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Ohio Valley Road Show
to remain a Armory
thro
Saturday, A6

concert, As

•

Printed on IOOlk
Recycled Ne~.,print

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• Mangini staying with
Browns. See Page 81

Jury seated, opening statements
completed in Rizer murder retrial
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen Williams and Paula
Ri!Cr's defense attorney,
Herman Carson of Athens.
presented opening statements Thursday to a second
jUt)' charged with determining if Rizer murdered her
husband last April.

A jut) of six men and six
"omen "ere seated in
Common Pleas Court yesterday. as Rizer's second
trial on a charge of murder
got underway. Those jury
members were sent home
by mid-afternoon yesterday,
due to the weather.
A jury of 11 women and
one man acquitted Rizer in
November on an oricinal
charge of aggravated murder,

and failed to reach a unanimous verdict on the lesser
charge of murder. Riter is
still in jail. in Marietta. in lieu
of a $500.000 cash bond. She
is
transported
from
Washington County to Meigs
County each day for her trial.
In her opening statement
to the jury. Williams said all
six shots fired at Kenneth
Rizer. Sr.. on April 3. were
fired m the same direction ,

and refuted RiLer's explanation that the gun kept firing
after she pulled the trigger
just once.
Williams said forensic
testing by the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Identification
and Investigation proved
that the gun was in working order at the time of the
shooting. and that the

Students in the Meigs,
Eastern and Southern
Local School Districts
enjoyed a snow day
Thursday and some
sledding Shayla
Molden and Shawn
and Jaxon Meadows of
Middleport glide down
the hill at General
Hartinger Park.
Staff photo

More snow for tri-county
B Y ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•

Another blast of wintry
weather dropped more snow
on the tri-county area
Thursday with more expected today.
The National Weather
Service
issued
winter

Details on Page A2

weather advisories for
Mason. Gallia and Meigs
counties. The advisory for
Mason County is in effect
until 6 a.m. Saturday, while
the advisory for Gallia and
Meigs counties will expire
at 6 p.m. toda).
Snow began falling in

2 SECHONS- 12 PAGF-8

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Faith
Sports

B3-4

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Bs
A3-s
B Section

li.IJIJI,I !I! I.! 1!11 .

Please see Snow, Al

Preparing for the worst

A6

&lt;;) 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

t

Thursday \\ ith an additional
two mches expected today
in the tri-count) area. High
temperatures toda) are forecast to reach 25 degrees. but
\\ inds out of the west
between 11 and·14mph will
drive temperatures lower.
Old Man Winter's touch
on the tri-county this week
forced schools to close on
Tuesday and all schools in

Storm surge

INDEX

Beth SergenVphoto

Shoppers pack Powell's Foodfair, preparing for the latest
winter storm.

POMEROY - Local grocer) ~to res "ere packed
with customers Thursday.
stocking up and preparing
for the worst the latest dose
of winter dished out.
One of the reasons people
-were flocking to stores was
the fear of a power outage
which often comes with a
hea\). wet sno\\. If the

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSI\EWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Please see Heating, Al

INSIDE

All schools closed today

Emergency
heating
assistance
continues

Please see Preparing, Al

Page A2
• Wallace Haynes
• Ernest Vanlnwagen

earnest around 2:30 p.m.
Thursday and roadwa) s
around the area became sno\\
covered and slick in :-.hort
fashion, prompting local officials in each count) to mobilize salt trucks and plows.
Icy conditions contributed
to several traffic accidents
around the region Thursday
evening.
Forecasters were calling
for three inches of :-.now

AST
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-~----~- ---- -- ---·- ,-~__.__,_..__

_

_._._~~-~

D ...

power is out. concerns shift
to how to keep food and
drinking water safe.
According to the Centers
for Disease Control. folIo\\ ing these safety tips to
stay healthy during a power
outage.
Keep the refrigerator and
freezer doors closed as
much as possible to keep
food cold for longer but if
the power is out fOr longer

Please see Rizer, Al

OBITUARIES

• Students encouraged
to apply for scholarships.
~Page A2
•
A Hunger For More.
See Page A4
• God has a special
plan for you.
. See Page AS
• How different is
too different?
See Page AS

~

CHESHIRE - GalliaMeigs C.A.A.'s Emergency
HEAP Program, which
began on Nov. 2, will continue through March 31.
Sandra
Edwards,
Emergency Sen ices director. announced today that
Community Action Agency
is now" taking calls for
appointments bi-weekly and
booking two weeks in
advance. However she
emphasized that an appointment may not extend a
scheduled utility shut-off.
Eligible households must
be ator below 200% of the
federal poverty guidelines,
which has been increased this
program year. and will assist
more clients, she added.
Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had utilities
disconnected, face the
threat of disconnection or
1 have 10 days or less supplj
I of bulk fuel.
The program allo" s a onetime payment of up to S 175
per heating season to restore
or retain home heating ser\ ices for AEP or Columbia
Gas and up to $250 for
BREC and Knox Energy.
For propane and fuel oil
clients. the pajment may be
up to $600 (200 gallons) for
propane/bottled gas or fuel
oil. Clients heating with
wood or coal will be assisted up to $350. Homeowners
or renters may qualify.
The Regular HEAP program offers heating assistance once per heating season to low income households while defraying the
high cost of home heating.
Regular HEAP pays a portion of eligible households'
winter heating bills. The
amount of assistance is
determined b) : total household income. the number of
people in the household and
the type of heating fuel used.
The income guidelines for
both programs are the same.
However, Regular HEAP
requires the previous 12
months income while the
past three months income is
acceptable for Emergency
HEAP. The 12-month period or three month period
for the test is determined
from date of application
making it possible for some
with decreased income during these periods to qualify
later in the program.
Examples of these t) pe situations could occur from layoff. strike. retirement. dis. ability or death of a spouse
or household member.
Documentation verifying
income must be provided
whep applying for HEAP.
Also a copy of the applicant's recent electric bill is
required. It is also suggested
that those applying provide
a birth certificate or other

SNOW DAY!

WEATHER

•zsz•••••••

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•

�,_.....-----~-~~~--~--~~--..._~.--

'Friday, January 8,

----------------- ---------

2010

~~

----

.........._..__,,_..._.._.

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

__________.,..

The Daily Sentinel• PageA2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Students encouraged to apply for scholarships

Deaths
Wallace Haynes
Wallace Glenwood Haynes. 90, Syracuse, died
Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2010, at St. Mary's Medical Center in
Huntington, W.Va.
There will be no funeral. Arrangements are by Hall
Funeral Home, Proctorville.

Emest Vanlnwagen
Ernest Vanlnwagen, of Middleport, passed away on
Thursday, Jan. 7. 20 10, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Services will be held at 1 p.m., Monday, Jan. II, 2010, at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be held from 4-8 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 10,
2010. at the funeral home.
An online registry is available by logging onto
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs
Free throw tournament
POMEROY - Boys and girls 10-14 are invited to participate in the local level of competition for the Knights of
Columbus Free Throw Championship, to be held at 9 a.m.
on Jan. 16 at the Mulbeny Community Center.
The K of C Free Throw Championship is sponsored
annually. with winners progressing through local, district
and state competitions. International champions are
announced by K of C international headquarters based on
scores from the state-level competitions. All boys and girls
10-14 are eligible to participate and will compete in their
respective age divisions.
Local contestants will be recognized for their pruticipation in the event. Participants are required to furnish proof
of age and written parental consent. Entry forms are available at the door.
The local competition is sponsored by Father Jessing
Council1664, K of C, of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

Meetings set, president elected
DARWIN - Bedford Township Trustees elected Trustee
John Dean as president and Trustee Jack Welker as vice
president for 2010. The trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7 p.m., the second Tuesday of each
month at the town hall beginning next month.

COLUMBUS - State
Sen. Jimmy Stewart (RAlbany) today encouraged
local high school seniors to
apply for college tuition
assistance through the Ohio
Association of Career
Colleges and Schools'
(OACCS)
Legislative
Scholarship Program.
The OACCS. in cooperation with the Ohio General
Assembly and 48 participating career colleges and
schools across the state, is
offering more than 260
scholarships worth nearly
$1 million for students pursuing post-secondary training for careers in business,
law, technology, medicine.
criminal justice, education
and a variety of other professions.
"The OACCS scholarship
progrrun provides a tremendous opportunity for hundreds of Ohio students to
learn the skill::. necessary to

percent. Wind chill values
as low as zero.
Saturday...Partly sunny
with isolated snow showers.
Cold with highs around 20.
Northwest winds around 5
mph. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Saturday night...Partly
cloudy with a chance of
flurries. Cold with lows
around 9 above. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday...Mostly sunny. A
chance of flurries in the
morning. Cold with highs in
the mid 20s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 35.19
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 65.40
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 40.70
Big Lots (NYSE) - 29.67
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.84
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 37.19
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 17.01
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.50
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.22
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 31.70
Collins (NYSE) - 56.83
DuPont (NYSE) - 34.39
US Bank (NYSE)- 24.17
Gannett (NYSE)- 16.88
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.25
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 25.80
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 44.79
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.45
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 18.76
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 52.55

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 21.15
BBT (NYSE) - 2~65
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.50
Pepsico (NYSE) - 60.97
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.88 ·
Rockwell (NYSE)- 48.78
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.90
Royal Dutch Shell - 61.61
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 99.18
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.60
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.50
WesBanco (NYSE)- 12.78
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.07
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Jan. 5, 2010, provid·
ed by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Heating from Page At
form of citizenship for the
primary applicant. This can
be Passport, military service
records, voters registration,
etc.
Edwards listed the following income levels by
household size used in
determining eligibility, and
went on to explain that the
suidelines represent the 200
percent calculation and are
revised annually.
Allowable annual income
for a l person household is
$21,660, 2 persons $29,140,
3 persons $36,620, 4 persons $44,100, 5 persons
$51 ,580, and 6 persons
$59,060. Households with
more than six members
should add an additional
$7,480 to the yearly income.
Both Emergency HEAP
and Regular HEAP applications can be completed at the
Gallia C.A.A. Heap Office,
~59 3rd Avenue, Gallipolis,
CentraJ Office, 8010 N. SR 7,
Cheshire or the Meigs C.A.A.
HMG!Heap Office at 122 N.
2nd Street, Middleport.
· Applications will be taken
6y appointment from 8:30
to 10:45 a.m. and from I to

•

3:30 p.m., Monday through
Thursday
(Tuesday
Thursday in Middleport).
For
those
who
are
employed, we will offer
evening appointments until
5:30 in some instances.
As in previous years, the
agency is still operating
under the appointment system to apply for Emergency
HEAP. Contact 992-6629
(Meigs County) and 3677341 (Gallia County) on the
pre-determined call-in dates
to schedule your appointment. Phone calls on every
other Friday to schedule
appointments throughout
the heating season unless
the selected Friday falls on
a holiday weekend; in
which case, other arrangements will be made.
The toll-free number for
Regular HEAP inquiries is 1800-282-0880. For the hearing impaired with a telecommunication device for the
deaf (TDD) 1-800-686-1557.
For further information,
contact the Cheshire Office
at 367-7341 or 992-6629;
Sandra Edwards, Emergency
Services Division Director.

pursue their career and life
goals.··
said
Stewart.
''Further, by helping our
young people access an
education beyond high
school. the program compliments the state's ongoing
efforts to build a more
skilled workforce that will
attract businesses and jobs

Statehouse, Room 040,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Sen. Stewart's contact information can also be found at
www .ohiosenate .gov/jimmy
-stewart.
"I encourage all high
school
seniors
from
Southeast Ohio interested in
attending one of Ohio··
career colleges to apply f
tuition assistance," Stewa
added. "These schools offer
a top notch education and
valuable career training that
can not only help students
secure a job but provide a
foundation for long-term
professional success."
For more information on
the OACCS Legislative
Scholarship Program please
visit www.ohiocareercolleges.org. The deadline to
apply is April I. 2010.
Sen. Stewart represents
Ohio's 20th Senate District
of seven counties including
Meigs.

Rizer from Page At
shots could only have been
fired by pulling the trigger
each time.
Williams also refuted
claims of a possible struggle
between the two, saying there
was no evidence of one.
"This is not a ease of
'whodunn.it,'"
Williams
said. "The defendant murdered her husband. The gun
didn't just keep firing."
Carson introduced a
wooden paddle as a symbol
of what he characterized as
a violent and oppressive
environment in the Rizer 's
Lovett Road home that had
grown worse by April 3,

Meigs County Forecast
Friday...Snow showers
likely. Additional snow
accumulation around an
inch. Cold with highs
around 19. West winds 10 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph. Chance of snow 60
percent. Wind chill values
as low as l below.
Friday night...Most1y
cloudy. Snow showers likely...Mainly in the evening.
Total snow accumulation of
4 to 6 inches possible. Cold
with lows around 12.
Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of snow 60

Jimmy Stewart

to our local communities
and improve Ohio's ability
to compete in a 21st century
economy."
The OACCS Legislative
Scholarship Program is
open to any Ohio high
school student scheduled to
graduate in June 2010.
Scholarships may cover up
to one-half of a student's
tuition or a specific dollar
amount. To be eligible,
applicants do not have to
demonstrate financial need,
but they must have
achieved a "C'' erade average or better. ~
In addition, to be considered for scholarship money,
applicants must be nominated by a current member of
the Ohio General Assembly.
AJl high school seniors
from the 20th Senate
District who are interested
in applying can send their
nomination form to State
Senator Jimmy Stewart at

2009. On that day, Carson
said, the Rizers had an
argument when Kenneth
Rizer insisted that his wife
cut off her relationships
with her adult children and
her grandchild, who was
Jiving with the Rizers at
the time of Kenneth
Rizer's death.
Carson said the defendant suffers post-traumatic
stress disorder, due to an
increasingly abusive relahad
tionship,
which
become worse after Rizer
retired from his job as a
union carpenter. He said
she was unable, when

investigators first ques- defense."
Two new witnesses will
tioned her about the shooting, to piece together what appear on Rizer's behalf.
happened.
Dr.
Karla
Fisher,
a
He said forensic evidence psyschologist and attorneA
will be introduced that will will address the use of se~
prove Kenneth Rizer was defense in domestic viostanding over his wife, who lence cases.
Dr. Michael Baden, a
was cowering on the floor,
when at least one shot was forensic pathologist seen
fired at him. In the end, regularly on Fox News and
networks,
will
Carson said, Paula Rizer other
shot her husband in self attempt to prove Kenneth
defense - "to keep him Rizer was standing over the
away from her."
defendant at the time the
"Her purpose in firing the shots were fired, based on
shots was not to kill her one of the entrance wounds
husband," Carson told the found on his body during
jury. "She was acting in self an autopsy.

Preparing rrom Page At
than two hours, follow the
guidelines below:
• For the Freezer section:
A freezer that is half full
will hold food safely for. up
to 24 hours. A full freezer
will hold food safely for 48
hours. Do not open the
freezer door if you can
avoid it.
• For the Refrigerated section: Pack milk. other dairy
products, meat, fish, eggs,
gravy, and spoilable leftovers into a cooler surrounded by ice. Inexpensive
Styrofoam coolers are fine
for this purpose.
• Use a food thermometer
to check the temperature of
your food right before you
cook or eat it. Throw away.
any food that has a temperature of more than 40
degrees Fahrenheit.
If food is thawed or partially thawed, the CDC says
food may be safely refrozen
if the food still contains ice
crystals or is at 40 °F or
below. Evaluate each item
separately. Be sure to discard any items in either the
freezer or the refrigerator
that have come into contact
with raw meat juices. Partial
thawing and refreezing may
reduce the quality of some

food, but the food will
remain safe to eat.
The CDC also states
when power goes out, water
purification systems may
not be functioning fully.
Safe water for drinking,
cooking, and personal
hygiene includes bottled,
boiled, or treated water.
Here are some general rules
concerning water for drinking, cooking, and personal
hygiene. Remember:
• Do not use contaminated water to wash dishes.
brush your teeth, wash and
prepare food, wash your
hands, make ice, or make
baby formula. If possible,
use baby formula that does
not need to have water
added. You can use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer to
wash your hands.
• If you use bottled water.
be sure it came from a safe
source. If you do not know
that the water came from a
safe source, you should boil
or treat it before you use it.
Use only bottled, boiled, or
treated water until your supply is tested and found safe.
• Boiling water, when
practical, is the preferred
way to kill harmful bacteria
and parasites. Bringing water

SnoW rromPageAl
Meigs County were closed
on Thursday. Schools in
Gallia and Mason counties
dismissed students earlier
than usual on Thursday
ahead of the impending
storm.
All schools in the tri-county area are closed today.
NWS meteorologists are
predicting a chance of snow
for Saturday with high temperatures in the lower 20s.
Sunday's forecast is calling
for sunshine with highs in

the mid 20s.
A slight warm-up is predicted for Monday and
Tuesday of next week with
highs in the lower 30s.
Wednesday's forecast is
calling for highs in the
upper 30s locally.
The
According
to
Weather Channel Web
site's 10-day forecast, tricounty residents can expect
afternoon highs in the
lower 40s next Thursday,
Friday and Saturday.

to a rolling boil for 1 minute
will kill most organisms.
• When boiling water is
not practical, you can treat
water with chlorine tablets,
iodine tablets, or unscented
household chlorine bleach
(5.25% sodium hypochlorite): If you use chlorine
tablets or iodine tablets, follow the directions that come
with the tablets; if you use
household chlorine bleach,
add 118 teaspoon (-0.75
mL) of bleach per gallon of
water if the water is clear.
For cloudy water, add l/4

teaspoon (-1.50 mL) of
bleach per gallon. Mix the
solution thoroughly and let
it stand for about 30 minutes before using it. Note:
Treating water with chlorine
tablets, iodine tablets, '
liquid bleach will not k'
parasitic organisms.

Internet
I.SERVING'POMtROY .

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• t~..woUI~J·'&gt;IIIP jm I&gt;.M.IIil

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• C D1&gt; mFIQ!l M&lt;'l! IIOIIFoe'.\'1' n.l

&amp; James Ande..-..on
DIRE&lt;:-I'ORS

~"lA'~
;I'\
( Surf up., 6X It/stet!_..;
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HEARTLAND PUBUCATlONS .:..":"'_.

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Reach the Lost &amp;
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740-446-2342 ext. 17

�....- -------..,.------------ ------- - --- --- -- -Page A3 • The Daily Sentinel

F~llowship

Apostolfc

Church nf Jc,u~ Chri'l .-\p&lt;:Klolic
\nnZandt •nd \\,ml Rd. P.l'tc&gt;r Jamr'
\1111&lt;.-r, Sunday s,hool
10·30 a.m.
E1enmg 7 10 r.m

•

Rhcr \aile)
Rl\er \'aile) Af"'lolic Wol'hrp Center,
sn s 1rd \IC. \luldlcpon. R~l
\ l!,·ha~l BnrJfor&lt;l Pa't'''. Sunda). I0. 30
a nL Tue, 6 J(l prJ) er \\ eJ 7 pm Brbk
StUJ)
Frnmanuel \(ll"tolic Tnhernocle Inc.
L&lt;l&lt;lp Rd on 'lje11 Lmra Rd. Rutlund.
Scr. ICe'. ~un 0:00 am &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thur&gt;. 1:00pm .. Pa,tor :1-h•rty R. Hunon

Assembly of God
Libert) \"cmbl) of God
l'{l Bm 467. Duddmg l.~nc \lason.
\\.\a.. P•,tvr :\c1l Tcnn.mt. Sunday
Scr&gt; ICC'· llHKl a.m and 7 p.m

Baptist
Pnjle' ille Free" ill Bnpti~t Church
Pa!.tor: Flo)d Ro" Sunda) School9.30 to
10:30 am, Wor-h1p -;er. ICe 10:30 to 11:00
am. \Ired. preach1ng 6 pm
Carpenter Independent Baptist Church
SunJa) School • 9:30am, Preachrng
SenKe IO:X)am. E1ening Sem~e
7.OOpm. Wedne,tJa} Bible Study 7:00pm.
l)~"tor:

•

Cheshire Bapti~l Church
Pa,wr: Steve Ltttle. 740-367-7801. H.
740-992-7542. C. 740-645-152~. Sunday
School o-~O am. Morning Wonlup 10.30
am. Youth &amp; Bible Budd•e' 6:30 pm.
choir practice 7;30; Spec1al da}' of month
l. Ladie' of Grace 7 pm 2nd ~1onday. 2
Men\ f'eU''"'h'p 1 pm ~rd Tue'
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant St. \liddlepon. Sunda) ,chool
·9:30am. \lronhip- II a.m and 6 p.m ..
\\edne&gt;da} Scr. 1cc 7 p.m. PNor: Gary
Elh'
Rulland Fi~t Baptist Church
Suo&lt;lay School • 9:30 a.m Worship 10:45 run
Pomero~ Fil'&gt;l Baptist
PaMor Jon Bm.:kert, East Marn St..
Sunday Sch 9JO am. Wor,hip 10:30 am
First Southern Baptist
41 XI~ Pomero} Pike. Sunday School '!:30 a.m .. Wor,h•p- 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesda) ')erv•ces - 7:00 p.m. Pastor.
Da1 1&lt;l Bralllard

Fint Baptist Church
Pa,tor. Bill) zu,pan 6th and Palmer St..
\l•ddlepon. Sunday School - 9·15 a.m ..
\\or,htp
10 15 a.m .• 7:00 p.m ..
\\'eJnc&gt;day Sen1ce- 7:00p.m.

•

Racine Fi!'&gt;t Baplist
Pa,tor· R) an E~ton. pastor , Sunday
School· QJO am .. Worship· 10:40 a.m.,
6:00 p.m., Wedncsda) Sen ices • 7:00
p.m.
Sih er Run Baplisl
Pastor· John S\\anson. Sunda) School IOa.m .. Worship - lla.m .. 7:00 p.m.
.\\ednc-.da) Ser&gt; "'e&gt;- 7:00p.m
\U.l nion Baptist
P"'tor Denn" \\c;l\a Sunduy Schoolq 45 a.m, E&lt;ening • 6:.'0 p m..
\\ cJne-.da) Ser-·ic(s - 6: &gt;Op.m
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Gr.:al Bend Route 124. Racine, OH.
Pastor. Sunda) School - 9 ..10 a.m ..
Sunda) Wor&lt;&gt;h1p 10:30 a.m .•; Wedne&gt;da}
Bible Stud} 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel free Will Baptist Church
28601 St Rt 7, Middlepon. Sunday
S~r11ce - 10 11.m.• 6:00 p.m .. Tuesda}
Ser-·ices -6:00
Hilhide Baptist Church
St Rt. 141 JUS! off Rt 7, Pastor: Re\.
lame' R. Acree. Sr.. Sunda) Umfted
Ser1ice, Wo.-hip - 10:30 a.m, 6 p.m ..
Wednc&lt;;day Sef\ ices -7 p.m.
\1ctory Baptist Independent
525 !'\.2nd St. Middlepon. PaMor: James
E. Keesee. Wor,htp lOa.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesda) Serv''"' - 7 p.m.

•

faith Baptist Church
Railroad St.. \la,on. Sunday SchO&lt;ll • 10
a.m .. Worship - II a.m . 6 p.m,
\\edne&gt;da) Servrces · 7 p.m.
ForeM Run Baptist- Pomero)
Re,, J11seph Wo.,J,_ Sunda) School • 10
a.m., \\or-hip- II :30 a.m.
'-11. '-forlah Bapthl
Founh &amp; .\hun St., \liddleport, Sunda}
School- 9.30 a.m .• Wo~hip- 10:45 a.m
Pa&lt;tor: Re1 :-..lichJel A Thomp-on, Sr.
AnlifJUily Baptht
Sunda) School - 9:30 a.m .. Wor,hip •

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Friday, January 8, 201 0

WORSHIP GOD ·THIS WEEK
10.4S am ~un&lt;la) h~nan • t\:00 p m,
g
Pa&gt;tor D11n \\alker

Rutlnnd ht:c \\ill Bapli\1
Salem St.. P.t,tor I'd Bartle) . Sunday
School • 10 am .. F.1emng 7 p.m .•
Wedne,da) S...r. Ices • 7 p.m
Second BapHst Chun:h
R,t,ens\\t-.od W\', Sunda) Sch&lt;&gt;&lt;'l 10 am
. ~lommg "O"h•p II am E\enin~- 7 pm.
Wedne,da} 7 p.m
t'ir.t R:~ptl\1 Church nf \tuson, \\ \
tlndq1endent Bapti'!)
SR 6~2 and ,\ndcrson St. l'a,tor: Ruben
Grad). Sunday school 10 am. Mornrng
church II ••m. Sunda) e'&lt;ning 6 pm. Wed
Bible Stud) 7 pm

Catholic
Sacrt-d Heart Catholic Chun:h
161 \lulhcrry A1c Pomcro) 992-51!'1~.
Pa,tor Re1 \\alter E Hcmz. Sat. l'nn
4:45-5; 15p.m.: ~1.,,,. 5:30 p m.. Sun.
Con. -8 45-'l: IS a.m ... Sun. Mass '! JO
a.m Da1l) \las'- 8:.\0 aJn.

Church of Christ

1\ll. \1orioh Church of God
Mile Hill Rd Racmc. Pa&gt;lnr lame'
Saucrfidd, Sunda) School - 9:45 a.m •
E1cnmg 6 p.m. Wedne,da&gt; Service'. 7
p.m
Rutland Chun:h of God
Pa,tor. Shane \I Bowling Sunda)
\\or,h•p 10 u.m .. 6 p.m Wednc&gt;da)
Services 7 p.m.

Syracuse First Church of God
,\pple and Second Sr- Pa,tor· Re&gt; Da\ld
Ru,,cll, Sunda) School and \\nf\hlp· 10
a.m. Eve01ng Service&gt;· 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.
&lt;'hun:h ot God of Prophe9
OJ White Rd. off St. Rt 160. Pa,tor PJ.
Chapman, Sunday School
10 a.m ..
Wor&gt;hip- II am .. \\'cdnesdu) Ser&gt; ices. 7
pm

Congregational
Trinity Church
Pa.,tor· Re\ Tom John,on. Se~ond &amp;
Lynn. Pomero), Pa,tor • Wor&lt;h1p 10:25
a.m.,

Episcopal

Westside Church of Cltri\1
Home Rd. Pomero), OH
Contact 740-992-3847 Sunday mommg
10:00, Sun mormng Bible 'tud);
folio" ing wor,hip. Sun eve 6:00 pm.
\\ed bible slud) 7 pm

Grace Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy.
Hoi)
Euchari'! l 1.30 a.m. Sunda) &amp; 5.30 pm
\Ved Rev, Lc'lie H~mmmg

Hemlock Gro1e Christian Church
.\1inister Larr) Brown. Worship - 9:30
am. Sunda) School • 10:10 a.m .• Bil&gt;l~
Stud) 1 p.m.

Cnmmunily Church
Pa,tor· Ste1·e Tomek. Main Street,
Rutland. Sunda) Worshi1&gt;-W:OO a.m.
Sunday Ser.·J~e-7 p.m

Pomeroy Church of Christ
112 W J\.l;un St.. Sunda) School - 9:30
.1.m . Worsh•p- 10:10 a.m 6 p.m ..
Wedne-.day Ser-·ice, • 7 p.m

Danville HollniM Chun:h
31057 Statt Route 325. Lanpvlle. Pa,tor:
Brian Batie) Sunday &lt;:chool • 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday ''orsh•p • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pra)cr scr.ice- 7 p.m.

3.\~26 Children\

Holiness

l'omeroy \\eslsidc Church of Chriq
33226 Children·, Home Rd . Sunday
School- I I am .. Wor,h•p IOa.m .• fl p.m.
Wednc-.da) sm ices • 7 p.m
\liddleporl Church of Christ
Stb and \1atn. Pu,tor· AI H~nson.
Childrens Director; Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan. Sunda) School
9:30a.m .. Wn"hip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m . 7
p.m .. Wcdnc&gt;da} Servtces- 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School 10.30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. I stand
Jrd Sunda)
Bearwallo" Ridge Church of Christ
Pa'ior.Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9·30
d.JD.

Worshtp • 10:30 .1.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wedne,day ServiCe&gt;. 6:30p.m.
Zion Church of Chri~
Pomem) Harrison&lt;ille Rd (Rt 1·13).
Pastor. Roger Watson. Sunda) School 9:30 a.m Worship 10.10 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wedne,da) Scn1ces • 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Chun:h of Chri~t
ln\trumental. Worship Service - 9 a.m .
Commumon - 10 a.m .. Sunday School 10:15 a.m .. Youth· 5 30 pm Sunda). l:l1ble
Stud} Wedne&gt;day 7 pm
Bradbury Church of Christ
:\llniMer rom Runyon, 3955S Bradbur)
Road. Middlepon. Sunday School • 9·30
a.m.
\Vo~hip

• 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Church of Chri~t
Sunda) School • 9-30 a.m .. Worship and
Communion • 10:30 am . David
Wi-.eman. ~hn"ter
Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .•
Mini&gt;tcr: Doug Shamblin. Youth Mmtster·
Bill ,\mbcrgcr Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp - 8:00 a.m .• 10·30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,\\edne,day Sen·i~c' ·7:00p.m.
Hick or) Hills Church of Christ
Tupper&gt; Plams. Pa,tor .\like Moore Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunda); wor,h•p lO am.
Sunday. wor-;hip 6:30 pm Sunday: B1blc
cia's 7 pm Wed.
Reed"llle Church of Christ
Pastor. Jac~ Colgrove. Sunda) S~hool
9:30 a.m .. Wor-.hip Sen'ice· 1030 am ..
Bible Stud). \lredne&gt;day. 6:30p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m . Sunday worship
• 10:30 a.m
The Church of Christ ofPomero~
lnrersecuon 1 and 124 W E\angcJi,t:
Denn" Sargent. Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m \lrorship: IO:JO a.m. and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday B1ble Stud) • 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:h of Christ in
Christian Union
H.trtford. \\\a Pa,tor: Mike Puckett,
Sund&amp;) School • 9:30 a.m , Wor,hip I0:30 a.m.. 7:00 p.m • Wedncsda)
Ser&gt;1ces- ':()(J p.m.

Cahary Pilj!rim Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pa-ror: Charl~s
\lcKenzic. Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship • II a.m .. 7:00 p.m .. Wedne,da)
Service ·7:00p.m.
Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd .. Ruthmd. Pastor· Re1
Dewe) King. Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.,
Sunda) worship -7 p.m .. Wedne,day
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
l/2 mile off Rt. 325. Pa.,tor· Re' O'Dell
Manley Sunday School
9:30 a.m.,
Wonh1p
10:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m ..
Wedne,day Service-7:00p.m.
We!.leyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport Pastor. Dou~
Co,. Sunday School· 10 a.m. Wor.hip10:45 p.m., Sunday Ev~. 6:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service. 7:00p.m.
HyS('Il Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev Larry Lemley·: Sund.~) School
-9:30a.m .. Wo~hip - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m ..
Thunda) Bible Study and Youth- 7 p.m.
Laurel ClifT Free :11ethodist Chun:h
Pa&lt;tor: Glen McClung. Sunda) School •
9:30 a.m .. Wol'h•p 10 30 a.m and 6
p.m ..\\edne&gt;day Service 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:h of Jesus
Christ of Laller-Day Sainll&gt;
St. Rt 160 . .;46-6247 or 446-7486
Sunda) School 10:20-11 a.m .. Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05- I 2:00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9·10: 15 a .m ,
Homernakmg meet mg. ht Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran

joppa
P&gt;'tor· Den11l Null, Wonh•p • 9·30 a.m.
Sunday School lO:JO a.m.
Long Bouom
Sunday S~hool - 9:30 a.m.. Wo~h•p IO:JOa.m.
Reeds,Jlle
Wonhtp - 9 :\0 am .. Sunday School •
10.10 a.m .. h"t Sunda) of Month - 7:()()
(l.m. \CrYICC
l'upl)l:r. Plains St. Paul
Pa,tor· Jim Corbiu. Sunda) School . 9
a.m. Worship· 10 a.m .. Tue-da) Services
• 7:30p.m
Central Cluster
Asbury (S)rdcUse} Pastor: Bt&gt;h Robmson.
Sunday School 9:45 a.m .. Wor,hip - II
.t.m .• Wcdnc-.day Service'. 7:30p.m.
Flatwoods
p,"tor Dewayne Stuuler. Sunday School10 a.m., Wor-htp- II a m.
Fore\t Run
Pa,tor Bob Robmson. Sunday School· 10
a.m .. Worship· 9 a.m.
Heath (Middleporl}
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School •
10:00 a.m .. Wor,hip- 11.00 a.m
\11ners,ille
P•stor· Bob Robm,on. Sunday School - 9
a.m .. \\ol'hip- 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunday School 9 a.m .. Wor&lt;hip. 10 a.m.
New Beginnings Church
Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Worship • 9:25
a.m .. Sunda) School- 10:45 a.m.
Rock Springs
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler. Sunday School 9:00 a.m .• Worsh1p - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellow &lt;hlp. Sunday- 6 p.m. Early Sunda)
wor-h•p 8 am. Lenora Lcifhc•t
Rutland
Pa&lt;tor· John Chapman. Sunday School •
9:30a.m .• Wor-.hip • 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School · 10:15 a.m .. Worship • 9:15 a.m.,
Bible Study: Monda) 7:00pm
Snow•ille
Sunday School· 10 a.m .. Wor&lt;&gt;hip • 9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: John RoLewicz. Sunday School •
10 a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .• Wednesday
Services • I0 a.m.
Carrnei-Sunon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: John RoleWIC7. Sunday School 9:45 a.m .. Worsh1p • II :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.
Morning Star
Pas1or: John Rozewicz, Sunda&gt; School II a.m .• Wonh1p- 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor; Bill ~1a.-hall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worsh1p • 10 a.m .• 1st Sunday
every month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Re,. William Marshall. Sunday
School - I0 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.Wedneway Semces 6 pm: Timr Bible
Stud) 7 pm

10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .. We~nc~day Servrcc' •
?p.m.

Sunday S~hool - 9 a.m .• Worship Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

Pomero) Church of the Nazarene
Pastor· Jan Lavender Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worshtp • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m .. Wedntsday Semces. 7 p.m.

Carleton lotcrdenomlnalional Church
King,bury Road Pastor· Robert Vance,
Sunday School • 9·30 a.m .. Wo~h•p
Senice 10:30 a.m .. Evening Senice 6
p.m.
Freedom Go\pel ~ll&lt;~lon
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor. Rev
Roger Willford. Sunday School • 9:30
a m. Wol"hip- 7 p.m

Cb~ter Church oftbe Na1.arene
Pastor· Rev. Warren Lukens. Sunday
School 9 30 a.m .. Wo·ship 10·30 a.m,
Sunday ~vemng 6 pm
Rutland Church of the "'azan:ne
Pastor: George Stadler. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .• Worship - 10·30 a.m .. 6·30
p.m .. Wedneway Services. 7 p.m.

Other Churches
New HOPI: Church
Old American Leg1on Hall,
Fo~rth Ave.. Middleport. Sunda} 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church
2480 Second St.. Syracuse.t&gt;H
Sun. School 10 am. Sund) night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Gwinn
A New Beginning
(Full Gosl)l:l Church) Harrisonville.
Pa.to~: Bob and Kay Marshall.
Thu~. 7 p.m.

Fair&gt;lew Bible Church
Letart. WVa. Rt. J. PaMor; Brian May,
Sunday School -9:30a.m.. Wo~hip. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Study· 7:00p.m
Faith Fello"ship Crusade for Christ
P~tor: Rev Frank.hn Dickens, Servict:
Friday, 7 p.m .
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pa&gt;tor: Rev
Blackwood, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .•
Worship 10·30 a.m , 7:30 p.m ,
Wednesday Semce- 7:30p.m.

Amazing Grace Community Church
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt.681,
l'uppers Plams, Sun. Wo~h•p 10 am &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

Stive~ville Communi!)- Church
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Wor&gt;h1p
II :00 am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

Oasis Christian fello"ship
(?1/on-denominanonal fellowshtp)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeleria Pastor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am- Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship. Children's ministry
Community of Christ
Portland-Rnc1ne Rd .. Pa,tor· Jim Proffitt,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worsh1p •
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wo!'&gt;hlp Center
39782 St. Rt. 7, 2 miles south of Tuppers
Plains. OH. Non-denominational with
Contemporary Praise &amp; Wo~hip. Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc. Pastor Karyn Dav1s.
Youth Director Betty Fulks. Sunda)
ser&gt;ices: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Clas~s. Wed &amp; Thur n•ght Life
Groups at 7 pm. Thur:; morning ladies·
Life Group a1 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wed. evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visil U&gt; onUne at www.bethelwc.org.
Ash Street Church
398 A'h St.. Middlepon-Pastors Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m .. Morning Worship •
10:30 a.m &amp; 7:00pm. Wednesday Service
·7:00p.m.. Youth Service-7:00p.m.
Agape Life Center
"Full-Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason. 7735017. Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm
Abundant Grace
923 S. Third St .. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davis. Sunday sen·ice. 10 a.m ..
Wednesday -.ervice. 7 p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bouom, Pa~lor: Steve Reed Sunda)
School · 9:30 a.m. Worship • 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednesday· 7 p.m., Friday fellowship service 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Communi!)- Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Cburcb
575 Pearl St.. Middleport , Pastor· Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 a.m .•
Evening- 7:30p.m . . Wednesday Ser~ice7:30p.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Wor,hip • 9:00 a.m .. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m. P:"lor·

Coolville United \lethodist Parish
Paqor- Helen Kline. Cool,ille Church,
\lain &amp; Fifth St Sun. School • 10 a.m .•
Wor.hip- 9 a.m., Tues. Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Our Stniour Lutheran Church
\lralnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: Dand Russell. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m., Wor,hip- l l a.m

Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School • 9
a.m. Worship - 10 a.m .• Wednesday
Ser.·ices • 10 a.m

Valley Tabernacle Church
Ba1ley Run Road, Pa;tor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson. Sunday Evening 7 p.m ..
Thursday Ser1ice- 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Kathr) n Wile}. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Wo"hiP • 10:~0 a.m., Pastor Phillip
Bell

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., S}racuse, PastorRe1. Ro) Thompson. Sunday School • 10
a.m. Evening - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Ser~ice
-?p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer S)camore &amp; Second St.. Pomero).
Sun School-9:45a.m .. W&lt;ll'hip- II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United :'&gt;lelhodist
Wol'hip- II a.m Pa&gt;tvr. R~&lt;hard !\case
Becbtel l:nited Methodist
\few Haven, Richard Nea,e. Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Stud).
\lt. Olive Unllcd \lelbodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pa~tor. Rc1.
Ralph Spires Sunday School - 9:JO a.m ..
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. Thur&lt;&gt;day
Sen ices - 7 p.m.

\leigs Cooperati•e Pari~h
Nonhca't Clu~ter. Alfred, Pastor: J1m
Corbm. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m •
Wonhrp • II a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Jim Corbin. \Vor,hip - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. Thur&gt;day
Ser-·ice' 7 pJn.

Church of God

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m

9:30 a.m ..

Nazarene
Point Rock Church of the Nazarene
Route 689. Albany. Rev Lloyd Grimm.
paslor. Sunday School 10 am: worhsip
&gt;ervice II am. evening :.ervice 7 pm. Wed.
prayer meeting. 7 pm
\1iddleporl Church of the J\azarene
Pa,tor Leonard Powell. Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..Wor&lt;&gt;hlp- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.,
Wednesda) Service' • 7 p.m ..
Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor. Russell
Carson • Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Wor&lt;&gt;hip • 10:45 am , 7 p.m .. Wedne,day
Ser11ces- 7 p.m.
Syr:&gt;cuse Church of the Nazart&gt;ne
Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wo"hip

White's Chapel We&gt;leyan
Coohille Road. Pastor Rev Charle'
Mantndale, Sunday School - 9:30 a m.,
Wo~hip • 10:30 am., Wedne-ctay Ser&gt;1ce
-?p.m.

F~lth

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124. Pastor. &amp;hel Hart, Sunday
School-9:30a.m .. Wor&lt;hip • 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p.m.
Oyesville Community Church
Sunda) School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chal)l:l Church
Sunday 'chool - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m .. Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bouom. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m ..
Worship
10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p m..
Wedne&lt;day 7:30p.m.
Full G&lt;!.~el LlghthouS('
330-+5 Hiland Road , Pomeroy, Pru.tor: Ro)
Hunter, Sunday School • 10 a.m .. &amp; 7:30
Wednesday Evening 7:30p.m ..
Soutb Bethel Communll) Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood.

Rejoicing Life Cburch
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon. Pastor·
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emeritus La\\ renee
Foreman. Wor&gt;hip- 10:00 am
Wednewa} Services- 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton. W Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Wo~hip · 7 p.m .. Wedneoda) Service • 7
p.m.
Tbe Ark Church
3773 George' Creek Road. Gallipolis OH
Pastor. Jamie Wu-eman. Sunda&gt; Services.
10:30 a.m. Wednesday • 7 p.m. Thu~day
Prayer &amp; Praise at 6 pm. Classes for all
ages e'ery Sunday &amp; Wednesday.
IVW\\ .thearkchurch .net
Full Gospel Church
of Ihe Living Savior
Rt.338. Antiqutty. Pastor· Jesse Mom,.
Service" Saturday 2:00p.m.
Salem Communily Church
Back of We't Columbia. W.Va.om Lieving
Road, Pastor: Charle~ Rou'h (304} 6752288, Sunday School 9 30 am. Sunda)
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Stud)
Wedne~ay service 7:00pm
Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Pa,tor: Her-.chel Whne. Sunday School10 am. Sunday Church o;en·ice. 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Chrisllan Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Wo~hip 10:00 am,,
Wednesday· 7 pm
House of Healing \1inistries
St. Rt. 124 Langsville, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Roben &amp; Robena '
Musser, Sunday School 9:30 am, .
Worship 10.30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service 7:00 pm
Team Jesus :1-flnlstrl~
Pastor: Eddie Baer. ~1~ung 333
Mechamc Streel, Pomeroy. OH Service
every Sunday I l :00 a.m. Hoi) Smoke
Service 6pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124. Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m .. Evening - 7
p.m .. Wedne-.day Service' • 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisom ille Presb) lcrian Chun:h
Pastor: Roben Marshall. Worship • 9:00
a.m. Sunday
Middleport Presb)terian
Pa&lt;tor: lame• Snyder, Sunday, School 10
a.m .. " o~hip service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist .
Seventh-Day Adventist
MulbeiT) Hts . Rd .. Pomeroy. Saturda)
Service;. Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
, Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
,\11. Hermon Lnited Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Communny 36411 Wickham Rd,
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .• Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Ser11ccs • 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda) s
7 pJn.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 124. be1ween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport. Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Sunday Wor;hip- II :00 a.m. We~ne,day
Service&gt; • 7:00 p.m .. Pa,ror· M. Adam
Will

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Matthew 5:16

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The Lord does not look at the things
man looks at, man looks at the
outward appearance, the Lord looks
aJ the heart.
2 Samuell6-7b

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 8,

A Hunger For More
When a recent rash of
local business holdups
began. I began to think of
what can happen when a
person has no sense of
God's pre,em.:c 111 his or her
life. A person who can
storm into a busi ness.
\\ieldtng a knife or gun. can
hardly be said to really
believe that a good God
exists any more than one
who breaks into a house and
bullies an elderly person or
a terrified child.
Consider the depths to
which a person can sink
\\hen he or she believes that
there arc no consequences
for his or her actions or
thinks that "no one \\ill ever
know!" What holds such a
person back? The Bible says
in Psalm 14:1 that ''The fool
says in his heart. 'There is
no God.' They are corrupt.
their deeds are vile ...." The
result of a contemptuous
disregard for God is corruptiOn and deeds that cannot
be characterized any other
way than that the) arc vile!
Jf there is no belief in God,
the human hea11 cannot help
but sink into the swirling
maelstrom of selfishness
and evil.
Of course. we must have
the right kind of "belief,"
too. Belief in a harsh. tyrannical deity can lea\ e us
vainly trying to "perform"
for His favor or tr) ing to
earn a salvation. the price
of which cannot be met by
human effort. That God is
sadistically "waiting for a
chance to toss you into

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

hell" is not a very encouraging thought!
On the other hand. it is
almost as bad to believe in
either a sugary. wishywashy God who's just too
big a "pushover" to ever
confront us for our being
"naughty" or a God who's
nearsighted and just a bit
deaf, without His glasses or
batteries for His hearing aid.
If either of these notions is
what we subconscious))
believe about God. we will
feel as though we can simply do anything we please
being onfident in thinking
that "God isn't 'man
enough' to stop me."
In response to such reoccun·ing "dumb ideas about
God," the Bible announces
two equally vital attributes
of the Lord that both com
plement and uphold the
other. The frrst is that God is
perfectly righteous and. consequently, judges
sin .
Consider the fierce but
in
encouraging
words
Proverbs 24:19-20. "Do nor
fret because of evil men or
be envious of the wicked. for
the e\ il man has no future
hope, and the lamp of the
\\icked \\ill be snuffed out.'"

Religion News in Brief
Man sentenced
in scheme to
sell church
DETROIT (AP) - A
Detroit man who was convicted in a church mortgage
scheme has been sentenced
to at least 11 years in prison.
Forty-six-year-old Tracy
Carmichael was sentenced
Tuesday. He was convicted
last month by a jury of
charges including embezzlement. forgery and mone)
laundering.
Authorities
say
Carmichael attempted to
sell the Temple of God
Deliverance church on
Detroit's east side in 2007.
The church pastor was alerted to the scheme when his
congregation was served
with eviction papers.

Defense attorney Allan
Sarokt has said Carmichael
claimed to have an agreement with the pastor to
help obtain a loan on the
property.
He also was ordered to
pay $115,000 in restitution.
Authorities say Carmichael
hoped to pocket $156.000
from the scheme.

R.I. lawmakers
back funeral
rights for gays
PRO\ IDENCE, R.I. (AP)
- Rhode Island lawmakers
have voted to allow samesex and unmarried couples
the right to plan the funerals
of their late partners, overriding a veto by the governor. who warned it eroded
traditional marriage.

"No future hope?'' Docs
it reallv mean that one's
wickedi1ess can result in
his being "snuffed out?"
Well. yes. It means exactly
this if his wickedness runs
to its ultimate and logical
conclusion. lt is a fatal
en·or to not realize that God
takes human wickedness
seriously. "The Ri ghteou~
One takes note of the house
or the wicked and brings
the wicked to rui n"
(Proverbs 21: 12).
But sadly. as crime and
immorality escalate both
nationall) and even in our
own backyards, it is abundantly clear that we are collectively failing to realize
this truth. The e\ idence is
not onl) in the recent plunderings of businesses or
area homes. It is evidenced
every time \\ c nonchalantly
shrug off the lack of
integrity in the workplace.
when we are lazy in the
care of the health and wellbeing of our families. or
when we turn awa) those in
genuine need though they
cry out for help.
The on ly response that
one can expect from a perfect!) righteous and holy
God is a perfectly righteous
and holy judgment.
The second attribute then
is our only hope. For though
our individual and collecti\ e rebellions earn us a
wage of judgment, He lays
before our feet a season of
grace. a\\ indo\\ of opportunit) to turn from our own
\\a) and follow Him. "Will

evildoers ne\ er learn those who devour M) people as men eat bread and
who do not call on the
LORD?" (Psalm 14:4).
What should \VC do in this
short but wonderful era in
which we might choose to
tum to Him? Our response
should be what is said in
Hosea 10:12, "Sow for
yourselves righteousness,
reap the fruit of unfailing
Jove. and break up your
unplowed ground: for it is
time to seek the LORD.
until He comes and sho\\ ers
righteousness on you ."
Such grace is not cheap: it
cost God His ver) best so
that the shower of His righteousness might complete!)
cleanse the horror of our
sin. God's verv best \\as the
sending of ·His Son to

What does it mean
to 'fear the Lord?'
It \\as emphas1zed to me
as a kid gnJ\\ iug up in
church that "The fe.1r of the
Lord is the b~ginning of

wisdom." M) Dad once
taught me an abiding lesson
as it concerned this verv
truth, particular!) as tear
the Lord invol\cs \\ isdorn.

Ron
Branch

of

ing a family thorn. Certain
disciplines imposed on me
were not being effecth e
Dad approached me one
Saturda\ afternoon as I "as
preparing for an outing.
and stnted fim1ly with that

Teen arrested
in West Bank
mosque blaze

ncssing. \\ e are filled \\ ith
the dJs:-.atisfactJon of coveting. A lot of th1s \\OUid
change and consequences
negated 1f \\ e feared the
Lord b) way of re pecting
His La\\,
Fear of the Lord prevail
upon us to re\ ercnce the
hohne-,s of God. Ha it
occurred to you recently
why the personhood and
presence of God is being
e\ icted from the consciousness of government. church
instituttons. and l!Ocicty at
large? It is bt!causc the holiness of God stirs comictlon . .tnd people hate that
feeling because conviction
b1ings up the issue and nee~
of spiritual change. l f the
\\as to occur real ''change
these days. \\e \\Ould make
it a point to reverenl.:c the
holines' of God by allowing Him to spirituall) readjust our srnful personalities
and practices.
Fear of the Lord expects
u' to gn e .honest regard to
the deep nch blessmgs He
directs our wny on a daily
basis.
First.\\ hen Dad 1ssued hi:ultimatum, I knew he was
not bluffing. I was not going •
to be let back in the house it
I did not manifest a d) namic readjustment. Dad had
given me se\ era I warnings ''
previously about this possi- •
bilit\. Second, the fact that·
Dad- had to issue such an
ultimatum hm1 m) heart. In ·
that moment. m) fear of
him being Ill) Dad became
more intense. not beeau e I
''a&lt;:: afraid of him. but
becau-,e I re pected him.
Third, Whdom from fee:
ful respect of h1m began l
take hold in m) thmking. I
thought to m) .,elf. ''If Dad
Js not going to let me back ,
m the hou e, \\here am I
going to sleep? Where '"ill I
li\e? From where\\ ill I get
m) meals?" I certainly •
learned fear of the Lord that
dav throu!!h mv Dad! I am
thankful that i learned it
sooner rather than later.
In much the same way. we
had better Jearn f~.:u1 of th~.: J:
Lord sooner than later. too. ~ .

I

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

The fifth spiritual work of mercy Is to
bear wrongs patiently. Bearing wrongs
patiently does not, however, mean being
N ..,
a doormat for others to walk on. It
simply means that, regardless of the
1
wrongs which we suffer, we should bear
them all patiently. For example, if you
have had something stolen from your
unlocked car, this virtue requires that
you treat this with patience and
equanimity, but not that you continue
to keep your car unlocked. It is more
about the attitude that you have
concerning the wrong done to you. We
might take a lesson from the andent stoics, who counseled that every
event has two handles, as it were, one by which it can be borne and one
by which It is unbearable. Remember that everything here Is temporary
and that liars, thieves, and even murderers really have no power over
our Immortal souls. Finally, consider the example of Jesus In his last
days. Faced with false charges and inhuman torture and suffering, he
prayed for his accusers and torm~ntors. We should show patience by
praying for those who wrong us, realizing that they are the ones who
have truly been harmed by their misdeeds.
For one Is approved If, mindful of God, bt endures pain while
suffering unjustly. For what credit ls It, If when you do wrong and
are beaten for tt you take it patiently? But If when you do right and
suffer for It you take it patiently, you have God's approval.
R.S.V. 1 Peter 2:19-21

•

As an older teenager, my
ramburH.:tiousne:-.:,
and
rcbelliousnes~ "as becom

imposing glare from his
gre) eyes, "Son, if you
don't get yourself ':&gt;lraightrecetve upon His own body encd up tnda), then do not
His Father's judgment of come home tonight!'' In
human wickedness Ma) \\e : that moment, ·'fear of the
individually and as a people Lord'' took 011 an eye-openrespond to such an offer of ing pcrspecthc 111 the pergrace by turning from that son of my Dad.
Probably the most despiwhich will only drown us in
destruction to that which cable stance taken by most
offers us life beyond the people in the midst of our
limits of our imagination.
continuin~ moral and spiri(Thom Mollohan and hi.\ tual declme is thi~ 'er)
family have mini.srered in attitude
lack of fear of
southern Ohio the past 14? the Lord. Because of it. we
years and is the awhor of are acting. talking, and livThe Fairv Tale Parable.\. ing like "fooh," spintual
He is the pastor of Pathway "scorners." and "slmpleCommunitv Church and tons'' - to use the \\Ord-,
may be reached for com- of the writer of PrO\ erbs
ments or questiom b_v email
without a second
at pastorrhom@patlma.\- thought about the actuallygallipolis .com.)
taking-place-right-no\\ as
Copyright© 2010, Tlwm \\ell as the-~ure-to-come
Mollohan.
ramifications.
We need to re-learn and
re-emphasize what ''fenr the
Lord" means as \\ell a~
\\hat it invoh es. The foiJm, ing are Sc1 ipture-based
principles that should lead
The bill passed 67-3 in the
Police spokesman Micky us back to this key and basic
House and 31-3 in the Rosenfeld said a minor was consideration for our li\ inu.
Senate, and enjoyed support questioned last week in the
Fear of the I ord means to
from several Republican attack. believed to have been livt' respecting the La\\ of
lawmakers. who in the same the woFk of Jewish extrem- God, which is most
party as Gov. Don Carcieri. ists in the West Bank. Israeli poignant!) presented '' ith
an adamant opponent of law prohibits publication of the Ten Commandment'&gt;.
same-sex marriage in a state information that might lead Can ) ou s.l) that we are
that does not recognize gay to identification o( minors exhibiting fear of the Lord
unions.
suspected of crimes.
with all the law breaking ''e
The attackers burned arc committing these da) s?
The new funeral planning
rights abo apply to unmar- pra)er carpets and a book Look how we \\Orship our
ried heterosexual couples.
stand with ~fuslim hoi) little Idols of per~onal pnortexts. The) also left ities. God's name is contmHebre\\ graffiti on the ually disrespected. \\e
floor. The arson sparked deliberate!) practice \\oroutcries
from
both
hip di connection. l\1)
Muslims and Jews. Israel's generat1on has r.tised a genchief rabbi visited the dam- eration of parental dishoncraged mosque to denounce crs. An inordinate number
JERUSALEM (AP) the Dec. 11 burning.
of people arc killed b) deed,
Israeli
police
briefly
Authorities
suspect as well as by thought (refer
detained a teenager from a Jewish extremists carried to the \\ ords of Christ at
West Bank settlement in out the attack in retaliation Matthew 15:19).Adulteries
connection with the torch- for a government-ordered arc rampant. Stealing is jusing of a West Bank mosque slowdown in West Bank set- tified We love to &lt;.:reate our
in December.
tlement construction.
own t.1bloids of false wit-

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Matthew 5:8
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Page As

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 8,

Tubbs in concert
•

•

Jim and Shirley
Tubbs will be in
concert at 6 p.m.,
Sunday, Jan. 10 at
First Church of the
Nazarene in
Gallipolis, Ohio. The
Tubbs have been in
full-time music ministry since 1984.
They have ministered to congregations in 46 states,
performing a wide
range of musical
styles. Many of their
songs have been
performed by solo
and group artists in
the U.S. and
Canada. There is
no' admission fee
• for the concert. A
love offering will be
taken. First Church
of the Nazarene is
located at 111 0
First Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Submitted photo

God has a special plan for you
This is now the fir~t full
week of 2010. The weather
outside isn't what I'd call
frightful. but neither is it
"delightful." Actually. tt's
darn-right cold in these here
Tom
parts and, as a result. most
Johnson
of us have donned much
heavier clothing to better
cope with this frigid stuff'.
Even so. r ve not iced
some
people
walking
around without an) coat on lion. Because He is a\\ehoi) and majestic. I
- and I have to wonder. some.
also
maintain
God is altodo they do it'? The) gether \\Orth) of
praise
oblivious to the fact and \\Orship and our
our time
winter. and e' identl) arc and service.
impervious to the cold!
AllO\\ me to share several
What pualcs me stilI inc1dents from my past that
more is ho\\. some people inspire my thinking and m)
can be ignorant of God . theology. Frankly, what I'm
Belie'e it or not. I'm not about to share with )OU is.
talking about those whose in large part. why I have the
attitude is that God doesn 't "attitude of gratitude," and
exist at all. Such people arc the commitment to and love
everywhere. They don't of God I do.
necessarily stand out in any
Very shortly after reportcrowd, but neither do they mg aboard my first ship. I
comprehend the Christ of was assigned the job of
Christmas or that Jesus is doing main-tenance work
the reason for the yearly on a certain steam valve. I
Easter Season.
wasn't aware there was 400More remarkable. indeed. plus p.s.i. of steam in the
are the many so-called line to this valve. As I was
''Christ1ans" whose concept doing the work. the pressure
of God ts limited b) their in that line caused a nut I
own narrow-mindedness. was loosening to blow off of
Personally. I am firm!) con- the bolt it \\as attached to vinced of the rcalit) of the missing m) head b) no
God of the Bible. and of more than an inch or t\\. o.
God's being complete}) Like the dead!) projectile it
deserving of the world's was. had that nut made conlamation and affirma- tact with my head I would

have been dead instant!). aged to extricate myself from
"My number wasn't up.'' the car. J \\as quite alone. but
but it was God's providence not for long. Very shortly I
- not luck on my part!
had company.lots of compaA second mcidcnt involves ny - firemen and E.M.T.'s.
another near-death incident I and any number of "curious
had, this time as the victim of George"-types. They were
what PolJce and Emergency there because of me. and
Responders know as an most were there for me.
M.V.A. - a motor vehicle
Know this: an asphalt
acctdent. The date was road heavily traveled by 14September 10. 1993, and I a_nd 18-\\ heel coal !rucks is
was retuming to the to\\ n likely to be vel") sltck. parwherein we were living, at ticularly followmg a sudden
the time. Only an hour earli- and do\\npour - as had
er I had met my'" ife 's moth- happened before I came on
er. and transferred our infant the scene. I hydroplaned.
son and dau!.!hter to her car; and my car rolled O\er and
she and Jill's father \\ere left the road upside-down.
As for me. I had a broken
going to take care of them
that weekend. since both Jill neck. I was operated on the
and I had commitments \\.e following Monday. at a hospital in Pittsburgh. I then
planned to keep.
If you knO\\ anything wore what is known as a
about plans, you know they ··halo brace·· for the next
three months. I found out
are subject to change sometimes \Cry abruptly. later the doctors declared
even radically. Ours did. me to be a miracle, because
Rounding a slight curve in I should have been killed, or
the road. I started to slow paralyzed. as a result of that
down to stop for a car up accident. B) the grace of
ahead that was turning. I God. I survived and had a
stopped, alright - upside full recovery.
I'm here to tell you things
down. in a ditch. The car's
engine \Vas running. and the happen - things beyond
radio was playing. I never our sight and control. God
lost consciousness, but I spared my life for a purwasn't 100% certain of pose. and I know I'm in His
\\ill. Trust me: God also has
what had happened. either!
There was some tingling in a special plan for )OU.
(Re1•. Tom Johnson i.\ pen111\ left arm and across m\
back, and when I final!\ got tor ofTriniry Congre£?arional
the seat belt undone I inan- Church in Pomeroy.)

2010

A New Year Again?
About the time I get used
to writing a year date, here
comes another one. The
older I get the faster time
seems to run by me. I better
hurry up and catch up .
Alex
I understand numbers. I
Colon
know that the number I0
comes after 9 (I feel smart
already). In Biblical numerology. both the number nine
and the number ten have a lot
of meaning. For example, the not so much discerning God's
number nine speaks of new direction for our lives, but
beginnings, new birth. and discovering God 's nature.
ne\\ life. There are nine gifts When confronted with a
of the Spirit and Jesus died on mountain of decisions, it is
the ninth hour. r can go on often more fruitful to spend
.md on about the meaning of time recalling God's charac·
the number nine in Hebraic ter than it is rehashing our
choices while trying to figure
teaching but r \\On 't.
rhe number ten speaks of out the problems at hand.
The customat) Christian
perfect measuring. It also
ad,
ice for finding God's will
~peaks of God's divine perfection. There are Ten for our lives goes something
Commandments (Ex. 20): like this: ( 1) Pray. (2) Ask
one tenth of your income is a your pa&lt;;tor for advice. (3) If
tithe: there were ten plagues that doesn't work then fast
on Egypt (Ex. 9:14): 10 x 10 like crazy. Though these relisilver so~.:kets formed the gious activities ought to be
foundation of the Tabernacle part of our lifestyle. yet there
is something of far ~reater
(Ex 38:27): There are 10 "I importance
than fmdmg
AM's spoken by Jesus in God's will for our lives. That
John and so on and so forth. greater thing is in looking
Stnce the number ten and applying God's characspeaks of God\ divine per- ter in God's nature.
fection and God's perfect
It is of greater importance
measuring. then it \\ill be to God to develop in us His .
safe to say that this year\\. ill fruit than it is to enjoy the His
be a )Car of God's divine gifts. It is far greater to know ·
pt::rfcction in the life of Him than to kno\\ about
bclie,crs. God has been Him. While knov.. ing God we
doing something in your life automatically become aware
and though last )Car may of what He is doing as well a'i
not ha'e been a year of re\- where He is going.
elation of God's working.
Make 2010 a year of purthis year may be the year of suing God's nature and •
that re\ elation you have character and enjoy your
been waiting for.
pursuit. God is looking to
This is the year of results. perfect our character in •
God's people are anxious!) order to reveal His. God has
waiting for God to move in a perfect plan for you, for
nmaculous ways. Between me. for our community and
H 1N 1 tlu, the economy and for our land. It's been a long
who knows what else may trip so far. Like our children
come up. Christians are look- often say when we are in the
ing for God's hand to move car going somewhere "Dad.
in a mighty way to deliver us are we there yet?" I think
from this mess and in the we're there! Let's make it a
process looking for God's great year! I'm looking for,., ill and call for their lives. ward to experiencmg God's
That dear reader is 'ef) presence. plan and purpose
stressful and I don't care to like never before.
1 be stressed out - do \Ou'?
Make it a great year!
We anxiou'l) a ...k our( Ret•. Alex Colon is pastor
..,eJ\es, wh,tt if, in all of this of Lighthouse Assembly of
mess, I miss God's '"ill for God in Gallipolis. On the
1 rm life? Our real problem is Internet: wnow.lagohio .org .)
•
- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -

Local Church Notebook
Revival at Rodney UMC
RODNEY
Rooney United Methodist Church will host
revival service~ Jan. 11- 13. Doors will open at 6:30p.m.
each day. Pastor Randy Carnes from Elizabeth Chapel
Church will present the message at 7 p.m. A nursery will be
pro' ided. All are welcome to attend .

Christ UMC meeting times
GALLIPOLIS - Christ United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis meets for sen ices e' ery Sunday and Wednesday.
Sunda) school begins at 9:30 a.m. Mornmg worship and
Children·.., Church are held at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The
Wednesda) ~ight Kids meeting runs from 4 to 6 p.m. Bible
study is held from 6:30 to 8 p.m. each Wednesday.
Christ United ~tethodist Church is located at 9688 Ohio 7.
south of Gallipolis. The Re' Kand) :-.luce is the senior pastor.

Church meeting·times posted

Minister's moments: Weary in well doing
Now that the busyness of
the season, the shopping. the
special services, visiting
family and all of the many
meals - wow, are over.
Maybe we can just relax a little, but not too much. though.
We· ve got the cold and
dark winter days to go
through before \\-e see the
breaking forth of the freshness of spring. This is an
example of life. We've got to
walk through the dark. cold
valleys of life; sometimes we
must walk through the valley

Glenn
Rowe

of the shadow of death before
we see the brightness of our
da) spring, Jesus Christ.
We must not let the bleakness of the weather. nor of

the valley of the shadow of
death. make us weary. Lets
get weary in well doing. We
must keep on keepmg on.
We must keep going to
church, reading our bibles,
praying and praising God,
witnessing to people and
inviting them to come to
church. There is no place to
neither slow down nor quit.
It is eas) in these cold
months to just stay home and
watch some gospel program
on the television. This will
not be a substitute for attend-

ing your church. unless you
are too sick or the road is too
slick to travel. What if God
hibernated during winter like
we want to sometimes? We
wouldn't hear from Him
when we pray. we wouldn't
feel His presence. Let us not
hibernate this winter.
Let's keep busy for God
and His Kingdom.
(Rev. Glenn Ron·e i~ pastor
of Clifton Charge United
Methodist Church and a
member ofthe Mason Cmmry
Ministerial Association.)

GALLIPOLIS • The church of Chnst m Gallipolis
meets at 234 Chapel Drive. Sunday meeting times are: 9:30
a.m., Bible class; 10:30 a.m .. worship; 5 p.m., evening
assembly. Lewis Mikell is the speaker. The church meets at
7 p.m. Wednesday for Bible study.
In keeping with New Testament teaching and example,
the Lord's Supper is remembered each first day of the week
and singing is vocal, with no instrumental accompaniment.
rree Bible courses are offered by mail, or there are Christians
who would be glad to study the Bible with you personally in
your home. Send your name and postal address to the address
abo\ e. or c. all 446-1494 to take advantage of either service.

Healing room open
BIDWELL - Garden of My Heart Holy Tabernacle invites
the public to it healing room. which is open from 6 to 7:30p.m.
each Tuesda). The church is located on Ohio 850 in Bidwell .
For information. call 388-0414 or (304) 675-0660.

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 8 ,

2010

ASK DR. BROT H ERS

How different
is too different?
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear Dr. Brothers: I've been with my husband •
years. He's very shy and likes to stay at home,
wh1le I hke to go out and have a good time with our friends.
I thought we basically resolved our differences a long time
ago, but recently we've been butting heads a lot over our
social plans. It's become quite clear to me that we are two
entirely different personality types. I know opposites
attract, but my question is for how long? - K.H.
Dear K .H .: You have come up with a good analysis of
your problem: way too few things in common in the personality area. While you may enjoy the same types of hobbies or interests and are physically attracted to one another,
you can't ignore the fact that there is a large social element
to marriage - after all, you can't be expected to spend
you~ life together being the only focus of attention, and
relymg only on each other to fulfill each of your needs.
Some of us do have a lot more tolerance for a lack of a
social life than others, and many people have a strong need
for privacy and isolation that seems to fly in the face of the
nature of man as a social animal.
That said, you need to focus on the things that bring yol(
together before the other stuff makes you feel as though
you are drifting apart. The issue here may be two people
w~o are ~illing or unwil.lin~ to. compromise on setting
as1de theu own natural mchnauons to some extent in
order to function as a couple. Talking it out really should
help, because you can then set up some reasonable goals
for doing things together and giving each other time apart
- and that may be the time in which you find you can •
fill some of your social needs. Marriage is all about fi
ing a happy medium between "I" and ·'we:' and you need
to start doing that.
al ~ost f~ve

Hope Roushlphotos

Pictured are some of the many items that have been taken to to the Ohio Valley Gold and Silvery Refinery's Road Show.
Residents still have an opportunity to bring in items in exchange for money today and Saturday.

Ohio Valley Road Show to
remain at Armory through Saturday
B v H OPE ROUSH
'HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Those wishing to
earn some extra cash now
have the opportunity to do
so with the Ohio Valley
Gold and Silver Refinery
Road Show, which continues today and Saturday at
the National Guard Armory
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
This is the first time that
the Ohio Valley Gold and
Silver Refinery has hosted
a show in Point Pleasant.
The show began on
Tuesday, and according to
Karen Hoskins, show manager, several people have
attended.
Hoskins said the show is a
way for people to get rid of
used and unwanted items.
such as jewelry, and make
money at the same time.
"People bring items in
and we have buyers look at
the items - most items we
can buy and we let them
know how much we can
pay," she said. "We then
give them a check and they
leave with money that day."
According to Hoskins,
most items brought to the
show include unwanted and
broken jewelry, class rings,
dental gold, chains, gold
and silver coins and sterling
flatware and tea sets. In
addition, vintage items,
such as guitars and pocket
watches, are accepted.
Silver coins dated through
1964 and Kennedy half-dol-

Ohio Valley
Gold and
Silver
Refinery
buyer
Imogene
Hoskins
exams a
piece of
jewelry
during
Thursday's
road show,
which was
held at the
National
Guard
Armory.
The show
continues
today and
Saturday.

Jars dated through 1969 are
also accepted.
Hoskins encouraged residents to attend the show.
"We are bringing economic stimulus to the area.
Especially now with the
economy being so low we
encourage people who have
things they are not using to
bring them in and have a
good chance at turning them
into cash," she said.
Hoskins stressed that the
Ohio Valley Gold and

•• •

Dear Dr. Brothers: I really thought my life would be different by now. Despite four years of college, I have to hold
down two part-time jobs in order to survive. My wife
always complains that we never see each other. and she's
right. I honestly don't know. how people can make ends
meet and have a marriage or even a family at the same time.
I feel I'm the only one who can't get a handle on what
seems to come so natural! y to others. How can we have
children like this? What can I do? - J.T.
Dear J .T.: Whoa, calm down. You are working yourself
into a lather over your circumstances, which clearly are
stressful and not the ideal way to live. So, recognizing thi~
fact is the first step to making some positive changes, and I
think you can assure yourself that you are not going to live
this way forever. That's the first thing. When you are able to
stop pushing the panic button, you and your wife would be
well advised to sit down together for some long-term planning and budgeting so that you can get a handle on exactly
what needs to change in order for you to start a family and
have a happy home life, with enough time together to make
life seem more worthwhile than it does now.
Because of the formerly booming economy that has
stopped dead in its tracks. people your age haven't really
experienced hardship in the job market until now. Asjob situation grows less bleak. chances are you will wan
try for just one job, with more normal hours, and your
may be able to find something better as well - and your
home life will benefit. Rule out anything in which you are
working different shifts - that would be a killer for a couple like you. One bright note you can cling to now is that
you both want more time together and intend to build a
family. That means your marriage has a strong foundation
to build upon.
(c) 2009 by King Features Syndicate

Silver Refinery's road
show is beneficial because
those who bring in items
get to take home cash
immediately.
''There is no middle man
to deal with," she said.
The Ohio Valley Gold and
Silver Refinery has shows
all over the United States,
United
Kingdom
and
Canada. The show continues today at the armory
from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. and
Saturday from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Jan. 11
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education, 8
p.m., high school media
room, annual organizational
meeting and tax budget
hearing.
POMEROY
Organizational meeting of
Meigs County Board of
County Commissioners,
10 a.m.
RUTLAND Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Station.
Tuesday, Jan.12
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Elections,
regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.,
office.
VVed nesda~ Jan. 13
PORTLAND - Lebonan
Township Trustees, will
meet.

Clubs and
. organizations
Friday, Jan. 8
HEMLOCK GROVE Meigs County Pomona
Grange, 6:30 p.m. officers
conference, 7:30 p.m. regular
meeting,
Hemlock
Grange Hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting,
Middleport

Association,
Masonic Lodge 363, annual Merchants
inspection, dinner 6 p.m., 8:30 a.m. at Peoples Bank.
work in Master Mason Planning for 2010 promoDegree to follow, bring tions. Call 992-6677 for
Bill
more
information,
dessert.
Quickel, president.
Saturday, Jan. 9
VVednesda~ J an.23
POMEROY
Meigs
POMEROY- Middleport
County
Christian
Motorcycle
Association, Literary Club, 2 p.m. at the
regular meeting, 5 p.m., Pomeroy Library. Leah Ord
to review "I am Murdered"
Common Grounds.
by Bruce Chadwick.
Monday, Jan. 11
Thursday, Jan. 14
POMEROY - Big Bend
TUPPERS PLAINS Farm Antiques, regular
7:30
p.m., Tuppers Plains VFW Post
meeting,
Mulberry
Community 9053, 6:30p.m. meal, 7 p.m.
meeting.
Center.
RACINE Sonshine
Tuesday, Jan. 12
Circle, 6:30 p.m. card signHARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville OES 255, ing, with meeting at 7 p.m.
refreshments, 6:30 p.m.; at the Bethany Church.
meeting 7:30 p.m. at the Hostesses, Edie Hubbard,
Betty Proffitt, and Blondena
hall.
Rainer.
Take stuffed aniPOMEROY
Meigs
Chamber
of mals for her fund. All
County
Commerce, business-mind- women invited.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
ed
luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, James Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
Mourning, CPA, featured the Syracuse Community
speaker on "Major Federal Center. Shirley Hamm to
Income Tax Changes for lead a dried flower project.
201 0," lunch catered by Members to take materials
Bun's Party Barn, RSVP at to work with.
992-5005
or
michelle@ meigscountychamber.com.
Friday, Jan. 8
HARRISONVILLE
LONG BOTTOM - Faith
Harrisonville OES #255,
refreshments 6:30 p.m., Full Gospel Church, SR
124, Long Bottom hymn
meeting 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy sing, 7 p.m. with Oasis.

Church events

Invite them to your church.
'~rouch their souls with God's \Vord.

•'We will shoutfor joy wlien we are
victorious and lift up our banners in the
n nte of God."'
Psaltn 20:5

Call ~bt ®aUipoliilllailp ~ribttnr
740-446-2342

�----------------------

pwz

•

•

O Jp U

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

a

Jets D feels disrespected, Page 82
College players gro\\ into PGs. PaAe 86

Friday, January 8, 2010

.~~~~:~!:~~h~
E

Mangini
staying with
Browns

varS&gt;Iy sportJng events lni/Oivong tenms
1rom Gall&amp;, MAson and MetgS counties.

Erld.ay. January 8
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Fed Hock 6:30 p.m
Gallta Academy at Portsmouth, 6 p.m
Fa1rland at R1ver Valley, 6 p.m
Tnmble at Southern, 6:30p.m.
Cross Lanes Chrlst1an at South Galha

CLEVELAND (AP)
Eric Mangini pulled off his
biggest win yet.
Mangini will return for a
as
second
season
Cle\eland·s coach, a surprismg per~
sonal ,·ictory following a fourgame win..,
ning streak
by
the

7:30
Wayne at Pomt Pleasant 6 p m.
Calvary at Hannan, 7·30 p.m
Teays Valley Chnsllan at Wahama, 7 30
p.m.
Girls Basketball
Cross Lanes Chrlst1an at South Ga ha 6
p.m
Calvary at Hannan, 6 p.m
Teays Val ryy ChriStian at Wahama, 6
p.m
Wrestling
Po1nt Pleasant at Jackson County Invite,
TBA

SA1I.wl.a.Y. Ja.awlWI

Bro\.\n~

Boys Basketball
South Galha al New Boston. 6 p.m
Girls Basketball
Warren at Gall1a Academy, 6 p.m
River Valley at Me1gs. 6 p m.
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 1:30
p.m.
Wrestling
Me1gs. R1ver Valley at River Valley lnvtte.
10 a.m.
Potnt Pleasant at Jackson County tnv1te,
TBA

MOJldaY,

Januar~

Girls Basketball
ern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
•
r Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m
South Galha at Southern, 6 p m
Belpre at Me1gs, 6 p m
Van at Hannan, 6 p m

Thursday Results
GIRLS BASKETBALL

eoSIPQNED

Eastern at Fed Hock
Fairland at River Valley
Trimble at Southern
Meigs at Athens
Pt Pleasant at Wayne
Wahama at Calhoun Co

AP photo

Alabama head coach Nick Saban holds the championship trophy with Mark Ingram, right, after winning the BCS
Championship NCAA college football game against Texas in Pasadena, Calif., on Thursday. Alabama defeated Texas 37-21.

Crimson Tide rolls past Longhorns

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)
the
highBCS
- The sure thing ""as look- CHAMPIONSHIP light. I was
1&gt;0 CXCitCd.
ing shaky for Alabama.
My
legs
Hanging onto a precarious
three-point lead and with
were weak.
my muscles
momentum on the other
were crazy.
side,
linebacker
Eryk
Anders was determined not
and I made
it." Dare us
to let the championship slip
said.
away.
The secAnders forced a fumble on
ond
half
h1s blindside sack of Texas
figured to
NEWPORT
BEACH. backup quarterback Garrett
be aJau~ber
if. (AP) - The new BCS Gilbert \\ ith 3:02 left
Thursday
night
to
help
the
""ith
Gilbert
uti\e director officiall&gt;
in the game
his tenure Thursday b) top-ranked Crimson Tide
- a tleshing the often-criticized hold on for a 37-21 'ictor)
rnan who
represents a con- in the BCS title game - a
/sensus among the 120 win that figured to be much was Texas' "qua11crback of
when
Alabama the future" but had thro" n
schools that play major col- easier
knocked out Colt McCoy on!) 26 college passes.
lege football.
The kid almost did it.
· Bill Hancock said a playoff carl&gt; in the first quarter.
.. 1 would have given any- though.
at college football's highest
He threw tv.. o touchdown
level would lead to more thing to be out there because
injuries, conflict \\ith final it would have been differ- passes to All-American
Jordan Shipley to trim the
exams. kill the bowl system ent,'' McCoy said.
With McCoy on the side- deficit to 24-21 with 6: 15
and diminish the importance
of the regular season.
line nursing a shoulder left, and after an Alabama
"I know this is not com- injury, the Tide (14-0) rolled punt. he had the ball at the 7pletely popular, but I believe to a 24-6 lead at halftime. yard line, 93 yards away
in it,'' Hancock told reportc~ the final touchdown coming from one of the most
Thursday at the Football when lineman Marcell improbable comeback stoWriters Association of Dareus picked off a sho\ el ries in the history of the
America a"' ards breakfast. "I pass and returned it 28 yards game.
believe it is in the best inter- for the score late in the sec- ~ But after an Alabama
est of the univer.;ities.
ond quarter.
holding penalt) mo' ed the
..College football has never
"I was thinking about ball to the 17. Gilbert
been better and I belie\ e the grabbing the guy \.,:ith the dropped back to pass and
ball. but then l said. ·Let me got rocked by Anders. a
BCS 1s part ot that."
Hancock, a longtime just grab this football: I
administrator in college ath- wasn ·r C\en thinking about Please see Alabama, 86
s, was hire~ b{' the co~­
nce comm1ss1oners tn
vember to be a full-time
point person for the Bowl
Championship
Series.
During the first 12 years of
the BCS, the position of
coordinator rotated among
conference commissioners
on a two year basis.
Hancock now assumes
those duties.
The Bo\.\1 Championship
Series was Implemented in
1998 to match the two toptanked teams in major college football at the end of
the season and help create
inatchups for the four
other marquee bo"" I games
:- the Fiesta Sugar.
Orange and Rose
• No. I Alabama and No.2
Texas were set to play in
the BCS national champipnship Thursday night at
the Rose Bowl.
: Hancock said the fact that
pther lower levels of college
tball use playoffs to
ide
their champions does•
n t mean it would work in the
Football Bowl Subdivision.
:fhe second tier of bivi~ion I
football. the Championship
Subdivision. has a 16-team
playoff with all but the final
played at home sites.
AP photo
"It works at that level, I
can •t deny it, but if you look Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chad Ochocinco
attendance for those games. breaks away from San Diego Chargers cornerback
onl) Montana had decent Antonio Cromartie for a 49-yard touchdown reception in
the second quarter of an NFL football game Sunday, Dec.
Please see BCS, B&amp;
20, 2009, in San Diego.

BCS chief:
System is in
schools'
best interest

:~

-

37

21

J

€

I----·

AP photo

Alabama running back Mark Ingram (22) celebrates after
Alabama defensive lineman Marcell Dareus' (57) touchdown during the second quarter of the BCS Championship
NCAA college football game 1n Pasadena, Calif., on
Thursday. Dareus scored after intercepting a pass from
Texas quarterback Garrett Gilbert.

that may
have saved
his
job.
New team
president
Mike Holmgren decidea
Thursday to retain Mangini,
whose job seemed to be
slipping away after the
Browns started 1-11.
Mangini's staff has been
asked to return as well.
Holmgren spent the past
t\.\O days in meetings with
Mangini. ""ho was fired
after last season b) the ~ew
York Jets and had a turbulent first year m Cleveland.
..1 ""as able to gatn some
tremendous insight into his
thought
process
and
philosophies. and came
away from our meetings
very impressed," Holmgren
said in a statement. "In my
opinion, Eric has gained the
respect and admiration of
players, coaches and others
in the organization, and
with him continuing to lead
the team I feel that we are
headed in the right direction.
'"Working together. our
goal is to build on the strong
tradition of this franchise
and help get the Browns
back to the pia) ofts ."
Mangini felt confident all
alon~ that he would be back
desptte stgns that the team
"as planmng to go m another direction. Bro•.,.ns O\\ner
Randy Lerner did not attend
any of the club "s final three
games. and there were
reports that Holmgren was
already lining up possible
replacements.
Instead. Holmgren elected
continuity over a swift
coaching purge and decided
one year was not a fa1r
barometer
to
judge
Mangini. Cleveland·s fourth
coach since 1999.
"I want to thank Mike for
the opportumty to not only
meet with him and share my
thoughts and vision on what
it takes to lead a team, but
also to continue what ""e
started here:· \1angini said.
..I belie\e we made some
real. tangible progress

Please see Mangini, Bl

Cowboys, Bengals looking
to break through in playoffs
BY BARRY WILNER

SATURDAY GAMES

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Cowboys haven •t won a playoff
game in more than a decade. The Bengals
haven·t won one. in nearly t\\O decades.
That can change. the) hope. in Saturda) ·s
wild-card round.
Both !!et familiar foes: Dallas takes on
~FC Ea~st rival Philadelphia for the third
time since earl) No,ember. and for the
second straight ""eek. Cincinnati also has a
rematch from Week 17 a!!ainst the Ne''
York Jets.
~
On Sunday, it's Baltimore at Ne\\
England and Green Ba) at Arizona.
Unlike the Bengals. ""hose only appearance in the postseason since a 1990 playoff
""in against Houston - the Oilers, that is
- was in 2005, Dallas is som~:what of a
regular in the Super Bo\\ I parude. Since
beating Minnesota and then losing to
Carolina in the ·96 postseason, the
Cowboys have reached the playoff\ six
times. including now. meaning they're on a
six-game losing streak.
America's Team? America ·s flops in
Januar).
'"It\ surreal to be sitting here ha\ ing to
e\ en answer that question:· O\\ ncr Jerry
Jones said. '"I wouldn·t have dreamed that
in '96 we wouldn't hme (\\on) a playoff.
and I wouldn't have dreamed that \\C
\.\Ould have had the turno,er in the coaches that we· ve had.

NY Jets at Cincmnat1 4:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Dallas. 8 p m

SUNDAY GAMES
Baltimore at New England, 1 p m

PLAYOFFS

Green Bay at Ar zona, 4 40 p m

•·t \\Ouldn·t have dreamed we would have
had some of the challenges that. whether it
"as ~elf-imposed or not through me. that
we·\e had in our quarterbacking. So all of
those things as I look back O\Cr these years
I couldn't have imagined that:·
But imagine this: The Co'' boys are
among the hottest teams in the 1\FL heading
into the playoffs. Dallas set a team record
with 6,390 total yards. exceeding 6.000 in a
season for the first time. The defense. which
blanked the Eagles last weekend to win the
division, allowed 33 points in the last four
home games. The yield was 37 in the last
four games overall.
Still. there is that 13-year run of disappointment. and the Eagles have won their
lirst playoff game in seven consecutive
postseason appearances. They've taken 10
playoff games since Dallas last won one.
And there ·s this:
Since 1990. when the current playoff format ""as adopted. in nine first-round
Please see Playoffs, Bl

~~============~~==~~===--------=~'·~~----------~~~~---------------- ~------~==

a

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
and No. I rushing offense in
football. and New York
dominated in those areas last
from Page Bl
Sunday night. But that was
in the Meadowlands and
rematches following a final- Cincinnati had little to gain.
"I just hope we go out
game meeting, the loser of
with
the same intensity and
t)le regular-season game
won the playoff matchup I'm sure we will,'' rookie
coach Rex Ryan said.
five times.
Plus. 19 times since the "Knowing that we're going
J970 merger. a team has to get Cincinnati's best shot,
swept two games from an knowing that they are going
opponent and then they met to get ours. and see if we're
i)1 the playoffs. The sweep- good enough to beat them."
The Patriots were good
ing team won 12 times. But
the Cowboys were one of enough to beat Baltimore
the losers, to the Giants in 27-21 in October and won
2007.
the AFC East at 10-6. The
"We've just got to put it Ravens earned the other
together any way possible AFC wild card at 9-7.
to go out there and win,"
Ne~ England will be
Eagles
game-breaking without
league-leading
receiver DeSean Jackson receiver Wes Welker. gone
said. ''They've got our num- with a knee injury sustained
ber this year. They've beat last Sunday. Look for the
lJS two times. I'm not going Ravens to double-team
to put anything more into it. Randy Moss on every down.
They're a good team, but
Look for Tom Brady and
they're a bearable team. "
Bill Belichick to find other
, So are the Jets, who lost ways to attack a defense that
seven times this season. But is not quite as formidable as
the} went 5-l down the in recent years.
stretch, got help from the
"For two days you're
Colts and Bengals resting going, 'We don't have Wes.
regulars, and sneaked in at What are we going to do?'"
9-7. They're hotter than the Brady said. "And then you
Bengals. who finished 1-3 put together a game plan and
and struggled for much of you get out there and practhe second half of the sched- tice and you're like, 'Man,
ule. Indeed, Cincinnati was OK. All that stuff looks pret6-0 in winning the AFC ty good."'
North. but 4-6 outside the
NFC West champ Arizona
division.
looked pretty bad a week
Just being in the postsea- ago in losing at home 33-7
son is something very differ- to Green Bay. Neither team
ent for the Bengals and had anything on the line, but
quarterback Carson Palmer. the Packers used their
the top overall draft pick in starters far longer than the
2003. In 2005, when the Cardinals did.
Bengals won their division,
This time, all the key guys
Palmer lasted two plays and should go, although such
one pass. a 66-yard comple- stars as Packers cornerback
tion to Chris Henry on Charles Woodson (shoulwhich Palmer's knee was der). Cardinals receiver
wrecked when he was hit by Anquan Boldin (ankle) and
Pittsburgh's Kimo von cornerback
Dominique
Oelhoffen. The Bengals lost. Rodgers-Cromartie
(toe.
This is his return to the knee) could be hobbled.
playoffs. Same for Cincy.
"Anytime one of your best
"Any NFL player sitting players and your leaders
at home watching games is isn't on the football field it's
putting on a show," Palmer tough because you know the
said.
"Nobody
enjoys effort he gives every week,"
watching the first round, Cardinals quarterback Kurt
second round, third round. Warner said. "You know
the Super Bowl. It's tough to what you can expect from
do. I think that is something him and there's always a
that has really driven our question mark when you
team, and definitely me."
have to have somebody else
Palmer and the Bengals step in for those kinds of
face the top-ranked defense guys."

Playoffs

Mangini
from Page Bl
throughout the course of the
season, culminating with
wins in our final four
games. I feel as though the
culture and mindset that we
established this year have
laid the foundation for success in 20 I0 and beyond,
and r m looking forward to
working with Mike and a
general manager in making
this happen."
During his introductory
news conference Tuesday,
Holmgren
said
that
"absolutely" Mangini had a
legitimate chance of keepihg his job. Cleveland's new
boss kept his word and evidently liked what he heard
from Mangini, whose first
season with the Browns was
anything but smooth.
Players questioned his
methods. Fans wanted him
fired. The national media
scorned him.
Mangini survived.
Although he and Mangini
have different offensive and
defensive
philosophies,
Holmgren apparently found
enough common ground to
want to work with his inherited coach. Holmgren's
decision to keep Mangini,
who has three years left on
his contract, comes with
risk.
Jf the Browns don't start
well next season, the focus
will shift to whether
Holmgren will return to the
sideline. Earlier this week.
the 61-year-old Holmgren.
who won an NFL title with
Green Bay and took Seattle
to its only Super Bowl
appearance, said he has no
plans to coach in Cleveland.
"I did it," Holmgren said.
''It was so much fun. I
enjoyed it. I mis·s it, and I
know I'm going to miss it.
My challenge is to take my
new role, help whoever the
coach is be as successful as
he can be and understand
that. I'm in a different place
now."
Mangini was granted a
second season one day shy
of his first anniversary with

the Browns, who hired him
on Jan. 8 last year. He
avoided joining an infamous club with Ray
Rhodes, who was fired by
two teams after two full
consecutive seasons.
Now that Cleveland's
coaching
situation
is
resolved, Holmgren can
move down his to-do list.
He will interview Seattle
pro personnel director Will
Lewis on Friday for the
club's GM position. Lewis
has a strong background
with Holmgren, working
with him in Green Bay and
Seattle. After his playing
career ended, Lewis was a
scout with the Packers
before following Holmgren
to Seattle, where he joined
the team's pro personnel
department.
Holmgren's
interview
with Lewis, who is black.
fulfills the Browns' obligation to comply with the
NFL's Rooney Rule, which
requires teams to interview
minority candidates for
head coaching jobs and
other key positions.
On
Wednesday.
Holmgren
interviewed
Philadelphia GM Tom
Heckert. Per league rules.
the Browns would have to
wait until the Eagles season
ends before they could hire
Heckert.
Holmgren may also try to
patch up a messy spat with
Pro Bowl return specialist
Josh Cribbs, who is upset
with the club for not giving
him a new contract. Cribbs
and his agents blasted the
team for their latest offer of
$1.4 million per year.
Cribbs has three years left
on his current deal, but
believes he has outperfomed it and should be
rewarded for a strong season.
Cribbs cleaned out his
locker at the team's facility
on Thursday. He told The
Associated Press he feels its
"unlikely" that he'll play
again for the Browns.
"I did all the playing I'm
going to play on this contract," he said. "I ain't doing
nothing, I'm not showing
my face until it's right."

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 8,

201 0

Jets' top-ranked defense feels disrespected
FLORHAM PARK. N.J.
(AP) - The New York Jets
have the NFL's top-ranked
defense, yet they keep hearing
about what they haven't done
this season.
They can ·r close out opponents in close games. They
can't put points on the board
off turnovers. They can't get
to the quruterback consistently enough.
"We understand people still
doubt our capabilities, but,
hey. they also said we weren't
going to make the playoffs,"
cornerback Lito Sheppard
said Thursday. "Look where
we're at now. We love it. It
definitely keeps us motivated,
not that we need it. but it definitely adds to it."
If the Jets (9-7) can shut
down Carson Palmer, Chad
Ochocinco and the Ben~als
(10-6) ror the second straight
week - this time in a firstround playoff game Saturday
at Cincinnati - Rex Ryan's
defense might start getting the
respect it says it deserves.
"We've obviously played
weU and, statistically, we're at
the top. and you can't take
that away from us." safety Jim
Leonhard said. "Now we're in
the playoffs and this is when
that defense should shine."
From a numbers standpoint,
the Jets would appear to have
a
monstrous,
dominant
defense that should strike fear
into any opponent, and that's
even without having injured
big nose tackle Kris Jenkins.
They finished the regular sea-

son allowing the fewest yards.
by fm·. with 252.3 per game
- more than 30 less than
Green Bay (284.4).
New York gave up a leaguelow I 87 offensive points, finished first in pass defense.
held opposing quarterbacks to
an NFL-low 58.8 passer rating, and created the highest
percentage of three-and-outs.
The gaudy stats go on and on.
and it's clear the Jets have an
excellent defense.
But, is it great?
"We're the No. l defense
and I think we· ve been playing good all year." Pro Bowl
cornerback Darrelle Revis
said. "When people see us on
the tilm, they know that we
bring it. I think we've just got
to keep on being consistent,
keep on making ~lays and be
confident. That s the only
thing that we can do."
Still, when people talk
about great defenses. the 2009
New York Jets won't appear
on that list - not now, anyway.
''It's important because
we're sending a statement,"
linebacker Bart Scott said.
"Before I got here, when you
said the New York Jets. you
really didn't have an identity.
They were kind of like
nomads."
When Ryan came to New
York from Baltimore, he
brought
an
aggressive
approach with him, along
with Scott, Leonhard and
defensive lineman Marques
Douglas. He leaned on them a

AP photo

New York Jets fans hold a sign referring to Cincinnati
Bengals wide receiver Chad Ochocinco during the third
quarter of an NFL football game at Giants Stadium in East
Rutherford, N.J., last Sunday.

lot as he installed his system,
hoping the trio would help the
others adjust. So far, so good.
"We're trying to start a tradition, something that people
can expect,'' Scott said. "It's
not a surprise when I stand up
here and we talk about the
Jets defense and everyone is
surprised that we're No. 1.
We want them to be surprised
that we're not No. l. Set that
expectation. that standard
really high.''
The next step in that is
making sure there are no lategame slip-ups, as there have
been earlier this season. They
allowed Miami. Jacksonville
and Atlanta to score against
them with the game on the
lifle. The critics say. and
rightfully so. that great
defenses don't blow games

like that.
"We've given up a couple
of leads. but I think every
team in the lea~ue has done
that," Ryan saio. ''When you
look at it statistically and
even on the field. this defense
has outperformed every
defense in the league.''
In perhaps the clearest indicator that the Jets· defense is
still trying to earn respect is
the fact that only one player,
Revis. made the Pro Bowl.
'There are definitely other
deserving guys that didn't get
in," safety Kerry Rhodes said.
·•we just have to go out and
prove it. We are capable~
having those guys there
we should have those guj
there. We definitely have a
chip on our shoulder right
now."

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�----

...

----~~--· .---~~~-"':""----~------------

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 8, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
,v

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Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

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Publishing reserves
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Errors Must 8
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ay of publicatio
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For more information, contad your
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Q9allipoli~

MAKE
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~oint ~Iea~ant 3Regi~ter

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orrections will
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vailable edition.

Real
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ar
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anted ads meetin
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We
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dvertisement
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ioiation of the law.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads ............................ ,.......................21 0
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals .....................................................230
Wanted ........................... ,............................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive ................................................. , 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
~•uoornuL.,, ................................ ,,,.,, ............. 31 0
::niii'I/Ecl~ll'!rllv Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ........... ,...................................... 316
Domestics/Janitorial .......... ,........................ 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial.............................. ,........................322
Health .........................................................., 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ........................................, ............ 332
Lawn Servtce ............................................... 334
Mustc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................ ,338
Plumbing/Eiectrical ............ ,........................340
Professional Servlces .........................., ......342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Rooflng ......................................................... 346
Security .......................................................,348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Financial .......................................................400
Financial Services ....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend.............................................415
Educatlon ...... ,.............................................. 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses ..........................................................610
Livestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy ...................... ,...........................625
Agriculture ................................. , ................. 700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
ng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ................................. ,.....................905
Appllance ................., ................................... 910
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain Basement. ......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markets ...... ,......................................... 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport.................................... 955
Kid's Corner................................................. 960
Mlscellaneous .............................................. 965
Want to buy.................................................. 970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

.s,

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publlc::atlon
sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday tor Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid"

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Compl~e
Duertptlon • Include A Price • AIIOld Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

THE
CLASSIFIEDS

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added to your classified ads
~
Borders $3.00/perad
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$1 .00 for large

Djsplay Ads

«POLICIES«

•

GET YOUR CLASSIFJED LLNE AD NOTICED

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1 010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVlease .....................................2005
Autos ..........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
Trucks....... ,.................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ..................................... ,......................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condomlniums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale .........................................3025
Land (Acreage) .......... ,............................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................ ,...............3510
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.. ,......................... ,................................4005
Movers.............. ,.........................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financial ................................ 6002
Adminlstrative/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care .................................. ,.. 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumbing ...................................6018
Employment Agencies ..............................6020
Entertalnment ................................... ,, .......6022
Food Services ............................................ 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ......................... ,... 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics .................................................. 6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ................... ,..................... 6052

POUCIES: Ohio \Iailey Publlahi~ .--vee 1ht right to edit. reject. or ca~l •nr ad at eny time. Errore mlllll be rtpO&lt;ted on the lfrtt day ol p~llcatlon and the
Tr1bLne-Sel'tlnei-Regl81er Will be responsible for no more than the coat orthe tpaee occupied by the wror and only the ftl'lllr.rtlof\. We ahl.ll no1 be lllble lor
any lots or ~ tl'lat resulll from the pubiiC811on or oml~~aiOn of an aclve(tlsement. Cor!9CIIon will be made In thl flrat anllable t&lt;lltloo. • Box numl&gt;el ad•
are alway• conNdentleL • Current rete card IIJipllee. • All real te1ate t&lt;lvelfltemenla are eubject to the Federal Fair HoUIIng Act of 19e8. • Thla newapeper
~~· only help wartt&lt;l till m"'Jng EOE lltllndar*- We 101111 not knofilngly accept III'Y advenhllng In violation of lhe law. Will not be retpOOSible tor any
erro,. In en ad talten over the phona.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Apartmenh/
Townhouses

Announcemenls

CONVENiENTLY
LO.·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE! Townhouse apart·
menls,
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call
740·44i ·1111 for appli·
cation &amp; information.

Lost &amp; Found
Found in Pomeroy small
reddish tan male dog
wearing black harness
call to 10, 740·992·3256
LOST-BUTLER
LANE
Small
male daschund
black/while
speckled.
One brown/one blue eye
w/green collar. Family
pet
Reward
Offered
388·8041 or 441·5856.

Free Rent Special I!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
electric
Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304}882·3017

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
ommends that you do
business with people you
know. and NOT to send
money lhrough the mall
until you have invest•gat·
ing the offenng.

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.
Retired, senior, caucasian male, financially se·
cure.
non-smoker,
non-drinker
lndependant, no strings attached
Relocating to Gallipolis in
near future. Wishes to
correspond
w/ caucasian, senior widow who
is financially secure. in·
dependant, no strings at·
tached, does not smoke
or drink who will enjoy
meeting
a
genlleman
and form1ng a lasting
friendship in our twilight
years. No drugg1es or
gold diggers. Send let·
ters to: CLA Box 100 c/o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
PO Box 469, Gallipolis,
OH 45631

Tw1n Rivers Tower is ac:
cepting applications tor
waiting list for HUD suP.
sidized, 1·BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
call 675·6679

®
&amp;

www.comics.com

400

Financ1al

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Divi·
sion of Financial lnstitu·
lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
taln a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1·866·278·0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly li·
censed. (This is a public
service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)
_ _.....;;._...;....;........~
Educalion

500

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367
1·800·214·0452
galhpohscaraercoUege.edu
Accred&lt;led Member Accredit·
1119 Counc1l for Independent
Colleges and Schools 12746

Wanted
Small home repair, remodeling,
and
winter
brush cutting. 20 yrs exp.
certified (740)446-3682.

@

Farm Equipment

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
Large round bales hay,
6x6, 1500 lbs, barn kept,
740.416·1780,
740·949·2293

600

Animals

Merchandise

Fuel I Oil I Coal I
Wood/Gas
Firewood $50.00. Pick
up
load,
Delivered.
740·379-2758
Seasoned firewood.
All Hardwood
740·853·2439
740·446·9204.

or

Miscellaneous
Peh

300

Services

3 piece L.A. set $300
AKC miniature Schnau· OBO Washer/Dryer both
zers. Part• &amp; Chocolates. sao Stereo $200 OBO
Parents
on
premises. (740) 446·1451
740·441-1657.

Home lmprovemenh
Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondilional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnished. Estab·
fished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446·0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Other Services
Pet
Cremalions.
740·446·3745

Call

Free 11 rabbits Lion·
head , M1nirex &amp; Dwarfs
musl
take
all
304·937·3192.
Two Lovely English bull·
dogs for Adoption,Both
Male and female.Ready
to become your sweet
bab1es contact me via
my email • jaydensil·
vester@llve.com.
700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582-3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV. · Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537·9528

STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1ce
Now Available at Carmi·
chael
Equipment
740·446·2412
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed! Check out our
used
Inventory
at
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
m1chael
EqUipment
740-446·2412

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

~

2 bedroom apartment
available in Syracuse.
$200 depos1t. S375 per
month rent. Rent an·
eludes water sewer. and
trash. No pets Sufficienl
income needed to qual·
lfy, 740-378·6111

Recreati.onal
Vehicles

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

RV
MIDDLPORT, 1 BED·
Service at Carmichael ROOM
APARTMENT,
Trailers
APPLIANCES
FUR·
740·446·3825
NISHED,
NO
PETS,
NON SMOKING, NICE.
RV Service at Carmi·
740·856·8863
chael
Trailers
Apartment available now
740·446·3825
Rlverbend
Apts,
New
2000
Automotive Haven WV. Now accept·
lng
applications
for
HUD·subsidized,
one
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
Autos
included. Based on 30%
01 Grand AM 4 cyl. of adJUSted income. Call
available
95,000 miles new tires 304·882·3121,
for Senior and Disabled
$3300.00 304·593-4218.
people.
2006 Buick Lacrosse ga·
rage kept 27,000 miles Beautiful 2 BR apt. for
will sacrafice $12,500.00 highly qualified person &lt;X
304·675·2563.
couple, WiD hookup &amp;
FOR SALE 2003 CRV dishwasher. Inc. wale~
Honda, perfect shape, sewage &amp; trash. Central
only 2 owners, never heating &amp; air No pets.
wrecked 72,000 miles $560/mo.
Kelly
$10,500
Call
(740) 740·645·6378.
441-8299
or
(740)
Beautiful Apts. at Jack~
441·5472.
son Estates. 52 West·
Real Estale wood Or.. from $365 to
3000
740·446·2568.
Sales $560.
Equal Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution ts an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
For Sale By Owner
vider and Employer
12 Unit Apt. Complex. For Rent. 2 BR, Duplex
446-0390.
1n
lown,
$475/mo.
Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
Real Estate
3500
place. 446-1271
Rentals
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor
and
Rivers1de
Apartmenh/
Apts. in Middleport, from
Townhouses
$327
to
$592.
Equal
and .2 bedroom apts., 740·992-5064
furnished
and
unfur· Housing Opportunity.
nished, and houses In Jordan Landing Apart·
Pomeroy and Middleport, ments
secunty deposit required, 2.3,4, br. available w/
no pets. 740·992·2218
2nd month free rent all
1 BR apt. by Walmart. electric, no pets call for
details 304·674·0023 or
WID hookup, ref &amp; stove
Util.
incl.
Ref.
req. 304·610·0n6

NEED CASH ?? Host a
gold party wilh family &amp;
friends--Everyone brings
old, new, broken &amp; un·
wanted GOLD-you earn
cash bonuses! It's fun &amp; $525/mo./$150/dep.
easy call (740) 379-9887
740·245·5555
TODAYII
441·5105,
Sale-Berber carpet $5.95
yd. Also, specials on vi·
nyl &amp; laminate 1n stock.
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastern Ave.. Gallipolis,

1 BR and bath. first
months rent &amp; deposii.
relerences requ1red, No
Pets
and
clean.
740·441-0245

2010 by UFS, Inc.

1000

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999, VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWWCARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446·3825

900
Business &amp; Trade
School

l~?rk&gt;lt&gt;

I

Modem 1BR
or 740·446·0390

2 BR Completely Fum.
$600/mo
+
elec.
$500/dep. Call 446·9585
or446-9595.
2 br. apartment S375.00
_o~
H~(!!!!7~
40~)~44~6~-7~4~44~~!!!! a mon In PI Pleasant
=
304-812-4350
Want To Buy
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
Absolute Top Dollar • sil· zer Hospital on SR 160
ver/gold
COinS,
any C/A. (740) 441·0194
1OK/14KI18K gold jew· Efficiency Apt. For Rent.
elry, dental gold, pre No Steps. No Pets, Rent
1935
US
currency, and All Utilities (Inc.)
prooffmlnt
sets,
d1a· $500/mo. 1624 Chatham
monds. MTS Coin Shop. Avenue
(Rear)
151 2nd Avenue. Galli· 740·446·4234
or
polis. 446·2842
740·208·7861.

apt.

Call

Nice 1 BR wash-dry
Stove &amp; Fndge. All Utili·
lies. Call 740·446·9585.
$500fmo.-S500 dep.
Nice 3 BR Apt for rent;
stove, refridg, &amp; water
Inc. W/D hookup, Close
to hospital, Centenary
Rd. Gallipolis, OH. n9
pets. 446·9442 after 5pm
Recently built, 2BR, 1BA
Apts.
WiD
Hookups..
Dishwasher,
Garbage
Disposal. Great location,
btw. Rio Grande and
Jackson. overlooking US
35.
S525;mo+dep.
740·645·1286

�.... ,------

-~---~--~

---

....

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

CERTIFIED
MECHANICAL

Plumbing Compan.Y office
. t I
.
managerICSt 1m a Or SUperVISOr
w"ntc·'
u
u to manage commerctal and

work. Responsible for bidding
· ·
and supcrnstng work. Muster Plumber

residential

license prefcm:d but not mandatOI).
Must apply by sending rl'Stllnc to
Certified Medlanical

PO Box 68 Chester, OH 45720 or
wcs@ karrcontracting.com.
Salary is based upon C\pcricncc.
":::::::O:::ffi:tc::c:Jo:c:;u:tc:d:i:n:A:th:c:n:s:.O
:::H:::::~
,...

Apartments/
Townhou•e•
======;=
Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at S470
Month. 740-446-t599
....- - - - - - Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR 1 5

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Part-time position available

to assist individuals with
developmental disabilities in Meigs
County: 11p-8a Fri; 8 p- Sa Sat/Sun.
Must have high school diploma or
GED, valid driver's license, three
years good driving experience and
adequate automobile insurance. $8.97
hr., after training.
Send resume to:

Buckeye Community
Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadline for applicants: 1/8/2010.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer

1 &amp; 2 BR houses Gall1pohs, Oh, rent starting 0
$275 per mth. plus utili·
ties.deposit startmg @
$275 deposit, no pets.
256·6661

~~-~~-1 BR house 1n Pomeroy
S325 mo
plus
dop.
740-742-1903

4000

Manulactured

Housmg
Rentals

2 BR Mobile Home, No

_ _H_e_lp_w_a_n_te_d_ _ _ _H_e_l_p_w_a_n_te_d_ _ 2

BR

Mobile

Home

. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , $425 mo $425/Dep Must
have ref. No Pets. Vinton
area. 740-388-Q011

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications for a Licensed
Practical Nurse and/or Medical Assistant.
Previous medical office experience or
hospital related experience preferred, but
not required.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
pt Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pvalle~

AA/EOE

R 01 2000 14x70
2 ba $500 00 a
mon 304-675-7911
------For rent on RT 2 N 3 br
2
ba
daUblewtde
-8 5304 9 3129

OVerbrook Rehab la\Jon
Center IS currently seek·
g a bcaUiician to worl&lt;
n tho facilty'S beauty saloo Candidates shovld
possess a va ld 01110
Manag ng Cosmetolog st
lloenso Salary Is based

For
3br

Ow
"!'
_n_a~N~ew-3~B~
R. ~
2 ~B~A
wl1 acre 5% down. $525
mo. WAC. Near Holzer

-.
74~0~.4=
4 6~.3~5~
70=·~~~

-

Sal..
=======
Country liVIng· 3·5BR
2•3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! Wo own tho
bank
Cell
today'
866-215-5774

2BR House m Kanauga
S42S.mO+S425 dep No
pets.
Plus
Ut _ _
AAA
__N
_ow
....,""..- 201 0
R
740-441-2707
Doublewldo
48
nly
.,A
..
Q -'"""6~'
3 BR 1.5 BA Natural
.u
2010 S~nglewtde
Gas. Central A11, Newly
Remodeled $600/mo +
IMte.&lt;liblt~
depos I + ref 446-0073
ONLY at MIDWEST
or 446-2966 Close to
mymldwesthome com
GAHS &amp; Hospital.
740.828.2750
~---....,-- - - --H-- -.S--0 10
3 br. home n Pomeroy.
rent SSOO per mo.,
BEST BUYS
740.591-8644
2010 3BR Doublow1de
S39,9n
4 Rms + Ba. St9ve &amp;
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
lndge. 50 Olive St No
FHA $349 mo
pets. $450/mo + dep.
2010 3br/2ba Single
446-3945.
from $199 mo
For rent • 2br. house &amp; 2
MIDWESTHOMES
br. trailer Bellmead area
senous
calls
only mymldwesthom~:~s.carr
304·675-3952
740.828.2750

pets. Water, sewer. trash
ncluded At Johnson s
Mob le
Home
Park.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 740-645-0506.

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE AND/ OR
MEDICAL ASSISTANT

Help Wanted· General

bath, back patiO pool ~
M~
obl-le_h_o_
m_
e ~tor - r-en-1
playground, (trash, sewHud accept ca I before
l
age, water pd No pets 9pm 304 675-3423.
a lowed
$450/rcnt.
S4501sec.
dep
Cat Ntee 3BR, 2 Bath, 16x80
740-645-8599
~~~~~~~ Country
Settmg.
House• For Rent
367-0266 or 339-3366
•

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER -------IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

L------------------'

Rental•

2 BR Tra1ler lor rent.
SSOOimo. 446-4060 or
367-n62

commrssJOn
Inter- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ested candidates should ..
I out an appllcaUon at
YOUNG'S
333 Page Street, Mldd e·
Carpenter Service ,
Construction
port
Ohio
Overbrook
• Room Addot ons &amp;
Canter pan1C1pates In the • Vinyl Siding
Remodeling
drug tree Workplace Pro- • Replacement
•
New Goroge1
gram
Windows
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
- - - - - - - ·Roofing
• Rootmg &amp; GuHoro
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Accepting
applications ·Decks
· Pallo and Porch Decks
for part time cashiers.
·Garages
wv 036725
Apply at Par Mar #38.
15289 Huntington Rd. • Pole Buildings
V.C.
YOUNG Ill
Gallipolis Ferry, WV. No • Room Additions
992-6215
phone callS please
Owner:
740·591 ·0195
James Keesee 11
Pomeroy, Ohio
Do you enJOy helptng
people? 11 so. 1 will gNe ~--7-42_·_23_3_2_ __. 30 Years Local Experience
FULlY INSURED
you FREE RENT AND FREE UTILITIES plus an
Income just lor movmg m
and he p1ng my 87 year
old mothor You W1 Iva
here as il lt were your
own home m nus the ex7•n•1631""
pcnses ....,... • JV.

on

Roofmg Sidmg.
Soffit Decks
Doors Wmdows
Electnc, Plumbmg.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
AdditiOns

29625 Bashan Road
Ractne OH 45771

740-949-2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10• x 30'

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

r-----------r-------n

HELP

WANTED:
Pan
posii!Ons availab e
to aSSISt IndiViduals w1th
developmonlat
d1sab ,_
lies at a group home n
Blctwen 1) 35 hrs 4-11 p
w 3·10p Th; 2-10p F~;
9a·8p Sat 2) 27.5 hrs:
3·30·11p Fn. 10-8p Sat:
1-9p Sun. Must have
high
school
diplomaiGED,
valid
driver's license &amp; three
CONSTRUCTION
years good driVIng exp.
Remodeling,
$8.97/hr, after training.
Excellent benefit pack·
Roofs, Garages,
ago.
Pre-employment
Pole Buildings,
_ _Th
_e
_B_t_
G_S-al-e - - Drug Testing. Send reSiding, Decks,
Used Homes &amp; Owner
sume to Buckeye Commun ty SeMCes. PO Box Drywall, Additions
Financtng ·New 2010
Jackson.
OH
604
and New Homes.
Doublowide S37 989
45640
Deadl ne
for
Ask about $8.000 Re·
apps 11812010.
Insured- Free
bates
Estimates
mym1ctwesthome com
Looking for a job ?
740-828-2750
Looking tor candidates to
740-742-3411
-~~~~~- take up the postllon of ..__ _ _ _ _....,.
"The PrOCioMI o
Sates/Accounting. Man·
D lference·
agement Cordmtor and
H&amp;H
S1 and a deed IS a you more
no sales exp.
Guttering
need to own your dream needed as nstructions
homo Call Nowt
wt 1 be prov1ded contact :
Seamless Gutters
Freedom Homes
danaross.employer@ya·
Roof1ng. S1d ng Gutters
888·565-0167
hoo com lor details
Insured &amp; Bonded
~~~-~~~- ~~~----­
740-653·9657
Trade 111 your old single· LPNSIRN5 needed lor
w1de tor a new homo.
pediatriC home health ..__ _ _ _ _....,.

Great coverage and
superior service

lime

(that's easy on your wallet)

304-773-1111

SUNSET

ROBERT '
BISSEll
• New Homes
• Garages
· Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Total Construction
One Call to Do It All
Pole Barns Metal Roofs
Frre &amp; Water Damage
Dr)\\ aii!Repatr

Replacement
"indo\\

and

Vin) I Siding
Specialbts, LTD
17~0)

142-2563

• Siding • \in) I
Window-; • :\lctnl
und Shingle Roofs
• Dcl·ks • \dditions
•l·.lcctricul
• Plumbing
• l'oll• Burns

o

care 1n the Crown City
area. FT/PT hours avaiiable lor Sunday thru Saturday mght shifts. Exp.
w/ventltrach/g-tube
pre2BR Mobile Home in
!erred Email resume to
Racine.
$325/mo+$325 -==•E;;;:d;;;:uc;;;:a;;;:tio;;;:n==• dcantrell@pcnsohio.com
dep. 1 yr lease. No Pels or call800·518·2273
No calls after 9PM. Part·l•me
Instructors
740-992-5097.
needed dunng the day - - - - - - - •n: mathematiCS, eco2BR. Ideal lor 1 or 2 peo- nom cs and accounting.
pie, $300/month,
Ro- MathematiCS and eoo!emces. . No Pets, NO nomiC nstructors must
CALLS
after
7pm have a mastefs degree Now accepting appi"ICa740-441.0181
tn the d1scrp ne If nter· tiOns lor housekeep111g
4 br 2 ba $650.00 a estad please erne a rc- laundry and lloor tech
mon 1 br 5325.00 a sume and cover letter to location Arbors of Ga po s 170 P1118Crest Dr.
mon. 1n Gall1pol s Ferry jdank:k10gal po sea·
Gall1pols.
wv 740-973-8999
reeroottege.edu

!@~Erie
~a~~ Insurance·

CONSTRUCTION

2•2aR Mobile Homes money down 446-3570
S400/mo+S400 dep. 1
Addison.
1
Chestme
367 -7023

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740.416-5047

!!!~~=~~~~

Team Members tor Ma·
County Homeless
Shelter·
m mmum
roqu rement of HS D ploma
or GED exce ent commurncaliOn ski s a d ba·
SIC
computer
s Is
part-llme send resuf'le
cover letter and 3 ltrs ol
ref. to SCAC Inc Attn
HAD. 540 5th Avenue
HUntmgton WV, 25701
by Jan. 15.2010 EOE
son

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
11urnp 1 ruck
Sen icc
\\c do drhc\\ll)S
Umc,tonc • Grmel
'I op Soil • fill nirt

WVi040954 Ce11740-416-2960 740-992-0730

740-985-4422

Medical

740-856-2609

Doctors Office need1ng
part t1me X-Ray Tech.,
Call
304-675·1637 or
come by 1n person to
3009 Jackson Ave , Pt
Pleasant between 1·3pm
M·F

Cl·ll

Local
nomo
health
agency look ng lor 2 FT
LPN pos \IonS
Please
call (740) 446·3808 or
1-800-759·5383.

Classlfieds

co~s fRl

l'onH ro). Ohio

Commen-ial •

\\ork

Residential

*Rc:t.onnhle Rate
'*Insured
*E.xpencnced
Reference:; A~ 1lclJic 1
Call Gal) Stanle}
740-591- 044
Please lea\ e message

No\

Selhng:

• Ford &amp; Motorcrnft

Part • En rne,
Tr:ubfer C !bCS &amp;

Baer
Builders

A Do-it-yourself classified ads

• Ne\\ Homt•s
• Complete

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

c 110:'\

((),

*Prompt and Qualrt}

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

JJt~

HA~KS

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Remodeling
• Plumbing
&amp; Heating
740-416-1568

1r n'mrs,aon'
• Aflerrnarket

Repl

~.:ement

Mt:tal &amp;
1 r All \I

Sheet
Compono.:nt~e.' t

\ e'l' t '

RJ.:rne. Oh1n
7~0-9~9-1956

Free Estimates lOr
• Baddloe • TrenChing
• Brush Hogging
• Portatlle Banllml
Tree Trimming • Senlng
Poles &amp; Trusses

Call740·882·8572

ea,tt
Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Re.,identinl
~ • Room additions • Roofing •

Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • \ im I &amp; \\ ood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

V'
V'
V'
V'
V'

Do-it-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

SBJ.IT
NOW

for ..,lvate party
mercbandlle, 1
ltemperld

St 001 1ti000
411nn, 14 IIIYI

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

For priVIta party
11111111 and mUlti·
flllllllyhlel
4 ~~nn,

a ••

:\IICIIAI&lt;:L'S
I

Shop the
Classifieds!

Sf-:IH ICE GE;"''TI~R .
15551\:\'E Me.'
Ponwru\', 011
• Otl &amp; hlterch.mge

•Tune lps

• Brake
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tax Budget Hearing
Notice Is hereby given
on Monday, the 11th
day of January, 2010,
at 8:15 p.m. at the
Southern High School
Media Center, 920 Elm
Street, Racine, Ohio.
The Southern Local
School Board will hold
Its public hearing for
the tax budget for the
period of July 1, 2010
through June 30, 2011.
Roy J. Johnson, Treasurer/CFO
Southern Local Board
of Education
920 Elm Street Racine,
Ohio45n1
(1) 8

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834

.. F~lly.;ru.urcd &amp; bonding avniluhll·
. · ·'Fn-e l'Siimates- ::!5+ years experience
(;\ol omi.uiard "ilh .\t\Lr Mun-umKooORJ: ,&lt;,; Kcl1l()(klinK)

Sen ace

• AC Re,h. r e
• Mrnor e:-;h ust
repaar • 1arc Rep:ur
• Trnnsnuss10n l1ltc
&amp; folmd Chan •e
• Gener.ll1\lechantc
\\Ofk

{740) 992-0910

m

:\eK CQnstrurtion cmd
ReplacemeIll I m)l \1 indowf

~~CONTRACTOR INDOW SUPPLY
&amp; ANUFACTURING, llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION
1\e :,p, ll&lt; lt.:t' In Replac wtt nt II rndmv1

LEWIS

CONCRETE
&lt;:ONS'J'I{lJCTI&lt;&gt;N
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All I\ pes Of
Concnte \\ork

29 \curs Exp&lt;·ricnl'e

Da\id Le\\iS
7-t0-992-6971

I or Old r /lome'

&lt;(

lhlll&lt; n

�~-·--~--,.--~ -~----..---- -

---

A

Friday, January 8, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

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

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

a

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Puppy
sounds
5 Edges
9 Spnng
sign
1 1 Modify
13 "Walk
Away-"
14 "Tiny
Bubbles"
singer
15 Ultimate
degree
16 Uninvited
guest
18 Marathoner
Frank
20 Bruins
legend
21 Icy
22 Hightail it
23 Misstep
24 Fish eggs
25 Sister of
Linus
27Con
game
29 Coach
Parseghian
30 Notorious
box
opener
32 Ruth
nickname
34 Movingday sight
35"Barry
Lyndon"
star
36 Scoundrel

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
38 From the
country
39 Paint
Picassos,
say
40 Pert talk
41 Calls on
DOWN

1 Stories
2 Singer
Franklin
3 Simple
picture
taker
4 Glimpse
5 Airport
aid
6 Altar
exchange
7 Street
sights
8 Bubble,
e.g.

1 0 District
12 Baseball
manager
Joe
17 Field
judge
19 Actor
Calhoun
22 Doting
24 Hightail 1t
25 Part of a
repair bill

26 Oberon
orbits 1t
27 Outlaw
28 Grove
product
30 Pharmacy
stock
31 Southern
range
33 Cote cries
37 Debtor's
letters

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checl&lt;/m o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853·6475

1-8

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

iS

~L,T-rLE PINk

.socK- L1rTLE

ZITS

!1

~11-&gt;t:"~

I
~

,.YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO L-AUGH AL..L.. THE WAY
TO THE BANK, L-EROY ... NOT THE TEL..L..ERS."

Patrick McDonnell

CUTTS

l\o~~~ G:

i

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PtNk Soc!(
c::;

,

1-=--»~

1'-

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

8

4

8
5
6

9

9

2

6

5

3

8

3

9

7

5
9

2
2

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum
Diflicult\ l.cl'cl

3

1
4

6

•
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1

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****

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LJ.f, MR. WIL.SON, YOUR

HAT WAS llU:
~ 1..'{ ONE Ble ENOUGH 1b FIT HIM~''

v

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9 £ 9
G ~ v
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L 6 B
9
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-

HAPPY BIRlliDAY tor fridav, }an. S, 2010:
You have the &lt;~bility to head forward, bre.1k pallems
,md move in&lt;~ new direction thi~ year. Oe&lt;~rly, there
are m&lt;~ny solution-. and ideas through fritmds, ,,sS&lt;JCi·
&lt;ltes and groups in gener,ll. You .;imply need to a~k for
the necessary -.upporl, ,md you'll get there. You have a
d)namic way of thinking and often can inmrporc1le a
lot more than you think possible. If you ,,re single, you
ea.s11)' meet people. Thmugh a friend&lt;•hip, someone
quite unique and speoal enters your life. If you ,Ire
allrwhl'd, the more ~&gt;d,ll you become as a muple, the
happier you will be. Scht&gt;dule ,, long-&lt;&gt;verdue p.1rty or
gel together. SCORPIO is your natural cheerle,lder.
'l11e Stars Sllm1• ll1r Kiutl of Day You'll Have: 5·
Dynmmc; 4-P~itiz:-c; J·Atrmgc; 2-So-so; 1·D!tficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
**** Other; ao.;sume a domi.ndnt J'O!'itilm, and
you just might not mind. LL.;;ten to whdtls sh,u-e.:l,
~pedally \\ith key ao;sodJto.&gt;s ,md a higher up. 'lbu
might want to do some m,IJOr rethinking &lt;Is,, n.&gt;sult.
"lhnight Make dinner pJ.m., with a lo'ed one.
TAURUS (April20 M.1y 20)
k**** You mn bt&gt; sure your opinion isn'tthe
only one in the ir&lt;~y. In fMi, being a good li5tt'f1er .md
under-.L&lt;mding where 1de,t" overlap could be •no;trumental. 'lou di-.ro,·er there are a lot of wavs to the
s.1me end. Tonight: Just don't opt to be alone
GEMINI (I\ lay 21 June 20)
*** Bring a project lo mmpletion, if po'&gt;siblt&gt;. A
p.vtner likes your idl'•' l'ul c.~lso addo; his or her own
ll1ir. You cert&lt;linly ,,re ,,n ide,\ person, though you
might need the mi\ of new conrepts and others' gifts
,md &lt;;IJ'engths. li.m•ght: He.1d home early.
CAl\CER(hme21 July22)
*****Allow greater &lt;"reativity to flow between
you undo~~. Sometimes) ou don't sht~re vour idea~,
for' arious reasons. Skut breaking d01m those b.miers
to surcess. Other.; ignite your imagination. 'thnight:
Add more magic to the moment.
lEO auly 2.1-Aug. 22)
****Your ,1bllity to mme through isstll$ ,md
make cl differen~ in \'oll"i&lt;IUS -.ituatiOn'i l"'OU)d change
the dn-eclion of pmjects, a..Sl&gt;&lt;i,ltes and friends. L'~
}OUT inndte ,kiJJs well to create more 'tab•lity withm
your life. Tonight: Head home; do what you want.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
***** Keep t.1lks gomg. &lt;l.'i much moll' inl(lmla·

tion could ll0&lt;1t through, especi.llly t\1nceming a
work-n&gt;l,ltt'd matter. Remember, yt&gt;u don't need to
agree with other.;, but it i&lt;; helpful ttl understand
where they .1re coming from. Tonight: Get together
with a friend.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**** How you \'bualize a choice ami your presentation (',m m,1ke or break .uw deaL You are unusu·
ally gifted 1\ ith a great imagmation Do be aware of
the building l'OSb of a project. Remain sen&lt;&gt;itive tooth·
e~· n~d.,. ToniW'It: Pay a billlH two, then decide.
SCORPIO (6ct. 23-NO\. 21)
***** You are in prime sh,lpe, ,md ready to tum
a situation ,uound. Your abilities f,lke you down a
new path, where success will bt' more likely to greet
you. Understand that someone i-.n't being contrary as
much as testing his or her bound,uies. Tonight
Whale\ er puis ,, grin on your f.:x:e.
SAGJTii\RlUS (t\0\: 22-Dec. 21)

*** Know when to pull b.1ck ,md do something
totally differently. Cnder.;tdnding will evolve to a new
level if yuu listen .md note wh.lt isn't being said.
follow your si.&gt;..th sense with ,, money m.1tter. Tonight:
Take ~mw lonh-twerdue pri\·dt~ lim~.
CAPRICOM (Dec. 22·}an. 19)
***** You could fee: ino.;pired by rerent evenl'&gt;
and what might be occurring. Kt&gt;ep reclthing out to
se' eral.1ssodates or friend-. for a mreting of the
mind.... )ou might be surprised by ewrything that
goe~ down. ' lbni~ht: Know wh,lt you Wdnt and why.
AQUARIUS Ut~n. 20-Feb. l!l)
**** 'l:lke ,, sl.lnd. as uncomfort.1ble as it might
be. Your mtuition pushes you :-tmngly in one key
direction. Under.;tanding evoh es to 11 new Je,·el if you
can relax. A bos.. or higher-up m1~t be guile transp.u·
ent to }OU. but not to other.-. 'li:might: A Ioree to be
dealt with
PISCES (fot'b. 19-~farch 20)
**** 'lake in,, new ide,,, e'en if it me,ms that
you are reuwenling xour logic on )&gt;(lll1e level.
Sometime:, vou don t ht~ve ,,11 the ,mswers, but you
have the resoun es to determine th~ l'\)rn&gt;&lt;.i p.1th to
head d01\n. "lhtst in your inlUitiO" Ii.m•ght: A must
sho\\.
Jacqut1illt' Brgar r;; L'lllll&lt; Trrttm~l
atlrttp:l/um&lt;\}'UI/lltlirrelngar.rom

sentine .com

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 8 , 2010

College players grow into point guard position 2 Bearcat coordinators
CHAPEL HILL. ~C . (AP) - All
the best college pomt guards know
what a coach needs. not just what he
wants.
It's a leader!-&gt;hip quality - once
defined by former Georgetown coach
John Thompson - that has to be
developed in all inexperienced noor
generals. There are no exceptions,
whether it's a Larry Drew II at
defending national champion North
Carolina or a sensational Kentucky
freshman named John Wall.
And how quickly point guards can
get in sync with coaches during the
season could determine just how far
some perennial powers can go in
March.
"You have to enjoy (the pressure)
because it comes with the territory."
said Drew. a sophomore in h1s first
year as a starter "You're going to be
put on the spot a lot. You· ve just got
to be that quarterback out there. and
your team and coach have to trust you
to make the right decisions ."
Earning that trust isn't always eas&gt;.
though it comes faster for some .
The earl) returns for Wall have been
impressive.
"I realized (Kentucky coach John
Calipari) could trust me a lot." Wall
said. "I was just going to have to
come in and work hard and prepare
myself for the college game because it
was a lot different than high school.
"If he thinks you can play. you go
out there and make plays. If you can't
make plays. he doesn't want you on
this offense or on this team."
Cali pari has proven he's not hesitant
to give the ball - and his trust - to a
youngster. riding freshmen Derrick
Rose and Tyreke Evans at Memphis to
the national championship game and
the NCAA tournament'&lt;; round of 16
in the past two seasons. He's doing
the same thing with Wall, who many
believe could be the No. 1 pick in next
year's NBA draft.
"If you're good enough to start for
me, you'll start ," Calipari said. "No""
I never promhe any freshman they'll
start. I just don't do it. I've started
freshman point guards. if they're the
best at that position ."
Wall has been rewarding Calipari's
trust. He leads the third-ranked and
unbeaten Wildcats in scoring and
assists. He hit a buaer-beating basket
to win his first collegiate game and
recently set the storied program's single-game record with 16 assists .
Point ~uards who intuitively know
what their coaches want can turn talented teams into champions. whether
it's Duke's Bobby Hurley in 1991 and
1992, UCLA's Tyus Edne} in 1995.
Michigan State's Mateen Cleaves in
2000 or North Carolina's Raymond
Felton (2005) and Ty Lawson (2009).
The challenge for a point guard is
trying to decipher e\'erything their
coach wants for the team even as they
adjust to major college minutes for
the first time. That might mean spending extra time watching film with the
coach to go through every play
together, or picking the coach's brain
during any stoppage - no matter how

BCS
from Page Bl
.attendance." he said. "Many
:teams didn't draw as well as
they did in the regular sea
·SOn."

Hancock said there has
:been no discussion about
·adding a fifth bowl into the
BCS mix. He said the com'missioners and bowls are
pleased with the doublehosting model, in which the
championship
game
is
played about a week after the
other four bowls at one of
those sites.
"But I suspect it will be
one of the items on our list of

leaving for Notre Dame

Duke's Jon
Scheyer,
rear, pressures Long
Beach
State's
Greg
Plater during the
second
half of an
NCAA college basketball
game in
Durham,
N.C.,
Tuesday,
Dec. 29,
2009.
AP photo

brief - in practice or a game.
But there is no substitute for playing
experience.
Current powers like No. I Kansas
(Sherron Collins). No. 5 Duke (Jon
Scheyer) and No. 10 Michigan State
(Kalin Lucas) have veteran point
guards who give their teams an advantage in late-game possessions.
That much was on display
Wednesday night. when Collins
scored a career-high 33 points and
made several key plays late to help
the Jayhawks hold off Cornell's upset
bid.
Over in Chicago. Scheyer - a
senior who grew into the point guard
role last season - scored 3 I points to
help the Blue Devils beat Iowa State
and has his team looking like the best
in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Seniors Nic Wise of Ariz.ona and
Ishmael Smith of Wake Forest appear
to finally be on the same with their
coaches after two unusual journeys.
Wise has played for four coaches in
four seasons: Lute Olson as a freshman. interim coaches Kevin O'Neill
and Russ Pennell in the past two
years. and now. Sean Miller. Wise is
playing well. but figures he might
have become a better player had he
played in the same S) stem throughout
his career instead of having to start
over every preseason.
''It's different schemes offensively
and defensively." Wise said . "It's
been tough. I've just kept working
hard. Everything happens for a reason."
While Arizona is struggling in a
down year for the Pac-1 0, Wise is the
biggest reason the Wildcats arc .500.
He hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to

topics." he said.
It has been speculated that
the Cotton Bowl, now played
in the new $1.2 billion Dallas
Cowbo}s Stadium, would
again make a pitch to be
included in the BCS.
"The fact is what we have
right now works:· Hancock
said. ··Who would you ask
not to be a part of this?''
No changes are expected
to the system for the next
four years, despite congressional hearings and a new
pro-playoff ad campaign.
The BCS begins a new
four-year TV deal with
ESPN next season. and each
of its current bowl partners
also start new four-year contracts in the 2010 season.

beat Lipscomb in overtime just before
Christmas, then a last-second layup to
beat North Carolina State two days
later.
"There's no way I would tell the
young guys. 'It's on you,"' Wise said.
"This is what I came to school for ...
to be the leader. the gu} everybody
looks to ..
Smith , playing in the shadows of
Ore"" and Scheyer along Tobacco
Road. has Wake Forest on a sevengame winning streak and hoping to
return to the NCAA tournament for
the second straight season.
He was a starter as a freshman for a
program still reeling from Chris
Paul's early defection to the NBA 18
months earlier. He then took a sixth
man role last season to sophomore
Jeff Teague- who helped the Demon
Deacons to a No. 1 ranking before
departing to become an NBA first
round draft pick - before returning
to the starting lineup this year.
"I think over time, the coach and a
point guard get a feel for the way we
want the game played." Wake Forest
coach Dina Gaudio said. "We spent a
lot of time watching film with
(Smith). There's a lot of ways to learn
m this game: in practice and individual instruction and in the film room."
The Tar Heels' Dre\x.· has a simple
plan that serves as good advice for all
his colleagues: don' t tf) to be someone else - and listen to everything
your coach says - which in his case
is Hall of Farner Roy Williams.
"You just have to go in and know
you can get the job done:· he said. "If
you go in doubting yourself, other
teams recognize that and then they'll
eat you up out there."

The BCS is in the middle
of a four· year cycle it will us
to evaluate which conferences receive automatic
bids. The champions of the
Big East. Big Ten, Big 12,
Pac- 10. ACC and SEC currently get automatiC bids to
BCS games
The BCS uses three criteria. which jud~e the :-;trength
of the teams 111 the conferences from top to bottom. to
determine which leagues
receive automatic bids.
Hancock said the number
of automatic bids could go
up for the 20 I 2 season if
another conferences qualifies under the BCS standards.
The
Mountain
West
Conference doesn't have an

automatic bid but has had its
champion earn a BCS berth
three times since the 2004
season, including this season
with TCU. The Western
Athletic Conference also has
had three teams. including
Boise State twice. reach the
BCS.
But both leagues would
like to secure automatic bids
and some BCS critics have
questioned whether the
process for earning an automatic bid is truly objective.
Hancock said the BCS has
talked about making that
process more transparent.
"I think there is some
sense now that it is time to be
a little bit more open about
that," he said. "It's all objective, based on the data."

DON'TMI~$

OUT ON OUR EXTRA
MONEY $A VINCi
COUPON$
THI$WEEK
IN$IDE
$UNDA Y'$ PAPER!!!
~unbap \!time~ ~entinel

SOuTH BEI\JD, Ind.
(AP)
Notre Dame coach
Brian Kelly will bring two
assistants
from
his
Cincinnati staff to be his
defensive and offensive
coordinators.
Bob Dh~eo will run the
defense, just as he did the
past
1&gt;eason
tor
the
Bearcats. Charley Mol nar,
who served as Cincinnati's
passing game coordinator
and w1de receivers coach
the past three seasons. will
be in charge of the offense
with Kelly serving as the
offensive play caller.
"I expect a lot from my
coordinators." Kell&gt; said
Thursday. "Because the&gt;
will direct the position
coaches and our players.
the coordinators need to be
effective leaders. clear
communicators and selfstarters. Bob and Charley
possess these traits and I
look forward to having
them help me lead the
Irish."
The Bearcats finished
the 2009 season ranked
?7th in total defense, givmg up an average of 374
yards a game in Diaco's
first year at Cincinnati.
The Bearcats were 31st in
total defense a year earlier.

but lost I 0 starters from
that squad.
Diaco also spent a year
working under Kelly at
Central Michigan in 2005.
Kelly said Diaco accepted the Cincinnati JOb
knowing the challenges he
would face and im
mented a new defense.
Irish will switch back
3-4 defense that will sometimes use a linehacker as a
fourth man on the line.
"One great thing about
basing out of a 3-4 is th~
element that the offense
doesn't know where th~
fourth rusher will be com"'
ing from." Diaco said.
Diaco takes over an Irish
squad that finished 86th in
total defense , giving up an
average of 398 yards a
game. Notre Dame hasn't
ranked in the top 30 in
total defense since Tyrone
Willingham's first season
in 2002, when· it was 13th.
Molnar has been on
~elly's staff since joining:
htm at Central Michigan in
2006. Molnar previously,
served as offenstve coord1~
nator at Kent State ( 19962000) and Indiana State
(2005).
Kelly has to hire three,
more assistant coaches.

Alabama

McCoy - the winning'
quarterback in college football history - down and
out with an inJury to his
throwmg
shoulder on
Texas· fifth offensive play.
"I just heard a thump
when I hit him." Dareu
said. "I did lay it down prett) hard. I dido 't try to. but it
felt great."
Dareus finished with one.
tackle, one interception and
one touchdown. but all
were game-changers.
·
Seeking
its
second
national title in five years,
Texas ( I 3-1) got to the
game on the back of its AIJ ...
American quarterback, who
often looked like a one man
show in leading the
Longhorns to I 3 ~traight
wins.
After the injury. McCoy
was begging to go back in
to finish hls la'St col
game. Hh dad. inter\ ie
on TV. said the injury
n't that bad.
But Texas coaches decided to err on the side of caution, and McCoy spent the
second half wearing a headset on the sideline.trying to
encourage his teammates.
The Longhorns defense,
ranked third in the country
in yards allowed, kept
things close until Gilbert
got his feet underneath him.
And boy did he.
He led the Longhorns on
a five-play. 59-yard drive to
make it 24-13. then 60
yards for the second score.
and suddenly. the Tide was
falling apart. not rollmg.
The 2-point conversion
made it 24-21.

from Page Bl
senior who plays in the
shadow of All-Americans
Terrence Cody and Rolando
McClain. The ball went flying and Courtney Upsha\'.
recovered.
Three
plays
later.
Heisman Trophy winner
Mark Ingram surged into
the end zone from the I for
the I 0-point lead. A few
minutes later, after Gilbert's
third interception of the
night. Trent Richardson
scored his second touchdown to make it 37-21.
Then the party began.
Glor&gt; came back to one of
the countr} 's most storied
programs. the football factory that Bear Bryant built.
courtesy of Nick Saban.
who resurrected this team in
the short span of three seasons.
..We back:· Ingram sa1d.
Back for the first time
since 1992. when Bryant's
protege, Gene Stallings. led
the Crimson Tide to its last
national title. This one gives
Alabama eight since the
polls began in the 1930s. Its
seventh Associated Press
championship should be a
shoo-tn when the votes are
tabu lated.
Ingram finished with 116
yards and two touchdowns
and Richardson had 109
yards and two scores.
Anders will go down with
them in Crimson Tide lore.
as will Dare us. who before
his touchdown knocked

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