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~~----------------------·---------~·~--~--

Center holds
play date, A3

--------- ~---~----_....

Gathering 2010, A7

y
Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

0BTIUARIES
Page A3

J.

R EED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Rare towboat
returning to
Ohio home
&amp;
ARIETIA (AP) -A
historic towboat is ready
to return to its southeastern Ohio home after an
extensive overhaul.
The W.P. Snyder Jr. is
the last steam-driven
sternwheeler
towboat
still in the nation's river
system.
For the previous 54
years, it had been moored
in Marietta, displacing a
section of the Muskingum
River half the length of a
football field.
After 10 months of
work to replace its hull
and paddle wheeL the
towboat will make the
146-mile voyage home
from a repair yard towed
by two tugboats. The
Ohio River Museum
plans special homecoming events Sept. 17-18.
Federal, state and private grants funded the
million preservation
k on the National
•
Historic Landmark.

POMEROY - The Fourth
District Court of Appeals has
granted a fourth extension of
. time for the preparation of the
trial transcript in the murder
case against Paula Rizer, delay~
ing her appeal.
In June, the appeals court
granted a third extension of
time for the completion of the
transcript and preparation of
briefs from both sides. Aaron
M. McHenry, magistrate for
the appeals court, has now

granted an extension to early
October, and wrote in an entry
filed in Rizer's appeals file it
would be the final extension
granted.
"No further extensions will be
granted absent extraordinary circumstances,'' McHenry wrote in
his order of June 28, but based
on an affidavit from Court
Reporter Samantha Mugrage, he
has granted a final extension. In
the latest entry, McHenry indicated no additional extension
will be granted.
Last October, Rizer was
acquitted on a charge of .aggra-

vated murder, but the jury was
unable to reach a verdict on a
murder charge. She was re-tried
and convicted in January of
murder.
Rizer shot her husband,
Kenneth, Sr., at their Lovett
Road home in April, 2009. He
died in his reclining chair from
multiple gunshot wounds.
Rizer is represented by Craig
Jaquith and Melissa Prendergast
of the Ohio Public Defender 's
office. They and Prosecuting
Attorney Colleen Williams will
file briefs with supporting case
law once the transcript is com-

pleted and the record of the trial
proceedings are transmitted to
the appeals court.
According to court documents, the court reporter,
Samantha Mugrage, a staff
member in the trial court, has
been unable to complete the
transcript of the two week-long
trials and the hearings associated with the case. as well as
jury
bench
conferences,
instructions and other trial proceedings.
Mugrage cited the voluminous
nature of the transcripts required
for the appeal in her affidavit.

Two men
arrested in
burglaries
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

SPORTS
• Gallia Academy
beats aves.
See Page 81
Beth SergenVphoto

Members of the Meigs Child Support Enforcement Agency present plaques of appreciation to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Colleen Williams and Assistant Prosecutor Matt Donahue for assistance in collecting
child s·upport payments. Pictured are (from left) Don Snyder, Williams, Donahue, Randy Smith, Larry Byer,
Shelley Hill, George. Hoffman, Dean McKnight.

Record cases, collections of child support
B Y B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•~=====
WEATHER

High: 85
Low: 51

2 SEcriONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

AB

.as~ifieds

Bs-6

OffilCS

B7

Editorials
A4
Faith
As-7
NASCAR
B8
Sports B Section
© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

liJ!IJI, !Ill.!I!II .
'•

POMEROY - Nonpayment of child support
is thought by many to be
a
victimless
crime
though many of those in
Meigs County who don't
pay child support are
learning different.
This month is Child
Support
Awareness
Month and this year's
theme is ''Throughout
Life, Support Matters."
According to the Meigs
County Child Support
Enforcement Agency, a
division of Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services, in 2009
record child support collections were made totaling $3.2 million. Don
Snyder of Meigs CSEA
reports there is approxi-

~astern

INDEX

aD.,

Rizer transcript deadline extended into October
BY B RIAN

• Jeanette Scott

_ _ _ _..,..

mately $5 million of outstanding child support
payments to be collected.
The agency feels it's on
track to meet last year's
collection goal.
The Meigs CSEA uses
a variety of partners
including local law
enforcement, the domestic and juvenile divisions
of the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
and the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney's
Office.
According to Meigs
CSEA, in the past 20
months, over 150 cases
have been accepted by
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen
Williams. The Meigs
CSEA feels "both she and
her Assistant Prosecuting
Attorney Matt Donahue
have worked tirelessly in

the fight against criminal
non~support."

The CSEA refers only
its worst cases for criminal prosecution, calling
this a "last resort" which
is utilized only after
every other option has
been unsuccessful. The
Meigs CSEA, through
the Prosecuting Attorney,
presents cases every
month to a Meigs County
Grand Jury and as a
result, the organization
reports "many successful
outcomes have been
received with a large
number of payments."
The week, Meigs CSEA
staff presented Williams
and Donahue with plaques
of appreciation for their
work in collecting child
support payments.
In
presenting
the
plaques, Snyder said the

agency wanted to take
few moments "for the
invaluable assistance that
Williams and her staff
have provided the Meigs
Support
Child
Enforcement Agency.
According
to
the
ODJFS Office of Child
Support, Ohio collects
approximately $1.9 billion in child support
annually. ranking third in
the nation' for child support distributed. Also in
Federal fiscal years
2007-09, more than 95
percent of all child support collections in Oh10
~ent to families.
ODJFS also reports the
Child Support Program
impacts one of every
three people in Ohio in
terms of the number of
children and families
who are served.

school board ·approves personnel

S ENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINSEastern Local Board of
EducatiOn
approved
teachers and other personnel at its recent regular meeting.
The board took the following action relating to
teaching staff:
• Approved the resignation of Mrs. Robin Baird
as high school mathematics and science teacher.
• Employed Leslie
LeBlanc as a high school
Spanish teacher on a one
year contract.

Cheerleader
• Re-employed retired ·Varsity
teacher Howard Caldwell Instructor; Wes Sanders,
as a high school language Paid Assistant Varsity
arts teacher on a one-year Football Coach; Mike
Tipton,
Volunteer
contract.
Football
• Employed Jackie Assistant
Janey as high school Coach; Brian Cummins,
Weight
Room
math teacher on a one Fall
year contract.
Coordinator.
The board approved
T.he board approved
the following supple- the following substitute
mental and pupil activity teachers for the 20 10-11
contracts for the 2010-11 school year . ~en~ing
certificatiOn:
school year pending proper
proper certification: Pam Peggy Bailey, Renee
Douthitt, Varsity Softball Barton, Eric M. Brown,
Coach; Bobby Calaway, Anna Buckalew, Use
Junior Varsity Girls Burris, Marissa Cantrell,
Basketball
Coach; Leland (Joe) Carver, Fred
Deidra Cross, Junior Connery Jr., Carolyn

Crowner, Sharon L.
Cunningham, William
Downie Jr.,
Cheryl
Facemyer, Marge Fetty,
John C. Flemming.
Betty L. Fulks, Brey L.
Gheen,
Suzanne
Hanning,
Roberta
Harbour, Brian Howard,
Gregory R. Jeffers, Jill
Johnson, Janel Kennedy,
John Krawsczyn, Megan
Lawhon, Ron Logan,
McDaniel,
Angela
Michael McMath-Dunn,
Holl;' Murphy (Grim),
Andrea (Annie) Pepper.
Gay Perrin. Samantha

Please see Eastern, Al

POMEROY- Two
ruTests were made in
two burglaries reported late, Wednesday
night on Lasley Street
in Pomeroy and on
Union Avenue just
outside the village
limits.
At
11:53
p.m.,
Wednesday,
the
Police
Pomeroy
Department received a
call
from
Kathy
Shockey of 400 Lasley
Street who said she'd
returned nome to find
her fan had been
pulled from her window and the window
knocked in. Shockey
reported jewelry and
cigarettes were missing.
Pomeroy Patrolman
Delwon Laudermilt
was dispatched to
Shockey's home to
investigate. He later
returned
to
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department to assist
Shockey in giving a
statement.
While
Shockey was giving a
statement, Lauderrnilt
returned to the residence
to
find
Alexander W. Day, 18,
Pomeroy. and Derek
W. Kirker. 22. Mason,
W.Va. inside.
Laudermilt said during questioning. the
two men confessed to
breaking into, and
returning to, the resi-.
dence on Lasley Street
and breaking into a
residence on Union
Avenue which was
outside the village
limits. Meigs County
Court records list this
residence as 39698
Union Ave. The Meigs
Sheriff's
County
Office is investigating
the burglary on Union
Avenue. No further
information was available on this case.
Laudennilt said the
two suspects allegedly
ditched the stolen
items but most were
later recovered.
and
Both
Day
Kirker were arraigned
in Meigs County
Court yesterday and
charged with two
counts of burglary and
one county of theft.
Each was released on
a $25,000 own recognizance bond. given a
court-appointed attorney and asked to
appear at their preliminary hearings scheduled for 11:30 a.m.,
Thursday, Sept. 2.

�ageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 2 7,

.

ASK DR. llR.OTHER.S

She explains that time isn't on their side
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
am married to a \\Oman
20 years y_ounger than 1.
Before we tied the knot,
we agreed not to have
children. and that we
would be fine with this.
We had similar interests
and a professional tie, so
we thought we would
have plenty in common
for our life together. Well,
now. 15 years later, she is
telling me (politely) that I
am too old for her. She is
in her early 40s and is
worried that she will
never have kids. She said
we are ships passing in
the night. What? - M.G.
Dear M.G.: I am sorry
you have been blindsided
by this sad tum of events.
and I will try to help you
understand your wife's
state of mind - surely
you have heard of the
concept of the biological
clock ticking? She must
be feeling a tremendous
amount of pressure to
"fish or cut bait" - that
is, take the opportunity to
have a baby before it is
too late. Why did she
·agree not to have chil dren? It might not have
seemed important to her
in her late 20s. Maybe she
hoped you would change
your mind, or that she
would not care whether

lot for some time, but you
both have plenty of years
to find a mate closer to
yourstage in life.

•••

I&gt;ear Dr. Brothers: I

Dr. Joyce Brothers
she had kids. At any rate.
she has found that she is
not comfortable with that
promise after all though she may have
meant it at the time.
But the ships passing in
the night is a concept you
need to think about now.
The 20-year age gap can
work at certain stages. and
indeed can work for a lifetime if both parties are
willing. But that is very
unusual. You wouldn "t
have dated your wife when
you \vere 27'and she was 7.
but when the ships passed
at 49 and 29, it was workable. It doesn't go as well
at 50 and 70. As in any
maniage. you can't make
her love you. and gracefully bowing out would be the
best option for keeping
your dignity. It may hurt a

Vaughan Agency

didn't think I W&lt;Ls a vef)
paranoid type of person.
but the more I hear about
the technology that is
being used today. the
worse I feel about meeting
or talking to anyone
online, or even in person. It
seems everybody is busy
recording everyone else by
We beam or phone cameras
or built-in mics. and saving
text messages and instant
messages and so on. I
would love to try Internet
dating. but I am par,tlyzed,
because anything I say or
do could come back to
haunt me.- E.T.
Dear E.T.: This is a
sad predicament - you
seem to be well aware of
all the latest technology.
but instead of reveling in
all the advances that have
been made to make communication easier than
we'd ever dreamed, you
are focusing only on the
nightmarish aspects of it.
Yes, it is true that lives
and l:areers have been
ntined by the injudicious
use of text messages for
''sexting,·· but that is
mostly among indiscreet

teenagers. And jobs can
be lost through publicly
shared e-mails - but
you' re not going .to date
anyone at work or spend
your
time
sending
steamy mesS&lt;fgeS, right?
What I am getting at is
that discretion is the
watchword, and your natural bent is toward being
very conservative with
your personal expression.
It will not be easy for you
to start dating online and you seem to have trust
issues about any kind of
dating that could end up
with a photo of you on the
Internet. But honestly.
most people are not interested in exposing others.
They are looking for love
and romance and friendship, just like you are. If
you remain unconvinced,
you will have to ask
friends to introduce you to
people they trust. Then
you must hope they have
impeccable judgment and
that your date never gets
mad at you and seeks
revenge. As you can see,
there arc no guarantees. I
think you might b~netit
from some counseling.
which would help you to
understand where your
fears are coming from.
(c)

20/0

Ohio auditor hopeful wants
more performance audits
CLEVELAND (AP) The Democrat \\ ho wanls
to take over the Ohio auditor's office says he wants
to help governments bette• detect fraud and to find
ways to cut £osts and
operate more efficiently.
David
Pepper on
Thursday reteased a plan
in which he says he
would conduct more performance audits of local
governments and would
work harder to educate
local officials on ways to
ferret out fraud.
Pepper is a commissioner
in ·Hamilton
Count) in Cincinnati. He
faces Delaware County
prosecutor Dave Yost. a
Republican,
in
the
November
election.
Current Auditor Marr
Taylor, a Republican is
leaving the office to run
for lieutenant governor.
Yost spokesman Matt

Borges says Pepper:s
plan outlines basic principles any candida.
would support. He say
Yost has already come
out in support of more
performance audits.

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�www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 27, 2010

Deaths

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Play date!
Jeanette Scott

Jeanette Scott, 85, Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Aug.
24, 2010. at Holzer Senior Care Center.
Service will be at 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 29, 2010, Wtllis
Funeral H0me, with Pastor Alvis Pollard officiating.
urial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
riends may call from 1-2 p.m. prior to the service
Sunday.

f

Local Briefs
Winner announced
~OMEROY - Fannie Aleshire, Syracuse, was the
wmner of a set of DVD provided in a drawing at the
Meigs County Fair by the Meigs County Tea Party
9.12 Project.

For the Record
911
POMEROY - Meigs 911 dispatched these medical
emergency calls:

Wednesday
2:36 p.m., North Second Avenue, chest pain; 4:03
p.m., East Memorial Drive, fall; 4:59 p.m.,
Rocksprings Road, difficulty breathing; 5:56 p.m.,
Aneroy Pike Road, fracture; 7:17p.m., East Second
W eet, laceration.

Thursday
4:09a.m., East Memorial Drive, fall.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported these
transfers of real estate:
• Timothy R. Priddy, Timothy R. Priddy, Sr., to
Leanna R. Cundiff, Jonathan J. Avis, deed, Village of
Middleport; Pomeroy-Racine Lodge, F&amp;M, to
Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer District, easement.
• Orland Lee Floyd, Leta Carol Floyd, to Syracuse
Racine Regional Sewer District, easement; Mabel A.
Sheets, Suzanne Cotterill, to Syracuse Racine
Regional Sewer District, easement.
• Harold Nutter, deceased, to Rita Nutter, affidavit
of transfer, Orange; Rita Nutter to Sandra S. Spencer,
deed, Orange; Foothills District West Ohio
Conference United Methodist Church, to Danny D.
Brown, Bonnie G. Brown, deed, Sutton.
• Richard L. Coleman, Anne S. Goss, to Goss
Coleman Co., LLC, deed, Bedford; Alice C.
Chapman to Federal National Mortgage Corp., sheriff's deed, Salisbury.·

County Forecast
Friday: Areas of dense
fog before 7 a.m.
Otherwise, cloudy through
mid morning, then clearing, with a high near 85.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
51.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 87.
Saturday

Night:

Mostly clear, with a low
around 59.
Sunday: Sunny, with a
high near 90.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
60.

Monday

COLU~US ~AP) Thomas Edison ts a step
closer to Washington.
A panel of state lawmakers voted Thursday to recommend that the inventor
born in northern Ohio be
the subject of a new Ohio
statue in the U.S. Capitol.
The committee's recommendation now goes
to the Legislature for a
final _vote late~ this .year.
Ohioans earlier this year
gave the nod to Edison in a
vote at historic sites around
the state. He won a close
vot~ over aviation pio~eers
Orville and Wilbur Wnght.
The committee voted
6-0 to go with Edison. ·

Tuesday

Night:

Mostly clear, with a low
around 62.
Wednesday: Sunny,
with a high near 91.

Wednesday

Night:

Partly cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Thursday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
89.

BBT (NYSE) - 22.27
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 11.60
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.13
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.31
Rockwell (NYSE) - 50.77
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 7.33
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.94
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 63.16
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 50.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.05
WesBanco (NYSE) - 15.1 o
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.08
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET c losing quotes of
transactions for August 26,
201 0, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac
Mills In Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Pierce,
Shannon
Plummer,
Michael
Rinaldi-Eichenberg.
William
(Nathan)
Robinette,
Edward
Safranek,
Amanda
Schwarze!,
Samantha
Shaffner, Shana Snyder,
David Stafford, Ladona
Stephens, Rachel L.
Stoltzfus, John H. Taylor,
William Tipton Jr.,
Randy Wachter, Maxine
Whitehead,
Elizabeth
Wilfong, Jason Williams,
Richard S. Wilson, Ian
Wyatt, Juli Simpson.
The board approved
the following substitute
teacher aides for the
2010-11 school year
pending proper certification: Stephanie Allen,
Tamara S. Browning,
Carrie Carpenter, Pamela
Codner, Carmel Evans,
Janel Kennedy, Romayne
Martindale,
Sheila
McKinney, Sunshine A.
Russell,
Amanda
Schwarze!,
Connie
Soulsby, Launa Teaford,
and Robin Werry.
Lee
Swain
was
approved as a substitute
mechanic for the 2010-11
school year.

Inj u r e d i n a Car Accident?
Lee a.~ k'J ?tJ«.jPeC 'liaeL~~CP «/tJr-Lfa~c./

BEND AREA
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER

.

Submitted photo

Each state gets two
statues of notable historic
figures who are deceased.
Most are in bronze or
marble and stand in
National Statuary Hall,
south of the rotunda.
Ohio lawmakers decided to replace former governor William Allen a
19th century congr~ssman who portrayed
blacks as savages and
supported the (iahts of
Southern slave o:ners.
Village leaders in
Milan, th.e Ohio town
where Edison spent the
first seven years of his
life, made their case for
Edison last summer,

telling lawmakers about
all of his inventions - the
phonograph, motion pictures and even the cement
that built Yankee Stadium.
Rep. Thomas Letson,
D-Warren, voted for
Edison to make the decis~on unanim&lt;?us, but said
h1s first chmce was the
Wright brothers because
they did th~ir research in
Oh~o .and .hved most of
theJr hves m Dayton.

www.mydailysentinel.com

,tt
_():.

~
/1\uale foundation
2010 Foothills Blues &amp;Arts Festival
August 27th &amp; 28th
St. Rt. 143 near Harrisonville, Ohio
Farm

Eastern from Page At

Night:

Mostly clear, with a low
around 61.
Tuesday: Sunny, with
a high near 91.

.

Panel recommends Edison statue go in u.s:Capitol

Monday: Sunny, with
a high near 90.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.20
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 52.12
land Inc. (NYSE) - 45.41
Lots (NYSE) - 30.35
Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.42
..
rgWarner (NYSE) - 43.21
Century Alum (NASDAQ) 9.44
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.30
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 3.35
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 28.00
Collins (NYSE) - 54.17
DuPont (NYSE) - 39.49
US Bank (NYSE) - 21.00
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 14.50
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 24.01
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 35.63
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.36
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 24.32
Norfo lk So (NYSE) - 53.05
OVBC (NASDAQ)- 19.63

..

New Honzons Chtldhood Ennchment Center recently held a play date allowing students to get to know their
new clas~mates and teacher. Parents and t~achers also had a ch~nce to meet during the play date held at
Pomeroy s Water Works Park. Students begrn classes at New Horrzons, located in the Mulberry Community
Center, on Sept. 8.

The board approved
the following classified
substitutes for the 20 lOll school year: Mary
Pellegrino, Robin Lynn
Swain, Jackie Westfall,
John Helgesen, James
Richmond,
Deborah
Snyder, Alicia Ihle.
The board also:
• Approved a reduction
in meeting compensation
for board of education
members from the current $125.00 per meeting
to $50.00 per meeting
effective Jan. l, 2011.
•
Set Wednesday,
September 15, 2010 at
in
the
6:30
p.m.
Elementary
Library
Conference Room for the
next regular meeting of
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Thank You Randy Moore, BP
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Cole Graham
Thank You Andy Nelson Meat Processing
for purchasing my Market Hog.
Chase Graham
Thank You J&amp;L Construction
for purchasingmy Market Hog.
Brandon Marcinko
2010 Meigs County Fair

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The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 27,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street : Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make " o law respecting an
establislm rent of religion, or prolribiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tire right of the p eople
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govermnentfor a redress ofg rier,ances.
The First Amendment to th e U.S. Constitution

PL~m;~~
CALM.... JOE BIC£N
SAVe; WE'RE
HR~Dif\.IG IN tk

~1-lr DIRECrK&gt;N!

New jobless claims drop
for first time in 4 weeks
BY

_

CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

New requests for unemployment benefits fell
sharply last week. the fust decline in a month and a
hopeful !iign after a raft of negative economic rep.xts.
New claims for jobless aid dropped by 31.000 to
a seasonally adjusted 4 73.000. the Labor
Department said Thursday. Still. claims remain
much higher than they would be in a healthy economy. Employers are reluctant to hire as economic
growth appears to be slowing.
The drop comes after a steep rise the previous
three weeks that sent claims to their highest level
in nine months. Those increases raised fears that.
businesses were starting to layoff more workers.
Wall Street economist~ had expected a smaller drop.
according to surveys by Thomson Reuters. Stock
futures rose immediate!) after the report's release.
Even with last week's decline, the four-week
average. a less volatile measure. rose to 486.750,
the most since November 2009.
The department also said the total unemployment benefit rolls climbing steeply, as more peo·
pie join extended unemployment aid programs
that were renewed last month by Congress.
During the recession, Congre:-;s added up to 73
weeks of emergency aid on top of the 26 weeks
typically provided by the states.
All told. about 10.1 million people were receiving unemployment checks in the week ended Aug.
7. the latest data available. That's up about
260,000 from the previous week.
The economy has grown for four straight quarters. But the pace has slowed from a 5 percent
annual rate in last year's fourth quarter to 3.7 percent in the January-to-March period. It has weakened even fUI1her in the past several months.
Many economists expect the government Friday to
revise lower its growth estimate for the April-June
quarter to belov..· 2 percent. That's weak in normal
limes and even worse after such a steep recession.
TI1e housing sector. which usually helps power
economic recoveries. is now acting as a drag. New
home sales felll2.4 percent in July to the lowest level
111 nearly a half-century, the government reported
Wednesday. And another report this week showed
that sales of previously occupied homes fell to their
lowest level in 15 years. Sales ~m! plummeting after a
popular homebuyer's tax credit expired April 30.
Jobless claims fell steadily last year as the economy began expanding. dropping from a peak of
651,000 in March 2009 to about 460,000 at the
beginning of this year. After fluctuating around
that level for most of this year. claims started
climbing again last month.
In a healthy economy, claims generally fall
below 400.000.
Some companies are still cutting workers.
Northrop Grumman Corp. said Wednesday that it
will lay off 642 workers at its shipyard in
Pascagoula. Miss .. by the end of the year. The
shipyard currently has 11.000 employees.
And in late July. a NASA private contractor. the
United Space Alliance. began telling 1,400 employees that they would be laid off in the fall as the U.S.
space agency ends the space shuttle program.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader

Ser~
Correction Policy

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FACTCHECK

Stimulus assessments overly optimisti~
BY FREDERIC J . SOMMER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Obama administration
claimed this week that $100 bil·
lion invested in innovative tech·
nologies under the economic
stimulus law is ''transformmg the
American economy" by putting
the nation on track for technological breakthroughs in health care.
energy and transportation.
But an examination of details in
the 50-page report unveiled
Tuesday by Vice President Joe
Biden reveals something a bit different: a collection of rosy projec
tions that ignore many of the chal
lenges, pitfalls and economic realities in all those areas.
A look at how the administration's claims compare to the facts:

"Projecting from the last few
years looks at the effects of a
global recession that lowers material costs and a temporary glut of
module manufacturing capacity."
he said. "They have influenced
cost but are not based on any technology innovation."

rail cars that meet U.S. crash\\Orthiness standards, which are different than much of the rest of the
world.

Health information
technology

The claim: Stimulus spending is
··a significant boost" to goals of
converting to electronic health
records. computenzed prescrip- ·
The claim: Stimulus funding is tions and remote treatment of
spurring National Institutes of patients in hard-to-reach locaHealth research to make unravel- tions.
ing people's individual genetic
The facts: The effort to get doc
codes, or genomes, easy and tors' offices and hospitals using
cheap enough that the number electronic medical records is in its
completed could "dwarf. by 50 earliest stages. Economic divitimes or so" the number so far fin- dends from greater efficiency and
ished.
fewer costly medical mistakes
The facts: NIH research kicked could be years away.
off the revolution in human
And there's plenty of potential
Increasing
genome sequencing and continues for glitches. People involved with
to play a cmcial role, but it has the issue give the administrati.
renewable energy
lots of help today from universi- high marks for trying. but rna
The claim: Thanks to the stimu- ties, international research foun- do not expect Obama ·s goal
lus, the United States is on track dations and even private compa- getting all of America's medical
nies jockeying to sell better gene- records computerized within five
to "doubling U.S. renewable ener
years to be met.
gy generation capacity and U.S. scanning machines.
It cost about $3 billion and a
For one thing, about 90 percent
renewable manufacturing capac1
decade of government research to of roughly $20 billion the stimuty by 2012."
The facts: While the Recovery come up with the first draft of a lus legislation allocated for this
Act has helped increase renew- human genome in 2000. Last purpose has yet to be spent.
Most of the stimulus money is
able eriergy, the fact that it is a year. a Stanford University proone-time jolt makes it difficult to fessor reported that he sequenced to help doctors and hospitals
project that the growth will con- his genome in a week at a cost of defray the cost of installing comtinue for the next couple of years. $48,000, using a $1 million puter systems, but the Health and
George Sterzinger, executive machine. Many specialists believe Human Services Department only
director of the Renewat;&gt;le Energy the price may drop to less than recently spelled out the capabili
Policy Project, a Washington $1 ,000 in a few years. The more ties that those systems will have
think tank that promotes renew- sequencing scientists do allow~ to have in order to qualify for fedable energy, said the Recovery them to better explore variations eral money. No systems have yet
Act's cash grant program for that contribute to disease.
been certified as meeting the
As promismg as personal required capabilities.
renewable energy projects "jumpstarted a lot of stuff. But there's genome sequencing is. people
need to understand that it's basinothmg beyond that."
Electric vehicles
cally
a first step. The bigger chalSterzinger added that it would
be a mistake to link the growth in lenge. still in its infancy, is deciThe cla1m: The stimulus has
renewable energy generation to phering what the genetic varia- helped. produce "significant steps
tions mean and how that informathe growth in American made
toward affordable electric cars
renewable energy equipment. tion might be harnessed for better that can drive 300 miles on a sin
care.
While the U.S. could probably
gle charge. powered by $10 of
meet the first goal, he said, it isn't
clean
electricity instead of $.
High-speed rail
likely to meet the second because
dollars of oil. Ultimately t
much of the equipment is made
means consumers may have the
overseas.
The claim: ''With $8 billion in choice among a range of vehicles
Robert L. Nelson, a partner at funding. the Recovery Act is from a combustion vehicle with
the Akin Gump law firm who co- beginning to make high-speed rail over 50 miles per gallon or an
chairs its renewable energy group. a reality across the country." electric-drive vehicle for the same
said that the manufacturing claim Projects selected for funds repre- price."
reminded him of a story told in sent "strategic investments" that
The facts: While strides are
will yield high-speed serv1ce or being made. this vision of the
the old Soviet Union. A commis
sar. or government official. asks a lay the groundwork for future ser- future rests on as:o;umptions that
fanner how good next year's crop vice.
many regard as overly optimistic.
will be. The farmer says it will be
The facts: The largest project is Even a White House task force on
10 times as good as last year's. one that would connect San the auto industry's recovery said
The commissar thinks to himself. Francisco with Los Angeles. while General Motors· extended"Ten times zero is zero."
using trains traveling up to 220
range plug-in hybrid. the Volt.
Nelson said, "When you're. mph. But some of the projects "holds promise, it \viii likel) be
looking at where the U.S. is start· getting stimulus money would too expensive to be commercially
ing from, doubling isn't all that primarily upgrade existing freight successful in the short tem1.'. At
meaningful a statistic."
rail tracks so they could be used
for faster passenger service, $41,000, the Volt is about twice
reaching speeds of up to 11 0 mph the price of a conventional mid
Cutting the cost
· at least part of the time - well size car. The price of electric cars
of solar power
short of the speeds in other devel- will drop, but automakers are
years from being able to sell them
oped countries.
at
the same price as cars with
The claim: Government stimuNot everyone shares the White
lus money will lead to "cutting House ·s optimism about the internal combustion engines.
Another hurdle is fuel pnces.
the cost of solar power in half _by prospects for high-speed rail. A
which
are relatively low and pro·
2015, putting it on par with the recent
analysis
by
the
cost of retail electricity from the Government
Accountability vide little incentive to consumers
grid."
Office concluded that building to spend thousands of dol
The facts: That projection high-speed rail service in the U.S. extra f01 a hybrid or even
·'is a difficult, multiyeai· effort'' for a plug in car: it would take
assumes a huge payoff from stim
ulus spending on technology that hinges on financing that goes years for the.fuel savings to outimprovements in solar energy. ''far beyond the funds provided by weigh the higher,price.
And there arc questions about
Nelson, who has worked in the Recovery Act in a time of conrenewable energy for 25 years. tinuing federal and state deficits." whether the large lith1um ion batcalled the prediction "highly
Another challenge for some teries needed for electric cars are
unlikely," unless there is a big projects will be meeting the 2017 durable. safe and affordable
increase in utiJity-scale solar deadline to spend Recovery Act enough for widespread use.
(Associated Press H riters
funds, the GAO said. The capacipower projects.
Lauran
Neergaarcl. Joan Lowy
ty
to
manufacture
passenger
rail
Sterzinger said there was too
much uncertainty in the world cars and other high-speed equip- an{/ Ricardo Alonso-'laldivar in
economy to make such a predic- ment exists in the U.S. But it may Washington ancl Tom Krisher lfl
take years to design and test new Detmit contributed to this report.)
tion.

Quicker, cheaper .
genetic mapping

'I

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Friday, August 27, 2010

F~llowship

Rhtr \'all~~
Rher \,~le~ Aposlohc \\n1'-h1p Ccn1er,
~7.1 S lrd
Ave.. '-.1Jddlepon. Rev.
Michad Br..dford. I';Jslor. Sunda) 10:.10
am Tues 6-30 pr.I)er, \led. 7 pm Bibk
SIUd)
Emmanuel \poslolic labcrn.Jdc luc.
loop Rd olf :\ew L1ma Rd. Rolland,
S.t~ICts' Sun 10.00 a.m. &amp; no p.m.
Thur&lt;. 7:00p.m., !':~&gt;lor ~1.10) R Hollon

Assembly of God
Libtrl) \'&gt;t'mbiJ of God
Bo~ 467, Duddmg l.ane, Mason,
\\.\'a.. Past&lt;'r .'ie~l Tennant. Sunda)
Ser.·ices 10.00 a.m ond 7 p.m

Baptist
Pageville Frt-t\lill Ba11llst Church •
Pastor; Aoyd Ro", Sunday School9.10 to
10:30 am. \\or;hip sef\·ice 10:~0 to 11:00
am Wed. pre:Jchmg 6 pm
CarpentH Independent Bapli1t ('hurch
Suada) School
9·.10am Preaching
Se,..,ice 10·1o-.~m. Evemng Ser&gt;~ce
7;00pm. \\ednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm
Pastor

•

Che-.hire Bupthl Church
Pastor: Steve !Jitle. 740-167-7801. H
7-l0-992-7q2, C. 740-64'1-25d Sunda)
School: 9·10 am. Morning \1 otship: 10·.10
am. Youth &amp; B1ble Budd1es 6·10 pm.
cboJr practicx 7:30; Specml daJ·s of month
I. LadJes of Grace 7 pm 2nd Monday, ~
Mtn's Fellowsh•p 7 pm 3rd Tues.
Hope Bopti&gt;t Church 1Sou1hernl
570Granl St., M•ddlepon. Sunda~ &lt;chool
9:.10 a.m., \\'ol'ohip II am. and 6 p.m ..
Wednesday ServJCe - 7 p.m. Pastor· Gary
Elhs
Rutland First Baplbt Church
Sunda~ School - 9:30 a.m.. 1\orsb•p
10:45 a.m
Pomero) fir-t llaptht
P:btor Jon Brockcn, F.ast \1aJO Sl.
Sunday Sch 9.30 am. \lor&lt;hip 10:30 am
fi"l Southern Baptist
41872 Pomero) Pike. Sunda) ~chnol
9;30 a m.. 1\or;hip -9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Se,..,ices - 7:00 p.m. Pastor·
Dav1d Br:unard
Fir&lt;t Bapli't Church
Pastor Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middlepon, Sunday School 9:J5 am ..
Worship • 10:15 a.m., 7110 p.m.
Wednesda) Semce- 7:00p.m

•

Racine Hrst Raptis!
Pastor: R)aD Eaton, pas11&gt;r , Sunday
School 9:.10 a.m.. Wof\hip 10:40 am ,
6:00 p.m .• Wednesda) Sm JCes 7 00
p.m.
Si11·er Run llapti;t
Pastor· John Swanson, Sunda) School
JOa.m. l\ot&gt;h1p
lla.m .. 7:00 p.m.
,\ledntsda)' SmJC¢1'- 7:00p.m
\It, Union Jlapti;t

Pastor: Dennis \\eaver Sundo) School9:45 a.m., Even1ng
6:30 p.m ..
Wednesda) Semces 6:30p.m
Bethlehem Bapti11 Church
Great Bend. Route 124. Racine OH
Pastor , Sundav School 9:30 a.m..
Sunday Wor;h1p 10;.10 a.m. ,; \\ednesda)'
Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Frte II ill Oapli\1 Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon, Sunda)
Service • 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m., fuesday
Servicxs -6:00
Hill&gt;ide Baptht Church
St. Rt. 143 JUst off Rt. 7. Paslor R~v.
James R. Acree. Sr.• Sunday Cnihed
Service. Worsb1p 10:30 a.m , 6 p.m ..
Wednesday S."'ices-7 p.m.

•

\'ictOrJ Baptist lndtptndent
525 :\ 2nd St. M1ddlepon. Pastor: James
E. Keesee, ll'orsh1p IOa.m., 7 p.m ,
Wednesday Semces • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptbt Church
Railroad St., Mason. Sunday School 10
a.m.. l\orsh1p • II a.m.. (&gt; p.m .
1\ednesday Servltt&gt; 7 p.m
Forest Run Baptist· Pomero~
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School 10
a.m., Wur:h1p I I :30 a.m.
\11. \loriah Baptht
iounh, &amp; \tam Sl .. M1ddlepon, Sunda)
School . 9:.10 a.m.. \\orsh1p 10:45 am
Pastor- Rev..\1Jchael A Tbom~. Sr
Anliquit) 8aptl1t
Sunday Schtol 9.30 a.m. \\orsh1p

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Ch1;rch Of JNilo lhrbl \p&lt;hiOiiC
\nnZ1ndl and Ward Rd., Pasaor; J:uncs
~1iller, Sunda1 School
10;30 a \11.
E1ening ~ .10 p.m

P.O.

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Apostolfc

•

--

IOAS a.m., Sunda) Evemng • 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor Don \\alker

•ree

Rutl.md
\\illllaptl't
Salem St., Pastor· Ed Burne) , Sunda)
School 10 am., Evemng • 7 p.m ..
\lcdnesda~ Smll'&lt;-'. 7 p.m
SecuM llaplist ('hurch
Ra\enswo-)(J II\ Sunday School 10 am·
, ~lvm1n~ l'&lt;&gt;rshlp 11 am Evenin~ • 7 pm.
\\ednesday 7 p.m
f ir&lt;t Baptist Church of \Jason,\\\
(lndcpendenl Bapt"t)
SR 652 and -\ndeN&gt;n St. PNcw RQben
Gra•l)', Sund&lt;l) school 10 am. \lormng
chun:h II am Stmda) &lt;Y&lt;nmg 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 1 pm

"11lc H1ll Rd., RadDe. Pa&gt;l&lt;&gt;r. James
Sauerfield, Sunda) School 9:45 a.m
Evenmg - (I p.m . 1\ednesday Ser11~es 7
pm.
Rutland !'hurd! of(;cKI
Pastor Lorry Slucrner, \unda' \\ &gt;r;hJp
10 a.m., 6 p.1n .. llcdnesd.J) ~er&gt;JCes 7

p.m
S) rl!UISC t irst Church of God
1\pple 1nd Second Sh, I';Jstor Rev Da\Jd
Ru"ell. Sunday School and \\o"hip 10
a.m. Evemn~ Services o .10 p.m ..
\\ ednesday ServJ&lt;cs 6:30 p.m.

Church of God of PN,pbec)
0 J White Rd. olf St. Rt. lt\IJ, P:"l"r PJ
Chapman. Sunda). School
10 a.m .

Catholic
Sacred lle~~rt Catholic Churrh
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomerny, 992
Pa-~or Re' \I alter E. Hemz Sat
4.45-5:15p.m . ~Ia" 5:10 p m
Con. 8:45-9: IS a.m ... Sun Mass
1tm.. Dail) ~lass 8.30 a.m

MI. \lorlah Church of God

SR98.
Con
Sun.
9:30

Church of Christ

Wo"hiP • 11 a m., 1\ednesdat Services . 7
p.m

Congregational
Trinit) Church
Pnstor Re'v. Tom Johnson. Second &amp;
Lynn. Pomeroy l'aslor , \\or;h1p 10:25
am ..

Episcopal

Wc,tside Church of Christ
.13226 Ch1ldren 's Home Rd. Pomtro), OH
Ce&gt;nlact 740-992-3&amp;4? Sund.l) morning
10:00. Sun mornm~ Bible stud),
lollowing worship. Sun, eve 6:00 pm,
lied bibk stud) 7 pm

Grace Episropal Church
126 E. Mrun St Pomeroy.
Holy
F.u,hanst 1UO ~ m Sunda) &amp; 5;10 pm
\\ed. Rev. l..cslie Hemming

Hemlock Gro1e Chrbtian Church
\hnister· l.arr) Br'"'"· Wor&gt;hip - 9:30
a.m. Suoday Sl'bOOI · 10;.10 a.m .. Bible
Stud) 7 p.m

Communi!) Church
P:"1or Ste&gt;&lt;· T&lt;&gt;mek. Main Street,
Rutland. Sunday Wor;h1p-IO:OO a.m ..
Sunday Serv1re 7 p.m.

PomenJ) Church of Christ
212 II, \1ain Sl., Sunda) School 9:30
am .. Worship 10:30 am., 6 p.m ..
\\edoesda) Semces . 7 p.m

Dan&gt;illr Holine&lt;' Cturch
.11057 Slate Rout~ )25, Langsvlle. Pastor
Bnan Bailey. Sunda~ school 9· 30 a.m ,
Sunday &gt;h&gt;rsh1p 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wedncsda) prayer se"'ice 7 p.m

Pomeru~ \INside Church of Chri~t
13226 Children's Home Rd., Sunday
School 11 a.m., Worship l&amp;J m., 6 p.m
1\'ednesdaJ Semces • 7 p m.

\liddlcport Church of ( hml
Sth and \la1n. Pastor: AI Hartson
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
DJreC~or: O..'&lt;l~cr Vaughan. Sunday School
- 9,JOa.m., \\orship- 8:15. IOJOa.m., 7
p.m.. Wednesday Semces . 7 p.m

Holiness

Cal&gt;ary Pilgrim Chapel
Hamsonville Road. Pasw: Charles
\!.Kenzie. Sunday School 9:10 a.m ..
Worship • 11 a m.. 7:00 p.m.. 1\ednesda)
Semce- 7:00p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holine" Church
Leading C"'ek Rd .. Rutland, Pasw Re1
De"c) King. Suoday school· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worshlp 7 p.m., \\ednesday
prayer mwin!· 7 p.m.

Ke~'(!Siillc

S~hool

Forest Run
Pnstor· Bob Rob1nson. Sundav S&lt;hool - 10
am 1\or&lt;hip 9 a.m
H~&lt;1th

(\liddleport)
Pastor. Brian Dunham. Sunday School •
!O:OOa.m.. \\o"h•p-ll:OOa.m
\ sbul") Sy racu'c
Pastor. Bob RobiPsno. Sunda) School 9:30a.m., \\orsh•p • 10:10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunda) School - 9 a.m., Worship 10 a m
:\e\1 Beginning; Church
l'omero)
Pastor Brian Dunham, 1\oJ'.hJp - 9:25
a.m. Sunda) School- 10:45 am.
Rock Sprinl(s
Pa&lt;tor: Dewayne Slutler, Sunday School.
9:00 a.m .. Worship • 10 a m . Youtb
Fellowship. Sunday 6 p.m Early Sunday
worship 8 am Leoom leifbell
Rutland
I';Jqor: John Chapman. SU!lda) School •
9; 10 a.m .. Wor;hip. 10:30 a.m. fhur&lt;da)
Services 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: \\ilham K. Mmhall. Sunday
SchO\&gt;I 10:15 am \\orship 9:15a.m.
B1ble Study. Monday 7:00pm
Sno1nillc
Sunday School 10 a.m, Wor;h1p 9 a.m

1\eno Church of Chri1t
\\orsb1p 9:.10 a.m .. Sunday School •
10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey \lallace. lsi and
3rd Sunday

Pine Gro•e llibll• Holine" Church
1.2 m•le off Rl. 325, Pas1or Sunda)
School 9:30a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m,
6:00p.m.. 1\ednesday Se"'IC{ 7·00 p.m.

Bear"•lllo" Ridge Church of Chrht
Paslor:Bruce Terry, Suru.lav School -9:30
a.m
10·30 a.m., 6:3(1 p.m.
Wednesday Set~J&lt;es 6:30pm.

\\e-.lc)an Bible Holinc'&gt; Chun.·h
75 Pearl St.. Middlepon. Pa,tnr O..JUg
Cox. Suoda) School 10 a.m. \\or&lt;h1p •
10:45 p.m., Sunda) £\'e. 6:00 p.m.,
\\edoC&gt;day Scmce • 7:00p.m.

/ion Church or Christ
Pomero), HarrisonVIlle Rd. 1Rt.l43).
Paslor: Ro~er 1\atson. Sunda) School
9:30 a.m.. \\orsh1p • 10:10 a.m. , 7:00
p.m.. 1\'cdncsda) Strvices 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
P;Jstor· Re•. lall) Lemle); s~nda) s,hool
9:30a.m .• Wor&lt;b1p 10:~5 am .. 7 p.m.
Thur;day Bible Sludv and Y91th 7 p.m.

\lornin~ Star
P;t&lt;tor. John Rozewicz. Sunday School •
II a.m. Wor:hip 10 a.m.

Laurel Clifft'ree \lcthodi&gt;t ('burch
Pa.wr· Glen \lcCiung. Sun:Lly S&lt;:h JOI
9:30 am., \\orship 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wedntl&gt;d,ay Se,..,ice 7:0J p.m.

f.a.st l.~tarl
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School •
9,tm. \\orsh1p 10 am., 1•1 Sunday
evel')· month ~vemng se,..,ice 7:00 p.m.;
\\ednesday , 7 p.m.

Tuppe,., Plain Church of Christ
lnstrum&lt;ntal, \lorsh1p :&gt;et~Jce 9 a.m ..
Communion 10 a.m., Sunda) School
10:15 a.m Youth 5:30pm Sunday, ll1ble
Stud) \\edn&lt;Sdl)' 7 pm
Bradbury Church ofl hrist
~llmster· Juslm Roush , 39558 Bradbury
Road. \liddlepon, Sunday School • 9:30
a.m.
\\orship 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
sunda' School • 9:10 a.m . lh&gt;rsh1p and
CommuniOn
10:30 a.m ., David
1\Jstman. ,\!mister
Br,adford Church of Christ
Comer of SL RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger, Sunday
School 9:30 a.m. Wof\blp 8:00 a.m..
10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m., Wednesday Services
7:00pm
llickof) Hills Chur(h of thrill
Tupper; Plain&gt; . Pastor M1ke Moore, Bible
da&gt;S. 9 a.m. Sunday: \lor,hip 10 a.m.
Sunda) , wof\hlp 6JO pm Sunday, Bible
cl;tss 7 pm \led
Rctd" ille Church of Chrlst
Pastor· Jack Col~ro1 e. Sundav School
9:10a.m., \\or&gt;b1p Semce· 10:30 am .
Bible Study. \\ednesday, 6:311 p.m.
oe,ter ( 'hurch of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m.. Sunda) wor&lt;hip
IO.JOa m.
1hc Church of Christ of l'onwro)
lntersccuon 7 and 124 W, Evangelist.
Denms Sargent, Sunday Bible Stud) •
9·30 a.m., 1\orship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesdil) B1ble Study 7 p.m

Christian Union
Hartford ('burch of Christ In
Chrhlian l nion
Hanford, 1\,Va., Pastor· )'.1Ike Puckcll,
Sunday Schoo'i • ~:.10 a.m , \\ol\hip •
10:10 a.m ., 7:00 p.m .. 1\ednesday
Services 7:00pm.

Latter-Day Saints
The Church of Je&gt;o~
Christ of Latter-Day Saint&gt;
Sl Rt. 160. 446 6247 01 446-7486.
Sunday School 10:20-11 Lm , Relief
Sociely Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9 10:15 am .•
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. \\ol\hlp 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m Paslor:
OurSa1iour Lutheran Church
\\alnul and Henry Sts., Ra\enswood,
W.Va. Paslor· David Russell. Sunday
School - lO:OOa.m, 1\orship 11 am
St. Paull.utheran Church
Corner S)camore &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy,

Sun School 9:45 a.m .. 1\oN\•p I I a.m.

United Methodist
Graham Lnit&lt;'&lt;l \lethodi;t
Worship II a.m Pastor- R1chard NeaseBechtell nited Meth•xlist
~e" Haven. Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9:10 a.m Tue.. 6:30
pr..yer and B1ble Sludy.

Che;ler Church of the ~aJ.arene
Pastor· Rev 1\arren Lukens, Sunday
Schoc.,J 9·.10 a.m. Worsh1p • 10:30 am.,

\\orsh1p 'J m ;c m \Unlla\ ~ch&lt;'&lt;•l
10 30 ,, m I IN Sunda) of Month 7.00
p.m semcc Pastor Gene Gc&gt;O&lt;IWIII
Tupper&lt; l'lains St. Paul
Pllst&lt;&gt;r Jun Corbitt, Sunda) School • 9
a m., llorshlp HJ a.m , Tuesday Se"'Jces
730pm
C'cntral Clust~r
Asbury (Syracuse), Pa.stor: Bob Robmson,
Sunda) School • 9:45 a m.. Worsh1p Il
am .. 1\edoesday ServJCes - 7·30 p m
Flat\lood;
PaSior Dewayne Sluttler Sunday
lOa.m. \\or;h1p 11 am.

lltthan)
Pastor· John Rozcwict, Sunday School 10 a.m., \\orsh1p 9 a.m. Wednesday
Set\ices · ,10 a.m.
Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine. Ohio.
P~slor: John Rozew1cz. Sunday School •
9:45 am .. 1\orsh•p 11:00 a.m. , Bible
Study 1\ed. 7:30pm

Racine
Palot&lt;&gt;r. Rev. W1lham Mar;hall, Sunda)
School • 10 a.m Wor&lt;h1p • II
a.m.Wednesday Services 6 pm, Thur Bible
Study7pm
toohille United \lethodist Pari&lt;h
Pa.stor: Helen Kline. Coolville Church,
~fain &amp; Fifth St. Suo. School • 10 a.m ..
ll,&gt;r;hip • 9 a.m. Toes ServiCes. 7 p.m.
B~thel Church
TO\\nship Rd, 461\C. Sunda) School · 9
a.m. \\onbip
10 a.m., \\cdncsday
ServiCes - 10 a.m
Hockin~port Church
Kathryn Wlle), Sunday School • 9:30
am., Wol"hlp 10:30 a.m., Pastor Philhp
Bell
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 6.1, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
\\orsb1p lO:JO a m

Nazarene
Point Rock Church of I be 'lam rene
Route 689. Albany, Rev. Lloyd Gnmm,
pa,tor. Sunday School 10 am: worh&lt;~p
se"'ice II am. everun~ se,..,ice 7 pm. \\ed
prayer meeting 7 pm

Sund.-.) ~HIIUI~ fl ~·m

Rulland Church of lhe '&lt;•mn:ne
Pastor: Gemge Stadler. Sunday School
9:10 a.m., Wor&gt;hlp 10:30 a.m., 6:30
p.m., Wedne&gt;dav Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

10 a.m 2nd and 4th Sunday

Carleton lnlerdenominational Church
K1ngsbury Road, Pastor· Roben Vance.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .. Wor&lt;:h1p
Service JO::ln a.m .. Even1ng Service 6
p.m
Freedom Gospei.\Ji,sion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor Rev.
Roger Willford. Sunday S&lt;hool 9:30
a.m. Wof'lhlp- 7 p.m ,
\\hile\ C!Japel W~le)an
Cl&gt;olville Road, Pastor: Rev. Charles
Manindale, Sun School
9;30 a m ,
Wof'Jhip·l0:30a.m Wed. Ser11ce 7 p.m.

Common Ground 'lbsions
Paslor;: O.:nms \1oore &amp; Rick Lltde
Sunday 1(!:00 a.m.
TeamJe.us
Pastor- Edd1e Baer, Sun \\orsh1p II am
333 Mechanic St. Pomeroy
\e" Hope Church
Old American Leg10n Hall,
Founb Ave .. M1ddlepon. Sunday 5 p.m
S)racust' Con•munit) Church
2480 Second St. Syracust. OH
Sun. School 10 am. Sundy ni~ht 6 30 pm
Pa1otor: Joe Gwinn
A \e" Beginning
/Full GosJ)el Church) Harrisonville,
P.•stor&lt;: Bob and Kay Marshall,
Thurs. 7 p.m.
\maTing Grace Communi!) Church
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt 681.
Tuppers Pi runs, Sun. Wo"hip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm,. Wed. B1ble SIUd) 7;00 p.m

Fairvie&gt;~ Bible Church
Letan. W.~a. Rl. l, Pastor; Brian May,
Sunday School 9:JO am.. Worsh1p. 7:00
p.m, Wednesday B1ble Srudy 7:00p.m.
faith f'ello";hip Crusade for Chrht
Pastor· Rev. Frankhn Dickens, Se,..,ice:
Friday, 7 p.m

Cahar) Bible Church
Pomtro) P1ke. Co. Rd., Pastor; Rev.
Blll(;kwood, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worsh•p 10.30 a.m. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Se,..,i&lt;e - 7:30p.m.
Sthcmille Community Church
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Worship
11:00 am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; MISsy Da1ley

Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Me•gs M1ddle School
Cafetena Pnstor: Chris Stewan
I 0:00am :--loon Sunday; lnfonnal
Worship, Cbildren's mmistry
Communi!) of Chri~t
Portland Racme Rd .• Paslor: J1m Proffitt.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m., 1\orship •
10.30 a.m.. Wednesday Se,..,iccs - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel 1\onsbip Ccnler
39i82 St. Rt. 7, 2 miles soulh of Tuppers
Plains, OH. :\on-denominational w1th
Contemtxnary Praise &amp; Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber, Assoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Belly Fulks. Sunday
servic~s: 10 am Wor~hip &amp; ,6 pm Family
L1fe Cla&gt;'es. Wed &amp; Tlrur mght Life
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs morning ladies'
Ufe Group at 10. Outer Limns Youth Life
Group on Wed. evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
\lsit us onhne al www.bethel"c.org.
\sh Street Church
398 Ash St .. M1ddlepon-Pastors Mark
Morro"' &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m., Mom1ng Worsh1p 10:.10 a.m. &amp; 6:30pm. Wednesday Smice
·6:30p.m.. Youih Service 7:00p.m
\gape Life Center
"Full-Gospel rhurch". Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason, 7735017. Service lime: Sollda) 10:30 a.m..
\\ednesday 1 'Pin
\bundant Gra~
92.1 S. Third St .. M1ddlepon. Pas1or Teresa
DaviS, Sunday serv1ce. 10 a.m.,
Wednesday -;e,..,ice. 7 p.m
Failb Full Gospel Church
Long Bouom, Pastor. Sieve Reed. Sunday
School - 9:30a.m WoNhlp. 9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednesday • 7 p.m .. Fnda)
fellowship o;e,..,ice 7 p.m.
Harrisom ille Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunda) • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., \lednesday 7 p.m.
\liddleport Communi!) Church
575 Pearl St. Middlepon .. Pastor: Sam
Ander&gt;on. Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evening-7:30p.m. Wednesday Se,..,ice •
7:30p.m
Faith Valle) Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmeu
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thur&lt;day Service. 7 p.m.

RejoidnJi I .ife Church
500 ~ - 2nd Ave., M1ddlepon, Pastor·
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emerilus Lawrence
Foreman. Worship· 10:00 am
Wednesday Se,..,ices. 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabtrnacle Church
Clifton.\\ Va., Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Worship • 7 p.m., Wednesday Service . 7
p.m
f"ull Gospel Church
ofthe l.htngSa,·ior
Rt.338, Anllqwly, Paslor: Jesse Moms,
Se,..,ices: Saturd3) 2:00p.m.
Salem Communi!) Church
Back of West Columbia, WVa.om Lieving
Road. Pastor; Charles Roush (3~) 6752288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
evening service 7:00 pm. B1bly Sludy
Wednesday service 7;00 pm
Hob&gt;on Christian f'ello"~bip Church
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday Schoolto am. Sunday Church Sef"·ice. 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Christian Fello"&gt;hip
9365 Hooper Road, Athens, Pa.slor·
Lonme Coals. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday· 7 pm
Hou;e of Healing )llnistries
St. RL 124 Lang,\\ille, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Robtn &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunday School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am
7:00 pm. Wed.
Semce 7.00 pm
Team Je-'"' \linistrit'&gt;
Pastor Eddie Baer, Meeung 333
Mechanic Streel. Pomeroy. OH
s.,,..,,ce every Sunday I LOO a.m.

Pentecostal
l'enleco;tal Assembly
Pastor St. Rt. 124. Rac1ne. Tornado Rd.
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m., Evening • 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrison1ille Pre'b)terian Church
Pastor· Re• Da"d Faulkner. Wor,:;bip •
9:00a.m. Suuda)
'liddleportl'resbyterian
Pastor James Snyder Sunday School 10
a.m., worship servict II am.

. Seventh-Day Adventist

Syracu;e \li&lt;Sion
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse. Pastor·
Rev. Ro) Thompson. Sunday School - 10
a.m. Evenmg 6 p.m.. Wednesday se,..,•ce
· ?p.m.

Se1enth-Da) Ad•entlst
Mulberry llt&gt;. Rd .• Pomero). Saturda)
2 p.m.,
Services: Sabbath School
Wooh•p 3 p.m.

Hazel Conunuuity Church
Off Rt I 24, I';Jstor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School -9:30a.m., \lor;hip • 10:30 a.m.,
7·10p.m.

\fl. Hermon l-nited Brethren
in Chrht Church
Texas Communi1y 36411 W1ckham Rd.
Pastor; Peter Marundale. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday ServJce' 7:00 p.m
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7pm
Edtu l,;uited BN.'thrcn in Christ
Slate Route 124, between ReedsVIlle &amp;
Hockmgpon. Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m. Wednesday
Semces • 7:00 p.m .• Paslor- M. Adam
\\'ill

llyes,ille ComnJUnit) Church
Sundav School 9:30 a.m \\oNhip •
10:30 am., 7 p.m.
\lor-e Chapel Church
Sunday schQOI 10 a.m., Worship • II
iLm., 1\ednesday Se.... ICC - 7 p.m.

\It, Olhe l nited \tethodi1t
Off 124 behmd \\ 1lkesville. P.ISI&lt;•r Rev:
Ralph Sp11es. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
1\orship • 10:.10 a.m .• 7 p.m., Thursday
ServiCes 7 p.m.

\liddleport Churcb ofthr :\azarene
Pastor· Leonard Powell , Sunday School
9· 30 a.m.,\\orship . 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.,
llcdnesda) Semce&lt; 7 p.m ..

\leig1 Cnoperati1e Pari'h
'\onhcast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor; Gene
Good'\'"· Sunday Scb()(&gt;l - 9:.10 a.m.,
\\orsh1p . II am 6:30p.m

Reed"ille Fello\lship
Church of the )o.az.arene. Pastor; Russell
Car&lt;on Sunday School 9·10 am ..
\\,&gt;rsh•p 10:45 a.m. 7 p.m., Wed.nesd~
Smices 7p.m

Chester
Pastor: Jim Corbit!, \\'or,hlp 9 am..
Sunda~ School
10 a.m. , 1 hur&gt;day
S&lt;:me&lt;s 7 p.m.

S) racu.se Church of the \a1.arcne
Sunda) S,hool • 9:30 a.m., Worship
10:30 a.m., 6 p.m., \\ed Services. 7 p.m.

F'ull Go,pell.ighthou."'
Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor· Roy
Hunler. Sunday School · 10 a.m., &amp; 7:30
\\ednesday beo!ng 'l;JO p.m.,

l'omero) ('burch of the \a1arene
Pa 1 Ja La end r Sunday S ·hool

South Bethel Contmunit) Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood,
SdShl9
WhS.
'

Church of God

'

9:30 am .. l\orsh1p 10·30 am and 6
p.m. 1\ednc.••lay se ....ices • 7 p.m.

I'.ISior: DcnlJI :\ull. Wor&lt;hip 9:10am
Sunday School 10:10 •.m.
t.on~ llottom
Sunda) School 9 .10 am, \\orsh1p
JOIOam.

Faith Gospel Church
Long Bouom. Sunda) School 9:30 am.,
Worship
10:45 a.m., 7·30 p.m ..
1\ednesday 7:30p.m.

United Brethren

33~5

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

friday, August 27,

A Hunger for More
On occasion, I find
myself in conversations
with people who choose
to share with me why
they have chosen to not
become Christians (or at
least the reasons they
delay
in
becoming
Christians). Sometimes
they may even share why
they feel some hostility
towards the church and
pretty much let it be
appear that they would
just as soon have a root
canal as come to church.
I appreciate their willingness to trust me
enough to make themselves vulnerable to me in
baiing their hearts as they
seek to explain the
"whys" and "wherefores"
of their resentment or fear
of church ... if not out-andout hostility towards it. In
fact, I'm honored by their
confidence. And I especially appreciate their
willingness to talk about
it for their own sake.
They'll share with me
about hypocrisy that
they've witnessed. Or
they'll refer to some
"Christians" who, somewhere and at some point,
were cold and indifferent.
They' 11 perhaps mention
Church people in their
past who were all about
condemnation of others
while exalting themselves
and their own "holiness."
As they share, I find it
impossible, of course, to
attempt to excuse the bad
behavior of someone in
their past. Additionally,
since I (generally) don't
know the people to whom
they refer, it is impossible
for me to really form my
own opinions of their
behavior and discern if the
one talking to me is justifiably angry and upset, or
is perhaps looking with a
distorted perspective, misunderstanding the words
and deeds of others.
Be that as it may, our
conversations ultimately
drift towards the subject
of how the person sharing
is him- or herself responding to the information that
they feel they've gleaned.
Honestly, there are times
when folks eventually
begin to show that their
concems are not real concerns, but perhaps hide
deeper spiritual issues that
they may or may not recognize. For example, Joe
(an imaginary person) may
blame
Aunt
Ellie's
"FOSE" for his reluctance

Thorn Mollohan
to attend church, talk about
spiritual things, or make a
personal commitment to
trust and follow Christ.
Oh. Maybe you don't
know what FOSE is.
Well, don't look it up in
the dictionary; I made the
word up. It stands for
"Flamboyant Outbursts
of Spiritual Excitement.''
Maybe Joe's embarrassed by how Aunt Ellie
claps out of rhythm .. .
VERY LOUDLY. Okay.. .
so maybe every time her
hands come together
everybody else in the
building stops what
they· re doing and looks
her way ... with poor old
Joe blushing an amazingly deep fire-engine red.
In truth. he would like to
have the confidence that·
his eternal peace with God
has been secured but he's
afraid of what his co-workers and friends might think
so he throws up a smokescreen for others and,
maybe, even for himself.
Another example is
Ruthie (another imaginary
person). She says that she
resents the hypocrisy that
she sees at church. "Why
go if they're all a bunch of
hypocrites, right?"
In reality, she simply
likes her life... a lot. She
doesn't have any particular
desire to change anything,
being perfectly happy with
her friends, her job, her
hobbies, her family, etc.
Placing her faith in Jesus
for salvation makes sense
in her head, but her heart is
contented with everything
the world has been serving
up to her. She fears that in
following Him, she'll have
to begin making some
choices about her priorities. She's afraid that He'll
say to her what He said to
the disciples when He
called them, "Follow Me."
So now, when someone
suggests that she attend
church, she pulls out her
handy-dandy, sure-frre rea-

son for not going. The per
son who invites her backs
off, not sure how to
respond to Rut hie's objection and so she continues
to contentedly live her life
the way she wants.
And then there is Carl,
who feels the stirrings of
something, a hunger for
more
perhaps.
His
defense is to wear a mask
of cynicism, to keep what
he calls "over-reactive
Bible thumpers" at a safe
distance, all the while
weighing their words with
their life-styles. He's
know some Christians
who seemed no different
than anyone else in the
world, but then there have
been a few whose joy,
compassion. courage and
patience have seemed
almost supernaturaL
So Carl probes into the
life of his co-worker.
Leonard, a quiet, but
peaceful Christian. Carl
likes to play "devil's advocate" (no pun intended)
with Leonard. sometimes
to amuse himself in trying
to upset Leonard (who
doesn't often cooperate
and chooses to patiently
withstand Carl's taunts).
:8\it sometimes he asks
because he really wants to
know why Leonard's life
is so different: safe problems and same headaches,
but a completely different
outlook on them.
But there are times
when we may meet a person who has really and
genuinely been hurt, been
misused or abused, or has
witnessed others being
victimized by someone
allegedly
from
''the
church." Their reaction?
Anger, of course. And then
sweeping generalizations
about other Christians.
And then, horror of horrors, mistaken conclusions
about God Himself.
Maybe they've heard
about some abuse at the
hands of a "church leader"
in a news story. Perhaps
some immoral act or
behavior comes to their
attention. Or, it may be,
they heard of someone who
helped him or herself to
others· money illegally ...
or at least inappropriately.
I understand the confusion and hurt in this latter
case. And God understands
infmitely more clearly than
I do. However, no one is
released from accountability before God just because
someone else was "mess-

2010

Gods blessings exceed the brim

ing with our minds." God
will indeed hold those
folks accountable who are
"leaders" in the church but
have violated the calling
God has given them.
Though they dash to the
ground the fact that He had
entrusted them with abilities and oppo1tullities to
serve Him, they are each
accountable to God for the
ways that they have lived.
Have you been hurt in
the past by someone in the
church? The Lord understands . . . He understands
and He cares. Yet . . . He
looks to you to let go of the
past and to look to Him.
He urges you to surrender
your will, receive His gift
of reconciliation, and walk
a new path by His side.
Though you and. I may
say, "But I was hurt in the
past!" His reply is, "Yes, I
know. I was there and I saw
it all. I'll take care of it. But
what about YOU? Why
won'tYOU walk with me?
It's the only way to happiness and fulftllment, you
know. You·were created for
Me and My purposes. Why
won't YOU receive the gift
of life I would give to you?
You can see that 1gave My
very best in giving up My
Son for your sin. Why hesitate and maybe miss your
opportunity to have eternal
life?"
"For God so loved the
world that He gave His one
and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not
perish but have eternal life.
For God did not send His
Son into the world to condemn the world, but to
save the world through
Him. Whoever believes in
Him is not condemned, but
whoever does not believe
stands condemned already
because He -has not
believed in the name of
God's one and only Son
(John 3:16-18 NIV).
Well, l'm outta here. Jf
you need anything, just
drop me a line. I think
that I' 11 go now and have
a FOSE.

(Thom Mollohan and
his family have ministered
in southern Ohio the past
15 years and is the author
of The Fairy Tale
Parables. He is the pastor
of Pathway Community
Church and may be
reached for comments or
questions by email at pastorthom@pathwqygallipolis.com.)
Copyright© 2010,

Thom Mollohan.

(The following is an
open e-mail letter to my
wife, Terry): "Howdy!
Lovely Darling!
You know that for years
I have gently tried to get
you to alter something that
you so often do. But, you
just will not take heed to
my suggestion. Is it something that many women
do, too? D!d you learn it
from your mother?
Actually, I do not know
how you do it without
making a mess every
time. How is it that you
can make tea and fill the
pitcher just above the
brim without dripping
any of the , contents as
you transport it from the
counter to the refrigerator? Is it not possible for
you to leave some space
just below the brim?
After all, when I go to
handle the jug, I always
inadvertently spill tea in
the refrigerator. While
that image may make you
chuckle, it is not funny to
me, because I have to
wipe up tea from the
lower levels and contents.
But, it is the same thing
with other containers that
you fill. Do you remember
what happened at the supper
table
Thesday
evening? You had cut
cucumbers and onions and
stuffed them in a quart jar
filled with vinegar. You
even had a lid and ring on
the jar. Though I had the
jar sitting square on the
table as I removed the lid,
juice was primed already
over the brim just waiting
for me - or, so it seems
- to open it. It made a
quick mess on the table,
and, before paper towels
could be retrieved for
clean-up, on the floor.
Babe, I know that this
is the most minor of
minors about which to
utter continued complaint. I also know that
the major problem with it
is me - I keep forgetting
that you make it a point
to fill things above the
brim, which results in
spills. You would think
that I would not forget.
But, on the other hand,
you do not realize how all
of this fills me with spiritual angst. How am I supposed to consider the deep,
rich blessings of God? In
Psalms 23, King David
indicated God's blessings
were filling and overflowing his life. "My cup nmneth over," David reported
I can identify with that.
Many times God has seen

•
Ron Branch
fit to bless us just enough
to meet our needs. He has
cettainly promised to bless
us to that extent, for which
we are thankful. Yet, you
and I both consider that the
cup of our married and
family life runs over with
the deep, rich blessings of
God. He blesses us materially in over-flowing manner. He blesses us spiritual~
ly to the brim and beyond.
I know you know John
10: lO and the words of
the Lord, "I am come that
they might have life, and
that they might have it
more abundantly." This
means that the Lord give.s
'overflowing life' to thos
whose lives are lived by
spiritual faith in Him. We
make it a point to not forget how God blesses us
beyond the brim.
But, I do not think the
same is true for most people at large. It is clear that
America's cup runs over
with the multitudinous
blessings of God. Shame
. on us that we have so easily forgotten that the God
of Israel the Father of the
Lord Jesus Christ is the
source of the abundance
we have. You would think
we would not forget.
Shame on us for the greed
and self-centeredness we
manifest toward -the
blessings of God that
exceed the brim on a
daily basis. We crave 'the
Lord gives,' but do not
readily consider that the
Lord can 'taketh away'
unless we return spiritual-ly, morally, and sociall
to His expectations.
I have often heard that
if you have a problem to
write it out. Having done
so, I am not going to say
another word of complaint about your filling
practices. You keep on
exceeding the brim, and I
will be reminded that
God's filling practice is
the same. Sorry I took up
your time to read this."

(Rev. Ron Branch is
pastor of Faith Baptist
Church in Mason, WVa.)

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

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The eighth otthe wOtts of the flesh mentioned by Paul in
his epistle lo the Galal1ans is jealousv. which is atranslation
of the Greek word "zelos." The word •zelos' can be
translated as jealousy, envy, or zeal, and can have both a
good and abod sense. In a good sense, we can
be zealous for God and alllhings holy, but in a
bod sense, we can envy lhe success of olhers
or be jealous aboul our loved ones spending
time wilh others. In Exodus 20;4-5 we are told
to avoid making graven images or bo~ng
down to anylhillg other !han God •tor I the
Lort.f your Got.! am aJealous God." As human
beings, lhe only proper zeal we should have
is for God and goodness. Jealousy and zeal
which leads lo brtlemess and diV~siveness is
obviously lhe bod type oi Jealousy, or misplaced
zeal. The original meanmg oOhe word •zelos"
was 'lo boll.'lndeed, jeabusy has away of •maltjng
our blood boil," and making us 'boil over.• When this
zeal is holy and proper~ directed !hal is agood lhing,
~en il is focused on our 0\11!1 selfish needs and desires it is not. We should renect
on whal we are zealous about and hy lo focus our zeal on God and God alone

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ageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August

2 7, 2 0 10

ASecret Place
Part 2
ew Lutheran group likely
RELIGION TODAY

Last week were talked
about the Secret Place place
in
God's
a
Presence. We mentioned
that sometimes we want
God's provision, God's
and church buildings. "People protection and God's
don't see it as too likely, but it's plan unveiled in our lives
not a discussion too many want to by simply praying a
prayer, going to church
have," Braaten said.
So why go through the hassles and give a little offering.
- especially when even critics of But God wants much
the ELCA's more liberalized poli- more. He wants intimacy.
The Secret Place is the
cy admit that no congregations are
likely to be compelled to install a place of· His presence
where time is of great
gay pastor?
"I don't think it's the issue of importance, and where
whether someone is going to have heart to heart thoughts
words
are
a gay pastor forced upon their and
church, as much a question of what exchanged. This time in
a straight pastor is going to be God's presence demonteaching," said the Rev. David strates intimacy and
Baer, pastor of Immanuel Lutheran lacks rush.
Prayer, ~raise and
Church in Whitewood, S.D.,
Worship
can not be
another charter member of the new
rushed
when
desiring to
denomination. "What's God's
intention for man·iage, for sexuali- be more like Jesus, when
ty? The concern is the ELCA is desiring to hear his voice.
trading in its teaching and losing receive ditection, have
its grounding in scripture and no wisdom and be endued
with power.
longer having a moral center."
Much like a marriage
Organizers of the new denomination will reveal on Friday its 18 relationship could not
charter churches - a number they produce fruit without
hope will grow to 200 or more intimacy; neither can our
relationship with God
within a year.
produce
fruit without
Earlier this month, the ELCA
spending time with the
reported a nearly 3 percent drop in
All-knowing one.
total receipts for its congregations
Furthermore, intimacy
from 2008 to 2009, and a decline
or quite times for a couin membership of 90,850 people.
ple enhances a relationThree times since April 2009, the,
ship a great deal.
ELCA's council cut the denominaLikewise, quite times of
tion's budget by a total of $17.5 intimacy
with
our
million and eliminated the equiva- Creator enhances our
lent of nearly 76 full-time jobs ..
relationship with Him.
ELCA spokesman John Brooks By intimacy I mean, a
said departures over the new cler- closeness of heart; a time
gy policy played a part in the pic- to listen to the Holy
ture but that the bad econo~y has Spirit. Time set aside to
also been a major factor in the spend with the One that
denomination's financial strug- loves you the most and
gles.
even died for you.
Hill, who in her early days at the
With the business and
church helped found a ministry for demands of life, the
gay, lesbian: bisexual and trans- Secret Place becomes a
gender people, said she was dis- very important necessity
heartened by the departing church- in the life of the Believer.
es.
It is important to realize
"There are some who feel they that crowds will fragmust leave the ELCA over that," ment your focus; recreshe said. "I feel sad about that, it's ation often diverts your
unfortunate. But to feel you have attention from your desto leave over the inclusion of your tiny. Friends can influ,brothers and sisters - that dimin- ence your life greatly.
ishes who we are as the body of Enemies
demoralize,
Christ."
children as great as they
(On the Internet: Evangelical are they still obligate.
Lutheran Church of America, But the Holy Spirit alone
www.elca .org; Lutheran CORE, transfotms. That's why
www.lutherancore .org.)
you must disconnect
from the world of human
influence and enter the
harbor of divine impartation - The Secret Place.
When the Secret Place
in God becomes your
habit, your life will experience dramatic change.

to rise from gay discord

,

BY PATRICK CONDON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS
Richard
Mahan and Anita Hill are both
Lutheran pastors who were inside
a Minneapolis convention hall last
summer when delegates for the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America voted to allow non-celibate gay and lesbian pastors.
Afterward, each cried for different reasons.
Mahan, lead pastor at St.
Timothy in Charleston, W.Va., said
he cried because he realized he
would likely leave the denomination in which he had invested 42
years of ministry. For HilL the
openly gay lead pastor at St. Paul.
eformation in St. Paul, they were
~s of ''joy and relief."
A year later, the ELCA is moving gay pastors into its fold - it's
now the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. to allow noncelibate gays into its ranks - even as
the most "isible dissidents strike
out on their own.
Mahan and other critics of the
decision plan to gather this week in
Columbus, Ohio, for another
Lutheran convention. Leaders of
18 former ELCA churches are
expected to be among more than
l ,000 Lutherans voting Friday to
create a brand new Lutheran
denomination that they claim will
follow the Sc1iptures more faithfully:
the
North American
Lutheran Church.
"The issue is depa1ture from the
word of God." Mahan said. His
church has already voted twice to
end its longtime identity as a
ELCA church, also ending an
annual $36,000 in tithing to the
denomination.
Meanwhile, Hill will finally join
official roster of ELCA pastors.
e was ordained in 2001, but she
• ad been kept off the roster
because she lived openly with her
lesbian partner, with whom she'd
shared a commitment ceremony in
1996. That meant she was not eligible for the full housing
allowance and retirement benefits
and could not be a voting delegate
to churchwide assemblies.
Next month, Hill and two other
lesbian pastors will gather to
receive the ELCA's newly
designed Rite of Reception and
officially join the roster of the St.
Paul Synod. The St. Paul bishop

will "lay on hands,'' Hill said, in a
ceremony that is becoming mor~
frequent around the country. Seven
gay and transgender pastors were
received last month in San
Francisco. Similar ceremonies are
planned soon in Minneapolis and
Chicago.
"At my church there is a sense of
great celebration, of people being
very happy that our work to make
the ELCA a more inclusive place
has come to· fruition," Hill said.
Her denomination will be slightly smaller: As of early August, 199
congregations had cleared the hurdles to leave the ELCA for good,
while another 136 awaited the second vote needed to make it official. In all there are 10,239 ELCA
churches with about 4.5 million
members, making it still by far the
largest Lutheran denomination in
the U.S.
And the breakaway members
gathering in Ohio will face their
own challenges if they vote to start
another denomination at a time
when attendance at mainline
Protestant churches is falling and
denominational distinctions appear
irrelevant to a growing number of
churchgoers.
But pastors in a few churches
that plan to join the North
American Lutheran Church say.
there are still good reasons to be
part of a larger church body.
"For a lot of congregations and a
lot of churchgoers, there is value in
a larger Lutheran fellowship," said
the Rev. Mark Braaten, pastor at
Our Savior's Lutheran Church in
Tyler, Texas, another charter member of the new denomination.
About 75 percent of the churches that already left the ELCA have
affiliated
with
Lutheran
Congregations in Mission for
Christ - another, smaller denomination. But the Rev. Mark Chavez,
Lutheran CORE's director, said
some Lutherans found that denomination too loosely structured and
wanted a choice that retained
aspects of the ELCA identity.
Some ELCA refugees have a
more bottom-line reason to jom a
new denomination. Under many
church constitutions, congregations that leave the ELCA and try
to strike out as a wholly independent church could actually see
their ELCA synod council assert
legal ownership of their property

Alex Colon
This is probably why
David spent seven times
a day in the Secret Place.
Daniel prayed three
times a day. Jesus prayed
regularly and often by
himself up on a mountain. He recognized that
his strength and rejuvenation (for his human
side) was of vital importance. It was important
for Jesus to remain in
God's will, God's ways
in order to continue in
God's wonder, operating
the signs and wonders.
If Jesus took time to be
in the Secret Place of
Father's Presence, then
how much more us
today? 1 am not trying to
go back to Old Covenant
times ..I understand that
in the New Covenant, we
are the tabernacle of the
Holy Spirit where God
abides in. Yet, with Jesus
being as close as the
mention of His name, our
thoughts, our consciousness and our lives are
often very far from Him.
We worry more than we
relax. We fear more than
we faith. Christians have
loss the 'touch' of living
by faith. We live by fear
more than by faith and
this is a proven fact!
I want to encourage
you to take time to enter
the Secret Place. The
place where fear fears
and faith arises. Fear can
not abide in God's presence. The Secret Place is
the arena of confidence,
peace, joy and removal
of stress and anxiety.
This is where God
reveals His secrets to His
servants. Don't be in
such a hurry. Don't put it
off any longer. Your life
depends on the time
spent in the Secret Place.
He's waiting anxiously to
meet you there.
Make it a great week!
(Rev. Alex Col6n is
Lighthouse Assembly of
God in Gallipolis, Ohio.
On the Internet at
www.lagohio.org.)

Gathering
2010
Willing Heart Outreach
for Christ, located at
1081 Oshel Road, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., will host
the
1Oth
Annual
Gathering Aug. 30-Sept.
5. Each night, singing will
begin at 7 p.m. On Sept.
4, Sonz of the Most High,
a Christian rap group
from Chicago, Ill., will
take the stage at 6 p.m.,
follqwed by the awardwinning Hebrew Children
of Dayton, Ohio.

E-mail Faith news to
mdsnews @mydailysentinel.com

�Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 27,

Chinese dinosaur Community Calendar
fossils to make
Public
U.S. debut in Ohio meetings

Church of the Nazarene,
Jarvis Family, Smeeks
Family, others.

tion in his .honor w1ll be
held from 1-4 p.m ., at
Racine American Legion
Hall.

Sunday, Sept. 5

Monday, Aug. 30

B Y LISA C ORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI
Dinosaur fossils. includmg a rib more than 9 feet
long from a species of the
long-necked titanosaur
family, are making their
North American debut
Friday at a Cincinnati
museum.
Four of the fossils arc
among at least a dozen
that were found from
2005 to 2007 in China's
Henan province. The rib
and

three

vertebrae

came from a titanosaur
that.
paleontologists
believe was 30 feet tall.
close to I00 feet long
and probably weighed
32 to 87 tons.
The fossils in the
exhibit date back to 144
million to 100 million
years ago. officials at the
Cincmnati
Museum
Center said.
After the fossils were
Identified. researchers
found that villager::; in the
region had been digging
up dinosaur bones for
centuries. belie' ing them
to be dragon bones and
grinding them up for
medicine.
"Henan could become
the largest dinosaur field
in China," said Daoping
Bao. president and CEO
of Dinosaurs Unearthed
Corp .• a dinosaur exhibition company based in
Canada.
Discovery of the fossi Is
from the titanosaur family, named after the ·
mythological Titans from
ancient Greece. was
important to China and to
the field of paleontology,
said officials with the
museum and Dinosaurs
Unearthed.
"It enabled identification of a new species of
titanosaur," ::~aid Glenn
Storrs. curator of vertebrate paleontology at the
museum.
The
exhibit
also
includes a fossilized nest
of eggs laid by an
unknown species of the
feathered, beaked oviraptorosaur. The eye-

catching attraction that
first greets exhibition
visitors measures more
than 5 feet in diameter
and contains 26 eggs
averagmg a foot or more
in length and laid in
pairs around the edge of
the round nest.
This nest i::. important
because it shO\\ s the eggs
were laid in a manner
similar to bird eggs
today. said Storr::~.
, "It is another addition
to the broad amount of
evidence linking living
birtls
with
extinct
dinosaurs," he said.
The entire collection of
fossils from Henan has
only been displayed in a
in
Henan.
museum
although two. of the fossils were displayed
briefly in Japan, officials
with
Dinosaurs
Unearthed said.
The Cincinnati exhibit
will continue through
mid-October. when the
collection will be included in a larger Dinosaurs
Unearthed exhibition of
the Chinese fossils set to
begin touring the U:1ited
States and Canada. Sites
have
yet
to
be
announced.
The fossils are on loan
from
the
Henan
Geological Museum in
China and were obtained
through a partnership
between the Cincinnati
and Henan museums and
Dinosaurs Unearthed.

RAC INE - Southern
Local
Board
of
Education. regular session, 8 p.m., high school
media center.

POMEROY
Homecoming at First
Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
10:30 a.m., with the
French
Chorders
Quartet.

Sunday, Sept. 5

RACINE ~
~

~ •

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations

RACINE - Charles
Bush will be 90 on Aug.
28. Birthday cards may
be sent to him at 49740
McKenzie Ridge Road,
Racine, 45771. A recep-

Tuesday, Aug. 31

POMEROY - OhKan
Coin Club will meet at
6.30 p.m. at tile Pomeroy
Library. Poster for coin
show wil be ava1lable.
MIDDLEPORT
Athens-Meigs Scottish
Rite Club, regular meeting, 6:30p.m., Middleport
Mason1c Lodge, refreshments served.

Saturday, Aug. 28

Church events
Friday, Aug. 27

POMEROY - Noah's
Ark Outdoor Drama, 7:30
p.m., Aug. 27-29, Hillside
'Baptist Church, free
admission.
Sunday, Aug. 29

CHESTER - Hymn
sing, 6 p.m.. Chester

......................................................
.. .. .. . .... .. . .. .. .. . ..
Spt•&lt;:ial thanks to

~
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for pun:ha-.ing my

Grand Champion
Market Goat.

The Vaughan Agency
Providing a world of choice in insurance.

Wednesday, Sept. 1

CHESTER -. Open
meeting for the public,
Chester Garden Club,
with Craig Matheney as
speaker, 7 p.m., Chester
United Methodist Church.
Ref.reshments.
Door
prizes.

Shuler will be celebrating
her 97th birthday on
Sept. 5. Cards may be
sent to her at 4482.
Resort Road , Racine,
Ohio 45771

•,
}'copies Bank of Pomeroy,
,
', ' Pleasant Valley Hospital and Michael ' ..
;
'
'
Bartrum, and The Cutting Crew

Wednesday, Sept. 1

PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. Pageville town hall.

Mildred

2010

It's About Being There
for Your Family ...

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~.---~.-~--~~--~--~~.---------------------------~----~-~ --------------~-~---------~~----------~------~~----~

B1

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
URG ~ol·cer opens '"ith win, Page B3

Tiger ·.,hoots best round of JCnr, l'age B4

•

Friday, August 27,2010

Time for

1

Kickoff

II

A sc:hedu

POMEROY -

ol upconung

l'tgh school varsny sport ng events
nvolvlng 1~ ms from Mason. Metgs and

OVP area opens football season with 7 garries
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BW.\LTERS@MYOAilYTR SUNE COM

The 20 I 0 gridiron season ofticiall) begins for
seven of the nine football
teams in the Ohio Valley
Publishing coverage area
this Friday night, including a full slate of six contests on the northern side
of the Ohio Ri,er.
Meigs and South Gallia
will be the lone teams
pht) ing at home this
weekend. '" hile Gallia
Academ). River Valley.
Eastern and Southern
will he on the road their
Ohio openers.
Hannan,
the
lone
Mason Count} school
playing this weekend.
will be making its West
Virginia opener on the
road. Both Point Pleasant

and Wahama star. the
2010 \tlountaineer campaign with an open date.
Here i'\· a small breakdown of this Friday s
season-openeing contests.
COAL GROVE
AT MEIGS

Friday will be the third
consecutive season in
which the Hornets and
Marauders have met in
Week I, which has
resulted in a J.J head-tohead record over that
span.
Ironically, the winner
of th.is contest has gone
on to qual if} for the playoffs in each of the last
two years - so it is an
important game early in
the sea~on.
The ~arauders- who

finished 5-5 a season ago
- lost the 2009 decision
at CG HS by a narrow 4442 decision. Coal Grove
went on to win the Ohio
Valley Conference title
and tmish 9-l overall.
Meigs · which won
the 2008 game at Bob
Roberts Field by an 18-7
margin - enters its 18th'
season under head football
coach
Mike
Chance).
who
has
amassed a 94-76 overall
record during that tenure.
MHS has also won
three of its last four season openers and enters
20 I 0 with a 4-game regular
season
winning
streak.
The visiting Hornets the 3-time reigning OVC
champions - were hit
hard by graduation. most

notably on the offensive
side of the ball. CGHS
will enter 20 lO having to
replace 2.000 rushing
)ards and 36 touchdowns
with the losses of nmningbacks Oakie Haynes
and Frank Delawder, as
well as quarterback Evan
Ferguson.
Coal Grove. however.
\Vi II have 13 starters and
numerous letterwinners
returning for head coach
Dave Lucas - '"'ho has
amassed a 195-89-l
record at CGHS over 27
,seasons.
SCIOTOVILLE EAST
AT SOUTH GALLIA

Two programs with
new head coaches will
square off at Rebel Field
on Friday when the
Rebels and Tartans meet

in a non-conference
matchup.
South Gallia - which
finished 3-7 a year ago
- "ill be under the leadership of longtime assistant Jason Peck, who
replaces Justy Burleson
after seven seasons at the
helm. That 1 artans \Vho were 5-5 last fall will be under Todd
Gilliland. the program s
third coach in as many
sea..ons.
East enters Friday with
a two-game winning
streak in this series.
including last years 19-6
victory over SGHS. East
also beat the Rebels 2812 in 2007 but South
Gallia won two straight
from the Tartans during

Please see OVP, Bl

Ga oa countiH

EJ:isln. .AI!.II.!.Ili27

Pape earns
medalist honors
as Southern
falls to Miller

Football
Galha Academy at Athens
Coal Grove at Meigs
Eastern at Alexander
Portsmouth East at South Gallia
Southern at Symmes Valley
RIVer Valley at Federal Hocktng
Hannan at Williamson
• all ctre'1 start a:: 7·'10 p.m.

SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS@MYOA Y5ENTINELCOM

Stil.!Id.IY. August 28
Volleyball
South Ga 1a at Waterford. Noon
Cross Country
Gatna Academy, Eastern, Southam
at Manetta. 10 am.
R1ver Valley. Ed Sayre Memorial
~eet 9 a.m.
Po•nt Pleasant at Hurricane
lnVttattonal 10:45 am
Soccer
Point Pleasant (G) at Mtdland Trail,
11 am
Wo1r at Pomt Pleasant (B). 1·30 p m

Mslod.fly, August 30
Volleyball
Gall a Academy at Mtnford, 5·30
Valley at Tnmble 6 p m.
at South Galha, 6 p.m
Wahama at Chflside. 4:30 p.m
Golf
Gallla Academy, R1ver Valley.
Wah~:na at Chffs1de 4:30 p.m
Eastern at Loga,.. 5 p m.
Southern at Wahama 5 p rn
Metgs at We ston 5 p m
Soccer
Ironton St Joe at OVCS 6 p rn

2010 RIVERSIDE 2-MAN
BEST BALL TEE-TIMES
FIRST ROUND- SATURDAY AUG. 28
7 30 a.m. - Cra1g Brumfield, Ryan
Dav1s. Colton Brumfield
740arn -Open
7.50 am -Open
a·oo a m -Pat Garter Hop Wh to
David Reed DaVid Reed. Jr.
810am-Open
8:20 a m.
()pc:'l ,
8 30 a m - Ron Jackson, Dave
Stone
Pat Clay, Aaron
8:40 a m Hunt•ng, Jay Hams. J•m Stewart
Enc Tolar. Lydel
8:50 a.m Norman, M1ke Chapman. Dono Lent
9:00 a.m - Dernck Yonker, Mike
Sigler. Brent F1elds Jon McCauley
9.10 am. - Gary Roush, Dale
Browmng. Terry Lucas. T1m Burnett
a rn - Trent Roush. M•tch
- larry Hawluns, Jam1e
Bnan Bidde Mason Stan ey
9 40 a m - Mark Workman, Jamte
Laton Matt Moore, Brandon Frame
9 50 a m. - Mark Warden. Bnan
Presnell B II Strong Bnan Huston
10:00 a rn - Jeff Rollyson, Tim 1
Mount, Corey Miller, John R1denour
10 10 a.rn - Jeff Arnold. John
Bentley. M1ke Haynes, Aaron BICkle
10.20 a m -Joey Rogers. Andrew
Cochran, Garrett Humphreys, Joe
Fyall
10 30 a.m - Phil Mayes, Jom
Freeman Bruce Wethecholt
10 ~0 a rn - Doug lson Dave
Ison Dan ol W netordner, Bradley
Jarrett
10 50 am -CUrtiS Roush. RIChte
0 a n Tom Dotson Pat Harbour
11 00 a rn - Jason Shu er. Bryan
DrumMOnd, Jeremy Vallet, Dav1d
Loggtns
11 10 am. - Tommy K1rk, Bill
Copley. Dave Runyon
11 20 a.m. - Jason Kmg, Carl
K1ng, Styerltng ShteldS, PJ GibbS
11 :30 a m. - Scott Perry, Doug
lson, Jr, Sam Whorto,., Buddy
Butler
11 40 a m - Buk Powell Sparky
LISle Roy Johnson. Roy Johnson
Jr
11 50 a m - Nick B1bbee, John
Monroo, Scon Bibbee. Jay Kaufman
1200pm -Open
1210pm -Open
12 20 p m - Jeff Goebel, Rob1n
Phaln
30 p.m -Tony Dugan. Jason
ker Jeremy Tucker, Ryan Noms

CoNTAcrUs
1·740·446-2342 ext. 33
Fax-

1·74Q-446-3008

E-mail . md:aportsOmydallyseot net com

.smtrti

fl

Bryan Walters
{740) 446·2342 ext 33
bwaltors@ mydallytnbune.corn

Sarah Hawley
(740) 446·2342 ext 33
shawl yCf11Yd8 lytrtbune.com

$

Sarah Hawley/photo

Gallia Academy's Cody Rob1nson, right. follows the ball down field as Ohio Valley Christian's Evan Bowman
defends Robinson scored four of the e1ght goals for the Blue Devils in the game,' and assisted on another.

Blue Devils score 7 in second to beat OVCS
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAv.tEY MWA LYTR BUNE COM

CENTE:--:ARY. Ohio
- After battling to a 1-1
half time score. Gallia
Academy scored seven
second half goals to
defeat
Ohio
Valley
Christian
8-1
on
Thursday evening.
The game was the
home opener for the Blue
Devils and the season
opener for Ohio Valle}
Christian.
Gallia Academy scored
first. on a goal by Zach

Stewart in the 8th minute
of play. Casey Denbow
ass1sted on the goal.
Richard
Bowman
scored
Ohio Valley
Christi&lt;m s goal midway
through the . first half,
tying the game at one.
Two minutes into the
second
half.
Zach
Stewart scored h s second !!oal of the contest.
\vith ~Jonathan Caldwell
ass1stmg. At the 43rd
minute. Caldwell added a
~oal of his own, with
:)tewart providing the
·
assist.

Cody Robinson scored
a goal at the 51st minute
with
an assist b)
Denbow
Robinson
added h1s second goal of
the game at the 57th
minute. with Caldwell
assisting.
Caldwell scored his
secQnd of the game in the
62nd
minute.
with
Robinson providing the
assist.
Robinson added goals
in the 73rd and 78th minutes to take the score to
8-1. Chris Kyger and
Jared Lester assisted on

the goal.
Robinson scored a total
of four goals and added
one assist in the victory.
Stewart and Caldwell
each had two goals in the
game.
Caldwell and Denbow
each had two assists,
with Stewart. Kyger. and
Lester each adding one.
Gallia Academy ho::.t
Point
Pleasant
on
Tuesda) at 5:30 p.m.,
while
Ohio
Valley
Christian host Ironton St.
Joe on Monday ~t 6 p.m.

URG ·volleyball picked 2nd in MSC East
BY MARK WILLIAMS

'

SPECIAl TO DiE SENTINEL

LOU ISV ILLE, Ky. --

1 he Universit) of Rio
Grande RedStorm volleyball team is predict
cd to finish second in
the
Mid-South
Conference
East
Division. ttccording to
the MSC Coaches Preseason
poll.
Rio
Grande received 13 voting points and one firstplace vote. Mid-South
Conference newcomer
and arch-rival Shawnee
State is picked to win
the East.
Shawnee
State
received
14 voting
points, including three
first-plucc votes from
the
East
Division
coaches. Coaches were
not allo"' ed to vote for
their own team.
Rio Grande finished
third in the MSC last
!ii.:CISOil
with a 9-5
record.

Rio Grande head
coach
Billina
Donaldson and the
RedStorm are extremely optimistic about the
20 I 0 season and can t
wait to get underway.
"We
are
bigger.
stri&gt;nger. faster and
more
experienced.''
Donaldson said. "We
cannot wait to turn
heads this season ...
"The key to our success this year will be
the ability to show up
for the big games.''
Donaldson added. "We
have so much talent this
year. we just have to
have confidence when
we walk onto the
court."
Georgetown College
is the consensus pick to
finish at the top of the
West Division. This
season marks the first
time
Mid-South
Conference• volleyball
has moved to divisional
play. The conference

expanded to 10 fulltime members in July.
The rest of the projections for the East
Division are as follows:
Pikeville College is
third in the preseason
ranking \Vith 11 voting
points. including the
final first-place vote.
MSC newcomer UVAWise received eight
voting points. while
WVU Tech received
four voting points to
complete
the
East
Division.
In
the
West.
Georgetown received
16
voting
points.
including four firstplace votes in the West
Division
preseason
poll.

Campbellsville

•

University 1s projected
second in the West with
13 voting points and the
final first-place vote.
Lindsey
Wilson
College received I 0
voting points to finish
third in the balloting,
while University of the
Cumberlands (seven)
and
St.
Catharine
College (four) round
out the West Division .
Rio Grande begins the
season, August 26 versus Point ~Park inside
the Newt Oliver Arena
at6 p.m.
'I he 20 I 0 MSC volleyball seas.on begins
later this month and
concludes w.ith the conference
tournament
Nov. 7-9 in Frankfort.
Ky

GLOUSTEf{, OhioThe Southern Tornadoes golf
t e a m
dropped
a
TVC
Hocking
match
agaist
Miller at Forest Hills
golf course on Tuesday.
Miller
defeated
Southern by a score of
201-209.
Southern s
Adam Pape took medalist honors with his
round of 44. Miller s
Dakota McGill was runner-up with a 46.
For the Tornadoes.
Andrew Roseberry shot
a 48. Dyllan Roush had
a 55. and Cole Graham
shot a 60. Additional
players for Southern
"'ere
Brandon
Marcinko (60)
and
frenton Cook (63).
Miller· s
Coalton
Pargeon
and
Evan
Pargeon each shot a 50.
\\ ilh
Justin
Hinkle
adding a 55. Brandon
Davi.. shot a 59 and
And) Jeffers had a 63.
GAHS GOLFERS WIN
TAl-MATCH AGAINST
WELLSTON, CHILLICOTHE

WELLSTON, Ohio
Gallia Academy s
Rob Canady shot a oneover par 37 to lead the
Blue De' ils to a trimatch victory over
Wellston
and
on
Chillicothe
at
Wednesday
Country
Fairgreens
Club.
Gallia
Academy
scored a 162 to defeat
Wellston ( 186) and
Chillicothe (2 t 3 ).
Canady s 37 was
closely· followed by
Boeing Smith s 38.
Derricl' Gilmore shot a
41 and Warren. Patrick
shot a 46. Also playing
for Gallla Academy
were Corey Arthur ( 49)
and Gus G·raham (61 ).
Wellston was led by
Blake Downard with a
round of 42. . Nick
Derrow shot a 46,
Hunter Reipenoff shot a
48. and Thomas Scaggs
had a 50. Also playing
for Wellston were Lane
Bunnel (52) and Tony
Spanos (53).
Pierce Knisle) led
Chillicothe
'' ith
a
round of 51.
Jake
BrO\\ n shot a 53,
Brandon Ta\ IJr had a
54, and I'yler Morrissey
had a 55. Also playing
fc,&gt;r Chillicothe were
Gnbc Preston (56} and
K.J. King (74).

'

�-------~--~--- -

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

Page B2 • The Daily Scntind

OVP
from Page Bl
the playoff runs of :::!005
(26-20 ot) and 2006 ( 1612).
Sciotoville Ea~t has a
roster that goes 30-strong.
but ther~ are a lot ot new
faces to that varsity lineup. The Rebels - who ~o
28-dcep on the vars1ty
roster - lost only tom
players to graduation.
GALLIA ACADEMY
AT ATHENS
Friday will be the third
consecutive season in
which the Blue Devils and
Bulldogs have met in
Week I. \\ hich has resulted in a 1- J head-to-head
record over that span.
Gallia Academ&gt; had
won the pre\ ious s1x contesb between the t\\O programs until last fall. \\hen
AHS claimed a 21-0 decision at Memorial Field.
Athens \\o·ent on to win a
share of the TVC Ohio
with a 9-1 mark. while
GAHS finished just the
2009 campaign w1th a 2~X
mark.
teams
have
Both
numerous skilled players
returning to the mix. but
line. play may ultim~tel)
dec1de the outcome ol th1s
contest.
All five of Athens start~
ing offensive linemen and
top-four defensive linemen are gone due to gmduation. which will lea&gt;e
plenty of question" cntcrmg the opener. 'I he
Bulldogs. hov..·e\ cr. will
have a roster that £&lt;&gt;es 51stron~ - which~ should
help 111 that transition.
Athens is'also looking
for its first back-to-bad(
winning seasons since the
2002-03 campaign.
The Devils ~- who
enter 2010 with a 40·man
roster
arc looking for
their first winning season
since 2006.
EASTERN AT
ALEXANDER
Friday will he the tifth

w\\&gt;w.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 27,

con:secuth e season in
which the Eagles and
Spartan~ ha-.e- met in
Week 1. "hich has resulted in four straight wins for
AilS. Alexand'cr - since
2006 - has posted wins
or :::!9-21. 17-13. 48-14
and la!it years 35-21 decision.
The Spa1tans - \Vho
fini,hcd g.2 la't year \WI"&lt;.' the lone Tn-Valley
Conference team, Ohio or
Hocking, to qualify for the
postseason. Eastern which finished 6-4 overall
- recorded its first "inning football season since

Fed Hock - which finIt will be the first game
ished :!OOlJ \\ ith a 3-7 as head coach - for
mark - has not won a Southern s Kyle Wickline.
season opener since the who takes 0\ er for Dennis
2003 campaign. an 8-0 Teaford after four sea'\Oil!&gt;
overtime\ ICtor) over l·ort at the helm. In contrast,
Frve. The Raiders - "ho Ru!&gt;t) Webb 'vi ii be enterwere 1-9 last se.tson. ing his lOth season at
thanks to a Week I lhdcit SVHS while accumulat~
by Minford for using an ing a sg-38 ovcmll record
ineligible player - have and tivc playoff appearwon two of their last four ancl!s over that span.
season openers.
The Lancers will have a
HANNAN AT
44-strong roster 1'01 20 10.
WILLIAMSON
but graJuation and other
Following an 0-10 camcircumstances have left paign in 2009. new
FHH S with no returning I Iannan football coach
all-league perfonners and Keith Ta) lor \\ ill be look2004.
only a handful of st:u1ers ing for the Wildcats to end
The Spartans \\ill go back.
a 12-game regular season
42 strong on the 'ai'Sit)
The Raiders. on the lo~in~ streak again~t the
roster th1:s fall. including other hand, will ha\C 4 1 Wolfpack on Friday night
the return of senior nul'~ players on their roster The \\'ildcats will have
ningback Cody Lawson mduding 13 lettem inners
- the pmgram s all-time back from 2009. The 23 pla)Crs on their' arsity
leading rusher. Thrc!e-) ear Raiders last ofticial Week roster, "hich \\ iU include
staner Michael Chapman 1. victol} came in 2(X)6 II varsity letterwinner$
will abo be back at quar- after an I R-1 ~ dc:cision from last season. Taylor
- who was the coach of
terback.
atom!
\Vith over Southca~ tcm.
Han nan ~n both 2007 and
numerous other fettenvin:!008,
which includes the
ners.
SOUTHERN AT
program s last victory in
Eastern \'&gt;ill have a 33SYMMES VALLEY
stron~ varsity 'roster and
Friday will be the tifth ::wog - will be aiming
20 tettcrwinners back consecutive season in for the Cats to fare betfrom last season. includ- ' which the Tornadoes and ter than a year ago
ing a 1.000-yard running- Vikings have met in Week against WHS.
Wi lliamson - coming
back in Klint Connery and l. wh1ch has resultccl in a
1.400-yard passer in 3-1 Symmes Valll!y head- off a 4-6 overall record
Braydcn Pratt.
to-head series lead. All last fall - wi ll have 15
The Eagles haven t won three of those SVHS wins
a sca~on opener since have also came in the last
2004. which \\as a 41-6 three meetings.
victnl} over South Gallia.
The Vikings - fre~h off
an 8-2 season and a plarRIVER VALLEY AT
off appearance - will
FEDERAL HOCKING
have r3 starters back from
Friday will be the first last seRson and will also
meeting bctv.een these boast a roster that ~oes 34t" o programs since the strong. The 'Iomaoocs, on
tum of me millenium. as the other hand. wen.' 4-6
the Lancers and Raiders last year and have on!) 2 1
will square off in Athens players for the 2009 camCounty.
paign.

WATER AEROBICS
MON. • WED. • FRI.
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returning Jetterwinncrs
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---~----

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

Friday, August 27, 2010

.....----- ~·-

--

--.....--------.....--------The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ B:l

www.mydailysentinel.com

RedStorm open
Omaha must give Clarett a support system
season with shutout
its
of Houghton, 2-0
OMAHA, Neb. (AP)
~tauril'e Clarett can t
si~n with the Omaha
Nighthuwks until team
shows It has a support
system in place for the
former Ohm State star.
the commissioner of the
United Football League
said Thursday.
'·Just throwing him to
the wolves, I wouldn t be
interesteu
in
that,"
Michael Hu)ghue said.
Clarett was the marquee running back In
college football in 2002,
leading Ohio State to its
first national championship in 34 years.
His star fell quick!)
amid myriad off-thefield troubles. He served
3? years in prison for
having a hidden gun and
holding up t\'..·o people
outside a bar. then spent
4? months in a community-based, lockdown dormitory.
Clarett called the
Nighthawks
recently
asking for a chance. and
an Ohio judge this week
~ave him permission to
leave the state to attenu
an individual workout. A
team spokesman said the
workout hadn t been
scheduled yet.
-

B Y MARK WILLIAMS
SPECI~L TO THE SENTINEL

•

IO GRANDE, Ohio
- The fourth-rankeu
University
of
Rio
Grande
RedStonn
men s
soccer
team
shook off a some\\ hat
lackluster first half to
gain a 2-0 victory over
visiting
Houghton
College in the lid lifter
to the 20 I 0 season on
Wednesday evening at
Evan Davis rield.
Rio Grande ( 1-0) took
a 1-0 lead in the 20th
minute when newcomer
Roberto Lopes notched
the first goal of the season with a header off a
nice feed from Joel
Thiessen
Houghton (0-1) put
pressure on the R10
defense throughout the
first half and missed on
a
pair of golden
chances, including one
t caroming off the
ss bar that would
•
e tied the score.
After halftime. Rio
Grande tightened up its
play and put the game
away with a key insurance goal in the 81 st
minute on a tremendous
play by senior forward
Ederson
Lopes
Sophomore
Brandon
Tyler gave Lopes the
feed and he found the
back of the net with an
impressive header to
make the score 2-0.
Sophomore goalkeeper Jonathan Viscosi collected the shutout in his
first collegiate start.
Viscosi notched three
saves on the night.
Houghton goalkeeper
Steve Zacchinga posteu
two saves.
"Even though we
were up 1-nil at half. • it could have easin 2-1 HouQ:hton,''
Rio Grande head
coach Scott Morrissey.
"We dido t do a good
JOb defensively marking
up on an) of the dead
balls in the first half. I
think we sorted it out in
the second half and we
really eliminated the
number of dead ball
chances that they had. ·•
(The Highlanders had

only one shot in the second half after getting off
six attempts prior to the
break).
"Make no mistake
about it. they have a
ver)
good
team,''
Morrissey
added.
"They certain!) played
well. I was happy with
how we responded in
the seconu half.,.
"It was a good game.
i s always a great game
with Houghton and no
matter what, it s always
going to be a tight one.''
Morrissey said.
"It
was a good result for
liS."

Rio Grande will now
get ready for back-toback
contests
this
weekend with Grace
College and Spnng
Arbor in the D. Wayne
Evans
Classic.
"I
thought we used players
welL we used them in
the right manor knowing that we ve got to
come back in 48 hours
and play and then again
in 24 hours after that
and play, so it was
impo:t:tnt that \Ve get
guys
minutes,"
Morrissey said.
Rio Grande will face
Grace
College
on
Friday night. Kick-off
is set for 7 p.m. ~otre
Dame College. ranked
No. 7 in the NAIA preseason Top 25 rating.
will pia\' Spring Arbor
Universit) , t 4:30 p.m.

INGELS

ning back Ahman Green.
If the Nightha\s.ks
want to sign Clarett.
Huyghue saiu he would
interview him to dctclmine how sincere he is
about making a football
comeback. Huyghu~ said
he \\Oulu cnns1der mput
from Nighthawks gencr
al manager Rick Mueller,

coach Jcfl Jagouzinski
and veteran players.
''You ho~\C to bui ld an
infrastructure because
i s a traumatic transition
if you allow a player who
spent three years in jai l
.to come out and join a
team,'' l luyghue said .
"It s ~~~lt ju~t business as
usual.

The Meigs Co. Fish and Game Association would like to
thank the following for their support and donations to

~~ake

fue recent k~::P:::::.::::Y possible

~
Geor~

s Barber Shop
Deb Ron Fence Builders
Baum Lumber Company
River City Sports Bar
Hannon Heating &amp; Cooling
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance
Pomeroy Eagles
Pomeroy Subway
Forest Run Concrete
Athens Pepsi
Annie s Place
Tuppers Plains Dairyette

Parkers Taxidermy
Summerfield s
D&amp;M Home Maintenance
Superior Auto Body
Sunset Home Constmction
Ridenour Gas
Mason WaJMa11
Gallipolis K-Mart
Chris Tenoglia Attorney At Law
Shade River Ag
·1£ ~
Powel1 s FoodFair
Terry Albright

=======

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www.m ydailyse ntineJ.com

Friday, August

27, 2010

Browns create ring of Woods shoots 65 for his best round of the year
N.J. (AP)
as golf. it tournament was when he top.''
honor for past greats - PARAMUS,
Yes, that really was
was nice to won
the
Australian
With sunshine and a
BEREA, Ohio (AP) When he coached in
Green
Bay.
Mike
Holmgren would point to
the names ringing the
upper deck facade at
Lambeau Field.
Ray Nitschke. Vince
Lombardi. Bart Stan·. Paul
Hornung.
Those Pickers set the
standard.
"I could say. 'Look up at
those names. Know who
they are. Study them. "
Browns president Mike
Holmgren said Thursday.
''For the young players.
corning into the league.
tree s no better example
than the men who are
going to be in our ring of
honor."
The Browns, with a history rivaling any NFL
franchise. will unveil a
ring of honor with the
names of their 2.r~at players during a hal~ime ceremony on Sept. 19.
They re hoping the
greatest one of all shows
up.
Jim Brown, strip~d of
his senior advisor title by
Holmgren, has not committed to attending the
event. Brown is one of 16
Hall of Famers whose
names will be permanently displayed on the facing
of the stadium s upper
deck
an
honor
Holmgren feels is long
overdue.
Following a report that
Brown intended to skip the
ceremony, Holmgren said
he called the legendary
running back and that the
two had a "great conversation."
Holmgren now believes
Brown may attend.
''I m hopeful that he U
be there:· Holmgren said
Thursday at a news conference attended by Hall
of Famers Paul Watfield
and Joe DeLamielleure.
''Jim Brown is synonymous with the Cleveland
Browns. It s going to be a
great celebration for all of
us and the 16 families. and
I trust he 11 be part of that
1-l: s ~oing to holler back
at me.'
Brown served as an
executive advisor to
owner Randy Lerner for
several
years.
When
Holmgren took over. he
revamped
Cleveland s
front office. Brown was
one of the casualties.
"That happens when
you have someone come
m and they are changing
things:· Holmgren said.
"New people come in,
people go, their responsibilities change and that
was what happened with
Jim. It s important to
understand with Jim that
his role. what I would like
him to do, the importance
of Jim Brown to the
Cleveland Browns and
this commw1ity, none of
that stuff is different and
he knows that. I told him
that
"His
responsibilities
prior to me coming on
board have changed a little
bit. Would I like Jim
Brown to come in and talk
to our rookies? Absolutely.
Do 1 want him as part of
this day? Absolutely.
Listen, the glass is half
full. I think everyone is
going to be there."
Among
the
other
Browns legends to be honored in the initial ring of
honor class are coach Paul
Brown, quarterback Otto
Graham and kicker/tackle
Lou Groza.
··r m overwhelmed.''
said Warfield, previously
enshrined in the Miami
Dolphins ring of honor.
"This organization has the
richest and proudest history. 'Ih:re s something special about the Cleveland
Browns:·
When he took over,
Holmgren said he was
stunned to learn the
Browns did not have a ring
of honor, a tradition shared
by almost half of the
league s teams. Holmgren
said part of the reason he
came to Cleveland was
because of the team s storied pa&lt;;t.
Holmgren said the team
has not yet established criteria for induction into the
ring of honor. He said
starting with the team s
Hall of Famers was "an
easy call." The Browns arc
also planning a seasonlong exhibit at the stadium

to honor
their history.
Holmg re n s
hope was
NOTEBOOK that the
of
ring
honor
could serve as something
for young players to aspire
to make. Pro Bowl left
tackle Joe Thomas feels
the team s nod to its glory
days will affect everyone
who straps on a plain
orange helmet.
''ft s inspirational, motivational and important,"
Thomas said. "This franchise was built on the
backs of a lot of great NFL
players - some of the
~reatest of all time. It s
1mpo1tant to understand
the tradition and history of
the Cleveland Browns. I
think it sa g:reat step for us
to have a nng of honor. 1
know it means a lot to current and former players."
For DeLamielleure, a
self-described "football
junkie'' and also a member
of Buffulo s ring of honor,
i s one more chance to
hear a stadium roar.
"My . eight grandchi!dren w1ll get to see th1s
and it s &amp;oing to mean a lot
to them, · he said.

:R.

Tiger won; name atop
the leaderboard.
In his tirst tournament
since his divorce, Woods
finally looked like the
No. J player in the world
T hursday at the Barclays
when he opened with a 6under 65, his lowest score
of the year. to share the
lead with Vaughn Taylor.
It was his first time leading after any round on the
PGA Tour since the Tour
Championship
last
September.
"ft s exciting to hit the
ball flush again." Woods
said. ''lt s something l ve
been missing all year."
He didn t miss much at
Ridgewood
Country
Club. Woods hit all but
one fairway and putted
for birdie on all but two
holes. And while he hit
his driver only twice,
they were two of his best
shots of the day including on the 291-yard
fifth hole. where his drive
landed pin-high and settled 15 feet away.
Was it just a coincidence that his game
showed up so soon after
his marriage was dissolved?
"I can t really say that s
the case," he said. "As far

put
it
together."
Woods
and Taylor
both played
in
the
morning.
when
the
W ocds
greens were
smooth and
the conditions were only
breezy. They had a oneshot lead over Adam
Scott. Brian Gay and
Ryan
Palmer.
Scott
played in the afternoon,
where a gust of wind
played tricks on him at
the tina! hole and led to
bogey.
Scott endured a long
day in t he pro-am
Wednesday and didn t
think Ridgewood would
serve up a 65 to anyone.
"Seeing some good
scores this morning made
me change my mind:' he
said.
That one of those
scores
belonged
to
Woods was hardly a surprise.
"For him to piece
things together can t be
too hard." Scott said.
·~ s very good."
The last time W&lt;XXis
was atop the leaderboard
after any round of any

Masters on Nov. I 5. les~
than two weeJ...s after hi&amp;
life caved in on him the car crash after
Thanksgiving
night.
details of adultery, five
months away from the
game and a broken marria~e. which officially
enaed Monday.
His golf hasn t been
very good either. which is
why Woods began the
FedEx Cup playoffs
ll2th out of 125 players
who qualified. He was so
low down the list that he
was first to tee off under a
sunny sky at Ridgewood.
the first time he s done
that in his PGA Tour
career.
It worked to his advantage.
"With fresh greens.
everybody in our group
was makina putts on the
front nine.'~ Woods said.
"You had to get it today."
And he did. The 65 was
his lowest score in 46
rounds, dating to a 62 in
the BMW Championship
last year. Taylor grinned
when asked if he was surprised to see Woo:ls
name on the leaderboard.
·'Somewhat,
you
know?" he said. "It s
good to see him back up

light breeze. conditions
were ripe for scoring.
Palmer had a chance to
join the leaders until a
three-putt bogey on the
18th put him at 66. Even
though
the
gree'
bequne bumpy in t
afternoon after so muc
foot traffic, the course
was soft enough to allow
for good scores. There
were 14 players who shot
67, jncluding Davis Love
Ill. defending champion
Heath
Slocum
and
Stewart Cink.
Phil Mickelson. with
his ninth chance in the
last four months to
replace Woods at No. J in
the world. made only one
birdie for a 72.
For Woods, the timing
could not have been better.
Only the top I00 in the
FedEx Cup standings
advance to the second
round of the playoffs
next
week. in
the
Deutsche
Bank
Championship. Woods at
least needs to make the
cut, then finish in the
middle of the pack. •
had a better solution.
"I figure if I win.
should be OK.'' Woods
said.

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

'

�----..--------.......-~~---~-~----~~-- .~~-- -~. ~

Friday, August 27, 2010
'"

I

L-.J

"-- "'

-.

~~· ~- -~

~~

--

-~-

- - -

~~

...

-~· -~-- ---~--~--.......,.----------------

The Daily Sentinel· Page 85

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Now you can have borders and graphics
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Other Services

Yard Sale

Trucks

Pet Cremations. Call
740·446-3745

Garage sale 5067
Cora Mill Ad Set1-6
Antiques collectibles
&amp;tools

1996 Ford Bronco
XLT 108,000 miles
Carolina · Blue
&amp;
Silver EXC. Cond
740-446-2728

DIRECTV

Will care for elderly
For the best TV
person in my home
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Ref &amp; exp. 740-256upgrade from cable
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rust!
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NETWORK
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you have investigating Home lmpro:o-ements
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the offering.
SUMMER SPECIAL
Dish Network
Get your gun permit
1. Driveway Seal,
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call now for conceal
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local
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certified
instructor reparred &amp; installed.
and long
740-256-6514
3 Painting &amp; yard
distance
email:nraccw@in):&gt;ox ' work &amp; misc. odd
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3004
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1-877-673-3136
must be picked
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ProfeS$ional Services
Waterproofing
Any pictures
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guarantee. Local
that are not
SOCIAL SECURITY
references furnished.
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be
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Waterproofing.

There's
•
Something
For
Everyone
In
T;he....

2 miles south of
Real Estate
3000
Tuppers Plains, Aug.
Sales
27th, 9·5, a little for
everyone, Grate res.
Commercial
Estate
saleWednesday,
September 1 and
Thursday September
2. 39290 Bradbury
Road,
Middleport,
'Oh.
Furniture,
glassware, jewelry,
tools,
clothing,
antiques, appliances,
hardwarA, Old Avon
Tupperware
and
china

CLASSIFIED$!!
Professional Services

600
Animals
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Pets
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
MinPin pups for sale
800-537·9528
CKC
reg.
tails
~~~~~~~ docked dewclawed.
Repairs
black tan markings,
wormed, 1st shots, 8
Joe's Tv repair on wks mother prem, 3
&amp; mles $250 2 females
most
makes
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304-675-1724
no ans. leave mess.
Security

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$850 Value
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400

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puppies. Call 64591242 or 441-7644
Free gray; 2 Russian
f,
fixed,
blue,
declawed,
inside,
740-949-3408 mess

CREDIT CARD
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700

Agriculture

John Deere 5210
tractor, 2950 hrs,
excellent
condition
$10,750 filrm. 740379-2789

Washer &amp; Dryer for - - - - - - sale $100.00 740- 03 450 Honda 4x4 4
645-8599
wheeler $3500 nice
304-593-5130
or
304-593-5123
Equipment/
Supplies
Campers/ RVs &amp;
Must
go!
Salon
Trailers
E~uipment for sale
reasonable 740-645- 2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
8599
sleeps six. Excellent
Asking
Black
Beauty condition.
See
sandblast sand $6 $19,900.
at
per 100-lb bag, ten photos
or more $5 each. www carmjchaeltraile
J:S..I42IIl
740-446·
304-773-5332
2412

For sale by owner
modular home. 4
acres, country sitting,
7 miles from Vinton
off of St Rt 325. 3BA,
2BA,
garden
tub.,dining room, lg
living
rm.,
utility
room, all appliances
including
washer/dryer,
24
above
pool,
detached 30x56 3
bay garage. $95,000.
call 740-742-1900
Colonial home for
sale. For more info
visit www.orvb.com
1740-256-6011

Motorcycles

land (Acreage)
2007 HD Heritage
Softail. 4,695 milesShowroom
cond. 5 Acres for sale.
water
&amp;
$16,000 negotiable Elec..
sewage. 12 miles
740-446-0121
from Pt Pleassant in
'
th country. 304-6742000
Automotive
8-sets of white tail
4658
deer antlers on skull
plates, some score in
Real Estate
Autos
3500
the 150's &amp; 160's.
Rentals
These are unique &amp; Autos for sale 883
heavy, should see Harley, vans, trucks,
Apartments/
$800. Fellows dont small
&amp;
sports
Townhouses
drag your feet on cars,suv. 90 day wa.
these. call quick. 740-446-7278
2BR APT.Ciose to
740-533-3870
Holzer Hospital on SR
Cars
&amp; 160 CIA. (740) 441·
Vent tree natural gas Quality
log
heater
mac Trucks wlwarranty all 0194

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
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at
C!&lt;rmichael Equipment 39,000 BTU. Also
740-446·2412
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Brick
brown
mix
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nassau full range
Grain
740-446-7203
or
352 201 2580
Money To lend
Hay for sale. $2.50 - - - - - - - - - sq bale 740-367- PAINT
PLUS
PreHARDWARE
NOTICE Borrow Smart. 7762
Season Sale on all
Contact
the
Ohio
Want To Buy
non-vented
gas
. Division of Financial
Institutions Office of Elderberries.
spice heates (save 20% off
Consumer
Affairs bushberries,
reg. price) 3 plaque
BEFORE you refinance awpaws,
black un-vented gas heater
P
your home or obtain a
740-698- reg. price $154.99
loan. BEWARE of walnuts,
6060
sale price $123.99
requests for any large
Special prices on
advance payments of
Pittsburgh Paint &amp;
fees or insurance Call
other
items
the Office of Consumer
thoughout store 304Affiars toll free at 1·
675-4084
866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is p(operly
Yard Sale
licensed . . (This Is a
Garage sale· Ewing
public
service
announcement from the
basement, 300 4th
Ohio Valley Publishing
St., Pomeroy
c'ompany)

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

6 apts $147.000
rent $2030 mo, 740·
446-0390

Farm for sale in
putnam Co., WV 105
acres
w/public
utilities. Minerals sold
withe land. Exc.
woodlands
for
hunting.
Several
Recreati.onal house sites. House
1000
Veh1cles on
property,
but
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02
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450 Milton,
WV.
Forman,
07 360 $350,000.
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740-388-8760

Appliances

--=====-

Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
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With so many
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Merchandise

Shepherd
German
Miscellaneous
top
puppies.
bloodline,
large
boned, both parents Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
$400
on
site.
Heritage Farm 304- rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evens 1-800·
675-5724
537-9528

Farm Equipment
Financial Services

900

For Sale By Owner

prict:!U to sell, 15 yrs.
in business. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 740446-0103.

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or
small houses for rent.
Call 740. 441-1 111 for
application
&amp;
information.
- - - -....- Free Rent Special

------2003 Neon Ssp, air,
200
256
$3·
OBO
1539 and 2009 PT
Cruiser automatic, air
!II
$ ,
OBO
_
d
256 2&amp;3BR apts $395 an
6 200
up, Central Air, WID
1233
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
Oiler's Towing. Now the hours of 8A·8P
buying junk cars
EHO
w/motors or w/out.
Ellm View Apts.
740-388-0011
or
(304)882-3017
740·441-7870.
No
Sunday calls.
Jordan Landing AptsNow leasing 1,2. 3
Pam &amp; AcceS$ories and 4 bedroom units.
No pets. Ask for rent
JVC 12 Disk Changer specials.
304-61 0Car Stereo with Cass.
0776
or
304-674·
&amp; AM/FM Radio $70.00
0023
Call740-339·0303

�---·-·-·--·-----·-.. . -- ----

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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/

Apartmenb/

Townhouses

Townhouses

Tw n Atvers Tower

IS

accepting appliCations
lor vlafting hst lor HUD
subs dtZed,
1·BR
apartment for the
elderly/dtsabled,
call

675-6679

. . .-

-~~-~~-~---,--~--~~"r."'~-~~~~----------

Commercial

Rentals

Commercial bUilding
2nd floor 2 BR for rent 740-446·
6565
apartm nt,
overlooktng Gallipolis
Park,
LA,
Ctty
kttchen/dining area. 1
BA,
1/2
washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep 740·446·
4425 or 740-446·
2325
Houses For Rent

Valley
View
800
Apartments
State Route 325
Thurman, OH 45685
740·245·9170.
1·2
Bedroom apartments
with
appliances
furnished, on stte
laundry facility. Call
for details or ptck up
application at rental
offtce. PoSSibility of
rental
assistance.
Equal
Housing
Opportunrty
TOO
419·526-0466 This
ansttMton tS an Equal
Opportuntty porvider
and Employer.

PSI CONSTRUCTION
S[:e::~

in ~ Jd.:5 JICl~,
stonn, wi.rx:l &amp; water damage.
Roan Mditions, Rerodeling, Metai &amp;

Sales
BRAND

NEW

Formerly Rohies Construction

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED

Shingle Roofs, New l:bres, Siding,
Decks, Bathroan Ra!Odcling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458

Rick Price - 17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740-416-2960
740-992-0730

HRS Repa;u.. t-740-992-3061
20+yrs exp

Onner: Sam Smith, Mason. WV

,

YOUNG'S

Services ~1ost Heating &amp;
Cooling S) stem (including
Heatpumps) and Controls
Tankless Hot Water Heater
Change-outs ~eplacem ents .
Whole House Water Puriliers
(helps against CR intake)

• .Room Addition'&gt; &amp; Remodeling
• lllew Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
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The following appll·
cations and/or verified
complaints
were received, and
the following draft,
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actions were issued, by the Ohio
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"Actions" Include
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IDENTIFICATION
NO. : RVK01476
FINAL
REVOCA·
TION OF A PERMIT·
TO-INSTALL (PTI)
HAS BEEN ISSUED
FOR THE FACILITY
INDICATED.
RE·
QUESTS FOR PERT I N E N T
INFORMATION AND
DOCUMENTATION
CONCERNING THIS
ACTION MUST BE
DIRECTED
TO
CARA CHERRY AT
OHIO EPA DAPC,
SOUTHEAST DIS·
TRJCT OFFICE. 2195
FRONT
STREET,
LOGAN, OH 43138
OR (740)385-8501.
THE PERMIT REVOCATION CAN BE
D0 W N L 0 A DE D
FROM THE WEB
P A
G
E
:
WWW.EPA.OHIO.G
OV/OAPC
AMERICAN MUNICJPAL POWER GEN.
STATION
STATE ROUTE 124
R A C I N E
OH AC;JON DATE :
08/1612010
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR
IDENTIFICATION
NO.: RVK01477
FINAL
REVOCA·
noN OF A PERMIT·
TO-INSTALL (PTI)
HAS BEEN ISSUED
FOR THE FACILITY
INDICATED.
RE·
QUESTS FOR PERT I N E N T
INFORMATION AND
DOCUMENTATION
CONCERNING THIS
ACTION MUST BE
DIRECTED
TO
CARA CHERRY AT
OHIO EPA DAPC,
SOUTHEAST DIS·
TRICT OFFICE, 2195
FRONT
STREET,
LOGAN, OH 43138
OR (740)385-8501.
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CATION CAN BE
DOWNLOADED
FROM THE WEB
P
A
G
E
:
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OV/OAPC
(8) 27

Concrete Removal and Replacement

.

~~~~~~-~
date.
Pursuant to Ohio
Revised Code Sectlon 3745.04, a final
action may be appealed to the Environmental Review
Appeals Commission (ERAC) by a
person who was a
party to a proceed·
lng before the Director by filing an
appeal within 30
days of notice of the
final action. Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section
3745.07, a final action issuing, denylng, modifying,
revoking or renewlng a permit, license
or variance which is
not preceded by a
proposed
action,
may be appealed to
the ERAC by filing
an appeal within 30
days of the issuance of the final
action. ERAC appeals accompanied
by a $70.00 filing fee
which the Commisslon in its discretion
may reduce if by affldavit the appellant
demonstrates that
payment of the full
amount of the fee
would cause extreme
hardship,
must be filed with:
Environmental Re·
view Appeals Commission, 309 South
Fourth Street, Room
222,
Ohio
Columbus,
43215. A copy of
the appeal must be
served on the Director
within 3 days after
filing the appeal
with ERAC.
FINAL ISSUANCE
OF REVOCATION
OF PERMIT TO IN·
STALL
AMERICAN MUNICIPAL POWER GEN.
STATION
STATE ROUTE 124
R A C I N E
OH ACTION DATE:
08/1612010
FACILITY DESCRIP·
TION:AIR

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leases, variances,
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and specifications.
"Draft actions" are
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Intent with respect
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daya of notice of the
proposed action.
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a proposed action If
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objection is received by the OEPA
within 30 days of Issuance of the proposed
action.
Written comments,
requesta for public
meetings and adjudication hearing requests must be sent
to: Hearing Clerk,
Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency,
P.O.
Box
1049,
Columbus,
Ohio
43216- 1049 (Tetephone:
614-644"Final
2129).
actions" are actions
of the Director
which are effective
upon Issuance or a
stated
effective

LEWIS

CIDROPRACTIC CENTER

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF Stephanie
Lynn Story-Schwab
To: Stephanie Lynn
Story
Case No. 201 06035
NOTICE OF HEAR·
lNG ON CHANGE
OF NAME
Applicant hereby
gives notice to all
interested persons
and to NIA that the
applicant has filed
an Application for
Change of Name In
the Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio,
requesting
the
change of name of
Stephanie
Lynn
Story-Schwab
to
Stephanie
Lynn
Story. The hearing
on the application
will be held on the
6th day of October
2010, at 10:00 o'clock am In the Probate Court of Meigs
County, located at
100 East Second
Street, Courthouse.
2nd Floor, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Stephanie
Lynn
Story-Schwab
552 Fourth Avenue
Ohio
Middleport,
45769
(8) 27

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CROSSWORD
B y THOMAS J OSEPH

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

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6 Track
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11 Kitchen
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13 Accrued
14 Dancer's
boss
15 Hosp.
sections
16 Little devil
18 Fix
seams
19 Squealer
20 Calendar
box
2 1 Pot fill
22 Unwavering
24 ''Ratatouille"
hero
25 Stop
between
flights
27 Humdinger
29 Gilda of
"SNL"
32"Roserose ... "
33 Night flier
34 One of
Frank's
wives
35 Diet
no-no
36 Boxing
great
37 Male
turkey
38 Ordeal

40 Spnng
feature
42 Ham it up
43 In the sky
44 Force
units
45 Inverted
sixes

DOWN
1 Kitchen
gadgets
2 Turkish
peak
3 Leo, for
one
4 Outback
bird
5With
speed
6 Hoarse
7 Notre
Dame's
Parseghian

8 Dismay

27 Raised
28 Company
10 Ocean
org.
lane
30 Change
17 Like
over
some
time
elections 3 1 Noted
23 Water, in
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24 Warning
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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
I

by Dave G reen

•

Ib _ . -

7
9
4
2 9
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1
8
8
7
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1
9

"Do we HAFTA leave? This place was
just gcttln' to feel like home."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank ~etchurn

****
a·g
(!

G1 9 L B
~
~· B £ 6 G
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L G 9 v
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"Too MANY

PEOPLE IN 11-11!&gt; NE'IGH 130RHOOD
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£

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9
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9

l!APPY BIRTHDAY for l'rida\,
Aug. 27, 201 0:
This yea~; you will be challenged
once more to walk a new path and
give up what is no longer workable.
Financial changes remain on the hori
zon, but you will have the where
withal to. handle them. Do avoid risking emotionally and financially. It is
one issue to let go of what isn't work·
ing; it is another issue to take wild
risks. If you are single, date for il
while bclort' even considering th.1t a
bond is fore,·er. If you arc attilchcd,
passions ignite. KnO\...-ing which fire-.
to quench could be !&gt;trntt-gic. ARIES
pushes your buttons but can be hdp·
ful.
Tize Stars Show the Kind of Day
)'!m'll I lm'f': 5-Dynamzc; 4-Posititte; 3Atmzge; 2-S()-~; 1-Diffimlt
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
***"*The Moon in your sign
gives you an edge, even \.vhcn deill·
mg with a cold, difficult person. You
could be uncomfortable with wh.1t is
coming up at the workplact•. You can
not COlmt on someone like you have
in the past. lonight A':t you likt'. I his
io.; your weekend!
TAURUS (April 20-M,,y 20)
*** Much is going on that 1s
maklng you uncomfortable. You haw
not isolated some of the l'lemmt-; as
of yet. You just know that you would
prefer io pull back and do Jess until
you are sure of yourself. Ionight:
Vanish if you can.
GEMINI {May 21-June 20)
***** You might want to zt•ro
in on basic., knowing your limits.
Friends and several meetings could
punctuate vour day, making accomplishmg what you want difficult Stav
foC\tS(.&gt;d, and vou \\ill be ~roiling.
Tonight: \'\'here the ach&lt;ll1 is.
CANCER (June 21 july 22)
****Though you mi~t want to
take a stand or make a dL'CJSJon, oth
er-. could be challenging. lake anllthcr look at an a~sociate. !lave nlu
noticed a change in this person's
demeanor? Understanding evolves.
lonight Working late.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
***** Detach and get away
from what might be a ritu.1listic
approach. You need to break past for
mer barriers. A novel approc1ch will
open doors. Be willing to change
courses, even if you're nervou~. lakl•
a risk. Tonight Jake off ASAI~

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****Be :;mart and let someone
you trust handle a personal matter.
rhis person has proven him- or herself trustworthy over and over. You
could be more difficult than you reali7-e. A risk right now is not a good
ide.1. 'lbnight: Meet up with a dear
friend
LIBRA (S&lt;&gt;pt. 2.'~-0ct. 22)
*****Others want to run with
tht' ball. You might question what is
enough pt·r~nally. with a certain situation. You might need to make an
ndjustment. You could be a bit more
cynical or distant than you realize.
lonight: Sort through invitations.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
** * I hough you might feel a bit
down, rethmk a decision with care.
lry not to make a point right now;
somchov. a conversation could backfire. A meeting could feel awk,...·ard .
Kmn' that there will be a better time.
lonight: C'.et some exercise.
SAGITIAlUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
*****Stay on targt:t with a
proJect. You ,,rc unusually creative.
~ unnel this energy into work, knowing you wnnt to get out of the door.
J.)d.ty .1 meeting if possible, especially
ns a kq person might be negative.
!(might: Let go of the week. Join fun
frit•nds
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
*** You m1ght ft&gt;el squeezedin many w.1ys you are. Don't push
somL'I.&gt;nc too hard, or else it could
backfire. 1f you can, work from home
or m.1ke it an early workday. A family
member will be thrilled to have you
home. Tonight: You don't have to go
fa~

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2(}.Feb. 18)
****Open up conversations
,,,th those who impact your daily
life. You might be overworking a
problem and making more out of it
than nt'&lt;.-d be. New-. from a distance
could ft&gt;ellikc someone clo:;ed you
off. tonight: Jiang out.
PISCES (F~b. 19-March 20)
*** Rcali7-e the co-.t of pursuing
a wrtain path. A friend could be the
source of disconcerting news. Think
twi«' and St.&gt;e if there is a better route.
Understand where a partner is com- ·
ing from You don't neL&gt;d to agree.
ll.might: Your treat.

jnrquclittt• Bignr is 011 the Internet
nt hitp://nrnrw.jacq uri indrignr.COlli.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�--·--------------------

.....

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www·.mydailysentincl.com

Friday, August 27,

2010

NASCARTHIS
Elliot Sadler still has
something in his tank
By JENNA FRYER
A P Auto Rannl' H ntu·

CHARLOITE. ~.C.
lilliott Sadler does a great
JOb sh1lhng for hi-&lt; sponsor,, and he', a mtural m
front of camera-..
\\hen hb da'" a-. a
NASCAR dri,er ·an: 0\Cr,
the 13-ycar 'etc ran probably 1s headed tO\\ ard a
h&lt;..'nlth) second career in tcle\ IS JOn.
He .Just isn't ready to hang
up his helmet yet.
'J he future IS uncertatn
lor one of'NASCAR's most
likublc dnvers. lie's in the
midst or his sixth conseeuhve winless season. and his
prospl..'cts of landmg u solid
ride in the Spnnt Cup
Series arc fadmg \\ ith each
\\Cek.
Richard Pelt\ :Motorsports last \\ccJ..: ·said StanIcy, \\hlch currcntly sponsors Sadler. \\Ould mo\C to
Marcos Ambro-,~'s car
''hen he jo11b the organil'.atum next \Car. and the team
has gl\ en" no ind•c~uon n's
planning to bring Sadler
back m 2011.
So. ''hen he pulled m
. last "eek to Bnstol Motor
Speed\\ ay.
where
he
eamcd lu-. fir,..t career Cup
\\Ill m 200 I. he couldn't
st,l\c ofl thc emotions that
come \\ith so much unccrlainty.
"I told mv wife. 'This
might be rhc last Bristol
n1ght race I C\'Cr race m."'
he recounted "That'::. hard
to swallow."
It may not be totally m cr
fi1r ~adler, though.
He'-: sho.... n n&lt;!\' lite out
s1dc of Ius Cup car. and ha::.
proved throughout the
mdu~tl) that he's ..,till got
~omo.:thmg left in h~&gt;o tank
\\hen gJ\en the nght opportunit) It came from Kc' m
and Delann Han ick, '' ho
offered Sadler ~ome -.cat
time m the1r trLck and
Natiom' 1dc: Scnes ndcs.
Sadler \Hln his lir't
NASCAR race since .2004

"hen he dro\ c a Kc\ 111 llr1r, i1.·k htc.-O\\ ned truck to a
"in last month at Pocono,
and m r1inc mccs bel\\ ccn
the t\\ o scncs, he has fh e
top-1 Os and 132 laps led.
In Cup, Sadfcr only ha::.
one top-10 th•s cnt1rc sea
son and a grand h•tal of s1x
of th\.'ln O\ cr his last 60
starts.
But it's not entirely
Sadler's fault \\ hen he
JUmped fmm \ ,Jie~ ){,Jclllg
to R,I\ I \emham :'1. loto1·
spons ·mld\hl)' through the
2006 season, Ill' llgurcd he
\\.Is 1110\ my IIlio the best
opp011Uillt)' of h1s C&lt;JI'CCI.
I nste,ld, the team '' ,1o:;
sold to Georg(' ( illkll Jr.,
and ''hat \\&lt;tS lcli of the
origmal organll'ation later
merged '' ith Richard Pctt)
~Iotorsport-.. As fumhng
dncd up, the te.Im tried to
pu ... h adler out bcfi.&gt;re the
start of the 2009 se,Json.
Sadler fourht to keep h1s
JOb, but tt's not exact!)
prmen to be \\Orth ~u s
\\h1lc. lie'-. h.1d ix dtflcrcnt
CI'C\\ chu:fs mcd 2006
four of ''hom had never
held the positiOn before
and ha' slogged along
through finanl'Ial unccn,unty that seems to ha\ e atl'cctcd to :some degree C\ eryonc
in the organrl'atlon except
Kasc) Kahnc.
i\nd Knhne, so eager to
move
nn
hunsclf,
announced rnl\pril a deal to
dm e tor llcn&lt;h 1ck Motorspons 1\Hl year!; from nm\
lie drdn't cveu care that
there \\ ,1s no plan li11 ''hat
he'd do next sc&lt;Ison when he
decided to lcme.
So now Sadler waits to
. ee what's next, and \\hen
he left Hristol this \\Cekcnd,
he had no tlh:,I
•. , \\ISh I had an cffiS\h;r,"
~adler ~•d. "~ couple of
\\CCks ago I n:alh thQught I
had something hncd up and
rt kina ofshppcd awa). I \\as
thmkmg. '1\c got to regroup
and try somc.thmg cl c.'
\\ hat I ''ant to do 1s be com-

petlii\C .md run up front. I
don't can: "hat the vehicle
looks hke that I run in."
And that's \\hat likely
\\ill
contmuc Sadler's
career
He drove for KHI at Bristol m tx)th the Trucks and
:\nttOtl\\ 1de races. He was
111 contention lor the win m
the tn1ek, and fin1shed third
afkr "innmg the pole and
lcadmg 26 laps in Nation\\ldo.:.
Han ick
has
been
1mprcs~ed
\\ ith Sadler's
performance. and turned
into one of hi:, biggest sup. r.ortcrs.
"I thmk in the right stun·
he can he competitive at
'' hatcver level 'he is in,"
I Janick said. "You don't
JUst wm all the races that he
\\on ... and just forget how
to drt\C, and at ..orne point
you arc only as good as
wftat )OU drive.
"I don't kno'' all the irL~
and outs of that particular situation (at RJ&gt;:\1). but e'ery
t1me he ha::. been in our }Jo. 2
truck. he "' m the top-fih:
and
competill\e e\ery

It's catchmg people's
attention, and giVIng S,1dl.:r
a confidence that c;ome
think 1s what he's been J,rcKmg in the C up car.
"I thmk he's JUSt been m n
bad -&lt;ltuatum, and sometimes 1t takes n:,•llv earnIng yourself to find out
''hat's gomg on," Evel"l
ham ~ald. ''\\hat's happe'lmg is that Kcvm HMH~k •s
"a) mg 'I ky, I IIi ott S.tdl~r
can still dri'c u t.Icc ~ar.'
l'\'c al\\avs bellc,ed he
could, an~l I don't kno\\
\\hy he doesn't nm any blltcr than he docs in the Cup
stuff.
"I ike e\ery athlctc, tlwy
get in a slump and it takes
something to .. p.trk them
out of it. 1\1aybc thb 1s the
spark that brings h11n out uf
the slump."
Sadler \\Ould hkc to put
..,omething together \\1 h
Han ick for 20 I 0, and
belie'e" he \\Ill dnve some
for the tcrun, he JUst doesn't
kno'' to \\hat e'.:tcnt f Jther
way. the Han 1Cks ha\C
g•vcn tum a second ~:hancc
that he', not takmg hghtl)

Auto Racing
Glance
1

•

SPRINT CUP
Emory Hoolthc~~r• 500

•
INOYCAR

\\CCk."

•
Rllss

Sf. • A

Pr

Driver Elliott Sadler celebrates in victory lane after wiming
the NASCAR ~ing World Truck Series Pocono Moootains
125 auto race, Saturday, July 31.

Solid field heads to Montreal
By JENNA FRYER
,,, furo Rming Hrift.•r

Carl Edwards thoucht he
had no chance of catchmg
Marcos Ambrose in the \\aning laps of last year\ 1\allon\\ ide Series race in \lontrcal.
As he :,logged Jus wa)
around the rain-~oa;;ed ( ircun Gilles Villcnet.\C road
course. Ed\\ ards decided on
one final desperate attcn1pt
tu get past the le&lt;:dcr He
ducked ,,;de in "a last-dnch
cftort to rattle him a little
bit," causing Amhrose to
m•~' the entrance to the final
tum and 1!1\ e edward-. the
opening he needed to pounce
for his fiN career' ietory on
a road course.
"It gi"cs me chills thinking
about it.'' f·dwa'rds rL-callcd
this \\cek. "That \ ictOI)' lap
last season. and the rc:;ponsc I
got from the crowd that \\ ~Ls
one of the ncat(,.--st wins 1\e
ever had in mv life."
And one that \\On'! be easv
to defend.
·
l~d\\urds and the Nation\\ 1dc Series rctum to Cmada
thiS \\Cckend for '\A SC \R\
only trip outside the L 'I ted

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States m anv oJ' its three
nattonal scri~.... the event
typically attract:, the top mad
racer.; lium North Amenca.
and the li.1urth nnm1ng of the
e\ ent '' 111 be no dlllcrcnt
Among I d\\,mb' ch.tl·
lengers ''ill he Ambrose,
"ho coughed up ,, Sprmt
Cup Series wm on the road
course at Sonoma 111 June,
but rebounded to '"" the
~nuom\'ldc race at \\atkm
Glen earhcr th1s month.
Ambrose IS still "martmg
fi'nm hi.. ntanv near-mi~"·s
mcludmg the maugural
!\tontreal C\CIIt m 2007,
''hen Robby &lt;wrdun spun
hun m u contrO\crsial
sequence of raemg O\Ct thc
final laps.
Amhrosc has a !;e\ cnth,
thml and last \ e:u's secondplace to ::&gt;ho\\· f~•r his three
uips to Montreal
"It's frustrating :md dis:Jppointing because \\e should
ha\e ''on J\lontreal mult1ple
times," t\mbrosc s.ml. "J'lus
time, no dramas. \\'e're gomg
there to \\ 1n. and I'll keep
r.tcmg then; until we do
\\in"
I om1cr Fommla One

world champion Jacques Ville nell\ c is entered in Sunday\ race and v.ill try to
dri\C a stock car to a "iet01y
on the circuit named for his
late father. Villeneuve was
fourth m last year's race. and
was runnmg behind winner
I d\\ards at Road America in
June unt1l an electrical problem took him out on the last
lap.
He'll be back for a th1rd
consecutl\e year dm ing tor
Omun Racing and searching
for a win in ASCAR
"\\c arc coming m agbTJ"eSM\eh," Villencu'e said. noting ti1c team has a new brakmg S)Stcm m the car this
-.car to suit his stvlc. ''\\'e are
pulhng out nil ti1e stops for
\1ontrcal so \\C can compete. fhe first year when it
\\".Is the he&lt;'' y rain. we led
the lap and then I crashed
undc1 ,, caution. That was a
little bit annoying. And we
wt:rc qu11c competitive last
year. So I think \\e arc corn·
mg this )Ctlr to tty and win

since h1s dmmatics in 2007.
Gordon passed Amb1'&gt;'c
to take the lead. bul Ambro~c
spun him. all at the san·e
time a caution wa-&lt; c.11lcd lor
an accident tar bchmd them.
Gordon belie\ cd he should
have been second on tl·e
restart, but ~ASC \R n1kd
he "-as actually ll1 13th
bec.m~c he hml not mninlaincd reasonable ~-peed alkr
h1s spm.
Gordon refused to drop
ruck lt1 the fidel hcld hiS scrond poslllnn on the "-"''~''
then "PWl Ambrose to deny
Ambro"e lhc \\ m ( .ordon
then contmucd on and was the
first driver to cross the fimsh
line and cdcbmtcd :L' 1f he
,.,ere the VIdor.
NASCAR
disqualified
hm1 lor disolx:ying a black
tlae.
i:d\\ards. upon learning
this week that Gordon had
entered this year's ral'~.
couldn't help hut laugh out
loud.
'That's ,mother guy wc
have got to heat." I d\\,mis
II."
Also in the licld \\ill be s;ud "Robh). he'll be go1ng
Gordon. \\ ho 1s makmg h1" then: for one thing nnd On.!
tirst appearance in the race thing onl). \1urcos, too."

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
M
Robert W. McMillan
President

nl I

ntr

Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

NHRA FULL THROTTLE

CAMPING WORLD
TRUCKS
Enjoytl nol•.com 225

•
PORTSMOUTH RACEWAY
PARK
Thl• S..lurtay I
An""" Fred
l.*"'&gt;ria
Lftt .eek a winna,ra Raees canceled

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