci'ad. Gallipnh~ . OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman . Sunday Servi c e~ .
10:}() a.m. W~dntsday- 7 p.m. Thursda)
Prayer &amp; Praise at 6 pm. Clas s e~ fnr all
ag~s e"ery Sunday· &amp; Wedne'ida;.
www.thearkchurch.net

Rt'Storullon Chri!;llan Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Won;hip 10:00 am .
WCdneMy: 1 prri

• Foll[l Full Gospel ~b""b

ROCKSPRINGS
Ler your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, thar they may see your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Porneroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

Mike Foremon. Pastor Ement u~ Lawrence
Foreman . Worship- 10:00 am
Wedn~sday Ser.·ices . 7 p.m.

Loog' Bonum. Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunduy

Brogan•Warner.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MaUhew5:8

Sdvmvlllt Communily Churt h
Sunday School 10:00 um. Sun~a y Worlhlp
11 ;()() am . Wednesdoy 7:00 pm Past nr
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

(Non-d~nominational fellow'stlip)

'

~

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike . Co , Rd .. P&lt;t)lOr: R~ 1
Blackwood . Sunday School .· 9JO a.m.. ,
Worship 10 :30 a_-m ·. 7·30 .r .m .
W~dnesda&gt;· St;rvict · 7:.l0 p.m

Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edsel Hart. Sunday

11&lt;11

White's Chapel Weslryan
Coohllk Road , Pauor. Rt• . Char\e )
Martindale . Sunduy School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wt;trshlp · 10:30 11,.m ., WediK'!odti~ Sem ~·e
• 7 pm .
falniew Dible Ch!!n:h
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor: Bnan Ma;.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.. Wor ~hip · 7J)IJ
p.m .. Wedne$ ) Bible S1udy • 7:00 p.m
Faith Ff'llowship Crusadt for Christ
Pastnr: R ~ v . FranKlin Didens. Ser\l cl".
Friday. 7 p.m.

p.m

Rock Sprinp
Pllslor: Dewayne Stutler. Sund~y School 9:00 a.m., Wouhip - 10 a.m.. Youth
Fel)owship, Sunduy • 6 p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am lenni Dunham

Hysell kun Community Chun:h.
Pastor: Rev.~- Lemley: Sunday School
• IJ:3U a.m ., Worship- 10;45 a.m .. 7 p.n1.1
ThuMay Bible Study and Youth- 7 p.m.

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churdl
Comer S)·cnmore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sun. School· 9:~ a.m .. Worship · I I a.m.

TUpper&amp; Plain~ . Pu tor Mike Moore. Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

School • Q:JO a.m.. Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday e"ening 6 pm .
RIIJ.Iand Churc:h ottbt Nazarene
Pastor: George Stadltr, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship • 10 :30 a.m.. 6:3()
p m., Wed~y Services - 7 p.m.

Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim PToffit1 .
Sund ay School - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip •
10:30 a.m., Wednesd ay Services • 7.00

Pomeroy ·

· Cl.l'lnd..Sunon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. RaciOe, Ohio,
Pastor: J o~n Gilmore , Sunday School ?:4.5 a.m:. WorShip - 11:00 a.m.. . Bible
Study Wed./:30 p.m .

Pa~tor:

Clltckr Churth ol tM NuartM

AmllZing GnKe CommunJty Church
Pastof: Way ne Dunlap, State Rt . 681 .
Tuppcr;s Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed. Dible Stu~ 7:00p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pa stOr: Dri!in Dunh am, Sund&lt;~y. School ·
9:30a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m. ·

Btthany
Pas1or: John Gilmore, Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wor ship - 9 a.m., Wednesd ay
Services - 10 a.m.

1

I

FOI"a.. Run
Bob Robinson , Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wotship • 9 a.m .
~;'astor:

Wtsleyan Bible HolineSs Chun:h
73 Pearl St., Middleport . PaslOr: Doujj:
Cox, Sunday School - 10 tu n. Worsh ip 10:45 p.m.. Sunday E\·e. 6:00 p.m..
Wednesday Sef\lice ·7:00p.m.

Our S•vlour L•lheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts .. RavensWood ,
W.Va .• Pastor: David Russell. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m .. Worship - II a.m.

•

'

Faith Baptist Churdl
Railroad St. ,' Mason . Sunday School- 10
a.m., Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m ,
' wi-dnesday Services· 7 p.m.

Episcopal

Lutheran

Comer of St. ~t . 124 &amp; a·radbury Rd .,
Minister:.Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 &lt;~.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wed~dll.y Ser\lices -7:00p.m .

Hllhktt Blptilt Churth
Sl. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Ptslor: Rev. .
James R. Acree, Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service, Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

J.,ETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

"

Pastor: Dewayne Stutt!er, Sunday ScOOol 10 a.m ., Worship - 11 a.m.

St. John Lllthtrtn Churd
Pin~ Grove.~Worship · 9:00a .m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pas1or:

Bradford Chul'\:b or Qrist

Oid Bfthtl F~ Will Bapd~t Churth
28601 St. Rt 7, Middleport, Sunday
Service. ·. 10 a.m ., 6:00 p.ni., Tuesday
Servkts -6:00

Victory Bapll§l btdtprndtnt
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport , Pa.'ltor: James
E. Keestt, Wor~hip - !Oa .m., '7 p.m ..
Wednc-!iday Service'- 7 p.m.

Tupptn Plalnl St. Paul
Pa stor: lim Cor~itt, Sunday School • "'
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m.;Tuesday Services
. 7:30p.m . .
Ceatral CIU51tr
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor. Bob ROb inson.
Sunday Scbo(ll - 9:45 a.m.. Worship - II
a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

· F1atwoods

Trtnlty Cburch
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor:
Wol'\hip 10:25 a.m.,

Pomeroy Cll•n.-11 ot lhe Nuarnt'
Pastor Jan Lnender. Sunday S"hool ·
9 30 a.m.. Wor~h1p - 10:30 a.m. 11.nd 6
p.m.. Wednesday Sei""JCes · 1 p.m .

King~bury Road . P11 ~ tor : Robtn Vanct
Sunda y Schoo! - 9:30 a.m .. \lior~tup
SeT\' ICe 10.30 a.m . Evening S~n ICC 6
p.m.
Fl"ftdom Gospel MiNion
Bald Knob , on Co. Rd. 31. Pa ~tor . Rc\
Ruxer Willford . Sund~t) Sch()(ll · 9JO
a.m. WonJ11p- 'I p.m.

Pa~tor : Rev. Curta Raridolph, Sunda~

Congregational

Tht Churth or Jesa~
Chrl!lt of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 44~6247 or 446-7486,
S~pday School 10:20-ll a.m., Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sacramen,t · Service 9-10: 15 a.m ..
Homemiling meeting, 1st Thurs . - 7 p.m.

Rul111.0d Cbun:h ·~Christ
' Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship and
Communio,n - 10:30 a.m .. Davi d
Wiseman, Minister

Great Bend, Roure 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor: Eid Caner, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.• Sunday Worship - IO:JO•a.m.,.t. 7
pm; Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 P·ll'!·

Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up umil 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 24. Lerters
r&lt;'ceived afrer that deadline will nor be published. Letters
should .be 300 words in length or less and musr address
issues, not personalities. Letters e11dorsi11g local or llation a/ candidatrs. or containing personal arracks, will nor 4if
accepted.
· ·
.

Chapma,n. Sunday School . 10 a.m.,
Worship · I I a.m., W~di'ICsday Services. 7
p.m.

Loqllollom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wonh1p •
10:30 a.rn
letdswillt
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Sunda)' School 10:30 a.m .. F,int Sun day of Monlh - 7:00
p.m. servi~

Zion Chllrth of Christ

Radllf Ftnt Baptist
Paslor: ·Ryan Eaton, pasto r , Sunday
School . 9:30a .m .• Woahip. 10:40 a.m.,
6:00 P;.!ll .. Wtdnesda.)' Services - 7:00 ·

Elections letters advisory

Church ftf C'.od or Proph«y

Btarwal\ow Ridge Church of Christ

First U.ptisl Cbun;h
Billy Zuspan 61h and Palmer St.,
Middleport. Sun'day Schoo~ - 9:15a.m.,
Wors hip - 10: 15 a.m .. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Strvicf- 7:00p.m.

'

Syraw• Flnt Cbudl of C'.od
Apple and Second Sn., Pa;tor: Re\'. David
Russell, Sunday Sc-hool and Worship- 10
· a.m. Evening Services- 6 :30 p.m..
Wednesday Service~ · 6:JO p.m.

Pine Grovr Blblt Hollne55 Cburth
1/2 mile Qff Rt. 325, Pa ~t~r : Rev . O'Dell
Manley. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship . 10;30 ci.m., 6:00 p.m..
Wednesday 'seT\' ic e · 7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

8&lt;1~-

Rllllud Churth of God
Pistor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship· 10
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday ~rvices · 7
p.m.
.

Rose of Sharon Hollom Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutbmd, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King , Sunday school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday woahip •7 p.m.. Wedm:sday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Ktno Churth or Christ
Worship • 9:30 a.m., Sundliy School •
10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. lst and
3rd Sunday

First Southern Bap&amp;t
41S72 Pomeroy Pike . Sunday School9:3(i'a. m.. Worship . 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

.

1

Pomeroy Westside Church ol Christ

Hopt BapCkt Churth (Southern)
570 Grant St., Middleport. Sunday school
-9:30a.m. , Wor~hip · II a.m. and 6 p.m ..
Wednesday S~rvice - 7 p.m. Pllstor: Gary
Ellis
Rutlaad Flnl Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy lilrst BapU!it
Pastor Jon Bnx kert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9.30 am. Worship 10:30 am

CONCESSiON SPE.ECH.

Service~ ·

Holiness

· Carpenttr lndeptndeat Baptist ChuKh
Su nday School - SI :JOam, Preaching
Service IO:JOam , Evening Service
7:00pm, Wedntsday Bible Study HJO pm,
Paslor:

' l'·•'p.m. ,

E\·e:ninj! • 6 p.m .. Wrdnnday
pm.

OJ . Whitt Rd . off St R1 . 160, Pastor: PJ .

Catholic

Emmanuel Apoetolic Taberfll:dt Inc.

WE'VE JuST Hf.ARP
1HAT COIPRAPO'S
YoTJI-.lG SYSTEK IS
ABoUT To I'MKEA

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Friday, October 24, ~oo8

{The
700
Club'
isn't
just
for. ~epublicans anymore
The Daily Sentinel
·Washington correspondent David BruJy knew it
was a symbolic moment
when Democratic Partv
Chairman Howard Dean
appeared on the Christian
Broadcasti'ng Network.
Then there was the landmark Nevada trip to interview Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid and his
wife. Landra, at their home.
Landing' a face-to-face
interview with Sen. Hillary
Clinton for "The 700 .
Club''" Say no more.
Finally. after a year of
negotiations, Sen. Barack
Obama 's staff took a leap of
faith and schedule(! an interview with the news team at
the Rev. Pat Robertson's
llagship network. Then
Obarna came back for
anpther interview, then
another and another.
Before that fourth 'interview. Brody expected to
shake hands once again.
But Obama caught him
off guar'd by moving in for
one of those "Hey. how are
you doing?" shoulder-toshoulder bumps that colleagues use when greeting
one another.
. " It was strange," said
Brody . speaking at the
Press
annual
Baptist
Collegiate
Journalism
Conference. "You really
don 't want to be chestbumping White House
candidates. It just doesn 't
look right."
Indeed , these are. strange
times. In the past year,
Democrats have been talk-

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II
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�PageA6.

FAITH. VALUES

"

The Daily Sentinel
'

-·. - A·H

Activis~s

For More -

Friday, October 24,

2008

•

see opening for

ISSUe

Bv JuLtE CARR SMYTH
where you are and also has
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
- that my daughter had lost
the strength necessary to
bne of her favorite toys, a
push aside such obstacles
COLUMBUS - Leftthat might bar your happy · leaning Christian and social
~mall doll in the likeness of
Cinderella from the Disney
. reunion with your heavenly activists see opportunity in
Pastor
~r .ND :
version of the fairy tale .
Father: There are things that an unconventional presidenThom
'
Interestingly, I've been
1 know and can share with tial race · and a spiraling
Mollohan my children, and there are national economy: pushing
ilsked on several occasions'
l!Y people that I had not met
things that I'm physically poverty as an.election issue.
previously if Cinderella had
empowered to handle for
At a time when more than
•ver reappeared . Always
them. But there are limits to 37 million Americans are in
t've had to answer rather wi~dom begin to help them my knowledge and strength. poverty. including many
glumly that she had n't.
differentiate between "real" I can't save plastic princess- who are new ly poor and
: But it seems right and
·es from storm sewers . There paying keen attentiOn, spiripretend).
proper to bring an update to and
But all of this brings me are people that 1 have in the tual leaders are encouraging
that scenario: our prodigal to· the question, "What do past been ahle to help in the young to vote and urging
.
. AP p~to
voters
to
select
candidates
Students
leave
an
assembly
about
the
Importance
of vot1ng
Pnderella has indeed final- we who are 'grownup' do some small way and there
in the election at Collinwood High School Wednesday,
ly returned ... it took me lift- with our loved ones whO are are some, though I may wJ'lo will fight poverty.
ing a cedar hope chest to lost?" By "lost" we could have tried to help them. are · "I feel more momentum , . Sept. 24, 1n Cleveland. Big public school districts around
find it, but our 3-year-old certainly mean those who beyond my ability to help energy and .focus on poverty the state have turned the presidential election into coursedaughter has had a very are· wandering through life either because there are lim- than I have ·in churches in work, capitalizing on the energy of this year's campaign to
happy reunion. She and all
.h
d'
·
its to my knowledge or three decades or more.'' said register unprecedented numbers of graduating seniors.
1- because
Wit
out
any
•rectton,
vu
their situation is Jim Wallis, chief executive
J'ler other princess dollie s
nerable
to
the
hazards
that
!lave had quite a celebra- beset
them,
straying simply beyond my strength. officer of Sojourners social health care, often second- presidential debates, in
)ion. Of course, not all lost through emotional and spirministries
in ' · class schools because of the stump speeches, in talking
But there .are no limits . justice
objects of our affection itual minefields by which with God . There is no place Washington.
funding scheme, and then points, in the news covermake it back to us. There they may be wounded if npt that you can hide from Him
"Partly, it's a new genera- little hope on the back side." age," he said. "There's th1s
have been things that our entirely destroyed. But we that He is not there. Nor is lion . Baby boomer~ are
ONE.org, a nonpartisan sense that everyone is midchildren have lost that have also must remember that there any shackle or chain becoming church . leaders coalition of more than 100 . dle class, and let's dare not
never been found, and I even if they feel that their that He cannot break. You and speaking to a new gen- advocacy and humanitarian talk about poor people."
must admit that there have 1ives are all thatthey could may feel that your life orthe eration that wants their lives · organizatiops. including
Yet anti-poverty activists
l:ieen things that I too have want them to be , if Jesu s life of someone else is to make a difference. It's a soine churches, has taken up are trying to get the attenb:lst that I've never seen isn ' t truly Lord and Savior. beyond hope, but you can't new altar call, if you will," the same cause, operating a . tion of politicians during
again.
grass-roots movement and this . election, the first in
then all the ways that they move the obstacles that are he said.
They're somewhere but I may feel they're succeeding in the way. Yet. God is no
In Orlando, Fla., partici- TV ads stretching across all decades without an incumjust don't lnow where to are an illusion: they are still · more intimidated by all the pants in Sojourners' Vote 50 states.
· bent president or vice presilook . But then there are "lost," bound to an endless tragedy and hurt that can · Out 'Poverty initiative have
Sojourners has collrcted dent running. THe effort is
things that are lost to us and parting from the One Who hem us in than if we were · coalesced around a contra- 20,000 Vote Out Poverty political, they say, but it is
we know exactly where loves them best
·
prisoners in sand castles. He versial city law \hat prohib- pledges from voters to pick not partisan.
they are. Every time we
The cause has resonated
My daughter's Cinderella. simply moves in and clears ited feeding the homeless in candidates who will fight
visit the downtown library , in a very literal sense, was the way with a shovel called a city park. Opponents got . poverty, and thousands more across party lines and
our young daughter pauses lost beyond hope (or at least hope ... true hope that can the law overturned in court. from candidates who have denominations, sail:! Elaine
to stand on and stare into the beyond the hope chest). As only be found in Jesus
Alan Clapsaddle. associ- committed to cutting pove11y Clements, deacffii of St.
large storm drain in the con- far as we knew, she was Christ. Remember this: ate pastor at the city's First in half by 2019. Sunday ser- Andrew's Episcopal Church
crete parking lot. A very gone for good: we had Jesus died for you so that United Church of Christ, mons on poverty are being in New Orleans. More liberlarge and heavy iron grill looked everywhere we you may be forgiven . and said the law 's opponents delivered around the country. al
.Episcopalians
and
covers it. but each space in knew to look, even in places made new. Because of this , saw it as part of a national
The movement has been Methodists are working
the grid is nearly two inches that we thought she couldn 't God has an eternal plan for trend to criminalize good embraced by more than 100 alongside more conservain diameter: just right · for. possibly be, but it was all to your life that starts now!And works.
churches in a dozen states, tive
evangelicals
and
small possessions to slip no avail. And even if iny · He can reach into the lives of
"You have a hard time get- but Wallis said political bat- Baptists in a manner many
through no matter . how daughter knew where she your loved ones, too. Trust ling a jury to convict some- tleground states"are crucial say they have not seen this
prized they may be .
one for sharing food. 'Uh, to its success.
generation.
was, she didn 't have the Him and keep praying.
If I remember to do so, I strength necessary to push
"In election times, it's difShe said that every Wal"For You created my what was your weapon?'
t,ry to park away from the aside the . obstacle that inmost being; You knit me 'Um, a ladle?'" he said. ficult because of all the Mart patron she has
grill to reduce the likelihood trapped her and then get her together in my mother 's "People saw the impact th.at competition - like right approached in the economithat my daughter 's curiosity back. But her father did .
. womb.! praise You because government could have . on now we're talking about the cally stricken Tchoupitoulas
will prompt her to try an
Are you aware of any I am fearfully and wonder- faith communities."
collapse of the financial neighborhood has readily
"experiment." If she carries Cinderellas today suffering fully made; Your works are
The Rev. Jesse Jackson markets, last election it was signed a pledge to pick
one of her toys with her, we from some degree of "lost- wonderf\11, I know tl)at full recently visited battle- . the threat of terrorism. local, state and federal cancaution her to steer away · ness?" Maybe they seem well. My frame was not hid- ground Ohi() to push super- . Poverty gets pushed aside," didates this year with pover· from the .storm drain since, too.far gone and you. cannot den · fro111 You when I was intendents in its eig~t Wallis said.
ty foremost in mind. ·
·
"if ·we lose a princess down fathom ·how you can reach made in the secret place. largest school districts . to · ''These swing states,
Many Christians viewed
there, we'll never get her them. You may feel that you When I was woven together register high ·school seniors because there's ·so much the city's treatment after
l!ack!" So far, we've not lost can't relate to where they're in the depths. of' the earth, to vote. He has repeated the attention, become national Hurricane Katrina as added
li.ry princesses , toy rings, coming from and you just Your eyes saw
my message - central to his forums _!or the public dis- evidence that the poor's
plastic animals, or anything don't know "where they unformed body. All the days Rambow/PUSH Coalitwn ' cuss1on.
· needs were being overelse (that I know of) to the are ." Or you may feel pow- ordained for me were writin Atlanta. Detroit,
As.excited as activists are, looked, said Lisa Sharon .
!error of the storm drain. Yet erless to mtervene and make ten ·in Yom book before one Baltimore and New York.
however, success is not Harper, of New York Faith
If something does get lost a difference because you do of them came to be" (Psalm
Jackson, whqse efforts are assured , said David Brady, &amp; Justice.
Qown there, we ' ll know not have the strength neces- 139: 13-16 NIV).
· separate from Vote Out an associate professor of
"War and violence across
r&lt;here it is, but will be pow- sary to push aside the obsta(Tiwm Mollohan and his Poverty, said nine in I0 sociology
at
Duke the globe , the lack of comerless to retrieve it. Now cles ihat trap them and get family have ministered in Cleveland public school University. He said the last passion toward !he poor
'-eep in mind that to a them back. But your heav- southern Ohio the past 13 students are poor.
time- poverty played a role in during .their time of most
preschool child, beloved . en!{ father does. You your- years and is the author of
"Children go to school in a national politics was when need in Katrina, and the coldolls and stuffed animals sel may be struggling with · "The Fairy Tale Parables." those great numbers," he then-President Clinton was lapse of an economic 'strucare like friends or even fam~ direction and purpose, won- He is the pastor of Pathway said. "Many of them do not battling with Congress over ture where Wall Street was
~y members. When they dering if you are lost Community Church and ·have reading glasses. Many ' welfare reform in 1996.
made rich on the backs of
rose such a "friend," it can beyond hope and too far may be reached for com- of them don't have hearing
He said there is little evi- the poor," Harper said.
~eem to them as painful as gone for anyone to come to ments or questions by e- support or dental care. So dence candidates care.
"There's an open window
actually losing a real , live your rescue. It so,. there 1s mail at pastorthom@path• we've got unemployed par"I 've not heard anything that nobody really made.
person (until maturity and One Who knows exactly . waygallipolis.com).
ents because of the lack of in the vice presidential•and It's just time."
·
~ In September, I shared

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PageA7
Friday, October 24, 2008

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should not watch. Now me,
personally, I have 'better
What is wrong with our things to occupy my mind,
country? What is wrong soul and heart with - why ·
with the people saying we is it so convenient to sav.
need to pass No, 6 issue on "Out of sight,out of mind'1?
th~ Ufoming voting, camWhen raising my chil ·
•dren, I set a time limit and
patgn .
' If we think our schools if they were not · home, I
are needing help , it should went on the hunt for them.
not be by gambling. Our I was supposed to know
young people now are where they were and what
going down the drain they were doin~. Oh yes, I
because of people neglect- realize it doesn t take long
lng to teach children to to get out of line, but at
abstain from the very least, there is and should.
appearance of eviL Hey be a st11ndard of operation
fathers, hey mothers, hey or guidelines for someone
church Christian profes- living uqder Dad's and
sors, let's not sit on the Mom 's roof.
stool of do nothin¥ and say
Also , grown up men and
everyone is doing 11. No, no women, fathers and moth- everyone js not doing it. ers .truly' ~ght to have
· ' But say, "Oh, our schools enough Biblical sense . to
are needing help by saying, stay out of beer joints 'Teachers , open up with a unless the Holy Spirit actugood prayer."' I remember , ally leads you to be a witwhen I was even in Gallia ness with tracts or wants
Academy, we had teachers you to take someone out
who opened up with prayer. where a precious soul is and
To remember is also should not be.
Do I believe in practically
remembering when I was a
little first grade student in killing them? No, l never
the country schools, teach- did believe a parent should · . ·
·
.
ers opened up with a prayer. hruise a child to the point of Seen here are participants in the sixth
What has happened to lelt'Ving blue marks or such County Samaritan Fund.
1-"i~i;~·~~i~1~in God~ What has on them. No, I mean, let
•
to believing in them know they were someJesus? What has happened. what disobedient by being
to believin~ in the Divine where they are at. Carefully
Holy Spirit?
admonisn them with Real
How about we all pull Love, but with Real Firm
together and put God com- mean it, not by uncalled
pletely back in schools; put bad-mouthing or cussing.
the Bible back in schools.. This should be a no-no by
POINT P!,-EASANT, W.Va. - Ov.er
Let's not separate school adults and children and
from the Word of' God. exempt from TV. · I never 30 participants representing seven
That's what has happened ever head teachers use bad county churches gathered on Sunday,
- we took God out of words or vocabulary when I . Oct. 19, for the sixth annual' Good
many . things and now · was in high school, but they Samaritan for a Day event.
The event is sponsored by the Mason
schools and other organiza- did correct where correction
County
Ministerial Association. with
tions are hurting .
·
was needed. Yep, someWhat we need is a good times standing in the corner1 the purpose of raising fuDdS for and
remedy.
Well, am I an old person? awareness of the Mason County
Samaritan Fund. The Samaritan Fund
Now, first remedy, put Yes, but I was once young.
God back in school. Then
Am
I grey-headed? exists to help the needy living in or
how about learning our Almost to the tee, but once. I passing through Mason County.
children that money does was not.
not grow on trees? Maybe . Wa5 I always perfr.ct? No ,
us · but I was corrected with
we
should,
all
grownups; . stop thinking ., ·.:Love.
.
young people can stay out
Was I home when I was
on the streets late at night. · supposed to be? Oh yes. l
Us parents and grandpa.-- had guidelines of good
ents, let's reach ,,dur chi!- knowleclge.
.
dren and grartdcbildren · Did I learn by good directhey don't need "evejythitig tion? Yes, but especially
under the sun - or here on when I became a child of
Earth. A nice home is won- . God in my early teens. But
derful. But often TV has my Mom . was a good
become for some children, Christian.' Early on, she was
as soon as they become old converted under the great
enough; the babysitter. Anli ministry of Rev. Charles
· often it is nothing but trash. !.;usher. 'Also, my Dad who
Oh, you mean you don't !lad fel,l an~ broke his back
watch TV? Very httle. They when Wbrkmg for the WPA
used to have some de.cent and laid on frames for three
home programs on, but for ' years before his death, was
some reason they vanished also led to the Lord by Rev.
and there are soap OJ'!iras, Charles Lusher.
(Dorothy
Whittington
which I understand a child
or even .ffiarri~ . couples resides in Gallipolis.)
BY DOROTHY WHITTINGTON

·

.

·

Submitted photo

annual Good Samaritan for a Day event in Point Pleasant to benefit the Mason
·

Good·Sa111a•·itan fund-raiser:
draws over 30 pa•·Licipants
Participants secured sponsors to
support them 'in walking or rocking to
.raise money for .the Samaritan Fund.
Churches represented at the event
include Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church. Jordan Baptist
Church , Main Street Baptist Church.
New Hope Bible Baptist Church.
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church.
St. Peter Lutheran Church and Trinitv
United Methodist Church.
•
Funds raised for the event are

'expected to be over $2,000 . The per; .
son who raised the most wa s
· Matthew Kav ser of Trinitv United
Methodi st Church. who raised over
$500 for the event.
·;
Anyone wishing to make a donation to
the Mason County Sammitan Fund rna):
do so by mailing it to the fund at P.O.
Box 574.. Point Pleasant. W.Va. 25550. "
Addilional information may b&lt;;
obtained .frnm the jimd's director, Dr..
Riclu•", · Sargeill, ar (304) fi75-406 / .

Fall kick-off held

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FAITH. FAMILY
Some remedies for
modern.problems

The 'Daily Sentinel

The sponsors of this church page .do so with pride in our community

Nurture Your Inner Innocence
Is it no!' miracle that Gtld can make saints out of sinners? By almost ann1andard, moot of
are unn!JCntant, protllgatl' sinners and )t1 we all know that it would be hm to repent of
our sins and find reiU&amp;f In God. AllllO!t invariably,11r know what is thf right thing to do,
:llld rct 11e often Muse 1o do it. And el'elltha!e ol
"'"'- ~ '"us who ha1e k-anltd how to control our sinful
·
nature know that this is mosllr jus! for.show. .
We may h. kind and m~rclful on
the outside, out insiO.. ~~ are
often ast'lllhing cauldron of
emy, je:doil'iy, lust !llld hatdul
impul!e! and working hanl Ul
r.lrain from sin. hut It is
possible for tis to tame the
inner beast. When ~~t find onnelws
U&gt;

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thinking bad thouiJtts and incUned to
sin int&lt;mallv. ~&lt; mt~t tmmedlarelr a~k
for God's help and soon w·e mav find

that our Inner Jifl, Will t.. clm4'; to the
truly saintly life. ,\nd ~e should takl!
enoouragcmc111 from the fact that
ewen gffiuinc saints stmggle.w·llh this.
Think of Saint P.a1il's stmggle with the
flesh, which he ml'rttiotll over arld owr
agaln, or Saint Aug1Nine's ~~Iward
youth. Mtd more recem~: ~t have
heard abqut Mlllh.r Tet\'5a and her
jnner struuiMth h&lt;:r faith.
Fonunalfi), God's ntl'I'C) is grta1cr rhan wr ~n,, and Gixl ilel'et' giv;:s up on us. So, 1\1'
should not giw up on our.;el\.,, and know that ~~ are all ralled to be lai.nts. ·
To all God:• 11e16rwl irr Rome. uilo are rlllltd IIJ bt sain/.!' Gt'IICt! t.J )1?11
andfl'oicr from God"'" FalhtJ- and lhl' /.orr/}l!lu.&lt;Christ.

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
.Matthew 5:8

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Submitted

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So .He May Be Glorified Home School Group held its annual fall kick-off on Aug . 23. Families all gathered at the Bob Evan~
Farm Shelterhouse for a luncheon, games and a special visit from Patti Slayton and her horses from Rio Valley Stables:
Patti, her son, Nate and several volunteers, including her student, Haylee Bing , provided lead r ide~ and time for picture:
taking .for the kids/families. Many enjoyed a wonderful trail ride as the ending of a beautiful day. All interested parties fo(
home-schooled education c,an contact Amanda Brumfield at (740) 446-4707 and/or if.,interested in horse-related activi:i
ties then contact Patti at (740) 446-8945 .
::,, •

P.O. Box683
Pomero .Ohio 45769-068

~te

ribbon.campaign set next week

GALLIPOLIS ..:. What is WRAP?
It stands for White Ribbons Agai'nst
Pornography. Why do we observe it?
Its purpose is to increase public
awareness of the harm done by exposure tO pornography. It will be
obsei'Ved Oct. 26-Nov. 2.
The St. Louis Catholic Women's
Club are appealing to other churches
in Gallipolis to help raise awareness of
the problem of what the exposure of

pornography does to the minds of our
children. Pornography addiction can
occur within a week and easi ly within
three months for many· people.
· Ask your ministers to preach against
pomograpl)y during this observance.
Wear a whtte ribbon as a symbol of
decency. Make up fliers to dis.tribute
to family members, friends and coworkers or hand out at · a sbopping
mall , describing what they can llo to

••.

combat pornography.
..
Also ask'your state prosecutor, go"~
ernor. state legislature. to issue ~
proclamation in conjunction with tlw
White Ribbon Against Pornogrllph~
Campaign.
·
For more information. go / c)
www.moralirvirmredia.org .... .,.ap.htln·
WH'II'.HTapfamily.com!Hmp hrm . and
'''w"·.OIJSceniryCrimes .nrg. m n(une &lt;l
few sources.
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�PageA6.

FAITH. VALUES

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The Daily Sentinel
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-·. - A·H

Activis~s

For More -

Friday, October 24,

2008

•

see opening for

ISSUe

Bv JuLtE CARR SMYTH
where you are and also has
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
- that my daughter had lost
the strength necessary to
bne of her favorite toys, a
push aside such obstacles
COLUMBUS - Leftthat might bar your happy · leaning Christian and social
~mall doll in the likeness of
Cinderella from the Disney
. reunion with your heavenly activists see opportunity in
Pastor
~r .ND :
version of the fairy tale .
Father: There are things that an unconventional presidenThom
'
Interestingly, I've been
1 know and can share with tial race · and a spiraling
Mollohan my children, and there are national economy: pushing
ilsked on several occasions'
l!Y people that I had not met
things that I'm physically poverty as an.election issue.
previously if Cinderella had
empowered to handle for
At a time when more than
•ver reappeared . Always
them. But there are limits to 37 million Americans are in
t've had to answer rather wi~dom begin to help them my knowledge and strength. poverty. including many
glumly that she had n't.
differentiate between "real" I can't save plastic princess- who are new ly poor and
: But it seems right and
·es from storm sewers . There paying keen attentiOn, spiripretend).
proper to bring an update to and
But all of this brings me are people that 1 have in the tual leaders are encouraging
that scenario: our prodigal to· the question, "What do past been ahle to help in the young to vote and urging
.
. AP p~to
voters
to
select
candidates
Students
leave
an
assembly
about
the
Importance
of vot1ng
Pnderella has indeed final- we who are 'grownup' do some small way and there
in the election at Collinwood High School Wednesday,
ly returned ... it took me lift- with our loved ones whO are are some, though I may wJ'lo will fight poverty.
ing a cedar hope chest to lost?" By "lost" we could have tried to help them. are · "I feel more momentum , . Sept. 24, 1n Cleveland. Big public school districts around
find it, but our 3-year-old certainly mean those who beyond my ability to help energy and .focus on poverty the state have turned the presidential election into coursedaughter has had a very are· wandering through life either because there are lim- than I have ·in churches in work, capitalizing on the energy of this year's campaign to
happy reunion. She and all
.h
d'
·
its to my knowledge or three decades or more.'' said register unprecedented numbers of graduating seniors.
1- because
Wit
out
any
•rectton,
vu
their situation is Jim Wallis, chief executive
J'ler other princess dollie s
nerable
to
the
hazards
that
!lave had quite a celebra- beset
them,
straying simply beyond my strength. officer of Sojourners social health care, often second- presidential debates, in
)ion. Of course, not all lost through emotional and spirministries
in ' · class schools because of the stump speeches, in talking
But there .are no limits . justice
objects of our affection itual minefields by which with God . There is no place Washington.
funding scheme, and then points, in the news covermake it back to us. There they may be wounded if npt that you can hide from Him
"Partly, it's a new genera- little hope on the back side." age," he said. "There's th1s
have been things that our entirely destroyed. But we that He is not there. Nor is lion . Baby boomer~ are
ONE.org, a nonpartisan sense that everyone is midchildren have lost that have also must remember that there any shackle or chain becoming church . leaders coalition of more than 100 . dle class, and let's dare not
never been found, and I even if they feel that their that He cannot break. You and speaking to a new gen- advocacy and humanitarian talk about poor people."
must admit that there have 1ives are all thatthey could may feel that your life orthe eration that wants their lives · organizatiops. including
Yet anti-poverty activists
l:ieen things that I too have want them to be , if Jesu s life of someone else is to make a difference. It's a soine churches, has taken up are trying to get the attenb:lst that I've never seen isn ' t truly Lord and Savior. beyond hope, but you can't new altar call, if you will," the same cause, operating a . tion of politicians during
again.
grass-roots movement and this . election, the first in
then all the ways that they move the obstacles that are he said.
They're somewhere but I may feel they're succeeding in the way. Yet. God is no
In Orlando, Fla., partici- TV ads stretching across all decades without an incumjust don't lnow where to are an illusion: they are still · more intimidated by all the pants in Sojourners' Vote 50 states.
· bent president or vice presilook . But then there are "lost," bound to an endless tragedy and hurt that can · Out 'Poverty initiative have
Sojourners has collrcted dent running. THe effort is
things that are lost to us and parting from the One Who hem us in than if we were · coalesced around a contra- 20,000 Vote Out Poverty political, they say, but it is
we know exactly where loves them best
·
prisoners in sand castles. He versial city law \hat prohib- pledges from voters to pick not partisan.
they are. Every time we
The cause has resonated
My daughter's Cinderella. simply moves in and clears ited feeding the homeless in candidates who will fight
visit the downtown library , in a very literal sense, was the way with a shovel called a city park. Opponents got . poverty, and thousands more across party lines and
our young daughter pauses lost beyond hope (or at least hope ... true hope that can the law overturned in court. from candidates who have denominations, sail:! Elaine
to stand on and stare into the beyond the hope chest). As only be found in Jesus
Alan Clapsaddle. associ- committed to cutting pove11y Clements, deacffii of St.
large storm drain in the con- far as we knew, she was Christ. Remember this: ate pastor at the city's First in half by 2019. Sunday ser- Andrew's Episcopal Church
crete parking lot. A very gone for good: we had Jesus died for you so that United Church of Christ, mons on poverty are being in New Orleans. More liberlarge and heavy iron grill looked everywhere we you may be forgiven . and said the law 's opponents delivered around the country. al
.Episcopalians
and
covers it. but each space in knew to look, even in places made new. Because of this , saw it as part of a national
The movement has been Methodists are working
the grid is nearly two inches that we thought she couldn 't God has an eternal plan for trend to criminalize good embraced by more than 100 alongside more conservain diameter: just right · for. possibly be, but it was all to your life that starts now!And works.
churches in a dozen states, tive
evangelicals
and
small possessions to slip no avail. And even if iny · He can reach into the lives of
"You have a hard time get- but Wallis said political bat- Baptists in a manner many
through no matter . how daughter knew where she your loved ones, too. Trust ling a jury to convict some- tleground states"are crucial say they have not seen this
prized they may be .
one for sharing food. 'Uh, to its success.
generation.
was, she didn 't have the Him and keep praying.
If I remember to do so, I strength necessary to push
"In election times, it's difShe said that every Wal"For You created my what was your weapon?'
t,ry to park away from the aside the . obstacle that inmost being; You knit me 'Um, a ladle?'" he said. ficult because of all the Mart patron she has
grill to reduce the likelihood trapped her and then get her together in my mother 's "People saw the impact th.at competition - like right approached in the economithat my daughter 's curiosity back. But her father did .
. womb.! praise You because government could have . on now we're talking about the cally stricken Tchoupitoulas
will prompt her to try an
Are you aware of any I am fearfully and wonder- faith communities."
collapse of the financial neighborhood has readily
"experiment." If she carries Cinderellas today suffering fully made; Your works are
The Rev. Jesse Jackson markets, last election it was signed a pledge to pick
one of her toys with her, we from some degree of "lost- wonderf\11, I know tl)at full recently visited battle- . the threat of terrorism. local, state and federal cancaution her to steer away · ness?" Maybe they seem well. My frame was not hid- ground Ohi() to push super- . Poverty gets pushed aside," didates this year with pover· from the .storm drain since, too.far gone and you. cannot den · fro111 You when I was intendents in its eig~t Wallis said.
ty foremost in mind. ·
·
"if ·we lose a princess down fathom ·how you can reach made in the secret place. largest school districts . to · ''These swing states,
Many Christians viewed
there, we'll never get her them. You may feel that you When I was woven together register high ·school seniors because there's ·so much the city's treatment after
l!ack!" So far, we've not lost can't relate to where they're in the depths. of' the earth, to vote. He has repeated the attention, become national Hurricane Katrina as added
li.ry princesses , toy rings, coming from and you just Your eyes saw
my message - central to his forums _!or the public dis- evidence that the poor's
plastic animals, or anything don't know "where they unformed body. All the days Rambow/PUSH Coalitwn ' cuss1on.
· needs were being overelse (that I know of) to the are ." Or you may feel pow- ordained for me were writin Atlanta. Detroit,
As.excited as activists are, looked, said Lisa Sharon .
!error of the storm drain. Yet erless to mtervene and make ten ·in Yom book before one Baltimore and New York.
however, success is not Harper, of New York Faith
If something does get lost a difference because you do of them came to be" (Psalm
Jackson, whqse efforts are assured , said David Brady, &amp; Justice.
Qown there, we ' ll know not have the strength neces- 139: 13-16 NIV).
· separate from Vote Out an associate professor of
"War and violence across
r&lt;here it is, but will be pow- sary to push aside the obsta(Tiwm Mollohan and his Poverty, said nine in I0 sociology
at
Duke the globe , the lack of comerless to retrieve it. Now cles ihat trap them and get family have ministered in Cleveland public school University. He said the last passion toward !he poor
'-eep in mind that to a them back. But your heav- southern Ohio the past 13 students are poor.
time- poverty played a role in during .their time of most
preschool child, beloved . en!{ father does. You your- years and is the author of
"Children go to school in a national politics was when need in Katrina, and the coldolls and stuffed animals sel may be struggling with · "The Fairy Tale Parables." those great numbers," he then-President Clinton was lapse of an economic 'strucare like friends or even fam~ direction and purpose, won- He is the pastor of Pathway said. "Many of them do not battling with Congress over ture where Wall Street was
~y members. When they dering if you are lost Community Church and ·have reading glasses. Many ' welfare reform in 1996.
made rich on the backs of
rose such a "friend," it can beyond hope and too far may be reached for com- of them don't have hearing
He said there is little evi- the poor," Harper said.
~eem to them as painful as gone for anyone to come to ments or questions by e- support or dental care. So dence candidates care.
"There's an open window
actually losing a real , live your rescue. It so,. there 1s mail at pastorthom@path• we've got unemployed par"I 've not heard anything that nobody really made.
person (until maturity and One Who knows exactly . waygallipolis.com).
ents because of the lack of in the vice presidential•and It's just time."
·
~ In September, I shared

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Friday, October 24, 2008

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should not watch. Now me,
personally, I have 'better
What is wrong with our things to occupy my mind,
country? What is wrong soul and heart with - why ·
with the people saying we is it so convenient to sav.
need to pass No, 6 issue on "Out of sight,out of mind'1?
th~ Ufoming voting, camWhen raising my chil ·
•dren, I set a time limit and
patgn .
' If we think our schools if they were not · home, I
are needing help , it should went on the hunt for them.
not be by gambling. Our I was supposed to know
young people now are where they were and what
going down the drain they were doin~. Oh yes, I
because of people neglect- realize it doesn t take long
lng to teach children to to get out of line, but at
abstain from the very least, there is and should.
appearance of eviL Hey be a st11ndard of operation
fathers, hey mothers, hey or guidelines for someone
church Christian profes- living uqder Dad's and
sors, let's not sit on the Mom 's roof.
stool of do nothin¥ and say
Also , grown up men and
everyone is doing 11. No, no women, fathers and moth- everyone js not doing it. ers .truly' ~ght to have
· ' But say, "Oh, our schools enough Biblical sense . to
are needing help by saying, stay out of beer joints 'Teachers , open up with a unless the Holy Spirit actugood prayer."' I remember , ally leads you to be a witwhen I was even in Gallia ness with tracts or wants
Academy, we had teachers you to take someone out
who opened up with prayer. where a precious soul is and
To remember is also should not be.
Do I believe in practically
remembering when I was a
little first grade student in killing them? No, l never
the country schools, teach- did believe a parent should · . ·
·
.
ers opened up with a prayer. hruise a child to the point of Seen here are participants in the sixth
What has happened to lelt'Ving blue marks or such County Samaritan Fund.
1-"i~i;~·~~i~1~in God~ What has on them. No, I mean, let
•
to believing in them know they were someJesus? What has happened. what disobedient by being
to believin~ in the Divine where they are at. Carefully
Holy Spirit?
admonisn them with Real
How about we all pull Love, but with Real Firm
together and put God com- mean it, not by uncalled
pletely back in schools; put bad-mouthing or cussing.
the Bible back in schools.. This should be a no-no by
POINT P!,-EASANT, W.Va. - Ov.er
Let's not separate school adults and children and
from the Word of' God. exempt from TV. · I never 30 participants representing seven
That's what has happened ever head teachers use bad county churches gathered on Sunday,
- we took God out of words or vocabulary when I . Oct. 19, for the sixth annual' Good
many . things and now · was in high school, but they Samaritan for a Day event.
The event is sponsored by the Mason
schools and other organiza- did correct where correction
County
Ministerial Association. with
tions are hurting .
·
was needed. Yep, someWhat we need is a good times standing in the corner1 the purpose of raising fuDdS for and
remedy.
Well, am I an old person? awareness of the Mason County
Samaritan Fund. The Samaritan Fund
Now, first remedy, put Yes, but I was once young.
God back in school. Then
Am
I grey-headed? exists to help the needy living in or
how about learning our Almost to the tee, but once. I passing through Mason County.
children that money does was not.
not grow on trees? Maybe . Wa5 I always perfr.ct? No ,
us · but I was corrected with
we
should,
all
grownups; . stop thinking ., ·.:Love.
.
young people can stay out
Was I home when I was
on the streets late at night. · supposed to be? Oh yes. l
Us parents and grandpa.-- had guidelines of good
ents, let's reach ,,dur chi!- knowleclge.
.
dren and grartdcbildren · Did I learn by good directhey don't need "evejythitig tion? Yes, but especially
under the sun - or here on when I became a child of
Earth. A nice home is won- . God in my early teens. But
derful. But often TV has my Mom . was a good
become for some children, Christian.' Early on, she was
as soon as they become old converted under the great
enough; the babysitter. Anli ministry of Rev. Charles
· often it is nothing but trash. !.;usher. 'Also, my Dad who
Oh, you mean you don't !lad fel,l an~ broke his back
watch TV? Very httle. They when Wbrkmg for the WPA
used to have some de.cent and laid on frames for three
home programs on, but for ' years before his death, was
some reason they vanished also led to the Lord by Rev.
and there are soap OJ'!iras, Charles Lusher.
(Dorothy
Whittington
which I understand a child
or even .ffiarri~ . couples resides in Gallipolis.)
BY DOROTHY WHITTINGTON

·

.

·

Submitted photo

annual Good Samaritan for a Day event in Point Pleasant to benefit the Mason
·

Good·Sa111a•·itan fund-raiser:
draws over 30 pa•·Licipants
Participants secured sponsors to
support them 'in walking or rocking to
.raise money for .the Samaritan Fund.
Churches represented at the event
include Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church. Jordan Baptist
Church , Main Street Baptist Church.
New Hope Bible Baptist Church.
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church.
St. Peter Lutheran Church and Trinitv
United Methodist Church.
•
Funds raised for the event are

'expected to be over $2,000 . The per; .
son who raised the most wa s
· Matthew Kav ser of Trinitv United
Methodi st Church. who raised over
$500 for the event.
·;
Anyone wishing to make a donation to
the Mason County Sammitan Fund rna):
do so by mailing it to the fund at P.O.
Box 574.. Point Pleasant. W.Va. 25550. "
Addilional information may b&lt;;
obtained .frnm the jimd's director, Dr..
Riclu•", · Sargeill, ar (304) fi75-406 / .

Fall kick-off held

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FAITH. FAMILY
Some remedies for
modern.problems

The 'Daily Sentinel

The sponsors of this church page .do so with pride in our community

Nurture Your Inner Innocence
Is it no!' miracle that Gtld can make saints out of sinners? By almost ann1andard, moot of
are unn!JCntant, protllgatl' sinners and )t1 we all know that it would be hm to repent of
our sins and find reiU&amp;f In God. AllllO!t invariably,11r know what is thf right thing to do,
:llld rct 11e often Muse 1o do it. And el'elltha!e ol
"'"'- ~ '"us who ha1e k-anltd how to control our sinful
·
nature know that this is mosllr jus! for.show. .
We may h. kind and m~rclful on
the outside, out insiO.. ~~ are
often ast'lllhing cauldron of
emy, je:doil'iy, lust !llld hatdul
impul!e! and working hanl Ul
r.lrain from sin. hut It is
possible for tis to tame the
inner beast. When ~~t find onnelws
U&gt;

'

.

.

thinking bad thouiJtts and incUned to
sin int&lt;mallv. ~&lt; mt~t tmmedlarelr a~k
for God's help and soon w·e mav find

that our Inner Jifl, Will t.. clm4'; to the
truly saintly life. ,\nd ~e should takl!
enoouragcmc111 from the fact that
ewen gffiuinc saints stmggle.w·llh this.
Think of Saint P.a1il's stmggle with the
flesh, which he ml'rttiotll over arld owr
agaln, or Saint Aug1Nine's ~~Iward
youth. Mtd more recem~: ~t have
heard abqut Mlllh.r Tet\'5a and her
jnner struuiMth h&lt;:r faith.
Fonunalfi), God's ntl'I'C) is grta1cr rhan wr ~n,, and Gixl ilel'et' giv;:s up on us. So, 1\1'
should not giw up on our.;el\.,, and know that ~~ are all ralled to be lai.nts. ·
To all God:• 11e16rwl irr Rome. uilo are rlllltd IIJ bt sain/.!' Gt'IICt! t.J )1?11
andfl'oicr from God"'" FalhtJ- and lhl' /.orr/}l!lu.&lt;Christ.

R.s. ~: RllrlUins t.7

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
.Matthew 5:8

"

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(740) 992-6472
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words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
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John/5:7

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Submitted

'
'
So .He May Be Glorified Home School Group held its annual fall kick-off on Aug . 23. Families all gathered at the Bob Evan~
Farm Shelterhouse for a luncheon, games and a special visit from Patti Slayton and her horses from Rio Valley Stables:
Patti, her son, Nate and several volunteers, including her student, Haylee Bing , provided lead r ide~ and time for picture:
taking .for the kids/families. Many enjoyed a wonderful trail ride as the ending of a beautiful day. All interested parties fo(
home-schooled education c,an contact Amanda Brumfield at (740) 446-4707 and/or if.,interested in horse-related activi:i
ties then contact Patti at (740) 446-8945 .
::,, •

P.O. Box683
Pomero .Ohio 45769-068

~te

ribbon.campaign set next week

GALLIPOLIS ..:. What is WRAP?
It stands for White Ribbons Agai'nst
Pornography. Why do we observe it?
Its purpose is to increase public
awareness of the harm done by exposure tO pornography. It will be
obsei'Ved Oct. 26-Nov. 2.
The St. Louis Catholic Women's
Club are appealing to other churches
in Gallipolis to help raise awareness of
the problem of what the exposure of

pornography does to the minds of our
children. Pornography addiction can
occur within a week and easi ly within
three months for many· people.
· Ask your ministers to preach against
pomograpl)y during this observance.
Wear a whtte ribbon as a symbol of
decency. Make up fliers to dis.tribute
to family members, friends and coworkers or hand out at · a sbopping
mall , describing what they can llo to

••.

combat pornography.
..
Also ask'your state prosecutor, go"~
ernor. state legislature. to issue ~
proclamation in conjunction with tlw
White Ribbon Against Pornogrllph~
Campaign.
·
For more information. go / c)
www.moralirvirmredia.org .... .,.ap.htln·
WH'II'.HTapfamily.com!Hmp hrm . and
'''w"·.OIJSceniryCrimes .nrg. m n(une &lt;l
few sources.
·•

�Friday. October 24. 2008

ww w.mydai Iysenti ne !.com

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

WVU whips Auburn, Page B2

Big Ten .Notebook, Page B3

'

~ig East Notehook, Page B4
School

Big Ten
w L

OVerall

0
4 0
3 1

8 0

w

4

Penn State
Ohio State
M&lt;:hig;m State
_ Minnesota

2

Northwestern

2
2
2
1
0
0
0

Iowa
Illinois
Michig;,n

Purdue
Wisconsin
Indiana

7

6
6

1
1

6
5

2
2

L

1
1
3

4 3
2 _5

2
3

2

5

-4

3

4

4

2

5

SATURDAY 'S GAMES
Pe1!n State at OSU, 8 p.m.

Illinois at Wisconsin, noon
Minnesota at Purdue, noon
Northwestern at Indiana, noon
Michigan St. at Midligan, 4:30p.m.

BIG TEN SlATS
'

-

_RUSHING OFFENSE
.Penn State ......................234.6
Jllinois ..............................204.9
1owa ................................ 195.4
Wisconsin ............... :....... 194.1
Indiana .......................... 183.0
PASSING OFFENSE
Illinois ..............................279. 7
- Purdue ......................... ;258.1
Penn State ...................... 247.5
.Minnesota ...................... 232.0
Northwestern :................. 230.1
•
TOTAL OFFENSE
lllinois .............................. 484.6
Penn State ....................... 482.1
Northwestern ..................~9.3
lnd1ana ... :...... ........ .. .........386.6
Wisconsin ......... :.............. 386.0
TOTAL DEFENSE
'Penn State ...................... 263.2
Ohio State ...................... 265.4
lowa ................................ 297.8
Wlsconsln .........:.............. 328.7
Northwestern ..................33 7.4

BIG TEN lEADERS
RUSHING YARDS
Javon Ringer, Mich. State .. 1179
Shonn Greene, Iowa .......... 1154
Evan Royster, Penn State .... 893
f&lt;Dry Sheets, Purdue .......... 733
:Tyrell Sutton, Nqrthwestern 699
PASSING YARDS
Juice Williams, lllino1s ........ 1948
.Curtis Painter, Purdue ........1726
-Adam Weber, Minnesota .... 1612
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern .. 1555
:Daryll Clark, Penn State ...... 1531
RECEIVING YARDS
·Eric Decker, Minnesota ........ 782
Arrelious Benn, lllinois .......... 693
Desmond Tardy, Purdue ...... 535
Greg Orton, Purdue .............. 503
Mark Dell, Mich. State ........ 496 -

OSU LEADERS
A\SSING YARDs
'
Terrelie Pryor ......................653
RUSHING YARDS
Chris Wells ........................619
RECEIVING YARDS
Brian Robiskie .................... 242
TOUCHDOWNS

Brian Robiskie ........................ 5
Terre lie Pryor .......................... 5
TACKLES
James Laurina~is .................. 78
SACKS
Marcus Freeman .................. 3.5
FIELD GOALS
,
Ryan Pretorius .................. 13/17
PUNTING
.A.J. Trapasso ...................... 42.9
TACKLES FOR LOSSES
Marcus Freeman .................. 5.5
INTERCEPllONS
Malcolm Jerkins ......................3
Kurt Coleman .......................... 3

2008 OSU SCHEDULE

•

Aug, 30
sept. 6
sept. 13

Youngstown State w. 43-0
OhK&gt;
W, :26-14
usc
L. 35-3

sept. 20
sept. 21

Troy

W, 28-10

Minnesota

W. 34-21

Oct4
Wisconsin·
W, 20·17
Oct 1i ,, Purdue
w, 16-3
Oct.18
MSU
W.45-7
Oe1. 25
Penn Slats
8 p.m.
N&lt;N. 8
.@ Nortl1westem
lBA
N(N_ 15
@ llllros
TBA
"""- 22

Michigan

TBA

OJntent comp"&lt;&lt; by Jim N....,u ard .
desi!PJ1 by Ross B&lt;sroff • The uma Nev.o

uma

Friday, October 24, 2008

1
2

eop.,.~ ~ 2008 The
Nev.s. ReprodUCtiOn ot all or any~ of this material
IS PIQhitllted YmOOut """""" consent

• ..,. Uma N.,... photos

-,

An inside look at this week's game

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY- A schedule of upcoming high
school vars ity sport1ng evenls involving
teama from Meigs and Gallla counties .

Er.ldu October 24

Paterno's numbers add up to greatness
Fifty-four pen:ent of the pOpulation of the United States is
younger than 40 years old, according to Census Bureau statistics.
That means wrapping your
mind around the concept of
doing anything for 40 years is
outside the Jif'e experiences of
more than half the co uritry.
Even if you have been
around more than 40 years, the
idea of doing one job for more
than· four decades, as Penn
State football coach Joe Pa·
terno has done, is a little difficult to grasp.
Paterno is in his 43rd year as

..

Jim
Naveau
The Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com
. 419 -993-2087

Penn State's head coach, as he
leads his team into Ohio Stadium for a showdown of Top
Ten teams on Saturday night.
He has been at Penn State for
59 seasons if you include his
16 years as an assistant coach.
·So, here are a few numbers to
illustrate just how long Pa·
terno has been win'ning games

as the Nittany Lions' head
coach:
1 - Paterno was born one
year after Jim Tressel's parents, Lee and Eloise.
16-GrandchildrenPaterno
and his wife Sue have, nine
more than the only other Big
Ten coach with grandchildren,
Indiana's Bill Lynch.
24 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Neil Arm·
strongwalkedonthe moon.
35 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Wisconsin
football coach Bret Bielema
was born.
42 -' Wins by Paterno at

Penn State before Jim Tressel
graduated from high school. .
42 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the first
Starbucks opened.
75- Wins by Paterno at
Plii:m State before' the release
of Bruce Springsteen's first
album.
84 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Northwest·
em football coach Pat Fitzger·aid was born.
·
85 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the premiere
of Saturday Night Live on
NBC.
.
85 - Wins by Paterno at

Football ·
Marlena at Gaflla Academy, 7:30 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 7:30p.m .
A~ HUt at River VaUey, 7:30p.m .
South Gallla at Symmes Vall@y, 7:30

Penn State before the first of
Sylvester Stallone's six
"Rocky" movies was in theaters.
123 - Wins by Paterno at
Pennbta'tewhileWoodyHayell
wasOhioState'scoach.
151 -Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the. first
HondaAccordrolledotftheas·
sembly line at Honda's plant in
Marysville.
325-Combinedwinsascollege football coaches by Pete
Carroll, Nick Saban and Lloyd
Carr, which is still 55 wins
shortofPaterno's NCAADivi·
sian !-record 380 at Penn State.

p.m.

Wahama at Athens, 7:30p.m.
SltUrdQ Octpbftr 25
Foolball
Southern p,t Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Croas Country

Dhilslons 11-111 Regional meets at
"ckerlngton. 10 a.m.
•

SPORTS

Alookatsomeofthekeymatchupsinthe passesfor287yards and twoTDs.
started only one game. End Josh Gaines Ross Homan had nine tackles and Marcus
Freeman had five tackles. Freeman leads
game between No. 10 Ohio State (7 -1, 4- Penn State's top three receivers, Dean has 3.5 sacks.
0 Big Ten) and No. 3 Penn State (8-0, 4-0 Butler (30 c~tches, 486 yards, 3 TDs), Jar- Ohio State's defensive line, widely regarded OSU IMth 3.5 sacks and Laurina~is has 2.5.
Advantage: Ohio State
Big Ten) on Saturday night at Ohio Stadium: dan NoiWOOd (25 catches, 405 yards, 5 as the weakest link of the defense so far, did
Quarterbacks
TDs) and Derrick Willial)'lS (25 c&amp;ches, 282 get more pres.Sure on the opposition for the Defensive backs
yards, 1 TO) have all been 1n the pra@'amat secoodv.eekina rowatMich~State. ThadOhio State leads the nation
Ohio State's Terrelle Pryor has gotten as least four years.
.
cleusGibsonhasthreesacks,theonlyOSUde· ~ 21 takeaways. Comer·
much attention as any quarterback in ·the . Advantage: Penq State
fensive lineman IMth more than one.
. back Malcolm Jenkins
.country, but Penn State's Daryll Cla111, from Offensive line
Advantage: Penn ·state
and safety i&lt;urt Coleman
\bung;town Ursuline High School, has probU back
ably played about as well as any QB in college Ki111 Herbstreit said on his Columqus radio
ne
ers
each ha-.e three interoeptions. Ohio State's
football this season. Cla111. a·first-year starter. show earlier this week that Penn State might
Penn State's Navarro-Bowman, a
in his fourth season, has completed 63 per- have the beSt offensive line in college foot· 6-foot, l-inch, 218-pound sophodefense has scored
cent of h1s passes for 1,531 yards and 11 ball. Nobody IS saying that about Ohio State's more, has three sacks and 9.5 ·
three touchcowns in
touchcowns and aro has run for eir)11 scores. offensive line.
tackles for losses,1but all of the
the last two games.
Pryor, of Jeannette, Pa., hash~ 65 percent
But the Buckeyes' linemen had probably sacks and five oftne tackles
Penn State has 15
takeaways, including
of his passes for 653 yards and six touch- their best pelfomnance of the season against for losses came in one
11 interceptions.
downs and has run for 411 yards-and five Michigan State. After struggling to score game against Temple.
_Safety An1l"ony Scirrotto
touchdowns. He might have played hiS best touchdowns ins1de an 'opponent's 20-yard Freshman Michael
overall game in a 45-7 win over Michigan line much of the season, they scored four Mauti could be in line
is a three-year starter. He
State last Saturday when he threw for 116 touchdowns on five trips inside Michigan for more playing time
has one interception this
yards and fJ.JShed for .72 yards. .
State's 20. In their previous 20 trips inside after having seven
season, whid1 !iJves him 11
. ~: PennStl!_te.
_,lheoppositjon's20-yard line, they had got- tackles against
for his career. No other Nittany
Uons defensive back has ·
Running backs
ten eight touchdowns.
Michigan. Penn .
·Both the Buckeyes and NittanyUonshave State has aimore than one interPenn State's Evan Royster, a 212-pound four linemen who have started at least the . lowed only
ception.
so;ihomore, was a high school All-American last tWo seasons. Penn State has been one opposAdvam.ce:
in lacrosse. He's not bad in footba lf e~er, quicker and more agjlethah most offensive ing runner,
Ohio State
rushing for 893 yards and 10 touchdowns lines in the Big Ten . Penn State has allowed Michigan's .
$pedal
sofarthisseason.Hehadacareer-best174 . six quarterback sacks, compared to Ohio Brandon
teaml
yards in a 46-17 win over Michigan last State's 21.
Minor, to gai'n
Saturday. Stephfon Green (411 yardS) bting;
Advantage: Penn State •
more than 100
Derrick
quickness to the backfield.
Defen
ard5
Williams has re'
osu tailback Chris Wells says his inJ·ured
slve line
YOSU's
improved
turned two kickoffs and
right foot still hurts, but that didn't stop him
Penn State defensive end Aaron Mayl]n defensive line play
a punt for touchdowns for Penn
from carryng 31 times for 140 yards at has 10 quarterback sacks, which is seven ·helped free the
State. The Nittany Uons' kicker,
Michigan State. His backup Dan Herron has more than any Ohio State lineman and only llnebaGkers to
Kevin Kelly, has hit 12 of 14
missed thlllast two games because of a three fewer than the Buckeyes have as a make plays at
field goals and is the all- ·
concussion and Maurice Wells ancf Brandon team. He ranks second in the country. Be- Michigan State.
time Big Ten kick soaring
Sainecombinedforonlyfour',-ardson nine fore the· season started, the N~ny Lions James Laurileader with 316
carries last Saturday. Herron IS expected were pushing another end,
naitis had 11
points. OSU's Ryan
back this week.
Maurice Evans, for
tackles and
Pretorius is 13 of
Advantage: Penn State
All-American han·
1 . 5 sac.s.
,,
17 on field
Recelven
ors after he had
goals, though
12 sacks last
Aaron
Pettrey ·
Ohio State's receivers have had to make year.. But
has been given
the most of scarce opportunities w~h Pl)lor
averagjng 15 passes a game since he be- E v a n 5
opportunities
came the starting quarterback five game!;
in two recent
Ohio State
ago. Brian Hartline did that when he gained
gemes to kick
56 yards on a catch and run against 'Michilong
field
quarterback
gan State and so did Brian Robiskie, who
goals.
Terrene
Pryor
cau(lht a short touchdown pass from Pl')llr,
Advanwee:
Rob1skie has 26 catches for 242 yards and
Penn Stidlil
five touchdowns. Hartline has caught 15

Say what?

NAME: i&lt;urt Schumacher
HOMETOWN: Cleveland
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1971·74
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS: Atwo-time
AII-BigTen selection at offensive tackle
and a first -team All-American in 1974.
Ohio State was 29-4-1 his last three
·seasons.
"
AFTER OHIO STATE: First-round draft choice of
the New Orleans Saints in 1975. He played three
years with the Saints and two with Tampa Bay before a knee injwy forced him to retire from pro
football. Worked in sales after retirement. Lives in
Harleysville, Pa.

.. You put as much tape on it as you
can and go out there and play."

•

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: What year did Penn
State enter the B1g Ten?

2: Who is Penn State's

only Heisman Trophy
winner?

3: Who played in the f!o5e
Bowl first, Ohio State or Penn

State?

Am&lt;"'"" 1. 1993: 2. John Gappellet!J in 1973; 3. Ohio State played in the 1921 Rcse Bowl,
Penn State went tv.o yeers later.

GALLIPOLIS· - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling stats for the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and · also the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 learn.
All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
~end individual nominations
from their respective teams
- along with regular season slats ~ to Bryan
Walters of the sports depart·
ment in Gallipolis.
. St$ may be · faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bw alters@ mydaifytribune .c
om
· Don't forget to . include
offensive and defensive
stats-, as well as 'special
ieams for any individual·
ilomin11ted.
" ..
: All nominations must be
received
by
Monday,
November I , to be eligible
for representation at tlie AP
district meeting.
Any questions, call the
sports line at 446-2342 ext.
33 .

·Ocho Cinco will
stick with old
jersey for season

-.

- Marcus Freeman , about playing with a sprained ankle
last week against Michigan State

BRIEFS

Football stats
needed for AP
district, OVP
nominations

- SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: PENN STATE (8-0, 4-0)

Where are they now?

VOlleyball - 04 dlatrlct flnala

South Webst8f versus LUcasville Valley
at Wellston HS, 4 p.m.
Eastern versus ~Ike Eastern at Wellston
HS, 30 minutes after Match 1
Volleyball - ACSitoumoment
OVCS ai .Cedarvltle, TBA

days until .kickoff -

CINCINNATI (AP) Chad Ocho Cinco will keep
his dual identity for the rest
of the season.
The Cincinnati Bengals
receiver formerly known as
C h a d
Johnson
s a i d
Thursday
he'll wear
his
old
name on
the back of
his uniform
for the rest
of the seaOcho Cinco son.
It
.
.
would have
eost him a lot of money to
make the switch for this
year.
.
"We've just left it alone,"
he said, in an interview. "I'll
just wait and do it next
year."
• The Pro Bowl receiver
fegally changed his name 10
Ocho Cinco last August,
Shortly before the start of
the season. Reebok, which
produces NFL jerseys for
sale to fans,. had a large
Inventory of jerseys with his
Qld niune ready for sale.
• The league respected the
ieceiver's name change, but
. Said he couldn't wear "Ocho
. Cinco" on the back of his
jersey until he compensated

Rays even series at 1_apie~e
Bv MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Squeeze plays, a wacky checked
swing and a fresh face out of the
bullpen. These plucky Tampa Bay
Rays pulled out all their tricks at
Tropicana Field to tie the World
Series.
James Shields stymied the slumping Philadelphia Phillies, rookie
David Price got the final seven outs
· and Tampa Bay rebounded fr_om a
rare home Ioss With a 4:2 v1ctory
Thursday mght that made 11 1-all.
·:we came ~n here_ k~.owing it's
g_omg lobe a light se~1es:, Rays outf1elder B.J. Upton sa1d. Both clubs
are a lot alike." ·
. The , Rays scored on Jason
Bartlelt s safety squeeze and bUih
another rally when Rocco. Baldelli
walked on a checked swmg that
seemed to confuse players and
umpires_alike.
Tampa Bay never really got a huge
hit, but neither did the Phillies as

Jimmy Rollins &amp; crew fell to !-for28 with runners in scoring position.
"That might be one of our sloppiest .
games all year," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. 'Tm concerned about us hitting with guys on
base, because it looks like at times
we might be trying a little too hard.
But we can fix that."
The series shifts to Philadelphia for
Game 3 on Saturday night , though
rain is in the forecast. ALCS MVP
Matt Garia is scheduled to pitch for •
Tampa Bay• against 45-year-old
Jamie Moyer, making hi s World
Series debut.
, Shields pitched shutout ball into
·the sixth. working out 6f (rouble just
as Phillies ace Cole Hamels did for a
3-2 win in the opener Wednesday
.
night.
"I didn't feel too much pressure,"
Shields said. "The guys in the clubhouse were real relaxed before the
game."
·
The 23-year-old Price, _called up in

Ohio State's
Beanie sore,
but ready for
Penn State ·
COLUMBUS (AP)
Chris "Beanie" Wells is sore
all over. His foot still hurts
from an injury that sidelined
him three games, and aches
and . pains
· still linger
from last
week's
seasonhigh
31
carries.
A n d
==== especiall,Y
when he s
black and blue, Wells relishes the thrill of a Ng game.
That comes Saturday
when No. 10 Ohio State
hosts No. 3 Penn State in a
game that could' decide the
Big Ten championship.
"All my life I've loved
big games," he said. "It's
something that I guess you
. Bryan Walteralphoto could say that I'm made for.
Membens of the Eastern volleyball team react just after winning its Division 1i district semifinal match against Pike I like to think that I'm made
Western on Thunsday night at Wellston High School. The Lady Eagles will be playing in their seventh consecutive district to play on the big stage."
championship this Saturday when they battle Pike Eastern.
..
Last weekend. Wells
rushed for 14{) yards and
two touchdowns in a 45· 7
rout. of No. 20 Michigan
State. It was the first time he
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
that same span. With a win,
In Game I alone, there same, featuring seven ties carried more than 22 times
BWALTERSIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM the Green and White would were 15 ties and 16 lead throughout the contest. in a game all season.
"Beanie was sorer after 31
capture the program's sixth changes - nine of which Eastern, however, trailed carries than he was after 20,
WELLSTON . - For the regional berth over seven . were in favor of the third- only once (7-6) in Game 2 which' is understandable,"
seventh time in as many years.
seeded Lady Indians ( J8c6). before capturing the.lead for coach Jim Tressel · said.
posts~asons, Eastern volleySecpnd-seeded .Eastern Both teams also had a pair of good at 8-7. The Lady "You get hit 11. times by a
ball ts headed back to the will take on fourth-seeded game-clinchillg points in the Eagles' lead grew to as truck, 1t hurts more."
Division IV district champi· .Pike Eastern this Saturday in opener, but Eastern made the many as seven points. ( 18Wells, one of II kids who
onsh!p match followmg a the district championship at most of ils second opportu- II) before closing the game grew up in a scarlet and
stra1ght game 28-26, 25-21, Wellston in the second of nity at 27-26.
out with a four-point tri- gray house in Akron, Ohio,
25-13 victory over Pike two district finals oeing
Game I was tied at I. 3. 4, umph and a 2-0 advantage.
1s used to taking and inflictGame3wasnocontest,as ing hits. And that worries
Western on Thursday m a played. Pike Eastern defeat· 5, 12,14, 15 ,17, 19,20,22,
D4 distri~t semifinal at .ed top-seeded Portsmouth 23, 24, 25 and 26. Eastern · Eastern never trailed and his Penn State counterpart.
Wellston H1gh SchooL
Clay m the first semifinal led 12-7 at one point and had stormed out to leads of 4-0
" He's a 9reat back ," said
The Lady Eagles (19-5) Thursday night by a score of another ram~ point at 25-24. and 9-2. The lead then Penn State s Evan Royster.
are now 7-0 in district semis 24-26,25-15, 25-IS, 25-23. ,Westerns b1ggest lead was stretched oul to If points at "He's got speed and power.
dating back to 2002 and will
Although EHS won in two points and had game · 16-5 , and Western never Hc;'s the whole package. It's
be IO?k1~g to unprove on a straight games, the match poinl,s at 24-23 and 26-25.
'
.
Please see Eastern, Bl ·
Please see OSU, Bl
5-1 d1stnct final record over itself was anything but easy.
Game 2 was much of the

=

Lady·Eagles advance to district finals

'

· ~rep Football Roundup

Devils, Raiders at home;
SG, Wahama hit the road
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSCIMYllAILYSENTINELCOM

Chad, 82

CoNTAcrUs
:

1·74Q-446-2342 elrt. 33

~u

- 1-7~-3008

,.,...II - sportsa myOallysentinet.com
~.&amp;1111

illryen Walters, Sports Writer
Q'IO) -4-4&amp;-2:)42, ext 33
-roOmydallytribune.com

•

~rty Crum, ~rta Wrher
~40)

&lt;1&lt;18-2:)42, 8XI. 33

...

li:rumO mydallyt1gi11M.com

:

•

·

.

AP photo

Please see Rays, 84

•

.' PleaH -

Tampa Bay
Rays' Cliff
Floyd con·
nects for a
broken-bat
single dur·
ing the
fourth inning
against the
Philadelphia
· Phillies during Game 2
of the baseball World
Series in St.
Petersburg, ·
Fla .. on
Thursday.

·

Bryan WaHenlphoto

Gallia Academy head coach Matt Bokovitz talks to his playerS following last week's 12·0
home loss to Zanesville Friday at Memorial Field In Gallipolis. Gallia Academy and River
Valley will W'rap up the regular season at home Friday while South Gallia hits the road for
its finale.

J

GALLIPOLIS It's
Senior Night at Memorial
Field this Friday and Gallia
Academy will be rrying to
get back on the winning
track against a Marietta (3·
6) team that is coming off
their first win on the road in
the 2008 season.
The last time these two
schools faced off on the
Gridiron was in 2005 when
the Blue Devils defeateo
Marietta 42-21 .
GAHS (5-4, 2-3 SEOAL)
comes into the game with a
winning season within their
grasp and a very slim chance
at a DivisiQII IV Region 15
playoff birth.
T.he Blue Devils and
Tigers both enter the game
tied for fifth pla,c e in the
SEOAL.

Gallia Academy will need
a win on Friday night, some
help and maybe even a little
luck to keep their playoff
hopes alive.
GAHS is c.,ming off of a
tough Homecoming Joss
where a slingy Zanesville
defense held the l3tue Devils
scoreless for on! y the. second
time this season .
Ethan Moore was 12 for
23 with 90 yards passing
with six of his passes going
to Beau Whaley (or 61 yards
against the ZHS defense'.
Gallia Academy will look
to recapture the effort they
showed two weeks ago
when
they
defeated
Wellston by using a balanced offensive attack.
Coach Bokovitz and the
Blue Devils are hoping a· •·
victory against Marietta will

Pluse -

Footb.IIL 83

�Friday. October 24. 2008

ww w.mydai Iysenti ne !.com

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

WVU whips Auburn, Page B2

Big Ten .Notebook, Page B3

'

~ig East Notehook, Page B4
School

Big Ten
w L

OVerall

0
4 0
3 1

8 0

w

4

Penn State
Ohio State
M&lt;:hig;m State
_ Minnesota

2

Northwestern

2
2
2
1
0
0
0

Iowa
Illinois
Michig;,n

Purdue
Wisconsin
Indiana

7

6
6

1
1

6
5

2
2

L

1
1
3

4 3
2 _5

2
3

2

5

-4

3

4

4

2

5

SATURDAY 'S GAMES
Pe1!n State at OSU, 8 p.m.

Illinois at Wisconsin, noon
Minnesota at Purdue, noon
Northwestern at Indiana, noon
Michigan St. at Midligan, 4:30p.m.

BIG TEN SlATS
'

-

_RUSHING OFFENSE
.Penn State ......................234.6
Jllinois ..............................204.9
1owa ................................ 195.4
Wisconsin ............... :....... 194.1
Indiana .......................... 183.0
PASSING OFFENSE
Illinois ..............................279. 7
- Purdue ......................... ;258.1
Penn State ...................... 247.5
.Minnesota ...................... 232.0
Northwestern :................. 230.1
•
TOTAL OFFENSE
lllinois .............................. 484.6
Penn State ....................... 482.1
Northwestern ..................~9.3
lnd1ana ... :...... ........ .. .........386.6
Wisconsin ......... :.............. 386.0
TOTAL DEFENSE
'Penn State ...................... 263.2
Ohio State ...................... 265.4
lowa ................................ 297.8
Wlsconsln .........:.............. 328.7
Northwestern ..................33 7.4

BIG TEN lEADERS
RUSHING YARDS
Javon Ringer, Mich. State .. 1179
Shonn Greene, Iowa .......... 1154
Evan Royster, Penn State .... 893
f&lt;Dry Sheets, Purdue .......... 733
:Tyrell Sutton, Nqrthwestern 699
PASSING YARDS
Juice Williams, lllino1s ........ 1948
.Curtis Painter, Purdue ........1726
-Adam Weber, Minnesota .... 1612
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern .. 1555
:Daryll Clark, Penn State ...... 1531
RECEIVING YARDS
·Eric Decker, Minnesota ........ 782
Arrelious Benn, lllinois .......... 693
Desmond Tardy, Purdue ...... 535
Greg Orton, Purdue .............. 503
Mark Dell, Mich. State ........ 496 -

OSU LEADERS
A\SSING YARDs
'
Terrelie Pryor ......................653
RUSHING YARDS
Chris Wells ........................619
RECEIVING YARDS
Brian Robiskie .................... 242
TOUCHDOWNS

Brian Robiskie ........................ 5
Terre lie Pryor .......................... 5
TACKLES
James Laurina~is .................. 78
SACKS
Marcus Freeman .................. 3.5
FIELD GOALS
,
Ryan Pretorius .................. 13/17
PUNTING
.A.J. Trapasso ...................... 42.9
TACKLES FOR LOSSES
Marcus Freeman .................. 5.5
INTERCEPllONS
Malcolm Jerkins ......................3
Kurt Coleman .......................... 3

2008 OSU SCHEDULE

•

Aug, 30
sept. 6
sept. 13

Youngstown State w. 43-0
OhK&gt;
W, :26-14
usc
L. 35-3

sept. 20
sept. 21

Troy

W, 28-10

Minnesota

W. 34-21

Oct4
Wisconsin·
W, 20·17
Oct 1i ,, Purdue
w, 16-3
Oct.18
MSU
W.45-7
Oe1. 25
Penn Slats
8 p.m.
N&lt;N. 8
.@ Nortl1westem
lBA
N(N_ 15
@ llllros
TBA
"""- 22

Michigan

TBA

OJntent comp"&lt;&lt; by Jim N....,u ard .
desi!PJ1 by Ross B&lt;sroff • The uma Nev.o

uma

Friday, October 24, 2008

1
2

eop.,.~ ~ 2008 The
Nev.s. ReprodUCtiOn ot all or any~ of this material
IS PIQhitllted YmOOut """""" consent

• ..,. Uma N.,... photos

-,

An inside look at this week's game

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY- A schedule of upcoming high
school vars ity sport1ng evenls involving
teama from Meigs and Gallla counties .

Er.ldu October 24

Paterno's numbers add up to greatness
Fifty-four pen:ent of the pOpulation of the United States is
younger than 40 years old, according to Census Bureau statistics.
That means wrapping your
mind around the concept of
doing anything for 40 years is
outside the Jif'e experiences of
more than half the co uritry.
Even if you have been
around more than 40 years, the
idea of doing one job for more
than· four decades, as Penn
State football coach Joe Pa·
terno has done, is a little difficult to grasp.
Paterno is in his 43rd year as

..

Jim
Naveau
The Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com
. 419 -993-2087

Penn State's head coach, as he
leads his team into Ohio Stadium for a showdown of Top
Ten teams on Saturday night.
He has been at Penn State for
59 seasons if you include his
16 years as an assistant coach.
·So, here are a few numbers to
illustrate just how long Pa·
terno has been win'ning games

as the Nittany Lions' head
coach:
1 - Paterno was born one
year after Jim Tressel's parents, Lee and Eloise.
16-GrandchildrenPaterno
and his wife Sue have, nine
more than the only other Big
Ten coach with grandchildren,
Indiana's Bill Lynch.
24 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Neil Arm·
strongwalkedonthe moon.
35 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Wisconsin
football coach Bret Bielema
was born.
42 -' Wins by Paterno at

Penn State before Jim Tressel
graduated from high school. .
42 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the first
Starbucks opened.
75- Wins by Paterno at
Plii:m State before' the release
of Bruce Springsteen's first
album.
84 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before Northwest·
em football coach Pat Fitzger·aid was born.
·
85 - Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the premiere
of Saturday Night Live on
NBC.
.
85 - Wins by Paterno at

Football ·
Marlena at Gaflla Academy, 7:30 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 7:30p.m .
A~ HUt at River VaUey, 7:30p.m .
South Gallla at Symmes Vall@y, 7:30

Penn State before the first of
Sylvester Stallone's six
"Rocky" movies was in theaters.
123 - Wins by Paterno at
Pennbta'tewhileWoodyHayell
wasOhioState'scoach.
151 -Wins by Paterno at
Penn State before the. first
HondaAccordrolledotftheas·
sembly line at Honda's plant in
Marysville.
325-Combinedwinsascollege football coaches by Pete
Carroll, Nick Saban and Lloyd
Carr, which is still 55 wins
shortofPaterno's NCAADivi·
sian !-record 380 at Penn State.

p.m.

Wahama at Athens, 7:30p.m.
SltUrdQ Octpbftr 25
Foolball
Southern p,t Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Croas Country

Dhilslons 11-111 Regional meets at
"ckerlngton. 10 a.m.
•

SPORTS

Alookatsomeofthekeymatchupsinthe passesfor287yards and twoTDs.
started only one game. End Josh Gaines Ross Homan had nine tackles and Marcus
Freeman had five tackles. Freeman leads
game between No. 10 Ohio State (7 -1, 4- Penn State's top three receivers, Dean has 3.5 sacks.
0 Big Ten) and No. 3 Penn State (8-0, 4-0 Butler (30 c~tches, 486 yards, 3 TDs), Jar- Ohio State's defensive line, widely regarded OSU IMth 3.5 sacks and Laurina~is has 2.5.
Advantage: Ohio State
Big Ten) on Saturday night at Ohio Stadium: dan NoiWOOd (25 catches, 405 yards, 5 as the weakest link of the defense so far, did
Quarterbacks
TDs) and Derrick Willial)'lS (25 c&amp;ches, 282 get more pres.Sure on the opposition for the Defensive backs
yards, 1 TO) have all been 1n the pra@'amat secoodv.eekina rowatMich~State. ThadOhio State leads the nation
Ohio State's Terrelle Pryor has gotten as least four years.
.
cleusGibsonhasthreesacks,theonlyOSUde· ~ 21 takeaways. Comer·
much attention as any quarterback in ·the . Advantage: Penq State
fensive lineman IMth more than one.
. back Malcolm Jenkins
.country, but Penn State's Daryll Cla111, from Offensive line
Advantage: Penn ·state
and safety i&lt;urt Coleman
\bung;town Ursuline High School, has probU back
ably played about as well as any QB in college Ki111 Herbstreit said on his Columqus radio
ne
ers
each ha-.e three interoeptions. Ohio State's
football this season. Cla111. a·first-year starter. show earlier this week that Penn State might
Penn State's Navarro-Bowman, a
in his fourth season, has completed 63 per- have the beSt offensive line in college foot· 6-foot, l-inch, 218-pound sophodefense has scored
cent of h1s passes for 1,531 yards and 11 ball. Nobody IS saying that about Ohio State's more, has three sacks and 9.5 ·
three touchcowns in
touchcowns and aro has run for eir)11 scores. offensive line.
tackles for losses,1but all of the
the last two games.
Pryor, of Jeannette, Pa., hash~ 65 percent
But the Buckeyes' linemen had probably sacks and five oftne tackles
Penn State has 15
takeaways, including
of his passes for 653 yards and six touch- their best pelfomnance of the season against for losses came in one
11 interceptions.
downs and has run for 411 yards-and five Michigan State. After struggling to score game against Temple.
_Safety An1l"ony Scirrotto
touchdowns. He might have played hiS best touchdowns ins1de an 'opponent's 20-yard Freshman Michael
overall game in a 45-7 win over Michigan line much of the season, they scored four Mauti could be in line
is a three-year starter. He
State last Saturday when he threw for 116 touchdowns on five trips inside Michigan for more playing time
has one interception this
yards and fJ.JShed for .72 yards. .
State's 20. In their previous 20 trips inside after having seven
season, whid1 !iJves him 11
. ~: PennStl!_te.
_,lheoppositjon's20-yard line, they had got- tackles against
for his career. No other Nittany
Uons defensive back has ·
Running backs
ten eight touchdowns.
Michigan. Penn .
·Both the Buckeyes and NittanyUonshave State has aimore than one interPenn State's Evan Royster, a 212-pound four linemen who have started at least the . lowed only
ception.
so;ihomore, was a high school All-American last tWo seasons. Penn State has been one opposAdvam.ce:
in lacrosse. He's not bad in footba lf e~er, quicker and more agjlethah most offensive ing runner,
Ohio State
rushing for 893 yards and 10 touchdowns lines in the Big Ten . Penn State has allowed Michigan's .
$pedal
sofarthisseason.Hehadacareer-best174 . six quarterback sacks, compared to Ohio Brandon
teaml
yards in a 46-17 win over Michigan last State's 21.
Minor, to gai'n
Saturday. Stephfon Green (411 yardS) bting;
Advantage: Penn State •
more than 100
Derrick
quickness to the backfield.
Defen
ard5
Williams has re'
osu tailback Chris Wells says his inJ·ured
slve line
YOSU's
improved
turned two kickoffs and
right foot still hurts, but that didn't stop him
Penn State defensive end Aaron Mayl]n defensive line play
a punt for touchdowns for Penn
from carryng 31 times for 140 yards at has 10 quarterback sacks, which is seven ·helped free the
State. The Nittany Uons' kicker,
Michigan State. His backup Dan Herron has more than any Ohio State lineman and only llnebaGkers to
Kevin Kelly, has hit 12 of 14
missed thlllast two games because of a three fewer than the Buckeyes have as a make plays at
field goals and is the all- ·
concussion and Maurice Wells ancf Brandon team. He ranks second in the country. Be- Michigan State.
time Big Ten kick soaring
Sainecombinedforonlyfour',-ardson nine fore the· season started, the N~ny Lions James Laurileader with 316
carries last Saturday. Herron IS expected were pushing another end,
naitis had 11
points. OSU's Ryan
back this week.
Maurice Evans, for
tackles and
Pretorius is 13 of
Advantage: Penn State
All-American han·
1 . 5 sac.s.
,,
17 on field
Recelven
ors after he had
goals, though
12 sacks last
Aaron
Pettrey ·
Ohio State's receivers have had to make year.. But
has been given
the most of scarce opportunities w~h Pl)lor
averagjng 15 passes a game since he be- E v a n 5
opportunities
came the starting quarterback five game!;
in two recent
Ohio State
ago. Brian Hartline did that when he gained
gemes to kick
56 yards on a catch and run against 'Michilong
field
quarterback
gan State and so did Brian Robiskie, who
goals.
Terrene
Pryor
cau(lht a short touchdown pass from Pl')llr,
Advanwee:
Rob1skie has 26 catches for 242 yards and
Penn Stidlil
five touchdowns. Hartline has caught 15

Say what?

NAME: i&lt;urt Schumacher
HOMETOWN: Cleveland
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1971·74
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS: Atwo-time
AII-BigTen selection at offensive tackle
and a first -team All-American in 1974.
Ohio State was 29-4-1 his last three
·seasons.
"
AFTER OHIO STATE: First-round draft choice of
the New Orleans Saints in 1975. He played three
years with the Saints and two with Tampa Bay before a knee injwy forced him to retire from pro
football. Worked in sales after retirement. Lives in
Harleysville, Pa.

.. You put as much tape on it as you
can and go out there and play."

•

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: What year did Penn
State enter the B1g Ten?

2: Who is Penn State's

only Heisman Trophy
winner?

3: Who played in the f!o5e
Bowl first, Ohio State or Penn

State?

Am&lt;"'"" 1. 1993: 2. John Gappellet!J in 1973; 3. Ohio State played in the 1921 Rcse Bowl,
Penn State went tv.o yeers later.

GALLIPOLIS· - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling stats for the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and · also the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 learn.
All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
~end individual nominations
from their respective teams
- along with regular season slats ~ to Bryan
Walters of the sports depart·
ment in Gallipolis.
. St$ may be · faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bw alters@ mydaifytribune .c
om
· Don't forget to . include
offensive and defensive
stats-, as well as 'special
ieams for any individual·
ilomin11ted.
" ..
: All nominations must be
received
by
Monday,
November I , to be eligible
for representation at tlie AP
district meeting.
Any questions, call the
sports line at 446-2342 ext.
33 .

·Ocho Cinco will
stick with old
jersey for season

-.

- Marcus Freeman , about playing with a sprained ankle
last week against Michigan State

BRIEFS

Football stats
needed for AP
district, OVP
nominations

- SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: PENN STATE (8-0, 4-0)

Where are they now?

VOlleyball - 04 dlatrlct flnala

South Webst8f versus LUcasville Valley
at Wellston HS, 4 p.m.
Eastern versus ~Ike Eastern at Wellston
HS, 30 minutes after Match 1
Volleyball - ACSitoumoment
OVCS ai .Cedarvltle, TBA

days until .kickoff -

CINCINNATI (AP) Chad Ocho Cinco will keep
his dual identity for the rest
of the season.
The Cincinnati Bengals
receiver formerly known as
C h a d
Johnson
s a i d
Thursday
he'll wear
his
old
name on
the back of
his uniform
for the rest
of the seaOcho Cinco son.
It
.
.
would have
eost him a lot of money to
make the switch for this
year.
.
"We've just left it alone,"
he said, in an interview. "I'll
just wait and do it next
year."
• The Pro Bowl receiver
fegally changed his name 10
Ocho Cinco last August,
Shortly before the start of
the season. Reebok, which
produces NFL jerseys for
sale to fans,. had a large
Inventory of jerseys with his
Qld niune ready for sale.
• The league respected the
ieceiver's name change, but
. Said he couldn't wear "Ocho
. Cinco" on the back of his
jersey until he compensated

Rays even series at 1_apie~e
Bv MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
Squeeze plays, a wacky checked
swing and a fresh face out of the
bullpen. These plucky Tampa Bay
Rays pulled out all their tricks at
Tropicana Field to tie the World
Series.
James Shields stymied the slumping Philadelphia Phillies, rookie
David Price got the final seven outs
· and Tampa Bay rebounded fr_om a
rare home Ioss With a 4:2 v1ctory
Thursday mght that made 11 1-all.
·:we came ~n here_ k~.owing it's
g_omg lobe a light se~1es:, Rays outf1elder B.J. Upton sa1d. Both clubs
are a lot alike." ·
. The , Rays scored on Jason
Bartlelt s safety squeeze and bUih
another rally when Rocco. Baldelli
walked on a checked swmg that
seemed to confuse players and
umpires_alike.
Tampa Bay never really got a huge
hit, but neither did the Phillies as

Jimmy Rollins &amp; crew fell to !-for28 with runners in scoring position.
"That might be one of our sloppiest .
games all year," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said. 'Tm concerned about us hitting with guys on
base, because it looks like at times
we might be trying a little too hard.
But we can fix that."
The series shifts to Philadelphia for
Game 3 on Saturday night , though
rain is in the forecast. ALCS MVP
Matt Garia is scheduled to pitch for •
Tampa Bay• against 45-year-old
Jamie Moyer, making hi s World
Series debut.
, Shields pitched shutout ball into
·the sixth. working out 6f (rouble just
as Phillies ace Cole Hamels did for a
3-2 win in the opener Wednesday
.
night.
"I didn't feel too much pressure,"
Shields said. "The guys in the clubhouse were real relaxed before the
game."
·
The 23-year-old Price, _called up in

Ohio State's
Beanie sore,
but ready for
Penn State ·
COLUMBUS (AP)
Chris "Beanie" Wells is sore
all over. His foot still hurts
from an injury that sidelined
him three games, and aches
and . pains
· still linger
from last
week's
seasonhigh
31
carries.
A n d
==== especiall,Y
when he s
black and blue, Wells relishes the thrill of a Ng game.
That comes Saturday
when No. 10 Ohio State
hosts No. 3 Penn State in a
game that could' decide the
Big Ten championship.
"All my life I've loved
big games," he said. "It's
something that I guess you
. Bryan Walteralphoto could say that I'm made for.
Membens of the Eastern volleyball team react just after winning its Division 1i district semifinal match against Pike I like to think that I'm made
Western on Thunsday night at Wellston High School. The Lady Eagles will be playing in their seventh consecutive district to play on the big stage."
championship this Saturday when they battle Pike Eastern.
..
Last weekend. Wells
rushed for 14{) yards and
two touchdowns in a 45· 7
rout. of No. 20 Michigan
State. It was the first time he
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
that same span. With a win,
In Game I alone, there same, featuring seven ties carried more than 22 times
BWALTERSIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM the Green and White would were 15 ties and 16 lead throughout the contest. in a game all season.
"Beanie was sorer after 31
capture the program's sixth changes - nine of which Eastern, however, trailed carries than he was after 20,
WELLSTON . - For the regional berth over seven . were in favor of the third- only once (7-6) in Game 2 which' is understandable,"
seventh time in as many years.
seeded Lady Indians ( J8c6). before capturing the.lead for coach Jim Tressel · said.
posts~asons, Eastern volleySecpnd-seeded .Eastern Both teams also had a pair of good at 8-7. The Lady "You get hit 11. times by a
ball ts headed back to the will take on fourth-seeded game-clinchillg points in the Eagles' lead grew to as truck, 1t hurts more."
Division IV district champi· .Pike Eastern this Saturday in opener, but Eastern made the many as seven points. ( 18Wells, one of II kids who
onsh!p match followmg a the district championship at most of ils second opportu- II) before closing the game grew up in a scarlet and
stra1ght game 28-26, 25-21, Wellston in the second of nity at 27-26.
out with a four-point tri- gray house in Akron, Ohio,
25-13 victory over Pike two district finals oeing
Game I was tied at I. 3. 4, umph and a 2-0 advantage.
1s used to taking and inflictGame3wasnocontest,as ing hits. And that worries
Western on Thursday m a played. Pike Eastern defeat· 5, 12,14, 15 ,17, 19,20,22,
D4 distri~t semifinal at .ed top-seeded Portsmouth 23, 24, 25 and 26. Eastern · Eastern never trailed and his Penn State counterpart.
Wellston H1gh SchooL
Clay m the first semifinal led 12-7 at one point and had stormed out to leads of 4-0
" He's a 9reat back ," said
The Lady Eagles (19-5) Thursday night by a score of another ram~ point at 25-24. and 9-2. The lead then Penn State s Evan Royster.
are now 7-0 in district semis 24-26,25-15, 25-IS, 25-23. ,Westerns b1ggest lead was stretched oul to If points at "He's got speed and power.
dating back to 2002 and will
Although EHS won in two points and had game · 16-5 , and Western never Hc;'s the whole package. It's
be IO?k1~g to unprove on a straight games, the match poinl,s at 24-23 and 26-25.
'
.
Please see Eastern, Bl ·
Please see OSU, Bl
5-1 d1stnct final record over itself was anything but easy.
Game 2 was much of the

=

Lady·Eagles advance to district finals

'

· ~rep Football Roundup

Devils, Raiders at home;
SG, Wahama hit the road
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSCIMYllAILYSENTINELCOM

Chad, 82

CoNTAcrUs
:

1·74Q-446-2342 elrt. 33

~u

- 1-7~-3008

,.,...II - sportsa myOallysentinet.com
~.&amp;1111

illryen Walters, Sports Writer
Q'IO) -4-4&amp;-2:)42, ext 33
-roOmydallytribune.com

•

~rty Crum, ~rta Wrher
~40)

&lt;1&lt;18-2:)42, 8XI. 33

...

li:rumO mydallyt1gi11M.com

:

•

·

.

AP photo

Please see Rays, 84

•

.' PleaH -

Tampa Bay
Rays' Cliff
Floyd con·
nects for a
broken-bat
single dur·
ing the
fourth inning
against the
Philadelphia
· Phillies during Game 2
of the baseball World
Series in St.
Petersburg, ·
Fla .. on
Thursday.

·

Bryan WaHenlphoto

Gallia Academy head coach Matt Bokovitz talks to his playerS following last week's 12·0
home loss to Zanesville Friday at Memorial Field In Gallipolis. Gallia Academy and River
Valley will W'rap up the regular season at home Friday while South Gallia hits the road for
its finale.

J

GALLIPOLIS It's
Senior Night at Memorial
Field this Friday and Gallia
Academy will be rrying to
get back on the winning
track against a Marietta (3·
6) team that is coming off
their first win on the road in
the 2008 season.
The last time these two
schools faced off on the
Gridiron was in 2005 when
the Blue Devils defeateo
Marietta 42-21 .
GAHS (5-4, 2-3 SEOAL)
comes into the game with a
winning season within their
grasp and a very slim chance
at a DivisiQII IV Region 15
playoff birth.
T.he Blue Devils and
Tigers both enter the game
tied for fifth pla,c e in the
SEOAL.

Gallia Academy will need
a win on Friday night, some
help and maybe even a little
luck to keep their playoff
hopes alive.
GAHS is c.,ming off of a
tough Homecoming Joss
where a slingy Zanesville
defense held the l3tue Devils
scoreless for on! y the. second
time this season .
Ethan Moore was 12 for
23 with 90 yards passing
with six of his passes going
to Beau Whaley (or 61 yards
against the ZHS defense'.
Gallia Academy will look
to recapture the effort they
showed two weeks ago
when
they
defeated
Wellston by using a balanced offensive attack.
Coach Bokovitz and the
Blue Devils are hoping a· •·
victory against Marietta will

Pluse -

Footb.IIL 83

�•

Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Octobel' 24, 2008 '

White, Devine lead WVa pastAuburn
MORGANTOWN , W.Va. turned some recetvers
(AP) - West Virginia's Pat open."
White and Noel Devine
Dorrell Jalloh caught two
needed a little time to hit of White 's scoring tosses.
full stride against fading His 2-yard catch put West
Auburn .
Virginia ahead to stay late
· White threw three touch- in the third . On his second,
dowll passes, Devine ran for Jalloh shed the grasp of
a career-high 207 yards and defender Zac Ethendge,
West Virginia scored 31 turned around without
straight points to beat the breaking stride, sideste,pped
Tigers 34-17 on Thursday Walter McFadden · and
night.
scored from 32 yards out
· White, an Alabama native early in the fourth to make
playing his first full game in it 27-17. ·
~ month following head and
Devine completed the
hand injuries, overcame two scoring with a 30-yard TD
early interceptions to bring run late in the game. He surWest Virginia (5-2) back passed a 188-yard effort in
from a 17-3 deficit. The an Oct. II win over
Mountaineers had their Syracuse and has four 100highest point total since . a yard efforts this season.
season-opening 48-21 wtn
" I saw confidence oozing
over Villanova.
out of everyone tonight,"
' ''1 tried to give it away West Virginia coach Bill
~arly, but my teammates Stewan sa id "Our defense
offensively.defensively and played aggressive. We
on special teams - all hung played a little smarter in the
in there for me," . White second half."
·
said . "We fe lt we could put
Auburn entered the game
points on the board and we as the ninth-best scoring .
did ."
defense but allowed a sea·
. Auburn's Kodi Burns son high for points .
threw touchdown pass a'nd
" It's very difficult to
ran for another score before . watch them score like that ,"
halftime but couldn't' keep said Auburn linebacker Josh
the early m~mentum going. Bynes. "We've g~t to get
. The Tigers (4-4) managed . beUer defenstvely.
.
just 33 second-half yards,
Auburn m~de a r~re ~r1p
were shut out over the final far to the north for lis flfSt
40 minutes ,and now have a nonconfeni nce roa~ game
three-game losing streak. since 2003 . The crisp fall
That hadn 't happened since night hardly threw off the
1999,
coach
Tommy warm-weather Tigl!rs. In
Tuberville's first season.
fact, it was . West Virginia
Auburn lost for only the that looked out of place
ninth time under Tuberville early.
when leading at halftime.
White entered the game
"We just didri ' t have an completing 73 percent of
answer the second half," his passes and had thrown
Tuberville said. "Pat White just one interception all sea'
and Noel Devine had great son, but was picked off on
speed. We couldn ' t stop the We_st Virginia 's first two
run with the four· man front. senes.
.
We couldn't tackle. Then
"It made me mad," White
we started blitzing and said. "I don ' t know if it

Eastern
from Page 81
came closer than nine points
the rest of the way. EHS led
by II points at five different
· times m Game 3 before fin·
(shing with its biggest win
of the night at a dozen
~ints.

Eastern showed signs of
dominance as the night progressed , but early on neither
team showed an ability to
pull away.
·
· First-year EHS coach Juli
Simpson was pleased with
the end result, but she too
was concerned about the
way that her Eagles started
district play. .
'
.·
. "All season long , it seems
like it has taken us a game
or two to get warmed up
and get going like that. In
Game 3 we looked like ourselves, but we just didn't
seem to have the focus in
ihe first two games."
Simpson com.mented . "We
had some silly mistakes.
.and ·some of it could have
been nerves, but we defi ·
nitely have sorne things to
work on before Saturday."
Eastern was 73-of-75 at
the service line on the night
for 97 percent. The Lady
Eagles also posted collective totals of 65 digs. 50
kills , 48 assists and one
block.
Tresa
Swatzel
and
Beverly Maxson both led

Chad ·
· from Page Bl

Reebok for the 'old jerseys
that would now be a tough
sell.
Teammate Keith Ri vers Jc~u~~~~ii~e~·~f~~:;~~
had to pay about $10,000 to his uniform nu'mber _ it
change his number before means "eight five" in
the start of the season. The Spanish. When the NFL
Hispanic
rookie linebacker wore No. celebrated
SS at Southern California, Heritage month in 2006, he
but got No. 58 when he · wore it on the back of his
joined .the Bcngals . No. SS uniform
for
pregame
became available when warmups, but had to
linebacker Ahmad Brooks remove it before the kickoff
wu released after the last because of NFL rules; it
preseason game.
w'a&lt;n 't his real name .
It would 'bave cost Ocho
He legally changed his
Cinco far more, given the name in his home state of
J)opularity of his jersey. His Florida last August. The
No. BS and ,quanerback Bengals changed his name
Carson Palmer's No. 9 are above his locker and on
lhe ones most often seen official statistics and notes
tiround Cincinnati. The before the season opener at
receiver declined to say Baltimore. The league was
exactly how m11ch the going to comply, but said
switch would have cost , the receiver had to first take
him.
care of the inventory of jer·
. Ocho Cinco said he can seys.
··

- - -- -- - - · - - -

Brady has more surgery to fight infection .
BOSTON· (AP) - New England quarterback Tom ~rady
has undergone two more procedures to clean out mfectron on
his surgically repaired knee. the Boston Herald reported
Thursday.
.
.
The newspaper said Brady is on a s1x-week course of mtra~
venous antibiotics and will continue to have follow·UP.
exams at the clinic in Los Angeles where he had the surgery.
· Brady confirmed for the first time Saturday that he'd
undergone two operations. on his ' inju~~d left kn~. The
Herald, citing an unnamed source fam1har w1th h1s· treat;
ment, said he's had two more sir ~e then because of mfecuon;
If the infection is not brought under control, the Herald
reports. the patellar tendon graft used to replace ~rady's
anterior cruciate ligament could become compromised. If
that happens,_Brady could need to redo the surgery - likely
delaying his rehabilitation.
..
New England Patriots spokesman Stacey James sa1~
Wednesday the team would let Brady comment on the status
of his injury.
.
.
.
Brady was injured in the first quarter of the season oi'Cner
on a hit by Kansas City Chiefs safety. He ha~ bee~ w1dely
reported to have sustained a to~ anterior cruc1ate h~~ment~
but he and the team have not g1ven spec1fics on the mJury. :

Prosecutor says ex-Ohio lawmaker facing 2 charges
AP photo

West Virginia's Pat White drops back to pass against
Auburn during the first quarter of an NCAA college football
game Thursday .in Morgantown.
flustered me . You 've got to 17-3 lead early in the sec·
take the good with the bad ." ond.
.
Auburn followed Jpsh
Whi'te hit a wide-open
Bynes ' interception with a Alric Arnett with a 44-yard
20-play drive that ate . up TD strike, West Virginia's
nearly 10 minutes. But the longest pass play of the seaTigers. couldn't find the end son, midway through the
zone on three tries from second to bring West
inside the 3 and settled for Virginia to 17-10.
Wes Byrum's short field
White was held to a ·sea•
goal. .
son-low 8 rushing yards but
After McFadden returned more than made up for it
an interception 18 yards to with his arin. He finished
the West Virginia 27, Bums 13-of-21 for 174 yards and
tossed a third-down screen now ' has 12 TO passes this
pass to Brad .Lester, wl)o . season, just two shy of his
followed three blockers 16 total for all of last season.
yards into the end zorie.
Bums led Auburn with 82
· Mario Fannin's 69-yard rushing yards and went 13kickoff return set up Burns' of-21 for Ill yards with an
9-yard touchdown run for a interception.

the service attack with eight
points apiece~ followed by
Brittany Casto with six and ·
Morgan Burt with five. ,
Karissa Connolly was next
with four points , while
Katie Wilfong added three .
points and Whitney Putnam
chipped in two points.
Both Sami Cummins and
Britney Morrison had one
point apiece in the victory
as well.
Swatzel led the net attack
·with 15 kills , followed by
Burt with 12 and Casto with
nine . Wilfong and Maxson
both contributed five kills,
while Connolly and Jamie
Swatzel added two kills
each.
Connolly also had 'a
game- high.· 44 ·assists' and
Maxson led the defense
with 14 dig&gt;. Tresa Swatzel
added a dozen digs and both
Burt and Connolly had 10
digs apiece .
Experience goes a long
way in the tournament , and
Eastern ·s experience in the
district tournament should
pay dividends this weekend
Bryan Watto111fphoto
in the championship game.
Eastern
senior
.
Katie
Wilfong,
right,
drills
a spike past
Then again, this will be the
first district final for some Western defender Kelcie Hawk (11) during Thursday night's
of these players, so Division lv district semifinal vol.leybalf match at Wellston
Simpson feels a collective High School.
effort .will be needed to add level. We also have some Saturday will be between
another district champi- young girls that are new to top-seeded South Webster
onship banner to the wall at. the roster and new to this and ·
second-seeded
environment,"· Simpson Lucasville. Valley at 4 p.m.
I
EHS.
"There are some girls that said. "They are all going to The Eastern-Eastern match
have been in this position have a chance to prove they will begin 30 minutes after
the conclusion of the first
before. and they know what are ready for it."
it takes to perform at this
The first district final on match .
get his ne w name on the
back of jersey next season
without having to compensate Reebok. which will be
aware of the switch when it
comes time to make more
jerseys for sale to the pub·
lie.

Sports Shorts

COLUMBUS (AP) - A former state lawmaker who has
admitted he bought Ohio State University football ticket~ .
with campaign money and sold them for a personal prof1t IS
scheduled to be arraigned in Franklin County Mumc1pal
.
Court on related charges nex.t week.
· Franklin County Prosecutor Ron 0' Brien said Thursday
that former state Rep. John Widowfield is expected to plead
guilty on Tuesday to filing a false financial disclosure state:
ment and .converting campaign funds into personal use. .
O'Brien says both charges are misdemeanors and . that
each carries a possible six mo~eth sentence and $1,000 fme,
Widowfidd, a Republican from Cuyahoga (keye-uh~
HOH' -guh) Falls ilear Akron, resigned from the Legislat_urt)
in May. He apologized last week and says h~ has re1m•
bursed the campaign $13,676 to cover the prof1t.
.

.osu
fromPageBI
goin* , to be tough to stop
him.' ,
The 6-foot-1, 225-pound
junior is averaging . 124·
yards rushing a game just like a year ago when he
had 1,609 yards despite
playing with a twisted ankle
and a broken , bone in his
hand for most of the season.
,Ohio State's offense has
rebounded since Wells
returned fo r the stal'l of Big
Ten play.
"Even that little bit of
time when he was huit, I
could definitely see that he
was still into •it, that he was
still involved," wide receiver Brian Robiskie ~aid.
"Just these past couple ·of
weeks watching him get
back out there, you can really see he's getting comfortable . lt's exciting."

Wells is wearing a pair o{
"lineman's cleats" with a
special steel insert that is
supposed to help protect the
foot he injured in the seaagainst
son-opener
Youngstown State. They're
heavier than his pre-inJury
pair, which were similar to
track shoes.
No prol;llem. Any linger; .
ing aches and pains don't
worry Tressel.
"He seemed a little sore
on Sunday because he'd
carried it 31 times. That's~
bunch,"
Tressel
said
Thursday. "I'm sure that
(two-time Heisman Trophy
w.inner) Archie Griffin,
could 1el,I you that 1,Qq
Sundays and Mondays and
Tuesday, sometimes it's 'I
don't knpw if I'm going to
be ready.' Then WednesdaY,
comes around, and you get .
·that little burst of adrenal in
and your body has quietec:!
down from those hits .
(Beanie) looked to me like
he was ready to go."
·

· Friday, October 24,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Big Ten Notebook: Golden Gophers going to the Golden State?
BY RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

Let's say lhree teams tie
for the Big Ten title with 71 records. Team A's only
loss came to Team B.
which also has a nortconference loss . Team C beat
Team B and didn't play
Team A, but lost to another
- conference team.
· The result: Minnesota
going to the Rose Bowl to
play South!lm California.
Under the scenario listed
above. which is not that far
fetched. Minnesota's only
loss Sl&gt; far came at Ohio
State. If the Gophers win
out and the Buckeyes lose
to . Penn State, but the
Nittany Lions are then
upset by Iowa or Indiana,
Minnesota would be the
big winner.
- According to the Big Ten
tiebreaker, Ohio State
would drop out because it
had the worst overall
record with two losses.
Since Minnesota and Penn
State did not meet, and no
other tiebreaker applies,
the conference's Bowl
Championship .Series representative would be determined by which team had
last won the conference's
automatic BCS berth. Penn
State represented the conference in 2005.
. And that's how the
Golden Gophers can get to

·Football

go to the Golden State .
'60s
FLASHBACK:
Once · upon
a
time,
Michigan State was the
dominant college football
CONFERENCE
program in Michigan .
In 1965-66, the Spartans some of the best players in
were 19-1-1 overall - the state
recruits
including a famous tie with Michigan used to attract.
Notre .Dame - an.d 14-0 in
s·orne are saymg
· the
h
t e Big Ten, including wins Spartans have a window of
over Michigan by a com- opportunity to catch up
bined score of 44-14 .
.
Since then, Michigan with the storied program in
State hasn't beaten the the state. But that opportuWolverines twice in a row. nity won't mean much to
The Spanans have gone the Spartans unles.s they're
to the Rose Bowl (in 1987) able to capitalize with onand had eight wins in con- the-field victories. They
secutive seasons (1989-90) meet on ~aturday at The
only once since their glory Big House.
years. Nick Saban' is
"They've found a way to
regarded as one of the win·;" Dantonio said of the
game·s· great coaches , but . Wolverines . "So we'll have
he was barely over .500 in to.find a way to win."
his first four seasons before
.Said QB Brian Hoyer:
bolting for LSU after win- "They have had the upperning nine games in 1999.
hand recently . They ' ve
Times have changed.
been the guys that .have
Rich Rodriguez's debut been on top."
on the sideline at Michigan
Oddsrnakers expect that
(2-5, I-2) has been so to change. According to
rough that college foot ' World Features Syndicate,
ball's winningest program. the Spartan&gt; are favored to
is· headed for its first losing win at Michigan Stadium
for the first time since
season since 1967.
Mark Dantonio is 13-8 in 1968.
two seaso.ns at Michigan
The Woiverines were
State (6-2, 3-1 ), quickly installed as the biggest
turning around a program underdogs in school history
that was coming off three last week. with Penn State
straight losing years.
favored by more than three
Dantonio seems to be touchdowns. Michigan ~till
getting commitments from didn't cover the spread,
.

·~·,

CHARLOTTE KELLER

Dau.ghtsr of JlmnJc. &amp; Reva M uss~r .
OetoiH!r 2$, 2008

STARTS AT MIZWAY
J.'I&lt;:ATURING:
Charley Lilly
and
Tuff Enuff
Sfgn Up - 12:00
l.ast Bike Out - t :00
Last Bike In - 5:00
$10.00 Single
$15.00 Couple
Stops To Be Announce(! At Sign Up
FooJ. Door Prizes &amp; Rnfnes
Cornhole Tuurnament
$5.00 If Nol. On The Run

All Vehicles Welcome
*N&lt;OTRESPONSIBLE 1-'0R AC.'C/,DE'N1'S•I

collapsing after a strong to home.
"'Hey, you know what?
start and losing 46-17.
Still, Michigan Tsn't If I want to win a champiready to concede its grip on onship, if I want to do great
the state to its neighbors 50 things, I don't have to
the
state
of
miles to the nonhwest.
leave
"I don't buy it because Minnesota,"' Brewster said
they haven't beat us yet," some in-state , recruits .lll'e
"And
that's
Michigan linebacker John . saying.
Thompson said. "There's extremely. positive for all
nothing much they can say of us ."
about closing the gap yet,
Defensive end Willie
but I guess we'll find out VanDeSteeg is one of many
Saturday."
players enjoying the tumWolverines
safety around.
Brandon Harrison added,
"It's exciting, obviously.
"Just look at the records You get a little bit of
and the numbers, then respect," he said. "But we
were 1-11 l11st year, and we
come talk to me."
GOPHERS GETTING can't forg~t that ." .
GOOD: Minnesota didn't
GOOFING ON PAT:
play .last week, but the Northwestern coach Pat
body of work - and sever- Fitzgerald has a mantra:
al losses by teams at the His team starts each week
end . of the national nmk- •with a 0-0 record and is J·ust
ings - was enough to get trying to go 1-0.
the Gophers in the AP Top
After the Wildcats landed
25 for the first time since at No. 22 in the first BCS
Oct. 9, 2005 .
rankings, wide receiver
Coach Tim Brewster dis- EriC Peterman kidded his
carded the notion of his coach: "I don't know if you
team being overco.nfident. heard or not, but we're the
"I think anybody who's first 0-0 team to make the
spent any time at all with BCS standings. So we're
our players, with our proud of that."
coaching .staff, understands
BY
COMMITTEE:
that there's nobody that's Jason Ford's 112 yards
going to have a big head," rushing and three touchdowns against Indiana was
Brewster said.
Coaches canvassing the · by far the best game any
country on recruiting trips Illinois back has had this
have sensed an increase in season. But coach • Ron
good vibes toward the Zook says he doesn't plan
Gophers, especially close to make Ford, or anyone

Despite neither team
appearing to play for anything more than a win,
. Friday's matchup will .
fromPageBl
· have plenty at stake for
help extend their season at bo.t h squads. as the Redmen
and Raiders battle it out
least 'One more week.
: The Blue Devils ate aver- for fifth place in the final
aging 17.4 points per game Ohio Valley Conference
offensively
and
their. standings and more.
· defense have given up 25.1
On top of the conference
. points per game on the sea- race, both teams will also
son and are 4-1 at home .be .fighting for first time
this season.
wins·
GAHS has wins this seaR1&gt;ck Hill (0-9, 0-3
son against A\hens(31 ,22), OVC) will be seeking its
Point
Pleasapt(28-21}, first win. of the season
j a c k s 0 n ( 3 6 _ 2 8 ) , while Riv.er Valley (2-7, 0and 3 OVC) looks for its first
,,
Portsmouth(7-0)
Wellston(42-20)
while conference victory in. near- ··
· · ''•'•
their losses have come to ly three years dating back ~~1. : :·
Ironton(42-6), Logan(40- to a 35-6 win over South -.;n ;::&lt;:;;:~;:::::;;(,... .,.,..,
'1), Chillic.othe(41-0) and - Pojnt in 2004.
Athent ; . , ..... , :. , ..... , . , ,,_.&gt;N·•·"
zanesyille(l2-0).
Since that win the· l!4lljJ&lt;e • , .... ,.,,&gt;..... ..... . , .. .
-.. .....• ~ ;; ~ ········
The 17 Seniors for the R a1'ders have I os t 21 · . ~idi!H'
~~- ........ ,.... ,,:. .
:' . "~''
Blue and White will have straight and have been ·~.· · \•J'~·&gt;
all the inspiration they will outscored 853-231 in OVC ~; • ·.· , .' .&lt;.,. ,.
need in t.rying to .finish competition.
. ' ... . ~;" 'c' 'Y ·
~~'Y
·· · ,
th
N
dl
b
their playing career with a
ee ess to say, o . wetoil:l!~
''''t'"···~
.......
winning season.
. teams will be hungry for
. Playing their filial regu- .victory Friday night.
t.tlllef ; . i .., .. ......:.,: . ;;,,.;•;;o:• .~,....
lar season game for the
Rock Hill, who secured ,;:
.. '· ·
Jllue Devils Friday night its .first losing season in
,
~!II be Beau WhMaley,CCodJy th6reheasyne'atrsebJ.aocykedinaW!elkn . l'ioh.ma: ...... .'. ~· ...
ward, Corey
ason,
. '. ,
n
50Uti\(i8118 ..............,, .._. .
Harrison, Tyler Grimm, Jon since late last season as its Harlnan·......, " .. ;· .... · .. , .. ·
J(yger, Tyler Wachs, Brett losing streak .currently sits ' · ..f!i.t., ,
:;teinbeck, Clint Saunders, at 12 straight - a ~\retch
•
Adam
Blazer,
Cole unseen for the usually c~ ...' ..,:.: ..... , ... .
!iimpson, · Will Morris, dominant Redmen.
Politt~ .......... : .•. : ....~······ ·· .~~f·::.
Ierrod
Wray,
Roben
Instead the Red and Wllyrie :·... :.,r.. .. :·.; ... : .. :.•.
Daniels, Quintin Nibert, White will be playing for :=;,;,;~ :; .::: : :-::::::::;::;:;
Evan Wood and Nick win number one against i!'lbell HQOVef . , ···.: . " :: •• :\ :··, .' '......" ""'
Wilson. ·
the Raiders Friday night,
, .• . _ . . f· .. ,,.,..
: Marietta will come into a big step in · the wrong be playing for its first win Galli a (2-7) to end a·three
Memorial Field· ·attempting direction for a playoff of the season, . River garve losing streak and
to. play the part of spoiler team from .a year ago.
Valley will be looking to keep Symmes Valley from
~nd hope· s to finish the seaTo Rock Hill's credit,
·
h' ·
500
d
r·
end an embarras.s mg 1os- ac 1evmg a .
recor .
e
R b 1
·
Son Wl' th ther.r' second big seven of its nine losses ing streak in the con.er· The · e e s are commg
road win in as mapy weeks. have come against teams ence.
off a very tough loss to a
: The Tigers are coming with winni11g records
The
Raiders
have talented Oak Hill team
off their largest scoring including undefeated SOC enjoyed one of its more this past Friday night .
SGHS is averaging 8.6
performance of the season powers Portsmouth West successful seasons · in a
Wheelersburg. long time, getting wins points per · game offenwith a 45-14 victory over and
the Portsmouth Trojans last Combined the Redmen's over Eastern (14-0) and sively while their defense.
.
opponents are 52 - 28 on Waterford (27-7), butthe is allowing 31.7 points
Friday night.
eense
has
the
season.
.
has contmue
·
d m
·
.
The MHS Of1 '
losmg
per game.
averaged 25.6 poi,nts per
Rock Hill's losses have the OVC. River.Valley has
South Gallia this season
game and will try ·to out come against Zane Trace lost ·its last four to Coal has defeated ' Southern
26 • 7), Valley &lt;41 " 13 ), Grove (61-6), Chesapeake (14-0) and Green, while
PacetheTigersdefen5ethat · &lt;
Oak
Hill
(42-18),
has given up 33.1 points Ponsmoilth West (42 _6 ), (28-14), Fairland (69-34) Jhey have had losses to
( 52 7 ) and South Point (42-6) Waterford
Wh 1 b.
(41-20),
per game on the season. ,
. Marietta has wins against
ee ers urg
- ' while also sporting Jru:ses Eastern
(35-8),
Fairland
(49-25),
-.
6)
Warren ( 2 6- 2 I ) , Chesapeake ( 36 _28 ), Coal to Minford (42-6), Oak' Wahama(WV)
(41- ,
Dame
(35-6),
Parkersburg
South Grove (42 _13 ) and South Hill (33-0) and Meigs Notre
(WV)(42-21)
and Point (55 _16 ).
(53-20).
Buffalo '(Putnam) (WV)
Overall the Redmen are
And, like the Redmen, (40-12),
Sciotoville
· P6nsmouth(45-14) while
iheir losses have come to averaging 14 .7 points per River Valley has faced Community School (31-0)
"nl'II'1ard
Darby(53.- 14) • game while surrendering some stiff competition. an~ak Hill (54-0).
· Camb rl'd ge (41 - 27)· •· New 42.7 markers per game.
The combined record for
e Rebels opponents
'l
d
1
h!'
a(39
20)
the
Raider's
opponents
is
coming
.into this game
Ph
.
1a e P
• Rock u1'II . is led by
· Jackson(35 - 28) • Lo gan(49• quarterback
''
have a combined record of
Will 46-34.
0 4) ·
Zan
'II
(25
14)
Against
that
competi·
43-33
.
' a
esv1 e - · McCollister who threw
tion the Raiders are averValley wil.l look to pull
: River Valley looking to for 124 yards and two aging 14 points per game . out their fifth victory on
· end OVC losing streak · touchdowns on 12 of 26 while giving up 37.2 the season and avoid fin·
passing last week against points .per outing .
ishing with a losing
South
Point.
:Mitchell
Friday
's
matchup
will
record
.
CHESHIRE - Coming
The Vikings offense is
off of !heir worst loss this Davenport caught both of kick-off at 7:30 p .m. at
those
scores
and
finished
Raider
Field.
averaging
21.8 points per
decade, the River Valley
with
78
yards
on
eight
game
and
the defe.nse is
football squad will be
·
SGHS to face rival
allowing · 27.2 points per
looking to avenge Friday's receptions.
On
·
the
ground
the
Vikings
Friday
game.
55-point setback to Coal
Symmes Valley (4-5)
Grove and end their season Redmen· are led by Steve
Lewis
and
Corey
Bamer.
WILLOW
WOOD
will
try and rebound from
on a high note when winless Rock Hill visits the although neither eclipsed This final game of the a close loss the previous
Gallia County campus the 100-yiud mark last season won't just be for week to. the Notre Dame
Fr.iaay night at Raider weekend .
bragging rights, it will Titans.
~
.
But while Rock Hlti will also be a chance for S.
SVHS has defeated
Fiefd.

..... :.;::.... ..
c

= :-::;.:(:;:::·:····'f.t;;;,:r

for

...
The Daily Senlin!l • Pqe B3.

::·f:..... .

.

n
. d

else, his go-to back.
Illinois regularly uses
four running backs Daniel Dufrene, Ford, Troy
Pollard&lt;'
and
Mikel
LeShoure .
"I don't '• know why any •.
thing has to change," Zook
saic;l. "If another guy gets
hot, we'll leave him ill
there ."
QUICK-HITTERS:
Saturday's other games ~
Illinois at Wisconsin, No:
24 Minnesota at Purdue·;
No . 22 Northwestern at
Indiana. and No. 3 Pend
State at No. 10 Ohio State.
... Players of the week:.
Iowa RB Shonn Greene'
(217 yards, 25 carries, 4·
TDs), Iowa LB Pat Angerer
(6 tackles, 2 ints.) and Penn.
K K · K II (3
State
evm e Y .
FGs, 5 PATs, 'Became Big
Ten's all-time kick scorerwith 376). ... Arrelious
Benn has an Illinois record
four consecutive 100-yard
receiving games . . :.. Each
Big Ten winner last week
scored at least 38 points ... ~·
Wisconsin was No. 9 in th&amp;
nation on Sept. 27 but after
. losing four in a row is tied
for last in the conference.

AP Sports Writers lArry,
Lage and Dave Campbell,
and Associated Pres~
Writers Tim Martin, Jo~
Esse and David Mercer
contributed to this report. ·

Southern
(35-3), Golden Eagles on a 16.Manchester
(53-32), yard
scamper· whil«:·
Northwest (28 -6) and ·sophomore quarterback
Green (34-22), while the Trey Harris tossed a 44-.
losses
to yard TD pass to senior
have
Matewan(WV)
(20,6), tight end Zane Summers.
Chesapeake
(48-6), Senior Curtis Herron is.
Sciotoville Community expected to get the start at
School (32-8), Oak Hill flanker with junior Frank
(56-7) and Notre Dame Valentour expected to get
(26-20).
the call at wide receiver.
The Vikings ' 1&gt;pponents The Bulldog interior line
coming into the final averages 225 pounds per
game of the season have a man from tackle to tackle.
combined record of' 38The White Falcons will
try and return to its big· .
41.
play offensive ways on
Friday
after failing to
WAHAMA TRAVELS TO ·
generate much of an
ATHENS
attack last week against
THE PLAINS - After top rated Willi'amstown,
tumbling from the unbeat- Wahama concluded the
en ranks following a loss night with 235 yards of
to Wil1iamstown Coach total offense but the
Ed Cromley's Wahama majority of that total came ·
White · Falcon football once the Yellow Jacket
team · prc;pares for a road reserves entered the contest at Athens as the Bend test. Senior Kyle Zerkle
Area team attempts to continue's to lead the Bend
secure its third consecu- Area team in scoring with
tive pl11yoff berth ·and its 89 points while junior
seventh post-season chal- Micaiah Branch has 60
points
and
Garrett
lenge in eight years.
Underwood
54.
The White Falcons
Branch is the .teams
dropped only two spots in
leading
ground gaine~
the latest WVSSAC state
with
713
yards while
rankings despite the onesided loss to the Yellow Zerkle has 477 yards and .
Jackets · and appears in senior Jacob Roach 216.
the ninth position among Junior William Zuspan
Class A M:hools. The has completed 54 of 95'
locals 6-1 regular season passes on the year for
record on the current sea- 1044 yards and 17 touchson puts the Mason . downs with three of his
County grid squad on the aerials being picked off.
playoff bubble no matter Underwood leads the
what the outcome in the · receiving corp with. 15
Bend Area teams final catches for 261 yards and
three regular season· con- nine touchdowns with
tests. Realistically, how- junior Colin Pierce grab-.
ever, WHS would likely bing 10 tosses for 229
need at least one more yards and three scores.
victory over · Athens ,
Defensively ·Branch is
Parkersburg Catholic or the runaway leader in
Buffalo to assure its place tackles followed· by Trey
in the 16 team playoff Anderson,
Matt
field and a lhree game Dangerfield, ·
Elijah
sweep to earn a first round Honaker
and
Jacob
home outing. ·
Roach. Senior
Colby
Friday's 7:30 p.m . road Davis, freshman Robert
contest
against
the Peyton and sophomore
Bulldogs will be the first Ryan Lee are coming off
ever meeting between the big outings tbe past two
two schools. Athens, 3-6 weeks · and are quickly
on the year, began the moving up the leader
season by losing its first eoard for the WHS'
fopr games but has rallied defensive
unit . Kyle·
to win three of its last five Zerkle intercepted one·
dates. The Bulldogs fell
pass. last week to gi v~·
to Gallia Academy (31the senior defensive
22), Federal Hocking (16·back five picks on the
0), Bloom Carroll (27-'13)
season.
.
and Meigs (26-13) before
Athens is averaging:
winning two straight over
19.4:
points per game.
Vinton County (25- 7) and
Alexander (34-6). Two offensively while the
defense
is'
more losses to Wellston Bulldog
allowing
20.7
points
per
(34-21) and NelsonvilleYork (22-14) preceded a outing . Wahama averwin over Belpre (33-18) ages 40.5 points offen~
sively while the Bend
last week.
Area defense giv es up:
Athens' go
18.8 points per game to.
opposition.
.
Sl
•Priday's
kickoff
wm.
back
be the regular s&amp;ason
. totliled 186
three touchdowns in the football finale. for the
win over Belpre . Junior Bulldogs with a starting
Robbie Glass also reached tim.e for the senior n,ight
the end zone against the contest set for 7:30p .m.

'

�•

Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Octobel' 24, 2008 '

White, Devine lead WVa pastAuburn
MORGANTOWN , W.Va. turned some recetvers
(AP) - West Virginia's Pat open."
White and Noel Devine
Dorrell Jalloh caught two
needed a little time to hit of White 's scoring tosses.
full stride against fading His 2-yard catch put West
Auburn .
Virginia ahead to stay late
· White threw three touch- in the third . On his second,
dowll passes, Devine ran for Jalloh shed the grasp of
a career-high 207 yards and defender Zac Ethendge,
West Virginia scored 31 turned around without
straight points to beat the breaking stride, sideste,pped
Tigers 34-17 on Thursday Walter McFadden · and
night.
scored from 32 yards out
· White, an Alabama native early in the fourth to make
playing his first full game in it 27-17. ·
~ month following head and
Devine completed the
hand injuries, overcame two scoring with a 30-yard TD
early interceptions to bring run late in the game. He surWest Virginia (5-2) back passed a 188-yard effort in
from a 17-3 deficit. The an Oct. II win over
Mountaineers had their Syracuse and has four 100highest point total since . a yard efforts this season.
season-opening 48-21 wtn
" I saw confidence oozing
over Villanova.
out of everyone tonight,"
' ''1 tried to give it away West Virginia coach Bill
~arly, but my teammates Stewan sa id "Our defense
offensively.defensively and played aggressive. We
on special teams - all hung played a little smarter in the
in there for me," . White second half."
·
said . "We fe lt we could put
Auburn entered the game
points on the board and we as the ninth-best scoring .
did ."
defense but allowed a sea·
. Auburn's Kodi Burns son high for points .
threw touchdown pass a'nd
" It's very difficult to
ran for another score before . watch them score like that ,"
halftime but couldn't' keep said Auburn linebacker Josh
the early m~mentum going. Bynes. "We've g~t to get
. The Tigers (4-4) managed . beUer defenstvely.
.
just 33 second-half yards,
Auburn m~de a r~re ~r1p
were shut out over the final far to the north for lis flfSt
40 minutes ,and now have a nonconfeni nce roa~ game
three-game losing streak. since 2003 . The crisp fall
That hadn 't happened since night hardly threw off the
1999,
coach
Tommy warm-weather Tigl!rs. In
Tuberville's first season.
fact, it was . West Virginia
Auburn lost for only the that looked out of place
ninth time under Tuberville early.
when leading at halftime.
White entered the game
"We just didri ' t have an completing 73 percent of
answer the second half," his passes and had thrown
Tuberville said. "Pat White just one interception all sea'
and Noel Devine had great son, but was picked off on
speed. We couldn ' t stop the We_st Virginia 's first two
run with the four· man front. senes.
.
We couldn't tackle. Then
"It made me mad," White
we started blitzing and said. "I don ' t know if it

Eastern
from Page 81
came closer than nine points
the rest of the way. EHS led
by II points at five different
· times m Game 3 before fin·
(shing with its biggest win
of the night at a dozen
~ints.

Eastern showed signs of
dominance as the night progressed , but early on neither
team showed an ability to
pull away.
·
· First-year EHS coach Juli
Simpson was pleased with
the end result, but she too
was concerned about the
way that her Eagles started
district play. .
'
.·
. "All season long , it seems
like it has taken us a game
or two to get warmed up
and get going like that. In
Game 3 we looked like ourselves, but we just didn't
seem to have the focus in
ihe first two games."
Simpson com.mented . "We
had some silly mistakes.
.and ·some of it could have
been nerves, but we defi ·
nitely have sorne things to
work on before Saturday."
Eastern was 73-of-75 at
the service line on the night
for 97 percent. The Lady
Eagles also posted collective totals of 65 digs. 50
kills , 48 assists and one
block.
Tresa
Swatzel
and
Beverly Maxson both led

Chad ·
· from Page Bl

Reebok for the 'old jerseys
that would now be a tough
sell.
Teammate Keith Ri vers Jc~u~~~~ii~e~·~f~~:;~~
had to pay about $10,000 to his uniform nu'mber _ it
change his number before means "eight five" in
the start of the season. The Spanish. When the NFL
Hispanic
rookie linebacker wore No. celebrated
SS at Southern California, Heritage month in 2006, he
but got No. 58 when he · wore it on the back of his
joined .the Bcngals . No. SS uniform
for
pregame
became available when warmups, but had to
linebacker Ahmad Brooks remove it before the kickoff
wu released after the last because of NFL rules; it
preseason game.
w'a&lt;n 't his real name .
It would 'bave cost Ocho
He legally changed his
Cinco far more, given the name in his home state of
J)opularity of his jersey. His Florida last August. The
No. BS and ,quanerback Bengals changed his name
Carson Palmer's No. 9 are above his locker and on
lhe ones most often seen official statistics and notes
tiround Cincinnati. The before the season opener at
receiver declined to say Baltimore. The league was
exactly how m11ch the going to comply, but said
switch would have cost , the receiver had to first take
him.
care of the inventory of jer·
. Ocho Cinco said he can seys.
··

- - -- -- - - · - - -

Brady has more surgery to fight infection .
BOSTON· (AP) - New England quarterback Tom ~rady
has undergone two more procedures to clean out mfectron on
his surgically repaired knee. the Boston Herald reported
Thursday.
.
.
The newspaper said Brady is on a s1x-week course of mtra~
venous antibiotics and will continue to have follow·UP.
exams at the clinic in Los Angeles where he had the surgery.
· Brady confirmed for the first time Saturday that he'd
undergone two operations. on his ' inju~~d left kn~. The
Herald, citing an unnamed source fam1har w1th h1s· treat;
ment, said he's had two more sir ~e then because of mfecuon;
If the infection is not brought under control, the Herald
reports. the patellar tendon graft used to replace ~rady's
anterior cruciate ligament could become compromised. If
that happens,_Brady could need to redo the surgery - likely
delaying his rehabilitation.
..
New England Patriots spokesman Stacey James sa1~
Wednesday the team would let Brady comment on the status
of his injury.
.
.
.
Brady was injured in the first quarter of the season oi'Cner
on a hit by Kansas City Chiefs safety. He ha~ bee~ w1dely
reported to have sustained a to~ anterior cruc1ate h~~ment~
but he and the team have not g1ven spec1fics on the mJury. :

Prosecutor says ex-Ohio lawmaker facing 2 charges
AP photo

West Virginia's Pat White drops back to pass against
Auburn during the first quarter of an NCAA college football
game Thursday .in Morgantown.
flustered me . You 've got to 17-3 lead early in the sec·
take the good with the bad ." ond.
.
Auburn followed Jpsh
Whi'te hit a wide-open
Bynes ' interception with a Alric Arnett with a 44-yard
20-play drive that ate . up TD strike, West Virginia's
nearly 10 minutes. But the longest pass play of the seaTigers. couldn't find the end son, midway through the
zone on three tries from second to bring West
inside the 3 and settled for Virginia to 17-10.
Wes Byrum's short field
White was held to a ·sea•
goal. .
son-low 8 rushing yards but
After McFadden returned more than made up for it
an interception 18 yards to with his arin. He finished
the West Virginia 27, Bums 13-of-21 for 174 yards and
tossed a third-down screen now ' has 12 TO passes this
pass to Brad .Lester, wl)o . season, just two shy of his
followed three blockers 16 total for all of last season.
yards into the end zorie.
Bums led Auburn with 82
· Mario Fannin's 69-yard rushing yards and went 13kickoff return set up Burns' of-21 for Ill yards with an
9-yard touchdown run for a interception.

the service attack with eight
points apiece~ followed by
Brittany Casto with six and ·
Morgan Burt with five. ,
Karissa Connolly was next
with four points , while
Katie Wilfong added three .
points and Whitney Putnam
chipped in two points.
Both Sami Cummins and
Britney Morrison had one
point apiece in the victory
as well.
Swatzel led the net attack
·with 15 kills , followed by
Burt with 12 and Casto with
nine . Wilfong and Maxson
both contributed five kills,
while Connolly and Jamie
Swatzel added two kills
each.
Connolly also had 'a
game- high.· 44 ·assists' and
Maxson led the defense
with 14 dig&gt;. Tresa Swatzel
added a dozen digs and both
Burt and Connolly had 10
digs apiece .
Experience goes a long
way in the tournament , and
Eastern ·s experience in the
district tournament should
pay dividends this weekend
Bryan Watto111fphoto
in the championship game.
Eastern
senior
.
Katie
Wilfong,
right,
drills
a spike past
Then again, this will be the
first district final for some Western defender Kelcie Hawk (11) during Thursday night's
of these players, so Division lv district semifinal vol.leybalf match at Wellston
Simpson feels a collective High School.
effort .will be needed to add level. We also have some Saturday will be between
another district champi- young girls that are new to top-seeded South Webster
onship banner to the wall at. the roster and new to this and ·
second-seeded
environment,"· Simpson Lucasville. Valley at 4 p.m.
I
EHS.
"There are some girls that said. "They are all going to The Eastern-Eastern match
have been in this position have a chance to prove they will begin 30 minutes after
the conclusion of the first
before. and they know what are ready for it."
it takes to perform at this
The first district final on match .
get his ne w name on the
back of jersey next season
without having to compensate Reebok. which will be
aware of the switch when it
comes time to make more
jerseys for sale to the pub·
lie.

Sports Shorts

COLUMBUS (AP) - A former state lawmaker who has
admitted he bought Ohio State University football ticket~ .
with campaign money and sold them for a personal prof1t IS
scheduled to be arraigned in Franklin County Mumc1pal
.
Court on related charges nex.t week.
· Franklin County Prosecutor Ron 0' Brien said Thursday
that former state Rep. John Widowfield is expected to plead
guilty on Tuesday to filing a false financial disclosure state:
ment and .converting campaign funds into personal use. .
O'Brien says both charges are misdemeanors and . that
each carries a possible six mo~eth sentence and $1,000 fme,
Widowfidd, a Republican from Cuyahoga (keye-uh~
HOH' -guh) Falls ilear Akron, resigned from the Legislat_urt)
in May. He apologized last week and says h~ has re1m•
bursed the campaign $13,676 to cover the prof1t.
.

.osu
fromPageBI
goin* , to be tough to stop
him.' ,
The 6-foot-1, 225-pound
junior is averaging . 124·
yards rushing a game just like a year ago when he
had 1,609 yards despite
playing with a twisted ankle
and a broken , bone in his
hand for most of the season.
,Ohio State's offense has
rebounded since Wells
returned fo r the stal'l of Big
Ten play.
"Even that little bit of
time when he was huit, I
could definitely see that he
was still into •it, that he was
still involved," wide receiver Brian Robiskie ~aid.
"Just these past couple ·of
weeks watching him get
back out there, you can really see he's getting comfortable . lt's exciting."

Wells is wearing a pair o{
"lineman's cleats" with a
special steel insert that is
supposed to help protect the
foot he injured in the seaagainst
son-opener
Youngstown State. They're
heavier than his pre-inJury
pair, which were similar to
track shoes.
No prol;llem. Any linger; .
ing aches and pains don't
worry Tressel.
"He seemed a little sore
on Sunday because he'd
carried it 31 times. That's~
bunch,"
Tressel
said
Thursday. "I'm sure that
(two-time Heisman Trophy
w.inner) Archie Griffin,
could 1el,I you that 1,Qq
Sundays and Mondays and
Tuesday, sometimes it's 'I
don't knpw if I'm going to
be ready.' Then WednesdaY,
comes around, and you get .
·that little burst of adrenal in
and your body has quietec:!
down from those hits .
(Beanie) looked to me like
he was ready to go."
·

· Friday, October 24,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Big Ten Notebook: Golden Gophers going to the Golden State?
BY RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

Let's say lhree teams tie
for the Big Ten title with 71 records. Team A's only
loss came to Team B.
which also has a nortconference loss . Team C beat
Team B and didn't play
Team A, but lost to another
- conference team.
· The result: Minnesota
going to the Rose Bowl to
play South!lm California.
Under the scenario listed
above. which is not that far
fetched. Minnesota's only
loss Sl&gt; far came at Ohio
State. If the Gophers win
out and the Buckeyes lose
to . Penn State, but the
Nittany Lions are then
upset by Iowa or Indiana,
Minnesota would be the
big winner.
- According to the Big Ten
tiebreaker, Ohio State
would drop out because it
had the worst overall
record with two losses.
Since Minnesota and Penn
State did not meet, and no
other tiebreaker applies,
the conference's Bowl
Championship .Series representative would be determined by which team had
last won the conference's
automatic BCS berth. Penn
State represented the conference in 2005.
. And that's how the
Golden Gophers can get to

·Football

go to the Golden State .
'60s
FLASHBACK:
Once · upon
a
time,
Michigan State was the
dominant college football
CONFERENCE
program in Michigan .
In 1965-66, the Spartans some of the best players in
were 19-1-1 overall - the state
recruits
including a famous tie with Michigan used to attract.
Notre .Dame - an.d 14-0 in
s·orne are saymg
· the
h
t e Big Ten, including wins Spartans have a window of
over Michigan by a com- opportunity to catch up
bined score of 44-14 .
.
Since then, Michigan with the storied program in
State hasn't beaten the the state. But that opportuWolverines twice in a row. nity won't mean much to
The Spanans have gone the Spartans unles.s they're
to the Rose Bowl (in 1987) able to capitalize with onand had eight wins in con- the-field victories. They
secutive seasons (1989-90) meet on ~aturday at The
only once since their glory Big House.
years. Nick Saban' is
"They've found a way to
regarded as one of the win·;" Dantonio said of the
game·s· great coaches , but . Wolverines . "So we'll have
he was barely over .500 in to.find a way to win."
his first four seasons before
.Said QB Brian Hoyer:
bolting for LSU after win- "They have had the upperning nine games in 1999.
hand recently . They ' ve
Times have changed.
been the guys that .have
Rich Rodriguez's debut been on top."
on the sideline at Michigan
Oddsrnakers expect that
(2-5, I-2) has been so to change. According to
rough that college foot ' World Features Syndicate,
ball's winningest program. the Spartan&gt; are favored to
is· headed for its first losing win at Michigan Stadium
for the first time since
season since 1967.
Mark Dantonio is 13-8 in 1968.
two seaso.ns at Michigan
The Woiverines were
State (6-2, 3-1 ), quickly installed as the biggest
turning around a program underdogs in school history
that was coming off three last week. with Penn State
straight losing years.
favored by more than three
Dantonio seems to be touchdowns. Michigan ~till
getting commitments from didn't cover the spread,
.

·~·,

CHARLOTTE KELLER

Dau.ghtsr of JlmnJc. &amp; Reva M uss~r .
OetoiH!r 2$, 2008

STARTS AT MIZWAY
J.'I&lt;:ATURING:
Charley Lilly
and
Tuff Enuff
Sfgn Up - 12:00
l.ast Bike Out - t :00
Last Bike In - 5:00
$10.00 Single
$15.00 Couple
Stops To Be Announce(! At Sign Up
FooJ. Door Prizes &amp; Rnfnes
Cornhole Tuurnament
$5.00 If Nol. On The Run

All Vehicles Welcome
*N&lt;OTRESPONSIBLE 1-'0R AC.'C/,DE'N1'S•I

collapsing after a strong to home.
"'Hey, you know what?
start and losing 46-17.
Still, Michigan Tsn't If I want to win a champiready to concede its grip on onship, if I want to do great
the state to its neighbors 50 things, I don't have to
the
state
of
miles to the nonhwest.
leave
"I don't buy it because Minnesota,"' Brewster said
they haven't beat us yet," some in-state , recruits .lll'e
"And
that's
Michigan linebacker John . saying.
Thompson said. "There's extremely. positive for all
nothing much they can say of us ."
about closing the gap yet,
Defensive end Willie
but I guess we'll find out VanDeSteeg is one of many
Saturday."
players enjoying the tumWolverines
safety around.
Brandon Harrison added,
"It's exciting, obviously.
"Just look at the records You get a little bit of
and the numbers, then respect," he said. "But we
were 1-11 l11st year, and we
come talk to me."
GOPHERS GETTING can't forg~t that ." .
GOOD: Minnesota didn't
GOOFING ON PAT:
play .last week, but the Northwestern coach Pat
body of work - and sever- Fitzgerald has a mantra:
al losses by teams at the His team starts each week
end . of the national nmk- •with a 0-0 record and is J·ust
ings - was enough to get trying to go 1-0.
the Gophers in the AP Top
After the Wildcats landed
25 for the first time since at No. 22 in the first BCS
Oct. 9, 2005 .
rankings, wide receiver
Coach Tim Brewster dis- EriC Peterman kidded his
carded the notion of his coach: "I don't know if you
team being overco.nfident. heard or not, but we're the
"I think anybody who's first 0-0 team to make the
spent any time at all with BCS standings. So we're
our players, with our proud of that."
coaching .staff, understands
BY
COMMITTEE:
that there's nobody that's Jason Ford's 112 yards
going to have a big head," rushing and three touchdowns against Indiana was
Brewster said.
Coaches canvassing the · by far the best game any
country on recruiting trips Illinois back has had this
have sensed an increase in season. But coach • Ron
good vibes toward the Zook says he doesn't plan
Gophers, especially close to make Ford, or anyone

Despite neither team
appearing to play for anything more than a win,
. Friday's matchup will .
fromPageBl
· have plenty at stake for
help extend their season at bo.t h squads. as the Redmen
and Raiders battle it out
least 'One more week.
: The Blue Devils ate aver- for fifth place in the final
aging 17.4 points per game Ohio Valley Conference
offensively
and
their. standings and more.
· defense have given up 25.1
On top of the conference
. points per game on the sea- race, both teams will also
son and are 4-1 at home .be .fighting for first time
this season.
wins·
GAHS has wins this seaR1&gt;ck Hill (0-9, 0-3
son against A\hens(31 ,22), OVC) will be seeking its
Point
Pleasapt(28-21}, first win. of the season
j a c k s 0 n ( 3 6 _ 2 8 ) , while Riv.er Valley (2-7, 0and 3 OVC) looks for its first
,,
Portsmouth(7-0)
Wellston(42-20)
while conference victory in. near- ··
· · ''•'•
their losses have come to ly three years dating back ~~1. : :·
Ironton(42-6), Logan(40- to a 35-6 win over South -.;n ;::&lt;:;;:~;:::::;;(,... .,.,..,
'1), Chillic.othe(41-0) and - Pojnt in 2004.
Athent ; . , ..... , :. , ..... , . , ,,_.&gt;N·•·"
zanesyille(l2-0).
Since that win the· l!4lljJ&lt;e • , .... ,.,,&gt;..... ..... . , .. .
-.. .....• ~ ;; ~ ········
The 17 Seniors for the R a1'ders have I os t 21 · . ~idi!H'
~~- ........ ,.... ,,:. .
:' . "~''
Blue and White will have straight and have been ·~.· · \•J'~·&gt;
all the inspiration they will outscored 853-231 in OVC ~; • ·.· , .' .&lt;.,. ,.
need in t.rying to .finish competition.
. ' ... . ~;" 'c' 'Y ·
~~'Y
·· · ,
th
N
dl
b
their playing career with a
ee ess to say, o . wetoil:l!~
''''t'"···~
.......
winning season.
. teams will be hungry for
. Playing their filial regu- .victory Friday night.
t.tlllef ; . i .., .. ......:.,: . ;;,,.;•;;o:• .~,....
lar season game for the
Rock Hill, who secured ,;:
.. '· ·
Jllue Devils Friday night its .first losing season in
,
~!II be Beau WhMaley,CCodJy th6reheasyne'atrsebJ.aocykedinaW!elkn . l'ioh.ma: ...... .'. ~· ...
ward, Corey
ason,
. '. ,
n
50Uti\(i8118 ..............,, .._. .
Harrison, Tyler Grimm, Jon since late last season as its Harlnan·......, " .. ;· .... · .. , .. ·
J(yger, Tyler Wachs, Brett losing streak .currently sits ' · ..f!i.t., ,
:;teinbeck, Clint Saunders, at 12 straight - a ~\retch
•
Adam
Blazer,
Cole unseen for the usually c~ ...' ..,:.: ..... , ... .
!iimpson, · Will Morris, dominant Redmen.
Politt~ .......... : .•. : ....~······ ·· .~~f·::.
Ierrod
Wray,
Roben
Instead the Red and Wllyrie :·... :.,r.. .. :·.; ... : .. :.•.
Daniels, Quintin Nibert, White will be playing for :=;,;,;~ :; .::: : :-::::::::;::;:;
Evan Wood and Nick win number one against i!'lbell HQOVef . , ···.: . " :: •• :\ :··, .' '......" ""'
Wilson. ·
the Raiders Friday night,
, .• . _ . . f· .. ,,.,..
: Marietta will come into a big step in · the wrong be playing for its first win Galli a (2-7) to end a·three
Memorial Field· ·attempting direction for a playoff of the season, . River garve losing streak and
to. play the part of spoiler team from .a year ago.
Valley will be looking to keep Symmes Valley from
~nd hope· s to finish the seaTo Rock Hill's credit,
·
h' ·
500
d
r·
end an embarras.s mg 1os- ac 1evmg a .
recor .
e
R b 1
·
Son Wl' th ther.r' second big seven of its nine losses ing streak in the con.er· The · e e s are commg
road win in as mapy weeks. have come against teams ence.
off a very tough loss to a
: The Tigers are coming with winni11g records
The
Raiders
have talented Oak Hill team
off their largest scoring including undefeated SOC enjoyed one of its more this past Friday night .
SGHS is averaging 8.6
performance of the season powers Portsmouth West successful seasons · in a
Wheelersburg. long time, getting wins points per · game offenwith a 45-14 victory over and
the Portsmouth Trojans last Combined the Redmen's over Eastern (14-0) and sively while their defense.
.
opponents are 52 - 28 on Waterford (27-7), butthe is allowing 31.7 points
Friday night.
eense
has
the
season.
.
has contmue
·
d m
·
.
The MHS Of1 '
losmg
per game.
averaged 25.6 poi,nts per
Rock Hill's losses have the OVC. River.Valley has
South Gallia this season
game and will try ·to out come against Zane Trace lost ·its last four to Coal has defeated ' Southern
26 • 7), Valley &lt;41 " 13 ), Grove (61-6), Chesapeake (14-0) and Green, while
PacetheTigersdefen5ethat · &lt;
Oak
Hill
(42-18),
has given up 33.1 points Ponsmoilth West (42 _6 ), (28-14), Fairland (69-34) Jhey have had losses to
( 52 7 ) and South Point (42-6) Waterford
Wh 1 b.
(41-20),
per game on the season. ,
. Marietta has wins against
ee ers urg
- ' while also sporting Jru:ses Eastern
(35-8),
Fairland
(49-25),
-.
6)
Warren ( 2 6- 2 I ) , Chesapeake ( 36 _28 ), Coal to Minford (42-6), Oak' Wahama(WV)
(41- ,
Dame
(35-6),
Parkersburg
South Grove (42 _13 ) and South Hill (33-0) and Meigs Notre
(WV)(42-21)
and Point (55 _16 ).
(53-20).
Buffalo '(Putnam) (WV)
Overall the Redmen are
And, like the Redmen, (40-12),
Sciotoville
· P6nsmouth(45-14) while
iheir losses have come to averaging 14 .7 points per River Valley has faced Community School (31-0)
"nl'II'1ard
Darby(53.- 14) • game while surrendering some stiff competition. an~ak Hill (54-0).
· Camb rl'd ge (41 - 27)· •· New 42.7 markers per game.
The combined record for
e Rebels opponents
'l
d
1
h!'
a(39
20)
the
Raider's
opponents
is
coming
.into this game
Ph
.
1a e P
• Rock u1'II . is led by
· Jackson(35 - 28) • Lo gan(49• quarterback
''
have a combined record of
Will 46-34.
0 4) ·
Zan
'II
(25
14)
Against
that
competi·
43-33
.
' a
esv1 e - · McCollister who threw
tion the Raiders are averValley wil.l look to pull
: River Valley looking to for 124 yards and two aging 14 points per game . out their fifth victory on
· end OVC losing streak · touchdowns on 12 of 26 while giving up 37.2 the season and avoid fin·
passing last week against points .per outing .
ishing with a losing
South
Point.
:Mitchell
Friday
's
matchup
will
record
.
CHESHIRE - Coming
The Vikings offense is
off of !heir worst loss this Davenport caught both of kick-off at 7:30 p .m. at
those
scores
and
finished
Raider
Field.
averaging
21.8 points per
decade, the River Valley
with
78
yards
on
eight
game
and
the defe.nse is
football squad will be
·
SGHS to face rival
allowing · 27.2 points per
looking to avenge Friday's receptions.
On
·
the
ground
the
Vikings
Friday
game.
55-point setback to Coal
Symmes Valley (4-5)
Grove and end their season Redmen· are led by Steve
Lewis
and
Corey
Bamer.
WILLOW
WOOD
will
try and rebound from
on a high note when winless Rock Hill visits the although neither eclipsed This final game of the a close loss the previous
Gallia County campus the 100-yiud mark last season won't just be for week to. the Notre Dame
Fr.iaay night at Raider weekend .
bragging rights, it will Titans.
~
.
But while Rock Hlti will also be a chance for S.
SVHS has defeated
Fiefd.

..... :.;::.... ..
c

= :-::;.:(:;:::·:····'f.t;;;,:r

for

...
The Daily Senlin!l • Pqe B3.

::·f:..... .

.

n
. d

else, his go-to back.
Illinois regularly uses
four running backs Daniel Dufrene, Ford, Troy
Pollard&lt;'
and
Mikel
LeShoure .
"I don't '• know why any •.
thing has to change," Zook
saic;l. "If another guy gets
hot, we'll leave him ill
there ."
QUICK-HITTERS:
Saturday's other games ~
Illinois at Wisconsin, No:
24 Minnesota at Purdue·;
No . 22 Northwestern at
Indiana. and No. 3 Pend
State at No. 10 Ohio State.
... Players of the week:.
Iowa RB Shonn Greene'
(217 yards, 25 carries, 4·
TDs), Iowa LB Pat Angerer
(6 tackles, 2 ints.) and Penn.
K K · K II (3
State
evm e Y .
FGs, 5 PATs, 'Became Big
Ten's all-time kick scorerwith 376). ... Arrelious
Benn has an Illinois record
four consecutive 100-yard
receiving games . . :.. Each
Big Ten winner last week
scored at least 38 points ... ~·
Wisconsin was No. 9 in th&amp;
nation on Sept. 27 but after
. losing four in a row is tied
for last in the conference.

AP Sports Writers lArry,
Lage and Dave Campbell,
and Associated Pres~
Writers Tim Martin, Jo~
Esse and David Mercer
contributed to this report. ·

Southern
(35-3), Golden Eagles on a 16.Manchester
(53-32), yard
scamper· whil«:·
Northwest (28 -6) and ·sophomore quarterback
Green (34-22), while the Trey Harris tossed a 44-.
losses
to yard TD pass to senior
have
Matewan(WV)
(20,6), tight end Zane Summers.
Chesapeake
(48-6), Senior Curtis Herron is.
Sciotoville Community expected to get the start at
School (32-8), Oak Hill flanker with junior Frank
(56-7) and Notre Dame Valentour expected to get
(26-20).
the call at wide receiver.
The Vikings ' 1&gt;pponents The Bulldog interior line
coming into the final averages 225 pounds per
game of the season have a man from tackle to tackle.
combined record of' 38The White Falcons will
try and return to its big· .
41.
play offensive ways on
Friday
after failing to
WAHAMA TRAVELS TO ·
generate much of an
ATHENS
attack last week against
THE PLAINS - After top rated Willi'amstown,
tumbling from the unbeat- Wahama concluded the
en ranks following a loss night with 235 yards of
to Wil1iamstown Coach total offense but the
Ed Cromley's Wahama majority of that total came ·
White · Falcon football once the Yellow Jacket
team · prc;pares for a road reserves entered the contest at Athens as the Bend test. Senior Kyle Zerkle
Area team attempts to continue's to lead the Bend
secure its third consecu- Area team in scoring with
tive pl11yoff berth ·and its 89 points while junior
seventh post-season chal- Micaiah Branch has 60
points
and
Garrett
lenge in eight years.
Underwood
54.
The White Falcons
Branch is the .teams
dropped only two spots in
leading
ground gaine~
the latest WVSSAC state
with
713
yards while
rankings despite the onesided loss to the Yellow Zerkle has 477 yards and .
Jackets · and appears in senior Jacob Roach 216.
the ninth position among Junior William Zuspan
Class A M:hools. The has completed 54 of 95'
locals 6-1 regular season passes on the year for
record on the current sea- 1044 yards and 17 touchson puts the Mason . downs with three of his
County grid squad on the aerials being picked off.
playoff bubble no matter Underwood leads the
what the outcome in the · receiving corp with. 15
Bend Area teams final catches for 261 yards and
three regular season· con- nine touchdowns with
tests. Realistically, how- junior Colin Pierce grab-.
ever, WHS would likely bing 10 tosses for 229
need at least one more yards and three scores.
victory over · Athens ,
Defensively ·Branch is
Parkersburg Catholic or the runaway leader in
Buffalo to assure its place tackles followed· by Trey
in the 16 team playoff Anderson,
Matt
field and a lhree game Dangerfield, ·
Elijah
sweep to earn a first round Honaker
and
Jacob
home outing. ·
Roach. Senior
Colby
Friday's 7:30 p.m . road Davis, freshman Robert
contest
against
the Peyton and sophomore
Bulldogs will be the first Ryan Lee are coming off
ever meeting between the big outings tbe past two
two schools. Athens, 3-6 weeks · and are quickly
on the year, began the moving up the leader
season by losing its first eoard for the WHS'
fopr games but has rallied defensive
unit . Kyle·
to win three of its last five Zerkle intercepted one·
dates. The Bulldogs fell
pass. last week to gi v~·
to Gallia Academy (31the senior defensive
22), Federal Hocking (16·back five picks on the
0), Bloom Carroll (27-'13)
season.
.
and Meigs (26-13) before
Athens is averaging:
winning two straight over
19.4:
points per game.
Vinton County (25- 7) and
Alexander (34-6). Two offensively while the
defense
is'
more losses to Wellston Bulldog
allowing
20.7
points
per
(34-21) and NelsonvilleYork (22-14) preceded a outing . Wahama averwin over Belpre (33-18) ages 40.5 points offen~
sively while the Bend
last week.
Area defense giv es up:
Athens' go
18.8 points per game to.
opposition.
.
Sl
•Priday's
kickoff
wm.
back
be the regular s&amp;ason
. totliled 186
three touchdowns in the football finale. for the
win over Belpre . Junior Bulldogs with a starting
Robbie Glass also reached tim.e for the senior n,ight
the end zone against the contest set for 7:30p .m.

'

�...

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 24,2008 •

www .mydailysentinel.com
•

••

Friday, October 241 2008

Big East Notebook

~

m:rthune- Sentinel-l\e

7
3-year-old
has
teammates
hooked
on
his
game
Cardinals turn to the run
•
!
Bv JtM

'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

LITKE

·.----------------~----

: Climbmg out of the car
:afler the first lew days of
;practice was torture.
, Dunng speed and agility
j?,rills, hts teammates were
,timed running the 40-yatd
•dash m 5 seconds or less He
~ran 6.6 Thetr vertrcal leaps
:ranged !rom 41 mches to the
~low 30s. He JUmped 20.
£ ''I'm not exactly a dunker,"
~said Roane State guard Ken
~Mmk, who at 73 ts nearly
:tour umes as old as many of
ihts teammates and twtce as
rold as me Tennessee commufmty college he 'II sun up and
wiay basketball for.
~ "But l"ve scored m scnm~inages, blocked a shot and
:tnade a mce behind-the-back
:pass to the corner not too
~long ago that pretty much
~topped
practtce m ns
,racks "
• Mmk. a 6-toot. 190~pounder. passed a phystcal
:before bemg cleared to play:
' he can't run the court at
~game tempo for more than
~five mmutes, and he doesn't
:expect to get on the tloor
•unttl the wanmg moments ot
•·mop-up tune.
: In short. thts ston ts more
:about the JOUrney 'than the
-destmatron
; A half-century ago. Mink
'Was commg off a solid freshman season at tmy Lees
College m Kentucky and
eycmg a Dtvtston I scholarshtp One day. he got a note
'to report to the prestdent's
' otfrce The coach's offrce
i had been "soaped" - shav~ mg cream filled hi s shoes
•and JUSt about every other
• 1ecept~cle m the room , as
well as the walls - and
someone fingered Mmk as
;the culpnl He pleaded mnoicent but was summartly
!expelled
1 "Nobody talked about 'due
process' m that era," Mmk
recalled dunng a telephone
tntervtew Thursday, but me
bttterness has been leavened
.only so much by the passage
:of trme. Mmk ts stx chapters
1111to a book he plans to wnte
;aboltl the season, but tt
•already mcludes thts plea
&gt;·Fess up "
"To thts day, I don 't know
,who dtd 11. But I'd love to
, know I promtse I won't try

LeBeau was m the final
yeat of hts head coachmg
contract DLtnng minicamp
that year, he donne~ a
Superman shtrl and ' ran
through a banner that satd.
"Bengals Super Bowl 2002"
\\-hen the team fell to 0-7
with a 30-24 loss to
Tennessee, LeBeau got emottonal after the game
"We had every opportumty
to Will, and next week we wtll
wm." he said. hts voice nsmg
for emphasts
Told of hts coach's predtctton. Johnson went one step
further
"Next week , I assure vou a
wm.'' he satd "I guarantee
you we wtll v.m"
It was the first tune the second-year recerver went out on
a limb that way He backed tt
up by catchmg one of Jon
Kitna 's four touchdown passes agamst the Texans who
were 2-5 headmg mto the
~arne and had the Ben gals'
mfl ammatory guotes posted
on l:hetr buUeun boards for
msptratron.
Afterward, LeBeau played

down how hts predtction had
come true.
"I dtdn 't know my powers
of clatrvo~ance were so
ommpotent,' he satd. "I JUst
wanted them (the Bengals) to
know I was proud of them
and I belteved that "
He was done prcdtcltng.
and the Bengals were done
wmnmg. They lost thetr next
stx games before wmnmg
anothet. and fimshed the season a franchtse-wotst 2-14.
LeBeau was fired and Marvm
Lewts was brought m as head
coach
Only four players rem.un
from the 2002 team Ocho
Cmco,
receiver
T J.
Houshmandzadeh. left tackle
Levt Jones and lon~-snapper
Bt ad St Lollis Ocno Cm&lt;:o
had forgotten about hts guarantee unttl he was remmded
lhts week Houshmandzadeh
dtdn 't remember too much
about the game, etther
"What's funny ts I dtd play
that
game."
satd
Houshmandzadeh . who had
three catches ''I played that
game and I never thought I

was gomg to play that game
Let's JUSt say I went to bed
that mght at 4 o'clock m the
mornmg. I went to bed late
because I dtdn't thmk I'd
play"
lust ltke m 2002, the
Bengals are headmg to
Houston as an underdog. The
Texans ate 2-4, conung off
wms over Mtamt and wmless
DetrOit They've neve1 won
three m d row m thcu bnef
htstory They were a 10 1/2pomt tavonte at the strut of
the week
The Beng,,ls ' A loss on
Sunday would drop them to
0-8 fllr the filth lime 111 franchrse lmtory. Thetr won,t
st,m was 0- 10 m 1993 under
Dave Shula They've also
started 0-8 three other ttmes·
1978. 1991 and 1994
Cmcmnalt ts commg off a
38- 10 loss to P11tsburgh, their
most lopstded defeat of the
.season.Aithough there's been
no predtctmg and no guaranteemg , there was a sense of
optnmsm that good thmgs
wuld happen agam \"
Houston.

those two games,
A btg part of the reason.
AP SPORTS WAITER
Cmcmnau was forced to use
On a team full of questton redshirt freshman quarterback
marks, Loursvtlle quarterback Chazz Anderson because of
Hunter Cantwell was sup- mJunes to senior Dustin
Grutza (broken leg) and
posed to be the constatJt
Lately, it's been the other junior Tony Pike (broken left
forearm) Pike was back at
way around
TheCardmals(4-2,0- l Btg practice l:hts week wtl:h the
East) have won four of five left (non-l:hrowing) arm proalmost m sptlc of the play of tected by a soft cast
Part of the problem agrunst
Cantwell , wbo has struggled
v.nh an ankle tnjury and Rutgers was the mexperiuncharactensttcally
po,or enced quarterback. Anderson
took consecultve sacks that
decrsron making
Cantwell has throw eight set up a thild-and-24, at1d had
touchdowns passes and a Btg anotfter sack that led to a
East-leadmg erght mtercep- lhtrd-and-19. Penallles also
ttons, mdudi ng a parr of ptcks played mto it. Cincinnati
last week agamst Mtddle drew 12 overall for 115 yards
Crncinnati ranks stxth in the
Tennessee that allowed the
Blue Ratders to butld an early Btg East on third downs, convertmg 35 percent for the sea14-0 le.td
son.
South Ronda leads the
The Cardmals managed to
recover behind the strength of conference at 47 percent.
"We need to work on our
tts runnmg game to wm, and
coach Steve Kragthorpe potse ," runmng back Jacob
st1essed Cantwell had as Ramsey satd. "It's not that
much to do wtth the rally as we're not phystcally tough
he dtd wtth the defictt enough or mentally tough
Cantwell
threw
for enough. It's that we have to
Loursvtlle's final touchdown stay more focused and eliminate some of the penalties at1d
and tim shed w1th 144 yards
go
and get the thtrd-atld-shon
' The thmg you always
worry about a QB ts when or whatever it may be."
UPON
FURTHER
somethmg doesn't go hts way
Connecllcut
and when thmgs aren't neces- REVIEW:
sanly rollmg the way you coach Randy Edsall would
would want them to go, how like to see some changes in
does
he
respond?" the Btg East's instant replay
Kr.tgthorpe sa ,d "It's a lot system Edsall dtd not cballtke .t fighter p1lot, tf you get lenge a safety called dunng
m " tatlspm are you gomg to Saturday 's 12-10 loss to
be able to pull it out or are you Rutgers, even though replays
gomg to end up crashing? showed Connecncut running
And I thought Hunter dtd an back Donald Brown may
excellent JOb of that."
have made tl out of the end
zone
It helps when you have a
Edsall said he couldn't tell
potent. rushmg
attack.
Loursvtlle, whtch butlt its rep- from hts position if it was a
utatton under Bobby Petnno bad call, and was relymg on
as a pass-first attack, rs aver- replay officials m the Sooth.
ag mg a robust 210 yards per They are supposed to ex31J1game on the ground.
me every play, making II difSTEADY STULL: While ficult for coaches to know
much of the hoopla surround- when a challenge should be
mg No 17 Ptttsburgh 's nse made, Edsall said.
has gone to do-everything
"At least tf it's a controvertailback LeSean McCoy, me Sial lhmg, we wrsh mat they
steady play of quarterback would JUSt maybe stop (play),
Bill Stull has made defenses so we know that 11 s bet.ng
pay for gatJgmg up on the run reviewed and let (the officil!ll
Stull has blossomed during go over and say, 'No, it's
hts first year starting for the OK"'
Panthers (5-I) He's seoond in
Edsall satd he also would
the conference 111 passing hke to see the revtews moved
yards, av'eragmg 213 yards from the booth to field, as
per game
. they do m the NFL.
"I thmk tl's a work' m
"Nothing agamst the replay
progress," satd coach Dave officials m the booth, but the
Wannstedt. "Every game he's guys on the field, they're
doing some thmgs better. actually domg thts everr,
Every game somethmg week and they are seemg 11 , '
comes up that's a leaming he said
expenence for hun We've
UConn
(5-2)
hosts
got to contmue that route Cmcmnatt (5-l) on Sarurday
week by week Hopefully
HONORS: South Ronda
some ot the mtstakes we quarterback Matt Grothe's
make and he makes can be year JUSt keeps gettmg better.
cot reeled and not costly.''
The JUiliOr ptcked up B1g East
Whtle Stull has thrown 'offensrve player of the week
more intercepttons (five) than honors for me third lime l:hts
tOl!Chdowns
(four), season for hts play m a 45-13
Wannstcdt satd Stull's abthty wm over Syracuse. Grothe
to play through pam has threw for 348 yards and three
endeared htm to teammates
touchdowns and added 72
''He's defimtely a tough yards rushmg and at1other
guy," Wannstedt satd "He's score for the Bulls.
got the respect of all the
Rutgers lmebacker Ryan
coaches, all the piayers and D'Impeno was named defenhe's been bat1ged around a lit- stve player of me week after
tle btl and he comes m every collecting II tackles, mcludday and shows U{l and he's mg I 5 tackles for loss, m a
ttght there in the mtddle of tl." 12- 10 wm over Connecticut.
GET THE PUNTER D'lmpeno helped me Scarlet
READY: Cincinnati won its Kmghts hmtt the Huskies to
last two games desptle a 117 yards rushing, 123 yards
dreadful showmg on thtrd below therr season average.
down
Rutgers punter Teddy
The Bearcats were only 4- Dellaganna was selected as
of-13 on thtrd-down conver- the special teams player of me
stons m a vtctory over week Dellagamta averaged
Marshall. They faded to con- 41.7 yards on seven punts,
vert any of their ll thtrd droppinl! four inside the
downs m a wm over Rutgers , Connecucut 20, includmg
lc"avmg them 4-tor-24 m three mside the UConn 3.

Tampa Bay's frrst ever
World Senes wm
"Unreal Thts ts awefrom Page Bl
some," Price satd. "[ was
nervous.,
• Phtladelphta's lone htt
'September after he was the
_top ptck m last year's draft. wtth runners in scormg
was
Shane
struck out slugger R~an posttton
Vtctonno's
mfield
smgle
m
Howard Wtth two on to end
the
fq,urth
and
that
dtdn
't
the seventh.
The hard-throwmg lefty even produce a run.
Ltvmg up to hts catchy
gave up a pmch-htt homer
"Btg Game
momcker,
.to Ertc Bruntlett m the
·'etghth. then stayed on to James." Shtelds outpttched
Baldellt
close tl out agarnst Brett Myers
Phtladelphta 's btg
~c;;:~~~ Phtlltes
r;,
throw,
Carloz Rutz led
double and a
'-'8~"1'~ Bay
advantwo costly mtstakes
Pnce
to graze tage
But ll was by Werth.
Rollins '
, not
a
batter and a
"They don., even call me
~ frustrated Rolhns ended up by my first name anymore,"
-poppmg out.
Shtelds satd.
- Rutz scored when thtrd
Shields usually flounshes
baseman Evan Longona at home. where he was 9-2
booted Jayson Werth's wrth a 2 59 ERA dunng the
.grounder for an error, but season All four of hts post' Pnce fanned Chase Utley season starts have come at
and got Howard on a g:vne- tncky Tropicana , Freid,
endmg grounder to secure includmg a wm over the

Chtcago Whne Sox in
Tampa Bay's tirst playoff
game.
A 14-game wmner durtng the season. the nghthander looked surpnsed
when he was pulled m the
srxth after 104 pllche;. He
doffed ht&gt; cap to the
crowd, and Dan Wheeler
retrred Pedro Feliz on an
rnnmg-endrng grounder
wtth runner;~~ the corners
The Phil ire ~ had a chance
to rally m the It fth after
puttmg two on wtth one
out. Utley htt a looper to
nght that wa; caught on
the run by Baldellt who
ftred to ftrst behmd Werth
for an t ~mng-endmg double play
Back from two seasons
deratled by lllJunes and
mttochondnal dtsorder. a
condrtion that slows muscle recove ry and causes
extreme fatrgue. Baldellt
also wa; rt:~• olved on a
confusrng call m the sec-

ond that helped Tampa Bay
make ll 3-0
He checked ht s sw mg on
a full-count pttch and plate
umptre Kerwm Danley
rmmedtately ratsed hts
nght arm as tf to call stnke
three But then Danley
pomted to ftrst base for an
appeal, and umptre Fteldm
Culbreth stgnaled saf~
"It was hts mtentton to
go to ftrst base for help on
a hall-;w mg that he had as
ball four.'' satd Mrke Port.
MaJor League Baseball 's
vtce presrdent for umptrmg ''He JU!it gave a con, fusmg mechahtc But he
had called II a ball, and I[
was ruled no half -swing
an1way So 11 was JUSt that
parttcular mechantc that
caused contuston •·
Myers
and
several
Pht lltes mftelders were
puzzled,
along
wllh
Manuel. who took a few
steps out of the dugout but
dtdn 't argue long

"I thought he called the
guy out," Manuel said .
Port said the umptres
would not be avatlable for
comment
Wtth the bases loaded
and two outs, Upton htt an
RBI smg le to nght. Werth
made a strong throw to cut
down
Baldellt,
who
cras hed tnto Rut z but
couldn 't dtslodge the ball
Before the next mmng
staned. Baldellt rested on
one knee tn nght field.
In the fourth, Bartlett,
the No 9 hitter, drove m
Cliff Floyd wuh a safety
squeeze - one pttch after
fou lmg off a surctde
squeeze attempt. Rays fans
clanged thetr cow bells , JUSt
as they were mstructed on
the scoreboard 111 a campy
"publtc servtce announcement" before the game.
Demoted to the mmors Ill
July. Myers was m trouble
from)the start. He rssued a
leadoff walk tq Akinori

BY WtLL GRAVES

Larry Crumlphoto

In lhts Oct 1 photo, Roane State basketball player Ken Mtnk, 73, ts guarded by teammate
Camtlle Ngon a' Ngon dunng basketball practrce at Roane State Communrty College's gym
in Hamman, Tenn
'
to beat you up ," he satd , then
added a moment later "Of
course.that person mtght not
be around anymore "
Instead of sulkmg, Mmk
left Lees and enhsted m the
Atr Force He played plenty
m the mtlttat y and when he
left to become a new spapet man , the games shtfted to
YMCA
and
indu strial
leagues When he retired , 11
was state Semor O!ymptc
tournaments. He added soliball , golf, htkmg, hang-gilding and snov. - and water-sktmg to Ius repertoue. and
can't remember a week passmg smce he was 6 when he
wasn't playmg something
Ltke the rest of us , Mmk
got slower. ttghtet and the
bumps and brutses ltngered
longer But one thmg dtdn' l
change He could shoot the
eyes out of a basket That's
what Mmk was domg in a
netghbor's dnveway near hts
Knox ville-area home when
he canned one shot after
another. Remembenng he
sttll had a year of eltgtbtltty
left, he walked back to ht s
house and announced "I've
strll got I! I''
"You 've still got what'!"
hts wtfe, Ameha, asked
"I can still play," Mink
teplted "There's sttll some
life left in the old guy"
He wrote to eight schools
wtthm an hour's dnve and
recerved zero responses He
was about to grve up when

coach Randv Nesbtl called to
atrange a· ' meetmg. Mmk
went to the gym at h1s church
three ttmes a week to prac tice. run and hft wetghts.
then stopped by the chapel
&lt;tfterwant to say H few exu a
pra)ers
Nesbtl look one look at
hun and the deal was sealed.
"I'm not ve ry good at sayIll£ no," he told the
Knoxvtlle News Sentinel.
" It's a gesture of goodwill to
help a fme man lmd closure.
Why not?"
Mmk's teammates had a
few more quesltons
When they saw hts reactton to the Ratders' long,
baggy shorts - ''Sttll make
me feel hke a 5-year-old" they wanted to know what
shorts were ltke back m ht s
day "When I showed them
how ht~h, they kept laughmg
and gomg. 'That htgh?'"
Stuck beneath the basket
on one play, he ptvoted away
from a defender and
uncorJ&lt;ed the httle-man hook
shot Chft Hagan populanzed
from the mtd-1950s The
Ratders had never heard of a
hook shot, let alone Hagan.
"So I reminded them about
Kareem and the sky hook:·
Mink satd "I hoped most of
them knew who he was ."
He's learned a few thmgs
hom them, too.
"If a guy made great play
back then. we slapped ht m
on the rump Today, you've

elbow bumps and knuckle
salutes and then you're supposed to bounce off each
other I JUstt em md them ," he
satd , "to be careful bumpmg
a 71-yeat-old '
Pttchet Satchel Patge
famously satd , "Age ts a
qLtestton ol mtnd over matter It you don't mmd , 11
don't matter ·• It's not qune
th.ll st mple, oJ cowse
Sull, two 50-somethmgs
made the rosters at MameAugust.t and Western Uppet
Pemnsu la not too long ago,
and even a '19-year-old linebacker played at Sui Ross
State m Texas
Ro,me State's season
begms Nov 3 agamst Kmg
College. In the me.mtrme.
Mmk satd he 's balancmg
homewor k hom a full 12hour workload and tr)'tng tl!
master Nesbtt's mlttcate
motron offense
The Raider s mtght JUst be
good enl!ugh to get Mmk
some gat bage tune nght off
the bat Etthet way, you'll
know he 's made tt mto the
game when you look up m
the stands and see famtly and
fnends m 50s-style cheerleadmg garb, holdmg up a
stgn that reMs, "Ken! Ken'
He's out (Medrcare) man!"
Jmt L1tke

a natwnal
;port; u!lu m11111 for The
A;;ocwred Pre1.1 Wute to
hrm at jlllkeap.mg
11

:o.7 Bengals going to Houston for flashback game
CINCINNATI (AP) Dtck LeBeau 'predtcted a win
"Chad Johnson went ahead
and
guaranteed
tl
Remarkably. both turned out
to be nght.
The last ttme the Cmcmnall
Bengals went to Houston.
,they were 0-7 and awfully
chatt)' for a wmless team
-Even the oddsmakers expected them to lose th&lt;tt 2002
game agamst the Texans. an
;expansron team that had
never before been favored
The result: Cmcmnau 38.
Houston 3. The losmg streak
was over - for one week
· As they get ready to head
' back to Houston this weekend the Bengals ha\e the
· ~ame record but few parallels
wrth that team of stx years
ago LeBeau ts the defensrve
coordmator m Pmsburgh
Johnson has changed hts last
name to Ocho Cmco And
there's a whole lot less hubns
th" ltmc around
"There's really no room to
talk trash." Ocho Cmco satd .
That '02 Bengals bunch
.had no trouble

J{ays

· cLASSIFIED

as QB Cantwell struggles

ASSOCIATED PRESS

lwamura in the ftrst before
Upton shced an oppositefield smgle to nght. Werth
booted the ball for a key
error that gave both runners an extra base, and
Upton clapped hts hands
after sltdmg into second.
Carlos Pena drove m a
run with a groundout and
the Phtllies kept their
inf1eld back for Longoria,
who made It 2-0 wuh
another grounder
Shtelds gave up leadoff
doubles m the second and
third, but escar.ed each
time
as
Phtladelphia
plunged to 0-for-19 wtlh
runners 111 sconng JXISIIion
during the Senes.
Vrctonno's mftcld smgle
snapped the slide in the
fourth, putting runners at
the corners wrth one out
Shtelds then struck out
destgnated httter Greg
Dobbs lor the second ltme
and retired Feliz C!J a
grounder.·

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Wlllet'prOOflng

Uncondftlona! lifetime

~Juarantee. Local refer·

1f the
lender

mortga~

broker or
IS properly If
cansed {ThiS Is a pu bl•·
"'
service
announcement
from the Ohio ' Valley
Publishing Company)

~

ences lumiSned Estel&gt;llshed 1975 Cal24 HI&amp;
740 446 0870 Rogers
•
•
'
Basement Waterproofing

I

WUI

ngty accept 1n
1

lt'tlument
lltk)nofthelaw.

Other Servicts

::Po~t=::c,:"e:"m~ab~on:"s"'"":c::::atl
740-446-3745

IL:~~~~;U

UHf

4 9'"8--~
~$4~50~7~40-~25'"6_1 _

5pm304-675·2529

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Loal&amp; Found ............................................... 216
Memory/Thank You ............................... 220
Notlcea ........................................................ 225

Recreatlonll V.hlclea ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcyclea ..............................................1010
BOIIWAcceaorlea ................................ 1015
CamperiRVa&amp;Trallera ........................... 1020
Motorcyclea......... ................................ 1025
Other .....................................................1030

::::,·~~::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~ :~~',!':.t~~.:::::::::::::::::. .::.:.:::::::·::.:.:·::::::.:~:~
Servlcea ....................................................... 300

Appliance Service ............ ,........................ 302
Automotive ............................................... 304
Building Materlala ....................................... 306
BuelneN .................. · ..... ......................... 308
catering ......................................................310
ChlldiEidat1y C.re ....................................... 312
Computera .................................................. 314
ContrKtora ............................................... 318
DomHflco/JonKorlol .................................. 318
Elactrl""l ...................................................... ~
Financial................. ...... . •..........................326
Hoollh... ................................................. .....
HIItlng &amp; Coollng .............. _....................... 328
Home lmprovementa 330
tnouronce .................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................. 334
Mualc/Dtlnce/Dromo .................................. 333368
Other S.rvlcea....................... ......................
Plumbing/Electrical ....................................340
li'roleeelon•l Servlce1 ................................. 342
Aepll,. ............................................. ··········::
Rool11111 .................. ...... "' ................... ' •

S.Curtty........................... ........... ...... ......... 348

TlxiAccountlng ........................................... 350
Trawl/Entertainment ........... .......................362
Financial .....................................................400
Flnonclel Sentl- .......................................405
ln1urance ..........................................7....... 410
Maney to Lend ............................................415

Educltlon .....................................................SOO

Bual,_o &amp; -School .... ......................505
lomructlon &amp; Trotn11111 ............................... 510
LMaOM .......................................................515
Peroorll&gt;l ..................................................... &amp;20
Anlmala ............ ,_.............................. ......... 800
Animal Supplln ................................ ...... 805
HOriM .....................................................810
U.oetock.....................................................815
Pota..............................................................820
want to buy................................................825
.f\!lrlculturo................. ................................:1011
Jiijt:m Equipment .......................................705
Gordon &amp; Produce .....................................710
Hoy, Fead, Seed, Groin ............................. ,. 715
'hintinG Land .......................................... 720
Wont to buy.............................................725

a

_ . . . ...............................................100
Anttquea ........... - ................................- .......to5
Applla,.. ........................................- .......110
Auctlono ............................................ • .....115
Bargain Boaement..................................120
Collecll-..................................................!125
Camputwro .................................................930
Equi..,...WUpplt.....................................935
Flea Merkota ......................... ,..................... t40
Fuel on Coai/Waodo'Gu ............................ 945
Furntturo ............................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt 6 Sport ....................................955
Kld'a c...-..........-....................................960
Ml-toMDua...................... ..... • .... • ....1165
W~nt to buy ..................................................970
Sale ...................................~.................975

••nt

AutaAentaliLeue ...........................~ ......... 2005
Aulol....... ... .............. ........... ....... ...... 2010
Clnalc/An11quet ........ ,, ......... .... ....... 2015
CommerclalnndUIItrlal .............................. 2020
Part1 &amp; Acceporlea. • .................,..... ...2025
Sporta Utlltty ...................................... 2030

Truoka......................................................... 2035
Utility Trallera ....................................... 2040
V•ne ..... •••·•••· ...........................................2045

=

Wontto buy ...............................................2050
Real EaiAit; Selea ..................................
c . m e t e c ryl llota .......................................301 0
omnwrc • ................................................
Candomlnluma .......................................301&amp;
For &amp;lilt by Owner...................- ................3020
HouHolor Sele .........................................3025
Land (Acrooge) ..........................................3030
Lola ..... .....................................................~~
Want lo buy................................................RNI EaiAitellentela.................................3500
Apartmentii'TownhauHI ........................ 3505
gomct"*"f1rl ...............................................~=~~·
on omln uRmo........................................ 3520
Hou... or
La~Aoraage) ..........................................3525
Storogo ...................................................... 3636
Want to Rent .......................................... 3540
Mllnulocturod Houa11111 ............................. 4000
Lot8 ............................................................4005
Mo¥ers........................................................4010
Rentela ....................................................... 4015
.........................................................4020
SuppiiH . ............................................... 4025
Wont to Buy .............................................. 4030
Reoort Property ........................................ &amp;0011
Rnorl Property for uta .......................... 5025
Ro110rl Property for rant ........................... 5050
Employmont ...............................................
Aecountlng/Financlel ..............................6002
AdmlniAitrotlve/Prolnalonol ..... ,,. .............6004
Caahler!Cierk ........................................80011
ChlldiEidtrty Cllro....................... .......
6008
Clerlcol ...................................................... 8010
Conlltrucllon ................... ,. ......................8012
Drivers &amp; Delivery .~.......................... 8014
EduAtlon......................~~...............6016
Eloc:tricol Plumbing ..... , ........ ; ............... eD18
Employment Agenctea .............................. eo20
Ent-lnment ..................................... ,. ..... eo22
Food Servlceo ........................................ 6024
Government &amp; -.a. Jol&gt;a ...................eo26
llefp anted- G-.1 .................................. 8028
Low Enlarcement .................................... 6030
Malntonone..OOmeatlc ............................ 8032
Manogemeni/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
-honloo ............................................... 11038
_1.,.1 ...................................... ,.,.............. 11038
Muolcat .................................................. 6040
Plirt·TII-Tompororleo ...............- .......... 6042
-uronto ............................................... 6044
Set .............. - ............................................. 6048
Technical 'Trac!n ......................... ...... 8050 ,
ToxtiiH/Factcky .......~ ................................ 80!i2

ent................. .......... ... ......

eooo

Mlnlture
DachShund
CKC regiStered. shots,
wormed
Males &amp; Females
longhair
&amp;
shorthatr, red &amp; blackll:an

o---

Oak

Air
ConditiOned
V1sa, Master Card &amp;
Debt! 304·550-1616 Ste·
phen Aeedy ~~639
.............~':"':'!!!!!!":""'
:::52;:110;;.:;;304~5:;;93;.;·36~20:....:~~
Fu.l/ 01/ Coal/
:::'
k
Wood/ Gas
Pomerantan&amp;pup2sd Bshow1s , ....~~"'"::"""~
old 1st
n
s FireWOOd tor sale, hard
wormed 2 (M) left $150
delivered
11 1
SR W 1
sp
10
• u
PUJlpes b r ~---~--~~~
sale partially house ro- Seasoned
Firewood
ken &amp; 3 monlha old. Hardwood 44s-9204
!(~740~l4~16-64~;;:49~~~~
Yorkfe Puppies for sale tlasoned Firewood CAA
S350 &amp; 5450 Ve1 recom- HEAP
accepted
mended
6 wks old 645-5946 or 441·0941

~~~~

~lllpolls

~~115

L~....i.i-.f

•- 1 Hunt &amp;

;;;;;;;;5;;;;;;

t 86 NOrth Park Or call
304 675-5640
or
304-593-1204 will sell on
Lana Contract or Out
Right Also a Wellington
Ptano call lor appo1nt
ment to see them both
bo

lu m
mower
Gravely 60 tnch deck
Audioni
27 HP Moving, must
~
~ ....~~!""';;;:;;;~~ sell 367-7129
Cross
Creek
Auctton, "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Buffalo Sa1Urday 6 pm
~
USed
Consignments ::~-W~ani;:-T;;;o~Buy;;;i;;;....~
J k
&amp;
from BC SOn
nuaue
Counties,
Fumlture, Buying tools sell or trade
mEK:hanlc-carpenter lawn
Hand Tools &amp; Produce &amp; garden power toots
1 1
Call 740-38S-1515 or celt
after Mtnlature
Schnauzers quality Knives such as 740"208 0320
available (740)9921328
Case Buck &amp; Mossy Absolute Top Dollar Sll·

~~EEY,:Wno~, l.a~ort~! ~74;;;1l-~388~8;.;6:;;55~~~~ ~~~!dln~~n~ !0 :~~~

wtth Children call

for Solo

M;---u---u1

Zero

ver/gold
co1ns
any
1OK/14KI18K gold jewoil)'. dental gold, pre
US
currency
1935
J)roof/ml nt
sets
dla
monds, MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gall1.wls 4462842
F'

·

Yard Sole

9-5 &amp; Nov 2 !.rom 9-3

ove-n pee •
Chp th1s AD and lake It
wtth you when you VISit

our community to get
this spectal dlseourn
Move-m m Oct and get
$100.00 oil your 2BR
Apt 1n Nov Currently
renttng 1 &amp;: 2 BR units

Spacious lloor plans.
ranch &amp; 1ownhome style
hv1ng playground &amp;
basketball cour1 on-site
laundry tactltty 24 hr
emergency mamte

nance qutel country locatiOn close to mator
facilities

medtcal

pharmacies grocery
store juS1 m1nutes
away from other major
shopping m the area

Aportmenll
266 Coloma! Drive #113
B~well Oh~ 45614
741l-446 3344
OffiCe Hours M W. F
9AM • 5PM

11.----------...1

d
I de
ve groun poo ,
tached double garage 1BA Apt WID hookups
fenced-In back yard nice satellite TV 1ncl w/renr
nelghbo1hood
1n Racma, close to hospital cau
)
•
1740 992 1424
~~~~~'::':"~~
74 o-339 0362
3 BD HOUSE IN CHES ~~~---.-----TEA Oh CONTACT
2 bedroom IMng room
740·985 4t31
kitchen bath Apartment
~~~~~~~ Have Central Air, ful
3 Bed 2 Bath HUO
Homesl Only $19 900 for mshed
Wllh
coubt1

a

Ustirtgs 800-620 4946 e:c

~A0;;;1:;;9~~~~:::-'~

~~a~: m~~~~:e

=

dtnlng table and chairs
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In $400 depOSit, $400 a

town • hw &amp; llle floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths.
pnvacy lance &amp; above
ground
pool
securUy
system much more 130
Basttanl D1 $129 OOOF01
ptes and tnformation go
to
wwworvbcom
446·2923
. ~-~--~......-::-::::

month
Call
304 882 2523
Leave
Message and Numbe1 11
not at Home

:"'::::"':"""":""--':""::o=
2 BR Apartmenl &amp; 2 BA
House on Sth St Pt
Pleasant
304·812·4350
asldor Don

~=-~--~;;;;;;~= ~o~:~ ~~n1 ~!le~~~~l ~~~ ~3--roo·m•s..,..a·nd~b-a1'."h-up2 Fam Oct 25·26 from 1nGalhr:Johs 4462692

sta1rs

Completely

fur

8-5? Old Gall1a School Ext rdl
Pr perty ntshed w1th WfD No
House on A1 233 at
'": ~ery
lh~ pe1s Aol Aeq 441-0245
1
Greenfield Fire Station 5 pee cu er Yew
o1
~:=~~:::::::::!:""'::=.
Clothes,
glassware, Ohio River
Apar1menl available now

°

Sport

GUN SHOW • LANCAS
TER OH Nov 1 from

Townhoutoo

HoMy&amp;uckle Hilla

H011101

~;;;;;;;;;;;;__,;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 br 1 b full basement,

,_
-::;==-~~;;;;;;;~-:-~

CKC Maltese pups Fe·
males $550 Males $500 :FREE Puppies 1/2 Jack
74G-256-t498
Ausse!l &amp; 112 mtx 6 wks
~-.~~-='-.--...'" old 304-1375-5313
-:Fema1e "Mint ""h
~ nauzer ~~~:"':::~:="':~::'
6 monUl old $100 with Free 1-1 2 Yr old M ,nu&lt;age 740-441-tl365
etered
Austnan
Cattle
Dog good homo ontyCall
FOUND, Siamese cat on
740-843-5401message
JerJCho
Ad
Pt
PI
304-675·3522
G1veawayl Small Gold
Lab
Female
Call

~~~~~~~~---:::-::--:-::-:=::=:::~~~~~==~:::::::._
1
~
Legala ............................................_ . ......... 100
Announcllfftenta .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlveraary ................................. 206
Happy Ada ....... ....................................... 210

....._

1r11 ts'lle
Sillcs

3000

:

H-

Buy

Cars Trucks, and GMC,
Saturn BUICk SUV S With
we'"anty
Vistl us at

know and NOT to send
money through the mall
unit! you have tnvestigat-

~ ..tnllfft/

lNc:b

Ca-./
IVa &amp;
"-r--

Pnvate dnve off L1ncoln
Hill,
Pomeroy.
OhiO,
woods on three s1des
(4+)acres to a hlstoncal
home
C1rca 1900 5
bedrooms 2 fireplaces, 2
fuH baths 2 statrcases

R1verbend
Apts
New
Haven lfoiV Now accept
lng
applications
for
HUO subsichzed
one
Bedroom Apls
U~ ltltes
tncluded Based on 30%
of adjusted Income Call

Trailers

beautiful ongmat wOOd· 304 882 312t
available
wort(, many p1cture wm- for Sen1or and D1sabled
dows mostly new win- · people
dows large kllchen and
breaklasl mom beault
v,
tully landscaped with 1n :::::::------:"-----.
STOCK
TRAILERS ,
Miocellanoou&amp;
AV
gmund pool Stl on the 2BA garage Apartment
LOAD
MAX
EOU1P·
Service at Carmichael wrap around porch and downlown $425 mth ren1
MENT
TRAILERS 200+
Nascar
trading Tra11era
enJOY
1he spectacular + uttli11es NO PETS
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp; cards $100 00
740·446·3625
v1ew o1 lhe On•o Atvor 2 446·0415
HOMESTEADER
Dale Jr run in the red ::]~~E~: car detached garage and
CARGO/CONCESSION,
stand up $20 00
2 out butldtngs Would Free
Rent
Special' II
TRAILERS
B+W Dale Jr Budweiser rae·
MototqdN
make a wonderful family 2&amp;3BR and up, Central
GOOSENECK FLATBED tng· 3·0 stand up $20 00
home or bed &amp; breaklaSI Air WID hookup, tenanl
$3999 VIEW OUR EN· 304-675-6822
gg Honda XR70R Good Pn~tate anef P~turesque
pays electnc EHO Elm
TIRE TRAILER INVENCondltton
runs
good
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Vtew
Apts
TORY AT
only (304)882 3017
WNW CARMICHAEL·
Jet Aera11on MoiOIS re $500 obo 740-367-7251
TRAILERS COM
palled new &amp; rebUin •n or 740-645-4647
Tw1n RIVers Tower Is ac·
•
40slock Call Ron Evans,
7 446 3625
Land
ceptlng appl~a1K&gt;ns 1or
1 800-537·9528
~~~§"'~~~ wa1tmg 11st for HUO sup
Trade- 1995 Chevy Con sidtzed 1 BR apartment
~~":""~~~":::::: Mollohan
Carpel
Fall
Have you priced a Johl)
~;ers10n
Van
eKcellent lor the elderty/Cflsabled
Special 20 oz Cammer·
condition, eas" on gas call 675·66'9
Deere lately? You II be lal ca-t $6 95/yaM
•
'
'u
also w!tra1ler
"76":-.16
surprised! Check out our C
Se era! 't""
Colors
• -~
v
....,.;;;;;:;;;;;"""';;;i;;;;;':;;;;;;;;;;~ 2b 3500N
axles, 2 whee l BeeuUful Apls at Jeck·
used
lnf91'110ry
at 740-446 7"-4 Quality al ~
k
1
lor' 5 1on Eatltel 52 West
WNW CAREQ com
Car Low Pncesl
2001 Pontiac Grand AM ra es w ramp
michael
Equtpment ~~~~~~~ take
over
payments acres tn Me1gs Counry wood Or from $365 to
740-446 2412
NEW AND USEO STEEL 304-1&gt;75-3168
(740)992·0174
$560
741l-446·2568
•
Equal Housing Opportu·
Steel Beams Pipe
Rebar
for
Concrete
Angle ~~~----...--:oo~
nlty This lnstiMion IS an
Channel Flat Bar, Steel 2006 Durango 4 wheel
Equal Opportunity ProGrating
for OralflS Onve dnve lea1her. sun roof &amp;
vider
and Employer
Free
Black
Walnuts
player,
$10,000
Apc.lmonll/
G
Ll
and
Easy Access1b11ity1 Call ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L OVD
1
2
Scrap Me1als ()pen Mon 256-1618
TownhouMI
I'IIC oua
v 1r1IJ 1
74D-44~541
after Spm
rue
wect
&amp;
Fri
"iii'""m;;;;;i'i;;;;;;im! Bedroom Apts at VlllaQ'J
tor dlrectoos1
8am-4 30pm
Closad
~H API
(146) Manor and RIVerside
ThuiS
Sat
&amp;
Sun
T......
441-tl194
Apts tn Mtddleport, !rom
740.446·7300
$327
10
$590!
L0 741l-992 5064
Equel
1998
GMC
984390 CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
AFFORD· Hous1ng Opportuntty
Travel
trunk
14"
x miles, 1 0 angme gas 5 CATEO
14'/15'hlgh
tooled speed trans 24 n bed. ABLE! Townhouse apart· ~~~~...-"":!:'~~
and/or
small NICe
Clean
Ground
leather - SteOCIIed S A GVW 25950 lb8, 0001 ments,
hOuses
for
rent
Call
Floor
2br,
W/0
hookup
ColJI1h . Pt Pleasant va need
COL
$8,500
74~41·1111 lor lt apph ReferenoesJDepostt/No
did ll!oy 1858·pllone 304 304-773-5343
cation
&amp; lnformatiOfl
Pets 304-675-5162
5112·154 7 In tVOillntJ
Fairfield
county
Fa1r- ~-=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;
EBY,
INTEGRITY, grounds AM Butldlng AV Se111lce at Canm
KIEFER BUILT,
Adm $4 135 6 TBLS chael
Tra.leiS
"ALLEY
HORSE/LIVE $35 740-667-()412
741).446·3625

faim Equipment

,;!;ee;;,;,;,.;,;,,.,..,

ti:r·.·

:'!"!'----------

:----::-.--:-=

(Aa.ae-1

""'""'"""'i""""'""'=

"""""""""""""""'!:'""""

erx

•

�...

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 24,2008 •

www .mydailysentinel.com
•

••

Friday, October 241 2008

Big East Notebook

~

m:rthune- Sentinel-l\e

7
3-year-old
has
teammates
hooked
on
his
game
Cardinals turn to the run
•
!
Bv JtM

'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

LITKE

·.----------------~----

: Climbmg out of the car
:afler the first lew days of
;practice was torture.
, Dunng speed and agility
j?,rills, hts teammates were
,timed running the 40-yatd
•dash m 5 seconds or less He
~ran 6.6 Thetr vertrcal leaps
:ranged !rom 41 mches to the
~low 30s. He JUmped 20.
£ ''I'm not exactly a dunker,"
~said Roane State guard Ken
~Mmk, who at 73 ts nearly
:tour umes as old as many of
ihts teammates and twtce as
rold as me Tennessee commufmty college he 'II sun up and
wiay basketball for.
~ "But l"ve scored m scnm~inages, blocked a shot and
:tnade a mce behind-the-back
:pass to the corner not too
~long ago that pretty much
~topped
practtce m ns
,racks "
• Mmk. a 6-toot. 190~pounder. passed a phystcal
:before bemg cleared to play:
' he can't run the court at
~game tempo for more than
~five mmutes, and he doesn't
:expect to get on the tloor
•unttl the wanmg moments ot
•·mop-up tune.
: In short. thts ston ts more
:about the JOUrney 'than the
-destmatron
; A half-century ago. Mink
'Was commg off a solid freshman season at tmy Lees
College m Kentucky and
eycmg a Dtvtston I scholarshtp One day. he got a note
'to report to the prestdent's
' otfrce The coach's offrce
i had been "soaped" - shav~ mg cream filled hi s shoes
•and JUSt about every other
• 1ecept~cle m the room , as
well as the walls - and
someone fingered Mmk as
;the culpnl He pleaded mnoicent but was summartly
!expelled
1 "Nobody talked about 'due
process' m that era," Mmk
recalled dunng a telephone
tntervtew Thursday, but me
bttterness has been leavened
.only so much by the passage
:of trme. Mmk ts stx chapters
1111to a book he plans to wnte
;aboltl the season, but tt
•already mcludes thts plea
&gt;·Fess up "
"To thts day, I don 't know
,who dtd 11. But I'd love to
, know I promtse I won't try

LeBeau was m the final
yeat of hts head coachmg
contract DLtnng minicamp
that year, he donne~ a
Superman shtrl and ' ran
through a banner that satd.
"Bengals Super Bowl 2002"
\\-hen the team fell to 0-7
with a 30-24 loss to
Tennessee, LeBeau got emottonal after the game
"We had every opportumty
to Will, and next week we wtll
wm." he said. hts voice nsmg
for emphasts
Told of hts coach's predtctton. Johnson went one step
further
"Next week , I assure vou a
wm.'' he satd "I guarantee
you we wtll v.m"
It was the first tune the second-year recerver went out on
a limb that way He backed tt
up by catchmg one of Jon
Kitna 's four touchdown passes agamst the Texans who
were 2-5 headmg mto the
~arne and had the Ben gals'
mfl ammatory guotes posted
on l:hetr buUeun boards for
msptratron.
Afterward, LeBeau played

down how hts predtction had
come true.
"I dtdn 't know my powers
of clatrvo~ance were so
ommpotent,' he satd. "I JUst
wanted them (the Bengals) to
know I was proud of them
and I belteved that "
He was done prcdtcltng.
and the Bengals were done
wmnmg. They lost thetr next
stx games before wmnmg
anothet. and fimshed the season a franchtse-wotst 2-14.
LeBeau was fired and Marvm
Lewts was brought m as head
coach
Only four players rem.un
from the 2002 team Ocho
Cmco,
receiver
T J.
Houshmandzadeh. left tackle
Levt Jones and lon~-snapper
Bt ad St Lollis Ocno Cm&lt;:o
had forgotten about hts guarantee unttl he was remmded
lhts week Houshmandzadeh
dtdn 't remember too much
about the game, etther
"What's funny ts I dtd play
that
game."
satd
Houshmandzadeh . who had
three catches ''I played that
game and I never thought I

was gomg to play that game
Let's JUSt say I went to bed
that mght at 4 o'clock m the
mornmg. I went to bed late
because I dtdn't thmk I'd
play"
lust ltke m 2002, the
Bengals are headmg to
Houston as an underdog. The
Texans ate 2-4, conung off
wms over Mtamt and wmless
DetrOit They've neve1 won
three m d row m thcu bnef
htstory They were a 10 1/2pomt tavonte at the strut of
the week
The Beng,,ls ' A loss on
Sunday would drop them to
0-8 fllr the filth lime 111 franchrse lmtory. Thetr won,t
st,m was 0- 10 m 1993 under
Dave Shula They've also
started 0-8 three other ttmes·
1978. 1991 and 1994
Cmcmnalt ts commg off a
38- 10 loss to P11tsburgh, their
most lopstded defeat of the
.season.Aithough there's been
no predtctmg and no guaranteemg , there was a sense of
optnmsm that good thmgs
wuld happen agam \"
Houston.

those two games,
A btg part of the reason.
AP SPORTS WAITER
Cmcmnau was forced to use
On a team full of questton redshirt freshman quarterback
marks, Loursvtlle quarterback Chazz Anderson because of
Hunter Cantwell was sup- mJunes to senior Dustin
Grutza (broken leg) and
posed to be the constatJt
Lately, it's been the other junior Tony Pike (broken left
forearm) Pike was back at
way around
TheCardmals(4-2,0- l Btg practice l:hts week wtl:h the
East) have won four of five left (non-l:hrowing) arm proalmost m sptlc of the play of tected by a soft cast
Part of the problem agrunst
Cantwell , wbo has struggled
v.nh an ankle tnjury and Rutgers was the mexperiuncharactensttcally
po,or enced quarterback. Anderson
took consecultve sacks that
decrsron making
Cantwell has throw eight set up a thild-and-24, at1d had
touchdowns passes and a Btg anotfter sack that led to a
East-leadmg erght mtercep- lhtrd-and-19. Penallles also
ttons, mdudi ng a parr of ptcks played mto it. Cincinnati
last week agamst Mtddle drew 12 overall for 115 yards
Crncinnati ranks stxth in the
Tennessee that allowed the
Blue Ratders to butld an early Btg East on third downs, convertmg 35 percent for the sea14-0 le.td
son.
South Ronda leads the
The Cardmals managed to
recover behind the strength of conference at 47 percent.
"We need to work on our
tts runnmg game to wm, and
coach Steve Kragthorpe potse ," runmng back Jacob
st1essed Cantwell had as Ramsey satd. "It's not that
much to do wtth the rally as we're not phystcally tough
he dtd wtth the defictt enough or mentally tough
Cantwell
threw
for enough. It's that we have to
Loursvtlle's final touchdown stay more focused and eliminate some of the penalties at1d
and tim shed w1th 144 yards
go
and get the thtrd-atld-shon
' The thmg you always
worry about a QB ts when or whatever it may be."
UPON
FURTHER
somethmg doesn't go hts way
Connecllcut
and when thmgs aren't neces- REVIEW:
sanly rollmg the way you coach Randy Edsall would
would want them to go, how like to see some changes in
does
he
respond?" the Btg East's instant replay
Kr.tgthorpe sa ,d "It's a lot system Edsall dtd not cballtke .t fighter p1lot, tf you get lenge a safety called dunng
m " tatlspm are you gomg to Saturday 's 12-10 loss to
be able to pull it out or are you Rutgers, even though replays
gomg to end up crashing? showed Connecncut running
And I thought Hunter dtd an back Donald Brown may
excellent JOb of that."
have made tl out of the end
zone
It helps when you have a
Edsall said he couldn't tell
potent. rushmg
attack.
Loursvtlle, whtch butlt its rep- from hts position if it was a
utatton under Bobby Petnno bad call, and was relymg on
as a pass-first attack, rs aver- replay officials m the Sooth.
ag mg a robust 210 yards per They are supposed to ex31J1game on the ground.
me every play, making II difSTEADY STULL: While ficult for coaches to know
much of the hoopla surround- when a challenge should be
mg No 17 Ptttsburgh 's nse made, Edsall said.
has gone to do-everything
"At least tf it's a controvertailback LeSean McCoy, me Sial lhmg, we wrsh mat they
steady play of quarterback would JUSt maybe stop (play),
Bill Stull has made defenses so we know that 11 s bet.ng
pay for gatJgmg up on the run reviewed and let (the officil!ll
Stull has blossomed during go over and say, 'No, it's
hts first year starting for the OK"'
Panthers (5-I) He's seoond in
Edsall satd he also would
the conference 111 passing hke to see the revtews moved
yards, av'eragmg 213 yards from the booth to field, as
per game
. they do m the NFL.
"I thmk tl's a work' m
"Nothing agamst the replay
progress," satd coach Dave officials m the booth, but the
Wannstedt. "Every game he's guys on the field, they're
doing some thmgs better. actually domg thts everr,
Every game somethmg week and they are seemg 11 , '
comes up that's a leaming he said
expenence for hun We've
UConn
(5-2)
hosts
got to contmue that route Cmcmnatt (5-l) on Sarurday
week by week Hopefully
HONORS: South Ronda
some ot the mtstakes we quarterback Matt Grothe's
make and he makes can be year JUSt keeps gettmg better.
cot reeled and not costly.''
The JUiliOr ptcked up B1g East
Whtle Stull has thrown 'offensrve player of the week
more intercepttons (five) than honors for me third lime l:hts
tOl!Chdowns
(four), season for hts play m a 45-13
Wannstcdt satd Stull's abthty wm over Syracuse. Grothe
to play through pam has threw for 348 yards and three
endeared htm to teammates
touchdowns and added 72
''He's defimtely a tough yards rushmg and at1other
guy," Wannstedt satd "He's score for the Bulls.
got the respect of all the
Rutgers lmebacker Ryan
coaches, all the piayers and D'Impeno was named defenhe's been bat1ged around a lit- stve player of me week after
tle btl and he comes m every collecting II tackles, mcludday and shows U{l and he's mg I 5 tackles for loss, m a
ttght there in the mtddle of tl." 12- 10 wm over Connecticut.
GET THE PUNTER D'lmpeno helped me Scarlet
READY: Cincinnati won its Kmghts hmtt the Huskies to
last two games desptle a 117 yards rushing, 123 yards
dreadful showmg on thtrd below therr season average.
down
Rutgers punter Teddy
The Bearcats were only 4- Dellaganna was selected as
of-13 on thtrd-down conver- the special teams player of me
stons m a vtctory over week Dellagamta averaged
Marshall. They faded to con- 41.7 yards on seven punts,
vert any of their ll thtrd droppinl! four inside the
downs m a wm over Rutgers , Connecucut 20, includmg
lc"avmg them 4-tor-24 m three mside the UConn 3.

Tampa Bay's frrst ever
World Senes wm
"Unreal Thts ts awefrom Page Bl
some," Price satd. "[ was
nervous.,
• Phtladelphta's lone htt
'September after he was the
_top ptck m last year's draft. wtth runners in scormg
was
Shane
struck out slugger R~an posttton
Vtctonno's
mfield
smgle
m
Howard Wtth two on to end
the
fq,urth
and
that
dtdn
't
the seventh.
The hard-throwmg lefty even produce a run.
Ltvmg up to hts catchy
gave up a pmch-htt homer
"Btg Game
momcker,
.to Ertc Bruntlett m the
·'etghth. then stayed on to James." Shtelds outpttched
Baldellt
close tl out agarnst Brett Myers
Phtladelphta 's btg
~c;;:~~~ Phtlltes
r;,
throw,
Carloz Rutz led
double and a
'-'8~"1'~ Bay
advantwo costly mtstakes
Pnce
to graze tage
But ll was by Werth.
Rollins '
, not
a
batter and a
"They don., even call me
~ frustrated Rolhns ended up by my first name anymore,"
-poppmg out.
Shtelds satd.
- Rutz scored when thtrd
Shields usually flounshes
baseman Evan Longona at home. where he was 9-2
booted Jayson Werth's wrth a 2 59 ERA dunng the
.grounder for an error, but season All four of hts post' Pnce fanned Chase Utley season starts have come at
and got Howard on a g:vne- tncky Tropicana , Freid,
endmg grounder to secure includmg a wm over the

Chtcago Whne Sox in
Tampa Bay's tirst playoff
game.
A 14-game wmner durtng the season. the nghthander looked surpnsed
when he was pulled m the
srxth after 104 pllche;. He
doffed ht&gt; cap to the
crowd, and Dan Wheeler
retrred Pedro Feliz on an
rnnmg-endrng grounder
wtth runner;~~ the corners
The Phil ire ~ had a chance
to rally m the It fth after
puttmg two on wtth one
out. Utley htt a looper to
nght that wa; caught on
the run by Baldellt who
ftred to ftrst behmd Werth
for an t ~mng-endmg double play
Back from two seasons
deratled by lllJunes and
mttochondnal dtsorder. a
condrtion that slows muscle recove ry and causes
extreme fatrgue. Baldellt
also wa; rt:~• olved on a
confusrng call m the sec-

ond that helped Tampa Bay
make ll 3-0
He checked ht s sw mg on
a full-count pttch and plate
umptre Kerwm Danley
rmmedtately ratsed hts
nght arm as tf to call stnke
three But then Danley
pomted to ftrst base for an
appeal, and umptre Fteldm
Culbreth stgnaled saf~
"It was hts mtentton to
go to ftrst base for help on
a hall-;w mg that he had as
ball four.'' satd Mrke Port.
MaJor League Baseball 's
vtce presrdent for umptrmg ''He JU!it gave a con, fusmg mechahtc But he
had called II a ball, and I[
was ruled no half -swing
an1way So 11 was JUSt that
parttcular mechantc that
caused contuston •·
Myers
and
several
Pht lltes mftelders were
puzzled,
along
wllh
Manuel. who took a few
steps out of the dugout but
dtdn 't argue long

"I thought he called the
guy out," Manuel said .
Port said the umptres
would not be avatlable for
comment
Wtth the bases loaded
and two outs, Upton htt an
RBI smg le to nght. Werth
made a strong throw to cut
down
Baldellt,
who
cras hed tnto Rut z but
couldn 't dtslodge the ball
Before the next mmng
staned. Baldellt rested on
one knee tn nght field.
In the fourth, Bartlett,
the No 9 hitter, drove m
Cliff Floyd wuh a safety
squeeze - one pttch after
fou lmg off a surctde
squeeze attempt. Rays fans
clanged thetr cow bells , JUSt
as they were mstructed on
the scoreboard 111 a campy
"publtc servtce announcement" before the game.
Demoted to the mmors Ill
July. Myers was m trouble
from)the start. He rssued a
leadoff walk tq Akinori

BY WtLL GRAVES

Larry Crumlphoto

In lhts Oct 1 photo, Roane State basketball player Ken Mtnk, 73, ts guarded by teammate
Camtlle Ngon a' Ngon dunng basketball practrce at Roane State Communrty College's gym
in Hamman, Tenn
'
to beat you up ," he satd , then
added a moment later "Of
course.that person mtght not
be around anymore "
Instead of sulkmg, Mmk
left Lees and enhsted m the
Atr Force He played plenty
m the mtlttat y and when he
left to become a new spapet man , the games shtfted to
YMCA
and
indu strial
leagues When he retired , 11
was state Semor O!ymptc
tournaments. He added soliball , golf, htkmg, hang-gilding and snov. - and water-sktmg to Ius repertoue. and
can't remember a week passmg smce he was 6 when he
wasn't playmg something
Ltke the rest of us , Mmk
got slower. ttghtet and the
bumps and brutses ltngered
longer But one thmg dtdn' l
change He could shoot the
eyes out of a basket That's
what Mmk was domg in a
netghbor's dnveway near hts
Knox ville-area home when
he canned one shot after
another. Remembenng he
sttll had a year of eltgtbtltty
left, he walked back to ht s
house and announced "I've
strll got I! I''
"You 've still got what'!"
hts wtfe, Ameha, asked
"I can still play," Mink
teplted "There's sttll some
life left in the old guy"
He wrote to eight schools
wtthm an hour's dnve and
recerved zero responses He
was about to grve up when

coach Randv Nesbtl called to
atrange a· ' meetmg. Mmk
went to the gym at h1s church
three ttmes a week to prac tice. run and hft wetghts.
then stopped by the chapel
&lt;tfterwant to say H few exu a
pra)ers
Nesbtl look one look at
hun and the deal was sealed.
"I'm not ve ry good at sayIll£ no," he told the
Knoxvtlle News Sentinel.
" It's a gesture of goodwill to
help a fme man lmd closure.
Why not?"
Mmk's teammates had a
few more quesltons
When they saw hts reactton to the Ratders' long,
baggy shorts - ''Sttll make
me feel hke a 5-year-old" they wanted to know what
shorts were ltke back m ht s
day "When I showed them
how ht~h, they kept laughmg
and gomg. 'That htgh?'"
Stuck beneath the basket
on one play, he ptvoted away
from a defender and
uncorJ&lt;ed the httle-man hook
shot Chft Hagan populanzed
from the mtd-1950s The
Ratders had never heard of a
hook shot, let alone Hagan.
"So I reminded them about
Kareem and the sky hook:·
Mink satd "I hoped most of
them knew who he was ."
He's learned a few thmgs
hom them, too.
"If a guy made great play
back then. we slapped ht m
on the rump Today, you've

elbow bumps and knuckle
salutes and then you're supposed to bounce off each
other I JUstt em md them ," he
satd , "to be careful bumpmg
a 71-yeat-old '
Pttchet Satchel Patge
famously satd , "Age ts a
qLtestton ol mtnd over matter It you don't mmd , 11
don't matter ·• It's not qune
th.ll st mple, oJ cowse
Sull, two 50-somethmgs
made the rosters at MameAugust.t and Western Uppet
Pemnsu la not too long ago,
and even a '19-year-old linebacker played at Sui Ross
State m Texas
Ro,me State's season
begms Nov 3 agamst Kmg
College. In the me.mtrme.
Mmk satd he 's balancmg
homewor k hom a full 12hour workload and tr)'tng tl!
master Nesbtt's mlttcate
motron offense
The Raider s mtght JUst be
good enl!ugh to get Mmk
some gat bage tune nght off
the bat Etthet way, you'll
know he 's made tt mto the
game when you look up m
the stands and see famtly and
fnends m 50s-style cheerleadmg garb, holdmg up a
stgn that reMs, "Ken! Ken'
He's out (Medrcare) man!"
Jmt L1tke

a natwnal
;port; u!lu m11111 for The
A;;ocwred Pre1.1 Wute to
hrm at jlllkeap.mg
11

:o.7 Bengals going to Houston for flashback game
CINCINNATI (AP) Dtck LeBeau 'predtcted a win
"Chad Johnson went ahead
and
guaranteed
tl
Remarkably. both turned out
to be nght.
The last ttme the Cmcmnall
Bengals went to Houston.
,they were 0-7 and awfully
chatt)' for a wmless team
-Even the oddsmakers expected them to lose th&lt;tt 2002
game agamst the Texans. an
;expansron team that had
never before been favored
The result: Cmcmnau 38.
Houston 3. The losmg streak
was over - for one week
· As they get ready to head
' back to Houston this weekend the Bengals ha\e the
· ~ame record but few parallels
wrth that team of stx years
ago LeBeau ts the defensrve
coordmator m Pmsburgh
Johnson has changed hts last
name to Ocho Cmco And
there's a whole lot less hubns
th" ltmc around
"There's really no room to
talk trash." Ocho Cmco satd .
That '02 Bengals bunch
.had no trouble

J{ays

· cLASSIFIED

as QB Cantwell struggles

ASSOCIATED PRESS

lwamura in the ftrst before
Upton shced an oppositefield smgle to nght. Werth
booted the ball for a key
error that gave both runners an extra base, and
Upton clapped hts hands
after sltdmg into second.
Carlos Pena drove m a
run with a groundout and
the Phtllies kept their
inf1eld back for Longoria,
who made It 2-0 wuh
another grounder
Shtelds gave up leadoff
doubles m the second and
third, but escar.ed each
time
as
Phtladelphia
plunged to 0-for-19 wtlh
runners 111 sconng JXISIIion
during the Senes.
Vrctonno's mftcld smgle
snapped the slide in the
fourth, putting runners at
the corners wrth one out
Shtelds then struck out
destgnated httter Greg
Dobbs lor the second ltme
and retired Feliz C!J a
grounder.·

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

Loal&amp; Found ............................................... 216
Memory/Thank You ............................... 220
Notlcea ........................................................ 225

Recreatlonll V.hlclea ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcyclea ..............................................1010
BOIIWAcceaorlea ................................ 1015
CamperiRVa&amp;Trallera ........................... 1020
Motorcyclea......... ................................ 1025
Other .....................................................1030

::::,·~~::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~ :~~',!':.t~~.:::::::::::::::::. .::.:.:::::::·::.:.:·::::::.:~:~
Servlcea ....................................................... 300

Appliance Service ............ ,........................ 302
Automotive ............................................... 304
Building Materlala ....................................... 306
BuelneN .................. · ..... ......................... 308
catering ......................................................310
ChlldiEidat1y C.re ....................................... 312
Computera .................................................. 314
ContrKtora ............................................... 318
DomHflco/JonKorlol .................................. 318
Elactrl""l ...................................................... ~
Financial................. ...... . •..........................326
Hoollh... ................................................. .....
HIItlng &amp; Coollng .............. _....................... 328
Home lmprovementa 330
tnouronce .................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................. 334
Mualc/Dtlnce/Dromo .................................. 333368
Other S.rvlcea....................... ......................
Plumbing/Electrical ....................................340
li'roleeelon•l Servlce1 ................................. 342
Aepll,. ............................................. ··········::
Rool11111 .................. ...... "' ................... ' •

S.Curtty........................... ........... ...... ......... 348

TlxiAccountlng ........................................... 350
Trawl/Entertainment ........... .......................362
Financial .....................................................400
Flnonclel Sentl- .......................................405
ln1urance ..........................................7....... 410
Maney to Lend ............................................415

Educltlon .....................................................SOO

Bual,_o &amp; -School .... ......................505
lomructlon &amp; Trotn11111 ............................... 510
LMaOM .......................................................515
Peroorll&gt;l ..................................................... &amp;20
Anlmala ............ ,_.............................. ......... 800
Animal Supplln ................................ ...... 805
HOriM .....................................................810
U.oetock.....................................................815
Pota..............................................................820
want to buy................................................825
.f\!lrlculturo................. ................................:1011
Jiijt:m Equipment .......................................705
Gordon &amp; Produce .....................................710
Hoy, Fead, Seed, Groin ............................. ,. 715
'hintinG Land .......................................... 720
Wont to buy.............................................725

a

_ . . . ...............................................100
Anttquea ........... - ................................- .......to5
Applla,.. ........................................- .......110
Auctlono ............................................ • .....115
Bargain Boaement..................................120
Collecll-..................................................!125
Camputwro .................................................930
Equi..,...WUpplt.....................................935
Flea Merkota ......................... ,..................... t40
Fuel on Coai/Waodo'Gu ............................ 945
Furntturo ............................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt 6 Sport ....................................955
Kld'a c...-..........-....................................960
Ml-toMDua...................... ..... • .... • ....1165
W~nt to buy ..................................................970
Sale ...................................~.................975

••nt

AutaAentaliLeue ...........................~ ......... 2005
Aulol....... ... .............. ........... ....... ...... 2010
Clnalc/An11quet ........ ,, ......... .... ....... 2015
CommerclalnndUIItrlal .............................. 2020
Part1 &amp; Acceporlea. • .................,..... ...2025
Sporta Utlltty ...................................... 2030

Truoka......................................................... 2035
Utility Trallera ....................................... 2040
V•ne ..... •••·•••· ...........................................2045

=

Wontto buy ...............................................2050
Real EaiAit; Selea ..................................
c . m e t e c ryl llota .......................................301 0
omnwrc • ................................................
Candomlnluma .......................................301&amp;
For &amp;lilt by Owner...................- ................3020
HouHolor Sele .........................................3025
Land (Acrooge) ..........................................3030
Lola ..... .....................................................~~
Want lo buy................................................RNI EaiAitellentela.................................3500
Apartmentii'TownhauHI ........................ 3505
gomct"*"f1rl ...............................................~=~~·
on omln uRmo........................................ 3520
Hou... or
La~Aoraage) ..........................................3525
Storogo ...................................................... 3636
Want to Rent .......................................... 3540
Mllnulocturod Houa11111 ............................. 4000
Lot8 ............................................................4005
Mo¥ers........................................................4010
Rentela ....................................................... 4015
.........................................................4020
SuppiiH . ............................................... 4025
Wont to Buy .............................................. 4030
Reoort Property ........................................ &amp;0011
Rnorl Property for uta .......................... 5025
Ro110rl Property for rant ........................... 5050
Employmont ...............................................
Aecountlng/Financlel ..............................6002
AdmlniAitrotlve/Prolnalonol ..... ,,. .............6004
Caahler!Cierk ........................................80011
ChlldiEidtrty Cllro....................... .......
6008
Clerlcol ...................................................... 8010
Conlltrucllon ................... ,. ......................8012
Drivers &amp; Delivery .~.......................... 8014
EduAtlon......................~~...............6016
Eloc:tricol Plumbing ..... , ........ ; ............... eD18
Employment Agenctea .............................. eo20
Ent-lnment ..................................... ,. ..... eo22
Food Servlceo ........................................ 6024
Government &amp; -.a. Jol&gt;a ...................eo26
llefp anted- G-.1 .................................. 8028
Low Enlarcement .................................... 6030
Malntonone..OOmeatlc ............................ 8032
Manogemeni/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
-honloo ............................................... 11038
_1.,.1 ...................................... ,.,.............. 11038
Muolcat .................................................. 6040
Plirt·TII-Tompororleo ...............- .......... 6042
-uronto ............................................... 6044
Set .............. - ............................................. 6048
Technical 'Trac!n ......................... ...... 8050 ,
ToxtiiH/Factcky .......~ ................................ 80!i2

ent................. .......... ... ......

eooo

Mlnlture
DachShund
CKC regiStered. shots,
wormed
Males &amp; Females
longhair
&amp;
shorthatr, red &amp; blackll:an

o---

Oak

Air
ConditiOned
V1sa, Master Card &amp;
Debt! 304·550-1616 Ste·
phen Aeedy ~~639
.............~':"':'!!!!!!":""'
:::52;:110;;.:;;304~5:;;93;.;·36~20:....:~~
Fu.l/ 01/ Coal/
:::'
k
Wood/ Gas
Pomerantan&amp;pup2sd Bshow1s , ....~~"'"::"""~
old 1st
n
s FireWOOd tor sale, hard
wormed 2 (M) left $150
delivered
11 1
SR W 1
sp
10
• u
PUJlpes b r ~---~--~~~
sale partially house ro- Seasoned
Firewood
ken &amp; 3 monlha old. Hardwood 44s-9204
!(~740~l4~16-64~;;:49~~~~
Yorkfe Puppies for sale tlasoned Firewood CAA
S350 &amp; 5450 Ve1 recom- HEAP
accepted
mended
6 wks old 645-5946 or 441·0941

~~~~

~lllpolls

~~115

L~....i.i-.f

•- 1 Hunt &amp;

;;;;;;;;5;;;;;;

t 86 NOrth Park Or call
304 675-5640
or
304-593-1204 will sell on
Lana Contract or Out
Right Also a Wellington
Ptano call lor appo1nt
ment to see them both
bo

lu m
mower
Gravely 60 tnch deck
Audioni
27 HP Moving, must
~
~ ....~~!""';;;:;;;~~ sell 367-7129
Cross
Creek
Auctton, "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Buffalo Sa1Urday 6 pm
~
USed
Consignments ::~-W~ani;:-T;;;o~Buy;;;i;;;....~
J k
&amp;
from BC SOn
nuaue
Counties,
Fumlture, Buying tools sell or trade
mEK:hanlc-carpenter lawn
Hand Tools &amp; Produce &amp; garden power toots
1 1
Call 740-38S-1515 or celt
after Mtnlature
Schnauzers quality Knives such as 740"208 0320
available (740)9921328
Case Buck &amp; Mossy Absolute Top Dollar Sll·

~~EEY,:Wno~, l.a~ort~! ~74;;;1l-~388~8;.;6:;;55~~~~ ~~~!dln~~n~ !0 :~~~

wtth Children call

for Solo

M;---u---u1

Zero

ver/gold
co1ns
any
1OK/14KI18K gold jewoil)'. dental gold, pre
US
currency
1935
J)roof/ml nt
sets
dla
monds, MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gall1.wls 4462842
F'

·

Yard Sole

9-5 &amp; Nov 2 !.rom 9-3

ove-n pee •
Chp th1s AD and lake It
wtth you when you VISit

our community to get
this spectal dlseourn
Move-m m Oct and get
$100.00 oil your 2BR
Apt 1n Nov Currently
renttng 1 &amp;: 2 BR units

Spacious lloor plans.
ranch &amp; 1ownhome style
hv1ng playground &amp;
basketball cour1 on-site
laundry tactltty 24 hr
emergency mamte

nance qutel country locatiOn close to mator
facilities

medtcal

pharmacies grocery
store juS1 m1nutes
away from other major
shopping m the area

Aportmenll
266 Coloma! Drive #113
B~well Oh~ 45614
741l-446 3344
OffiCe Hours M W. F
9AM • 5PM

11.----------...1

d
I de
ve groun poo ,
tached double garage 1BA Apt WID hookups
fenced-In back yard nice satellite TV 1ncl w/renr
nelghbo1hood
1n Racma, close to hospital cau
)
•
1740 992 1424
~~~~~'::':"~~
74 o-339 0362
3 BD HOUSE IN CHES ~~~---.-----TEA Oh CONTACT
2 bedroom IMng room
740·985 4t31
kitchen bath Apartment
~~~~~~~ Have Central Air, ful
3 Bed 2 Bath HUO
Homesl Only $19 900 for mshed
Wllh
coubt1

a

Ustirtgs 800-620 4946 e:c

~A0;;;1:;;9~~~~:::-'~

~~a~: m~~~~:e

=

dtnlng table and chairs
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In $400 depOSit, $400 a

town • hw &amp; llle floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths.
pnvacy lance &amp; above
ground
pool
securUy
system much more 130
Basttanl D1 $129 OOOF01
ptes and tnformation go
to
wwworvbcom
446·2923
. ~-~--~......-::-::::

month
Call
304 882 2523
Leave
Message and Numbe1 11
not at Home

:"'::::"':"""":""--':""::o=
2 BR Apartmenl &amp; 2 BA
House on Sth St Pt
Pleasant
304·812·4350
asldor Don

~=-~--~;;;;;;~= ~o~:~ ~~n1 ~!le~~~~l ~~~ ~3--roo·m•s..,..a·nd~b-a1'."h-up2 Fam Oct 25·26 from 1nGalhr:Johs 4462692

sta1rs

Completely

fur

8-5? Old Gall1a School Ext rdl
Pr perty ntshed w1th WfD No
House on A1 233 at
'": ~ery
lh~ pe1s Aol Aeq 441-0245
1
Greenfield Fire Station 5 pee cu er Yew
o1
~:=~~:::::::::!:""'::=.
Clothes,
glassware, Ohio River
Apar1menl available now

°

Sport

GUN SHOW • LANCAS
TER OH Nov 1 from

Townhoutoo

HoMy&amp;uckle Hilla

H011101

~;;;;;;;;;;;;__,;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 br 1 b full basement,

,_
-::;==-~~;;;;;;;~-:-~

CKC Maltese pups Fe·
males $550 Males $500 :FREE Puppies 1/2 Jack
74G-256-t498
Ausse!l &amp; 112 mtx 6 wks
~-.~~-='-.--...'" old 304-1375-5313
-:Fema1e "Mint ""h
~ nauzer ~~~:"':::~:="':~::'
6 monUl old $100 with Free 1-1 2 Yr old M ,nu&lt;age 740-441-tl365
etered
Austnan
Cattle
Dog good homo ontyCall
FOUND, Siamese cat on
740-843-5401message
JerJCho
Ad
Pt
PI
304-675·3522
G1veawayl Small Gold
Lab
Female
Call

~~~~~~~~---:::-::--:-::-:=::=:::~~~~~==~:::::::._
1
~
Legala ............................................_ . ......... 100
Announcllfftenta .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlveraary ................................. 206
Happy Ada ....... ....................................... 210

....._

1r11 ts'lle
Sillcs

3000

:

H-

Buy

Cars Trucks, and GMC,
Saturn BUICk SUV S With
we'"anty
Vistl us at

know and NOT to send
money through the mall
unit! you have tnvestigat-

~ ..tnllfft/

lNc:b

Ca-./
IVa &amp;
"-r--

Pnvate dnve off L1ncoln
Hill,
Pomeroy.
OhiO,
woods on three s1des
(4+)acres to a hlstoncal
home
C1rca 1900 5
bedrooms 2 fireplaces, 2
fuH baths 2 statrcases

R1verbend
Apts
New
Haven lfoiV Now accept
lng
applications
for
HUO subsichzed
one
Bedroom Apls
U~ ltltes
tncluded Based on 30%
of adjusted Income Call

Trailers

beautiful ongmat wOOd· 304 882 312t
available
wort(, many p1cture wm- for Sen1or and D1sabled
dows mostly new win- · people
dows large kllchen and
breaklasl mom beault
v,
tully landscaped with 1n :::::::------:"-----.
STOCK
TRAILERS ,
Miocellanoou&amp;
AV
gmund pool Stl on the 2BA garage Apartment
LOAD
MAX
EOU1P·
Service at Carmichael wrap around porch and downlown $425 mth ren1
MENT
TRAILERS 200+
Nascar
trading Tra11era
enJOY
1he spectacular + uttli11es NO PETS
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp; cards $100 00
740·446·3625
v1ew o1 lhe On•o Atvor 2 446·0415
HOMESTEADER
Dale Jr run in the red ::]~~E~: car detached garage and
CARGO/CONCESSION,
stand up $20 00
2 out butldtngs Would Free
Rent
Special' II
TRAILERS
B+W Dale Jr Budweiser rae·
MototqdN
make a wonderful family 2&amp;3BR and up, Central
GOOSENECK FLATBED tng· 3·0 stand up $20 00
home or bed &amp; breaklaSI Air WID hookup, tenanl
$3999 VIEW OUR EN· 304-675-6822
gg Honda XR70R Good Pn~tate anef P~turesque
pays electnc EHO Elm
TIRE TRAILER INVENCondltton
runs
good
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Vtew
Apts
TORY AT
only (304)882 3017
WNW CARMICHAEL·
Jet Aera11on MoiOIS re $500 obo 740-367-7251
TRAILERS COM
palled new &amp; rebUin •n or 740-645-4647
Tw1n RIVers Tower Is ac·
•
40slock Call Ron Evans,
7 446 3625
Land
ceptlng appl~a1K&gt;ns 1or
1 800-537·9528
~~~§"'~~~ wa1tmg 11st for HUO sup
Trade- 1995 Chevy Con sidtzed 1 BR apartment
~~":""~~~":::::: Mollohan
Carpel
Fall
Have you priced a Johl)
~;ers10n
Van
eKcellent lor the elderty/Cflsabled
Special 20 oz Cammer·
condition, eas" on gas call 675·66'9
Deere lately? You II be lal ca-t $6 95/yaM
•
'
'u
also w!tra1ler
"76":-.16
surprised! Check out our C
Se era! 't""
Colors
• -~
v
....,.;;;;;:;;;;;"""';;;i;;;;;':;;;;;;;;;;~ 2b 3500N
axles, 2 whee l BeeuUful Apls at Jeck·
used
lnf91'110ry
at 740-446 7"-4 Quality al ~
k
1
lor' 5 1on Eatltel 52 West
WNW CAREQ com
Car Low Pncesl
2001 Pontiac Grand AM ra es w ramp
michael
Equtpment ~~~~~~~ take
over
payments acres tn Me1gs Counry wood Or from $365 to
740-446 2412
NEW AND USEO STEEL 304-1&gt;75-3168
(740)992·0174
$560
741l-446·2568
•
Equal Housing Opportu·
Steel Beams Pipe
Rebar
for
Concrete
Angle ~~~----...--:oo~
nlty This lnstiMion IS an
Channel Flat Bar, Steel 2006 Durango 4 wheel
Equal Opportunity ProGrating
for OralflS Onve dnve lea1her. sun roof &amp;
vider
and Employer
Free
Black
Walnuts
player,
$10,000
Apc.lmonll/
G
Ll
and
Easy Access1b11ity1 Call ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L OVD
1
2
Scrap Me1als ()pen Mon 256-1618
TownhouMI
I'IIC oua
v 1r1IJ 1
74D-44~541
after Spm
rue
wect
&amp;
Fri
"iii'""m;;;;;i'i;;;;;;im! Bedroom Apts at VlllaQ'J
tor dlrectoos1
8am-4 30pm
Closad
~H API
(146) Manor and RIVerside
ThuiS
Sat
&amp;
Sun
T......
441-tl194
Apts tn Mtddleport, !rom
740.446·7300
$327
10
$590!
L0 741l-992 5064
Equel
1998
GMC
984390 CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
AFFORD· Hous1ng Opportuntty
Travel
trunk
14"
x miles, 1 0 angme gas 5 CATEO
14'/15'hlgh
tooled speed trans 24 n bed. ABLE! Townhouse apart· ~~~~...-"":!:'~~
and/or
small NICe
Clean
Ground
leather - SteOCIIed S A GVW 25950 lb8, 0001 ments,
hOuses
for
rent
Call
Floor
2br,
W/0
hookup
ColJI1h . Pt Pleasant va need
COL
$8,500
74~41·1111 lor lt apph ReferenoesJDepostt/No
did ll!oy 1858·pllone 304 304-773-5343
cation
&amp; lnformatiOfl
Pets 304-675-5162
5112·154 7 In tVOillntJ
Fairfield
county
Fa1r- ~-=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;
EBY,
INTEGRITY, grounds AM Butldlng AV Se111lce at Canm
KIEFER BUILT,
Adm $4 135 6 TBLS chael
Tra.leiS
"ALLEY
HORSE/LIVE $35 740-667-()412
741).446·3625

faim Equipment

,;!;ee;;,;,;,.;,;,,.,..,

ti:r·.·

:'!"!'----------

:----::-.--:-=

(Aa.ae-1

""'""'"""'i""""'""'=

"""""""""""""""'!:'""""

erx

•

�.,

'
'

· Friday, October 24, 2008

www.my~allysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 24, 2008
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
.-.

p

•rftt/

-=
To*' I int

t

p

'·'

oppilcatlons at
Valtey View Apartments
· ' 800 State Route 325
Thurman, Ohio 45685

7.241170
.• 1-2 Bedroom Apartments
, with appliances tumished
• On aite laundry faciHty.
: Call fOf delails or pick up
application at rental
offli::e.
PosSibility of rental

· assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TOOt 4 t 9-526.0066
"This institution is an '

Equal Opportunity
· Provider and Employer"

Holp Wam.d • o.-.1
2 bay seMce station I 28R. 1 bath on farm
Jackson
Pike.
Lease $500 per month includes

fequired . Call 446·36« utilities. 540..752·0826 or
fofmore inlo.
540·729-1331
HOUMtforRent
Federal Funds just re$23B/mo 4 ned. 2 bath . leased for Land Owners.
•
Bank Repu! 15% down. l5 No closing cost and
1

yean, 8% APRI for listing!i ZERO
800-620-11)46 ex R027
land

Will do
improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
~~~7 + 1epos~.
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bedg e.
um,
rooms
available.
hoo~up, No· steps, Very 740 _44 6- 3384
clean. 114 State St.
740·441·0596
2 bedroom ,House $300 For Rent
m&lt;lnth, Plus Utility, Ref &amp; Mobile .homes . &amp; lots '
Deposit
No
Pets (no pets) in AshtOn WV
. 304·675-4874
304·576-2942.
DOWN!

:a

~~--~~~-

2eA

heuse , located in
town, Gallipolis,
OH.
$500/mo plus utilities. No
Pets. 740-441-D1t0 or

;_740~-5:9-t-~5t~7"i4~~~~

-~~-.~--Scenic
location, convenient to town
and affordable,
2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
·
call
17 4 01 99 2 5 63 9

2hr on the River in Ma· ~,;!!!o;;,;;;'~o;~,.,.,.,.,.
son. HUD Approved Ref·
Soles
·~
· "":"---~~~~ erenoos 304-682·3512 or =~~=~:-;;=-:~
·:rara
Townhouse 304-488-7946
2004 Doublawide In new
Apartments • 2SR, 1.5 ~2B~R:;,::;.t~ba~th:;:,~in~Ga~llip~o":'"'
hs condition. 4 bedroom. 2
·bath, back ·patio, pool, Stovelfrldg~
fum.
No batl'l, all · ilppliances inplayground, (trash, sew- smokers&amp;pets
Ref&amp;......_ eluded, $37,000 located
pd .) $450/mo w/s/1. 256-9 t90""" at 176 zuspan Lane Ma·
age,
water
$425/rent ,
$425/sec .
son City 304-675·2117
3 bedroom, total electric
c;tep. Call740-367-0547
house also 14170 trailef",
Racine.\740)949·2237
2009 4BR. aliA
Pub?lc Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE .
NOTICE: II hereby
given
that
on
Saturday,
Saturday,
October 25, 2008 ,at
·.0:00 a.m., a pu bllc
~?e wi?P be held at 21.1
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, OH. The
Farmers . Bank and
Savings Company Ia
oe?llng for· cash In
hand
or
ce.rtH?ed
~heck the following
co?Pateral:
2002
CHEVROLET IMPALA
40,
Vln#
2G1WF52E829339251
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
lhe above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank

3BA house on SA · ~60
near North Gallia Htg
"h
School. $500 rent + $500
deposit 446· 6495
3 AM's &amp; bath rg. &amp; ret.
tum. very clean, no pets.
$400 mo. + dep. off st.
pa r1i11g. 446-0596
Church parsonage . 3BR,
2 bath, full basement, 2
caT
garage.
IncludeS
• W/D, · new fri(:fge and
range. Sits on nearty 2
acres. $700 plus soc.
dep. For info or inspec·
tion call245-0031

House For Rent in ~oint
Pleasant : 2·story house,
Main St. f'ojnt Pleasant,
2
br .. 2
ba
2
lr.,dr.,kltchen w/stove, refrigerator, 112 basemertt,
large yard, no pets,
S550.00,dep. &amp; ref. req.
call304-675-2319.
Well main~inel 4 br.
house .&amp; 2 br. ,yabin on
200 • acres close to
and Savings Company Pomeroy, available im·
reserves the right to mediately,
reject any or all bids 1740)992·4590
or
aubmltted.
740·416·7538
The abOve doscr?bed
co?!atera! will be ·sold
"as Is~ where Is", with
no
expressed
or =;;;;;~~;;;;;;
lmp??ed
warranty •
given.
Rental.
For
further
Information, or for an 2BR 1 bath al 3675 Btlappointment
to Iaviiie Pk. Must Seel No
Inapeel
coUateral, Pets. 740-446-4234 or
prior to sale dote 740-206-7861
contact Cyndle,
or Ken at 74()..992- 2BR, Bidwell area. $375
rent/deposit. NO PETS.
2136.
388-9880
(10) 22, 23, 24,2008.

Help Wanted

HerpWa'"ed

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Using your skiUs . compassion and ca,ring to

make a difference every day.
Current Emp?oy\'}ent Opportunities

'

~

Nuring- RNs
• Ff and PT 12 hr shifts available
Nursing· STNAs
• All shifts available
Apply at 3759 Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
www .extendicare.com
EOE

GaUipotis Career College
is seeking part-time instructors who possess
&amp;OOL
trnpl 1~rnl· l'
master's degree in geo·
eral education subjecr areas such as: English,
Accounting / financial Math, and Social SciE .1
Local
home
medical ern:es .
·-mw resumes
to jdanickiO II' ltsca
equ ipment company now
" - ed ga !flO
11•

a

seek.ing
e~perienced
medical billing specialist
with customer service
skills. Fax resume and
Salary requirements to
74"~
·'41•t'•••
~
,..._...: __1

Public Not?ce

or

ca

~-~2-t-:4.o45':':':~2~~~~

~~":'.'~~~':""~

hiring home
~ .. -lth ~
·'"es. Ce""ied
or
••••
experience.
Bonuses
Available. .
Cell

Forever our love
Always our friend
Wife Zelma,

Bonnie, Kay,
Rick. Shawn,
Tracy,
Grandchildren

&amp;

Great
Grandchildren

of ·

Labor

face ~rerttiCe·. r. eo-~~

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTI(:E
The Public Utilities Comm ission .of Ohio has scheduled l~"al public
hearings in Case Nos. 08· 72-GA-APR . 08· 73-GA-ALT. 08-74-GA·
AAM; and 08-75-GA-AAM. ?n the Maner of the Applicalion of
Columbia Gas of Ohio. Inc .. for Authority to Amend Fi led Tariffs lo
Increase the Rates and Charges for Gas Distribution . Service. The
hearings are scheduled for the purpose of providing an opportunity for
interested members of the Public (o testify in these proceedings. The
local hearing~ will be held us fo llows:

L,._..;;,;..;;.;;;;.;;;.._ _.

1·913·599·8226,
emp. serv, ·

241hrs. Service Manager &amp; Service Technician positions
'POST OFFICE
NOW available. Health care &amp;
HIRING avg. Pay $20ihr ·Retirement plan.s availor
$57t&lt;Jyr,
includes able. PJease send re·
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by sume
to
adSource, not aftillated LLCOCAREQ.COM
or
with USPS who hires. 1fl¥ w 7:1Q-Mfi-HJQ4
t -866-403-2582
· Wanted
\'Ieider, )ron
worl&lt;ers, Pipe F:itters, &amp;
Holp Won?od. Gonoral crane
OJ~&lt;rators.
Top

North
• 5 '

currently

Food Sotvicu

soc.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

29670.Bashan Road
Raelna, O.hlo

Rem!HWing

·NewG•ave•

By its application. Columbia Ga~ of Ohio, ·Inc .. seeks a rate increase .
which would generate approximately $87,805.000 of additional
revenue , or an increa~e of 6.1 percent over current revemte. After its
: review of the company's records and application, the staff of the
. Commission recommended an increase in revenue of between
$46,876,000 and $55,626:000, or an increase of 3.26 and 3.86 percent
over current revenue .
The major issues in the c a~es , raised by the panics to the cases, are as
follows:
~'
.'(a) The appropriate revenue requirement for Columbia
: (b) The appropriate." level. of cash working capital and customer deposits
, included in rate base
· : (c) The methodology used to detcm1ine the appropriate rate o{ return to
which Columbia is entitled on its investment.
(~) Whether Columbia's proposed accelerated main replacement
program and advance!;( meter reading installation program should be
approved and at what cos t to customers.
·,
(e) Whether, the Co mm i~sion shou ld approve a straight II ~led volfmble
rate design or a decoupling rider.
(f) The appropriate assignment of any revenue increa!.C· to the customer
• ; classes .
(g) The appropriate level of and source of fundin g for' low~ income
assistance•program s and demand side management programs.
Further information regardmg the cases or the local public hearing3 may
be obtained by contacting the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
E. Broad Street. Co?umbus, Ohio 432! 5-3793 , . viewing 1he
Commi ssion's web page at http:/lwww.puc.state.ohio.us or contacting
: the Commission ·s holline al 1 ~800-6~6-7826. The hearing impaired can
· reach the commi ssion via TIY at 1-800-686- 1570 or in Columbus. at
· : 466·ti J80. Participants in the proceeding may request a sign language
interprerer by calling the Commission·s Service Monitoring . and
Enforcement Department at aqy of the nu mbers listetl above at least 48
hours before the hearing.

740-9411-2217

Painting
• Pttlo and Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C . YOUNG

Ill

992·6215

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

Pomeroy 01'1 10
IS Yf'n, l nr&lt;, FoiJNIPrll '

•

140·992·1m
South
1a
J•

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

44087 Wlpp?e Rd.

Pomeroy,OH
.(5 Poinls) ·
New &amp; Used Tires ,
We bUy used tires ,
.computer wheel
alignments.l ight
mechanic work.
complete service oil
changes . small e'ngine
rt'pair.
We service and
winterize boats and
RV 's

E·mail: captbiii6S@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

(740) 992-5344

BARNEY

·

'DANG !! LOOKS L1KE
~ 1 CAN'T
FINISH
HANGIJ&gt;J'

:::--:-.,tl • LAUNDRY
It

Years Experienre

David Lewis
740-992-6971
wv0Gt82 Fnta

...THE ·
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

WPNTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds
Ocl. 25. 2008
· 9:00a.m. · II :00 a.m.
Release: April 25. 2009
A f~. of $20.00 will be
charged for early arrival,
late nnival , early removal,
l ate remo val, or anytime
ac":ess
i~
wanted
to
fairgrounds
nther than
stated
doted . Building
space is first come first
serve.
Insi de Storage $4.00flf
Open Span: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence : $ 1.00/lf

Wf\~T '!&gt;

Guttering

. f\t-.I'P'Il'r-\ 1"-\0T
lt\(JJ,!

t:'lclt'i
t».Y!

Pass

??

46 Coarse
oend
47 Kind of disc

serving
11 ScintiUa

51 Science
magazine

13 Name
meaning
"tNih"
14 PC button
15 Parking lol

52 Wig
53 Antenna

type
55 Juicy pear
56 Famed lava
spewer

16 Dr. Pavlov
17 Environmen?
19 Ocean

57 Prickle
58 Umbrage
59 Pic. boss
13 Type of
60 Tokyo, ·
sausage
dwellers
to shogu.ns 18 Moo
20 Colony
companion
member
DOWN
22 Fundamen21 Osprey kin
tal pan
23 Tijuana
Social
23 Humbug
Pocale
insecl
preceder
26 Zin~y flavor 2 Foolhardy
24 Cassius..
28 Vistlor from 3 "Free Wi?ty"
Clay
Melmac
whale
25 ODE
29 Always!
4 Samuel
successor
in poems
Clemens
27 Was ,
30 Caravan
5 Loom device
to Ovid
halts
6 Gyro pocke1 29 Mild cheese
34 Raised
7 Quay
31 Bask at the
prices
8 Doctoral
beach
36 Skill
• exams
32 Windup
38 Numero- 9 Censors
33 Tofu base
39 Hobby knife 12 Family tree, 35 Glamorous
(hyph.)
1o some
37 On the prowl

40 Hidden
sPore
41 FBI

acronym

42 Warrior's
pro1ec1ion
43 Car-wash
s1ep
45 No-fal Jack
46 Asian
desen
48 Health food
49 3.0 shape
50 Clonk
54 Move 10
and -

We have been looking at advance control-bids (cue-bids), which allow une
player to show a very suitable hand for
play in partner's suit. Today's deal gives
another example of this theme.
look at only the North hand. Partner
opens one spade; you fespond one notrump, showing 6·10 points with fewer
than three spades; and he rebids three
hearts, which is natural and game-lore·
ing. What woolcl you do now?
Is your hand ·lousy. middling, good or'
great , given that you responded one notrump?
11 Is terrific. You hBve a maXImum with
five,card heart suppOrt. Vou must not
content ·yourself with a raise to four
hearts, which you would bld without, say,
the heart king. You must make an
advance control-bid (cue·bld) of four
clubs. (II you have a weak hand wilh lots
of clubs, rebid either three 110-trump or
five clubs.)
Your four-club bid is just 'Nhat partner
wanted to hear, looking at hls two club
losers. He uses Blackwood, then jumps
to six hearts.
by Luis Campos
West leads the club q'ueen , and East
Cetebnty Ctpher.cryptngrams are :reated !rom quotatiO,S by lamous people past and oreS!nt
Each lelle! 1n the c1 pner stands 'or arother
signals enthusiaStically with the nine.
1oday·s clue.· v equars W
How should South plan the play?
After winning with dummy's club ace,
" KBLGLKEXG HW EBX PIFT WXKJGX
declarer must shed the club loser from
erther dummy or his hand.·He unblocks
MPJIALEH· PI PM EBX WELEX ."
his ace·klng of diamonds, then starts on
the spades. When Wesl ruff~ the third
· K L F C H I . KP P F HA S X
round f&lt;&gt;w, dummy overruns and leads ·
the diamond queen. Curses! East ruffs.
"VBLEXCXO TPJ LGX , RX L SPPA
So South 011errulfs and plays another
spade.This time luck is in- West has to
P' l X . " • L R X F H I K P F I
ruff wilh the heart ace and dummy's cl ub
loser.can be dlsqarded.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "In matters ol style. swim w1th the current in
matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson

O

..Astro-

BIG NATE

PSI CONSTRUCTION

WONDER WAAT
IT WOlJLD BE
LIKE TO BE IN

·rtlE Z.ONE ."

YOV HEAR ATHLETES
TM.K AIW\!T 8EING
IN A ZONE WHERE
THEY CAN DO
NO WRONti. .

Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters

SOt'IETIMES THEY'i!E
So LOCKED IN.
t{EY'II.E NOT EVEN
....WARE OF Tt{E
....11A2.tNG PLI..VS
THEY'RE M....KING .

rnsurecJ &amp; Bonded

i

Quality Seamle~
Gutters
Commercial &amp; Rtsid.,riaq
Viny?
Siding/Rep?acement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
free E~limaled
Pomeroy. Ohio

IIP.III

Saturday, October 25, 2008
9:00 till?? DJ Charlie
COSTUME CONTEST:
$200 for· first prize and more
cash prizes; Drink Specials;
Door prizes; T·shlrt contesr.
A?so come and vo?e for your
. favorite emp?oyee in costume .

Joh'CiUree .
Compltte Tree CIN

J4Htl2·5&amp;12

T.W.1...,

--."'"""-

lnaulwd • , . . e..u.n.t..

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Vlnyr Sld?ng
• Rep?acement
Windows
• Rooftng
·Decks
•Garagee
• Po?a Bu?Pd?ngs
• Room Add?dons

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Odors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Rooqi
Additions
.
Local Conlractor

Owner: .
·James Keesee ??
742-2332' •
For

740-367-()544
F-Ealim740.367-'1)536

and "!ew House ~ul?d?na

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding ~ Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

....,.... s 19ail!' atrtbune
(740) 446-2342 .

The Daily Sentinel

IIIEW.-CIM, -EI

(740) 992·2155

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

,tlleasant i\egfster
(304) 675-1333

1

I

COWandBOY
BEING A I &amp;I FR.
YOU CAN ENTERTAIN
, ..UST A9JUT ANYONE.

j

IT DOESN'T MATTE~
WHERE THEY~ FROM.
IF THEY'RE OLD 012 YOUNG,
EVEIIYONE IS TRANSFPXED
BY THE ~HYTHMIC TOSSING
OF AIJIBOIINE OBJECTS.'
OKAY, HERE GOES.

:J

-..-.

.121111.

HALLOWEEN PARTY

•Prompt and Qua?ity
Work
* Reasonable Rates
*Insured
•Experienced
References Availab?e!
Call Gary Slan!ey @ '
740-59? -8044
Please leave messa e

ll11.124PI•III!LH
... H . .

Upper Level

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

GARFIELD .

Q Reorrcnge

&lt;!bur 'llrlhdo,y:
·

•

In tt1e year ahead, more powerful ambitions than usual may be aroused through
cl'10ice or oecessity. In either case. once ·
you got your teeth into somelhing, it isn't

I

•
0

·likely you'll settle for anything but impres·
s1ve accompli shments.

0

SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-No'J. 22)- Someone

If we sell it,.we'll
print an'other.

w.1 o knows you are the type of person
who occasionally doesn't mind picking up
the tab for everyone may try to maneu ver
you Into doing so. Don't fall tor his or her
manipulation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - 11
you allow your emotions or feelings to
cloud your ludgmenl, established goals
could go un tullitl ed . Only a clea r, logical
approach lo t1'1 1ngs can actompllsh your
airris .
~APR I CORN ~Dec . 22 ·Jan . 19) Having a curious mind is fruitful when lry·
IOQ to ·resolve an l!ilsue, but probing into
lhings that are none of you r business,
espeCially 11'11ngs that friends consi der to
be p&amp;rsonal, will get you snunned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Be careful about recommending prOOucts or people to others, because lltl'1ey don't prove
to be exactly wl'1a1 the person is looking
for, you will be blamed for things not
working out.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Usually
· you 're good about selecting whort\ to go
to for advice. but you might seek counsel
from someone wl'1o wlll only further confuse you and/or provide faulty informa·
lion .
ARIES (March 2 t -April 19)- You know
better than 10 try to force square pegs
info round hOles, so tne moment you
notice that 's what yo'U're doing, start rea "SOning things out lOgically and make l:lP
for lost time.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ Be IJ)(Ce p·
tionaUy cautious about getting lr)volved in
any type of arrangemenl that ,r equires a
financial risk. UnfOrtunately, th e odds
favor the olhe r guy, so it will be difficult for
you to win.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - It might be
one Of tnose days where it seems as if
everyone in your housel'1old is jumping to
negative conclu sions without letting t!le
ot1'1ers clarify their positions. Don.'t b.a one
of them .
CANCER (June 21 -July .22) - If you find
yourself in tl1 e company of an acquain tance who thrives on repeatmg gossip,
select your top1c of conv~sation wit~ ·
extreme ca re so he or she can 't misquote
you and cause trOu ble.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) .:..... Be more care ful than usual, beceuse thl!re ·s a chance
you could be accident-prone and break
something you che'rish. Remember. an
ounce of pr911entlon Is worth a pound of
eu re .
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) - The bell
way to sroust retentment in othart 11 to
Insist that ..,.rythlng ba dona your way
and In vour tlrrwa. To your dlam.y, howev- •
tr, ot1'!41tt ml~t almpty let you p~ad
whh Kit all on )'04Jr own .
L.II!IRA (S.!Jt. 23·001. 23 ) -'fOur lmiiQI·
nation 11 likely to ba graally halgh~anid .
~~ •adly, It won't ba Wpllftlng oonoapts

{nat rtO&lt;l&lt;lUPY your thoughtl. Oqom and
gloom mlghl bt tht only tntng on your
brlln.
"

SOUPTONUTZ

740-985-4141 .
Ce?l: 740-4 P6· P834
25+ yean exfMritnct Fne Estiwumr

Advertise
hi this spac;e for
$64
month •

~Hti~' S©'\\tllA-lG"B~S®

WORD

GAM I
- , - - - - - ldUod by CLAY R. POU~N - ' - - - - - -

By Bernice Bade Osol

I

PEANUTS

·First printinq will
be one copy.

1

Graph

Saturday, Oct 25, 2008

•

741).653·9657

Wanted:
Part
Time
Room Attendant at the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
Must be willing to work
weekends and holidays.
Experience preferred but
we wiN train. Appty In
person. Absolutely no
phone calls.

300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
(across from city park)
Hou rs: M· F 106, Sat. 10·5
Closed Sunday

.

L051!11&amp; TI\OIJ~~t&gt;!&gt;

Cel?: 746-416-5047
emal?:

~

KIPLING SHOE CO.

'&lt;Ci.J KNOW, T~
. t&gt;r..'1'::., I'Jo\ ~loi.OST

"'!

fl\'{ POR.TFOL.IO I!&gt;

I

H&amp;H

fl\'( ~ AA£ \Xl'f.IN ...

C.fllEr?

Racine, Ohio 740.247·201 '
Owners: .
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

1-\Y !&gt;\()(.1(.5 AA£ t)()WN .. .

WltO"--G,

Moint.nance /
-=~Donoutic:""!~"""~;;;;;

sure how long sale will
continue ...
DON'T MISS OUT!!

East

1 NT

Anawsr to Previous Puzzle

CELEBRITY CIPHER

2~

-EIIYIEUS

Not

Pass

North

Are you weak,
middling or strong?

BIIIV R. Glblelr.
740-416·1164

We appreciare your ·

W~st

.Pass

Opening lead : • Q

luCilenear:

· Mon-Fri.
8:00am · 4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am- 12

52

Dealer: South
Vulnerab?e : Both ·

Stop &amp; Compare

~P~ay~.3~0~4-~7;63~-~~
·~,,~

UNBELIEVABLE!!!
$5 &amp; $10
Nam&amp;brand shoes
for tne entire family

• 9 3··
•K986 3

South
•AKQ .J t O
• Q J 10 9
t AK

111411 mo. pd

L &amp; L Tire Barn

bu!'iiness

t ' J65 42

41 Griffith or
Glbb
42 Bakery lu"'
44 Inquire

10 Corn

sight

.. Q J 10 7

• Complete
Remodeling

Skiing I

Tuesday, October 28, 2008. at 6:00 p.m.. al Kent Slate University.
Room 101/Lecture Hall. 2492 St. Rt . 45 Soulh , Salem , Ohio 44460 .
Wednesday, Ociober 29, 2008, al 6:00 p.m , at Springtleld City Hall.
City Forum · First Floor. 76 Easi High Street , Springfield, Ohio 45502.
· Wednesday, November 5, 2008, at 6:30p.m. , at Mansfield City Council
Chambers, 30 North Diamond Slrcet, Mansfie!d. Ohio 44902.
Thursday, No&gt;cmber 6, 2008. at 6:30 p.m .. at lite City of Columbus
Wolfe Park Shelter House. 105 Park Drive, Co lumbus, Ohio 432()9.
Monday, November, 10, 2008 at 6:00 p.m. at the Athens Community
Cenler. 701 Eost Slate Street, Suile 20 I , Alhens, Ohio 45701:
Wednesday, November 12, 2008 , at 6:00 p.m., at Bowsher High
School, 2200 Arlington Avenue, Toledo , Ohio 43614 . ·
· Thursday, November 13, 2008, a1 12:30 p.m .. at Panna City Hall ,
· Council Chambers , 6611 Ridge Road, P"•rn1a. Ohio 44129.
Thursday, No&gt;ember 13, 2008. al 6:00 p.m .• at Lorain City Ha?l ,
Council Chambers, 200 West Eric Avenue, Lorain , Oh io 44502.

4sm

Plumbing

·Rooting 1 Gutters
• VInyl

East
• 8 7 6 3
• 4 1.

Wesl

• New Homes
• Garages

oa

.. A 4

¥ A 7

· Room Addlttana a

•E5tctrk:lll 1

iD-21

¥K B653
• Q 10 8 7

...

Hlil s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

Ohio
valley
Home "'
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides. • STNA
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 14800 ' JackSOn
Pike, Gall~olis, · Ohio or
phone 740-441·1393 for
more into. Competitive
wages, mileage retmbursement and benefits
including health !nsurance &amp; much more.

mess.

7 Soflloos

Home Health Care of
Southeast Ohio Inc., is

S59,M6
mymidwestnome.com
7~28·27so

10/25/08

1 A pal
4 Kitchen

Medical

60-hr. EMT Min8r Class ~t866-;;;;,.;;361l;;;;,·1;,;1!!00i!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!
hers 40 h Su :; : ;

Richard
(Deke)
Gilmore

Phillip
Alder

,;;,;;,;;;,;,,:""':""""',.

&amp; R9 f

McDonald's
of
Rio $250 Sign on 8onu1
Grande now hiring morn0 No Experience'
ing shift, flex ible hours,
Required
~~~~~~~= paid Holidays and Vaca·
0 Weekly Pay &amp;
Brand new 3bed 2bath tion. Apply within
Bonuses •.
on + -half acre 'in P1. - - - - - - - Pleasant. · OW~ER Fl0 Set Schedules
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
0 Meqical, Dental and
Vision
1740 ) 446 ·3570
0 Paid
~~~~~-~~
trainlnglholidaylvacalion
3BR/2BA, CIA, 16x32
0 Qnsite Doctor
Management
Deck, 112 acre. Jerr{.s
. Opportunities
Run
Rd.'
$f6,500
New training elutes
We ~k career oriented
304-576-Jt t t
starting right nowl
individuals
who
wi!l
strive
~-::-:'~~~~~
to achieve the "Sesr in '
New 3 Bedroom homes
1-888-IMC-PAYU
Customer satisfaction
from $21A.36 per month,
EKI. 1931
and learn work. If you
Includes many upgrades, have a desire to succeed
hHp:II!ObsJnfoclslon.C&lt;Mn
delivery
&amp;
sat-up.
with a goal clrlven, team· Diesel Mechanic , tow
740·385·2434
· oriented and growing
boat experiece desired,
~~-::~~-::-::::::::
company, we offer:
good wages, exc. benefit
Prices Reduced 2 2006
Health, dental, and lite
package
304-675-4545,..
16x80 2 bed 2 bath, 1 , _insurance. prescription
Direct Care Staff in resi2000 16•70 2 bed t
card, bonus program.
dential youth program.
bath, 1 1999 t6x80 2
paid vacation,
Must
be 21 years of age.
bed ? bath gas, 1 1997
management apparel,
Pay
based on experi14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
advancement from
ence.
Call
t 2002 t6x80 3 bed 2
within.
(740)379·9083
Mon·Fn
.
batn. Priced delivered
Apply In person at the
9am-3pm.
blocked, leveled and anBurger King Restaurant
choroo.
Day
Ph.
65 Upper River Ad or .
PolDS
740-361l·OOOO
&amp;
mail resume to:
COORDINATOR
740-388-8513 ·
&amp;
Burger King
Edgewood Manor
740·245·9215 · Evenings
PO Box 2407
of Wellston
&amp;
weekends
Ph. Huntington, WV 25725 or
50 skilled .bed Facility
740·388·8017
&amp;
lax resume to:
' AN
740·245·921 5
&amp;
740·446-3400 or
"2yrs MDS
74fl.794-D460
304-529-0055
Experl&amp;nce
EOE
·exceptional
communication &amp;
In Memory
GovemOMnl .&amp; Federal
people skills
Jobt
'Interpersonal &amp;
organizational skills
FEDERAL
. To apply, visit:
POSTAL JOBS
www.consulatemgtcareers.com
$17·69 ·$2S. 27/HR..
now
405 North Park Ave
hiring. For application
Wellston, OH 45692
and free government job
740 _384 _5611
9/29/31
info, call American As·
EOE/SF/OF

ACRO~

Auto Tecll experience required. Call
1or Into
388-9680

Rettaurants
•""!;;;o,;"""~;;;;o,;;;;;;;~
Underground Apprentle&lt;i ~
Tree
Clearing Now Hiring Expel'iEIR::ed,
16-hr.
-;;;;;;;~-~;;;~~!"" Mine Underground For· waitstaff, cooks. c:lsh·
!
man Class. Minor Safety washers &amp; delivery" drlv·
Fast paced, challenging_ Equipment Store.
For' ers apply in person
office looking tor moti· more
information
call HaffY'S
Famous
Hot
vated worker tor part
0 0·
New H
Training ·;;
time position.. Must type Whit-Co
= !i!Q!!,s;;;;;,;;,;,;;a;;ven;;;,,.,....,
and
have
exceUant 304-372-8346
Sal..
-=.:-;;==."::"=":""
phona/customer
service ~~~~~~~~
An EKcellent way . to eam :'
skills . Please submit re· money. The New AVon. Part:lime retail sa}es
sume and references by cau
·
Marityn 12-1 5 hrslwk. Starting
November 5, 2008. Send 301$-882-2645
pay $7/tu. send resumes
resumes to CLA Box AVON! All Areas!
To to Box 102, C/O PO Box
101, PO Box 469, Gam: Buy
or Sell Shirley 469,
Galtipolis,
Qtllo
polis, Ohio 45631
Spears 304•6751429
~456=31======
;;,;;;;;,:,;;;;,;;,;;;;;;;;,;,,,!!!! ;~~;:..;..~.;.;.;;-,-:- ~
SN. ce Bu~
-~o;;;,;,;:;te;;;n;;;&amp;~O.-:"Iive=.ry"Change the world
9000
Dlrl'clory
~
one call at a time!
Light duty tow truck op- , Help Ch'ld
d
d
1 ren an a u1ts
erator. Clean driving refighting cancer by
cord. 388 "9880
making calls asking for
volunteer support.

1

Public Notice

reerco•-r· u

Mochanico

,•• ti

Jette!'! ef the
four scral'l'!bied wcrd§ below to form foiJr sirm;.:e words.

"

G R AF UL

SHONAf·!

"The S~crcl 10 staying young:·
gr.mny laugh•d. "is good heallh
and ly ing aboul .... ••• ...
() Ccmpieto 1he c:+n.d le CLio:ed
bv lilting ir. th~,t mi:.sing words
yo'J ~eiop from stao No :! h~t!r"tw

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS 10'2 3!()8
Viable · Grimy - Ma1ch · Pigpen -GRAVITY
One eldcrl' womanlo nnothcr. "Humor h•lps compensalc
Plte law of GRAVITY ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

fo(

�.,

'
'

· Friday, October 24, 2008

www.my~allysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 24, 2008
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
.-.

p

•rftt/

-=
To*' I int

t

p

'·'

oppilcatlons at
Valtey View Apartments
· ' 800 State Route 325
Thurman, Ohio 45685

7.241170
.• 1-2 Bedroom Apartments
, with appliances tumished
• On aite laundry faciHty.
: Call fOf delails or pick up
application at rental
offli::e.
PosSibility of rental

· assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TOOt 4 t 9-526.0066
"This institution is an '

Equal Opportunity
· Provider and Employer"

Holp Wam.d • o.-.1
2 bay seMce station I 28R. 1 bath on farm
Jackson
Pike.
Lease $500 per month includes

fequired . Call 446·36« utilities. 540..752·0826 or
fofmore inlo.
540·729-1331
HOUMtforRent
Federal Funds just re$23B/mo 4 ned. 2 bath . leased for Land Owners.
•
Bank Repu! 15% down. l5 No closing cost and
1

yean, 8% APRI for listing!i ZERO
800-620-11)46 ex R027
land

Will do
improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
~~~7 + 1epos~.
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bedg e.
um,
rooms
available.
hoo~up, No· steps, Very 740 _44 6- 3384
clean. 114 State St.
740·441·0596
2 bedroom ,House $300 For Rent
m&lt;lnth, Plus Utility, Ref &amp; Mobile .homes . &amp; lots '
Deposit
No
Pets (no pets) in AshtOn WV
. 304·675-4874
304·576-2942.
DOWN!

:a

~~--~~~-

2eA

heuse , located in
town, Gallipolis,
OH.
$500/mo plus utilities. No
Pets. 740-441-D1t0 or

;_740~-5:9-t-~5t~7"i4~~~~

-~~-.~--Scenic
location, convenient to town
and affordable,
2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
·
call
17 4 01 99 2 5 63 9

2hr on the River in Ma· ~,;!!!o;;,;;;'~o;~,.,.,.,.,.
son. HUD Approved Ref·
Soles
·~
· "":"---~~~~ erenoos 304-682·3512 or =~~=~:-;;=-:~
·:rara
Townhouse 304-488-7946
2004 Doublawide In new
Apartments • 2SR, 1.5 ~2B~R:;,::;.t~ba~th:;:,~in~Ga~llip~o":'"'
hs condition. 4 bedroom. 2
·bath, back ·patio, pool, Stovelfrldg~
fum.
No batl'l, all · ilppliances inplayground, (trash, sew- smokers&amp;pets
Ref&amp;......_ eluded, $37,000 located
pd .) $450/mo w/s/1. 256-9 t90""" at 176 zuspan Lane Ma·
age,
water
$425/rent ,
$425/sec .
son City 304-675·2117
3 bedroom, total electric
c;tep. Call740-367-0547
house also 14170 trailef",
Racine.\740)949·2237
2009 4BR. aliA
Pub?lc Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE .
NOTICE: II hereby
given
that
on
Saturday,
Saturday,
October 25, 2008 ,at
·.0:00 a.m., a pu bllc
~?e wi?P be held at 21.1
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, OH. The
Farmers . Bank and
Savings Company Ia
oe?llng for· cash In
hand
or
ce.rtH?ed
~heck the following
co?Pateral:
2002
CHEVROLET IMPALA
40,
Vln#
2G1WF52E829339251
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
lhe above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank

3BA house on SA · ~60
near North Gallia Htg
"h
School. $500 rent + $500
deposit 446· 6495
3 AM's &amp; bath rg. &amp; ret.
tum. very clean, no pets.
$400 mo. + dep. off st.
pa r1i11g. 446-0596
Church parsonage . 3BR,
2 bath, full basement, 2
caT
garage.
IncludeS
• W/D, · new fri(:fge and
range. Sits on nearty 2
acres. $700 plus soc.
dep. For info or inspec·
tion call245-0031

House For Rent in ~oint
Pleasant : 2·story house,
Main St. f'ojnt Pleasant,
2
br .. 2
ba
2
lr.,dr.,kltchen w/stove, refrigerator, 112 basemertt,
large yard, no pets,
S550.00,dep. &amp; ref. req.
call304-675-2319.
Well main~inel 4 br.
house .&amp; 2 br. ,yabin on
200 • acres close to
and Savings Company Pomeroy, available im·
reserves the right to mediately,
reject any or all bids 1740)992·4590
or
aubmltted.
740·416·7538
The abOve doscr?bed
co?!atera! will be ·sold
"as Is~ where Is", with
no
expressed
or =;;;;;~~;;;;;;
lmp??ed
warranty •
given.
Rental.
For
further
Information, or for an 2BR 1 bath al 3675 Btlappointment
to Iaviiie Pk. Must Seel No
Inapeel
coUateral, Pets. 740-446-4234 or
prior to sale dote 740-206-7861
contact Cyndle,
or Ken at 74()..992- 2BR, Bidwell area. $375
rent/deposit. NO PETS.
2136.
388-9880
(10) 22, 23, 24,2008.

Help Wanted

HerpWa'"ed

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Using your skiUs . compassion and ca,ring to

make a difference every day.
Current Emp?oy\'}ent Opportunities

'

~

Nuring- RNs
• Ff and PT 12 hr shifts available
Nursing· STNAs
• All shifts available
Apply at 3759 Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
www .extendicare.com
EOE

GaUipotis Career College
is seeking part-time instructors who possess
&amp;OOL
trnpl 1~rnl· l'
master's degree in geo·
eral education subjecr areas such as: English,
Accounting / financial Math, and Social SciE .1
Local
home
medical ern:es .
·-mw resumes
to jdanickiO II' ltsca
equ ipment company now
" - ed ga !flO
11•

a

seek.ing
e~perienced
medical billing specialist
with customer service
skills. Fax resume and
Salary requirements to
74"~
·'41•t'•••
~
,..._...: __1

Public Not?ce

or

ca

~-~2-t-:4.o45':':':~2~~~~

~~":'.'~~~':""~

hiring home
~ .. -lth ~
·'"es. Ce""ied
or
••••
experience.
Bonuses
Available. .
Cell

Forever our love
Always our friend
Wife Zelma,

Bonnie, Kay,
Rick. Shawn,
Tracy,
Grandchildren

&amp;

Great
Grandchildren

of ·

Labor

face ~rerttiCe·. r. eo-~~

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTI(:E
The Public Utilities Comm ission .of Ohio has scheduled l~"al public
hearings in Case Nos. 08· 72-GA-APR . 08· 73-GA-ALT. 08-74-GA·
AAM; and 08-75-GA-AAM. ?n the Maner of the Applicalion of
Columbia Gas of Ohio. Inc .. for Authority to Amend Fi led Tariffs lo
Increase the Rates and Charges for Gas Distribution . Service. The
hearings are scheduled for the purpose of providing an opportunity for
interested members of the Public (o testify in these proceedings. The
local hearing~ will be held us fo llows:

L,._..;;,;..;;.;;;;.;;;.._ _.

1·913·599·8226,
emp. serv, ·

241hrs. Service Manager &amp; Service Technician positions
'POST OFFICE
NOW available. Health care &amp;
HIRING avg. Pay $20ihr ·Retirement plan.s availor
$57t&lt;Jyr,
includes able. PJease send re·
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by sume
to
adSource, not aftillated LLCOCAREQ.COM
or
with USPS who hires. 1fl¥ w 7:1Q-Mfi-HJQ4
t -866-403-2582
· Wanted
\'Ieider, )ron
worl&lt;ers, Pipe F:itters, &amp;
Holp Won?od. Gonoral crane
OJ~&lt;rators.
Top

North
• 5 '

currently

Food Sotvicu

soc.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

29670.Bashan Road
Raelna, O.hlo

Rem!HWing

·NewG•ave•

By its application. Columbia Ga~ of Ohio, ·Inc .. seeks a rate increase .
which would generate approximately $87,805.000 of additional
revenue , or an increa~e of 6.1 percent over current revemte. After its
: review of the company's records and application, the staff of the
. Commission recommended an increase in revenue of between
$46,876,000 and $55,626:000, or an increase of 3.26 and 3.86 percent
over current revenue .
The major issues in the c a~es , raised by the panics to the cases, are as
follows:
~'
.'(a) The appropriate revenue requirement for Columbia
: (b) The appropriate." level. of cash working capital and customer deposits
, included in rate base
· : (c) The methodology used to detcm1ine the appropriate rate o{ return to
which Columbia is entitled on its investment.
(~) Whether Columbia's proposed accelerated main replacement
program and advance!;( meter reading installation program should be
approved and at what cos t to customers.
·,
(e) Whether, the Co mm i~sion shou ld approve a straight II ~led volfmble
rate design or a decoupling rider.
(f) The appropriate assignment of any revenue increa!.C· to the customer
• ; classes .
(g) The appropriate level of and source of fundin g for' low~ income
assistance•program s and demand side management programs.
Further information regardmg the cases or the local public hearing3 may
be obtained by contacting the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
E. Broad Street. Co?umbus, Ohio 432! 5-3793 , . viewing 1he
Commi ssion's web page at http:/lwww.puc.state.ohio.us or contacting
: the Commission ·s holline al 1 ~800-6~6-7826. The hearing impaired can
· reach the commi ssion via TIY at 1-800-686- 1570 or in Columbus. at
· : 466·ti J80. Participants in the proceeding may request a sign language
interprerer by calling the Commission·s Service Monitoring . and
Enforcement Department at aqy of the nu mbers listetl above at least 48
hours before the hearing.

740-9411-2217

Painting
• Pttlo and Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C . YOUNG

Ill

992·6215

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

Pomeroy 01'1 10
IS Yf'n, l nr&lt;, FoiJNIPrll '

•

140·992·1m
South
1a
J•

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

44087 Wlpp?e Rd.

Pomeroy,OH
.(5 Poinls) ·
New &amp; Used Tires ,
We bUy used tires ,
.computer wheel
alignments.l ight
mechanic work.
complete service oil
changes . small e'ngine
rt'pair.
We service and
winterize boats and
RV 's

E·mail: captbiii6S@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

(740) 992-5344

BARNEY

·

'DANG !! LOOKS L1KE
~ 1 CAN'T
FINISH
HANGIJ&gt;J'

:::--:-.,tl • LAUNDRY
It

Years Experienre

David Lewis
740-992-6971
wv0Gt82 Fnta

...THE ·
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

WPNTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds
Ocl. 25. 2008
· 9:00a.m. · II :00 a.m.
Release: April 25. 2009
A f~. of $20.00 will be
charged for early arrival,
late nnival , early removal,
l ate remo val, or anytime
ac":ess
i~
wanted
to
fairgrounds
nther than
stated
doted . Building
space is first come first
serve.
Insi de Storage $4.00flf
Open Span: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence : $ 1.00/lf

Wf\~T '!&gt;

Guttering

. f\t-.I'P'Il'r-\ 1"-\0T
lt\(JJ,!

t:'lclt'i
t».Y!

Pass

??

46 Coarse
oend
47 Kind of disc

serving
11 ScintiUa

51 Science
magazine

13 Name
meaning
"tNih"
14 PC button
15 Parking lol

52 Wig
53 Antenna

type
55 Juicy pear
56 Famed lava
spewer

16 Dr. Pavlov
17 Environmen?
19 Ocean

57 Prickle
58 Umbrage
59 Pic. boss
13 Type of
60 Tokyo, ·
sausage
dwellers
to shogu.ns 18 Moo
20 Colony
companion
member
DOWN
22 Fundamen21 Osprey kin
tal pan
23 Tijuana
Social
23 Humbug
Pocale
insecl
preceder
26 Zin~y flavor 2 Foolhardy
24 Cassius..
28 Vistlor from 3 "Free Wi?ty"
Clay
Melmac
whale
25 ODE
29 Always!
4 Samuel
successor
in poems
Clemens
27 Was ,
30 Caravan
5 Loom device
to Ovid
halts
6 Gyro pocke1 29 Mild cheese
34 Raised
7 Quay
31 Bask at the
prices
8 Doctoral
beach
36 Skill
• exams
32 Windup
38 Numero- 9 Censors
33 Tofu base
39 Hobby knife 12 Family tree, 35 Glamorous
(hyph.)
1o some
37 On the prowl

40 Hidden
sPore
41 FBI

acronym

42 Warrior's
pro1ec1ion
43 Car-wash
s1ep
45 No-fal Jack
46 Asian
desen
48 Health food
49 3.0 shape
50 Clonk
54 Move 10
and -

We have been looking at advance control-bids (cue-bids), which allow une
player to show a very suitable hand for
play in partner's suit. Today's deal gives
another example of this theme.
look at only the North hand. Partner
opens one spade; you fespond one notrump, showing 6·10 points with fewer
than three spades; and he rebids three
hearts, which is natural and game-lore·
ing. What woolcl you do now?
Is your hand ·lousy. middling, good or'
great , given that you responded one notrump?
11 Is terrific. You hBve a maXImum with
five,card heart suppOrt. Vou must not
content ·yourself with a raise to four
hearts, which you would bld without, say,
the heart king. You must make an
advance control-bid (cue·bld) of four
clubs. (II you have a weak hand wilh lots
of clubs, rebid either three 110-trump or
five clubs.)
Your four-club bid is just 'Nhat partner
wanted to hear, looking at hls two club
losers. He uses Blackwood, then jumps
to six hearts.
by Luis Campos
West leads the club q'ueen , and East
Cetebnty Ctpher.cryptngrams are :reated !rom quotatiO,S by lamous people past and oreS!nt
Each lelle! 1n the c1 pner stands 'or arother
signals enthusiaStically with the nine.
1oday·s clue.· v equars W
How should South plan the play?
After winning with dummy's club ace,
" KBLGLKEXG HW EBX PIFT WXKJGX
declarer must shed the club loser from
erther dummy or his hand.·He unblocks
MPJIALEH· PI PM EBX WELEX ."
his ace·klng of diamonds, then starts on
the spades. When Wesl ruff~ the third
· K L F C H I . KP P F HA S X
round f&lt;&gt;w, dummy overruns and leads ·
the diamond queen. Curses! East ruffs.
"VBLEXCXO TPJ LGX , RX L SPPA
So South 011errulfs and plays another
spade.This time luck is in- West has to
P' l X . " • L R X F H I K P F I
ruff wilh the heart ace and dummy's cl ub
loser.can be dlsqarded.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "In matters ol style. swim w1th the current in
matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson

O

..Astro-

BIG NATE

PSI CONSTRUCTION

WONDER WAAT
IT WOlJLD BE
LIKE TO BE IN

·rtlE Z.ONE ."

YOV HEAR ATHLETES
TM.K AIW\!T 8EING
IN A ZONE WHERE
THEY CAN DO
NO WRONti. .

Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters

SOt'IETIMES THEY'i!E
So LOCKED IN.
t{EY'II.E NOT EVEN
....WARE OF Tt{E
....11A2.tNG PLI..VS
THEY'RE M....KING .

rnsurecJ &amp; Bonded

i

Quality Seamle~
Gutters
Commercial &amp; Rtsid.,riaq
Viny?
Siding/Rep?acement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
free E~limaled
Pomeroy. Ohio

IIP.III

Saturday, October 25, 2008
9:00 till?? DJ Charlie
COSTUME CONTEST:
$200 for· first prize and more
cash prizes; Drink Specials;
Door prizes; T·shlrt contesr.
A?so come and vo?e for your
. favorite emp?oyee in costume .

Joh'CiUree .
Compltte Tree CIN

J4Htl2·5&amp;12

T.W.1...,

--."'"""-

lnaulwd • , . . e..u.n.t..

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Vlnyr Sld?ng
• Rep?acement
Windows
• Rooftng
·Decks
•Garagee
• Po?a Bu?Pd?ngs
• Room Add?dons

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Odors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Rooqi
Additions
.
Local Conlractor

Owner: .
·James Keesee ??
742-2332' •
For

740-367-()544
F-Ealim740.367-'1)536

and "!ew House ~ul?d?na

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding ~ Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

....,.... s 19ail!' atrtbune
(740) 446-2342 .

The Daily Sentinel

IIIEW.-CIM, -EI

(740) 992·2155

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

,tlleasant i\egfster
(304) 675-1333

1

I

COWandBOY
BEING A I &amp;I FR.
YOU CAN ENTERTAIN
, ..UST A9JUT ANYONE.

j

IT DOESN'T MATTE~
WHERE THEY~ FROM.
IF THEY'RE OLD 012 YOUNG,
EVEIIYONE IS TRANSFPXED
BY THE ~HYTHMIC TOSSING
OF AIJIBOIINE OBJECTS.'
OKAY, HERE GOES.

:J

-..-.

.121111.

HALLOWEEN PARTY

•Prompt and Qua?ity
Work
* Reasonable Rates
*Insured
•Experienced
References Availab?e!
Call Gary Slan!ey @ '
740-59? -8044
Please leave messa e

ll11.124PI•III!LH
... H . .

Upper Level

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

GARFIELD .

Q Reorrcnge

&lt;!bur 'llrlhdo,y:
·

•

In tt1e year ahead, more powerful ambitions than usual may be aroused through
cl'10ice or oecessity. In either case. once ·
you got your teeth into somelhing, it isn't

I

•
0

·likely you'll settle for anything but impres·
s1ve accompli shments.

0

SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-No'J. 22)- Someone

If we sell it,.we'll
print an'other.

w.1 o knows you are the type of person
who occasionally doesn't mind picking up
the tab for everyone may try to maneu ver
you Into doing so. Don't fall tor his or her
manipulation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - 11
you allow your emotions or feelings to
cloud your ludgmenl, established goals
could go un tullitl ed . Only a clea r, logical
approach lo t1'1 1ngs can actompllsh your
airris .
~APR I CORN ~Dec . 22 ·Jan . 19) Having a curious mind is fruitful when lry·
IOQ to ·resolve an l!ilsue, but probing into
lhings that are none of you r business,
espeCially 11'11ngs that friends consi der to
be p&amp;rsonal, will get you snunned.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Be careful about recommending prOOucts or people to others, because lltl'1ey don't prove
to be exactly wl'1a1 the person is looking
for, you will be blamed for things not
working out.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Usually
· you 're good about selecting whort\ to go
to for advice. but you might seek counsel
from someone wl'1o wlll only further confuse you and/or provide faulty informa·
lion .
ARIES (March 2 t -April 19)- You know
better than 10 try to force square pegs
info round hOles, so tne moment you
notice that 's what yo'U're doing, start rea "SOning things out lOgically and make l:lP
for lost time.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ Be IJ)(Ce p·
tionaUy cautious about getting lr)volved in
any type of arrangemenl that ,r equires a
financial risk. UnfOrtunately, th e odds
favor the olhe r guy, so it will be difficult for
you to win.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - It might be
one Of tnose days where it seems as if
everyone in your housel'1old is jumping to
negative conclu sions without letting t!le
ot1'1ers clarify their positions. Don.'t b.a one
of them .
CANCER (June 21 -July .22) - If you find
yourself in tl1 e company of an acquain tance who thrives on repeatmg gossip,
select your top1c of conv~sation wit~ ·
extreme ca re so he or she can 't misquote
you and cause trOu ble.
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) .:..... Be more care ful than usual, beceuse thl!re ·s a chance
you could be accident-prone and break
something you che'rish. Remember. an
ounce of pr911entlon Is worth a pound of
eu re .
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) - The bell
way to sroust retentment in othart 11 to
Insist that ..,.rythlng ba dona your way
and In vour tlrrwa. To your dlam.y, howev- •
tr, ot1'!41tt ml~t almpty let you p~ad
whh Kit all on )'04Jr own .
L.II!IRA (S.!Jt. 23·001. 23 ) -'fOur lmiiQI·
nation 11 likely to ba graally halgh~anid .
~~ •adly, It won't ba Wpllftlng oonoapts

{nat rtO&lt;l&lt;lUPY your thoughtl. Oqom and
gloom mlghl bt tht only tntng on your
brlln.
"

SOUPTONUTZ

740-985-4141 .
Ce?l: 740-4 P6· P834
25+ yean exfMritnct Fne Estiwumr

Advertise
hi this spac;e for
$64
month •

~Hti~' S©'\\tllA-lG"B~S®

WORD

GAM I
- , - - - - - ldUod by CLAY R. POU~N - ' - - - - - -

By Bernice Bade Osol

I

PEANUTS

·First printinq will
be one copy.

1

Graph

Saturday, Oct 25, 2008

•

741).653·9657

Wanted:
Part
Time
Room Attendant at the
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
Must be willing to work
weekends and holidays.
Experience preferred but
we wiN train. Appty In
person. Absolutely no
phone calls.

300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
(across from city park)
Hou rs: M· F 106, Sat. 10·5
Closed Sunday

.

L051!11&amp; TI\OIJ~~t&gt;!&gt;

Cel?: 746-416-5047
emal?:

~

KIPLING SHOE CO.

'&lt;Ci.J KNOW, T~
. t&gt;r..'1'::., I'Jo\ ~loi.OST

"'!

fl\'{ POR.TFOL.IO I!&gt;

I

H&amp;H

fl\'( ~ AA£ \Xl'f.IN ...

C.fllEr?

Racine, Ohio 740.247·201 '
Owners: .
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

1-\Y !&gt;\()(.1(.5 AA£ t)()WN .. .

WltO"--G,

Moint.nance /
-=~Donoutic:""!~"""~;;;;;

sure how long sale will
continue ...
DON'T MISS OUT!!

East

1 NT

Anawsr to Previous Puzzle

CELEBRITY CIPHER

2~

-EIIYIEUS

Not

Pass

North

Are you weak,
middling or strong?

BIIIV R. Glblelr.
740-416·1164

We appreciare your ·

W~st

.Pass

Opening lead : • Q

luCilenear:

· Mon-Fri.
8:00am · 4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am- 12

52

Dealer: South
Vulnerab?e : Both ·

Stop &amp; Compare

~P~ay~.3~0~4-~7;63~-~~
·~,,~

UNBELIEVABLE!!!
$5 &amp; $10
Nam&amp;brand shoes
for tne entire family

• 9 3··
•K986 3

South
•AKQ .J t O
• Q J 10 9
t AK

111411 mo. pd

L &amp; L Tire Barn

bu!'iiness

t ' J65 42

41 Griffith or
Glbb
42 Bakery lu"'
44 Inquire

10 Corn

sight

.. Q J 10 7

• Complete
Remodeling

Skiing I

Tuesday, October 28, 2008. at 6:00 p.m.. al Kent Slate University.
Room 101/Lecture Hall. 2492 St. Rt . 45 Soulh , Salem , Ohio 44460 .
Wednesday, Ociober 29, 2008, al 6:00 p.m , at Springtleld City Hall.
City Forum · First Floor. 76 Easi High Street , Springfield, Ohio 45502.
· Wednesday, November 5, 2008, at 6:30p.m. , at Mansfield City Council
Chambers, 30 North Diamond Slrcet, Mansfie!d. Ohio 44902.
Thursday, No&gt;cmber 6, 2008. at 6:30 p.m .. at lite City of Columbus
Wolfe Park Shelter House. 105 Park Drive, Co lumbus, Ohio 432()9.
Monday, November, 10, 2008 at 6:00 p.m. at the Athens Community
Cenler. 701 Eost Slate Street, Suile 20 I , Alhens, Ohio 45701:
Wednesday, November 12, 2008 , at 6:00 p.m., at Bowsher High
School, 2200 Arlington Avenue, Toledo , Ohio 43614 . ·
· Thursday, November 13, 2008, a1 12:30 p.m .. at Panna City Hall ,
· Council Chambers , 6611 Ridge Road, P"•rn1a. Ohio 44129.
Thursday, No&gt;ember 13, 2008. al 6:00 p.m .• at Lorain City Ha?l ,
Council Chambers, 200 West Eric Avenue, Lorain , Oh io 44502.

4sm

Plumbing

·Rooting 1 Gutters
• VInyl

East
• 8 7 6 3
• 4 1.

Wesl

• New Homes
• Garages

oa

.. A 4

¥ A 7

· Room Addlttana a

•E5tctrk:lll 1

iD-21

¥K B653
• Q 10 8 7

...

Hlil s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

Ohio
valley
Home "'
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides. • STNA
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 14800 ' JackSOn
Pike, Gall~olis, · Ohio or
phone 740-441·1393 for
more into. Competitive
wages, mileage retmbursement and benefits
including health !nsurance &amp; much more.

mess.

7 Soflloos

Home Health Care of
Southeast Ohio Inc., is

S59,M6
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7~28·27so

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1 A pal
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Medical

60-hr. EMT Min8r Class ~t866-;;;;,.;;361l;;;;,·1;,;1!!00i!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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of
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Grande now hiring morn0 No Experience'
ing shift, flex ible hours,
Required
~~~~~~~= paid Holidays and Vaca·
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Brand new 3bed 2bath tion. Apply within
Bonuses •.
on + -half acre 'in P1. - - - - - - - Pleasant. · OW~ER Fl0 Set Schedules
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0 Meqical, Dental and
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Management
Deck, 112 acre. Jerr{.s
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We ~k career oriented
304-576-Jt t t
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Prices Reduced 2 2006
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1

Public Notice

reerco•-r· u

Mochanico

,•• ti

Jette!'! ef the
four scral'l'!bied wcrd§ below to form foiJr sirm;.:e words.

"

G R AF UL

SHONAf·!

"The S~crcl 10 staying young:·
gr.mny laugh•d. "is good heallh
and ly ing aboul .... ••• ...
() Ccmpieto 1he c:+n.d le CLio:ed
bv lilting ir. th~,t mi:.sing words
yo'J ~eiop from stao No :! h~t!r"tw

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS 10'2 3!()8
Viable · Grimy - Ma1ch · Pigpen -GRAVITY
One eldcrl' womanlo nnothcr. "Humor h•lps compensalc
Plte law of GRAVITY ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

fo(

�,.

·.

www.mydailysentinel.com

~~

,Friday, October 24. 2008

Elec t

~oo8

ROGER
BRANDEBERRY
SHERIFF .. .. -.. ,......L.:·-:.::·-;.:::.:.:::::

ALONG THE RivER
Night lights: Majestic
scenes plentiful after dark, Cl

.

~

.. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

Sprint Cup ·

Nationwide ·

• Race: Pep Boys Auto 500

• .w r-: AUanta Motor Speed,

~:~~5~in
ecWI!
races ain&lt;:e,

began the
CM!f

Johnsen. In

Busch haHiopped 485 points.
~ That makes him last, not first.
: 1&gt; bpla's hold on the manufactur: et iJ9!nts lead rs sudden~~
~ ~ Only one T&lt;¥&gt;fa ~lin:. lshed lh the top 10 at Martipsville.
With 1oor races remain~ TOI'O!a
. has 193 Points, follciwed ~
· ; Chevrolet wltl11g;!, F!llll with 184 ·
' and ~e with 135.
.1&gt; Hilndtk:itMotorsports'.Mar· •
: tlnsvlle dOininan&lt;:e is etched
• dark irDrl!- tt was four years ago
' that 10 people died en route to
• Ulis track on the team's plane.
Johnson\; first Martins~lle victory
occurred on Ulat day. Hendrick · ,
Cl'em&gt;lets have won all but two of
the nine raoos run here sinre the
tragedy.
1&gt; At the remaining four Chase
· tracks, Johnson has won siK ~mes
and finished In the toP five 20
Hmes in 41 starts.
· 1&gt; As a practical matter, JOhnson
can probably afford two off races
in the final four and still win tile
- championship.
1&gt; Attendance cootinues to sutter,
and NASCAR continues to de!¥ it
The "estimated clll'Ml"listed in
tile raoo results I'H!S 64,000,
wh~h ;s near capacity and 1,000
more Ulan the estimate of an apparently larger Clll'M1 ea~ier this
year. A more likely attendanre fig.
ure was about 50.000.
1&gt; Jeff Gordon lost his best Shot at
winning a race. Gordon hasn't
gone Ulrough a season winless
since his first (1993). He's'won
more raoos at Martms~lle (se.:en)
Ulan ~ny other actO/e driver.
1&gt; Wl'en Gordon refers to Johnson
as "Mr. Martinsville; he knows
what he's talking about. Johnson's
career winning percentage at the
track Is .357. Gordon's is .219.
1&gt; The four Hendricl&lt; entries Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. (sec·
ond), GorOO!l (fourth) and Casey
Mears (sixtn)- all finished up ·
front. Two of Mears' best f~e finishes this year are !It Martins~lle.
1&gt; ~rt Busch's Dodge was so
bal~ \hat he wanted to gNe up.
~ Busch asked permission. denied
t1; Penske Racing's walt Czameo
ki, to pull off the track in the Mar·
. tin~He race's latter stages. Twice
Busch's car, in his words, "j,opped
~.front tires, and he finished ,
the raoo 34 laps behind.

way, Hampton, Ga. (1.54 m1.),
) 325 laps/500.5 miles.
\I • Wilen: Sunday, Oct. 26.
• t..t ya's wtnner: Jimmie
" . Johnson, Ch!Molet.
• ~-:Geoffrey Bo:1. dine, Ford,197.478 mph. Nov.
15, 1997.
• Race .-.1: Bobby Labonte. .
l ~ Pl:lntiac,159.904 mph, Nov.16.
1997.
.
. •Ust ~: What is there
• about Jimmie Johnson - and
Henarick Motorsports: for that
' matter- at Martinsville Speed~ wey? Johnson roared to within
shouting distance of a third
straight Sp&lt;int Cup championship
~winning the Turjls QuikPak
500. Natural~. of course. Johnson didn't shout. He spent qualf
ty t1me assuring everyone in

. earshot Ulat yet another champf
onsh1p wasn't a done deal. Most~ this led to ~ling bf eyes,
yawns and wances·of disbelief.
The race's Dnaming sponsor,meanwhile, undoobted~ came in
handly to all the v.oulilbe cor&gt;
tenders figuratO/ely drowning in
the wake of Johnson's Chevrolet.
In a raoo that ended with a twolap, overtime fin1sh. Johnson won
~ .708 ot a second. which is
k_
ind of like winning a 1(X}rard
dash ~five of them. Johnson, of
cour: e. said, UWe were one of
two or thre&lt;;! cars tl]at were realiy
strong." The other two, whoever
they were, mariaged not to lead
339 laps, capture a fourth race
out of the past five at th1s track
and pick up a mere 83 points
the driver, Jeff Bl.rton. who had
been closest to him in the Chase
standings entering tile race.

• Race: Kroger 250
• WheN: Memphis (Tenn.)
Motorsports Park (.75 mi.),
250 laps/187.5 miles.
• When: saturday, Oct. 25.
• lJilt year's w-: D~id
Reutimann, Toyota .
• Qualifying record: Jeff
Green, Chevrolet.120.267
mph, Oct. 28, 2000.
• Race record: Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet. 92.352
mph, Oct. 29,2000.
• Last race: Kyle Busch
won for the ninth time in the
series this year, capturing
the Dollar General 300 at
Lowe 's Motor SpeedWay.

· Craftsman Truck

'

(1.54 mi.), 130 laps/200.2
miles.
• When: saturday, Oct. 2~.
• lJilt year's wiMOr: Kyle
Busch. Chevrolet.
·•
• Qualifyln&amp; record: Rick
Crawford. Ford, 182.735
mph, March 17, 2005.
• Race record: Ron Hornaday Jr., Chevrolet, 142.424
mph, March 18, 2005.
• Last week: Johnny Benson closed ·in on the championship by winning the
Kroger 200 at Martinsville

.

SPORTS
• High school football
action.
Page 81

see

~

'" ·r'J;s tyrsSIJ
J .:::.=..1 .

.,• r.::.
,. . . :s i.Jr:...; !Jr
r ·

c

No. 48

SPRINT CuP

JiMMIE JOHNSON

son, whose

ever at Mar·
tinsMiie.
I&gt;Who~IIOI­

K)1e Busch has
gone from first
to worst (12th)
ih the first six
Chase raoes. ...

Sinoewinn~at

Tall~. TOO(

J

LowE's CHEVROLET

5

As always, Burton was diplomatic
about rt, but a pit-road penalty- for
pitting outside his box- cost Burton dearly in the points race. Burton
said he couldn't get in the box because Jeff Gordon's car was leaving
the pits as his came in. "He didn't
do anytning wrong. I didn't do anythTng wrong; said Burton, who noted
that the penalty wasn't immediate~
assessed.

NASCAR This Week's Monte Out·
ton gives hie take: · one can't help
but wonder if Burton's penalty might
have been overlooked had not TV announcers ra ised the 1ssue."
)

NASCAR This Week
Jimmie Johnson started lhe Chase In lhlnl place, 40 points behind then-leader Kyle Busch. Now; with foorracts left, hi Is a comfortable
149 points ahead of seCond-place Greg Billie arid 152 points ahead of thlnl-place Jeff Burton.

,.. happy Joe . . . Radii!(
lllolllll( at 11111111'1 111111
. Dell NASCAR Title Wtek.
I'm so glad JGR (Joe Gibbs Rae·
ing) is losing at the end of the season. I hated it when Joe Gibbs 1
stabbed GM in the back by going to
Toyota .... They are taking away
American racing! I'm glad they're losing.
.limy Raid

Winchester, va.
There are many fans driving Toy·
. otas, too, and there are many Amerl·
can workers building them..

Johnson leaving his competition in ·the dust
By Monte Dutton

need more than merely a true aim. haven't already drowned in Johnson's
Only Johnson can lose the champi· wake are determined to keep on tread·
onship. Without an improbable col· ing water.
lapse, none of the three can catch him.
But it's tough. Edwards had his
Johnson, of course, isn't talking best-ever finish at Martinsville. All
smack. His words are carefully con- finishing third got him was a loss of
sidered.
30 more points.
"Overconfident would be a mis·
"Being realistic, this really was a
take," he said. "That's the thing that · very successful day for as," he said.
we really want to focus on not doing,
Edwards' best wasn't good enough.
and we need to carry the momen~um
"It feels just like you think it would
and have it work in the right direction feel like,'' he said. "You think, 'Damn,
for us, and we need to be confident in those guys are good."'
what we are doing and the equipment
A year ago, Johnson won the first of
we are taking to the track.
four straight races here en route to
"But we can't b.e cocky. Cocky? We the championship. He arrived trailing
are going to get our hand slammed in Jeff Gordon by 68 points. This year,
the door. It's just not what we are he already had a substantial lead (69)
about ... "
when he got here and left with a
Similarly, the three 'drivers who might-nig_)rlnvincible one.

MARTINSVILLE, Va.- Poor Cale
Yarbomugh. The only man ever to win
three consecutive NASCAR Cup
championships is _going to have his
comfortable retirement complicated
by one call after another from some
intrusive media types:
That's because Jimmie Johnson is
four races away from duplicating
Yarborough's 30-year-old feat. Win·
ning for the foul'th time in his past
five tries at Martinsville Speedway
gave Johnson a clear patq to yet an·
other championship.
The three drivers still within range
-Greg Biffle (·149 points), Jeff Burton (·152).and Carl Edwards (·19B)-

Stewart has fin.

BuS.:H !Shed 11th and
26tll,

bank robbery, according to Wednesday
afternoon,
BAEEDOMYDAILYSENnNEL.COM
Agent Mike Brooks of the after allegedly robbing the
Federal
Bureau
of bank wearing a silver
POMEROY
A ,. Investigation..
. Halloween mask.
Middleport
woman · Sayre · spent Wednesday . Beegle said Sayre conaccused in the armed rob· night in the Southeastern · fessed to robbing' the bank
bery of the Peoples Bank Ohio Regional Jail in brancl,· Wednesday after
in Rutland is now in feder- Nelsonville before being . she was apprehended at a
al custody.
transferred to custody of home on Ash S1reet in
Billie Jo Sayre , . 28, the U.S. Marshal Thursday. Middleport.
She told
appeared in U.S. District She was arrested by Sheriff Beegle she had planned to
(:ourt Friday on a count of Robert
Beegle
on confess to the crime after

R I 0
GRANDE

NASCAR This Week we/comes letters
· to the ednor. but Plfa$e be aware that
we have room for on~ a ~each weel&lt;.
We'll do our beSt to seleCt the best. but
indMdual replies are lrnpossJble due to
the bulk of mailre&lt;eived. Ptea!;e do not
seno stamped and seW-addressed envelopes with JWr iettefS, which.shoold
be addressed to:
NASCAR Th~ Week

rhe Gaston Gazette

0BITUARIFS
"Page AS
• PhYllis Lee Hughes
• Andrew M. McCarty ·
· • RichartfW. Myers

A

Gallipolis
woman's
dedication to

~~fi~e; . e~~d

community
Pauline
service was Wlitherholt
recognized
• James Bill Sands
last week when . Pauline
• William Edward Kauff
(Polly) Wetherholt received
• Anna Mae Ellis
·
the 2008 "'Outstanding
Achievement
in
• Lena Mae Maynard
Trustee~hip" award from
• Mabel L. Mahan
the Ohio Association of
~ Kenneth Harlan Cundiff Community Colleges.
. "Polly has provided
unwavering sul?port and
·outstanding"llemce·'to. ·Rio
Grande Community Colle$e
for over 30 years," sa1d
INSIDE
RGCC
President
Dr.
Herman Koby. "She has
continually lobbied for what
• Republican fall rally set is best for local students
for Lyne Center.
regardless of political nuni·
fications ."
SeePageA2
. "Her concern has always
·• Breast Cancer Health
been, and continues to be,
FairNoV:8 at HCCC.
the students of Rio Grande
Community
. Collellf:,"·
SeePageA2
Koby added.
-"
• Running from past
Wetherholt's late husshadows doesn't help.
band, Manning Wetherholt,
was one of the founding
~eAJ
members of the community
• Rio boards commit to
· Please see Trust.H, A2
shared vision,
governance. See Page A6

WEATIIER

P.O.Ila&gt;&lt; 1538
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

...J.:!.

:\u. -J.O

.

BY BRIAN J. REED

NEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

NASCAR ilfftc181a

)-; I . .JO • \'ol.

aD" .

Accused bank robber in federal court

STAFF REPORT

NASCAR

Jeff Burton va.

John Clark/

.

trustee wins
• •
recogmuon

u
Burton

PonHTO! • \Iiddlt•jHll'l • ( •• tllipoli-.,. • ()('lohL•t· :!.h. :!UOX

Ex-RGCC

E
R

s

NASCAR This Week

worst finish in
the Chase is a
ninth .... Dale
Eamhardt Jr.'s·
runner-up ftniSh
washlsbest

I ..:

v

in

... Who~ hotWell, ot&gt;.iously,
Jimmie JoM.

( Hli 11 \ . dlt·~ Puhli-..l!ing ( o .

~~!~~~~~!~~~,g~~~

and65building
of
po1nts an
overadvantage
Hornaday.

on

l'rilllM on 100%
Rer,-cled N~"· spriat

Hometown News
for Gallia &amp; MeigS counties
.

• Race: E·Z-GO 200
• Where: AUanta Motor
SpeedWay, 'Hampton, Ga.

Jobless
rates post
·decrease

consulting with a minister.
but was arrested before she
could do so.
Sayre allegedly en'tered
the bank shortly ,after 9 a:m.
Wednesday, armed with an
automati~
weapon, and
forced a teller to enter the
vault and fill the bag with
money .
Sayre told local officials
she left the cash, costume

and other items on Beech
Grove Road . They were
later · recovered. and the
weapon she used in the
crime was recovered from
the Middleport residence.
The Mid&lt;!leport home
was subject "to a searc h
warrant investigation after
her arrest, Beegle sai d, but
no other evidence was
found .

Delta Mariner sails past Meigs
Bv BETH

SERGENT

.

.

.

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Friday
the
Delta
afternoon
Mariner, a 312-foot-long
vessel floated upon the
Ohio River past Meigs
County, casting a massive
shadow over the landscape
on it's way to Cape
Canaveral, Fla.
According to Foss Marine
in Seattle, Wash., owner of
the vessel, the Delta
Mariner is out of the Port of
Mobile, Ala·. · and often
delivers delta rockets to
Cape Canaveral. According
to an article written by Dave
Gossett from the Herald
Star, the vessel was in
Steubenville the day before
it passed by Meigs County.
Gossett reported the vessel was carrying comro.nents. .fur NASA:&lt; Ares -X
test 't'figtit lotht' Kennedy
Space Center on a journey
that began in Wellsville and
will go from the Ohio to the
Mississippi Rivers and
finally across the Gulf of
Mexico to Florida during a
trip that will take a total of
12 days.
According to NASA's
website, the Ares I-X, the
agency's "next-generation
spacecraft and launch vehicle system" will bring
NASA ""one step closer to
its exploration goals · to
return to the moon for more
ambitious exploration of the
lunar surface and to travel
to Mars ·and destinations
beyond ." Tlie first test Iight
is scheduled, to launch in
2009.
As the vessel and it's

...

Beth Sergenl/photo
The Delta Mariner casts a massive shadow along the Ohio River at Pomeroy Friday after·
noon. The vessel, which can travel on the open ocean or inland waterways, is 50 feet tall,
has an 8,000-horsepower engine and is 312-feet long. It's cargo is bound tor Cape
·
Canaveral and eventually, the moon .

SPliCe-bound cargo passed
by the Pomeroy parkmg lot
Friday afternoon, a small
gathering of 'people began
to gawk at the ship made for
both ocean and inland travel. The vessel is 50 feet tall ,
has a maximum speed of 15
knot&gt; at open sea and has an
8,000-horsepower engine.
Common questions heard
along the river front ,were:
uwhat is that?" As well as:
'" Is that going to make it

under the bridge?''
The vessel did make it
under the bridge on it's way
south just as it did ~arlier
this month on it's way north
to pick up its cargo.
According to Foss the sup·
ply ship often transports
space-bound
hardware ,
including the common
booster cores for the Boeing
Delta. IV rocket program.
Foss describes the vessel
as '"versatile" and says it

often rounds the Florida
peninsula en route to Cape
Canaveral or transits the
Panama Canal .en route to
the western range Delta IV
launch
fadlity
'at
Vandenberg Air Force Base
in California. However; on
Friday, it traversed the
Ohio River and caused
some conversation in
Meigs County as its cargo
floated f)y on its way to the
moon.

.Strickland back to Pomeroy for Phillips campai~
BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEEOO MYDAILYSENToiNEL.COM

• ev KEviN KEllY

.I

POMEROY - Gov. Ted
• Strickland made his second
'·
campaign vjsit in Pomeroy in
GALLIPOLIS
a month Friday, stumping for
Unemploymeni
dipped Sen. Barack Obama 's presislightly in southeastern Oruo dential campaign and for
counties during September, Debbie
Phillips,
the
the Ohio Department of Job Democratic candidate for the
and Fwnily Services found in Ohio
House
of
Detelll on Pqe A6
.
its release of county-by-co_un- Representatives .
..
ty data last week.
U.S. Senator Sherrod
Gallia County, which saw Brown was originally sched·
its August jobless l'llle spike at uled to make the trip 'with
7.4 · percent in August, fell . Sttickland, but was unable to
five-tenths of a percent to 6.9 do so, Strickland said.
,.
•
percent in September. Meigs
Carpenters Hall was
4 SIICI10NS - 24 PAGES
County was at 105 percent packed with Meigs County
~ound Town
Aa . last month, a three-tenths of a Democrats, members of labor
pen:ent drop from August's organizations and a 'delel!a·
reading
of 10.8.
lion of Ohio Univemty
Celebrations
C4.
Meigs remained amo~~g the Young Democrats, who
D Section four counties with the highest accompanied Athens County
6assifieds
une,nployment rates in the Democratic Chainnan Susan
insert state, followed by Morgan at Gwinn in support of Phillips'
Comics
10.6 percent, VanWert at 105 campaign.
'
·
I
and Huron.at 102, according ' · Sttickland emphasized the
Editorials
toJFS.
importance of a . Democratic
•
Cs
Reductions in joblessness majorit_y in the Ohio House to
Movies
were seen in surrounding furthenng his agenda. The
•
•
counties last month, with Democrats are only four seats
pbitli~rles
Athens going to 7.7 percent in away from the majority, and'
September, down five-tenths Strickland said he was confi·
B Section of a percent from 8.2 in dent that Phillips will be
SpGrts
August. Jackson fell two- elected.
Weather
~nths of a percent, from 8.7
"She knows a lot about a
in'August to 85 in September. -lot, but she is, especially
~ aool Ohio Valley Pub~&amp; Co.
Lawrence dropped one- knowledgeable about educa·
tenth of a percent from 6.3 in. tion," Strickland said of
August to 62 the following Phillips. "She will hit the
ground running. and will be
,.. . . . . . . . . . . Al
i.
one of the three or four most
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.

lNDEX

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH
(740}

992-~155

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_

Ohio Governor led Strickland campaigned in Pomero{Friday afternoon .on behalf ol
Debbie Phillips, the Democratic candidate tor Ohio House of Representatives. He also discussed the importance of early voting to Democratic wins.
knowledgeable state legisla· of which refers to Phillips as Barack Obama ~·is a
Socialist."
tors in that area."
"Do-Nothing."
"Meigs
C!Junty
has
He said he was offended by
Strickland was critical of
negative campaigning by the mail, ·and by commenis endured a lot of hardship and
Republicans in this election, made · las! week at Meigs struggle, but the people here
including direct mail sent by County
Repub'N;iin are the salt of the earth , who
and on behalf of Phillips' Headquarters by Sen. Geotge
. Republican opponent - one Voinovich, that Senator Please see Strlcldand, A2

•

'

.•

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