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                  <text>Hometown Christmas
Holiday Gift G:uide .

ShOP locallY

Mason Smoke Shak ~
211 07 Ohio River Rd. • Mason, WV

inside today's Sentinel

304-773-5857

•

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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HUll.\\ . '\;()\ ' EI\1BER :~11 , :!1111 7.

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Potential ''intervenors' fire back at AMP

SPORTS
• Cowboys send
Green Bay packing.
See Page 81

"citizen groups" and local
resident Elisa Young of
Racine attempting to block
COLUMBUS ~ The war AMP's motton they be
of filing petitions, memo- denied intervention status to
randums and motions con- participate in the hearing.
tinues in the cause to either
The "citizen groups" are
bring or stop the coal-fired the Natural Resources
power plant proposed for Defense Council, Ohio
Letart Falls by American Environmental Council and
· Municipal Power-Ohio.
Sierra Club which filed a
The most recent filings separate response from
with the Ohio Power Siting Young's
though
both
Board, which is set to have responses asked to be grantan adjudicatory hearing on ed participation in the
the allplication to build the upcoming hearing.
plant next inonth, consist of
"Ohio la.,Y grants citizens
BY B£TH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

the right to participate in
Board hearings and affords
intervenors full evidentiary
rights. AMP's unsubstantiated attempt to curtail these
rights is inconsistent with
Ohio law and, thus, should
'be denied," the "citizen
groups"' response said:
These "citizen groups"
also claim they submitted
their motion to intervene
before the deadline and also
took issue with AMP's
argument that documents
submitted in the groups '
effort to intervene should

, 29'

be slricken because the reques1 that the discussion
groups haven't been grant- of carbon dioxide emised intervenor status.
sion s. I global warming be
"Supporting evidence , banned from the hearing ,
including declarations, to a the
groups'
motion
motion to intervene are responded : "The United
needed to satisfy the States Supreme Court
requirements for interven- recently confirmed that
tion, and nothing in the carbon dioxide is an air
administrative rules bars pollutant ...and C02 is subsubmittal of. supporting ject to and/or actually reguevidence for a motion to lated under various proviintervene," the groups' sions of the Clean Air Act. .
motion read, further calling As such, C02 emissions
AMP's argument on this · must be regulated under
issue "illogical."
In regards to AMP's
Ple•se SH AMP, AS

lO

Commissioners
applaud FQHC
operator
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED~MYDAILVSENTINEL . CDM

OBITUARIES
Page A&amp;
• AQbert V.
Page 16 •

www.myclailysentinel.com

2007-08 Winter Sports Guide

....

• Christmasllights
and Christmas lite.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
·• Youth deer hunting.
See Page AS
·• For the Record.
Sect Page AS
• Son pleads not
guilty in killing of
retired professor father.
See Page AS
. • $1.6 million project
funded at OU.
see Page A7
• Local grangers
receive state contest
awards. See Page AB

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WEATIIER

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....

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INS~E .

••

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• Ruth Al:lh

. .'. '. ...
.'

Marty Maadowa

Marty Meadows retires
from HoDie Health
"I've always enjoyed doing
what I do, and I'll really miss
my patients and the people I
POMEROY - Today is the work with here," said Marty as
last day Marty Meadows of she talked about the eight years
Portland, a nursing assistant she has spent as an aide in hom'e
with Holzer Home Health Care health rare, a position she took
of Meigs County, will be provid: when
Veterans
Memorial
ing health care for patients. in Hospital closed.
_
their homes. She is retiring.
But not only will Marty mtss
It was nearly 30 years ago that her patients. her patients are sure
Marty moved into the career to miss her. She is known for not
· ·which she says has brought her only providing- comfort to her
real joy and one which she will patients ~n a physical way, ~ut
ail emotional way. Her sktlls
miss tremendously.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

enhanced by her gentle manner ·
and marked by her keen sense of
humor always seemed to make
life a lillie brighter for her
patients.
It was in 1978 that Marty went
to work at Veterans Memorial as
an aide. Her duties there became
varied as her · experience
increased. She worked on the
tloor, in the emergency ro\)tl\, in
intensive care, and the therapy
department assisting the nurses .
Please see Me•dows, AS

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioner' Mick Davenport suid the
Monday opening of the new Family Health
Care chnic is u promising expansion of health
care services, and said the company operating
the clinic has u good reputation.
The Chillicothe-based operation will open
its new Federally-Qualified Health Care clin·
ic in the Medical Arts building across from the
Veterans Memorial Hospital building on
MulbetTy Heights next week. It wlll ,,rra fumily practice medical services to all r t•sidents,
regardless of income or insurance coverage..
"This is a very good organization that has
put a lot of effort in working with us to sec ure
the facility," Davenport said. "They have a
good reputation in the communities they
serve, and the opening of the clinic is exciting
because it will expand health care services to
include all of the county 's residents."
Commissioner Jim Sheets said the clinic
· will be particularly helpful to those without
health insurance, who have been required to
pay cash al existing physician's oftices.
A nurse practitioner will see patients at the
clinic inilially, but primary care physicians will
be p:irt of the clinic. as well, Davenport said.
"The management is to be commended for
opening the facility so early, since our hope
was to have it open by the end of the year."
Davenport said commissioners and the county's health care committee have been aware of
Family Health Care's reputation in operating
FQHC facilities in other counties, including
The Plains, Logan. McArthur. Chillicothe and
New Lexington. He said the committee was
referred to the organization as a possible billing
contractor before it becatnc involved in tiling
and securing the county's FQHC grant.
· ''Medica\ billing is a complicated business,
especially when it involves working with federal agencies like Medicare," Davenport said.
"We were very concerned about. that end of
the operation. and Family Health 'Care has an
exceptional reputation with regard to billing.''
At Thursday's regular weekly meeting. commissioners awarded bids to KAL Electric, Inc ..
Athens, in the amount of $60,250 for new electrical work and a generator for the Tuppers
Please see FQHC, AS

Being someone s ~angel'
'

••
De!AIIII an Pace AS

BY B£TH SERGENT
BSERGENr~MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

'•

lNDEX

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2 SECfiONS -

·PLEASANTVALLEYH&lt;DSP::;: ··
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16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A7

Calendars '

A7

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values

A2-3

Movies

As

NASCAR

B4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section

AS

@ 1007 Ohio ljoilley Publlohlna Co.

•

POMEROY - This year the
Meigs County Council on Aging is
providing several opportunities for
people in the community to be. someone's "angel."
A way to be someone's angel that
doesn't require shopping at all is
being a home delivered meal sponsor.
Individuals can now sponsor a
senior's meals for a week, a month or
for however long they choose.
· Unfortunately, .there hasn 't been a
lot · of response to this very real
need . By paying for the meals, it
frees up more money for medications and bills for the many seniors
that rely on the home delivered
meals program.
Every · year the senior ·center also
puts up an Angel Tree with paper
angels hanging from it to depict
seniors in need. Each paper angel has
a ·list of items that can be purchased
for those seniors in the community
who don't have any family 9r for

those who are in need of clothing or
household items. Gifts are due back at
the center by Dec. II .
Names of the seniors in need are not
disclosed but their angel is told if they
are male or female, clothing sizes and
item lists.
Each senior on the angel tree will
also receive an assortment of items
such as canned goods. cleaning supplies and toiletries that the center
collects. The following is a li st of
donated items currentl y being
accepted: Canned goods, any kind,
any size; toilet paper; laundry detergent; fabric softener; shaving cream;
soap; ·toothpaste; shampoo; dtsh
detergent; paper towels ; deodorant;
disposable razors; or any kmd of
items people wi sh to donate.
Unlike the home delivered meal
sponsors, so far the response has heen
good for the angel tree.
·
Call the senior center at Y92 -2 16 1
for more information on the se angel
projects or stop by the center during
normal business hours from 8 a.m.·
4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday.

'·

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Jim Hudson .
. custiJdian of the
Meigs County
Courthouse.
had help from
Bev Coll ins of
the county
auditor's office
Thursday as he
installed lights.
wreaths and
other holiday
decorations
along the
courthou se
balconies.
B~an

J. Reed/ photo

\

•

�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

- -- A ~unger For More- - grace." 'And they 're quite
As far as pastimes go.
right. But what escapes
"drawing lines" probably
them is that the essence of
doesn't rank on man y peoGod in the New Testament
ple's "to do" list. ·In fact,
is consistent with His
"drawing lines," as in e,tabPastor
essence
in the Old. And
lishing boundaries for ourThom
while we do truly live by the
selves and for our chi ldren.
Mollohan grace of God (by which we
seems to have a connotation
mean "unmerited favor") ,
of severity that many folks
those Ten Commandments
feel too narrow -minded
are essential moral codes
and/or judgmental. On the
for navigating life today.
other hand, I suggest that a
Some time ago, I was
failure to learn how to appro- "passing the ir children
involved
in a conversation
priately establish boundaries through the fires of
by which we stand in our Molech" (a kind of human about the "over sexualizahabits, activities, and atti- sacrifice involving their tion" of teens and preteens.
tudes is essentially the own babies being burned Much was said about the
social
factors
equivalent of relational sui- alive as offerings to pagan various
cide in our homes and fami- gods that they worshiped), fomenting it. On the one
lies. Without such wisely and temple prostitution by hand, it was observed that
appointed boundaries, rela- which the "gods" vicarious- our culture is absolutely
tionships, no matter how ly had relations with wor- SATURATED with sexually
confusfng ,and explicit inforintimate, will suffer the dev- shipers in their temples. ·
astation of disappointment
As His people were sent mation, and that our children
and broken trust, as individ- into the land to take owner- are caught in the crossfire. I
uals either "use" others or ship of it as God had almost agree but believe that
are "used" by others in pat- intended, just as important the truth is far more heinous
terns of presumption.
(if not more so) · than the than that: our children are
Without setting bound- physica! allotments being · actually TARGETED by
aries for ourselves as a peo- made (although they too se lfish and evil-minded
ple, we are also committing were guided by God) were companies looking to attract
a kind of societal homicide the spiritual, moral and younger customers to "excitin which our lack of respect social boundaries given ing and cool" products.
Then, on the other hand, it
for God and other people them by the One Who had
escalates "reactive mea- delivered them from their was stated that, while the
other observation is true, the
sures" as we are forced to · bondage in Egypt.
legislate rules and laws
In Exodus 20, verses I "blame," as it were, falls
which aren't necessary through 17, and reiterated in back on us parents who may
when people are simply Deuteronomy 5, verses 7 think that making 'sex symcommitted to doing things through 21, God gives His bols of children is "cute."
God's way anyway. People people 10 basic principles We are also ~uilty this spiral
who cannot perceive the that would shape their per- into immoralny when we are
need for personal bound- sonal assessments of right pushovers when it comes to
aries and do not instruct and wrong, the ways in · drawing Jines for our chiltheir children in how to con- which they must structure dren and then sticking by
structively establish, evalu- their familial relationships, them (in movies, music, teleate and maintain personal and the laws that would vision show, un-chaperoned
boundaries will reap a har- govern
their
society. or poorly sup~rvised teen
vest of heartache and disap- Worshiping no other gods, events). Can one see why
gave
us
Ten
pointment. I think that one refusing to participate in God
very strong reason that peo- idolatry, treating God 's Commandments in the first
ple have an innate distaste name with reverence and place? In addition to lifting
for drawing boundaries by awe, keeping a Sabbath day us up out of natural instincts
whic.h we determine how we set aside to honor God, hon- into a mindset more like His,
will invest our time, energy, oring our fathers and moth- He also gives us "boundand affections is that we ers, not committing murder aries" that move us collecbelieve in our own innate or adultery or stealing, and ,tively towards a greater corgoodness and assume that neither lying or coveting the porate good and allow for
we have a sort of intrinsic things of other people were higher personal happiness.
One of the greatest things
spiritual wisdom inherent in very specific boundaries
our psychological make-up. that were relevant then and that God has done for
But human nature really are relevant now: even humanity is the giving of
isn't as benevolent in today they should serve as boundaries for our lives.
essence as we would like to boundaries for Christians,
One of the greatest ,things
believe to which human hisFrankly, I don't think we that you and I can do as His
tory attests. And in review- merely fudge on these Ten children is to observe them
ing how God has historical- Commandments; we bla- and yield to His loving
remembering
ly interacted with people tantly defy them. Ii's bad authority,
throughout time, we see that enough for folks to live life that the reason Jesus came
some boundaries actually rnorally without an anchor to earth in the first place
have eli vine order behind if they 've not had opportu- was to restore the heart of
them.
nity to learn that there IS an humanity to a position of
For example, even as God anchor on which they may desiring to live peaceably
sent His people back into a depend. But what should be within God's boundaries
land that He had given their especially troubling and (one "must be born again"
ancestor over 400 years ear- indeed heartbreaking to us - · see John 3:3). And one
lier, He drove out of the as Christians today is that of the greatest things that
land of Canaan peoples we don't seem to see the parents can do for their
who had geographical relevance of God's Law for children today is to lovingboundaries but no moral our own lives. Some say, ly establish and gracefully
boundaries whatsoever, "But we don't live accord- enforce boundaries for
practicing the evil work of ing to the Law, but by their children so that they

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may learn and benefit from
the love and wi sdom of
those who are their mothers
and fathers.
While this isn't exactly a
"Ctiristmassy" message, let
us stop and catch our breath.
Let's pause an~ think for a
moment before we get
sucked into all the hyperactivity of December. Let us
think about how we need
boundaries for life (yes ...
even grownups need boundaries). We need boundaries
in our relationships. We
need boundaries in our
spending. We need ·boundaries for our time and our
pursuits. We need boundaries for our families. And
we need boundaric!s spiritually speaking so that we
may remember why we
were put here in the first
place ... to love God with all
that we are.
"Hear, 0 Israel: The
LORD our God, the LORD
is one. Love the LORD your
God with all your heart and
with all your soul and with
all your strength. These
commandments that I . give
you today are to be upon
your hearts. Impress them
on your children. Talk about
them when you sit at home
and when you walk along
the road, when you lie down
and when you get up ...
When your son asks you,
'What is the meaning of the
stipulations, decrees and
laws the LORD our God has
commanded you?' tell him:
'We were slaves ... but the
LORD brought us out ...
with a mighty hand .... The
LORD commanded us to
obey ·all these decrees and to
fear the LORD our God, so
that we might always prosper and be kept alive, as is
the
• case
today"
(Deuteronomy 6:4~ 8, 20-21,
24 NIV).
It is time that we reconsider how God's ways aid
us in maintaining healthy
priorities; teach us to discern what is holy and lovely
versus what is ugly and
common; and give us standards for life that allow us
to live 1ives with an abundance of joy and peace
which God Htmself created
for those who love and
serve Him.

(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 12
years. He is the ptJStor of
Pathway · Community
Church, which meets on
Suntlily mornings at 455
Third Ave. He may be
reached for · comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

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Friday, November 30, 2007

"Dad, when are you going
to get the lights up?"
It's not even December
and I' ve beard that question
(or some variation of it) at
least a dozen times. Hanging
lights on the house, yard,
trees, bushes seems to have
become the new Christmas
tradition in the last decade
or so. If its an outside object,
then· you ·can hang lights on
it. And if you don't already
have enough objects, the
stores are happy to provide
you with plywood cutouts,
heavy-duty wire guides,
even blow-up figurines of
larger-than-life
Santas,
Mickey Mouses, and maybe
Jesus in a manger.
One of the most effective
light displays that I've seen is
actually pretty simple. A person put a spotlight ih the yard
facing the side of the house
· where there were no windows.
lben he put a small cut-out
shape about a toot away from
the light. The small shape cast
a dramatic shadow against the
wall. The shape I remember
seeing was of a Wiseman
poi,nting either towards the star
or the destination.
My house, however, doesn't have such a simple outdoor decorating theme. We
have tried to outline the
entire roofline in the large
outdoor multi -colored lights.
And because we prefer a
very neat, finished look, each
light is mounted into a plastic
holder that slides under the
roof shingle. Each light is
spaced according to the total
length of the roofline divided
by the number of lights on
that strand available. (Yes, I
hate doing the math, too!)
It's a lot of work to get our
lights up and looking good.
And for the last several years, I
have n01 had very much time
to get that work done.
December always seemed to
be a fast month for me; but
oow that I am serving as a pastor, the month goes by so fast
that I barely blink before its
gone! If I can't even catch my
breath, how can I get lights uP,?
"Honey, the lights sull
aren't up. Are xou going to
do it this year? '
What makes the lights so
important? Why should I
make them a priority over the
other things I must get done?
(Like writing this article
about Christmas lights ... ) I
think there are several reasons. First of all, the lights are
a·gift back to the community.
We all enjoy driving around
to look at Christmas lights.
Just take a look at the lines of
cars going to Point Pleasant, if
you doubt me. When the
lights are up on our house, we
are saying "Menry Christmas"

Fellowship

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Ap~stolfc

Church ur JesWi Cbrlsl Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward ltd . Pastor Jame~
Mill er. Sullday School
10:30 tun .
Evemng - 7.30 p.m.
Ril'tr Valley
Rtver Valley Apostolic Wursh1p Cenh:r,
873 S. 3nl Ave , Mtddleport. Rev

Pastor

Kerry

Michael Bradford, Pastor , Sunday, 10 30

am Tues. 6 30 prayer. Wed . 7 pm B1ble
Study

Wood

Emmanuel Aposlolk Tabtmade Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland,
Services. Sun 10:00 am &amp;: 7.]0 p m .
Thurs ? IJJ p m, Pnlor Many R. Hulton

to everyone who drives by.
Secondly, Christmas li~ts
are a remmder of the L1~ht
of the World - Jesus Chnst.
Isaiah 9 says this: "The people walking in darkness have
seen a great light; on those
living in the land of the shad·ow of death, a light has
dawned .... Forto us a child
is born, to us a son is given,
and the government will be
on his shoulders. And he will
be called,
'Wonderful
Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of
Peace.' Of the increase of his
gover-nment and peace there
will be no end."
John's gospel picks up on
this theme in 1ts opening
verses: "In the beginning was
the Word, and ·the Word was
with God, and the Word was
God. He was with GOd in the
beginning. Through him all
things were made; without
him nothing was made that
has been made. In hiln was
life, and that life was the light
of men. The light shines in
the darkness, but the darkness has not understood it."
Even with all of the millions
of Christmas lights burning in
thousands of displays, we still
live in a dark world. So many
times, we light up our houses,
yards and trees without recognizin~ how much darkness
remams within us, Every time
we are rude, self-serving,
impatient, abrupt, dishonest,
and excessive, the darkness
grows a little darker. But
. whenever we are loving, joyful , peaceful, patient, kind,
good, faithful, gentle and selfcontrolled, the light of Christ
shines a little brighter.
I may or may not get my
Christmas lightsjlup on my
house before Oui tmas Day,
but I pray th$ u will see
the Christmas Licllt inside of
me everyday, (When people
see you, do th~ see darkness
or hght? During this season
of preparing for Christmas,
focus your energies on being
a Light for Christ. Otherwise,
you may just be celebrating
Christmas lite.
_
(Kerry Wood is tl11 {iaslor

Assembly of God
Liberty AS8embly of God
P.O. Box 467. Duddmg Lane , Mason.
W Va ., ~c~.stor. Ne il Tennanl. Sunday
Services- 10 00 a m and 1 p m

Baptist
Paanllle Frt'ewUIBaptlsl Chun:b

Pastor· Floyd ROll ~. Sunday Sc hool 9 30 to
10·30 am. Worship serv11;e \0.30 to 11 :00
am. Wed preachmg 6 pm
Carpe nt~

C heshire Baptlsl Church
Pastor· Steve Lmle Sunday School IJ 30
am, Momin.!! Wooh1p 10 30 am.
Wedne$da) Bibl_e .Stlldy 6 30pm. chmr
practice 7,30, youth und Bible Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thurs l pm book study

Hope Baptisl c•urch {Soothem)
570 Grnnt St , M1ddl epor1 . Sunday ochool
- 9.30 a.m .. Worship - II a.m . and 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Service · 7 p m Paslor Gary

Ellis
Rulland Flrsl Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m., Worship 10:45 am
Pomeroy First Baptist
Postor Jon Brockert. East Mam Sl..
Sund'ay Sch 9 30 am , Wor!ihip 10 30 am
Flnl Southern Bapllfil
4 1872 Pomeroy Pike. Pnslor· E Lamar
O'Bryant. Su nday School - 9 30 am.
Worship - 8 IS a.m:. 9;45 am &amp; 7·00 p n: ..
~dn~sday S ervt~ s - 7 00 p m

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Pas10r. B11ly Zuspan 6th and Palmer St ,
M1ddkport . Sunday School - 9 15 am .
Wors hip - 10:15 a.m., 7.00 p m ,
Wednesday S ervt~- ? Ill p m
K4dne fo'tl'!it Haptist
Pastor Ryan Eaton , pa~tor , Sunday
School - 9·311 am , Worsh1p - IIJ-40 a rn ,
6.00 p m., Wedne ~ day Se rvice s - 7.00

pm
SHnr Ran Baptbt
Pastur John Swa nson, Sunday School !Oa .m .. Worship - !Ia m , ?:00 p m
,Wedm::sda} Semces- 7.00 p.m
MI . Union Baptist
Pa stor Dcnn1 s Weaver Sunday School9 45 am , Eve nm g - 6 30- p m ,
WedneW.ay Servtces - 6:30p.m
Bethlehem Baptlsl Cburth
Great Dend . Route IN Rac me, 0 11 .
Pastor Ed Caner. Su nday School - 9:30
am Sunday Worsh1p - 10 ·30 am ,&amp; 7
pm; Wednesday Btble Study - 7 00 p m

..

Two Sources
of Fallibility

There are two primary sources of
human falltbility or error. One,.of
these sources is 1gnorance. There 1s
much that we simply do not knnw,
etlher tndt&gt;idually or collectively.
For example, in deciding which 1wo
romes to take, we may not know the'
besl route because we are unaware
of traffic patterils or tJe-ups along
the way, Bul,
much lhal
we do know

We Sell Homes at

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members of the MLS and REALTOR"

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

740·992·3325
www.teafordrealestate.net •
two
better path.
happens tn
There is much

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Racine, OH

740-949-2210

r

Vl(tory Baptist lndepentknl
525 N 2nd St Mtddlcport . Pastor· James
E. Keesee. Worsh1p • JO;un . 7 p rn .
Wednesday SeTVI l'eS - 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy

.l 'orHt Run Haptlsl· Pomeroy

Wtu-m Frtendly
Aunruphert

Mt. Moriah Baptl~l
Founh &amp; Mam St., Middleport, Sunday
School- 9·30 am., Worship - 10:45 am .

Hours
6 am-S pm

Andqulty 811~tlst

:Mi[[ie.'s 1{estaurant

Sunday School • 9.30 a rll , Wor §hlp ·
10:45 a.m.. Sunday Evenmg 6·00 p.m .
Pastor: Don Walker

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Hills Self Storage

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

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Catholic
Sacred Heltrt C11tholi( ChuKh
Hi ! Mu lberry Ave , Pomeroy, 992-58q8.
Pastor Re~ . Walter E Hemz, Sat Con
4:45-5· 15p Dl.. Ma&lt;&gt;s- 5 30 p m . Sun
Con -8.45-9 15 a m , Sun Muss - 9 30
a m.. Da1ly Mass - S.30 u.m.

Churc"h of Christ
Westside Church or Christ
33226 Ch11dren s Uome ~d . Pomeroy , UH
Contac l 740-441 - 12% Sunday mommg
10.00 , Su n mornm g H1bl e stud) .
foll ow1n g worsh1p, Sun eve n no pm .
Wed b1hle-study 7 pm
Hcmluck Grove Christian Church
Mm1ster Larr) Brown Wor ~h 1p - 9 30
a.m . Su nday School 10.30 am .. B1 ble
Study·7 p m
l"omeroy Church oi'Chrlst
212 W Mam St .. Sumluy School - 9 30
am . Worsh1p.- 10·JO ... m.. 6 p m .
Wednesday St:rVJces- 7 p m
Pomeroy W¥Stside Cburch of Christ
33226 C hildr e n ·~ Hnme Rd , Sund&lt;l)
School - II a m.. Wurship - Ifro~ m , fi p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

or

Middleport C hurth Christ
5t h and Mat n , Pa~lor A I llt~rl son ,
Ch ildrens Due&lt;.:lor , Sharon Sayre, Teen
Dtrector· Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
· 9.30 a.m .. Worsh ip - 8. 15, 10 30 a m.. 7
p m . Wednc ~ ay Serv1.::es - 7 p m
Keno C hurch of Christ
Worship · IJ JO am . Sunday Sehoul

10 30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wall :ace, Istand
3rd Sunday
Hearw.allow Ridge Church of Christ
Pas1or:Bru ce Terry, Su nday School 9 30

""'
Worship

· 10 ~ 0 ot m .. 6 30 p m ,
\\edne~day Serv1ces - fi·lO p m

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvi lle Rd . (Rt 14 3),
Pa~rnr- Roger Watson, Sunday School 9.30 a.m , Worship - 10 .10 11 .m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Sc:rvtccs · 7 p m
Tuppen Plain C hurth of Christ

Instrumental, Wun h1p Serm;e - 9 .1.m.,
Communwn 10 a m.. Sunday Sc hool 10 15 am. Yollth- 5 30 pm Sunduy. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Bradbury Chureh of Chrlotl
Mm1 ster lorn Runyon. 39558 Brudbury
Road, M1ddlepon . Sunday School - 9.30
Worsh1p 10:30 a m
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday Schoo l - IJ '!() am , Wor~hlp and
Commumon - 10 30 a m, Bob J. Werry.
Mmtster
Bradford ChuJ'('h nf Christ
Comer of St. R1 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Mimster: Dou g Shambhn. Youth Mm1ster ,
Bill Amberger. Sunday S~.:huol - 9 30 a.m.
Worshi p - 8.00 a.m, 10:30 am ., 7.00
p m ,Wednc::sday Serv 1~ es - 7 00 p.m
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Tupper!i Plains. Pastor Mtke Moore. B1blt:
d a~s . 4 a 01 Su nd ay. worsh1 p 10 am
Su11day, wor!ih lp 6 30 pm Sund ay; B1ble
da~ s 7 pm Wed
Reedsville Church of Chris!
Paslor. Phil ip Stunn. Sunday School 9.30
a.m.. Worshtp SerY1ce 10 ~~ 11m , R1ble
Study. Wednesday, 6.30 p.m.
Dexter Church uf C hrl!it
Sunday sc hool 9.30 u.m . Sunday worship
- HIJll am
The Church of Christ or Pomeroy
lntcrscctLOn 7 and 124 W, Evangd1st
Denm s Sar~,:em . Sunday Btble SIUdy
9 30 a m . Worship 10 30 a m and 6 30
p m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m

En·n mg - 6 p.m.. 'Wednesda) Sen1ce ~ 7
j) Ill
Ruth•nd l'hurch or God
Pa ~ 1or R11n l-1 ~a t h. Su nda} Worship - 10
. a Ill h r m . Wc dn e~d a y Se rV I~C~ - 7

Christian Union
Hartford ChuKh of Christ in
Chrl~thm Union
Hartford , W.Va .. Pastor Dav1d Greer.
· Sunday School - 9 30 am , Wo rslup ·
\0 .30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednes&lt;iay
Servu:es · 7 00 p.m

Church of God
MI. Muriall Churth of God
Mil e Ht11 Rd . Rac1ne, Paslor Jome5
Satterfield , Sunday School - 9.45 a m..

Churth or God of Prophrcy
0 J While Kd nilS! Rt 160. Pastor PJ
('lmpm,m. Sunduy School
10 am ..
Wurshtp - I I d m. W~d ncsda y Sei'VIl'es- 7
pm

740-985·3561
992·1550
Salas .. Sarvlca • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohif.l45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

'
your light so shine bef&lt;&gt;re J
that they may sec
works and glorify
:Uathtor in heaven."

Trinh) Church
Second &amp; Lynn , Pomeroy, Pastor Rev "
Jonalhun Noble, Worship 10.25 am
Sunday School q I "i a m

•

.

•

10

~(I J

'/ \[/

ol 111 •

\\ nr-, tll p

Ill

Wnr-,hl p
I (,I ~0

pIn

.t

m

&lt;J ·JO a m - Sundt~y Sthool .
Fa'\ Sunda y ti l Momh 7 00

Episcopal

Holiness
Communil y C hurch
Pa~ tur
Steve TomcJ.. , ·Mam Slr!.'et ,
Rut lalld , Suod&amp;y Wnr ~ h 1 p- IO OO .1 m .
s~m day Ser~ ICe - 7 p.m
Oanvillt Hollnes!i Chun.:h
31057 State Route 325. Langsvl\c Pastor
BcnJamm Cra'4 ford Su nday !!thool - 9 '0
urn , Sunday v..ooh1p - 10.30 a.m &amp; 1
p m Wednesday pruyer se.r ~ 1 c e - 7 p m
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harnsonv1\le Ro:1d Pas10r Ch arl e~
McKenzie, Sund&lt;~ y School \1 30 am
Wnrsh1p - II am, 7·00 p m.. 'Wednt:sda}
7tlO p m

Ro~ or Sharon Uoliness Churrh
Lt:admg Cree k Rd., Rutland. Pasmr: Rev
Dewc) Kmg. Sunday school - \1·30 a m
Suudily w u r~ hip -7 p.m . Wednesday
pra)er mt:t!tmg 7 p.m

Pint Grove Bible Hollnrss C hurch
I 12 mile ol f Rt 3~5 . Pastm Re o. . O' Dell
1J:30 a.m
M .mlc~ . Sunday School
Worsh1p - 10 30 a m , 7 30 pm ,
Wcdlll.'~d&lt;~y Ser.1ce 7. :\1:) p m

Tup~ rs

Plains St . Paul
P a~ l or Ja m l nrh1t1 Su nday Sd1ool
I)
il m. Wo r~ h 1 p - 10.1m. Tue-,d,ly Scn•1ccs

- n opm
Cmtnd Cluster
Asbury 1Syrutuse1 P·o~~tor Hnh 1-itlhlli"ln
Sun,l.ily Sd!tu l · tl4'i a 111 . Wor~h1 p - II
W!!d llt'~d a y Ser\' lCC~

Cheslt'r Churt· h of tht• N a zllftn~
Pa'itnr Rc ; Cur l! ~ Rando lp h. Su nd il~
S(hool - IJ .'&lt;l a.m. Wor~h1p - 10.30 a.m .
Sunday c;cmng l'l p1n
Rutland Churrh nf thf 1-iazart'nf
Pastor hu,l ~ Sllllpc SuiKI,I) Sc hnnl - '-Vltl
a.m. W 11r~h1p - Ill lO am . 6.30 p m ,
Wednesday :)erv 1 ~e~ 7 p m

am Wor ~i11 Jl 7p1n

Whitt 's Chaptl \\'f'!;leyan
l{,o~ d p ~qo r Rev C h a rle~
ManmLI&lt;LII! . Su nd,l) Slhnul - 'J JO am.
Wnro, l11p Ill 10 ;.~ m • 'Wt:d ne~d&lt;~ y Se r~ 1 ce
1 p.m

Co ul ~d lc

Fain•iew Bible Church
Lell!rt. W \&lt;1 Kl 1 l',"tor Hnan May.
Su11d,1) Sllmnl 9 30 J m . Wor~ h 1 p - 7 [))
p nt . Wednt.,da}' Btb le S!udy - H XJ p m
luith hllo"ship C ru ~ad e for Christ
Pa•lllr !{~\ Franklm D1 ckens. Serv1ce·

7 )ll p m

•:merprl!ie
Pas tor Arhtn d Kmg. Su ni1.1 y S~,:hoo l - 9 IO
am. Wor' hl p 10 JO am 33 105 Hiland
Rd PomeruJ
Pastor Keu h i{udcr. Sunday Schoo l
m . wnr.,h1p - 11 a m

to

&lt;~

P~Hv!

J'ilrest Hun
Bvb Rvbmso n. Sunda y Sdmul ]()

\VI;'l;le}an Bible llollness Church
Pn slor R1ck
lluurne. SLlnJay School - 10 :1 m Worship
10 4'\ p m . Sunday Evl' 700 pm .
W!'dllt:sJay St: rvKe - 7. 30 p m

Heath IM iddlcpnrl)
Pa-.tnr ll n,m Du nha m. Su1Hiay Sl ht&gt;nl
' 9i.l!l.1 m . Wnr.h1 p liOOu m

Other Churches
Syrucust l:ommumt~ Churl'h
2-li((J Second St s. I .I~Use. O II
Suo School 1001m, Sum.IJ n1ght 6 30 pm

FndJ ). 7 p m

Mlnets,'lllc
P,J, tur Rob 1-inhmson Su nday Sehoul - 9
;.~m,'Wor~ht p - I O&gt;~ m

tau rei Cllrr Free Melhodist Church
P,t,lor Gl enn Ro\\c , Su nda) Sd1ool
1)·10 am .. Worship - 10 30 am and 6
p m .Wednt'OI:Iay Semce- 7 no p m .

Pomenty
Pa't11r Rrian Du nh am. Wor~ h1 p - 9 30
;.~ m .Sunday S..·hool 10 35 am
Rock Springs
P,1s1or Ke11 h Rader. Sun day Sl: huol - t) I)
a m . Wor sh1p
10 a m .. Youth
Fellowshi p, Sunday . 6 p m
Rutland
Ri ck Bourne. Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m . Wor5hl p • 10·30 1:1 m. Thursday
Se l'\' l~es - 7 p m
Salem Center
Pa!itur Wilh.ml K Mm ~ lwll , Sunday
School 10 1.5 a.m.. Worsh1p - !J 15 a.rn
Btble St lld} Monday 7 00 pm
Snowville
Suntl,l y Sc hon! - 10 ~ m , Worship - I) a m
P~ stor .

Belhan_y
P~swr Jt1hn Gtlmorc. Sunduy Sdwol • 10

am,

Wnr ~h 1p

'I

,1 111

Wcdnl";;day

· 11) :1 Ill

Curnwi·Suttun
Carmel &amp; B o~ ~ hil n R d ~ R:Lc 1nc. Oh111
Pustor Jnhn Gt lmorc . Su11Jay S~.: h uo l 9 45 am . Wursh1p ll 00 lim A1hk
Stud } Wo.-d 1 JO p m

Pustor John Gilmore. Sunday School

II

,\ Ill . \Vo r~ h 1p · 1U ,1Ill
Jo~ast1 . ctnr l
Pa ~ lnr

Btll Marbh;Jll Sll ntl:ty School
'1,1 nt
Wor ~ ht p - Ill ll 111 . l ~ t Sunda )
Cl'l't; month eveum g serVILe 7 00 p m..
We d n~:.day 7 p m
Racil'lf
Kerry Wwd . Sunda) Sehoul - 10
a.m . Worship
II a m Wedna.da)
Sc1v1ces 6 pm . Thu r B1b l ~ Study 7 pm
P .1 ~ 1 or

Lutheran
St. John Lulhcran Church
Pine Gruve. Worsh1p - 9 00 a Ill . Sundu y

School - 10·00 u.m Pastor.
Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnul and Henry ~ I s. Ravens Wood .
WVa ., Pastor. David Ru ss~ !!. Su nda}
~ l'hool · 10-00 n m , Wur:;hlp - l l o m
Sl. Paul Luthera110 C huKh
Cmner Sy c&lt;~ mure &amp; Sewnd St., Pomeroy,

t:oolville lniled Methodist Parish
Pustor· Helen Kl1ne. Ctllllvtlle Church.
M,u n &amp; Filth St . Sun Schoo l - 10 am
WJJrsh1p - 9 &lt;1 m Tucs SeTI'Ice~ 7 p m
Relhel Church
To\\ nshtp Rd 4ftXC Sunday School - q
a m, Wm~h•p - 10 .1 111 . W~dne s day
Serm·es 10 a m

Sun . School - 9.45 a.m.. Worsh1p - II P m

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Won;hip · II am P;tstor. RIChard Nease
Hechlel UniiOO Methodist
New Ha\en, R1dwrd Ne~ se, Pustur.
~ unduy worsh1p ? · JO B m Tues 6· JO
prayer and B1blc S1ud;
MI. Olhe Urilted Melhodisl
Olf 124 behmd Wtlkesv11Je. Pastor Rev.
Rulph Spires, Sunday School · 9.30 a m ,
Worsht p 10 .30 u.rn ., 7 p m., Thursday ,
SeT\oiCes- 7 p m

Hockingport C hurth
Gntn d Street . Sun&lt;.J.1y Sc hool - 9 10 am _
Worshtp - 10 30 a m . P,LS!nr Ph1lhp Hell

I]
Ton:h Church
((, Rd . bJ. Sunda~ Sdl&lt;.IOI - 9 JO 1:1 .m .
WOI,.IIIJI - 10 11) .1 111 '

Stivcrsvllle Community Church
Sunday S...hool tO (X) am .Sunday Wof'ihip
II .(X) am. Wednesday 7 00 pm Pustu r
Bryan &amp; M1 ssy Dailey

(Non -dcnoml naiiOn.tl fdlow, hlp)
M ~e 1 1 n g m lhe Me1gs M1ddle St hoo l
Caktcna Pastor Ch m Stew.lrt
IO.&lt;X! mn - Noon Su nd.1y. ln l om~ .t l

ICeJoicing Life Churth
500 N . ~ 11d A\ e .. Middleport , Pasto r ·
M1ke Forema n. Pustor Ememus Lawrence
r•orem,m Wor~h1 p- 10 00 am
'Wcdnesd.1y Scrv1ces - 7 p.m.

l:ommunily oi'Chdst
Ponl and Ra ~.: me Rd , Pa'&gt;lor Jim Pro ffi ll.
SundaY. Schoo l · 9 m d m Worsh1p •
10 30 a.m.. Wednesd.1y Sen·1ces - 7.()()
p.m
~thrl Wurship Center
397R:. St Rt 7. 1 mtles ~olllh ol Tuppers
Plam s, OH ,\lon -denomtnat mnal v,.11h
Con t ~mpor a ry Pra1se &amp; Worshi p Pa ~ 10r
Rob Barber, A ~~ oc P ~s t or Karyn Dav1s
Youth Dm:ctor Ben y Fulks Sunduy
~erv 1 le s 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Fam1Jy
L1f~ C l&lt;~ ~sc:s, Wed &amp; Thu r mght L1fe
Group~ .1r 7 pm. Thurs morn mg l a d 1 e~·
L1fe Gruup at 10 Outer Lmlll s YoUlh L.tfe
Group on Wed evening fro m 6.M 10 S:30
Ytsll u ~ 1lnllne lit W\\w.bethelwc.org

Clihon Tabernade Churt'h
Cllflon W Va . Sunday School - 10 a m
Wo r~ l11p - 7 p m • Wellnesda)' Servu.:e - 7
pm
New Lire Victory Cenlrr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Ga lh pohs. OH
Pastor U11t Staten. Sunday ServLCes - \0
a.m . &amp; 7 p.m. Wed nesd ay 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 pm

lo' ull GO!ipel C httrch
uf the Living Su"k1r
Rt 338, AntiQUtty Pa stor Je sse
Semces. S a t urd~ y 2.00 p.m .

Ash Slrert Church

Mom ~.

Salem Community Church
ofWesl Columbtu. W Va om Ltevmg
Road. Pastor Ch ark § Rou sh (304) 675 2288, Sunda y School 9 30 ~ m . Su n da~
eve n1 ng se rv1ce 7 UO pm. B1bl} Stud~
Wednesday serv 1ce 7 00 pm

3911 Ash St , Mtddlepon-Pastor Jeff Sm1th

B a~:k

Sun day Sc hool - q 30 a m . Morning
Wor ship - 10 10 a m &amp; 7 00 pm.
We d n e~du y Serv1~.:c - 7 OU p m . Youth
Ser.tce- 7 on p m
Ag11pt! Life Center
Fu ll G o~ pc l Chur.:h . Paslor\ J&lt;thn &amp;
Pany Wadt: , 60) ScL1mli Ave. Mason, 773~ 017, Sen ice lime Sunday 10 lO am ,
Wedn esd~y 7 pm

Uobson Christian Fellowship Church
Pa s1or Herschel Wh1te . Sundll) School10 am , Sunday Chu rc h serv1ce 6 30 pm
Wedne~ da y 7 pm

Abundant Gra~ R.F. I.
923 S Tlurd Sl, M1ddlepon . Pa swrTeres~
Da \ 1&gt; . Sund.1 y ~ l"l\'l l e . 10 &lt;1 m _
Wedn esday se rVICe, 7 p rn

Rtslor(ftion Christian Fello"shlp
93 65 Hooper Ruud . Athem . Pasto r
Lonme Cou t ~ Sundll) Worsh1p 10·00 ~m

Faith Full GO!ipel t:hurch

House of ll~aling Ministries
St. Rt. 124 Lanw;ville, OH
Full ( i n~pel ('] P.l\!llr' Rnb€'rt &amp; Rohc-rta
Muss\:r. Sund.1v Slhoo l Q JO am .
Worsh1p Ill 10 am · 7 00 pm WNI
Se r ~IU' 7 00 pm
Team h.·sus \hmslri(S
Mcctmg 111 th t Mull&gt;t:IT) Cummumly
Cenler G~ mn a ~ n1m Pnstor Eddte Buer.
S ~ n 1&lt;.:&lt;: ~' t' f } Tue~ll) n ] 0 prn

Wed n ~· da y

Long Bot tom. Pastor Steve R~:: ed . Sunda)

S.: hool · ') 30 a 111 , Wonlnp - 4.30 il m
and 7 p m . Wcdnesda} 7 j) 111 . fnday ieJioii'~Jllp ~C r Y IL"e 7 p 111
llarr1sunville t:ommunity Church
Pa, l&lt;lr Theron Durh ,1m. Sunduy 9 30
a Ill 1111d 7 pIll . Wed11csd.1) - 7 pIll
11.1iddleporl Community l' h11rrh
575 Pea rl St . Midd leport • Pas10r Sa m
A.' n d ~ r ~o n Sund:1 y So: hL)O I 10 am .
E"enm!! - 7 .10 p m. Wednesdoty Serv1ce

7 pnl

1 30 pIll

Pentecostal
p.~ , tnr
Stl llll&lt;l }

pIll

Faith Vallry Tahnnaclr Churrh

Ba iley Run Rm1d. Pastor Re\' Emmett
Ra w~n n . Sun day Evc nm!! 7 p m .
Timrsday Scrvi~.:c - i p m
Syracuse MM1un
1411 Bndge ma n St . S}racuw. Su nd,l}
Schon! - 10 a m, Eve mn g - 6 p m
Wednesdlly Scr~ 1ce - 1 p.m.
Hazel Community Church
Off Rt 124. Pastor. Edse l Han. Sunda y
School - 9 1n am . Worshrp - 10 30 a m .
7 30 p m.

. Nazarene
Point Rock C hurch oftht Nazarene
Route OIN . Allmny . Rc\1 Ll oyd Gnmm .
pns10r. Su nd,ly S ~ h lHII 10 .n n, wu rh ~ 1p
sen-1ce 11 am even1ng ~&lt;:"1"\ l i,;C 7 pm Wed ,
prayer meeung 7 pm
Middltporl Church uf the Nazaren~
Po~tnr : Lc'onnrd Powell Sunday School 9 30 a.m .. Wur!ihip - 10 30 am 6 30 p.m .
Wednc $day Sen' ICC~ i p.m

Chester
P,J stor J1m Corb tl1 , Wm ~ h 1 p 9 am.
Stmda) Schoo l · 10 am . Thursdny
Ser~ u:es 7 p m

Ret&gt;dsvlllt •·enowshlp
Churc h uf the Na:~:arcne . !':lslt)r ' W.ussell
C ar~on , Sundav Sdmul - 9 30 a m ,
Wor~ h1p - 10 45 am . 6 p m . Wedn e~day
St'rv i ~cs - 7 p 111 .
Syracust' Ch urch of lhe Nlllurenc

Cunununity Chun.:h
Sunday Sd1ool - 9.JO a.m.. Wo~ ht p t030 ll m .) pm
Morse Chapel Chul'fh
Sun d,ty S&lt;: llno l - 10 .1111 Wor\ hlp - I I
a.m . Wednesday Ser\ Ke 7 p.rn
•'aith Gospel ChuJ'('h
Lon g Bottom. Sunda y School · &lt;.J lOam ,
Wro rs h1p - 10 .45 am . 7 30 p 111.
Wednfsd11y 7.30 p m
Full Gospel Llghlhousc
JJIW5 Hiland Road . Pomeroy. P,l,tur Ro ~
Hunter Sunday School - 10 am , Even1ng
1 lnpm . fucsd,l} &amp; Jh ur~ -7 _\0 jl m

PentecuMal .\s.wmbb·
S1 Rl 12.-1 . Raune. lomado Rd
Sdwo l - 10 :1m. E\Cnln g - 7

Wct ln ~'o&lt; ill~

SaY I CC ~ . 7 r

Ill

Presbyterian
ll:trrisoli1'11k· Pnsbylt·ri:m Church

P111tor Rnbert Crt til. \\ iiT,hl p

lJ o1

m

\liddleporl Pre~ byterlan
P,l, lor J.1Jile' Sn~ dt·r SunJ .J~ Sc hool Ill
am . wm sh1p ~en'ILe II am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Scvenlh·Ua)' Adn-nlist
Mu lbc:rr) Hh Rd . P1&gt; mt:n&gt;:o S&lt;~t urJ .1 y
S e mc.:~ . Sa bbath Sd llln l
.! p m .
Wor~ l 11 p - 1 p m

United Brethren

Dyesvill~

Meig.•; Coopertttl~e Parish
Northeast Cluster. AlfrCd. Pas tor. J1m
Cnrb llt , Sund ay School - 9:30 a .m..
Worsh1p - II am . 6 30 p m

Joppa DenZLI Nul l. Worsh1p · 9.30 u m.

Amazmg Grace Community Church
Pastor Wayne Dunl.1p State Rt 6HI,
Tuppt!r~ Plams. Sun Wor&gt;hlp 10 am &amp;
frlll pm .. Wed R1blc S!udy 7lX IJI 111

l\lornina Star

Latter-Day Saints
Tbc Church or Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt 160 , 446 -6247 or 446-7480.
Sund uy School t0·2fl- ll 11 m . Rchcf
Soc1ety/Pnes1hood 11 .05- 12.00 mmn ,
Sacrament Sentcc 9- 10 · 15 am ,
Homemaking nlt!etlllg , hi TI1ur ~ - 7 p m

Ca l~ary Hiblr l:hun:h
Pm neruy P1ke. Co Rd . Pustor Rev
BladW11od Sundll) Schoo l · 9 30_a m .
Wonh1 p 10 30 am , 7.3 0 p m ..
\V~dne'il.lu} Ser\' lce 7 30 p.m

Worsh1p . Ch i ldre n ·~ 1111 111 st ry

Pearl Chapel
Sun,hly School - 'Jam 'Wnr ,l11p - 10,1111

5~ rV1CC~

lly~ell Run Cunununity Church
l'aswr Re\ Larry Lemle} Sumill) Sc hool
- IJ lll am . Worsh1p - 10 .t5 ~ .m , 7 p 111 ,
Thursday B1 ble Sl udy and Yomh - 7 p m

(Full (,ospel Church) li &lt;Lm ~nnville .
Paston; Bub and Kuv Marshall .
Sunday"Sel"\'lcc. 2 p m

.oasis Christian Frllowship

1'\ Pearl St . Middleport

P.I ~ tor

B,tld Knnh ••n C1 o h:d .1 1. P01~tor Re v
Rlli!\.'1 Wllllo rLI. Su n da~ School t} 30

&gt;erVIL'~'

t~m , Wor ~ lll p - 'Jam

s~r. 1 c~ -

Pomeroy Ch urt&gt;h uf thr ,Nazartne
Pa.tor Jan LilVI"tll.kr. Sun day S&lt;.:hunl lJ JU a m. Worslllp - 10 JO a.m and b
pIll . Wedne'oda } ~~n I H~ - 7 p m

A New Beginnin11:

Grace t:piscOpul Church
326 E Mam St . l'omeroy. Sunda) School
and Holy Eucha n~t II 00 am Rt•v
Edward Payne

jfi!lbrr jfunrral.,omr

...,..

28UIIIIIIIelltlhl. •1•1111\ H

1\lt.llermon Lni l~d Rrethren
in Christ Church
T~u~ Commun i!) 3641 I Wtd.Jwm RJ
PusiOT' Peter Manmdale. Stmday S~ h ool
930!1m. Wm ~h 1p - IO J0&lt;$111 . 7 00
p m , Wednesday Ser~'1c e' 7·00 p m
Youth gmtlp meeting 2nd &amp; -lth Sunday s
7 p.m

Eden United Brflhren In Christ
'Rtlutc I~-L be!wctn Reedsv ille &amp;
H o~ktn~p1m. Sllntla) s ~· hoo l
10 11 m
Sunday W\lr, hiP- 11 no a m Wed nesday
Ser11ces · 1 00 p.m . P&lt;lSIOr M Adam
S t~t c

W1ll

South Bethel Community Church
Sll\er R1dge- l'astm L1 nda Dam&lt;.'wood ,
S u n da~· School - 9 am . WorsllLp Scn'ICe
1011 m 2od and 4th Sunda)

•

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
1-800-45t-9806

Full line of
Insurance

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128
Local source tor trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

AG!'NCIES Inc

words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
be done unto you.
Services
John 15:7·

Bill

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
. 740-66~·311 0

(740) 992·6451

-·
..

'

llnli
ANDERSON
fUNERAL HOME

..

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your 11glu so shine before
IRE'HAIBILITAT'ION CENTER men , that they may see your

The care you deseTVe, close to home good works and glorify row·
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
lrlcll IIIMI·Itncllr
Father 111 lleal'en ...
Hllllllllllblll· ,_., H Ulll
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Marth ew 5: 16
M8·112·54t4

741-H2-Ii141

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

P.O_Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Su nJ:I\ Sdwo l

-

740-594-6333

190 N. Second St

l.unJ: Hnth1m

&lt;1m.

Congregational

Carlewn lnt e rdmumin~ttional Church
Kwg,hu ry Ru,nl. P."hu h:oben Vance,
Sund:~y S,ht•ol - 'I .1 0 a m , Worshi p .
Su~ l \;~ Ill \1! u m I \&lt;.:nm~ Sn v1ce 6
pru

&lt;!

R ted S \' ill~

Syrttcust H nl t:hurth of God
Apple und Second Sto; . P.Jsior: R.ev. Dav1d
Rus se ll. Su n1!a) Sl' hool and Wor~ h1 p- IU
~~ m Eve n Ill! Sc 1v1ces- , 6 30 p.m .
Wedne,'Juy Services- 6 l O p. m

740-992-6606

I

The Appliance man

PU&gt;Ior M 1 J..~.: Adkm\ Sund;~~ .SC hlM)I '1- \0
m . Woa ~IHp - 10 31) a. m . 6 p.m
\i.~tdne~ay Serv 1 ce~ 1 p.m

J(ll.(l a 111

- .'

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20
choose many
palhs, some
of which may aflpear equally good.
But oflen, we know lhc bcSI course
,
of aclion and Slill faillo follow il
You wtll show me lhe path of hfe: in your because of cgollsm. lazmess. or
presence" fullness of joy; at Your right some olhcr self-servmg mollvc. We
hand are pl easures forevennore.
must seek knowledge when il is
available. and !hen follow lhrough
·New K.J.VPsalm 16 11
hy doing whm we kno~ 10 ~ righi

S unJ ~y S~lt~HJI -

pm

I

Re\1. Joseph Woods, Sunday School - 10
am, Worsh1p · 11:30 am .

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

740·949·2217

Faith Bapllst Cburc.h
Railroad St, Mason. Sunday School - 10
a.m . Worship
II a rn .. 6 p.m.
~dne!lday Serv1ce~ · 7 p m.

D1rector Of Marketing and AdmissiOns

Homt Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specitds

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH ·

Old Betllel FM Wll Baptist Church
28601 St Rt. 7. Midd leport. Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6 00 p m . Tuesday
Ser\IICeS -6 00
Hillside Baptlm Church
St Rt . 143 JUSt off Rt 7, Pas1or Rev
Jamn R. Acree, Sr .. Sunday Unifted
Semce, Worship - 10 30 am , 6 p m ,
Wednesday Services 7 p.m.

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

Rutland Fm Will Baptist
Salem St . Pa stor . Sunday Sc hoo l - J(J
am .. Eve mn g - 7 p.m , Wcdnesda)
Services - 1 p m
Second B11plist Church
Ra.,enswood. WV, Sunda} SchrHll 10 am, Mornmg worsh1p I I am Evemng - 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
First Uaplist Church of l\laiOn, wv ~
(lndcpendem B:~pti l\ 11
SR 652 and Anderson St Pustor Robert
Grady. Sunday sc hool 10 am, Morn1ng
ch urch II am, Sunday e~e mng 6 pm . Wed
81ble Study 7 pm

Hrst Baplbl (hurd•

United Methodist
Church, SIS El!n Str:eet in
Racine. Sutuhly worship is at
II a.m. Pastnr Kerry ca11 be
reached qJ rocineumc@suddenlink-liet.)

r

Independent Baptist Church

Sunday School - 9 JOam , Pteachmg
Serv1ce 10 30am. Evenm~ Service
HMlpm. Wednesda~ B1ble Study 7 00 pm ,
Pastor. Wh1U Aker5

Q( Racine

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK ·

Friday, November 30, 2007

CHRISTMAS
LIGHTS
•
AND CHRISTMAS LITE

www.mydallysentiriel.com

Brogan-Warner

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SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

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God .m loved rhe world
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John 3:16
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less than 30 m1nu1es from
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"Still small

MY l!race is sufficient
for thee: for m11
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

�'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

F:riday, November 30, 2007

Friday, November 30, 2007

Obituaries

All about believers ·and their checkbooks

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
W'NW.mydallysentlnel.com

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 30, the 334th day of 2007. There are
31 days left in the year.
Joday's Highlight in Histol)':
On Nov. 30, 1782, the United States and Britain signed prelim!nary peace articles in Paris, ending the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
·
·
. In 1803, Spain completed the process of ceding Louisiana to
France, which had sold it to the United States.
·
In 1835, Samuel Langhorne Clemens - better known as
Mark Twain - was born in Florida, Mo.
In 1874, Sir Winston Churchill was born at Blenheim
Palace.
In 1900, writer Oscar Wilde .died in Paris at age 46.
. In 1936, London's famed Cl)'stal Palace, constructed for the
Great EXhibition of 1851 , was destroyed in a fu-e.
In 1939, the Russo-Finnish War began as Soviet troops
invaded Finland.
In 1962, U Thant of Burma, who had been acting secretal)'general of the. United Nations following the death of Dag
Hammarskjold the year before, was elected to a four-year
teiiD.
' In 1966, the fonner British colony of Barbados became
· independent.
·
In 1981, the United States and the Soviet Union opened
negotiations in Geneva aimed at reducing nuclear weapons in
Europe.
·
·
In 1987, author James Baldwin died in Saint Paul de Vence,
France, at age 63.
Five years ago: International weapons hunters in Iraq paid
an unannounced visit to a milital)' post' previously declared
"sensitive" and restricted by Baghdad. A nightclub fire in
Caracas, Venezuela, killed 50 people.
. One year ago: President Bush met in Jordan with Iraqi
Prime Minister. Nouri ai-Maliki; Bu'h said the Vnited States
would speed a turnover of security responsibility to Iraqi
forces but assured ai-Maliki that Washington was not looking
for a "graceful exit" from the war. Pope Benedict XVI visited
Istanbul's famous Blue Mosque in a dramatic gesture of outreach to Muslims.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Efrem Zimbalist Jr. is 90. Actor
Robert Guillaume is 80. TV personality and producer Dick
Clark is 78. Radio talk show host G. Gordon Liddy is 77.
Count!)' singer-recor~ing executive Jinuny Bowen is 70.
Movie director Ridley Scott is 70. Singer Rob Grill (The
Grassroots) is 64. Movie writer-director Terrence Malick is 64.
Rock musician Roger Glover (Deep Purple) is 62. Playwright
David Mamet is 60. Actress Margaret Whitton is 57. Actor
Mandy Patink.in is 55. Musician Shuggie Otis is 54. Country
singer Jeannie Kendall is 53. Sin~er Billy Idol is 52. Education
.Secreta!)' Margaret Spellings ts 50. Rock musician John
Ashton (The Psychedelic Furs) is 50. Comedian Colin
Mochrie is 50. F9rmer football and baseball player Bo Jackson
is 45. Rapper Jalil (Whodini) is 44. Actor-drrector Ben Stiller
is 42. Rock musician Mike Stone is 38. Actress Sandra Oh is
37. Country singer Mindy McCready is 32. Singer Clay Aiken
is 29. Actress Elisha Cuthbert is 25. Actress Kaley Cuoco is
22.
Thought for Today: "'Classic' : a book which people praise
and don' t read." - Mark Twain (1835-1910).

It was the kind of cryptic
theological statement that is
often found stuck on automobile bumpers.
This sticker said: '·Don't.
let my car fool you. My
treasure is in heaven." This
echoed the Bible passage in
which Jesus urged believers
to, "lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven .... For
where your treasure is.
there will your heart be
also."
This sti cker's creator
probably intende~ it to be
displayed on the battered
bumper of a maintenancechallenged car, noted sociologist Christian Smith.
director of the Center for
the Study of Religion and
Society at the University of
Notre Dame .i Thus, the
sticker suggests that the driver knows his car is. a
wreck, but that he has
"other commitments and
priorities" that matter more .
But Smith was puzzled
when he saw· this sticker on
a $42,000 SUV parked at a
bank
"Let's be clear. I have no
problem with abundance. l
have no problem with capitalism," he said, speaking at
Gordon College, his alma
mater near Boston. "The
person driving this car may
give away 40 percent of
their income. I have no
idea·. I'm not trying to nail
people who drive SUVs or
whatever.
"But it seems to me that
the meaning of this bumper

sticker has changed from
what I thought was the original meaning to, ' Well,
"Jesus didn ' t quite get it
right, because l have a lot
here and I also have it in
heaven. too. So I have all
the bases covered . .,.
After years of digging in
the data. Smith has reached
some sobering conclusions
about believers and their
checkbooks ..
It 's true that Americans
give away lots of money, in
comparison with people in
other modern societies. It's
also true that religious
Americans are much more
generous than nonreligious
Americans. But here's the
bottom line : The top I 0 per·
cent of America's givers a~e
very generous, while 80
percent or more rarely, if
ever, make charitable donations of any kind .
"This is the glass half-full
perspective ," said Smith.
"We ' re not doing too bad.
We're doing pretty good.
However, most American
Christians turn out to be
·stingy financial givers
most, but not al l."
Sti\(gy? Smith believes

deer

Sentenced

Robert V. King, 89, of Middleport, ended his earthly journey and began hi s etemal journey Nov. 29, 2007 .
He was born Aug. 13, 1918. in Meigs County, the son of
the late Tho.mas Vincenr and Ida Grace Hysell King.
Bestdes hts parents, he is preceded in death by his wife.
Ltlhan Bess Cottenll King ; son, Robert Thomas King:
brother, Charles King: and sister, Mary Hyse!l.
In 1952, he and his wife founded RV King Construction
and Ktng Bmlders Supply Co., now knowti as King
Hardware. Hts quality building standard and craftsmanship
are found tn commercial buildings and homes throughout
Metgs County and the surrounding area.
Mr. Ktng was a member of Bradbury Church of Chri st, a
member, Past Master and 32nd Degree Mason in
Mrddleport Ma s~ic Lodge No. 363, a past Worthy Patron
of the Harrisonville Eastern Star and a Life Member of the
Feeney Bennett Post 128, American Legion. He served in
the U.S. Army during Wurld War II. fighting in the Pacific
Theatre from Dec. 8, 1941 until October 1945.
Surviving are a daughter-in-law, Wendy King of
Worthmgton: daughter and son-in-law, Carol and Darrell
Brewer of Middleport: son and daughter-in-law, Tim and
E~re King of Middl eport; grandchildren, Nick and Russ
Kmg of Worthington, Libby and T.J . King of Middleport,
and Stacey and Bryan Walters of Jackson: a brother and sister-in- Ia~. William and Naomi King of Middleport: and a
spectal frrend, Georgaleen Hockenberry of Marietta.
Services will be 2 p.m . Sunday, Dec . 2, 2007, at the
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Homes, with Tom
Runyon o(ficiating. Burial will follow in Bradford
Cemetery. Friends may call on Saturday Dec. I, 2007, from
2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home .
Masonic services will be conducted by Middl eport
Masonic Lodge at !UO p.m. Saturday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Bradbury
Church of Christ Building and Maintenance Fund, 39558
Bradbury Road, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

POMEROY - Amber Nicole Boling was sentenced to
two years ii1 prison , on two counts of theft in· Meigs
County Comm~m Pleas Court. The sentences were suspended and Boling was placed on a five-year period of
community control.
.
Jeremiah Bentley was sentenced to three years in prison
on three counts of receiving stolen property. The sentences
were suspended and Bentley was placed on a five-year
period of community control.

-Ruth Ann Love

Highway Patrol
BASHAN - Michael L. Haynes, 43, Charleston, W.Va.,
was cited for failure to control by the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol following a one-vehicle accident
Tuesday on County Ro~d 28 (Bashan). .
Troopers said Haynes was northbound, seven-tenths of a
mile north of Chester Township Road 112 (Scout Camp) at
8: II p.m. when he swerved the pickup truck he drove to the
right to avoid collision with a deer.
. The pickup went off the right side of the road, came back
onto the ·road·, traveled off the left side and into a ditch,
according to the report.
Disabling damage was reported on the yehicle.

FQHC
from PageA1
Plains Regional Sewer
District,
and
LAS
International, Ltd., Bismark,
N.D., in the amount of
S 10,852, for reconditioning
work on aerator pumps at the
system's lagoon on Ohio 681.
The projects are funded
through . the Community
Development" Block Grant
program. The bid s were
awarded on the basis of a
recommendation from ME
Companies, the distri ct '.,s

engineering firm.
Commissioners also:
· • Approved a bid from
Asphalt Materials, Inc .,
Marietta, for bituminous
materials for December, and
referred the bid to the county engineer.
• Approved an appropriations request from Probate
Court in the amount of
$3,000.
• Approved an appropriation .in· miscellaneous contingencies in the amount of
$38,722.64 for a CDBG
project.
. Also present was Clerk
Gloria Kloes .

Ruth Ann Love, 68, of New Haven, W.Va. , passed away
Wednesday. Nov. 28, 2007, at St. Mary 's, Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va.
· She was born May 25, 1939, in New Haven, daughter
of the late Neal Wallace Love and Edna Kathorene
"Kitty" Love.
. She is survived by a daughter, Orenda and Ty Roush of
Mason, W.Va.: a son, James "Jim" Love and Harlan J.
Brunais of Raleigh, N.C.: a grandson, Jerod and Beckie Cook
her right to .Intervene
of Columbus: a great-grandson, Jameson E. Cook: sister.
appears to be the equivaBillie June Hayes of New Haven: brother, Jack E. Cartwright
lent of denying her most
of New Martinsviile, W.Va.: sister, Jo Cartwright of New
basic due process rights
from PageA1
Martinsville: brother, Donald and Barbara Love of Ohio:
and property rights."
brother, Vernal and Sue Love of Indiana: sister, Barbara and Ohio. air pollution control
Young claims in her reply
Charles Heinlein of Florida: dear friend, Phyllis Yost of statute and cannot be that AMP has tired to
Charleston, W.Va.: and several loving nieces and nephews.
ignored as an 'unregulated' "bully" her "into backing
Services will be 10 a.m. Saturday, Dec. I, 2007, in the pollutant here."
out of this proceeding by
Anderson Funeral Home at New Haven, with Pastor
The groups · went on to stating that merely living on
Jason Simpkins officiating. Burial will follow in the say: "Even if the environ- her family's farm next door
Graham Cemetery.
mental impacts of C02 to the plant, which has been
A celebration of life reception will be held at the emissions did not have to in . her family since the
Riverside Golf Course after the comntital service at the be evaluated in this pro- Revolutionary War is 'not
cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5 to 9 ceeding, the costs of such good cause."' She also
p.m. Friday, Nov. 30, 2007, and two hours prior to the ser- emissions remain relevant wrote in her reply: "Without
vice on Saturday.
to the alternative and public . Ms. Young or the intervenA registry is available online at www.andersonfh.com.
interest standards fur certi- tion of someone who is
fication."
directly impacted, the proThe groups also said it ceeding should not go forwould suggest Integrated ward .
Gasification
Combined
In summary, Young li sted
Cycle as an alternative to her interests in the hearing
pulverized coal, if granted as involving her economic
intervenor status. The use of well-being, property interIGCC technology is what· est and personal health and
v, oung ca 11 s an "enormous
s·a~ety.
RUTLAND - The annual Christmas lighting conlesl of
Tuesday revealed the !atRutland will be held Dec . 20 with the judging to begin at 6 distinction between her and
the
other
citizen
group
est
filing in the case when
p.m. The judging area will include new Lima Road to Joe
Bolin's property, down Route 124 to Cook's Gap Hill. Prizes intervenors," adding ·she is Young sent a copy of a letter
"firmly opposed to lGCC" she sent to John Bentine,
will be awarde~ for religious, non-religious, and door.
in her reply to AMP's Esq., attorney for AMP, to
.
motion to have her inter- the OPSB to be documentvenor status denied. .
ed. The letter to Bentine
In her reply to the OPSB , states his request to depose
POMEROY - The Meigs County Senior Center will Young said her interests are Young on "three different
host a cooking haking contest on Dec. 6. Cookies should be not represented by other workdays within one work
at the center by 10 a.m. on Dec. 6 for judging. Trophies, parties and that "if living week" in Columbus was
provided by Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, will be within 10 miles of the pro- "bordering on harassment,"
awarded to first and second place winners. Cookies will be posed plant does not consti- given the fact Young works
auctioned to the highest bidder after judging is completed. tute a real and substantial full -time in Southeast Ohio.
Bring cookies in disposable container. Call Debbie Jones at interest. she can't imagine
Young, who said in the
992-2161 for more information.
what does."
letter " I am not a paid enviYoung also said her peti - . ronmentalist with time and
tion to intervene being funds for travel expenses"
';two and one-half hours went on to tell Bentine "if
MIDDLEPORT - The meeting of the Middleport late" should be accepted the Administrative Law
Village Council ordinance committee was postponed from because it was filed under Judge for 'the OPSB detercircum- mines that I am required to
Thursday evening to 6 p.m. Monday In council chambers. "ex traordinary
stances" which her motion set aside time to again pro·
ex plain s in detail. Young vide you with the same
said it seems " unduly harsh information I am already
to deny her intervention submitting within the previ·
· POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Elections will be because her petition was a ously agreed upon time
dosed on Dec. 4 so staff can attend a meeting in Pike County. few hours late. Ms. Young frame, then we will .need to
paid a substantial sum of find a mutually agreeable
money
to overnight the time for you to come to
f
not
home of a friend suffering ' documents to each party, Mei g,~ County
and
did
evel)'thing
possi
Columbus
at
my
time
and
from cancer or some other
ble to be on time . To deny expense.''
illness to help out.
While Marty is retiring
from PageA1
from Holzer Home Care,
says she is not retiring
she
Over the years her role of
helping the sick didn't cease from life. "I'll be visiting
with the hours she spent on family and doing some
One Ounce
the job. She seemed always things I like to do- quiltSilver Rounds $21
· to be extending a helping ing; crocheting, tatting and
hand to a friend or neighbor. knitting," she said. Then
Bronze Rounds $5
Her goal always seemed to she added "I have a friend
with
cancer
who
doesn
'
t
be making life a little better
for someone less fortunate . need me · right now' but
Many times she left her reg- maybe soo n and I' ll be
ular job only to go to the there to help."

Submitted photos

Crew Warden of Racine shot this 10-point buck on his
grandfather's farm during the recent youth deer season.

Josiah Brewer killed his first deer during the recent youth
hunting season while hunting with his uncle.

AMP

''
'

.

Local Briefs

Lighting contest planned

"

Cookie baking contest

The Giuliani conundrum

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Rudy Giuliani's candidacy for the Republican presiLetters to the tfditor are welcome. Th~y should be less dential nomination presents
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be conservative Republicans
signed, and include address and telephone number. No with a real conundrum.
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in , Should they support the
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of candidate who will put up
thanks to organizations and individuals will nOt be accept- the best fight, though he (or
she) disagrees with them on
ed for publication.
virtually all of the social
issues? Or should they insist
on a candidate who truly·
represents conservative values, even if they suspect he
Reader Services
(USPs 213-960)
might be a degree or two
Correction Polley .
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
less combative against (say)
our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
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paign?
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My own brooding on this
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The Daily Sentinel

1

•••••••• •

•

Terry
Mattingly

·· that ' the vast majority of the resources to act."
Ministers are often afraid
affluent
American
Christian s will see they are to talk about this issue
guilty as charged, if they openly, in large part
candidly
contrast
the because they "feel like
amount of money they give they're in a compromised
away with the doctrines that position," he noted. "They
are proclaimed in the pul- don't want people to think
pits of all traditional that they are standing up
churc hes.
there in the pulpit trying to
The result is a iangh-to· raise their own salaries."
keep-from-crying paradox.
Truth is, people in the
ln fact, Smith considered pews would probably prefer
using another tit)e for his to hear a clear, unapologetic
chape l address: "Why does
$30 seem Iike so much to message about ste;wardship
give in church and so little from someone who is not
But
Smith
to spend in the restaurant ordained.
stressed that anyone who
after church?"
The stakes are high in thi s talks about faith and money
spiritual struggle. Recent has to be able to "communiresearch indicates the com- cate a spiritual vision that is
bined incomes of active larger than trying to pay the
U.S. Christians - people light bill' at the end of the
who frequently go to month."
church - reached about $2
When it comes to tithes
trillion 'in 2005.
and offerings, parents are
The Bible's minimum even more important than
standard for giving is the pastors.
"tithe," Smith noted, and it
"People who give generasks believers 'to give away ously," said Smith, "almost
at least I 0 percent of their always say, This is just the
income. Do the math: 10 way my parents raised me.
percent of $2 trillion is a lot This is part of who I am and
of money,
what I believe . My parents
"When
you
study
taught me to be thankful
American religion, " said
and to help others."'
Smith, "it quickly becomes
(Terry Mattingly is direcclear how important having
tor
of the Washingto11
material resources is if you
want to get anything 'Journalism Center at the
accomplished .... There are Council for Christian
all kinds of things that Colleges and Universities
leads
the
church leaders say that they and
GetReligion.org
project
to
are su pposed to be doing,
yet they struggle to do them study religion and the
because they do not have news.)

The Dail y Sentinel• Page As

For the Record

Robert V. King

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

don, in the process, 70 percent of the principles that
conservatives believe are
worth fighting for?
Let's concede that, on the
Iraq
war, and to the extent
William
that we know them (an
Rusher
important reservation) on
foreign issues generally,
Giuliani is in synch with
conservative positions. But
able inclination on the par1 on Dec . 2, 1999, he assertof the electorate to think it 's ed, " I' m pro-choice, I'm
the other guys' turn :
pro-gay rights," and when
Of course, 2008 won't be asked whether he would
the end of the world. There support a ban on par1ialwill be other elections, and birth abortion, he told
the Republicans wi II win a CNN's "Inside Politics":
fair share of them. There "No, I have not supported
might even be some drainat- that, and I don't see my
ic shift in the probabiliti es position on that changing:"
in 2008: lf. for example , a
Gun control? On March
major terrorist attack 011 the 21, 2000, he told the Boston
United States occurred in Globe: "Anyone· wanting to
September or October,· own a gun should have to
pushing everything but pass a written exam that
security out of the voters · . shows that they know how
minds. But I urge you not to t o use a gun ... "
be deluded into · thinking
Immigration ?
In
that Ame.~ica just can't November 2006, he sup- .
stand Hillary, or that politi- ported the Senate plan for
cal ~ycles can be disregard- guest workers, with a path
ed. Barring the unimagin- to citizenship - a plan that
able, 2008 is going to be a was stopped dead in its ·
Democratic
year, · and tracks by a subsequent tidal
Hillary may well be hack in wave of public opposition.
the White House, thi s time
Now. it's perfectly true
as Madam President.
that Giuliani's positions on
If so, what good will it do these and practi cally all
conservative Republicans to other social · issues are
·nominate a candidate who matched - and indeed outcan undeniably put up a matched - by those of any
'dogged light . but will aban- likely Democratic con-

tender. So it's fair to argue
that, however unsatisfactory
Giuliani might be as president, "he wou)dn 't be as bad
a~ Hillary!"
But if it is true that the
Democrats are overwhelmingly likely to win in 2008,
then Giuliani won't have
the chance to be a better
president than Hillary. He
will simply be the image
that the Republican Party
chooses to offer the public
next year: a tough New
York politician who knows
how to wage a good fight,
but differs with his conservative fellow Republicans on
just about. every social
issue.
I cannot believe the
American . people
will ·
respect the Republican
Par1y more if it is willing to
abandon some of its core
principles, Qelieving that
they are transiently unpopular. Far better to lose, if lose
we must, with a Mitt
Romriey
or
a
Fred
Thompson than with a
Giuliani. For with Giuliani,
we will not only lose the
election but the core values
that represent the only reason to hope for victory. ' ·
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmnnship and
Political Philosophy.)

·I

•

Meeting postponed

Office closed

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Eric Klein, 8. of Racine, is pictured with the six-point buck
he harvested during the youth deer season. He is the son
of Kevin and Mary Klein.

Son pleads not guilty in killing
.of retired professor father ·
ATHENS (AP) - A former Ohio University graduate student has pleaded not
guilty in the stabbing death
of his retired professor father.
Jonathan Bebb. 32, wasn't
present for his arraignment
in Athens
Wedne sday
County Common . Pleas
Court. Hi s attorney entereu
the plea for Bebb on tme
count of aggravated murder.
Authorities have said 66year-old Phillip Bcbb died
of multiple stab wounds.
His wife found the body of
the retired hi story professor

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Sat, Dec. 1, 2007
Jingle Bell Follies
Saturday
December 7, 8, 9
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740, 446-ARTS

on the lloor of their Athens
home Sept. 24.
At the hearing. the judge
raised the son's bond from
$250.000 to $1 million.
Prosecutor David Warren
Liescribes that as good for
the sa fet y of the community.
The trial date for Bebh
has been set for Feb. 4.
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�The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

PageA6
Friday, November 30,2007

Graveyard shift soon to be listed as 'probable'
cause of cancer, a link once seen as wacky
BY MARIA CHENG
AP MEDICAL WRITER

AP photo

This photo ·made available· by the Shat.em Center shows pieces of pottery discovered in
Jerusalem's City of David. Artifacts including pottery shards and arrowheads found durmg
an excavation to rescue f1 tower and a wall which were in danger of colfapse suggest, according to Israeli archaeologists that the wall is from the 5th century B.C. , the time of Nehemiah.

Hasmonean period from
about 142 B.C. to 37 B.C.
The findings suggest that
JERUSALEM - A wall the structure was actually
mentioned in the Bible's part of the same city wall
Book of Nehemiah and long the Bible says Nehemiah
sought by archaeologists rebuilt, Mazar said. The
apparently has been tound, Book of Nehemiah gives a
an Israeli archaeologist says. detailed description of con- .
A team of archaeologists struction of the walls,
discovered the wall in de stroyed earlier by the
Jerusalem's ancient City of Babyloni ans.
"We were amazed," she
David during a rescue
attempt on a tower that was said, noting that the discovin danger of collapse. said ery was made at a time
Eilat Mazar, head of the when many scholars argued
Institute of Archaeology at that the wall did not exist.
the Shalem Center, a
'This was a great surJerusalem-based research prise. It was something we
and educational institute, didn't plan," Mazar said.
and leader of the dig .
The tirst phase of the qig,
Artifacts including ·pot- completed in 2005, uncovtery shards and arrowheads ered what Mazar believes tv
found under the tower sug- be the remain s of King
gested that both the tower David's palace , built by
and the nearby wall are King Hiram of Tyre, and
from the 5th century B.C., also mentioned in the Bible.
the time of Nehemiah,
Ephr;~im Stern, professor
Mazar said this · week. emeritus of archaeology at
Scholars pre\:iously thought Hebrew University and
the wall dated to the chairman of the state of
Bv REGAN E. DOHERTY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Israel archaeological council, offered support for.
Mazar's claim.
"The material she showed
me is from the Persian period ,"
the
period
of
Nehemiah, he said. "I can
sign on the date of the material she found."
However, another scholar
disputed the significance of
the discovery.
Israel Finkel stein, professor of archaeology at Tel
Aviv University, called the
discovery "an interesting
lind,"' but said the pottery
and other artifacts do not
indicate that the wall was
bui It in the time of
Nehemiah. Because the
debris was not connected to
a floor or other structural
part of the wall, the wall
could have been built later,
Finkelstein said.
"The wali could have been
built, theoretically, in the
Ottoman period," he said.
"It's not later than the pottery - that's all we know."

Tens of thousands of Venezuelans
protest Chavez's referendum
Bv FABIOLA SANCHEZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CARACAS, Venezuela
- More than I00,000 people flooded the streets of the
capital Thursday to oppose
a referendum that would
eliminate term limits for
President Hugo Chavez and
help him establish a socialist state in Venezuela.
Blowing whistles, waving
placards and shouting "Not
like this!" the marchers carried Venezuelan flags and
·dressed in blue - the chosen color of the opposition ·
- as they streamed along
Bolivar Avenue.
"This is a movement by
those of us who oppose a
change to this country's
way of life, because what
(the referendum) aims to do
is impose totalitarianism,"
said former lawmaker Elias
Matta. ''There can't be a
communist Venezuela, and
that's why our society is
reacting this way."
No official crowd estimates were available, but
opposition
politician
Leopoldo Lopez said about
160,000 protesters filled the
avenue, and thousands more
spilled over onto surrounding roads. The rally was
among the largest by the
opposition in recent years.
The rally marked the close
of the 'opposition 's campaign agamst the proposed
constitutional
changes.
which will be submitted to a
vote Sunday. Chavez plans
to lead rallies in favor of the
reforms Friday.
Venezuelans ,wi II vote on
69 proposed changes to

Keeping
.' Meigs County
informed
1he Daily Sentinel

nation's 1999 constitution
that would , among other
things, eliminate presiden tial term limits; create forms
of communal property and
give greater power to the
presldency.
Chavez denies that the
proposals are a bid to seize
unchecked power, saying
the constitutional · overhaul
is necessary to give more of
a voice to tlie people
through community-based
councils.
Rallies for and against the
amendments have surged
across thi s South American
country in the run-up to the
vote, occasionally leading
to clashes. The.re were no
immediate reports of violence Thursday.
Chavez's ex~wife, a critic
of his administration, said
the political strife in
Venezuela has turned it in to
"time-bomb ," given the
polarization .and the amount
of guns on the streets.
"The gun powder is
spread, and all it needs is a
detonator," said Marisabel
Rodri guez in comments to

Colombia's Caracol Radio,
who worried that any "nonsense" by the opposition or
the government could set
off' a wave of violence.
On .Wednesday, hundreds
of stone-throwing students
clashed with police and the
Venezuelan national ~uard in
a protest against the constitutional overhaul. Security
forces responded with water
cannons and tear gas.
Opposition
leaders
confident
appeared ·
Thursday that they have
enough votes to defeat the
referendum. Chavez, who
was · handily re-elected to
another six-year term last
year, has predicted a
"knockout" victory.
Henriq11e Capriles, mayor
of the Caracas borough of
Baruta, said even some people who support Chavez are
against the constitutional
changes.
"If there is transparency,
whatever the result, we will
recognize ir," Capriles said.
But he warned, "We
won't put up with a fraudulent process."

Reed &amp; Baur
Insurance Ae:ency
New office locatedat

•

pie who do shift work to
recognize that there 's an
increase in cancer, but we
can't rule out the possibility
of other factors."
. Scientists believe having
lower melatonin levels can ·
raise the risk of developing
cancer. Light shuts down
melatonin production, so
people working in artificial
light at night may have
lower melatonin levels .
Melatonitt-can be taken as
a supplement, but experts
don' t recommend it lon~­
term, since that could rum
the body's ability to produce it naturally.
Sleep deprivation may be
another factor in cancer
risk. People who work at
night are not usually able to
completely reverse their' day
and night cycles.
"Night shift people tend to
be day shift people who are
trying to stay awake at
night," said Mark Rea, director of the Light Research
Center
at
Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute in New
York, who is not connected
with the !ARC analysis.
Not getting enough sleep
makes your immune system
vulnerable to attack, and
less able to fight off potentially cancerous cells.
Confusing your body's
natural rhythm can also lead
to a breakdown of other
essential tasks. "Timing is
very important," Rea said.
Certain processes like cell
division and DNA repair
happen at regular times.
Even worse than working
an overnight shift is flipping
between daytime
and
overnight work.
"The problem is re-setting
your body's clock;" said
Aaron Blair, of the United
States' National Cancer
Institute, who chaired
!ARC's recent meeting on
shift work. "If you worked at
night and stayed on it, that
would be less disruptive than
constantly changing shifts."

~ay Merry Christmas

to &amp;meone ~pecial with a

&amp;ntinel Christmas Angel
Example: Actual Size

NONLYN
~ooo

Per Picture
Prepaid

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Cool young
admirer's heels

Other events

Saturday, Dec. I
MIDDLEPORT -Straw
giveaway for pet bedding,
10 a.m. - l p.m., behind
BY KATHY MITCHELL
the loss of revenue from the Meigs County Humane
AND MARCY SUGAR
dinner, but also the tip. This Society Thrift Store.
happens fairly often, and I
Wednesday, Dec. 5
Dear Annie: I li ve in guess people just presume
POMEROY
- Jerri
Southern California and the food and service is free Dahler. field representative
have two kids . The oldest is since I am the owner.
for U.S. Rep. Chari ie
12. She has a brown belt in
How should I deal with Wilson , D-Bridgeport, will
kara te and two of her thi s? Obviously. I do not hold ottice hours from l-3
fri end s (I hey' re brothers) want to end the social situa- p.m., Meigs County District
al so have brown belt s.
tions, bu t I am tired · of Public Library in Pomeroy.
The 15-year-old brother always payi!lg for dinner.
has a habit of talking to me This is especiall y difficult if
every time I take my daugh- there is liquor involved , ·
ter to karate class. He becau se of the taxes. I could
'
comes up to the cur window use some guidelines. My
Saturday, Dec. 1.
and says "H i." I always ask restaurant is my income. not
CARTHAGE - Carthage
how he's doing in sc hool. a hobby for entertaining.I'm heg inning to think. Perplexed in Foodland
however, that he doesn't
Dear Perplexed: Your
see me as a fr iend . The friends don 't realize you
younger one told my have to pay for the food and
daughter tllUt his brother drink served at restaurant
ATHENS
Ohio
has a cru sh on me. The · you own. The solution is University will partner with
younger on e also men- quite simple. The next time several leaders in the aerotion ed a vag ue threat that if you go out with friends , space industry on a $1.6
the boy can 't talk to me, se lect a different restaurant. million federal project to
he'll pick on my daughter.
If they say they'd prefer research and · develop the
Both of these boy s attend yours, reply that eating in next generation of heat
th e same sc hool as my your own restaurant is like exchangers for military airdaughter. I' ve tal ked to their working overtime and it's planes and spacecraft.
parent s, and th e karate · much more pleasant for you
The
project · was
instructor has talked to the to sample the other places . announced Wednesday by ·
older boy, but nothing is around town. If they truly university officials, U.S.
getting through hi s head. Is enjoy your ·company over Rep . Charlie Wilson and
it just hormones, or is he the free ride, they will be representatives of the
reaching out for some other more than happy to go else- endeavor 's other partners.
reason? Thi s is starting to where.
The university 's Center tor .
go a little too, far. Dear Annie: I am writing Advanced
Materi als
Concerned Mom
'
in response to "Aging with Processing, part of the Russ
Dear Mom: Sounds like Dignity," wlio was upset by College of Engineering -and
hormones, but we don 't like the rudeness of a former Technology, wi.ll work with
the "vague threat.'' It 's pos- high school classmate about GrafTech International, the
sible that hi s littl e brother is the baldness of her husband. Ohio Aerospace 1!1stitute
telling tall tales, but if your
I, too, am a balding man and Air Force Research
instincts say the boy could in my early 50s and have Laboratories to develop the
take out hi s fru strations on received a few barbs from exchangers.
your daughter. you need to · time to time about my thinAccording to Khairul
take it seriously. Make it ning hair. I tind a quick- Alam. the university's Moss
Uear that you ha ve no inter- witted re spon se is most Profe ssor of Mechanical
est in him. Coo l the small appropriate in these situa- Engineering and researcher
talk. Be less friendly ltnd tions. My fa"orite is, "I
chatty. If you arc married, guess I'm just receiving my
have your hu sband . dri ve halo early. '
your daughter to karate for a
A little humor goes a long
while , or put her in a car- wat - Proud To Be a
jJool so _you don't see this Skm Head In Indy
GALLIPOLIS The
boy as often. (Make sure the
Dear Proud: Very cute.
Carson
Dater
Ariel-Ann
&gt;chool and the karate We agree that humor is
instructor keep an eye on often the best response Performing Art Centre will
when confronted with present Jingle Bell Follies
Ibis kid )
Dear Annie: I own a rudeness, intentional or 2007 featuringtwo short
play productions.
restaurant in a small town . otherwise.
·
The Elves and . the
and am wondering what the
Annie's Mailbox is writKaren
correct protocol is for eating ten by Kathy Mitchell and Shoemaker by
is
an
Boettcher-Tate
:With my patrons. Since I Marcy Sugar, 16ngtime ediupbeat,
whimsical
romp
of
know many of my patrons tors of the Ann Landers
socially, we sometimes get column. Please e-m· ;I your a fantasy that also holds a
together for meals. When questions to am. ,mail- gentle message about the
discussing dinner plans with box@com.cast.net, or write nature of kindness.
Lockhart Cobblestone,
a friend last week. we to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
the
shoemaker, has a kind
decided to have dinner Box 118190, Chicago, JL
heart
but little money in his
together and chose my 60611. To find out more
restaurant.
about Annie's Mailbox,
After dinner, my friend and read features by other
simply left without utTering Creators Syndicate writers
to P&lt;IY his share of the bill. and cartoonists, visit the
This ended up costing me Creators Syndicate Web
f!Ot only the food price and page at www.creators.com.
COOLVILLE - Roberta
Henderson wa s named
weekly .best weight-loss
winner and Amy Ritchie
runner-up at Tue sday' s
meeting of TOPS (Take
POMEROY - Ben A.. ter on a 4.0.grading system. Off Poun.ds Sen sibly)
Ohio
Northern Chapter
Holter, son of Roy and
#OH
2013
stu- Coolville.
University's
quality,
Valerie Holler, 34421 Dairy
Lane , Pomeroy, h&lt;IS been dent-centered education disHenderson was a! so recnamed to the Ohio Northern tinctively combines the lib- ognized for being the best
University dean s' li st for the eral arts with professional monthly weight-loss winfall quarter 2007-08 . He is a programs for more than ner. There were 16 memsixth year student majoring 3,600 students in its five bers present. KOPS (Keep
colleges: Arts &amp; Sciences, Off Pound s Sen sibly)
in pharm acy.
· The deans' lis.t incl udes Business Administration, members Mary Cleland and
students who att:J in a grade Engineering, Pharmacy and Patricia Richmond were in
·
leeway.
point average of 3.5 or bet- Law.

Church events

a

Adam Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

Community Church, oldfashioned hymn fest, 4 p.m.
featuring the Jarvis Family,
the Rou sh Family, · other
gue51 singers, and church
singers. Refreshments. For
more information .

'

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Dec. 3
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, OES, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Take tree ornament for exchange. Wear
chapter dress. Refreshments.
Thesday, Dec. 4
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7 p.m. at the

Maso nic hall. Quarterl y . cal officer Osie Follrod.
birthday s to be observed, $3
REEDSVILLE - Olive
gift exchange and nomina- Township Trustees meet at
tion of officers to be held. 6:30p.m.
Take Christmas readings.
Wednesday, Dec. 5
POMEROY
- Meigs
Cou nt y Board of Health,
regular meeting , 5 p.m.,
con
ference room Meigs
Monday, Dec. 3
County
Health Department.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Thursday, Dec, 6
Township Tru,, tees, 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Salisbury
at the Syracuse Village Hall.
Town ship Trustees, 6:30
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees, 5 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY - Board of
p.m., at office building.
Supervi sors for the Meigs
Thesda y, Dec. 4
and
· Water
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Soil
Township Trustees, 6:30 Conservation District, spep.m .. Pagev ille Townhall . . cial meeting. II :30' a.m. at
Orange the MSWCD office, 33101
ALFRED Township Trustees,. 7:30 Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
p.m. at the home of the tis- Questions ·&gt; call 992-4282.

Public meetings

in charge of its part in the
project, these heat exchangers represent an exciting·
new technology because
they have the potential to
increase efficiency and
decrease emissions in military planes.
Heat exchangers are used
on military and commercial
aircraft in many ways,
including as oi l coolers and
fuel heaters. Because the
exchangers under development are made from carbon
toam. they will weigh up to
40 percent less than the
metallic ones now · in use.
This will con serve energy,
save money and increase
aircraft lifespans.
:'This is the next generation of heat exchangers that
will allow people to make
more energy-efficient product s," Alam said. The tech nology, he said, eventually
could be adapted for commercia! uses in jetliners and

even home heating systems
and refrigerators. "I am
really excited and very
grateful that we have the
funding to bring this for-

the project, is optimistic the
research will be at the forefront of mcidernizing heat
exchange technology for the
military. He also noted the
'
ward."
potential to increase jobs
Alam will work wiih sev- and spur economic developeral Ohio University gradu - ment in Ohio.
ate students to develop
"We have research and
model s to test various con- technology for our military
figurations of the foam . going on· right here in
Thi s will allow them to Athens and that makes me
determine how to make it proud," he said.
both conductive and costOhio University President
effective.
Roderick J. McDavis said
A 24-year member of the he was pleased the universiOhio University faculty, ty will play such a key role
Alam also will work closely in developing technology
with GraiTech, a world that will have an impact in
·leader in manufacturing car- the United "States and
bon and graphite products. around the world.
GrafTech, based in Parma,
"We are a center of innoultimately will design and vation , and that innovation
manufacture
the
heat lead s to economic developexchangers.
ment. which leads to jobs,"
Wilson·, who worked he said. "This type .of colclosely with U.S. Sen. laboration is exactly what a
George V. Voinovi ch to public uni versity should be
secure federal funding for all about."

Ariel Jr. Theatre hits the stage for Christmas
pocket. Moved by the plight
of an old beggar woman, he
gives her· his last pair of
shoes. Poor Lockhart has
leather enough to make only
one more pair of shoes and
sets it out to work on the
next mqrning. Out pop five
weird, endearing little elves
who whip up the most fantastic and magical shoes the
town has ever seen.
Santa's Spectacles By
Jeanne A. Davis and Jim
Fpote is about how the
neighborhood children have

'

labeled Prunella Crookshank
"cranky" Crookshank - she
never smiles, is always shooing them away, and worst of
all hates Christmas. When
Santa's spectacles are lost
and become confused with
Prunella's, she wears them
and suddenly becomes
merry and lovely. But Santa
must have his spectacles
back so he can make his
Christmas Eve visit to the
children.
Prunella returns hi s spectacles but to find out that

life has become stale and
gloomy again. Jingles, a little elf gives Prunella a
smile for Christmas and
once she wears it, her own
glasses stay in place and
shows her a bright, happy
world about her.
Come see jingle bell follies 2007 Dec. 7 and 8 at 7
p.m. and Dec.9th @ 3 pm
Ticket prices students $6.00
Adults $8.00 and . VIP
Seating $10.00 For more
information call 740-446(ARTS)2787.

Best loser ~onored by TOPS
The chapter Christmas
party will be Dec. ll .
Members are to take a
wrapped $5 gift for
exchanging and a healthy
food to share. There will be
a weigh-in only on
Thursday, Dec. 27 and no

meeting on January I.
Leader Pat Snedden read
a section of "TOPS, The
Way to Weight Loss
and
Beyond Calories
Exercise" and "Yo-Yo
Dieting Cut the String;" and
gave weight loss tips.

The group meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5:15 to ·6:15 p.m. with a
meeting at 6:30. For information, call Pat Snedden at
662-2633 or attend a free
meeting .

1/2 Off.
through December 3rd

Mail or drop off at :

The Daily Senti1_1el
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

From:_·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Your Name: _______________________________

Bart &amp; The Chasers. Saturday. December 1st
at Good Times
Also Playing In December
Swamp Juece-Dec. 8th
Flint-De·c. 15th
OH • 740-992-7986

Address: ·- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - : - - - Phone: _________________________________
Ads must be pre-paid

•

2007

$1.6 million project funded at Ohio University

* Actual Size t&gt;\3
* Runs Monday, December 24th
* Deadline for entry December 18th at 5:00

Child's Name:-'------ - - - - - - - - -

. 992-3600
www.reedhaur.com
Providing Insurance Solutions
Home Auto Farm Business

Friday, November 30,

Community Galendar

Named to dean's list

•

NOW OPEN

. ~ribe today • 992"2155
l

LONDON - Like UV
rays and diesel exhaust
fumes , working the graveyard
shift will soon be listed as a
"probable" cause of cancer.
It is a surpri sing step validating a concept once considered wacky. And it is
based on research that finds
higher rates of breast and
prostate cancer amon g
women and men whose
work day starts after dark.
Next
month,
the
Internati&lt;?nal Agency for
Research on Cancer. the
cancer arm of the Wo rld
Health Organization, will
add overnight ~hift work as
a probable carcmogen.
The higher cancer rates
don't
prove
working
overnight can cause cancer.
There may be other factors
common among graveyard
shift workers that raise their
risk for cancer.
However, scientists suspect that overnight work is
dangerous because it disrupts the circadian rhythm,
the body 's biological clock.
The hormone melatonin ,
which can suppress tumor
development, is normally
produced at night .
If the graveyard shift theory eventually proves correct,
millions of people worldwide could be affected.
Experts estimate that nearly
20 percent of the working .
population in developed
countries work night shifts.
Among the first to spot the
night shift-cancer connection was Richard Stevens, a
cancer epidemiologist · and
professor at the University
· of Connecticut Health
Center. In 1987, Stevens
published a paper suggesting a link between light at
night and breast cancer.
'Back then, he was trying to
figure out why breast cancer
incidence suddenly shot up
starting in the 1930s in indus-

trialized ·soctel!es, · where
nighttime work W\lS considerect a hallmark of progress.
Most scienti sts were bewildered by his proposal. .
.
But in recent years, several
studies have found that
women working at night
over many years were indeed
more prone to breast cancer.
Also, animals that have their
light-dark
schedules
s-., itched develop more cancerous tumors and die earlier.
Some research also suggests that men working at
night may have a higher rate
of prostate cancer.
Because these studie s
mostly focused on nurses
and airline crews, bigger
studies in different populations are needed to confirm
or disprove the findings .
There are still plenty of
skeptics. And to put the risk
in perspective, the "probable carcinogen" tag mean s
that the link between
overnight work and cancer
is merely plausible.
Among the long. list . of
agents that are listed as
"known" carcinogens are
alcoholic beverages and
birth control pills. Such lists
say nothing about exposure
amount or length of time or
hl)W likely they are to cause
cancer.
The American Cancer
Society Web site notes that
carcinogens do not always
cause cancer. " The cancer
society doesn ' t make its
own assessments of possible cancer-causing agents,
but relies on analyses by the
!ARC and a U.S. agency.
Still, many doubters of
the night shift link may be
won over by the !ARC's
analysis to be published in
the December issue of the
journal Lancet Oncology.
'The indications are positive,"
said
Vincent
Cogliano., who heads up the
agencY,'s carcinogen classitications unit. "There was
enough of a pattern in peo-

PageA7

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.

Week!)' Pill

·

BOXES $2.00

SWISHER

~

LOHSE

PHA.R~A.CV

�..

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

...

Page AS
Friday, November 30,2007

Eichingers have Local grangers receive state contest awards
family gathering

POM EROY - Contest
awards won by Hemlock
Grange in judging at the
CHESTER - Relatives and friends of Opal Eichinger Ohio State Convention was
and Laura Mae Nice enjoyed Thanksgiv ing dinner at the 'presented at the rece nt
home of Charles and Sue Eichinger at Pickerington.
meeting of the local grange.
They spent the day and evening at the Eichinger home, then
Winning first place in the
returned the next morning for a family breakfast before returil- state for birdhouses was
ing to their own homes. The observance of Thanksgiving Roy Grueser with the a qui It
together has been a family tradition for 15 years.
made by a group taking second · in the state. Rosalie
Johnson won fifth place in
the state in the baby quilt
contest as did Sarah

Local Weather

Cu llums on her quil t.
er, was on Christmas seals were built for the treatment
Plans were made to take and the American Lung . of tuberculosis children. The
·canned goods or a donation Association . She noted that first Christmas seal sold in
to the December meeting. in December 1903 a post - the United States was Dec.
Kim Romine thanked mem- man, Einar Holboell was 7, 1907 in Wilmington, DeJa.
bers for assistance at the working late in a. post office
The Christmas seal camauction which the Grange in Copenhagen when he got paign. went national in 1908
served recently. The officers the idea for an ex tra stamp under the sponsorship of the
conference was held recent- with the money to go u•tfor- American Red Cros~. In its
ly at the Racine grange.
tuoate children .
second year the sale brought
Helen Quivey was reportIn 1904 the Christmas in ·$250,000 and the
ed as recovering from seals went on sale and after National
Tuberculosis
surgery at her home . The the first two Cliristmas seal Association assumed conprogram by Romine. lectur- campaigns, two hospital s trol of the project.

Inside

Forecast for Friday, Nov. 30

cttynleglon
High I Low temps

:JI( : i.

Toledo•
4t ' l21 "

Voungetown •
Mansfield • f'Y'...,_ .

. 44" I 22'

*Columbu•

t:___:)

43' 121 '

PA

L....:)

42' I 20'

Dayton• ~

·~

45' 123°

~ ./

•,:

Cincinnati
• 50" I 23'

f"Y.-...

Pods.mouth •
t:.__:) 50•124' ,'

.) .

!\Y.
~

t.__:)
Partly

Cloudy

Cloudy

~

/"'

'''''

~---··:)

~

Showers

Thunder· ~ Rurries ~
storms

&amp;-~ ' ' "
~~

Ra in .

~

Brown sells three Ohio dailies to American Consolidated
DALLAS
(AP)
American
Consolidated
Media LLC is buying five
daily newspapers in Ohio
and Maryland and 28 other
publications in two separate
deals, one with Blue Ash,
Ohio-based
Brown
Publishing Co.
American Consolidated's
parent, Macquarie Media
Group of Austrijlia, valued
the papers at $159.5 million.
Dallas-based American
Consolidated said late
Wednesday it agreed to buy
II newspapers in southeastern Ohio from Brown. The
publications are daily
papers
in
Athens,
Circleville and Logan, with
a combined circulation of

about 23,200; weekly newspapers in New Lexington,
Jackson, Waverly and
Vinton County; and four
shopper products.
The company will buy 22
publications in Maryl and,
Pennsylvania
and
Delaware, including dailies
The Star Democrat in
Easton, Md., and The Cecil
Whig in Elkton, Md. The
seller is Whitcom Panners
of New York, which represents the families of Edward
Barlow and Robert Blank.
The sale is expected to close
in early Janua.ry.
"We have been honored to
be involved with each of the
commumttes served by
these newspapers and the
employees running them

Snow

Weather Underground • AP

Friday... Mostly sunny. rain showers. Not as cool
Highs around 50. Southwest with lows in the mid 30s.
winds 5 to I0 mph.
East winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday · nl~Jht ... Partly
Sunday... Showers likely
cloudy. Cold wllh lows in in the morning ... Then
the lower 20s. West winds S showers in the afternoon.
to I 0 mph ... Becoming Not as cool with highs in
northwest after midnight.
the upper 50s. Chance of
Saturday...Partly sunny. rain 80 percent.
· ·. ·
Highs in the lower 40s.
Sunday nlght ... Cloudy.
Northeast winds around 5 Showers
in
the
mph.
evening ...Then a chance of
Saturday nlght...Cloudy rain and snow showers after
with a 50 percent chance of midnight.

*********
is pleased to announce the

Ice

6•*• .:.::· ~
~

;md know thai ACM will be
American Consolidated
an excellent steward of will have 15 daily newspathese publications going pers and 89 weekly and
forward," Roy Brown, CEO shopper publications in I 0
of Brown Publi shing, said states after the deals close.
in a statement.
Mark
Dorney,
Founded in 1920, Brown Macquarie 's chief execuPublishing is a privately tive, said the papers its subheld company based in sub- sidiary is buying a.re the priurban Cincinnati. After the mary sources of local news
sa:le , it will continue to pub- in their markets and have a
li sh 16 daily and 60 weekly diverse base of advenisers
and niche publications in with little reliance on
Ohio.
national advertising.

Opera House
.hosting wine train
NELSONVILLE - Stuart's Opera House is hosting a
Wine Train on the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway on
Friday, Dec. 7.
The train departs at 6:30 p.m. from the Nelsonville
Depot, at the corner of U.S. 33 and Hocking Parkway. The
Wine Train features drinks, appetbers, live music and a trip
through the scenic Hocking Valley.
Tickets are .still available at u cost of $20. The proceeds
from ticket sales will benefit Stuart's Opera House. For
more information call (740) 753-1924 or visit our website
at www.stuartsoperahot.lse.or,g.

GRAND OPENING
of their Community Health Center in Pomeroy

December 3rd at
113 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-0540
Accoptlur "'"' patl•nts

M11.&lt;1 lnsurauces accept•d lncludlnr Trl·C:aro

Provldor Bnorly Phillip•. CNP-Nur" Pro'clllilan•or'
Family H•althcafl ha9 othlf I~W~Jtlom:
C:hl/1/colhl • Loran • McArthur • N•w Lulnrran

• Th1 Plain•

**.**"********

Bl ,

..

'

Friday, November 30, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A sched iJie ol upcomin g high

schoo l va rsi ty sporting ew,Jinls involving
teams from Meigs County.
Today'e games
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy al Meigs, 6;30 p.m.
SOuth Galtia at Cross Lanes Christian,
7:30p.m.

OVCS Tournament, TBA
Girls Basketball
SoUth Gallia at Cross Lanes Christian , 6

Today's Forecast

The Daily Sentinel

South Point smashes RVHS, Page 82
AP All-Ohio FoolbaU Teams, Page 83
Athletes feeling more vulnerable, Page 88

p.m.

Gallia Acadamy at Logan. 6 p.m .
OVCS Tournament, TBA
Saturday.

pee;

1

Boys Basketball
Ri~~er Valley at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at South Gallia, 6:30 p.m.
Southam at Grove City Christian , 11 :30

a.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Gl~a Saakotball
OVCS Tournament, TBA

SPORTS BRIEFS

Middleport
Youth 4-6 grade
tournament

Federal Hocking gets big win over Eastern, 71-19
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

STEWART Federal
Hocking had 20 points in the
first qua.rter. Eastern had 19
points in the game .
· It is safe io say Thursday
night" wasn't the Lady
Eagles best performance.
The Lady Lancers (2-0, 10 TVC) scored 19 or more
points in three of four quarters while holding Eastern
(0-3 , 0-1 TVC) to single
digit scoring in each quarter
en route to a 71 -19 victory in
the Tri -Valley Conference
opener for both teams
Thursday night in Stewart.
The Lady Lancers jumped
out to a 20-5 lead after one
quarter and extended that

Rawson

Hayman

lead to 39- 11 at the break.
Federal Hocking slowed
down some in the third quarter, posting just 12 points,
but managed to hold Eastern
to just eight second half
points while throwing in
another 20 points in the final
quarter to make the final
tally 71-19 in favor of the

Lady Lancers .
Federal Hocking was led
by Iris Butcher who had 21
points and seven rebounds,
with Emily Dunfee adding
14 points and Chelsea Bail
posting I0 points for the
winners. Summer Hattleld
had eight points, Brittany
King ' six points, Ch anda
Cuckler four points and
Hannah McKibben, Julie
:Vinson, Kayla Deeter and
Alisha Skinner with two
points apiece.
Eastern was led by
Amanda Durha.m and Allie
Rawson whp had four points
apiece. Katie Hayman added
three points and a team high
five rebounds, Kaylee
Milam had three points,
Alyssa
Newland
and

Audrianna Pullins had two
points apiece and Emcri
Co nnery had a single poi nt
in the losing effort .
Overall the Lady Eagles
had 25 turnovers to just
eight for F~deral Hocking
and were out rebounded'3314. Adding to the sluggish
.ni ght, Eastern shot just 18
percent (7-of-39) from the
field compared to a red hot
53 percent (33-of-62) by
Federal Hocking.
Eastern will return to
action Thursday when it
hosts Trimble. The Reserve
game is slated to hegin at 6
p.m.

Kat ie Hayman 1 1-3 3. Morgan Wer ry 0
0-0 0. Kaylee Milam 1 0-Q 3, Alyssa

Newland 1 0·0 2. Emeri Connery 0 1-2 1.
Amanda Durham 1 1· 1 4 , Karissa
Connolly 0 0-Q 0. Audnanna Pun ins 1 00 2. Allie Rawson 2 0-0 4, Beverly
Maxson 0 0·0 0. Haley Perdas 0 0·0 0,
Denise Hannum o 0-0 O, K81ty Thomas o
0·0 0: TOTALS 7 3-6 19; T.hree-point field
goals: 2 (Milam. Durham).
Federal Hocking 71 (2-0, 1.0)
Iris Butcher 10 1-3 21 . Emily Ounfe(!! 6 2·
2 14 , Brittnay King 2 2·2 6, Chelsea Bail
5 0-0 1o. Summer Hatfield 4 1)..0 B.

Chanda Cuckler 2 0-~ 4 , Hannah
McKibben 1 0·0 2. Julie Vinson 1 0-0 2.
Kay Ia Deeter 1 0·0 2. Al isha Skinner 1 00 2, Leanna Vinson 0 0·0 o. Katie Mace
0 0-0 0: TOTALS 33 5-10 71, Three-point
field goals: None.
TEAM STATISTICS!
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Field Goals- Eastern 7·39 (.179). 2·
point field goals 5·36 (.139), 3-point field

goals 2·3 !.667} ; Federal Hocking 33·62

(.532), 2-poi ntlield goals 33 61 (.541 ), 3·
poin t field goals 0· 1 (.000) ; Free th rows
- Eastern 3-6 (.500), Federal Hocking 5Feder• I Hocking 71, Eastern 19
10 (.500); Rebounds - Eastern 14
Eastern
5 6 4 4 - 19
(Hayman 5). Federa l Hockin g 33
Federal Hocking 20 19 12 20 - 71
(Butcher 7); Turnovers - Eastern 25,
Federal Hocking S: Tea m Fouls 19 (Q-3, o-1)
· Eastern 13, Federal Hocking 15.

Eastern

Packers hang in but
can't beat Cowboys

. MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Youth League
will be holding a .4-6 grade
boys and girls basketball
in
late
tournament
December at the Rutland
Civic Center. ·
The tournament will
begin December 22 and will
run through Janua.ry 3 with
a .break for the holidays
December 24-25 .
For more information,
please contact Dave at 5900438, Tanya at 992-5482 or
Mike
·
... at 416-5301.

'

downs on his first five driASSOC IATED PRESS
ves. He tlnished with four
TD passes, giVIng the
IRVING, Texas- Tony Cowboys ( 11-1) their sixth
Romo took a knee, sealing a straight win and guaranteeplayoff-clinching, record- ing a spot in the playoffs.
setting· victory over the team
They al so-have a leg up on
he grew up rooting for and avoiding a trip to La.mbeau
the quarterback he's obvi- Field should these teams
ously patterned himself meet again in the NFC
after. So when it was time championship.
for hugs and handshakes,
"We 've got ourselves in
the kid from Wisconsin went the driver's seat," Dallas'
looking for Brett Favre. . Terrell Owens said. "Now
He had to settle for Aaron we've got to stay there."
Rodgers.
The Packers (10-2) ended
Favre was already in .the a six-game winning streak
locker room getting treated and are ·now essentially two
for a banged-up right elbow games behind Dallas in the
and a separated left .shout- chase for the conference's
der. Besides, the graying top spot with only four
icon already had seen games left.
enougb from Romo and the
The bigger concern is
Dallas Cowboys.
Favre's health.
·
For all his denials about
Favre was hurt on a hit by
Favre's influence on him. cornerback Nate Jones in the
Romo sure ·played a lot like . second quarter. His run of
a young No. 4 Thursday 249 consecutive starts - a
night - full of moxie and record that's about six seajoy, but needing a bit of a sons longer than the nexthigh-wire act to send the best by a quarterback Cowboys past the Green might be in jeopardy,
Bay Packers 37-27 and into although he has 10 days to
the lead for home-field heal before the Packers play
advantage throughout the again, Dec. 9 at home
NFC playoffs.
against Oakland.
"When I got out to the
"I had a similar injury last
11eld, (I realized) it was pret- year, " Favre said. "I lost
t:t neat, the atmosphere," feeling in my fingers and I
Romo said. " I looked still have some tingling. But
around and was like, 'This is I think I'll be fine ."
why you want to. play
Rodgers, who spent the
sports.' You want to play in week pretending he was
games like this. Your com- Romo in Green Bay pracpetitive juices get flowing tices, provided the kind of
and you want to prove what rally Favre usually specialkind of player you are."
izes in , even throwing the
Romo led Dallas to two
field goals, then three touchPlease see Dallas, Bl
BY JAtME ARON

~day's Eastern-

.·NY game cancelled
· TUPPERS PLAINS flri.day's game between
Eastern and NelsonvilleYork has been cancell.ed .

LeRro~ JaJ11.~

day-to-day with
sprained finger

CLEVELAND (AP)
An MRI on LeBron James'
injured left finger in
Toronto revealed a sprain,
and the Cleveland Cavaliers
said their superstar would
be a game-time decision for
Friday's game against the
Raptors.
James hurt his index finger with 4:41 left in the second quarter on Wednesday
night against Detroit when
he was fouled on a drive by
Pistons
center
Nazr
Mohammed, who slapped at
the ball as James began to
shoot.
James stayed in the game
AP photo
and made both free throws.
Dallas
Cowboys
wide
receiver
Terrell
Owens
(81)
pulls
in
a
48-yard
pass
as
Green
Bay
He finished the first half but
left the court holding his Packers linebacker A.J . Hawk (50) defends in the second quarter in their NFL football game
·
hand in obvious discomfort. Thursday in Irving, Texas.
He later returned to the
bench in street clothes with
his injured finger taped to
his middle one and iced his
hand while ·watching the .
Cavs lose I09-74.
· X-rays taken at the Palace
in Auburn Hills did not
show any fractures. James
underwent an . MRI at
Cleveland Clinic Toronto,
which confirmed the sprain,
the club said in a statement
that offered no other details.
While the team says
J.ames is day to daY., the
Cavaliers likely w1ll be
&lt;i.verly cautious with the
injury so he doesn't make it
:Wllrse. Cleveland is already
without
starter Larry
Hughes (bruised leg) as
:Well as veteran Donyell
tvfa.rshall (sprained wrist) .
AP photo
· · James leads the NBA in
Cleveland Browns' Joe Jerevicius {84) is tackled by Houston Texans' Fred Bennett (32) in.
~~&lt;Pcing with 31.7 po~nts per
BY RusTY MILLfJI
acclaimed as one of the the fourth quarter of an NFL football game, Sunday in Cleveland. Clevelanders are more
~e and ts averagmg 8.5
ASSOCIATED PRESS
nation 's best teams, is than beaming these days. They're believing. The Browns , 0ne of the NFL's proudest and
!!M&gt;jsts and eight rebounds.
favored
to 'beat Mentor ( 11 - most star-&lt;:rossed teams .for decades , are winning again.
."
for
a
state
cham2) in Saturday night's game .
Playing
. ....
Canton' s
Fawcett
pionship means nervous- at
(:ONI'ACf Us
ness, anxiety and, for some, Stadium. But the Cardinal s.
. '•
fea.r.
who lost 36-35 in two over1-740-446-?342 ext. 33
Going BACK to play for a times to Hilliard Davidson
when it's not really over entrenched in the AFC playBY ToM WITHERS
state
champion
ship
might
in
last
year's
final,
have
the
ASSOCIATED PRESS
there
becau se · they ' re off race. and as the final
~..7" 1·74Q-446-3008 I
eliminate
a
lot
of
those
troubenefit
of
having
lived
at
us, it 's kind of month of ihe regular season
(angry)
.E·molt. sports@mydallytribune.com blesome emotions. ·
through all the hype and
BEREA - Browns wide nice to get the righl direc- approaches, it's the Browns,
fi!JI.I)tlf Stitt
receiver Joe Jurevicius does- tions and have people sl}lil- not the Patriot s.. not the
Three teams a.re hoping hoopla' just a year ago,
·
P.ackers or even the
Biyan Walters, Sports Writer the experience of having · "Havmg gone there last · n't dread his wife sending ing,'' he.said. ·
r * .446-2342, ext. 33
lived throu gh the lofty year, it's kind of made it cas- him ·on errands anymore.
Cleve landers are more Cowboys. who are thi s
~arsOmydal lytribune .com
Cleveland's
surpri si ng than beaming these days. year's feel-good story.
expectation s of a trip to the ier," Mentor coach Steve
t.:t .
ultimate
game
pays
off
Trivisonno
said
.
"It's
taken
season
has
made
life easier They're believing.
They ' ve become thedia
~lie' Randolph, Sport• Writer
as
he
runs
fly
patterns
down
when
they
return
for
this
away
all
that
stuff,
that
first·The
Browns,
one
·
of
the
darlings
.
&lt;ZiG&gt; .448-2342. BXI. 33
week's 36th state football time excitement is gone, and the aisles at the local grocery NFL's proude sl and most
~~&amp;.Omydailyse~tinel . com
Since their 27- 17 win over
.
now it's 'Let's get down to store.
finals in Sta.rk County.
star-crossed teams for Houston on Sunday, the club ·
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
In
Division
I,
top-ranked
"
Instead
of
people
telling
decades, are winning again.
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
Cincinnati St. Xavier ( l-l4-0), , Please,see Finals~. Bl
me the milk }J over the~
At 7-4. they ' re firmly Please see Browns, Bl
letum 1mydailyreglster .com

State finals
year
helps .avoid butterflies
this time around

.

Browns enjoy perks of ·winning

~

.

•

....

..

4

'

'

v

�Friday, November 30,
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www mydadysentinel com

CHESHIRE - One gtrls
basketball team entered
Thursday w1th an unbeaten
record the other had yet to
wnagame
By n ght s end t sure was
difficult to tell the d1fterence
between the two
YISitmg South Pomt shot 57
percent m the first half and 47
percent overall wh1le p1ck ng
up 1ts first v ctory of the sea
son dunng a 77-45 tnumph
over R ver Valley dunng he
2007 08
Oh10
Valley
Conference opener Thur day
mght at RVHS
The Lady Pomters (I 2 I 0
OVC) went 12 of 19 from the
field n the opemng e1ght nm
utes helpmg them establish a
SIZeable 26 II first quarter
lead The Blue and Gold then
hit half of the1r 16 shots m the
second canto to mcrea e that
advantage to 47 17 at the
break
Conversely the Lady
Rruders (2 I 0-1) managed
JUst 25 percent from the floor
(6 of 24) dunng the hrst halt
and shot 29 percent overall n
the setback The S lver nd
Black also comnutted 14 of
thetr game high 22 turnovers
m the open ng 16 nunutes n
companson to JUSt 16 total
turnovers tor SPHS
The guests htt 34 of 73
field goal attempts on the
mght wh1le RVHS sank JUSt
16-of 55 floor attempts
desp1te ownmg a 36 29

Finals
from PageBl
busmess We ve taken a
great workman attitude
Of course t doesn t hurt
to have Mr Footballm your
lineup Quarterback Bart
Tansk1 walked off w1th the
21st annual award present
ed by The As soc mted Press
on Wednesday
He called the return
engagement the h1ghllght ot
h1s playmg career
It s huge playmg two
years m a row bemg a pub
he school gmng back to
back sa1d Tanski who
threw for 327 yards and
dtvlSion state fmals records
four TDs last year It s a
btg accomplishment to
make a state chump1onsh1p
Hopefully th s year we can
flmsh It oft
Nerves shouldn t be a
problem for two other
teams both of wh1ch are
back and gomg for titles for
the second year m a row
The two days of champ1
onsh1ps opens on Fnday
mormng w th Mana Stem
Mar10n Local ( 14 0) takmg
on
mnth ranked
Youngstown Ursuhne (12
2) at Masstllon s Paul

Dallas
from PageBl
frrst touchdown pass of hts
three year career But he s
no Brett Favre so th1s
comeback came up short
Romo was 19 of 30 for
309 yards He sup to 33 TD
passes smashmg the club
season record He ued
another club mark by
throwmg a touchdown 10
hts 16th strmght game
Owens caught seven pass
es for 156 yards and a
touchdown He tied a team
record wuh h1s 14th TD
catch of the season and tied
another mark w1th a TD
catch 111 seven stra1ght
games Patnck Crayton
caught two of the touch
downs and Anthony Fasano
the other
Dallas also extended tl e
best start n franchise h sto
ry W1th four games left the
Cowboys already have the1r
most wms m a season smce
gomg 12 4 m 1995 the1r
last Super Bowl season and
they re two wms from
matchmg the franch1se
record
It s pretty amazmg to
break any record wtth all
the glory th1s team has had
fmt year coach Wade
Phillips sa1d
The Packers are sttll tn
great shape for at least the
No 2 seed and a first round
bye because the1r next three
opponents have los ng
records And the dea of
startmg Rodgers next week
may no longer be as dread

'

reboundmg edge overall neiL dmg a 13 I0 advantage
on the ollensove gl1ss South
Po nt also had 10 steals m the
VICtory m compan on to
seven for the hosts
R1ver Valley led JUSt once m
the contest wh1ch came 17
seconds mto the game when
B ooke Marcum sank a pa r
of free throws to a 2 0 Lady
RaJders lead
Kayla Fletcher ued he
game at two with a layup at
7 2R then tean1mate Jalynn
Bradburn gave South Pomt ns
hrst lead (4 2) JUSt 24 licks
I ter on a short runner n the
pa nt RVHS was never closer
the rest of the ght
Those two cores were part
of a 9 0 run n the open ng
mmute and a halt of the
game then the guests took
therr ftrst double d g1t edge
w1th 2 56 left m the hrst canto
"he Fletcher h t a short
JU nper 1the il1e tor a 16 6
lead
RVHS tw ce pulled back to
&gt;~tth n seven at 16 9 and 18
II but the Lady Po nters
ended the final wo nunutes of
the stanza on an 8 0 run tor a
26 II lead The Lady Rmders
were JUSt3 of 13 shootmg (23
pe cent) n the f rst J:]uarter
and also comm tted seven
turnovers
South Pomt enxtended ns
advantage to 64 27 through
three quarters of action and
led by as many as 40 pomts
(73 33) with 4 34 left m regu
laton After tra hn., by 30 at
halft1me RVHS was 1ever

closer than 23 the rest of the
even ng
The Lady Pomters had
e ght players reach the scor
ng column mcludmg a
game h1gh 26 po nts from
Bradbum Retcher was next
with 23 lollowed by Tinesha
T 1ylor w1th II and Er ca
Le ghty \1 tl s x n arkers
Brooke Mar~.:um paced the
hosts With a double double
sconng 13 po nts and hauhng
n a game h1gh 17 rebounds
Amanda Hagar was next for
RVHS with nme pomts fol
owed by Rachel Walburn
w1th e ght md Mackenz e
Cluxton w th s x
II ana Co t as ch pped m
four markers Jenna Ward had
three and Kelsey Sands
rounded out the sconng wuh
two po nts
The Lady RaJdcrs were 12
ot 15 at the chanty stnpe for
80 percent "hlle the guests
were JUSt S of IS for 33 per
cent
Rver Valley salvaged a
spill on the evenmg w1th an
excmng 46 42 w n m the
JUn or vars ty tilt
Mansa Marcum paced the
JV Ra1ders \\ tth 13 pomts
followed closely by Jess
Hagar w th 10 Ashley
Goodall led SPHS w1th a
dozen wh1le Angehca Stewart
was next wnh 10 markers
R1 ver Valley returns to
acllon Monday when It travels
to Galhpohs to take on coun
ty nval Galha Academy m a
non conference matchup The
JV game w II start at 6 p m

Bru&gt;~ n
T ger Stadwm
he nation m some pubhca
Manon Loc II ranked No 1 10ns and Web s1tes
m the AP s fmal regular
- Mooney could almost
season D v s 01 V poll won lay claun to a true overall
the DIVIs on VI title a year state champwnsh1p 1f It
ago beat ng Shadys1de 17 wms m DIVIsiOn IV The
0
Cardmals
who
m
Then on Saturday after Coldwater meet the only
noon
top ranked team that has beaten them m
Youngstown
Card nal the1r last 29 games are
Mooney ( 14 0) tn es to gmng for therr seventh state
defend Its DIVISIOn IV champwnshtp thrrd m four
crown when 1t takes on No years and second strrught
II Coldwater (13 I)
crown Mooney has already
The rest of the weekend s beaten Mentor and Ursulme
games nclude fifth anked dunng the regular season
Sunbury B g Walnut ( 13 I) But All Oh10 quarterback
agamst No 6 Newark Dan McCarthy a Notre
L1ckmg Valley ( 13 I) m Dame s1gnee w11l not be
DIVISIOn III first time state able to play after suffenng a
fmals teams 12th ranked neck rnJury m the regtonal
Cmcmnatl Anderson (12 2) semtfinals
battling No 8 LoUJsvllle
- Marwn Local s Flyers
12 2) tor the DIVISIOn II ndmg a 26 game wmmng
crown and No I Bascom streak are hopmg to JOID
Hopewell Loudon ( 14 0) Cmcmnatl Academy of
meetmg
e1ghth ranked Phys1cal Educatloo (1985
Newark Cathol c ( 12 2) m IV 1986 lll) Cleveland
D v1s on VI
Bened1ctme
( 1980 III
There are several other 1981 II) and Versatlles
subplots n the finals
(1994 V 1995 IV) as the
- St Xav er 1s seek ng only schools to w n a state
1ts second state title m three title m one dJVIS on and
years
after
defeatmg come back the next year to
Mass1llon Washmgton m repeat as champwn m a
the 2005 state champ1 h1gher diVISIOn
onsh p The Bombers fin
- Newark Catholic IS
shed as runners up three makmg a state record 13th
limes before And a wm appearance m the finals and
m1ght JUSt earn them some 1s chasmg Its e1ghth title attention as the top team m and first smce 1991

ful to fans who have won
dered 1f he was a wasted
draft p1ck In the most
extended act on of h1s
career he was 18 of 26 for
201 yards and a touchdown
wtth no turnovers
I thought he played
great Favre sa1d He gave
us a chance to wm
Favre was 5 of 14 for 56
yards with two mtercep
t10ns one that looked hke a
punt and another on the play
he was mJured At least two
other heaves could have
been p1cked off The
Packers o 1ly touchdown
dunng h1s act1on came on a
62 yard run by Ryan Grant
It s a shame most of the
country nussed seemg thts
game because 1t sure was
worthy of a b1gger aud1ence
than the NFL Network can
prov1de
There were h1stonc teams
and star players drama! c
plays and b1zarre ones like T 0 Juggling a paten
ual back breakmg touch
down lemng t turn mto an
mtercepllon that could have
let Green Bay take the lead
And of course there was
the Romo Favre storyline
wh1ch got rolhng when they
sm1led and laughed through
a chat on the field about I
1/2 hours before k1ckoff
What d1d they say?
Exchangmg rec1pes and
stuff Romo sa1d Guy
talk I don t know We JUst
talked about hunting or
somethmg I told h m NFL
Network was gomg to have
a heart attack 1f I d dn t
come over and say h Tl ey
were runnmg out of film

wmtmg for n
Even the pregame com
toss was cool as Roger
Staubach and Troy A1krnan
were honorary captams
JOmmg Cowboys players
dressed m throwback um
forms that tromcally hark
back to the days when Vmce
Lombardt and the Packers
dommated Tom Landry s
early Dallas teams
Green Bay got a field goal
on tts first drive but would
n t lead agam
The
Cowboys were up 6 3 then

coach, embarks on recruiting trail
LINCOLN Neb (AP) Fe&gt;~ Nebraska football fans
are gomg to argue w th Tom
Osborne s deciSion on an
mter m head coach
Already the mtenm ath
lellc director
Osborne
declared h1mself the coach
unt1l he h1res a successor to
B111 Callahan allowmg
Nebraska s beloved former
coach to VISit prospective
recruits and try to prevent
the program from shppmg
dunng the recruiting contact
penod
Athletic department com
mumc ttwns chtef Randy
York sa1d the 70 year old
Osborne who took over the
department after the f r ng
of Steve Pederson last
month passed an NCAA
certJflcauon test on h1s f1rst
try Wednesday and has
mformed the B1 g 12 office
of h1s new title
Osborne was unava1lable
for comment Thursday

York sa1d he would be on
the road recrUJtmg through
the end ot the week
Gary Bargen ass1stant
athlettc d1rector m charge of
compliance sa1d the mtenm
AD tag would have hmlted
Osborne to meetmg with
prospect1ve recru1ts only 1f
they VISited campus Now
he can VISit recru1ts n
schools and homes until
Dec IS
Several recruits who had
been
committed
to
Nebraska have satd publicly
that they are constden ng
other schools wh le awa1t
mg to see who the next
coach w1ll be
Cftllahan was f red last
Saturday followmg a 65 51
loss at Colorado where the
Huskers squandered an II
pomt halftime lead by
allowmg 34 consecuu ve
pomts
Nebraska fimshed a d1s
mal 5 7 a year removed

from re tchmg the B g 12
champ onsh1p game The
season featured a 76 39
defeat at Kansas the most
pomts allowed by a
Nebraska team and mel ud
ed SIX games n wh1ch Its
famed defense surrendered
40 or more pomts
Osborne who won 255
games and three national
champ10nsh1ps from 1973
97 has smd he has no mter
est m returnmg to the s dehnes even gmng so far a6
to say h s w1fe Nancy
would shoot me 1f he did;
Once a h1re IS made
Osborne could contmue to
recrUit unttl the new coach
assembles a full staff of mn~
assistants York sa1d
Another coach linked to
the search Cmcmnat s
Bnan Kelly told local rad1o
station
WCKY
oo
Wednesday that he had not
been
contacted
by
Nebraska

Browns
has been overwhelmed with
nattonal mterv1ew requests
as The New York Times
USA
Today
Sports
Illustrated and other pnnt
on
outlets
conyerged
Cleveland along With the
NFL Network Mtke &amp;
M1ke m the Mornmg and
the Best Damn Sports
Show
ESPN even sent a camera
crew to quarterback Derek
Anderson s hometown of
Scappoose Ore to do a
feature
Everyone 11 seems wants
a p1ece of these Browmes
The unusual attentiOn has
been overwhelnung
It s almost been a httle
surreal satd k1cker Phtl
Dawson who has endured
Cleveland s many low
pomts as the lone player left
from the club s 1999 expan
s1on team For so many
years we weren t even m
the conversation of the NFL
world And now all of a sud
den we are It s fun
To apomt
Wh1le Browns coach
Romeo Crennel IS pleased
that hts players are getting
theu due he s also con
cerned about them becom
mg distracted by thetr new
found fame and posstbly
thmkmg they re better than
they are
They start be he vmg
what everybody tells them
and then that takes your
focus off the JOb you have to
do he satd If they re not
mature enough they m1ght
not work as hard Then you

end up losmg a game that
you should have won or
could have won
We have to talk to the
guys about the next game
concentratmg and focusmg
I ve got some veterans that
help me do that
W1llle McGmest IS one
Crennel s
pnmary
enforcers
The Browns elderly
statesman and veteran lme
backer who also played for
Crennel m New England
has been keepmg hts team
mates egos m check They
haven t won anythmg yet
and McGmest remmds them
of that everyday
What
success?
McGmest sa1d It s defi
nttely better than what we
had last year We re on the
nght road but I don t th1nk
we re getting complacent or
getting sat1sf1ed wtth our
record JUSt because we ve
won more games The goal
1s a lot h1gher
At the end of the day 1t
doesn t really matter what
you do or how great a sea
son you have 1f you don t
wm and go to the next
level
That next level would be
the playoffs but the P
word' 1sn t menuoned
mstde Cleveland s locker
room Without promptmg
Those orders come from
Crennel and there 1sn t a
player who dares not follow
them
He s always remmdmg
us that we re gomg to get
more medta exposure
guard Enc Stembach satd
Lookmg ms1de th1s locker
room we know what we ve
got to do yet We haven t
done anythmg yet All
we ve done 1s won seven

games we haven t done
anythmg as tar as the post
season
We re not there yet to be
s ttmg back and k nd of get
tmg patted on the back
For 1 JW the Browns :rre
enJOY ng the1r flavor of thet
moment statu s Success car)
be fleetmg 111 a league
where upsets are all too
common and where one
costly InJUry can destroy a
team s asp1rauons
It all came on so qUJck "
Dawson smd and 11 can
leave JUSt as qUJck
Drab un forms as1de the
Browns are football lash
o 1able and Cleveland fa~
who have been subjected to
more than the1r share bf
m1sery m recent years are
begmnmg to savor ti]IS
unexpected season
People are startmg to get
a little excited Dawson
smd I thmk the fans mtght
have been a ltttle hesnant at
first to JUmp n becausj:
we ve let them do&gt;~ n so
many t1mes m the past
But I thmk there IS some
legtllmate excnement gomg
around town It does the c1ty
some good I see a lot more
people sm1llng and wavm~
to each other on the stde
walk Hey Cleveland 1s on
a pretty good roll nght
now
He s nght Cleveland
wh1ch hasn t celebrated a
rnUJor sports champ10nsh1p
smce the Browns won n all
m 1964 1s rockmg like
never before The Brown s
success comes on the heels
of the Cavaliers mak1ng
the1r first NBA fmals an~
the lnd1ans gettmg Within
one w n of the Worlc:j Ser es
Now
Dawson sa1d
ll s our turn

turned It mto 27 10 m the
span of JUSt e1ght oftens1ve
snaps
Then Favre left and
Dallas mtens1ty went too
The lead fnttered to 27 24
and after AI Hams caught
the mterceptlon caused by
Owens the Packers were
dn v ng for a go ahead
touchdown But Green
Bay s b1d ended qu1ckly
then Romo drove nght back
for a touchdown that made
It 34 24
Rodgers got a field goal

then the Packers needed a
stop from the1r defense But
with Kabeer GbaJa B1amtla
and cornerback Cllarles
Woodson macuve with
mJunes they couldn t do 1t
Dallas got a clock drammg
dnve and field goal for a
I0-pomt lead wtth I 03 left
- and With Favre nowhere
m s1ght havmg already
headed to the locker room
before the 2 mmute warn
mg.
Notes Favre already con
stdered Texas Stadwm a

m1serable place half JOkm~
earlier th1s week that he was
hopmg tt would be gone
before I got back there
He s 0 9 here
Dallas
leads the regular season
senes II 10
Cowboys
WR M1les Austm d1dn t
have a catch but he drew
pass mterference penalties
of 42 and 40 yards
Look
for the
shaggy ha1 red
Rodgers to get a ha1rcul
soon He vowed not to tnm
t until he threw a touch
down

fromPageBl

www mydallysentinel com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Friday November 30, 2007

AP All-Ohio Football Teams - Dill-VI

South Point smashes Lady Raiders Osborne names himself interim
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDA LYTR BUNE COM

2007

Division III
All-Ohio List
The 2007 Assoc a eel P ess 0 v s on
A Oh o h gh schoo ootba
eam
based on he ecommenda ons of a

sa e mad a pane
DIVISION II
F 1tTeam
OFFENSE Ends-Toddy Robb Can a
Futon NW 6 oot
190 pounds
san or Matt A neha Dove 5 9 165
s DewCannCceva59165
s Dane Hadd )( Urbana 6 0 190 s
NaeCaud Cyde 6 170 s B yan
McKn gh New Ph ade ph a 5180
s Co ey Manns Kemon 6 1 85 s
Ch s Feds PaJ'Ies Havey 60 180
J L nemen T m Ge man Newa k
lcking Va ey 6 7 285 s Ma Ca on
TppCtyTppecanoe 62 223 s Nae
K an Can a Futon NW 6 4 280
Shane B shop Ray and Buckeye Loca
62 220 s JaadBansk Cyde 62
2 5
Chad Hounshe Men o lake
Ca h 6 6 300 s Qua terbacks
Seve McNeey Beo W B aneh 61
200 s
MCConne Sm h Hun ng
Val ey Un v Schoo 6 o 205 s Bo
Code Cn ndan H 60 90
A8)( G lett C yde 6 2 85 Backslsa ah Pead Co s Eas moo Acad 5
1 195 s Ja ed Fe guson Man oe 6
2 2 5 s
Nate Ganya d N es
McKney 6 1 215 s
Bandon
S ephenson L rna Shawnee 5 8 180
J Rama Cemens Wa ensv e Hs
5-7 70 I Kckes SehWh e Cos
Bex ey 59 183 s
Se h Had ng
Sa em 6 1
95 s
Je y Ph ps
Cyde 6
205 s Joe Vucc Ce
Mo e Dame-Cathod a La n 6.
65

Division VI
All-Ohio List

I

DEFENSE L nomen Ky e Smad
Co and lakev ew 6
190 s Joe
Gag one Mento lake Cath 6 4 225
s Mke Me Monoe 62 215 s
De ek Wolfe
sbon Beave oca 6 4
285 s Ty e Rhoades L rna Shawnee
5 9 9!r s Anthony N xon Cana
Wnchese 61 22 s And ew g
Cuya Fa s Wa sh Jesu 6 2 275 s
2 220 8
N ck Wagne Napa eon
Jake Sto e
Hun ng Va ey Un v
Schoo 6 3 255 s l nebacke s-W
Stud en Sunbury B g Wa nut 6 3 225
J K k We he e Cambndge 6 0 210
s Nahan W ams WCH M am ~pce
6-4 240 s
Som KJen Newak
L ck ng Va ey 6 3 220 1 Taddy
Jenn ngs Dayton Cham nade--Ju anne
!}6 215 s Roy Dav s Ravenna 6 3
'200 8 Jus n Mae M esbug W
Ho mes 6 0 220 s Jacob And ews
C yde 6 1 200 s
Dave P ungas
Meno lake Cah
63 220 s
Backs-Tony Stove Can a Fu ton NW
6 3 200 s Ethan We ze Sunbu B g
Wanut 6 2 200 s Keth Mogan
Belefonane 6
95 s AexFe a a
Cuya Fa s Wash Jesu 59 175 s
PUnle -A en
Sl oub e
A ance
lla ngton 5 11 160 1 Ryan F eck
Napoeon 6 5 86 s
Offenelva p ayera or the year sa ah
Pead Cos Eas moo Acad A ex
G en Cyde
Detentlve playere of the yea W
Stud en Sunbu y 8 g Wa nu Tony
Stove Cana Fu on NW
Coaches of the year Ph Mau o
Cana W nches e V c Wh ng Cana
f'u on NW E c M che Warrensv e
li s Ron Lew s Rocky R ve
Second Team
OFFENSE Ends-N ck Keke akes
&lt;;n ndanH 6
70s AndyPak
B yan 6 2 87 s Pau McKe vey
Hunt ng Va ey i.Jn v Schoo 6 2 190
s Dena oGay Wa ens eHs 5
0 170 J L nemen-Jake Band Cos
Bex ey 6 6 254
Ro and Somme
Cn ndan H
62 220
Bet
Riche Monee 51 1 305 s
B
QIJgan Po and Sem na y 6 5 300 s
Joe Pachu a New Co co d John G enn
6 7 285 s Josh ackson Uh chsv e
Claymo 6- 265
Rayshaun Pope
Wa ensv e H s 6 3 275 s Kev n
0 s Rocky Ave 62 255 s
Qua tarbacks-Cory Bache G anv e
62 175 J Coeylsow8k Dove 62
180
Ko y Ha nge C c ev e 6 2
65 s Zach Free Wash ng on CH 6
0
90 s
Andy B e d gam Rocky
Ave
6 2 185 s
Backs Zac
Lemmon G anv e 6 1 195 s Sean
Ege Be eontane 5 10
85 s
Carte Pau Ph o 6 o 200 s Cody
G ffn C cev e 59 75 s Koby
Frye St Mays Memo a 5 0 175 s
Anthony Urban a Cle Bened ctlne 6 o
208
Jake S m.on Pa ma H s Ho y
Jon Gpson
Name 5 1 2 5 s
Rocky Ave 59
85 s KckeJo dan Be gh a T pp City Tippecanoe
57 157 •
DEFENSE l nemen-Just n Sp ague
Cay Cham nade Ju enne 6 3 245 s
Ross lockwood C n nd an H 6
200 s Matt Betz A ance Ma ng on
6 250 s Jake Hochendone Po and
Semnay 82 230 s Ch s Mooe
Wa ensv e H s 6-Q 230 s Oae
Eng sh Pa rna H s Hoy Name 6
255 s l nebacke s-ch s an Gomes
Urbana 6 2 190 s Dust n Co be t
Tpp C y Tppecanoe 6 2 200 s
Mchae Con m Ea on 5 0 185 s
M J~:e McK nney Canton S 6 0 200 J
Matt N ese Napa eon 6
95 s E c
Hufford T ff n Co umb an 6 2 226 s
V nee Ca v o C e Bened ctine 6-Q
214 s Zach Youseff Rocky A ve 5
0 195
Backs-Isaac F ee
WBshngon CH 60 85 s Ma1y
Sweeney C e Bened c ne 6 1 84 j
Sean Be ange Rocky A ve 6 2 215
s Punta - ance S e ne Sp ng
Geenon 59 75 j
Specla Mem on
Adam A de man G anv e A an Hess
Co s BaKley M chae Kuh we n Newa k
L.ick ng Va ey Zach 8 own Cana
W ncheste G ant Geo g c De aware
Buckeye Va ey Ryan W bo n Co s
EBB moo Acad An on o Dav s Cans
Wnchese
Macus E vn
Cos
EBB moo Acad Zack H chen8 Cana
W nches e
Oa y
Wood
Co s
EBB moo Acad Ka ed Dew De awa e
Buckeye Va ey Veta Rod guez Co s
i:astmoo Acad Zach Sa ome Co s
Bex ey A ex McCu dy De awa e
Buckeye Va ey Joe Reed Sunbu y 81g
Wa nut E han Wetze Su nbu y B g
Wa nut Ma on Johnson Co s Eas moo
Acod
Robbe Oav a Cad z Ha son Cen a
Ja ed
Kendz o sk
Uh chsv e
C aymon Do en Thomas W n e sv e
nd an
C eek
Ty e
Hades y
O~mb dge Matt Ne
M e sbu g W
Holmes Gabe F pp Dove Jona han
F ge W ntersv e nd an C eek Ryan
McC e and Camb dge Mo gan Pavo
McConne sv ~ Mogan N ck L p ak
.Cfmb dge Just n G dcumb New
Cgnco d John G enn Nahan Shaw
Ray and
Buckeye
Loca
M ke
""'rTgache
Dove
Bake Ponchak
~Conne sv e Mo gan saac Oma s
Rayland Buckeye Loca Ky e Scott
A chmond Ed so n l oca
M chae
WUson W ntersv e nd an C eek Zach
Garb and Uhrichsv e C aymont John
Ph ps 1-lew Ph ade ph a Bobby
G mo e Dove
Ben Geye
New
Co nco d John G enn Wes Sk nne
Cadiz Ha nson Cen a E han Russe
Usbon Beave Lqca Stiane Leste
Dove Kev n W gh New Ph ade ph a
Cody B agg McConne sv e Mo gan
Ga ett Benn ngton New Conca d John

e

Division IV
All-Ohio List

v

Genn
Ryan Locke Ea on ash Ande son
Btil efontane Kye Co bn Tpp Cty
'Tippecanoe leona d A s on c n nd an
H I Dane COpe nd an lake Jer'Eimy
S1ol ngs Sp nra; Kenton A dge Man
Ke e Cm ndan H
Je emlah James Be o W B anch
M ke Ca nahan Hubba d K s Adams
Mogado e F e d Zack B own Youngs

Division V
All-Ohio List
The 2007 Assoc

a ed

P ess D v s on V
oo ba
ea rn
based on he ecommenda ons o a
saemedapane
DVISIONV
F rstTeam
OFFENSE E ds Za h W ams W
e eson 6 oo 85 ponds se or
Ben Wonde y Sherwood Fa ew 5 9
65
M chae Weh Ba nesv e 5 o
40 s Jmmy Du nng Achbod 5
0 165 s Lnemen Ma M ha k
Ga es M s G mou 6 7 270 s G y
Cu son Cos Ready 6 3 280 s
Adam Schae e Cess own M am E 6
0 200 s
Jus n Ray
o sv e
Aqu nas 6 5 290 s Jo dan Lusk W
La aye e A dgewood 5
242 s
A ex Sube Ma a Sen Ma on loca
63 250 s CodyPe
Hame Pa ck
Hen y 6 3 2:25
Qua e backsMe tt Zo as F ede ICk own 6 0 165
s Lama McQueen Youngs U su ne
5 9 65 s Devon Be am A chmond
70s
Bock Da sOd
Hts 62
Wash Buckeye T a 6 0 B5 s 0 ew
Sped n Wheee sbug 65 85 s
Ryan Redc H Sherwood Fa ew 6 3
95 s Backs-Ben Rascon a C n
Dee Pa k 5 7 75 s Ryan Kneube
Ca d ngton L nco n 6 0 185
Thad
No s nge App e c eek Wayneda e 5
1 200
Dev n Sch e Suga c eek
Ga away 5
65
li e Reyno ds
Mnfod 60 205 s
Dew Kue8e
Heme Pa ck Hen y 6 0 190 s Tom
Haa GatesM sGmou 5
85
s Sam Sma wood Ca.ss own M am
E 5 7 180
K ckers-..M ke Mo gan
Cos Ready 5 1
175
Ma
Schaee W Sa em NW 5 0 75 s
DEFENSE L nemen-Dus n Hogan
Waynesv e 6 0 225 s
Ca men
amancusa V enna Ma hews 6 3 275
s arne Tu ne Youngs U su ne 6 3
2 5 soph J T Con e"t._ Whee e sbu g
6
74 s Todd Augg ey ma Cen
Ca h 6
75 s
N k Womack
Bed o d Chane
6
205
s
nebacke s-anG ahem Cos Ready
5
90s
OeckYongW
La aye e R dgewood 5
87
Dan
s a
0 p Wash Buckeye li a 5
220
s
Joh
A epenho
Whee e sbu g 6 2
89 s
Jo dan
Thompson Rockfo d Pa kway 6 3 225
s
M che
Dawson
ohns ow
Mon oe 5 0 2 5 s Backs Shawn
She dan W SaemNW 50 75 s
Ross San o K and 5 7 55
MIChae We ng Read ng 6
85 s
Ross Rave a Youngs U su ne 5 0
85 s Aaon Cat Fnday bey
Be on 6
75 soph Co ey Pu hoff
S Hen y 6
170 s Pun e s-E c
Lee Sm hv e 6 0 2 5
Ke h
Raddsh C Dee Pak 59 70s
Offensive p aye a of the yaa
ama
McQueen Youngs U su ne Ryan
Aadc ff Sherwood Fa v ew
Defensive p ayers of the yea
o dan Thompson flock o d Pa kway
Shawn She dan W Sa em NW
Coaches of the tear Tom W ams
e omesv e H sda e Derr ck ohnson
RcmondHs
Second Team
OFFENSE Ends sa ah Chea ham
Cn S hode 59 55 s Coey H
Co umb ana C es v ew 6 0
78
A ane Stae
Acl)mond Hs 5 0
65
S ephen W son Cuyahoga
Hs 6 3
68 s
nemen-MaHhew
M Keeve Waynesv e 5 0 85 s
Je emy 0 e C es on Norwayne 6 4
255 s M ke Hudak N l me S Range
5 0 2 0 s
8 ando Lo
F day
L be y Be on 6 2 2 2 s
ake
Hy and L ma Cen Ca h 6 4 220 s
La y K ame Ga es M s G mou 6 2
225 s a a e backs Ch s " eke
Ma aSenMa onloca 60 90s
Gene Goe ng A chbod 6 3 95 s
Tom 8 sc Ham e Pa ck Hen y 6 0
A Oh o h gh schoo

U
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For mfo call John Cremeans
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Announce Your Hoi ............
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publish Friaay, December 14,
ana Friaay, December 21.
Deaaline December 11, 1007
Call Dave or Brenaa
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For more information

�Friday, November 30, 2007

Friday, November 30, 2007

www.mydailysentinel .com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

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\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e ister
C LA s·s IF IE D
Gallia
county;
OH

... If you have 8 quas,lon or 8 comment, write: NASCAR ThiS Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

In "'trospect, Jeff Gonion
thinks he helped c"'ate a monster wl1en he recommended that
Rick Hencnck pair his No. 24
team In the same buoldlng as
the No. 48 of then-newcomer

11&gt;

J1mmie Johnson. "They wouldn't

hi:rJe gotten wl1ere they did as
fast as they did. I'm not saying
they wouldn't have gotten .there.
but they came out of the box

w1th championship cars and matenal," said Gordon.
Since joining Hendnck Motorsports, Johnson has won 33

11&gt;

races ID Gordon's 23. Tony

Stewart's won 20 during the

After the racing, it's time for the pats on the back
victuals.
On Wednesday, Nov. 28, the top 10
drivers were scheduled to take part in a
Victory Lap parade, beginning and ending in Times Square.

ing Johnson and the rest of the top 10 in
the Chase.
Nov. 30
NASCAR chairman Bnan France
Waldorf·Astona Hotel , New York, N.Y.
calls New York "a perfect fit: the nation's No. 2 sport recognizing its chamFor the 27th consecutive year, the pion in the nation's No.1 market''
Cup champion, Jimmie Johnson, will be
Another highlight , on Thursday,
honored amid the bright lights of New Nov. 29, is the NMPA Myers Brothers
York City. The awards ceremonies cui- Media Luncheon 1t Cipriani, in Man·
minate· a weeklong schedule of activi- hattan. This will be the scene of severties involving photo shoots, live appear- a! ann ouncements, mc luding the dl sances on television shows, charitable . tribulion of year-end contmgency
activities and press conferences involv- awards to the vano us learns an d ind1·

Nextel Cup Series

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune .com

Kevin Harvick's 2006 feat of winning
the Busch Series IItle while, at the·
same time, qualifying for the Chase in
Nexlel Cup.

In on·e Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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To Place

Craftsman Truck Series

ca~~;:.::;... ,(7~~~ To44~:~~0842

Busch Series

Champion Ron Hornaday Jr. was honored
on Nov. 19 in an awards banquet at
Dec. 7
the
Seminole
Hard Rock in Hollywood,
Portofino Bay Hotel, Orlando, Fla.
Fla. Hornaday is the series' first three-:
Carl Edwards won his first major time champion, having also won the ti-'
NASCAR championship and duplicated tie in 1996 and '98.

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

same span.
11&gt;

For Dale Earnhardi Jr.. JOonmg

Hendrick Motorsports offers a
better shot at a championship

c

but also the challenge of rals1ng

JJ J

- .r~J
_,

e ::;:.....&lt;.r
--

- r ~l I r:__-J r_l"f

r_;r~.J -

I

,.

"'

)

his performance to the level of
Johnson and Gordon.
Matt Kenseth won his last race
with Robbie Reiser as his crew

choef. Chip Bolon substituted for
Re1ser during a NASCAR SUS·

1

pension early in the year, and
Kenseth's win at Califorma
Spee&lt;M'ay occurred with Bol 1n
canmg the shots .
_.Asked the main thing he
learned as a rookie, Juan Pablo
Montoya sa1d: • Bnng the car
home every week. Whether it's

r ,5
Jr

J I . 1 4 ,s ,. !(
rJ.=:. J 1.:::,:::.:.

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

)

Two years ago, Ro'u sh put his
whole team in the Chase, and it
cha ps him to no end that Rick Hen·
dnck has re-emerged as the sport's
most s,uccessful owner Whi le on t he .·
one hand say1ng: ~ I ..
misjudged; 1t was
my fa ult. ~ Roush
st1ll has some bit· •

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Gel Response ...

•POLICIES*

terness at NASCAR

allowmg Hendrick .
Motorsports to conduct research on
the Car of Tomorrow ~

35th or first, bring ot home .
That's very 1mpcrtant."
M1chae1 Waltnp has

r .-o:

j,
.J .J

Jack Rouech vs. NASCAR

SEASON IN· REVIEW

~

11&gt;

,J I

Reusch

that Roush Fenway :
failed to complete. ·we didn't take advantage of the la x· ~
•tY NASCAR had of not enforcing the
testing policy that they had ind1cated .

a sugges·

11on regardmg quahtyong. He'd
like to see all the drivers w1th
automatic spots 1n start1ng

fields l&gt;unched together, leaving
others the opportumty to quality

they were going to 1m pose on us, so
1got behmd there," he sa1d.

under s1m11ar 'track conditiOn s.

NASCAR Thlo Week'&amp; Monte
Dutton gives hlo take· "Hardworking •

._ Hendnck Motors ports won 18
of the season's 36 races, mark·
1ng the f1rst t1me a smgle team
won at least half smce Petty En·
terpnses won 27 out of 48 in

OllloValley
lhe rlghtto edij,

reject or c1ncel any
ad at any time.
Errors

Must

B

ported on the firs
ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
egloter will

esponslble lor n
ore than the cost o

people always have trouble admitting:
to bemg beaten fairly, and 1t serves
the add1t1onal purpose of hardemng. ·
Roush's resolve for next year."

1967. A\127 in '6Twere by

he space occupie
y the error and on!
he llrst Insertion. W

hall not be liable 1o

ny loBS or expens
hat results trom th
ubllcalion or omls
ion of an advertise

Richard Petty. Four Hendnck
drivers won rac es th1s year.

enl. Corrections wll
made in the firs

• Given the decll ne ·m the Chase
performances of Tony Stewart
and Denny Hamhn, one can't

valleble edHion.

help but speculate Joe G1bbs
Rac1ng m1ght have been distracted by the impendmg move
from Chevy to Toyota
"' It m1ght be Interesting next
year to compare the perform
ances of Earnhardt Jr w1th
those of Kyle Busch, the dnver
he was hired to replace. Busch
w1ll be a teammate of Stewart

Box number ads a
lways confidential.

Stewart'w •ctlon benenta

Phows by John Clark/ The Gazette

multiple chllrltlea

(From left) Jlminle Johnson's amazing run through lite Chase, Jeff Gordon's dominant regular season and Dale Earnhardt Jr!s switch
from his father's-race team to Hendrick. Molorsports were the top stories of the 2007 season.

.

Tony Stewart 1s host1ng a P1eces
of the Prelude auct1on, hosted online by eBay. The auctton began on
Nov. 23. Various Items Will be avail·

able for l!J.&lt;Iay peroods, woth all bid·
dmg comong to a close on Dec. 21.

Among the 50 items are auto.
graphed helmets, mementos from

and Hamlin at JGR.

the 20()6.{)7 Prelude to the Dream
events at Eldora Raceway and a VIP
package for the 2008 Prelude to the

"'Who knew, when Kevm Harv1ck

won the Daytona 500 on Feb.
18, 2007, 1t would be his only
offic1al v1ctory?

Dream . The auct1on benefits the

charitable activities of the Tony Stew·~

art Foundat1on

)
)

(

ented

Ida

meetln

By Monte Dutton
.. -

.. hot -

NASCAR This Week

Jimmie Johnson's the
champ1on for
a second

straight year,
and he's won
10 more
races than
anyone else
dunng the
past s1x years .... Clint Bowyer

and Mart1n Truex Jr. estal&gt;
lished them selves firmly as
buddmg stars.

Tony Stewart's
performances plummeted at
yea(s end. and teammate •

11&gt; - · • not -

Denny Haml1n brought up the
rear in the Chase.

accept eny adver
lsemsnl In vlolallo
f the law.

Jimmie, Jeff and Junior dominated the news on and off the track
In many ways, 2007 was the season
of the three J's in NASCAR.
Three J's? Why, that's easy: Jimmie
(Johnson), Jeff (Gordon) and Junior
(as in, Dale Earnhardt Jr.).
Johnson and Gordon dominated the
activities on the tracks. Dale Earnhardt Jr. dominated the column inches
and video reports transmitted from
those tracks.
In winning the Nextel Cup championship for the second consecutive
year, Johnson became the first driver
to win as many as 10 races since Gor·
don won 13 in 1998. Johnson wrapped
up the title al Homestead-Miami

Speedway after winning all four of the
races leading up to the finale .
Gordon would've won the cham pi·
onship in any other year. H1s average
finish in the Chase was 5.1. Johnson's
was 5.0. Johnson accumulated more
points in the. Chase than any of its
three previous champiOns Gordon,
who trailed Johnson at the end by 77,
also accumulated more points than the
previous champions.
Earnhardt Jr. wasn't linked to the
other two J's in 2007 but will be m '08.
During a season-lon g soap opera,
Earnhardt went public with the differences between him and ste pmother
Teresa, announced f1rst that he wou ld
be leaving the famil y team and then
that he would join Hendric k Motor·

sports, and wound up bringing longtime crew chief Tons Eury Jr. with
h1m.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Earnhardt
endured a tou gh farewell season at
DEI, failing to win for the first time in
his Cup career and missing the Chase
for the second lime in three years.
In what was otherwise a year of
change, most of the attention was still
centered on three familiar faces: Jimmie, Jeff and Junior.
Then, of course, there's Rick Hendnck, who will put all three in his cars
next yea r.

Not e\'er)' race fan hila
acce.. to Able, you know

If ABC is going to cover the
races, they should commit to cover
the whole race and not s1gn out to a
cable channel when the race Is delayed and w111 run late. All race fans
don't have access to cable. Then

NASCAR wonders why the rat1ngs

drop off when TV pulls thiS . I would

l1ke to see the end of the race. They
wouldn't do that with a football

game.

L Worthlncton
Elizabeth. Pa.
You make some good points
Once the TV contracts are signed and
the money is flowmg, though, the var·
ious networks can pretty much nandie 1t the way they want. Perhaps the
1ssues you raised should be a part of

Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http://www.gas.tongazette.com/sectionslsportslnascar

negotiations.

-·

Fnmce and the
state of NASCAR
France recently Issued

an ·all 1s

well" for NASCAR's declining TV
rat1ngs .

· "look. TV ratmgs for almost

everythrng are down : pnme t1me,

daytime. spcrts, Whatever else,"
he saod.
· "We're probably a v1ctim of
that to some level. You have to
remember we're st1tl postmg b1g
audiences, and our TV partners
are very satisfie d. We'd love to
be growing at better rates , but
we're not contracttng at all and
we're pretty satisfied. We'll De
fine m terms of ratings·

EXPANSION ABROAD?
France also said ther- r e
no concrete plans in place for

NASCAR to hold races 1n any of

tts three major sertes outSide of
North America
"There's notht ng on the hon·
zan beyond Montreal and Mexico

Coty (bOth host Busch Series
races) that we looked at," he
sa1d,

~but

Gordon talks about his new teammate for next year
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week

NASCAR Chairman Broan

we get opportumt1es

to lookall the time, and (It's 00.
visable to be) mposition one day
to take advantage of those.
· It's not in the foreseeable future, I:Jut we should at sorne
pomt have an opportuntty."

•

With Hendrick Motors ports
at the top of the sport - and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. coming on
board next year- Jeff Gordon
discussed the new challenges
that face the team.
"Anytime you bring on somebody with a profile under the
microscope like Dale Jr. is going to have, there's going to be
a lot of pressure," said Gordon.
"There will be a lot of pressure
on Rick (Hendrick), and on that
team, and on Dale Jr., and there
will be a lot of distractions
there.
"It's going to be a lot lo overcome, but you know what? Hendrick Motorsports is used to
things like that. By having Tony
Eury Jr. in there (as EarQhardt's crew chief), it will make
the transition a lot easier. We'll
just have to wait and see. I
think he's roing to do great. I
don'! see how it's going lo affect what we're doing with the
other teams. I still think next
year can be a very strong year
for us."

•
Walking away - Robert
Yates, one of NASCAR's legendary mechanics, turned over
his team to son Doug Yates,
and now Max Jones has moved
over from Roush Fenway Racing to serve as general manager and part owner.
Yates, though, isn't planning
a quiet retirement. He is vitall y
interested in environmental
concerns and has been lobbying
NASCAR to adapt to new en·
gine technology for some time.
As for racing, Yates said. "I
enjoyed it, and now, I'll pull
over and quit getting run over
by these people that want lo do
it quicker and better and faster
than I do. I'll get m th e slow
lane and get out of the way.
"I'm going to find something
fun to do, I hope. I know
NASCAR is so popular that1t's
hard to go anywhere, but I'll be
doing somethin g. I'm going to
try to not take a job the firs t day.
I've never been jobless one day
in my life, not one day .. The

-;-- -------- -

-·-

sun comes up and goes down, bie Reiser said his promotion to
and I still want more iime."
general manager at Roush won't
have any effect on the performance of Matt Kenseth, who, for
the first time in his NASCAR
You say you want a revolu- career, will have a crew chief
tion - .Jack Roush smd It's al· (Chip Bolin) other than Reiser.
ready occurring, and it involves
"Th1s ain't affecting the '17'
a fundamental change in which team," said Reiser. "What's the
decisions involving the per- difference if you're a GM or a
formance of the race car are crew ch1ef on the 17? You're
determmed more by engineers still mvolved in the 17; you're
and less by drivers and crews. still working with 1t on a day"Time was, when I started 20 to·day basis.
years ago at this, engineering
"The '17' has been together so
was something that was kept on long thai aU the guys are pretty
the back burner, and 1f you ab· much al the pomt where they're
solutely got cornered and could· full·grown, they can go do what
n't fi gure ou t what to do, you they want to do on this team. By
would ask the engineer what he me coming out of the mold and
thou ght and the crew chief allowing everybody else to step
would make a dec1s10n Ia e1ther up a httle bit, it gives them an
laugh or to try it," said Roush. opportunity to do a little some"But today this thing has gotten thing different that will make it
so. complex, and there are so exciting . ... I don't really think
many grea t eng meers domg so it's all that different from what
much predictive and analys is we've been doing. ~·
work thai you have to have that
gomg for you."

JohnSon described the process
from a driver's point of view.
"Well, there are so many
ways to adjust the race cars,
and there are some rules and
things that keep us from work·
ing in certain areas (with the
COT), and it's up to the engineers to find ways to get grip irr
the car without breaking those
rules," said Johnson. "Greg
(Ives, race engineer) is really,
really good at understanding
that stuff and poring through
the data, and finding a way that
we can put grip in the car.
·
"There isn't a free lunch, and
usually when you make an ad'
justment to a car, it sacrifices
in the corner. Very rarely do
you find something that helps
all the segmentN!f the turn
and piece it all together.
"So they make changes, and I:
get out on track, and I've tried
some different lines and different techniques to see if it
would work if I changed my
style and changed the way I approached the corner, in terms
The champ's perspective - of trying to find maximum grip
When asked about the effect of or maximum attitude in the
No sk ips in this beat - Rob- engineers at Hendrick, Jimmie car; whatever it may be."

•

•

•

''"

...

•,

-

Number.

740-416·4015,

Broker: G. Bruce Teaford.
www.teafordrealestate. net
Teaford Real Estate

r

GIVF.AWAV

4 small boxes ol new fabm::

we will nol knowing

c

1

ub)oct to the Fodera
air Housing Act o

OE ltandords.

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3511

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................030
Antlquea ................................................... .... 530
Apartment&amp; for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market ............................. oao
Auto Parts &amp; Acceasorles .......................... 760

Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos tor Sale .............................................. 710

Boata &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ................"..................:...550
Buolneos and Buildings ............................. 340
Buolnel8 Opportunlty................................. 2t0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cemplng Equlpmenl ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly C&amp;ro ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 6,10
Farms lor Rent .............................................430
Farms lor Sola ............................................. 330
For Laaae ..................................................... 490

For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Tracle......................................... 590
FruHa &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnlahed Rooma ........................................ 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Giveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ............................................ .....110

Home lmprovements ......................... .......... 81 0

Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410

In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660

Uveotock......................................................630
Lost and Found ........... ,............................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
'-'locellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ...................,... 540

Mobile Homo Repair .................... ........... ....860
Mobile Homos lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
Money lo Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..................... :. ... 740
usk:allnstruments -.................................. 570

Peraonals .................. :............................ ...... 005
Pets for Sale ...................................... .......... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820

Proleoalonal Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
~I Eetate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoolslnotructlon ..................................... 150
Sled , Plant &amp; FerUIIler .............................. 650
Sttuatlono Wanted .................................... .. 120
Space for Rent .............................................460
$porting Goods ........................................... 520
SiUV'o for Sale.............................................. 720
Trucke for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholetery ...........................:....................... 870
Vans For Sale.............................................,..730
Wanted to Buy ............................................ 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
W.anled To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Ren\ ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpollo ....................................072
Yerd Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .........................074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

,.

H1:1.PW.1~ 11.11

HDJ' WANllJJ

IH II

POSTOFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
lncludmg Federal Benefits
and OT.Patd Train1ng.
Vacat1ons·FT/PT
' 1·866·542·1531

USWA

PRODUCTION
OPERATORS

Full lime employm ent opportunities for entry level chem·
1cal operators ' are be1ng
offered by a polymer manu ·
lecturer .n Mason County,
WV Candidates must have a
h1gh school diploma or
equiValent GED and be
available and w1111ng to work
rotahng 12 hour sh11!s
Found black Lab at Letart
Demonstrated expenence •n
Locks and Dam Call 247·
an 1ndustnal/ manulactunng
2140
enwonment and pnor
chem1cal plan! expenence IS
preferred Individuals meet·
Lost Winchester 410 Laver
11--;o
1ng these requirements must
Act1on shotgun, Reward
submit a resu me post·
Lost on Rock L1ck Ad
marked
by
Monday
Mercer'lllle 446· 7786
www.comlcs.com
&lt;P 2007 by NEA, Inc.
December 10, 2007 to thiS
ad, prov1d1ng contact 1nfor·
Please Return (M1ssmg
maliOn employment h1story
SinCe 11/13) Lost male
~'P.t'""_ _ _ _ _ _.,
and descnptlons of ;my cer
dachshund, black wtvery ht·. IIIO HELPWi\JVI'EV
litO HFJJ' WANIID Ill tO IIELPW~
!lflca!IOns,
tram1ng courses
tie brown , answers to Oooby, •
•
•.
or
relevant
programs com
shght scar on belly · 2 or 3
plated Candidates ol Inter·
l1ght patches ot ha1r grow1ng CNA'S
&amp;
Res1 dent
Service Laborer-Earn
as You est will De contacted for pre
baCk on hiS nose K1ds Pet Ass tstaots Interviews Are Customer
One ( 1) Learn
Start building for employment assessments/
m1ss very much 304·675· Now Be1ng Conducted For Representative
1mmedtate openmg ex1st s your future NOW by joining 1nterv1ews
7561
CNA &amp; Res1dent AsSIStant with a chemical manufactur·
our Professional Team and
PoSitiOns tf You Are A
er 1n Mason County. WV for Pressure
Cleanmg Reply to TSC·27 c/o Po1nf
AuqiDN ANU
Canng,
Enth usiasti c
candidates possessmg the Mamtenance Technician. Atl Pleasant Reg1Ster. 200 Ma1n
L_..;Jiu'AoiiiiiiMiiiiio\RKETiiiiiiiio_.l Dependable Person Then followmg sk1lls Advanced positions require extended St , PI Pleasnt wv 25550
, We Want You To Jam Our
skills m Microso ft Office, TRAVEL outSide the state
Cross Creek Auct1on Buffalo Team Come On Over &amp;
includmg OuUook and excel Company provides lodging. Production Operators
Auct1 on Saturday 6pm ThiS Check Us Out I You'll Be
weeks Hauler Ron Pnce Glad You D1dl Competitive with proficiency managmg tra nspmtatiOn and Per Full t1me employment oppor·
personal files and folders Detm AVERAGE slarting tu n111es for entry level cham·
8u1ldng IS full Start1ng to CNA
Wages,
Pa1d
sen h1gh qual1ty kn1ves such Vacat1ons, Paid Meats Many and the ab1hty to create and wage with cost of benefits 1cal operators are bemg
spreadshee ts Included IS $2 10.00 per fteld offered by a polymer manu·
as Case Buck &amp; Mossy Other Benel1ts Ravenswood manage
Excellent
verbal
and writt en day worked w1th a chance to faclurer 1n Mason County,
Oak V1sa and Master Card Care
Center
1113 commumcatmn
sk1ils advance up to $255.00 per WV Cand1dates must have a
(304) 550· 1616 Stephen Washmgton
St , required. as well as an abili- f1eld day worked We prov1de high school d1ploma or
Reedy 1639
Ravenswood , WV (Across ty to work well w1th cus· patd lratmng and EXCEL- equ1vatent GED and be w1ll·
R1tch1e Bndge Rt 2 North, tamers and others. Prev1ous LENT BENEFITS.
Pre· 1ng to work rotat1ng 12 hour
R1vers1de Auction Barn Sat Last Busmess On R1g ht) Customer Service and offtce employment DRUG TEST sh1fts. Demonstrated e)(penReferences Required
N'ght@ 6pm GUNS
expenence With demonstrat· and a valid Driver's L1cense ence 1n an 1ndustnal env1·
Stevens 22 Rifle Model I SA,
--:c:-:-:c::-:---:c::c-'C':Cc:·
ed orgam zahonal skills pre· are required Class A COL ronment and pnor chem1cal
Wards Western 410 ISA, CUSTOMER
SERVICE ferred Accounts receivable, IS a plus. bul not requ1red. planl expenence 1s pre·
Preco1t 12 Gauge , Stevens REPRESENTATIVE . One transportation processes, WE WILL BE TAKING !erred.
598 410 Boll ActiOn,
AND IndiVIduals mee11ng these
~ 1) 1mmed 1ate opening mventory or supply plannmg APPLICATIONS
Winchester 37A 16 Gauge,
req u1rements must subm1! a
INTERVIEWING
FROM
ex1sts with a chemical man- experience helpful, SA'P
ConnectiCUt Arms 50 Cal
utacturer In Mason County, experience
a
plus. 9 00 am until 5 00 PM ON re sume postmarked by
Black
Powder
for candidates possess· lnd1v1duals meehng the se DECEMBER 41h AT THE Monday December 1o,
LONGABERGER BAS- ng the
following skills:
requiremenls must submit a BEST WESTERN INN, 701 2007 to thiS ad, prov1d1ng
KETS, Party l1te FENTON, 1
. MAIN ST.. RIPLEY. WV contact 1nformat1on, employ·
·Advanced skills in Microsoft resume to lh1s ad no later W
Boyds Baars, Lad1es Purses
AND
ON DECEMBER 5th men! h 1 slo~ and deswpiiOn
ce 1nclud1ng Outlook than December 10, 2007
· COACH, GUCCI, Old 0111
and Excel. with prOIICiency providmg contact 1ntorma· AT THE WINGATE .INN, of any certifications. tra1n1ng
Silver Tree Org Box w/
managing personal file s and l1on, employment and salary 1502 GRAND CENTRAL courses or relevant pro·
paper sleeves + X·Mas told ers and the ability to ere- history and descnplton of AVENUE, VIENNA, WV OR grams
completed
Dec , &amp; New Seller Located
ate and manage spread- any trai nmg programs or Send work history and day· Candidates ol 1nterest w111
5 M1les Below the Dam on sheets
experience Candidates of lime · phone number to. be contacted for pre·
Rt 7 South 740·256·6989 ·EMcellent verbal and wr 1nen mterest w111 be contacted for Techn ician Tramee, PO Box e m pl o ym e nt
communicaiiOn
skrlls pre·employment a~sess· 565, Mar1eHa. Oh10 45750 assessment/l nterv1es Send
resumes to CLA Box 101
required, as well as an abtll· ments/1nterv1ews
Send EOE
PO Box 469 . Gal lipoliS, Oh
ty to work well With cus· resumes to CLA 102,
Ohio Valley Home Health, 4563 1
tamers and others
PO Box 469, Gallipolis, OH
Inc
hmng STNA, CNA,
Absolute Top Dollar U S
45631
Home Health A1des and Tra1ner POSitiOn
Silver and Gold Cams , 'Previous Customer Serv1ce
Personal Care A1des Full, Are you mterested m a
Proolsets. Gold A1ngs, Pre· and off1ce experience with
Headwaters, Inc.
1935
US
Currency. demonstrated organiZational Headwaters, Inc IS a world Part T1me and Per D1em reward1ng poSitiOn' PA'S 1s
and telephone sk1lls pre·
Apply currently :Seek1ng a partt1me
• Sol1 t a~re D1amondS· M TS
leader 1n InnovatiVe natural pos1t10ns ava1lable
at
1480
Jackson
P1ke. staff lor Mason, wv prOIIId·
Com Shop, 151 Second !erred
reM urce Utilization Our
Rece1vable.
Avenue,' Galhpobs, 740-446- ' Accounts
serv1ces to energy compa- Gallipolis. phone 44 1-1393
ng tra1n1
resLdentLai/communlty.
tr ansportation processes,
fOr Skilled OH1ce or apply at 1
sk1U
ng w1th 1nd1V1dua1s
2842 '
1nvantofy or supply planmng ' nieS include conversion of 1456 Jackson Pike, phone
fossil fuels mto alternative
w1th MA/DD Seekmg stAff
experience helpful
441·9263
tor for Monday·Fn.-1·1 3 30pm·
energy products Our
Want to buy Junk Cars, ca ll .. SAP experience a plus
Passpori/Pnvate
Care 6 30pm H1g 1 r r )I drplo
Headwaters.
Inc
.
New
740·388.0884 '
IndiVIduals meetmg these
Haven, WV facility has the OH1ce Comp ellttve Wage s ma or GEO 12qU1red No
requtrements must subrmt a
I \ 11'1 i)\ \II \I
necessary
following exollng opportu m· and Ber:~efll s mcluding expenence
resum e to 1h1s ad post·
\I H\ H I "
ties ADMINISTRATIVE' health msurance and Cnmmal background check
=;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.....; marked no later than
m1teage
required Must have reliable
ASSISTANT.
'i 1
December 10. 2007 provldM1mmum ol 3·4 years' Person for l1ve m wllh elderl y transport atiOn and val1d auto
mg contact informat1on,
Hr.IJ' WWilll
1nsurance Pa1d 1ra1mng
adm1mstrat1ve
ass1stant lady Call740·367·7129
Hourly rate start1ng at $7·
· - - - - - - - " ' employil1enl and salary hiS- experience. Sttong comput·
tory, and descnptlons of any
$8 00/hOur P le~se call t
Adtunct
Faculty,
School
ol
er
skillS
in
MS
XP
An Excellent way to earn relevant tra1nmg programs or
Professional and Outlook Educalton, Requ1rements 304 -373-10, 1 or toll fr ee at
money The New Avon.
e~p e n e nce
Candidates of
Call Mar1iyn 304·882·2645 mterest w1ll be conlacted for EMpress mvo1ce preparatiOn L1censure 1n Language Arts 1·877-373-1011
and documentation phones, 7-12, m1n1mum 3 years lull
pre·employment assess·
WANTED Part·tlme p0S111pn
typing. fi lln~J . Ln\IOIC9 process t1me teachmg expenence
AVONI All Areas l To Buy 01 mentsl1nterviews
avallable
to as s 1 ~1 1nd1v•du·
IOf payment. employee lime- Doctoral Degree Prefe'rred.
Sell Shirley Spears. 304·
ab
W
ith
mental
retardahon
keeping/ reporting and OIJBr- Masters Degree Required
Reply lo TSC·26 do Point
at a group home 1n BidWell
675 1429
Successtul
appl1cant
Will
all management of datly
Pleasant RegLstel, 200 Ma1n
Language
Arts 35 hrSiwk np-8a Th 11 p·
off1ce
functiOns teach
St
PI
Pleasant,
WV
25550
Chnst1an Compar1y seek1ng
Meth6ds
(Grades
7-12)
one 9a F 7p·9a Sun Must have
Construction off1ce expenh1gh school d1ploma/GED
Manager to work from hOme
ence
preferred
The mght per week dLmng the
$2,000·$6,000 per month,
Truck DriVers COL Class A Headwaters, Inc. pos1t1on sprmg 2008 semester To val1d dnver s ltcense and
three years good dr1v1ng
exc , Benehts FT/PT can
ReqUired. min1mum of 5 mcludes a compet1t1ve bene- apply send current resume expenence $7 50/hr Pre·
888·434·6256
and
Interest
le1ter
to
Iii
package.
Qualified
ca
nd1
·
years
dnvmg
exp
emplOyment Drug Testmg
EMper1ence
on dales, submit resume With PhylliS Mason , ' SPHR, Send resume 10 Buckeye
Metal Fabncator IS accept· Overd e1mens•onal loads,, salary
of
Human
h1story
to. Director
1ng resumes for the following Mu sl have good dnvmg Headwaters, Recourse s, PO Resources. Un1vers1ty of R10 Community Serv1ces. PO
poSit1ons 3D Drafter (Auto record Earn up to $2 000 BaM 309, Mason, WV 25260 Grande, PO Box 500 R10 Box 604, Jackson. OH
CAD ), Eng1neer Pat! room weekly For application Call To
learn more , visit Grande, OH 45674, e·ma11 45640 Deadline for appl1
cants
12/5/06
Equal
cle rk a·nd Outs1de Sales (304)722·2184
M·F www headwaters com EOE pmason @no edu. lax 740· .Opportunity
Employer
Person &amp; ReceptiOni st 8 30am·4pm
245·7972
Manpower IS now hmng for
Compensat•on based upon
expenence Please submit · - - -- - -- - - the follow1ng postt1ons
Prodution
resume and 3 proless1onal Lookmg lor a good auto Automobile
references to 70764 ST At mechamc send resume to Workers in the Buffalo WV
124, VInton. OH 45686 by 78 Seny Road. Albany. Oh Area Benellts available Call
Today 304·757·3338
457t0
Doc 14

[~

r.':l:"-------,

1· '1111

Ho~us

kttncarlyle@comcast.net

November 30 @ 12·2pm
UNI' ANII
2394
Second
Street.
Syracuse, December 1 2·
FoVNII
4pm 460 Grant Street.
Middleport, December 7 @ 2 dogs lound near Silver
12·2pm. 257 Cole Street. Bndge Plaza on Tuesday 1
Middleport, Contact Agent Choc lab &amp; 1 Beagle m1x.
Wend1 Miller. Reahor, Agent 740·985-4295

740·446·0189

newapape

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

OPEN HOUSE SCHEDULE 3499

All

This

Oea.a'lfirM
Word Ads
Display Ads

Ave, GaillpOIIS Annual Craft
Nov.30 &amp; Small male house dog. 1/2
Chlhuahua/1/2 Pek1ngesa,
Dec 1 9--3 Dally
has short ha1r, (740) 985-

3 pupp1es to a good home
6wks old Blk&amp;wht W1ll be
med1um s1ze adult dogs

ccepts onlv hel

5

&amp; Bake Sale

Current ra1e car

968.

675-1333
(7~?a~ To99~~~~ ~6 (304)
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Free·9 wk old Beagle m1x
pupp1es &amp; 7 wk old Husky
Chr1stmas Wreaths &amp; Grave and Wolle m1x pupp1es 740Blankets. $5·$25 (740)949· 949·2188
2115, 740·949·3151 , Sue's - - - -- - - - Greenhouse
Part Basset Hound. Male
First Holzer Apls. 55:5 2nd while and brown 256-1233

pplles.

Real Estat
dvertlaements ar

~

l\egister

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\\'\01 \f 1 \II '\IO.,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Publishing reserves

.Sentinel

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • InClude Complete
Dl!!scrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addn~~ss When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

.r. ,....,.-----..Ir

Websites:
www.mydailytnbune com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.myda;lyregisler.com

1'1T.!'""------.,

r

WARD CLERK Applicants
W1th A Keen Eye And A
Backg rou nd In Acc urate
Paperwork
D1 stnbuhon
Desned Must L1 ve W1thm
15 M1les 0 1 RavenSI'. OOd
Competi11ve Statt1ng Wage.
Pa1d Vacat1on Pa1d Meals,
Di scounts &amp; Oth er Benefits
Ava1lable 24·32 Hours Pe1
Week. Poss1ble Fuii·T•me In
The Upcommg Future
App licants May APply In
Person At Ra ven S\\ Ood
Ca re
Center
11 t 3
Wash10gton
St
Ravenswood WV 26 164
V1a Mad or Facslmtle (304)
273·9236
References
Aeqwred
Senous
Longstanding Appl1ca nts
Please Apply

150

Galllpolls Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740· 446·4367,
1·800·21-1· 0452
w'lfW g a l hpoh sc&lt;'~r f!i!rCOII ey e com
A:croarled rAamtHlr A :~ red t•ng
Counctl tor lnd Jpcndcttl Co lloge~
aod Schools 12748
_·_

180

W.•.xrm
To lin

3br, 1 bath, 2 car Garage on
1 acre lot 10 Gallipolis Ferry
$65 000
304·675·4075
even1ngs

3BR 2BA. 1800 sq It
remodeled Ranch on 1 acre
mil 1n GallipOliS New kn WI
pantry &amp; l a undr ~ 1m Huge
master sutte wl FP &amp; pnvate
entran ce OR, LAw/ gas FP/
Allached carport 2 ca1
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
Cond Ready to move 1n
$98.500 neg 740.645·8751
Anention!
Local company oHonng "NO

DOWN PAYMENT" pro

grams tor you to buy yqur
home 1nstead of renting
• 100"'0 f1nanc1ng
- Less than perfect cred1t
accepted
• Pay ment coulD be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators

1740)367 0000

Need someone lo take care
of your lovW·one 1n the1r
home In GallipOliS I PI
Pleasanl Call me (740)44671 65
Oftenng lull lime ca re lor th e
elderly lad1es. 111 r•1y home
20 years experllilrlce. exce llent refere nces Call lor
more mtormallon 740· 446·

4300
Pr6fe ss10nal ly
Clean
Homes
&amp;
Bus1ness
Reasonable
Rates
Ref erences 740·446·2262

All real estate advertising
in this newspaper Is
subJeCt to the Federal
Fa1r Housm g Act of 1968
which makes •!'illegal to
advertiSe "any
preference, hmitatlon or
d1scriminat10n based on
race , co lor. rel1g1on. sex
1amillal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmilaUon or
discri minatio n "

W1 ll Clean your House Call

tor lntorm al iO!J 304·675·
1653

II\\\( Ill
10

wv

BUSINESS
OPI'ORTLNIT\'

AVON · S1arl your own bUSI·
ness today• Eam up to s o~.,
Cal l Stlaron 1 866·640

2866: 1nd Rep
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALl EY PUBliSH·
lN G CO recom mends
that you do busmess w11n
peopl e you know and
NOT lo send money
lhrough the ma1l unt1l you
have 1nvest1gatcd til e
offenng

r

-

SllKXll .~

IN--I'RUCI10N

FOR SUE

220

!\ (()i'\E\'

m 1.0-\N

~=======~
IP
••:\tt'l'lf' t:••
Borrow S m &lt;~ rt Con ta ct
t!le Oh•o D•vts1o n ol
Fmanoal
lnslliul•on's
Olt1Ce
ol Consumer
Afla1r:,; BEFORE vou reh·
I)C~ n ce
your home or
qbtam a loan BEWARE
ol requests for any la1ge
ad vance pavmen ls ot
fees or rnsurance Call tire
Ort.ce
ot
Co1sume1
Atfmrs toll !reP at 1·866278·0003 to lea1 n d the
mortgage brol&lt;.er or
lender
IS
property
l1 censed (Th•s 1::. a pubhc
serv,ce announce menl
hom the Oh•o Valley

~P;u;bl:•~s h;'":g:C:o:m:p:a":Y:I=~

•

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI?
No Fe&gt; c Uni'JS.' Nc 'Nif1'
1·RH9 582 l.\-l!'l

ThiS newspaper will not
knqwlngly accept
Advertisements for rl!al
estate which Is in
vlolat1on of the law. Ou r
readers are hereby
Informed that au
dwellings advertised In
th11 newsp.11per are
available on an equal
opportunity bases
FQr sale by owner 3BR
Ranch/ 1 bath Fam11y
Room. Stove/Fridge , WI D
1ncluded Ask1ng $70,000
Call 740 709·6339
House for sale m Rac1ne
area Approx 4 acres all
professmnally landsca ped
Ranch style hOuse With 4
bedrooms hvrng room d1n
1ng room k1lchen large family room central a1r gas heat
and 1 fi replace Add1110n ot a
large Flor1da room completely cedar opens onto .
pauo &amp; pool area Healed 1n
ground pool enclosed by pn vacy fen c1ng and landsc aped F1mshe d 2 car
garage attached to house
and f1mshed &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached
Excellent co nd1t•on ready to
move 1n $255.000 00 Call

(7401949·22 17

House
for SALEI
3
Bedroom 5th St . Nev.
Hoven. WV $35 500 740·
992 564 t
New home 1n Gallipolis
2BR 2BA 3 acre s MIL
REDUCED' $80 000 Call
740 446 7020
N1ce 3BH newly remodeled
New \-VH &amp; Furn CIA
Appliance mcluded Across
from Y1nton Elem 565 000
740-245-5555 or 44 1-5105

1975 I ll X 70 Go\.'ernOI 3
8J 1 112 ba\11 740 247

0402
New 3 Bedroom homes lrom
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades , delivery &amp;
set·UP (740)385·2434

�· Friday, November 30, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

~

Anentlanl

II!Ff-arge
2001 Double
wide on concrete foundation
rn great condition, with 10
acres of land, 5 miles trom
Poin1 Pteasant on black top.

Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAYMENT"
grams for I'OU to bvy your
home instead ot renting.

Pro·

• 100% tinancrng

road. $85,000 304-675· 1730 · Less than pertect credit
Of 304-895-3082

·

accepted
• Payment could be th e

same as rent.
Mortgage

Good
to the

CONVENIENTLY LOCATEO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,

Ellm View
Apartments

(740)367-QOOO

• Centra! heat &amp; NC
Two story Appartm ent C'!:~:-:---:~-..., •Washer/dryer hookup
Building For Sale. m New ~ MOBILE HOME'S
• Tenant pays electric
Haven. wv $27.000 304 · ~--FOI'OiiiRIIIbiiiiM
iio,..,J
68H793 or 30H62·2326 '
2br Total Electric, AC, $300
Loll&gt;&amp;
a month plus utilities.
ACREAGE
References 304 -675· 4874
or 304-574-6424
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek 2BR trailer on Skidmore Ad
Bidwell. Rents for $350 plus
Rd, 441 -1111
$350 dep. 446-4426
Wanted - Acreage to lease
2br.. 2ba Mobile Home m
lor the 2008 Deer Sea son
Mason , all electric. $3 50 per • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Would preler 200+ acres for
mooth. Deposit required . • Central heat &amp; AIC
family &amp; friends to hunt (no
304-6 75-7783
•Washer/dryer hookup
outfit1ers) , please contact
•All Eitectric- averag1ng
(628)·279-6159 or 1 628~ )
3BR on Adamsvi lle Rd . SSO·S 60/mciith
689-6516.
$375/rent + dep. Call after
pm _446-4562
•Owner pays water. sewer,
5
trash
HI \ I \ I \
3BR , 2BA, no indoor pets,
no smo~ing , nice. pri11ate,
scenic, $485/mon. Available
~
HOl!IE'l
Dec.1st Will go fast. 740• 1
FORRENr
7 42-3046 or 859 -806-4354

I(J.IOW IT W/16

EllmView
Apartments

r

Phillip
Alder
J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacemenl
Windows

• Garages

• Decks

• Complete

•Garages

Remodeling

• Pole Buildings
Owner:
742·2332

South
!NT

3.

HOl.IDfOIJ)

Lw-liiliiiiliii!iliiliiliii_.l

Harftood Caltjnetry And FllmHure

600~537~9528.

Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

White's Metal Detectors
Christmas Specials
· Ron Allison
588 Watson Ad
Bidwen, Ohio
740-446-4336

e...,-..;...,,;_,;,;,;_..,

lead on, foresight, In focus,
new level S. band 0699.:
lwstralian Shepherd Pups
L~--oii;-·.--_.1 t740)245·5984. 1740)645:
9 CKC reQistered . Mini 4833
Dachshunds, long haired,
II~ \ \\Pil l ~ I \110\
short haired, red. black &amp;
tan, sable · "Ready to Go"
AUTOS
asking $400 each 304-593FOR SALE
3620

P!m;

Advertise
in this
space
for
$60 per
month

TRUCKS

S

"---FQR·-··\!Jl-....,J
SUVs

FOR SALE

i0

L--·I&lt;·O·R;;,:;;S.Iii&lt;\LE--,.1
-

Meigs Co-op Food Bank

124 Htghland Ave.
Point P leasant, WV

FREE BINGO!!
at

1ST (2) packs FREE!!

Smith GM
Superstore

Guaranteed $500
Coverall IN PACK!
(14) $60 GAMES
(2) $150 GAMES
We will now be playing n
Saturdays

1991 Pont. Gr AM

&amp; Mondays

1992 Buick Roadmaster

Point of Hope will still be playing

1993 Pont. Sunbird

on Thursdays and Fridays
Ooors Open at

2000 Pont Firebird

4:00 pm

1995 Jeep Cherokee
Your Choice

Middleport
American Legion
BINGO

$1995
Smith GM Superstore
1911 Eastern Ave .

December 1st, 2007
$100 per game
$500 Coverall
Coverall in pack
$30 up to 6 pack

Gallipolis, Ohio

Broad Run Gun Club
Outlaw &amp; Slug Match
.Sunday 12 Noon
Meeting before Match

FASHION BUG
ONE DAY SALE SUN. DEC . 2

50% 0FF
EveryJhing
(Excluded priced tust right)
Open early 1 0 to

"(~

8

"

miiliiiiimtim1lmmnrn~

IT WQONG--

SHE'S

ADDIN' ·A

CUP AN' A HALF

THE BORN LOSER

:r

""'"~~

· '1'00 MA.'i ~01 AAIJ( 1-, COU.E:6E

· ~,!".'&lt; rR\Et-1\&gt; .,.

~BIJ\ YOU ~ PWJt&gt;L'I' CLI\\1"1-,

P"'&lt;E:i&gt;J.L Tf\1 1-&lt;K I C.l&gt;.l'&lt; I&gt;..~~L'&lt; ':"!

m~T '&lt;OU'R£ mrnt&gt;III\G mE:
~Cf\OOL OF fW:l) Kt-.10&lt;.~!

FOR :)\Ul:&gt;t.l'&lt;T r..ID?

120fo All Stock

Name: Sieve Hysal
.
Address:
28472
Bashan Road
City:
Racine,
Ohio
45771
Terms ol the 'sale will
be cash or certHied
lund,
Hill's Sell Storage.
29625
Bashan
Rd
Racine, OH45771
(11) 29,30

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

aloud.
The
Contract
Documents may be
examined at lhe followtng locations:
Dodge
Reports:
Bulidere
Exchange,
Ohio; MoE Companies;
andTPCWD's Offlce In
Reedsville, Ohio,
Copies o1 the Contract
Documents may be
obtained atlhe Issuing
Office,
M•
E
companies, Inc.

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

740·367-0544
Free Estimates

PEANUTS
V C YOUNG
1'1? h),

y ('I I!•

""Ill (
l

I

,

I

t

r r

'I

'f'OU NEED ROLES
TO 6E FAIILTO
ENJO'I AAf 6AME
A PERSON MOST
A~WA'/5 S1RI'IE
8E FAIR:

OKA~RERUN , BEFORE
BE61N T~E 6A•ME,

Ill

1)

READ THE RULES ...

t

DEER

&amp;OOD "

NOW

T~E FIRST ·
Tf:IIN6 WE

DO 15 DECIDE

I WANT
.TI-fE RED!!

WHO.,

PROCESSING
Maplewood
Lake .
SR 124

COW and BOY
FOQ I&lt;,LL WE WORRY
ABOUT OUR MORTALITY ,
AND WHAT
MIGHT DO
US IN ...

Between

Syracuse
&amp; Racine
Summer
Sausage Made

CHESTER WATER DIS· - - - - - - - TRICT (TPCWD)
Public Notice
39561 BAR 30 ROAD,
REEDSVILLE,
OHIO
45772
The American Legion
Sealed
Bids
lor Posl #140 In ·New
Slewarl Tank &amp;Flow Haven Ia now taking
Control
Station bids for lnetallstlon of
Telemelry
will
be · a melal roof with a 30
received by TPCWD, at yr. guarantee lor the
!heir Districl Office, Posl, lhrough Dec .
localed al39561 Bar 30 1Oth. Posl #140 has the
Road , Reedsville , Ohio right lo accepl or
45772 until 11 :00 a,m , rejecl all bids, For
Public Notice
(local time) Tuesday, more inlormallon call
December 18 2007, and 882·3306, 882·2722, or
PUBLIC SALE .
then alaaid office pub· 882·3101 aller 4 pm
Notice is hereby given licly opened and read , (11) 19, 23, 30

'.

&amp;
RManier.'
acycl ft&amp;

...IT ALWAYS ENDS UP
BEING Tf1E Tf11NG WE
LEAST EXPECT. SO
WHY BOTf1ER
WORRYING
ABOUT IT
AT ALL?

YES, BUT I NEVER ' QUIT
EXPECTED TO DIE
Sf111KING,
CHASING A BALLOON, I ALMOST •
IT.
(___..

HAVE

l)
'

~=7~4~0~-~36~7:·:0:5:3:6~;::7:40:-:9:4;9:·2:7:34~

located at 4085 Tile
Plan!
Rd.,
New ·
Lexington, OH 43764
upon paymant of $60
lor Stewart Tank &amp;
Flow Control Slatton
Telemetry.
The Engineer's osll· ·
mate lor Stewart Tank
&amp; Flow Control Stallon
Telematry Is $28,000.
By order 1 the Tuppers
Plains- Cheater Water
Dl&amp;lrlct, 39561 Bar 30
Public Notice
Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772..
Counly
of
ADVERTISEMENT FOR Meigs, lhla 161h day of
BIDS
October 2D07:
·
TUPPERS . PLAINS· (11) 25,30

collateral will be eold
"as Is-where Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further informslion, or for an appointment to inspecl coitaleral, Pfior Ia sale date
contact Cyndie or, Ken
at 992·2136,
(11) 28, 29, 30

Heller
57 PC key

15 Depend on
16 Pouched

58 Cloves or

animal

59 Mattress

nutmeg

18 Raids
the fridge
20 Wildlife

problem
Space
widths
61 Pack away

60

shelters

12 Church
assistant
11 Peddles
19 Hotsauce
2t Queeg ' s
ship
22 Cove
23 Mural

21 About ,

datewise

DOWN

Thomas Mann .. German novelist and
Nobel laureate, wrote, ~A great truth is a
truth whose opposite is also a truth ."
Yesterday, -we had the truth about the
declarer play in this lour-spade contract.
To handle the trump ·suit tor one loser,
South should start with a low spade from
!he dummy, not !he jack. After losing the
first spade finesse, when declarer is
back on the board with the club jack, he
runs the spade jack. taking a second
sp8de finesse and staying on the board
for a third finesse when it tums out that
East had begun with four trumps.
You may haw noticed, though, that the
defense was not of the highest caliber.
Let's look at West's problem alter he has
taken two diamond tricks. He can expect
to score his spade king. But where is
defensive trick number four?
West has 10 high-card points, there are
seven on the board, and South, with his
two- no-trump opening, advertised 2122. That leaves only one or two points for
East. So It is unlikely that the defenders
can collect a third side-suit trick. They
need two trump tricks. II is time to give a
ruff-and-sluff by leading a third diamond .
(East discards a club.)
Declarer will trump on the board, then
play a spade to his 10. (Yes, il he guess·
es to put up his ace. he .get's home, but
that is so anti-percentage, losing to all 3·
2 splits with at least one honor oriSide.)
West wins wit_h his king and leads a
fourth diamond. Now South, wheth~ he
ruffs on the board or in his hand, cannot
stop East's spade queen from becoming
a trick.

24 Knows how
25 Bassoon
cousin
27 Gravy no-no
31 Mae West
rote
32 Briel rests
33 Feng34 From

I Cry
of disdain
2 Boxing
great

3Won-llllUD

-~

45 Maj,

-Hoople
6 Whistle
blower
square one 7 Carnivore's
36 Get fresh
delight
38 Ozarks st.
(hyp/1.)
39 Sharpe's
8 Sphagnum
sighting
9 Border on
40 Hoofbeat
10 Teacup
41 luau music
edges

24
26
28
29
30

(save)
45 Says
hoareely
46 Cuts short
47 Mystique
48 Adult male

deer

49 Underwater
undercoats
ohockers
Poner's
51 Cave,
supply
perhaps
Gemstone 53 Plop down
Se~·move
54 Kind
linn (hyph .)
of system
Gloomy
55 Put in
Walleyed
stitches

fish
35 Ploys
37 Heavy
rainfalls
43 Put-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeleDrly Clliller cryptcgranS are c.teatoo trom Quo1aton sb~ lamous peope past EJ"C present
Each leiter 1n Ihe Clp!1er ~tanas lor anOiher
Today's due:·i equals J
"MBV'JT

XAT

UZBRHLN

MBVJ

· xATJT ' R LB
HX

S8J

BLZM BLT KAB'R
TMTR

BLT

M8V. " -

OX

TZRT
IOFTR

LHNAX.

KAB

UOL

GB

UODL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I ope,ed !he door lot a~~ ol people. and !hey jusl
ran through and ~" me hold~ng the koob." - Bo Diddley

$10.50/100

Publk Notlm in .N'"''"~'"'
Yoor Right to Know, Dellnred Right lu

1FTCR15T9HPA9D151
1997
Jeep
Grand
C h ·e r o k e e
1J4GZ58S8VC562218
1990 Chevy pickup
1GCDK14Z2LZI78650
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Compeny,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right to
bid al this sale, and to
wtlhdraw the above
collaleral prior lo sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and
S,avings
Company reserves the
rightto reject any or all
bids aubmllled.
The abuve described

curves

56

WOlD
GAMI

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

thai on December 1,
2DD7 at 10:00 a.m, a
public sale will be held
lor lhe purpose of aal·
lalying a landlord's lien
on the contents of sell·
service storage rooms,
The goods to be sold
are described general·
ty as household. The
rooms will be opened
lor viewing Immediately prior to solicltallon
of bids,
Bay #78

~ •

East
Pass
All pass

~~*~~
H

Feed

MaroRC\'CLJ:..~

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE:Ia
hereby
'given that on Saturday,
December 1, 2007 at
1 O:oo . a.m,, a public
sale will be held at211
W,
Second
St,,
Pomaroy, Dhlo. The
Farmars Bank and
Savings Company Is
selling lor cash in
hand or certified check
the following collatoral:
·
1987
Ford
Rangef

I

BROWN SUGAR!!

WHAT A DEAL!!

(2)2000 Ford Rangers 4X4
EXT./Cab,all power equipment $7995.00. 03 Poriiiac
Vibe AIIW/Dr. Nice and
many more. Riverview
Motors 2 Blocks above
McDonalds 740 992-3490.

01
Hyundai
Accent
4WHEFUliS
Border Collie and Australian
Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
Healer mix pups $50 each
Pekingnese pups, call for 65,310 miles, good condi- 2006 Honda Gold Wing
tion. peeds catalytic convertprice. 256-1652
$4,000 in accessories. Paid
er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
$24,000 new,;$t9,600. ·call
709-6339.
CKC Registered Yorkshire
740-367·7129.
Terrier puppies, 1st hots .
ready to go December 1st 05 Chrysler 300 ltd AJC.
leather seats. garage kept.
30H75-t298
- - - - - - - - 92 lumina. AJC, till, all
Just in time for Christmasll power, $t400 NEG. 245I
Reg . Golden Retriever 5017
BASEMENT
Puppies. $325. 741)...256,
and Quality
06 PT Cruiser 16K miles,
WATERPROOFING
14.29
Work
black, AC, auto, PW, Pl. Unconditional lifetime guarMin Pin pups. 1 blkltan F 14· AM/FM/CD. Like new, nice antee.local references fur· I*IRellSOI,ab•le Rates
,wks.1 blk/tan M&amp;F. 1 red F car. Asking $12k, but will nished. Established 1975. l•l""''"'rl
ready 11/24 $300/each. Call negotiate. 740·416-1189
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- I*E&gt;,potiefi,ced
740·388-8124.No relay caUs - - - - - - - - 0870, Rogers Basement
Refere-nces Available!
1997 Ford ·Explorer Eddy Waterproofing.
Call c.ary Stanley @
Reg. Chihuahua pups. Black Bauer Edition, good condi&amp; white. Have shots and tion $4,000 1983 Chevy s.740-742-2293
wormed. $200. Call 304· 1&amp; 4x4 good condition
Please leave
674-5857
$1,800 304-675-6986

WV Jobs Foundation
BINGO!!

· Across from Post Office for

FAMBLY

I SAW

4x4

r---.S'"'H,;.Q"'p=---.
CLASSIFIED$

"Welcome Back Special"
Saturday, De.c. 1st

1401.1) ON, MAW--

BARLOW

OF

Club Caves- Heat wave. 2004 Nissan X-terra. 56000
bleed in purple, direct hit, miles. 4WD. $8900 080.
Sin City &amp; Broadband ~ Reg . Co;•t;.l7;,;:4;::0-~2;:56::;·.:,:t6"'1:;,B_ _.,

FOR SAI.E

TH'

YEP !! IT'S AN OL'
SECRET FAMBLY
RECIPE !!

95
Ford
Mustang
Conll{lrtible · $2,500 Go04
Condition 304-593- 4193

t

Angus Butts- Prime cut, 878

THAT l3ARBYQUE
SAUCE SMELLS
MIGHJY GOOD,
LOWEEZY

2001 Cavalier, auto. 52650.
Call 740·256-1618 or 256·
6200

er. Allison auto. 2001 t2ton
tag trailer. Electric brakes.
All equipmenl in very good 69 Dodge· 1 ton dually. V8,
Sw1m Spas Arrived! Save condition, Asking $45,000 runs good, dump bed needs
$$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet. for package. May separate. minor repair. $900 or 080.
Closeouts
available.
416-6793
Ashland. KY 606~929·5655

r

BARNEY

www.-boruoolulalt..,_,..-

&amp;

" Pass
Pass

North
3•

~age
and-

.46 Foundations
49 This ,
in Havana
50 In the yard
52 Winding

alternative

From one side
to the other

II-~

r15

West

44

1 Hiker's trail
5 Fake it
8 Nick or
scratch
11 Spoken
13 Marshal's
problem
14 Teahouse

23 Mousse

Opening lead: + A

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

For
C~ncrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
G
rating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Wal~ways . L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wecjnesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30p m. Closed

"' 7 4

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : East· West

RENT

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

• 9 5 3 2
• 9 7 6

'•

Apartments , Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. Ci A, 1 112
Bath, Adult POOl &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $4251Mo.
.No Pets, lease Plus
Security Deposit Required,
(740)446-348 1.

1993 John Deere 550G
dozer. 5000 hours. Full
guards, screens, sweeps,
and
enclosures.
New
undercarriage."
1984
International 1900 - single
l ow
axle dumptruck.
mileage. DT466 diesel. As
new tires.
Ai r brakes.
Curren! WI/ inspection stick·

• 1 II B 1
tAK t0853
&lt;lol 063

Stop ~ Compare

James Keesee II

Townhouse

t

East
• Q764

South
• A 10 9 ll
• KQ J
• Q2
4 A K Q 9

tUK RENT

Tara

West
4 K

J40·912·1m

• Room Additions

42 Tai

attire

• A&amp;4
• J 4
• J 8 5 2

• New Homes

• Rooflng

11 ·30-07

• J 5 32

AP.4.RTMENTS

--===------

1992 Ford Explorer

North

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7 40-94&amp;-2217

r16

&gt;

I

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIIS'IIICllll

Hill 's Self
Storage

Housing Opportunity. '
SPACE
FOR
Holiday Special! Save $100
2BR, 1 Bath. No pets. 1638_ 1 and 2 bedroom aparton 2BR apt Some utilities
Chatham Ave. 740-446- ments, fu rnished and unfurpaid. $400-tdep. 740 -368 · OfficeNJarehouseiStorage
4234 or 208-7861
nished, and houses in 9343 or 988-6130 ·
Great location in Gallipolis!
--bd_h_o_u-se-.-cl-os_e_t_o Pomeroy and Middl eport.
Space
starling
at
3
Hills
security deposit required, no Honeysuckle
$150.00/month for 700 sqft.
Ordir;,ance elem. $495 plus pets, 740 _ _2218 _
Apartmen1s now accepting
992
call 404-456-3802.
deposit and references.
- - - -- - - - applications !Of t and 2 BR
Available Dec. 1. 304· 755· 1br Apartment fu rnished,
Apts. Located on Colonial - -- - - - - 8744 or 304· 675-6757
$475 all utilitie~ pa:iCI, quiet Drive across from Gallia Trailer space $200 month,
water furnished, Ohio Riller
neighborhood . References, County Health Dept. No
3 Bedroom House in
rental
assistance
available
Road , Pt. Pl easa nt City limDeposit 304-593~818t
its (304)776 .5656
Syracuse. $500lmonth +
deposit No Pets. (304)675· 1BR Apt, WiD hookups, at this time . Rents start at
5332 weekends 740-591· internet/satellite TV incl. $310 and $340. Eqval
Oppartuni.y. lml"'""'!":~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
0265
w/rent. close to hospital. Call Housing
(740)446·3344
.
740-339·0362
3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 full
Immaculate 1 bedroom· apt. L~---Gooliiiii;iDS--_.1
-bath, garage, full basement, 2 bedroom aptrtment in New carpet &amp; cabinets, ....,
new carpet, very clean, Centenary. all utilities paid heshly painted &amp; decorated, 1/2 size BIS &amp; Mat. $150.00.
handicap accessible, $635 a except electric $325. Call WID hookup. Beautiful coun- New sofa &amp; love seat
month, (740)949~2303
(740)256·t t35 .
try setting. Only 10 minutes $400.00
Recliner
sale
3BR, 1 bath in Bidwell, 2BR apt. Stove. fridge . trom town. Must see Ia $199.95. 202 Clark Chapel
$325/mo. Rd. Bidwell, Oh . 740-388S575Jmo + sec. dep. 446· water,
traSh
included. appreciate
36~4
$350/rent $350/dep. 44t- (614)595-7773 or 1-800- 0173. M -F 9a- 4p. Sat9a3p.
9672, 446~7620 , 709-95t9 798-4686. 740-645-5953
38A, 1.5 bath house in cell
Immaculate 2 bedroom apt. -------~
town. $575/rent + sec dep. - - - - - - - - New carpet &amp; cabinets, Carpet
Sale:
Berber,
446.3644
3
Br. $395 M.,plus utlt
6 ·951Yd: plush. $5 ·95 /yd,
freshly
painted
&amp;
decorated.
$
&amp;dep,no · pets,
3rd
WID hookup. Beautiful coon- 15' wide &amp; 13' 6" wide carpet
3BR, 1BA, laundry room. 65 ST.,Aacine.740·247·4292.
try setting. Only tO Minutes in stock. Mollohan Carpet,
Mill Creek. No pets: 740· Apartment for rent , 1-2 hom town. Must see to 2212
Eastern
Ave.,
446· 9523
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- appreciate.
$400/mo. Gallipolts.
OH.
Phone·
3Br, 2 car garage, City pet, stove &amp; frig ., water, (614)595-7773 or 1·800· (740)446·7444
-------School District. Water &amp; sewer, trash pd. Middleport. 798-4686. 740-645-5953
Che rry Veneer Kitchen cabiRet.
appliances
included. $425.00. No pets
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call nets , cOunter tops, ra nge,
740·843·5264.
required.
$600/mth. ~el. Req. 740·
446-0390
dishwasher. excellent cond.
446-0969
Apt for Rent. No Pets. 740. - - - - - - - - 446-3364 or 441-7138
Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446992-5858
3BR, 2BA WOSR 03
3736
Just in tim ~ for Xmas, wild
Ooublewlde
$575/rtro Apts in Meigs County, In ::.:_:::___ _ _ _ __
$575/dep.
t722
t/2 town, No Pets, Deposit Spacious second-floor apt black cherry dinmg room
Chatham -Ave. Ready Now. Requiied , (740)992-5174 or overlooking Gallipolis City table, seats 15, pad includper1ect
condilion.
(740)441 -0110 .
Park and river. L.A. den, ed,
446-25t 5
large kitchen-dining area $850.00. Call 740-44t·8299
5 rooms, only 1BA. Third Beautiful Apts. at Jacksoft with all new appliances &amp; or 740-441-5472
Ave. Plenty of storage. Estates. 52 Westwood cup ~oards 3BR. laundry - - - - - - - $425lmo plus utilities. 703· Drive. from $365 to $560. area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per Table &amp; chairs $35, couch &amp;
451-2591
740-446-2568. .
Equal month. Call 446·4425, or chair $100. Call446-7620 or
441 ;9872
Housing Opportunity. This 446-2325
7 rooms, 3 or 4br's, deck, On institution is an Equal
r.:~..,..-----.
Dead End St. Big Yard Pt. Opportunity Prollider and Twin Rivers Tower is accept- 540 MJSt."'EILANEOUS
Employer.
ing applicalions for waiting
MERUIANI&gt;I&amp;'E
Pleasant 304-675-4532
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br.
Aivar view, new interior, Furnished .Apt, 2nd A11e, apartment.for
the
For Sale Mink Coat $300,
2BA. 1. 1/2 bath, 6 rooms Gallipolis,
Upstairs,
1 elderly/disabled oa ll 675China set serve for 8 $100
total . $1000/mo plus utilities. Bedroom, No Pets. All utili· 6679
Equal
Housing
304~773-6036
703-451·2591
ties paid, (740)446-9523
Opportunity

RACO FOOD DRIVE
Saturday, December 1st
8 am -1 pm

~

~~
'1\:\~~
~ ' · '- - -.............

Furnished upstairs 3 rooms
and bath. Clean. no pets,
deposit req. 740-446-1519
.
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Yillage
Manor and Riwrside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992·5064. Equal

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

· ACROSS

(304)882·3017

Mobile hOme for rent with
. h
2 &amp; 3 bedroom houses for
rent, no pets, (740)992-5858 electnc · eat. (740 )949 -2237
Nice 2BR at Johnsons
2·3 bedroom, Pomeroy, Mobile Home Par~. 740-446-.
$550 a month plus $500
200
deposit, no pets. {740 )992 . _
_ 3_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Trailer
tor renr. 3BA , 2 SA.
6909
Call 367.7762 or 446-4060
2BA in town (Gallipolis).
APARThlllVI'S
$550/mon, No pets. Call
441.0110 or 992-5174
1.,~--oiFOiiiiRoiRENrliii;;,-pl

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

U&lt;IE!

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
·lor 'Captivating news
stori~s. dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

(304)882·3017

www.mydailysentinel.com
04, wow... 16 'l'Mr
THE TIMt? I OtON'T

Last
Word

and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call ~74 0)441 - 1111
lor appllcatton &amp; information

l ocators. • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

r

Friday, November 30, 2007
ALLEY OOP

'

GARFIELD
I FA'rl WHE:N I
5HOUL.P

•III,R41111
7....12._

llllllllllt•IPF

lltfl'lllllt.R•IR•
IIIIJUII:II•12:11•M
PlYING TIP PIICES fll

. .. . . .

~•

-

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

CIUIIIIC C S!IWI · - ·
..............

ICII .. Citi.lftlelll

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740·416·1698

$RIZZWELLS
•

1
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'H~.'PUT ME

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Saturday, Dec. 1, 2007
Bv Bernice Bode Osol
A plethora of opportu n1ties could flow
your way in the year ahead. and you'll
want to take advantage ot all o"f them, but
you can't. Select only those you can
comfortably handle, so you don't collapse under the load.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- 0ac. 21) Mak:e certain that aU you do is well
thought out, because relying upon
chance or Lady Luc~ to pull you through
important matters could be a pipe
dream. Tl;ley'Unot be dependable allies ..
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) - Even
if others tend lo eKaggerate things , don't
yield to a temptation to top their tall tales.
They actually won't get away with their
fibs in lhe final analysis, and_neilher will
you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - I f you're
not sure what is at stake or what you're
doing concerning a financial deal, get
expert advice. (4. miS~;BICulation o11e r ·the
cos! of something could turn out to be an
expensive mistake .
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - In order
for this day to be a productive and happy
· one, you must avoid hanging out with
erratic associates . The ir uneKpecled
. shenanigans could cause more trouble
than you'd like.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - There are
all kinds of jobs and projects you may
intend to get done that would bauer your
circumstances. But it you are sloppy in
handling them, -they could give you a
headache instead
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -You may
want to run the shov.· "'ui you'll be better
ott blending into the group, rather than
sticking out. If you attempt to manipulate
your peers, thay are likely to shut you
·down.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You might
start out like a ho.use on lire, anempting
to do all ~inds of chores. You' ll lire just as
quickly. Don't expect others to finish
things: they'll leave the mess for you ro
clean up.
CANCER (June 21.-July 221 - Norma lly
you're very adroit at thinking on your feet,
Out you could have a strong tendency to
jump to conclusions instead. Take time to
gather all the facts and sort things out
reatisticatty.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - It's generally a
good pol(cy not to borrow expensive
items from others, but if you th1nk this is
necessary. ta~e extra care in handling
the item. There's a strong possibility of
breakage.
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - When it
comes to partnership situaUons, be
eldremely setecti~~e . It you get involved
with a sloppy worker, you may end up
having to help pay for his or her mlstake.s.
LIBRA (Sept . 23 -0ct. 23) - Others
should be willing to help you out. but only
up to a point. Don't take on something
you ~now you can't complete without
assistance . The job could be left hang·
lr:"IO·
SCOA~IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -What I•
apt to contribute to your downfall 11 building large hopes · upon fatee pram I....
Although lt'a always good to be optimistic. your assumptions rnay be ba...d
on unrealistic tactore .

r--------.

Gtanny told the new
parents that, •A mother's
arm~ are made of tenderness
and child!en sleep soundly

l. . JIL-r. . Jf_~_E.~.I_c._.~.f_.J/L. 6-,.Jj o ~ -loilif~ ~~~,:h~:~~g~~:~~
5

..

. you dove p lrom step No. 3 below.

-

·A PkiNT NUMBERED lETTERS
'~ THESE SQIJARES

IN

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SCRAMJ.ETS ANSWERS

11· 21-0 1

Trough:.Swept-Chhp- Bishop ~ WORTifthe TRIP
"'be road i3 as long as you make i~" the elderly gent tuld lhe young
111111, "so make it WORTH the TRIP,"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

[

SOUP :ro NUTZ
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a fboL flo.RTY..

lP&lt;&gt;ks

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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 30., 2007

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Watch your back: Taylor's death reminds athletes of their vulnerability
to come · up wilh some
molive for the shockin?.
brazen crime. But Taylor s
Fred Taylor has a permit to fellow athletes aren't waitcarry a concealed gun. His ing for answers. Some are
house is equipped with a looking into hiri ng security
high -tech security system. guards. Others are considercameras included. Still , he ing whether to turn their
wonders if all th at's enough homes
into fortresses.
to keep him safe.
Everyo ne is watching their
After fellow NFL star back. and with good reason.
Sean Taylor was gunn ed
Just look at this blotter:
down in his ow n home, dead · - Two NBA players,
at the age of 24. Fred Taylor Eddy Curry and Antoine
is consideri ng a more primi- Walker, were robbed JUSt
tive form of protection.
weeks apart in
th eir
· "I' m soon to get one of the Chicago-area homes over
big canine security dog~:· the summer. Curry, his wife
said
the
Jachonvi li e . and an employee were tied
Jaguars' running back, who up at his suburban mansion.
isn' t related to Sean Taylor. Walker and a relative were
"Don ' t get caught in my similarly terrori zed at his $4
yard. The dog's going to bite million townhouse in a ritzy
you 'til the death, right on · section of the city.
that jugular."
- In September, two men
If Fred Tay lor sounds a bit broke into the home of
jumpy. somewhat paranoid. H·ouston Texans cornerback
even a little de sperate ... Dunta Robinson, tying up
well, he is.
the victim and stealing jewHe's not alone .
elry. That same month,
Athletes fee l as though Memphi s football player
they' re under attack, thei r Tay lor Bradford was shot to
luxurious worlds invaded by .death in what police have
thugs and hustlers and crim - described as a botched robinals who want to take them bery. The fo ur suspects
down or take what allegedly thought he was
they ' ve worked so hard to carrying several thousand
earn through their skills on dollars in casino winnings.
- A burglary crew in Los
the courts and playipg fields.
' "We ' re definitely targets Angeles has targeted homes
now,"
said
Quentin in wealthy neighborhoods,
Richardson of the New York making off with millions in
Knicks, who still mourns the cash and jewelry. Among its
brother .killed during a rob- reported victims: Clippers
bery two : ' l rs ago. "They star Cuttino Mobley, who
assume that we carry around lost $500,000 in cash . and
large sums of money and jewelry.
And now, Taylor.
jewelry and things like that.
and right now it seems like
"For the most part, we
they' re thinking we're easy have way more money than
targets."
the president, but less securiSean Taylor 's death was ty," said Minnesota Vikings
only the latest example of a safety Dwight Smith, who
crime wave that appears io grew up in Detroit. "you try
have athletes in its sights. to move your family to a
These players, who seem good neighborhood, but
invulnerable with a helmet you' re .never out of the way.
on their heads or a ball in If somebody wants to get to
their hands. are finding you, they can get to you."
they're all too human when
Chicago Bulls center Ben
staring down the barrel of a Wallace has never felt
gun .
threatened, but he's becom"Hate. It 's just hate," said ing increasingly wary of
Cleveland Cavaliers megas- what could happen.
tar LeBron James, who can't
"Most of us came from the
go anywhere withollt being street. We feel like we know
recognized. "People just . the street. We feel like we
hate on us because we're in can pretty much protect ourthe position that we are. selves. All our lives we've
They say it's just given to us. been taking care of ourThey don' t believe we work selves," he said. "Now, it's
hard to get where we' re at. becoming a situation where
So they want to try and take , things are starting to be a litit from us."
tie different. Now, you might
Sean Taylor, a Pro Bowl need that bodyguard standsafety with the Washington ing beside you, extra securiRedskins, was sleeping early ty at your house."
Monday at his home in an
That athleteS, often black
affluent Miami suburb, athletes, are under fire is not
along with his longtime girl- surpn smg
to
James
friend and the couple's 18- Peterson, an English profesmonth-old daughter.
sor at Bucknell University
Without warning, accord- who · has studied Africaning to a family friend, the American culture.
He pointed out that many
couple were awakened by
loud noises: Taylor grabbed athletes come from tough
a machete he kept nearby for backgrounds themselves.
protection, but it did him no Even when they sign milgood when the intruder lion-dollar contracts, it's
broke down the bedroom hard to get away from those
door and fired two shots, one early influences . ..
"A lot of it has to do with
striking the player in the leg
and ripping through a vital entourages. These guys hang
artery. Taylor died a little out with the same cast that
. • they did on the streets,"
over 24 hours later.
Police are still sorting Peterson said. "Some of
through the evidence, trying those people are jealous, or
BY PIIUL NEWBERRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

they bring the wrong element into · the at hlete's
sphere."
And it's not surprising, he
added, that athletes increasingly lind themselves robbery targets.
"They've got the toys that
the burglar wants," r&gt;eterson
said. "They've got the
tlatscreen TVs. They 've got
the right stereo systems, the
right video games, the right
jewelry. A burglar from the
streets would much rather be
robbing someone like Sean
Taylor,... than some ·o ld couple across the street who's
not going to have those type
of things."
Sometimes, the crime goes
beyond material things.
In the early morning hours
of Jan. 1, Denver Broncos
cornerback
Darren!
Williams was killed after
leaving a Denver ni ghtclub,
his limousine· sprayed with
bullets in a drive-by shootAP photo
ing that apparently stemmed Cleveland Cavaliers basketball player LeBron James answers questions fn Cleveland, In
from an altercation in the this June 13 file photo.
club between people in his
party and gang members .
hi~. vehicle .
.
nappings in hopes of getting training facility, Also, all
Peterson said athletes are
If I see a car behmd me a hefty ransom. The mother members of the media must
especially vulnerable when · for a whi!;• I take ther:n o~. a of former pitcher Ugueth wear ID badges to get into
they go out in public, and he JOY nde, Mason smd. , If Urbina spent more than five the locker room for interfeels many are unfairly they want to g~! me, they ve months in captivity until she yiews . .
Still, it's not enough to
. was rescued.
labeled as mstigators when got to stop me.
they 're often just trying to
He keeps his guard up m
While that sort of crime make a player feel totally
defend themselves.
other ways, too.
· has not yet happened in the safe . A Ithough the NFL has
"Unless you're a hermit,
"Be careful who yoll invite United
State s,
Atlanta stepped up its sanctions
you want to go out to clubs, to your home . Be careful Falcons receiver Joe Horn is against players for off-theyou want to hang out and what you talk about or who taking no chances. He goes field problem s, Antonio
party," the professor said. you talk around. Don't t~ll out in public with a security Pierce said it's time to spend
"When they go to a club in people where you stay," said guard, and he makes sure his more time finding ways to
keep them out of harm's
an urban area there's all Mason, who signed a two- family is protected, too.
·
··
these different ' hustlers all year deal worth about $11
"When you 're blessed to way.
"Something different than
these different gang ~em- ~illio~ before this season. make the money we make,
all
these worries about guys
bers. They see these (ath- They. re Simple thmps, but you buy the best of the best,"
Ietes) ball in ', and they're son~ellmes wben you re out, he said. "You hire a security having guns and stuff like
jealous. They want to test you, re havmg a drmk or guard 24 hours a day if you that," said Pierce, a New
them. They think they're y~u re _at a dmner or some- have to, to watch over your York Giants linebacker. "I'm
soft because they got their thmg hke that and people family and your children. not saying you need to have
money legally."
ask ~ou ab~ut the .area you You never know when a gun at home with you : I am
But again money isn't stay m. You re talking casu.~ someone might have that just saying we need protection, too."
always at the root of the ally, but maybe somebody at opportunity."
crime. ·
the next table .heard you."
Teams and leagues have
Even when an athlete does
For a chilling glimpse at stepped up security and try everything right, there are no
Just over a year ago,
Miami Hurricanes football what the future could hold, to keep players advised of guarantees.
Everyone is · vu.lnerable.
star Bryan Pata was gunned look to South America. In the best ways to keep themdown outside his off-campus countnes such as Venezuela, selves safe . After Williams Anyone can be a victim.
apartment, and that case home to dozens of major was gunned down in
"I don't have a bodyguard
remains unsolved. A couple leagu~r baseball players, the Denver, the Broncos hired right now." Wallace said. "I
of months before that, five families of wealthy athletes guards to keep an eye on might have a bodyguard
Duquesne basketball players often are targeted for kid- everyone who enters their tomorrow, though."
were shot after an on-campus party, allegedly by the
Jealous friends of a woman
who was flirting with one of
the players. Fortunately, all
survived.
"Jealousy is a powerful
motivator," said Jay Granat,
a New Jersey-based psychotherapist
who
has
worked with thousands of
athletes. " A lot of people
commit crimes because of
jealousy and envy."
What's an athlete to do?
Bodyguards are an obvious consideration , and many
On Friday, December 21, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not ·
top players already have one
or two on the payroll. Some
forgotten.They will be similar to the sample below:
athletes are taking matters
into their own hands,
whether it's buying a gun or
wish, select one of the following FREE verses below to
simply being more guarded
lae&lt;,OffillRny your tribute.
when they're out in public.
I . We hold you in our lhoughts and memories forever.
Fred Taylor has condi2. May God cradle you in His am1s, now i.llld fore\'er.
tioned himself to keep an
3. Forever missed. never forgotte n. May God hold you in the palm of
eye on the rearview mirror
His hand.
David C. Andrews
wbenever he stops at a traf4.
Thank
you for lhe wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980
fic signal. Milwaukee Bucks
will be with y~u unti l we meet again.
forward Desmond Mason
5. The day~ we shared were sweet. !long to ~ee you again in God's
also is always wary that
May God's angels
heavenly glory.
someone might be following
6. Your courage and.bra&gt;ery slill inspire us all. and the memory of your

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

.....

Police suspect random burglar killed
Taylor; grieving team tries to move on
ASHBURN, Va. (AP) "We have no reas.o n to
Police investigating Sean think this was anything
Taylor' s death say they 've other than a burglary or a
found no indication the robbery involving an intrudWashington Redskins safety er," Parker said.
was targeted or knew the
Taylor's funeral will be
assailant who broke into his held Monday at II a.m. ·at
home;
•
Pharmed Areria on the camMiami-Dade police direc- pus of Florida International
tor Robert Parker called it University
in
Miami.
"more like a random ev~nt." Redskins owner Dan Snyder
"There's nothing that indi- is making arrangements for
cates thus far that there 's the entire football organiza:
some ki'nd of involvement tion to attend.
At Red skins Park on
on the victim's part," he said
Wednesday. ,
Wednesday, Taylor's family
Evidence indicates one or . and teammates came togethmore intruders barged into er to privately share tears
Taylor 's home in an aftluent and memories. Taylor's
Mi am i
suburb
earl y father, Pedro Taylor, and
Monday, Parker said. After a girlfriend Jac kie Garcia both
co nfrontat ion ms idc the ad dressed the team.
house, the 24-year-old was . "Many of these guys were
shot once in the upper leg wonderin g, ' How in th e
and di ed early Tuesday after world am I going to go out
losing a tremendous amount and do this on Sunday?'"
of blood.
said Brett Fuller, the team
Police said they had no chaplain . "And when Mr.
suspects, and were still Taylor stood up and sa id go
in vestigating a possible link out and win these next li ve
to a Nov. 17 break-in at and ·make it to the playoffs.
Taylor's
home. during · we felt a surge in the room,
which they said someo ne th at he almost gave us perpried open a front window, mission to play well ." .
rifled throu gh drawers and
Taylor 's father didn 't state
lett a kitchen kmfe on a h\:d · .the te~m should win in

honor or memory of his son,
but many players adopted
that feeling nonetheless. The
Redskins (5-6) are in contention for a playoff . berth
despite three straight los·ses.
"We all know that's something Sean would want for
us," defensive end Andre
Carter said. "You've got to
keep on moving forward. "
The team then began to
attempt to focus on preparations for Sunday's home
game against the Buffalo ·
Bills. Players went to their
game-planning meetings which were shorter than normal - and later held a quieter-than-usual afternoon
practice.
Taylor 's locker remained
untouched , but the Redskins
made the uncomfortabl y
nece ssary move of dropping
him from the oflicial roster
as part of a series of personnel moves.
The NFL announ ced that
every player league-wide
wi II wear a No. 21 decal on
hi s helmet at this weekend's
game s to honor Taylor.
R e ds ~ins players will wear
the decal for the remainder
of the season. ,

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

Always in oar hearts, '·
John and Mona Andrews and
family

smi le fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight. you'll forever be in my hcan and mind.

8.The days may come and go, bul the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the li"ght of peace shi.ne on your face for eternity.
10. May God's angels gUide you and pro1ec1you lhroughout lime.
II . You were a light in our life that burri~ forever in our hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you forall time.
13. Youare in our thoughts and prayers from morning·IO nighl and from
year to year.
14. We send thi s message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless youwith Hi s graces and warm, loving heart.

•

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WA_Y,
SEND 88.00 PER LISTING • $121F PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop otT to
The Dliily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE: MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 12 N"on
r-----p~e:;ubii:h;;.~ibu;i;;;eciaJM-;:~;::g;o-;;fricfu"y:O::;r21~~---l

I
Name of deceasedl - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

I

'I
Relationship to me'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Number of selecled verse - -.1
Dale of binh _ ___;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Date of passin'l&gt;--- - - - - 1

Print your name

here -------------------~-__;--1

Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone number------~

Cily·-~-------------,--- Stale:- - - - - Zi.p---1
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