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                  <text>Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 8, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Anna Nicole Smith
dies after collapsing
at Florida hotel, As

Johnson looks to pull of rare NASCAR repeat
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRE SS

CHAR,LOTIE, N.C.
Jimmie Johnson was the
. clear favorite to win last season's Nextel Cup champiunship, an easy pick after
coming so very dose so
many times before.
This year's pick isn't nearly as obvious, with 50 drivers revving their motors in
pursuit
of
dethroning
NASCAR's newest chmnpion. Jeff Gordon wants a tifth
Nextel Cup title . Tony
Stewart is fired up after
missing last year's Chase,
and Matt Kenseth's glial is
to win a second title, this
time under a new points system.
But no matter how you
break it down, the champiunship is Johnson 's 10 Jose.
"It 's hard 10 win one,
much less back to back, and
to do anything twice in a row
is tough ," said Stewart, who
won titles in 2002 and 2005.
"I can go to Vegas and put a
whole bunch of money on a
number, and to have it hit
once is something, but to
come back again and have it
hit again."
Only seven drivers have
won consecutive Cup titles
- none since Gordon in
1997 ami 1998.
Even though the odds are
clearly against him, Johnson
plans to make a full-speed
run at title No. 2.
"I am a race car driver. and
I want to win championships," he said. "I always
wanted to win one, and now
I've got it. That whole experience makes you hungry
and want to come back and
do it again.
"I feel with the team and
everything that we have (at
Hendrick Motorsports), we
could be a contender for a
few more of these."
Johnson has every reason
to believe he can do it again,
because his 2006 title was
no fluke . Since entering the

Nextel Cup Series five years
ago, Johnson consistently
has been among NASCAR:s
top drivers .
The No. 48team never has
been lower than tifth in the
standin~s and was twice runner-up m the championship.
That- earned Johnson the
dubious distinction of being
the Peyton Manning uf
NASCAR - the guy who
dominated the regular season, only to come up short
when everything was on the
line.
When Johnson and crew
chief Chad Knaus finally
cleared that final hurdle last
November, overcoming a
disastrous start to the Chase,
Johnson was freed of that
label.
· "A lot was said that they
might not be able to win it,
and Jimmie couldn't get it if
he didn't get it last year," car
owner Rick Hendrick said.
"Well, he did. I think a lot of
the pressure is off. The pressme now is not 10 prove he
can be a champion . The
pressure is on himself to
come back and be in the hunt
again."
it again starts with Knaus,
who
learned
valuable
1essons 1ast season. F'1rst, he
realized he had to back oil
just a bit to sustain the energy and drive Johnson needed
over the long 36-race sea-.
son.
Knaus also learned to delegate but had trouble easing
up initially. When he was
caught cheating _ during
Daytona 500 preparations, a
four-week suspension forced
Knaus to slow down . With
the crew chief watching
from home, Johnson rallied
to win at Daytona and again
in Las Vegas two weeks
later.
When Knaus returned to
the trm:k, he was able to
maintain an even pace the
rest of the year.
Now, his challenge will be
allowing his guys to celebrute last season's success
without losing the intensity

that made them champions.
"You have to give the guys
an opportunity to go out
there and soak it in and feel
a sense of accomplishment,"
Knaus said. "Because if they
are working continuously
and they don 't get any type
of reward for what they have
done, they are going to fee l
like ' Why am I applying
myself and working myself
to death fur nothing ?'
"The drivers take off and
go to France and Italy (during the offseason). but the
guys are in here worki11g
like crazy. It \ a balance that
you've got to find, and I
think we did a good job. We
just have to wait and see."
The mind-set of Knaus
and his crew will be just one
part of Johnson's success,
which also will depend on
how he handles his new role
as ambassador to the sport .
The
demands
on
Johnson 's
time
have
increased, and the spotlight
magnifies everything. He
learned that the hard way
last December when he fell
off a golf cart and broke his
wrist while gootlng around.
Reluctant to reveal exactly
how he was injured, Johnson
had to backtrack when the
truth came out.
"It can gel overwhelming
with the expectations," said
Gordon . "Every show, every
print and TV, every media,
every fan wants more 'Of
you . That's a good thing, but
at the same time, it can be
hard to manage ."
The only certainty is
Johnson plans to give his
pursuit of a repeal title his
fu ll attention. Anything else
and Knaus knows they ' II
come up short.
"I think we have to go out
there and prove ourselves
every week," Knaus said.
"Anytime somebody rolls
into a season or an event
thinking that .they are the
AP photo
favorite, you are going to get
NASCAR
driver
Jimmie
Johnson
takes
the
checkered
and
yellow
flags
as
he
wins
the
your bun handed to you. So
Daytona
500
auto
race
at
Daytona
International
Speedway
in
Daytona
Beach.
Aa.,
in
thiS
we won' t take the mentality
Feb. 19, 2006 fi le photo.
that we are the favorites."

Racing 101: Schools a proving
ground·for racin.g teams
LIMA (AP) - Michael
Klenke has learned in class
how to assemble a race car
engine and tear apart its
transmission.
He's also learned the best
way to h'lndle a problem that
crops up when a stock car is
flying around a dirt race track
at 60 mph.
"It's more than just step on
the gas and tum leti," Klenke
said of driving fur the
University of Northwestern
Ohio's stock car team.
" It makes you realize you
really are going to use what
you learn here," he said.
Klenke's school is one of a
handful of places where students can study how to build
a race car from tht• bottom
up. The high performance
motorsports program readies
them for a career in auto racing - whether it be working
on a pit crew or in the shop.
"A lot of people just see
NASCAR on Sundays," said
Steve Klausing, an instructor
who works with the school's
race club. "There's a lot that
goes into the six days before
the race."
Auto racing's growing
presence on television and its
widening appeal to mainstream fans has led to more
leagues, teams and job
opportunities in a sport that
- increasingly needs highly
skilled crew members.
"It ust:d to be that growing
up with your dad in the
garage was good enough to
get you through," said Don
Radebaugh, spokesman for
the ARCA -5eries. "But it
requires more than turning
. wrenches in a garage.
"We're seeing more and
more drivers and crew members who are college graduates," he said.
ARCA has become a steppingstone rU~:e league for not
only the drivers but also crew
members.
About 20 students from the
school in Ohio spent their
weekends last vear working
with ARCA ·teams. This
week, a group from the
school traveled to Florida to
wor(( at the ARCA 200 on
Saturday
at
Daytona

International Speedway.
They ' II work on the
engines, clean the cars for the
race and watch .how the pros
adjust the aerodynamics of
tl\e cars to make them run
faster.
"It gives any racing program a pi ace to look for
help," said Bill Kimmel.
crew chief for eight -time
ARCA champion Frank
Kimmel. "If you take a kid
off the street, we have to
show them every step of the
way."
He usually pairs a student
with an experienced crew
member. Kimmel's team,
based in New Albany, Ind.,
hired one of the students who
worked for him a year ago to
be a mechanic.
Motorsporls students at
Indiana University-Purdue
University in Indianapolis
compete for internships in
the Champ Car World Series
and with the Panther Racing
team in the Indy Racing
League.
"We work with teams to
configure the classes around
what the teams need," said
Peter Hylton. director of the
IUPUI motorsp011s'program.
ARCA car owner Wayne
Hixson. of Soddy Daisy,
Tenn.. said there's still a
learning curve when students
start working with a pro
team.
"We're looking for somehody who can carry tires over
the wall and put them on," he
said. "I teach them how to
carry tires, put them on and
put air in them."
About 1.000 students are
enrolled in the motorsports
program at the University of
Northwestern Ohio, which
offers two- and four-year
degrees in business and technologies.
The year-old $7 million
motorsports complex is
where they learn about building transmissions. welding
frames and shaping fenders.
Classrooms are attached to
the garages where stock cars
and dragsters are taken apart
and put back together.
"There's a lot of big boy toys
here." said Torh Grothous. a

dean in the college of technologies.
In one of the garages. the
metal frame of a stock car
sits on a Iiii, but soon it will
be filled with an engine and
ready for the racing season in
April. Outside, there's a 500foot track for drag racing and
a small oval for stock cars.
Mounds of rocks and dirt are
for the off-road racers.
The school also boasts
what it calls the world's
largest motorsports classroom - a 114-mile banked
dirt track that the university
bought nine years ago. As
many as I00 students line up
on Friday nights in the spring
and summer to work on the
pit crews with weekend drivers who come to the
Limaland Motorsports Park .
Anywhere from 2,000 to
5,000 fans show up on race
night to watch the sprint cars,
stock cars and trucks.
The .university's llrst stock
car team started competing
there last year. This season, it
will have two teams racing in
cars with "student driver" on
the rear bumper.
"It lets everyone know that
lhfy 're out there to learn and
not to push the other guys
into the wall." said university
president Jetl'rey Jarvis, who
can be found on race nights
handing candy to children
and talking with the fans and
drivers.
The motorsports program
at the Ohio school started in
1993. Other colleges have
since added the training,
including Lincoln Tech in
Indianapolis and WyoTech at
its campus in Fremont. Calif.
The
Universitv
of
Northwestern Ohio ·doesn't
trac~ how many graduates
end up in racing but knows
that its former students are
now working for teams in
NASCAR , the Indy Racing
League and minor league circuits.
The education in the classroom can't compare with
practicing at the trt~ek,
Klausin g said.
·'It 's just not the same thing
as when th~ car's coming in
all hot," he said. " It gets your
adrenaline going ...

It's Time To

Eastent drops
second to Federal
Hocking, Bt

...
at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
) r, ( l '\. 1'--i•\ o l

-1 h

SPORTS
• Trimble topples
Tornadoes. See Page 81

'\• • 1 . ; ~

11&lt;111\\ , 11 Bl&lt;l \1(\ 1) ,:.! (~0 ~

\\\\\'1. , lll\\l.uh ' ( ' 11111 Hl4 • n• l

Commissioners appoint second 911 committee
J.

Technical
Advisory
Committee also serv e on the
Planning Committee.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Appointed were Pomeroy
County
Commissioners Fire Chief Rick Blaennar,
appointed the second com- Pomeroy Police Chi~f Mark
mittee required to imple - Proffitt . Sheriff Robert
ment the ·county 's E-911 Beegle.
Emergency
service during Thursday's Management
Agency
regular meeting.
Director Robert Byer.
Commis sioners
met Rutland Township Trustee
Wednesday. for the first Joe Bolin. EMS Director
time , with their I}JJ Doug
Lavender,
Planning Committee , and Commumty Action Agency
most of those on the Director Tom Reeu. Ohio
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Hi ghway
Patrol
Stute
Commander Richard Grau.
Skip Dalton of Verizon
Communication s
and
Health Commissioner Larry
Marshall.
Dalton met with the planning commission to discuss
the preliminary steps in
implementing the service,
which Meigs County voters
endorsed through a 50-cent
telephone line c har~e in
November. Those mitial
steps mclude the develop-

ment of a database of tele phone numbe rs and phy,i ·
cal addresses for all residents, secu ring financing
for the purchase of the nee ·
c"ary equipment. and
establish ing the fund nece s·
sary for the proceeds of the
line fee. which will be col lected hy the telephone
companies 111 the t:ount}
and paid into the fund .
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said yesterday the process
of creating the database and

LTl'ating l'llH:r!;t:lll') Lunin~
area~. defin111g what em~r ­

gciH..') re..;p&lt;lll~t:.· d~pitrtml.!nh
\\ ould 1\.~-. ponU to l'ach tL'k~ ­

phum• number. will li~cl)
he completed h) the cnunl1 .
rather lhan h) a l..'ontractecl
firm or pcn.on .
The
tilllL'-cu n~unHnl!
prnce~s wil l ensure th;~

each telepho ne number has
a corrc,pondin~ physical
addres., and hm"e number .

Please see 911, AS

~ woman

Mal&lt;ing Valentines

accused,
injured
in alleged
robbery
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

MIDDLEPORT
- A
Pomerov woman will be
charged· after attempting to
rob
Whitley\
Liquor
Agency on Mill Street in
Middleport on Thursday
morning .
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swift said Amy
Thornburg. 2\1. of Old
Forest Road. Pomeroy. was
transported to a hospita l for
laceration s she su ffered
when Renee Whitley. who
was working behmd the
counter nf the store. st ruck
her 11 ith a liquor bottle after
Thornburu allcgedlv tried to
hold up tl~e slo~e. •
Swift said detail s of the
alleged attempted robbery
are st ill h~?ing invt~stigated.
but sa id Wlutkv is belie ved

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Raymond I. Lane, 98
• Edward Lawson, 53
• Raymond L. Little, 76

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Regents want more
power over tuition,
degree duplication.
See Page A&amp;

to

ha\'l'

acted

Ill

SL"If

defense. He said Thornbu rg
will be c· hargcd and jailed

WEA1HER

Cha~ene

Hoefllch/photo

With Valentine's Day just around the corner, these art students were busy Thursday finishing off ceramic heart boxes.
Ruth Ward. standing, teaches a ceramics class at the Senior Citizens Center. From the left are Potty Curtis. Shirley Hamm.
and Barbara Gheen .

Cold weather and the danger to seniors
8 ETH

around 50 lunches and mt:Jications are at risk for
although that number fell cold stress. If taking n]edslightly yesterday.lhe center ication for high blood presPOMEROY - The recent sti ll serveu 37 ilmche s anu sure. nervousness, deprescold snap has many of liS that was without the center's sion, poor circulation or
turning up our thermostats vans making pickups .
sleeplessness, talk abou t
but for some seniors who
As for d1oosing between hypothermia I cold stress
have to choose between heat heat and medicine . workers with your doctor.
·
and medicine , turning up say the seniors at the center
Symptoms for cold stress
their thermostat is not an haven't said too much include sleepiness (difficuloption which can lea(l to about that though that may ty waking up). confusion,
serious health problems.
change when the fuel bill s slurred speech.lack of coor, One of those problems is begin to hit. Several mem- dinat ion. uncontrolled shiv·'cold stress" which is basi- bers at the center also live ering, weak, slow pul se,
cally hypothermia and at The Maples where their slow breathing. puffy face ,
· caused by excessive body utilities arc paid for which cold. stiff mu scles. tremheat loss as well as expo- can be a help.
bling of one side of the body
sure to cold. Cold stress can
For those who don't live or in one ann or leg. change
happen indoors, even at in a facility like The in behavior or personality.
Reduce your risk of cold
temperatures as mild as Maples . putting on an extra
between 60 and 70 degrees. layer of clothing may n.ol be stress by slaying warm and
Workers at the Meigs enough to kee p warm and dry, indoors and outdoors ,
County Senior Citizens safe from wid stress.
a void ~xposure to snow.
Center said despite the · Those who don ' t dress wind, rain and water/damprecent bad weather manv warmly enough. live in a ness. dress warmly. wear
seniors are still visiting the cold room or house, lack loo se layers of dothing .
center daily for fellow ship shelter from the snow, rain. ~specially woolens. cover
and other activities . The wind ami water. eat potJrly head and neck (wear a hat
center normally serves and take certain prescription and scarf) . wear gloves or
BY

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MY OAILYSENTINEL. COM

Race lor the Nextel Cup Preview

Februarv 16, 2001

Qetalls on Pa&amp;e A6

INDEX
2 SF.CfiONS- t2 PAGJ-:S

~allipoltu

Ball!' Qtrtbune

446-2342

~oint {Biea~an.t

)legit1ter

675-1333

The Daily Sentinel

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Don't miss out on this great opportunity
to .have your business included!
.\dn'rtisinv I&gt;eadlinr is Frhruan 12. 200
'

Call Back to Health Chiropractic today!

740.446.7460

mit1ens. chance socks and

long 11nd e rw~ear if th ey
become damp or wet. wear
warm shoes and socks.
keep skin and clothing dry
to lessen the chance of
fro stbite. eat nutritiou s
meals on a regular basi s.
especially a hot meal. drink
a lot of fluids.
In thi s type of weather. as
vear round , drivers from the
senior center's Meals on
Wheel s program not only
deliver those important hot
meal s but chec·k on their
clients five dav s a wee~ .
Jone~s.
Mei ~s
Debbie
County Senior Citizens
Center act i VIties dire1.·tor
said she and workers aJ,o

Please see Robbery, AS

Rutland
responds to
Wells Run
Road fire
BY BETH SERGENT
BSE RG E NT~.:'1'&gt;11.1YOAILYS E "JTINH.COM

RLITLI\ND
The•
Rutland \ 'olun tcer Fir,·
Department rcspomkd to a
.:himnl'\ fire at &lt;t hmne on
Wclh . Run Road on
Wednesday morning .
Rutl and Assistant Fire
l'hief Dann" Da1 is "tid h&lt;s
department in·ci~e·d the call
at IIU'i :1.111 . Wednesda1
and arrived on scene at th~
hom~,.· PfStL'\C

T\1a\nard and

fam ily at :lh I ::''i \\lei! ' Run
call to check on the center', 1 Road. ~Lt\nard 11 a' htllne
regulars if they Uon"t sllll\·\ at the ti 1w:-with hi" ,,jf~,..· &lt;t llll
up when they norma II) do .

\\a~

"We try and kc·ep track of
our seniors and 1f thev' rc not
here or where we thi;tk the'}

the fi re 11hen the· dep•u1 ·

Please see Cold, AS

Please see Fire. AS

altcmpting tn l'ontain

mt:nt HITi' ~...·d. Da,·i-. "aid.

The ltre likeh 'tarted

�PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 9,

2007

Fellowship
Apostolfc

- - - -A Hunger For More
I like snow ... a lot! In
addition to being an occasional burst of visual glory
in the passing of seasons
here in the Ohio Valley, I
enjoy the simple pleasures it
bnngs. The snowfall of a
few weeks ago, for instance,
provided a very rare occasion for my wife and me to
slow down enough to build a
snowman with our children
(there's still a round lump of
snow left over from that
enterprise) . I didn't even
mind shoveling the snow of
this most recent snowstonn
as the activity allowed me a
linle bit of invaluable time
to just think.
'
On the other hand, a very
heavy snowfall that blocks
roadways and Raralyzes
communities, reminds me a
great deal of those things
that can move into our lives
and threaten our spiritual
pilgrimage. Like snow,
when enough cares and
worries blow into our lives,
we can find ourselves
smothering m stresses,
problems , and responsibilities. Perhaps snow is a bit
like the "thorns" mentioned
in Matthew 13 (it's a different metaphor but the same
principle).

Pastor
Thon;
Mollohan

A farmer went out to
sow his seed .... (Some) fell
among thorns, which grew
up and choked the plants .. ..
The one who received the
·seed' (the Word of God)
that fell among the thorns is
the man who hears the
Word, but the worries of this
life and the deceitfulness of
wealth choke it, making it
unfruitful" (Matthew 13:3b,
7, 22 NIV) .
Let's be honest. A life of
faith isn't too hard when
things are just the way we
want them to be. When
things roll along neatly and
as we've planned , then we
can talk about God and
faith with relati ve ease. On
the other hand , when woes
and struggles pour down
upon us out of the proverbtal sky (not to mention
those everyday little gl itch-

es that cumulatively can
wear us out), it can get
harder to see the practicality of faith and even harder
to see the signature of God
in our circumstances.
Nonetheless , even more
sure than the road's presence under the drifting
snow of a winter storm , is
the presence of our God
and
heavenly
Father.
Perhaps the activity of God
in your life is a bit
obscured under a blanket of
difficulties , but take heart
in knowing that faith can
only really be worked out
and refined in you through
such storms. And after all,
of all the things that are
perhaps being divinely cultivated in your life . faith is
the most prized of all.
" ... Without faith it is
impossible to please God,
because anyone who comes
to Him must believe that
He exists and that He
rewards those who earnestly seek Him" (Hebrews
II :6 NIV).
What can we do to avoid
getting buried alive by blizzards of trials and tribulations? Just as one might go
out with a snow shovel in
hand to do what he or she

can to keep clear the sidewalk of one's home ,
although still relying on
help to clear the main roads,
we also work to keep the
paths of our lives open so
that we can still connect
with God and can still channel our energies in seeking
Him , knowing that real connection with Him takes a
power greater than our own.
Making prayer and Bible
study a daily habit, not to
mention regular participation in Chri stian fellowship
and in corporate worship ,
are critical steps that we
take in keeping the paths
clear. If you make it your
business to reach out to
God, He makes it His business to make sure that real
avenues of spiritual power
and blessing are kept open
by which His Holy Spirit
will minister to you.
"When the Counselor
(God's Holy Spirit) comes,
Whom I (Jesus) will send to
you from the Father, the
Spirit of Truth Who goes out
from the Father, He will testify about Me....... When He.
the Spirit ofT ruth, comes, He
will guide you into all truth .
He will not speak on His
own; He will speak only what

"Unfortunately, we're not
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
big in numbers, and numbers talk," said Dr.' Suhaib
TRENTON, N J.
Nashi, a 53-year-old pediaAmong the casualties of the trician who helps run the
Iraq war is a little-known Mandaean Societf
of
religious
faith
called America out o
his
Mandaeanism that has sur- Morristown home.
vived roughly two millennia
Mandaean leaders say
and
whose
adherents tens of thousands of their
believe that John the Baptist brethren are now scattered
was their great teacher.
around the world, including
While there were more a U.S. community centered
than 60,000 Mandaeans in around New York and
Iraq in the early 1990s, only Detroil.
about 5,000 to 7,000
With the dispersion
remain. Many have fled comes concern that the failh
amid targeted killings, is withering, especially as
. rapes, forced conversions, more Mandaeans marry
and 11roperty confiscation non-Mandaeans, with no
by Islamic extremists, mechanism to bring their
according to a report children into the fold .
released last week by the
"There's not much hope
New
Jersey-based for us to survive to two or
Mandaean
Society of three generations," Nashi
America.
said.
Among the roughly I ,500
Scholars who study the
U.S. Mandaeans , there have Mandaean religion and ·
been continual phone calls culture say its extinction
with endangered friends and would be a great loss, the
relatives, collections of · end of an ancient religious
money, and unsuccessful movement. Dating to the
lobbying
efforts
m time of the Roman Empire .
Washington
to
get it survived primarily in
Mandaeans out of Iraq, as what is today Iraq and
well as neighboring Jordan Iran , a branch of the
Gnostic movement that
and Syria.

r

r

r

r

r

r

borrowed element s of
Christianity.
Mandaeans view John the
Baptist as a great teacher,
and engage in baptisms to
come in closer contact with
a "world of light" that is
better than the material
world on Earth .
"It represents a slice of
the culture of the Middle
East before the rise of
Islam . It's a view to a former wor 1d. And frankly, we
don 't know very much
about it,'' said Charles 0 .
Haberl, an instructor in
Middle Eastern studies at
Rutgers University. .
Haberl, who says he's tryinll to arran~:e a reprint of
one of the Mandaeans • main
holy books for the first time
in about 150 years, laments
that an "enormous literary
tradition" may soon entirely
disappear.
"It would be as if a museum or library were put to the
torch," Haberl said.
Driven from both Iraq and
Iran , many Mandaeans have
adapted to their new homes,
enjoying financial success
as medical doctors, civil
engineers an&lt;;( jewelers,
Nashi said.

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But being scattered means
that many in the younger
generation have found
spouses outside the commumty. And since a Mandaean
has to be born a Mandaean ,
the children of such marriages have a questionable
status in the religion.
Mamoon Aldulaimi, 60,
of Lake Grove, N.Y., is a
civil engineer who's a
leader in the Mandaean
community. Aldulaimi 's
son, 20-year-old Hani
Aldulaimi, married an
American rallied as a
Baptist.
At the wedding last May
in the Phoenix area, where
the
newlyweds
live ,
Mamoon
Aldulaimi 's
daughter-in-law prominently displayed a darfash, a
cross with cloth hanging off
of it that 's a symbol of
Mandaeanism.
"She took that mtt1at1ve
as a matter of respect for
us," Aldulaimi said.
But with the religion's
·few dozen priests reluctant
to agree on a mechanism to
bring in the children of
mixed
marriages,
Aldulaimi and others wonder how long Mandaeanism

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He hears, and He will tell you
what is yet to come . He will
bring glory to Me by takmg
from what is Mine and making it known to you. All that
belon~ s to the Fatl1er is Mine.
That ts why I said the Spirit
will take from what is Mine
and make it known to you"
(John 15:26, 16:13- 15 NIV) .
What can we do so that
we don 't become hopelessly
blinded by a "white out" of
woe? For starters, don't
wait until stonns are upon
you to start getting familiar
with the ways of God . It's a
lot easier to walk a path
when it 's buried under concealing snow drifts if you
have gotten to know 1t
before hit by furious flurries
of problems or temptations .
On the other hand , maybe
you're already in the
clutches of such a storm.
Instead of slipping into a
mode of denial and thereby
missing God's blessings in
your life. take the step of
reaching out to Him and see
that He's us good as the
Bible says He is.
"'God opposes the proud
but gives grace to the humble.' Subm it you rselves,
then, to God. Resi st the
devil , and he will llee from

you. Come near to God , and
He will come near to you.
Wash your hands, you sinners , and purify your hearts,
you
double-minded.
Grieve , mourn and wail.
Change your laughter to
·mourning and your joy to
gloom. Humble yourselves
before the Lord, and He will
lift you up" (Hebrews 4:6bIO NIV) .
And while I realize that
folks generally take offense
at being called "sinner,"
keep in mind that it refers to
all humanity (including me)
and uses the term in an
appeal for each of us to just
come clean with God, and
cast ourse lves upon Hi s
grace so that He can "clear
the roads" ahead of us for a
journey in knowing what it
truly means to be loved and
lifted up.

(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past
eleven years. He is the paslor of Pathway Community
Church which metls on
Sunday mornings at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached for comments or
questiom by email at pastor/hom @path waygallipolis.com).

the United States, where
they would be safe.
Jorunn Buckley, an assistant professor of religion at
Bowdoin
College
in
Brun swick, Maine, has
studied Mandaeans for
decades and has testified for
them in U.S. immigration
couns. She said the U.S.
could do much more to get .
Mandaeans out of the
Middle East.
"It's not that many people ," Buckley said. "It's not
.5 million people."
When contacted about
the issue, a U.S. State
Department
spokesman
cited Jan. 17 congressional
testimony by Assistant
Secretary Ellen Saucrbrey,
who &gt;ard the department
has been expanding the
ability of the U.S. to bring
in more . lra9i refugees,
includin~ the ' special ~op­
ulation s
of relig10us
minorities.
"We intend to ensure that
these special populations
receive the same consideration and access to the U.S.
resettlement program as
others," Sauerbrey told rhe
Senate
Judiciary
Committee.

will survive.
Meanwhile, the few thousand Mandaeans still living
in Iraq are finding their
lives increasingly in danger,
targeted by extremists of
every political stripe and
religious faith.
Nashi said a cousin on his
father's side, Suhail Jani
Sahar, was killed by Shiite
fighters in November. A
more distant cousin on his
mother's side, Yahya AlChuhaily, was killed by
Sunnis in June.
"Where Jhere are areas
where the Shia arc the
majorily, they'll kill the
Mandaeans
and
the
Christians along with the
Sunnis. Where there are
areas where the Sunni are
the majority , they'll kill the
Mandaeans
and
the
Christians along with the
Shia," Nashi said.
Both
Nashi
and
Aldulaimi are convinced
that there Will soon be no
Mandaeans left in Iraq .
Thousands
of
Mandaeans, they said , have
taken refuge in Jordan and
Syria but are still sutlering
abuses, with no easy way to
escape to countries such as

r

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r

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

•

Your judgement

ofOtherS

.

r

Racine, OH

One of the deti ni tions of lhe word

at:t:urding In 1he American
Heritage dic.lionary (folmh edilion), is

"charily."'

"forbearance in judging others."
However. when mo.~t of us think of the
word "charity," we probably f1rstthink. of
the primary meanings. ~uch "·' · "hdp nr
relief ~ tve n tu the poor." or of ·· an
org:mizmion of fund thut helps the
needy." (A merican Heritage dic tionary.
4th ed.) But, there is an important bs.on
in the use of t~e word mt:aning
forbearance in judgin~ other.-..
This is the use of th~ wnn.J where we
might say that "the Lharitabl e

interpretation of his not re~ponding to our
invitation was thai he w~ on an extended
vacation ." We are oflen inclined to jullg~.:
another 's actiom. unfavorably. atiFibuting
their ac1ions In malice or lack nf
consideration. when in fact we really
don"t know why people do the
things they do. lt is diff1cuh enough to
correctly judge our own moti vation , le-1
a1one liy to define sumtone ebe's.

740-949·221 0

Forbeanmce in judging others or judging
tht:ir al·tiom. in L~ musl fa\'nrab!e light is

Karl K•bl•r lll
Certifil'd Public Acl·ountant
tmail: kkebltr@charter.net

judging Othe~ in the lx~-~~ pos~ible light
raises 1hc moral bar' And finallv.
sin-.:e mo.~ t
~
.:qmmunication i ~ miSI.·ommunit;ation, the
charitable forbearam.:e ofjudgemenl allows
us W ask
thll~

other~ what

618 E. Maio Slr&lt;tl
PoDieroy, OH 45769
741).9'.12-7270

they rea ll y meant and

not jump lo um.:hariwble conclu~ions. .

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SERVICES

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

Mif{ie's 'l(_estaurant

Karl Keblef. Ill . CPA. Rcgislt:rl'd
Reprcscntllli,..,. or H.D. Vc)1 lnvl'§tntenl
Services'" Sec-uritil's offered through H.D. Ves.t
ln1ieslment ~rvices "', Member SIPC AJv1!oOry
services offered through H.D. Ve st AdviWf)'
~rv i\:e ~"' . Nun-bank ~ubsidiMic~ uf W~ll s
Far,!lo &amp; Co mpan)· .6~:1J ~onh Sta~( HWY 161
4\h Floor. lrving TX.750J8i9721 !170-6000

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 i'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Assembly of God
l.ibtrty ASSfmbly of God
1'0 ilv~ -4()7, Duo dm~ l..Jik
W\'~ .

Ma~n.

l•a~Uor

forroetl l ennant . Sunday
Ser. •~t• - I[I tltJ .. m .utd 7 p.m

Baptist

Church of Christ
Wrttakit t:burdl ol Cbrilt
}111!1 Children"• Honw Rd. Pomcruy, Oll
Contact 1.W-44 1- l296 Sundll)" mumm1:
10:00 . Su n morn ml!! Bible .tudy:
fnll o ~~o· mg w or~oh1p . Sun e~e 6 00 pm .

Pumeroy Churdr. of f 'briat
W. M;~m St . SunJa) School - 9JtJ
a 111 . , Wm ~hip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wedn~ y SenKc\ - 7 p.m

( 'heshire Bapll!it Chun:h
Sunday School: 9 ·30

Momlll£ Worshtp
10. ~ am.
Wednc!..day H1hk S tuJ ~ b .\Opm, ~· hmr
pr.li.."IK"I! 7 JO. \mllh ;mJ Htble Budd ic:i
tdll P.m. Th ur~ . J rm ht \0 ~ '&gt; IUd)
dill .

ll oPf 8ap1lst rhun:h
~1\f Gr~nt S1. .

~Sou1hrrn1

M1ddk'p1.lrt. Sunday ~ hnol

- 9:.lO a.m , Worship - II ~ - m and n p.m..

Wednc:&gt;day Sen· i~· c - 7 p.m. Pa~ tor: Gal)'
El!is
Rutland t'lnt Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School · YJO ant., Won:lup 10:4S a.m
Pomeroy flnt B11pUsl
Paitor Joo BrocUn, Eut Main St ,
Sund.a; Sch . 9:30 ~ m . Wnrs.hip 10:30 am

ll&lt;arwalkno Ricltt Cburdo ol Clorlst
Pa.totor :Bru\:c Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m

Flnl !louthun B•ptltt
41872 Pomero y Pil;.e. Pastor: E Lamar
O' Hr)ant, Sunday School - 9 30 a.m·.
Won;h1p - 8: l ~ 1.m , 9. 45 am &amp; 7.C.l p.m..
'n'ednc~a)· Sem~·e\ - 7:00p .m

Flnt Baptill Chwdl
Pallor· Bill) Zu~pan 6th 11nd 1-'al rner St.,
\-hddleport , Sund&amp;)· School - 9. 1~ a.m.,
Worship - 10: 15 am .. 7:00 p.m. ,
Wednewiay Semcc- 7:00p.m.
Radii• l'lnlBaplbt
Pastor· R}·aa Euton, pastor , Sunda)·
S..:hoo! - 9..\0 am.. Worsh.tp - 10.-W a.m.,
7.UO p.m . WeJ ncsda} S e n~rc ) - 7:00
p.m

Slhrr Kun BapUsl
P1btor John Sw11nsun. SundJy Sdwol IOa .m .. Wouh1p - !!a .m .. 7 00 p.11 1
. W..-dnew.la~ S( n •..:es- 7:00pm
\11. Unkln Baplisl

Wea;er Sunda_v s~·hool ~ ]0 p m .
Wedt~esdu y Service~ · 6:)()p.m.
~ ~en•ni!

Belhhhrm Baptist Cbu.rth
G1eat Bend, Ruute 1~ -' . Racme. OH.
Pa~ h•l l:d Cmer. Sumla~ Schvo l 9:30
.:1m . , Sumlot} Wor~ lup - IO .JO 11 m..
We.Jne..Ua) B1ble Stutl) . 7 00 p.m
Old lkthel FrH \\'Ill 811ptlst Cbul"fh
28601 St Rt 7 1\l iddh:purt , Sum.la~·

- II! &lt;l .m. 6·(11 1 p.m..
S.:n·1cb -6:IXI
Sent~e

Zion Church ol Chrtll
Pomeroy, Harnsonvilie Rd . (Rt.I·BI,
Pli510r : Rlli!Cr Wat§on. Sunday School 9:30 ~&amp; . m .. Wonhip - 10:]0 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednelda)' Services- 1 p.m.
1\opt~m

Plaia Ck""" ol Cbrtst

lnsttumenllll. Wonhip Service - 9 a.m.,
Comm11nion - 10 a.m., Sundiy Sthool 10:15 1m., YO\Ith· 5:30pm Sunday , Bible
Study Wednesday 1 pm
Brldbury Ch11J'dl ofCbrUI
Mmisler: Tom Run}'On, 39S58 Bradbur)'
Road , Middlepon. Sunday School - 9:30

a.m.
Won;hip - 10:.\0 a.m.

Rutlaod Chlll'dr. of Chrii1
Sunday School- 9:l0 a.m., Wonhip and
Cummunion • IO:JO a m.. Bob J. Werry.

Pa ~ toJ. lknni ~

9 4S a.m..

Wonhlp - 10 :30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wcdne!idity Service1 - 6:30p .m

1'~1eso.lay

11· Jll -. .m.

MIOI SICl

Brld.ford Cbun:h or Christ
C'Ctmer of St. Rt. 1.2 4 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
M11l1~1er : Doug Shambl m. Youth Min1~ter :
Bill Ambtl}!er. Sunday School - ~; 30 a.m.
Wo r~hip - 8·00 a Ill. , 10:30 a.m . 1·{)()
p. m .We.dne!;dJy Sen·ire§o - 7:1.() p.m
Hkkor)" Hilhi Cbun:k o1 Christ
Tuppers Plains, PllSior Mtke Moore . Ribk
cla'is. 9 a.m. Sunday . ...,01\hip 10 11 m.
Sunday; wonhip tdO pm Sunday : Bible
d~.,~ 7 pm \lo'cd
Rmb" l~ Chun'h of Chrl&lt;;t
P.4.'ltor; Plulip Sturm , Sumill) School: 9 :]()
a.m.. Wursh1p Sem~·e . 10:30 a.m.. Bible
!ltuJ) . Wednr:so.luy, 6. 30 p.m.

Outer Cb u.rtb uf Chrbt
Sunda) ~•·hool\1}0 a.m., Sunday ""otship
- UHUam

The Churth oll'hrist of Powero)
lnt(r\.:,•tion 7 omd I ~4 W. Evangelist:
Dennis Surgcnt . Sundil)" Btble StUd)' 9;.30 11m., Vt'onhip; IO:JO a 111 and 6 30
p.m.. Wcdnesdo.)" Bible Study - I p.m

Christian Union
Htu1ford (' huN:k of t brht Ia
Chrlo;tlan t.:nton
Hanford. W.\'a . !lcl.'&gt;tor: lla\·id Gr(..-r.
Sunday School 11:10 u m . Wor.. hip IO:JO u.m . 7:00 p.m . Wedncidlly
Serv i ce~ - 7:00 p.tn

Sunda~

Church of God
~ll.

Mocillh Chu.rch ur God

Mil e Hill RJ ., lhcin tl, P~stor : Jam es
Satterfidd, SunJay S..:hool - 1,1.45 11.111.,
Evrnmg - 6 p.m , Wcdue'Kioty Ser,·ictl) . 7
p.m

Rutland CbUrtb or tiod

Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
Woflhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wednclday Service-7 :30p.m .
Welleyu Blbk HoUacu Churdl
7S PeiUI St. , Middleport . PilitOT: Rick.
Bourne . Sundt}" School • 10 a.m. Worship
- 10 :4~ p.m., Sunday Eve 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m

ll)'lllllua Communlly Cllurth
Puwr: Rev. Larry Lemle} ; Sunday School
-9:30a.m., Wonftip - 10.4j 1.m.. 7 p.m.,
lblltlday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

ne ClsUI"Cb of le!iUI
Cbrh' of Laller·Dil)' SainiJ
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446 -74H6,
Sunday School 10:20- 11 u.m .. Relief
Society/Pries thood I 1 . 0~ · 12 : 00 noon.
Sacramenl S~rvicc 9-10: 15 J:t.m .,
Homrmal:ing meeting, 1st Thun; .- 7 p.m

Lutheran
Sa. Jolan Lutbtrao Churth
Pine Grove. Worsh tp · 9:00a .m . Sunday
School - IO:m a_m_Pastor:

Our Savklur Lutheran Churt'h
Walnut and Henry Sts., RBven swood ,
W. 'li~ .. Pastor : David Rt1~sell. Sunday
SduXll- 10:00 un .. Wurship - II a.m.

St. Paul Lutheru Clwtb
Comer Sycamore &amp; Scc{lnd St., Ponu:my.
Sun. School · 9:45 a.lli .. Worship - I I a.m.

United Methodist
Graham llnittd Mrthodlst
Wi}J"Shtp - l l a.m. Pastor: Ri~· hard Nea..e
Duhtel United \1ethodbl
New Hncn . H.1charJ Nras~ . Pasto r,
Sunda)· wor:.hip 9: ~n a.m Tttts. tdU
praJer and Dible Study
MI . Olhe United Mt lbodl\1
Off 124 behind Wi lt e~~· ille. Pu~tor : Rev.
Ralph Spires. St~nday Sc hool - 9:30a .m..
Wohhlp - 10:)0 a. m., 7 p.m.. ThuNda)-'
S~ r Y i~:cs

· 7 p.m.

Meig.ol CooperlllliY.: Pamh
Clusttlt, Alfred. Pa~ l\)t: Jim
Corbin . Sunday Sfhool - 'UO a .m ,
Wor~hi p - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Northea~t

l 'bakr
Jim Corbitt , Worsh ip - 9 a.m.,
Suoda; School - lU a .m. , Thursday
Servi cts - 7 p.m
ra~tor;

Joppa
Pastor: Denzi l Null , Wor~hip · 9:-'0 11 .m
Sunda)' School - ·10:30 a.m

.............
,.
••
.....................
MIIIHM1

Father in heaven ."

. .l .........

Malthew 5: I

499 Rk:bland Aveoue,AIIIens

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

MI-IINM4

Oavls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
words, abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
Insurance
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
SERVICES~
Financial
214
E. Main
IH done unto you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc .
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Quickel

Middleport, OH

740..992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues 1-shirts and more

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

(740) '192-645 I

,:n,
-\lloriO l "'!lt O ~

H "-'i t\ \ l HOM t

174Lo,"".llnti•PO Bt..l'lll

New lla\"tQ, WV 15245
t'Wifl'lf Dinctor

Blessed are the pure
in heart; jQr they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Bo~ld Knob on Cu H.d

•

a m Wor~h• p · 7 p m

Wbht 'li C"haptl \\HI~t)•n
Conl•lllt Ruad Pi~&gt;lnr 1&lt;1"\ l'hill1p
lt1denour. SunJ&lt;~ } S ~ hiK1 1
w, ,1~h1p

CeatraJ Cllllttr
AsbUI)' (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob RobinliOn ,
Sunday School - IJ:45 a.m . Woa t11p . II
a.m., Wednesday Service•- i lO p.m

Other Churches

"14.1 ~

· Ill

'-1 \o am .

m . Wednt!&gt;dli} Str. •~r

hlrvtew Bibk&gt; Church
Leli.rt . W Vi! Itt I . Pa~ l\1 1 Bn11.n May ,
Sunda} Schntll · 11 \0" m W., r ~lu p . 1 L(J
p m . w~d ~k&gt;11aJ R1hk ~lud 1 - 71 )1J p m
Fatth hUo"shlp Crw.arte ror l"h~hil
Pa ~tor Rtl f-1Jnl l1n [Jtden, _ S&lt;"nlcc
f-nd11. ~. 7 p.m

SynKUM Community Churc:h

24SO Second St .. Syracuse. OH
Sun SchOC&gt;l 10 am . Sund} n1gfu6 30 pm
UndeTthe dtrtctmn ur Dan &amp; Fauh

tiayiiWl
A New Bqtnnillj
jfuU Geiptl Church ) HiiiTl s.o n~ 1llc .
PtiKlrt: Bob and K.a.y MaNhall .
Sunday Ser. 1CC . 2 p m

Eaterprbt
Pa~tor : Arland K1n¥ , Sund~) Schoo! 1 0 · ~ a m.. Wonh1p - 9:30 a.m. Bible
Sru d) Wed_7:30
flltwOOik
Ptmor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wonh1p · II 1un

C~&amp;hllry

Foralllua
PaitOI. llQb RobinliOn , Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wonhip - 9 11.m.

Pas1or: Wayne Dunlap. State R1 681 .
Tuppe ~ l-'l&amp;lll i. St.m. Wonlup 10 am &amp;
6:10pm . Wed . 81ble Stud) 7.110 p.m

Wednt::..ia) Ser1,..,.. 7 \fl prn

Wor~h1p

IU ~(l

R~\

:,dwul - \1 .30 ll m..
a m

p m .

7 .\{)

Slhrrs\111£ lommuniiJ Chun-h
Wii) ll t' R Je ~~oell. SunJ.1 :, 11 unh 1p
- !dill p m . Wednesda) I'd).) p m_R1hk
llttKI)
Pa~ tor ·

~Non -denomin&amp;tlonal fel lo w~hJpJ

~110 1'.

Rrjuidng Life Chun:h
~nd A'.: r.. li dJ it"pu ll

,\ tilt FtJr,·•n••n. p.,,h11 tmentu~
F01eman. Wur,htp· I ~J IIO;Jm

Communil) oll'hrlit
Ponland -Ran ne Rd . Pa.to r Jnn Pn• ffut
Sunday School - q -JII a.m.. Wonh1p ·_
10 :30 a.m . Wedne ~a) Sen1 cn - 1 UO

Wt!d~:.dlt; ~t!n h"&lt;'~ - I

POl&gt;hH;

L.~ .... ren~e

pm

t 'Ufton TuiH'rnack lhul'('h
( hfwn . \\\'a Su nd.. , Sch c~JI- IIJ am ..
Wualup - 1 p.m . \l, td ne ~Ja) \en h." t - 7
p.m
Nl!'w Uf• Victor) (t"nlu
371 _\ Gco r~e, Creet Rndd , Gal l !plll1.1. ( IH
Pll.'ltnr: Bil l ~ Iat e n . SonJa)- Sen1 _;e• - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m Wrdne•~tla ) - 1 p m &amp;
\'uuth 1 p.m

pm

Btlhel Worship Center
S R 1 , R e~d~~· i l k . Oti --15772, 112
nule north of Eastern Sdtooh on SH 7. A
Fu ll Go~~~ Church . Pa, tor Rob Barber.
/\'ih)l:late P~stor Kat yn o~ v • ~. Youth
Pa.\IUr Sul1e Franc1~ . Sundll)" ~er,· l c es
10 :00 am W(II"Ship . 6-00 pm hmil~ L1fc
Clai.tl , Wrd . Home Cdl Groups 7:00
p.m., Ou1er Limtu Ce ll Group at the
chun:h 6:30pm 10 H:JO pm
W78~

Rotk Sprinp
Keith Rader. Sunda)· Schnlll - 9: J ~
a.m ., Worship
10 .a. .m_, Youth
Fcllowslrip, Sunda} · 6 p.m.

p.. ~wr

Ama.Jia&amp; Gritce Commuttity Chufth

Mcxmng tn tile Meig~ Middk .'io.-hnol
C~f~ ttna 1-'astor. Chri ~ Sw,o,·an
10 00 Mi l· Noun Sunda} . lnl"om1al

P&lt;~s!Ut .

~und" )

Blach• ood

OU!i CluiiiU.n Frllcunhlp

Purl Cbapd
Sunday School - li a.m.. W{1 ~ h1p 10 a.m

Blbk Chun:h

c(, Rd .

Pomao) P1~c

Full Gosptl C hurch
of lhe
Sa~tor
Rt.JJS, Antiqu1t) . Pastur: Jesse Morri s,
Serv1ce:o: Saturday 2:00p.m.

u,·tna

Kollowcl
Pastor- Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 10;30 a.m., Thutlday
Services • 1 p.m.
Salem Ceatu
Paitor; William ~ - Mmha!l , Sunday
~hool - IO:U a.m., Wonhip - 9:1."i a.m.,
Bible St11dy : Monday 7:00 pm

Alb Street Chun:h
398 A.sh St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a .m. Mornioa
Wor11 hip - 10 :10 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm ,
Wcdnuday Sen·ice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service-7 :00p.m.
Appt Lift Cea&amp;u
··fuli -Uospclli Church", Pastorl John &amp;
Pally Wade, 603 Second 1\\·e. Ml$00. 773~0 11, Scr~ice time. Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedne.clay 7 pm

s.....w.
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Wmhip . 9ll .m.

Bttbuy
Pa"or: John Oi!more, SunrJa.y S'houl - Hl
a. m .. Wouhip • 9 a.m., WeJ nclday
Service•- 10 a.m.

"bundant Grt~« R.F. I.
921 S. Third St.. Middleport, Pastor Tereoa
D~~ovis , Sunday aervice, 10 1m.
Wemt.clday s.ervtcc, 1 p.m .

CU'IIIII·SuttoJI
Carmel &amp; Bu han Rds . Racl!le , Oh io.

Fotob ruu Goopcl Cbw.b
loni Bollom, Pastor: Ste~·e Reed, Sunda)·
School • 9JO a.m. Wonhip · 9:30a.m
ud 1 p.m., Wednesday - 1 p.m.. Friday - ·
fello"·thip !iC"nice 1 p.m.

Pastor: John Gil more , Sunday School •
9:4j a.m ., Worship - 11 :00 a.m. . Bible
Srudy Wcd .7:30 p.m.

M..-lllq Stor
Pastor: John Gilmo~. Sunday 5(:houl - J 1
a.m., Worship - IOa.m .
Eu1 l-etart
Pastor: Bil l Marshall Sund~y Scnool •
9a.m .. Wors hip W a.m.. ht Sunda}
every mon1h ~vemng sen ·K:e 7:00 p m.:
Wednesday- 7 p.m

HarrilonvUJe Commwlity Chu.rdl
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sundily - 930
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday . 1 p.m.

Mkklltpon Commualty Churth
."i7~

Pearl St ..\1iddlepon , Pa~t or : Sam
1\nderson, Sund ay School 10 8 m ..
E,·cnina - 7JO p.m . W~dnesday Ser\'ice 7:30p.m.

Radoe
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship · 11 a.m.Wednesday
ScntcM 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coohille Uolted Mttb~t Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline . Coolvil le Church,
Main&amp;. Fifth St., Sun . School·- 10 a.m.,
Worship 9 a m.. Tues. Sen·ice$ - 7 p.m.

Bethel Cftrch
Township Rd., &lt;46HC. Sunduy School - Q
a.m. Wor~ hip
10 a.m .. W~Jnc:;d1ty
Sen·iccs - 10 a.m

l'allb Volley To-le Cbunh
Ba tie}' Rlln Road, Pa§tor: Re v. Emmen
R11wson, Sunday Eve nmg 7 p m .•
Thursday Ser.·ice - 7 p.m

Syracust \1 lsskm
141 1 8nd ~ema n St. Syracuse. Sunda)
Sehoul
U1 a.m. E\'ening - 6 p m ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Uuul Community Churrb
Off Rt. 1 ~4. P:l sM: li1ls..:l Hart , Sunday
Scho11l - 9: ~U &lt;l.m.. Wu r&gt;hip . 10:3o ·a.m..
1 :J(\ p.m

Hoc:~&amp;pw1

Cbun:h
tirind Stm:t. Sunday School - 9JU J. .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Plollitor Phillip Hell

S..:hool -

1 u · m~ . m

Torth Cbun:b
Co Rd . O:l. Sunday S~;hool
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

m.,

W~.-u ~h 1p

- 9;30

a.m.,

Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Mitlcap. Sullday School ·
9:30a .m ..Worship - IO:JO a.m . ll :JD p m.,
Wednesday Sen 1 ce~ - 1 p.m.. Pao;tur
1\ llen Midcap
t·~ uow!iblp

-

ra.ilh Gu&lt;ipel ( "hur.:h
l.ong Bouom. Sunday Sch011l . •uo a m .
Wonhtp
1(1:45 a .m.. 7 .1u p.m .
Wedne ~d-.y 7:3U p.m
Mt. OUn~ Cummunity Church
Pa~wr : Lawrenl"e Bus n, Su nda~ Schoo.1l .
IJ.Jil,. m.. E 1·enin~ - 0 .:m p.m.. Wed ne w~~
p.m.

Chun·h of the Nazarene . Pastor: Ru ~ ~dl
Carson , Sunda y S\·ho(l] - 9:.10 a.m ..
W~·r~h•p - 10:45 a.m.. 1 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m

1-' uU Gus,wl Ughth~
J l04 S HiiJnJ ~ &lt; lild. f\, mc1 11~ . 1'&lt;1\h&gt;r· koy
Hunt ~r. S01kiay Sc· h~~t'l . 10 t&lt;.m . EH·mu ~
7 .lO p.m.. lue~da) &amp; Thun _ 7 . .10 p.m.

SyrllrCust Chun:b of lbc ~iW"ellC
l-'Mtor Mile Adk.ins, Sunda} School - 9:30
a m., Wor5 hip - IU:JO a.m.. 5 p.m ..
Wedne.~day Sc:rvices - 1 p.m.

Soulh lkllld l:vmmW1il ~ Church
Sd,·er Ridge- Pastor Lmda Oamev.'"-'d .
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Won,hlp ~r n l(l"
10 a.m. ~nd and 4th SunJa}

Pomeroy f'hW"('h of tbt Nuareot
Pastor: Jan la\·ender, Su nduy School -

Father ill heaven .··
Mauhell' 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so IOI'ed the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbegol'ten sor1. ..
Prescriptions
John 3:/6
992·2955
Pomeroy

Acts 24:16

Pentecostal
l'tntew~lal Assembly
St. Rt 124 . Racme , Tornado Rd . Sunday
S(' hllol - 10 ~ m.. Evening - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Semce~ · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
H~trriswnllk!

Prnbyterian Chuftlrt
Pas10 r. Robert Cf? w. Wm-ship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
James Snyder, Sunda) S~houl 10
n.m_, "'Orsh1p ~ernce II o1m
P&amp; ~to r:

Seventh-Day Adventist
~1ulbcrr y Ht~

Rd . I'Dmt~rO J . \ ,!lll rJa~

:\h. Hermon ttniled Brtthi\'D
in Christ Cburch
Te.\J:t ) l'umm11 ml~ .\6-lll Wi ..: kham Rd.
Pastor: Pete1 ~brtllldak , Sunda;. S~o· hll\1 1 9:30 a.m .. W1•n R1p - IO :.lO a.m , 7:00
p.m.. Wedn e~day Sen 1~e~- 7 (K) p.m
Youth group mcrung :!nd &amp; -'th Sundap
7 p.m

l:de-n l"nited Brtthrtn in Chri:st
Sta tt' Rout~· 1 ~4 . b&lt;'t•1~e11 ReeJ ~, · d l~ &amp;
Ho•·k mgport . Sunday School - 10 .i.tn .
SunJa) Wor'ihi p - 11 .00 am. W~d !l ~\Ja _,
s~n If~~ - 7 tKl p.m . Plh\OT- \ 1. Adam
Will

Kingsbul)· Road. Paste&gt;r: R\•bcn \"an c&lt;.e .

Tile care you deserve J closr to lumae good works and glorifY Your

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

St. Rl. ll4 ~~~~~. OH
Full Gospel. Cl Plllitors Robert &amp; Rul:lcna
Muuer , Sundt}· Schoo l 9;30 am , ,
Worship 10 .30 am - 7 00 pm, Wed .
Service 7:00pm
Team Ja.ua MbtlttOO
Meeting in 1he MulberT) Cornmtln l1}
Center GymoiiSlum . Pastor E.tldir Baer
Scrvu;e evrry Tuesda) 6.J(l pm

CarleiOn lntmleoomin~~~liwud th,urch

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr .10 shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER mm. that rhev may see vour
36759 Rocksprings Ad .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
74C..992-6606

u...., or H..U.. Mlnblrla

United Brethren

Sunday ,i-R&lt;ll.ll - IU a.m . W0r-.h 1p - 11
ll.m . WL'lln,:_'&gt;IJil) Sen"JCt' - 7 r Ill

s~ r \"i~· ..: -;

Rcsaoradorl Chriltlan Fellowtblp
9365 Hooper Roa d, Athen.o; , PllstorLonnic Coats, Sunday Worsh ip lll:OO am.
Wedne§dw.y: 7 pm

1 p.1u

\1orst' t"h ..ptl C hurth

Mldclepon Churtb of the NIW"fllr

Reeds,·IUe

Y : ~(l it

Hobton ChrhUu Fellowship Chun:h
Pntcr · Her~chel While , Sunday s,·hOQI 10 am, Sunda)" Church ~rvi~-e . 6:30pm
Wednesday 1 pm

Scrl"iccs · Sabbillh s,·hnol - 2 p.m
Wu rship - _I p.m.

Uyenilk Community Chun:b
Sun d"~

Salem Commualty CbUKh
BKk of West Columbia. W_Va .om L•e'"lnJ
Road , Pa~tor : Charles Roush tJO.lJ 67$22&amp;8. Sunday Schoo l 9:30 am . Sunday
cvcnina service 7:00 pm , Bibly Stud)
Wednesility !oer'l'ice 7:00pm

~
~ p~t~OkT~~
.,.. ' ""Jomif&gt;J !Wp

Suppn:~sion

• E~t.ingu.isher":&gt; • Sprinklers
• S«-urity

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Oh10

Located less 1han 30 minutes from
Athens . Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-746-667-3156
"SiiUsmall
to can"

MY ~race is
for thee: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

172 N. 2n&lt;1 Ave. Middleport. OH

992-6376

PO. Box 683

'

Pa~lur Me1

31

Kugel Willlnni. Sundi} ~ c huul - IJ .1il

Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

•

E1en1n~ Sent .. t h

·I pm

r.m

rome; to)'
Pa ~ tor · Brian Dunham , Wo rsh1p - 9 JO
a m . Sundai) School - to: J~ am.

Pbtc Grove Bible Holillell Cluud1
112 mile uff Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell

Latter-Day Saints

'1\oppon PloWS.. Paul
J1m Corbit!, Sunda) Scbool - It
a.m., Worsh1p - 10 a.m., Tuc:wlay Serv1~e'
Pa~tor:

Mlou&amp;viltt
Pastor: Sob Rob mson . Sunday Schoo l · 9
a.m.. Worship . 10 a.m.

Kost of Sharun Hollnh:~ Ckurtb
Leading Cte.d: Rd ., Rutland, Pasmr: Rev
Dewey King , Sunday "'hool- 9:30 ill.m.,
Sunday
worihlp -7 p.m., Wedocsday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Launl CUff F.., 'ltlbodld CIHudo

Wonh•r · If JO a.m . Sund~ y School 10.30 a.m . F1nt Sul\da) uf Molllh - 1 UO
p.m. s.er.· ~ee

Cbelttr Cb&amp;U&lt;t:h of tht ~UaJne
P..u101 Re' tierben Griitt. Sund.i) .Xhool
- It -~ a.m , Wou hJp
II 11m . b p m .
Wednnd~y Se r.K:e ~. 1 p m
llut.laad Clu111:b oltbt Nuanot
Sunday School · '} 30 ill m , Worship ·
IO .JO a.m . tJ 30 p m . WedncW.}
~rv1ces- 7 p.m

Wor~ h1p . Chdd n:n'~ mtlli~t(}

Cal\'11')' Pilgrim CktltP'I
Harrison ville Road. Pastor· Charle.~
McKeolie , Sunday Sr huol 9:30 a.m..
Worship - I I ill.m., H.K) p.m., Wednesda}
~n· •~e- 7:00p.m

Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunda)· School 9:30 a.m ., Wonh tp • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesdt)· Service-7:00 p.m.

Koecb-

-7: 30

~trll~t ILJ 3H il m

pm

I'...OOm Goopol MlYion

JO·JOam

Heath (MkkUeportl
Pastor: Bnan Dunham, Sunday School ·
9::\0a m . Worshtp - II:OOa .m

Dtr.n"il&amp;t HoUneu Church
} 105 1 State Ruu te 325, LaniHIIe , Pastor
Utnjamin Crawford, Sunday \ol."huul - 9:30
a m . Sunda y wonhtp - 10;.1() a m. &amp; 7
p m . Wednesday prayer ~rvl~ - 7 p.m.

jisbtr junrral _,omt

"Let your light so shine before
men. that they may see
good works and glorify ,

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

uardrail. Fence &amp;
s1gn erection

Trinity Chun:b
Second &amp; l ynn , Pomeruy, Pll.)tur Re ~ .
Jon athan Nohlr. Worlhlp !() 15 a.m.,
Sunday &amp;::hooi9·J5 a_m

Holiness

\Uddlcport C..ul'('b of r hrut
5th an d Malll. Pa s10r : AI H11 r t ~nn .
C lul dre n~ Dtrecwr: Sharon Sayre. Teen ·

Clturth of Cluist
Worsh1p - 9;30 a.m.. Sunday S{·hool 10:30 a.m., Pas1or-Jcffre y Wallace. Itt artd
Jrd Sunday

Congregational

Co mmtm6t)" Church
P~swr :
Steve T11mek . Mam Street.
Ruiland, Sund.i~ Wor~ h•p-10 · ({1 a.m..
Surtday Servkr-7 p.m.

Pomero)l WesWde Church of Chrut
ll!:! ll l' h•ldren"~o 1-hmtr RJ Su nday
S~·hnoll- ll um . Wnrsh,fl · IO&lt;I .m., t.run ,
Wednesday Services 7 p m

~ eno

p.m .

Episcopal

~ 11

Dn«"tvr· Dud~;n Vau ,; h~n . Sunday Schoo.JI
- Y:JO a.m., Wunohip - 8: 15, 10:30 a.m . 7
p.m , Wrdne \tla)" Se.r\· ice~ · 1 p.m.

Churc:ll of God ol PropMcy
OJ . Wh1te Rd off St. R1 . IW, Pastor: PJ
Clhlpman. Sunday School - 10 11m .•
Wu~hi p - II a.m., Wednoday Scrviceli - 7

G.-.e Epl5copal Oum:h
126 E. Main S1 .. Pomeroy. Sunday Sckoo!
and Hol}· Euch:uist 11 :00 a.m. Re v
Edward Payne

Wed b1bh: ~~ ~)' 7 pm

740-992-7713

190 N. Second St.

S)TKU.R Flnt Otud of God
Apple and Second Sli .. Paslor Re\ . Oavkl
Ru~ .ell . Sunda) Scbool u d Wontup- 10
ill m Eve.n•nil Scrv1cu- fdO p m .
Wedne ~) Sc:no1ces - 6;30 p.m.

Catholic

C11rptnter H!iplhil Churth

Pa~ t or: S1.:1r L1ttlc .

Lon. Boatom
Sunda) School - 9 . :W 1 m . Worthlp ·

7

pm .

Sacrwl Hent (~•1-..k: Cllun:h
II'll Mulbtrr)· A~e .. Pumc:roy, 99 2-5898 ,
P&lt;.~.'&gt;Wr Rr~ WDIIer E . Hem.t , S-at . Cun
4 : -45 - ~ 15p m : fo.ta .i - S:JO p.m., Sun
C11n -IHVI· J, a.m... Sun . Mus . •:HU
u m . Daily MJ~\ - !1:30 a.m.

Hrmlock Gm"" Chrkllan Oum:h
M•n i.ter: l1my Br••Wn, Worshtp · 9·3()
ll .m . Sunda~ School · !0 .iO a .m., Ribk
STUd) 7 p m

Su ndoiy Sch,KJ I
9:3Ciam. i'Tea.:hmg
St:rv•~·r
10 J()Olll\. Evcn mg Servi.:e
7.00pm. Wedne ~W; Bible Stud) 7:00pm.
lntcnm Prcachc:r f-1ord Rus~

p m . Wedncsda ) Scr\'ICc:i

m . (i

7 pm

l'lae\·Uk •·rw"'·m B11pti_..t Chuf'fh
Paitor: M1le H.uruuu , Sum.Ja) School
9:JO to 10·"1 &lt;~Ill . Wo.-..hlp &gt;e:n1.:e 10:3(1
111 II :flO am Wed pre&lt;u:hu1g (-. pm

A.ntiquily B111plllol
Schodl - 9:.\0 a.m .. Worship 10.-lS u.m.. Sunday E1·cning - 6:00 p.m..

Homemade Desse rts Made Daily

IRA j -•, Rollurn.s•. Stud s" Humll' . M••fllul

FuniJs•, Annuilie~ '. Umg Term Curt'

Emnt•nucl Apullitulk Tlilberuack 111".
Loop Rd . ulf Nc ~~o Luna Rd Rutl!iliJ
St:n~rr\ Sun llJ Ill u m. &amp; 7 _,.l p n•
Thur~. 7 lJIJ p m Pd, lu f Miln) R ll utuon

f\11. Morillh 8aptbt
M1tklkpurt . Pastor.
Rl'\ . Gilbert Cra1g. Jr. Sunday Sc-hool .
q : _~o UJn . Wm-.;hip - \0:45am.

'

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
a!·k what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

74()-985·3561
992·1550

f.itud)

~ eUncWay

Fnu rth &amp; ~ l ai n St

Oam - 8pm

Hills Self Storage

The Hppliance man

JIJ _pra)er. WeJ 7 pm B1blt

rue \ b

&lt;I Ill.. Wur~ h.lp -

Sizes available 5x t0 to 10 x 20

factor and forbear judging us. For another
thing. people lend to li ve up to (or down to)
our judgements and expa:tmiom: so.

~h:h,.d BnuJh)nl . Pill!loM". Sunda ), 10 .10
am

l'ure.t Ru.u Buptlst· Pomeroy
Rl·\· Jo.1 eph ~Ids, Su nd ••y School - l(l

Hours

Frietl(ih
A1mo.1phrre

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

740·949·2217

almost always a good poliq. For one thi ng .
JX'Ople are Lhen more·lik.ely to return tht:'

Rl\tr Valle) Apu~tul ,.._ W(ll ~hip Crrnrr,
K7] S luJ
A\ t
Mn1dltpon, Rt v

Dirt'L'Ior of Marketing and Admissions
333 Page Slreet
(740) 992·6472
Middle ort OH Fax 740 .992-7406

Rutland t'rtt Wll BMptist
S11lem St , P'"ltlf Jam1e Fonner. SundaJ
s,· hoot · 10 ill m . t~emn~: - 7 p m
Wl!J nt'odol) Scr11~~o.n · 1 p m

. Mommg wur"&gt;tup II .tm benul&amp; - 1 pm .

Rl\er \al.Jey

am .. Won.h1p · 10 10 ~ m and 6
p .m , Wedntida) Sen.·•cc, . 7 p m

IJ JU

Pa~tor : Ron ll!!Mih. Sunda~ Worship - 10
il

ROII(u,..,uud . W'l/ Sunda)' ~.: hool 10 am-

hlth 8aptl!it Cbun·b
ih.ilro~d St., Masu n, Sunday Schllol - Ill
a .m .. Wonhll' · II .1.1n , 6 p.m.
Wcdnesda)" Se1-..icn 7 p.lll .

Michelle Kennedy

Don Waller

Mcuod &amp;pU•t l 'hurd1

811p1bt ln drpendfnt
5~ 5 ~ - ~nd St . Middleport . Pw.wr. J amr ~
E Kt:c:)ec. Wur,hip - l\la.n1 . 7 p. m..
WeJneWay Services · I p m

Hume Cooked Meals&amp;. Daily SpecUJls
Open 7 days u week

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

10. \() 11m.

\'ktor~·

n~um

209 Third

Mtl k r. Sundat ~hl~ •l
l:.ltmng · 1 J() p.m

Hlllsilk H•ptl~t Cbu.n' h
St. RL 1-'J JUS1 off R! 7, Pastor: Rev.
J tlm('i H.
A,·rl·e . Sr. . Sundn) l lmf1cd
Sen"e. Wnn.h•r · ltUO a.m . 6 p rn .
Wednt ~a) Sen h."C.\ -7 p.m

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

P..&amp;~or ·

Cbun:-h ul Jesu. Chri\1 AI\O!'IOtk
\ ilfll4ildl anJ W~J Rd . P.u1r1r Jamn

Because of Iraq war, a small religious group suffers
Bv CHRIS NEWMARKER

........,., . ,..,WORSJJJP ci()j'j'j}ns WEEK ,., ..,..m,..,..... .,

.,

�PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 9,

2007

Fellowship
Apostolfc

- - - -A Hunger For More
I like snow ... a lot! In
addition to being an occasional burst of visual glory
in the passing of seasons
here in the Ohio Valley, I
enjoy the simple pleasures it
bnngs. The snowfall of a
few weeks ago, for instance,
provided a very rare occasion for my wife and me to
slow down enough to build a
snowman with our children
(there's still a round lump of
snow left over from that
enterprise) . I didn't even
mind shoveling the snow of
this most recent snowstonn
as the activity allowed me a
linle bit of invaluable time
to just think.
'
On the other hand, a very
heavy snowfall that blocks
roadways and Raralyzes
communities, reminds me a
great deal of those things
that can move into our lives
and threaten our spiritual
pilgrimage. Like snow,
when enough cares and
worries blow into our lives,
we can find ourselves
smothering m stresses,
problems , and responsibilities. Perhaps snow is a bit
like the "thorns" mentioned
in Matthew 13 (it's a different metaphor but the same
principle).

Pastor
Thon;
Mollohan

A farmer went out to
sow his seed .... (Some) fell
among thorns, which grew
up and choked the plants .. ..
The one who received the
·seed' (the Word of God)
that fell among the thorns is
the man who hears the
Word, but the worries of this
life and the deceitfulness of
wealth choke it, making it
unfruitful" (Matthew 13:3b,
7, 22 NIV) .
Let's be honest. A life of
faith isn't too hard when
things are just the way we
want them to be. When
things roll along neatly and
as we've planned , then we
can talk about God and
faith with relati ve ease. On
the other hand , when woes
and struggles pour down
upon us out of the proverbtal sky (not to mention
those everyday little gl itch-

es that cumulatively can
wear us out), it can get
harder to see the practicality of faith and even harder
to see the signature of God
in our circumstances.
Nonetheless , even more
sure than the road's presence under the drifting
snow of a winter storm , is
the presence of our God
and
heavenly
Father.
Perhaps the activity of God
in your life is a bit
obscured under a blanket of
difficulties , but take heart
in knowing that faith can
only really be worked out
and refined in you through
such storms. And after all,
of all the things that are
perhaps being divinely cultivated in your life . faith is
the most prized of all.
" ... Without faith it is
impossible to please God,
because anyone who comes
to Him must believe that
He exists and that He
rewards those who earnestly seek Him" (Hebrews
II :6 NIV).
What can we do to avoid
getting buried alive by blizzards of trials and tribulations? Just as one might go
out with a snow shovel in
hand to do what he or she

can to keep clear the sidewalk of one's home ,
although still relying on
help to clear the main roads,
we also work to keep the
paths of our lives open so
that we can still connect
with God and can still channel our energies in seeking
Him , knowing that real connection with Him takes a
power greater than our own.
Making prayer and Bible
study a daily habit, not to
mention regular participation in Chri stian fellowship
and in corporate worship ,
are critical steps that we
take in keeping the paths
clear. If you make it your
business to reach out to
God, He makes it His business to make sure that real
avenues of spiritual power
and blessing are kept open
by which His Holy Spirit
will minister to you.
"When the Counselor
(God's Holy Spirit) comes,
Whom I (Jesus) will send to
you from the Father, the
Spirit of Truth Who goes out
from the Father, He will testify about Me....... When He.
the Spirit ofT ruth, comes, He
will guide you into all truth .
He will not speak on His
own; He will speak only what

"Unfortunately, we're not
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
big in numbers, and numbers talk," said Dr.' Suhaib
TRENTON, N J.
Nashi, a 53-year-old pediaAmong the casualties of the trician who helps run the
Iraq war is a little-known Mandaean Societf
of
religious
faith
called America out o
his
Mandaeanism that has sur- Morristown home.
vived roughly two millennia
Mandaean leaders say
and
whose
adherents tens of thousands of their
believe that John the Baptist brethren are now scattered
was their great teacher.
around the world, including
While there were more a U.S. community centered
than 60,000 Mandaeans in around New York and
Iraq in the early 1990s, only Detroil.
about 5,000 to 7,000
With the dispersion
remain. Many have fled comes concern that the failh
amid targeted killings, is withering, especially as
. rapes, forced conversions, more Mandaeans marry
and 11roperty confiscation non-Mandaeans, with no
by Islamic extremists, mechanism to bring their
according to a report children into the fold .
released last week by the
"There's not much hope
New
Jersey-based for us to survive to two or
Mandaean
Society of three generations," Nashi
America.
said.
Among the roughly I ,500
Scholars who study the
U.S. Mandaeans , there have Mandaean religion and ·
been continual phone calls culture say its extinction
with endangered friends and would be a great loss, the
relatives, collections of · end of an ancient religious
money, and unsuccessful movement. Dating to the
lobbying
efforts
m time of the Roman Empire .
Washington
to
get it survived primarily in
Mandaeans out of Iraq, as what is today Iraq and
well as neighboring Jordan Iran , a branch of the
Gnostic movement that
and Syria.

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borrowed element s of
Christianity.
Mandaeans view John the
Baptist as a great teacher,
and engage in baptisms to
come in closer contact with
a "world of light" that is
better than the material
world on Earth .
"It represents a slice of
the culture of the Middle
East before the rise of
Islam . It's a view to a former wor 1d. And frankly, we
don 't know very much
about it,'' said Charles 0 .
Haberl, an instructor in
Middle Eastern studies at
Rutgers University. .
Haberl, who says he's tryinll to arran~:e a reprint of
one of the Mandaeans • main
holy books for the first time
in about 150 years, laments
that an "enormous literary
tradition" may soon entirely
disappear.
"It would be as if a museum or library were put to the
torch," Haberl said.
Driven from both Iraq and
Iran , many Mandaeans have
adapted to their new homes,
enjoying financial success
as medical doctors, civil
engineers an&lt;;( jewelers,
Nashi said.

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But being scattered means
that many in the younger
generation have found
spouses outside the commumty. And since a Mandaean
has to be born a Mandaean ,
the children of such marriages have a questionable
status in the religion.
Mamoon Aldulaimi, 60,
of Lake Grove, N.Y., is a
civil engineer who's a
leader in the Mandaean
community. Aldulaimi 's
son, 20-year-old Hani
Aldulaimi, married an
American rallied as a
Baptist.
At the wedding last May
in the Phoenix area, where
the
newlyweds
live ,
Mamoon
Aldulaimi 's
daughter-in-law prominently displayed a darfash, a
cross with cloth hanging off
of it that 's a symbol of
Mandaeanism.
"She took that mtt1at1ve
as a matter of respect for
us," Aldulaimi said.
But with the religion's
·few dozen priests reluctant
to agree on a mechanism to
bring in the children of
mixed
marriages,
Aldulaimi and others wonder how long Mandaeanism

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He hears, and He will tell you
what is yet to come . He will
bring glory to Me by takmg
from what is Mine and making it known to you. All that
belon~ s to the Fatl1er is Mine.
That ts why I said the Spirit
will take from what is Mine
and make it known to you"
(John 15:26, 16:13- 15 NIV) .
What can we do so that
we don 't become hopelessly
blinded by a "white out" of
woe? For starters, don't
wait until stonns are upon
you to start getting familiar
with the ways of God . It's a
lot easier to walk a path
when it 's buried under concealing snow drifts if you
have gotten to know 1t
before hit by furious flurries
of problems or temptations .
On the other hand , maybe
you're already in the
clutches of such a storm.
Instead of slipping into a
mode of denial and thereby
missing God's blessings in
your life. take the step of
reaching out to Him and see
that He's us good as the
Bible says He is.
"'God opposes the proud
but gives grace to the humble.' Subm it you rselves,
then, to God. Resi st the
devil , and he will llee from

you. Come near to God , and
He will come near to you.
Wash your hands, you sinners , and purify your hearts,
you
double-minded.
Grieve , mourn and wail.
Change your laughter to
·mourning and your joy to
gloom. Humble yourselves
before the Lord, and He will
lift you up" (Hebrews 4:6bIO NIV) .
And while I realize that
folks generally take offense
at being called "sinner,"
keep in mind that it refers to
all humanity (including me)
and uses the term in an
appeal for each of us to just
come clean with God, and
cast ourse lves upon Hi s
grace so that He can "clear
the roads" ahead of us for a
journey in knowing what it
truly means to be loved and
lifted up.

(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past
eleven years. He is the paslor of Pathway Community
Church which metls on
Sunday mornings at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached for comments or
questiom by email at pastor/hom @path waygallipolis.com).

the United States, where
they would be safe.
Jorunn Buckley, an assistant professor of religion at
Bowdoin
College
in
Brun swick, Maine, has
studied Mandaeans for
decades and has testified for
them in U.S. immigration
couns. She said the U.S.
could do much more to get .
Mandaeans out of the
Middle East.
"It's not that many people ," Buckley said. "It's not
.5 million people."
When contacted about
the issue, a U.S. State
Department
spokesman
cited Jan. 17 congressional
testimony by Assistant
Secretary Ellen Saucrbrey,
who &gt;ard the department
has been expanding the
ability of the U.S. to bring
in more . lra9i refugees,
includin~ the ' special ~op­
ulation s
of relig10us
minorities.
"We intend to ensure that
these special populations
receive the same consideration and access to the U.S.
resettlement program as
others," Sauerbrey told rhe
Senate
Judiciary
Committee.

will survive.
Meanwhile, the few thousand Mandaeans still living
in Iraq are finding their
lives increasingly in danger,
targeted by extremists of
every political stripe and
religious faith.
Nashi said a cousin on his
father's side, Suhail Jani
Sahar, was killed by Shiite
fighters in November. A
more distant cousin on his
mother's side, Yahya AlChuhaily, was killed by
Sunnis in June.
"Where Jhere are areas
where the Shia arc the
majorily, they'll kill the
Mandaeans
and
the
Christians along with the
Sunnis. Where there are
areas where the Sunni are
the majority , they'll kill the
Mandaeans
and
the
Christians along with the
Shia," Nashi said.
Both
Nashi
and
Aldulaimi are convinced
that there Will soon be no
Mandaeans left in Iraq .
Thousands
of
Mandaeans, they said , have
taken refuge in Jordan and
Syria but are still sutlering
abuses, with no easy way to
escape to countries such as

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

•

Your judgement

ofOtherS

.

r

Racine, OH

One of the deti ni tions of lhe word

at:t:urding In 1he American
Heritage dic.lionary (folmh edilion), is

"charily."'

"forbearance in judging others."
However. when mo.~t of us think of the
word "charity," we probably f1rstthink. of
the primary meanings. ~uch "·' · "hdp nr
relief ~ tve n tu the poor." or of ·· an
org:mizmion of fund thut helps the
needy." (A merican Heritage dic tionary.
4th ed.) But, there is an important bs.on
in the use of t~e word mt:aning
forbearance in judgin~ other.-..
This is the use of th~ wnn.J where we
might say that "the Lharitabl e

interpretation of his not re~ponding to our
invitation was thai he w~ on an extended
vacation ." We are oflen inclined to jullg~.:
another 's actiom. unfavorably. atiFibuting
their ac1ions In malice or lack nf
consideration. when in fact we really
don"t know why people do the
things they do. lt is diff1cuh enough to
correctly judge our own moti vation , le-1
a1one liy to define sumtone ebe's.

740-949·221 0

Forbeanmce in judging others or judging
tht:ir al·tiom. in L~ musl fa\'nrab!e light is

Karl K•bl•r lll
Certifil'd Public Acl·ountant
tmail: kkebltr@charter.net

judging Othe~ in the lx~-~~ pos~ible light
raises 1hc moral bar' And finallv.
sin-.:e mo.~ t
~
.:qmmunication i ~ miSI.·ommunit;ation, the
charitable forbearam.:e ofjudgemenl allows
us W ask
thll~

other~ what

618 E. Maio Slr&lt;tl
PoDieroy, OH 45769
741).9'.12-7270

they rea ll y meant and

not jump lo um.:hariwble conclu~ions. .

KEHLER BUStNESS
SERVICES

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

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Karl Keblef. Ill . CPA. Rcgislt:rl'd
Reprcscntllli,..,. or H.D. Vc)1 lnvl'§tntenl
Services'" Sec-uritil's offered through H.D. Ves.t
ln1ieslment ~rvices "', Member SIPC AJv1!oOry
services offered through H.D. Ve st AdviWf)'
~rv i\:e ~"' . Nun-bank ~ubsidiMic~ uf W~ll s
Far,!lo &amp; Co mpan)· .6~:1J ~onh Sta~( HWY 161
4\h Floor. lrving TX.750J8i9721 !170-6000

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 i'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Assembly of God
l.ibtrty ASSfmbly of God
1'0 ilv~ -4()7, Duo dm~ l..Jik
W\'~ .

Ma~n.

l•a~Uor

forroetl l ennant . Sunday
Ser. •~t• - I[I tltJ .. m .utd 7 p.m

Baptist

Church of Christ
Wrttakit t:burdl ol Cbrilt
}111!1 Children"• Honw Rd. Pomcruy, Oll
Contact 1.W-44 1- l296 Sundll)" mumm1:
10:00 . Su n morn ml!! Bible .tudy:
fnll o ~~o· mg w or~oh1p . Sun e~e 6 00 pm .

Pumeroy Churdr. of f 'briat
W. M;~m St . SunJa) School - 9JtJ
a 111 . , Wm ~hip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wedn~ y SenKc\ - 7 p.m

( 'heshire Bapll!it Chun:h
Sunday School: 9 ·30

Momlll£ Worshtp
10. ~ am.
Wednc!..day H1hk S tuJ ~ b .\Opm, ~· hmr
pr.li.."IK"I! 7 JO. \mllh ;mJ Htble Budd ic:i
tdll P.m. Th ur~ . J rm ht \0 ~ '&gt; IUd)
dill .

ll oPf 8ap1lst rhun:h
~1\f Gr~nt S1. .

~Sou1hrrn1

M1ddk'p1.lrt. Sunday ~ hnol

- 9:.lO a.m , Worship - II ~ - m and n p.m..

Wednc:&gt;day Sen· i~· c - 7 p.m. Pa~ tor: Gal)'
El!is
Rutland t'lnt Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School · YJO ant., Won:lup 10:4S a.m
Pomeroy flnt B11pUsl
Paitor Joo BrocUn, Eut Main St ,
Sund.a; Sch . 9:30 ~ m . Wnrs.hip 10:30 am

ll&lt;arwalkno Ricltt Cburdo ol Clorlst
Pa.totor :Bru\:c Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m

Flnl !louthun B•ptltt
41872 Pomero y Pil;.e. Pastor: E Lamar
O' Hr)ant, Sunday School - 9 30 a.m·.
Won;h1p - 8: l ~ 1.m , 9. 45 am &amp; 7.C.l p.m..
'n'ednc~a)· Sem~·e\ - 7:00p .m

Flnt Baptill Chwdl
Pallor· Bill) Zu~pan 6th 11nd 1-'al rner St.,
\-hddleport , Sund&amp;)· School - 9. 1~ a.m.,
Worship - 10: 15 am .. 7:00 p.m. ,
Wednewiay Semcc- 7:00p.m.
Radii• l'lnlBaplbt
Pastor· R}·aa Euton, pastor , Sunda)·
S..:hoo! - 9..\0 am.. Worsh.tp - 10.-W a.m.,
7.UO p.m . WeJ ncsda} S e n~rc ) - 7:00
p.m

Slhrr Kun BapUsl
P1btor John Sw11nsun. SundJy Sdwol IOa .m .. Wouh1p - !!a .m .. 7 00 p.11 1
. W..-dnew.la~ S( n •..:es- 7:00pm
\11. Unkln Baplisl

Wea;er Sunda_v s~·hool ~ ]0 p m .
Wedt~esdu y Service~ · 6:)()p.m.
~ ~en•ni!

Belhhhrm Baptist Cbu.rth
G1eat Bend, Ruute 1~ -' . Racme. OH.
Pa~ h•l l:d Cmer. Sumla~ Schvo l 9:30
.:1m . , Sumlot} Wor~ lup - IO .JO 11 m..
We.Jne..Ua) B1ble Stutl) . 7 00 p.m
Old lkthel FrH \\'Ill 811ptlst Cbul"fh
28601 St Rt 7 1\l iddh:purt , Sum.la~·

- II! &lt;l .m. 6·(11 1 p.m..
S.:n·1cb -6:IXI
Sent~e

Zion Church ol Chrtll
Pomeroy, Harnsonvilie Rd . (Rt.I·BI,
Pli510r : Rlli!Cr Wat§on. Sunday School 9:30 ~&amp; . m .. Wonhip - 10:]0 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednelda)' Services- 1 p.m.
1\opt~m

Plaia Ck""" ol Cbrtst

lnsttumenllll. Wonhip Service - 9 a.m.,
Comm11nion - 10 a.m., Sundiy Sthool 10:15 1m., YO\Ith· 5:30pm Sunday , Bible
Study Wednesday 1 pm
Brldbury Ch11J'dl ofCbrUI
Mmisler: Tom Run}'On, 39S58 Bradbur)'
Road , Middlepon. Sunday School - 9:30

a.m.
Won;hip - 10:.\0 a.m.

Rutlaod Chlll'dr. of Chrii1
Sunday School- 9:l0 a.m., Wonhip and
Cummunion • IO:JO a m.. Bob J. Werry.

Pa ~ toJ. lknni ~

9 4S a.m..

Wonhlp - 10 :30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wcdne!idity Service1 - 6:30p .m

1'~1eso.lay

11· Jll -. .m.

MIOI SICl

Brld.ford Cbun:h or Christ
C'Ctmer of St. Rt. 1.2 4 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
M11l1~1er : Doug Shambl m. Youth Min1~ter :
Bill Ambtl}!er. Sunday School - ~; 30 a.m.
Wo r~hip - 8·00 a Ill. , 10:30 a.m . 1·{)()
p. m .We.dne!;dJy Sen·ire§o - 7:1.() p.m
Hkkor)" Hilhi Cbun:k o1 Christ
Tuppers Plains, PllSior Mtke Moore . Ribk
cla'is. 9 a.m. Sunday . ...,01\hip 10 11 m.
Sunday; wonhip tdO pm Sunday : Bible
d~.,~ 7 pm \lo'cd
Rmb" l~ Chun'h of Chrl&lt;;t
P.4.'ltor; Plulip Sturm , Sumill) School: 9 :]()
a.m.. Wursh1p Sem~·e . 10:30 a.m.. Bible
!ltuJ) . Wednr:so.luy, 6. 30 p.m.

Outer Cb u.rtb uf Chrbt
Sunda) ~•·hool\1}0 a.m., Sunday ""otship
- UHUam

The Churth oll'hrist of Powero)
lnt(r\.:,•tion 7 omd I ~4 W. Evangelist:
Dennis Surgcnt . Sundil)" Btble StUd)' 9;.30 11m., Vt'onhip; IO:JO a 111 and 6 30
p.m.. Wcdnesdo.)" Bible Study - I p.m

Christian Union
Htu1ford (' huN:k of t brht Ia
Chrlo;tlan t.:nton
Hanford. W.\'a . !lcl.'&gt;tor: lla\·id Gr(..-r.
Sunday School 11:10 u m . Wor.. hip IO:JO u.m . 7:00 p.m . Wedncidlly
Serv i ce~ - 7:00 p.tn

Sunda~

Church of God
~ll.

Mocillh Chu.rch ur God

Mil e Hill RJ ., lhcin tl, P~stor : Jam es
Satterfidd, SunJay S..:hool - 1,1.45 11.111.,
Evrnmg - 6 p.m , Wcdue'Kioty Ser,·ictl) . 7
p.m

Rutland CbUrtb or tiod

Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
Woflhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wednclday Service-7 :30p.m .
Welleyu Blbk HoUacu Churdl
7S PeiUI St. , Middleport . PilitOT: Rick.
Bourne . Sundt}" School • 10 a.m. Worship
- 10 :4~ p.m., Sunday Eve 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m

ll)'lllllua Communlly Cllurth
Puwr: Rev. Larry Lemle} ; Sunday School
-9:30a.m., Wonftip - 10.4j 1.m.. 7 p.m.,
lblltlday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

ne ClsUI"Cb of le!iUI
Cbrh' of Laller·Dil)' SainiJ
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446 -74H6,
Sunday School 10:20- 11 u.m .. Relief
Society/Pries thood I 1 . 0~ · 12 : 00 noon.
Sacramenl S~rvicc 9-10: 15 J:t.m .,
Homrmal:ing meeting, 1st Thun; .- 7 p.m

Lutheran
Sa. Jolan Lutbtrao Churth
Pine Grove. Worsh tp · 9:00a .m . Sunday
School - IO:m a_m_Pastor:

Our Savklur Lutheran Churt'h
Walnut and Henry Sts., RBven swood ,
W. 'li~ .. Pastor : David Rt1~sell. Sunday
SduXll- 10:00 un .. Wurship - II a.m.

St. Paul Lutheru Clwtb
Comer Sycamore &amp; Scc{lnd St., Ponu:my.
Sun. School · 9:45 a.lli .. Worship - I I a.m.

United Methodist
Graham llnittd Mrthodlst
Wi}J"Shtp - l l a.m. Pastor: Ri~· hard Nea..e
Duhtel United \1ethodbl
New Hncn . H.1charJ Nras~ . Pasto r,
Sunda)· wor:.hip 9: ~n a.m Tttts. tdU
praJer and Dible Study
MI . Olhe United Mt lbodl\1
Off 124 behind Wi lt e~~· ille. Pu~tor : Rev.
Ralph Spires. St~nday Sc hool - 9:30a .m..
Wohhlp - 10:)0 a. m., 7 p.m.. ThuNda)-'
S~ r Y i~:cs

· 7 p.m.

Meig.ol CooperlllliY.: Pamh
Clusttlt, Alfred. Pa~ l\)t: Jim
Corbin . Sunday Sfhool - 'UO a .m ,
Wor~hi p - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Northea~t

l 'bakr
Jim Corbitt , Worsh ip - 9 a.m.,
Suoda; School - lU a .m. , Thursday
Servi cts - 7 p.m
ra~tor;

Joppa
Pastor: Denzi l Null , Wor~hip · 9:-'0 11 .m
Sunda)' School - ·10:30 a.m

.............
,.
••
.....................
MIIIHM1

Father in heaven ."

. .l .........

Malthew 5: I

499 Rk:bland Aveoue,AIIIens

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

MI-IINM4

Oavls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
words, abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
Insurance
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
SERVICES~
Financial
214
E. Main
IH done unto you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc .
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Quickel

Middleport, OH

740..992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

(740) '192-645 I

,:n,
-\lloriO l "'!lt O ~

H "-'i t\ \ l HOM t

174Lo,"".llnti•PO Bt..l'lll

New lla\"tQ, WV 15245
t'Wifl'lf Dinctor

Blessed are the pure
in heart; jQr they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Bo~ld Knob on Cu H.d

•

a m Wor~h• p · 7 p m

Wbht 'li C"haptl \\HI~t)•n
Conl•lllt Ruad Pi~&gt;lnr 1&lt;1"\ l'hill1p
lt1denour. SunJ&lt;~ } S ~ hiK1 1
w, ,1~h1p

CeatraJ Cllllttr
AsbUI)' (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob RobinliOn ,
Sunday School - IJ:45 a.m . Woa t11p . II
a.m., Wednesday Service•- i lO p.m

Other Churches

"14.1 ~

· Ill

'-1 \o am .

m . Wednt!&gt;dli} Str. •~r

hlrvtew Bibk&gt; Church
Leli.rt . W Vi! Itt I . Pa~ l\1 1 Bn11.n May ,
Sunda} Schntll · 11 \0" m W., r ~lu p . 1 L(J
p m . w~d ~k&gt;11aJ R1hk ~lud 1 - 71 )1J p m
Fatth hUo"shlp Crw.arte ror l"h~hil
Pa ~tor Rtl f-1Jnl l1n [Jtden, _ S&lt;"nlcc
f-nd11. ~. 7 p.m

SynKUM Community Churc:h

24SO Second St .. Syracuse. OH
Sun SchOC&gt;l 10 am . Sund} n1gfu6 30 pm
UndeTthe dtrtctmn ur Dan &amp; Fauh

tiayiiWl
A New Bqtnnillj
jfuU Geiptl Church ) HiiiTl s.o n~ 1llc .
PtiKlrt: Bob and K.a.y MaNhall .
Sunday Ser. 1CC . 2 p m

Eaterprbt
Pa~tor : Arland K1n¥ , Sund~) Schoo! 1 0 · ~ a m.. Wonh1p - 9:30 a.m. Bible
Sru d) Wed_7:30
flltwOOik
Ptmor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wonh1p · II 1un

C~&amp;hllry

Foralllua
PaitOI. llQb RobinliOn , Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wonhip - 9 11.m.

Pas1or: Wayne Dunlap. State R1 681 .
Tuppe ~ l-'l&amp;lll i. St.m. Wonlup 10 am &amp;
6:10pm . Wed . 81ble Stud) 7.110 p.m

Wednt::..ia) Ser1,..,.. 7 \fl prn

Wor~h1p

IU ~(l

R~\

:,dwul - \1 .30 ll m..
a m

p m .

7 .\{)

Slhrrs\111£ lommuniiJ Chun-h
Wii) ll t' R Je ~~oell. SunJ.1 :, 11 unh 1p
- !dill p m . Wednesda) I'd).) p m_R1hk
llttKI)
Pa~ tor ·

~Non -denomin&amp;tlonal fel lo w~hJpJ

~110 1'.

Rrjuidng Life Chun:h
~nd A'.: r.. li dJ it"pu ll

,\ tilt FtJr,·•n••n. p.,,h11 tmentu~
F01eman. Wur,htp· I ~J IIO;Jm

Communil) oll'hrlit
Ponland -Ran ne Rd . Pa.to r Jnn Pn• ffut
Sunday School - q -JII a.m.. Wonh1p ·_
10 :30 a.m . Wedne ~a) Sen1 cn - 1 UO

Wt!d~:.dlt; ~t!n h"&lt;'~ - I

POl&gt;hH;

L.~ .... ren~e

pm

t 'Ufton TuiH'rnack lhul'('h
( hfwn . \\\'a Su nd.. , Sch c~JI- IIJ am ..
Wualup - 1 p.m . \l, td ne ~Ja) \en h." t - 7
p.m
Nl!'w Uf• Victor) (t"nlu
371 _\ Gco r~e, Creet Rndd , Gal l !plll1.1. ( IH
Pll.'ltnr: Bil l ~ Iat e n . SonJa)- Sen1 _;e• - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m Wrdne•~tla ) - 1 p m &amp;
\'uuth 1 p.m

pm

Btlhel Worship Center
S R 1 , R e~d~~· i l k . Oti --15772, 112
nule north of Eastern Sdtooh on SH 7. A
Fu ll Go~~~ Church . Pa, tor Rob Barber.
/\'ih)l:late P~stor Kat yn o~ v • ~. Youth
Pa.\IUr Sul1e Franc1~ . Sundll)" ~er,· l c es
10 :00 am W(II"Ship . 6-00 pm hmil~ L1fc
Clai.tl , Wrd . Home Cdl Groups 7:00
p.m., Ou1er Limtu Ce ll Group at the
chun:h 6:30pm 10 H:JO pm
W78~

Rotk Sprinp
Keith Rader. Sunda)· Schnlll - 9: J ~
a.m ., Worship
10 .a. .m_, Youth
Fcllowslrip, Sunda} · 6 p.m.

p.. ~wr

Ama.Jia&amp; Gritce Commuttity Chufth

Mcxmng tn tile Meig~ Middk .'io.-hnol
C~f~ ttna 1-'astor. Chri ~ Sw,o,·an
10 00 Mi l· Noun Sunda} . lnl"om1al

P&lt;~s!Ut .

~und" )

Blach• ood

OU!i CluiiiU.n Frllcunhlp

Purl Cbapd
Sunday School - li a.m.. W{1 ~ h1p 10 a.m

Blbk Chun:h

c(, Rd .

Pomao) P1~c

Full Gosptl C hurch
of lhe
Sa~tor
Rt.JJS, Antiqu1t) . Pastur: Jesse Morri s,
Serv1ce:o: Saturday 2:00p.m.

u,·tna

Kollowcl
Pastor- Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 10;30 a.m., Thutlday
Services • 1 p.m.
Salem Ceatu
Paitor; William ~ - Mmha!l , Sunday
~hool - IO:U a.m., Wonhip - 9:1."i a.m.,
Bible St11dy : Monday 7:00 pm

Alb Street Chun:h
398 A.sh St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a .m. Mornioa
Wor11 hip - 10 :10 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm ,
Wcdnuday Sen·ice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service-7 :00p.m.
Appt Lift Cea&amp;u
··fuli -Uospclli Church", Pastorl John &amp;
Pally Wade, 603 Second 1\\·e. Ml$00. 773~0 11, Scr~ice time. Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedne.clay 7 pm

s.....w.
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Wmhip . 9ll .m.

Bttbuy
Pa"or: John Oi!more, SunrJa.y S'houl - Hl
a. m .. Wouhip • 9 a.m., WeJ nclday
Service•- 10 a.m.

"bundant Grt~« R.F. I.
921 S. Third St.. Middleport, Pastor Tereoa
D~~ovis , Sunday aervice, 10 1m.
Wemt.clday s.ervtcc, 1 p.m .

CU'IIIII·SuttoJI
Carmel &amp; Bu han Rds . Racl!le , Oh io.

Fotob ruu Goopcl Cbw.b
loni Bollom, Pastor: Ste~·e Reed, Sunda)·
School • 9JO a.m. Wonhip · 9:30a.m
ud 1 p.m., Wednesday - 1 p.m.. Friday - ·
fello"·thip !iC"nice 1 p.m.

Pastor: John Gil more , Sunday School •
9:4j a.m ., Worship - 11 :00 a.m. . Bible
Srudy Wcd .7:30 p.m.

M..-lllq Stor
Pastor: John Gilmo~. Sunday 5(:houl - J 1
a.m., Worship - IOa.m .
Eu1 l-etart
Pastor: Bil l Marshall Sund~y Scnool •
9a.m .. Wors hip W a.m.. ht Sunda}
every mon1h ~vemng sen ·K:e 7:00 p m.:
Wednesday- 7 p.m

HarrilonvUJe Commwlity Chu.rdl
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sundily - 930
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday . 1 p.m.

Mkklltpon Commualty Churth
."i7~

Pearl St ..\1iddlepon , Pa~t or : Sam
1\nderson, Sund ay School 10 8 m ..
E,·cnina - 7JO p.m . W~dnesday Ser\'ice 7:30p.m.

Radoe
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship · 11 a.m.Wednesday
ScntcM 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coohille Uolted Mttb~t Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline . Coolvil le Church,
Main&amp;. Fifth St., Sun . School·- 10 a.m.,
Worship 9 a m.. Tues. Sen·ice$ - 7 p.m.

Bethel Cftrch
Township Rd., &lt;46HC. Sunduy School - Q
a.m. Wor~ hip
10 a.m .. W~Jnc:;d1ty
Sen·iccs - 10 a.m

l'allb Volley To-le Cbunh
Ba tie}' Rlln Road, Pa§tor: Re v. Emmen
R11wson, Sunday Eve nmg 7 p m .•
Thursday Ser.·ice - 7 p.m

Syracust \1 lsskm
141 1 8nd ~ema n St. Syracuse. Sunda)
Sehoul
U1 a.m. E\'ening - 6 p m ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Uuul Community Churrb
Off Rt. 1 ~4. P:l sM: li1ls..:l Hart , Sunday
Scho11l - 9: ~U &lt;l.m.. Wu r&gt;hip . 10:3o ·a.m..
1 :J(\ p.m

Hoc:~&amp;pw1

Cbun:h
tirind Stm:t. Sunday School - 9JU J. .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Plollitor Phillip Hell

S..:hool -

1 u · m~ . m

Torth Cbun:b
Co Rd . O:l. Sunday S~;hool
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

m.,

W~.-u ~h 1p

- 9;30

a.m.,

Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Mitlcap. Sullday School ·
9:30a .m ..Worship - IO:JO a.m . ll :JD p m.,
Wednesday Sen 1 ce~ - 1 p.m.. Pao;tur
1\ llen Midcap
t·~ uow!iblp

-

ra.ilh Gu&lt;ipel ( "hur.:h
l.ong Bouom. Sunday Sch011l . •uo a m .
Wonhtp
1(1:45 a .m.. 7 .1u p.m .
Wedne ~d-.y 7:3U p.m
Mt. OUn~ Cummunity Church
Pa~wr : Lawrenl"e Bus n, Su nda~ Schoo.1l .
IJ.Jil,. m.. E 1·enin~ - 0 .:m p.m.. Wed ne w~~
p.m.

Chun·h of the Nazarene . Pastor: Ru ~ ~dl
Carson , Sunda y S\·ho(l] - 9:.10 a.m ..
W~·r~h•p - 10:45 a.m.. 1 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m

1-' uU Gus,wl Ughth~
J l04 S HiiJnJ ~ &lt; lild. f\, mc1 11~ . 1'&lt;1\h&gt;r· koy
Hunt ~r. S01kiay Sc· h~~t'l . 10 t&lt;.m . EH·mu ~
7 .lO p.m.. lue~da) &amp; Thun _ 7 . .10 p.m.

SyrllrCust Chun:b of lbc ~iW"ellC
l-'Mtor Mile Adk.ins, Sunda} School - 9:30
a m., Wor5 hip - IU:JO a.m.. 5 p.m ..
Wedne.~day Sc:rvices - 1 p.m.

Soulh lkllld l:vmmW1il ~ Church
Sd,·er Ridge- Pastor Lmda Oamev.'"-'d .
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Won,hlp ~r n l(l"
10 a.m. ~nd and 4th SunJa}

Pomeroy f'hW"('h of tbt Nuareot
Pastor: Jan la\·ender, Su nduy School -

Father ill heaven .··
Mauhell' 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so IOI'ed the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbegol'ten sor1. ..
Prescriptions
John 3:/6
992·2955
Pomeroy

Acts 24:16

Pentecostal
l'tntew~lal Assembly
St. Rt 124 . Racme , Tornado Rd . Sunday
S(' hllol - 10 ~ m.. Evening - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Semce~ · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
H~trriswnllk!

Prnbyterian Chuftlrt
Pas10 r. Robert Cf? w. Wm-ship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
James Snyder, Sunda) S~houl 10
n.m_, "'Orsh1p ~ernce II o1m
P&amp; ~to r:

Seventh-Day Adventist
~1ulbcrr y Ht~

Rd . I'Dmt~rO J . \ ,!lll rJa~

:\h. Hermon ttniled Brtthi\'D
in Christ Cburch
Te.\J:t ) l'umm11 ml~ .\6-lll Wi ..: kham Rd.
Pastor: Pete1 ~brtllldak , Sunda;. S~o· hll\1 1 9:30 a.m .. W1•n R1p - IO :.lO a.m , 7:00
p.m.. Wedn e~day Sen 1~e~- 7 (K) p.m
Youth group mcrung :!nd &amp; -'th Sundap
7 p.m

l:de-n l"nited Brtthrtn in Chri:st
Sta tt' Rout~· 1 ~4 . b&lt;'t•1~e11 ReeJ ~, · d l~ &amp;
Ho•·k mgport . Sunday School - 10 .i.tn .
SunJa) Wor'ihi p - 11 .00 am. W~d !l ~\Ja _,
s~n If~~ - 7 tKl p.m . Plh\OT- \ 1. Adam
Will

Kingsbul)· Road. Paste&gt;r: R\•bcn \"an c&lt;.e .

Tile care you deserve J closr to lumae good works and glorifY Your

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

St. Rl. ll4 ~~~~~. OH
Full Gospel. Cl Plllitors Robert &amp; Rul:lcna
Muuer , Sundt}· Schoo l 9;30 am , ,
Worship 10 .30 am - 7 00 pm, Wed .
Service 7:00pm
Team Ja.ua MbtlttOO
Meeting in 1he MulberT) Cornmtln l1}
Center GymoiiSlum . Pastor E.tldir Baer
Scrvu;e evrry Tuesda) 6.J(l pm

CarleiOn lntmleoomin~~~liwud th,urch

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr .10 shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER mm. that rhev may see vour
36759 Rocksprings Ad .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
74C..992-6606

u...., or H..U.. Mlnblrla

United Brethren

Sunday ,i-R&lt;ll.ll - IU a.m . W0r-.h 1p - 11
ll.m . WL'lln,:_'&gt;IJil) Sen"JCt' - 7 r Ill

s~ r \"i~· ..: -;

Rcsaoradorl Chriltlan Fellowtblp
9365 Hooper Roa d, Athen.o; , PllstorLonnic Coats, Sunday Worsh ip lll:OO am.
Wedne§dw.y: 7 pm

1 p.1u

\1orst' t"h ..ptl C hurth

Mldclepon Churtb of the NIW"fllr

Reeds,·IUe

Y : ~(l it

Hobton ChrhUu Fellowship Chun:h
Pntcr · Her~chel While , Sunday s,·hOQI 10 am, Sunda)" Church ~rvi~-e . 6:30pm
Wednesday 1 pm

Scrl"iccs · Sabbillh s,·hnol - 2 p.m
Wu rship - _I p.m.

Uyenilk Community Chun:b
Sun d"~

Salem Commualty CbUKh
BKk of West Columbia. W_Va .om L•e'"lnJ
Road , Pa~tor : Charles Roush tJO.lJ 67$22&amp;8. Sunday Schoo l 9:30 am . Sunday
cvcnina service 7:00 pm , Bibly Stud)
Wednesility !oer'l'ice 7:00pm

~
~ p~t~OkT~~
.,.. ' ""Jomif&gt;J !Wp

Suppn:~sion

• E~t.ingu.isher":&gt; • Sprinklers
• S«-urity

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Oh10

Located less 1han 30 minutes from
Athens . Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-746-667-3156
"SiiUsmall
to can"

MY ~race is
for thee: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

172 N. 2n&lt;1 Ave. Middleport. OH

992-6376

PO. Box 683

'

Pa~lur Me1

31

Kugel Willlnni. Sundi} ~ c huul - IJ .1il

Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

•

E1en1n~ Sent .. t h

·I pm

r.m

rome; to)'
Pa ~ tor · Brian Dunham , Wo rsh1p - 9 JO
a m . Sundai) School - to: J~ am.

Pbtc Grove Bible Holillell Cluud1
112 mile uff Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell

Latter-Day Saints

'1\oppon PloWS.. Paul
J1m Corbit!, Sunda) Scbool - It
a.m., Worsh1p - 10 a.m., Tuc:wlay Serv1~e'
Pa~tor:

Mlou&amp;viltt
Pastor: Sob Rob mson . Sunday Schoo l · 9
a.m.. Worship . 10 a.m.

Kost of Sharun Hollnh:~ Ckurtb
Leading Cte.d: Rd ., Rutland, Pasmr: Rev
Dewey King , Sunday "'hool- 9:30 ill.m.,
Sunday
worihlp -7 p.m., Wedocsday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Launl CUff F.., 'ltlbodld CIHudo

Wonh•r · If JO a.m . Sund~ y School 10.30 a.m . F1nt Sul\da) uf Molllh - 1 UO
p.m. s.er.· ~ee

Cbelttr Cb&amp;U&lt;t:h of tht ~UaJne
P..u101 Re' tierben Griitt. Sund.i) .Xhool
- It -~ a.m , Wou hJp
II 11m . b p m .
Wednnd~y Se r.K:e ~. 1 p m
llut.laad Clu111:b oltbt Nuanot
Sunday School · '} 30 ill m , Worship ·
IO .JO a.m . tJ 30 p m . WedncW.}
~rv1ces- 7 p.m

Wor~ h1p . Chdd n:n'~ mtlli~t(}

Cal\'11')' Pilgrim CktltP'I
Harrison ville Road. Pastor· Charle.~
McKeolie , Sunday Sr huol 9:30 a.m..
Worship - I I ill.m., H.K) p.m., Wednesda}
~n· •~e- 7:00p.m

Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunda)· School 9:30 a.m ., Wonh tp • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesdt)· Service-7:00 p.m.

Koecb-

-7: 30

~trll~t ILJ 3H il m

pm

I'...OOm Goopol MlYion

JO·JOam

Heath (MkkUeportl
Pastor: Bnan Dunham, Sunday School ·
9::\0a m . Worshtp - II:OOa .m

Dtr.n"il&amp;t HoUneu Church
} 105 1 State Ruu te 325, LaniHIIe , Pastor
Utnjamin Crawford, Sunday \ol."huul - 9:30
a m . Sunda y wonhtp - 10;.1() a m. &amp; 7
p m . Wednesday prayer ~rvl~ - 7 p.m.

jisbtr junrral _,omt

"Let your light so shine before
men. that they may see
good works and glorify ,

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

uardrail. Fence &amp;
s1gn erection

Trinity Chun:b
Second &amp; l ynn , Pomeruy, Pll.)tur Re ~ .
Jon athan Nohlr. Worlhlp !() 15 a.m.,
Sunday &amp;::hooi9·J5 a_m

Holiness

\Uddlcport C..ul'('b of r hrut
5th an d Malll. Pa s10r : AI H11 r t ~nn .
C lul dre n~ Dtrecwr: Sharon Sayre. Teen ·

Clturth of Cluist
Worsh1p - 9;30 a.m.. Sunday S{·hool 10:30 a.m., Pas1or-Jcffre y Wallace. Itt artd
Jrd Sunday

Congregational

Co mmtm6t)" Church
P~swr :
Steve T11mek . Mam Street.
Ruiland, Sund.i~ Wor~ h•p-10 · ({1 a.m..
Surtday Servkr-7 p.m.

Pomero)l WesWde Church of Chrut
ll!:! ll l' h•ldren"~o 1-hmtr RJ Su nday
S~·hnoll- ll um . Wnrsh,fl · IO&lt;I .m., t.run ,
Wednesday Services 7 p m

~ eno

p.m .

Episcopal

~ 11

Dn«"tvr· Dud~;n Vau ,; h~n . Sunday Schoo.JI
- Y:JO a.m., Wunohip - 8: 15, 10:30 a.m . 7
p.m , Wrdne \tla)" Se.r\· ice~ · 1 p.m.

Churc:ll of God ol PropMcy
OJ . Wh1te Rd off St. R1 . IW, Pastor: PJ
Clhlpman. Sunday School - 10 11m .•
Wu~hi p - II a.m., Wednoday Scrviceli - 7

G.-.e Epl5copal Oum:h
126 E. Main S1 .. Pomeroy. Sunday Sckoo!
and Hol}· Euch:uist 11 :00 a.m. Re v
Edward Payne

Wed b1bh: ~~ ~)' 7 pm

740-992-7713

190 N. Second St.

S)TKU.R Flnt Otud of God
Apple and Second Sli .. Paslor Re\ . Oavkl
Ru~ .ell . Sunda) Scbool u d Wontup- 10
ill m Eve.n•nil Scrv1cu- fdO p m .
Wedne ~) Sc:no1ces - 6;30 p.m.

Catholic

C11rptnter H!iplhil Churth

Pa~ t or: S1.:1r L1ttlc .

Lon. Boatom
Sunda) School - 9 . :W 1 m . Worthlp ·

7

pm .

Sacrwl Hent (~•1-..k: Cllun:h
II'll Mulbtrr)· A~e .. Pumc:roy, 99 2-5898 ,
P&lt;.~.'&gt;Wr Rr~ WDIIer E . Hem.t , S-at . Cun
4 : -45 - ~ 15p m : fo.ta .i - S:JO p.m., Sun
C11n -IHVI· J, a.m... Sun . Mus . •:HU
u m . Daily MJ~\ - !1:30 a.m.

Hrmlock Gm"" Chrkllan Oum:h
M•n i.ter: l1my Br••Wn, Worshtp · 9·3()
ll .m . Sunda~ School · !0 .iO a .m., Ribk
STUd) 7 p m

Su ndoiy Sch,KJ I
9:3Ciam. i'Tea.:hmg
St:rv•~·r
10 J()Olll\. Evcn mg Servi.:e
7.00pm. Wedne ~W; Bible Stud) 7:00pm.
lntcnm Prcachc:r f-1ord Rus~

p m . Wedncsda ) Scr\'ICc:i

m . (i

7 pm

l'lae\·Uk •·rw"'·m B11pti_..t Chuf'fh
Paitor: M1le H.uruuu , Sum.Ja) School
9:JO to 10·"1 &lt;~Ill . Wo.-..hlp &gt;e:n1.:e 10:3(1
111 II :flO am Wed pre&lt;u:hu1g (-. pm

A.ntiquily B111plllol
Schodl - 9:.\0 a.m .. Worship 10.-lS u.m.. Sunday E1·cning - 6:00 p.m..

Homemade Desse rts Made Daily

IRA j -•, Rollurn.s•. Stud s" Humll' . M••fllul

FuniJs•, Annuilie~ '. Umg Term Curt'

Emnt•nucl Apullitulk Tlilberuack 111".
Loop Rd . ulf Nc ~~o Luna Rd Rutl!iliJ
St:n~rr\ Sun llJ Ill u m. &amp; 7 _,.l p n•
Thur~. 7 lJIJ p m Pd, lu f Miln) R ll utuon

f\11. Morillh 8aptbt
M1tklkpurt . Pastor.
Rl'\ . Gilbert Cra1g. Jr. Sunday Sc-hool .
q : _~o UJn . Wm-.;hip - \0:45am.

'

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
a!·k what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

74()-985·3561
992·1550

f.itud)

~ eUncWay

Fnu rth &amp; ~ l ai n St

Oam - 8pm

Hills Self Storage

The Hppliance man

JIJ _pra)er. WeJ 7 pm B1blt

rue \ b

&lt;I Ill.. Wur~ h.lp -

Sizes available 5x t0 to 10 x 20

factor and forbear judging us. For another
thing. people lend to li ve up to (or down to)
our judgements and expa:tmiom: so.

~h:h,.d BnuJh)nl . Pill!loM". Sunda ), 10 .10
am

l'ure.t Ru.u Buptlst· Pomeroy
Rl·\· Jo.1 eph ~Ids, Su nd ••y School - l(l

Hours

Frietl(ih
A1mo.1phrre

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

740·949·2217

almost always a good poliq. For one thi ng .
JX'Ople are Lhen more·lik.ely to return tht:'

Rl\tr Valle) Apu~tul ,.._ W(ll ~hip Crrnrr,
K7] S luJ
A\ t
Mn1dltpon, Rt v

Dirt'L'Ior of Marketing and Admissions
333 Page Slreet
(740) 992·6472
Middle ort OH Fax 740 .992-7406

Rutland t'rtt Wll BMptist
S11lem St , P'"ltlf Jam1e Fonner. SundaJ
s,· hoot · 10 ill m . t~emn~: - 7 p m
Wl!J nt'odol) Scr11~~o.n · 1 p m

. Mommg wur"&gt;tup II .tm benul&amp; - 1 pm .

Rl\er \al.Jey

am .. Won.h1p · 10 10 ~ m and 6
p .m , Wedntida) Sen.·•cc, . 7 p m

IJ JU

Pa~tor : Ron ll!!Mih. Sunda~ Worship - 10
il

ROII(u,..,uud . W'l/ Sunda)' ~.: hool 10 am-

hlth 8aptl!it Cbun·b
ih.ilro~d St., Masu n, Sunday Schllol - Ill
a .m .. Wonhll' · II .1.1n , 6 p.m.
Wcdnesda)" Se1-..icn 7 p.lll .

Michelle Kennedy

Don Waller

Mcuod &amp;pU•t l 'hurd1

811p1bt ln drpendfnt
5~ 5 ~ - ~nd St . Middleport . Pw.wr. J amr ~
E Kt:c:)ec. Wur,hip - l\la.n1 . 7 p. m..
WeJneWay Services · I p m

Hume Cooked Meals&amp;. Daily SpecUJls
Open 7 days u week

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

10. \() 11m.

\'ktor~·

n~um

209 Third

Mtl k r. Sundat ~hl~ •l
l:.ltmng · 1 J() p.m

Hlllsilk H•ptl~t Cbu.n' h
St. RL 1-'J JUS1 off R! 7, Pastor: Rev.
J tlm('i H.
A,·rl·e . Sr. . Sundn) l lmf1cd
Sen"e. Wnn.h•r · ltUO a.m . 6 p rn .
Wednt ~a) Sen h."C.\ -7 p.m

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

P..&amp;~or ·

Cbun:-h ul Jesu. Chri\1 AI\O!'IOtk
\ ilfll4ildl anJ W~J Rd . P.u1r1r Jamn

Because of Iraq war, a small religious group suffers
Bv CHRIS NEWMARKER

........,., . ,..,WORSJJJP ci()j'j'j}ns WEEK ,., ..,..m,..,..... .,

.,

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 9, 2007

Doug
TenNapel
uses
cartoons
to
create
a
bridge_
.
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislune11t of religion, or prohibiting the
ji-ee exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

-·- - - - - - - - - - -- --

TODAY IN HISTORY
Todav is Friday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2007. There are
325 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Feb. 9, 1943, the World
War II battle of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended
with an Allied victory over Japanese forces.
On this date : In 1825. the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams president after no candidate
recei ved a majority of electoral votes.
In 1861 , Jefferson Davis was elected the provisional
president of the Confederate States of America.
ln 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau was established.
In 1942, daylight-saving "War Time" went into effect in
the United States, with clocks turned one hour forward.
In 1950. in a speech in Wheeling. W.Va., Sen. Joseph
McCanhy, R-Wis., charged that the State Depanment was
riddled with Communists.
In 1964, The Beatles made iheir first live American television appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show" on CBS.
In 1971. the crew of Apollo 14 returned to Earth after
man 's third landing on the moon.
In 200 I, a U.S. Navy submarine collided with a Japanese
fishing boat off the Hawaiian coast, killing nine men and
boys aboard the boat.
Ten years ago: Best Products dosed the last of its stores,
a victim of the diminishing allure of the catalog showroom
concept of retailing. The East beat the West in the NBAAllStar game, 132-120.
.
Five years ago: Britain's Princess Margaret, the htghspirited and unconv0ntional sister of Queen Elizabeth
died in London at age 71. At the Wmter Olymptcs m Salt
Lake City, Jochem Uytdehaage of the Netherlands won the
gold medal in the men's 5,000-meter speedskating race in
world record time of 6 14.66. Oakland s Rich Gannon led
the AFC to a 38-JO victory over the NFC in the Pro Bowl.
One year ago: President BLtsh defended U.S. surveillance
effort s, saying spy work helped thwart terrorists ~:"~lotting to
use shoe bombs to hijack an airliner and crash 11 into the
tallest skyscraper on the West Coast. Kidnapped American
journalist Jill Carroll appeared in a video aired on a private
Kuwaiti TV station. appealing for her supponers to do
whatever it took to win her release "as quickly as possible."
(She was freed on March 30. 2006.) Neil Entwistle, whose
wife and baby dmtghter were found shot to death at the couple's home in suburban Boston. was arrested on murder
charges in his native England (Entwistle is eApected to go
on trial later this year). British entrepreneur Sir Freddie
Laker died in 1-lollywood, Fla., at age 83.
Today's Birthdays: Television journalist Roger Mudd is
7&lt;1 . Actress Janet Suzman is 68 . Singer-songwriter Carole
Kin g is 65 . Actor Joe Pesci is 64. Singer Barbara Lewis is
64. Author Alice Walker is 63. Actre.s Mia Farrow is 62.
Rh vtlun-and-blues musician Dennis ''DT" Thomas (Kool
&amp; the Gang) is 56. Country singer Travis Tritt is 44. Actress
Julie Warner is 42. Country singer Danni Leigh is 37. Actor
Jason George is 35. Actress Ziyi Zhang is 28. Actor David
Gallagher is 22.
Thought for Today: "If your neighbor is an early riser,
you will become one." - Albanian proverb.

n.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Doug TenNapel isn't your
ordinary guy who doodles
on the church bulletin when
the sermon gets boring.
The Eisner Award-winning cartoonist scribbles in
his daily calendar, creating
a bridge from the pew to his
studio. The result is a pocket universe of character
sketches, strange movie
ideas and graphic "plot
wheels" in which. he works
out the twists and turns in
his stories.
These days, swarms of
Kid Elves on tlying logs
bump into sketches of
Bigfoot, next to rough
tdeas for a violent, at
ttmes profane, graphic
novel that TenNapel is
creating about crime bosses, invading aliens and an
inquisitive priest.
"I can write I0 of these
stories a year, but I only
have time to draw one," he
said. "When I see these
things in my head, it's like
I'm watching movies. ...
But in the past they've been
too far out for Hollywood."
TenNapel is a cult figure
with online fanboys who
admire his work in cartoons,
video games, television and,
especially. his book-length
graphic novels with complex plots and images that
resemble movie storr.boards. But things wtll
change if "Creature Tech"
reaches movie theaters.
What is the graphic novel
about? Publishers Weekly
said: "It's the story of the
battle between the abrasive

~----------------------------~

•

Tomatoes.,

Tht·n he moved into video
games, leading to his 1994
good-guy scientist Dr. Ong hit "Earthworm Jim." Two
and the resurre cted Dr. years later, Steven Spielberg
Jameson , a male volent hired him to create the
19th-century occultist-mad "Ne\'erhood" games for
scientist who sought to ruk Dreamworks. TenNapel wa&gt;
the world. Ong ... returns to a digital success, but he also
his hometown after being spiraled into burnout. Then .
appointed to direct a in 2002, he created
researo;h facility locals call "Creature Teo; h. "
The key moment came
Creature Tech . There he
when
the blogger called
opens a crate housing the
"Moriany"
posted the folShroud of Turin. Things get
complicated when the lowing at the Ain't It Cool
ghost of Jameson ... steals (aintitcool.com) site for
the shroud, resurrects his film in siders.
"There's no doubt. It's
own body and resumes tryweird
.... It's also very funny,
in¥\ to take over the world
swe~t and heartprofoundly
wtth the help of an army of
felt
,
touching
in a strange
conjured hellcats and a
way, and serious about congigantic space eel. "
cepts
like faith and family
There's more. Ong is also
without
being in any way
a seminary dropout, and his
preachy
or
corny," he wrote.
father is a pastor who used
to be a scie.ntist. Then "Simply put, 'Creature Tech'
there's the 7-foot mantis the is the best American animatU.S. ~ovemment semis as a ed film since 'The Iron
secunty team and the sym- Giant.' ... Better than anybiotic alien parasite that thing from any studio . ... It's
clamps onto the hero's chest a movie that just happens to
and, strangely enough, be in print."
Within minutes, studios
makes him a better person.
This is a normal TenNapel started calling his agent .
Regency Enterprises and
plot.
It helps to understand that 20th Century Fol\ won the
he grew up in rural Thrlock, bidding war, and early
Calif.. in a home that. dur- wor~ began on a live-action
ing his childhood years, movte.

Part of the cha.llenge,
admitted TenNapel, is capturing his blend of fantasy
and Christian faith. Some
critics wish he would quit
weaving sin , redemption,
politics and science into his
plots. Then· there are church
people who think he should
be drawing evangelistk·,
''Christian comic s" and
avoiding hi s o~:casionat
blasts of sd -ti potty humor.
TenNapel just wants to
tell the stories that are in
his head. He has no de sire
to
be
a
symboli c
"Christian" trailblazer.
"There
really
are
Christians who are think ing, 'If we could just save
Brad Pitt, then God could
really do wonders in
Hollywood.' That's what
God really needs, you see.
God needs Brad Pitt in
order to be taken seriously.
More people would listen if
God had Brad Pitt on his
side," he said.
"People want a quick tix.
Christians are going to have
to learn that art isn't automatically good if it's rilade
by
Christians.
And
Hollywood will have to
learn that an isn't automati cally bad if it's made by
Christians."
(Terry Mauingly is dirt'C·
tor of the Washington
Journalism Cemer at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges and Uni1•ersities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

www.mydallysentinel.com

Obituaries

An•

dleslllr

Bv SUZETIE LABOY

Edward Lawson

ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ITER

HOLLYWOOD , Fla. Anna Nicole Smith , the curvaceous blonde whose life
played out as an extraordinary tabloid tale - Playboy
centerfold , jeans model.
bride of an octogenarian oil
tycoon, reality-show subject, tragic mother - died
Thursday after collapsing at
a hotel. She was 39.
She was stricken while
staying at the Seminole
Hard .Rock Hotel and
Casino and was rushed to a
hospital. Edwina Johnson,
chief investigator for the
Broward County Medical
Examiner's Office , said the
cause of death was under
mvestigation and an autopsy would be done on Friday.
Just five months ago,
Smith 's 20-year-old son ,
Daniel, died suddenly in the
Bahamas in what was
believed to be a drug-related death .
Seminole Police Chief
Charlie Tiger said a private
nurse called 911 after finding
Smith unresponsive in her
sixth-tloor room at the hotel,
CHESHIRE - Raymond L. Little, 76, Cheshire, died which is on an Indian reserWednesday, Feb. 7, 2007 , in the Veterans Affairs Medical vation. He said Smith's
Center in Chillicothe. Ohio.
bodyguard
administered
He is survived by his wife, Donhy Lewis Little. The fam- CPR, but she was declared
ily will receive friends from 5 - 7 p.m Friday at the dead at a hospital. Later
Cremeen s Funeral Chapel , Gallipolis.
Thursday , two sheriff's
deputies carried. out at least
eight brown paper bags
sealed with red evidence tape
GALLIPOLIS - Raymond I. Lane, 98 , Gallipolis, died from Smith's hotel room.
Dr. Joshua Perper, the
Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2007 . in the Holzer Medical Center.
chief
Broward County medHe was preceded in death by his wife , Pauline Phillips
Lane. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday. Feb. II, 2007 , ical examiner who will perin the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Rev. Alvis Pollard will offi- forrn the autopsy, said if her
ciate. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends death was from natural
causes, the findings would
may call from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home
likely be announced quickly. He cautioned, however,
that definitive results could
take weeks.
"I am not a prophet, and I
cannot tell you before the
autoesy what I am going to
find,' he said.
Through the '90s and into
SHADE - Bedford Township's 2006 annual financial the new century, Smith was
report is available for inspection by contactini Barbara famous for being famous. a
Orueser, fiscal officer, at 696-1244.
pop-culture
punchline
because of her up-and-down
weight, her Marilyn Monroe
looks, her cxa_ggcrated
RACINE - Racine Southern Future Famers of America curves, her little-grrl voice,
will have a breakfast from 8 a.m. to I p.m. in the hiih her ditzy-blonde persona,
school cafeteria. The breakfast is open to the public. Eggs, and her over-the-top revealing outfits.
pancakes, sausage and other food will be served.
Recently, she lost a
reported 69 pounds and
became a spokeswoman for
TrimSpa. a weight-loss supplement. On her reality
show and other recent TV
RACINE - Edward A. Lawson, 53, of Racine, passed
away on Wednesday, Feb . 7. 2007, at his home , after a twoyear battle with lung cancer.
He was born on Sept. 6, 1953 , in Mason, W.Va., son of
the late Charles and Hazel Smith Lawson . Edward was
employed for 15 years as an auto mechanic at Tom Peden
Country in Ripley, W.Va .
Edward is survived by his wife, Kelley Lawson, of Racine ;
two sons, Eric (Gena) Lawson and Kyle Lawson; a stepdaughter Jayhn Smder; a granddaughter, Ariel Lawson ; a
brother, Robert (Sherry) Lawson of Radne; four sisters~·Wilda
l,.emley of Racine, Dorothy Shain of Racine, Evelyn (Gary)
Mtller of Bellevtlle, and Cmdy (Mark) Miller of Beverly; several meces and nephews, and his faithful Chihuahua, Lovey.
Bestdes hts parents, Edward was also preceded in death
by mfant brothers Clifford and Russell , and brothers Glenn,
Frank, and Harold Lawson .
Funeral will be held at I p.m. on Monday. Feb. 12 , 2007 ,
at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine , with his nephew
Robert Lawson, Jr. officiating.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Sunday at the funeral home .
Burial will be at the Letart Falls Cemetery following
the servtce.

Deaths

Raymond L Little

Raymond I. Lane

Report available

•

JEALOUSY&amp;
DENIAL ...

Plan breakfast

·

For the Record

Indictments

•

POMEROY - Ten indictments were filed in Meigs County
Common Plea~ Coun on Thursday. The indictments were classified as secret by Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story and names of
those indicted and the charges against them will not be made a
part of the public record until the defendants are served.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Coun to Clint Lang Stewart, 28. ami
Tiffani Lee Russell. 26. both of Rutland, and to John Paul
Boling, 25, and Amber Nicole Duffy, 22. both of Racine.

Beware of the golden boy
He is also fiendishly
handsome, and looks
gracefully youn~ at 53. He
has a good-ltlOkmg family,
and incurred considerable
sympathy when his wife
William
was diagnosed with brea-r
Rusher
cancer shortly after the
2004 campaign ended.
(She seems to have been
treated
succes sfully
since
.)
As
might be
to the national race .
(Compare Lyndon Johnson, expected of a succes sful
who ran .for re-election to trial lawyer, he is highly
the Senate in 1960 rather articulate, but blessedly
than bet his whole career on free of legalese. He comes
his simultaneous nomina- across as just an attractive
tion as JFK's running- North Carolina farm boy,
mate.) Since then. Edwards who wants to do what is
has returned to private life best for his country.
And what is that? In the
and prepared himself for a
Senate
his most important
run at the presidency in
2008. Once again I have vote was in suppon of our
been surprised at his rela- invasion of Iraq - a vote
tive invtsibility; but this he now frankly condemns
may have been a deliberate as a "mistake." But in his
strategic move, for he has politics in general , and
now declared his candidacy especially since letting his
and is starting to show up ambitions for 2008 become
known, Edwards has hantall over the place.
In all the obvious ways, mered out a position that is
Edwards is a formidable rather strikingly far to the
challenger. He may not be left. For one thin g. he
· able (yet) to raise as much wants us to start pulling
money from supporters as out of Iraq - now. And.
Hillary Clinton, but (as again and again, he has
noted above J be has made described the United Stales
millions of dollars as a sue- as consisting of "two
cessful trial lawyer. and Americas" - . one small
could
probably
buy and almost ridiculou sly
Hillary 's mansions in rich. and another that is
Chautauqua, N.Y. , and large and just barely scrapWashington out of his pock- ing by. This is the politics
et change .
of class envy with a

Sentenced
vengeance , and Edwards
seems convinced that it is
exactly what the doctor
ordered for the Democratic
Party. On "Meet the Press"
recently, he lleshed out this
vi sion by putting furlh a
healthcare proposal that
would cover all Americans;
cost upward of $100 bil·
lion a year, and require
increased taxes .
Finally, Edwards possess·
es one funher attribute that
gives him an edge over all
the other serious candidates
for the Democratic nomination: He is from the South.
When you retlect that the
only two Dem01:rats who
have been elected to the
presidency in nearly 50
years
were
also
Southerners. that is an asset
not to be sneezed at.
Watching Edwards on
television. I am torn
between admiration of his
finesse and a deep wariness
over whether somebody so
glib can possibly be real. A
good many other Americans
may come to share that
doubt. But this country
cheerfully elected BiU
Clinton twice. and he wa~o
surely the King of Glibness.
So keep your eye on John
Edwards.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for th~
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy. ) ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

-

Local Briefs

ONE SMALL
51tP FOR LOVE,

I will confess that, as a
conservative
with
Leuas 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less Republican leanings, I have
rhan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be long nurtured a healthy fear
signrd, and include address and telephone number. No of John Edwards. As a fortmsi811ed letters will be published Letters should be in mer senator from North
r;:ood taste, addressing i.uues, nvt personalities. Letters vf Carolina, who burst onto the
thm•h tv or~anizations and individuals will11ot be accepl- political scene after amassing a huge fortune as a trial
u/ ]or publication
lawyer, Edwards has always
seemed (not least to himself) destined for higher
things. When the Democrats
nominated him for vice
Reader Services
. (USPs 213-11801
president
on John Kerry's
Correction Polk:y
Ohio Val..y Publl.tllng Co.
ticket
in
2004,
I eKpected
Our main concern i;1 all s1ories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
him
to
tum
in
a
brilliant
perthrough Friday. 111 Court Strtet,
be accurate. It you know of an error
Pomo«&gt;j, Ohio. Second-class postage
fonnance in the campaign.
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
paid at Pomeroy.
Instead, he simply disap992-2156.
u..nbw: The Associated Press and
peared. I can barely rememthe Ohio Newspaper Association.
ber seeing him mentioned in
Po*tmut.r: Send address correcOur main number Is
the media at all between the
tions to The Daily sentinel , 111 Court
(740, ~2-2156.
convention and election. In
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Department extension• are:
retrospect, it seems likely
Sui!Krlptlon Rata•
that this was largely the
ey ..,.., or motor roule
doing of Kerry's managers,
News
OM
month ...........'10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
who, q_uite simply, feared
One·yqr . . . .... .....'123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
compansons.
They worried,
Dtol~ .... . ... " .... .. .. 50'
. Reporter: Belh Sergent, Ext. 13
with
reason,
that
their man,
Senior cnt•en ratu
OM month . ...... . ...'10.27
who rou~hly resembles a
OM yqr .. . .........'103.80 badly ktppered herring,
Advertising
SuiJ6cot&gt;ers si10uld rem01 in would suffer in contrast to
Outside Salea= Dave Harris. Ext . 15 arecttlli&gt;e Daily SerWnel No subscrip.
the
youthful and strikingly
Outal~ Sl,_o: Brenda Davis , Ex116 tion by mail permitt!ed in ar&amp;BS where
handsome Golden Boy from
home earner service is avatlabte.
CtaaaJCiro.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
North Carolina. If there was
....1 Subec:rlptlon
a photograph of the two of
General Manager
tnaldew.tu-County
them toge~r taken during
13 Wee!&lt;s ..... ... .....'32.26
Charlene Hoefhch, Ext. 12
the campaign, I must have
26 Weeks ...... .......'64.20
missed it.
52 W-s ......... .. '127.11
E-mail:
Edwards' single tenn in
news@ mydaitysentinel.com
OuWldt w.tu- Coumy
the Senate was up in 2004.
13 Weeks .............'53.55
and he courageously decidWob:
26 Weeks ............ '107.10
ed
not to run again In order
52 Weeks .......... . '214.21
www.mydailysentinel .com
to devote his whole energy

The Daily Sentinel

Terry
Mattingly

contained many religious
intlue nces - from atheism
to evangelicalism. He studied art at Point Lorna
Nazarene University in San
Diego and e ventuall~ took a
TV animation job wtth "The
Atlack of the Killer

Friday, February 9, 2007

POMEROY - Frank E. Came lin II was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to two and a half years in priwn
on a charge of failure to appear after recognizance release .

AP photo

Anna Nicole Smith, leaves the U.S . Supreme Court. in this
Feb. 28, 2006, file photo m Washington. Smith, the former
Playboy playmate whose bizarre life careened from marrying
an octogenarian billionaire to the untimely death of her son ,
died Thursday after collapsing at a South Florida hotel, one
of her lawyers said.
appearances, her speech was a topless dano;er at a
was often slurred and she strip club before she entered
seemed out of it. Some crit- her photos in a search conics said she seemed test and made the cover of
drugged-out.
Playboy magazine in 1992.
"Undoubtedly it will be She became Playboy's play'
found at the end of the day male of the year in 1993.
that drugs featured in her She was also signed to a
death as they did in the contract with Guess jeans,
death of poor Daniel," said a appearing in TV commerformer attorney for Smith in Cials, billboards and magathe Bahamas, Michael Scott. zine ads .
Another former Smith
In 1994, she mairied 89attorney. Lenard Leeds, told year-old oil tycoon J.
the celebrity gossip Web Howard Marshall II , owner
site TMZ that Smith of Great Northern Oil Co. In
"always had problems with 1992, Forbes magazine estiher weight going up and mated his wealth at $550
down, and there's no ques- million.
tion she used alcohol."
In a 2005 interview with
Leeds said it was no secret ABC, Smith recalled meet·
that "she had a very trou- ing Marshall at what she
bled life" and had "so many, called a "gentleman's club"
many problems."
in Houston. "He had no will
Smith atlomey Ron Rale to live and I went over to
told The Associated Press see him," she said . "He got
that he had talked to her on a little twinkle in his eyes.
Thesday or Wednesday, and and he asked me to dance
she had flu symptoms and a for him. And I did."
fever and was still _grieving
Marshall died in 199S at
over her son. He dtsmissed a~e 90. setting off a feud
claims her death was relat- wtth Smith's former steped to dru~s as "a bunch of son, E. Pierce Marshall.
nonsense.'
over his estate. A federal
"Poor Anna Nicole," he court in California awarded
said. "She's been the under- Smith $474 million. That
dog. She's been besieged ... was later overturned. But in
and she's been trying her best May. the U.S. Supreme
and nobody should have to Court revived her case, rulendure what she's endured." ing that she deserved anothThe Texas-born Smith er day in court.

prefixes representing differ- courage the use of smoke- $217 .221.60
ent communities, and all of less tobacco.
• Approved a resolution
the numbers with all of those
According to the procla- appointing
Pomeroy
prefixes will be assigned to mation. those who use Attorney Raberta A. Hill as
from PageA1
their respective zones."
smokeless tobacco eight to an administrative hearing
In other business. com- 10 times per day receive officer for the Department
since many numbers listed missioners signed a procla- the same amount of nico- of Job and Family Services,
in the telephone directory mation from the Holzer tine as a two-pack smoker. on an as-needed basis , at a
do not provide a physical Tobacco Prevention Center Spit tobacco , the proclama- rate of $50 and $100 per
address .
and the Meigs County tion says, contains 28 hour,
depending
on
"Meigs County ha~ one of Tobacco
Prevention known carcinogens . and whether a hearing is conthe best house numbering Coalition. declaring next increases the risk of oral ducted in the case .
systems in the o;ounty," week Through with Chew and other cancers .
Present
were
Sheets said, "and that will Week. and Feb. 22 as the
Commissioners also:
Commissioners Sheets and
help simplify the process. Great American Spit Out ,
• Approved the payment Mio;k Davenpon and Clerk
But there are nine telephone supporting efforts to dis- of bills in the amount of Gloria Kloes .

911

fighters. No one was injured to protect families should
at the scene.
the chimney or stove malChimney fires are com- function and send dead Iv
·
from PageA1
mon this time of year and gases into the home.
Other
NFPA
tips
for
prethe National Fire Protection
POMEROY - An action for divorce was tiled in Meigs
Agency (NFPA) recom- venting chimney fires
County Common Pleas Court by Cathy C. Lentes. from a crack in the chimney mends chimneys be profes- include:
which then ignited a two.
Middleport, against John R. Lentes, Gallipolis.
Choosing to burn a hardby-four
board, Davis added. sionally inspected and
A divorce was granted to Elizabeth Anderson agamst
wood·
because softwoods
The damage to the two story cleaned annually. Excessive
Scott Anderson .
wood home was described build-up of creosote inside tend to have a high content
as "minimal" with firefight- chimneys is the main cause of creosote and resin. Some
recommended hardwoods
ers having to cut a hole in of chimney fires.
hickory.
oak,
The NFPA also . recom- include
the wall to get to the fire .
madrone
.
ash.
POMEROY - A civil action filed in Meigs County
Rutland responded with mends installing a carbon
Inspect chimneys for
Common Plea~ Coun by Home National Bank against three trucks and II fire- monoxide detector in homes
Charles D. Wilson, Jr .. and others. was dismissed .

Divorces

Fire

Dismissed

'

Robbery

Cold
fromPageA1

should be someone 's calling
to find out." Jones said.
Diana Coates of the Ohio
Retired and Senior Volunteer

Program coordinates volunteers for the R-U-OK program. The volunteers call
from PageA1
shut-ins daily to check on
them and if no one answers.
Coates notifies the shut-in's after she is released from
contact person. The R-U-OK medical care.
Swift said officers found
program is free and residents
Thornburg
at a Brownell
can sign up by calling
Coates at 992-2161.
Avenue address and arrest-

trs easy to subscribe to the

The Daily Sentinel

ed her there shortly afterthe
incident. Another subject at
the residence was also
arrested on an outstanding
warrant. but his nante has
not been released. He said
drug paraphernalia was
found at the home.
Swift said additional
information will be forthcoming about both arrests .

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cracks and loose bricks and
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contact a chimney specialist
to repair the chimney.
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on the hearth clear of debris .
In fireplaces. always have
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Never leave any fire unattended. Ensure that fires are
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The stepson died June 20
at age 67. But the family
said the court fig ht would
continue.
Smith starred in her own
reali ty TV &gt;cries, "The
Anna Ni cole Show," in
2002-04 . Cameras foJJowed
her around as she sparred
with her lawyer, hung out
with her personal assistant
and interior decorator. and
cooed at her poodle , Sugar
Pie . She also ijppeared in
movies. performing a bit
part in "The Hudsucker
Prox y" in J994.
In a statement . Playboy
founder Hugh Hefner said:
·· J am very saddened 4!0
learn about Anna Nicole's
passing . She was a dear
friend who meant a great
deal to the Playbov family
and to me personally."
Smith's son died Sept. 10
in his mother's hospital
room in the Bahamas. just
days after she gave birth to a
daughter.
An American medical
examiner hired by the family. Cyril Wecht, said he died
accidentaJJy of a combination of methadone and two
antidepressants . ·
Last
month , a Bahamas magistrate scheduled a formal
inquiry into the death for
March 27 .
Meanwhile , the paternity
of Smith's now 5-month-old
daughter remained a matter
of di spute . The birth certificate lists Dannie lynn 's
father as attorney Howard
K.· Stern. Smith's most
recent companion. Smith's
ex-boyfriend
Larry
Birkhead was waging a
legal chaJJenge, saying he
was the father. An emergency hearing in the paternity case was scheduled for
Friday in Los Angeles.
Lawyers were eKpected to
discuss an emergency
motion filed by Birkhead's
attorney seeking DNA from
Smith's body. Rale said. The
reasons for the motion were
not immediately clear, but
an attorney for Stem, James
T. Neavitt, was frustrated.
"There's no question about
her being the mother," he
said. "So what's the purpose
of the DNA testini? Why do
they need her DNA?"
Debra Opri, the attorney
who filed Btrkhead's r.atemtty suit, said Birkhead 'is devastated. He is inconsolable,
and we are takina steps now
to protect the DNA testing of
the child . The child is our
No. I priority."

• More product and service options to choose from

C.ll 1-800-234-1CWO for locations
or visit us at www.jacksonhewittcom

1 Mosr office&gt; Me •"f'«&gt;e' &gt;C.tlll)' o~ Mld Of)flitE&lt;I

.'

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�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 9, 2007

Doug
TenNapel
uses
cartoons
to
create
a
bridge_
.
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislune11t of religion, or prohibiting the
ji-ee exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

-·- - - - - - - - - - -- --

TODAY IN HISTORY
Todav is Friday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 2007. There are
325 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Feb. 9, 1943, the World
War II battle of Guadalcanal in the southwest Pacific ended
with an Allied victory over Japanese forces.
On this date : In 1825. the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams president after no candidate
recei ved a majority of electoral votes.
In 1861 , Jefferson Davis was elected the provisional
president of the Confederate States of America.
ln 1870, the U.S. Weather Bureau was established.
In 1942, daylight-saving "War Time" went into effect in
the United States, with clocks turned one hour forward.
In 1950. in a speech in Wheeling. W.Va., Sen. Joseph
McCanhy, R-Wis., charged that the State Depanment was
riddled with Communists.
In 1964, The Beatles made iheir first live American television appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show" on CBS.
In 1971. the crew of Apollo 14 returned to Earth after
man 's third landing on the moon.
In 200 I, a U.S. Navy submarine collided with a Japanese
fishing boat off the Hawaiian coast, killing nine men and
boys aboard the boat.
Ten years ago: Best Products dosed the last of its stores,
a victim of the diminishing allure of the catalog showroom
concept of retailing. The East beat the West in the NBAAllStar game, 132-120.
.
Five years ago: Britain's Princess Margaret, the htghspirited and unconv0ntional sister of Queen Elizabeth
died in London at age 71. At the Wmter Olymptcs m Salt
Lake City, Jochem Uytdehaage of the Netherlands won the
gold medal in the men's 5,000-meter speedskating race in
world record time of 6 14.66. Oakland s Rich Gannon led
the AFC to a 38-JO victory over the NFC in the Pro Bowl.
One year ago: President BLtsh defended U.S. surveillance
effort s, saying spy work helped thwart terrorists ~:"~lotting to
use shoe bombs to hijack an airliner and crash 11 into the
tallest skyscraper on the West Coast. Kidnapped American
journalist Jill Carroll appeared in a video aired on a private
Kuwaiti TV station. appealing for her supponers to do
whatever it took to win her release "as quickly as possible."
(She was freed on March 30. 2006.) Neil Entwistle, whose
wife and baby dmtghter were found shot to death at the couple's home in suburban Boston. was arrested on murder
charges in his native England (Entwistle is eApected to go
on trial later this year). British entrepreneur Sir Freddie
Laker died in 1-lollywood, Fla., at age 83.
Today's Birthdays: Television journalist Roger Mudd is
7&lt;1 . Actress Janet Suzman is 68 . Singer-songwriter Carole
Kin g is 65 . Actor Joe Pesci is 64. Singer Barbara Lewis is
64. Author Alice Walker is 63. Actre.s Mia Farrow is 62.
Rh vtlun-and-blues musician Dennis ''DT" Thomas (Kool
&amp; the Gang) is 56. Country singer Travis Tritt is 44. Actress
Julie Warner is 42. Country singer Danni Leigh is 37. Actor
Jason George is 35. Actress Ziyi Zhang is 28. Actor David
Gallagher is 22.
Thought for Today: "If your neighbor is an early riser,
you will become one." - Albanian proverb.

n.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Doug TenNapel isn't your
ordinary guy who doodles
on the church bulletin when
the sermon gets boring.
The Eisner Award-winning cartoonist scribbles in
his daily calendar, creating
a bridge from the pew to his
studio. The result is a pocket universe of character
sketches, strange movie
ideas and graphic "plot
wheels" in which. he works
out the twists and turns in
his stories.
These days, swarms of
Kid Elves on tlying logs
bump into sketches of
Bigfoot, next to rough
tdeas for a violent, at
ttmes profane, graphic
novel that TenNapel is
creating about crime bosses, invading aliens and an
inquisitive priest.
"I can write I0 of these
stories a year, but I only
have time to draw one," he
said. "When I see these
things in my head, it's like
I'm watching movies. ...
But in the past they've been
too far out for Hollywood."
TenNapel is a cult figure
with online fanboys who
admire his work in cartoons,
video games, television and,
especially. his book-length
graphic novels with complex plots and images that
resemble movie storr.boards. But things wtll
change if "Creature Tech"
reaches movie theaters.
What is the graphic novel
about? Publishers Weekly
said: "It's the story of the
battle between the abrasive

~----------------------------~

•

Tomatoes.,

Tht·n he moved into video
games, leading to his 1994
good-guy scientist Dr. Ong hit "Earthworm Jim." Two
and the resurre cted Dr. years later, Steven Spielberg
Jameson , a male volent hired him to create the
19th-century occultist-mad "Ne\'erhood" games for
scientist who sought to ruk Dreamworks. TenNapel wa&gt;
the world. Ong ... returns to a digital success, but he also
his hometown after being spiraled into burnout. Then .
appointed to direct a in 2002, he created
researo;h facility locals call "Creature Teo; h. "
The key moment came
Creature Tech . There he
when
the blogger called
opens a crate housing the
"Moriany"
posted the folShroud of Turin. Things get
complicated when the lowing at the Ain't It Cool
ghost of Jameson ... steals (aintitcool.com) site for
the shroud, resurrects his film in siders.
"There's no doubt. It's
own body and resumes tryweird
.... It's also very funny,
in¥\ to take over the world
swe~t and heartprofoundly
wtth the help of an army of
felt
,
touching
in a strange
conjured hellcats and a
way, and serious about congigantic space eel. "
cepts
like faith and family
There's more. Ong is also
without
being in any way
a seminary dropout, and his
preachy
or
corny," he wrote.
father is a pastor who used
to be a scie.ntist. Then "Simply put, 'Creature Tech'
there's the 7-foot mantis the is the best American animatU.S. ~ovemment semis as a ed film since 'The Iron
secunty team and the sym- Giant.' ... Better than anybiotic alien parasite that thing from any studio . ... It's
clamps onto the hero's chest a movie that just happens to
and, strangely enough, be in print."
Within minutes, studios
makes him a better person.
This is a normal TenNapel started calling his agent .
Regency Enterprises and
plot.
It helps to understand that 20th Century Fol\ won the
he grew up in rural Thrlock, bidding war, and early
Calif.. in a home that. dur- wor~ began on a live-action
ing his childhood years, movte.

Part of the cha.llenge,
admitted TenNapel, is capturing his blend of fantasy
and Christian faith. Some
critics wish he would quit
weaving sin , redemption,
politics and science into his
plots. Then· there are church
people who think he should
be drawing evangelistk·,
''Christian comic s" and
avoiding hi s o~:casionat
blasts of sd -ti potty humor.
TenNapel just wants to
tell the stories that are in
his head. He has no de sire
to
be
a
symboli c
"Christian" trailblazer.
"There
really
are
Christians who are think ing, 'If we could just save
Brad Pitt, then God could
really do wonders in
Hollywood.' That's what
God really needs, you see.
God needs Brad Pitt in
order to be taken seriously.
More people would listen if
God had Brad Pitt on his
side," he said.
"People want a quick tix.
Christians are going to have
to learn that art isn't automatically good if it's rilade
by
Christians.
And
Hollywood will have to
learn that an isn't automati cally bad if it's made by
Christians."
(Terry Mauingly is dirt'C·
tor of the Washington
Journalism Cemer at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges and Uni1•ersities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

www.mydallysentinel.com

Obituaries

An•

dleslllr

Bv SUZETIE LABOY

Edward Lawson

ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ITER

HOLLYWOOD , Fla. Anna Nicole Smith , the curvaceous blonde whose life
played out as an extraordinary tabloid tale - Playboy
centerfold , jeans model.
bride of an octogenarian oil
tycoon, reality-show subject, tragic mother - died
Thursday after collapsing at
a hotel. She was 39.
She was stricken while
staying at the Seminole
Hard .Rock Hotel and
Casino and was rushed to a
hospital. Edwina Johnson,
chief investigator for the
Broward County Medical
Examiner's Office , said the
cause of death was under
mvestigation and an autopsy would be done on Friday.
Just five months ago,
Smith 's 20-year-old son ,
Daniel, died suddenly in the
Bahamas in what was
believed to be a drug-related death .
Seminole Police Chief
Charlie Tiger said a private
nurse called 911 after finding
Smith unresponsive in her
sixth-tloor room at the hotel,
CHESHIRE - Raymond L. Little, 76, Cheshire, died which is on an Indian reserWednesday, Feb. 7, 2007 , in the Veterans Affairs Medical vation. He said Smith's
Center in Chillicothe. Ohio.
bodyguard
administered
He is survived by his wife, Donhy Lewis Little. The fam- CPR, but she was declared
ily will receive friends from 5 - 7 p.m Friday at the dead at a hospital. Later
Cremeen s Funeral Chapel , Gallipolis.
Thursday , two sheriff's
deputies carried. out at least
eight brown paper bags
sealed with red evidence tape
GALLIPOLIS - Raymond I. Lane, 98 , Gallipolis, died from Smith's hotel room.
Dr. Joshua Perper, the
Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2007 . in the Holzer Medical Center.
chief
Broward County medHe was preceded in death by his wife , Pauline Phillips
Lane. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday. Feb. II, 2007 , ical examiner who will perin the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Rev. Alvis Pollard will offi- forrn the autopsy, said if her
ciate. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends death was from natural
causes, the findings would
may call from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home
likely be announced quickly. He cautioned, however,
that definitive results could
take weeks.
"I am not a prophet, and I
cannot tell you before the
autoesy what I am going to
find,' he said.
Through the '90s and into
SHADE - Bedford Township's 2006 annual financial the new century, Smith was
report is available for inspection by contactini Barbara famous for being famous. a
Orueser, fiscal officer, at 696-1244.
pop-culture
punchline
because of her up-and-down
weight, her Marilyn Monroe
looks, her cxa_ggcrated
RACINE - Racine Southern Future Famers of America curves, her little-grrl voice,
will have a breakfast from 8 a.m. to I p.m. in the hiih her ditzy-blonde persona,
school cafeteria. The breakfast is open to the public. Eggs, and her over-the-top revealing outfits.
pancakes, sausage and other food will be served.
Recently, she lost a
reported 69 pounds and
became a spokeswoman for
TrimSpa. a weight-loss supplement. On her reality
show and other recent TV
RACINE - Edward A. Lawson, 53, of Racine, passed
away on Wednesday, Feb . 7. 2007, at his home , after a twoyear battle with lung cancer.
He was born on Sept. 6, 1953 , in Mason, W.Va., son of
the late Charles and Hazel Smith Lawson . Edward was
employed for 15 years as an auto mechanic at Tom Peden
Country in Ripley, W.Va .
Edward is survived by his wife, Kelley Lawson, of Racine ;
two sons, Eric (Gena) Lawson and Kyle Lawson; a stepdaughter Jayhn Smder; a granddaughter, Ariel Lawson ; a
brother, Robert (Sherry) Lawson of Radne; four sisters~·Wilda
l,.emley of Racine, Dorothy Shain of Racine, Evelyn (Gary)
Mtller of Bellevtlle, and Cmdy (Mark) Miller of Beverly; several meces and nephews, and his faithful Chihuahua, Lovey.
Bestdes hts parents, Edward was also preceded in death
by mfant brothers Clifford and Russell , and brothers Glenn,
Frank, and Harold Lawson .
Funeral will be held at I p.m. on Monday. Feb. 12 , 2007 ,
at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine , with his nephew
Robert Lawson, Jr. officiating.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Sunday at the funeral home .
Burial will be at the Letart Falls Cemetery following
the servtce.

Deaths

Raymond L Little

Raymond I. Lane

Report available

•

JEALOUSY&amp;
DENIAL ...

Plan breakfast

·

For the Record

Indictments

•

POMEROY - Ten indictments were filed in Meigs County
Common Plea~ Coun on Thursday. The indictments were classified as secret by Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story and names of
those indicted and the charges against them will not be made a
part of the public record until the defendants are served.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Coun to Clint Lang Stewart, 28. ami
Tiffani Lee Russell. 26. both of Rutland, and to John Paul
Boling, 25, and Amber Nicole Duffy, 22. both of Racine.

Beware of the golden boy
He is also fiendishly
handsome, and looks
gracefully youn~ at 53. He
has a good-ltlOkmg family,
and incurred considerable
sympathy when his wife
William
was diagnosed with brea-r
Rusher
cancer shortly after the
2004 campaign ended.
(She seems to have been
treated
succes sfully
since
.)
As
might be
to the national race .
(Compare Lyndon Johnson, expected of a succes sful
who ran .for re-election to trial lawyer, he is highly
the Senate in 1960 rather articulate, but blessedly
than bet his whole career on free of legalese. He comes
his simultaneous nomina- across as just an attractive
tion as JFK's running- North Carolina farm boy,
mate.) Since then. Edwards who wants to do what is
has returned to private life best for his country.
And what is that? In the
and prepared himself for a
Senate
his most important
run at the presidency in
2008. Once again I have vote was in suppon of our
been surprised at his rela- invasion of Iraq - a vote
tive invtsibility; but this he now frankly condemns
may have been a deliberate as a "mistake." But in his
strategic move, for he has politics in general , and
now declared his candidacy especially since letting his
and is starting to show up ambitions for 2008 become
known, Edwards has hantall over the place.
In all the obvious ways, mered out a position that is
Edwards is a formidable rather strikingly far to the
challenger. He may not be left. For one thin g. he
· able (yet) to raise as much wants us to start pulling
money from supporters as out of Iraq - now. And.
Hillary Clinton, but (as again and again, he has
noted above J be has made described the United Stales
millions of dollars as a sue- as consisting of "two
cessful trial lawyer. and Americas" - . one small
could
probably
buy and almost ridiculou sly
Hillary 's mansions in rich. and another that is
Chautauqua, N.Y. , and large and just barely scrapWashington out of his pock- ing by. This is the politics
et change .
of class envy with a

Sentenced
vengeance , and Edwards
seems convinced that it is
exactly what the doctor
ordered for the Democratic
Party. On "Meet the Press"
recently, he lleshed out this
vi sion by putting furlh a
healthcare proposal that
would cover all Americans;
cost upward of $100 bil·
lion a year, and require
increased taxes .
Finally, Edwards possess·
es one funher attribute that
gives him an edge over all
the other serious candidates
for the Democratic nomination: He is from the South.
When you retlect that the
only two Dem01:rats who
have been elected to the
presidency in nearly 50
years
were
also
Southerners. that is an asset
not to be sneezed at.
Watching Edwards on
television. I am torn
between admiration of his
finesse and a deep wariness
over whether somebody so
glib can possibly be real. A
good many other Americans
may come to share that
doubt. But this country
cheerfully elected BiU
Clinton twice. and he wa~o
surely the King of Glibness.
So keep your eye on John
Edwards.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for th~
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy. ) ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

-

Local Briefs

ONE SMALL
51tP FOR LOVE,

I will confess that, as a
conservative
with
Leuas 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less Republican leanings, I have
rhan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be long nurtured a healthy fear
signrd, and include address and telephone number. No of John Edwards. As a fortmsi811ed letters will be published Letters should be in mer senator from North
r;:ood taste, addressing i.uues, nvt personalities. Letters vf Carolina, who burst onto the
thm•h tv or~anizations and individuals will11ot be accepl- political scene after amassing a huge fortune as a trial
u/ ]or publication
lawyer, Edwards has always
seemed (not least to himself) destined for higher
things. When the Democrats
nominated him for vice
Reader Services
. (USPs 213-11801
president
on John Kerry's
Correction Polk:y
Ohio Val..y Publl.tllng Co.
ticket
in
2004,
I eKpected
Our main concern i;1 all s1ories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
him
to
tum
in
a
brilliant
perthrough Friday. 111 Court Strtet,
be accurate. It you know of an error
Pomo«&gt;j, Ohio. Second-class postage
fonnance in the campaign.
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
paid at Pomeroy.
Instead, he simply disap992-2156.
u..nbw: The Associated Press and
peared. I can barely rememthe Ohio Newspaper Association.
ber seeing him mentioned in
Po*tmut.r: Send address correcOur main number Is
the media at all between the
tions to The Daily sentinel , 111 Court
(740, ~2-2156.
convention and election. In
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Department extension• are:
retrospect, it seems likely
Sui!Krlptlon Rata•
that this was largely the
ey ..,.., or motor roule
doing of Kerry's managers,
News
OM
month ...........'10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
who, q_uite simply, feared
One·yqr . . . .... .....'123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
compansons.
They worried,
Dtol~ .... . ... " .... .. .. 50'
. Reporter: Belh Sergent, Ext. 13
with
reason,
that
their man,
Senior cnt•en ratu
OM month . ...... . ...'10.27
who rou~hly resembles a
OM yqr .. . .........'103.80 badly ktppered herring,
Advertising
SuiJ6cot&gt;ers si10uld rem01 in would suffer in contrast to
Outside Salea= Dave Harris. Ext . 15 arecttlli&gt;e Daily SerWnel No subscrip.
the
youthful and strikingly
Outal~ Sl,_o: Brenda Davis , Ex116 tion by mail permitt!ed in ar&amp;BS where
handsome Golden Boy from
home earner service is avatlabte.
CtaaaJCiro.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
North Carolina. If there was
....1 Subec:rlptlon
a photograph of the two of
General Manager
tnaldew.tu-County
them toge~r taken during
13 Wee!&lt;s ..... ... .....'32.26
Charlene Hoefhch, Ext. 12
the campaign, I must have
26 Weeks ...... .......'64.20
missed it.
52 W-s ......... .. '127.11
E-mail:
Edwards' single tenn in
news@ mydaitysentinel.com
OuWldt w.tu- Coumy
the Senate was up in 2004.
13 Weeks .............'53.55
and he courageously decidWob:
26 Weeks ............ '107.10
ed
not to run again In order
52 Weeks .......... . '214.21
www.mydailysentinel .com
to devote his whole energy

The Daily Sentinel

Terry
Mattingly

contained many religious
intlue nces - from atheism
to evangelicalism. He studied art at Point Lorna
Nazarene University in San
Diego and e ventuall~ took a
TV animation job wtth "The
Atlack of the Killer

Friday, February 9, 2007

POMEROY - Frank E. Came lin II was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to two and a half years in priwn
on a charge of failure to appear after recognizance release .

AP photo

Anna Nicole Smith, leaves the U.S . Supreme Court. in this
Feb. 28, 2006, file photo m Washington. Smith, the former
Playboy playmate whose bizarre life careened from marrying
an octogenarian billionaire to the untimely death of her son ,
died Thursday after collapsing at a South Florida hotel, one
of her lawyers said.
appearances, her speech was a topless dano;er at a
was often slurred and she strip club before she entered
seemed out of it. Some crit- her photos in a search conics said she seemed test and made the cover of
drugged-out.
Playboy magazine in 1992.
"Undoubtedly it will be She became Playboy's play'
found at the end of the day male of the year in 1993.
that drugs featured in her She was also signed to a
death as they did in the contract with Guess jeans,
death of poor Daniel," said a appearing in TV commerformer attorney for Smith in Cials, billboards and magathe Bahamas, Michael Scott. zine ads .
Another former Smith
In 1994, she mairied 89attorney. Lenard Leeds, told year-old oil tycoon J.
the celebrity gossip Web Howard Marshall II , owner
site TMZ that Smith of Great Northern Oil Co. In
"always had problems with 1992, Forbes magazine estiher weight going up and mated his wealth at $550
down, and there's no ques- million.
tion she used alcohol."
In a 2005 interview with
Leeds said it was no secret ABC, Smith recalled meet·
that "she had a very trou- ing Marshall at what she
bled life" and had "so many, called a "gentleman's club"
many problems."
in Houston. "He had no will
Smith atlomey Ron Rale to live and I went over to
told The Associated Press see him," she said . "He got
that he had talked to her on a little twinkle in his eyes.
Thesday or Wednesday, and and he asked me to dance
she had flu symptoms and a for him. And I did."
fever and was still _grieving
Marshall died in 199S at
over her son. He dtsmissed a~e 90. setting off a feud
claims her death was relat- wtth Smith's former steped to dru~s as "a bunch of son, E. Pierce Marshall.
nonsense.'
over his estate. A federal
"Poor Anna Nicole," he court in California awarded
said. "She's been the under- Smith $474 million. That
dog. She's been besieged ... was later overturned. But in
and she's been trying her best May. the U.S. Supreme
and nobody should have to Court revived her case, rulendure what she's endured." ing that she deserved anothThe Texas-born Smith er day in court.

prefixes representing differ- courage the use of smoke- $217 .221.60
ent communities, and all of less tobacco.
• Approved a resolution
the numbers with all of those
According to the procla- appointing
Pomeroy
prefixes will be assigned to mation. those who use Attorney Raberta A. Hill as
from PageA1
their respective zones."
smokeless tobacco eight to an administrative hearing
In other business. com- 10 times per day receive officer for the Department
since many numbers listed missioners signed a procla- the same amount of nico- of Job and Family Services,
in the telephone directory mation from the Holzer tine as a two-pack smoker. on an as-needed basis , at a
do not provide a physical Tobacco Prevention Center Spit tobacco , the proclama- rate of $50 and $100 per
address .
and the Meigs County tion says, contains 28 hour,
depending
on
"Meigs County ha~ one of Tobacco
Prevention known carcinogens . and whether a hearing is conthe best house numbering Coalition. declaring next increases the risk of oral ducted in the case .
systems in the o;ounty," week Through with Chew and other cancers .
Present
were
Sheets said, "and that will Week. and Feb. 22 as the
Commissioners also:
Commissioners Sheets and
help simplify the process. Great American Spit Out ,
• Approved the payment Mio;k Davenpon and Clerk
But there are nine telephone supporting efforts to dis- of bills in the amount of Gloria Kloes .

911

fighters. No one was injured to protect families should
at the scene.
the chimney or stove malChimney fires are com- function and send dead Iv
·
from PageA1
mon this time of year and gases into the home.
Other
NFPA
tips
for
prethe National Fire Protection
POMEROY - An action for divorce was tiled in Meigs
Agency (NFPA) recom- venting chimney fires
County Common Pleas Court by Cathy C. Lentes. from a crack in the chimney mends chimneys be profes- include:
which then ignited a two.
Middleport, against John R. Lentes, Gallipolis.
Choosing to burn a hardby-four
board, Davis added. sionally inspected and
A divorce was granted to Elizabeth Anderson agamst
wood·
because softwoods
The damage to the two story cleaned annually. Excessive
Scott Anderson .
wood home was described build-up of creosote inside tend to have a high content
as "minimal" with firefight- chimneys is the main cause of creosote and resin. Some
recommended hardwoods
ers having to cut a hole in of chimney fires.
hickory.
oak,
The NFPA also . recom- include
the wall to get to the fire .
madrone
.
ash.
POMEROY - A civil action filed in Meigs County
Rutland responded with mends installing a carbon
Inspect chimneys for
Common Plea~ Coun by Home National Bank against three trucks and II fire- monoxide detector in homes
Charles D. Wilson, Jr .. and others. was dismissed .

Divorces

Fire

Dismissed

'

Robbery

Cold
fromPageA1

should be someone 's calling
to find out." Jones said.
Diana Coates of the Ohio
Retired and Senior Volunteer

Program coordinates volunteers for the R-U-OK program. The volunteers call
from PageA1
shut-ins daily to check on
them and if no one answers.
Coates notifies the shut-in's after she is released from
contact person. The R-U-OK medical care.
Swift said officers found
program is free and residents
Thornburg
at a Brownell
can sign up by calling
Coates at 992-2161.
Avenue address and arrest-

trs easy to subscribe to the

The Daily Sentinel

ed her there shortly afterthe
incident. Another subject at
the residence was also
arrested on an outstanding
warrant. but his nante has
not been released. He said
drug paraphernalia was
found at the home.
Swift said additional
information will be forthcoming about both arrests .

go to
www.mydailysentinel.com

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The stepson died June 20
at age 67. But the family
said the court fig ht would
continue.
Smith starred in her own
reali ty TV &gt;cries, "The
Anna Ni cole Show," in
2002-04 . Cameras foJJowed
her around as she sparred
with her lawyer, hung out
with her personal assistant
and interior decorator. and
cooed at her poodle , Sugar
Pie . She also ijppeared in
movies. performing a bit
part in "The Hudsucker
Prox y" in J994.
In a statement . Playboy
founder Hugh Hefner said:
·· J am very saddened 4!0
learn about Anna Nicole's
passing . She was a dear
friend who meant a great
deal to the Playbov family
and to me personally."
Smith's son died Sept. 10
in his mother's hospital
room in the Bahamas. just
days after she gave birth to a
daughter.
An American medical
examiner hired by the family. Cyril Wecht, said he died
accidentaJJy of a combination of methadone and two
antidepressants . ·
Last
month , a Bahamas magistrate scheduled a formal
inquiry into the death for
March 27 .
Meanwhile , the paternity
of Smith's now 5-month-old
daughter remained a matter
of di spute . The birth certificate lists Dannie lynn 's
father as attorney Howard
K.· Stern. Smith's most
recent companion. Smith's
ex-boyfriend
Larry
Birkhead was waging a
legal chaJJenge, saying he
was the father. An emergency hearing in the paternity case was scheduled for
Friday in Los Angeles.
Lawyers were eKpected to
discuss an emergency
motion filed by Birkhead's
attorney seeking DNA from
Smith's body. Rale said. The
reasons for the motion were
not immediately clear, but
an attorney for Stem, James
T. Neavitt, was frustrated.
"There's no question about
her being the mother," he
said. "So what's the purpose
of the DNA testini? Why do
they need her DNA?"
Debra Opri, the attorney
who filed Btrkhead's r.atemtty suit, said Birkhead 'is devastated. He is inconsolable,
and we are takina steps now
to protect the DNA testing of
the child . The child is our
No. I priority."

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�PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

want more power
over tuition, degree duplication

College student.is happy being single
help. I know a lot of nice
guys, but haven' t felt compelled to date any of them.
Dear Annie: I am a 21 - VVhat can I say to th ese
year-old college student. I well-meaning but nosy peofocus mostly on school , ple without seeming rude?
which I enjoy. I have close - Happy But Annoyed in
friends I can talk to about Florida
Dear Happy: VVe underanything. I'm also lucky to
stand
your frustration , and
have a large, loving family .
I enjoy watching sport-s. we don't want to join the
going to movies, shopping, nagging crowd , but guys
going to the beach , and just are not going to fall into
about a n)Jthing a girl my your lap . If you don't
, "actively search," they are
age enJoys .
So what's the problem'&gt; I harder to find, especially if
don 't have a boyfriend. I you don ' t display any inte rdon' t see it as a problem , est. And you will never find
but others do. I wouldn ' t as many single men to
mind meeting a nice guy, choose from as when
but I'm not actively search- you're in college. VVe don 't
ing. I feel I will find him want you to have regrels
eventually. However, I am down the road . OK, we' re
continually pressured by done with the lecture now.
family and friends of my If you don 't want to be
parents to tind a boyfriend . I fixed up or pestered about
am constantly asked if I dating , simply tell people ,
have a boyfriend, and when '"Thanks. I' ll let' you know
I politely say no, they ask when I'm interested ."
why not, like there's some- Beyond that. ignore them .
thing wrong with me .
Dear Annie: Please help
Once people find out I'm settle a minor dispute that
una!lached, they immedi- has arisen in our family
ately try to find someone. for over the proper protocol for
me . They mention guys they inviting relatives to inforknow, guys silling in the mal gatherings .
next booth at the restaurant ,
VVhenever an occasion
a cute guy they saw at the comes up. I call my brother
mall , etc. I appreciate the to invite him and his family ,
thought, but I don't need the and I call my father to invite

ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
BY

him and his wife. My hus- res ult . when we all ge t
band calls hi s brother and together, she is excluded . I
his aunt to in vite them.
keep this from her so her
Recentl y, my fath er k d ings aren't hu rt .
informed me .thut this is nut
VVhat's the best way to
correct. He insists the only discuss her obvious unhapproper way to extend an piness and how her negativmv1tation is for me to call Ity pushes people away
his wife directly, as well as without her taking it as an
my sister-in-law and my attack'' Nola reads your colhusband's aunt, because the umn. so please sign this ·
hostess is responsible for Anonymous
inviting the other "women
Dear Anonymous: Invite
of the household ."
Nola over and tell her you
I honestly never heard of value her friendship and
such a thing . I have never you know she probably is
been accused of having bad not aware how she .comes
manners and want to do the off to others. Ask her if
right thing . - Minding My she 's depressed , and if so,
Manners in Massachusetts suggest she seek counselDear Manners: Your ing . Otherwise , make it
father is wrong . Invitations clear that her negative attiare often extended to female tude is making her life more
relatives becau se women difficult than it needs to be.
Am1ie's Mailbox is writtend to be the ones in charge
of the social calendar. but ten by Kathy Mitchell and
there is no rul e to that Marcy Sugar, longtime edieffect. However, it's possi- tors of the Ann Landers
ble your father 's wife column. Please e-mail your
prefers that you contact her questions to anniesmail·
directly, in which case, try box@comcast.net, or write
to accommodate her.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I have a dear Box l/8190, Chicago, lL
friend who comes across as 60611. To find out more
bitter and angry . "Nola" can about Annie's Mailbox,
be judgmental and a real and read features by other
downer. The mutual friends Creators Syndicate writers
who introduced us are no and cartoonists, visit the
longer interested in spend- Creators Syndicate Web
ing time with her. As a JHige at www.creators.com.

KATHY MITCH ELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

2007

Regent~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Bv

Friday, February 9,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLU MBUS
The
state's hi gher education
board on Thursday proposed that lawmuk ~ rs _g_ive
11 more power to set tUition
rates and eliminate deg ree
programs if they' re duplicated at another school ,
The Board of Regents also
proposed letting the governor appoint the state's higher
education chancellor. then
allow the chancellor to serve
at the pleasure of the rege nts .
If enacted into law, the proposals made Jo House
Speaker Jon Husted would
represent significant changes
fur Ohioans attending fouryear colleges and earning
advam:ed degrees in the state.
Currently ,
indi yidual
trustee boards at universities set tuition rates. The
regents want the ability to
set tuition ranges, giving
them more say in how much
universities charge students
to go to ·college .
"These proposed changes
are intended to address concerns about Ohio higher education, especially in the areas
of affordability, accountability and efficiency,'' board
chairwoman
Donna
Alvarado said in a statement.
"The current higher edu-

cation structu re and authority granted to the board are
no longer adequate to
achieve des ired outcomes
fo r Ohio," she said.
Husted , a Dayton-area
Republican, first proposed
the idea of giving the governor control over the l"hancellor 's oftlce last month . He
.:ontinues to back that idea :
and is reviewing the other
proposal s. spokeswoman
Karen Tabor said Thursday.
'" He welcomes the ideas of
the Ohio Board of Regents
into the discussion on higher
ed refom1 ," Tabor said .
Stockland. a Democrat. has
also said he favors the idea of
appointing .the chancellor,
saying he cannot assen the
necessary fiscal and quality
control over Ohio's system of
public colleges and universities unless the chancellor is
within his cabinet. However,
he did not agree with the
regents' proposal .
"Gov. Strickland has made
his position very clear that
it's in the best interest of
Ohio fur him to pave the
ability to appoint the chancellor and for the chancellor
to repon directly to the governor." said spokesman
Keith Dailey. "This proposal
does not meet that standard ."
Dailey said the governor
is still reviewing the
regents' other proposals.

Public meetings
Friday, Feb. 9
MARIETTA - Regional
Advisory Council for the
Area Agency on Aging meets
at 10 a.m. in the Buckeye
Hills-HVRDD Area A~ency
on Aging office in Manetta.
Saturday, Feb. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered," regular meeting, 10 a.m., Common
Grounds Coffee Shop, VVest
Main Street.
Monday, Jan. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 45.30
Al&lt;zo (NASDAQ}-- 62.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 68.20
Bl&amp; Lots (NYSEf-- 27.42
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 34.36
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE)- 74.40
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 44.43
Champion (NASDAQf-- 9.25
Charmln&amp; Shops (NASDAQ) 13.00
City Holdlflll (NASDAQ}-- 40.73
Cottlns (NYSE)- 69.24
Dollar General (NYSE)- 16.90
DuPont (NYSE)- 51.14 .
US Bank (NYSE) - 35.93
. Gannett (NYSE) - 61.17
General Electric (NYSE)- 35.74
Harte)'-l)avldson (NYSE) - 69.36
JP Mof&amp;an (NYSE) - !50.93
Mro&amp;er (NYSE) - 25.95
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 29.05
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 49.01
Oak Httl Financial (NASDAQ) 28.12
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 25.35
BBT (NYSE)- 42.85
Peoples (NASD&gt;\Qf-- 29.13
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.31
Premier (NASDAQ)- 15.37
Roct&lt;wett (NYSE) -63.40
Roct&lt;y Boots (NASDAQ) - 15.43
Royal Dutch Shell - 67' 74
Sears Holding (NASDAQf--180.81
W~lrt (NYSE) - 48.31
Wencti's (N'r'SE).- 93.07
Worthlnaton (NYSE) - 18.52
Dtllty stock r8j)Of18 are the 4

p.m. ET closlflll quotes ol transactions lor Feb. B. 2007, ..-ovideel ~ Edward- financial
edvl10111 laaK Mills In Gaiiii&gt;Oita
at (740) 441-9441. Trent Roush
In Pomeroy It (740} 992-3875,
and Lesley Marrero In Point
P.leManl at (304) 67~174.

Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board meets
at 7 p.m. at the office.
Thesday, Feb. 13
DARVVIN
Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting , 7 p.m.
town hall.

Clubs and
organiz~tions
Friday, Feb. 9
RACINE Pomeroy
Racine Lodge 164, special
meeting, annual inspection·
in the Fellowcraft degree.
dinner 6:30 p.m., Racine

United Methodist Church.
inspection 7:30p .m. lodge.
Monday, Feb. 12
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club , 7:30
p.rn., Mulberry Community
Center.
MIDDLEPORT
Special meeting for any
business of Middleport
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m.
Members and all Masons
invited .
Refreshments.
Replacell meeting set for
Feb. 6 which was canceled .
Thesday, Feb. 13
·" POMiROY
Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-mind-

ed luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
Library. Mike Gerlach,
Middleport Development
Group, speaking and The
French Chorders Quattet,
RSVP, 992-5005.

Church events
Friday, Feb. 9
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing, 7 p.m., Faith
Full Gospel Church, with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.
Saturday, Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE
Valentine's Day spaghetti
dinner, 5 p.m., followed by
special music at 7 p.m.,

Reedsville
United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY - "A Day for
Couples" marriage enrichment seminar. 10 a.m. to 3
p.m ., Mt. Hemon United
Brethren Church, 36411
VVickham Road, Pomeroy.
Presented by Jeff ami Joan
Sherlock. Free lund! and
child care . lnfomation from
Pastor Peter Manindale at ·

985-4220 or 985-9837 .
Sunday, Feb. 11
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
David Rahamut speaks at the
10:30 a.m. worshtp service at
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Call (304)
773-5559 for information.
SYRACUSE
"Proclaim" to sing at 6:30
p.m. at Syracuse Community
Church on Second Street.

Forecast for Friday, Feb. 11
Friday ...Partly
sunny .
Highs in the lower 20s .
VVest winds 5 to 10 mph .
Friday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around II . VVest winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 20s.
VVest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Saturdtty night ...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
I0
above .
around
Nonhwest winds around 5
mph.
Sunday and Sunday
night ... Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 20s. Lows •
101015.
Monday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the lower 30s.
Monday night ... A chance
of
snow
in
the
evening .. .Then snow likely
al"ter midnight. Light snow
accumulation possible . Not
as cool with lows around
30. Chance of snow 60 percent .
Thesday ...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of snow.
Highs in the lower 30s.
Thesday night ... Mostly
'-l;.ioudy. Colder with lows 15
to 20 .
Wednesday
through
Thursday ...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 20s. Lows
around 10 above.

A!P~

High t Low temps

Toledo•
18' 15'

Mansfield •
17' 15"

:I'Y--.,

Frlday 'a pam11
Boys Ba1k911tball
Federal Hocking at Southern, 8 p m
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m
Me1gs at Belpre. 6:30 p.m
Eastern at Water1ord, 6:30 p.m
BuHaMJ at South Gallia. 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley. 6 p.m
OVCS at Grace. 7.30 p .m.

Girla Batketblill
OVCS at Grace. 6: 15 p .m.
Federal Hocking at Southern. 6:30

p.m.
Sllurday'a g~m11
Boy• Batketball
Gallia Academv vs. River VaKey (at ·
Rio), 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6:30 p.m

Gina Buulball
Gal!ia Acactemy \IS . Ath ensiZ'viUe (at
Jackson). 2 p.m.
Poi nt Pleasant at River Valley , 3

pm
Miller at Eastern. 3 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 3 p.m

Wfeltllng
Meigs, TVC League Championship
Mgnday'a QJmtl

Glr.. Tournament Buketbell
Gallia Academy vs. Sheridan (at
Akutander ). 7 p.m.
Glrta B••k•tball
Fairl and at River Valley. 6 p.m.

F_rench anti-doping
agency postpones
decision on Landis

F I o y d
Landis
because of
a positive
dopmg test
he
after
agreed not
to ra~e in
the country
this year.
T h e
AFLD had

Landis
,

e e n

b

IH

Lltndls, B1

Ballroom Dancing wfDr_ Li
Begins Feb. lfi .
1:20.7:20
SptJnsored by Holzer Cancer Center

Trimble topples Lady Tornadoes
BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Southern (612) hopes the third time is
indeed a charm.
The
Trimble
Lad y
Tomcats (li- 12) found a way
to escape Racine with a 5347 vicwry Thursday night
during girl s· Tri -Valley
Conference
basketball
action. Trimble has taken
both league matches thi s
year, but the two teams meet
111 the Sectional tournament
at Athens next week for a
chance to meet Symme s
Valley in the Sectional
finals.
Trimble was led by Tabby
Jenkins with 15 points,
while Kourtn ey Kinnison
notched 14, Katlyn VVahon
added eight. Jenny Sikorski
six , Chelsey Kinnison five ,
and Allie Jago five .

LEFT

South e rn e l ~ve n point fi rs t qu art er
was kd hy hllll . Sarah Eddy hit a
lr:.!~h m a n jumper and a driver for four
poinh in the charge, whil e
\l,t lld \ ) UI
K a s c y Ri ffl e netted a short jumper
Tu rky with tlJ give Southern a 17- lli
20 "poi nts edge.
Katlvn Walton came from
and
10
r e bound s nowhere in the second
for a dou- round . VValton, swrele" in
ble-doubl e , the first mee tin g, notched
Hill
whil e &gt;ix second period points to
VVhitn e y join Sikorski 's tri-fe&lt;:ta in
VVolfe- Riffle added nine, liftin g Trimble to a 29-27
Sarah Eddy seven, Emma halftime advantage.
The ditfcrcnce in the game
Hunter three, Cheyenne
Dunn three, Rachael Pickens came in the third round
three. and Mallory Hill two. when Trimble shut the door
Southern \
Turley.
The · ~arne marked &gt;e nior on
ni ght ~ for Southern 's lone Southern struggled badly on
senior contributor Mallory the offensive end with just
two points, and came up
Hill
Southern took an early short 13-2 as Trimble led 42lead in the first round around 29.
their offensive anchor
Turley, who went on an Please see Southem, 81

Southern
freshman
Cheyenne
Dunn.
left,
releases a
shot anemf!l
in front of
Tr i m bl e
defender
Kou r tney
Ki nn1son dur
ing the second half of
Thur s d ay's
TVC Hocking
matchup 111
Rac1 ne.
Bryan Walters/
photo

Arroyo gets $25
million, 2-year
extension
through 2010

Federal Hocking holds
otT Lady Eagles, 31 ;.27
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@ MYOAILYTRIBU NE .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Emily Dunfee meshed a pair
of free throws wi.th two seconds remaining to seal
Federal Hocking's J 1-27
girls high school basketball
victory over the Eastern
Lady Eagles on Thursday.
Eastern had a chance to .tie
or take the lead in the tina!
seconds, trailing 29-27. but
Katie Hayman's jumper was
off the mark. The Lady
Eagles were forced to foul
after the Lady Lancers collected the nuss .
Dunfee hit nothing but net
on her first two free throws
of the night, sec uri n~; her
club a second-place fintsh in
the Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking Div1sion. Federal
Hocking (9-10) improved to
6-3 in the conference , which
clinches at least a tie for second place.
Eastern ( 11 -8) , meanwhile. lost for the third time
in its last four games and fell

back to third place with one
game left.
VVaterford, still unbeaten
in Hocking play, had long
clinched the outright title.
Federal Hocking's Iris
Butcher scored 13 of her
points in the first half, and
finished as .the game's leading scorer with 15 points.
Dunfee went for si~ while
Ryan Fieler and Tara Russell
had four each. · Summer
Hatfield had a bucket as
well.
No Lady Eagle hit double
figures . Erin VVeber led the
way with eight points and
Jenna Hupp hit a pair of
three and finished with
seven. Hayman. Morgan
Werry and Jillian Brannon
all went for four.
It was also senior night at
Eastern High School where
senwrs
VVeber,
Hupp,
Brannon and Georgana
Kublentz were honored in a
pre-game ceremony. Coach
Dave VVeber. father of Erin.

Please see Eastem, 81

'' t's

BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

C IN C I N ~ATI

- In th eir
biggest spending splurge
since they brought Ken
Grifkv Jr. hom e. the
·

Cin c innati

Reds ha ve
locked up
their
top
two starting

Brad Sherman/photo

Eastern senior Enn Weber goed up for a lay-up during the
first half of Thursday's TVC Hocking contest aga1nst Fede ral
Hocking in Tuppers Plains.

earn

pit.:hc rs for
the
next
four ycms.
It' s a sign
of how priorities have
changed .
Ri g ht hander Bronson Arroyo got
a
two-year
extension
Thursday that will pay him
an additional $25 million
and keep him under contrac·t
throu gh at least 20 I0.
There's a team option fnr
the t()llfl\\ ing sca sot~.

Please see Anoyo. 86

ort"

Bova Standings

Dtlyton • :/'Y--..
18' I 0"

TVC

Federal 'Hocking .

0

Pwtamouth•
22" 12'

0

.\LL

7·0
.. 5·2

Miller . ... . ... .
Wa1ertoro
Southern

Cincinnati
o 22" I 0'

Introducing the Family Medicine Office Staff of
Nancy B. Lares, MD &amp; Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Tri-Valley Conterwnce
Hocking

t:____:)

14-2
11 -4
.9-6
' .5·12

4-3
.3·4

Eas1ern

.1-6

'. 1·1 5

Trimble .

. 1-6

. 2· 13

Ohio
Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Nei-York
Wellston .
Meigs .

Weather Underground • AP

ALL
TVC
16-()
B·O
.. .. 5·2 ... ;o-s
.... 4-3
.9-6
.... 3-4
. ... .2-5 . .. 3·13

Putting The Patient First

. . .1-a

....o-8

... 3·13

Shown at left b the staff for the medical office
of N
Jl, La~s, MD, b~ck row'" at left, and
DBln
_ nm~rd, MD. b.ck row, at
!lho.._,n ate ftont row, left to rigf:lt,
11~ medical assistl\nt,,Holly B.;-,ur-~eld,
&gt;ao.tntin.nist, Julie Spencel'. medical assista~~
-~ncfDarlen. e l;lensle)', medical assistant. · ·

Gkls Standings
Tri-VaUey Conference
Hocking

TVC
Wat9rford
Eastem

DON~T

MISS.

OOT ON OUJ~ ~XTJ~A
MONEY SAV1N&amp;

ALl ,

... .8-0 .. . i6·2

... . . .5-4
Federal Hocking ....... 6-3
.4-5
Trimble .
.2-7
Miller
Soothern
1-7

11-B
.9-10
8· 11
. 5-14

' .6-12

Ohio

'

Inside
sunday's

Classic Movie- Romaru:e
Sunday. Feb. 11 • 2 pm

l

1ean\S from GaMIB and Me195 ooonti8S

TVC
Alexander
VInton County

Nels-York ..
Meigs .
Wellston .
Belpre

ALL

. ' .9-0 .. 17-2
... 6-2
i4·3
5-3 .. 1 5·3
3-6 .. 9- i O
1·7
.. 6-12
... 1-7 . .1·1 7

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scorel\ne (5 p. m.-1 a.m.)
Fu-

Tickets On Sale Now!

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February 10 8 pm

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LocAL ScHEDULE

t:____:)

ICENHOWER

The Ariel-Dater Hall

Friday, Ftbruary 9; 2007

Pl...•

Younglltown •
19' 19'

(l)UPONS

DWIGHT

l'ltllllps II8JlliJd Cowboys coach, Page llli

expected to rule, but agreed
to an appeal by Landis to
postpone their decision until
after the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency rules in May, AFLD
president Pierre Bordry
said. The AR..D will resume
its discussion of the case in
late June.
The decision came after
Landis pledged not to race
in France in 2007, Bordry
said in a statement he read
to reponers in Paris.
"He understood pert"ectly
that if he didn't act today,
we would stan the procedure immediately," Bordry

Local Weather Today's Forecast cttyJR~Ion

Member SIPC.

No. 4 OSU hold• off Gophers, Page 82

PARIS (AP) The
French anti-doping agency
postponed
a
decision
Thursday on whether to suspend Tour de France winner

Community Calendar

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Sports Staff

BIIICI Sherman, Sports Editor
(740144&amp;-2342. ext 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribu ne.com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 44&amp;-~ . ext. 23
Ierum 0 mydailyregister..;;om

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342 ,

• Adult &amp; pediatric medicine
• Women's health care
• Minor office
procedures
'---

...

nt Valley Medical Office Cen~~:·'
.e91'1ler qf 25th Street &amp; Jefferson Avenue ~¢~
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
'~-~-~;

• Sports physicals
• Geriatrics
•

S~in

procedures

1).

Accepting new patients - .Walk-ins welcome

ext_33

bwalters @mydailytrlbune.com

------

-----

�PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

want more power
over tuition, degree duplication

College student.is happy being single
help. I know a lot of nice
guys, but haven' t felt compelled to date any of them.
Dear Annie: I am a 21 - VVhat can I say to th ese
year-old college student. I well-meaning but nosy peofocus mostly on school , ple without seeming rude?
which I enjoy. I have close - Happy But Annoyed in
friends I can talk to about Florida
Dear Happy: VVe underanything. I'm also lucky to
stand
your frustration , and
have a large, loving family .
I enjoy watching sport-s. we don't want to join the
going to movies, shopping, nagging crowd , but guys
going to the beach , and just are not going to fall into
about a n)Jthing a girl my your lap . If you don't
, "actively search," they are
age enJoys .
So what's the problem'&gt; I harder to find, especially if
don 't have a boyfriend. I you don ' t display any inte rdon' t see it as a problem , est. And you will never find
but others do. I wouldn ' t as many single men to
mind meeting a nice guy, choose from as when
but I'm not actively search- you're in college. VVe don 't
ing. I feel I will find him want you to have regrels
eventually. However, I am down the road . OK, we' re
continually pressured by done with the lecture now.
family and friends of my If you don 't want to be
parents to tind a boyfriend . I fixed up or pestered about
am constantly asked if I dating , simply tell people ,
have a boyfriend, and when '"Thanks. I' ll let' you know
I politely say no, they ask when I'm interested ."
why not, like there's some- Beyond that. ignore them .
thing wrong with me .
Dear Annie: Please help
Once people find out I'm settle a minor dispute that
una!lached, they immedi- has arisen in our family
ately try to find someone. for over the proper protocol for
me . They mention guys they inviting relatives to inforknow, guys silling in the mal gatherings .
next booth at the restaurant ,
VVhenever an occasion
a cute guy they saw at the comes up. I call my brother
mall , etc. I appreciate the to invite him and his family ,
thought, but I don't need the and I call my father to invite

ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
BY

him and his wife. My hus- res ult . when we all ge t
band calls hi s brother and together, she is excluded . I
his aunt to in vite them.
keep this from her so her
Recentl y, my fath er k d ings aren't hu rt .
informed me .thut this is nut
VVhat's the best way to
correct. He insists the only discuss her obvious unhapproper way to extend an piness and how her negativmv1tation is for me to call Ity pushes people away
his wife directly, as well as without her taking it as an
my sister-in-law and my attack'' Nola reads your colhusband's aunt, because the umn. so please sign this ·
hostess is responsible for Anonymous
inviting the other "women
Dear Anonymous: Invite
of the household ."
Nola over and tell her you
I honestly never heard of value her friendship and
such a thing . I have never you know she probably is
been accused of having bad not aware how she .comes
manners and want to do the off to others. Ask her if
right thing . - Minding My she 's depressed , and if so,
Manners in Massachusetts suggest she seek counselDear Manners: Your ing . Otherwise , make it
father is wrong . Invitations clear that her negative attiare often extended to female tude is making her life more
relatives becau se women difficult than it needs to be.
Am1ie's Mailbox is writtend to be the ones in charge
of the social calendar. but ten by Kathy Mitchell and
there is no rul e to that Marcy Sugar, longtime edieffect. However, it's possi- tors of the Ann Landers
ble your father 's wife column. Please e-mail your
prefers that you contact her questions to anniesmail·
directly, in which case, try box@comcast.net, or write
to accommodate her.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I have a dear Box l/8190, Chicago, lL
friend who comes across as 60611. To find out more
bitter and angry . "Nola" can about Annie's Mailbox,
be judgmental and a real and read features by other
downer. The mutual friends Creators Syndicate writers
who introduced us are no and cartoonists, visit the
longer interested in spend- Creators Syndicate Web
ing time with her. As a JHige at www.creators.com.

KATHY MITCH ELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

2007

Regent~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Bv

Friday, February 9,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLU MBUS
The
state's hi gher education
board on Thursday proposed that lawmuk ~ rs _g_ive
11 more power to set tUition
rates and eliminate deg ree
programs if they' re duplicated at another school ,
The Board of Regents also
proposed letting the governor appoint the state's higher
education chancellor. then
allow the chancellor to serve
at the pleasure of the rege nts .
If enacted into law, the proposals made Jo House
Speaker Jon Husted would
represent significant changes
fur Ohioans attending fouryear colleges and earning
advam:ed degrees in the state.
Currently ,
indi yidual
trustee boards at universities set tuition rates. The
regents want the ability to
set tuition ranges, giving
them more say in how much
universities charge students
to go to ·college .
"These proposed changes
are intended to address concerns about Ohio higher education, especially in the areas
of affordability, accountability and efficiency,'' board
chairwoman
Donna
Alvarado said in a statement.
"The current higher edu-

cation structu re and authority granted to the board are
no longer adequate to
achieve des ired outcomes
fo r Ohio," she said.
Husted , a Dayton-area
Republican, first proposed
the idea of giving the governor control over the l"hancellor 's oftlce last month . He
.:ontinues to back that idea :
and is reviewing the other
proposal s. spokeswoman
Karen Tabor said Thursday.
'" He welcomes the ideas of
the Ohio Board of Regents
into the discussion on higher
ed refom1 ," Tabor said .
Stockland. a Democrat. has
also said he favors the idea of
appointing .the chancellor,
saying he cannot assen the
necessary fiscal and quality
control over Ohio's system of
public colleges and universities unless the chancellor is
within his cabinet. However,
he did not agree with the
regents' proposal .
"Gov. Strickland has made
his position very clear that
it's in the best interest of
Ohio fur him to pave the
ability to appoint the chancellor and for the chancellor
to repon directly to the governor." said spokesman
Keith Dailey. "This proposal
does not meet that standard ."
Dailey said the governor
is still reviewing the
regents' other proposals.

Public meetings
Friday, Feb. 9
MARIETTA - Regional
Advisory Council for the
Area Agency on Aging meets
at 10 a.m. in the Buckeye
Hills-HVRDD Area A~ency
on Aging office in Manetta.
Saturday, Feb. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered," regular meeting, 10 a.m., Common
Grounds Coffee Shop, VVest
Main Street.
Monday, Jan. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 45.30
Al&lt;zo (NASDAQ}-- 62.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 68.20
Bl&amp; Lots (NYSEf-- 27.42
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 34.36
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE)- 74.40
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 44.43
Champion (NASDAQf-- 9.25
Charmln&amp; Shops (NASDAQ) 13.00
City Holdlflll (NASDAQ}-- 40.73
Cottlns (NYSE)- 69.24
Dollar General (NYSE)- 16.90
DuPont (NYSE)- 51.14 .
US Bank (NYSE) - 35.93
. Gannett (NYSE) - 61.17
General Electric (NYSE)- 35.74
Harte)'-l)avldson (NYSE) - 69.36
JP Mof&amp;an (NYSE) - !50.93
Mro&amp;er (NYSE) - 25.95
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 29.05
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 49.01
Oak Httl Financial (NASDAQ) 28.12
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 25.35
BBT (NYSE)- 42.85
Peoples (NASD&gt;\Qf-- 29.13
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.31
Premier (NASDAQ)- 15.37
Roct&lt;wett (NYSE) -63.40
Roct&lt;y Boots (NASDAQ) - 15.43
Royal Dutch Shell - 67' 74
Sears Holding (NASDAQf--180.81
W~lrt (NYSE) - 48.31
Wencti's (N'r'SE).- 93.07
Worthlnaton (NYSE) - 18.52
Dtllty stock r8j)Of18 are the 4

p.m. ET closlflll quotes ol transactions lor Feb. B. 2007, ..-ovideel ~ Edward- financial
edvl10111 laaK Mills In Gaiiii&gt;Oita
at (740) 441-9441. Trent Roush
In Pomeroy It (740} 992-3875,
and Lesley Marrero In Point
P.leManl at (304) 67~174.

Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board meets
at 7 p.m. at the office.
Thesday, Feb. 13
DARVVIN
Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting , 7 p.m.
town hall.

Clubs and
organiz~tions
Friday, Feb. 9
RACINE Pomeroy
Racine Lodge 164, special
meeting, annual inspection·
in the Fellowcraft degree.
dinner 6:30 p.m., Racine

United Methodist Church.
inspection 7:30p .m. lodge.
Monday, Feb. 12
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club , 7:30
p.rn., Mulberry Community
Center.
MIDDLEPORT
Special meeting for any
business of Middleport
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m.
Members and all Masons
invited .
Refreshments.
Replacell meeting set for
Feb. 6 which was canceled .
Thesday, Feb. 13
·" POMiROY
Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-mind-

ed luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
Library. Mike Gerlach,
Middleport Development
Group, speaking and The
French Chorders Quattet,
RSVP, 992-5005.

Church events
Friday, Feb. 9
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing, 7 p.m., Faith
Full Gospel Church, with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.
Saturday, Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE
Valentine's Day spaghetti
dinner, 5 p.m., followed by
special music at 7 p.m.,

Reedsville
United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY - "A Day for
Couples" marriage enrichment seminar. 10 a.m. to 3
p.m ., Mt. Hemon United
Brethren Church, 36411
VVickham Road, Pomeroy.
Presented by Jeff ami Joan
Sherlock. Free lund! and
child care . lnfomation from
Pastor Peter Manindale at ·

985-4220 or 985-9837 .
Sunday, Feb. 11
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
David Rahamut speaks at the
10:30 a.m. worshtp service at
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Call (304)
773-5559 for information.
SYRACUSE
"Proclaim" to sing at 6:30
p.m. at Syracuse Community
Church on Second Street.

Forecast for Friday, Feb. 11
Friday ...Partly
sunny .
Highs in the lower 20s .
VVest winds 5 to 10 mph .
Friday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around II . VVest winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 20s.
VVest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Saturdtty night ...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
I0
above .
around
Nonhwest winds around 5
mph.
Sunday and Sunday
night ... Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 20s. Lows •
101015.
Monday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the lower 30s.
Monday night ... A chance
of
snow
in
the
evening .. .Then snow likely
al"ter midnight. Light snow
accumulation possible . Not
as cool with lows around
30. Chance of snow 60 percent .
Thesday ...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of snow.
Highs in the lower 30s.
Thesday night ... Mostly
'-l;.ioudy. Colder with lows 15
to 20 .
Wednesday
through
Thursday ...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 20s. Lows
around 10 above.

A!P~

High t Low temps

Toledo•
18' 15'

Mansfield •
17' 15"

:I'Y--.,

Frlday 'a pam11
Boys Ba1k911tball
Federal Hocking at Southern, 8 p m
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m
Me1gs at Belpre. 6:30 p.m
Eastern at Water1ord, 6:30 p.m
BuHaMJ at South Gallia. 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley. 6 p.m
OVCS at Grace. 7.30 p .m.

Girla Batketblill
OVCS at Grace. 6: 15 p .m.
Federal Hocking at Southern. 6:30

p.m.
Sllurday'a g~m11
Boy• Batketball
Gallia Academv vs. River VaKey (at ·
Rio), 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6:30 p.m

Gina Buulball
Gal!ia Acactemy \IS . Ath ensiZ'viUe (at
Jackson). 2 p.m.
Poi nt Pleasant at River Valley , 3

pm
Miller at Eastern. 3 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 3 p.m

Wfeltllng
Meigs, TVC League Championship
Mgnday'a QJmtl

Glr.. Tournament Buketbell
Gallia Academy vs. Sheridan (at
Akutander ). 7 p.m.
Glrta B••k•tball
Fairl and at River Valley. 6 p.m.

F_rench anti-doping
agency postpones
decision on Landis

F I o y d
Landis
because of
a positive
dopmg test
he
after
agreed not
to ra~e in
the country
this year.
T h e
AFLD had

Landis
,

e e n

b

IH

Lltndls, B1

Ballroom Dancing wfDr_ Li
Begins Feb. lfi .
1:20.7:20
SptJnsored by Holzer Cancer Center

Trimble topples Lady Tornadoes
BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Southern (612) hopes the third time is
indeed a charm.
The
Trimble
Lad y
Tomcats (li- 12) found a way
to escape Racine with a 5347 vicwry Thursday night
during girl s· Tri -Valley
Conference
basketball
action. Trimble has taken
both league matches thi s
year, but the two teams meet
111 the Sectional tournament
at Athens next week for a
chance to meet Symme s
Valley in the Sectional
finals.
Trimble was led by Tabby
Jenkins with 15 points,
while Kourtn ey Kinnison
notched 14, Katlyn VVahon
added eight. Jenny Sikorski
six , Chelsey Kinnison five ,
and Allie Jago five .

LEFT

South e rn e l ~ve n point fi rs t qu art er
was kd hy hllll . Sarah Eddy hit a
lr:.!~h m a n jumper and a driver for four
poinh in the charge, whil e
\l,t lld \ ) UI
K a s c y Ri ffl e netted a short jumper
Tu rky with tlJ give Southern a 17- lli
20 "poi nts edge.
Katlvn Walton came from
and
10
r e bound s nowhere in the second
for a dou- round . VValton, swrele" in
ble-doubl e , the first mee tin g, notched
Hill
whil e &gt;ix second period points to
VVhitn e y join Sikorski 's tri-fe&lt;:ta in
VVolfe- Riffle added nine, liftin g Trimble to a 29-27
Sarah Eddy seven, Emma halftime advantage.
The ditfcrcnce in the game
Hunter three, Cheyenne
Dunn three, Rachael Pickens came in the third round
three. and Mallory Hill two. when Trimble shut the door
Southern \
Turley.
The · ~arne marked &gt;e nior on
ni ght ~ for Southern 's lone Southern struggled badly on
senior contributor Mallory the offensive end with just
two points, and came up
Hill
Southern took an early short 13-2 as Trimble led 42lead in the first round around 29.
their offensive anchor
Turley, who went on an Please see Southem, 81

Southern
freshman
Cheyenne
Dunn.
left,
releases a
shot anemf!l
in front of
Tr i m bl e
defender
Kou r tney
Ki nn1son dur
ing the second half of
Thur s d ay's
TVC Hocking
matchup 111
Rac1 ne.
Bryan Walters/
photo

Arroyo gets $25
million, 2-year
extension
through 2010

Federal Hocking holds
otT Lady Eagles, 31 ;.27
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@ MYOAILYTRIBU NE .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Emily Dunfee meshed a pair
of free throws wi.th two seconds remaining to seal
Federal Hocking's J 1-27
girls high school basketball
victory over the Eastern
Lady Eagles on Thursday.
Eastern had a chance to .tie
or take the lead in the tina!
seconds, trailing 29-27. but
Katie Hayman's jumper was
off the mark. The Lady
Eagles were forced to foul
after the Lady Lancers collected the nuss .
Dunfee hit nothing but net
on her first two free throws
of the night, sec uri n~; her
club a second-place fintsh in
the Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking Div1sion. Federal
Hocking (9-10) improved to
6-3 in the conference , which
clinches at least a tie for second place.
Eastern ( 11 -8) , meanwhile. lost for the third time
in its last four games and fell

back to third place with one
game left.
VVaterford, still unbeaten
in Hocking play, had long
clinched the outright title.
Federal Hocking's Iris
Butcher scored 13 of her
points in the first half, and
finished as .the game's leading scorer with 15 points.
Dunfee went for si~ while
Ryan Fieler and Tara Russell
had four each. · Summer
Hatfield had a bucket as
well.
No Lady Eagle hit double
figures . Erin VVeber led the
way with eight points and
Jenna Hupp hit a pair of
three and finished with
seven. Hayman. Morgan
Werry and Jillian Brannon
all went for four.
It was also senior night at
Eastern High School where
senwrs
VVeber,
Hupp,
Brannon and Georgana
Kublentz were honored in a
pre-game ceremony. Coach
Dave VVeber. father of Erin.

Please see Eastem, 81

'' t's

BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

C IN C I N ~ATI

- In th eir
biggest spending splurge
since they brought Ken
Grifkv Jr. hom e. the
·

Cin c innati

Reds ha ve
locked up
their
top
two starting

Brad Sherman/photo

Eastern senior Enn Weber goed up for a lay-up during the
first half of Thursday's TVC Hocking contest aga1nst Fede ral
Hocking in Tuppers Plains.

earn

pit.:hc rs for
the
next
four ycms.
It' s a sign
of how priorities have
changed .
Ri g ht hander Bronson Arroyo got
a
two-year
extension
Thursday that will pay him
an additional $25 million
and keep him under contrac·t
throu gh at least 20 I0.
There's a team option fnr
the t()llfl\\ ing sca sot~.

Please see Anoyo. 86

ort"

Bova Standings

Dtlyton • :/'Y--..
18' I 0"

TVC

Federal 'Hocking .

0

Pwtamouth•
22" 12'

0

.\LL

7·0
.. 5·2

Miller . ... . ... .
Wa1ertoro
Southern

Cincinnati
o 22" I 0'

Introducing the Family Medicine Office Staff of
Nancy B. Lares, MD &amp; Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Tri-Valley Conterwnce
Hocking

t:____:)

14-2
11 -4
.9-6
' .5·12

4-3
.3·4

Eas1ern

.1-6

'. 1·1 5

Trimble .

. 1-6

. 2· 13

Ohio
Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Nei-York
Wellston .
Meigs .

Weather Underground • AP

ALL
TVC
16-()
B·O
.. .. 5·2 ... ;o-s
.... 4-3
.9-6
.... 3-4
. ... .2-5 . .. 3·13

Putting The Patient First

. . .1-a

....o-8

... 3·13

Shown at left b the staff for the medical office
of N
Jl, La~s, MD, b~ck row'" at left, and
DBln
_ nm~rd, MD. b.ck row, at
!lho.._,n ate ftont row, left to rigf:lt,
11~ medical assistl\nt,,Holly B.;-,ur-~eld,
&gt;ao.tntin.nist, Julie Spencel'. medical assista~~
-~ncfDarlen. e l;lensle)', medical assistant. · ·

Gkls Standings
Tri-VaUey Conference
Hocking

TVC
Wat9rford
Eastem

DON~T

MISS.

OOT ON OUJ~ ~XTJ~A
MONEY SAV1N&amp;

ALl ,

... .8-0 .. . i6·2

... . . .5-4
Federal Hocking ....... 6-3
.4-5
Trimble .
.2-7
Miller
Soothern
1-7

11-B
.9-10
8· 11
. 5-14

' .6-12

Ohio

'

Inside
sunday's

Classic Movie- Romaru:e
Sunday. Feb. 11 • 2 pm

l

1ean\S from GaMIB and Me195 ooonti8S

TVC
Alexander
VInton County

Nels-York ..
Meigs .
Wellston .
Belpre

ALL

. ' .9-0 .. 17-2
... 6-2
i4·3
5-3 .. 1 5·3
3-6 .. 9- i O
1·7
.. 6-12
... 1-7 . .1·1 7

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scorel\ne (5 p. m.-1 a.m.)
Fu-

Tickets On Sale Now!

740--446--ARTS ' (2787)

POMEROY - A &amp;CheWie ol upoormng collegil
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February 10 8 pm

428 Sec. A.ve. Gallipolis. OH

LocAL ScHEDULE

t:____:)

ICENHOWER

The Ariel-Dater Hall

Friday, Ftbruary 9; 2007

Pl...•

Younglltown •
19' 19'

(l)UPONS

DWIGHT

l'ltllllps II8JlliJd Cowboys coach, Page llli

expected to rule, but agreed
to an appeal by Landis to
postpone their decision until
after the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency rules in May, AFLD
president Pierre Bordry
said. The AR..D will resume
its discussion of the case in
late June.
The decision came after
Landis pledged not to race
in France in 2007, Bordry
said in a statement he read
to reponers in Paris.
"He understood pert"ectly
that if he didn't act today,
we would stan the procedure immediately," Bordry

Local Weather Today's Forecast cttyJR~Ion

Member SIPC.

No. 4 OSU hold• off Gophers, Page 82

PARIS (AP) The
French anti-doping agency
postponed
a
decision
Thursday on whether to suspend Tour de France winner

Community Calendar

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

0

~unbap ~ime~ -~entinel

1-74()..446-3008

E-mail- sportsOmydaJiysenti netcom
Sports Staff

BIIICI Sherman, Sports Editor
(740144&amp;-2342. ext 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribu ne.com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 44&amp;-~ . ext. 23
Ierum 0 mydailyregister..;;om

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342 ,

• Adult &amp; pediatric medicine
• Women's health care
• Minor office
procedures
'---

...

nt Valley Medical Office Cen~~:·'
.e91'1ler qf 25th Street &amp; Jefferson Avenue ~¢~
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
'~-~-~;

• Sports physicals
• Geriatrics
•

S~in

procedures

1).

Accepting new patients - .Walk-ins welcome

ext_33

bwalters @mydailytrlbune.com

------

-----

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
Bon.lry
said
Landis
deserves to be heard bv the
US AD A as he req uests.
However, Bordry echoed
from PageBl
Tour de France president
Christi an Prudhomme's sen·said. "We wi ll let Landis timent that the Ameri can
&lt;lefend himself as he wishes agency was dmgging out its
before the USADA ."
process.
Landis had hip-replaceLandis' urine sample after
ment surgery 4 1/2 months a stage win in last year 's
ago. so it was unlikely thm he Tour de France was found to
would have competed in this contain elevated testosyear 's Tour.
terone to epitestosterone
: The American, who has levels. He risks being the
.denied wrongdoin~, did not first rider in the I04-year
appear at Thursday s meeting history of the race to be
of the AFLD's nine-member stripped of his title.
panel. but sent a lawyer who Prudhomme has said the
read his request for a delay.
Tour no longer considers
In the letter, a copy of him the winner.
which was obtained by The
Under French law, the
Associated Press. Landis AFLD has the right to sussaid the parallel cases in pend Landis for up to two
France and the United States years from racing on French
'were complicating matters, soil.
and asked the French agency
Landis argues that the
to hold off until after the U.S . Chatenay-Malabry laboratoagency rules. The USADA ry which carried out the tests
will hold its hearings May is unreliable, a view shared ·
14.
by seve n-time Tour champi"In thi.;! case. and in order on Lance Armstrong.
to avoid any misunderstandLandis insisted again on
ing. I agree to voluntari ly not his innocence al a fundraisparticipate in any profession- ing rally in New York on
al or amateur cycling event Wednesday night. He vowed
in France until December 31, to fight the "lack of leader2007, and in particular the ship at the top of cycling and
T&lt;;mr de France 2007," at the top of the anti-doping
agencies."
Landis said in the leuer.

Landis

Southern
from Page,Bl

Friday, February 9.

www .mydailysentinel.com

23 fouls.
Southern plays Federal
Hocking prior to the hoys'
game tonight (Friday) as
pan of a triple header, start ing with the boys reserves at
5 p.m. Southern makes up a
game with Waterford at 3
p.m. Saturday.
Both games are in Racine.

With a 9-16 stint at the
foul line and seven points
from
Wolfe-Riflle,
Southern nearly pulled off
the win in a gallant comeback. The bid fell short and
TRIMBLE 53, SOUTHERN 47
Jenkins finished strong for
Trimble 16 13 13 11 - 53
Southern 17 10 2
18 ·- 47
the Tomcats to push the
Athens CounVans to a 53TRIMBLE (8-11, 4·5 TVC Hocking)
47 victory.
Jenny Sikorski 2 0·0 6. Chelsey
Southern hit 16-36 from Kinn1son 1 3-5 5, Katlyn Walton 4 0· 1 B.
Campbell o 0·0 0. Allie Jago 2 1·2
the field and 13-24 at the early
5. Hannah Harper 0 0-0 0, Chloe
line. Southern had 26 Campbell 0 0-0 0, KolJrtney Kinnison 6
rebounds (Turley 10), 19 2·4 14, Tabby Jenk1ns 7 1·2 15_ Total s
7-14 53. Three Poin l Goals: Jenny
turnovers. II steals (Eddy 22
Sikorski two.
seven), seven assists (Eddy. SOUTHERN (G-12, 1·7TVC Hooking)
Hill 0 2 -2 2, Whitney WoHe-RiHie
Hill, Riffle two each). and 4Mallory
0.0 9, Sarah Eddy 3 1-2 7, Rachael
18 fouls.
PiCkens 1 1·6 3, Kasey Turley 6 7-9 20,
Trimble hit 22-35 overall Emma Hunter 1 1·3 3, Cheyenne Dunn
and 7- 14 at the line. Trimble 11·2 3. L1ndsay Teatord o o-oo. Totals
16 13-24 47. Three Point Goals:
had 19 rebounds. 15 Whitney Wolfe-Riffl e one, Kasey Turley
turnovers, ten assists, and one

·www.mydallysentlnel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\ tst

No. 4 OSU survives scare from Lady Gophers
BY DAVE CAMPBEll
ASSOC IATED PR ESS

MINNEAPOLIS - Ohio State's 28game Big Ten winning streak endured a
stitl' test at Minnesota. The last five
games of the conference season might
be more difficult if Bmndie Hoskins is
~

mi ssing.

Marsc illa Packer had 18 points,
including the go-ahead 3-pointer, to lead
the fourth-ranked Buckeyes past the
Gophers 70-67 Thursday night.
But Huskins. one of two senior
starters and the team's second-leading
scorer, suffered a foot injury late in the
first half and didn't retum.
Hoskins had surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles tendon last March, and
coach Jim Foster said she injured the
same ankle.
" I just tried to rally everybody and
keep everybody's high hopes," said
Jessica Davenport. who had her second
career triple-double - the onl y two in
the program's history +-- with 17 points,
I 0 rebounds and II blocks.
Davenport became the Big Ten
women's career leader in blocks with
372, which broke the mark of 367 set by
Michigan's Trish Andrew from 1989-93.
More critically, Davenport - whom
Foster described as internal, analytical
and thoughtful - tumed her voice up a
notch to fill the void created by the more
outgoing Hoskins.
. "Jess had to be a little out there with
some of her verbiage, to lead by letting
her teammates know that she was out
there," Foster said.
Ohio State (22-1, 11 -0), which has

AP photo

Ohio State forward Tamarah Riley, right.
knocks down Minnesota guard Breanna
Salley. left. as she drives into her during
the second half of a basketball game in
Minneapolis on Thursday. Ohio State
beat Minnesota, 70-67.
won 14 in a row overall . survived
despite 25 turnovers and a I0-point
defic it midway through the second half.

Eastern

CLASSIFIED

Ashley Ellis-Milan had 17 points to
lead Minnesota ( 13-12, 5-7), which lost
its fourth straight game and gave away a
halftime lead over the Buckeyes for the
second time this year.
Brittany M.:Coy's fast-break layup
near the 13-minute mark made it 49-39
Gophers. but Ohio State relied on experience Minnesota doesn't have to complete the comeback.
Stephanie Blanton's three-point play
brought the Buckeyes to a 61-alltie, and
Packer - who had a career-high 32
points and eight 3-pointers in a victory at
Minnesota last season - swished one
from behind the arc to put Ohio State
back in .front for good. That made it 6463 with less than 3 1/2 minutes left.
Star A lien's jump shot with 17 seconds remaining put the Buckeyes up 706 7, and on the linal possession Emily
Fox was ofl the mark on a difficult 3point attempt at the buzzer.
Fox, a sophomore, was the only nonfreshman on the floor at many stages in
the second half for the Gophers. who
missed eight of their 16 free throws.
They are 0-4 since losing starting guard
Kelly Roysland, their only senior, to a
broken collarbone during a Jan. 25 win
at Iowa.
Minnesota has lost its last three games
by a total of I0 points. including &lt;Hhr'eepoint decision to now-13th-ranked
Purdue last week.
Fox had 15 points and seven assists,
and Leslie Knight added I0 points for
the Gophers, who have made five consecuti ve NCAA tourname nt appearances after playing in it only once in the
program's first 20 years.

ond quarter as they came stea l ami converted the
back to take a 17- 16 half- layup. The visitors led 23time lead. Butcher's three- ~ 2 1 after three quarters.
Eastern took its final lead
pointer with two seconds
from PageBl
left but her club on top. of the game when Hupp
Eastern scored just four nailed a three from the lett
gave an emotional speech points in the· quarter.
wing, making it 26-25. But
and his club came out fired
Both teams had trouble it was short lived as Fieler
up.
finding the bottom of the scored her on ly four points
The Lady Eagles scored net early in the third quarter. of the contest on back-to·
the final eight points 'of the as Dunfee finally broke the back pick and rolls to make
opening period to seize a ice with a lay-in at the 3:30 the score 29-27 .
12-6 advantage at the firsr· mark to make it 19- 16 in her
Eastern's Hupp split a
stop. Weber went for six in team 's favor. Hupp nailed a pair of free throws to cut the
the frame while Hayman. threr- to even the score and lead to two, then a Fed
Werry and Brannon also Werry hit a long jumper to Hock turnover huvc Eas tern
put Eastern on top 2 1- 19.
one final shot to tie or rechipped in a bucket each.
Fed Hock evened the claim the lead. The attempt
But the Lady Lancers
stormed right back as score on a Dunfee jumper was no good, though.
Eastern wraps up the regButcher scored nine of her and .went in front when
team's II points in the sec- Butcher came away with a ular season on Saturday

E·mall
classified@mydailytribune.com

6
5

8

-

caW;:.::v...

Items

•POLICIES*
OhtoVottoy
• Publlthlng ,...,.,..
h right to edit,
,..)ect Of c•ncet anw

r

t

hi 1Fibun1-S1ntinet
egleter
will

nponelble lor n
or. th1n tht coat o

the error and

FEDERAL HOCKING (9-10, 6-3TVC)

'

Real
Eat1t
dvertl ..ment• ar
ubjec1to the Federa
1lr Houttng Act o

....

only

hel

OE etandlrdl.

w. wilt not knoWin

Are ·you 65

a,

Public Notice

ot constructing 8,900
feet of 3" waterline,
4,900 teet of 2" waterline, valves, hydrante,
services,
service
reeonnectlon, hydrant
reconnactlona
and
other
noceaaary
appurtenances.
Bid
Documents
include
the
Bid
Requirements
and
Contract Docunoents
(that Include all bid
sheets, plans, apaclf~
catlona,
and
any
addenda)
can
be
obtained from M-E
Companies, Inc. 5085
THie Plant Road, New
lexington, Ohio 43764
with a non-refundable
payment of $75.00 par
aet. Checka should be
made payable to M-E
Companiea, lnc.
Each
Bidder
is
required to furnish
with Its submission ol
the fully completed Bid
Documents, a Bid
sacurtty In accordance
with S.Ctton 153.54 o1
the Ohio Rovloed
Code. Bid aacurtty fur·
nlahed In Bond form
(Bid GuorontN ond
Contr..:l
ond
- - - Bond 11
provided In Soctlon
153.57.1 of the Ohio
Flevloecl Code), muot
be 1 - by I Surely
Company
or
Corporotlon llcenoect
In the
of Ohio to
provt" oald ourety.
Thooe Bl-1 that
e~t to submit bid
guaronly In the form ol
1 certHied check,
cuht.,·o check or lotlet ol creel~ pursuant
to Chopler 1301 of the
Ohio Flevloecl Cod•
and In accorctanc:. wllh

PlAIN$TUPPERS
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT MEIGS COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE· INVITATION TO BID
Sailed Blcloo will be
for lumlohlng
all labor, rnaterlalo and
equipment nace111ry
to cornpMII 1 pro~t
known 11 Antiquity
Watetll,. EKttnolono
81 the Tuppen Ptatn.
C - Wat., Dlotrlcl,
81 their Dlotrlcl Ollie.
loctlled ot 38811 Bar 30
- . Fleedevllle. Ohio
45n2 Office (lh,_
mllea oou111 o1 TuppaN
Plaine~ All bide mwt Section 153.14 (C) of
be .-tvoct by 10:00 the Ohio Flevloecl
am local tiiM on Code. Any ouch tetter
Wednao ...y, February of c . - lhlll lie revo211~ 2007 In willet! II cable only II the
thel limo aft bi«M option of the benefic~
.-tved by lhet limo IIY
The omounl
will publlcty 11e II!* ted of the certlllecl check,
lnd ,.., aloud. llde cllhter'o check or !Itmay M r1Ntlled or dellv- ter ol credll IINU be
ered In ad'oiiiCIIO the equal to ton (10) per·
TPCWD at the llbciQ cent of IN Bkllnd the
lldcl,...,
Succ.aful Bidder will
The pro)act conoloto be required to oubmlto

s-

ow-.

'

bond In the form provided In 153.57 of the
Ohio Revised Code In
conjunction with tho
execution
of
the
Contract.
Each proposal must
contain the full name
of the party or parties
submtnlng the Bidding
Documents and all par·
sons lnteruted thereln. Each bidder must
submll ovtdonce of Its
e•pertences on pro)ecla of similar slze and
complexity. The Owner
intends
that
this
Pro~t be completed
no later than the lime
period aa set forth In
Article 4 of
the
Standard Form of
AgrNment Between
Owner and Contractor
on tho Basis ot o
Stipulated price.
Each Bidder must
Insure lhet all employeea and applicants lor
employment are not
dlacrlmlnatect ogalnat
bacauM of race, color,
rallgton, oex, nationll
origin.
hondlcop,
IIICellry, or ago.
All contractoro. ond
1 u b c o n I r oc I o r o
lrwolvld with the prot.
oct shall to the extent
practicable, uM Ohio
producle, motorlolo,
NrvlcN lnd labor In
the lmplemonlltlon ol
their. prajacL
Addltlonolly, con·
tractor
compliance
with the equal
menl
opportunlly
requlrenienta of Ohio
Admlnlolrollve Code
Chop!.,
I 23.
the
Governor'• EgcuiiYO
Order of 1172, and
Gov.,nor'o Executive
Order 14-8 ohell be

Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water Dlatrlct
reserves the right to
waive any lnlormamtes
or
Irregularities.
Tuppers
PlainsChester Water District
reserves the ·rtght to
rejocl any or all bids or
to
increase
or
decrease or omh any
item or times and/or
award the bid to the
lowest, responsive and
responsible bidder.
By order ol the
TPCWD la&lt;:ated at
39561 Bar 30 Road,
Reedsville,
Ohto
45772, County
of
Meigs, this 2nd day of
February 2007.
(2)4, 9, 11 '

Nqiilrod.
lllddero mull • ply with the pte'181Hng
W8g0 raletl on Publlo

period ollten:h 1.2007
throul(ll June 10, :11107.

emptor·

lmprovo"*'lt
In
.....,_ County 11 ...,_
mined by the Olllo
o.portmonl
, ol
Cornmote~. Dtvlelon of
Ltbor and Wotklr

Slloly· W&amp;Qeand Hour.
The E,.,_ .. -

mea

for thla proJ-et te
S185.000.

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

eso

Hippy Acts. ...................................................050

eeo

oos

Profnollln&amp;l Senrtcao ................................. 230

Address _______________________

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 180
ANI Elllll Wanted ..... ................................ 360
Schoolo lnatructlon ..................................... l50
Seed , Ptonl &amp; Fertlltur ............................ .. 650

3BR .
2BA.
LR
with
Fireplace. OR, Kitchen,
Detached 2 ciu gan1ge. on
171x85 Lot. Within walking
Diatallce of new SGHS.
Asking $80,000. (740)256·
8170

Mo¥'6 in today ! New 2007 3
bedroom 2 bath
Only
$199.86 per month. Set up
minutes fro m Athens and
ready for immediate occupancy. Call 740-385-4367

r.

740 985-3518

Local company offering "NO

J--'\

(,..It~

~lttf

({.1 2:007 by NEA, Inc.

www.comica.com

11'111""------, ,.,..-------.
Hw&gt;WANim

1!111"-~~---,

l '.IO......._·-.w_.._~_,.ll j
•

nr.LI"

'"'-~ .. •r.u

MONEY
ro
[.(1\N

•

oo

I

1ng

or

.

expenenc'O;n,l

cook. Please apply at the

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of

cafeteria.

accepted

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

dlscrlmlnttton."

Dependable (Attendance Is So~ 454 • Hamden 0H
A Must) Team Players With
Bartender wanted to start
45634
Poeltlve
Attitudes To Join Us
immediately. Apply In person
In Providing Outstand ing,
at Halfhill's Tavern, 234 3fd Quality Care To Our
if'.NJKANO.:
A&gt;Jenue. Gallipolis, OH
Ruidents.
~------,.1
..,

~
1.31l.KY"'""""'

Overbrook Center Ia An

rMdlrt
eretl\et
hlf'ltly
lnlormed
all
dwellngt ldvlrtiHd In
thll newtpaper lrt
svelllbll on •n equtl
opportunity bl....

E.O.E . And A F&gt;artieiiJSnt Of

~l/Cl10N

Oryw•U ana Ptlnting aeMc- The Crug Free WorkpiiiCe
ea.A.lso. misc. l.lbor. 740- Pl'tVVam.
·~
Qalttpolte c .... COtltgl
965·3779 or 304·593-0541 .

FI!DEAAL
POSTAL JOBS
$18.53-$27.58/hr., -

hlr·

ing. For 8pllltco1ton and ""
governoment (ob Info, coli
American Assoc. ol Labor 1•
913-599--8042. 24hlra. amp.

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Ao.J g. Pay $20/tu or
$57K """""~
ln&lt;lu&lt;lng Fodoral Bonof1111
and OT,Pold lttlntng,
Vacatlona-FTIPT
H!00-584-1775 Ext. 08923

soc..

USWA

Local ManutactRurlng

Fact~

-'ec1101ltd

Ml~

~

.t.ooredlllog
It ColllgM

~

=

riO

FOR!bmiS.W:

I.

mot 3bd abe HUD
Ul.3341 5% down. 20 years
0 8%. For listings 800-5594109 x2S4

SUM/

Accepting
eaumes iVr DON, llq)el'ience preferred. &amp;349
General Labor. WeiQing and Call lor ackmional lntormamachine experience a plus. tion or inlervlew. Contact: Seasoned lire wOO(!, Oak 0 Down even with less than
Resumes must be sent to; Marjorie
Huston
0 and Hickory spilt You haul perfect cridit is available on

PO Boll 176, Rio Grande. (700)384·3485 or 1700)384· or I haul· Talol CAA&amp; HEAP tnts 3 btdroom, 1 bath
OH 45874.
2876.
Huston
Nursing 740-949-2038.
home. Corner lot. .fireptO,
- - - - - - - - Home, Inc. 38500 St Rt.
modern kitChen, jacuul tub,
K&gt;oldnn lor dollvery staff lor 180 Hamden Oltio 45634
WANJm
Payment around $550 per
L,--...:"'~~--.,J
month. 740-367-7129.
Catering company, hours _
a·

i!ljUP;;;,;;;;;;;;:;.,___,

•

ITIOIUy M-F day shift. Send

74D-992·5858.

Apartment lor rent, ,.2
Bdrm ,, remOdeled, n&amp;w car·
2·3
Bedroom
Duple•. pet, stove &amp; trig., water
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utili· sewer. trash pd . Middleport
ties in Downtown Gallipolis. $425.00. No pets. Ret
No Pets 1740)446·033&lt; required. 740-843·5264.

ESTATES, 52 WestwoOd

Twp, 1 112 mi from (304)675·4024 (304 )675Ofivt from $349 to $448
Calvin leport/Ciaarly Clean toWn, 1 112 ml trom New 0799 ask tor Nancy.
Walk IO ShOP &amp; mollie$. Call
(304)675+0022
G•HS
Equal
"' ' 3BR 6 nc. k Ranch' 3BR . 1 bat h. LeGrande 740·446-2568 .
$140,000 (740)446-81 31
Blvd, no pets, $62 5 mo. • Hous1ng Opportunity

I

-RN
-,-Im-modl-01&amp;--toope
-nl-ng-lor :::;o$:BT7

"1~~)~27~~~~~4~-----2 or 3 Br. house, no pets, -

Green

cleaning drill in an houri

"'"
1·800•214-.....
~
www.~oom

""""'r;
"':_';:
·n'l..p . •

2 bedroom house located in
A HIDDEN TREASURE'
Gallipolis. (740)44 1·01 94.
Laurel
Commons
2 Bedroom House on Apartments. largest in the
Country Lot, $400/mO , $400 area! Beautifully renO'Iateo
deposit,
No
Pets. throughout including brand
Aetere"ces
Reqwed . new kitchen and bath
(740)388·9£86
Starting at $405. CaH toda~ !

8art1·5pm Mon-Sat
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
For Sale: Ranch Style
Homt, 4 Btdrooma, 3 Bath
MENTS ,\T BUDGET
2br. House In Pt. Pl. $465
S acru. (740 )3&amp;8·&amp;839
. Homestead Really Broke1 PRICES AT JACKSON

No Ntecll
Low Moisture carpet

(Careers Cloae To Home)
Call TOdlytr40- 44e-4387,

740..446·15 19.

-

clean your Carpet7

ll'lo311l

3 and 4 room furnished apts
clean W/0 hookup. No pets.
Ret and deposit required

For listings 800-559-41 09
)(1709

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

Wa~1ng till Spring to

--~-----

2bf. Apt. on 5th Street $375
1994
ask tor Don (304) 593.

HOME! 4%00. 30yrs @ 8%.

ldvertluments for rMI
•tste whloh 1• in
\llolatton of the itlw. Our

•

required. no pets. 740-9922216.

$98/mol Buy 3bd HUO

This newspaper will not
knowingly acctpt

I

H~

and 2 bedroom apart ·
ments. furnished and unlurnlshed, security deposit

FOR RE.'ff

pr•r~~nc.,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUAITY 11111
No Fee Unleu We Win!
1·688·582·3345
~;~~~~--.. - - - - - - - -

I'"' . .

(740)44 1·0 11 0.

11

rid

In thil ntwapaper II
subject to the Feder•!
F~r HoY•Inl Act of 1188
which makN It ll~gal 1o
~IH "•ny

Custodian needed $7.50 per If 'fou Have Any OUhtions Albr&amp;eht Ftnanc:lal Servicta.
hour +. Retail floor experi· Conlact Hollie Bumgarner. Leads, Training, Quick PBy,
ence a plus. Please caM 304- LPN , Staff Oe~lopm1n1 $3tiK·$g5K PT/Fl, t·SOO·
817-2V82 or F11&gt;&lt; 216·882· Coordinator 0 740-992· 934 _3473 k7380

8412.

re~t•tate advertising

All

~P:utllis;:;"ln:g:C:om::pa:n:y:)~

l'fta;,;;
f) ·- -----. r

REAL FsrAl;

t5l
=

,....net, llmitltlon Dr

r~~ui:~wo~~:. ro:

"j

APAIITl\11'.11tTS

,,·rm ~--oiFOROiiiloiRIIiiii'-"ii;r-_.1

Payment coukj be the
\\'ANnD
same as rent
-•
Mortgag e
Locators.
(740}367 0000
Need to sell yoor home?
•
Late on payments. divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can t&gt;uy your home_ All cash
and quick closing. 740-4163130.

••NOTICE••

.....

$125 ·000

(304)882 3131
___
· - - - - - 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apar1ments
homeinsteadofrenling.
MobUt Homt Lot ror .-.nt lor f!lent, Meigs County, In
• tOO% financing
near Vinton. Call {740)441· !own, No Pets, Deposit
• Less than perfec1 credit _111111"1.~!"'"~!"'"-...., Requi red, (740)992 -5174 or

I'

University ol Rio Grande is

I k'

sites ·

r

~r~!N lorp~uM~oN~y ~~;

Hcensed. (This is a pW!ic

0452.

Nice 14x70 3 Bedroom , 2
Balh
hOme.
Located

Country water, septic, pond
&amp; barn. electric. many home

Attenttonl

fr
'AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Those Qualified Individuals Wo
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304• Completing The Class.
Applicants
Must
Be Info, send S.A.S.E to PO
675 _1429.

_
eo_s_to_n._M
_a_. - - - - ' - - -

-:-"-------

Lars &amp;

949·2253.

llmn.tion or
dlacrlminetion boed on
r~~ee, color, religion, ")(
llmlllll st1t1..1e or netlontl
origin, or •ny lnt.nUon to
mtU •ny such

- - - - -- - Appalachians
Work
at
home,
(S, 7 )436 _4624

Mob1le Home lot in Johnson
Mob•te Home Park 1n
Gallipolis,
OH
Phone
(740)446· 2003 or [7 40)446·
1409.

star~ and 1/2. AC, single Lw-..OAiiCRFAiiiiiiiiiiGiii[--' between
Athens
and
garage/20 X 20 shop ~
Pomeroy. $365.00
per
740· 47 acres +I· Lle\!inQ Road, month. Call (740)385-994a.
Racine. Route 124

nan ce . your home or
obtain a lOan. BEWARE
of requests for any l;m)A
-.ad'lance payments of
tees 01 insurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll tree at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage
t&gt;roker
or
lender
is
properly

An Ekcelent WWf to earn
money. The New Avon.
cau Marilyn 304-882·2645

I

Din., Front Am., Full base., __ AND BUillliNG.~ ,
sto~ and 112. IlL. ' s1ngle
9arage120 X 20 shOp F&amp;S Tire SR 7 &amp; SA 681 .
Racine, Route 124
740· Tuppers Plains. Oh, includes
949-2253.
all equipment. Frank Wells

Finan cial
Institution's
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE yoo refi·

~

2 Mob1le hOmes for rent.
740-367·7762 or 740·446·
4060
- ------3 Bedroom Mobile Home.
Union Avenue. Pomeroy,
Completely
Renoo.Jated ,
$450/mo. (740)416·6154

4 rental houses "For Sale" NEW 2007 4 bed O!Wide!
For a couple or construction
In Gallipolis. Cal l Wayne $49,179. Midwest (740)828·
workers
2 Br.. 12X150,
(404)456-3802.
2750
$350
plus dep
Gas
B!SIN~
Heat
Syracuse
992-7680.
5 Plus Acres. 2 Br .. Kit.,

Scheduled For Feb. 20· Upcoming salOn looking for
March 7, Hours Will Be 8am· a managing cosmetologist
4:30pm.
If
You
Are and 8 licensed naM tech. call
lntet'ested In Joining Our MWF 740-245-9870.
Friendly And OerJicated :.::.:::.~:.:.::.:.::...:.:_:__
Staff. Please Stnn By Our Wanted: Direct Supervision
~~
Front Office Mon·Fri., 9am· employees to oversee male
5pm And Fill Out An youth in a staff secure resi·
Application ,
Space
Is denlial environment. Must
•
Limited, Applications Will Be pass
phy's1cal training
Accepted Unt1l Feb. 9, Full requirement. Pay based on
Time Ar1d Part Time Part experience. Call (740)379·
Time Positions Available To 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fri

110 HF.I.P W.4.N1lD
1 -------~

__
·___·____·

~N 's

needed to JNrform
basic first lid at bueine&amp;s in GOd's Rojoicing Car ClaNipolio, oil 45631
Chesllire.
OH. building, remodeling, plumblntertslin;'low Stress Wotk inQ, prayer. John Moore 992·
Now Hiring experienced Environment.
Great 2839
sawmill help. Apply In per· Opportunity to Earn Extra
son .
l'wln
Rlv., Caslll C~l 888-2e9-e344 or 'iijp;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Uerc:twoocll2612l)6 Rt 35. Fax resume to 74D-266~
Southside
'
6871
~
~
re&amp;ume to 1364 Herman Rd

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
HouN fat .... : 2br. 1 ba. sec dep. (740}446-3844.
on Monroe Ave. Pt. Pleasant
ED A AFFORDABLE!
needs soma wor~ . good AcceptinQ
applica1 ionEi Townhouse
apartmenta .
llal1tr home or rental unit th rOlJgh 2/14. Nice 2 story, 3 and.'m small hou!BS FOR

$t9,500. 304-675 .6349
bedroom , I Bath, 571 Carter
- . , - - - , - - - --,------,-- Road. Propane heat. No
HUD HOMEI3bd S112/mo. Indoor Pets, Stove, Fridge.
3bd 2be t1Wmo. More Water and trlsh included
homl8 available! 4111odn . Deposit $400. Rent S450
30yrs 0 8%. For list1ngs (740 )256· 1106
800-559-4109 )(F144
Attontionl
Loe&amp;ted in Gallipolis Ferry, Local com pany olfe rin ~ "NO
large yard, wi 16)(8Q Mobile DOWN PAYMEN T" proHome, 30r. 2ba. vaulted ceil· grams for you to bu y your
ings. island kitchen. n a~ home 1nstead ot renting
refridg .. All electric, cove red • 100% financing
front porctl. 2 larQEJ Garages ' Leas than perfect credit
plus ootbulld1ngs (304)675- accepted
3161 aslOng $60.000
' Payme nt could be the
same as rent
Locators
HOM~ Mortgage

r

~

MOIIILE

1'011 SAL!;

I

• 1740)367-()()(1{)

lllrid

RENT. Call {740)44l ·11 l 1

lor application &amp; information
Oown1own Pomt Pleasa nt

modern one b&amp;droom Apt
Second floor. stove and
retngerator, mcl uded, au
electnci deposit reqUi red No
call
after Spm
Pets

(304 1675·371!8

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Cent r t~l

heat &amp; AJC
•WaSher/dryer hookup

• All el ectnc· averag•ng
S50-$60.'monlh
• Owner pays water. sewer.
trash

(304)882-3017

e

~ lor Flent .............................................480
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'o for Sale .............................................. 720
Truck. tor Sale .....:...................................... 715

I

Phone ___________'--------------~

For lease. 1600 squa re'"~"·
beautifuL unturn1shed, two
be&lt;t'oom apt , 2nd fioof. LA
DR. 1 , 12 barns. ~ntown
GallipoliS. •deal tor couple
References requ ired. no
~1$. security deposit, $600
per I'I'IOOih Call (740)446-

Upholotery ................................................... 870

For Sale .............................................. 730
Wl!ftttd to Buy ............................................. 090
· Wanted to Buy- F.,.,. Suppllel .................. 820
_ Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Ront............................................ 470
. Yard
Galllpoila....................................
- Yard Sale-"""*"VIMiddte ......................... 074
. YardSII.-PL PIHUnt ................................ 07f

Mall or drop off thla eoupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Vell•y Publlahlng P.O. Box 4e8. Oallfpolla, OH 45e31

so.

------------------------------•

_ , . .,,.,.

Ir M~r:~~ Ir Mc:;~IL'

Sltulttono Wonted ....................................... 120

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - -

I

Hay &amp; Groln.................................................. 840
· Http Wanted .................................................uo
· Home lmprovemento................................... 810
. Hamil tor 8ote ............................................ 3!0
Houoehold Good• ........ .. ............................. 510
. Hou-lor Ront .......................................... 410
· In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnturonce ..................................................... 130
Ltwn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ...................... 580
Llveotock. .....................................................830
Loot and Found ...........................................
Loll &amp; Acmgo ............................................ 350
Mtacelteneoon.............................................. 170
. Miaceltenaoua Merchandloe.......................540
· Mobile Home Repatr ....................................
Mobile Homea for Rent... ............................ 420
- Mobile Homu for Sate................................320
• Monay to Loon ............................................. 220
- Motorcyclel &amp; 4 Whoetera .........:................ 740
. Muolcallnatrumenta .................................. 570
. "-roonalo .....................................................
· "-'" lor Sale .................... ............................ 580
. Plumbing &amp; '*'llng .................................... 820

oao

Subscriber's Name - ' - - - - - - - - -

FOR YOIJ!!

Announctment ............................................ 030
Antiquoo ....................................................... 530
Apartmonto tor Rent.. .. .. ............................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ........................... 080
Auto Parta &amp; Accessorlao .......................... 780
Auto Repair ... ............................................... 770
Au too for Sale .............................................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplteo .............,.......................... 550
Buotne11 and Butldlngo ............................. 340
Bustnaoa Opportunlly ................................. 210
8uotne11 Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Clmparo &amp; Motor Homu ........................... 710
Camping Equipment ................................... 780 ·
Canto ol Thonko .......................................... OtO
Child/Elderly Core ....................................... I 10
Etectrlcai/Rtlrlgorotton ...............................840
Equipment for Flent. ..................:................. 480
Exoovtltng ................................................... 130
Farm Equlpmont .......................................... f10
For1111 lor Atnt .................................... ......... 430
F-lor Sale~ ............................................ 330
For L -..................................................:.. 480

For lltl ........................................................ 585

~-------------------------------

HAS
S(1,1ETHING

..., J.: \ II I ...

For Sate or Trlde .........................................SIO
FruHa &amp; Vegotabtea ..................................... 580
Fumlohed AoornL ....................................... 450
Gonentt Haullng...........................................
OIVHway ...................................................... 040

C!i$allipolts Dailp Qtrtbune
•oint •lea•ant B.egi&amp;ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba.! ' U::ime• -&amp;entinel

Public Notice

I

.

national origin, sex,
ago, retigton. political
bette! or dioablllly.
(2) 9, 12, 13

The 2006 Annual
Financial Roport of the
Vllllge of Rutland to
available for public
lnapactlon at the vi~
lage oHtce on Main
Stroelln Rutl.and, Ohio,
45775 between the
hours of 9 am and 2
pm Monday through
Friday.
(2) 9, 12, 13

The dNdtiN tor ...
mloaton 61 pro~ a1ala
lo Fobnllry 23, :11107 It
12:00 - .. !'of program tntormatlon guldellneo,
contact
Ctlrlo Shank, loctol
t.rvlcae Suparv'- II
(740) tll2-2117 Ill. 123
01 175 A - StrMI,
Middleport,
Ohio
48710.

·
•

r'o ~~

kitncarlvl. .comcaat.net

Oin.. Front Am ., Full base..

740.256- 1360.

1 not
• Boll

..-elL

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~:~~:7e4·1 37(!04)773-5343 1ilo

4K4'1 For Sole .............................................. 725

c.ncelany acl.t any lime. E«ort muat be ,.pon.cs on thll

. . liwt¥1 OOiilrldeiiiiM. • ~tnt,... c.tl appltM. • AI,_, ..... ldvertleanw.ntti ara tubiect to the FedMal fill Houaing Act of 1MI.
~on~ '*P wW1IId .a. mMIIng EOE
We wm not knowinttY Kcepllln't actvenitlng in ~o~kiLitiDfl Df tbllliw.

Bladl; colored mi)(ed breed
•
•
10 week old puppies. 1
Female, 2 male. 740-441 · CASH Paid tor junk cars &amp;
1269
trucks. $35-$130. Call Cell Overtlrook Center Located
.,
1·304-612· 1037, after ~ ...m 0 333Page St. , Middleport,
......
Ohio
Is Pleased To
1
Free to good home. Blac« 740)446-8955.
Announce We Will Be
puppies 2 Female and 1
I \ll'ill\\11 \I
Holding M STNA Clas&amp;.
Ma~.

Dr

s Plus AOfes, 2 Br., Kit.

Wrecks, Pay Cash J D

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·

'ltKt.

I

ii;t;p;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;""i

If so, you qualify for a

All
submissions
muat be received by
malt or hand delivered
by the above date and
time. No materials
received after that date
will be Included In pr•
vlouo oubmlootono nor
will be conaldered. The
DJFSreoervea the right
to reject any or all propoaato. The DJFSta
prohibited kom discrimination on the
baala of race, color,

Public Notice

The Melgo County
Depilrtment ol Job Fomlty Sarvlcae (DJFS)
to requeettng propooalo from a quaii!Md
vondor to provide a
promotional campaign
aimed at enhancing
the Iotter oarWedop.
lion Pf011rome 81 the
DJFSihrough
the
AdopiOhlo
Kkll
lnconUYO Fund tor the

manl tn vlolal:to
tho taw.

or ol·d er?

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

The Home National
Bank will auction the
following
item on
Saturtlay, February 10,
2007, at 10:00 a.m. at
tho Bank's parking tot.
2000 Ventura Van
1GNDX03EOYD321228
2002 Kia Sportage
KNDJA723425116244
1994 Mazda 626
IYVGE22DXR5117459
2004
19
HP
Craftsman Mower
1966 Academy Mobile
Home
481021222
Tho Mobile Home Is
ta&lt;:ated in Pomeroy.
The oate will be at the
Bank's parking lot.
The Home National
Bank reserves the
right to re~t any and
all bids. All vehicles
and mobile home are
sold. as Is where Is,
with no warranties
axpreased or Implied.
For an appointment to
- · call 949-2210, ask
for Sheila.
(2)7. 9

accept any IKiver

t:!-:r

Ab&amp;olute Top Dollar : U.S.
Sil'ller and Gold Coins,
(3041773-5630
Prootsets, Gold A1ngs, Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
SDI~aire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Coi n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740-446·
Australian Sheppard mix . 2842.
hver&amp;white,
short hair, - - - - - - - amber eyes, vaoc . and HW. Buying Junk Cars,Trudcs &amp;

740·388·0321

•nted •ds mHUn

POUCIU: Ohio YeiJwt Publlatllng ~ tM r)Vht to Mit.

TriOunt-Sentlne~tw will M rwporwlbtt lor no ...or. tn.n tht ooat of ltw apac:t~ occupiad by tha anor •nd only the fir~ innrtlon.
any lou or eJipenN lblt rMUitl; from tht P'lbllclillon Of omlnkwt ol an aclvertiMmenl Correction wiU MINidt In tha Hrat avalllle». edition.

To purchase Stanley
Home PrOducts or to
have an old-fashiolled
Stanley Party PhOne

Thla

cc•pt•

muat be prepitld"

Cross Creek Auctk&gt;n Buffalo
AucUon Saturday Trailer load
of merchandise from N. VA.
Suger
Creek
Bacon .
Longhorn Cheese, Produce
Used
Merchandise
AalrVSieevsnow Visa and
Master Card (304) 5501616 Stit
1&amp;39

he apace occupie

Box num~ ada 1
tway• conlklentill.

All Dleplay: 12 Noon :I
Bueln••• Day• Prior To
Publication
&amp;unday Dl•play: 1:00
Thu.-.cl•y for Sunday•

ok:fland fill road. 992-5327.

of pubi!Gatlon an

EASTERN (11-1, 5-4 TVC)

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL..\
added ta your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Barders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for lar9e

Display Ads

LOST BOXER REWARD! 9
yr.olcherv miSled, tern .,
SOib,browrvwh.on the neck.
Sun. 1·28 on S1ate Rt 143

ad at •ny time.
Errora Must
8
eport.ct on the firs

Katie Hayman 2 o-o 4, Ryan ·Davis 0 0·
0 0. Morgan Werry 2 ().() 4, Jllllan
Brannon 2 0-0 4, Georgana Koblentz 0
0·0 0 , Erin Weber 3 2·6 8 , Jenna Hupp
2 1-2 7. Totals - 11 3-8 27.
Three point goals - FH 1 (Butcher). E

Oearllfirec

• Slut Vour Ada With A Keyword • lnducle Complete
O..CripUon • Include A Prla~ • Avokl AbbreviiUont
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When ......._.
• Ads Should Run 7 ~,.

r

l\egister

(7~~1 ro992;~~~6 (304) 675-1333

• All ada

~~ 1
A~~o~ ~~~------~

\\\Ill \1 I \II\)"

Websjtes
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

Dally In-column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Prlday for Jn•art:lon
In N•xt Day'• Pa~r
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Por Sunday• PaPt~r

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to ·5:00 p.m.

Emily Duntee 2 2·2 6, Hannah
McKibOen 0 0·0 0, Ryan Fieler 2 ~ 4,
Tara Russell 1 2·2 4 , Chelsea Bail 0 o-o
0, Julia Winson 0 0.0 0, Iris Butcher 7 0·
0 15, Summer Hatfield 1 0-1 2 . Totals 13 4-5 31 .

2 (Hupp 21 .

m:rtbune
(7~?.~ ro446~!42
Word Ads

31
27

·s -

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To Place ·

FED HOCK 31. EASTERN 27
11
4

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County
OH

when it plays host to the
Miller Lady Falcons. The
game will begin at 3 p.m.
and there will be no reserve
game.
FedHocK6
Eastern 12

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2007

2 BedrOOfTl. Bulavi!1e Plke.
4425 or 1740)446-3936
2007
312 · Ooublew1d&amp;. TraSh/Water Pd. No Pets.
$37.970 MidWest (740)828- Deposit &amp; AeferellCes. Modern 1BA apt (740t446(740)388· 1100
0390
2750.

on

--·-

.

------------·-

· -~

----- -- --- --.

·-

-

.. ,,

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
Bon.lry
said
Landis
deserves to be heard bv the
US AD A as he req uests.
However, Bordry echoed
from PageBl
Tour de France president
Christi an Prudhomme's sen·said. "We wi ll let Landis timent that the Ameri can
&lt;lefend himself as he wishes agency was dmgging out its
before the USADA ."
process.
Landis had hip-replaceLandis' urine sample after
ment surgery 4 1/2 months a stage win in last year 's
ago. so it was unlikely thm he Tour de France was found to
would have competed in this contain elevated testosyear 's Tour.
terone to epitestosterone
: The American, who has levels. He risks being the
.denied wrongdoin~, did not first rider in the I04-year
appear at Thursday s meeting history of the race to be
of the AFLD's nine-member stripped of his title.
panel. but sent a lawyer who Prudhomme has said the
read his request for a delay.
Tour no longer considers
In the letter, a copy of him the winner.
which was obtained by The
Under French law, the
Associated Press. Landis AFLD has the right to sussaid the parallel cases in pend Landis for up to two
France and the United States years from racing on French
'were complicating matters, soil.
and asked the French agency
Landis argues that the
to hold off until after the U.S . Chatenay-Malabry laboratoagency rules. The USADA ry which carried out the tests
will hold its hearings May is unreliable, a view shared ·
14.
by seve n-time Tour champi"In thi.;! case. and in order on Lance Armstrong.
to avoid any misunderstandLandis insisted again on
ing. I agree to voluntari ly not his innocence al a fundraisparticipate in any profession- ing rally in New York on
al or amateur cycling event Wednesday night. He vowed
in France until December 31, to fight the "lack of leader2007, and in particular the ship at the top of cycling and
T&lt;;mr de France 2007," at the top of the anti-doping
agencies."
Landis said in the leuer.

Landis

Southern
from Page,Bl

Friday, February 9.

www .mydailysentinel.com

23 fouls.
Southern plays Federal
Hocking prior to the hoys'
game tonight (Friday) as
pan of a triple header, start ing with the boys reserves at
5 p.m. Southern makes up a
game with Waterford at 3
p.m. Saturday.
Both games are in Racine.

With a 9-16 stint at the
foul line and seven points
from
Wolfe-Riflle,
Southern nearly pulled off
the win in a gallant comeback. The bid fell short and
TRIMBLE 53, SOUTHERN 47
Jenkins finished strong for
Trimble 16 13 13 11 - 53
Southern 17 10 2
18 ·- 47
the Tomcats to push the
Athens CounVans to a 53TRIMBLE (8-11, 4·5 TVC Hocking)
47 victory.
Jenny Sikorski 2 0·0 6. Chelsey
Southern hit 16-36 from Kinn1son 1 3-5 5, Katlyn Walton 4 0· 1 B.
Campbell o 0·0 0. Allie Jago 2 1·2
the field and 13-24 at the early
5. Hannah Harper 0 0-0 0, Chloe
line. Southern had 26 Campbell 0 0-0 0, KolJrtney Kinnison 6
rebounds (Turley 10), 19 2·4 14, Tabby Jenk1ns 7 1·2 15_ Total s
7-14 53. Three Poin l Goals: Jenny
turnovers. II steals (Eddy 22
Sikorski two.
seven), seven assists (Eddy. SOUTHERN (G-12, 1·7TVC Hooking)
Hill 0 2 -2 2, Whitney WoHe-RiHie
Hill, Riffle two each). and 4Mallory
0.0 9, Sarah Eddy 3 1-2 7, Rachael
18 fouls.
PiCkens 1 1·6 3, Kasey Turley 6 7-9 20,
Trimble hit 22-35 overall Emma Hunter 1 1·3 3, Cheyenne Dunn
and 7- 14 at the line. Trimble 11·2 3. L1ndsay Teatord o o-oo. Totals
16 13-24 47. Three Point Goals:
had 19 rebounds. 15 Whitney Wolfe-Riffl e one, Kasey Turley
turnovers, ten assists, and one

·www.mydallysentlnel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\ tst

No. 4 OSU survives scare from Lady Gophers
BY DAVE CAMPBEll
ASSOC IATED PR ESS

MINNEAPOLIS - Ohio State's 28game Big Ten winning streak endured a
stitl' test at Minnesota. The last five
games of the conference season might
be more difficult if Bmndie Hoskins is
~

mi ssing.

Marsc illa Packer had 18 points,
including the go-ahead 3-pointer, to lead
the fourth-ranked Buckeyes past the
Gophers 70-67 Thursday night.
But Huskins. one of two senior
starters and the team's second-leading
scorer, suffered a foot injury late in the
first half and didn't retum.
Hoskins had surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles tendon last March, and
coach Jim Foster said she injured the
same ankle.
" I just tried to rally everybody and
keep everybody's high hopes," said
Jessica Davenport. who had her second
career triple-double - the onl y two in
the program's history +-- with 17 points,
I 0 rebounds and II blocks.
Davenport became the Big Ten
women's career leader in blocks with
372, which broke the mark of 367 set by
Michigan's Trish Andrew from 1989-93.
More critically, Davenport - whom
Foster described as internal, analytical
and thoughtful - tumed her voice up a
notch to fill the void created by the more
outgoing Hoskins.
. "Jess had to be a little out there with
some of her verbiage, to lead by letting
her teammates know that she was out
there," Foster said.
Ohio State (22-1, 11 -0), which has

AP photo

Ohio State forward Tamarah Riley, right.
knocks down Minnesota guard Breanna
Salley. left. as she drives into her during
the second half of a basketball game in
Minneapolis on Thursday. Ohio State
beat Minnesota, 70-67.
won 14 in a row overall . survived
despite 25 turnovers and a I0-point
defic it midway through the second half.

Eastern

CLASSIFIED

Ashley Ellis-Milan had 17 points to
lead Minnesota ( 13-12, 5-7), which lost
its fourth straight game and gave away a
halftime lead over the Buckeyes for the
second time this year.
Brittany M.:Coy's fast-break layup
near the 13-minute mark made it 49-39
Gophers. but Ohio State relied on experience Minnesota doesn't have to complete the comeback.
Stephanie Blanton's three-point play
brought the Buckeyes to a 61-alltie, and
Packer - who had a career-high 32
points and eight 3-pointers in a victory at
Minnesota last season - swished one
from behind the arc to put Ohio State
back in .front for good. That made it 6463 with less than 3 1/2 minutes left.
Star A lien's jump shot with 17 seconds remaining put the Buckeyes up 706 7, and on the linal possession Emily
Fox was ofl the mark on a difficult 3point attempt at the buzzer.
Fox, a sophomore, was the only nonfreshman on the floor at many stages in
the second half for the Gophers. who
missed eight of their 16 free throws.
They are 0-4 since losing starting guard
Kelly Roysland, their only senior, to a
broken collarbone during a Jan. 25 win
at Iowa.
Minnesota has lost its last three games
by a total of I0 points. including &lt;Hhr'eepoint decision to now-13th-ranked
Purdue last week.
Fox had 15 points and seven assists,
and Leslie Knight added I0 points for
the Gophers, who have made five consecuti ve NCAA tourname nt appearances after playing in it only once in the
program's first 20 years.

ond quarter as they came stea l ami converted the
back to take a 17- 16 half- layup. The visitors led 23time lead. Butcher's three- ~ 2 1 after three quarters.
Eastern took its final lead
pointer with two seconds
from PageBl
left but her club on top. of the game when Hupp
Eastern scored just four nailed a three from the lett
gave an emotional speech points in the· quarter.
wing, making it 26-25. But
and his club came out fired
Both teams had trouble it was short lived as Fieler
up.
finding the bottom of the scored her on ly four points
The Lady Eagles scored net early in the third quarter. of the contest on back-to·
the final eight points 'of the as Dunfee finally broke the back pick and rolls to make
opening period to seize a ice with a lay-in at the 3:30 the score 29-27 .
12-6 advantage at the firsr· mark to make it 19- 16 in her
Eastern's Hupp split a
stop. Weber went for six in team 's favor. Hupp nailed a pair of free throws to cut the
the frame while Hayman. threr- to even the score and lead to two, then a Fed
Werry and Brannon also Werry hit a long jumper to Hock turnover huvc Eas tern
put Eastern on top 2 1- 19.
one final shot to tie or rechipped in a bucket each.
Fed Hock evened the claim the lead. The attempt
But the Lady Lancers
stormed right back as score on a Dunfee jumper was no good, though.
Eastern wraps up the regButcher scored nine of her and .went in front when
team's II points in the sec- Butcher came away with a ular season on Saturday

E·mall
classified@mydailytribune.com

6
5

8

-

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Items

•POLICIES*
OhtoVottoy
• Publlthlng ,...,.,..
h right to edit,
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r

t

hi 1Fibun1-S1ntinet
egleter
will

nponelble lor n
or. th1n tht coat o

the error and

FEDERAL HOCKING (9-10, 6-3TVC)

'

Real
Eat1t
dvertl ..ment• ar
ubjec1to the Federa
1lr Houttng Act o

....

only

hel

OE etandlrdl.

w. wilt not knoWin

Are ·you 65

a,

Public Notice

ot constructing 8,900
feet of 3" waterline,
4,900 teet of 2" waterline, valves, hydrante,
services,
service
reeonnectlon, hydrant
reconnactlona
and
other
noceaaary
appurtenances.
Bid
Documents
include
the
Bid
Requirements
and
Contract Docunoents
(that Include all bid
sheets, plans, apaclf~
catlona,
and
any
addenda)
can
be
obtained from M-E
Companies, Inc. 5085
THie Plant Road, New
lexington, Ohio 43764
with a non-refundable
payment of $75.00 par
aet. Checka should be
made payable to M-E
Companiea, lnc.
Each
Bidder
is
required to furnish
with Its submission ol
the fully completed Bid
Documents, a Bid
sacurtty In accordance
with S.Ctton 153.54 o1
the Ohio Rovloed
Code. Bid aacurtty fur·
nlahed In Bond form
(Bid GuorontN ond
Contr..:l
ond
- - - Bond 11
provided In Soctlon
153.57.1 of the Ohio
Flevloecl Code), muot
be 1 - by I Surely
Company
or
Corporotlon llcenoect
In the
of Ohio to
provt" oald ourety.
Thooe Bl-1 that
e~t to submit bid
guaronly In the form ol
1 certHied check,
cuht.,·o check or lotlet ol creel~ pursuant
to Chopler 1301 of the
Ohio Flevloecl Cod•
and In accorctanc:. wllh

PlAIN$TUPPERS
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT MEIGS COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE· INVITATION TO BID
Sailed Blcloo will be
for lumlohlng
all labor, rnaterlalo and
equipment nace111ry
to cornpMII 1 pro~t
known 11 Antiquity
Watetll,. EKttnolono
81 the Tuppen Ptatn.
C - Wat., Dlotrlcl,
81 their Dlotrlcl Ollie.
loctlled ot 38811 Bar 30
- . Fleedevllle. Ohio
45n2 Office (lh,_
mllea oou111 o1 TuppaN
Plaine~ All bide mwt Section 153.14 (C) of
be .-tvoct by 10:00 the Ohio Flevloecl
am local tiiM on Code. Any ouch tetter
Wednao ...y, February of c . - lhlll lie revo211~ 2007 In willet! II cable only II the
thel limo aft bi«M option of the benefic~
.-tved by lhet limo IIY
The omounl
will publlcty 11e II!* ted of the certlllecl check,
lnd ,.., aloud. llde cllhter'o check or !Itmay M r1Ntlled or dellv- ter ol credll IINU be
ered In ad'oiiiCIIO the equal to ton (10) per·
TPCWD at the llbciQ cent of IN Bkllnd the
lldcl,...,
Succ.aful Bidder will
The pro)act conoloto be required to oubmlto

s-

ow-.

'

bond In the form provided In 153.57 of the
Ohio Revised Code In
conjunction with tho
execution
of
the
Contract.
Each proposal must
contain the full name
of the party or parties
submtnlng the Bidding
Documents and all par·
sons lnteruted thereln. Each bidder must
submll ovtdonce of Its
e•pertences on pro)ecla of similar slze and
complexity. The Owner
intends
that
this
Pro~t be completed
no later than the lime
period aa set forth In
Article 4 of
the
Standard Form of
AgrNment Between
Owner and Contractor
on tho Basis ot o
Stipulated price.
Each Bidder must
Insure lhet all employeea and applicants lor
employment are not
dlacrlmlnatect ogalnat
bacauM of race, color,
rallgton, oex, nationll
origin.
hondlcop,
IIICellry, or ago.
All contractoro. ond
1 u b c o n I r oc I o r o
lrwolvld with the prot.
oct shall to the extent
practicable, uM Ohio
producle, motorlolo,
NrvlcN lnd labor In
the lmplemonlltlon ol
their. prajacL
Addltlonolly, con·
tractor
compliance
with the equal
menl
opportunlly
requlrenienta of Ohio
Admlnlolrollve Code
Chop!.,
I 23.
the
Governor'• EgcuiiYO
Order of 1172, and
Gov.,nor'o Executive
Order 14-8 ohell be

Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water Dlatrlct
reserves the right to
waive any lnlormamtes
or
Irregularities.
Tuppers
PlainsChester Water District
reserves the ·rtght to
rejocl any or all bids or
to
increase
or
decrease or omh any
item or times and/or
award the bid to the
lowest, responsive and
responsible bidder.
By order ol the
TPCWD la&lt;:ated at
39561 Bar 30 Road,
Reedsville,
Ohto
45772, County
of
Meigs, this 2nd day of
February 2007.
(2)4, 9, 11 '

Nqiilrod.
lllddero mull • ply with the pte'181Hng
W8g0 raletl on Publlo

period ollten:h 1.2007
throul(ll June 10, :11107.

emptor·

lmprovo"*'lt
In
.....,_ County 11 ...,_
mined by the Olllo
o.portmonl
, ol
Cornmote~. Dtvlelon of
Ltbor and Wotklr

Slloly· W&amp;Qeand Hour.
The E,.,_ .. -

mea

for thla proJ-et te
S185.000.

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

eso

Hippy Acts. ...................................................050

eeo

oos

Profnollln&amp;l Senrtcao ................................. 230

Address _______________________

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 180
ANI Elllll Wanted ..... ................................ 360
Schoolo lnatructlon ..................................... l50
Seed , Ptonl &amp; Fertlltur ............................ .. 650

3BR .
2BA.
LR
with
Fireplace. OR, Kitchen,
Detached 2 ciu gan1ge. on
171x85 Lot. Within walking
Diatallce of new SGHS.
Asking $80,000. (740)256·
8170

Mo¥'6 in today ! New 2007 3
bedroom 2 bath
Only
$199.86 per month. Set up
minutes fro m Athens and
ready for immediate occupancy. Call 740-385-4367

r.

740 985-3518

Local company offering "NO

J--'\

(,..It~

~lttf

({.1 2:007 by NEA, Inc.

www.comica.com

11'111""------, ,.,..-------.
Hw&gt;WANim

1!111"-~~---,

l '.IO......._·-.w_.._~_,.ll j
•

nr.LI"

'"'-~ .. •r.u

MONEY
ro
[.(1\N

•

oo

I

1ng

or

.

expenenc'O;n,l

cook. Please apply at the

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of

cafeteria.

accepted

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

dlscrlmlnttton."

Dependable (Attendance Is So~ 454 • Hamden 0H
A Must) Team Players With
Bartender wanted to start
45634
Poeltlve
Attitudes To Join Us
immediately. Apply In person
In Providing Outstand ing,
at Halfhill's Tavern, 234 3fd Quality Care To Our
if'.NJKANO.:
A&gt;Jenue. Gallipolis, OH
Ruidents.
~------,.1
..,

~
1.31l.KY"'""""'

Overbrook Center Ia An

rMdlrt
eretl\et
hlf'ltly
lnlormed
all
dwellngt ldvlrtiHd In
thll newtpaper lrt
svelllbll on •n equtl
opportunity bl....

E.O.E . And A F&gt;artieiiJSnt Of

~l/Cl10N

Oryw•U ana Ptlnting aeMc- The Crug Free WorkpiiiCe
ea.A.lso. misc. l.lbor. 740- Pl'tVVam.
·~
Qalttpolte c .... COtltgl
965·3779 or 304·593-0541 .

FI!DEAAL
POSTAL JOBS
$18.53-$27.58/hr., -

hlr·

ing. For 8pllltco1ton and ""
governoment (ob Info, coli
American Assoc. ol Labor 1•
913-599--8042. 24hlra. amp.

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Ao.J g. Pay $20/tu or
$57K """""~
ln&lt;lu&lt;lng Fodoral Bonof1111
and OT,Pold lttlntng,
Vacatlona-FTIPT
H!00-584-1775 Ext. 08923

soc..

USWA

Local ManutactRurlng

Fact~

-'ec1101ltd

Ml~

~

.t.ooredlllog
It ColllgM

~

=

riO

FOR!bmiS.W:

I.

mot 3bd abe HUD
Ul.3341 5% down. 20 years
0 8%. For listings 800-5594109 x2S4

SUM/

Accepting
eaumes iVr DON, llq)el'ience preferred. &amp;349
General Labor. WeiQing and Call lor ackmional lntormamachine experience a plus. tion or inlervlew. Contact: Seasoned lire wOO(!, Oak 0 Down even with less than
Resumes must be sent to; Marjorie
Huston
0 and Hickory spilt You haul perfect cridit is available on

PO Boll 176, Rio Grande. (700)384·3485 or 1700)384· or I haul· Talol CAA&amp; HEAP tnts 3 btdroom, 1 bath
OH 45874.
2876.
Huston
Nursing 740-949-2038.
home. Corner lot. .fireptO,
- - - - - - - - Home, Inc. 38500 St Rt.
modern kitChen, jacuul tub,
K&gt;oldnn lor dollvery staff lor 180 Hamden Oltio 45634
WANJm
Payment around $550 per
L,--...:"'~~--.,J
month. 740-367-7129.
Catering company, hours _
a·

i!ljUP;;;,;;;;;;;;:;.,___,

•

ITIOIUy M-F day shift. Send

74D-992·5858.

Apartment lor rent, ,.2
Bdrm ,, remOdeled, n&amp;w car·
2·3
Bedroom
Duple•. pet, stove &amp; trig., water
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utili· sewer. trash pd . Middleport
ties in Downtown Gallipolis. $425.00. No pets. Ret
No Pets 1740)446·033&lt; required. 740-843·5264.

ESTATES, 52 WestwoOd

Twp, 1 112 mi from (304)675·4024 (304 )675Ofivt from $349 to $448
Calvin leport/Ciaarly Clean toWn, 1 112 ml trom New 0799 ask tor Nancy.
Walk IO ShOP &amp; mollie$. Call
(304)675+0022
G•HS
Equal
"' ' 3BR 6 nc. k Ranch' 3BR . 1 bat h. LeGrande 740·446-2568 .
$140,000 (740)446-81 31
Blvd, no pets, $62 5 mo. • Hous1ng Opportunity

I

-RN
-,-Im-modl-01&amp;--toope
-nl-ng-lor :::;o$:BT7

"1~~)~27~~~~~4~-----2 or 3 Br. house, no pets, -

Green

cleaning drill in an houri

"'"
1·800•214-.....
~
www.~oom

""""'r;
"':_';:
·n'l..p . •

2 bedroom house located in
A HIDDEN TREASURE'
Gallipolis. (740)44 1·01 94.
Laurel
Commons
2 Bedroom House on Apartments. largest in the
Country Lot, $400/mO , $400 area! Beautifully renO'Iateo
deposit,
No
Pets. throughout including brand
Aetere"ces
Reqwed . new kitchen and bath
(740)388·9£86
Starting at $405. CaH toda~ !

8art1·5pm Mon-Sat
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
For Sale: Ranch Style
Homt, 4 Btdrooma, 3 Bath
MENTS ,\T BUDGET
2br. House In Pt. Pl. $465
S acru. (740 )3&amp;8·&amp;839
. Homestead Really Broke1 PRICES AT JACKSON

No Ntecll
Low Moisture carpet

(Careers Cloae To Home)
Call TOdlytr40- 44e-4387,

740..446·15 19.

-

clean your Carpet7

ll'lo311l

3 and 4 room furnished apts
clean W/0 hookup. No pets.
Ret and deposit required

For listings 800-559-41 09
)(1709

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

Wa~1ng till Spring to

--~-----

2bf. Apt. on 5th Street $375
1994
ask tor Don (304) 593.

HOME! 4%00. 30yrs @ 8%.

ldvertluments for rMI
•tste whloh 1• in
\llolatton of the itlw. Our

•

required. no pets. 740-9922216.

$98/mol Buy 3bd HUO

This newspaper will not
knowingly acctpt

I

H~

and 2 bedroom apart ·
ments. furnished and unlurnlshed, security deposit

FOR RE.'ff

pr•r~~nc.,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUAITY 11111
No Fee Unleu We Win!
1·688·582·3345
~;~~~~--.. - - - - - - - -

I'"' . .

(740)44 1·0 11 0.

11

rid

In thil ntwapaper II
subject to the Feder•!
F~r HoY•Inl Act of 1188
which makN It ll~gal 1o
~IH "•ny

Custodian needed $7.50 per If 'fou Have Any OUhtions Albr&amp;eht Ftnanc:lal Servicta.
hour +. Retail floor experi· Conlact Hollie Bumgarner. Leads, Training, Quick PBy,
ence a plus. Please caM 304- LPN , Staff Oe~lopm1n1 $3tiK·$g5K PT/Fl, t·SOO·
817-2V82 or F11&gt;&lt; 216·882· Coordinator 0 740-992· 934 _3473 k7380

8412.

re~t•tate advertising

All

~P:utllis;:;"ln:g:C:om::pa:n:y:)~

l'fta;,;;
f) ·- -----. r

REAL FsrAl;

t5l
=

,....net, llmitltlon Dr

r~~ui:~wo~~:. ro:

"j

APAIITl\11'.11tTS

,,·rm ~--oiFOROiiiloiRIIiiii'-"ii;r-_.1

Payment coukj be the
\\'ANnD
same as rent
-•
Mortgag e
Locators.
(740}367 0000
Need to sell yoor home?
•
Late on payments. divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can t&gt;uy your home_ All cash
and quick closing. 740-4163130.

••NOTICE••

.....

$125 ·000

(304)882 3131
___
· - - - - - 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apar1ments
homeinsteadofrenling.
MobUt Homt Lot ror .-.nt lor f!lent, Meigs County, In
• tOO% financing
near Vinton. Call {740)441· !own, No Pets, Deposit
• Less than perfec1 credit _111111"1.~!"'"~!"'"-...., Requi red, (740)992 -5174 or

I'

University ol Rio Grande is

I k'

sites ·

r

~r~!N lorp~uM~oN~y ~~;

Hcensed. (This is a pW!ic

0452.

Nice 14x70 3 Bedroom , 2
Balh
hOme.
Located

Country water, septic, pond
&amp; barn. electric. many home

Attenttonl

fr
'AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Those Qualified Individuals Wo
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304• Completing The Class.
Applicants
Must
Be Info, send S.A.S.E to PO
675 _1429.

_
eo_s_to_n._M
_a_. - - - - ' - - -

-:-"-------

Lars &amp;

949·2253.

llmn.tion or
dlacrlminetion boed on
r~~ee, color, religion, ")(
llmlllll st1t1..1e or netlontl
origin, or •ny lnt.nUon to
mtU •ny such

- - - - -- - Appalachians
Work
at
home,
(S, 7 )436 _4624

Mob1le Home lot in Johnson
Mob•te Home Park 1n
Gallipolis,
OH
Phone
(740)446· 2003 or [7 40)446·
1409.

star~ and 1/2. AC, single Lw-..OAiiCRFAiiiiiiiiiiGiii[--' between
Athens
and
garage/20 X 20 shop ~
Pomeroy. $365.00
per
740· 47 acres +I· Lle\!inQ Road, month. Call (740)385-994a.
Racine. Route 124

nan ce . your home or
obtain a lOan. BEWARE
of requests for any l;m)A
-.ad'lance payments of
tees 01 insurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll tree at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage
t&gt;roker
or
lender
is
properly

An Ekcelent WWf to earn
money. The New Avon.
cau Marilyn 304-882·2645

I

Din., Front Am., Full base., __ AND BUillliNG.~ ,
sto~ and 112. IlL. ' s1ngle
9arage120 X 20 shOp F&amp;S Tire SR 7 &amp; SA 681 .
Racine, Route 124
740· Tuppers Plains. Oh, includes
949-2253.
all equipment. Frank Wells

Finan cial
Institution's
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE yoo refi·

~

2 Mob1le hOmes for rent.
740-367·7762 or 740·446·
4060
- ------3 Bedroom Mobile Home.
Union Avenue. Pomeroy,
Completely
Renoo.Jated ,
$450/mo. (740)416·6154

4 rental houses "For Sale" NEW 2007 4 bed O!Wide!
For a couple or construction
In Gallipolis. Cal l Wayne $49,179. Midwest (740)828·
workers
2 Br.. 12X150,
(404)456-3802.
2750
$350
plus dep
Gas
B!SIN~
Heat
Syracuse
992-7680.
5 Plus Acres. 2 Br .. Kit.,

Scheduled For Feb. 20· Upcoming salOn looking for
March 7, Hours Will Be 8am· a managing cosmetologist
4:30pm.
If
You
Are and 8 licensed naM tech. call
lntet'ested In Joining Our MWF 740-245-9870.
Friendly And OerJicated :.::.:::.~:.:.::.:.::...:.:_:__
Staff. Please Stnn By Our Wanted: Direct Supervision
~~
Front Office Mon·Fri., 9am· employees to oversee male
5pm And Fill Out An youth in a staff secure resi·
Application ,
Space
Is denlial environment. Must
•
Limited, Applications Will Be pass
phy's1cal training
Accepted Unt1l Feb. 9, Full requirement. Pay based on
Time Ar1d Part Time Part experience. Call (740)379·
Time Positions Available To 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fri

110 HF.I.P W.4.N1lD
1 -------~

__
·___·____·

~N 's

needed to JNrform
basic first lid at bueine&amp;s in GOd's Rojoicing Car ClaNipolio, oil 45631
Chesllire.
OH. building, remodeling, plumblntertslin;'low Stress Wotk inQ, prayer. John Moore 992·
Now Hiring experienced Environment.
Great 2839
sawmill help. Apply In per· Opportunity to Earn Extra
son .
l'wln
Rlv., Caslll C~l 888-2e9-e344 or 'iijp;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Uerc:twoocll2612l)6 Rt 35. Fax resume to 74D-266~
Southside
'
6871
~
~
re&amp;ume to 1364 Herman Rd

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
HouN fat .... : 2br. 1 ba. sec dep. (740}446-3844.
on Monroe Ave. Pt. Pleasant
ED A AFFORDABLE!
needs soma wor~ . good AcceptinQ
applica1 ionEi Townhouse
apartmenta .
llal1tr home or rental unit th rOlJgh 2/14. Nice 2 story, 3 and.'m small hou!BS FOR

$t9,500. 304-675 .6349
bedroom , I Bath, 571 Carter
- . , - - - , - - - --,------,-- Road. Propane heat. No
HUD HOMEI3bd S112/mo. Indoor Pets, Stove, Fridge.
3bd 2be t1Wmo. More Water and trlsh included
homl8 available! 4111odn . Deposit $400. Rent S450
30yrs 0 8%. For list1ngs (740 )256· 1106
800-559-4109 )(F144
Attontionl
Loe&amp;ted in Gallipolis Ferry, Local com pany olfe rin ~ "NO
large yard, wi 16)(8Q Mobile DOWN PAYMEN T" proHome, 30r. 2ba. vaulted ceil· grams for you to bu y your
ings. island kitchen. n a~ home 1nstead ot renting
refridg .. All electric, cove red • 100% financing
front porctl. 2 larQEJ Garages ' Leas than perfect credit
plus ootbulld1ngs (304)675- accepted
3161 aslOng $60.000
' Payme nt could be the
same as rent
Locators
HOM~ Mortgage

r

~

MOIIILE

1'011 SAL!;

I

• 1740)367-()()(1{)

lllrid

RENT. Call {740)44l ·11 l 1

lor application &amp; information
Oown1own Pomt Pleasa nt

modern one b&amp;droom Apt
Second floor. stove and
retngerator, mcl uded, au
electnci deposit reqUi red No
call
after Spm
Pets

(304 1675·371!8

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Cent r t~l

heat &amp; AJC
•WaSher/dryer hookup

• All el ectnc· averag•ng
S50-$60.'monlh
• Owner pays water. sewer.
trash

(304)882-3017

e

~ lor Flent .............................................480
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'o for Sale .............................................. 720
Truck. tor Sale .....:...................................... 715

I

Phone ___________'--------------~

For lease. 1600 squa re'"~"·
beautifuL unturn1shed, two
be&lt;t'oom apt , 2nd fioof. LA
DR. 1 , 12 barns. ~ntown
GallipoliS. •deal tor couple
References requ ired. no
~1$. security deposit, $600
per I'I'IOOih Call (740)446-

Upholotery ................................................... 870

For Sale .............................................. 730
Wl!ftttd to Buy ............................................. 090
· Wanted to Buy- F.,.,. Suppllel .................. 820
_ Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Ront............................................ 470
. Yard
Galllpoila....................................
- Yard Sale-"""*"VIMiddte ......................... 074
. YardSII.-PL PIHUnt ................................ 07f

Mall or drop off thla eoupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Vell•y Publlahlng P.O. Box 4e8. Oallfpolla, OH 45e31

so.

------------------------------•

_ , . .,,.,.

Ir M~r:~~ Ir Mc:;~IL'

Sltulttono Wonted ....................................... 120

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - -

I

Hay &amp; Groln.................................................. 840
· Http Wanted .................................................uo
· Home lmprovemento................................... 810
. Hamil tor 8ote ............................................ 3!0
Houoehold Good• ........ .. ............................. 510
. Hou-lor Ront .......................................... 410
· In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnturonce ..................................................... 130
Ltwn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ...................... 580
Llveotock. .....................................................830
Loot and Found ...........................................
Loll &amp; Acmgo ............................................ 350
Mtacelteneoon.............................................. 170
. Miaceltenaoua Merchandloe.......................540
· Mobile Home Repatr ....................................
Mobile Homea for Rent... ............................ 420
- Mobile Homu for Sate................................320
• Monay to Loon ............................................. 220
- Motorcyclel &amp; 4 Whoetera .........:................ 740
. Muolcallnatrumenta .................................. 570
. "-roonalo .....................................................
· "-'" lor Sale .................... ............................ 580
. Plumbing &amp; '*'llng .................................... 820

oao

Subscriber's Name - ' - - - - - - - - -

FOR YOIJ!!

Announctment ............................................ 030
Antiquoo ....................................................... 530
Apartmonto tor Rent.. .. .. ............................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ........................... 080
Auto Parta &amp; Accessorlao .......................... 780
Auto Repair ... ............................................... 770
Au too for Sale .............................................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplteo .............,.......................... 550
Buotne11 and Butldlngo ............................. 340
Bustnaoa Opportunlly ................................. 210
8uotne11 Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Clmparo &amp; Motor Homu ........................... 710
Camping Equipment ................................... 780 ·
Canto ol Thonko .......................................... OtO
Child/Elderly Core ....................................... I 10
Etectrlcai/Rtlrlgorotton ...............................840
Equipment for Flent. ..................:................. 480
Exoovtltng ................................................... 130
Farm Equlpmont .......................................... f10
For1111 lor Atnt .................................... ......... 430
F-lor Sale~ ............................................ 330
For L -..................................................:.. 480

For lltl ........................................................ 585

~-------------------------------

HAS
S(1,1ETHING

..., J.: \ II I ...

For Sate or Trlde .........................................SIO
FruHa &amp; Vegotabtea ..................................... 580
Fumlohed AoornL ....................................... 450
Gonentt Haullng...........................................
OIVHway ...................................................... 040

C!i$allipolts Dailp Qtrtbune
•oint •lea•ant B.egi&amp;ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba.! ' U::ime• -&amp;entinel

Public Notice

I

.

national origin, sex,
ago, retigton. political
bette! or dioablllly.
(2) 9, 12, 13

The 2006 Annual
Financial Roport of the
Vllllge of Rutland to
available for public
lnapactlon at the vi~
lage oHtce on Main
Stroelln Rutl.and, Ohio,
45775 between the
hours of 9 am and 2
pm Monday through
Friday.
(2) 9, 12, 13

The dNdtiN tor ...
mloaton 61 pro~ a1ala
lo Fobnllry 23, :11107 It
12:00 - .. !'of program tntormatlon guldellneo,
contact
Ctlrlo Shank, loctol
t.rvlcae Suparv'- II
(740) tll2-2117 Ill. 123
01 175 A - StrMI,
Middleport,
Ohio
48710.

·
•

r'o ~~

kitncarlvl. .comcaat.net

Oin.. Front Am ., Full base..

740.256- 1360.

1 not
• Boll

..-elL

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~:~~:7e4·1 37(!04)773-5343 1ilo

4K4'1 For Sole .............................................. 725

c.ncelany acl.t any lime. E«ort muat be ,.pon.cs on thll

. . liwt¥1 OOiilrldeiiiiM. • ~tnt,... c.tl appltM. • AI,_, ..... ldvertleanw.ntti ara tubiect to the FedMal fill Houaing Act of 1MI.
~on~ '*P wW1IId .a. mMIIng EOE
We wm not knowinttY Kcepllln't actvenitlng in ~o~kiLitiDfl Df tbllliw.

Bladl; colored mi)(ed breed
•
•
10 week old puppies. 1
Female, 2 male. 740-441 · CASH Paid tor junk cars &amp;
1269
trucks. $35-$130. Call Cell Overtlrook Center Located
.,
1·304-612· 1037, after ~ ...m 0 333Page St. , Middleport,
......
Ohio
Is Pleased To
1
Free to good home. Blac« 740)446-8955.
Announce We Will Be
puppies 2 Female and 1
I \ll'ill\\11 \I
Holding M STNA Clas&amp;.
Ma~.

Dr

s Plus AOfes, 2 Br., Kit.

Wrecks, Pay Cash J D

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·

'ltKt.

I

ii;t;p;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;""i

If so, you qualify for a

All
submissions
muat be received by
malt or hand delivered
by the above date and
time. No materials
received after that date
will be Included In pr•
vlouo oubmlootono nor
will be conaldered. The
DJFSreoervea the right
to reject any or all propoaato. The DJFSta
prohibited kom discrimination on the
baala of race, color,

Public Notice

The Melgo County
Depilrtment ol Job Fomlty Sarvlcae (DJFS)
to requeettng propooalo from a quaii!Md
vondor to provide a
promotional campaign
aimed at enhancing
the Iotter oarWedop.
lion Pf011rome 81 the
DJFSihrough
the
AdopiOhlo
Kkll
lnconUYO Fund tor the

manl tn vlolal:to
tho taw.

or ol·d er?

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

The Home National
Bank will auction the
following
item on
Saturtlay, February 10,
2007, at 10:00 a.m. at
tho Bank's parking tot.
2000 Ventura Van
1GNDX03EOYD321228
2002 Kia Sportage
KNDJA723425116244
1994 Mazda 626
IYVGE22DXR5117459
2004
19
HP
Craftsman Mower
1966 Academy Mobile
Home
481021222
Tho Mobile Home Is
ta&lt;:ated in Pomeroy.
The oate will be at the
Bank's parking lot.
The Home National
Bank reserves the
right to re~t any and
all bids. All vehicles
and mobile home are
sold. as Is where Is,
with no warranties
axpreased or Implied.
For an appointment to
- · call 949-2210, ask
for Sheila.
(2)7. 9

accept any IKiver

t:!-:r

Ab&amp;olute Top Dollar : U.S.
Sil'ller and Gold Coins,
(3041773-5630
Prootsets, Gold A1ngs, Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
SDI~aire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Coi n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740-446·
Australian Sheppard mix . 2842.
hver&amp;white,
short hair, - - - - - - - amber eyes, vaoc . and HW. Buying Junk Cars,Trudcs &amp;

740·388·0321

•nted •ds mHUn

POUCIU: Ohio YeiJwt Publlatllng ~ tM r)Vht to Mit.

TriOunt-Sentlne~tw will M rwporwlbtt lor no ...or. tn.n tht ooat of ltw apac:t~ occupiad by tha anor •nd only the fir~ innrtlon.
any lou or eJipenN lblt rMUitl; from tht P'lbllclillon Of omlnkwt ol an aclvertiMmenl Correction wiU MINidt In tha Hrat avalllle». edition.

To purchase Stanley
Home PrOducts or to
have an old-fashiolled
Stanley Party PhOne

Thla

cc•pt•

muat be prepitld"

Cross Creek Auctk&gt;n Buffalo
AucUon Saturday Trailer load
of merchandise from N. VA.
Suger
Creek
Bacon .
Longhorn Cheese, Produce
Used
Merchandise
AalrVSieevsnow Visa and
Master Card (304) 5501616 Stit
1&amp;39

he apace occupie

Box num~ ada 1
tway• conlklentill.

All Dleplay: 12 Noon :I
Bueln••• Day• Prior To
Publication
&amp;unday Dl•play: 1:00
Thu.-.cl•y for Sunday•

ok:fland fill road. 992-5327.

of pubi!Gatlon an

EASTERN (11-1, 5-4 TVC)

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL..\
added ta your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Barders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for lar9e

Display Ads

LOST BOXER REWARD! 9
yr.olcherv miSled, tern .,
SOib,browrvwh.on the neck.
Sun. 1·28 on S1ate Rt 143

ad at •ny time.
Errora Must
8
eport.ct on the firs

Katie Hayman 2 o-o 4, Ryan ·Davis 0 0·
0 0. Morgan Werry 2 ().() 4, Jllllan
Brannon 2 0-0 4, Georgana Koblentz 0
0·0 0 , Erin Weber 3 2·6 8 , Jenna Hupp
2 1-2 7. Totals - 11 3-8 27.
Three point goals - FH 1 (Butcher). E

Oearllfirec

• Slut Vour Ada With A Keyword • lnducle Complete
O..CripUon • Include A Prla~ • Avokl AbbreviiUont
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When ......._.
• Ads Should Run 7 ~,.

r

l\egister

(7~~1 ro992;~~~6 (304) 675-1333

• All ada

~~ 1
A~~o~ ~~~------~

\\\Ill \1 I \II\)"

Websjtes
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

Dally In-column: 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Prlday for Jn•art:lon
In N•xt Day'• Pa~r
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Por Sunday• PaPt~r

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to ·5:00 p.m.

Emily Duntee 2 2·2 6, Hannah
McKibOen 0 0·0 0, Ryan Fieler 2 ~ 4,
Tara Russell 1 2·2 4 , Chelsea Bail 0 o-o
0, Julia Winson 0 0.0 0, Iris Butcher 7 0·
0 15, Summer Hatfield 1 0-1 2 . Totals 13 4-5 31 .

2 (Hupp 21 .

m:rtbune
(7~?.~ ro446~!42
Word Ads

31
27

·s -

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To Place ·

FED HOCK 31. EASTERN 27
11
4

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County
OH

when it plays host to the
Miller Lady Falcons. The
game will begin at 3 p.m.
and there will be no reserve
game.
FedHocK6
Eastern 12

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2007

2 BedrOOfTl. Bulavi!1e Plke.
4425 or 1740)446-3936
2007
312 · Ooublew1d&amp;. TraSh/Water Pd. No Pets.
$37.970 MidWest (740)828- Deposit &amp; AeferellCes. Modern 1BA apt (740t446(740)388· 1100
0390
2750.

on

--·-

.

------------·-

· -~

----- -- --- --.

·-

-

.. ,,

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

r

Friday, February 9, 2007

Friday, February 9, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

QriCi&lt;lua living. 1 p 2 bodroom apartment~~ at Villge

ACROSS

Manof
and
Rlvtrtldt
Apartmtntl In Mlcklttpof1.
From $295-$«4. Col 740~qual Houalng

Phillip
Alder

Zilch
44 Slarbocko
Bulllca poll
order
Snow boot 46 Mlxor
1.11.-nlghl 50 "The
hoo1
GNoiHf'
12 Chemlol'o 51 Scorch
IIIIICMJnt
53 Wrulllng
13 Under par
otyle
14 Klutztt
54 ~wrHtr
15 FONm IIIlo
Janis 11 Drop-- 53 Vlvoclly
llno
56 Smoolh17 liD before
lllklng
IDH
57 Oil-drilling
10 Ago
plotform
21 Woolll4ll\lll 58 Former
11 Journal
22 Look at
lllllon co!no 18 Mighty
omorouoly 58 Nollltelr
bloW
23 Ttl-Mel dip
20 llonolaur'o
26 Glveo
DOWN
lolondo
comfort
22 Columbus'
26 Santa1 Muvetoward
home
winds
2 - ··
23 Weaken
26 lllngkok
brltfly
24 Shortly _
nollvo
3 Deleoll
25 Ruing loudly
31 Obolocle
4 See ey•lo- 26 Funny
33 Gl'ltlldour
eye
person
5 Urge
27 Wine
35 ototuo
ltrYed
6 Mlu Kltly'l

1
4
I
1,

lmmaculale 1 Bedroom Apt,
Newly CarpettO, Frllhty
Painted &amp; o-.1od, Now

ROGER HYSELL'S

GARAGE
112 mile west on SA
12410 Rulland, Oh

appllancet, WID Hookup,

Belterra
no
Resort &amp; Spa
3 Day-2 Night Getaway

March 22, 20071o
March 24, 2007
$175/person based on
double occupancy
Package includes dinner on the
.first night and brealdaat on the
second morning
Single rooms can be pu1rchaa11d I
for $275/person
Must be 21 years of age
(No relunda)
Gladly accept caah, money
order, check &amp; credit carda
Please call PVH Community
Relallons to make reservatlona,
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1328

~~
Music at the Eagles

"Wild Ride"
Band
Saturday,
February·1Oth

Privacy

Fence, Private
Parking, 12 min. hom Alo
Grande , Must 1M to IlPPI'•
ciale, $325/mo. (6141585·
n13, 800-798--48116.
Immaculate

2

740-992·5682
9am - 6pm

bedroom

apartment New carptl A
cabinets, lr81hly palnttd &amp;
decorated, W/0 hookup.
Beautiful country titling.

I h \ '\-. 1'4 11, I \ t i el '\

Auros

FORSAIJ!

Mutt aee to appreciate.
$400/mo (S14)595-n73 or

$5001 Pollee

1-800-798-4686.

Impounds

Cars from $5001For listings
80()..559-4086 x3901

Mld&lt;lepor1 Beech S1reel, 2
bedroom furni&amp;he&lt;l apart·
ment, deposit &amp; pre-rental
references, no peta, utilities
paid, (740)992.()165

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

New 1 Bedroom Apt., living
room. full ball\ &amp; largo ctoaet. Limited Kitchenette.
COuld be used u a two bedroom studio. Furnlahed,
$4501m0 and unfurnished,
S300/mo. (740)416-11154

Ool:lge

Ram Van 1500
series. $1500
080.
1740)256-1233 or (740)2561652.
2002 Pontiac Sunflre $3800.
1999 Cavalier, $2500. 2003
Ca11alier $4500, 740-256 -

New
2BR apartments.
Waaherldryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator indUded.
Also. units on SR 180. Pets

6169.

BISSElL
ctmiiCIIII
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

t A1 82
6 K 10 4

5:00pm to 9:00pm

••n-1m
Stop Compare
&amp;

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

AUCTION
Middleport DepL
Store
Sue's Selectables
March 2nd
March 3rd 10:00 am

'fROCKS
FORSAU:

W.lcomel (740)441.()194.

6 K J 8
• A 10 3

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

ROBERT

1988

Chevy

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Auctioneer
Billy R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164

........
In Memory

iliii;;;;;:ll&lt;ltHltoul:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

In Loving

Memory

Dwight
Haley Sr.
2-9-1918
1D-28-2003
Although we

are far apart
You will

l'hanks to the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church, Pastor Jamie
F()Tiner, and all the singers that
were there.
Also, thank you to everyone who
came out on such a bad night. It will
be greatly appreciated for the
collection to the Lucas Famity.
Thanks again,
Jim Farris· Middleport, OH
Card ol Thanks

always
remain In our
heart.
Love,
Wife&amp;.
Children

w...,.,. &amp; dcyero, refrigoragaa

and

91eclric registered. On premises.

======:::.:...

male 1 female 3 black and
- - - - - - - white, 2 tan and white.
Used furniture store, 130 $50.00 each. call days 740-

3 (M·F), sat . Call Flrtl.

i

r

I

,._'.!'-"""

IMI'K\l\'DDNI'S

BASEIIENT

IIAv

GRAIN

each. (740)388·8124
Puggle puppies for sale. 181
shots. wormed , health guarantee, puppy s1arter kil. can

P1tlo 1nd Porch O.Ckl

wvosem

'V C YOUNG Ill
I'
1

o

"' '' •
l

,

11115 1111111111
. . .I'll. II

e

Commercial building "For
s.tl" 1800 sq tt, oH atraet

parl&lt;lng. Qroat location. Call

Help Wln1ecl

Woyne (404)458-3602.

aet ot -4 toning tat&gt;Ms. sate
lor anyone "'""' program.
118i&lt;lng $3SOO.OO Call MWF
740-2%-IHI70

e

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications for lull-time and
per diem Nursina Assistants for South
One and South l'wQ. All shifts available.
Previous nursing assistance experience
prelened

Manager
Janet Jeffers

740-367·0544
Free Eatlmatas
740-367-()536

ttea·n IJIOUJCft
UlO --.y Drive
. . . . . . . . . 'IN lSSS.
£/O

Or fax:
30toll5-0J5

Ot apply on~ne at

•........,........,r._
M/EOE

Loc:~~l

A·O.

,....

I""'IOU ~f&gt;.."{ I\'~ '{QUI&lt;:.
PRE.ROC.f&gt;.."I:I\JE. TO
N.O\ itf:Mft/\&amp;.lt
'";&gt;-'-'i.:,:OUR ~ ...

'iOU KNON, GIAI&gt;'i !&gt;,
'10\Yil.E. ~N..L'i lolOT
&amp;.IIIC. FMC..

-· · 0

t:lasslllllls

•un

!17 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
991·3194
or991-6635

HAVEN'T THROWN
OUT A RUNNER AT
~ECOtll&gt; IN A~L OUR
'fEARS IN LITTLE

--.•·o

_-?~

~--~~~-----1i~

~------------~-J
-- ·U-----------~~

PEANUTS
I'M TIRED

OF BEIN6 COLD

AT

Hill s s('i l

SUNSHINE CLUB

StO id(jl '
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-948-2217

Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1!14'1 mo. pd

---··r.··
..........•

GARFIELD

Recycl ng

....

7 711

7

fl.E:(J(.,

~------.-; ,\, ~---~....--.~ ~

446.(1007

IEUS1111UE

1\LL

l.E,t,(,UE .

10 Pine Street • Gallipolis

,,,,
,.

·~~ '{CAJ"?.'""

'(0l)

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

lleell a
lllb ••••,

flU\ l

BIG NATE

Contractor

(]amiLy_ •"""•")":i"·,""'ij"§'":··

7

Holidays, health insurance,
sinale/family plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability
and retirement.
Send resumes to:
.....,._..,lhrpiWI

Diywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

"Middleport's only
Stlf..Stor....

Help Wanted

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• HomefiU System
• Helios System

r~~
FORSAIJ!

THE BORN LOSER

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

(740) 992-5232
Owner
Rhonda Peters

$325 each. (7401767-4875

Help Wanted

(740) 416·1568

High and Dry
Storage

Visa!Mastercard Accepted,

Help Wlnted

,or., •
I , 1,

Now Renting

LFI, repeating target rifle, Females, 11 weeks old. alp.
$150. Both gunt are verv Sho1s utd and oroomed.

Oak firewood lor sale. - Delivered
or
pickup. Gibson Eplphone 6 string
(740)441·0941, 1740)645· accuatic gunar~. New In bole
!ia.t6. CM HEAP accepted. wl1h warranty. $150 caeh

• Custom Baths
•Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

on ctubs to establish the extra wnners
that you require. And taking the club suit
in isolation, the percentkge play is to
cash the king, then to run the 10 through
West Here, though, thai highway leads
to failure, not au~ss. East ~s in with
his club queen and pushes a spade
through your king into lhe jaws of West's

We Deliver To You I

74Q-379-22ti8
Anlchutz 1516 22 mag rifle, .,.:...:...:..=.:..:.._ __
$550. Anschutz. 54ms .22 Schnauzers. Mini, AKC. 2

Pleasant Valley Hospital i~ currently
accepting resumes for a Director of Home
Care Services. Home Heakh experience
required. Experience in supervision and
management of a Home Care Aaency
preferred.
RN with Bachelor's Degree. Must
maintain licensure in the stales of WV
and Ohio. Applicants actively pursuina a
BSN will be considered.
Send resumes to:
P I - ' Vlllley Hcuplbll
c/o tkllnM • mo v.11ey Drift
Point Ple-.t. 'IN 15550
Or fax:

AA/EOE

I

5folmNG
Gool6
...______,l

NURSING ASSISTANI'S

_ptr.,.. .

~

WATERPROOFING
&amp;
Unconditional lifetimd guaranlee. Local references furBulaYIHe Pike. Electric gas 446·3398 eve 740·379· ---nished. Established 1975.
ranges, cheats. couches, 2467.
Sq. bales hay for sale.S3.00 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446-manreaaea, . bunk beds,
tor 2nd cutting and $2.00 tor 0870, Rogers Basement
dtnettea, rec~nera. (740)446- Miniature Pincher Pups, 2 1st cut11ng .Call after 7:00 Waterproofing.
.t782, Galllpolll, OH. Hrs 11- Black/Tan males, $250 P.M. 740-992-7302

DIRECTOR OF IJIME CARE SERVICFS

online at:

VInyl Siding &amp; P•lnd"'

•1•1.! t _.' ')

•r-----..,
j
IiiriitO;;;;;;;;;;:u..:;;;,;;;;;_;;;;;;;;

repairs on maJor brands in
olloporalyourllome.
Husl&lt;y puppies 5 wks old, 4 (740)441·5270

M/EOE

Or apply

puppies molherflalher ~KC

rangea,alroondilioners,and Ready 1o g Feb.15 $150 ~
•
wringer washers. Will dO Call tor info. 740-44HOOO
Paint Stud for Sate, $700.

(304) 675-5236.

304-675-6915

loadmaxDumps, &amp;

AKC
while
miniature Utility- Aluma Aluminum L_~:l::=:J:..-~
Sdmauzer, male, available 7 ~ B&amp;W. Gooseneck ..,
.
weeks 'old (?4 0)992· 1328 Httches·
Trader
Parts. 1996 Suzuki intruder 800 .
Carmichael
Trailers.
Thompsons A.pphance &amp; or 74()..4 ~
1
7403
$3500. Call for more inforAepair-4175-7388. Fer aale,
(740)446-2412
mation. 740-256-1567
re-conditioned automatic For 8818 Golden Retriever
, l in It 1"

Pleasant Valley Nursins and
Rehabilitation Center has openings for
State Tested Nursing Assistants. l'welve
hour shifts, shift differential, excellent
salary, holidays, health insurance
sinsle/family plan, dental, life insurance,
vacation, lo.nB·term disability and
retirement
For more information, please contact
Anaie Cleland. Director of Nursing.

e

TralleraGooseneck,

each. 740 379-2601

Card of Thankl

Help Wanted

I•

Wlnds1ar

Eteobiolll. Plumbing
-~~~Rooting I Gutltn

Gooai

STATE TES1tD NURSING ASSISTANTS

HelpWanlad

i

Plmi
FOR SAt..E

Ford

Kiefer Built- Valley-Bison· Northwood. Great condition
Horse
and
Livestock 94,000 miles. 740-985-3810

'---iiiiiliililirrro_.j.

tOr$,

Card ol Thanks

mond and lwo clubs. Clearly you wil play

CARPENTER Baer Builders
SERVICE
&amp;Developers

CURRENT EVENTS.

Card ol Thanks

a game, not a slam.
You start with seven

YOUNG '&lt;;

1998

992·2155

42 Claw or

nome

top tricks: one
spaOO (Irick one), three hearts, one dia-

-·...

The Daily Sentinel

6

30 Foot part
32 Thouoond
bucko
34 Bog dirt ·
36 Get dirty
10 Pilld- 39 llodtrn )0.

10, jack?
In lhe auction , North was right oot to
introduce his minor suit, because he had
a balanced hand and the values lor only

'r'OU
SPOIL. 'r'ORE
APPETITE !!

COUPIIS

To Subscribe Call

worm

37111koendl
blrkMptr
meot
7 A-r
38 HodiO......a&gt;OMion• 8 "The Seorlot
"
lor
40 Dragon
9 Noulleol
puppet
poolllon

My a,.,;ct.'

I!ICMMn AcldWonl •

ENTERTAINMENT

-·ly

Eut
Allpa,.

oei-11
44 Don
45 Jol46 Germon
lnduotrlal
region
47 Llnguoge
with c:licU
48 Kuwaiti
INdor
49 Stick up
52 Colton gin

That is an excellent approach to both life
and bridge. On this deal, many would go
down in three no-trump, but ooe hopes
they would then learn from their error. It
you were thEl declarer, what would you
do after West leads the spade six: two.

Mizway Tavern

COMICS SPIRTS

3 NT

43 ~~- of

ence. Fa11ure is, in a sense, the h;ghway ·
to success, inasmuch as fNii'V diaco'J ery of what is false leads us to seek
earnes1ty after what is true, and every
fresh experience points out some lorm
of error which we shall aftEHWards care-

www.auctionzip.com

8:00 pm - 12:00 mid

TECHNOLOGY

Nol1b

p..,

eomollve
41 AtiNMI
(2 welt.)

John Kea1s wrote , "Oon'l be discouraged
by a failure. It can be a positive 8ll.peri-

1500 . 4Jt4

Wed. &amp; Fri. Karaoke
Thur. - Pool tournament 7 pm
Sat. Band AM IX 9-1

Wer~t

1 NT

Avoid the lead
that is avoidable

350AT 3'susp. 3'body lift kit
35' tires. Ac Cd Sharp.
$5500 OBO. 740-367-0638

'!lop. 30U75-5182

Sou&amp;b

Opening lead: •

Nioa clean, newly doconl1od
carpel , 2 br. S1ove , refrldg.
wid hook-up. no pels 101. I

East
• 10 5 4
• 9 6 2
t K QJ
.. Q 6 5 3

Soulb

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877 -66!1-0007

Metros. 2 Rangen. 740.446·
2000 Neon. Auto, Air. 4cyl.,
$2200 OBO, 96 Wh ite

• 9 5 t

6A J 9 87

rJamihJ
•·tflHM•
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2 Escorts. 2 cavatl era. 2
7278

• 12
• K QJ

West
6AQ 9 6 3
• a1 a4
• 10 8 3
a 2

Ilion

43 Compotoror

•

Nl61-lT

1 WONDER
Wi-10 DESI&amp;NS
TllESE THIN65 ..

Instead,

you IT'K.ISt keep East

G

GRIZZWELLS
t:b~t'd~
~\'lllA1

-~
~\1-16
CfUr£
IS?

AstroGraph

10,2007
By hmkle 8ede Oeol

You will Cllscovar that only you can
accomplish your goals anel desires. After
waiting on others and beinp disappointed. you'll realize it Is time to 00 lor yourself, by yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It you
think by holding firm and being inflexible
to the thoughts of others you will get what
you want. you are sadly mistaken . You're
apt to encounter one who is more rigid
than you .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You''le
reached the oute r limits regarding a
responsibility or duty that should have
been taken care of. Asking for more time
will only yield big trouble.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Should
you have two invitations from which to
choose, remember the gala ewnt is lii&lt;&amp;ty to be what you 8)(pect, but lhe lesser
one could 8)(Ceed 9\/erything you hoped
to get from the activity.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) - Irs always
smart to count to 10 be tore soul"'ding off,
and this might be even more important
for you to do 11 your displeasure comes
from a·family member. Regrets are made
in haste.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 ) - Should you
find yourself dealing with a te~eramen­
tal associate. don't agQravate the situation further by allowing subjects or topics
to come up that ~u know would pro'IOke
him or her.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - What
makes some business condilion5 hard to
get a handle on at this lime is that people
in general are a bit on the edgy side.
PQstpone dealing with anything that Is
truly important to you.
LEO (July 23-Aug _22) - At limes. areas
of disagreement between you and you r
mate· could get a bit pronou~ed ai'K:I
today might be one of thOse days. Both
must avoid trying to Jorce the other to
CQffiply with OOmal"'ds.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22 ) - Enatic or
improper handling of situations that are
presently running smoothly would cause
a disruption in their performance. Don't
be the one who causes things to fall
apart or gO astray.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - It's best not
to be too loud or come on too strongly
when invol'lld In a social situation you're
sharing with others. Your friends will
respond better to poli1e consultattoo than
to demands.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) - In handling metters where you havl some
authOrity over othera. wield your power
patiently and wt.ely. Tyrannical lctlona
will make enemt•s whO only want to fight
all your demands.
SAG I TT~IUS {Nov. 23-0ee. 21) - Of
COUrM, It's your prMIO&amp;IM 10 cham9io n
an unpoQular ceuM , but know there are

for doing so. Don't

oet

dldn'1 agr• with you

10 begin with .
CAPRICORN (O.C: . 22-Jan . 1i)-It's not
like you to be ce~ wheln It comH to
"nanclal sltuatlone, ~Iaiiy tt1oH that
are crltlc;al to you. Yltlhat le .acll~ what
)'01.1 might do. and you'll ~ out on the
short end.

SOUPTONUTZ
-.Lielle 1lle -INQ
Of' l.R IS 1b I..MW - -

11-!!Na
&lt;II""'-~!' ~'leO tiO.

-

Todayl '*"· D-Is Y
"SAEY
NBLLFA
SW

GF.

EGBPF

OFWOlF

KFBSSD
ES'Y

LIKKEYA."

•

KFBLY

ABXF
AW

BGBUERP .. .
NBLLFA

WC
LFBTESD

KIS

ES ' Y

KFBSSD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The grealesl composers were also lhe grealesl
lllieves. Thei stole lrom everyone and ev\l!'fNhofe ' - Pabk&gt; Casals

.....
'=~=' s~~~lA-4t.~s· ....

o~.""..":mb~-wo:.
:: ~.........,--.....,.,
low .. form feout ...pie ._,.

-'lllrthdlilr:

~ who

by Luis Campos
CeleOrity C!phel aypitq!mi II! 11AWCI lr(ll11 qtAitAons b',' tarTrui ~ . P811.-d .........
Eld1 ~tter Ill the ~ SIII'IOS lOr !lliO'IMr

-~ loy ClAY l. POllAN

S.tu~~,eb.

contequ~

· · · -

ever

gaining the lead. At trick two, play a law
· heart to dummy's jack. Then, run the
club seven through East If the finesse
lost because West had the quoon, he
could not hurt you, and yOu would collect
at least nine tricks. Here, though, the
club finesse wins. You continue with a
club to your 10 and eventualy rake in an
overtrick.

angry at

2

from

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

FALOTA

hJ..:.M..:.;A..:C:.,;E:::..;;.R:-l ~
5

..

1.....1:-1-.1.-..J.....J~

s QA y u E

My liCCOUIIIInt allows me to
claim IDtS ofthiDp under
depreciation, except-. .

I

~---.,~,..;.;.,..:.,..;1;.,..:6:.,.,_
--1 A Complore tho chvcl;lo qUOftd
by filling In 1ho milling -.Is
L.....;.L.....I.-.1..-'-·....1.1.-J. V
yo• dovolop lrom Ifill No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBIRID lETTERS IN
W TtltSE SQUARES

I

I u~~~~~~~ tmus I
SCRAM-LIT~

IIIIII

ANSWERS

2-

e- 0 1

Tuxedo - Banjo - Envoy - Ponder - NOT t::IONE
"Housework,." m~ the mother of five "is 1
job that is not noticed unless it is NOT DONE!"

ARLO&amp; JANIS

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

r

Friday, February 9, 2007

Friday, February 9, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

QriCi&lt;lua living. 1 p 2 bodroom apartment~~ at Villge

ACROSS

Manof
and
Rlvtrtldt
Apartmtntl In Mlcklttpof1.
From $295-$«4. Col 740~qual Houalng

Phillip
Alder

Zilch
44 Slarbocko
Bulllca poll
order
Snow boot 46 Mlxor
1.11.-nlghl 50 "The
hoo1
GNoiHf'
12 Chemlol'o 51 Scorch
IIIIICMJnt
53 Wrulllng
13 Under par
otyle
14 Klutztt
54 ~wrHtr
15 FONm IIIlo
Janis 11 Drop-- 53 Vlvoclly
llno
56 Smoolh17 liD before
lllklng
IDH
57 Oil-drilling
10 Ago
plotform
21 Woolll4ll\lll 58 Former
11 Journal
22 Look at
lllllon co!no 18 Mighty
omorouoly 58 Nollltelr
bloW
23 Ttl-Mel dip
20 llonolaur'o
26 Glveo
DOWN
lolondo
comfort
22 Columbus'
26 Santa1 Muvetoward
home
winds
2 - ··
23 Weaken
26 lllngkok
brltfly
24 Shortly _
nollvo
3 Deleoll
25 Ruing loudly
31 Obolocle
4 See ey•lo- 26 Funny
33 Gl'ltlldour
eye
person
5 Urge
27 Wine
35 ototuo
ltrYed
6 Mlu Kltly'l

1
4
I
1,

lmmaculale 1 Bedroom Apt,
Newly CarpettO, Frllhty
Painted &amp; o-.1od, Now

ROGER HYSELL'S

GARAGE
112 mile west on SA
12410 Rulland, Oh

appllancet, WID Hookup,

Belterra
no
Resort &amp; Spa
3 Day-2 Night Getaway

March 22, 20071o
March 24, 2007
$175/person based on
double occupancy
Package includes dinner on the
.first night and brealdaat on the
second morning
Single rooms can be pu1rchaa11d I
for $275/person
Must be 21 years of age
(No relunda)
Gladly accept caah, money
order, check &amp; credit carda
Please call PVH Community
Relallons to make reservatlona,
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1328

~~
Music at the Eagles

"Wild Ride"
Band
Saturday,
February·1Oth

Privacy

Fence, Private
Parking, 12 min. hom Alo
Grande , Must 1M to IlPPI'•
ciale, $325/mo. (6141585·
n13, 800-798--48116.
Immaculate

2

740-992·5682
9am - 6pm

bedroom

apartment New carptl A
cabinets, lr81hly palnttd &amp;
decorated, W/0 hookup.
Beautiful country titling.

I h \ '\-. 1'4 11, I \ t i el '\

Auros

FORSAIJ!

Mutt aee to appreciate.
$400/mo (S14)595-n73 or

$5001 Pollee

1-800-798-4686.

Impounds

Cars from $5001For listings
80()..559-4086 x3901

Mld&lt;lepor1 Beech S1reel, 2
bedroom furni&amp;he&lt;l apart·
ment, deposit &amp; pre-rental
references, no peta, utilities
paid, (740)992.()165

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

New 1 Bedroom Apt., living
room. full ball\ &amp; largo ctoaet. Limited Kitchenette.
COuld be used u a two bedroom studio. Furnlahed,
$4501m0 and unfurnished,
S300/mo. (740)416-11154

Ool:lge

Ram Van 1500
series. $1500
080.
1740)256-1233 or (740)2561652.
2002 Pontiac Sunflre $3800.
1999 Cavalier, $2500. 2003
Ca11alier $4500, 740-256 -

New
2BR apartments.
Waaherldryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator indUded.
Also. units on SR 180. Pets

6169.

BISSElL
ctmiiCIIII
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

t A1 82
6 K 10 4

5:00pm to 9:00pm

••n-1m
Stop Compare
&amp;

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

AUCTION
Middleport DepL
Store
Sue's Selectables
March 2nd
March 3rd 10:00 am

'fROCKS
FORSAU:

W.lcomel (740)441.()194.

6 K J 8
• A 10 3

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

ROBERT

1988

Chevy

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Auctioneer
Billy R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164

........
In Memory

iliii;;;;;:ll&lt;ltHltoul:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

In Loving

Memory

Dwight
Haley Sr.
2-9-1918
1D-28-2003
Although we

are far apart
You will

l'hanks to the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church, Pastor Jamie
F()Tiner, and all the singers that
were there.
Also, thank you to everyone who
came out on such a bad night. It will
be greatly appreciated for the
collection to the Lucas Famity.
Thanks again,
Jim Farris· Middleport, OH
Card ol Thanks

always
remain In our
heart.
Love,
Wife&amp;.
Children

w...,.,. &amp; dcyero, refrigoragaa

and

91eclric registered. On premises.

======:::.:...

male 1 female 3 black and
- - - - - - - white, 2 tan and white.
Used furniture store, 130 $50.00 each. call days 740-

3 (M·F), sat . Call Flrtl.

i

r

I

,._'.!'-"""

IMI'K\l\'DDNI'S

BASEIIENT

IIAv

GRAIN

each. (740)388·8124
Puggle puppies for sale. 181
shots. wormed , health guarantee, puppy s1arter kil. can

P1tlo 1nd Porch O.Ckl

wvosem

'V C YOUNG Ill
I'
1

o

"' '' •
l

,

11115 1111111111
. . .I'll. II

e

Commercial building "For
s.tl" 1800 sq tt, oH atraet

parl&lt;lng. Qroat location. Call

Help Wln1ecl

Woyne (404)458-3602.

aet ot -4 toning tat&gt;Ms. sate
lor anyone "'""' program.
118i&lt;lng $3SOO.OO Call MWF
740-2%-IHI70

e

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications for lull-time and
per diem Nursina Assistants for South
One and South l'wQ. All shifts available.
Previous nursing assistance experience
prelened

Manager
Janet Jeffers

740-367·0544
Free Eatlmatas
740-367-()536

ttea·n IJIOUJCft
UlO --.y Drive
. . . . . . . . . 'IN lSSS.
£/O

Or fax:
30toll5-0J5

Ot apply on~ne at

•........,........,r._
M/EOE

Loc:~~l

A·O.

,....

I""'IOU ~f&gt;.."{ I\'~ '{QUI&lt;:.
PRE.ROC.f&gt;.."I:I\JE. TO
N.O\ itf:Mft/\&amp;.lt
'";&gt;-'-'i.:,:OUR ~ ...

'iOU KNON, GIAI&gt;'i !&gt;,
'10\Yil.E. ~N..L'i lolOT
&amp;.IIIC. FMC..

-· · 0

t:lasslllllls

•un

!17 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
991·3194
or991-6635

HAVEN'T THROWN
OUT A RUNNER AT
~ECOtll&gt; IN A~L OUR
'fEARS IN LITTLE

--.•·o

_-?~

~--~~~-----1i~

~------------~-J
-- ·U-----------~~

PEANUTS
I'M TIRED

OF BEIN6 COLD

AT

Hill s s('i l

SUNSHINE CLUB

StO id(jl '
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-948-2217

Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1!14'1 mo. pd

---··r.··
..........•

GARFIELD

Recycl ng

....

7 711

7

fl.E:(J(.,

~------.-; ,\, ~---~....--.~ ~

446.(1007

IEUS1111UE

1\LL

l.E,t,(,UE .

10 Pine Street • Gallipolis

,,,,
,.

·~~ '{CAJ"?.'""

'(0l)

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

lleell a
lllb ••••,

flU\ l

BIG NATE

Contractor

(]amiLy_ •"""•")":i"·,""'ij"§'":··

7

Holidays, health insurance,
sinale/family plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability
and retirement.
Send resumes to:
.....,._..,lhrpiWI

Diywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

"Middleport's only
Stlf..Stor....

Help Wanted

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• HomefiU System
• Helios System

r~~
FORSAIJ!

THE BORN LOSER

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

(740) 992-5232
Owner
Rhonda Peters

$325 each. (7401767-4875

Help Wanted

(740) 416·1568

High and Dry
Storage

Visa!Mastercard Accepted,

Help Wlnted

,or., •
I , 1,

Now Renting

LFI, repeating target rifle, Females, 11 weeks old. alp.
$150. Both gunt are verv Sho1s utd and oroomed.

Oak firewood lor sale. - Delivered
or
pickup. Gibson Eplphone 6 string
(740)441·0941, 1740)645· accuatic gunar~. New In bole
!ia.t6. CM HEAP accepted. wl1h warranty. $150 caeh

• Custom Baths
•Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

on ctubs to establish the extra wnners
that you require. And taking the club suit
in isolation, the percentkge play is to
cash the king, then to run the 10 through
West Here, though, thai highway leads
to failure, not au~ss. East ~s in with
his club queen and pushes a spade
through your king into lhe jaws of West's

We Deliver To You I

74Q-379-22ti8
Anlchutz 1516 22 mag rifle, .,.:...:...:..=.:..:.._ __
$550. Anschutz. 54ms .22 Schnauzers. Mini, AKC. 2

Pleasant Valley Hospital i~ currently
accepting resumes for a Director of Home
Care Services. Home Heakh experience
required. Experience in supervision and
management of a Home Care Aaency
preferred.
RN with Bachelor's Degree. Must
maintain licensure in the stales of WV
and Ohio. Applicants actively pursuina a
BSN will be considered.
Send resumes to:
P I - ' Vlllley Hcuplbll
c/o tkllnM • mo v.11ey Drift
Point Ple-.t. 'IN 15550
Or fax:

AA/EOE

I

5folmNG
Gool6
...______,l

NURSING ASSISTANI'S

_ptr.,.. .

~

WATERPROOFING
&amp;
Unconditional lifetimd guaranlee. Local references furBulaYIHe Pike. Electric gas 446·3398 eve 740·379· ---nished. Established 1975.
ranges, cheats. couches, 2467.
Sq. bales hay for sale.S3.00 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446-manreaaea, . bunk beds,
tor 2nd cutting and $2.00 tor 0870, Rogers Basement
dtnettea, rec~nera. (740)446- Miniature Pincher Pups, 2 1st cut11ng .Call after 7:00 Waterproofing.
.t782, Galllpolll, OH. Hrs 11- Black/Tan males, $250 P.M. 740-992-7302

DIRECTOR OF IJIME CARE SERVICFS

online at:

VInyl Siding &amp; P•lnd"'

•1•1.! t _.' ')

•r-----..,
j
IiiriitO;;;;;;;;;;:u..:;;;,;;;;;_;;;;;;;;

repairs on maJor brands in
olloporalyourllome.
Husl&lt;y puppies 5 wks old, 4 (740)441·5270

M/EOE

Or apply

puppies molherflalher ~KC

rangea,alroondilioners,and Ready 1o g Feb.15 $150 ~
•
wringer washers. Will dO Call tor info. 740-44HOOO
Paint Stud for Sate, $700.

(304) 675-5236.

304-675-6915

loadmaxDumps, &amp;

AKC
while
miniature Utility- Aluma Aluminum L_~:l::=:J:..-~
Sdmauzer, male, available 7 ~ B&amp;W. Gooseneck ..,
.
weeks 'old (?4 0)992· 1328 Httches·
Trader
Parts. 1996 Suzuki intruder 800 .
Carmichael
Trailers.
Thompsons A.pphance &amp; or 74()..4 ~
1
7403
$3500. Call for more inforAepair-4175-7388. Fer aale,
(740)446-2412
mation. 740-256-1567
re-conditioned automatic For 8818 Golden Retriever
, l in It 1"

Pleasant Valley Nursins and
Rehabilitation Center has openings for
State Tested Nursing Assistants. l'welve
hour shifts, shift differential, excellent
salary, holidays, health insurance
sinsle/family plan, dental, life insurance,
vacation, lo.nB·term disability and
retirement
For more information, please contact
Anaie Cleland. Director of Nursing.

e

TralleraGooseneck,

each. 740 379-2601

Card of Thankl

Help Wanted

I•

Wlnds1ar

Eteobiolll. Plumbing
-~~~Rooting I Gutltn

Gooai

STATE TES1tD NURSING ASSISTANTS

HelpWanlad

i

Plmi
FOR SAt..E

Ford

Kiefer Built- Valley-Bison· Northwood. Great condition
Horse
and
Livestock 94,000 miles. 740-985-3810

'---iiiiiliililirrro_.j.

tOr$,

Card ol Thanks

mond and lwo clubs. Clearly you wil play

CARPENTER Baer Builders
SERVICE
&amp;Developers

CURRENT EVENTS.

Card ol Thanks

a game, not a slam.
You start with seven

YOUNG '&lt;;

1998

992·2155

42 Claw or

nome

top tricks: one
spaOO (Irick one), three hearts, one dia-

-·...

The Daily Sentinel

6

30 Foot part
32 Thouoond
bucko
34 Bog dirt ·
36 Get dirty
10 Pilld- 39 llodtrn )0.

10, jack?
In lhe auction , North was right oot to
introduce his minor suit, because he had
a balanced hand and the values lor only

'r'OU
SPOIL. 'r'ORE
APPETITE !!

COUPIIS

To Subscribe Call

worm

37111koendl
blrkMptr
meot
7 A-r
38 HodiO......a&gt;OMion• 8 "The Seorlot
"
lor
40 Dragon
9 Noulleol
puppet
poolllon

My a,.,;ct.'

I!ICMMn AcldWonl •

ENTERTAINMENT

-·ly

Eut
Allpa,.

oei-11
44 Don
45 Jol46 Germon
lnduotrlal
region
47 Llnguoge
with c:licU
48 Kuwaiti
INdor
49 Stick up
52 Colton gin

That is an excellent approach to both life
and bridge. On this deal, many would go
down in three no-trump, but ooe hopes
they would then learn from their error. It
you were thEl declarer, what would you
do after West leads the spade six: two.

Mizway Tavern

COMICS SPIRTS

3 NT

43 ~~- of

ence. Fa11ure is, in a sense, the h;ghway ·
to success, inasmuch as fNii'V diaco'J ery of what is false leads us to seek
earnes1ty after what is true, and every
fresh experience points out some lorm
of error which we shall aftEHWards care-

www.auctionzip.com

8:00 pm - 12:00 mid

TECHNOLOGY

Nol1b

p..,

eomollve
41 AtiNMI
(2 welt.)

John Kea1s wrote , "Oon'l be discouraged
by a failure. It can be a positive 8ll.peri-

1500 . 4Jt4

Wed. &amp; Fri. Karaoke
Thur. - Pool tournament 7 pm
Sat. Band AM IX 9-1

Wer~t

1 NT

Avoid the lead
that is avoidable

350AT 3'susp. 3'body lift kit
35' tires. Ac Cd Sharp.
$5500 OBO. 740-367-0638

'!lop. 30U75-5182

Sou&amp;b

Opening lead: •

Nioa clean, newly doconl1od
carpel , 2 br. S1ove , refrldg.
wid hook-up. no pels 101. I

East
• 10 5 4
• 9 6 2
t K QJ
.. Q 6 5 3

Soulb

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877 -66!1-0007

Metros. 2 Rangen. 740.446·
2000 Neon. Auto, Air. 4cyl.,
$2200 OBO, 96 Wh ite

• 9 5 t

6A J 9 87

rJamihJ
•·tflHM•
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2 Escorts. 2 cavatl era. 2
7278

• 12
• K QJ

West
6AQ 9 6 3
• a1 a4
• 10 8 3
a 2

Ilion

43 Compotoror

•

Nl61-lT

1 WONDER
Wi-10 DESI&amp;NS
TllESE THIN65 ..

Instead,

you IT'K.ISt keep East

G

GRIZZWELLS
t:b~t'd~
~\'lllA1

-~
~\1-16
CfUr£
IS?

AstroGraph

10,2007
By hmkle 8ede Oeol

You will Cllscovar that only you can
accomplish your goals anel desires. After
waiting on others and beinp disappointed. you'll realize it Is time to 00 lor yourself, by yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It you
think by holding firm and being inflexible
to the thoughts of others you will get what
you want. you are sadly mistaken . You're
apt to encounter one who is more rigid
than you .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You''le
reached the oute r limits regarding a
responsibility or duty that should have
been taken care of. Asking for more time
will only yield big trouble.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Should
you have two invitations from which to
choose, remember the gala ewnt is lii&lt;&amp;ty to be what you 8)(pect, but lhe lesser
one could 8)(Ceed 9\/erything you hoped
to get from the activity.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) - Irs always
smart to count to 10 be tore soul"'ding off,
and this might be even more important
for you to do 11 your displeasure comes
from a·family member. Regrets are made
in haste.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 ) - Should you
find yourself dealing with a te~eramen­
tal associate. don't agQravate the situation further by allowing subjects or topics
to come up that ~u know would pro'IOke
him or her.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - What
makes some business condilion5 hard to
get a handle on at this lime is that people
in general are a bit on the edgy side.
PQstpone dealing with anything that Is
truly important to you.
LEO (July 23-Aug _22) - At limes. areas
of disagreement between you and you r
mate· could get a bit pronou~ed ai'K:I
today might be one of thOse days. Both
must avoid trying to Jorce the other to
CQffiply with OOmal"'ds.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22 ) - Enatic or
improper handling of situations that are
presently running smoothly would cause
a disruption in their performance. Don't
be the one who causes things to fall
apart or gO astray.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - It's best not
to be too loud or come on too strongly
when invol'lld In a social situation you're
sharing with others. Your friends will
respond better to poli1e consultattoo than
to demands.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) - In handling metters where you havl some
authOrity over othera. wield your power
patiently and wt.ely. Tyrannical lctlona
will make enemt•s whO only want to fight
all your demands.
SAG I TT~IUS {Nov. 23-0ee. 21) - Of
COUrM, It's your prMIO&amp;IM 10 cham9io n
an unpoQular ceuM , but know there are

for doing so. Don't

oet

dldn'1 agr• with you

10 begin with .
CAPRICORN (O.C: . 22-Jan . 1i)-It's not
like you to be ce~ wheln It comH to
"nanclal sltuatlone, ~Iaiiy tt1oH that
are crltlc;al to you. Yltlhat le .acll~ what
)'01.1 might do. and you'll ~ out on the
short end.

SOUPTONUTZ
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Tuxedo - Banjo - Envoy - Ponder - NOT t::IONE
"Housework,." m~ the mother of five "is 1
job that is not noticed unless it is NOT DONE!"

ARLO&amp; JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 9. 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

Cowboys replace Parcells with Mickelson eagles final hole for
ex-Buffalo coach Wade Phillips share of Pebble Beach lead
IRVING. Texas (AP) Twice during his introduction
of Wade Phillips as Dallas
Cowboys coach, Jerry Jones
had to stop and gather himself.
The decision was that em(}tional for the team owner.
"We needed to get it right."
Jones said, pausing as tears
welled up in his eyes. "'In my
mind, we got it ri ght ."
Phillips was hired Thursday.
providing Dallas with an
experienced replacement for
Bill Parcells and someone
well-versed in the 3-4 defense.
Maybe more signitkantly
for Jones was ~etting a coach
who can wm now. The
Cowboys haven't won a postseawn gante in 10 seasons,
the longest drou8ht in the history of a team With live Super
Bowls.
''lltis team is best served
now, next week, next month
and next season by an NFL
head coach with experience,
that knows the game, that candidly knows the personnel that
are P,laying the game right
now, ' Jones said.
The seventh coach in team
history, Phillips is only the
second to arrive in Dallas with
previous NFL head coaching
experience. The other was
Parcells, who retired Jan. 22
after four sea,ons with the
Cowboys.
Phillips, defensive coordinator at San Diego the past
three seasons, has a 48-42
head coaching record over
three seasons with Buffalo,
two with Denver and seasonending interim stints with
New Orleans and Atlanta. The
59-year-old son of longtime
Houston Oilers coach Bum
Phillips has been in the NFL
for 30 of the last 3 I seasons.
"It's great to have these
cowboy boots back in Texas,"
said Phillips, showing his
boots from the podium, where
his father sat to his right.
"(Jones) feels like and I feel
like I was the best tit for this
job. ... I think I can make an
Immediate impact."
Phillips joins Tom Landry
and Jimmy Johnson as the
only Texas natives to be in
charge of "America's Team."
Landry and Johnson both won
two Super Bowls in Dallas.
"It's a big job, but I'm ready
for it," said Phillips, who got a
three-year contract that
includes an option for a fourth
seawn.
Jones interviewed 10 candidates before hiring his sixth
coach since buying the team
in 1989. Phillips was interviewed two weeks ago, and
his chances of getting the job
seemed to be fading when
Norv Thrner was among live
more who followed him.
"It was really tough,"
Phillips said. "'In the game, 1
have control in a lot of things,
like making the calls. In this, I
didn't have any control. I'm
just hoping."
But Jones chose the defen-

AP photo
Wade Phillips makes a statement after being named head
coach of the Dallas Cowboys during a news conference at
the Cowboys headquarters in Irving, Texas on Thursday.

sive-minded Phillips over
Turner, a two-time head coach
who was the Cowboys' offensive coordinator for Super
Bowl titles atier the 1992 and
1993 seasons. But Tumer was
only 59-83-1 in nine seasons
as head coach for Washington
and Oakland.
;;It was important to get the
experience and expertise and
some of the specific things
that I felt we needed to help
our team out," Jones said.
"How we were going to go
torward with the offense, how
we were going to go forward
with the defense."
Atier Jason Garrett interviewed for the vacancy Jan.
25. Jones hired him to an
unspecified role on the coaching staff. It has been pre~urned
he will be the offensive l.'OOrdinator. but Phillips said he
didn't want · to discuss
Garrett's role until he had a
chance to talk to the lonner
backup quarterback.
Phillips' head coaching
record includes 3-4 as a 1111-in
for the Saints and Falcons and
0-3 in the playoffs. most
notably the "Music City
Miracle," when Tennessee
used a trick kick retum for the
winning touchdown in the
closing seconds against the ·
Bills in January 2000.
Besides carrying on his
family tradition, Phillips has
handled the dubious task of
replacing Super Bowl coaches
Dan Reeves in Denver and
Marv Levy in Buffalo. So the
idea of following Parcells
doesn't bother him.
Parcells. · who won two
Super Bowls with the New
York Giants, went 34-32 in
four years in Dallas and lost
twice in the playoffs. He
implemented the 3-4 scheme

in Dallas two years ago, and
has built a roster suited for it,
highlighted by end-turnedlinebacker DeMarcus Ware.
"I love the defense tltal S;m
Diego plays. and 1 think our
team has guys who could play
great roles in It," Ware said
Thursday from the Pro Bowl.
Yet the defense was the
weak link last season, when
Dalla~ went 9-7 and lost in the
tirst ro!lnd of the playoffs. The
Cowboys lost four of their last
live games, including the last
three, mainly because they
couldn't stop teams.
Phillips, meanwhile, was
helping the Chargers go 14-2.
They allowed the seventhfewest points in the NFL and
were rated I Oth in total
defense.
Phillips was bam in Omnge.
Texas, &lt;md played college ball
at Houston. He joined his
dad's staff with the Oilers a~ a
linebackers coach in 1976 and
has been in the NFL ever
since, excepl for 200 I .
He stayed with the Oilers
through 1980, then followed
his father to New Orleans and
became defensive coordinator
at age 34. He replaced his
father as head coach for the
linal tour games of the 1985
sea~on.
.
Phillips then was in char~;e
of the defense in Philadelphia
( 1986-88) and Denver ( 1989- .
92), taking over as coach of
the Broncos for 1993 and '94.
His teams went 16-16 with a
playoff loss.
The next three years were
spent as defensive coordinator
in Butfalo, followed by three
years a~ the Bills' cnach and
vice president of football
opemt1ons. llte Bills were 2919 under his guidance with
two playoff losses.

ers: shortstop Barry Larkin
(three years, $27 milli~n)
and first baseman Sean
Casey (three years. $20.4
from PageBl
million) .
"When you look at all the
The agreement came two Braves' winning years, you
days after top starter Aaron look at their rotation·," genHarang avoided arbitration eral
manager
Wayne
by agreeing to a $36.5 mil- Krivsky said. "Your starting
lion, four-year deal that also pitching is so important to
includes a club option for the success of your team.
2011.
It's nice to have these two
"I honestly didn't think guys signed for the period
they were going to even talk of time we do now."
to me about a contract this
Harang, 28, became only
offseason," said Arroyo, the eighth NL pitcher since
who had two years left. on 1960 to lead the league in
his current deal. "But they wins ( 16). and strikeouts
were serious."
(216). He started 35 games,
For the first time since pitched 234 1-3 innings and
they won the World Series had a 3.76 earned run averin \990. the Reds have a age.
pair of starters worth such
Arroyo. 29. was nearly
long-term deals and an his mirror image . He went
owner willing to spend the 14- 11. also started 35
money. Harang and Arroyo games. pitched a leaguewill make at least $71 mil, high 240 2-3 innings and
lion over the next four had a 3.29 ERA
years.
The Reds got Arroyo
"Most baseball people from Boston for outtielder
agree that with Bronson and Wily Mo Pena during spring
Aaron Harang. the top of training last year. Arroyo
our rotation is as strong as initially missed the big city.
any in baseball," owner Bob where he pitched in a World
Castellini said.
Series and launched his
The
two
contracts music career.
amounted to the team's
"'Last year in the beginbiggest spending splurge ning of the season. I was
since 2000, when previous still watching a lot of Sox
owner Carl Lindner gave games and I was kind of
Ken Griffey Jr. a $116.5 still caught up in the middle
million, nine-year deal to emotionally about being
play for his hometown traded," Arroyo said. "After
team. The downside of that being here a year and going
deal was that it forced the through what we went
team to scrimp on pitching through last year with havto stay within tts budget.
ing a chance to make the
In the following years. the playoffs, I'm a Red through
R.eds also gave bi~ contracts and through now."
to two other pos1tion playThe Reds finished 80-82

- their sixth straight losing
season - but were in contention until the final weeks
in the NL Central. Arroyo
was one of 36 players
acquired by Krivsky after
he got the job last February.
Arroyo enjoyed the city
and developed a local following for hi s musical
career. The singer/guitarist
has played several concerts
in the area. the first of
which was sponsored by the
Reds' community fund.
"I think the team here definitely has embraced that
part of me a little more than
Boston did," he said. " I
think Boston discouraged it
from the fact that they
thought it was a little bit of
a distraction to me."
the
Reds
Wheu
approached him about an
extension a couple of
weeks ago and he saw
their initial offer, he was
receptive to working it out.
Arroyo gets hase salaries
of $4;125 ,000 this year
and $3.95 million in 2008,
figures set under the old
contra~:!. The extension
includes a $2.5 million
signing bonus that will be
paid next year.
·
Arroyo will get salaries
of $9.5 million in 2009
and $11 million in 2010.
There is a club option at
$11 million for 2011 with
a $2 million buyout . The
option can escalate to $13
million. ba sed on innings.
As part of the agreement, Arroyo dropped provisions in his existing contract that could have
increased hi s 200l! income
by $650.000.

Arroyo

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Four tournaments
into his season, Phil
Mickelson showed signs of
turning the comer Thursday.
Mickelson, nowhere near
the leaderboard since his collapse at the U.S. Open last
summer, eal)lcd hi' fmal hole
at Poppy Hills for a 7-under
65 to share the lead with
rookie John Mallinger and
Nick Watney in the Pebble
Beach National Pro-Am.
Whether this week marks
the return of Mickelson
won't be decided for three
more days.
One thing was clear on a
gray afternoon on the
. Monterey Peninsula was the
return of the miserable conditions that have made this
tournament infamous over
the years. It was cold, wet
and windy - known as
"Crosby" weather in these
parts because of the years
when Bing Crosby was the
toui11ament host .
Mickelson and Watney
played at Poppy Hills, the
easiest of three courses in the
rotation because it is the farthest from the Pacitic Ocean
and shielded by trees.
The best round belonged to
Mallinger. a 27-year-old
rookie who was on the wrong
course at the right 'time. He

was at Pebble lleaclt,. which
is exposed tu the wind along
the cliffs of the ocean .
Mallinger, however, started
his round on the lOth tee in
the virtual calm of the morning. and gusts strong enough
to topple a tree at Spyglass
Hill didn't arrive until he had
only live holes remaining.
Then again, it helped that
he made I 00 feet worth of
birdie putts on his tirst three
holes, starting with a 60-footer from just short of the I Oth
green.
"1 gut 14 holes with good
weather." Mallinger said.
,;Those are where yo u make
your birdies. so when you've
got good weather. you ve got
an advantage."
He should clarify "good"
in this case, because sunshine
has graced this picturesque
peninsula the last six years. It
was good for 14 holes
because the flags weren't
bending sideways, the clouds
had not released the rain and
it didn't feel like winter.
"It was benelkial," he
said.
Jim Furyk played his best
golf in the worst conditions,
makin~ live birdies on the
back nme at Spyglass Hill for
a 67. Also at 67 w01s Arjun
Atwal, another early starter
at Pebble Beach who went

witheut a bogey until the
18th. The wind was blowing
so hard off the ocean that his
tee shot sailed right of a
bunker. nearly into tlte
hedges.
Mickelson is a two-time
winner at Pebble Beach, his
most recent victory coming
two years ago when he
opened with a 62 at Spyglass
and was never serious! y challenged the rest of the week.
He had not played since
goi ng 0-4- 1 at the Ryder
Cup. taking a three-month
break and approaching this
year feeling fresh. Instead. he
looked rusty at the Bob Hope
Classic
and
Buick
Invitational, where he linished in the middle of the
pack. and at the FBR Open
last week outside Phoenix.
where he missed the cut.
Mickelson ran off three
straight birdies on the back
nine at Poppy Hills, made the
turn in 31 and then settled for
pars in the cold, blustery conditions until the par-5 ninth,
where he shot into a share of
the lead.
Poppy was the place to he.
It was the only course that
averaged under par in the
opening round, while the
average at Pehhle Beach was
nearly 75 .

AWNG THE RIVER
Lakin Hospital:
A forgotten history, Cl .

rf

un a

tme

·•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
( l111o \ ;, tlln Puhli -., hin ~ &lt; n

SPORTS
• High school basketball
action. See Page 81

Ponu·1·u~ • \li•ldh·pul'l • &lt;••• llipoli-., • I dH ' Ildl}o 11. :.!.uo-

S 1.;)0 • \ ul. ..J.I , :\u . ;~

Alleged liquor store robber charged, arraigned
Story on a charge of aggravated robbery tiled Friday
morning. Thornburg is
MIDDLEPORT A accused in Thursday' s
Pomeroy woman accused in attempted
robbery
of
the attempted robbery of a Whitley's Liquor Agency on
Middleport liquor store will Mill Street in Middleport.
be held in jail on a $50,000
Story set bond in the case
bond following a Friday and set a preliminary, or
in Meigs probable cause hearing, for
arraignment
Feb. 15 . Thornburg was
County Court.
Amy Thornburg, 29, of restrained from the store
Old Forest Road, appeared and remanded to the cusbefore Judge Steven L. tody of the Meigs County
8Y BRIAN J. REED

BREEDOMYDA1'LYSENTINEL.COM

Sheriff. She will be permitted to post l 0 percent cash
bond, or property or surety
bond of $50,000.
A Cincinnati man arrested
at the Brownell Avenue residence where Thornburg was
tound after the robbery was
hospitalized Friday afternoon. Melvin Hayes, 28. is
charged with possession of
crack cocaine, according to
Jeffrey
Miller
ofthe
Middleport
Police

Department. Miller said demanded money from the
police believe Hayes was clerk. Renee Whitley . ..
transported to the hospital fur Wh itley struck Thornburg
drug withdrawal symptoms.
with a number of liquor
Miller said a "large quan- bottles from store shelves
tity" of crack cocaine was in self defense, Swift said.
found at the Brownell • and Thornburg was treated
Avenue residence .
and released for lacerations
Middleport Police Chief after she was apprehended.
Bruce
Swift
sa id
Miller said no weapon has
Thornburg
allegedly been identified, but said
entered the liquor store Thornburg told Whitley she
shortly after it opened on
Thursday morntng and
Pleese see Chef'led, Al

Fire destroys house on Ohio 160

Lerner personally funds Aston Villa transfers
BIRMINGHAM. England
(AP) - Randy Lerner is
serious about improving the
fortunes of his Aston Villa
soccer team, and to prove it,
he bought two players for
the Premier L,eague team out
of his own pocket.
Lerner said Thursday that
he had personally tinanced
the transfers Stilian Petrov
for $15.6 million (\.nd Ashley
Young for $ 18.8 million last
month.
;'The money I have spent
on players at Astun Villa has
come from my personal

pocket." said Lerner, who
also owns · the Cleveland
Browns. "I have no intention, and no market set, fur
when I would stop spending.
I don't have a number in my
mind."
Lerner, who also said he
had no plans to sell the nam ing rights for Villa Park or
open a casino. admitted he
had been interested in buy ing a Premier League club
for the past five years.
"I am a very, very big fan
of English football. I
thought it was the right time

for me, in terms of just
where I am in my career,"
Lerner said. "Then there is
just the chance element to
this. A set of circumstances
converged and it seemed to
make sense. I wouldn 't say
it was a burning need - it
wasn't a long, protracted
acquisition."
Villa, established in 1874,
hasn't won the English
league Iitle since 1981. The
team is currently in 13th
place in the Premier League,
3 I points behind leader
Manchester United.

2007

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOI\ILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Rev. Gilbert Craig Jr.
• Barbara J. Harbour
• James R. 'Jim' Neal

News and information
for your retirement years.

~ril

l..5lfu

[ February 23, 2007 ]
~alltpoli~

11Batlp mrtbune

!loint !llea~ant l\egi~ter

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Michelle Miller /photo

• Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
• For the Record.
See Page A2
• License plates
drive local collector.
See PageA2
• Obama announces
presidential campaign.
SeePage AS
• Task force plan calls
for wind turbines on
Lake Erie. See Page A&amp;

WEATHER

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in this special

Retirement
Edition
contact your
Advertising

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Power
outages
blamed:
on cold

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
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insert
Comics
•
Editorials
A4
C6
Movies
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A2
Regional
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Sports
A6
Weather
© 2007 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

With ice covered gear, Springfield Township volunteer firefighters with mutual aid from Rio Grande Volunteer firefighters
worked to extinguish hotspots in a structure fire that destroyed a two story house early Friday. At 4:34 ·a.m., Gallia County
9·1·1 received a call from the owner that his residence at 4033 Ohio 160 was on fire and all occupants were safely out
of the house. Firefighters arrived on the scene in less than 15 minutes and worked until after noon. No further details
were available at press time.

POMEROY
- Cold
weather has been blamed for
a seri~s . of power outllges
affecting Middleport and
Pomeroy, the latest on Friday.
AEP Spokesman Jeff
Rennie said a circuit breaker
at a Meigs County AEP sub-.
station malfunctioned, interrupting power to 50\ residential and business customers in
downtown Pomeroy.
Customers in Middlepon
expetienced brief outages
on Monday and Tuesday
morning. Rennie said those
outages were caused by a
similar problem with substation Circuit breakers.
HWe have looked for a reason tor the circuit breakerS
· 'popping' but have not determined the cause," Rennie
said. ··It IS related to the cold
weather uf this week. "
Rennie said 330 customers were restored to
power at just before 2 p.m.
on Friday. Service for the
remaining customers was
expected to be restored by
3:30p.m., Renme said.

OSHP cautions against Meigs offers adult day care program
aggressive.driving
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

HOEFLICH@MYOAIL.YSENTINEL .COM

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

If you have ever been
passed on the wrong side,
tailgated, cut off or hemmed
in by another vehicle,
you've been the victim of
an · aggressive
driver.
Aggr~ssive driving
has
become a serious problem
on our roadways.
What is aggressive drivin~? It can be delined as
an mdividual who commits
a combination of moving
traftic offenses that endanger other persons or property. Some examples of
aggressive driving are
excessive speed, frequent
or unsafe lane changes, failure to signal, failure to
yield the right of way. disregarding traffic controls
and impaired driving.
The Ohio State Highway
Patrol took action to reduce
this type of driving in June
1997, when Operation
TRIAD
(Targeting
Reckless, Intimidating and
Ag~ressive Drivers) was
inittated. Operation, TRIAD
is a program that lhcorpocates aircraft entorcement to
target motor vehicle violations that are typically difficult to detect and enforce by
troopers on the ground.
The patrol also took action
to reduce congestion on the
roadways with OhioSafe
Commute in 2003. OhioSafe
Commute
allows
law

enforcement officers to be
stationed in high crash areas
of Ohio to enforce safer
speeds and clear ~rashes
quickly to prevent congestion and additional crashes.
In 2006, the patrol made
over 1.4 million professional stops.
Of these, 554,570 were
enforcement stops, including I 06,145 for aggressive
driving. Drivers speeding at
more than 20 miles-perhour over the posted limit
accounted for 45,467 of the
aggressive driving stops.
In 2006, the patrol
stopped 446 aggressive drivers in Gallia County and
447 in Meigs County.
Aggressive behavior can
consist of tailgating. nash. ing their lights at other drivers because they are
annoyed, aggressive or ntde
gestures, deliberately or prevents drivers from moving
their vehicle. verbal abuse,
and/or assaulting another
driver. Your attitude before
starting the vehicle has a lot
to do with how stressed you
will become while driving.
Congested roadways and
pent-up frustration can lead
to aggressive driving. An
aggressive· driver who
resorts to using a roadway
shoulder to pass may startle
other drivers and cause
them to take an evasive
action resulting in a crash.
Please see Drlvln~o Al

POMEROY
Tomorrow a new program
called "Partners in Care"
consisting of day care for
adults with memory loss.
wi II get underway at the
Meigs Senior Center.
The emphasis of the program is two-fold - to provide memorr enhancement
techniques lor the clients.
and to give the caregivers a
break.
While several Meigs
Countians have already
enrolled in the two-day-aweek program. there remain
openings for several more.
Meigs Countians 50 and
over who are in the early or
middle stages of Alzheimers
Disease or have other memory disorders are encouraged to talk to Kathy
McDaniel. LPN. the program coordinator, or Norma
Torres. R.N., the Meigs
County Council on Aging
clinical nurse.
Once someone indicates
interest, McDaniel will do
an evaluation to determine
whether the program would
be beneficial to the
impaired senior. The program will be conducted on
Mondays and Fridays, from
9 a.m. to I p.m. at the
Center. A nurse and exercise
physiologist will be joined
bv volunteers to provide a
sc hedule of varied activities. Lunch will be provided
tu tho'e enrolled and any
materials needed for the

Submlttod pllo1o

Volunteers witt be working w1th nurses and exercise physiologists in the new adult day care program at the Meigs
Senior Center. Completing training last week in preparation
for tomorrow's kickoff have been. left to right. front.
Barbara Gheen and Gladys Cumings. and back. Kathy
McDaniel , program coordinator. and Jean Thomas. \)ther
volunteers are Marilyn Powell and Juamta Roush .
'
therapy programs will be vide memory en hanl·ement
techniques for the clients,
provided.
Ml'Daniel said that those and to giw the care givers a
who c·nroll mu&gt;t be able to break. There is a nominal
walk and to take care of charge ranging from a
their own toilet needs. She maximum f(,r the four-hour
emphasized that the pro·
Please see Melp, Al
gram is two folcl - t&lt;' pro-

•

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