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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Angry judge lectures .Simpson Bengals ·coach Lewis turns to old~
in court, raises bail to $250,000. f~iend Zimmer for defensive helP.
BY KEN RinER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS- An angry
judge
doubled
OJ.
Simpson's bail to $250,000
on Wednesday for violating
terms of his original bail by
attempting to contact a codefendant in his armed rob·
bery case.
Simpson, clad · in jail
attire, grimaced as the
amount was announced and
meekly acknowledged that
he understood.
" I don't know Mr.
Simpson what the heck you
were thinking - or maybe
that's the problem - you
wer-en't," Clark County
District Court Judge Jackie
Glass told Simpson.
.
· • "I don't know if it's just
arro~ance. I don' t know if
"it's 1gnorance. But you've
been locked up at the Clark
County - Detention Center
since Friday because of
arrogance or ignorance or both."
Glass said that the initial
court order to not - contact
other defendants was clear
and she warned that if anything
else · happened

'S impson would be locked
up.
Simpson wa~ picked up
by his bail bondsman,
Miguel Pereira of You Ring
We Spring, in Florida' on
Friday and was .brought
back to Nevada on allegations he violated terms of
his release.
The district attorney
charged that Simpson left an
expletive-laced phone message Nov. 16, telling Pereira
to
te II
co-defendant
Ciarehce "C.J ." Stewart
how upset Simpson was
about testimony during their
preliminary hearing.
"I just want, want C.J. to
know that .. . I'm tired of thi s
(expletive)," Simpson ·was
quoted as saying. "Fed up
with (expletives) changing
what they told me. All
right?"
Pereira testified d1Jring
the bail hearing but the
recording was not played
despite the prosecution 's
attempt to do so. Simpson
attorney Yale Galanter
immedtately
said
that
Simpson made t'he call a.nd
the JUdge did not allow the
recording to be heard.

Stewart and fellow codefendant Charles Ehrlich
did not have to appear for
the hearing and remain free
on bail.
The three men pleaded not
guilty Nov. 28 to kidnapping, armed robbery, assault
with a deadly weapon, burglary, coercion and conspiracy charges. A kidnapping
convictio~ could bring a life
sentence with· the possibility
of parole . An armed robbery
. conviction carries mandatory prison time.
Three other former codefendants have pleaded to
lesser charges and testified
against Simpson at a previous hearing.
·Simpson has denied any
knowledge about guns
being involved in the confrontation with memorabilia
dealers Bruce Fromong and
Alfred Beardsley. He has
said he intended only to
retrieve items that had been
stolen from him by a former
agent, including the suit he
wore the day he was acq\(itted of murder in 1995 in the
slayings of his wife, Nicole
Brown Simpson, and her
friend, Ronald Goldman.

Former champion Durant opens .with·
65 to share lead at Bob Hope Classic ·
PALM DESERT, Calif.
(AP) - Former champion
Joe Durant had a pair of
eagles on his way to a 7under 65 and a share of the
first~round lead Wednesday
in the Bob Hope Chrysler
Classic. ,
There was a logjam at the
top, with five players tied
for the lead and seven others just .one shot behind.
Ttm. Petrovic, Mathew
Goggin, Siege Maruyama,
and Omar Uresti also
opened · with 65s. Among
·those one stroke off the
pace were Kenny Perry, Lee
Jansen, Robert Gamez and
Steve Elkington.
Four of the leaders played
at the Classic Club, and
Uresti played at PGA West.
The first four days of the
Hope are a pro-am played at
four courses. Sunday's final

round, with the 70 lowscoring pros and ties, will
be at the Classic Club.
Durant, who won the
200 I Hope in record fashion, had a pair of eagles on
the opening day of the 90hole tournament this time.
Conditions were good,
sunny with not much wind,
for the opening round. Last
year, the tournament was
marked by chilly weather
and gusting wind.
Durant set the tournament
record seven years ago with
his total of 36-under 324,
good for a four-shot win.
That is one
his four
titles since he came ori the
tour in 1993. His most
recent victory was in the
'2006 Funai Classic.
Defending
champion
Charley Hoffman shot a 68.
He played at SilverRock

of'

Resort, a course being used
in the Hope for the first
time.
Back in the pack, Fred
Couples shot 69, John Daly
71, and David Duval 73.
Duval matched the PGA
Tour record with a closing
,59 to win the Hope in 1999.
Recalling his victory at
the Hope. the 33-year-ol~
Durant said, "It seems like a
long time, it really does."
Asked if he was on his
way to a.nother 36 under, he
smiled and said, "Oh, gosh.
I don't even know how to
respond to that one. I would
just like to get to 8 under
tomorrow at some point.
It's such a long tournament.
''I'm just glad to have one
good round under my belt.
But it's a marathon and you
have to treat it like that."

BY JoE KAY

It led the league in · four of the last five games.
turnovers in 2005, when
Cincinnati's
runnin'g
the Bengals had their only game was highly inconsisOne winning record under tent last season, forcing
CINCINNATI season into his first job as Lewis and made their only the Bengals to rely alrrioSt '
an NFL defensive coordi- playoff .appearance since exclusively at times on
nator, Mike Zimmer had a 1990. Otherwise, the unit Carson Palmer's passing.
problem.
has dragged them down.
"We ' ve got to go back
His Dallas Cowboys had
.During four of Lewis' and do the things that I
trouble stopping the run in five seasons as head want to see us do," Lewis
2000, so he visited some coach, the defense has said.
•
of his coaching friends to ranked 27th or worst in
One o'f'his biggest chal.get advice. One of his y,ards allo'' ed: After a 7-9 Ienges will be handlin.g ·
stops was
Baltimore, .finish Iast , season, Lewis receiver Chad Johnson,
where Marvin Lewis' fired coordinator Chuck who spent the last half of
defense had just helped Bresnahan and linebackers tlie
season
grousing.
the Ravens win a Super coach Ricky Hunley.
. Johnson · was upset over
Bowl.
Lewis
has
known criticism by fans and
"For a couple of days, Zimmer since the early media commentators for
we
talked
football," 1980s, . when they were his look-at-me antics and
Zimmer . said.
"Our assistant coaches in col- his on-field eruptions.
philosophies were very lege .
Later,
Zimmer
The . criticism started
similar. I learned a lot became the Cowboys' ' after he berated Palmer for
from him at that time, and defensive
coordinator, an interception during the
we became pretty geod keeping that job for seven first half of a loss to New
against the run after that." seasons before becoming England. Johnson kept at
Lewis' ·advice helped Atlanta's' defensive coor- it on the sideline and again
Zimmer, who. is now in dinator last year.
while the two of them
position to return the
With the Falcons still walked to the locker room
favor.
unsure about their next for halftime.
The 51-year-old Zimmer head coach, the assistants
Two days later, Johnson
was
introduced were free to leave. Lewis acknowledged that he was
Wednesday
as
the liked the idea of .hiring the one at fault on the play
Cincinnati Bengals' next Zimmer, in part because because he. ran the wrong
defensive
coordinator, he emphasizes toughness. route.
their third since Lewis
"I think you have to
Johnson went on ,a
became head coach before coach tough to be tough," national sports show la~t
the 2003 season. During Zimmer said. "You have to weekend, repeated that. he
Lewis' five years, he has have thilt mentality that didn't like the criticism,
failed to get the defense up this is ihe line in the sand, and suggested the Bengals
to standards.
and we're not letting guys should trade him if they
Picking the next coordi- cross it. I'm an aggressive think he's a problem.
nator was one of the most coach. I think most of the
Lewis listened to th.e
significant decisions of players would say I'm a interview and didn't find
Lewis' career. If the tough coach .
anything new in it. ·
defense continues to strug"Typically, I'm a little
"I didn't think he sail!
gle, Lewis ' coaching' repu- bit of a h()llerer and a anything different," Lew~
tation will take a huge hit. screamer and those kinds said Wednesday. "He felt
"It's an important hire of things. I'll be extremely like he was unduly chas'for me and for our pro- ·demanding."
tised or ridiculed for being
gram,"
Lewis
said
Lewis used Zimmer's this or that.
'
Wednesday. "The thing hiring to address a few
"But you have to go
he's kind of charged with other offseason issues. He back and accept what
is providing an identity to reiterated that the offense being a pro is, and that's
our defensive football is in for some changes, part of it with all of us,
team."
too, even though coordina- and we can go forward and
So far, the defense has tor
Bob
Bratkowski play. There will be no
been identified with noth- · remains. The Bengals trade of Chad.Johnson. We
ing but trouble.
failed to score 20 points in can repeat it again."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Moss
fromPageBl
record with 23 touchdown
catches this season, said he
spoke with coach Bill
Belichick about the matter.
Moss spoke to about 30
reporters in the locker room
after Belichick's regular
news conference at which
the ·coach wasn't asked
about it. .
Moss has avoided offfield problems this season
and has been hailed by other
Patriots players as an excellent teammate and leader. In

Notebook
fromPageBl
the boys mark of 42 in a
game;
At the end of the season
Hamilton B01din girls coach
Dan Purcell 1s stepping
down after 13 seasons and
more than 200 wins, including the 1998 Division II
state championship and
state runner-up finishes in
2000 and '04; Sarah Carroll
had 35 points, II rebounds

his previous nine seasons seven with Minnesota and
two with Oakland- he was
involved several incidents.
With Minnesota, he was
criticized by quarterback
Daunte Culpepper and oth· ers for leaving the field with
2 seconds left in a regularseason loss to Washington.
He bumped a traffic control
officer with his car in 2002,
verbally abused corporate
sponsors on a team bus in
200.1 and squirted a11 officia! with a water bottle in
1999.
He strongly denied the
latest allegations, breaking
his usual midweek silence.
and six steals to lead
Cincinnati Christian past
Clark Montessori 59-46;
and Tia McBripe had 24
points as Mount Notre
Dame beat Mother of
Mercy 64-47 - running
NO's record to 97-2 against
fellow Cincinnati teams
2

TISO.

sitpeJiho ~1/2
N
LINES: Brook Turson had
30 points, 13 rebou11ds, four
steals and four assists, but it
wasn't
enough
in
Plymouth's 66-62 overtime
loss to Collins Western
Reserve. Plymouth 's only

"It's very unfair to athletes if a person makes a
false claim. Yo1:1 know,
there's nothing that we can
do," Moss said. "The ·only
thing that we can do is
either pay up or sit back and
listen to what's being said
or what's being written.
"For someone to make a
false claim about me, I'm
kind of furious," he said. "It
kind of hurts me deep inside
for someone to do something like that because, you
know, I've always said t1me
and time again, I'm going to
stand up for what's right. If
I'm right, I'm right. If I'm
wrong, I'm wrong."
two losses this season have
been to Western Reserve.
SETBACK:
Quinn
McDowell, the leading
scorer (14.1) and rebounder
(5.3)
for
Cincinnat1
Moeller, is out at least three
weeks with a partial stress
fracture in his right foot:
Moeller is the reigning
Division I state champion
and No. I in the AP poll this
week. McDowell, a 6-foot5 shooting guard who
signed with William &amp;
Mary, also led Moeller in
scoring last year ( 15.1 ).

•
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)0

CL~TS • \ 'ol. :;-.

l"ltlll.\Y, ,1.\Nli ,\R\'

'\11 . l:!h

tX, :!IIOX

•

'""""'~d .tlh"·"li ud .etHII
'

SPORTS
· • Meigs downs Lady
· Rockets. See Page 81

Rutland Coun~il hears from Miller, Burke
BY BETII SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - This week
during a special meeting of
Rutland Council, council
members and M!lyor Lowell
Vance formally heard from
former Mayor April Burke
and Police Chief Jeff Miller
about two checks which
were written to cash from the
viUage's Law Enforcement
Trust Fund (LETF).
Last week Rutland Council
placed Miller on unpaid leave

until the issue of two checks Miller was not present at to use the cash 'for underwritten from Rutland's LETF last week's meeting.
cover drug purchases.
was resolved. The two
Burke spoke first at this
. The statement then say's
checks, each written "to . week's special meeting of Burke gave him permission
cash" for $200. were written council with Miller arriv- to sign her name as a secOct. ·20, 2007 and Dec. 24, ing later in the meeting. ond signa~ure on the first
2007 and cashed at a local Burke began her remarks · check to save him a trip to
business,
according
to by referencing a typed Burke's home. It also says
Rutland Council.
statement which was given Burke 'gave Miller permis- ·
Miller's signature along to council prior to the sion to do this "in an emerwith Burke's signature meeting. The statement had gency if needed as long as
appears on · the canceled Burke's signature alpng he let me know."
checks. Last . week at the with the signature of a witAt this week's special
· regular meeting of council ness and in summary stated c«;&gt;Uncil meeting, Burke, in
Burke said it was not her Miller contacted her about reference ,to . the statement, .
signature on· either check. needing to write the checks told council she did sign a

Group ··
.p lans
village
cleanup

statement MiUer prepared but
it was not what was before .
council, calling it "reworded," saying it was "allli.es."
"I don't know what he did
after I signed the paper,"
Burke said. "The only thing
the paper said plain and
simple was that I acknowledge that ·he signed. my
name after the facts. This is
not the paper I signed."
Council then adjourned
into executive session to

Please see Rutland, A3

Dog shelter filing up
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT!l!MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

,,

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs County DOg Shelter
is filling up with dogs in
desperate need of adoption
at the facility;
"We are up to capacity,
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED!l!MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
but we're still taking more,"
Dog Warden Tom Proffitt
MIDDLEPORT - A vilsaid, blaming some of the
lage-wide cleanup effort
situation on the cold weathwill be scheduled in the
er which prompts more
spring to coincide with the
potential neglect calls and
demolition of a condemend
drop offs at the shelter.
Proffitt said the shelter
building in downtown
Middleport.
currently has puppies and
Meanwhile, the group
dogs of every shape and size
coordinating efforts to
ready for adoption which
secure grant""l'unding for
costs $15 with'·a $6 dog tag
downtown revitalization
fee. Hours of operation at
hope an upcoming sewer
the shelter are 8:30 a.m.- II
improvement project might
a.m., Monday-Saturday, or
serve as part of a local
by appointment by calling
992-3779. If no one answers
match for the third grant
application.
leave a message and · your
The
Middleport
call will be returned.
Wendi Miller of Racine·
Development GrouP. hopes
adopted a puppy, Rosie, this
to work with the vtllage to
facilitate the cleanup, which
week through the sheher.
Rosie, a mix ·between a
will encompass the downtown shopping district and
Labrador Retriever and
Chow Chow, . was dumped
the residential neighborhoods in town. ' Meeting ·
off but has found a home
with Miller who also is an
Thursday, the development
advisor to the Kids N K-9's
group discu,ssed a number
4-H group where every
of ways to continue workchild participates with a dog
ing on the group's mission
project for 4-H. Rosie will
statement while waiting out
belong
to Miller's daughter
another grant period.
The four-phase mission
but she herself .has already
. fallen in love with the pup
statement calls for efforts to
who is appreciative of her
make Middleport "a great
place" to shop, live, work
new home. Miller hopes
and play. Revitalizing the
more people come out to the
Central Business District to
shelter to make a little room
create a "great place to
for a dog in their lives.
shop" has been the developThe capacity crowd at the
S.l'flllll/plloto shelter is despite Proffitt
ment group's priority during
the past year, but efforts to · Rosie, a Labrador-Chow Chow mix was adopted this week through the Meigs County Dog and his volunteers finding
Shelter. She is one of the lucky ones with the shelter currently at capacity, filled with dogs
Plene see Shelter, A3
Please s• Cleanup, A3
awaltingnew homes.

INSIDE

..

·C

Xavier

the team's next 20 points.
Xavier made only one
Christmas hit two diffi- shot over a 6-minute span
cult 3:pointers a minute before Drew Lavender
from PageBl
apart to give Temple a 47- scored to end the slump.
43 lead. After a three-point
"We played as good a
by
Jason
Love,
play
as we can play on
game
formance, Temple. played
Christmas
nailed
his
fourth
.both ends of the court,"
. one of its best halves using
Owls
broke
it
3
and
the
Dunphy
said,
"We're
a 12-2 run to take a 27-21
open.
improving
as
a
team."
lead.
Ryan Brooks and Chris
Temple's last win over a
Xavier answered with six
straight points, including a Clark tini shed off a 10-0 run Top 25 team came against
thunderous dunk by Brown with consecutive 3-pointers, No. 6 George Washington in
off an alley-oop pass from extending the lead to 60-4 7 the quarterfinals of the A- 10
Stanley Burrell. Brown fol - with 9:02 left. Seven-footer tournament in 2006. A
lowed with two free throws Sergio Olmos excited the small-but-enthusiastic .
to tie it, but Temple took a crowd on the opposite end, crowd ran onto the court to
blocking shots on consecu- celebrate this victory -one
30-27 halftime lead.
Christmas, Temple's 'lead- · tive possessions.
of the few times they've had
Christmas then showed reason to cheer lately.
ing scorer with a 20.5 average coming in, had just two off his inside game, spin"It's a great builder going
field goals in the first half. ning and driving to the bas- into the A-1 0 games,"
He found his scoring touch ket for a tough layup to TYndale said. "It's a big win
after the break, getting 15 of make it 65-50.
for us."

· Divers find body of pilot
whose plane crashed
into I ake Erie, AS

The Puzzler inside
. today's Sentinel

•

: _. C;m1paign puts
: ,fQCUs on Mormons. '
Page AS
:·• PVH physician
: recertnied by Board
: of Internal Medicine.
See Page A2
• Sonshine Circle
:omakes donations,
:·plans projects. .
See Page A2
: • Annual King
Symposium slated
. for Huntington.
Page Aa

::see

.

.

with

Dr. Kelly Roush
Chiropractic &amp; Sports Injury Physician

· see

WEATIIER

Rice re-elected
Eastern board president
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYS£NTINEL.COM

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.,.

TUPPERS PLAINS John Rice was re-elected
president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education
at the board's organizational meeting. Greg Bailey
will serve as vice rresident,
Howard Caldwel as le~­
islative liaison as Sheha
Taylor as student achievement liaison.
. The following committees
were appointed for the 2008
calendar year: Policy: Bailey
and Taylor; Building &amp;
Grounds:
Bailey
and
Caldwell; Finance: Rice and
Adam Will; Personnel: Rice
and Taylor; Public Relations,
Caldwell and Will.
The board approved the
bond for the treasurer at
$50,000 and authorized her
to provide bond satisfactory
to the board al the board's
cost. The board also ppointed a fmancelaudit committee to meet periodically with
board treasurer and superin-

tendent to monitor the district's financial status.
The board meeting will be
held at 6:30 p.m. on the
third Wednesday of each
month in the elementary
library conference room,
subject to change.
During the regular board
meeting,
the
hoard
approved the tax budget for
tax collection year 2007.
The board accepted the
resignation of Sue Arnold as
junior high track coach, and
approved Susan Parsons for
the supplemental position of
elementary . school choir
director. Sarah Lee was
approved as a substitute
teacher for the remainder of
the 2007-08 school year,
pending proper certification.
The following students
were approved for open
enrollment for the remainder
of the 2007-08 school year:
Thomas Connor, Courtney
Thomas, and Devin Dye.
Approved the following

Please see Eastern, A3

Accident injures two

St.t'l plloto

An accident between a tractor trailer and car yesterday afternoon resulted in two people
being taken to Holzer Medical Center for treatment of injuries. The accident occurred on
Ohio 7 near the Hobson .~Jxit. No names or further details about the accident were available at press time. Responding to the scene' were medics from Meigs EMS and emergency personnel from Rutland's Squad 44, Middleport Fire Department, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol. ·
·
~·

'

�The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

One time to stay
ou( of their affairs
BY lUTHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

.

Dear Annie: My parents
have been married nearly 50
years. About six years ago, I
suspec.ted my mother of having an affair. I confronted her
with my facts and she
assured me of her innocence.
Last · year, my brother
approached me with the
same thoughts. After some
investigation, we confirmed
that Mom was indeed seeing someone. We met with
our minister and, through an
intervention, told our father
of our suspicions . atfd
showed Mom pictures of
her and her lover that my
brother had obtained. She
confessed and persuaded
my father it was a one-night
fling. I later found out from
another family member that
Mom has carried on this
affair for 25 years.
My parents are now in
counseling. Mom convinced
everyone that she is no
longer in contact with this
man, but I found out she is
still lying. She professes to
be a Christian and is in
church every time the doors
are open, dragging Dad
along. He is 71 years old, not
in good health and loves her
dearly. Where do we go from
here? - Two Confused
Children in Georgia
· Dear Georgia: Nowhere.
Yoqr mother is in love with
another man, but because
she believes in marriage
unlii death, she will not
leave your father. Your parents have apparently managed to have a good life.
Dad wants to be with.Mom,
and presumably, she will
continue to take care of him.
We realize this is not a perfect scenario,' but try to
accept that it is not your
decision
to
make.
Concentrate on being supportive of your father and, if
at all possible, try to forgive
your mother. It will make
Dad's life easier. Yours, too.
Dear Annie: I live in a
rural Midwestern town and '
apparently it is the norm to
keep your doors unlocked
all day. Part of the reason
for th1s is to allow unexpected visitors to walk in at
any tiine.
•
In
particular,
my ·
· boyfriend's brother will rattle
the doorknob · and pound on
the door if we lock it. Once,
. he and a friend showed up to
see my boyfriend, who was
not home, and they peeked in

PageA2

the windows while I was
undressing upstairs: When f
opened the door, they invited
themselves in, watched me
as I ate dinner, read my
newspaper and used the
computer. I didn't know how
to get rid of them without
appearing ~de . On another
occasion, I left the door
unlocked and found a very
tall and intimidating friend of
my boyfriend in the kitchen.
I don 't like unexpected visitors, which seems extremely
rude to me, but having to
keep the door unlocked is
even more distressing. My
boyfriend claims this is how
he was brought up and refuses to change. Am I making
too big a deal of it? Exposed in My Own Home
Dear Exposed: Your
boyfriend is being obtuse.
The world is not as safe as it
once was and keeping your
doors open can be dangerous. We recommend locking the doors when you are
home alone, whether day or
night, and closing the
blinds. Beyond thl)t, please
try to be as welcoming as
you can manage.
"Not
Dear
Annie:
Impressed in Ottawa' was
annoyed that her in-laws
always came at least a halfhour- late for dinner. That
also used to happen to us.
One time, when the dinner
hour struck, we decided to
simply start without them.
When they finally showed
up, nearly an hour late, we
offered the late arrivals left- ·
overs. 'we did this in a ·
friendly, polite fashion.
They were never late
again, nor were any aunts,
uncles, cousins or anyone
else who participated in that
memorable dinner. Problem
solved. - On Time in
Moneta, Va.
Dear On Time: This type
of behavior modification is
a good solution for those
who are willing to take a
tough stand and stick to it.
· Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and readfeatures by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Sylvia Midkiff of Pomeroy
celebrates her 90th birthday
today. Cards can be mailed
to her at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
36759 Rocksprings Rd.,
Room 133, Pomeroy, 45769.

Group, 7 p.m., Athens
County Elltension Office.
Jerry Hopkins, operations
Saturday, Jan. 19
supervisor for ODNR state
COOLVILLE - Leonard
nursery in Marietta as speakAmos will observe his 80th
er. "Ohio Conservation
birthday Jan. 19. Cards may
Seedlings: Planting Value in
be sent to him at 42316
Ohio's
Woodlands."
Tucker Road, Coolville,
Information at 593-8555.
Ohio 45723.
Tuesday, Jan. 22
. Sunday, Jan. 20
POMEROY Meigs
REEDSVILLE
County
Humane
Society
Frances Reed of Reedsville
Saturday, Jan. 19
Board, 5 p.m., regular meetwill turn 80 on Jan. 17. Her
SALEM CENTER ing, 6 p.m. general memberfamily will host an open Star Grange #778 and Star
ship
meeting, both at
house 2-4 p.m. on Jan. 20 at Junior Grange #878 fun
Pomeroy
Library.
Reedsville
United night and potluck supper,
Methodist Church. Cards 6:30 p.m. Subordinate bakmay be sent to P.O. Box 75, ing contest (peanut butter
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. She · cookies) to be held.
asks that gifts be omitted.
Monday, Jan. 21
Monday, Jan. 21
POMEROY Meigs
Wednesday, Jan. 23
ATHENS - Southeast
ROCKSPRINGS
- ·· Ohio Woodland Interest County Agricultural Society•.

Clubs and
organizations

Public meetings

7 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
with organizational meet:
ing to be held precedil)g
regular session.

Church events
Sunday,Jan.20
MIDDLEPORT - Jeff
Kassell will sing at the Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist
Church, Route 7 and Story's
Run, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 23. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny
Tech Pre-School at the
Freedom Center Ministries
will have a winter musical, 7
p.m., at the school, 873 So11th
Third Ave., Middleport. ·

PVH physician recertified by Board of Internal Medicine
POINT PLEASANT - James R.
Toothman, DO, an Emergency Care
Center physician at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, recently received recertification by the American Board of Internal
Medicine, according to William A.
Barker, Jr., Vice-President of"Business
Plannin~. at the not-for-profit healthcare facility.
"This achievement is certainly reflective of Dr. Toothman's dedication and
interest in his specialty," praised Barker
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a 20 !-bed
facility, is a full service hospital with
state-of-the-art equipment. The hospi-

tal has over 65 physi- Prior to coming til Pleasant Valley
cians practicing with . Hospital, Dr. Toothman worked in the
the hospital in many · Emergency Department at St. Mary's
specialty areas.
Hospital (Huntmgton, W.Va.). . · :
Dr. Toothman earned
This dedicated physician serves as
his medical degree in the medical director at numerous local
1993
from
West nursing homes including the Pleasant
Virginia School of Valley Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation
Osteopathic Medicine Center (PVNRC), Rocksprings,
James R
Toothma~
(Lewisburg, Virginia). · Arbors, Scenic Hills and Heartland of
In 1994, he completed Charleston.
·
his rotating internship at Charleston
Dr. Toothman and his wife, Lisa, a
Area Medical Center :(Charleston, registered nurse; have two children,
W.Va.) and in 1997 his intern~hiJ?. in Abigail, 5 a~d Hannah, 3. The family
mtemal medtcme at the same !acthty. currently restdes m Teays Valley.

'Mountain Stage' returning to Athens for live taping .
ATHENS - "Mountain herself as an influential and a studio recording and are
Stage," a production of West inspirational artist. The equally comfortable playing
Virginia
' public empowering spirit of this textural musical landscapes
Broadcasting, ,will appear at one-of-a-kind singer/song- or guitar solos.
Big Head Todd and the
Ohio University's Templeton writer, guitarist and producer
Blackburn Alumni Memorial is evident in songs that tack- Monsters are one of those
Auditorium for a live taping le barbed politi9al .and sexu- very special bands that defy
on Monday, March 3, at 7 al issues with uncommon genres and categories - a
rock 'n'roll band in the
insight and compassion.
p.m.
The WOUB .. Radio , The band moe. is known broadest sense -". folk,
Network and the Ohio fof performances of hard blues, country, rhythm and
University Performing.Arts rock to melodic country. blues, soul, contemporary,
Series are sponsoring the · They deliver live energy to indie, and alternative.
show, which will feature Ani
DiFranco, moe., Big Head
Todd and the Monsters, and
George Stanford.
.
"Mountain Stage" is a
series of two-hour specials
that presents acts ranging
from traditional roots and
country music to avant-garde
rock and jazz. In addition to
showcasin~ both established
and emergmg artists from the
United States, ''Mountain
Stage" has featured artists ·
from all over the world.
II
"Mountain Stage" can be
heard SatUrdays at 8 p.m. on
WOUB-JIM.
Since releasing her fll'St
recording in 1990, Ani
DiFrapco has established

George Stanford made h,is
way to the front of the baQd
through the brass section,
where he played trombone.
Trombone proved to ·be .a
dangerous 'gateway' instrument, leading him to the
bass, guitar, and keyboards.
Tickets are available at
the Templeton-Blackburn
Alumni
Memorial
Auditorium box office or by
calling (740) 593-1780.

'Here's
Our
Card''·

,.

Care'' program at the Senior
Citizens Center, and then
talked about the program
which is open . to not just
Alzheimers piatients, but
others with a memory loss
problem. She talked about
facets of the pirogram,
which includes monthly
caregivers meeting, . and
work with those enrolled in
physical and mental exercises, crafts, current events
in the news and daily personal events.
McDaniel said the. program helps the caregivers
by giving them four hours
twice a week to rest, shop,
or do whatever needs to be
done. Volunteers are always
needed to help in the pro• ·
gram, McDaniel said.
Refreshments
were
served by hostesses, Mary
Ball and Kathryn Hart to
their guests and 18 members, Kathy McDaniel,
Jackie
White,
Edie
Hubbard, Blondena Rainer.
Betty ·Proffitt. Martha Lou
Beegle, Letha Proffitt, Judy
Gilmore, Hazel McKelvey,
Lillian Hayman, Ruth
Simpson, Bernice Theiss,
Mildred Hart, Mabel Brace,
Mary Ball, Louise Frank,
Evelyn Foreman, Ann
Zirkle, Kathryn · Hart and
Julie Campbell.
Next meeting ·will be Feb.
14 and hostesses will be
Lillian Hayman , Ruth
Simpson, and Bernice
Theiss.

'

Special advertising supplement found
January 31st only in the
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpolislatlp

OCrtbune
~o~nt ~leasant l\egtster

Do you know how many phone calls the Area Chamber
of.Commerce, as well as the newspapers and other
businesses receive asking for the name of plumber, .
contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc. This
special section will be user friendly and cards will be
arranged by category.

a

Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY.
W~ will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.
All you need to do is call the advertising department
~allipolis llail!? ijl;ribune 740-446-2342
ij];be ~oint ,flleasant l\egister 304-675-1333
The Daily Sentinel 740-992-2155

. H!~~~~~.f~~.

8

~?~~~~~anin

· 'l:.uther Kmg Jr. Symposium is scheduled for Monday, Jan.
. ZI ~d Wednesday, Jan. 23 at various locations around
Huntmgton as part of the annual celebration of the civi 1
• iightS leader's life.
The . sy,mposi~m was established by Marshall
Umversny s Mulllcultural Af~airs. office and is partially
funded by the ~est Vtrgmm Htgher Education Poli.cy
CQmmtsston. Th1s year's symposium theme is " Rising
from the Dark ·... To the Sunltt Path of Racial Justice" a
:·q!-lote from King's "ll;lave ~Dream" speech.
'
. ; The.sympostum begms wtth a Focus on Youth Program
. coordmated by Marshall's Student Government
• Association. The session begins at 2 p.m. on Monday, Jan.
11 and takes place.at First Baptist Church at 801 Sixth Ave.
. Marshall psychology senior Ronald Jones and SGA
President Do!llinique Elmore are facilitating the youth pro•
. ~ram that Wtll focus on academic achievement and the
•i":Iportance of a college education. Th'1 interactive forum
. wtll target middle and high school youth.
· . Followmg the youth program, participants in the tradi. bona! march procession will ~gin lining up at First Baptist
Church. The march is scheduled to begin at 4:45 p.m, and
ends at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church at 1647 Ninth Ave.
The Martm Luther King, Jr. "I Have a Dream" speech will
. be delivered from the steps of the church by Arley Johnson,
· formally endmg the procession.
.
•
This year's march will be led by Grand Marshal Dr. Ken
· Hechler, a former West Virginia secretary of state and
: Marshall faculty member. Huntington Mayor David Felinton
and Dr. Stephen J. Kopp, president of Marshall University·
also will participate in the march. All members of the com:
: munity are encouraged to take part in this historical event.
: .The annual memorial service begins at 6 p.m. at
. Stxteenth Street Baptist Church and features guest speaker
· Dr. Patricia Kusimo, chief executive officer for The West
; Virginia Center for Professional Development. WVCPD is
·a ~tate agenc:y whic~ works to support West Virginia edu. cators m theu pro!esswnal development as a means to
tmprove student academic achievement in the classroom.
. Wmn~~s of . the Martin -Luther King Jr. Awards
Compelltlon wtll be announced during the service. This
ye.ar's competition featured four divisions : elementary,
ffilddle school, high school and university.
·
A reception in the church's fellowship hall follows the
service.
The other symposium event is a 10 a.m. theatrical per-·
formance on Wednesday, Jim, 23 by the SaltWorks Theatre
' Company of Pittsburgh, in collaboration with Cabell
· County Schools. The performance takes place at the Joan
· C. Edwards Performing Arts Center.
· Sponsors of the events are Marshall University
Muh~cultural Affairs, in cooperation with the Mayor of
· Huntmgton; the Cabell County Board of Education; . the
Cabell County Public Library; the Huntington/Cabell
:County NAA~P; The 1-ferald-Dispatch, the Huntington
Human Relatlons Commtsston and the West Virginia
· Higher Education Commission.
· ·
· · For mo~e information, .c~ntact Maurice Cooley, interim
·VIce pres1dent for multicultural affairs, at (304) 6965430; Dr. Chns Green, co-chair of the Murtin Luther
. King Jr. Symposium Committee, at (304) 696-6269; or the ·
'Rev. Paul Willis, co-chair of the symposium committee at
;(3Q4) 523-1712.
'
. •---------~------

•

'

~

State may pay $600,000 as
:compensation
in shooting death
.

'

RACINE
Several
It was reported that 29
donations were made and cookbooks are left if anythe status of fund raisers · one still needs one. Work
and projects were dis ~ will start on the parsonage
cussed at the recent meet- as soon as weather permits.
ing of the ·sonshine Circle A donation from the
of the Bethany United Morning Star Church of
$500 and two checks of
Methodist church.
The regular $25 monihly $100 and $50 on the pardonation as made to the sonage fund were received.
Senior Citizens Center,
At the February meeting,
along with a one-time dona- men bers will be making
tion of $500 to the Senior fruit baskets to. give out
Citizens "meals on wheels" TJoose attending are to take
pro~ram with half being fruit and a basket for the
des1gnated to go to the ones projecct. The motherwho cannot affort to pay. A daughter banquet will' be
$100 donation as made in · held in May, and Kathryn
the way of a gas· card to a Hart, president, noted that
cancer patient.
' she needs someone to head
Members ·were reminded the committee.
Hart presided at the
to donate to the Chris Sayre
Fund. Sayre has an inopera- meeting
with
Kathy
ble brain tumor. Those ·McDaniel giving devotins
wanting to make a donation on experiences with angels
can do so with checks made and related a personal
out to' Chrisdt Sayre Fund experience. Also relating
. and mailed to 165 Yonker an exprience with an angel
St., Barberton, Oho 44203. was Mary Ball. Officers
Checks can also be dropped reports were given by Ann
off at any Charter One Bank Zirkle, secretary, and Julie
or the Citizens Bank.
Campbell, treasurer.
Card of thanks were read
The group sang "Happy
from were read Phyllis Birthday"
to
Julie
Owens, Chris Sayre for a Campbell, Judy Gilmore,
donation of $500, Anna Lee Mildred Hart and Mabel
Tucker, Bill and Crystal Brace. Nondus Hendricks
Marshall and the Meigs aso had a birthday this
County Council on Aging month.
staff. It was noted that 17
The program was presentcards of encouragement and ed by Kathy McDaniel. She
four sympathy cards have thanked the Son shine Circle
been sent out and members for its donation of supplies
· signed 69 more to be sent for
crafts
for
the
Alzheimer's "Partners m ·
out yet this month.

· ~------~------------------~~--------~~:2~=::::::::::_

••

BUSI
CARD
DIRECTORY

Sonshine Circle makes
donations, plans projects

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

__________________~T~e~D:a~il~y~S:e~n~ti~ne:l~·~P~a~g~e:A3~
h

Annual King SYJI.lposiwn Tax rebates ?f $300-$800 weighed as Congress,

Community Calendar
Birthdays

Friday, January t&amp;,

''

: COLUMBUS (AP) - A
: 'man imprisoned nine years
• for murder after pleading
:guilty- then released after
~being acquitted following an
• appeal over evidence- may
::get $600,000 from the state
:for wrongful imprisonment.
: Darrel Benner was killed
:after being shot in the head
• during a beer . binge at
· ~Kenneth Moore's home in
:Piketon in southern Ohio in
) 995 . Moore pleaded guilty
•)o murder and was sent to
;prison.
: · "He can kill somebody,
• get out and get $600,000?
:He won the lottery, didn't
~he?" said Diana Kritzwiser,
~enner's sister. .
•, Pike County Prosecutor
:~ob Junk also is upset.
;; "It's ills! wrong," Junk said.
: ·''The man pleaded guilty to
•murder. If he didn't do it, why
~)lid he plead guilty?"
!• State .law forbids those
;;_who plead guilty from pursu•JOg a claim for damages. But
~oore's plea and conviction
:were erased on appeal, the
~court rullng that his attorneys
;did not inform him of favor-

'

able evidence in his case.
Moore then was found not
guilty at trial in 2004.
In court documents ,
Moore said he was pressured to accept a plea by his
attorneys. He also said his
mind was muddied by a
drug he was taking for alcohoi withdrawal.
"I pleaded guilty under
dure~s. stress and. just plain
runmng scared," Moore
wrote in his motion to withdraw his plea.
The not-guilty verdict permitted Moore, 49, of
Chillicothe, to go to court for
a finding that he was wrongfully imprisoned. The case
ended up in the Ohio Court
of Claims, in which Judge
Craig Wnght ·ruled that '''e
court had no authority to set
aside a trial-court finding of
wrongful imprisonment, said
Pl(ula Paoletti, an assistant
attorney general.
·
Mediation led to the
$600,000 settlement- based
on $44,203 a year in statutory
damages, lost wages and
other factors - that awaits
Wright's approval.

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

...••••,

.... Shelter
•

•••

from PageA1

Eastern
from PageA1

•
'
•rescue
organizations to take recipients for the Class of
:'69 dogs in the last two
::weeks in an attempt to keep
;the euthanasia rate down.
:Volunteers like Jessica,
•Mike and Debbie Rosier
:actually drive the dogs to
:the rescues throughout
!Ohio, spending their own
•time and money. ·
: With winter setting in at
:the shelter, Proffitt said the
!shelter could always use
!d\}nations · of blankets,
•leads, food and bleach. He
:also reminds residents with
:outdoor pets to remember
:to put straw or som~ kind
;of winter bedding in the
•animal's shelter. He also
:stresse.s fresh water be
:~eplaced eyery day due to
:eold temperatures freezing
that watel:,

2007 Educational Foundation
scholarships: Valedictorian,
Nathaniel Alex McGrath,
Brittany Dawn Bissell, Erin
Weber; Salutatorian, Ryan
Davis; Green {Four Year
PrO~ram), Cory Shaffer;
White (Two Year Program,
Sarah Boston. .
·

Fed, White House urge economic rescue
BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AND

ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON
United for urgent action, the
White House ~nd Congress
raced toward emergency
steps Thursday to .rescue the
national ·economy fro.m a
possible recession, including tax rebates of at least
$300 a person and
maybe as much.as $800.
Federal
Rese rve
Chairman Ben Bernanke
endorsed the idea of' putting
money into the hands of
those who would spend it
quickly and boost the flagging economy.
.
All the talk of rescue
efforts failed to soothe Wall
Street. the Dow Jones
industrials plunged 306.95
points, . underscoring deepening concern about the
country's economic health.
The sudden scramble to
take action came as fears
mounted that a severe housing slump and a painful'
credit crisis co~ld cause
people to clamp down on '
their spending and businesses to. put a lid on hiring,
throwmg the country into.its
first recession since 200 I.
Presldent Bush tol~ congresstonal leaders pnvately
he. favors · income tax
rebates for people and tall
breaks for businesses, officials said. Bush spoke with
congresswnal leaders as
House aides worked behind
the scenes on an emergency
package that could .also

Rutland
from PageA1
discuss personnel matters,
specifically possible investigation of a public employee. During the executive
session, Miller arrived and
the meeting later adjourned
out Of executive session for
Miller to go on the record
about the situation .
Miller maintained the
typed statement Burke had
referred to was true as presented and that he prepared
it at Burk!!'S request He
maintained
it
was
approved by her before she
signed it. He added that it
"absolutely Infuriates me'~
that Burke said portions of
the statement appeared cut
and pasted.
.
Councilman Dean Harris
stated: "Regardless of who
told who to do what, it's
forgery."
"It's not forgery if she
sa~s to put my name on it,"
Mtller told Harris.

Cleanup
from PageA1
improve the community In
other ways will begin this
year, while a third application is prepared. ·
At the top of the list of
projects in the downtown
business district for · this
year is funding the village's
demolition of the condemned building on North
Second Avenue owned by
Alan Irvin. Funds pledged
to the demolition project by
private sources were mcluded in the local match for the
revitalization application .
improveStreetscape
ments, incluaing new sidewalks and streetlights, and
facade improvements for
participating private busi,
nesses were also planned
for the project
·
A second application for
revitalization funding was
denied last month . The
development group has not
learned why the village's
application for Tier II
downtown revitalization

He stressed that it must be
temporary and must be
implemented quickly - so
that it s economic effects
could be felt as much as
possible within the next 12
months. "Putting money
into the hand s of hou seholds and firms that would
spend it in the near term" is
. a priority, he said.
Especially important is
making sure a plan can put
cash into the hands of poor
people and the middle class,
who arc most likely to
spend it right away, he said,
though he added that
research shows affluent
AP, photo peopie also spend some of
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Ber11anke is seen their rebates.
during a meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
He declined to endorse
on Capitol Hill in Washington Monday to discuss ways any pm:ticular approach, but
Congress might act to boost the slowing economy.
he did say he preferred one
that would not have a longinclude more · money for had been made.
term adverse impact on the
food stamp recipients and
The pre sident did not government's
budget
the unemployed.
push for a permanent exten- deficit.
Aides . to lawmakers sion of his 200 I and 2003
BusiT and congressional
involved in the talks said tax. cuts, many of which are leaders from both parties
the White House is pressing 'due to expire in 20 I 0, one consulted via conference
for tax rebates of $800 for official said. That would call Thursday for about 30
individuals and $1,600 for eliminate a potential stum- minutes. Both sides basicalmarried
couples. bling block to swift action ly were in agreement that
Lawmakers were likely to by Congress, since most they needed to ·cooperate to .
settle on a $500 rebate for · Democrats. oppose making do something quickly,
individuals, said an aide the tax cuts permanent. ' Perino said.
involved in the talks, with
Bush planned to lay out
"There is reason to be
details for couples and peo- his position Friday, but he hopeful when the president
pie with children still being wasn 't expected to go illlo . recognizes there is a probnegotiated.
specifics. Press secretary lem in the country," House
The rebates would likely Dana Perino said he would Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dbe limited to individuals demand that any package be Calif., said afterward. She ·
with incomes of $85 000 or effective, simple and tern- has talked of a package
less and. couples' with porary.
totaling $100 billion or
incomes of $110 000 or
Bernanke voiced his sup- more. House Republican
less, the aide said, ~peaking port for a stimulus package leader .John Boehner of
on condition of anonymity m an appearance before the Ohio spoke of a bill on the
because no · final dectsions House Budget Committee .. range of $100-150 billion.
"Without a power of said. "I couldn't reach the
attorney you can not do mayor, she was my ftrst c;ill."
that," Harris saitl.
"At that time she no
"I did what she told me to longer
had
tljat
do," Miller reiterated, say- authofity... because she was
ing after questions from the no longer the mayor,"
first check came up late last Harris P-Ointed out, referentyear from council,' he mg the Jan. 8 check date.
thought
Burke - had
"That is absolutely . corexplained the arrangement rect, I have no excuse for
to council and the reason for that ·one, that's ju~t absentthe checks being cashed.
minded on my part," Miller
Harris then questioned . said. "I had been a week
Miller about a third check going to come and meet
written tci" cash from the with Lowell ami hadn 't
LETF for $150 on Jan. 8 done that either, wasn't
with Miller's signature and even sure how to reach him,
the signaiure of Rutland's during the course of all
Police
Officer
Steve that... it was just my absentWilliams. Miller said he minded on that part."
called Williams, who doesHarri s said he was not
n't live in Meigs County, to accusing· anybody of anyreceive his permis sio n thing with his questioning,
before he signed his name he was just concerned.
on the check too (as a secMiller responded that he
ond signature) and the dido 't want the situation to .
'funds were to be used for have the appearance that it
drug buys just as the other docs and that he felt he was
two checks.
··
tryfng io do something good
"Steve has no authority, for the village with the
no power, he 's not the undercover buys. Miller also
mayor," Harris said.
stated the check written in
"'!bat part's true," Miller October is tied to a case that

is pending though the investigations associated with the
checks written in December
and this month did not pan
out and the money from
those checks 'had been redeposited in the LETF.
Mayor Lowell Vance later
veritied that a deposit of
$350 was made into the
LETF on Jan. I 0 which is
the total amounts of both
checks.
Back at the meeting
Miller said: "I can't stress
enough to you that there are
no bad intentions from my
part here. For me, take that
fund if it's going to be that
kind of problem, I don' t
want that problem. I would
I ike to get back to work."
The meeting ended with
Vance saying the situation
would remain "status quo"
with Miller on unpaid leave
until the village can get
more legal information on
how to handle the situation.
Rutland is currently without
a village solicitor though
Vance said they are in the
process of finding ope .

funding was rejected, but help improve the physical coincide with the demolimembers of the develop- · appearance of the village tion project, which they
ment group suspect that it and help instill a sense of hope wi II be completed
might be because villages pride in the cummunity. In sometime in late March or
selected for the program the past, the vi II age paid for April, providing the necesplanned larger local match - the l;mdfill and collection sary legal steps are completes. However, the applica- costs of a spring cleanup, ed in time .
tions were to have been but has not for about three
rated based on community years. It has not been deterdistress as well as program mined how ·the cleanup
~
'
financing , impact and effort planned for thi s
;5
:-. ,·\ 0
....
'
:todesign, program strategy, spring will be financed.
\.U
(
\
~
\
______.
;:j
They
said
the
cleanup
feasability and implemen'&lt;" .... · · .:;;·
tation and organizational program will be planned to .
I'EitHJR.\HM i \KTSrt::•HRE
capacity.
Among the six communiBrittany's Prom
ties awarded gtants were
Review
Bryan,
Ironton
and
Defiance, which included
Sunday, January 27
$4 million matches 'in pub2pm
lic and private funds in their
proposals. · The Middleport
Scrap Happy Saturday
application offered a local
match of nearly $1 million,
February 2 at 9 am
including funds set aside for
RSVP by Jan. 28th
a new m.ulti purpose trai I to
be built along the Ohio
Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
River.
Mayor Michael Gerlach,
who has also served 'as the
appointed · coordinator for
Shouldn't Your Number #I .P..
4
the revitalization project,
New Years Resolution Be:
and Development Group
President Paul Reed, said a
Start Saving Money On
village-wide cleanup will

"A''o .
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�The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

One time to stay
ou( of their affairs
BY lUTHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

.

Dear Annie: My parents
have been married nearly 50
years. About six years ago, I
suspec.ted my mother of having an affair. I confronted her
with my facts and she
assured me of her innocence.
Last · year, my brother
approached me with the
same thoughts. After some
investigation, we confirmed
that Mom was indeed seeing someone. We met with
our minister and, through an
intervention, told our father
of our suspicions . atfd
showed Mom pictures of
her and her lover that my
brother had obtained. She
confessed and persuaded
my father it was a one-night
fling. I later found out from
another family member that
Mom has carried on this
affair for 25 years.
My parents are now in
counseling. Mom convinced
everyone that she is no
longer in contact with this
man, but I found out she is
still lying. She professes to
be a Christian and is in
church every time the doors
are open, dragging Dad
along. He is 71 years old, not
in good health and loves her
dearly. Where do we go from
here? - Two Confused
Children in Georgia
· Dear Georgia: Nowhere.
Yoqr mother is in love with
another man, but because
she believes in marriage
unlii death, she will not
leave your father. Your parents have apparently managed to have a good life.
Dad wants to be with.Mom,
and presumably, she will
continue to take care of him.
We realize this is not a perfect scenario,' but try to
accept that it is not your
decision
to
make.
Concentrate on being supportive of your father and, if
at all possible, try to forgive
your mother. It will make
Dad's life easier. Yours, too.
Dear Annie: I live in a
rural Midwestern town and '
apparently it is the norm to
keep your doors unlocked
all day. Part of the reason
for th1s is to allow unexpected visitors to walk in at
any tiine.
•
In
particular,
my ·
· boyfriend's brother will rattle
the doorknob · and pound on
the door if we lock it. Once,
. he and a friend showed up to
see my boyfriend, who was
not home, and they peeked in

PageA2

the windows while I was
undressing upstairs: When f
opened the door, they invited
themselves in, watched me
as I ate dinner, read my
newspaper and used the
computer. I didn't know how
to get rid of them without
appearing ~de . On another
occasion, I left the door
unlocked and found a very
tall and intimidating friend of
my boyfriend in the kitchen.
I don 't like unexpected visitors, which seems extremely
rude to me, but having to
keep the door unlocked is
even more distressing. My
boyfriend claims this is how
he was brought up and refuses to change. Am I making
too big a deal of it? Exposed in My Own Home
Dear Exposed: Your
boyfriend is being obtuse.
The world is not as safe as it
once was and keeping your
doors open can be dangerous. We recommend locking the doors when you are
home alone, whether day or
night, and closing the
blinds. Beyond thl)t, please
try to be as welcoming as
you can manage.
"Not
Dear
Annie:
Impressed in Ottawa' was
annoyed that her in-laws
always came at least a halfhour- late for dinner. That
also used to happen to us.
One time, when the dinner
hour struck, we decided to
simply start without them.
When they finally showed
up, nearly an hour late, we
offered the late arrivals left- ·
overs. 'we did this in a ·
friendly, polite fashion.
They were never late
again, nor were any aunts,
uncles, cousins or anyone
else who participated in that
memorable dinner. Problem
solved. - On Time in
Moneta, Va.
Dear On Time: This type
of behavior modification is
a good solution for those
who are willing to take a
tough stand and stick to it.
· Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and readfeatures by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Sylvia Midkiff of Pomeroy
celebrates her 90th birthday
today. Cards can be mailed
to her at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
36759 Rocksprings Rd.,
Room 133, Pomeroy, 45769.

Group, 7 p.m., Athens
County Elltension Office.
Jerry Hopkins, operations
Saturday, Jan. 19
supervisor for ODNR state
COOLVILLE - Leonard
nursery in Marietta as speakAmos will observe his 80th
er. "Ohio Conservation
birthday Jan. 19. Cards may
Seedlings: Planting Value in
be sent to him at 42316
Ohio's
Woodlands."
Tucker Road, Coolville,
Information at 593-8555.
Ohio 45723.
Tuesday, Jan. 22
. Sunday, Jan. 20
POMEROY Meigs
REEDSVILLE
County
Humane
Society
Frances Reed of Reedsville
Saturday, Jan. 19
Board, 5 p.m., regular meetwill turn 80 on Jan. 17. Her
SALEM CENTER ing, 6 p.m. general memberfamily will host an open Star Grange #778 and Star
ship
meeting, both at
house 2-4 p.m. on Jan. 20 at Junior Grange #878 fun
Pomeroy
Library.
Reedsville
United night and potluck supper,
Methodist Church. Cards 6:30 p.m. Subordinate bakmay be sent to P.O. Box 75, ing contest (peanut butter
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. She · cookies) to be held.
asks that gifts be omitted.
Monday, Jan. 21
Monday, Jan. 21
POMEROY Meigs
Wednesday, Jan. 23
ATHENS - Southeast
ROCKSPRINGS
- ·· Ohio Woodland Interest County Agricultural Society•.

Clubs and
organizations

Public meetings

7 p.m. at the fairgrounds.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
with organizational meet:
ing to be held precedil)g
regular session.

Church events
Sunday,Jan.20
MIDDLEPORT - Jeff
Kassell will sing at the Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist
Church, Route 7 and Story's
Run, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 23. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny
Tech Pre-School at the
Freedom Center Ministries
will have a winter musical, 7
p.m., at the school, 873 So11th
Third Ave., Middleport. ·

PVH physician recertified by Board of Internal Medicine
POINT PLEASANT - James R.
Toothman, DO, an Emergency Care
Center physician at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, recently received recertification by the American Board of Internal
Medicine, according to William A.
Barker, Jr., Vice-President of"Business
Plannin~. at the not-for-profit healthcare facility.
"This achievement is certainly reflective of Dr. Toothman's dedication and
interest in his specialty," praised Barker
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a 20 !-bed
facility, is a full service hospital with
state-of-the-art equipment. The hospi-

tal has over 65 physi- Prior to coming til Pleasant Valley
cians practicing with . Hospital, Dr. Toothman worked in the
the hospital in many · Emergency Department at St. Mary's
specialty areas.
Hospital (Huntmgton, W.Va.). . · :
Dr. Toothman earned
This dedicated physician serves as
his medical degree in the medical director at numerous local
1993
from
West nursing homes including the Pleasant
Virginia School of Valley Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation
Osteopathic Medicine Center (PVNRC), Rocksprings,
James R
Toothma~
(Lewisburg, Virginia). · Arbors, Scenic Hills and Heartland of
In 1994, he completed Charleston.
·
his rotating internship at Charleston
Dr. Toothman and his wife, Lisa, a
Area Medical Center :(Charleston, registered nurse; have two children,
W.Va.) and in 1997 his intern~hiJ?. in Abigail, 5 a~d Hannah, 3. The family
mtemal medtcme at the same !acthty. currently restdes m Teays Valley.

'Mountain Stage' returning to Athens for live taping .
ATHENS - "Mountain herself as an influential and a studio recording and are
Stage," a production of West inspirational artist. The equally comfortable playing
Virginia
' public empowering spirit of this textural musical landscapes
Broadcasting, ,will appear at one-of-a-kind singer/song- or guitar solos.
Big Head Todd and the
Ohio University's Templeton writer, guitarist and producer
Blackburn Alumni Memorial is evident in songs that tack- Monsters are one of those
Auditorium for a live taping le barbed politi9al .and sexu- very special bands that defy
on Monday, March 3, at 7 al issues with uncommon genres and categories - a
rock 'n'roll band in the
insight and compassion.
p.m.
The WOUB .. Radio , The band moe. is known broadest sense -". folk,
Network and the Ohio fof performances of hard blues, country, rhythm and
University Performing.Arts rock to melodic country. blues, soul, contemporary,
Series are sponsoring the · They deliver live energy to indie, and alternative.
show, which will feature Ani
DiFranco, moe., Big Head
Todd and the Monsters, and
George Stanford.
.
"Mountain Stage" is a
series of two-hour specials
that presents acts ranging
from traditional roots and
country music to avant-garde
rock and jazz. In addition to
showcasin~ both established
and emergmg artists from the
United States, ''Mountain
Stage" has featured artists ·
from all over the world.
II
"Mountain Stage" can be
heard SatUrdays at 8 p.m. on
WOUB-JIM.
Since releasing her fll'St
recording in 1990, Ani
DiFrapco has established

George Stanford made h,is
way to the front of the baQd
through the brass section,
where he played trombone.
Trombone proved to ·be .a
dangerous 'gateway' instrument, leading him to the
bass, guitar, and keyboards.
Tickets are available at
the Templeton-Blackburn
Alumni
Memorial
Auditorium box office or by
calling (740) 593-1780.

'Here's
Our
Card''·

,.

Care'' program at the Senior
Citizens Center, and then
talked about the program
which is open . to not just
Alzheimers piatients, but
others with a memory loss
problem. She talked about
facets of the pirogram,
which includes monthly
caregivers meeting, . and
work with those enrolled in
physical and mental exercises, crafts, current events
in the news and daily personal events.
McDaniel said the. program helps the caregivers
by giving them four hours
twice a week to rest, shop,
or do whatever needs to be
done. Volunteers are always
needed to help in the pro• ·
gram, McDaniel said.
Refreshments
were
served by hostesses, Mary
Ball and Kathryn Hart to
their guests and 18 members, Kathy McDaniel,
Jackie
White,
Edie
Hubbard, Blondena Rainer.
Betty ·Proffitt. Martha Lou
Beegle, Letha Proffitt, Judy
Gilmore, Hazel McKelvey,
Lillian Hayman, Ruth
Simpson, Bernice Theiss,
Mildred Hart, Mabel Brace,
Mary Ball, Louise Frank,
Evelyn Foreman, Ann
Zirkle, Kathryn · Hart and
Julie Campbell.
Next meeting ·will be Feb.
14 and hostesses will be
Lillian Hayman , Ruth
Simpson, and Bernice
Theiss.

'

Special advertising supplement found
January 31st only in the
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alltpolislatlp

OCrtbune
~o~nt ~leasant l\egtster

Do you know how many phone calls the Area Chamber
of.Commerce, as well as the newspapers and other
businesses receive asking for the name of plumber, .
contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc. This
special section will be user friendly and cards will be
arranged by category.

a

Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY.
W~ will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.
All you need to do is call the advertising department
~allipolis llail!? ijl;ribune 740-446-2342
ij];be ~oint ,flleasant l\egister 304-675-1333
The Daily Sentinel 740-992-2155

. H!~~~~~.f~~.

8

~?~~~~~anin

· 'l:.uther Kmg Jr. Symposium is scheduled for Monday, Jan.
. ZI ~d Wednesday, Jan. 23 at various locations around
Huntmgton as part of the annual celebration of the civi 1
• iightS leader's life.
The . sy,mposi~m was established by Marshall
Umversny s Mulllcultural Af~airs. office and is partially
funded by the ~est Vtrgmm Htgher Education Poli.cy
CQmmtsston. Th1s year's symposium theme is " Rising
from the Dark ·... To the Sunltt Path of Racial Justice" a
:·q!-lote from King's "ll;lave ~Dream" speech.
'
. ; The.sympostum begms wtth a Focus on Youth Program
. coordmated by Marshall's Student Government
• Association. The session begins at 2 p.m. on Monday, Jan.
11 and takes place.at First Baptist Church at 801 Sixth Ave.
. Marshall psychology senior Ronald Jones and SGA
President Do!llinique Elmore are facilitating the youth pro•
. ~ram that Wtll focus on academic achievement and the
•i":Iportance of a college education. Th'1 interactive forum
. wtll target middle and high school youth.
· . Followmg the youth program, participants in the tradi. bona! march procession will ~gin lining up at First Baptist
Church. The march is scheduled to begin at 4:45 p.m, and
ends at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church at 1647 Ninth Ave.
The Martm Luther King, Jr. "I Have a Dream" speech will
. be delivered from the steps of the church by Arley Johnson,
· formally endmg the procession.
.
•
This year's march will be led by Grand Marshal Dr. Ken
· Hechler, a former West Virginia secretary of state and
: Marshall faculty member. Huntington Mayor David Felinton
and Dr. Stephen J. Kopp, president of Marshall University·
also will participate in the march. All members of the com:
: munity are encouraged to take part in this historical event.
: .The annual memorial service begins at 6 p.m. at
. Stxteenth Street Baptist Church and features guest speaker
· Dr. Patricia Kusimo, chief executive officer for The West
; Virginia Center for Professional Development. WVCPD is
·a ~tate agenc:y whic~ works to support West Virginia edu. cators m theu pro!esswnal development as a means to
tmprove student academic achievement in the classroom.
. Wmn~~s of . the Martin -Luther King Jr. Awards
Compelltlon wtll be announced during the service. This
ye.ar's competition featured four divisions : elementary,
ffilddle school, high school and university.
·
A reception in the church's fellowship hall follows the
service.
The other symposium event is a 10 a.m. theatrical per-·
formance on Wednesday, Jim, 23 by the SaltWorks Theatre
' Company of Pittsburgh, in collaboration with Cabell
· County Schools. The performance takes place at the Joan
· C. Edwards Performing Arts Center.
· Sponsors of the events are Marshall University
Muh~cultural Affairs, in cooperation with the Mayor of
· Huntmgton; the Cabell County Board of Education; . the
Cabell County Public Library; the Huntington/Cabell
:County NAA~P; The 1-ferald-Dispatch, the Huntington
Human Relatlons Commtsston and the West Virginia
· Higher Education Commission.
· ·
· · For mo~e information, .c~ntact Maurice Cooley, interim
·VIce pres1dent for multicultural affairs, at (304) 6965430; Dr. Chns Green, co-chair of the Murtin Luther
. King Jr. Symposium Committee, at (304) 696-6269; or the ·
'Rev. Paul Willis, co-chair of the symposium committee at
;(3Q4) 523-1712.
'
. •---------~------

•

'

~

State may pay $600,000 as
:compensation
in shooting death
.

'

RACINE
Several
It was reported that 29
donations were made and cookbooks are left if anythe status of fund raisers · one still needs one. Work
and projects were dis ~ will start on the parsonage
cussed at the recent meet- as soon as weather permits.
ing of the ·sonshine Circle A donation from the
of the Bethany United Morning Star Church of
$500 and two checks of
Methodist church.
The regular $25 monihly $100 and $50 on the pardonation as made to the sonage fund were received.
Senior Citizens Center,
At the February meeting,
along with a one-time dona- men bers will be making
tion of $500 to the Senior fruit baskets to. give out
Citizens "meals on wheels" TJoose attending are to take
pro~ram with half being fruit and a basket for the
des1gnated to go to the ones projecct. The motherwho cannot affort to pay. A daughter banquet will' be
$100 donation as made in · held in May, and Kathryn
the way of a gas· card to a Hart, president, noted that
cancer patient.
' she needs someone to head
Members ·were reminded the committee.
Hart presided at the
to donate to the Chris Sayre
Fund. Sayre has an inopera- meeting
with
Kathy
ble brain tumor. Those ·McDaniel giving devotins
wanting to make a donation on experiences with angels
can do so with checks made and related a personal
out to' Chrisdt Sayre Fund experience. Also relating
. and mailed to 165 Yonker an exprience with an angel
St., Barberton, Oho 44203. was Mary Ball. Officers
Checks can also be dropped reports were given by Ann
off at any Charter One Bank Zirkle, secretary, and Julie
or the Citizens Bank.
Campbell, treasurer.
Card of thanks were read
The group sang "Happy
from were read Phyllis Birthday"
to
Julie
Owens, Chris Sayre for a Campbell, Judy Gilmore,
donation of $500, Anna Lee Mildred Hart and Mabel
Tucker, Bill and Crystal Brace. Nondus Hendricks
Marshall and the Meigs aso had a birthday this
County Council on Aging month.
staff. It was noted that 17
The program was presentcards of encouragement and ed by Kathy McDaniel. She
four sympathy cards have thanked the Son shine Circle
been sent out and members for its donation of supplies
· signed 69 more to be sent for
crafts
for
the
Alzheimer's "Partners m ·
out yet this month.

· ~------~------------------~~--------~~:2~=::::::::::_

••

BUSI
CARD
DIRECTORY

Sonshine Circle makes
donations, plans projects

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

__________________~T~e~D:a~il~y~S:e~n~ti~ne:l~·~P~a~g~e:A3~
h

Annual King SYJI.lposiwn Tax rebates ?f $300-$800 weighed as Congress,

Community Calendar
Birthdays

Friday, January t&amp;,

''

: COLUMBUS (AP) - A
: 'man imprisoned nine years
• for murder after pleading
:guilty- then released after
~being acquitted following an
• appeal over evidence- may
::get $600,000 from the state
:for wrongful imprisonment.
: Darrel Benner was killed
:after being shot in the head
• during a beer . binge at
· ~Kenneth Moore's home in
:Piketon in southern Ohio in
) 995 . Moore pleaded guilty
•)o murder and was sent to
;prison.
: · "He can kill somebody,
• get out and get $600,000?
:He won the lottery, didn't
~he?" said Diana Kritzwiser,
~enner's sister. .
•, Pike County Prosecutor
:~ob Junk also is upset.
;; "It's ills! wrong," Junk said.
: ·''The man pleaded guilty to
•murder. If he didn't do it, why
~)lid he plead guilty?"
!• State .law forbids those
;;_who plead guilty from pursu•JOg a claim for damages. But
~oore's plea and conviction
:were erased on appeal, the
~court rullng that his attorneys
;did not inform him of favor-

'

able evidence in his case.
Moore then was found not
guilty at trial in 2004.
In court documents ,
Moore said he was pressured to accept a plea by his
attorneys. He also said his
mind was muddied by a
drug he was taking for alcohoi withdrawal.
"I pleaded guilty under
dure~s. stress and. just plain
runmng scared," Moore
wrote in his motion to withdraw his plea.
The not-guilty verdict permitted Moore, 49, of
Chillicothe, to go to court for
a finding that he was wrongfully imprisoned. The case
ended up in the Ohio Court
of Claims, in which Judge
Craig Wnght ·ruled that '''e
court had no authority to set
aside a trial-court finding of
wrongful imprisonment, said
Pl(ula Paoletti, an assistant
attorney general.
·
Mediation led to the
$600,000 settlement- based
on $44,203 a year in statutory
damages, lost wages and
other factors - that awaits
Wright's approval.

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

...••••,

.... Shelter
•

•••

from PageA1

Eastern
from PageA1

•
'
•rescue
organizations to take recipients for the Class of
:'69 dogs in the last two
::weeks in an attempt to keep
;the euthanasia rate down.
:Volunteers like Jessica,
•Mike and Debbie Rosier
:actually drive the dogs to
:the rescues throughout
!Ohio, spending their own
•time and money. ·
: With winter setting in at
:the shelter, Proffitt said the
!shelter could always use
!d\}nations · of blankets,
•leads, food and bleach. He
:also reminds residents with
:outdoor pets to remember
:to put straw or som~ kind
;of winter bedding in the
•animal's shelter. He also
:stresse.s fresh water be
:~eplaced eyery day due to
:eold temperatures freezing
that watel:,

2007 Educational Foundation
scholarships: Valedictorian,
Nathaniel Alex McGrath,
Brittany Dawn Bissell, Erin
Weber; Salutatorian, Ryan
Davis; Green {Four Year
PrO~ram), Cory Shaffer;
White (Two Year Program,
Sarah Boston. .
·

Fed, White House urge economic rescue
BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AND

ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON
United for urgent action, the
White House ~nd Congress
raced toward emergency
steps Thursday to .rescue the
national ·economy fro.m a
possible recession, including tax rebates of at least
$300 a person and
maybe as much.as $800.
Federal
Rese rve
Chairman Ben Bernanke
endorsed the idea of' putting
money into the hands of
those who would spend it
quickly and boost the flagging economy.
.
All the talk of rescue
efforts failed to soothe Wall
Street. the Dow Jones
industrials plunged 306.95
points, . underscoring deepening concern about the
country's economic health.
The sudden scramble to
take action came as fears
mounted that a severe housing slump and a painful'
credit crisis co~ld cause
people to clamp down on '
their spending and businesses to. put a lid on hiring,
throwmg the country into.its
first recession since 200 I.
Presldent Bush tol~ congresstonal leaders pnvately
he. favors · income tax
rebates for people and tall
breaks for businesses, officials said. Bush spoke with
congresswnal leaders as
House aides worked behind
the scenes on an emergency
package that could .also

Rutland
from PageA1
discuss personnel matters,
specifically possible investigation of a public employee. During the executive
session, Miller arrived and
the meeting later adjourned
out Of executive session for
Miller to go on the record
about the situation .
Miller maintained the
typed statement Burke had
referred to was true as presented and that he prepared
it at Burk!!'S request He
maintained
it
was
approved by her before she
signed it. He added that it
"absolutely Infuriates me'~
that Burke said portions of
the statement appeared cut
and pasted.
.
Councilman Dean Harris
stated: "Regardless of who
told who to do what, it's
forgery."
"It's not forgery if she
sa~s to put my name on it,"
Mtller told Harris.

Cleanup
from PageA1
improve the community In
other ways will begin this
year, while a third application is prepared. ·
At the top of the list of
projects in the downtown
business district for · this
year is funding the village's
demolition of the condemned building on North
Second Avenue owned by
Alan Irvin. Funds pledged
to the demolition project by
private sources were mcluded in the local match for the
revitalization application .
improveStreetscape
ments, incluaing new sidewalks and streetlights, and
facade improvements for
participating private busi,
nesses were also planned
for the project
·
A second application for
revitalization funding was
denied last month . The
development group has not
learned why the village's
application for Tier II
downtown revitalization

He stressed that it must be
temporary and must be
implemented quickly - so
that it s economic effects
could be felt as much as
possible within the next 12
months. "Putting money
into the hand s of hou seholds and firms that would
spend it in the near term" is
. a priority, he said.
Especially important is
making sure a plan can put
cash into the hands of poor
people and the middle class,
who arc most likely to
spend it right away, he said,
though he added that
research shows affluent
AP, photo peopie also spend some of
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Ber11anke is seen their rebates.
during a meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
He declined to endorse
on Capitol Hill in Washington Monday to discuss ways any pm:ticular approach, but
Congress might act to boost the slowing economy.
he did say he preferred one
that would not have a longinclude more · money for had been made.
term adverse impact on the
food stamp recipients and
The pre sident did not government's
budget
the unemployed.
push for a permanent exten- deficit.
Aides . to lawmakers sion of his 200 I and 2003
BusiT and congressional
involved in the talks said tax. cuts, many of which are leaders from both parties
the White House is pressing 'due to expire in 20 I 0, one consulted via conference
for tax rebates of $800 for official said. That would call Thursday for about 30
individuals and $1,600 for eliminate a potential stum- minutes. Both sides basicalmarried
couples. bling block to swift action ly were in agreement that
Lawmakers were likely to by Congress, since most they needed to ·cooperate to .
settle on a $500 rebate for · Democrats. oppose making do something quickly,
individuals, said an aide the tax cuts permanent. ' Perino said.
involved in the talks, with
Bush planned to lay out
"There is reason to be
details for couples and peo- his position Friday, but he hopeful when the president
pie with children still being wasn 't expected to go illlo . recognizes there is a probnegotiated.
specifics. Press secretary lem in the country," House
The rebates would likely Dana Perino said he would Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dbe limited to individuals demand that any package be Calif., said afterward. She ·
with incomes of $85 000 or effective, simple and tern- has talked of a package
less and. couples' with porary.
totaling $100 billion or
incomes of $110 000 or
Bernanke voiced his sup- more. House Republican
less, the aide said, ~peaking port for a stimulus package leader .John Boehner of
on condition of anonymity m an appearance before the Ohio spoke of a bill on the
because no · final dectsions House Budget Committee .. range of $100-150 billion.
"Without a power of said. "I couldn't reach the
attorney you can not do mayor, she was my ftrst c;ill."
that," Harris saitl.
"At that time she no
"I did what she told me to longer
had
tljat
do," Miller reiterated, say- authofity... because she was
ing after questions from the no longer the mayor,"
first check came up late last Harris P-Ointed out, referentyear from council,' he mg the Jan. 8 check date.
thought
Burke - had
"That is absolutely . corexplained the arrangement rect, I have no excuse for
to council and the reason for that ·one, that's ju~t absentthe checks being cashed.
minded on my part," Miller
Harris then questioned . said. "I had been a week
Miller about a third check going to come and meet
written tci" cash from the with Lowell ami hadn 't
LETF for $150 on Jan. 8 done that either, wasn't
with Miller's signature and even sure how to reach him,
the signaiure of Rutland's during the course of all
Police
Officer
Steve that... it was just my absentWilliams. Miller said he minded on that part."
called Williams, who doesHarri s said he was not
n't live in Meigs County, to accusing· anybody of anyreceive his permis sio n thing with his questioning,
before he signed his name he was just concerned.
on the check too (as a secMiller responded that he
ond signature) and the dido 't want the situation to .
'funds were to be used for have the appearance that it
drug buys just as the other docs and that he felt he was
two checks.
··
tryfng io do something good
"Steve has no authority, for the village with the
no power, he 's not the undercover buys. Miller also
mayor," Harris said.
stated the check written in
"'!bat part's true," Miller October is tied to a case that

is pending though the investigations associated with the
checks written in December
and this month did not pan
out and the money from
those checks 'had been redeposited in the LETF.
Mayor Lowell Vance later
veritied that a deposit of
$350 was made into the
LETF on Jan. I 0 which is
the total amounts of both
checks.
Back at the meeting
Miller said: "I can't stress
enough to you that there are
no bad intentions from my
part here. For me, take that
fund if it's going to be that
kind of problem, I don' t
want that problem. I would
I ike to get back to work."
The meeting ended with
Vance saying the situation
would remain "status quo"
with Miller on unpaid leave
until the village can get
more legal information on
how to handle the situation.
Rutland is currently without
a village solicitor though
Vance said they are in the
process of finding ope .

funding was rejected, but help improve the physical coincide with the demolimembers of the develop- · appearance of the village tion project, which they
ment group suspect that it and help instill a sense of hope wi II be completed
might be because villages pride in the cummunity. In sometime in late March or
selected for the program the past, the vi II age paid for April, providing the necesplanned larger local match - the l;mdfill and collection sary legal steps are completes. However, the applica- costs of a spring cleanup, ed in time .
tions were to have been but has not for about three
rated based on community years. It has not been deterdistress as well as program mined how ·the cleanup
~
'
financing , impact and effort planned for thi s
;5
:-. ,·\ 0
....
'
:todesign, program strategy, spring will be financed.
\.U
(
\
~
\
______.
;:j
They
said
the
cleanup
feasability and implemen'&lt;" .... · · .:;;·
tation and organizational program will be planned to .
I'EitHJR.\HM i \KTSrt::•HRE
capacity.
Among the six communiBrittany's Prom
ties awarded gtants were
Review
Bryan,
Ironton
and
Defiance, which included
Sunday, January 27
$4 million matches 'in pub2pm
lic and private funds in their
proposals. · The Middleport
Scrap Happy Saturday
application offered a local
match of nearly $1 million,
February 2 at 9 am
including funds set aside for
RSVP by Jan. 28th
a new m.ulti purpose trai I to
be built along the Ohio
Box Olllce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
River.
Mayor Michael Gerlach,
who has also served 'as the
appointed · coordinator for
Shouldn't Your Number #I .P..
4
the revitalization project,
New Years Resolution Be:
and Development Group
President Paul Reed, said a
Start Saving Money On
village-wide cleanup will

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OPINION

· The Daily.'Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

VIEW

Threat

Not too klte to wake up

Friday, January 18, 2008

Invading Anglican closets ·

The
hi storic Trinity
111 Court Street • Pom-eroy, Ohio
.
Episcopal Church offers
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
clear onlirie guidance to
www.mydailysentinel.com
'
those seeking a Blessing of
Holy Union in its sanctuary
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
on Boston 's Copley Square.
The· services are based on
"A Rite for the Celebration
Dan Goodrich
o.f Commitment to a Life
Publisher
Together" which is used in
th e
Diocese
of
Charlene Hoeflich
Massachusetts.
General Manager-News Editor
"A priest may · ble ss a
•
same-sex civil marriage or
preside at and bless a s;~me-·
sex union . . .. The same
Congress shall make no law respectir~g an
liturgical rite is used," say
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
the guidelines. "In the presence
of God and the coufree exercise thereof; or abridging tht: freedom
pie's Christian community,
~?,{ speah, or of the press; or the right of the
the rite includes a declarapeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tion of the couple's intent to
join their liv~s together and
the GoJJernment for a redress of grieJJances.
a celebration of their com·-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. mitment tq a life together."
Thi s is precisely the kind
of rite that has infuriated so
many conservatives in the
worldwide
Anglican
Communion.
But the sound that
Anglican insiders heard the
other · day was nervous
coughing in England. U.S.
Presiding Bishop Katherine
Jefferts Schori has decided
not to let gays. lesbians and
bisexuals in the mother
church sit safely on the
sidelines while traditionalDear Editor:
We read and heard about the children's toys made in ists take shots at her flock.
What about those sameCl1i na that have lead in them that could hurt or kill our chilsex union rite s?
dren . China ha s for many year~ been a threat to America.
"Those services are hapWith China, cheap labor and America buying all the
. cheap junk and costing us so many jobs here at home. Look pening in various places,
where most of all the clothes are made. We import from including in the Church of
Chin3 so much here in America. No wonder so niany Englan'd, where my understanding is that there are far
Americans are out of work.
Now China wants to sell their cars here iri America and more of them · happening
put more people out of work. It see ms to me that our gov-·' than there . are in the
crnmcnt does care what these countries do. During the
Korean War the latter part of the war who was killing our
troops in Korea'.' Most of them were from Red China, and
it sce'ms to me that our government is sucking up to the
Chinese.
When I was a c hild many years ago and I went to church,
we took up pennies for China in Sunday sc hool. This is the
way they repay us. It's hard to believe that we have such a
short memory or just don't care.
Our govcmmcnt is worried about Iran. I really believe
that North Korea and China are more of a threat than Iran.
I jLhl hupe and pray that America wakes up before its too
laic . This paper I'm writing on is made in China. ·
Robert Burton
Pomeroy

READER'S

PageA4

Terry
Mattingly

ro Aug. 3. Conservatives
are planning their own
Global Anglican Future
Conference for June 15 to
June 22 in Jerusalem.
Thus, it was sy mbol.ic
that \ Archbishop
of
Canterbury
Rowan
Williams recently presided
at a closed-door Eucharist
in London for the Clergy
Consultation, a support network for gay Angl\can clergy, seminarians, monks and
nuns. The Times of London
offered this detail: "Secrecy
was so tight that a list of
names attending was
. sent to
Lambeth Palace wtth orders ,
that tt be ~hredded as soon
as Dr. W1lharns ha(l read
it."
Meanwhile, ·a few liberal
activists have focused on ·
the leader of the one U.S.
diocese that has _ so far-.
voted to cut its ties to · the
national church.

- Episcopal Church," she
recently told the BBC.
What
about
· New
Hampshire Bishop V. Gene
Robin son, a gay man who is
living in a same-sex relationship? According to
Jefferis Schori, Robinson is
under attack for being hanest.
Robin so n, she said, is
"certainly not · alone in
being a gay bishop, he's
certainly not alone in being
· a gay partnered bishop. He
is alone in being the only
gay partnered bishop who's
open about that status ....
Citing a disputed interThere's certainly a double view from more than a
decade ago, backed with
standard."
What we have here is an hostile testimonies, blogger
attempt to pull British bish- Lisa Fox of Jefferson City,
ops out and into open com- Mo. , claims · that · San
bat with conservatives in Joaquin Bishop John-David
Africa, South America, Schofield hl!S repeatedly
Asia and other parts of the "outed" himself as an ex7 0- m iII ion- rri ember . homosexual.
Yes, it's time to publish
Anglican Communioh. The
names,
Fox said.
'
presiding bishop has· played
"When a cleric uses his
the England card in a highstakes game of ecclesiasti- closet as a sniper's nest, he
cal poker inside the Church deserves io have a light
directe'd upon his deceit and
of England.
The · tensions
were duplicity," wrote Fox, at her
a,lready
rising
as "My Manner of Life" blog.
Canterbury prepares for its "For the life of me, I still do
once-a-decade
global not know how those gayLambeth Conference of lesbian bishops - especialbishops this coming July 20 ly the ones on the ' progres-

FDA APPROVES CLONED ME'AT...

sive' side of the spectrilm
- can look themselves in
the mirror each day."
.
Schofield, meanwhile,
insists that he has been misquoted. The 69-year-~ld
biShop does have an unusual background, since he lias
both taken a monastic vow
of celibacy and . been a
leader in the charismatic
renewal movement , with its
emphasis on spiritual gifts
such as healing and prophecy. He also supports ministries for those who struggle with sexual-orientation
·
tssues.
"I always though.t 1 would
be married," the bishop t6 Id
Virtueonline.org_
"In my early days of the
priesthood, I was an Oblate
of Mount Calvary that
required annual vows he .
renewed. By 1966 • 1 was
convinced that married life
was for me. On No~. 17,
1966 , however, in a lifechanging encounter with
the Lord, I responded to his
request to live a single life
for Him."
.
Schofield also answered
the question that others will
soon face.
"I am not a homosexual,"
he said. "I have never been
in
the
homosexual
lifestyle."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges and Universities
and .
leads
'· the
GetReligion.o.rg project to
study religiotl and the
news.)

~AHlfR.

1\1€. (t)I.IJMBVS OlSPAitH

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

I CAf\] TASTE A

THANKS I I FOUND

HINT 0 F GENETIC

THE RECIPE IN
'SCIENTIFIC AMERICAM~

EN61NEERIN6.

Today is Friday. )an. 18, the 18th day of 2008. There are
348 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 18. 1912. English explorer Robert F. Scott and
his expedition reached the South Pole, only to discover that
· Roald Amundsen had beaten them tq it. (Scott and his party
perished during the retum trip.)
On this date:
In 1778, Engli sh navigator Capt. Jame' Cook reached the
Hawaiian Islands , which he dubbed the "Sandwich
Island,."
In 191 '). the Pari' Peace Con Ference, held to negotiate
peace treaties endi ng World War I, opened in Versailles ,
France.
Thought for Today: ''Of all the liars in the world, sometime' the worst are you r own fears."- Rudyard Kipling,
British author and poet ( 1865-1936).
·

Le11ers ro tile editor are uielcome. They should be less
titan 300 words. All letrers are subject 10 editing, must be
signed. and inclrrde address and telephone number. No
wrsif.( 1red letters ll'ill he published. Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
tlulllks to org&lt;llli;.ations and indi viduals will not be accept''dJfll· publication.

- The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services.
Correction Polley

· (UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Friday, January 18, 2008

Ca•npaign puts focus on Morntons .

His eyes

BY JENNIFER DOBNER

God's eyes pierce into the darkness,
Where many a wandering soul can be found.
Entered they through temptation
Therein choose to abound.
'
His eyes dearly see them hiding,
Burrowed rn all of their inftrmities.
Eyes of penetr.ation,
·
Through soul's deepest secrecy.
A beacon of light shines from God 's eyes,
Beckomng each soul to follow Him.
'Tis the light of His spirit
That seizes the heart of inner men.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The church was founded .in 1830 by
Joseph Smith, who claimed that God
and Jesus appeared to hin\ in a forest
grove and implored him to restore the
true church to the world. Smith further
said that an angel, Moroni , led him to a
set of buried gold plates that.when translated from its anc1ent script became the
Book of Mormon.
During the 1800s, Mormons were
repeatedly ·attacked and driven from
their homes, making their.way west from
New York to Ohio and Illinois, where
Smith, a candidate for president. was
shot and killed in 1844 by a mob while
in jail. Mormons again fled , settling in
the Utah Territory.
Today the faith claims 13 million
members worldwide, more than 5. 7 million of them in the .United States, where
Mormoni sm is the fourth-largest
denomination .
Randy Parker, a 36-year-old Mormon
living in American Fork, complained
that religion is being used as a test of
political fitne ss for Romney but not for
the other candidates. Former Arkansas ·
Gov. Mike Huckabee, a one-time evangelical Baptist minister, has not bee'n
asked to explain hi s faith in the same
way, Parker said.
" At what point does a religion attain the
status of just being accepted generally?"
Parker asked. ~· 1 don't know, but
Mormonism isn't there. It's . kind of
opene(j my eyes, really about the rest"of
the country."·
·
Similarly, Ken. Jennings, the Mormon
software engineer from Salt Lake City
who won $2.5 million on "Jeopardy!" in
2004 to become the most successful
contestant in the game show's history,
said: "I guess rrty feeling is I expected
better of America. As a Mormon and an
American, I'm feeling a little disillusioned."
Publicly, leaders of the church are dealing with. the Romney ride as they do ·
everything- with optimism .
"I think over the long term this is
going to be a very, very positive thing
for us i ' said Elder M. Russell Ballard, a
member of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles. Ballard and others have been
visiting the editorial boards at newspaper s anq magazines to discuss
Mormoni sm.
"We're wanting to be a part of the conversation because we do not want people
defining us," he said. "Whether we clear
up all the misunderstandings is something
else, but we certainly had the chance to
talk ·to them about real issues ."

.

SALT LAKE CITY To Don
Loun.sbury, it's just another chapter in
the same old story - his church is being
maligned, misrepresented and misunderstood -.only this time it's happening as part of the campaign for the
White House.
Like Republican candidate Mitt
Romney, the 72-year-old retired teacher
is a Mormon, and he is keenly aware of
the white-hot spotlight Romney 's run for
president has focused on the faith .
Most cower from His light,
"It' s the same old thing ," . said
From God they opt to flee.
Lounsbury,
who retired to St. George,
Few bow down before Him,
Utah, from Oregon 15 years ago. "We've
Repenttng on bended knee.
always been picked on, but of course, so
Focusing upon His light, .
were the early Christians." "I'm not bothThose few are guided out of iniquity.
ered
hy it," he added. "Because I know
Lost blindly in their darkness,
the church is true."
,
. Rest remain still to IJe.
His wife of 52 years, however, has
God's eyes continue to seek,
some trepidation.
Desiring not to judge nor condemn.
''I'm afraid of the backlash on the
His light shines on compassionately,
church," 69-year-old Ethie Lounsbury
With His mercy on each of them.
said. If Romney becomes rresident "and
Searching with boundless love
AP plloto
it.doesn ' t go well, they wil bash not only
To safely redeem all from sin.
him , but the church."
Jana Reiss poses inside her home Tuesday
Despite Romney's attempts to keep the in Cincinnati. "You can feel persecuted just
Capture a glimpse of His light
ca
mpaign focused on issues, questions from having people every single day misunWhile it shines, yet exposed.
about
Mormons and their religious prac- derstand what you believe," Riess said, a
Step out of the dark irito it
tices such as wearing sacred undergar- Mormon convert and the Cincinnati-based
Before upon the soul,
ments and conducting secret ceremonies co-editor of 'Mormonism for Dummies."
God' s eyes turn away forever closed.
inside
their temples have dogged . the
- Mary Jane Litchfield
candidate and, by extension, the 178- Tuesday's Michigan primary suggests
year-old Church of Jesus Christ of Mormons won't soon get a break from the
Lattercday Saints.
scrutiny.
·
Some Mormons are frustrated by ~r­
While some see the attention as an irrisistent misconceptions and stereotypes- tant, others regard it as a blessed opportufor example, that all Morinons are polyg- nity to · do what the faith says they are
amists (The Mormon Church renounced called to do - spread the Gospel.
BY APRIL PYLES
polygamy in 1890) or have horns. They
"I've enjoyed it and hope it doesn't end.
have also been hit with allegations that I'm not fatigued. I'm proud of the church
How long is · your list? You know the one I Mormonism is more cult than religion, and could shout it from the rooftops,"
·. mean ... the one that includes all the things you' re that it is a heretical perversion of said Robert Nye, 48, president of the Des
going to do this year to make yourself happier, Christian doctrine, that it is secretive, Moines Stake, a .collec.,tion of Mormon
healthier and hopefully a little wealthier. Or exclusive, elitist and racist.
congregations much like a Roman
maybe a whole lot wealthier, depending on your
"You can feel persecuted just .from Catholic diocese.
. schemes and your dreams.
having people every single day misunIn Iowa, Nye caucused for Romney, the
Yes, .w e're at the beginning of another new derstand what you believe," said Jana former Massachusetts governor, and ·
year... a good time to think about all the things we . Riess, a Mormon convert and the . turned local curiosity about Mormonism
need to do and many of the things we would like Cincinnati-based
coeditor
of into a teachable moment. He went on a
to do to improve our lives. Trouble with resolu- "Mormonism for Dummies."
radio talk show to discuss Mormon
tions, it's ·so hard to carry them out. Otherwise,
Riess is frequently tapped by reporters beliefs and taught a Sunday school class
some of these ·things would have been accom- as an exper.t on her faith . The good · at a Methodist church.
plished last year,' right? ,
news, she said, is that the news media
"People just· wanted to know a little bit
:. Nevertheless, there's just something inspiring are getting it right most of the time. But more about what we believed. For them it
about the start of a new year when the calendar "I'm not sure the memo is getting down was 'Why · is religion even an issue and
is blank and full of possibilities and our-inten- to the people in the pews," she said. what's so different about the Mormons
tions are strong and liberatin~ . Take for Sometimes "I'm banging my head that we should be Wllrried?'" he said.
instance, a few of my own resolutrons , which I against a wall."
Persecution is a central part of the
shall list here.
finish
in Mormon story.
Romney 's. first-place
· First of all, I need to shed at least 50 pounds,
but for a start, I would settle for I0 or 12. They
-· the experts on this subject- suggest that people operate in small increments when anempting
major changes to their physique. Eating healthily
would ~o a long way in meeting this goal. Can I
BY MARY ANN WINEBRENNER
getting in . This cau sed the decided to go to Duke Medical
help it tf I'm a salt addict? Giving up food conmole to burst open and before Center to have my second
sumption after seven at night would help a lot,
I
could get in the house, the surgery.
011
Sept.
17,
1999,
I
was
too. Ummmm .. .J can see problems with this resgoing to pick up my sister back of my blouse was covThe following Sunday we
olution already.
and
go
went
to church (College Hill).
over
to
Bob
Evans
to
.ered
with
blood.
I
changed
my
Secondly, I would like to get more exercise,
·see
our
cousin,
whom
we
blofise and put a .bandage over We hadn ' t been going regularreally I would . I mean, it's getting rather critical
hadn't
1;een
for
17
or
20
ly, but I needed to go then.
the
'mole and continued on.
when a person can't even bend over and touch
years
.
I
had
a
big
mole
on
my
One
'of the members asked if I
The
following
week
my
their toes anymore. I was never an athlete, I'll
admit, but I used to, be flexible at least. Well, back that had enlarged and other sister called and got me would come up front and be
you know what they say... use it or lose it. Guess everyone kep.t telling me to an appointment to have it anointed and prayed for. When
he' touched me I never felt
taken off.
it'.s time to get serious and register at the fitness get it taken off.
anything
Then
about
three
weeks
I
started
to
get
in
·
my
car
to
Iike it, just somecenter - not next mo'nth, not next spring, but
I
.
,
go get my sister and hit my later, I found out that I had thing went through my whole
now. HeI p.
Thirdly, I have a B flat clarinet that' s been back on the car seat as I was melanoma in stage 4. So I body and out my feet. I wasn't
gathering dust for the past few years. I know in
my heart I am not, never was, nor will I ever be
another Benny Goodman. Still, it would be nice
to be as good as I .was a hundred years ago in
high school band . You never know, I might be
asked to play for someone 's wedding someWASHINGTON
bear communion elements and ous-spirited dialogue about
time . If Point Pleasant had a community band, Washington
National offer up gifts to the poor. The the major issues of our time as
I would join it, but we don't, so there she Cathedral will host a worship state flag will be placed on the seen from the Christian per. - sits ... all alone in her case, her reed becoming celebration Jan. 27 itrrecogni- chancel &amp;teps in the cathedral spective.
dry and brittle, her ke~s getting stiff from tion of the people and leaders for the following week to furWarren is founder and
nonuse. Poor thing. .
.
of West Virginia. More than ther mark West Virginia State senior pastor at Saddleback
Finally, for the benefit of my own soul and 300
visitors
from
the Day.
Church in Lake Forest, Calif.,
for those that God puts in my way, I feel a Mountain State, including
The. Right Rev. W. Michie which grew over 25 years to
strong desire to delve into His Word and invited clergy, elected leaders Klusmeyer, bishop of the become the largest Christian
'·become closer to the One who made me and and parishionerS, are expected Episcopal Diocese of West church in the state. He also has
'loves ·me unconditionally, who makes life at the majestic house of prayer Vtrginia, will preside at the written books, including the
service.
'
best-selling "Purpose 'Driven
·
. ·worth living, who invites me each new day tb for the service.
Rick Warren, one of the Life."
· partake of His creation and reljsh in all the
As part of its national minFollowing
the Sunday
·blessings He has provided. Actually, tHis reso- istry, Washington National nation's leading evangelical
lution should have been my first, since nothing Cathedral offers prayers for leaders, will preach at the ser- Forum, Vocal Tapestry, . a.
' else exists without God ... not good health, or the people and leaders of each vice and also will be spotlight- choral group from Fairmont,
personal happiness, or prosperity, or peace of state annually. The cathedral, ed in the cathedral's Sunday W.Va. , led by Douglas Bunner,
·heart and mmd. HeisEl Shaddai, the Almighty which hosts state funerals and Forum program leading up to will call the congregation to
worship with a choral prelude
other events of national signif- the worship.
· God, v.:ho can do all things .
''The
Sunday
Forum
at
to the West Virginia Major
·. As the Bible says, with God all things are po's- icance, honors each state. with
National State Day service.
. ,sible. Therefore, on this positive note, I begin the a major observance once · Washington
After the worship service,
Cathedral: Critical Issues in
. New Year with a hopeful heart and with the every four years.
the
Light
cathedral
of
Faith"
is
moderat·
guides will lead
West
Virginians
will
play
, \mow ledge that ll1Y life and the lives of my loved
key roles at the Cathedral's ed by the Very Rev. Samuel T. guests on a spec ial tour of the
. gnes are in good hands. May all that l do ·, whether it's being more careful in what I eat, II : 15 a.m . service marking the Lloyd Ill, dean of Washington cathedral, the sixth-largest in
exercising, playing the clarinet or whatever it is state's celebration. They will National Cathedral. It pro- the world, highlighting its ties
participate in the service's vides a space for honest, intel- to West Virginia. The state flag
. - may I do it to glorify Him!
·
opening procession and will lectually probing and gener- hangs in the cavernous nave,
So, what's on your list?

The List

. If you don't know the Lord, you're missing out

TODAY IN HISTORY

LETTERS TO THE
I;:DITOR

Page As

..The Daily Sentinel

a very good Christian until
after that.
Then, I went for my second :
surgery and the cancer hadn ' t
spread anywhere else.
But it was all GOD's doing.
I love the Lord, don't know
what I did without Him. I'm
telling you if you don't know
the Lord or have him in your
life you sure are missing out.
Thank you God for everything and all my family at
College Hill. Church.

West Vrrginia to be celebrated at national cathedral

Good news from Taiwan
The voters of Taiwan
have just handed their
friends and well-wishers in
the United States a gratifying victory i'n their nation's
parliamentary elections. It .
William
hasn' t received much notice
Rusher
in the' press here, but it
deserves to be noted for the
triumph it is.
Taiwan, which has been
an independent nation since Nationalists' policy of eventhe commun ists seized tual reunion with the mainChina during World War II, land,
albeit
a
nonwas dominated from its Communist mainland. More
inception in 1945 until 2000 important, it squarely conby the Nation_a list Party, or flicts with American policy,
Kuomintang.
The which . agrees ·· with the
Nationalists have never Nationalists in favoring
made any secret that their Taiwan's ultimate reunion
ambition is to reunite the . with the mainland after the
island with mainland China communists there have been
when the latter has been overthrown.
To
purged of communism and Washington,
President
is a free country again. Chen's policy of·cauti ously
Their chief opponent is the increasing Taiwan's separaDemocratic
Progressive tion from Chin a si mply
Party, which elected Chen aggravates Beijing to no
Shui-bian as president of purpose, since Taiwan is for
Taiwan in 2000 and has all practical purposes entiresince tended increasingly to ly independent of the
favor Taiwar\'s indepen- People\ Republic of China
dence not only from and has our assurances that
Communist China, but from we will make sure. by miliany succe;,sor govcrnmem tary means if necessary, that
of China. however free .
it remains so.
This tendency has natu Nevertheless, President
rally infuriated Beijing, Chen . seeking to benefit
which . of cour&gt;e. prefers .the politically by encouragin~

separatist tendencies i'n . endum . Recognizing the
Tat wan, has pursued a poli- · disaster that has already
cy of increasing the political occurred as well as the one
distance between Taipei and to come, Chen (whose secBeijing. At the moment, for ond and final term as presiexamp!e, he is sponsoring a dent is expiri11g) has ·
refe~end~m, to b7 held in ·resigned · as party chairman
conJunction
With
the to take responsibility for the
island's forthcoming presi- defeat. The DPP's candidate
dential election on March to . succeed him, Frank
22,_ that w~JUid make it Hsieh; is expected to play
nauonal pohcy to seek to down the issue. But if the
join· · the United Nations J(uomintang -defeats Hsieh
under the name "Taiwan" and the referendum, and
rather than rts formal name, elects its candidate, Ma
which is "the Republic of Ying-jeou, as Taiwan's new
China." Secretary _of State president, t~e United States
Condoleezza . R1ce has will have a loyal and
descnbed
th1s
as
a dependable friend in that
"provocative policy," which key position.
•
it surely is;
.
The biggest winners,
The Kuommtang, of however, will be the people
course, brtterly opposes of Taiwan. They will continChen's proposal. And that is ue to enjoy their de facto
why 1t 1s extremely note- independence
and the
w~rthy that, in ,the nationisland's famous prosperity,
w1de parhamentary elec- without
unnecessarily
tio~s just held, the voters of insulting their iarge and
T~tw an gave' a l a~d , lide dangerous neighbor across
VIctory to the Kuommtang, the Strail of Formosa. And
handing it nearly three- they will continue to have
quarters of ·the seats in an indispensable friend and
Parliament.
ally ih the United States of
This drubbing foreshad- America.
o.w s disaster for Chen's
(William Rusher is a
DPP in the elections of Distinguished Fellow of th~
March 22, which will vote Claremo/11 Institute for the
both on Chen's successor as Study of Statesmanship and
president and on the refer- Political PhilosfJI}hy.)

and the West Virginia state
seal has a prominent location
in the Narthex floor on the
West End of the Cathedral and
is represented on· a needle.point wall hanging in the War
Memorial
Chapel.
Additionally, the Sienko Glass
Company of Milton made the
hand-blown glass in the cathedral 's South Rose Window.
"As a house of prayer for all
people, th~ cathedral op,ens its
doors to all. On Jan. 27, we
especially welcome West
Virginia citizens as we honor
their contributions and service
to their neighbors and our
nation,' '
said
Benjamin
Bradburn, senior manager for
national outreach and the
National
Cathedral
Association, which is organizing the service. "West Virginia
State Day will be a celebration
of the . role the state plays in
the life of the cathedral and
our nation."

Come on over·to Bob's•••
,

Two Convenient Locations
'

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, West Virgi
. (304) 773··5721

�..
..

OPINION

· The Daily.'Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

VIEW

Threat

Not too klte to wake up

Friday, January 18, 2008

Invading Anglican closets ·

The
hi storic Trinity
111 Court Street • Pom-eroy, Ohio
.
Episcopal Church offers
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
clear onlirie guidance to
www.mydailysentinel.com
'
those seeking a Blessing of
Holy Union in its sanctuary
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
on Boston 's Copley Square.
The· services are based on
"A Rite for the Celebration
Dan Goodrich
o.f Commitment to a Life
Publisher
Together" which is used in
th e
Diocese
of
Charlene Hoeflich
Massachusetts.
General Manager-News Editor
"A priest may · ble ss a
•
same-sex civil marriage or
preside at and bless a s;~me-·
sex union . . .. The same
Congress shall make no law respectir~g an
liturgical rite is used," say
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
the guidelines. "In the presence
of God and the coufree exercise thereof; or abridging tht: freedom
pie's Christian community,
~?,{ speah, or of the press; or the right of the
the rite includes a declarapeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tion of the couple's intent to
join their liv~s together and
the GoJJernment for a redress of grieJJances.
a celebration of their com·-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. mitment tq a life together."
Thi s is precisely the kind
of rite that has infuriated so
many conservatives in the
worldwide
Anglican
Communion.
But the sound that
Anglican insiders heard the
other · day was nervous
coughing in England. U.S.
Presiding Bishop Katherine
Jefferts Schori has decided
not to let gays. lesbians and
bisexuals in the mother
church sit safely on the
sidelines while traditionalDear Editor:
We read and heard about the children's toys made in ists take shots at her flock.
What about those sameCl1i na that have lead in them that could hurt or kill our chilsex union rite s?
dren . China ha s for many year~ been a threat to America.
"Those services are hapWith China, cheap labor and America buying all the
. cheap junk and costing us so many jobs here at home. Look pening in various places,
where most of all the clothes are made. We import from including in the Church of
Chin3 so much here in America. No wonder so niany Englan'd, where my understanding is that there are far
Americans are out of work.
Now China wants to sell their cars here iri America and more of them · happening
put more people out of work. It see ms to me that our gov-·' than there . are in the
crnmcnt does care what these countries do. During the
Korean War the latter part of the war who was killing our
troops in Korea'.' Most of them were from Red China, and
it sce'ms to me that our government is sucking up to the
Chinese.
When I was a c hild many years ago and I went to church,
we took up pennies for China in Sunday sc hool. This is the
way they repay us. It's hard to believe that we have such a
short memory or just don't care.
Our govcmmcnt is worried about Iran. I really believe
that North Korea and China are more of a threat than Iran.
I jLhl hupe and pray that America wakes up before its too
laic . This paper I'm writing on is made in China. ·
Robert Burton
Pomeroy

READER'S

PageA4

Terry
Mattingly

ro Aug. 3. Conservatives
are planning their own
Global Anglican Future
Conference for June 15 to
June 22 in Jerusalem.
Thus, it was sy mbol.ic
that \ Archbishop
of
Canterbury
Rowan
Williams recently presided
at a closed-door Eucharist
in London for the Clergy
Consultation, a support network for gay Angl\can clergy, seminarians, monks and
nuns. The Times of London
offered this detail: "Secrecy
was so tight that a list of
names attending was
. sent to
Lambeth Palace wtth orders ,
that tt be ~hredded as soon
as Dr. W1lharns ha(l read
it."
Meanwhile, ·a few liberal
activists have focused on ·
the leader of the one U.S.
diocese that has _ so far-.
voted to cut its ties to · the
national church.

- Episcopal Church," she
recently told the BBC.
What
about
· New
Hampshire Bishop V. Gene
Robin son, a gay man who is
living in a same-sex relationship? According to
Jefferis Schori, Robinson is
under attack for being hanest.
Robin so n, she said, is
"certainly not · alone in
being a gay bishop, he's
certainly not alone in being
· a gay partnered bishop. He
is alone in being the only
gay partnered bishop who's
open about that status ....
Citing a disputed interThere's certainly a double view from more than a
decade ago, backed with
standard."
What we have here is an hostile testimonies, blogger
attempt to pull British bish- Lisa Fox of Jefferson City,
ops out and into open com- Mo. , claims · that · San
bat with conservatives in Joaquin Bishop John-David
Africa, South America, Schofield hl!S repeatedly
Asia and other parts of the "outed" himself as an ex7 0- m iII ion- rri ember . homosexual.
Yes, it's time to publish
Anglican Communioh. The
names,
Fox said.
'
presiding bishop has· played
"When a cleric uses his
the England card in a highstakes game of ecclesiasti- closet as a sniper's nest, he
cal poker inside the Church deserves io have a light
directe'd upon his deceit and
of England.
The · tensions
were duplicity," wrote Fox, at her
a,lready
rising
as "My Manner of Life" blog.
Canterbury prepares for its "For the life of me, I still do
once-a-decade
global not know how those gayLambeth Conference of lesbian bishops - especialbishops this coming July 20 ly the ones on the ' progres-

FDA APPROVES CLONED ME'AT...

sive' side of the spectrilm
- can look themselves in
the mirror each day."
.
Schofield, meanwhile,
insists that he has been misquoted. The 69-year-~ld
biShop does have an unusual background, since he lias
both taken a monastic vow
of celibacy and . been a
leader in the charismatic
renewal movement , with its
emphasis on spiritual gifts
such as healing and prophecy. He also supports ministries for those who struggle with sexual-orientation
·
tssues.
"I always though.t 1 would
be married," the bishop t6 Id
Virtueonline.org_
"In my early days of the
priesthood, I was an Oblate
of Mount Calvary that
required annual vows he .
renewed. By 1966 • 1 was
convinced that married life
was for me. On No~. 17,
1966 , however, in a lifechanging encounter with
the Lord, I responded to his
request to live a single life
for Him."
.
Schofield also answered
the question that others will
soon face.
"I am not a homosexual,"
he said. "I have never been
in
the
homosexual
lifestyle."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges and Universities
and .
leads
'· the
GetReligion.o.rg project to
study religiotl and the
news.)

~AHlfR.

1\1€. (t)I.IJMBVS OlSPAitH

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

I CAf\] TASTE A

THANKS I I FOUND

HINT 0 F GENETIC

THE RECIPE IN
'SCIENTIFIC AMERICAM~

EN61NEERIN6.

Today is Friday. )an. 18, the 18th day of 2008. There are
348 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 18. 1912. English explorer Robert F. Scott and
his expedition reached the South Pole, only to discover that
· Roald Amundsen had beaten them tq it. (Scott and his party
perished during the retum trip.)
On this date:
In 1778, Engli sh navigator Capt. Jame' Cook reached the
Hawaiian Islands , which he dubbed the "Sandwich
Island,."
In 191 '). the Pari' Peace Con Ference, held to negotiate
peace treaties endi ng World War I, opened in Versailles ,
France.
Thought for Today: ''Of all the liars in the world, sometime' the worst are you r own fears."- Rudyard Kipling,
British author and poet ( 1865-1936).
·

Le11ers ro tile editor are uielcome. They should be less
titan 300 words. All letrers are subject 10 editing, must be
signed. and inclrrde address and telephone number. No
wrsif.( 1red letters ll'ill he published. Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
tlulllks to org&lt;llli;.ations and indi viduals will not be accept''dJfll· publication.

- The Daily Sentinel
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Friday, January 18, 2008

Ca•npaign puts focus on Morntons .

His eyes

BY JENNIFER DOBNER

God's eyes pierce into the darkness,
Where many a wandering soul can be found.
Entered they through temptation
Therein choose to abound.
'
His eyes dearly see them hiding,
Burrowed rn all of their inftrmities.
Eyes of penetr.ation,
·
Through soul's deepest secrecy.
A beacon of light shines from God 's eyes,
Beckomng each soul to follow Him.
'Tis the light of His spirit
That seizes the heart of inner men.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The church was founded .in 1830 by
Joseph Smith, who claimed that God
and Jesus appeared to hin\ in a forest
grove and implored him to restore the
true church to the world. Smith further
said that an angel, Moroni , led him to a
set of buried gold plates that.when translated from its anc1ent script became the
Book of Mormon.
During the 1800s, Mormons were
repeatedly ·attacked and driven from
their homes, making their.way west from
New York to Ohio and Illinois, where
Smith, a candidate for president. was
shot and killed in 1844 by a mob while
in jail. Mormons again fled , settling in
the Utah Territory.
Today the faith claims 13 million
members worldwide, more than 5. 7 million of them in the .United States, where
Mormoni sm is the fourth-largest
denomination .
Randy Parker, a 36-year-old Mormon
living in American Fork, complained
that religion is being used as a test of
political fitne ss for Romney but not for
the other candidates. Former Arkansas ·
Gov. Mike Huckabee, a one-time evangelical Baptist minister, has not bee'n
asked to explain hi s faith in the same
way, Parker said.
" At what point does a religion attain the
status of just being accepted generally?"
Parker asked. ~· 1 don't know, but
Mormonism isn't there. It's . kind of
opene(j my eyes, really about the rest"of
the country."·
·
Similarly, Ken. Jennings, the Mormon
software engineer from Salt Lake City
who won $2.5 million on "Jeopardy!" in
2004 to become the most successful
contestant in the game show's history,
said: "I guess rrty feeling is I expected
better of America. As a Mormon and an
American, I'm feeling a little disillusioned."
Publicly, leaders of the church are dealing with. the Romney ride as they do ·
everything- with optimism .
"I think over the long term this is
going to be a very, very positive thing
for us i ' said Elder M. Russell Ballard, a
member of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles. Ballard and others have been
visiting the editorial boards at newspaper s anq magazines to discuss
Mormoni sm.
"We're wanting to be a part of the conversation because we do not want people
defining us," he said. "Whether we clear
up all the misunderstandings is something
else, but we certainly had the chance to
talk ·to them about real issues ."

.

SALT LAKE CITY To Don
Loun.sbury, it's just another chapter in
the same old story - his church is being
maligned, misrepresented and misunderstood -.only this time it's happening as part of the campaign for the
White House.
Like Republican candidate Mitt
Romney, the 72-year-old retired teacher
is a Mormon, and he is keenly aware of
the white-hot spotlight Romney 's run for
president has focused on the faith .
Most cower from His light,
"It' s the same old thing ," . said
From God they opt to flee.
Lounsbury,
who retired to St. George,
Few bow down before Him,
Utah, from Oregon 15 years ago. "We've
Repenttng on bended knee.
always been picked on, but of course, so
Focusing upon His light, .
were the early Christians." "I'm not bothThose few are guided out of iniquity.
ered
hy it," he added. "Because I know
Lost blindly in their darkness,
the church is true."
,
. Rest remain still to IJe.
His wife of 52 years, however, has
God's eyes continue to seek,
some trepidation.
Desiring not to judge nor condemn.
''I'm afraid of the backlash on the
His light shines on compassionately,
church," 69-year-old Ethie Lounsbury
With His mercy on each of them.
said. If Romney becomes rresident "and
Searching with boundless love
AP plloto
it.doesn ' t go well, they wil bash not only
To safely redeem all from sin.
him , but the church."
Jana Reiss poses inside her home Tuesday
Despite Romney's attempts to keep the in Cincinnati. "You can feel persecuted just
Capture a glimpse of His light
ca
mpaign focused on issues, questions from having people every single day misunWhile it shines, yet exposed.
about
Mormons and their religious prac- derstand what you believe," Riess said, a
Step out of the dark irito it
tices such as wearing sacred undergar- Mormon convert and the Cincinnati-based
Before upon the soul,
ments and conducting secret ceremonies co-editor of 'Mormonism for Dummies."
God' s eyes turn away forever closed.
inside
their temples have dogged . the
- Mary Jane Litchfield
candidate and, by extension, the 178- Tuesday's Michigan primary suggests
year-old Church of Jesus Christ of Mormons won't soon get a break from the
Lattercday Saints.
scrutiny.
·
Some Mormons are frustrated by ~r­
While some see the attention as an irrisistent misconceptions and stereotypes- tant, others regard it as a blessed opportufor example, that all Morinons are polyg- nity to · do what the faith says they are
amists (The Mormon Church renounced called to do - spread the Gospel.
BY APRIL PYLES
polygamy in 1890) or have horns. They
"I've enjoyed it and hope it doesn't end.
have also been hit with allegations that I'm not fatigued. I'm proud of the church
How long is · your list? You know the one I Mormonism is more cult than religion, and could shout it from the rooftops,"
·. mean ... the one that includes all the things you' re that it is a heretical perversion of said Robert Nye, 48, president of the Des
going to do this year to make yourself happier, Christian doctrine, that it is secretive, Moines Stake, a .collec.,tion of Mormon
healthier and hopefully a little wealthier. Or exclusive, elitist and racist.
congregations much like a Roman
maybe a whole lot wealthier, depending on your
"You can feel persecuted just .from Catholic diocese.
. schemes and your dreams.
having people every single day misunIn Iowa, Nye caucused for Romney, the
Yes, .w e're at the beginning of another new derstand what you believe," said Jana former Massachusetts governor, and ·
year... a good time to think about all the things we . Riess, a Mormon convert and the . turned local curiosity about Mormonism
need to do and many of the things we would like Cincinnati-based
coeditor
of into a teachable moment. He went on a
to do to improve our lives. Trouble with resolu- "Mormonism for Dummies."
radio talk show to discuss Mormon
tions, it's ·so hard to carry them out. Otherwise,
Riess is frequently tapped by reporters beliefs and taught a Sunday school class
some of these ·things would have been accom- as an exper.t on her faith . The good · at a Methodist church.
plished last year,' right? ,
news, she said, is that the news media
"People just· wanted to know a little bit
:. Nevertheless, there's just something inspiring are getting it right most of the time. But more about what we believed. For them it
about the start of a new year when the calendar "I'm not sure the memo is getting down was 'Why · is religion even an issue and
is blank and full of possibilities and our-inten- to the people in the pews," she said. what's so different about the Mormons
tions are strong and liberatin~ . Take for Sometimes "I'm banging my head that we should be Wllrried?'" he said.
instance, a few of my own resolutrons , which I against a wall."
Persecution is a central part of the
shall list here.
finish
in Mormon story.
Romney 's. first-place
· First of all, I need to shed at least 50 pounds,
but for a start, I would settle for I0 or 12. They
-· the experts on this subject- suggest that people operate in small increments when anempting
major changes to their physique. Eating healthily
would ~o a long way in meeting this goal. Can I
BY MARY ANN WINEBRENNER
getting in . This cau sed the decided to go to Duke Medical
help it tf I'm a salt addict? Giving up food conmole to burst open and before Center to have my second
sumption after seven at night would help a lot,
I
could get in the house, the surgery.
011
Sept.
17,
1999,
I
was
too. Ummmm .. .J can see problems with this resgoing to pick up my sister back of my blouse was covThe following Sunday we
olution already.
and
go
went
to church (College Hill).
over
to
Bob
Evans
to
.ered
with
blood.
I
changed
my
Secondly, I would like to get more exercise,
·see
our
cousin,
whom
we
blofise and put a .bandage over We hadn ' t been going regularreally I would . I mean, it's getting rather critical
hadn't
1;een
for
17
or
20
ly, but I needed to go then.
the
'mole and continued on.
when a person can't even bend over and touch
years
.
I
had
a
big
mole
on
my
One
'of the members asked if I
The
following
week
my
their toes anymore. I was never an athlete, I'll
admit, but I used to, be flexible at least. Well, back that had enlarged and other sister called and got me would come up front and be
you know what they say... use it or lose it. Guess everyone kep.t telling me to an appointment to have it anointed and prayed for. When
he' touched me I never felt
taken off.
it'.s time to get serious and register at the fitness get it taken off.
anything
Then
about
three
weeks
I
started
to
get
in
·
my
car
to
Iike it, just somecenter - not next mo'nth, not next spring, but
I
.
,
go get my sister and hit my later, I found out that I had thing went through my whole
now. HeI p.
Thirdly, I have a B flat clarinet that' s been back on the car seat as I was melanoma in stage 4. So I body and out my feet. I wasn't
gathering dust for the past few years. I know in
my heart I am not, never was, nor will I ever be
another Benny Goodman. Still, it would be nice
to be as good as I .was a hundred years ago in
high school band . You never know, I might be
asked to play for someone 's wedding someWASHINGTON
bear communion elements and ous-spirited dialogue about
time . If Point Pleasant had a community band, Washington
National offer up gifts to the poor. The the major issues of our time as
I would join it, but we don't, so there she Cathedral will host a worship state flag will be placed on the seen from the Christian per. - sits ... all alone in her case, her reed becoming celebration Jan. 27 itrrecogni- chancel &amp;teps in the cathedral spective.
dry and brittle, her ke~s getting stiff from tion of the people and leaders for the following week to furWarren is founder and
nonuse. Poor thing. .
.
of West Virginia. More than ther mark West Virginia State senior pastor at Saddleback
Finally, for the benefit of my own soul and 300
visitors
from
the Day.
Church in Lake Forest, Calif.,
for those that God puts in my way, I feel a Mountain State, including
The. Right Rev. W. Michie which grew over 25 years to
strong desire to delve into His Word and invited clergy, elected leaders Klusmeyer, bishop of the become the largest Christian
'·become closer to the One who made me and and parishionerS, are expected Episcopal Diocese of West church in the state. He also has
'loves ·me unconditionally, who makes life at the majestic house of prayer Vtrginia, will preside at the written books, including the
service.
'
best-selling "Purpose 'Driven
·
. ·worth living, who invites me each new day tb for the service.
Rick Warren, one of the Life."
· partake of His creation and reljsh in all the
As part of its national minFollowing
the Sunday
·blessings He has provided. Actually, tHis reso- istry, Washington National nation's leading evangelical
lution should have been my first, since nothing Cathedral offers prayers for leaders, will preach at the ser- Forum, Vocal Tapestry, . a.
' else exists without God ... not good health, or the people and leaders of each vice and also will be spotlight- choral group from Fairmont,
personal happiness, or prosperity, or peace of state annually. The cathedral, ed in the cathedral's Sunday W.Va. , led by Douglas Bunner,
·heart and mmd. HeisEl Shaddai, the Almighty which hosts state funerals and Forum program leading up to will call the congregation to
worship with a choral prelude
other events of national signif- the worship.
· God, v.:ho can do all things .
''The
Sunday
Forum
at
to the West Virginia Major
·. As the Bible says, with God all things are po's- icance, honors each state. with
National State Day service.
. ,sible. Therefore, on this positive note, I begin the a major observance once · Washington
After the worship service,
Cathedral: Critical Issues in
. New Year with a hopeful heart and with the every four years.
the
Light
cathedral
of
Faith"
is
moderat·
guides will lead
West
Virginians
will
play
, \mow ledge that ll1Y life and the lives of my loved
key roles at the Cathedral's ed by the Very Rev. Samuel T. guests on a spec ial tour of the
. gnes are in good hands. May all that l do ·, whether it's being more careful in what I eat, II : 15 a.m . service marking the Lloyd Ill, dean of Washington cathedral, the sixth-largest in
exercising, playing the clarinet or whatever it is state's celebration. They will National Cathedral. It pro- the world, highlighting its ties
participate in the service's vides a space for honest, intel- to West Virginia. The state flag
. - may I do it to glorify Him!
·
opening procession and will lectually probing and gener- hangs in the cavernous nave,
So, what's on your list?

The List

. If you don't know the Lord, you're missing out

TODAY IN HISTORY

LETTERS TO THE
I;:DITOR

Page As

..The Daily Sentinel

a very good Christian until
after that.
Then, I went for my second :
surgery and the cancer hadn ' t
spread anywhere else.
But it was all GOD's doing.
I love the Lord, don't know
what I did without Him. I'm
telling you if you don't know
the Lord or have him in your
life you sure are missing out.
Thank you God for everything and all my family at
College Hill. Church.

West Vrrginia to be celebrated at national cathedral

Good news from Taiwan
The voters of Taiwan
have just handed their
friends and well-wishers in
the United States a gratifying victory i'n their nation's
parliamentary elections. It .
William
hasn' t received much notice
Rusher
in the' press here, but it
deserves to be noted for the
triumph it is.
Taiwan, which has been
an independent nation since Nationalists' policy of eventhe commun ists seized tual reunion with the mainChina during World War II, land,
albeit
a
nonwas dominated from its Communist mainland. More
inception in 1945 until 2000 important, it squarely conby the Nation_a list Party, or flicts with American policy,
Kuomintang.
The which . agrees ·· with the
Nationalists have never Nationalists in favoring
made any secret that their Taiwan's ultimate reunion
ambition is to reunite the . with the mainland after the
island with mainland China communists there have been
when the latter has been overthrown.
To
purged of communism and Washington,
President
is a free country again. Chen's policy of·cauti ously
Their chief opponent is the increasing Taiwan's separaDemocratic
Progressive tion from Chin a si mply
Party, which elected Chen aggravates Beijing to no
Shui-bian as president of purpose, since Taiwan is for
Taiwan in 2000 and has all practical purposes entiresince tended increasingly to ly independent of the
favor Taiwar\'s indepen- People\ Republic of China
dence not only from and has our assurances that
Communist China, but from we will make sure. by miliany succe;,sor govcrnmem tary means if necessary, that
of China. however free .
it remains so.
This tendency has natu Nevertheless, President
rally infuriated Beijing, Chen . seeking to benefit
which . of cour&gt;e. prefers .the politically by encouragin~

separatist tendencies i'n . endum . Recognizing the
Tat wan, has pursued a poli- · disaster that has already
cy of increasing the political occurred as well as the one
distance between Taipei and to come, Chen (whose secBeijing. At the moment, for ond and final term as presiexamp!e, he is sponsoring a dent is expiri11g) has ·
refe~end~m, to b7 held in ·resigned · as party chairman
conJunction
With
the to take responsibility for the
island's forthcoming presi- defeat. The DPP's candidate
dential election on March to . succeed him, Frank
22,_ that w~JUid make it Hsieh; is expected to play
nauonal pohcy to seek to down the issue. But if the
join· · the United Nations J(uomintang -defeats Hsieh
under the name "Taiwan" and the referendum, and
rather than rts formal name, elects its candidate, Ma
which is "the Republic of Ying-jeou, as Taiwan's new
China." Secretary _of State president, t~e United States
Condoleezza . R1ce has will have a loyal and
descnbed
th1s
as
a dependable friend in that
"provocative policy," which key position.
•
it surely is;
.
The biggest winners,
The Kuommtang, of however, will be the people
course, brtterly opposes of Taiwan. They will continChen's proposal. And that is ue to enjoy their de facto
why 1t 1s extremely note- independence
and the
w~rthy that, in ,the nationisland's famous prosperity,
w1de parhamentary elec- without
unnecessarily
tio~s just held, the voters of insulting their iarge and
T~tw an gave' a l a~d , lide dangerous neighbor across
VIctory to the Kuommtang, the Strail of Formosa. And
handing it nearly three- they will continue to have
quarters of ·the seats in an indispensable friend and
Parliament.
ally ih the United States of
This drubbing foreshad- America.
o.w s disaster for Chen's
(William Rusher is a
DPP in the elections of Distinguished Fellow of th~
March 22, which will vote Claremo/11 Institute for the
both on Chen's successor as Study of Statesmanship and
president and on the refer- Political PhilosfJI}hy.)

and the West Virginia state
seal has a prominent location
in the Narthex floor on the
West End of the Cathedral and
is represented on· a needle.point wall hanging in the War
Memorial
Chapel.
Additionally, the Sienko Glass
Company of Milton made the
hand-blown glass in the cathedral 's South Rose Window.
"As a house of prayer for all
people, th~ cathedral op,ens its
doors to all. On Jan. 27, we
especially welcome West
Virginia citizens as we honor
their contributions and service
to their neighbors and our
nation,' '
said
Benjamin
Bradburn, senior manager for
national outreach and the
National
Cathedral
Association, which is organizing the service. "West Virginia
State Day will be a celebration
of the . role the state plays in
the life of the cathedral and
our nation."

Come on over·to Bob's•••
,

Two Convenient Locations
'

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, West Virgi
. (304) 773··5721

�•

..

PageA6

FAITH ·• VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 18, 2008

.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- To get people to attend
his new church campus,
Robbie McLaughlin is
sending his message out to ·
where the people are.
Staffers from Next Level
Church of Matthews will go
to bars in the Ballantyne

·(

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·r

·(

·(

-(

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r. r

r

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

friends and associates during His earth.ly ministry,
were sailing to the place
that Jesus had sent them.
While they were on the
·way, winds stirred up the
water into strong waves that beat against their boat. Then
Jesus was spotted ... walking towards them on the
surface of the water. Afraid
that some sort i:Jf haunting
was taking .Place, they
began to cry out until the
reassuring voice of the
Savior calmed their terror.
And then, wonder of wonder, Peter's heart was stirred
up like the waters around
them. When he asked Jesus
to call him out onto the
water also, the Lord invited
,
him to join Him.
Peter took incredible
steps of faith, not satisfied
with the mediocrity of religion but hungering for a
higher life ... a life of relationship with the holy Son
of God.
Most Christians fall into·
two categories: The majority of these are like the disciples that remained in the
boat, glad that their Lord is
Jesus and content that He
be in charge Uust as long
as they can stay in the
boat), But.some step out of
the boat.
·
Some want more and
know that, since Jesus is the
only One who can provide
that · "more," they have to
get out of the routine of religion and go somehow into
circumstances with which
tht;y're not comfortable
because that's where Jesus
is: Comforting and healing,
helping and saving.
But for every Christian
who dares to really "step
out," there is also the
windy-blown sea wave . of
trouble. grief, or temptation
that distracts the eye from
. the Savior's face.
For that is·, of course,
&gt;Ahat happened to Peter.
The Gospel of Matthew
records that although Peter
victoriously walked on the
.water once he courageously stepped out of his boat,
he began to be afraid once
he started to look at the
tempest about him. And
, having once begun to look
at those circumstances, he
•

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r

(

r

began to sink.
And here's the point. We
all sink at some point
because at some point our
eyes deviate from the countenance of the Savior and
we are overcome. So don't
be too hard on poor Peter.
Jesus alone has the right
to lament our human weakness, " You of little faith.
Why did you doubt?"
(from Matthew 14:31). At
least Peter got out of the
boat. and most of us have
yet to do so for fear that we _
too may s ink .
But take heart! Don't be
afraid of sinking. Count on
it instead! Because when we
finally find ourselves sinking, we also may count on
the hand of our Lord reaching out and catching Us!
"But when he (meaning
Peter) saw the wind, he was
afraid and, beginning to
sink, cried out, 'Lord, save
me!' Immediately Jesus
reached out His hand and
caught him" (Matthew
14:30-31 NIV).
Most people who don't
step out in serving God for
fear that they won't be able
to "cut the mustard" are not ·
really making a statement
about themselves, but indicate instead a lack of faith in
God's ability to handle us in
our weakness.
If you are "holding back"
in serving God because
you ' re saying things like, "I
am not capable of doing
that, Lord" or ''I'm not
going to try because I'.m
afraid I'll fail," then you're
saying that God really does;
n't know what He's doing
(remember that Moses tried
that line of reasoning in
Exodus chapter 4).
".,. The Spirit helps us in'
our weakness" (Romans .
8:26a). "The Holy Spirit
convicts the world of guilt .
in regard to sin and righteousness. and judgment ...
The Spirit of Truth will
guide xou into all truth ...
and Will take what is Mine
and make it' known to you"
(from John 16:8, 13, 14).
·Step · out onto the water
and find that the Lord's
hand is strong and · ready
enough to catch you in your
time of "sinking times."

-(

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Flnt Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunday School 9:30a.m., W.orship - 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m
First Buptlst Church
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport, Sunday School-9:15a.m.,
Worsh ip • 10 :15 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Racine First Blptl51
Pastor: Ryan EHton, pastor , Sunday
School - 9:30 a;m., Worship- !0:40a.m.,
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Services -- 7:00
p,m.

John Swanson, Sunday School •
10a.m., Worship - I !a.m. , 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

Mt. Union Bapdst
Pastor: Denni5 Wca\1er Sunday School9:45 a.m , Evening • 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Se!Vices- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Blllptht Chu.rclJ
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m.,&amp; 7
pm; Wedfle~ay Bible Suxiy- 7:00p.m.

Old Btthel Frtt Will B•ptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Tuesday
Service&amp; ..6:00
tollside Bapliit Churth
St. Rt. 143 just off R't . 7, Putor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr .. Sunday Unified
~rvice, Worship • 10:30 a.m. , 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

· :Yidocy Baptbt Independent"
S2S N. 2nd St. Middlepon, P11stor: James
E. Keesee, Worship • JOa .m .. 7 p.ll] ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

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Fllllh Bap~ll ChW&lt;h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School • 10
a.m ., Worship - II a,m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Fomt Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseplt Woods, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship- J 1:30 a.m.

M,t. Moriah Blptbt
Fourth &amp;: Main St., Middleport, Sunday
School-9:30a.m .• Worship - 10:45 a.m .
.\Rtlqu.lty Bapdst
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.,
Pastor; Do11 W11lker
Rutland Frtt Will Bapllrt

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your light so shine bef(&gt;re I
1mcn, that they may see
lg(&gt;Od works and glorify
F.rher in heaven ."
Matthew 5:

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9 Fifth Street

Cburth of God ot ProphMy
OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt . 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
WQJShip. II a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

. Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4:45-5 : 1•5p.m .; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun.
Con. -8:45 -9: 15 a.m... Sun. Mass - 9:30
a.m., IJaily Mass-8:30a.m.

· Congregational

Church of Christ

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

~ · · -

···T

-~~-

- ......... _ _

._.- ~

... ."".. -

Enterprise:
Pastor: Atland King, Sunday School • 9:30
a.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m. 33105 HilUJd
Rd, Pomeroy
flatweods
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Won;hip - I I a.m.

Trinity ChW&lt;h
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:1~ a.m.,
Sunday Schoo19:1S a.m.

Westside Churtb of Christ
, 33226 Chitdl't:n'§ Home Rd, Po!Tll!roy, OH
Conlact 740-441&lt;1296 Sunday morriing
10:09. Sun morning Bible stu dy:
following worship. Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 1 pm

Episcopal '
Gra« Eplseop11l Church.
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Minister: larry Brown , Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

ForutRun
Pastor: Bob Robinwn, Su11day Xhooi- 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Holiness

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham . Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wofllh ip • li:OO a.m .

Commu•lty Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street,
Rutland. Sunday Worshi_p-10:00 a.m .,
Suriday Service-7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churth of Christ
211 W. Main St.. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Wor sh ip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .•
WedneiDay Se!Vices- 7 p.m.

MlnernUie
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship · 10 a.m.

Danvlllr Holintu Church
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle, PaStor:
Benjamin Crawford. Supday $Chon! · 9:30
a.m., Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7
p.m .. Wednesday prayer sel'\•ice- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wnblde Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m .. Worship· IOa .m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Se!Vices - 7 p.m.
Middleport Churth of C•rb:l
5th and Main, Pastor: AI 11artson,
Childrens Dil'l.'ctor; Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaugh11n. Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m., Wednes&lt;:lay Services - 7 p.m.
Christmas Eve Candle Light Service 6:30
pm We invite you to celebrate the binh of
our Savior everyday.
www.middleponchurch.org

~earl

Chaptl
Sunday School- 9 a.m .• Wonihip • JO a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road. Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sundily School . ~ :30 a.m. , ·
Worship - II a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Gervice - 7:00p.m.

Rose of Sharoo HollnM Chun:h
leading Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pastor: Rev
Dewey King, Sunday school· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday wor5hip -7 p.m., Wednesday
prayermeeting- 7 ·p.m.

Keno Church or Christ .
Worship - 9:"30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .• Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, Jst and
Jrd Sunday

Pine Grove Bible HoUness Chun:h
112 mile off Rt . 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - ' 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
We(lnesday Service-7:30p.m.

Bearwall~ RldJe Church or Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry, Sunday .School -9:3Q
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30· p.m,
Wednesday se~kes- 6:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor: Doug
Co11., Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship •
10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service: 7:30 p.m.

Zion Chun:h of Chrl.U
Poll'leruy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:CIU
p.m .• Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev . Larry Lemley; Sunday School
·9:30a.m., Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p , ~ .

ThPP,m~Maln Churth of Chrl.od
lnstrumenud, Wurship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday School IU: 15 a.m., Youtii- 5:30pm Sunday, Dible
Study Wedr~~:sday 7 Pm

Laurel Cliff' Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Glenn · Rowe. Sundoy School ·
Y:30 ,a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesd11y Service-7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Bradbury Church ofChrl8t
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39.558 Bradbury
Road. Middleport. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m.
Wurship- 10:30 a.m.

The Chun:h of J ea;us.
Christ ol LaUer-Day Saints •
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 44b-74Hb.
Sunday School !0:20-11 a.m., Relief
Sciciety/Priesthood 11:05- 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.

Rutland Churth of Chrbt
Sum.J11y School • 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communi9n - 10:"30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minister

Lutheran
St. Jolm Lutberan Church
Pine Grove, Worship- IJ:OO a.m .. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Bradford Churcb of Christ
Cornet of St. Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Min.ister: Doug Shlliilblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m,
Worship • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m ., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday ServiceH ·7:00 p.m.

' Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood ,
W.Va., Pastor: David Rus!lell, SundBy
Schoo.! - 10:00 a.m .. Worship - II O.m.

Hl(kory Hilh Church or Christ
Tu-ppers Plains, PastOr Mike Moore, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship JO a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm SundAy; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Sl. PaullA&amp;theran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Secon(l St .. Pomeroy.
Sun. School· 9:45a.m., Worship· II a.m .

United Methodist

Rf:f:d1vllle Churth orChrtst
Pastor: Philip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a.m .• Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Graham Unllt:d Methodist
Worship- II a.m . Pastor: Richard Nease
Bethtel United Methodist
New Haven , Richard Nease , !'astor,
Sunday 'worShip 9:30 a.m. Tu~s . 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Deiter Churth of Clllrl!il
Sunday school9:30 a.ni., Sunday worship
-!0:30a.m .
The Churth ol Chrill ol Pomeroy
IntersectiOn 7 and 124 W, Evangeliit:,
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m.; Worship: 10:30 a.m. ahd 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive Unll&lt;d Metbodbt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville , Pastor: Rev .
~ Ralph

Spires, Sunday School· 9:30a.m .,
Wors ltip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Mt:lp Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster, Ai(red. Pastor: Jim
Corbin, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship-It a.m.,6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cburth or Cbrillln
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va., Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship :
10:3 0 a.m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services· 7:00p.m

Chel'llt:r
Pastor: Jim Corbiti, Worship • 9 a.m.,
Sunday School - 10 a,m. , Thursday
St:rvices"- 7 p.m.

Church of God

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!MIIIlltllllltiiii.·Em••rt•

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Ju.tiHMI

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499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333

ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
SERVICES
what ye will, and it sh.all
214 E. Main
done unto you.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
liffi
ANDF.RSON
FUNERAL HOME

174 Llyne Simi• PO Boxl70

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

Newu ..... wv 15265

J...., H. Mdenoo, Li&lt;en!td Funorol Dlmror

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

•
·-·- -

Tuppers Plains Sl. PIIUI
Pastor: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School • 9
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m., Tuesday Services
· -7:30p.m.
Central Clustu
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.. W«&lt;nesday Services-7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian ' Dunham , Worship • 9:30
a.m .. Sunday School- !0:35a.m.
ROJ:k Sprlap
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a.m .. Wor ship - 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.
Rutland
Pastor; Rick Bourne, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m .• Wor:ship- 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Se!Vices - 7 p.m.
Salem Ceriter
Pastor: William K. M_arshall, Sunday
School • 10:15 a.m., Worship · 9: I~ a.m.,
Bible Smdy: Monday 7:00pm
Snowwile
Sunday School- 10 a.m., Wunhip- 9 a.m .'
Bethany
Pastor: luhn Gilmore, Sunday School. 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.
Carmei-SuUon
Carmel &amp; B.nhan Rds . Racine , Ohio,
P11stor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:4.5 a.m .• Worsh ip - 11 :00 D:m· • Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.
Moralng Star
Jlntor: John Gilmore, Sunday School· II
u.m ., Wo!lhip • 10 a.m_.

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Mmhall Sunday School 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m .. 1st Sunday
every month evening Sfrvi"ce 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
RHine
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.Wednesday
Se!Vices 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm

Cuitton lntudeaominadonal Cbun:b
Kmgsbury Roatl. Pastor: Robert Vance,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worsh1p
Service 10:30 a.m .. Evening Service 6
p.m.
Frttdom Go&amp;ptl Mhllion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m: Worship-- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Ch111th ol the N11.111'tne
Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. , Worihip- 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.rn .• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Cbeetrr Cbun:h of the Na~ne
Pastor: Rev , Cunis Randolph, Sunday
School • 9:30 B.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m.,
Sunday evCiling 6 pm
Rudand Churth of the Nlf.lrene
Pastor: baac Shupe, Sunday /)chool· 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a,m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

Wbht's C111pd Waleyu
Coolville Road , Pastor: Rev. Chule5
Martindale, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Senoiee
- 1 p.m.

.

Fairview Bible Cba.rch
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I, Pastor: Brian Ma~ .
Sl!nday School· 9:30a.m., Worship - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusadt for Chrilt
Pastor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 7 pm,

Other Churches
Syracu.sr Community Chureb
2480 Second St., Syracuse, OH
Sun. SchooliO am, Sundy night 6:30 pm
Pll!itor: Joe Ow inn

A New B'llula&amp;
{Full Golptl c•nrdiJ Harrisonville,

Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Amaztaa Gr.,.. Community Cbwilo

·

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 681,
Tuppers Plains, Sun. Wol'!iihip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m.

SHnnvlllt CommuDit} Cbuft:h
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Wonlrip
t l :00 am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

Oasll Cbrtsttan Felowshlp
(Non-denominatioRAl fellowship)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewan
10:00 lliil- Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship. Children's ministry

Rejolclq Lift Church
500 N. 2nd A.ve., Middlepor1 , Pastor:

Community of Christ
Penland-Racine Rd ., Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.fn , Worsh ip 10:30 a.m., Wc:dnes.day Services • 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wonhlp Center
39782 St. Rt. 7, 2 miln south of Thppers
Plains , OH . Non-denominational with
Contemporary Praisc:i &amp; Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc. P.,stor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Deny Fulks. Su"nday
services: 10 am Worsll ip &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pm, Thurs morning ladies'
Life Group a1 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wed . evening from 6:30 to ~:30 .
Visit us online at www.bethelwt:.org .

llockln1port Church
Orand Street, Sunduy School -9:30a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a.m., Pasror Phillip Bell
Ton:h Churi:b
Co. Rd . 63 , Sundl)' School • 9:30 a.m .•
Worship- 10:30 a.m .

Nazarenl!
Poinl Rock Church Bf the Naurtae
Rouce 689, Albany. Rev. lloyd Orimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am; worhsip
service" II am. evening service 7 pm. Wed .
prayer meeting 7 pm
Middleport Chul'l'h or lht: Naurtar
Leonatd Powell, Sunday School • ,
9:30 a.m.,Wors hip- 10:30 a.m .• 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.,
Pasta~::

RrednUlr Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor: Russell
Carson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday
Service8- 7 p.m.

Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Law~ce
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday ~~ices - 1 p.m.

Clifton Tabernarlt Cburdl
Clifton, W.Va., Sunday School· 10 a.m.,
WOOlhip - 7 p.m.. Wednesday Service- 7
p.m.
New Ufe VIctory Ce•ter
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipo~is, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday Services- 10
a.m . &amp; 1 p.m. Wednlisday • 1 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Full Goop&lt;l ChW&lt;h
ol the Lh·l111 Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Monis,
Sen-ices: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Saltm Community Churth
Asb Strett Cllurth '
Back of West Columbia. W.Va.om Lining
398 Ash St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
,Road , Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67'·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Morning
- 2288. Sunday School 9:30 lm. Sunday
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm,
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
Wednesday Se~ice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Wednesday sen-ice 7:00pm u.
Service-7:00p.m.
Agape Lift: Cenler
Hobson Christian fellowship Cllurch
"Full-Gospel Church", "Pastors John &amp;
Pastor: HersChel White, Sunda"y SchoolPany Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason, 77310 am . Sunday Church service-6:30pm
5017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm
WedDesday 7 pm ·
Abuad111t GrKe R.F. I.
923 S..Thinl St., Miqdleport, Pastur Teresa
Davis, Sunday service, 10 a.m ..
Wednesday sen·ice, 1 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Churcb.
Long Bottom, Pastor: Ste~e Reed, Su~day
SChool • 9:30 un, Wor~hip - 9:30 a.m.
and 1 p.m .• Wednesda~· - 1 p.m .. Friday fellowship service 7 p.m
Harrisonville Cemmuall)' Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m . and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Mkldleport Community Churt:h
575 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening-7:30p.m., Wednesday Sen·ice· 7:30p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Fallb Valley Tabtroade Chutth
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coolville Church, ·
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m.,
• Rawson, Sunday ·E"ening 7 p.m.,
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Services- 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

lkthel Ch111&lt;h
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m , Worship - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- JO a.m.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev .
Blackwood . Sunday School- 9:30 a.m .,
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen'ice- 7:30p.m. ·

Syracuse Missloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sonday
School - 10 a.m, Evening • 6 p.m ..
We~sday Service- 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School-9:30a.m.. Worship . to':JO a.m ..
7:30p.m.
DyesvUir CommWIIty Chun:b
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday !Oehool • H1 a.m., Worship • II
a.m., Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Faith Gesptl Church
Long Bottom, Sunday School ·9:30a.m. ,
Worship - 10 :4.5 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Full Goopet L!Pthoue
33045 Hiland Road,Pon ..:roy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.m., Evening
7:30p.m. Tuesday&amp;: Thurs. : 7:30p.m.

Resloratlon Chrbdaa FelknniUp
9365 Hoope r Road, Athen~ . Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worsh ip 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 1 pm

House or Heallna: Mlnlstrlel
St. Rt. 124 Langsrille. OH
Full Gospel , Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Robena
Mus,ser, Sunda~ School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesus Ministries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymnasium. Pastor' Eddie Baer,
se!Vice every Tuesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124. Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School - 10 a.m .• Evening • 7
p.m. , WednesdaY Services- 1 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harri!KI•vlle Pmbyterian Chun:h
Pastor: Roben Crow, Worship- 9 a.m.

Middleport PreobyterlaoPostor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., WOfl!hip !!eTVice II alll.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Senn.. ·Day Adnntist
Mulberry. Hts. Rd., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services: Sabbath School - 2 P.m ..
Worship · J p.m.

United Brethren
. Mt. Hermon Unlled Brethrm
In Christ Cbun:h
Te~tas Community 364 I1 Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunda.y School •
9:30 a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Servic"es - 7:00 p.m .
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;: 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United Brethru In Christ
State Routf 124, betwec:n Reedsville &amp;
Hockingpon, Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
Sunda·y Worship- 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p,m.. Pastor- M. Adam
Will

South Bethel Community Chun:b
Silver Ridge· Pastor Linda Damewood,
Sunday Scl'lool - 9 a.m. , Worship Service

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
Tht cart you dtstrvt, cwst to home good works and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."

Pomeroy, OH 45769

740.992·6606

Matthew 5:16

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER ·
Coolville, Ohio

Located less than 30 minutes from
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1-740-667-3156
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God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
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Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

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

John 3:16

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Middleport, OH

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1740) 992-641 t

Lone Bottom
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Wnuhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •
!0:30a.m .• Firs t Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sund,Jy

Syra.:uae Churtb of the Naurene
Pa~tor Mike Adltins, Sunday St:hool - 9:30
a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6 p m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

...

If ye abide in Me, and My

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The Hppllance man

....

Ht~me Coolud Mtals &amp;: Daily Specials

Catholic

'

•
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Nllll, Wor~hip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Sehoul. 10:30 a.m.

Syracuse First Churth of God
Apple and Se(:ond Sts., Pa&gt;tor: Re.,., David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Services- 6 30 p.m .,
Wednesday Se!Vices- 6:30p .m.

Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Morning
chu~ch 1r am, Sunday evrning 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

Liberty AQembly of God
P.O. Boll 467, Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.Va .., Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sunday
St:rvices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Chun:h (Soulhern)
570 Grant St., Middlcpon, Sunday scho(ll
·9:30a.m., Wurshjp • II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Se!Vice - 7 p.m. Pa'stor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland First Baptist Cburcll
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m.
PomeroJ Flnt Baptirit
Pusmr Jon Brocken. East Main St.,
Sunda;,: Sc.h. 9:30am, Worship 10 :30 am

.,

IJJi[[ie's 1(estaurant

740-949-221 0

Assembly of God

Cheshlrt Baptl~l Churth
Pastor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am.
Wedne5day Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Director of Marketing and Admissions

Wwm Friendly

Sacred Hclirt Clllhollc Churth
Hi! Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992-5898,

Carpenler Independent Raptlsl Church
Sonday School • 9:30am. Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening Sel'\'ili,e
7:00pm. Wednesday Bible s,udy 7:00pm,
Pastor: Whitt Akers

,,

Hours

Elllmanurl Apo!toiiiC Tabtrnacl~ -Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland.
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thul'!ii . 7:00p.m., Pastor MartyR. Hunon

_Paatvllle FreewUI Baptist Church
Pastor: Aoyd Ross, Sunday Scllool9:30 to
10:30 am, Worship service 10:30 to 11:00
am . Wc:d. preaching 6 pm

..

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middlepon OH Fax (740) 992·7406

River Valley Apostolic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middlepor1, Rev.
Michael Bradford. Pastor. Sunday, 10:30 ·
a.m. Thu. 6:30-prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

SR 652 ·and Anderson St. Pastor: Roben

Baptist

''

Michelle Kennedy

(lndependenl Baptist)

RJver VaUe)'

.,

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

Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School ib am' Morning wol'ship I I am Eve11ing. 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m .

First Bapdst Ch•rth or Mason, WV

(

,

Second Baptist Church

Chun:b or Jeso.s Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.,
E,·ening- 7:30p.m.

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

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

Many of us treat our bodies more
like a garbage can than a temple. We
' drink all manner of
eat and
unhealthy substances, we fail to get
the proper rest and uerdse that we
need, and we generally neglect our
health until we don't have lt. We
know a lot niore about how to ke~p
our bodies healthy than they did In
Biblical times, and yet, ironically,
more people are obese than ever ·
before, simply' because we eat too
much and exercise too little. Sadly,
much of modern-day illness and
death are due to preventable causes,
such as using tobacco or misusing
alcohol, poor diet and inactivity, or,
simply not wearing seat belts. God
did not give our bodies to be
squandered or defiled, and if we
engage in bad habits which wear out
or destroy our body before its time·,
we are neglecting this wonderful gift
from God . So, we should take care
of our body: eat right, exercise
'
Do you not klww tl1at your body is a · daily, and get plenty of rest. We will
temple of the Holy Spirit within you, probably fi~d that the spirit that
which you have from God? You art nor dwell.&lt; within us will be a lot happier
your own,· you wert bought with a price. once we start taking better care of
So gwrify God in your body.
our temple. And, we should
remember that it's not just what
R.S. V. I Cori11thian.• 6:19-20
goes into our body that defiles it,
hut also, the behaviors which come

MI. Moriah Chunh of God
M1le Hill Rd., Racine, P11stor: James
Satterfield. Sunda)· School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 1
p.m.
Rutland Churth of God
Pastor: Ron -Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m. ; Wedne5day Services - 1
p.m.

Wedl"'(sday Services • 7 p m

Church puts slogan on shot glasses to publicize new campus

The Dally Sentinel ·Page A7

WORS1TI1P GOD THIS WEEK
.

' Friday, January 18,2008

She hasn't got a prayer ·
In many way,, Dawn
Shennan is your typical 14year-old. She goes to school.
sings in a church choir and wants to make a ditlerence in the· world. But
unlike most teenagers. she's
not waiting until she's a
"grown-up." Dawn is making a difterence · ~ at least in
her school district - right
now. She is party to a lawsuit that's tearing her sc hool
and community apart.
I read about her in a newspaper . article from the
Chicago Tribune. The
Illinois state legislature
passed a "Silent Retlection
and Student Prayer Act'' last
year' that allows schools to
provide one minute . of
'silence ·at the beginning of
ihe school day. Dawn objects
to the practice; she claims
that it violates her rights
because, ''f,irst of all. the
teacher is being made to stop
teaching, and I'm being
[made] an audience to something that is heavily suggestive in the direction of prayer
because of the title of the act.
It's called the student prayer
and silent retlection act."
Something else you should
know about Dawn. Stie is the
daughter of one of Illinois'
most prominent atheists, Rob
Shennan. The elder Sherman
' has long been trying to 'eliminate any references to God
from the public square. In the
early 1980s, he filed suit on
behalf of his son, then a first
grader, to stop his school
from forcing him to include
the ."one nation under God"
phrase in the daily recitation
of the Pledge of Allegiance
to the Rag. Sherman has also
attempted to remove "In God
We Trust" from US currency,
had run-ins with member of
the Bush Administration
over religion in the public
square, and once even
accosted the president himself over atheists' rights.
The article on Dawn
Sherman tells an intriguing
anecdote from her early
years: "Dawn wa~ exposed to
her father's beliefs at an early
age. 'She jokes that when she
was still· a fetus, her father
would whisper to her mother's belly: 'God is make-

\

w-Ww.mydallysentlnel.com

Salem St., Putor: Ed Barney . Sunday
School - 10 a.m.. Evemng - 7 p.m.,

One 'of the most profound
be spoken in the classroom
assurances·
that we have as
seems specious to me.
Eventually, this case (or Christians today is the fact
another one like it) will of God's help in living the
reach the US Supreme Christian life. On the one·
Pastor
Court. A similar law in Texas hand, we as creations of
Kerry
recently recei'ved the green God are commanded to
Wood
light from the Fifth US walk in God's ways.
"Be careful to do what
Circuit Court of Appeals. A
couple in one of Dallas' sub- the LORD your God has
urbs filed suit it\ 2006 commanded you; do not
against the .local school dis- turn aside to the right or to
believe. G,&gt;d is make-believe
trict and the Texas governor the left. Walk in all the
and Daddy is perfect."' ·
over· the state's minute of way that the LORD has
AI US citizens; the
silence. On January 5, 2008, commanded you, so that
Shennans are certainly entithe court said that the "the you may live and prostled to think what they want
per. .. "
(Deuteronomy
to think. and to act the·way primary effect. of the statute 5:32-33a NIV)
they want to act. No one is to institute a moment of
On the other, once we've
should force religious beliefs silence, not to advance or ~laced our faith in Jesus as
down their throats. But the inhibit religion." No · deci-. Lord and Savior and
counterpoint is that THEY . sian has been made about allowed His sacrifice on
should not be allowed to whether or not the couple . !he, cross of Cal vary to
force thei r non-religious will appeal the ruling.
I find the whole situation atone for our· sins, we are
(some might say anti-reli-'
declared to be the children
gious) beliefs down any one sad. What has brought this of God (s·ee John I: 12-13).
else's throat. And that's the country to the low point of · And as children of God,
problem. In Dawn's estima- somebody suing somebody we are given. the very
tion. her rights are being vio- else over everything? Maybe resource we need (in fact,
lated; and the only way for it's just me, but I thought our the ONLY resource)· to
her rights to be put "right" is courts were designed to deal give us victory in the holy
for her rights to violate the with REAL issues of justice, commandmeilt to walk .in
rights of others. She gets her · not simply one person's all His ways - that is to
way, so no on else gets opinion · becoming mqre say, to live righteously.
. important than another peranother way.
The provision that He
Quite frankly, if her case, son's opinion. -Even as a pas- promises us is the Person of
is based on what she said iri tor. school prayer to me is the Holy .Spirit. The Holy
the article, then I am sur- not an "Issue" with a capital Spirit of God is the ongoing
prised !hat a federal judge "l." Kid~ could gather expression of God's preswas willing to put a tempo- together before and after ence and power to the world
rary injunction against the school to pray. They can as He continually works in
statue. Read again what she organize Bible studies, pass
the midst of the world, repstated as her reason for notes of encouragement to resenting the holy authority
objecting: "[it's] heavily one another, and do other litof the Father/Creator as
suggestive in the direction tle things that retlect their
of prayer because of the title faith without causing contro- well as the incredible atonement provided us by the
of the act. It's called the stu- versies.
And I pray that in some work of the Son's substitudent prayer and · silent
quiet, loving and non-con- tionary death and glorious
reflection act." ·
She doesn 't like it because troversial way, someone resurrection.
And, by the way, I am
of its TITLE? And she's got will show'the Shermans just
it wrong! The title is actual- what God's love really greatly offended that the
ly "The Silent Reflection looks like . Remember, significance of the word
and Student Prayer Act." Dawn sin9s in a church "atonement" is smeared by
Student prayer does not get choir. That s one little step. a movie with the same
name. I lament that our cultip billing, even though she Maybe others will follow.
ture
has so far disconnected
As for prayer in schools, I
tried to make it so as part of
her objection . Furthermore, think my grandmother had itself from the . life-saving
how many kids in the class- it right: "As long as there power of Jesus' atonement
room will have a clue what are tests in schools, you bet~ .for us that we can trivially
the act's title is? S'eems ter believe there will be attach it to a movie filled
with the confusion that our
ma11y of them have a hard prayer in schools!"
morally
bankrupt society
time remembering the date
(Kerry Wood is the postor
constantly
generates.
when the colonies declared of Raci~re United Methodist
At any rate, we need to
their independence from Church, 818 Elm Street in
recognize
that, yes, we are
England. (July 4, 1776, in Racine. Swulay worship is aJ
all
called
to
live holy lives.
case you're · wondering.) JI a.m. Pastnr Kerry can be
Basing an objection on reaclwd aJ racineumc@sud- But also that God has made
a way for us to live it, lest
statute titles that will never delllink.tlet.)
anyone think that God has
called us to something that
is impossible and that He is.
therefore, unfair.
area of Charlotte to hand
McLaughlin is the pasBoth salvation itself and
out shot glasses that ask tor, and said he is confi- the spiritual life that folpatrons to "give us a shot" dent that it will be contro- lows after require a divine
and bear the slogan, "Real versial, but he said the strength that is not native
church for real people.'_'
goal is not .necessarily to to us.
The idea is to draw people impress
people
who
Consider the account of
to the church's
new already go to church. He Jesus walking on the water
Ballantyne campus, which said it's to impress people in Mauhew 14:22-33. The
opens next month.
who don't.
disciples, Jesus' closest

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PageA6

FAITH ·• VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 18, 2008

.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- To get people to attend
his new church campus,
Robbie McLaughlin is
sending his message out to ·
where the people are.
Staffers from Next Level
Church of Matthews will go
to bars in the Ballantyne

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Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

friends and associates during His earth.ly ministry,
were sailing to the place
that Jesus had sent them.
While they were on the
·way, winds stirred up the
water into strong waves that beat against their boat. Then
Jesus was spotted ... walking towards them on the
surface of the water. Afraid
that some sort i:Jf haunting
was taking .Place, they
began to cry out until the
reassuring voice of the
Savior calmed their terror.
And then, wonder of wonder, Peter's heart was stirred
up like the waters around
them. When he asked Jesus
to call him out onto the
water also, the Lord invited
,
him to join Him.
Peter took incredible
steps of faith, not satisfied
with the mediocrity of religion but hungering for a
higher life ... a life of relationship with the holy Son
of God.
Most Christians fall into·
two categories: The majority of these are like the disciples that remained in the
boat, glad that their Lord is
Jesus and content that He
be in charge Uust as long
as they can stay in the
boat), But.some step out of
the boat.
·
Some want more and
know that, since Jesus is the
only One who can provide
that · "more," they have to
get out of the routine of religion and go somehow into
circumstances with which
tht;y're not comfortable
because that's where Jesus
is: Comforting and healing,
helping and saving.
But for every Christian
who dares to really "step
out," there is also the
windy-blown sea wave . of
trouble. grief, or temptation
that distracts the eye from
. the Savior's face.
For that is·, of course,
&gt;Ahat happened to Peter.
The Gospel of Matthew
records that although Peter
victoriously walked on the
.water once he courageously stepped out of his boat,
he began to be afraid once
he started to look at the
tempest about him. And
, having once begun to look
at those circumstances, he
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began to sink.
And here's the point. We
all sink at some point
because at some point our
eyes deviate from the countenance of the Savior and
we are overcome. So don't
be too hard on poor Peter.
Jesus alone has the right
to lament our human weakness, " You of little faith.
Why did you doubt?"
(from Matthew 14:31). At
least Peter got out of the
boat. and most of us have
yet to do so for fear that we _
too may s ink .
But take heart! Don't be
afraid of sinking. Count on
it instead! Because when we
finally find ourselves sinking, we also may count on
the hand of our Lord reaching out and catching Us!
"But when he (meaning
Peter) saw the wind, he was
afraid and, beginning to
sink, cried out, 'Lord, save
me!' Immediately Jesus
reached out His hand and
caught him" (Matthew
14:30-31 NIV).
Most people who don't
step out in serving God for
fear that they won't be able
to "cut the mustard" are not ·
really making a statement
about themselves, but indicate instead a lack of faith in
God's ability to handle us in
our weakness.
If you are "holding back"
in serving God because
you ' re saying things like, "I
am not capable of doing
that, Lord" or ''I'm not
going to try because I'.m
afraid I'll fail," then you're
saying that God really does;
n't know what He's doing
(remember that Moses tried
that line of reasoning in
Exodus chapter 4).
".,. The Spirit helps us in'
our weakness" (Romans .
8:26a). "The Holy Spirit
convicts the world of guilt .
in regard to sin and righteousness. and judgment ...
The Spirit of Truth will
guide xou into all truth ...
and Will take what is Mine
and make it' known to you"
(from John 16:8, 13, 14).
·Step · out onto the water
and find that the Lord's
hand is strong and · ready
enough to catch you in your
time of "sinking times."

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41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunday School 9:30a.m., W.orship - 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m
First Buptlst Church
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport, Sunday School-9:15a.m.,
Worsh ip • 10 :15 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Racine First Blptl51
Pastor: Ryan EHton, pastor , Sunday
School - 9:30 a;m., Worship- !0:40a.m.,
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Services -- 7:00
p,m.

John Swanson, Sunday School •
10a.m., Worship - I !a.m. , 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

Mt. Union Bapdst
Pastor: Denni5 Wca\1er Sunday School9:45 a.m , Evening • 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Se!Vices- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Blllptht Chu.rclJ
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m.,&amp; 7
pm; Wedfle~ay Bible Suxiy- 7:00p.m.

Old Btthel Frtt Will B•ptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Tuesday
Service&amp; ..6:00
tollside Bapliit Churth
St. Rt. 143 just off R't . 7, Putor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr .. Sunday Unified
~rvice, Worship • 10:30 a.m. , 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

· :Yidocy Baptbt Independent"
S2S N. 2nd St. Middlepon, P11stor: James
E. Keesee, Worship • JOa .m .. 7 p.ll] ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

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Racine, OH

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John 15:7

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Fllllh Bap~ll ChW&lt;h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School • 10
a.m ., Worship - II a,m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Fomt Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseplt Woods, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship- J 1:30 a.m.

M,t. Moriah Blptbt
Fourth &amp;: Main St., Middleport, Sunday
School-9:30a.m .• Worship - 10:45 a.m .
.\Rtlqu.lty Bapdst
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.,
Pastor; Do11 W11lker
Rutland Frtt Will Bapllrt

•

your light so shine bef(&gt;re I
1mcn, that they may see
lg(&gt;Od works and glorify
F.rher in heaven ."
Matthew 5:

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Since
9 Fifth Street

Cburth of God ot ProphMy
OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt . 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
WQJShip. II a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

. Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4:45-5 : 1•5p.m .; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun.
Con. -8:45 -9: 15 a.m... Sun. Mass - 9:30
a.m., IJaily Mass-8:30a.m.

· Congregational

Church of Christ

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

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···T

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._.- ~

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Enterprise:
Pastor: Atland King, Sunday School • 9:30
a.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m. 33105 HilUJd
Rd, Pomeroy
flatweods
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Won;hip - I I a.m.

Trinity ChW&lt;h
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:1~ a.m.,
Sunday Schoo19:1S a.m.

Westside Churtb of Christ
, 33226 Chitdl't:n'§ Home Rd, Po!Tll!roy, OH
Conlact 740-441&lt;1296 Sunday morriing
10:09. Sun morning Bible stu dy:
following worship. Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 1 pm

Episcopal '
Gra« Eplseop11l Church.
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Minister: larry Brown , Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

ForutRun
Pastor: Bob Robinwn, Su11day Xhooi- 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Holiness

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham . Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wofllh ip • li:OO a.m .

Commu•lty Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street,
Rutland. Sunday Worshi_p-10:00 a.m .,
Suriday Service-7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churth of Christ
211 W. Main St.. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Wor sh ip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .•
WedneiDay Se!Vices- 7 p.m.

MlnernUie
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship · 10 a.m.

Danvlllr Holintu Church
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle, PaStor:
Benjamin Crawford. Supday $Chon! · 9:30
a.m., Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7
p.m .. Wednesday prayer sel'\•ice- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wnblde Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m .. Worship· IOa .m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Se!Vices - 7 p.m.
Middleport Churth of C•rb:l
5th and Main, Pastor: AI 11artson,
Childrens Dil'l.'ctor; Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaugh11n. Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m., Wednes&lt;:lay Services - 7 p.m.
Christmas Eve Candle Light Service 6:30
pm We invite you to celebrate the binh of
our Savior everyday.
www.middleponchurch.org

~earl

Chaptl
Sunday School- 9 a.m .• Wonihip • JO a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road. Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sundily School . ~ :30 a.m. , ·
Worship - II a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Gervice - 7:00p.m.

Rose of Sharoo HollnM Chun:h
leading Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pastor: Rev
Dewey King, Sunday school· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday wor5hip -7 p.m., Wednesday
prayermeeting- 7 ·p.m.

Keno Church or Christ .
Worship - 9:"30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .• Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, Jst and
Jrd Sunday

Pine Grove Bible HoUness Chun:h
112 mile off Rt . 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - ' 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
We(lnesday Service-7:30p.m.

Bearwall~ RldJe Church or Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry, Sunday .School -9:3Q
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30· p.m,
Wednesday se~kes- 6:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor: Doug
Co11., Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship •
10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service: 7:30 p.m.

Zion Chun:h of Chrl.U
Poll'leruy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:CIU
p.m .• Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev . Larry Lemley; Sunday School
·9:30a.m., Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p , ~ .

ThPP,m~Maln Churth of Chrl.od
lnstrumenud, Wurship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday School IU: 15 a.m., Youtii- 5:30pm Sunday, Dible
Study Wedr~~:sday 7 Pm

Laurel Cliff' Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Glenn · Rowe. Sundoy School ·
Y:30 ,a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesd11y Service-7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Bradbury Church ofChrl8t
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39.558 Bradbury
Road. Middleport. Sunday School- 9:30
a.m.
Wurship- 10:30 a.m.

The Chun:h of J ea;us.
Christ ol LaUer-Day Saints •
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 44b-74Hb.
Sunday School !0:20-11 a.m., Relief
Sciciety/Priesthood 11:05- 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.

Rutland Churth of Chrbt
Sum.J11y School • 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communi9n - 10:"30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minister

Lutheran
St. Jolm Lutberan Church
Pine Grove, Worship- IJ:OO a.m .. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Bradford Churcb of Christ
Cornet of St. Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Min.ister: Doug Shlliilblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m,
Worship • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m ., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday ServiceH ·7:00 p.m.

' Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood ,
W.Va., Pastor: David Rus!lell, SundBy
Schoo.! - 10:00 a.m .. Worship - II O.m.

Hl(kory Hilh Church or Christ
Tu-ppers Plains, PastOr Mike Moore, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship JO a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm SundAy; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Sl. PaullA&amp;theran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Secon(l St .. Pomeroy.
Sun. School· 9:45a.m., Worship· II a.m .

United Methodist

Rf:f:d1vllle Churth orChrtst
Pastor: Philip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a.m .• Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Graham Unllt:d Methodist
Worship- II a.m . Pastor: Richard Nease
Bethtel United Methodist
New Haven , Richard Nease , !'astor,
Sunday 'worShip 9:30 a.m. Tu~s . 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Deiter Churth of Clllrl!il
Sunday school9:30 a.ni., Sunday worship
-!0:30a.m .
The Churth ol Chrill ol Pomeroy
IntersectiOn 7 and 124 W, Evangeliit:,
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m.; Worship: 10:30 a.m. ahd 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive Unll&lt;d Metbodbt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville , Pastor: Rev .
~ Ralph

Spires, Sunday School· 9:30a.m .,
Wors ltip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Mt:lp Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster, Ai(red. Pastor: Jim
Corbin, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship-It a.m.,6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cburth or Cbrillln
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va., Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship :
10:3 0 a.m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services· 7:00p.m

Chel'llt:r
Pastor: Jim Corbiti, Worship • 9 a.m.,
Sunday School - 10 a,m. , Thursday
St:rvices"- 7 p.m.

Church of God

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P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

•
·-·- -

Tuppers Plains Sl. PIIUI
Pastor: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School • 9
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m., Tuesday Services
· -7:30p.m.
Central Clustu
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.. W«&lt;nesday Services-7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian ' Dunham , Worship • 9:30
a.m .. Sunday School- !0:35a.m.
ROJ:k Sprlap
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a.m .. Wor ship - 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.
Rutland
Pastor; Rick Bourne, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m .• Wor:ship- 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Se!Vices - 7 p.m.
Salem Ceriter
Pastor: William K. M_arshall, Sunday
School • 10:15 a.m., Worship · 9: I~ a.m.,
Bible Smdy: Monday 7:00pm
Snowwile
Sunday School- 10 a.m., Wunhip- 9 a.m .'
Bethany
Pastor: luhn Gilmore, Sunday School. 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.
Carmei-SuUon
Carmel &amp; B.nhan Rds . Racine , Ohio,
P11stor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:4.5 a.m .• Worsh ip - 11 :00 D:m· • Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.
Moralng Star
Jlntor: John Gilmore, Sunday School· II
u.m ., Wo!lhip • 10 a.m_.

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Mmhall Sunday School 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m .. 1st Sunday
every month evening Sfrvi"ce 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
RHine
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.Wednesday
Se!Vices 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm

Cuitton lntudeaominadonal Cbun:b
Kmgsbury Roatl. Pastor: Robert Vance,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worsh1p
Service 10:30 a.m .. Evening Service 6
p.m.
Frttdom Go&amp;ptl Mhllion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m: Worship-- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Ch111th ol the N11.111'tne
Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. , Worihip- 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.rn .• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Cbeetrr Cbun:h of the Na~ne
Pastor: Rev , Cunis Randolph, Sunday
School • 9:30 B.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m.,
Sunday evCiling 6 pm
Rudand Churth of the Nlf.lrene
Pastor: baac Shupe, Sunday /)chool· 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a,m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

Wbht's C111pd Waleyu
Coolville Road , Pastor: Rev. Chule5
Martindale, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Senoiee
- 1 p.m.

.

Fairview Bible Cba.rch
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I, Pastor: Brian Ma~ .
Sl!nday School· 9:30a.m., Worship - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusadt for Chrilt
Pastor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 7 pm,

Other Churches
Syracu.sr Community Chureb
2480 Second St., Syracuse, OH
Sun. SchooliO am, Sundy night 6:30 pm
Pll!itor: Joe Ow inn

A New B'llula&amp;
{Full Golptl c•nrdiJ Harrisonville,

Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Amaztaa Gr.,.. Community Cbwilo

·

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 681,
Tuppers Plains, Sun. Wol'!iihip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m.

SHnnvlllt CommuDit} Cbuft:h
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Wonlrip
t l :00 am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

Oasll Cbrtsttan Felowshlp
(Non-denominatioRAl fellowship)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewan
10:00 lliil- Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship. Children's ministry

Rejolclq Lift Church
500 N. 2nd A.ve., Middlepor1 , Pastor:

Community of Christ
Penland-Racine Rd ., Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.fn , Worsh ip 10:30 a.m., Wc:dnes.day Services • 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wonhlp Center
39782 St. Rt. 7, 2 miln south of Thppers
Plains , OH . Non-denominational with
Contemporary Praisc:i &amp; Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc. P.,stor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Deny Fulks. Su"nday
services: 10 am Worsll ip &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pm, Thurs morning ladies'
Life Group a1 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wed . evening from 6:30 to ~:30 .
Visit us online at www.bethelwt:.org .

llockln1port Church
Orand Street, Sunduy School -9:30a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a.m., Pasror Phillip Bell
Ton:h Churi:b
Co. Rd . 63 , Sundl)' School • 9:30 a.m .•
Worship- 10:30 a.m .

Nazarenl!
Poinl Rock Church Bf the Naurtae
Rouce 689, Albany. Rev. lloyd Orimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am; worhsip
service" II am. evening service 7 pm. Wed .
prayer meeting 7 pm
Middleport Chul'l'h or lht: Naurtar
Leonatd Powell, Sunday School • ,
9:30 a.m.,Wors hip- 10:30 a.m .• 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.,
Pasta~::

RrednUlr Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor: Russell
Carson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday
Service8- 7 p.m.

Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Law~ce
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday ~~ices - 1 p.m.

Clifton Tabernarlt Cburdl
Clifton, W.Va., Sunday School· 10 a.m.,
WOOlhip - 7 p.m.. Wednesday Service- 7
p.m.
New Ufe VIctory Ce•ter
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipo~is, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday Services- 10
a.m . &amp; 1 p.m. Wednlisday • 1 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Full Goop&lt;l ChW&lt;h
ol the Lh·l111 Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Monis,
Sen-ices: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Saltm Community Churth
Asb Strett Cllurth '
Back of West Columbia. W.Va.om Lining
398 Ash St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
,Road , Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67'·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Morning
- 2288. Sunday School 9:30 lm. Sunday
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm,
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
Wednesday Se~ice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Wednesday sen-ice 7:00pm u.
Service-7:00p.m.
Agape Lift: Cenler
Hobson Christian fellowship Cllurch
"Full-Gospel Church", "Pastors John &amp;
Pastor: HersChel White, Sunda"y SchoolPany Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason, 77310 am . Sunday Church service-6:30pm
5017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm
WedDesday 7 pm ·
Abuad111t GrKe R.F. I.
923 S..Thinl St., Miqdleport, Pastur Teresa
Davis, Sunday service, 10 a.m ..
Wednesday sen·ice, 1 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Churcb.
Long Bottom, Pastor: Ste~e Reed, Su~day
SChool • 9:30 un, Wor~hip - 9:30 a.m.
and 1 p.m .• Wednesda~· - 1 p.m .. Friday fellowship service 7 p.m
Harrisonville Cemmuall)' Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m . and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Mkldleport Community Churt:h
575 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening-7:30p.m., Wednesday Sen·ice· 7:30p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Fallb Valley Tabtroade Chutth
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coolville Church, ·
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m.,
• Rawson, Sunday ·E"ening 7 p.m.,
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Services- 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

lkthel Ch111&lt;h
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m , Worship - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- JO a.m.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev .
Blackwood . Sunday School- 9:30 a.m .,
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen'ice- 7:30p.m. ·

Syracuse Missloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sonday
School - 10 a.m, Evening • 6 p.m ..
We~sday Service- 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School-9:30a.m.. Worship . to':JO a.m ..
7:30p.m.
DyesvUir CommWIIty Chun:b
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday !Oehool • H1 a.m., Worship • II
a.m., Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Faith Gesptl Church
Long Bottom, Sunday School ·9:30a.m. ,
Worship - 10 :4.5 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Full Goopet L!Pthoue
33045 Hiland Road,Pon ..:roy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.m., Evening
7:30p.m. Tuesday&amp;: Thurs. : 7:30p.m.

Resloratlon Chrbdaa FelknniUp
9365 Hoope r Road, Athen~ . Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worsh ip 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 1 pm

House or Heallna: Mlnlstrlel
St. Rt. 124 Langsrille. OH
Full Gospel , Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Robena
Mus,ser, Sunda~ School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesus Ministries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymnasium. Pastor' Eddie Baer,
se!Vice every Tuesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124. Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School - 10 a.m .• Evening • 7
p.m. , WednesdaY Services- 1 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harri!KI•vlle Pmbyterian Chun:h
Pastor: Roben Crow, Worship- 9 a.m.

Middleport PreobyterlaoPostor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., WOfl!hip !!eTVice II alll.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Senn.. ·Day Adnntist
Mulberry. Hts. Rd., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services: Sabbath School - 2 P.m ..
Worship · J p.m.

United Brethren
. Mt. Hermon Unlled Brethrm
In Christ Cbun:h
Te~tas Community 364 I1 Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunda.y School •
9:30 a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Servic"es - 7:00 p.m .
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;: 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United Brethru In Christ
State Routf 124, betwec:n Reedsville &amp;
Hockingpon, Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
Sunda·y Worship- 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p,m.. Pastor- M. Adam
Will

South Bethel Community Chun:b
Silver Ridge· Pastor Linda Damewood,
Sunday Scl'lool - 9 a.m. , Worship Service

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
Tht cart you dtstrvt, cwst to home good works and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."

Pomeroy, OH 45769

740.992·6606

Matthew 5:16

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Reedsville
Wnuhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •
!0:30a.m .• Firs t Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sund,Jy

Syra.:uae Churtb of the Naurene
Pa~tor Mike Adltins, Sunday St:hool - 9:30
a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6 p m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

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Catholic

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•
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Nllll, Wor~hip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Sehoul. 10:30 a.m.

Syracuse First Churth of God
Apple and Se(:ond Sts., Pa&gt;tor: Re.,., David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Services- 6 30 p.m .,
Wednesday Se!Vices- 6:30p .m.

Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Morning
chu~ch 1r am, Sunday evrning 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

Liberty AQembly of God
P.O. Boll 467, Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.Va .., Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sunday
St:rvices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Chun:h (Soulhern)
570 Grant St., Middlcpon, Sunday scho(ll
·9:30a.m., Wurshjp • II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Se!Vice - 7 p.m. Pa'stor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland First Baptist Cburcll
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m.
PomeroJ Flnt Baptirit
Pusmr Jon Brocken. East Main St.,
Sunda;,: Sc.h. 9:30am, Worship 10 :30 am

.,

IJJi[[ie's 1(estaurant

740-949-221 0

Assembly of God

Cheshlrt Baptl~l Churth
Pastor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am.
Wedne5day Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Director of Marketing and Admissions

Wwm Friendly

Sacred Hclirt Clllhollc Churth
Hi! Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992-5898,

Carpenler Independent Raptlsl Church
Sonday School • 9:30am. Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening Sel'\'ili,e
7:00pm. Wednesday Bible s,udy 7:00pm,
Pastor: Whitt Akers

,,

Hours

Elllmanurl Apo!toiiiC Tabtrnacl~ -Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland.
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thul'!ii . 7:00p.m., Pastor MartyR. Hunon

_Paatvllle FreewUI Baptist Church
Pastor: Aoyd Ross, Sunday Scllool9:30 to
10:30 am, Worship service 10:30 to 11:00
am . Wc:d. preaching 6 pm

..

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middlepon OH Fax (740) 992·7406

River Valley Apostolic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middlepor1, Rev.
Michael Bradford. Pastor. Sunday, 10:30 ·
a.m. Thu. 6:30-prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

SR 652 ·and Anderson St. Pastor: Roben

Baptist

''

Michelle Kennedy

(lndependenl Baptist)

RJver VaUe)'

.,

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

Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School ib am' Morning wol'ship I I am Eve11ing. 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m .

First Bapdst Ch•rth or Mason, WV

(

,

Second Baptist Church

Chun:b or Jeso.s Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.,
E,·ening- 7:30p.m.

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

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

Many of us treat our bodies more
like a garbage can than a temple. We
' drink all manner of
eat and
unhealthy substances, we fail to get
the proper rest and uerdse that we
need, and we generally neglect our
health until we don't have lt. We
know a lot niore about how to ke~p
our bodies healthy than they did In
Biblical times, and yet, ironically,
more people are obese than ever ·
before, simply' because we eat too
much and exercise too little. Sadly,
much of modern-day illness and
death are due to preventable causes,
such as using tobacco or misusing
alcohol, poor diet and inactivity, or,
simply not wearing seat belts. God
did not give our bodies to be
squandered or defiled, and if we
engage in bad habits which wear out
or destroy our body before its time·,
we are neglecting this wonderful gift
from God . So, we should take care
of our body: eat right, exercise
'
Do you not klww tl1at your body is a · daily, and get plenty of rest. We will
temple of the Holy Spirit within you, probably fi~d that the spirit that
which you have from God? You art nor dwell.&lt; within us will be a lot happier
your own,· you wert bought with a price. once we start taking better care of
So gwrify God in your body.
our temple. And, we should
remember that it's not just what
R.S. V. I Cori11thian.• 6:19-20
goes into our body that defiles it,
hut also, the behaviors which come

MI. Moriah Chunh of God
M1le Hill Rd., Racine, P11stor: James
Satterfield. Sunda)· School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 1
p.m.
Rutland Churth of God
Pastor: Ron -Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m. ; Wedne5day Services - 1
p.m.

Wedl"'(sday Services • 7 p m

Church puts slogan on shot glasses to publicize new campus

The Dally Sentinel ·Page A7

WORS1TI1P GOD THIS WEEK
.

' Friday, January 18,2008

She hasn't got a prayer ·
In many way,, Dawn
Shennan is your typical 14year-old. She goes to school.
sings in a church choir and wants to make a ditlerence in the· world. But
unlike most teenagers. she's
not waiting until she's a
"grown-up." Dawn is making a difterence · ~ at least in
her school district - right
now. She is party to a lawsuit that's tearing her sc hool
and community apart.
I read about her in a newspaper . article from the
Chicago Tribune. The
Illinois state legislature
passed a "Silent Retlection
and Student Prayer Act'' last
year' that allows schools to
provide one minute . of
'silence ·at the beginning of
ihe school day. Dawn objects
to the practice; she claims
that it violates her rights
because, ''f,irst of all. the
teacher is being made to stop
teaching, and I'm being
[made] an audience to something that is heavily suggestive in the direction of prayer
because of the title of the act.
It's called the student prayer
and silent retlection act."
Something else you should
know about Dawn. Stie is the
daughter of one of Illinois'
most prominent atheists, Rob
Shennan. The elder Sherman
' has long been trying to 'eliminate any references to God
from the public square. In the
early 1980s, he filed suit on
behalf of his son, then a first
grader, to stop his school
from forcing him to include
the ."one nation under God"
phrase in the daily recitation
of the Pledge of Allegiance
to the Rag. Sherman has also
attempted to remove "In God
We Trust" from US currency,
had run-ins with member of
the Bush Administration
over religion in the public
square, and once even
accosted the president himself over atheists' rights.
The article on Dawn
Sherman tells an intriguing
anecdote from her early
years: "Dawn wa~ exposed to
her father's beliefs at an early
age. 'She jokes that when she
was still· a fetus, her father
would whisper to her mother's belly: 'God is make-

\

w-Ww.mydallysentlnel.com

Salem St., Putor: Ed Barney . Sunday
School - 10 a.m.. Evemng - 7 p.m.,

One 'of the most profound
be spoken in the classroom
assurances·
that we have as
seems specious to me.
Eventually, this case (or Christians today is the fact
another one like it) will of God's help in living the
reach the US Supreme Christian life. On the one·
Pastor
Court. A similar law in Texas hand, we as creations of
Kerry
recently recei'ved the green God are commanded to
Wood
light from the Fifth US walk in God's ways.
"Be careful to do what
Circuit Court of Appeals. A
couple in one of Dallas' sub- the LORD your God has
urbs filed suit it\ 2006 commanded you; do not
against the .local school dis- turn aside to the right or to
believe. G,&gt;d is make-believe
trict and the Texas governor the left. Walk in all the
and Daddy is perfect."' ·
over· the state's minute of way that the LORD has
AI US citizens; the
silence. On January 5, 2008, commanded you, so that
Shennans are certainly entithe court said that the "the you may live and prostled to think what they want
per. .. "
(Deuteronomy
to think. and to act the·way primary effect. of the statute 5:32-33a NIV)
they want to act. No one is to institute a moment of
On the other, once we've
should force religious beliefs silence, not to advance or ~laced our faith in Jesus as
down their throats. But the inhibit religion." No · deci-. Lord and Savior and
counterpoint is that THEY . sian has been made about allowed His sacrifice on
should not be allowed to whether or not the couple . !he, cross of Cal vary to
force thei r non-religious will appeal the ruling.
I find the whole situation atone for our· sins, we are
(some might say anti-reli-'
declared to be the children
gious) beliefs down any one sad. What has brought this of God (s·ee John I: 12-13).
else's throat. And that's the country to the low point of · And as children of God,
problem. In Dawn's estima- somebody suing somebody we are given. the very
tion. her rights are being vio- else over everything? Maybe resource we need (in fact,
lated; and the only way for it's just me, but I thought our the ONLY resource)· to
her rights to be put "right" is courts were designed to deal give us victory in the holy
for her rights to violate the with REAL issues of justice, commandmeilt to walk .in
rights of others. She gets her · not simply one person's all His ways - that is to
way, so no on else gets opinion · becoming mqre say, to live righteously.
. important than another peranother way.
The provision that He
Quite frankly, if her case, son's opinion. -Even as a pas- promises us is the Person of
is based on what she said iri tor. school prayer to me is the Holy .Spirit. The Holy
the article, then I am sur- not an "Issue" with a capital Spirit of God is the ongoing
prised !hat a federal judge "l." Kid~ could gather expression of God's preswas willing to put a tempo- together before and after ence and power to the world
rary injunction against the school to pray. They can as He continually works in
statue. Read again what she organize Bible studies, pass
the midst of the world, repstated as her reason for notes of encouragement to resenting the holy authority
objecting: "[it's] heavily one another, and do other litof the Father/Creator as
suggestive in the direction tle things that retlect their
of prayer because of the title faith without causing contro- well as the incredible atonement provided us by the
of the act. It's called the stu- versies.
And I pray that in some work of the Son's substitudent prayer and · silent
quiet, loving and non-con- tionary death and glorious
reflection act." ·
She doesn 't like it because troversial way, someone resurrection.
And, by the way, I am
of its TITLE? And she's got will show'the Shermans just
it wrong! The title is actual- what God's love really greatly offended that the
ly "The Silent Reflection looks like . Remember, significance of the word
and Student Prayer Act." Dawn sin9s in a church "atonement" is smeared by
Student prayer does not get choir. That s one little step. a movie with the same
name. I lament that our cultip billing, even though she Maybe others will follow.
ture
has so far disconnected
As for prayer in schools, I
tried to make it so as part of
her objection . Furthermore, think my grandmother had itself from the . life-saving
how many kids in the class- it right: "As long as there power of Jesus' atonement
room will have a clue what are tests in schools, you bet~ .for us that we can trivially
the act's title is? S'eems ter believe there will be attach it to a movie filled
with the confusion that our
ma11y of them have a hard prayer in schools!"
morally
bankrupt society
time remembering the date
(Kerry Wood is the postor
constantly
generates.
when the colonies declared of Raci~re United Methodist
At any rate, we need to
their independence from Church, 818 Elm Street in
recognize
that, yes, we are
England. (July 4, 1776, in Racine. Swulay worship is aJ
all
called
to
live holy lives.
case you're · wondering.) JI a.m. Pastnr Kerry can be
Basing an objection on reaclwd aJ racineumc@sud- But also that God has made
a way for us to live it, lest
statute titles that will never delllink.tlet.)
anyone think that God has
called us to something that
is impossible and that He is.
therefore, unfair.
area of Charlotte to hand
McLaughlin is the pasBoth salvation itself and
out shot glasses that ask tor, and said he is confi- the spiritual life that folpatrons to "give us a shot" dent that it will be contro- lows after require a divine
and bear the slogan, "Real versial, but he said the strength that is not native
church for real people.'_'
goal is not .necessarily to to us.
The idea is to draw people impress
people
who
Consider the account of
to the church's
new already go to church. He Jesus walking on the water
Ballantyne campus, which said it's to impress people in Mauhew 14:22-33. The
opens next month.
who don't.
disciples, Jesus' closest

•

�•

•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
The U.S. Coast
Guard cutter
Neah Bay
searches the
waters of Lake
Erie off
cfeveland for
the wreckage
of a small
plane
Thursday. The
Beechcraft
Baron took off
from Burke
Lakefront
Airport at
7:25p.m.
Wednesday
night and
crashed into
the lake just
north of a
breakwall, said
an airport
spokeswoman.

Page AS
Friday, January 18,2008

Local Weather

, .,. '

•
City/Region

Friday, January ·1s, 2008

High I Low temps

~~A~~~"~~~h~h ·

Toledo•

29" 122"

school varsity sporting events Involving

•

•

Dayton•~

*Columbua

L___")

32" 121 '

33' I 23'

~
L___")

Wreatllng

Gallla Academy at WSAZ ''""'itational
River Valley at WSAZ lnv1 . ...nal

Clnclnnllll

• 35' 124"

S1tunloy. JM 11

'.

~

POrlamouth •
37' I 28~'

L___")

' @2008

Divers find body of pilot whose
plane crashed into lake Erie
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - Divers
searching for a pilot whose
twin-engine plane crashed
into Lake Ene located the
body in about 30 feet of
water, authorities said
Thursday night.
Thomas Fijalkovich, 68,
was found in the plane's
fuselage, but divers with the
city fire department didn't
attempt to recover the body
· because of strong winds that
made the water choppy and
unsafe to continue, said Petty
OffiCer William Mitchell
with the U.S. Coast Guard.

The Beechcraft Baron Petty Officer Matthew said in a statement Thursday
went down Wednesday Schofield.
the plane was headed to its
night shonly after taking off
The Cuyahoga County Niagara Falls base.
from Burke Lakefront coroner's office reported earHe said its last annual
Ail]lort near downtown.
lier Thursday that the pilot's inspection was completed in
F1jalkovich was a contract body had been recovered. September. New engines
employee for Aitheras The office .sent investigators were installed in late 2006.
Aviation (iroup, an aircraft to the scene and retracted the
"The aircraft was in excelcharter company based in earlier stAtement
lent condition with no reportCleveland. He lived near
The Federal Aviation ed discrepancies," he said.
Ravenna, about 25 miles . Administration - and the
Aithems Aviation Group,
southeast of Cleveland.
National
Transportation which was formed in 2005,
Aitheras has hired a pri- Safety Board are investigat- manages airplanes for varivate companr to salvage the ing the crash. ,
ous companies and provides
. fuselage, Mitchell said. It
FAA records ·show the pilots for them.
wasn't immediately clear . plane was registered to
Burke Lakefront Airport,
when that would begin.
Everair LLC based . in just east of the Rock ancl
The
search
for Niagara Falls, N. Y
Roll Hall of Fame, is used
Fijalkovich 's body covered
George Katsikas, owner mostly by private and corabout 26 square miles, said of Aitheras Aviation Group, porate aircraft.
•

Report recommends fonnation of veterans' department
Bv STEPHEN MAJoRS

~

p-.;;;;?
Cloudy

Cloudy

~ T~~=· ~

&lt;U ,,,,,
·

Showers

· Aurrl"

~.

Ice

Snow

: : : ::

· Rain

*

· •

Weather Underground • AP

Friday... Partly
sunny.
Highs in- the upper 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph,
Friday night •••Mostl y
cloudy. A slight chance of
snow showers after . midc
night Cold with lows in the
lower 20s. Southwest winds
5 to I 0 mph. Chance of
snow 20 percent.
Saturday.•• Mostly cloudy ·
with a 50 percent chance of
snow showers. Cold with
highs in the upper 20s.
Temperature falling into the
mid 20s in the afternoon.
West winds I 0 to 15 mph,
Saturday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of snow showers.
Much · colder with lows
around 7. above. West winds
I 0 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph. Wind chill values as low as 7 below.

Sunday and Sunday
night •••Partly cloudy. Cold.
Highs around 20. Lows
around I 0 above,
. Martin Luther King Jr
Day
and
Monday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 10s. Lows in
the lower 20s. ·
Tuesday and Tuesday
night ••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of snow · and rain
showers. Highs around 40.
Lows in the mid 20s. Chance
of precipitation 40 percent.
Wednesday ••• Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
snow and rain showers.
Highs in the mid 30s. Chance
of precipitation ~0 percent.
Wednesday
night. ••
Mostly cloudy with a 40
percent chance · of snow
showers. Cold with lows in
the lower 20s.

on veterans issues and oversees county-level offices.
But creating a cabinet office,
COLUMBUS Gov.
, which. .would be equal· to
Ted Strickland will move to
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
agencies such as the heiiith · AEP (NYSE) - 46.18
add Ohio to a list of more
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 72
Here's a panial list o( ~crcommendations by the
-21
BBT (NYIE) - 28.71
than 20 othet' states that · . Veterlltl:s Study Council, · wll~u fermed bt' Gov. . department or the prisons Aohland Inc. (NYSE) - 42.08
department;
would
give
"the
Bit
Loto
(NYSE)14.13
Peoplea
(NASDAQ)- 2a.44
have cabinet-level veterans
Ted Stnckland to look at how to better connect Ohio's
Bob Evant (N.\SDAQ) - 25.18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 72.10
issue
more
visibility
and
staaffairs agencies, after a
veterans with the services they are eligible for:
Borewarner (NYSE) - 44.42
Premier (NASDAQ) -12.98
tus, Strickland has said.
report he commissioned
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)• Create a cabinet-level Department of Veterans Affairs.
Rock-11 (NYSE) -1111.411
Among the report's 15 43.41
Rocky Boota (NASDAQ) - 6.10
supported the formation of
• Develop and distribute statewide marketing prorecommendations
are
calls
Champion
(NASDAQ)
5.68
Royal
Dutch Shell - 711.711
the new department, a
grams to advise veterans on their benefits.
Chamtnc Shope (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) for
the
state
to
develop
and
spokesman said Thurs\lay.
• The department should have oversight of personnel
4.94
88.93
distribute marketing pro- City
An increasing number of
Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.45
providing service to veterans.
Will-Mart (NYSE) - 47.48
grams to assist veterans with Colllno (NYSE) - 61.19
Wondy'a (NYSE) - 211.20
states in recent years have
• Ade_&lt;~.uately fund Veterans Service Organizations
'
DuPont
(NYSE)42.80
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.78
benefits, to adequately fund
elevated veterans issues to
engaged m statewide claims assistance.
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.22
Dally otock report. . . the 4 p.m.
veterans service organiza- Gannett (NYSE) - 34.64
the highest level as the wars
ET cloalnJ quot.a of tronoactlons
in Iraq and Afghanistan
tions providing a state func- General Elect~c (NYSE) - 33.21 lor Jan. 17, 2008, provided by
have brought them into the John Scocos, president of benefits, pension payments tion of claims assistance, Ha~ay.Oavldlon (NYSE) - 38,95 Edward Jonea nnanclal adYieors
laaac Milia In Gallpolla at (740)
spotlight.
the National Association of and other services that are and for the cabinet agency to JP Morgan ( NYSE) - 40.04
Krocer
(
NYSE)
25.81
441·9441 and Lealey Ma,.ro In
Raising ;~wareness on vet- State Directors of Veterans available through the feder- · have total ~"ontrol over all Umlted Branda (NYSE) - 1&amp;.81
P - Pleaoant at (304) 874erans issues was part of Affairs and secretary of al government.
state veterans programs.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 44.89
0174. Member SIPC.
Strickland's qunpaign plat- Wisconsin's Department o'r
The federal government
form before taking office in Veterans Services.
has ,ranked Ohio 43rd amo1lg
2007, and he formed the 22"With our country at war the states for veterans' use of
member Veterans Study right now all of our governors those services. Ohio Council last May to study the · are dedicated to doing what's which has the nation's sixth
feasibility of creating a cabi- right , for the veterans," largest population of veternet-level a~ency. Backed by Scocos said. "It helps with ans - has lagged other
the 'report s recommenda- clout with the Legislature,"
states in securing federal
tions, Strickland, a Democrat, . Scocos said 22 states out money for veierans. More
will likely to take his plan to of 34 th\lt responded to a than I million veterans live
the · Republican-controlled survey from the organiza- in Ohio, and thousands more
state Legislature,
said tion have cabinet-level vet- from the state are serving in
spokesman Keith Dailey.
erans
depanments. the military.
The Ohio House and Missouri, New Mexico and. · Roughly 9.8 percent of
CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740·992-7986
, Senate will review the recom- Pennsylvania have elevated Ohio
veterans
receive
either
mendations. Senate President their veterans agencies to
Bill Harris, an Ashland that level in recent years, as disability compensation or
Republican, is generally sup- more. service personnel pension benefits. The nationportive of creating the agency have been involved in the al average is 12.1 percent.
The governor already has
but needs to look at the report, wars abroad, he said.
an
Office of Veterans
said Maggie Ostrowski, a · Strickland formed the
spokeswoman for Harris.
study council to receive Affairs, which advises him
Creating a cabinet-level recommendations on how
department raises awareness Ohio could better connect
· for veterans issues, said veterans with disability
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Local Stocks

·Recommendations from
the Veterans.Stuay..Council

Their New Hours
Mon.- Thurs. 3- close
Fri. - Sun. 11- close

Officer once accused of excessive
force promoted to sergeant
CINCINNATI (AP) -A
police officer once accused
of using excessive force
af;ainst a black man who
d1ed in police custody was
promoted to sergeant on
Thursday.
Patrick Caton, 41, was
one of 17 Cincinnati police
officers who got promotions, which are based sole.ly on written test scores.
Caton was involved in the
November 2000 arrest of
Rof;er qwensby Jr., '!'lho
pohce satd attempted to flee
.officers who wanted to
question him. Owensby was
tackled and hit several
times, then was put in hand·
cuffs and left unattended in
a cruiser.
Five
months
after
Owensby pied, Cincinnati
endured rioting after another

.

white officer fatally shot a
black man who was unarmed
when he ran from police on
pending charges of traffic
offenses and fleeing police.
In Owensby's case, a
coroner determined that
Owensby died of asphyxiation caused by either police
officers piling on top of him
during the arrest or their
attempts to restrain him.
Caton was fired in 2003
on internal · disciplinary
charges. City officials said
Caton used excessive force
against Owensby and failed
to provide him with emergency medical care. But an
arbitrator later overturned
the firing, reducing it to a
five-day suspension.
Owensby's family sued
the citr. which settled for
$6.5 mtllion.

•

Mond'V· J•n 21
Gl~a Baalcalball
Southern at South Gallia, 8 p.m.
Meigs at Wahema. 5:45p.m.
R"'er Valley ar Belpre, 6 p.m.
Soulhern at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

~ ~ ~ ·..... ~
~

Boys Baaketbell

River Valley at Wellston Tourn., 11 a.m.
Glrla Baoketball
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Zanesville, 6 p.m.

WVA

,

Bv M.R. KROPKO

1 •

.

•

James' 27 points leads Cavaliers to 90-88 win over Spurs
·

B E

.

UZABETH WHITE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fddav JM 18
,
Boyo Baok-11
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
J"rimble at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
Mi:ligs at Belpre, 6:30 p.m.
Zanesville at Gallla· Academy. 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, B p.m.
•
Glrll Baekttball
South Gallla al OVCS, 6 p.m.

PA

.

Y

.

30' 127'

~

29' 122'

learns !rom Meigs and Gallla counties.

·Youngstown •

Manalleld • h..__

AP photo
\'

'' •

Forecast for Friday, Jan. 18

'

Juu«My.·Jan aa
BoyaJiookotball
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.
f'olrtsmouth at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
~Oulh Gallla at Westfall, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS,7:30 p.m.
Glrla Baalcatball
Hannan at OVCS. 6 p.m .·

STEWART - · Armor
!""'mutll and lances poised,
the Federal
Hocking
L a d y
Lancers
e a s 'i I y
claimed
victory in
Thursday
night's
girls' basketball
Taylor
joust
at
Federal
Hocking
H i g h
School,
where the
·h 0 s t s
claimed an
81·32 TriValley
Conference
Hocking
Division
Turley
victory to
remain on
top of the conference.
Federal Hocking was led
by Emily Dunfee with 28
points, I 0 rebounds and I 0
steals for basketball's highest honor - the triple-double. Iris Butcher added 22
points !lfld a pair of eights
from Chelsea Bale and Julie
Vinson.
·
Southern was led by
Breanna Taylor with a
career-high 17 points. The
sophomore guard was
pOised and more confident
m picking up the slack of a
double-teamed
Kasey
Turley, who added 12.
Federal Hocking came .
out in a 2·2-1 half court
tmp, a strategy that handcuffed the Tornadoes and
stopped them in their tracks
early, allowing FH to march
to a quick 8-2 lead.
SOuthern called time, established some confidence, but
iitill fell .to a double-digit
deficit before making an
~out-face .

SAN ANTONIO
LeBron James wasn't looking forward to a founh overtime in three games.
So when San Antonio's
Manu Ginobili shot the ball
for the chance to tie with just
seconds remaining, all
James could do·was hope the.
Spurs star missed.
Ginobili did, . and James
and the Cleveland Cavaliers
were able to breathe easy.
· "You know it was down to
the ·last shot again for us
going into overtime," said
James, who scored 27 points
in the Cavaliers' 90-88 victory Thursday night. "It was
big to see. the ball not go in
with no time on the clock.
Big win."
And while the Cavs were
careful to treat the match11p
like any other in the regular
season, it could not have
escaped anyone's attention
that the win came against the
team that swept them in last
season's NB A finals.

points to
her season
total to he! p
the Meigs
L a d y
Marauders
basketball
team defeat
t
h
e
Wellston
L a d y
Rockets on
the road 5043.
Wolfe, a
junior, led
all scorers
and was 11of-16 from
the
freethrow line.
She
also
had
four.
steals for
Howard
the Lady
Marauders.
Freshman Morgan Howard
had a .double-double with
12 points and a game-high
15 rebounds.
With the league victory,
the
Lady
Marauders
improve to 8-7 on the year
with a 3-4 record in the TriValley Conference Ohio
DivisiOn. Wellston drops to
3-12 and remains winless in
the TVC Ohio at 0-7,
Wellston outrebounded
Meigs 39-32, while the visitors had the edge in both
steals (Il-l 0) and assists
( 10-8).
The
Lady
Marauders shot 37 percent
from the floor, making 15
of their 41 attempts, and hit
19 of 29 free throws for 66
percent. They made just one
of six three-point field
goals. The lone three-pointer came from sophomore
Tricia Smith. The Lady
Rockets were even less successful from beyond the arc,

.

.

.

'

\!rimes ~enttnel

...,,J.
I ;#

•

,,

•• •
•

Zydrunas ·llgauskas added
17. points for Cleveland,
which has won three in a
row, and Anderson Varejao
scored 12 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds ln their
first meeting with the Spurs
since June's finals.
"The finals are over and
done with," James said.
"One thing we did tonight,
we got defensive steps and
we made plays down the
stretch.... We've just got to
continue to play well. We've
·been playing great hasketballlately."
Ginobili scored 31 points
for the Spurs, and Tony
Parker added 23 points but
missed two free throws with
29.4 seconds to play that
would have tied the game at
90.
"They both felt good.
They JUSt didn't go in,"
Parker said. "I shoot 200
free throws every day. It was
a good chance to show my
improvement They just didn't f;O in."
. Ttm Duncan scored 20
points and had II rebounds

for San Antonio, which has
. ~·...~ ..... !... }i....;.....
lost four games at home and
dropped to 5-5 in its last 10
overall.
,
A goaltending call against
James, coming off a seasonhigh 51 points against
Memphis, gave the Spurs an
86-85 lead with I :34 to play,
but Daniel Gibson's 3-pointer put Cleveland ahead. Duncan tied it at 88 before
James'. winning layup gave
the Cavs a 90-88 lead with
33.6 seconds left Parker.
with a chance to tie, missed
his two free throws and
Ginobili 's
last-second
jum~er attempt didn't fall..
"I d do that 10 out of 10
times, you bet," Spurs coach
Gregg Popovich said of not
taking a lime out before the
last play. "You're not goirlg
••
to get a better shot than
•
Manu or Tony going one-onone down the court."
Gibson, who added II
AP photo
point~; for Cleveland, agreed.
Cleveland
Cavaliers
forward
LeBron
)ames,
left,
is
defendand not because Popovich's
ed
by
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim.
Dunce~n
(21)
during
decision resulted in the
the first quarter of an NBA basketball game in San Antonio
Please see C.nallen, 82 on Thursday.

'.

. STAFF REPORT
SPOATSII'MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

GLOUSTER - Emeri
Connery scored 16 points
but the Eastern Lady Eagles
basketball
team lost
on the road
64-51
to
the Trimble
L a d y
Tomcats on
Thursday
night.
·
T h e.
game was a
Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division
matchup
and the second time
this season
the teams
played.
Trimble
won
the
first
meetPhoto courteay of lhe Jackson Counly TlrnQ.Joumal
Maxson
ing,
as
Meigs' Hannah Pratt, left, shields the ball from a defender and looks for an open teammate
well.
during a girls l!;!ague basketball game against the Wellston Lady Rockets on Thursday night.
The Lady Eagles move to
Ta)1or Mullins 3 2-8 8, Kendra DePue 2
4-11 this season and 2-6 in
making just one of ten
Next up for the Lady o-2
4, Breanna HaU 3 0-0 7, Tafa Oliver
attempts. They were also Marauders is a Saturday 0 1-2 1, Stephanie Trainer 1 o-o 2, the TVC Hocking . The
less efficient from the field ni~ht game at Eastern. It Whllnoy Patrick 2 6-t1 10. Erin Sturgill Lady Tomcats improve to 71 3-6 5, Amber King 1 0-0 2, Hannah
6 . overall and 5-2 in the
at 15-of-50 and from the Will be their second meeting Wheatley
2 0.() 4; TOTALS t5 12·29 43;
foul line at 12-of-29.
with the Lady Eagles this Three-point field goals: 1 (Breanna Hall league.
Connery was the game's
Other scoring for the season, and Meigs Will be t ),
high-scorer with her 16Lady Marauders came from looking to go two-for-two TEAM
STATISTICS/INDIVIDUAL
point performance. The
senior Amy Barr, who had against their county rivals. LEADERS
Field goals- Meigs 15-41 (.366), 2·
freshman also had five
four points, and Smith with Start time will be at 6 p.m. point
field goale 14·35 (.400),
steals.
Not far behind
three. Senior Brittany
3·polnt field goals 1-11 (.t67); Wellston
Melga
50,
Welltton
•3
t
5·50
(,300),
2·polnt
flofd
goals
Connery was senior teamPreas!, junior Adrian Bolin, Meigs 6 9 22 t3 - 50
t4'40 (.350), 3·polnt field goals t·10
mate Katie Hayman with 13
and
sophomore
Meri Wellston 6 10 9 ta - 43
(,100); Free throws - Meigs 19~29
(.655), Wellston 12-29 (,414) ; Rebounds
points, going six-of-seven
VanMeter all scored two
MEIGS (6·7, 3-4 TVC Ohio) - Marl - Meigs 32 (Morgan Howard 15),
from
the foul
line.
points apiece.
VanMeter 0 2·2 2, Adrian Bolin 1 0·0 2, Wellston 39 (Whitney Patrick 12, Erin
Maxson
Freshman
Beverly
In acuon earlier action the Trlcla Smith t 1).2 3, Catie Wolfe 7 t H6 Sturgill11); Steals- Meigs 11 (Catte
Hannah Pratt o o-o o, Amy Barr 2 o- Wallo 4), Wellston 10 (l&lt;endra DePue
had nine points and a teamjunior
varsity
Lady 25,
1 4, Morgan Howard 3 6-8 12. Brittany 3~; Assists- Meigs 10,
Marauders were edged 20- Preast 1 o-o 2, Melissa Grueser 0 o-o 0, Wellston a (Erin Sturgill 4); Blocks - high nine rebounds, as well
17 by the JV Lady Rockets. Miranda Gr"eser 0 0·0 0: TOTALS 15 Meigs 0, Wellston 1; Turnovers - Meigs as her team's two blocked
19-29 50; Three-point field goals : 1 25, Welloton 23; Toom fouls - Meigs
Leading scorers were not (Trlcla
Smith t),
23, Wellston 21; JV SCORE- WelloiOn
available a't press time,
WELLSTON (3·t2, 0·7 TVC Ohio) 20. Meigs 17...

Nash scores twice to lift Blue Jackets to victory

· Southern patiently made a
iljl)e run, but SHS couldn't
GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP)
4J,tite get over ·the hump.
·Pown at one point in double -Rick Nash's late penalty
digits Southern cut it to 19-' nearly cost the Columbus
Blue Jackets, but he made
'
PtuH ... TDmedOH, 12 up for it less than a minute
later.
·
•
I
Nash scored a highlightreel goal with 21.5 seconds
left to lift the Blue Jackets
PlNTAcrUs
to their fourth straight win,
4-3 over · the Phoenix
: : 1-1 40-446·2342 elCt. 33
Coyotes on Thursday night.
Nash took a long outlet
Fu - 1·740-«8·3008
pass
from Michael Peca
~~rntll- sportsOmydailysentinel.com
outside
the Phoenix
·JUSt
IQorla Staff
•
blue line and outmaneuEric Randolph, Spcirta Writer vered defensetnen Keith
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
Ballard and Derek Morris
jports Omydailysentlnel.com
before faking
Mikael
•Bryan Walters, Sports Writer Tellqvist
to the ice and fir(740) 446-2342. ext 33
ing into the open left side of
bwalters 0 mydaHytribuOe.com
the net.
"It just seemed like the
Larry Crum, Sport• Writer
wa&amp; on a string," Nash
puck
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
"I made a couple of
said.
IC(um 0 mydaltyregister.com

..

~un~ap

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

QSU W~men beat Dlinois, Page 82
Favre versus other Manning, Page 83
!ID'P LoweD willing to be tested, Page B4
~rehoard, Pllge 88
·
•

,Today's Forecast

,. ,

Inside

I

dekes and the puck just'
stayed with me. Pees made
a nice pass up and it was a
1-on-2. We had three guys
back, so I figured I might as
well try something."
Martin Hanzal had scored
a power-Qiay goal on a
rebound 77 seconds earlier
to tie the game 3-3. Nash
had been whistled for highsticking when he caught
Morris in the face with his
stick.
"My stick hit the referee's stick and came up,"
Nash said. "I should have
better cor•.rol of my stick. I
felt pretty bad after they
scored with I :20 left."
Nash finished with two
goals and . an assist,
Rostislav
Klesla
and

Columbus
Blue Jackets'
Rick Nash
(61) Is con·
gratulated by
teammates
on the bench
after his goal
against the
Phoenix
Coyotes in
the second
period in an
NHL hockey
game
Thursday in
Glendale,
Ariz.
AP photo

Please see Nash, 82 .

-'

�•

•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
The U.S. Coast
Guard cutter
Neah Bay
searches the
waters of Lake
Erie off
cfeveland for
the wreckage
of a small
plane
Thursday. The
Beechcraft
Baron took off
from Burke
Lakefront
Airport at
7:25p.m.
Wednesday
night and
crashed into
the lake just
north of a
breakwall, said
an airport
spokeswoman.

Page AS
Friday, January 18,2008

Local Weather

, .,. '

•
City/Region

Friday, January ·1s, 2008

High I Low temps

~~A~~~"~~~h~h ·

Toledo•

29" 122"

school varsity sporting events Involving

•

•

Dayton•~

*Columbua

L___")

32" 121 '

33' I 23'

~
L___")

Wreatllng

Gallla Academy at WSAZ ''""'itational
River Valley at WSAZ lnv1 . ...nal

Clnclnnllll

• 35' 124"

S1tunloy. JM 11

'.

~

POrlamouth •
37' I 28~'

L___")

' @2008

Divers find body of pilot whose
plane crashed into lake Erie
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - Divers
searching for a pilot whose
twin-engine plane crashed
into Lake Ene located the
body in about 30 feet of
water, authorities said
Thursday night.
Thomas Fijalkovich, 68,
was found in the plane's
fuselage, but divers with the
city fire department didn't
attempt to recover the body
· because of strong winds that
made the water choppy and
unsafe to continue, said Petty
OffiCer William Mitchell
with the U.S. Coast Guard.

The Beechcraft Baron Petty Officer Matthew said in a statement Thursday
went down Wednesday Schofield.
the plane was headed to its
night shonly after taking off
The Cuyahoga County Niagara Falls base.
from Burke Lakefront coroner's office reported earHe said its last annual
Ail]lort near downtown.
lier Thursday that the pilot's inspection was completed in
F1jalkovich was a contract body had been recovered. September. New engines
employee for Aitheras The office .sent investigators were installed in late 2006.
Aviation (iroup, an aircraft to the scene and retracted the
"The aircraft was in excelcharter company based in earlier stAtement
lent condition with no reportCleveland. He lived near
The Federal Aviation ed discrepancies," he said.
Ravenna, about 25 miles . Administration - and the
Aithems Aviation Group,
southeast of Cleveland.
National
Transportation which was formed in 2005,
Aitheras has hired a pri- Safety Board are investigat- manages airplanes for varivate companr to salvage the ing the crash. ,
ous companies and provides
. fuselage, Mitchell said. It
FAA records ·show the pilots for them.
wasn't immediately clear . plane was registered to
Burke Lakefront Airport,
when that would begin.
Everair LLC based . in just east of the Rock ancl
The
search
for Niagara Falls, N. Y
Roll Hall of Fame, is used
Fijalkovich 's body covered
George Katsikas, owner mostly by private and corabout 26 square miles, said of Aitheras Aviation Group, porate aircraft.
•

Report recommends fonnation of veterans' department
Bv STEPHEN MAJoRS

~

p-.;;;;?
Cloudy

Cloudy

~ T~~=· ~

&lt;U ,,,,,
·

Showers

· Aurrl"

~.

Ice

Snow

: : : ::

· Rain

*

· •

Weather Underground • AP

Friday... Partly
sunny.
Highs in- the upper 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph,
Friday night •••Mostl y
cloudy. A slight chance of
snow showers after . midc
night Cold with lows in the
lower 20s. Southwest winds
5 to I 0 mph. Chance of
snow 20 percent.
Saturday.•• Mostly cloudy ·
with a 50 percent chance of
snow showers. Cold with
highs in the upper 20s.
Temperature falling into the
mid 20s in the afternoon.
West winds I 0 to 15 mph,
Saturday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of snow showers.
Much · colder with lows
around 7. above. West winds
I 0 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph. Wind chill values as low as 7 below.

Sunday and Sunday
night •••Partly cloudy. Cold.
Highs around 20. Lows
around I 0 above,
. Martin Luther King Jr
Day
and
Monday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 10s. Lows in
the lower 20s. ·
Tuesday and Tuesday
night ••• Mostly cloudy. A
chance of snow · and rain
showers. Highs around 40.
Lows in the mid 20s. Chance
of precipitation 40 percent.
Wednesday ••• Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
snow and rain showers.
Highs in the mid 30s. Chance
of precipitation ~0 percent.
Wednesday
night. ••
Mostly cloudy with a 40
percent chance · of snow
showers. Cold with lows in
the lower 20s.

on veterans issues and oversees county-level offices.
But creating a cabinet office,
COLUMBUS Gov.
, which. .would be equal· to
Ted Strickland will move to
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)
agencies such as the heiiith · AEP (NYSE) - 46.18
add Ohio to a list of more
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 72
Here's a panial list o( ~crcommendations by the
-21
BBT (NYIE) - 28.71
than 20 othet' states that · . Veterlltl:s Study Council, · wll~u fermed bt' Gov. . department or the prisons Aohland Inc. (NYSE) - 42.08
department;
would
give
"the
Bit
Loto
(NYSE)14.13
Peoplea
(NASDAQ)- 2a.44
have cabinet-level veterans
Ted Stnckland to look at how to better connect Ohio's
Bob Evant (N.\SDAQ) - 25.18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 72.10
issue
more
visibility
and
staaffairs agencies, after a
veterans with the services they are eligible for:
Borewarner (NYSE) - 44.42
Premier (NASDAQ) -12.98
tus, Strickland has said.
report he commissioned
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)• Create a cabinet-level Department of Veterans Affairs.
Rock-11 (NYSE) -1111.411
Among the report's 15 43.41
Rocky Boota (NASDAQ) - 6.10
supported the formation of
• Develop and distribute statewide marketing prorecommendations
are
calls
Champion
(NASDAQ)
5.68
Royal
Dutch Shell - 711.711
the new department, a
grams to advise veterans on their benefits.
Chamtnc Shope (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) for
the
state
to
develop
and
spokesman said Thurs\lay.
• The department should have oversight of personnel
4.94
88.93
distribute marketing pro- City
An increasing number of
Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.45
providing service to veterans.
Will-Mart (NYSE) - 47.48
grams to assist veterans with Colllno (NYSE) - 61.19
Wondy'a (NYSE) - 211.20
states in recent years have
• Ade_&lt;~.uately fund Veterans Service Organizations
'
DuPont
(NYSE)42.80
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.78
benefits, to adequately fund
elevated veterans issues to
engaged m statewide claims assistance.
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.22
Dally otock report. . . the 4 p.m.
veterans service organiza- Gannett (NYSE) - 34.64
the highest level as the wars
ET cloalnJ quot.a of tronoactlons
in Iraq and Afghanistan
tions providing a state func- General Elect~c (NYSE) - 33.21 lor Jan. 17, 2008, provided by
have brought them into the John Scocos, president of benefits, pension payments tion of claims assistance, Ha~ay.Oavldlon (NYSE) - 38,95 Edward Jonea nnanclal adYieors
laaac Milia In Gallpolla at (740)
spotlight.
the National Association of and other services that are and for the cabinet agency to JP Morgan ( NYSE) - 40.04
Krocer
(
NYSE)
25.81
441·9441 and Lealey Ma,.ro In
Raising ;~wareness on vet- State Directors of Veterans available through the feder- · have total ~"ontrol over all Umlted Branda (NYSE) - 1&amp;.81
P - Pleaoant at (304) 874erans issues was part of Affairs and secretary of al government.
state veterans programs.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 44.89
0174. Member SIPC.
Strickland's qunpaign plat- Wisconsin's Department o'r
The federal government
form before taking office in Veterans Services.
has ,ranked Ohio 43rd amo1lg
2007, and he formed the 22"With our country at war the states for veterans' use of
member Veterans Study right now all of our governors those services. Ohio Council last May to study the · are dedicated to doing what's which has the nation's sixth
feasibility of creating a cabi- right , for the veterans," largest population of veternet-level a~ency. Backed by Scocos said. "It helps with ans - has lagged other
the 'report s recommenda- clout with the Legislature,"
states in securing federal
tions, Strickland, a Democrat, . Scocos said 22 states out money for veierans. More
will likely to take his plan to of 34 th\lt responded to a than I million veterans live
the · Republican-controlled survey from the organiza- in Ohio, and thousands more
state Legislature,
said tion have cabinet-level vet- from the state are serving in
spokesman Keith Dailey.
erans
depanments. the military.
The Ohio House and Missouri, New Mexico and. · Roughly 9.8 percent of
CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740·992-7986
, Senate will review the recom- Pennsylvania have elevated Ohio
veterans
receive
either
mendations. Senate President their veterans agencies to
Bill Harris, an Ashland that level in recent years, as disability compensation or
Republican, is generally sup- more. service personnel pension benefits. The nationportive of creating the agency have been involved in the al average is 12.1 percent.
The governor already has
but needs to look at the report, wars abroad, he said.
an
Office of Veterans
said Maggie Ostrowski, a · Strickland formed the
spokeswoman for Harris.
study council to receive Affairs, which advises him
Creating a cabinet-level recommendations on how
department raises awareness Ohio could better connect
· for veterans issues, said veterans with disability
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Local Stocks

·Recommendations from
the Veterans.Stuay..Council

Their New Hours
Mon.- Thurs. 3- close
Fri. - Sun. 11- close

Officer once accused of excessive
force promoted to sergeant
CINCINNATI (AP) -A
police officer once accused
of using excessive force
af;ainst a black man who
d1ed in police custody was
promoted to sergeant on
Thursday.
Patrick Caton, 41, was
one of 17 Cincinnati police
officers who got promotions, which are based sole.ly on written test scores.
Caton was involved in the
November 2000 arrest of
Rof;er qwensby Jr., '!'lho
pohce satd attempted to flee
.officers who wanted to
question him. Owensby was
tackled and hit several
times, then was put in hand·
cuffs and left unattended in
a cruiser.
Five
months
after
Owensby pied, Cincinnati
endured rioting after another

.

white officer fatally shot a
black man who was unarmed
when he ran from police on
pending charges of traffic
offenses and fleeing police.
In Owensby's case, a
coroner determined that
Owensby died of asphyxiation caused by either police
officers piling on top of him
during the arrest or their
attempts to restrain him.
Caton was fired in 2003
on internal · disciplinary
charges. City officials said
Caton used excessive force
against Owensby and failed
to provide him with emergency medical care. But an
arbitrator later overturned
the firing, reducing it to a
five-day suspension.
Owensby's family sued
the citr. which settled for
$6.5 mtllion.

•

Mond'V· J•n 21
Gl~a Baalcalball
Southern at South Gallia, 8 p.m.
Meigs at Wahema. 5:45p.m.
R"'er Valley ar Belpre, 6 p.m.
Soulhern at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

~ ~ ~ ·..... ~
~

Boys Baaketbell

River Valley at Wellston Tourn., 11 a.m.
Glrla Baoketball
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Zanesville, 6 p.m.

WVA

,

Bv M.R. KROPKO

1 •

.

•

James' 27 points leads Cavaliers to 90-88 win over Spurs
·

B E

.

UZABETH WHITE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fddav JM 18
,
Boyo Baok-11
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
J"rimble at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
Mi:ligs at Belpre, 6:30 p.m.
Zanesville at Gallla· Academy. 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, B p.m.
•
Glrll Baekttball
South Gallla al OVCS, 6 p.m.

PA

.

Y

.

30' 127'

~

29' 122'

learns !rom Meigs and Gallla counties.

·Youngstown •

Manalleld • h..__

AP photo
\'

'' •

Forecast for Friday, Jan. 18

'

Juu«My.·Jan aa
BoyaJiookotball
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p.m.
f'olrtsmouth at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
~Oulh Gallla at Westfall, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS,7:30 p.m.
Glrla Baalcatball
Hannan at OVCS. 6 p.m .·

STEWART - · Armor
!""'mutll and lances poised,
the Federal
Hocking
L a d y
Lancers
e a s 'i I y
claimed
victory in
Thursday
night's
girls' basketball
Taylor
joust
at
Federal
Hocking
H i g h
School,
where the
·h 0 s t s
claimed an
81·32 TriValley
Conference
Hocking
Division
Turley
victory to
remain on
top of the conference.
Federal Hocking was led
by Emily Dunfee with 28
points, I 0 rebounds and I 0
steals for basketball's highest honor - the triple-double. Iris Butcher added 22
points !lfld a pair of eights
from Chelsea Bale and Julie
Vinson.
·
Southern was led by
Breanna Taylor with a
career-high 17 points. The
sophomore guard was
pOised and more confident
m picking up the slack of a
double-teamed
Kasey
Turley, who added 12.
Federal Hocking came .
out in a 2·2-1 half court
tmp, a strategy that handcuffed the Tornadoes and
stopped them in their tracks
early, allowing FH to march
to a quick 8-2 lead.
SOuthern called time, established some confidence, but
iitill fell .to a double-digit
deficit before making an
~out-face .

SAN ANTONIO
LeBron James wasn't looking forward to a founh overtime in three games.
So when San Antonio's
Manu Ginobili shot the ball
for the chance to tie with just
seconds remaining, all
James could do·was hope the.
Spurs star missed.
Ginobili did, . and James
and the Cleveland Cavaliers
were able to breathe easy.
· "You know it was down to
the ·last shot again for us
going into overtime," said
James, who scored 27 points
in the Cavaliers' 90-88 victory Thursday night. "It was
big to see. the ball not go in
with no time on the clock.
Big win."
And while the Cavs were
careful to treat the match11p
like any other in the regular
season, it could not have
escaped anyone's attention
that the win came against the
team that swept them in last
season's NB A finals.

points to
her season
total to he! p
the Meigs
L a d y
Marauders
basketball
team defeat
t
h
e
Wellston
L a d y
Rockets on
the road 5043.
Wolfe, a
junior, led
all scorers
and was 11of-16 from
the
freethrow line.
She
also
had
four.
steals for
Howard
the Lady
Marauders.
Freshman Morgan Howard
had a .double-double with
12 points and a game-high
15 rebounds.
With the league victory,
the
Lady
Marauders
improve to 8-7 on the year
with a 3-4 record in the TriValley Conference Ohio
DivisiOn. Wellston drops to
3-12 and remains winless in
the TVC Ohio at 0-7,
Wellston outrebounded
Meigs 39-32, while the visitors had the edge in both
steals (Il-l 0) and assists
( 10-8).
The
Lady
Marauders shot 37 percent
from the floor, making 15
of their 41 attempts, and hit
19 of 29 free throws for 66
percent. They made just one
of six three-point field
goals. The lone three-pointer came from sophomore
Tricia Smith. The Lady
Rockets were even less successful from beyond the arc,

.

.

.

'

\!rimes ~enttnel

...,,J.
I ;#

•

,,

•• •
•

Zydrunas ·llgauskas added
17. points for Cleveland,
which has won three in a
row, and Anderson Varejao
scored 12 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds ln their
first meeting with the Spurs
since June's finals.
"The finals are over and
done with," James said.
"One thing we did tonight,
we got defensive steps and
we made plays down the
stretch.... We've just got to
continue to play well. We've
·been playing great hasketballlately."
Ginobili scored 31 points
for the Spurs, and Tony
Parker added 23 points but
missed two free throws with
29.4 seconds to play that
would have tied the game at
90.
"They both felt good.
They JUSt didn't go in,"
Parker said. "I shoot 200
free throws every day. It was
a good chance to show my
improvement They just didn't f;O in."
. Ttm Duncan scored 20
points and had II rebounds

for San Antonio, which has
. ~·...~ ..... !... }i....;.....
lost four games at home and
dropped to 5-5 in its last 10
overall.
,
A goaltending call against
James, coming off a seasonhigh 51 points against
Memphis, gave the Spurs an
86-85 lead with I :34 to play,
but Daniel Gibson's 3-pointer put Cleveland ahead. Duncan tied it at 88 before
James'. winning layup gave
the Cavs a 90-88 lead with
33.6 seconds left Parker.
with a chance to tie, missed
his two free throws and
Ginobili 's
last-second
jum~er attempt didn't fall..
"I d do that 10 out of 10
times, you bet," Spurs coach
Gregg Popovich said of not
taking a lime out before the
last play. "You're not goirlg
••
to get a better shot than
•
Manu or Tony going one-onone down the court."
Gibson, who added II
AP photo
point~; for Cleveland, agreed.
Cleveland
Cavaliers
forward
LeBron
)ames,
left,
is
defendand not because Popovich's
ed
by
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim.
Dunce~n
(21)
during
decision resulted in the
the first quarter of an NBA basketball game in San Antonio
Please see C.nallen, 82 on Thursday.

'.

. STAFF REPORT
SPOATSII'MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

GLOUSTER - Emeri
Connery scored 16 points
but the Eastern Lady Eagles
basketball
team lost
on the road
64-51
to
the Trimble
L a d y
Tomcats on
Thursday
night.
·
T h e.
game was a
Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division
matchup
and the second time
this season
the teams
played.
Trimble
won
the
first
meetPhoto courteay of lhe Jackson Counly TlrnQ.Joumal
Maxson
ing,
as
Meigs' Hannah Pratt, left, shields the ball from a defender and looks for an open teammate
well.
during a girls l!;!ague basketball game against the Wellston Lady Rockets on Thursday night.
The Lady Eagles move to
Ta)1or Mullins 3 2-8 8, Kendra DePue 2
4-11 this season and 2-6 in
making just one of ten
Next up for the Lady o-2
4, Breanna HaU 3 0-0 7, Tafa Oliver
attempts. They were also Marauders is a Saturday 0 1-2 1, Stephanie Trainer 1 o-o 2, the TVC Hocking . The
less efficient from the field ni~ht game at Eastern. It Whllnoy Patrick 2 6-t1 10. Erin Sturgill Lady Tomcats improve to 71 3-6 5, Amber King 1 0-0 2, Hannah
6 . overall and 5-2 in the
at 15-of-50 and from the Will be their second meeting Wheatley
2 0.() 4; TOTALS t5 12·29 43;
foul line at 12-of-29.
with the Lady Eagles this Three-point field goals: 1 (Breanna Hall league.
Connery was the game's
Other scoring for the season, and Meigs Will be t ),
high-scorer with her 16Lady Marauders came from looking to go two-for-two TEAM
STATISTICS/INDIVIDUAL
point performance. The
senior Amy Barr, who had against their county rivals. LEADERS
Field goals- Meigs 15-41 (.366), 2·
freshman also had five
four points, and Smith with Start time will be at 6 p.m. point
field goale 14·35 (.400),
steals.
Not far behind
three. Senior Brittany
3·polnt field goals 1-11 (.t67); Wellston
Melga
50,
Welltton
•3
t
5·50
(,300),
2·polnt
flofd
goals
Connery was senior teamPreas!, junior Adrian Bolin, Meigs 6 9 22 t3 - 50
t4'40 (.350), 3·polnt field goals t·10
mate Katie Hayman with 13
and
sophomore
Meri Wellston 6 10 9 ta - 43
(,100); Free throws - Meigs 19~29
(.655), Wellston 12-29 (,414) ; Rebounds
points, going six-of-seven
VanMeter all scored two
MEIGS (6·7, 3-4 TVC Ohio) - Marl - Meigs 32 (Morgan Howard 15),
from
the foul
line.
points apiece.
VanMeter 0 2·2 2, Adrian Bolin 1 0·0 2, Wellston 39 (Whitney Patrick 12, Erin
Maxson
Freshman
Beverly
In acuon earlier action the Trlcla Smith t 1).2 3, Catie Wolfe 7 t H6 Sturgill11); Steals- Meigs 11 (Catte
Hannah Pratt o o-o o, Amy Barr 2 o- Wallo 4), Wellston 10 (l&lt;endra DePue
had nine points and a teamjunior
varsity
Lady 25,
1 4, Morgan Howard 3 6-8 12. Brittany 3~; Assists- Meigs 10,
Marauders were edged 20- Preast 1 o-o 2, Melissa Grueser 0 o-o 0, Wellston a (Erin Sturgill 4); Blocks - high nine rebounds, as well
17 by the JV Lady Rockets. Miranda Gr"eser 0 0·0 0: TOTALS 15 Meigs 0, Wellston 1; Turnovers - Meigs as her team's two blocked
19-29 50; Three-point field goals : 1 25, Welloton 23; Toom fouls - Meigs
Leading scorers were not (Trlcla
Smith t),
23, Wellston 21; JV SCORE- WelloiOn
available a't press time,
WELLSTON (3·t2, 0·7 TVC Ohio) 20. Meigs 17...

Nash scores twice to lift Blue Jackets to victory

· Southern patiently made a
iljl)e run, but SHS couldn't
GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP)
4J,tite get over ·the hump.
·Pown at one point in double -Rick Nash's late penalty
digits Southern cut it to 19-' nearly cost the Columbus
Blue Jackets, but he made
'
PtuH ... TDmedOH, 12 up for it less than a minute
later.
·
•
I
Nash scored a highlightreel goal with 21.5 seconds
left to lift the Blue Jackets
PlNTAcrUs
to their fourth straight win,
4-3 over · the Phoenix
: : 1-1 40-446·2342 elCt. 33
Coyotes on Thursday night.
Nash took a long outlet
Fu - 1·740-«8·3008
pass
from Michael Peca
~~rntll- sportsOmydailysentinel.com
outside
the Phoenix
·JUSt
IQorla Staff
•
blue line and outmaneuEric Randolph, Spcirta Writer vered defensetnen Keith
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
Ballard and Derek Morris
jports Omydailysentlnel.com
before faking
Mikael
•Bryan Walters, Sports Writer Tellqvist
to the ice and fir(740) 446-2342. ext 33
ing into the open left side of
bwalters 0 mydaHytribuOe.com
the net.
"It just seemed like the
Larry Crum, Sport• Writer
wa&amp; on a string," Nash
puck
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
"I made a couple of
said.
IC(um 0 mydaltyregister.com

..

~un~ap

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

QSU W~men beat Dlinois, Page 82
Favre versus other Manning, Page 83
!ID'P LoweD willing to be tested, Page B4
~rehoard, Pllge 88
·
•

,Today's Forecast

,. ,

Inside

I

dekes and the puck just'
stayed with me. Pees made
a nice pass up and it was a
1-on-2. We had three guys
back, so I figured I might as
well try something."
Martin Hanzal had scored
a power-Qiay goal on a
rebound 77 seconds earlier
to tie the game 3-3. Nash
had been whistled for highsticking when he caught
Morris in the face with his
stick.
"My stick hit the referee's stick and came up,"
Nash said. "I should have
better cor•.rol of my stick. I
felt pretty bad after they
scored with I :20 left."
Nash finished with two
goals and . an assist,
Rostislav
Klesla
and

Columbus
Blue Jackets'
Rick Nash
(61) Is con·
gratulated by
teammates
on the bench
after his goal
against the
Phoenix
Coyotes in
the second
period in an
NHL hockey
game
Thursday in
Glendale,
Ariz.
AP photo

Please see Nash, 82 .

-'

�\.
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 18,2008
Friday, January t8, 2008

Moeller's 3-pointer gives No. 16 ·ohio State win over Dlinois·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jolette Law said. " I knew it
Maria Moeller took only was go()d when she shot it."
one shot in nine minutes off
The ' lllini ( 11-6, 3-3 )
the bench and made it count. brought the ball up the coun
Moeller's 3-pointer with and called timeout. With
14 seconds remaining gave two seconds left, Illinois
No. 16 Ohio State a 43-42 inbounded the ball but Lori
comeback win over Illinois Bjork, who was tripled
on Thursday night.
teamed, made an errant pass
Down by . seven points and turned the ball over as
with 4:56 left, the Buckeyes time expired.
- got a layup from Jaritel
"The last two minutes of
. Lavender and a 3-pointer the basketball game were
· from Marscilla Packer to cut our best basketball," Ohio
Illinois' lead to 42-40.
State coach Jim Foster said.
Moeller, a reserve sopho- "We hung &lt;tround for 38
more guard, s~:ored from the minutes to put ourselves in
right corner to give the that position."
Buckeyes ( 14-3, 5- l Big ~ Ashlee Trebilcock led. the
Ten) their fifth-straight win. Buckeyes wi.th 11 J?Oiflts.
"I waited for my· opponu- Lavender fimshed wtth 10
nity and when my time points and grabbed 12
came I stepped up," Moeller rebounds. .
said.
Jenna Smith scored 16
The Buckeyes had not led points .for Illinois ( 11-6, 3.since 14-13 wtth nearly mne 3), wh1ch had been off f~r a
minutes left in the first half. week
after
defeaung'
"Moeller made the shot of Minnesota on Jan. 10. Bjork
her life," Illinois coach added 12 for the Illini.

Law said Ohio State's
ability to grab offensive
rebounds in the final minutes set up the Buckeyes'
·
comeback.
"Give credit to Ohio
State," Law said. 'They got
the key rebounds and executed when they needed to."
Illinois held the Buckeyes
without a field goal the final
8:29 of the first half to turn
a 14-\3 deficit into a 22-17
halftime lead. Ohio State,
which led the Big Ten with
72.3 points per game,
missed 11 straight shots and
Cbmmitted five turnovers
during the stretch.
"The bottom line is we
grinded this out," Foster
said. "The ugly wins are· ·
what determine a really
good season."
Ohio State finished shooting 32.7 percent from the
field (16 of 49) and Illinois
hit 33 percent (18 of 54).

AP photo

Cleveland State stuns No. Out of j~, OJ. Simpson retu~
12 Butler.with 56-52 win ~orne to Florida ~ter Las Vegas ··
BY TOM WtTHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - When
the final · horn sounded,
Cleveland State's fans
poured onto the floor and
celebrated a win unlike
almost any other in the
school's history.
In a swarming mass, they
danced, jumped and relished
a night that made them even'
prouder to be Vikings.
"It was a beautiful feeling," forward J'Nathan
Bullock said.
After a long, long wait.
Cedric Jackson scored 14
points and Cleveland State,
a program in disarray for
most of the past 20 years,
stunned No. 12 Butler 56-52
on Thursday night for the
Vikings' first regular-season
win over an AP Top 25 team.
Bullock added 14 points,
the last one coming on a free
throw with 2.6 seconds left.
The Vikings ( 13-5, 6-0
Horizon League) came in 126 in games against ranked
opponents, with their only
win coming on March 14,
1986, a shocking upset of
No. 16 Indiana in the NCAA
tournament under thencoach Kevin Mack~y. Since
that
memorable
win,
Cleveland State had lost I 9
straight games against
ranked opponents.
"It's big," second-year

coach Gary Waters said.
"What we're trying to do is
establish a foundation. It
(the win) will help people
understand that there are
some good things going on
at Cleveland State."
Freshman Matt Howard
scored 16 points and Pete
Campbell 15 to lead Butler
(16-2, 5-2), which missed a
barrag,e of 3-pointers in the
final seconds as the
Bulldogs tried to tie it. Mike
Green, their leading scored
had 12 points on 4-of-ll
.shooting before fouling out
and senior A.J. Graves had S
and went only 2,of-ll from
the floor.
It was Cleveland State's
night from the stan and the
win validated
Waters'
impressive turnaround with
the Vikings, who were only
10-21 last season and
haven't liad a winning season since 2000-0 I.
On · its visit la.st year,
Butler made . a school and
conference record 20 3pointers in a 92-SO thumping of Cleveland State. Btit
other than. Campbell, who
made S-of-7 3-pointers, 'the
Bulldogs were just 6-of-23
overall from behind the arc
and couldn't buy a 3 when
they needed one down the
stretch.
But even then, the
Bulldogs led just once and
were outplayed by the

\likings, who appeared
intimidated in recent losses
to Ohio State and Kent
State.
"You watch Cleveland
State on tape and it's easy to
see how good they are,''
Butler coach Brad Stevens
said. "They play hard and
they play with passion."
Green's two free throws
pulled within 50-48 with
3:21 left, but Jackson, a
transfer from St. John's, wa,s
left open OJ) the right wing ·
and drilled a 3-pointer to put
the Vikings ahead by five.
Cleveland State's backers,
who have seen so many
potential upsets slip away in
the past, began sensing th e
upset - as did Waters.
· "I knew we were going to
win the game when we were
up by five,'' he said.
But Graves drove through
the lane and dropped in a
high-arching shot that went
20 feet in thll air to make it
53-50.
But with a chance to pull
Butler closer after a
turnover, Graves, an 89~percent free throw shooter,
missed the front end of a 1and-! with 2:23 left. George
Tandy then hit a IS-foot
jumper for Cleveland State
and Campbell, Graves and
Juillin Belko misfired on 3s
in the last minute as Butler
lost for the first time in nine
games.

Tornadoes

effort wasn't enough. The 4), 39 turnovers, two steals,
Lance·rs once again pressed three assists (Turley 2), four
heavily and placed six dif- blocks (Turley 2, Snider 2)
from PageBl
ferent players in the scoring and II fouls.
column in the second quarMonday Southern travels
ter.
FH
led
42-21
at
the
half.
to South Gallia.
11 at the first buzzer.
Then SHS went downhill
Southern relied exclusively with a 23-6 third quarter
Fedlrol HOCking 81, SOuthern 32
on Kasey Turley and better spiral (65-27). A potent last SOuthern 11 10 6 5 - 32
floor pla:r from the rest of round pushed the score to Fed Hoc1&lt; 19 . 23 23 16 - 81
8I-32.
the supporting cast.
SOUTMERN {2·14, 1-6 TVC Hocking) ,
Federal Hocking hit 35- - Whitney Wolle·Riffle 1 0·2 2, Kasey
Turley had nine of II in
4 2-4 12. Breanna Taylor 7 3·5
the first quaner, then came of-72 overall and hit 8-of- Turley
H, Cheyenne Dunn 0 0-0 0, Lindsay
out in the second quarter to 12 at the line. The Lancers Teaford 0 0·2 0, Chelsea Ritchie 0 1-2 1,
find a host of Lancers slash- had 36 rebounds (Butcher 6, Jaylln Snider 0 0-1 0. TOTALS: 12 6-16.
Three Point Goals: Kasey Turley two
ing away · on both flanks. Dunfee I 0), 26 steals 32.
FEDERAL HOCKING {1 f.4, 6·1 lVC
Coach Joe Butchers Lady '(Dunfee 10), 14 assists and Hocking)- Kayla Deeter t 0·0 2, Emily
Lancers put the clamps on 17 fouls. Southern hit 8-of- Dunfee 13 ()..() 28, Hannah McKibben 1 ~
2. Brltany King 2 0·0 4, Alisha
Thrley, allowing Taylor to 27 two's, 2-of-2 three's, 0-0
Skinner a 3-4 3, Chelsea Bale 4 0·2 8,
pick up the pace. Taylor had and was 6-of-16 at the line. Julie Viilson 3 2·3 8, Iris Butcher 9 3·3
Summar Hatliold 12 ().() 4. TOTALS:
all I0 Southern points in the Southern had 22 rebounds · 22,
35 8-12 81 . Three Point Goals: Emily .
second quarter, but her (Turley 6, Riffle 4, Taylor Dunfee two, Iris Butcher one

Cavaliers

ter - and k,ept it until about
Barry's second 3 gave
halfway through the fourth San Antonio another lead at
quarter off Damon 81-79 before Ilgauskas tied
Jones' fast break layup that · it at 81 with 5:08 to play.
from PageBl
broke a 3 I -all tie.
Notes: Barry missed nine
The
Cavs
extended
their
games
with a tom left calf
Cavaliers' win.
to
eight
points
at
73-65
muscle.
He logged IS minlead
"It was a great call br,
Pop, to kind of let them go, ' by the end of a third quarter utes and scored six points.
Gibson said. "Because in which the teams largely .. . The Cavs swept both
when you're in transition, traded baskets, allowing games against the Spurs last
it's tough to find a body. We Cleveland · to keep San season and now have a four. .
. game regular-se~on winwere all scrambling looking Antonio at bay.
Down 73-65 headmg toto ning streak aga10st San
for him."
The Spurs jumped out to a the final quarter, Oinoblll Antonio. .. . The Cavaliers
nine·pOIOl lead early and scored eight straight for the outrebounded San Antonio
extended it to I0 early in the Spun to open the period 45·50, but the teams were
and brina San Antonio with· nearly even on points in the
second quarter.
But the Cavaliers, behind in 77-73. Spurs guard Brent paint (30 each), assists (18
Ilaauskas and Varejao, who Barry, in his first aame each) and fast-break points
scored nine and eight points since tearing a calf muscle · (IS-14 Spurs).... The Spurs
In the quarter, respectively, in late I?ecember, s~ored his visit Cleveland on Feb. 13:
went on a 17-2 run to _go up first po1nts of the mg~t on a ... James, who came down
43-33 with 3:38 left 10 the 3r.mter that made 11 77- on his right ankle on top of
·
quarter.
7 ·
,
·
Parker's foot in the third
Only Ginobili, with I0 . Par~er s fast break to the quarter, but didn't miss any
points in the second period, rrm ~th 6:42 left closed the lime, said he "tweaked it a
kept the Spurs afloat.
Spurs 1~-4 run and gave little bit. ... but 1 wasn't
Cleveland, up 50-43 at t~em th~1r frrst l~d, ?8-77, going to sit out the game,
halftime, took the lead with smce 8.06 remamed 10 the not in a big game like this."
7;30 left in the second quar- second quaner.

Judge doubles bail to $250,000

,.,

LAS VEGAS (AP) _· and taken back to Nevada this (expletive)," Simpson
O,J. Simpson returned for violating terms of his said, according to a tra~:~­
home
to
Miami
on release.
script. "Fed up with (expleThursday, a day after an
He had ' been ordered to lives) changing what t~y
angry Las Vegas judge dou- have no contact with co- told me. All right?"
bled his bail but allowed defendants or witnesses
Though there was no
him to stay out of jail while after he was freed on bail in indication Stewan received
he awaits trial on armed September on charges of the message, prosecuCor
robbery.
·
orchestrating the armed Chris Owens suggested: it
Tom Scotto, who coordi-. robbery of two sports mem- was threatening. The judge
nated with . four other orabilia dealers at a hotel merely said she didn't like
·friends to raise Simpson's room.
the tone.
bail, greeted Simpson after
But he found himself
"I don't know if it's just
his arrival at Miami before a judge again arrogance. I don't know if
International Airpo'rt and Wednesday because he it's ignorance," she said as
escorted him to a waiting mentioned co-defendant she set ~is bail at $2SO,OQO.
sport utility vehicle. Neither Clarence "C.J."' Stewart "But you've been locked up
man spoke to reporters while leaving a sputtering, at the Clark County
before the vehicle departed foul-mouthed phone mes- Detention Center sin~e
from the airport.
sage two months ago for his Friday because of arrogance
When Scotto talked to bail 'bondsman, Miguel or ignorance- or both."
Simpson the night before Pereira of You Ring We
Defense attorney Yale
the bail revocation hearing, Spring.
Galanter denied the call was
"He said, 'Pray for me.'
"I don't know, Mr. an effort by Simpson ro
That's a first. He was really Simpson, what the heck you contact Stewan.
:
nervous she wasn't going to were thinking, or maybe
Simpson and two other
let him out.!'
that's the problem - you · men are to face trial April 7.
Simpson, 60, posted bond weren't," Clark County They have pleaded not
and was released from jail District Judge Jackie Glass guilty to kidnapping, armed
just
after
II J'.m. said.
robbery, assault w1th a
Wednesday. He walke oui
In the messag~;; Simpson deadly weapon, burglary,
by himself, got into a white asked Pereira to tell Stewart coerciOn and conspiracy
Mercedes, and was driven how frustrated he was about charges. An armed robbery
away without speaking to testimony during a prelimi- conviction carries mandatothe media.
nary hearing several days ry prison time: A kidnap·The former football star earlier.
·
ping conviction could bring
was picked up last Friday in
"I just want, want C.J. to a life sentence with the pos'
Flonda by a bail bondsman know that ... I'm tired of sibility of parole. ·
- - - - - - -.....-------.,....-----------~
in · time in the season. It goals in the first and he
was a really difficult loss was just incredible."
to handle."
, . The Blue Jackets finally
Columbus had several got on the board at 9:54 of
fromPageBl
scoring chances during a 5- the second period when
on-3 power play in the first Nash took a pass from
Nikolai Zherdev also period but could not get the Fedorov and skated down
scored, and Sergei Fedorov puck away from the posts. the right side before
and Michael Peca each had Fedorov fired one shot off swooping between the cirtwo assists for the Blue the right post, and 17 sec- cles for the shot on
Jackets, who passed idle onds later Nash bounced a Tellqvist, tying it I -I.
St. Louis for second place puck off Tellqvist's glove
Klesla gave the Blue
in the Central Division.
and the right post. One Jackets the lead at 18:43 e~f
"We were ahead the minute later, Nash's shot the
period,
beating
whole game and probably from the right circle slid Tellqvist from the top of
deserved to win with our between Tellqvist's skates the left circle for llis sixth
attitude the whole game,'' and off the left post.
goal and l OOth career
Klesla said.
Less than 30 seconds point.
Peter Mueller had a goal after N11sh's last miss,
Mueller made it 2-2
and assist, and Shane Doan Doan came out of the when
he one-timed a pass
also scored for the penalty box · and received
from
Ed
Jovanovski past
Coyotes, who have lost an outlet pass from Daniel
Norrena for a power-play
three of five.
Winnick to begin a 3-on-1 goaL with 15:02 to play.
"They outplayed us. break. Doan faked · a pass
Zherdev put Columbus
They
outworked . us. toward the middle of the
back
ahead 3-2 when he
Everything that we have ice before slipping the
done in the past two to puck between Fredrik scored on a wraparound
three months, they did to Norrena's pads for his 15th with II :34 left.
"(Nash) and Zherdev had
us tonight," Coyotes coach goal.
two world-class, thirdWayne Gretzk.x s.aid. "So
"(Tellqvist)
was
for us to even lle 1t up, we absolutely phenomenal in period goals," Columbus
were lucky and fortunate .. the first period," Doan coach Ken Hitchcock said.
Points are too Important said. "They should have . "Our two best players .did
and imperative at th1s point been up on us three or four what we needed them to
do. They scored goals."

Nash

Eastern
fromPageBl
shots. Trimble's leading
scorer was Jessie Spears
with 14 points. .
As 11 team, the Lady
Eagles shot 25 percent from
the floor, making 17 of 68
attempts. The Lady Tomcats
shot 37 percent, Including
five-of-seven from threepoint range.
Eastern was outrebounded 47-37, but the Lady
Eagles had more steals and
were better from the foul
line, making 14 of 29
attempts to Trimble's-ll-of25. The Lady Tomcats also
had seven more turnovers

than their visiting counterpans.
.
Others finding the scoresheet for Eastern were
sophomore
Amanc'a
Durham with si)( points and
freshman Allie Rawson
with four points. Junior
Alyssa Newfand and senior
Morgan Wercy rounded out
the scoring for the Lady
Eagles with two ~ints and
one point, respecuvely.
Eastern Is back in action
Saturday night against
Meigs at home. The game is
scheduled to tip-off at 6
. p.m.
Eutorn
Trimble

ntmblo 114, !etler[i 11
12 9 8 :U 10 17 20 17 -

51
84

EASTERN {4·11 , 2·6 TVC Hocking)Emerl Connery 71·6 16, Katie Hayman
3 8·7 13, Beverly MOJCson 2 5·12 9,

Amanda Durham 3 0-o 6, Alllo Rawaon
1 1·2 4, Alyssa Nowland 1 0-0 2,
Morgan Werry o 1·2 1, Kar1111 Connolly
o 0·0 0, Audrlonno Pulllnt 0 o-o 0;
TOTALS -14 14·29 51 , 3-polnl goalt: 3
{Hayman 1, Connery 1, Aawoon 1)
TAIMILI {7-8, 5·2 TVC HOCiclng) · ~
Jualo Spurt 4 a-1 o 14, Hannah
Harpor BQ-1 13, Sc:huylor Shaner 4 OiO
8, Sierra Lonlgar 2 4•8 I, Taylor Savage
3 o-4 7, Cady Hapt co..,h a. O·O e,
Katlyn Wa"on a 1·2 8, Ctrly Ct~ll' t
O·O il, Chloe Campbell oo-o O;
"1,8
-19 11·28 14; 3·polnt goala: tCouoh
2. 8avage1 , Welton 1, Herpor 1)
·

e

TIAM LIADIIII/INDtVIQUAL ITA•

TIIT!CI
Field goalt - !aatorn 17-et (.250), i·
point goalt 14·88 (.258), 3·polnt goala
3·13 {.231);TrlmDII 24•11 {.388), 2•polnt
goalt 18·58 {.321), 3·polnl [10111 l!o7
{.714); Frto tnrowo - Ellltrn 14-29
{.483), Trlmblo 11·25 {.440); Robounda
- Eattorn 37 {17 ofltnalvl, 20 dolln·
alvo) {tlovo~y MlllCIOn 9), Trimble 47 {21
oHonolve, 28 dolontlvo) {Hannah
.Horpor 11); Blookt - Eattorn 2
{Maxson 2), Trlmllla 5 (Siorro Lonlgor 2);
S!oolo- Eootern 11 {Emorl Connery 5),
Trlmblo 8 (Taylor Savage 5); 1\Jrnovert
-

Eastern 15, Trimble 22; Team Foula

- Eaatorn 17, Trimble 15.'

•'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'

QB icon Favre against the other Manning in NFC championship game
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio State's
Jantel
Lavender, left,
posts up
against
Illinois' Jenna
Smith during
the second
half of a basketball game
Thursday in
Columbus.
Ohio State
beat Illinois
43-42.

www.mydailysentinel.com

GREEN BAY, Wis. - If
America's game has a quarterback, it has to be Brett
. Favre. And if America's
game has a kid brother quarterback, it has to be Eli
Manning.
. Favre is an icon not only
in Green Bay, where he has
. led the Packers to two Super
Bowls in 16 mostly su~cessful seasons, but throughout
pro football.
While it has not exactly
been a sentimental journey
· to Sunday's NFC championship game - there is little
room for sentiment in such a
rugged sport- Favre's trip
back to the NFL's pinnacle
has at least · been inspirationa!.
Who wouldn't be uplifted
by his tale? For the last two
years, No. 4 has toyed with
the emotions of everyone in·
· his adopted .state, plus the
folks back in his native
; Mississippi: Would he retire
or return? Were the off-field
troubles and tragedies, from
the deaths of his father and
wife Deanna's stepfather
and brother to Deanna's bout
with breast cancer, enough
to force him from the .game
he so clearly loves?
' . Each time, after weeks of
pandering 'his future, Favre
returned. Each of those sea· sons, the Packers were also-

rans.
They ' re anything but alsorans now, preparing io play
Manning and the Giants for
a trip to the Super Bowl.
Favre owns nearly all the
NFL's significant passing
records, and his· consecutive
starts streak is perhaps the
most · amazing of all: 274,
including postseason. .
Yet Favre remains a kid at
heart and a kid at play. And
gmteful for where he has
been, · where he is now, and
where he might be going.
"I would be lying if I said
I was not enjoying it," he
said. "But it has been what,
II years ... since we even
made it this far. So I don't
want io say that I got to a
point where I had forgotten
what that was like, or my
goals were not what they
used to be, but in some
respects it had kind of gotten
that way.
"I didn't get used to losing
·- we only had one losing
season - but we were far
removed, it seems like, from
that. So ihe standpoint that
we are back in it, this is my
fourth opportunity in a
championship game, what I
will say is that I appreciate
it. I don't want to say that I
savor the moment more, but
four tries in 17 years, and to
a certain degree that is better
than most guys.
"But I am very ·proud of
the fact that we have gotten

the game, maybe after a
pass, I am thinking, wow, I
am playing with Br.:tt Favre,
and that's something special,
and I'm definitely honored
·to be a part of it. But when
we're playing, he's another
quarterback. He 's a great
leader for us and we just take
advantage of it."
Leadership was not a word
often used in conjunction
.
with the younger Manning,
even though the Giants
made the playoffs the past
two seasons with him at
' quanerback. They lost in the
first round both times.
Eli has the unfortunate
, dilemma of nut being older
brother Peyton, and having
AP photo to play where the tabloids
Green Say Packers quarterback Brett Favre, right, passes and talk radio fanatics cut no
the ball . as he is pressured by New York Giants defensive slack. New York has not
end Michael Strahan (92) during first quarter NFL football been kind through Eli's
action at Giants Stadium in East Ruther.ford, N.J., in this growing process.
That the Big Apple · has
$ept. 16, 2007, file photo. The Giants and the Packers
become enamored of him
meet in the NFC Championship g~me on Sunday.
lately is nothing like the
this far."
his most efficient seasons. hero worship afforded
It's 11omewhat stunning'the His leadership is unques- Favre, of course. The love
Packers have gotten so far, if tioned,
particularly
in could turn back to venom as
only because of where they respect to a generally inex- soon as, well. Sunday night
were in early December perienced supponing cast, if the Giants fall shon of get2006: 4-8. But they won including · · young
wide ting a Manning to a second
their final four games of that receivers and running .backs. straight Super Bowl.
season, then went 13-3 and
"Well, in the middle of the
Manning isn ' t about to
manhandled Seattle in the game I' m not thinking that," examine his improved image
snow globe of Lambeau lead runner Ryan Grant said locally, ·or even get into what
Field last Saturday. ·
of the legend of Favre. Sunday's game· means Coach Mike McCarthy "There have been some even if it is the biggest chalhas reined in Favre's river- times when people really lenge of his. career.
boat gambler alter-ego just bring it to my attention.
"It is very cooL It is very
·enough that he had one of
" But after the fact, after exciting. You have to enjoy

it ," Manning said. "You
have to enjoy the whole situation of what it is, but again
you have to prepare yourself
and you have to get mentally
and physically ready to play
the game and look at it . for
what it is in this game. You
can' t alway&gt; look at the big
picture. You have to be
focused and be determined
to win this game .
"Just getting here is fun,
'but you want to win it also."
Favre
was
never
Manning's idol, even though
Eli
starred
for
the
Mi ssissippi Rebels in college and is very cognizant of
Favrh standing in the state.
Eli instead looked to his dad,
Archie, who :was the greatest
quarterback in Ole Miss history. And he '.s always had
Peyton to look up to.
Favre looks at Manning
and likes what he sees.
"It is no secret to you
guys, but he has caught a lot
of heat, not only frcim the
media but from the public,"
Favre said. "He just has the
same
demeanor
and
approach. and I can remember just saying that 'You
have handled things well,' "
after 'the Packers beat the
Giants in Week 2.
"!think he is a .fine player,
I thought he was then. I
think he has proven to people now that he is legit."

:Patriots defensive vets face former Chargers team in AFC tilt
BY HowARD ULMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
· -·. The last time Junior Seau.
played in an AFC champi-·
' onship ~arne, his team was
. given httle chance to beat
. 'the top seed.
In January 1995, the
. Steelers won their first play.
. off game in a rout, while the
, Chargers eked out a onepoint victory that set up the
._ matchup betwe~n those
teams the followmg week, end.
• . "Sitting in my hotel room
~in Pittsburgh and hearing all
the cheers and pep rallies
...tbat were going around and
all the Super Bowl videos
.that were being taped, every. . thin~ was against us," the
. l&gt;atnots linebacker said ..
~'The yellow towels were
flyjng around. It ·was definitely a time when we
ih m1ght we were against the
" Jr! d."
·
Hut San Diego won 17-13
in Pittsburgh then went on to
•one of the toughest losses in
•Seau's ·IS-year career, a 49. 26 rout by San Francisco in
·the Super Bowl.
· · Thirteen years later, the
Chargers aren't given much

of a chance against the perfeet Patriots on Sunday, the
day after Seau's .;39th birthday.
But he knows expectations
·can fall short. ·Didn't the
Patriots squander a 21-3 lead
in last year's AFC title game
and lose to Indianapolis, 3834?
So Seau and safety
Rodney Harrison, a rookie
on that 1994 Chargers team,
are working hard to avoid an
upset that can stop New
England's unbeaten season
one game short of another
Super Bowl appearance.
"I tell the youn~ guys,
'Don't take anythtng for
~ranted because at any point
m time it can be over with,
whether it's a season,
wliether it's a game, whether
it's your career,"' the 3Syear-old Hard son ·said
Thursday. "I think I have a
greater appreciation now
that I'm older:"
Seau sees many coinparisons between this year's
San Diego team and the one
in 1994 - the last two
Chargers clubs to reach the
AFC championship game. .
· "The maJor comparison ts
that they're confident," he
said. "We look forward to

moving on, growing every
day to tlie day it comes we
have to go out and perform."
Seau and Harnson will
play against the Chargers as
teammates for the first time
in. their long careers. Both
missed last season's 24-21
upset playoff win at San
Diego with injuries.
Sunday's game, then,
should have some special
emotions for them, especially since Seau is a native of
San Diego.
Right?
·
"I try not to get too Oprah
with it and know that it's just
another game and know that
I'm so happy for the city of
San Diego, my hometown,"
he said, but " it's going. to be
a challenge of the game of
football , nothing more."
Harrison, a fiery, hard-hitter like Seau, also prefers to
show his emotions on the
field .
·
"It's just special to be in
the AFC Championship,"
·Harrison said. "I don't know
necessarily
facing
the
Chargers makes it any more
special."
The Patriots have spent the
week building up the
Chargers as the best team in
the NFL since Thanksgiving.

They were. 5-5 before the win over the New York
holiday but 8-0 since then. · ·Giants in the regular-season
New England coach Bill finale .
Belichick likes to point . out
The Chargers' defense is
that his team .has won fewer younger with a knack for
games in that stretch. But creating turnovers. They led
that's .because they had a the NFL with 30 intercepplayofr bye and are 7-0 after tions and 48 takeaways then
Thanksgiving - but 17-0 added two interceptions and
overall.
one fumble recovery in last
San Diego coach Norv SundaY's 28-24 playoff win
Turner isn't surprised that at Indianapolis. All-Pro cor~
.Belichick fawned over the nerback
Antonio
Chargers.
Cromanie's 10 interceptions
"Everyone knows that led the league.
"It's remarkable the things
New England right now is
playing the best feotball in we've done defensively,"
the league and it's going to Turner said. "It seems like
be a real challenge for us," one guy tips (the ball) and it
Turner said. .
·
goes up in the air and one of
Tom Brady's 50 touch- our guys finds a way to get
down passes and Randy it."
Moss' 23 scoring catches are
The Patriots also have
NFL single-season record. some · pretty solid defensive
So are the 589 points the players.
Patriots scored.
Seau had three intercepBut the advanced age of tions and 3 1/2 sacks this
their defense may be catch- season and Harrison ended
ing up. They allowed three Jacksonville's hopes with an
scoring drives of at least 80 interception with just under
yards in last Saturday night's four minutes left. One more
31-20 playoff w·in over win, and the Patriots will
Jacksonville after giving up have a shot at their fourth
four tou.chdowns in a 38-35 championship tn seven

years.
That's a long way from
San Diego. Seau . and
Harrison left there ·after the
2002 season, when the
Chargers lost their last four
games to finish 8-8 and miss
the playoffs for the seventh
straight season. '
"Whether you want to
judge my play, whether you
want to judge the morale or
having the same people
there Jose and not making
any strides forward," Seau
said, "you have to look at
that and say, 'maybe it's
time to change."
Harrison went straight to
New England. Seau spent
the next three seasons with
Miami and is in his second
with New England .
On Sunday, for the first
time in 13 seasons, they'll
play again as teammates in
an AFC championship game.
"It's a lot of hype around
this game and deservedly so,
but, at the same time, it's a
football game," Harrison
said. "It doesn't matter what
we've done in the past."

2008 Meigs Co·unty Visitors Guide

:Patriots coach Bill Belichick backs wide
;receiver Randy Moss over restraining order
FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
· (AP) New · England
:Patriots
coach
Bill
. Belichick expressed strong
support Thursday for wide
feceiver Randy Moss, · the
: ~ubject of a temporary
. restraining order obtained
by a longtime friend.
· Belichick said he wasn't
· coric~rned about the allegation brought by Rachelle
Washington that • Moss
:committed battery or about
·how it might a,ffect Moss
on Sunday in the AFC
championship game against
·the San Diego Chargers.
· Washington 's attorney
. issued
a.
statement
. Thursday saying that Moss'
representatives were the
first to 'suggest that Moss
: pay the woman to keep the
issue quiet, according to
NBCSports.com . The attor. ney, David McGill, and
Moss' agent, Tim DiPiero,
did not returns telephone
·t:alls from The Associated
Press.
·' ·on Wednesday,
. Moss
·said that suggest tOn came
from her side and totaled
·"six figures ." He called it
!•a situation of extortion."
: No criminal charge has
been brought.
· · Belichick spoke briefly
:on questions about the matter Thursday. ,
·~ think Randy's covered

those and I've talked to
Randy about it, and I support Randy I00 percent,''
he said.
Moss spent about I 0 minutes in front of his locker
on Wednesday vehemently
denying the allegations.
On Monday, the .. temporary restraining order was
issued in Broward County,
Fla., ordering Moss to stay
at least 500 feet from the
home of Washington, who
alleged he committed "battery ... causing serious
injury" to her at her home
in Fort Lauderdale on Jan.
6, the Sunday of the
Patriots playoff bye week.
A hearing on issuing a
permanent restraining order .
is scheduled for 3 p.m. Jan .
28, · six days before the
Super Bowl.
.
Moss said the woman has
been a friend of his for II
years and that she asked for
"six figures " for what he
said wa&amp; an accident in
which she was hurt.
Washington , 35, alleged
they had been in an "intimate relationship" since
1997.
·
Her attorney's statement
said she · "has cared deeply
for Mr. Moss and has been
there for him throughout all
of his trials and tribulations" over the past II
years and didn't intend to

hurt Moss.
"However, she has surfered mental and physical
harm as a result of his
actions," the statement
said. "She simply wants
fiim to take responsibility
for what he has done. As a
battery victim , she has
shown
great
strength
throughout this entire
ordeal.
"Ms. Washington has
been unfairly characterize&lt;:~
as someone simply seeking
financial 'gain. In fact, it
was Mr. Moss' representalives who first contacted
our office to offer a 'six
figure' settlement with
hopes of not havmg th1s
incident become public
record."
Washington also alleged
that Moss refused to allow
her to seek medtcal treatmen't. Moss denied that.
Mcqill 's s~atement did not
spectfy an InJury.
"He has acknowledged .
that he was at Ms.
Washington's Florida residence and that he was
'g uilty' of an 'accident'
which occurred," the statement said . "However, Mr.
Moss fails to mention how
his reckless and degrading
conduct rendered Ms.
Washington unable to drive
her vehicle to seek medical
attention."

-------------·-----

DON7 MISS OUT ON HAVING YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION INClUDED
.DEADliNE JANUARY 3f, 2008

eatt
·

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2155
The Dail Sentinel
-

~--

-- - ------~

�\.
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 18,2008
Friday, January t8, 2008

Moeller's 3-pointer gives No. 16 ·ohio State win over Dlinois·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Jolette Law said. " I knew it
Maria Moeller took only was go()d when she shot it."
one shot in nine minutes off
The ' lllini ( 11-6, 3-3 )
the bench and made it count. brought the ball up the coun
Moeller's 3-pointer with and called timeout. With
14 seconds remaining gave two seconds left, Illinois
No. 16 Ohio State a 43-42 inbounded the ball but Lori
comeback win over Illinois Bjork, who was tripled
on Thursday night.
teamed, made an errant pass
Down by . seven points and turned the ball over as
with 4:56 left, the Buckeyes time expired.
- got a layup from Jaritel
"The last two minutes of
. Lavender and a 3-pointer the basketball game were
· from Marscilla Packer to cut our best basketball," Ohio
Illinois' lead to 42-40.
State coach Jim Foster said.
Moeller, a reserve sopho- "We hung &lt;tround for 38
more guard, s~:ored from the minutes to put ourselves in
right corner to give the that position."
Buckeyes ( 14-3, 5- l Big ~ Ashlee Trebilcock led. the
Ten) their fifth-straight win. Buckeyes wi.th 11 J?Oiflts.
"I waited for my· opponu- Lavender fimshed wtth 10
nity and when my time points and grabbed 12
came I stepped up," Moeller rebounds. .
said.
Jenna Smith scored 16
The Buckeyes had not led points .for Illinois ( 11-6, 3.since 14-13 wtth nearly mne 3), wh1ch had been off f~r a
minutes left in the first half. week
after
defeaung'
"Moeller made the shot of Minnesota on Jan. 10. Bjork
her life," Illinois coach added 12 for the Illini.

Law said Ohio State's
ability to grab offensive
rebounds in the final minutes set up the Buckeyes'
·
comeback.
"Give credit to Ohio
State," Law said. 'They got
the key rebounds and executed when they needed to."
Illinois held the Buckeyes
without a field goal the final
8:29 of the first half to turn
a 14-\3 deficit into a 22-17
halftime lead. Ohio State,
which led the Big Ten with
72.3 points per game,
missed 11 straight shots and
Cbmmitted five turnovers
during the stretch.
"The bottom line is we
grinded this out," Foster
said. "The ugly wins are· ·
what determine a really
good season."
Ohio State finished shooting 32.7 percent from the
field (16 of 49) and Illinois
hit 33 percent (18 of 54).

AP photo

Cleveland State stuns No. Out of j~, OJ. Simpson retu~
12 Butler.with 56-52 win ~orne to Florida ~ter Las Vegas ··
BY TOM WtTHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - When
the final · horn sounded,
Cleveland State's fans
poured onto the floor and
celebrated a win unlike
almost any other in the
school's history.
In a swarming mass, they
danced, jumped and relished
a night that made them even'
prouder to be Vikings.
"It was a beautiful feeling," forward J'Nathan
Bullock said.
After a long, long wait.
Cedric Jackson scored 14
points and Cleveland State,
a program in disarray for
most of the past 20 years,
stunned No. 12 Butler 56-52
on Thursday night for the
Vikings' first regular-season
win over an AP Top 25 team.
Bullock added 14 points,
the last one coming on a free
throw with 2.6 seconds left.
The Vikings ( 13-5, 6-0
Horizon League) came in 126 in games against ranked
opponents, with their only
win coming on March 14,
1986, a shocking upset of
No. 16 Indiana in the NCAA
tournament under thencoach Kevin Mack~y. Since
that
memorable
win,
Cleveland State had lost I 9
straight games against
ranked opponents.
"It's big," second-year

coach Gary Waters said.
"What we're trying to do is
establish a foundation. It
(the win) will help people
understand that there are
some good things going on
at Cleveland State."
Freshman Matt Howard
scored 16 points and Pete
Campbell 15 to lead Butler
(16-2, 5-2), which missed a
barrag,e of 3-pointers in the
final seconds as the
Bulldogs tried to tie it. Mike
Green, their leading scored
had 12 points on 4-of-ll
.shooting before fouling out
and senior A.J. Graves had S
and went only 2,of-ll from
the floor.
It was Cleveland State's
night from the stan and the
win validated
Waters'
impressive turnaround with
the Vikings, who were only
10-21 last season and
haven't liad a winning season since 2000-0 I.
On · its visit la.st year,
Butler made . a school and
conference record 20 3pointers in a 92-SO thumping of Cleveland State. Btit
other than. Campbell, who
made S-of-7 3-pointers, 'the
Bulldogs were just 6-of-23
overall from behind the arc
and couldn't buy a 3 when
they needed one down the
stretch.
But even then, the
Bulldogs led just once and
were outplayed by the

\likings, who appeared
intimidated in recent losses
to Ohio State and Kent
State.
"You watch Cleveland
State on tape and it's easy to
see how good they are,''
Butler coach Brad Stevens
said. "They play hard and
they play with passion."
Green's two free throws
pulled within 50-48 with
3:21 left, but Jackson, a
transfer from St. John's, wa,s
left open OJ) the right wing ·
and drilled a 3-pointer to put
the Vikings ahead by five.
Cleveland State's backers,
who have seen so many
potential upsets slip away in
the past, began sensing th e
upset - as did Waters.
· "I knew we were going to
win the game when we were
up by five,'' he said.
But Graves drove through
the lane and dropped in a
high-arching shot that went
20 feet in thll air to make it
53-50.
But with a chance to pull
Butler closer after a
turnover, Graves, an 89~percent free throw shooter,
missed the front end of a 1and-! with 2:23 left. George
Tandy then hit a IS-foot
jumper for Cleveland State
and Campbell, Graves and
Juillin Belko misfired on 3s
in the last minute as Butler
lost for the first time in nine
games.

Tornadoes

effort wasn't enough. The 4), 39 turnovers, two steals,
Lance·rs once again pressed three assists (Turley 2), four
heavily and placed six dif- blocks (Turley 2, Snider 2)
from PageBl
ferent players in the scoring and II fouls.
column in the second quarMonday Southern travels
ter.
FH
led
42-21
at
the
half.
to South Gallia.
11 at the first buzzer.
Then SHS went downhill
Southern relied exclusively with a 23-6 third quarter
Fedlrol HOCking 81, SOuthern 32
on Kasey Turley and better spiral (65-27). A potent last SOuthern 11 10 6 5 - 32
floor pla:r from the rest of round pushed the score to Fed Hoc1&lt; 19 . 23 23 16 - 81
8I-32.
the supporting cast.
SOUTMERN {2·14, 1-6 TVC Hocking) ,
Federal Hocking hit 35- - Whitney Wolle·Riffle 1 0·2 2, Kasey
Turley had nine of II in
4 2-4 12. Breanna Taylor 7 3·5
the first quaner, then came of-72 overall and hit 8-of- Turley
H, Cheyenne Dunn 0 0-0 0, Lindsay
out in the second quarter to 12 at the line. The Lancers Teaford 0 0·2 0, Chelsea Ritchie 0 1-2 1,
find a host of Lancers slash- had 36 rebounds (Butcher 6, Jaylln Snider 0 0-1 0. TOTALS: 12 6-16.
Three Point Goals: Kasey Turley two
ing away · on both flanks. Dunfee I 0), 26 steals 32.
FEDERAL HOCKING {1 f.4, 6·1 lVC
Coach Joe Butchers Lady '(Dunfee 10), 14 assists and Hocking)- Kayla Deeter t 0·0 2, Emily
Lancers put the clamps on 17 fouls. Southern hit 8-of- Dunfee 13 ()..() 28, Hannah McKibben 1 ~
2. Brltany King 2 0·0 4, Alisha
Thrley, allowing Taylor to 27 two's, 2-of-2 three's, 0-0
Skinner a 3-4 3, Chelsea Bale 4 0·2 8,
pick up the pace. Taylor had and was 6-of-16 at the line. Julie Viilson 3 2·3 8, Iris Butcher 9 3·3
Summar Hatliold 12 ().() 4. TOTALS:
all I0 Southern points in the Southern had 22 rebounds · 22,
35 8-12 81 . Three Point Goals: Emily .
second quarter, but her (Turley 6, Riffle 4, Taylor Dunfee two, Iris Butcher one

Cavaliers

ter - and k,ept it until about
Barry's second 3 gave
halfway through the fourth San Antonio another lead at
quarter off Damon 81-79 before Ilgauskas tied
Jones' fast break layup that · it at 81 with 5:08 to play.
from PageBl
broke a 3 I -all tie.
Notes: Barry missed nine
The
Cavs
extended
their
games
with a tom left calf
Cavaliers' win.
to
eight
points
at
73-65
muscle.
He logged IS minlead
"It was a great call br,
Pop, to kind of let them go, ' by the end of a third quarter utes and scored six points.
Gibson said. "Because in which the teams largely .. . The Cavs swept both
when you're in transition, traded baskets, allowing games against the Spurs last
it's tough to find a body. We Cleveland · to keep San season and now have a four. .
. game regular-se~on winwere all scrambling looking Antonio at bay.
Down 73-65 headmg toto ning streak aga10st San
for him."
The Spurs jumped out to a the final quarter, Oinoblll Antonio. .. . The Cavaliers
nine·pOIOl lead early and scored eight straight for the outrebounded San Antonio
extended it to I0 early in the Spun to open the period 45·50, but the teams were
and brina San Antonio with· nearly even on points in the
second quarter.
But the Cavaliers, behind in 77-73. Spurs guard Brent paint (30 each), assists (18
Ilaauskas and Varejao, who Barry, in his first aame each) and fast-break points
scored nine and eight points since tearing a calf muscle · (IS-14 Spurs).... The Spurs
In the quarter, respectively, in late I?ecember, s~ored his visit Cleveland on Feb. 13:
went on a 17-2 run to _go up first po1nts of the mg~t on a ... James, who came down
43-33 with 3:38 left 10 the 3r.mter that made 11 77- on his right ankle on top of
·
quarter.
7 ·
,
·
Parker's foot in the third
Only Ginobili, with I0 . Par~er s fast break to the quarter, but didn't miss any
points in the second period, rrm ~th 6:42 left closed the lime, said he "tweaked it a
kept the Spurs afloat.
Spurs 1~-4 run and gave little bit. ... but 1 wasn't
Cleveland, up 50-43 at t~em th~1r frrst l~d, ?8-77, going to sit out the game,
halftime, took the lead with smce 8.06 remamed 10 the not in a big game like this."
7;30 left in the second quar- second quaner.

Judge doubles bail to $250,000

,.,

LAS VEGAS (AP) _· and taken back to Nevada this (expletive)," Simpson
O,J. Simpson returned for violating terms of his said, according to a tra~:~­
home
to
Miami
on release.
script. "Fed up with (expleThursday, a day after an
He had ' been ordered to lives) changing what t~y
angry Las Vegas judge dou- have no contact with co- told me. All right?"
bled his bail but allowed defendants or witnesses
Though there was no
him to stay out of jail while after he was freed on bail in indication Stewan received
he awaits trial on armed September on charges of the message, prosecuCor
robbery.
·
orchestrating the armed Chris Owens suggested: it
Tom Scotto, who coordi-. robbery of two sports mem- was threatening. The judge
nated with . four other orabilia dealers at a hotel merely said she didn't like
·friends to raise Simpson's room.
the tone.
bail, greeted Simpson after
But he found himself
"I don't know if it's just
his arrival at Miami before a judge again arrogance. I don't know if
International Airpo'rt and Wednesday because he it's ignorance," she said as
escorted him to a waiting mentioned co-defendant she set ~is bail at $2SO,OQO.
sport utility vehicle. Neither Clarence "C.J."' Stewart "But you've been locked up
man spoke to reporters while leaving a sputtering, at the Clark County
before the vehicle departed foul-mouthed phone mes- Detention Center sin~e
from the airport.
sage two months ago for his Friday because of arrogance
When Scotto talked to bail 'bondsman, Miguel or ignorance- or both."
Simpson the night before Pereira of You Ring We
Defense attorney Yale
the bail revocation hearing, Spring.
Galanter denied the call was
"He said, 'Pray for me.'
"I don't know, Mr. an effort by Simpson ro
That's a first. He was really Simpson, what the heck you contact Stewan.
:
nervous she wasn't going to were thinking, or maybe
Simpson and two other
let him out.!'
that's the problem - you · men are to face trial April 7.
Simpson, 60, posted bond weren't," Clark County They have pleaded not
and was released from jail District Judge Jackie Glass guilty to kidnapping, armed
just
after
II J'.m. said.
robbery, assault w1th a
Wednesday. He walke oui
In the messag~;; Simpson deadly weapon, burglary,
by himself, got into a white asked Pereira to tell Stewart coerciOn and conspiracy
Mercedes, and was driven how frustrated he was about charges. An armed robbery
away without speaking to testimony during a prelimi- conviction carries mandatothe media.
nary hearing several days ry prison time: A kidnap·The former football star earlier.
·
ping conviction could bring
was picked up last Friday in
"I just want, want C.J. to a life sentence with the pos'
Flonda by a bail bondsman know that ... I'm tired of sibility of parole. ·
- - - - - - -.....-------.,....-----------~
in · time in the season. It goals in the first and he
was a really difficult loss was just incredible."
to handle."
, . The Blue Jackets finally
Columbus had several got on the board at 9:54 of
fromPageBl
scoring chances during a 5- the second period when
on-3 power play in the first Nash took a pass from
Nikolai Zherdev also period but could not get the Fedorov and skated down
scored, and Sergei Fedorov puck away from the posts. the right side before
and Michael Peca each had Fedorov fired one shot off swooping between the cirtwo assists for the Blue the right post, and 17 sec- cles for the shot on
Jackets, who passed idle onds later Nash bounced a Tellqvist, tying it I -I.
St. Louis for second place puck off Tellqvist's glove
Klesla gave the Blue
in the Central Division.
and the right post. One Jackets the lead at 18:43 e~f
"We were ahead the minute later, Nash's shot the
period,
beating
whole game and probably from the right circle slid Tellqvist from the top of
deserved to win with our between Tellqvist's skates the left circle for llis sixth
attitude the whole game,'' and off the left post.
goal and l OOth career
Klesla said.
Less than 30 seconds point.
Peter Mueller had a goal after N11sh's last miss,
Mueller made it 2-2
and assist, and Shane Doan Doan came out of the when
he one-timed a pass
also scored for the penalty box · and received
from
Ed
Jovanovski past
Coyotes, who have lost an outlet pass from Daniel
Norrena for a power-play
three of five.
Winnick to begin a 3-on-1 goaL with 15:02 to play.
"They outplayed us. break. Doan faked · a pass
Zherdev put Columbus
They
outworked . us. toward the middle of the
back
ahead 3-2 when he
Everything that we have ice before slipping the
done in the past two to puck between Fredrik scored on a wraparound
three months, they did to Norrena's pads for his 15th with II :34 left.
"(Nash) and Zherdev had
us tonight," Coyotes coach goal.
two world-class, thirdWayne Gretzk.x s.aid. "So
"(Tellqvist)
was
for us to even lle 1t up, we absolutely phenomenal in period goals," Columbus
were lucky and fortunate .. the first period," Doan coach Ken Hitchcock said.
Points are too Important said. "They should have . "Our two best players .did
and imperative at th1s point been up on us three or four what we needed them to
do. They scored goals."

Nash

Eastern
fromPageBl
shots. Trimble's leading
scorer was Jessie Spears
with 14 points. .
As 11 team, the Lady
Eagles shot 25 percent from
the floor, making 17 of 68
attempts. The Lady Tomcats
shot 37 percent, Including
five-of-seven from threepoint range.
Eastern was outrebounded 47-37, but the Lady
Eagles had more steals and
were better from the foul
line, making 14 of 29
attempts to Trimble's-ll-of25. The Lady Tomcats also
had seven more turnovers

than their visiting counterpans.
.
Others finding the scoresheet for Eastern were
sophomore
Amanc'a
Durham with si)( points and
freshman Allie Rawson
with four points. Junior
Alyssa Newfand and senior
Morgan Wercy rounded out
the scoring for the Lady
Eagles with two ~ints and
one point, respecuvely.
Eastern Is back in action
Saturday night against
Meigs at home. The game is
scheduled to tip-off at 6
. p.m.
Eutorn
Trimble

ntmblo 114, !etler[i 11
12 9 8 :U 10 17 20 17 -

51
84

EASTERN {4·11 , 2·6 TVC Hocking)Emerl Connery 71·6 16, Katie Hayman
3 8·7 13, Beverly MOJCson 2 5·12 9,

Amanda Durham 3 0-o 6, Alllo Rawaon
1 1·2 4, Alyssa Nowland 1 0-0 2,
Morgan Werry o 1·2 1, Kar1111 Connolly
o 0·0 0, Audrlonno Pulllnt 0 o-o 0;
TOTALS -14 14·29 51 , 3-polnl goalt: 3
{Hayman 1, Connery 1, Aawoon 1)
TAIMILI {7-8, 5·2 TVC HOCiclng) · ~
Jualo Spurt 4 a-1 o 14, Hannah
Harpor BQ-1 13, Sc:huylor Shaner 4 OiO
8, Sierra Lonlgar 2 4•8 I, Taylor Savage
3 o-4 7, Cady Hapt co..,h a. O·O e,
Katlyn Wa"on a 1·2 8, Ctrly Ct~ll' t
O·O il, Chloe Campbell oo-o O;
"1,8
-19 11·28 14; 3·polnt goala: tCouoh
2. 8avage1 , Welton 1, Herpor 1)
·

e

TIAM LIADIIII/INDtVIQUAL ITA•

TIIT!CI
Field goalt - !aatorn 17-et (.250), i·
point goalt 14·88 (.258), 3·polnt goala
3·13 {.231);TrlmDII 24•11 {.388), 2•polnt
goalt 18·58 {.321), 3·polnl [10111 l!o7
{.714); Frto tnrowo - Ellltrn 14-29
{.483), Trlmblo 11·25 {.440); Robounda
- Eattorn 37 {17 ofltnalvl, 20 dolln·
alvo) {tlovo~y MlllCIOn 9), Trimble 47 {21
oHonolve, 28 dolontlvo) {Hannah
.Horpor 11); Blookt - Eattorn 2
{Maxson 2), Trlmllla 5 (Siorro Lonlgor 2);
S!oolo- Eootern 11 {Emorl Connery 5),
Trlmblo 8 (Taylor Savage 5); 1\Jrnovert
-

Eastern 15, Trimble 22; Team Foula

- Eaatorn 17, Trimble 15.'

•'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'

QB icon Favre against the other Manning in NFC championship game
BY BARRY WILNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio State's
Jantel
Lavender, left,
posts up
against
Illinois' Jenna
Smith during
the second
half of a basketball game
Thursday in
Columbus.
Ohio State
beat Illinois
43-42.

www.mydailysentinel.com

GREEN BAY, Wis. - If
America's game has a quarterback, it has to be Brett
. Favre. And if America's
game has a kid brother quarterback, it has to be Eli
Manning.
. Favre is an icon not only
in Green Bay, where he has
. led the Packers to two Super
Bowls in 16 mostly su~cessful seasons, but throughout
pro football.
While it has not exactly
been a sentimental journey
· to Sunday's NFC championship game - there is little
room for sentiment in such a
rugged sport- Favre's trip
back to the NFL's pinnacle
has at least · been inspirationa!.
Who wouldn't be uplifted
by his tale? For the last two
years, No. 4 has toyed with
the emotions of everyone in·
· his adopted .state, plus the
folks back in his native
; Mississippi: Would he retire
or return? Were the off-field
troubles and tragedies, from
the deaths of his father and
wife Deanna's stepfather
and brother to Deanna's bout
with breast cancer, enough
to force him from the .game
he so clearly loves?
' . Each time, after weeks of
pandering 'his future, Favre
returned. Each of those sea· sons, the Packers were also-

rans.
They ' re anything but alsorans now, preparing io play
Manning and the Giants for
a trip to the Super Bowl.
Favre owns nearly all the
NFL's significant passing
records, and his· consecutive
starts streak is perhaps the
most · amazing of all: 274,
including postseason. .
Yet Favre remains a kid at
heart and a kid at play. And
gmteful for where he has
been, · where he is now, and
where he might be going.
"I would be lying if I said
I was not enjoying it," he
said. "But it has been what,
II years ... since we even
made it this far. So I don't
want io say that I got to a
point where I had forgotten
what that was like, or my
goals were not what they
used to be, but in some
respects it had kind of gotten
that way.
"I didn't get used to losing
·- we only had one losing
season - but we were far
removed, it seems like, from
that. So ihe standpoint that
we are back in it, this is my
fourth opportunity in a
championship game, what I
will say is that I appreciate
it. I don't want to say that I
savor the moment more, but
four tries in 17 years, and to
a certain degree that is better
than most guys.
"But I am very ·proud of
the fact that we have gotten

the game, maybe after a
pass, I am thinking, wow, I
am playing with Br.:tt Favre,
and that's something special,
and I'm definitely honored
·to be a part of it. But when
we're playing, he's another
quarterback. He 's a great
leader for us and we just take
advantage of it."
Leadership was not a word
often used in conjunction
.
with the younger Manning,
even though the Giants
made the playoffs the past
two seasons with him at
' quanerback. They lost in the
first round both times.
Eli has the unfortunate
, dilemma of nut being older
brother Peyton, and having
AP photo to play where the tabloids
Green Say Packers quarterback Brett Favre, right, passes and talk radio fanatics cut no
the ball . as he is pressured by New York Giants defensive slack. New York has not
end Michael Strahan (92) during first quarter NFL football been kind through Eli's
action at Giants Stadium in East Ruther.ford, N.J., in this growing process.
That the Big Apple · has
$ept. 16, 2007, file photo. The Giants and the Packers
become enamored of him
meet in the NFC Championship g~me on Sunday.
lately is nothing like the
this far."
his most efficient seasons. hero worship afforded
It's 11omewhat stunning'the His leadership is unques- Favre, of course. The love
Packers have gotten so far, if tioned,
particularly
in could turn back to venom as
only because of where they respect to a generally inex- soon as, well. Sunday night
were in early December perienced supponing cast, if the Giants fall shon of get2006: 4-8. But they won including · · young
wide ting a Manning to a second
their final four games of that receivers and running .backs. straight Super Bowl.
season, then went 13-3 and
"Well, in the middle of the
Manning isn ' t about to
manhandled Seattle in the game I' m not thinking that," examine his improved image
snow globe of Lambeau lead runner Ryan Grant said locally, ·or even get into what
Field last Saturday. ·
of the legend of Favre. Sunday's game· means Coach Mike McCarthy "There have been some even if it is the biggest chalhas reined in Favre's river- times when people really lenge of his. career.
boat gambler alter-ego just bring it to my attention.
"It is very cooL It is very
·enough that he had one of
" But after the fact, after exciting. You have to enjoy

it ," Manning said. "You
have to enjoy the whole situation of what it is, but again
you have to prepare yourself
and you have to get mentally
and physically ready to play
the game and look at it . for
what it is in this game. You
can' t alway&gt; look at the big
picture. You have to be
focused and be determined
to win this game .
"Just getting here is fun,
'but you want to win it also."
Favre
was
never
Manning's idol, even though
Eli
starred
for
the
Mi ssissippi Rebels in college and is very cognizant of
Favrh standing in the state.
Eli instead looked to his dad,
Archie, who :was the greatest
quarterback in Ole Miss history. And he '.s always had
Peyton to look up to.
Favre looks at Manning
and likes what he sees.
"It is no secret to you
guys, but he has caught a lot
of heat, not only frcim the
media but from the public,"
Favre said. "He just has the
same
demeanor
and
approach. and I can remember just saying that 'You
have handled things well,' "
after 'the Packers beat the
Giants in Week 2.
"!think he is a .fine player,
I thought he was then. I
think he has proven to people now that he is legit."

:Patriots defensive vets face former Chargers team in AFC tilt
BY HowARD ULMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
· -·. The last time Junior Seau.
played in an AFC champi-·
' onship ~arne, his team was
. given httle chance to beat
. 'the top seed.
In January 1995, the
. Steelers won their first play.
. off game in a rout, while the
, Chargers eked out a onepoint victory that set up the
._ matchup betwe~n those
teams the followmg week, end.
• . "Sitting in my hotel room
~in Pittsburgh and hearing all
the cheers and pep rallies
...tbat were going around and
all the Super Bowl videos
.that were being taped, every. . thin~ was against us," the
. l&gt;atnots linebacker said ..
~'The yellow towels were
flyjng around. It ·was definitely a time when we
ih m1ght we were against the
" Jr! d."
·
Hut San Diego won 17-13
in Pittsburgh then went on to
•one of the toughest losses in
•Seau's ·IS-year career, a 49. 26 rout by San Francisco in
·the Super Bowl.
· · Thirteen years later, the
Chargers aren't given much

of a chance against the perfeet Patriots on Sunday, the
day after Seau's .;39th birthday.
But he knows expectations
·can fall short. ·Didn't the
Patriots squander a 21-3 lead
in last year's AFC title game
and lose to Indianapolis, 3834?
So Seau and safety
Rodney Harrison, a rookie
on that 1994 Chargers team,
are working hard to avoid an
upset that can stop New
England's unbeaten season
one game short of another
Super Bowl appearance.
"I tell the youn~ guys,
'Don't take anythtng for
~ranted because at any point
m time it can be over with,
whether it's a season,
wliether it's a game, whether
it's your career,"' the 3Syear-old Hard son ·said
Thursday. "I think I have a
greater appreciation now
that I'm older:"
Seau sees many coinparisons between this year's
San Diego team and the one
in 1994 - the last two
Chargers clubs to reach the
AFC championship game. .
· "The maJor comparison ts
that they're confident," he
said. "We look forward to

moving on, growing every
day to tlie day it comes we
have to go out and perform."
Seau and Harnson will
play against the Chargers as
teammates for the first time
in. their long careers. Both
missed last season's 24-21
upset playoff win at San
Diego with injuries.
Sunday's game, then,
should have some special
emotions for them, especially since Seau is a native of
San Diego.
Right?
·
"I try not to get too Oprah
with it and know that it's just
another game and know that
I'm so happy for the city of
San Diego, my hometown,"
he said, but " it's going. to be
a challenge of the game of
football , nothing more."
Harrison, a fiery, hard-hitter like Seau, also prefers to
show his emotions on the
field .
·
"It's just special to be in
the AFC Championship,"
·Harrison said. "I don't know
necessarily
facing
the
Chargers makes it any more
special."
The Patriots have spent the
week building up the
Chargers as the best team in
the NFL since Thanksgiving.

They were. 5-5 before the win over the New York
holiday but 8-0 since then. · ·Giants in the regular-season
New England coach Bill finale .
Belichick likes to point . out
The Chargers' defense is
that his team .has won fewer younger with a knack for
games in that stretch. But creating turnovers. They led
that's .because they had a the NFL with 30 intercepplayofr bye and are 7-0 after tions and 48 takeaways then
Thanksgiving - but 17-0 added two interceptions and
overall.
one fumble recovery in last
San Diego coach Norv SundaY's 28-24 playoff win
Turner isn't surprised that at Indianapolis. All-Pro cor~
.Belichick fawned over the nerback
Antonio
Chargers.
Cromanie's 10 interceptions
"Everyone knows that led the league.
"It's remarkable the things
New England right now is
playing the best feotball in we've done defensively,"
the league and it's going to Turner said. "It seems like
be a real challenge for us," one guy tips (the ball) and it
Turner said. .
·
goes up in the air and one of
Tom Brady's 50 touch- our guys finds a way to get
down passes and Randy it."
Moss' 23 scoring catches are
The Patriots also have
NFL single-season record. some · pretty solid defensive
So are the 589 points the players.
Patriots scored.
Seau had three intercepBut the advanced age of tions and 3 1/2 sacks this
their defense may be catch- season and Harrison ended
ing up. They allowed three Jacksonville's hopes with an
scoring drives of at least 80 interception with just under
yards in last Saturday night's four minutes left. One more
31-20 playoff w·in over win, and the Patriots will
Jacksonville after giving up have a shot at their fourth
four tou.chdowns in a 38-35 championship tn seven

years.
That's a long way from
San Diego. Seau . and
Harrison left there ·after the
2002 season, when the
Chargers lost their last four
games to finish 8-8 and miss
the playoffs for the seventh
straight season. '
"Whether you want to
judge my play, whether you
want to judge the morale or
having the same people
there Jose and not making
any strides forward," Seau
said, "you have to look at
that and say, 'maybe it's
time to change."
Harrison went straight to
New England. Seau spent
the next three seasons with
Miami and is in his second
with New England .
On Sunday, for the first
time in 13 seasons, they'll
play again as teammates in
an AFC championship game.
"It's a lot of hype around
this game and deservedly so,
but, at the same time, it's a
football game," Harrison
said. "It doesn't matter what
we've done in the past."

2008 Meigs Co·unty Visitors Guide

:Patriots coach Bill Belichick backs wide
;receiver Randy Moss over restraining order
FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
· (AP) New · England
:Patriots
coach
Bill
. Belichick expressed strong
support Thursday for wide
feceiver Randy Moss, · the
: ~ubject of a temporary
. restraining order obtained
by a longtime friend.
· Belichick said he wasn't
· coric~rned about the allegation brought by Rachelle
Washington that • Moss
:committed battery or about
·how it might a,ffect Moss
on Sunday in the AFC
championship game against
·the San Diego Chargers.
· Washington 's attorney
. issued
a.
statement
. Thursday saying that Moss'
representatives were the
first to 'suggest that Moss
: pay the woman to keep the
issue quiet, according to
NBCSports.com . The attor. ney, David McGill, and
Moss' agent, Tim DiPiero,
did not returns telephone
·t:alls from The Associated
Press.
·' ·on Wednesday,
. Moss
·said that suggest tOn came
from her side and totaled
·"six figures ." He called it
!•a situation of extortion."
: No criminal charge has
been brought.
· · Belichick spoke briefly
:on questions about the matter Thursday. ,
·~ think Randy's covered

those and I've talked to
Randy about it, and I support Randy I00 percent,''
he said.
Moss spent about I 0 minutes in front of his locker
on Wednesday vehemently
denying the allegations.
On Monday, the .. temporary restraining order was
issued in Broward County,
Fla., ordering Moss to stay
at least 500 feet from the
home of Washington, who
alleged he committed "battery ... causing serious
injury" to her at her home
in Fort Lauderdale on Jan.
6, the Sunday of the
Patriots playoff bye week.
A hearing on issuing a
permanent restraining order .
is scheduled for 3 p.m. Jan .
28, · six days before the
Super Bowl.
.
Moss said the woman has
been a friend of his for II
years and that she asked for
"six figures " for what he
said wa&amp; an accident in
which she was hurt.
Washington , 35, alleged
they had been in an "intimate relationship" since
1997.
·
Her attorney's statement
said she · "has cared deeply
for Mr. Moss and has been
there for him throughout all
of his trials and tribulations" over the past II
years and didn't intend to

hurt Moss.
"However, she has surfered mental and physical
harm as a result of his
actions," the statement
said. "She simply wants
fiim to take responsibility
for what he has done. As a
battery victim , she has
shown
great
strength
throughout this entire
ordeal.
"Ms. Washington has
been unfairly characterize&lt;:~
as someone simply seeking
financial 'gain. In fact, it
was Mr. Moss' representalives who first contacted
our office to offer a 'six
figure' settlement with
hopes of not havmg th1s
incident become public
record."
Washington also alleged
that Moss refused to allow
her to seek medtcal treatmen't. Moss denied that.
Mcqill 's s~atement did not
spectfy an InJury.
"He has acknowledged .
that he was at Ms.
Washington's Florida residence and that he was
'g uilty' of an 'accident'
which occurred," the statement said . "However, Mr.
Moss fails to mention how
his reckless and degrading
conduct rendered Ms.
Washington unable to drive
her vehicle to seek medical
attention."

-------------·-----

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OR ORGANIZATION INClUDED
.DEADliNE JANUARY 3f, 2008

eatt
·

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2155
The Dail Sentinel
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�J

•
Friday, January

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. Friday, January 18, 2008

18, 2008

GoLEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOS IU N
:\1\ P t\ lth'

•

World Serie'
L&lt;lllell is willtng to gi\c blood tf that's
\\hat it t.tkcs to ,be IC&gt;Ied for
hum an ~nm th ho rmone .
But nnly- i(the tc" is I00
pcrcclll· aLTUra tc . Not '1'1
pcrL'Cnl.
"If u \ lJ&lt;J perce nt accurate. that\ go ing to be seven
f•tl sc positil'es." the Red
Sox thtrd baseman said
ThursJal' bdorc the annual
J inncr oi't ltc Boston chapter
nf the Baseball Writers'
!l"oc iat to n ol America.
"N tnct y- th ree percent is 70
guys. That"s almost three
"hole ro' tcrs .
"You 're Jcstroying someone\ reputation . What if
one of the false posttives is
Cal Ripkcn ·• Doesn't 1t put a
black m•ul on his career'!"
A respected vo ice in the
Red Sox dubhouse who
w•tsn't mentioned in the
Mitchell Report. Lowell
nnne[he le s~

came llnder sus-

picion in 2005 when. in the
first year of testing in baseball. he went through the
worst slump of his career.
Two strong years since
then - including hi s World
Series performance in 2007
- have qttieted the whispers that he struggled
· because he was off the juice.
"I'm not sensitive to it,
because I'm secure in what
\'\'c done." he said. "B ut

baseball player' are put on a
different stage."
LDwe\1 noted that San
Diego Chargers linebacker
Shawne Merriman was suspended after testing positive
for the steroid nandrolone,
but was elected to the Pro
Bowl anyway. Patriots safety Rodney Harrison reported ly admitted rec.eiving
human growth hormone and
was suspended four games,
but he's still popular in New
England.
·
"I don' t know Shawne
Merriman. I d.o n't' know
Rodney Harrison. But nothing was made of it," Lowell
said , noli ng that Patriots
fans were more concerned
how
Harrison's
about
abse nce would affect the
team.
Lowell acknowledged that
part of baseball 's problem
was self-inflicted: By fightmg any kind of testing for
years , the sport allowed
itself to be tainted in the
public mind. But he stood
by the players association
and said union head Donald
Fehr was concerned about
the pri vacy and accuracy of
the tests, not in protecting
..
users .
Fehr and commissioner
Bud Selig were called
before Congress this week
· to e~plain' the sport's efforts
performanceto
fight
enhancing drugs. Lowell
will follow them to
Washington : He and manag-

er Terry Francona have been
invited to a baseball-themed
dinner with President Bush
at the White House.
Lowell received
the
Thomas A. Yawkey Award
at Thursday night's dinner,
adding a Red Sox MVP to
the one he earned at the
World Series. Others honored by the Boston chapter
of the BBWAA :
-Longtime coach and
scout Dick Berardino as the
winner of the Judge Emile
Fuchs Award for long and
meritorious service to baseball.
. -Francona, as manager
of the year.
- Cleveland Indians general manager Mark Shapiro
as major league executive of
the year.
- Red Sox s~co nd baseman Dustin Pedroia, as the
AL and Red Sox rookie of
the year.
- Red Sox pitcher Jon
Lester, as the winner of the
'Tony Conigliaro Award for
courage in overcoming
adversity.
Lowell, also a cancer survivor, won the Conigliaro
award in 2000.
It's been a busy offseason
for him.
A high-priced castoff of
the Florida Marlins who was
dumped on the Red Sox in
the Josh Beckett trade in
2005, Lowe\1 hit 21 homers
last season while reaching
career highs with a .324

- Sentinel - l\e
·C L A S S I F I E D

Galli a
County
OH

'
E-mail
: • classified@ mydailytribune.com

PET,EJ

ASSPC IATED iiRESS

PALM DESERT, Calif.
- D.J . Trahan shot an Sunde r 64. and Robert
Gamez had a 65 Thursd~y
to lie rm the lead after two
roumb nf the Bob Hope
Cht y·' let-' Class ic .
Tra han began the day
" ''h a string of four birdies
am! had JUSt one bogey to
go to \ 3- under 131 through
J(, hol es of the 90- ho\ e
tournament.
Gamet tu rned in a bogeyfree rou nd . The co- leaders
playet.l at La Quinta
Cou ntry Cluh. one of fmtr
course s u&gt;ed for the first
fo ur rountb.
. Wind " often is a !actor
lfl the Hope and Ttahan was
happy to scme well desp ite
~ollie gu~ l ~.

"It was de finllely a httle
btl toug h toda y. The wind
wa-. hlowm g uver here. But

1l'm ) obv iou sly, very
pleased with the round like
that in these conditions."
Trah an's qui ck start
L'l llt\d ha ve been eve n better
- ht' mi ssed a short btrdle
try on his J'ifth ·hole.
"But I mean. four birdies
to start the day. w h"t more
could you ask''" he said.
The 27-vear-6 \d Trahan ,
heginning- hi&gt; fourth year
on the 1011r. is looking for

hi s second title. He got his
first win at the Madison,
Miss., event in 2006.
Gamez described his
round as "just solid golf."
"I had some chance the
last couple holes and just
didn' t capitalize. but 0Veral\ it was pretty good," he
said.
The 39-year-old Gamez.
in the Hope on an exemption. is a three-time winner
on the tour but doesn't have
a victory since 2005 . He
finished last ye'ar at 132nd
on the money list with
$693 ,464, far below his
best season in 2003, when
he earned $I .5 million.
He said he found out a
couple of weeks ago that he
would get an exemption for
the Hope.
"I would have hated
mi ssing this tournament,"
Gamez said. "it's in my top
five of the year on the tour,
and I just love playing it
and I Jove being here ."
Justin Leonard, the 2005
champion, had a 64 at La
Quiiua and was one shQ( off
the pace, with Steve
Elkington's 68 at PGA
West leaving him another
stroke back.
Joe Durant, who set the
tournament record of 36under 324 in 2001, began
the second round in a fiveway tie for the lead, but had

a 73 at SilverRock Resort
to drop into a tie for 2 I st.
The other four players
who held a share of the
opening-day lead fell back
during the second round.
Tim Petrovic had a 70 and
was tied for fifth. Omar
Uresti (72) Mathew Goggin
(73) and Siege Maruyama
(76) dropped back into tHe
pack.
Petrovic, Goggin and
at
Maruyama
play ed
SilverRock, bein g used in
the Hope for the first time.
Uresti playeJ at La Quinta.
Tbe first four rounds of
the tournament are a proam, with' pros only playing
Sunday 's final round at the
Classic Club .
Notes: Leonard said he
enjoyed his round, when he
played with rockers Alice
Cooper and Meat Loaf and
longtime Hope participant
Skeeter Holt. " It's a nice
relaxing atmosphere and
it 's fun to be here."
Leonard said . .. . Defending
champion
Charley
Hoffman had a 72 and was
tied for 42nd .... . David
Duval , who had a tour
record-tying 59 on the final
day to win the Hope in
1999, was tied at I26th next to last - after the second day this time, with
cards of 73 -77.

JoHN

PYE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MELBOURNE. Australia
- Serena Williams' only
hi ccup in her four prevtous
tnps t11 the Australian Open
was in the lhird round.
The Jcfcnding champion
crosseJ that minor mental
b:trrier on Friday with a 6-3 ,
6-4 win over Victoria
Azarenka 6-3 , fi-4 to reach
the lourth round, improving
her. record to 26- I at
Melbourne Park since - the
&gt;tart of 2003.
1\er third-round loss to
Daniela Hantuchova in 2006
\\as sandwt ched between
two tit les here. Sjlc also won
in 2003. hut ~ kipped the
2004 tournamen t with
tnJU lleS.
Ju stine Hcnin. the 2004
champion. also continued an
impresstvc run at Melhourne
Park on FriJay. beating
25th-secJed
Francesca·
Schia vo ne 7-.'i, 6-4.. It was
her 11 st coilsecu ti ve match
win and imprt&gt;ved her record
in Melbourne to 15- 1 ,;nee
, O.f.

WiJ\i a ms.
who
was
un&gt;ccdcd anJ ranked No I
when she heat then top-seed-

'

ed Maria Sharapova here
last year to claim her eighth
Grand Slam title, fired 15
aces and had a stretch of
seven service games in
which she yielded only six
points to Azarenka.
Williams also was painting the lines with her
groundstrokes, contributing
to 29 winners. When she
made her 25 unforced errors,
it was usually was by a matter of inches.
"I feel pretty good about
where I am," she said.
"Hopefully. I'll peak later in
the tournament."
Williams will face No. 12
Nicole Vaidisova, a 6-3, 6-4
winner ·aver Japan's Ai
Sugiyama 6-3, 6-4 in the
fourth round. Williams had
to save set points in a semifinal against Vaidisova here
last year.
''Obviously, it doesn't get
much tougher than that,"
Vaidisova said of the fourthround
match . against
Williams. "She's a great
champion, a great fighter.
"I' ll definitely have to
ha ve my A game on."
No. 5 Sharapova beat one
fellow
Russian,
Elena
Vesnina 6-3, 6-0 on Friday,

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, *POLICIES*

l\egi!iter

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Dally ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon
In Next Day"e P•per
5~~:~:~~~ In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Fl
For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.m. to s:oo

•

I

Sentinel

.

Word Ads

Boston Red Sox third baseman Mike Lowell, winner of the Thomas A. Yawkey Red Sox MVP
Award/ Tommy McCarthy Good Guy Award, listens to a question prior to the 69th Boston
Baseball Writers' Banquet in Boston on Thursday. Lowell is willing to give blood if that's
what it takes to be tested for human growth ~ormone. But only if the test is 100 percent
accurate, not 99 percent.
Reminded that he also
average and 120 RBis. He But when asked for anythen batted .400 (6-for- I 5) thing special th.at has come received a special invitation
during Boston's four-game his way because of his post- to the White House this
World Series sweep of the season prowess, Lowell month (the rest of the team
Colorado Rockies, with four gushed about a photo shoot will probably go in
February), Lowell laughed.
RBis, three walks and a with actress Rene Russo.
"I put that ahead of the
"I don't think if I went 1team-high six runs .
His performance earned for-'I7 in the World Series I president?" he said. "Well, I
him a three-year, $37.5 mil- would have done that," he don't think George Bush. is
going to be hugging me .":
lion contract in November. said.

Websites :
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.coni
www.mydailyregister.com

(740} 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

Vacations-FT/PT

I

BUSINESS

OPPotm!Nm

~

For sale by owner. 3BR
Ranch, t ' balh , Family
Room, Stove/Fridge, W/0 .
mcluded Ask1ng $70,000
Call 740·709·6339

N&amp;uonwtoe ~Ullom
Homos

Wanted
Builder/Dealer

House for sale In Racine
area. APprox. 4 acr'es, all
740-222-tOJt
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms. living room, din·
1ng room , kitchen, large fam ·
eNOTICEe
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· . ily room , central a1r, gas heat
lNG CO. recommends and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
that you do business with large 'Florida room com·
people you know, and pletely cedar opens onto
NOT to send money patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
through the matl until you ground pool enclosed by pn·
have investigated Ihe vacy fencmg and land·
scaped. Finished 2 car
offering.
garage attached to house
and fin1shed &amp; heated 3 car
MONEY
garage
unattached.
L.~--·roiiliLoliiiiAN
__,_ EKcellent condition ready to
,
move in. $255,000.00, Call.
(740)949·22t7
DemS.r @Mght.net

i

I

**NOTICE**

Renl · IO own, owner
financed, 4 BA, 3 ba, 2
kitchens, gas heat, central
atr, $5000 down and
$530.77/month. Will act:ept
lrades. 740-339·3224

Borrow Smart Contact
Ihe OhiO DIVISIOn ot
Institution's
Financial
OHice of Consumer
Aff.:urs BEFORE you refi~
nance your home or
oblaln a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
tees or Insurance. Call the
Office at Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lender
IS
properly
licensed. (Th1s is a public
service announcement
from the Ohto Valley
Publishing Company)

t

MOBILE HoMES
FORS.oU.E

I

$199 Month!

New 2008 Singlewlde
Midwest 740·828·2750
Ot Clayton t6x60 MH, 3BR ,
2BA, All appliances stay inc
WID New carpet LRfhall. 20'
covered patio. 16)(12ft back
deck. Too many extras to list
Must see to appreciate On
rented lat. can stay or be
moved. (740)245-5639

Point. E.~ecellent verbal, writ· • PerfOf'm computer data Motor
Route
Carner
1·866·542-1531
ten, mathematic and organt·
Mtnersvllle,
Syracuse, ____u_s_w_A--c--zatton sktlls a must.
entry
Racine. Part-time work FullConstruction site e)(perience
• Conespond wtth
Retail Managenal Personnel
lime pay $1250·$ 1350 mo. position awilable Must be
a
plus.
Qualified
candidates
insurance
companies
.
Contact
Steve
Lush
Daily
PR.OJoESW&gt;NAL 114x65 - Graham Grandville·
4x4'a For S11ie .............................................. 725
1
t
trustworthy, dependable with
Pease ex an updated
• Asslslln accounts
Sentinel 740-992-2 155. 111 excellent customer service
St:KVIl'lS
Redman MH. Includes stove
Announcement ............................................ 030
resume to 614-716-2272,
Court Street, Pomeroy,
&amp; t0Mt2 out bldg. Localad
AnUquaa .................. , .................................... 530
nola
Constructton
Assistant
receivable
proce.
d
ures
Ohio.
skills
Dnvers
License,
auto
A
Celebration
of
on lot #2 Quail Creek
Ap11rlmenta for Rent ................................... 440
tns. and drug testing
TURNED DOWN ON
Ltfe
....
Overbrook
Center.
on cover page. EOE
• Accurately fMe and
-Otl-ic_e_w_o_rk. $6-p-er_h_o-ur. 3-2 required. Send resumes to SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? Asking $9000 740·245·
Auction 1ncf Flu Mlrket.............................080
located at 333 Page Street,
0£3t
Auto Perla &amp; Acce11ortea .......... ................ 760
maintain patient med1cal
CLA BoK .!Ql, clo Gallipolis
No Fee Unless We Wmt
hOurs a week, no weekends.
Middleport, Ohio IS pleased ECHO I VASCUCAR TECH
Auto Repair..................................................770
records
Tribune, PO Box 469,
1-888·582-3345
computer skills a must, good
2008 . sectional home 3
to announce we are accept- FT or PT positton available.
Auloll tor Sate ..............................................710
Jab requirements include: with public, subm11 resume Gallipolis, OH 45631 ·
Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
ing
appltcation~ for the fol- (M·F) Outpallenl Diagnostic
Boata &amp; Motors for Sail ............................. 750
Center
Applicant
should
be
lowing positions to iom our
• Excellent time
with 3 reference~· PO BoiC Trainer P o s i ! l o n r
!!e~
and set up $38,695. 740·
10:--~---.,
Building Supplles........ ................................550
655, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Are you mterested in a
HOMES
385-9948.
friendlY and dedicated staff: registered or regtstry altgl·
lluelntls and Buildings ............................. 340
• Excellent computer
FOR SALE
-------Full iime 7PM·7AM Nurse bla. Minimal travel between
rewarding poSition? PAIS is
Buelneoo Opportunlly.................................210
skills, exp'enence W!lh
Ohio Operating Engineers cunently seeking a part time
2008 sectional home 3
offices. Full benelits avail·
and
Part·t1me
Nurses,
both
Bulineu Tl'lllntng ......................... .............. 140
Microsoft Ofttce SUite a
Apprenticeship &amp; Training staff tor Mason and Point 0 down payment. 4 bed· Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
able lor FT appl1cants
sh1fts.
Applicant's
must
be
campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
must
Program
Pleasant, WV providing resi· rooms. Large yard. Covered and set up $38,695. 740dependable, team players Compensation baseet on
Clmplng Equlpmenl .........:......................... 780
"ocaltB
385 9946
axpa~ence. Call 304·522·
with
positive
attitudes
to
J
Oin
• OME billing experience
dential/commun1ty skit! train- deck Atta ched gatage 740· __
- __
. ----Card• of Thanka ......,••\,,.............................. 010
4.vear Apprenticeship
7000
to
schedule
Interview.
us tn providtng outstandtng,
is a plus
20Q8APf!ICAT!ONPATES ing with, Individuals with 367·7'129.
95 Single Wide 14x60, 2
Child/Elderly Care ........................ ............... 190
quality care to our residents.
Electrlcai/Refrtgoratton ......................... :.....840
his Is a great opportunl
Jan. 28.29.30 &amp; Feb 7,6,9 MR!DD GHEtgh school ddipNio· - - - - - - - - bed, 1 bath &amp; all eppl
Stop by and fill out an applt· ECSONASCULAR TECH· or a very organized lndl
0 requ~re · 0 3br, 1ba, located on fl.t 2 N $8700. 740·208-1535
9:00am to 3:00pm
me or
Equlpmenl for Rent .....................................480
cation
or
conta&lt;;;t
Hollie
NICIAN:
Full-time
or
Part·
idual
who
is
setf
rnotlvat
Operating
En{Jineers
experience
necessary. 304·895· 3129
ExcavoUng ................ ,.................................. 830
Bumgarner, LPN, Staft time pos11ion available. (M·
build
a
career
path
whtt
era
the
men
and
women
Criminal
background
che~
Inventory blow·out sale, s1n·
Farm Equtpmenl ......................................... .610
0
Development F) Outpahent Diagnostic
evelopmg relationship
whO operate and repair
required Must have reliable ~:~do3 sl:thFI:~ sqo~ gles, doubles &amp; mods.
Farm• for Rent.. ........................................... 430
Coordinator@ 740-992-6472 Center Applicant should be
tlh t...._ patients and famt
the equipment that builds tran$1)ortat10n and valid auto
Payments from $299 and up.
Farms for Sate .............. ............................... 330
and come see for yoursetf registered or registry eligi· ies w'; serve! Competiti
Amerlcal
insurance . Paid tralmf1g. Clearwater lstand. Water slip 16 Homes to choose from 0
For Leaoe ....................................:................ 490
the difference you can make ble. Minimal travel between
age, great benefits, and
"Earn Aa You Laam"
Hourly rate start1ng at $7- ~J:rage ,Must sell! 446- down. (740)446-3093 or
For Sale ........................................................585
at Overbrookltl EOE &amp; a local offices. Full benefits earn environment are al
We wilt be accePting
$8 DO/hOur Please call 1
866-564·8679.
For Sale or Trade .................... ..................... 590
partlctpant of the drug·free available. foi" full-time appli· nctuded in this eiCcitin
applicat1ons with a $10.00 304-373-1011 or toll free 81 _ _ _A
_n_o-nt-lo-nl_ _ _ - - - - - - - FruHo &amp; Vegetabteo .....................................
t -Bn&lt;l73· tOt1 .
NEW 2008 4 BA·2BA
workplace program.
canls Compensation based
Furnt••ed Roome ........................................ 450
./ cash non-refundable fee, at ------,--,-,-:-- Local company oftenng "NO
1,700+ sq ft $49,989
rear. •
on
experience.
Call
304·
General Haullng........................................... 850
y in person at.
the followmg location '
Wait person needod. Must DOWN PAYMENr proMidwest 740.828·2750
A Local Manufacturer is 522·7000 to schedule inter·
GIVHWIIJ......................................................040
Fomlly Oxygen and
Logan Training Center
be dep,ndable and avaitable grams for you to buy your
looking for EXPERIENC~D view
. Happy Ado ................................................... ,050
Mtdle.ll Equipment
30410 Str8wn Roed · lor any sh1h. experience IS home •nstead of renting.
New 3 Bedroom homes from
Welders, and Laborers that
Hay &amp; Gratn .................................................,640
Log~~n, OH 43138·
optional, smiles are manda· • 1oo% fm8ncing'
$214 .36 per month,lncludes
70 Pine Street
can operate mduslrial EMpenanced lineman lor
Help Wanled .................................................110
Gotttpollo,,OH 45e3t
1..ea&amp;-385-2567
tory. COme and be a part of • Less than perfect d edit many upgrades, delivery &amp;
machinery. Apply in person telephone work, local work, NO hone Cilia
Home tmprovemente ...................................81 0
EOE
a winning team. Apply in accepted
set-up. 1740)365-2434
at King KuHer II , 2150 home fNery night, tun ttme, L.::~:=::..:;::::,~::=~
Homeo for Sale ............................................ 310
-Oh-io-Va_ll_ey_Ho_m_e-He-a-Rh.
person
at
the
Holiday
Inn
•
Payment
could
be
the
Nice used 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Eastern AVe., Galftpoils. No only experienced linemen Housekeeper wanted to
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
hi
STNA
CNA.
front
desk
No
phone
calls
.same
as
rent.
Home
$ 5995 delivered 740•
phone calls please.
HouHI for Renl .......................................... 410
wtll be considered. send clean house 1 or 2 days a 1nc
r1ng
'
· 1
Mortgage •
Locators.
Home
Health
Aides
and
Pease
385·
7671
In Memortam ................................................ 020
~------- resume to: Daily Sentlnet, week 1live lh GaNia County,
(740)367-0000
A Meigs County Office ts P.O. Box 729~31 , Pomeroy, close to town. Gall 740·645· Personal Care Atdes Full, Welders needed 1yr experitnourance .................................... ................. 130
ANDBUSINBUILDINGS~
Par t Time and Per Diem ence Good wages &amp; bene·
Lewn &amp; O.rden Equlpment ........................ 660 looking for a part lime office Oh 45769
4300.
pos1tions available. Apply fits. Send resumes to: CLA
Llveltock...................................................... 630 heJp to work 15+1- hours a
LOIIInd Found ........................................... 060 .week. Must be presentable - - - - - - - - Local Housmg Compatiy at 1460 Jackson Pika. Box 103, c/o Gallipolis Daily
Two Story Appartmen t
and have office skills Please
FEDERAL
••eking
Full-lime Gallipol~. phone 441-1393 Tribune, PO Bo• 469,
Lots &amp; Acl'llsge............................................ 350
Bu11ding
For Sate $29,000
send
resumes
listmg
ab11i·
POSTAL
JOBS
Experienced
Servtce
for
Skilled
Office
or
apply
al
Mlecelllnoous ..............................................170
GallipoliS, OH 45831
304-882·2793 or 304-882ttes and sktlfs to The Daily $17.33-$27.581llr., now hlr· Technician. Send resume to· 1456 Jackson Pike, phone
Mlecetllnoous MerchondiH .......................540
Sotooui
All real e1tate advtrtlt,lng 2326 after 6pm
Sentinel. PO BoK 729-39, ing For appllcBiion and tree CLA Box 104, cia GallipoliS 441 -9263
for
Mobile Home Repatr .................................... li&amp;O
In this newtp.,... 11
INstKUCDON
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
governement job info, call Tribune, PO Box 469, Passpori/Prtvate
Care
Mobile Home• tor Rent... ............................ 42D
sub)ect to 1ht Federal
Ottice.Competitive Wage s
Mobile Homes for Sate................................320
American Assoc. ot Labor t· Gallipolis. OH 4563t
Fair Housing Act of 1918
MoniiJ to L01n ............................................. 220 · An Excellent way to earn 9t3-599-8226, 24/hffi. amp _ _:__ _ _ _ __ and Benefits lndudi ng Goltlpolla Co,_ Collogo
wt'llch male" 1t Illegal to
Lf!L2 Weekend Mldnlghl~. health
money The New Avon.
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
msuranc:e
and (Csreers Close To Home)
serv
3 acres of Land tor Sale on
advet11tl ''any
2
Other
Shifts
(Eve.,
Day
or
Call
Marilyn
304-862·2645
Mustest lntlrumenta ................................... 570
m11eage reimbursement.
Call Today1740-446·4367,
Sandhill Ad $25.000. 304prefertncs, limitation or
Foatar Parente Netded Combination) EMpertence tn
Poroonalo ................... ..................................005
· 1-600-2t4-0452
discrimination baud on
695·3929
Regional
,
Pneumatic
Tanker
Appalachian Tire Products, $30 _548 8 d8.y with paid Geriatrics a Plus. Rate of
Palo for Sale ........... ..................................... 560
WtiW.gollipoNcareereollege com
rKt, color, religion, HX
Inc. Is current"• seeking an
Pay . Competitive, Patd &amp; OTA driving Positions: Aocred•ted Membe r Accred1hng familial stalld or national Approx . 1 a·cre on east
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... 820
''
respite, Training begins
Profeostonli Sarvlces ................... .......... .... 230
A·2 Service Tech for our January 26 _ Albany. Ci!ll Vacation, Benefits Available, R&amp;J Tn;ck.ing Company In Councd lor Independent College• origin, or any Intention to Bethel ' Road - No septic.
and Schools 12748
. .'
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Rep8tr ............................... 180
~nt Pleasant, WV loca't1on Oasts Foster Care to regis· Discounts, Non-Mandatary Marietta. Ohio is searching
mtka any auch
ClOse to town &amp; schools.
IIIII Eo- Wanled ..................................... 360
WagesbasedoneMpenence ter: Toll Free 1_877 _325 • Shtfts.
Immediate lor qualified COL A. Drivers It
WANTFD
p~ , limitation or
St3000. 740-446-93B3
and benBt1ts tncludlng 401 K.
Avai lability
~nterested to operate Semi-Dumps,
Schootllnotructlon ..................................... 150
dlec:rlmlnttlon."
To
Do
1558
Health Insurance. and Paid
·
Applicants May Apply VIa Pneumatic Bulk Tankers for
8MCI, Plllnt &amp; Feri1Hzer .............................. 650
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
Thla ntwap.sper will not
Vacation are atso available. - - - - -- - - Facslmlle0(304)273·9236 both regional and . OTR EKp mothar ol 6 &amp;
Sltuallono Wanled ....................................... 120
RENT, 1031 Georges Cre,k
Oualil1ed
knowtngly acc.pl
Valid CDL Required Please PAIS 18 seeking...
or Via Malt 0 LPN. 1113 opportunities.
Splice for Rent ............................................. 480
Ad, 44t· tttt
Grandmother of 10 wou ld
adwertiHmenta for rul
apply 1n person. Fpr any LPN : administer/m ontier Washmgton
St , applicants mu&amp;t be at least
Sporting Goods ........... .. .............................. 520
like to care lor your Child tn
I, I \. I I I "
aslllt• which Ia In
Information contact Teddy patten! medication prepare- Ravenswood, WV 26164 23 ~rs , have a mlnlrTl.lm ot 1
SIJV'I tor Sale ................................. ............. 720
my hOme weekdays. Ha'o'e
V'iolttlon
of
the
law.
Our
Trucko for Sale ....................................... ,.... 715 Lambert @ (304)675-3930. !ion tor mdlvldua\s Wllh Interviews Conducted Soon . years of safe· commerical ret. 11 you need them. 645rwders are hsr.by
de~~elopmental d1sabl1lties In Respond Immediately For driving el(perience, Haz Mat
Uphololery ................................................... 870
763t
Informed lhlt all
V.no For Sate............................................... 730
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or Clition, WV. $13·$15 per Consideration. References Certillcatlon, Clean MVA
ctwelllngt .twrtleed In
hour
based
on
experie~.
Required.
end good Job SlebYIIy. We
Wsntod to Buy ............................................. 090
SaiL Shirley Spears, 304·
Ifill lltWIPIPir IN
Please call (304) 373·t0tt
ofMr a full slate of benefits
Wanted lo Buy- Firm Suppttu .................. 620
675-t429
nalt.ble on an -t~.A~ol
or
toll
free
at
1
·677
·373·
ptus 401 {k) and vacation
Wanted To 00 .............................................. 180 '
1 possible 2br HoUse In New
opponunlty beHt.
pay. For Information 0011tact
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Haven, total electric. No
Earn up to $1200.00 per tOtt.
Kent at 800·462·9365 or
Yard Site- O.lllpolla.............................., ..... 072
Pel$, $300/mon $300/ctep
week, become a· foster ---~---Duplex lot Sale on Land 304·862-3652
v1sit our web site at
'1'1rd S.I•Pomeroy/Midclle......................... 074
parent. Contact Shelly al Person lor live in with elderly
Contract. 74D-992·5858.
wwwnnycklna com E.O.E.
Yard S.I•Pt. Pteauni ................................ 076
(740)794-&lt;!248 for delails. lady. Call740·367-7t29

CLASSIFIED INDEX

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items.To $480/wk Matenars
provided! Free InIormatiOn
• '"'9
pkg . 24Hr. Bot -42lr"tY"t

i

1

AP pholo

D.J. Trahan checks out the leader board before putting out on the 18th green during the

second round of the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic golf tournament at SllverRock Resort In La
Qu.i nta, Calif. , Thursday, . Trahan shot an S-under-par 64 for a two-day score of 13 under
par.

Defending champion Williams, top-ranked Henin advance to 4th round
BY

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

1'0 Place

Tra;han, Robert Gamez move into tie for lead at Hope Classic

• BY KEN

ter

I

•

•

D~J.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

~ribune

World Series MVP Lowell says he would submit to HGH test
BY JIMMY

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

and face s another in the myself"
fourth round after No: II
After retiring from the
Elena Dementieva beat 2006 Australian final against
Israel's Shahar Peer 6-2, 6-0. Amelie Mauresmo' because
Sharapova struggled early, 'of a stomach illness; Henin
getting broken twice, then skipped the event last year
ran off the last nine games to becausCo she was going
down Vesnina, who was in through a divorce.
constant trouble oti her own
She has dominated the
serve after holding in the · women's tour since returnfirst game.
ing, finishing 63-4, includSharapova had I I winners ing two majors and the sea, to only five unforced errors son-ending championship,
in the second set, breaking in 2007. She added the
Vesnina for the seventh con- Sydney International title
secutive .time to end the last week to b'uild up for
match.
Melbourne Park.
No . 3 Jele'na Jankovic,
She got only 48 percent of
who had io save match her first serves and had her
points in her first-round serve broken three times,
match, had a -lapse in the and was lucky it didn't cost
second set and a code viola- her more against Schiavone.
tion for coaching in the sec"It was really exciting. I'm
ond game of the third set of ·glad to win in two," Henin
a 6-2,4-6,6-1 win over No. satd . "She's always given
30 .Virginie Razzano of me trouble in the past, so it
France. ,
was a tough third round for
Henin will play Taiwan's me."
Hsieh Su-wei , who beat. Men '. s No. 4 Nikolay
Aravane Rezai 6-2. 6-7 ·(3), Da vydenko beat France's
6-4 in the thinj round.
Marc Gicquel 6-3, 6-2, 6-3
"I hate to look too far," and next faces No . 14
Hen in said. "I just want to Mikhail Youzhny, a 6-2, 6-4,
get ready, improve my game 6-2 winner over Croatia's
and be in my best shape. I lvo Karlovic.
know the draw, but I like to
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga had a
concentrateJ
on straight sets win over
sta y

Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of not apologize for the video
Spain.
in a statement released
Marcos Baghdatis downed Friday in response to criti2005 champion Marat Salin cism from ·Melbourne's
6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 3-6, 6-2 in a Turkish-Cypriot community,
momentum-swinging match saying. he wanted to concenthat started Thursday and trate only on the temiis.
stretched into Friday mornCyprus has been divided
lng and completed the sec- along ethnic lines since
ond round.
I974.
Safin was the last player to
The International Tennis
beat top-ranked Roger · Federation and Tennis
Federer in Melbourne, Australia both said they
breaking up the Swiss star's would not be making any
four Australian· titles. with a comment.
semifinal upset three years
Federer, aimin·g for a third
ago.
straight Australian title, won
. Baghdatis is one of three the last 10 games in a 6-1. 6\ostng Australian Open 2, 6-0 ·win over Fabrice
finalists still in contention Santoro on Thursday, ending
- a list that will certainly be the 35-year-old Frenchman's
reduced in the third round . record 62nd major in the
He will play 2005 runner-up second round.
Lleyton
Hewitt
next.
He has reached the finals
Fernando Gonzalez, who of the last· 10 Grand Slam
lost last year's champi- tournaments and won eight
onship match, is still in the of them, losing twice to
equatiOn. ·
Rafael Nadal at the French
Video of Baghdatis, a Open.
Greek Cypriot, holding a
Nadal and Roddick are
flare and reportedly yelling into the third round and
"Turks Out," emerged in the playing later Friday. Nadal
Australi[\11 n'1edia on Friday, faces No. 28 Simon Gilles
10 months after it was post- and ,sixth-seeded Roddick is
ed on a video sharing Web against
Philipp
site.
'
Kohlschreiber in .a night
Th~ 2006 runner-tlp did match .
~

..

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I'~

II

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I
I

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER IN
THE CLASSIREDS

i

I'

'

I

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•
Friday, January

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. Friday, January 18, 2008

18, 2008

GoLEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOS IU N
:\1\ P t\ lth'

•

World Serie'
L&lt;lllell is willtng to gi\c blood tf that's
\\hat it t.tkcs to ,be IC&gt;Ied for
hum an ~nm th ho rmone .
But nnly- i(the tc" is I00
pcrcclll· aLTUra tc . Not '1'1
pcrL'Cnl.
"If u \ lJ&lt;J perce nt accurate. that\ go ing to be seven
f•tl sc positil'es." the Red
Sox thtrd baseman said
ThursJal' bdorc the annual
J inncr oi't ltc Boston chapter
nf the Baseball Writers'
!l"oc iat to n ol America.
"N tnct y- th ree percent is 70
guys. That"s almost three
"hole ro' tcrs .
"You 're Jcstroying someone\ reputation . What if
one of the false posttives is
Cal Ripkcn ·• Doesn't 1t put a
black m•ul on his career'!"
A respected vo ice in the
Red Sox dubhouse who
w•tsn't mentioned in the
Mitchell Report. Lowell
nnne[he le s~

came llnder sus-

picion in 2005 when. in the
first year of testing in baseball. he went through the
worst slump of his career.
Two strong years since
then - including hi s World
Series performance in 2007
- have qttieted the whispers that he struggled
· because he was off the juice.
"I'm not sensitive to it,
because I'm secure in what
\'\'c done." he said. "B ut

baseball player' are put on a
different stage."
LDwe\1 noted that San
Diego Chargers linebacker
Shawne Merriman was suspended after testing positive
for the steroid nandrolone,
but was elected to the Pro
Bowl anyway. Patriots safety Rodney Harrison reported ly admitted rec.eiving
human growth hormone and
was suspended four games,
but he's still popular in New
England.
·
"I don' t know Shawne
Merriman. I d.o n't' know
Rodney Harrison. But nothing was made of it," Lowell
said , noli ng that Patriots
fans were more concerned
how
Harrison's
about
abse nce would affect the
team.
Lowell acknowledged that
part of baseball 's problem
was self-inflicted: By fightmg any kind of testing for
years , the sport allowed
itself to be tainted in the
public mind. But he stood
by the players association
and said union head Donald
Fehr was concerned about
the pri vacy and accuracy of
the tests, not in protecting
..
users .
Fehr and commissioner
Bud Selig were called
before Congress this week
· to e~plain' the sport's efforts
performanceto
fight
enhancing drugs. Lowell
will follow them to
Washington : He and manag-

er Terry Francona have been
invited to a baseball-themed
dinner with President Bush
at the White House.
Lowell received
the
Thomas A. Yawkey Award
at Thursday night's dinner,
adding a Red Sox MVP to
the one he earned at the
World Series. Others honored by the Boston chapter
of the BBWAA :
-Longtime coach and
scout Dick Berardino as the
winner of the Judge Emile
Fuchs Award for long and
meritorious service to baseball.
. -Francona, as manager
of the year.
- Cleveland Indians general manager Mark Shapiro
as major league executive of
the year.
- Red Sox s~co nd baseman Dustin Pedroia, as the
AL and Red Sox rookie of
the year.
- Red Sox pitcher Jon
Lester, as the winner of the
'Tony Conigliaro Award for
courage in overcoming
adversity.
Lowell, also a cancer survivor, won the Conigliaro
award in 2000.
It's been a busy offseason
for him.
A high-priced castoff of
the Florida Marlins who was
dumped on the Red Sox in
the Josh Beckett trade in
2005, Lowe\1 hit 21 homers
last season while reaching
career highs with a .324

- Sentinel - l\e
·C L A S S I F I E D

Galli a
County
OH

'
E-mail
: • classified@ mydailytribune.com

PET,EJ

ASSPC IATED iiRESS

PALM DESERT, Calif.
- D.J . Trahan shot an Sunde r 64. and Robert
Gamez had a 65 Thursd~y
to lie rm the lead after two
roumb nf the Bob Hope
Cht y·' let-' Class ic .
Tra han began the day
" ''h a string of four birdies
am! had JUSt one bogey to
go to \ 3- under 131 through
J(, hol es of the 90- ho\ e
tournament.
Gamet tu rned in a bogeyfree rou nd . The co- leaders
playet.l at La Quinta
Cou ntry Cluh. one of fmtr
course s u&gt;ed for the first
fo ur rountb.
. Wind " often is a !actor
lfl the Hope and Ttahan was
happy to scme well desp ite
~ollie gu~ l ~.

"It was de finllely a httle
btl toug h toda y. The wind
wa-. hlowm g uver here. But

1l'm ) obv iou sly, very
pleased with the round like
that in these conditions."
Trah an's qui ck start
L'l llt\d ha ve been eve n better
- ht' mi ssed a short btrdle
try on his J'ifth ·hole.
"But I mean. four birdies
to start the day. w h"t more
could you ask''" he said.
The 27-vear-6 \d Trahan ,
heginning- hi&gt; fourth year
on the 1011r. is looking for

hi s second title. He got his
first win at the Madison,
Miss., event in 2006.
Gamez described his
round as "just solid golf."
"I had some chance the
last couple holes and just
didn' t capitalize. but 0Veral\ it was pretty good," he
said.
The 39-year-old Gamez.
in the Hope on an exemption. is a three-time winner
on the tour but doesn't have
a victory since 2005 . He
finished last ye'ar at 132nd
on the money list with
$693 ,464, far below his
best season in 2003, when
he earned $I .5 million.
He said he found out a
couple of weeks ago that he
would get an exemption for
the Hope.
"I would have hated
mi ssing this tournament,"
Gamez said. "it's in my top
five of the year on the tour,
and I just love playing it
and I Jove being here ."
Justin Leonard, the 2005
champion, had a 64 at La
Quiiua and was one shQ( off
the pace, with Steve
Elkington's 68 at PGA
West leaving him another
stroke back.
Joe Durant, who set the
tournament record of 36under 324 in 2001, began
the second round in a fiveway tie for the lead, but had

a 73 at SilverRock Resort
to drop into a tie for 2 I st.
The other four players
who held a share of the
opening-day lead fell back
during the second round.
Tim Petrovic had a 70 and
was tied for fifth. Omar
Uresti (72) Mathew Goggin
(73) and Siege Maruyama
(76) dropped back into tHe
pack.
Petrovic, Goggin and
at
Maruyama
play ed
SilverRock, bein g used in
the Hope for the first time.
Uresti playeJ at La Quinta.
Tbe first four rounds of
the tournament are a proam, with' pros only playing
Sunday 's final round at the
Classic Club .
Notes: Leonard said he
enjoyed his round, when he
played with rockers Alice
Cooper and Meat Loaf and
longtime Hope participant
Skeeter Holt. " It's a nice
relaxing atmosphere and
it 's fun to be here."
Leonard said . .. . Defending
champion
Charley
Hoffman had a 72 and was
tied for 42nd .... . David
Duval , who had a tour
record-tying 59 on the final
day to win the Hope in
1999, was tied at I26th next to last - after the second day this time, with
cards of 73 -77.

JoHN

PYE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MELBOURNE. Australia
- Serena Williams' only
hi ccup in her four prevtous
tnps t11 the Australian Open
was in the lhird round.
The Jcfcnding champion
crosseJ that minor mental
b:trrier on Friday with a 6-3 ,
6-4 win over Victoria
Azarenka 6-3 , fi-4 to reach
the lourth round, improving
her. record to 26- I at
Melbourne Park since - the
&gt;tart of 2003.
1\er third-round loss to
Daniela Hantuchova in 2006
\\as sandwt ched between
two tit les here. Sjlc also won
in 2003. hut ~ kipped the
2004 tournamen t with
tnJU lleS.
Ju stine Hcnin. the 2004
champion. also continued an
impresstvc run at Melhourne
Park on FriJay. beating
25th-secJed
Francesca·
Schia vo ne 7-.'i, 6-4.. It was
her 11 st coilsecu ti ve match
win and imprt&gt;ved her record
in Melbourne to 15- 1 ,;nee
, O.f.

WiJ\i a ms.
who
was
un&gt;ccdcd anJ ranked No I
when she heat then top-seed-

'

ed Maria Sharapova here
last year to claim her eighth
Grand Slam title, fired 15
aces and had a stretch of
seven service games in
which she yielded only six
points to Azarenka.
Williams also was painting the lines with her
groundstrokes, contributing
to 29 winners. When she
made her 25 unforced errors,
it was usually was by a matter of inches.
"I feel pretty good about
where I am," she said.
"Hopefully. I'll peak later in
the tournament."
Williams will face No. 12
Nicole Vaidisova, a 6-3, 6-4
winner ·aver Japan's Ai
Sugiyama 6-3, 6-4 in the
fourth round. Williams had
to save set points in a semifinal against Vaidisova here
last year.
''Obviously, it doesn't get
much tougher than that,"
Vaidisova said of the fourthround
match . against
Williams. "She's a great
champion, a great fighter.
"I' ll definitely have to
ha ve my A game on."
No. 5 Sharapova beat one
fellow
Russian,
Elena
Vesnina 6-3, 6-0 on Friday,

~ribune

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ad at any ttmo.
Errore Must 8
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he Trlbune-Senttno
ogtator
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he opoce occuplo
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hall not btl llobla I
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at multo from lh

the

the

Box number ada a
twoyo conlldenUat.

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good home call (740)54t:l8t3

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Pul:lllthlng reaarves the right to edh, re}ec1, or cane. I any ld It any ttmt, Enors must bl reported on the flrlt dly of
Trlbun.SintiMI-ReglaiM wtll be reaponllble for no marelhan the cost of lh• apace occupied by the errOl' and only the first lnut11on. W• llhlll
~y to.. or 111pan.. tim riM.IItS from the publlcstlon or omiulon of an adwrtiMment. Co"*lUon will bl mads In the first •v•ll•bl• •dltlon; • Box
.. 1lways confldentill. • Cur-Nnt flte tlfd 1ppiiH. • All real ntate adv.t1111m11ntl arw
to ttt. trederal Fair Housing Act of 1168. • Tnts ,...,,..,,...
wtnttct Ida
••ndlrdt. wl will nat
1
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ubloct to the Federl
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ccopta only hel
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IM'IInt In vlotatto

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and Master Card (304) 550·
1616 Slephen Reedy 1639
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Super Nice Wood Bunk Bed,
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Baby Items, Stove, Fr1dge,
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Coin Shop, 151 Second
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Overbrook .
Center
Located@333Page
Sl..
Middleparl, Ohio is pleased
to announce we w111 be hold·
tng an STNA class. scheduled for February. Hours will
be 8AM-4.30PM If you are
Interested tn JOining our
friendly and ded1cated staft.
please stop by our front
office Mon.·Fri., 9AM-5PM
and fill out an applicatiOn.
Space IS ltmtted. Full t1me
and part time positions available to those qualified indi·
vlduals completing the
class . Applicants must be
dependable (Atlendance Is
a must) Team Players with
pos11ive atttludes to 101n us 111
provtding outstanding. quail·
ty care to our residents. If
you have any quest1ons con·
tact Halite Bumgarner, LPN.
Staff
Development
Coo rdlnator@ 7 40-992 ·
6472. Overbrook Center is
an E.O.E. and a participant
of the Drug Free Workplace
Program.

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from aula,740·247-2014,
small reward

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All Dlaplay: 12. Noon 2
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Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
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DMcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlont
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or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Dally ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon
In Next Day"e P•per
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Boston Red Sox third baseman Mike Lowell, winner of the Thomas A. Yawkey Red Sox MVP
Award/ Tommy McCarthy Good Guy Award, listens to a question prior to the 69th Boston
Baseball Writers' Banquet in Boston on Thursday. Lowell is willing to give blood if that's
what it takes to be tested for human growth ~ormone. But only if the test is 100 percent
accurate, not 99 percent.
Reminded that he also
average and 120 RBis. He But when asked for anythen batted .400 (6-for- I 5) thing special th.at has come received a special invitation
during Boston's four-game his way because of his post- to the White House this
World Series sweep of the season prowess, Lowell month (the rest of the team
Colorado Rockies, with four gushed about a photo shoot will probably go in
February), Lowell laughed.
RBis, three walks and a with actress Rene Russo.
"I put that ahead of the
"I don't think if I went 1team-high six runs .
His performance earned for-'I7 in the World Series I president?" he said. "Well, I
him a three-year, $37.5 mil- would have done that," he don't think George Bush. is
going to be hugging me .":
lion contract in November. said.

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(740} 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

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tees or Insurance. Call the
Office at Consumer
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must
Program
Pleasant, WV providing resi· rooms. Large yard. Covered and set up $38,695. 740dependable, team players Compensation baseet on
Clmplng Equlpmenl .........:......................... 780
"ocaltB
385 9946
axpa~ence. Call 304·522·
with
positive
attitudes
to
J
Oin
• OME billing experience
dential/commun1ty skit! train- deck Atta ched gatage 740· __
- __
. ----Card• of Thanka ......,••\,,.............................. 010
4.vear Apprenticeship
7000
to
schedule
Interview.
us tn providtng outstandtng,
is a plus
20Q8APf!ICAT!ONPATES ing with, Individuals with 367·7'129.
95 Single Wide 14x60, 2
Child/Elderly Care ........................ ............... 190
quality care to our residents.
Electrlcai/Refrtgoratton ......................... :.....840
his Is a great opportunl
Jan. 28.29.30 &amp; Feb 7,6,9 MR!DD GHEtgh school ddipNio· - - - - - - - - bed, 1 bath &amp; all eppl
Stop by and fill out an applt· ECSONASCULAR TECH· or a very organized lndl
0 requ~re · 0 3br, 1ba, located on fl.t 2 N $8700. 740·208-1535
9:00am to 3:00pm
me or
Equlpmenl for Rent .....................................480
cation
or
conta&lt;;;t
Hollie
NICIAN:
Full-time
or
Part·
idual
who
is
setf
rnotlvat
Operating
En{Jineers
experience
necessary. 304·895· 3129
ExcavoUng ................ ,.................................. 830
Bumgarner, LPN, Staft time pos11ion available. (M·
build
a
career
path
whtt
era
the
men
and
women
Criminal
background
che~
Inventory blow·out sale, s1n·
Farm Equtpmenl ......................................... .610
0
Development F) Outpahent Diagnostic
evelopmg relationship
whO operate and repair
required Must have reliable ~:~do3 sl:thFI:~ sqo~ gles, doubles &amp; mods.
Farm• for Rent.. ........................................... 430
Coordinator@ 740-992-6472 Center Applicant should be
tlh t...._ patients and famt
the equipment that builds tran$1)ortat10n and valid auto
Payments from $299 and up.
Farms for Sate .............. ............................... 330
and come see for yoursetf registered or registry eligi· ies w'; serve! Competiti
Amerlcal
insurance . Paid tralmf1g. Clearwater lstand. Water slip 16 Homes to choose from 0
For Leaoe ....................................:................ 490
the difference you can make ble. Minimal travel between
age, great benefits, and
"Earn Aa You Laam"
Hourly rate start1ng at $7- ~J:rage ,Must sell! 446- down. (740)446-3093 or
For Sale ........................................................585
at Overbrookltl EOE &amp; a local offices. Full benefits earn environment are al
We wilt be accePting
$8 DO/hOur Please call 1
866-564·8679.
For Sale or Trade .................... ..................... 590
partlctpant of the drug·free available. foi" full-time appli· nctuded in this eiCcitin
applicat1ons with a $10.00 304-373-1011 or toll free 81 _ _ _A
_n_o-nt-lo-nl_ _ _ - - - - - - - FruHo &amp; Vegetabteo .....................................
t -Bn&lt;l73· tOt1 .
NEW 2008 4 BA·2BA
workplace program.
canls Compensation based
Furnt••ed Roome ........................................ 450
./ cash non-refundable fee, at ------,--,-,-:-- Local company oftenng "NO
1,700+ sq ft $49,989
rear. •
on
experience.
Call
304·
General Haullng........................................... 850
y in person at.
the followmg location '
Wait person needod. Must DOWN PAYMENr proMidwest 740.828·2750
A Local Manufacturer is 522·7000 to schedule inter·
GIVHWIIJ......................................................040
Fomlly Oxygen and
Logan Training Center
be dep,ndable and avaitable grams for you to buy your
looking for EXPERIENC~D view
. Happy Ado ................................................... ,050
Mtdle.ll Equipment
30410 Str8wn Roed · lor any sh1h. experience IS home •nstead of renting.
New 3 Bedroom homes from
Welders, and Laborers that
Hay &amp; Gratn .................................................,640
Log~~n, OH 43138·
optional, smiles are manda· • 1oo% fm8ncing'
$214 .36 per month,lncludes
70 Pine Street
can operate mduslrial EMpenanced lineman lor
Help Wanled .................................................110
Gotttpollo,,OH 45e3t
1..ea&amp;-385-2567
tory. COme and be a part of • Less than perfect d edit many upgrades, delivery &amp;
machinery. Apply in person telephone work, local work, NO hone Cilia
Home tmprovemente ...................................81 0
EOE
a winning team. Apply in accepted
set-up. 1740)365-2434
at King KuHer II , 2150 home fNery night, tun ttme, L.::~:=::..:;::::,~::=~
Homeo for Sale ............................................ 310
-Oh-io-Va_ll_ey_Ho_m_e-He-a-Rh.
person
at
the
Holiday
Inn
•
Payment
could
be
the
Nice used 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Eastern AVe., Galftpoils. No only experienced linemen Housekeeper wanted to
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
hi
STNA
CNA.
front
desk
No
phone
calls
.same
as
rent.
Home
$ 5995 delivered 740•
phone calls please.
HouHI for Renl .......................................... 410
wtll be considered. send clean house 1 or 2 days a 1nc
r1ng
'
· 1
Mortgage •
Locators.
Home
Health
Aides
and
Pease
385·
7671
In Memortam ................................................ 020
~------- resume to: Daily Sentlnet, week 1live lh GaNia County,
(740)367-0000
A Meigs County Office ts P.O. Box 729~31 , Pomeroy, close to town. Gall 740·645· Personal Care Atdes Full, Welders needed 1yr experitnourance .................................... ................. 130
ANDBUSINBUILDINGS~
Par t Time and Per Diem ence Good wages &amp; bene·
Lewn &amp; O.rden Equlpment ........................ 660 looking for a part lime office Oh 45769
4300.
pos1tions available. Apply fits. Send resumes to: CLA
Llveltock...................................................... 630 heJp to work 15+1- hours a
LOIIInd Found ........................................... 060 .week. Must be presentable - - - - - - - - Local Housmg Compatiy at 1460 Jackson Pika. Box 103, c/o Gallipolis Daily
Two Story Appartmen t
and have office skills Please
FEDERAL
••eking
Full-lime Gallipol~. phone 441-1393 Tribune, PO Bo• 469,
Lots &amp; Acl'llsge............................................ 350
Bu11ding
For Sate $29,000
send
resumes
listmg
ab11i·
POSTAL
JOBS
Experienced
Servtce
for
Skilled
Office
or
apply
al
Mlecelllnoous ..............................................170
GallipoliS, OH 45831
304-882·2793 or 304-882ttes and sktlfs to The Daily $17.33-$27.581llr., now hlr· Technician. Send resume to· 1456 Jackson Pike, phone
Mlecetllnoous MerchondiH .......................540
Sotooui
All real e1tate advtrtlt,lng 2326 after 6pm
Sentinel. PO BoK 729-39, ing For appllcBiion and tree CLA Box 104, cia GallipoliS 441 -9263
for
Mobile Home Repatr .................................... li&amp;O
In this newtp.,... 11
INstKUCDON
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
governement job info, call Tribune, PO Box 469, Passpori/Prtvate
Care
Mobile Home• tor Rent... ............................ 42D
sub)ect to 1ht Federal
Ottice.Competitive Wage s
Mobile Homes for Sate................................320
American Assoc. ot Labor t· Gallipolis. OH 4563t
Fair Housing Act of 1918
MoniiJ to L01n ............................................. 220 · An Excellent way to earn 9t3-599-8226, 24/hffi. amp _ _:__ _ _ _ __ and Benefits lndudi ng Goltlpolla Co,_ Collogo
wt'llch male" 1t Illegal to
Lf!L2 Weekend Mldnlghl~. health
money The New Avon.
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
msuranc:e
and (Csreers Close To Home)
serv
3 acres of Land tor Sale on
advet11tl ''any
2
Other
Shifts
(Eve.,
Day
or
Call
Marilyn
304-862·2645
Mustest lntlrumenta ................................... 570
m11eage reimbursement.
Call Today1740-446·4367,
Sandhill Ad $25.000. 304prefertncs, limitation or
Foatar Parente Netded Combination) EMpertence tn
Poroonalo ................... ..................................005
· 1-600-2t4-0452
discrimination baud on
695·3929
Regional
,
Pneumatic
Tanker
Appalachian Tire Products, $30 _548 8 d8.y with paid Geriatrics a Plus. Rate of
Palo for Sale ........... ..................................... 560
WtiW.gollipoNcareereollege com
rKt, color, religion, HX
Inc. Is current"• seeking an
Pay . Competitive, Patd &amp; OTA driving Positions: Aocred•ted Membe r Accred1hng familial stalld or national Approx . 1 a·cre on east
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... 820
''
respite, Training begins
Profeostonli Sarvlces ................... .......... .... 230
A·2 Service Tech for our January 26 _ Albany. Ci!ll Vacation, Benefits Available, R&amp;J Tn;ck.ing Company In Councd lor Independent College• origin, or any Intention to Bethel ' Road - No septic.
and Schools 12748
. .'
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Rep8tr ............................... 180
~nt Pleasant, WV loca't1on Oasts Foster Care to regis· Discounts, Non-Mandatary Marietta. Ohio is searching
mtka any auch
ClOse to town &amp; schools.
IIIII Eo- Wanled ..................................... 360
WagesbasedoneMpenence ter: Toll Free 1_877 _325 • Shtfts.
Immediate lor qualified COL A. Drivers It
WANTFD
p~ , limitation or
St3000. 740-446-93B3
and benBt1ts tncludlng 401 K.
Avai lability
~nterested to operate Semi-Dumps,
Schootllnotructlon ..................................... 150
dlec:rlmlnttlon."
To
Do
1558
Health Insurance. and Paid
·
Applicants May Apply VIa Pneumatic Bulk Tankers for
8MCI, Plllnt &amp; Feri1Hzer .............................. 650
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
Thla ntwap.sper will not
Vacation are atso available. - - - - -- - - Facslmlle0(304)273·9236 both regional and . OTR EKp mothar ol 6 &amp;
Sltuallono Wanled ....................................... 120
RENT, 1031 Georges Cre,k
Oualil1ed
knowtngly acc.pl
Valid CDL Required Please PAIS 18 seeking...
or Via Malt 0 LPN. 1113 opportunities.
Splice for Rent ............................................. 480
Ad, 44t· tttt
Grandmother of 10 wou ld
adwertiHmenta for rul
apply 1n person. Fpr any LPN : administer/m ontier Washmgton
St , applicants mu&amp;t be at least
Sporting Goods ........... .. .............................. 520
like to care lor your Child tn
I, I \. I I I "
aslllt• which Ia In
Information contact Teddy patten! medication prepare- Ravenswood, WV 26164 23 ~rs , have a mlnlrTl.lm ot 1
SIJV'I tor Sale ................................. ............. 720
my hOme weekdays. Ha'o'e
V'iolttlon
of
the
law.
Our
Trucko for Sale ....................................... ,.... 715 Lambert @ (304)675-3930. !ion tor mdlvldua\s Wllh Interviews Conducted Soon . years of safe· commerical ret. 11 you need them. 645rwders are hsr.by
de~~elopmental d1sabl1lties In Respond Immediately For driving el(perience, Haz Mat
Uphololery ................................................... 870
763t
Informed lhlt all
V.no For Sate............................................... 730
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or Clition, WV. $13·$15 per Consideration. References Certillcatlon, Clean MVA
ctwelllngt .twrtleed In
hour
based
on
experie~.
Required.
end good Job SlebYIIy. We
Wsntod to Buy ............................................. 090
SaiL Shirley Spears, 304·
Ifill lltWIPIPir IN
Please call (304) 373·t0tt
ofMr a full slate of benefits
Wanted lo Buy- Firm Suppttu .................. 620
675-t429
nalt.ble on an -t~.A~ol
or
toll
free
at
1
·677
·373·
ptus 401 {k) and vacation
Wanted To 00 .............................................. 180 '
1 possible 2br HoUse In New
opponunlty beHt.
pay. For Information 0011tact
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Haven, total electric. No
Earn up to $1200.00 per tOtt.
Kent at 800·462·9365 or
Yard Site- O.lllpolla.............................., ..... 072
Pel$, $300/mon $300/ctep
week, become a· foster ---~---Duplex lot Sale on Land 304·862-3652
v1sit our web site at
'1'1rd S.I•Pomeroy/Midclle......................... 074
parent. Contact Shelly al Person lor live in with elderly
Contract. 74D-992·5858.
wwwnnycklna com E.O.E.
Yard S.I•Pt. Pteauni ................................ 076
(740)794-&lt;!248 for delails. lady. Call740·367-7t29

CLASSIFIED INDEX

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items.To $480/wk Matenars
provided! Free InIormatiOn
• '"'9
pkg . 24Hr. Bot -42lr"tY"t

i

1

AP pholo

D.J. Trahan checks out the leader board before putting out on the 18th green during the

second round of the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic golf tournament at SllverRock Resort In La
Qu.i nta, Calif. , Thursday, . Trahan shot an S-under-par 64 for a two-day score of 13 under
par.

Defending champion Williams, top-ranked Henin advance to 4th round
BY

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

1'0 Place

Tra;han, Robert Gamez move into tie for lead at Hope Classic

• BY KEN

ter

I

•

•

D~J.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

~ribune

World Series MVP Lowell says he would submit to HGH test
BY JIMMY

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

and face s another in the myself"
fourth round after No: II
After retiring from the
Elena Dementieva beat 2006 Australian final against
Israel's Shahar Peer 6-2, 6-0. Amelie Mauresmo' because
Sharapova struggled early, 'of a stomach illness; Henin
getting broken twice, then skipped the event last year
ran off the last nine games to becausCo she was going
down Vesnina, who was in through a divorce.
constant trouble oti her own
She has dominated the
serve after holding in the · women's tour since returnfirst game.
ing, finishing 63-4, includSharapova had I I winners ing two majors and the sea, to only five unforced errors son-ending championship,
in the second set, breaking in 2007. She added the
Vesnina for the seventh con- Sydney International title
secutive .time to end the last week to b'uild up for
match.
Melbourne Park.
No . 3 Jele'na Jankovic,
She got only 48 percent of
who had io save match her first serves and had her
points in her first-round serve broken three times,
match, had a -lapse in the and was lucky it didn't cost
second set and a code viola- her more against Schiavone.
tion for coaching in the sec"It was really exciting. I'm
ond game of the third set of ·glad to win in two," Henin
a 6-2,4-6,6-1 win over No. satd . "She's always given
30 .Virginie Razzano of me trouble in the past, so it
France. ,
was a tough third round for
Henin will play Taiwan's me."
Hsieh Su-wei , who beat. Men '. s No. 4 Nikolay
Aravane Rezai 6-2. 6-7 ·(3), Da vydenko beat France's
6-4 in the thinj round.
Marc Gicquel 6-3, 6-2, 6-3
"I hate to look too far," and next faces No . 14
Hen in said. "I just want to Mikhail Youzhny, a 6-2, 6-4,
get ready, improve my game 6-2 winner over Croatia's
and be in my best shape. I lvo Karlovic.
know the draw, but I like to
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga had a
concentrateJ
on straight sets win over
sta y

Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of not apologize for the video
Spain.
in a statement released
Marcos Baghdatis downed Friday in response to criti2005 champion Marat Salin cism from ·Melbourne's
6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 3-6, 6-2 in a Turkish-Cypriot community,
momentum-swinging match saying. he wanted to concenthat started Thursday and trate only on the temiis.
stretched into Friday mornCyprus has been divided
lng and completed the sec- along ethnic lines since
ond round.
I974.
Safin was the last player to
The International Tennis
beat top-ranked Roger · Federation and Tennis
Federer in Melbourne, Australia both said they
breaking up the Swiss star's would not be making any
four Australian· titles. with a comment.
semifinal upset three years
Federer, aimin·g for a third
ago.
straight Australian title, won
. Baghdatis is one of three the last 10 games in a 6-1. 6\ostng Australian Open 2, 6-0 ·win over Fabrice
finalists still in contention Santoro on Thursday, ending
- a list that will certainly be the 35-year-old Frenchman's
reduced in the third round . record 62nd major in the
He will play 2005 runner-up second round.
Lleyton
Hewitt
next.
He has reached the finals
Fernando Gonzalez, who of the last· 10 Grand Slam
lost last year's champi- tournaments and won eight
onship match, is still in the of them, losing twice to
equatiOn. ·
Rafael Nadal at the French
Video of Baghdatis, a Open.
Greek Cypriot, holding a
Nadal and Roddick are
flare and reportedly yelling into the third round and
"Turks Out," emerged in the playing later Friday. Nadal
Australi[\11 n'1edia on Friday, faces No. 28 Simon Gilles
10 months after it was post- and ,sixth-seeded Roddick is
ed on a video sharing Web against
Philipp
site.
'
Kohlschreiber in .a night
Th~ 2006 runner-tlp did match .
~

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FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER IN
THE CLASSIREDS

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'

I

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.~~'•..

~~~~~~s~~~jr-~~~~4~~~~~~~----~------·

leo ~~

2 bedroom furnished house
' In Mktd1eport, 1 car garage,
stove.
refrigerator',
washer/dryer.
central
air!l1eating, CATV available,
$525+ utilities, reference
required, No pets. (740)593-

RmSME

r

882-3652

RmRENT

4br House in Mason, Gas
I and 2 bedroom apartheat. appliances included.
ments, furnished and unfur- - - - - - - - No
Pets.
$425/mon ,
mshed, and houses in
2BA house at 87 Spruce St $~00/dep 304-882:3652 ·
Pomeroy and Middleport,
S450/mo. Also Upsta1r.s Apt.
MORILE HOMI]i
security deposit required, no
on 2nd Ave . $325/mo. 446-

e

•Owner p~s water sewer
'
'
lresh -~

-"017
(304)882...

pelS, 740·992·2218.

mR R1:xr

1BR Apt, WfO hookups,
3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 full
t4x70 , wheelchair access1· interneVsatellite TV incl .
bath, garage, full baserryent,
ble. AC. $§00/month $500 w/rent. close 10 hospital. Call
new carpet, ver~ clean . dep&lt;!sil Porter. Oh. 740740_339_0362
handicap accessible. $635 a

388-8375 or 441-2612

b~t~ Pe~:

,-..:;_..:.:..:.,.,.;:.;=;;----,

SHOP .

C=L=A=S=S=I=F=IE=D=S=
':
In Memory

2BR

at

-------Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts . in
Mid dl aport. from $327 to

Immaculate 1 bedroom Spt.
New, carpet &amp; cabinets,
freshly painted &amp; decorated,
W/0 hookup. Beautiful country setting. Only 10 minutes
from town. Must see to
apprec1ate.
$325tmo.

~-0~-~-le-Ho_m_e_P._r'_·7-40-·4_4_6- (304)812-4350
In Memory

446 ' 0390

740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Oppqrtunity. This
InStitution ·is an Eqtiat
Opportunity Provider and

Employer.
Clean &amp; quiet apts. Rodney
&amp; Gallipolis area _ Reffdep.

Jan.26, 1927- .

Everyday, a thought, an image of you in
our minds.
You never rl!ally left us, a part'of you is
·always in our hearts and out thoughts.
We miss you and it's on this, your
birthdays, our heart aches to tell you
how ~uch we love and mi~s you.

puppies, tails docked, dew- firm ; . Both
Excellent
claws r9moved, shots &amp; vet Condition., (740)339-0664 .
Newly reno1.1ated Comm. checked, colors black, apriBuilding In downtown Pt.
2000 Honda Shadow vue ,
Fleasant. 3,000 SQ. ft Csll cot &amp; cream, males $300 &amp; •I...UAw Mr'les; Great Cond"o~.
m
females $350, {740)992· $3000. (740)645-2728

c

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- large kitchen-dining area

,---.,-------

\'v:IO~
Lw--oiiiirri"""iiiiii;;,'-rl
--,

Heartland Publica1ions LLC. a fast growing
newspaper publishing company. with a regional
accounting office in Gallipolis: Ohio is seeking
the position of Accountant for imrnedialc
employment.
Accountant: A successful candidate should
have a degree in accounting or equivalent
experience and should be pmlicicnt in Excel
i:llld Word sofLware. Responsibilities w"ill
include creating and posting journal entries,
calculating inyentories. and preparing month·
end and year·end financial statement.'!. Three
years of general ledger and monrh-end closing
experience preferred.
·
Successful applicants must be people oriented
and have good organizaLional skills. Pno.; itions
offer all company benefits: including health
and life insurance. 40 l- (k ), ami paid va~:ation.

Yorkie CKC 1 yr. old 2 maier
ti:ii10~-;::~--~
$100 ea. Yorlde CKC a wks.
HoME
old 3 mate $600 ea.,3famate
IMPRoVEMEN'IS
$BOO ea. Maltese CKC 7 .....iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiorl
Want to rent house or trailer wks.
old
2male$800
BASEMENT
in Eastern School District, ea.,Pomer("LI 74041 6--3736 _
WATERPROOFING
i i i416-7240
iiiiilal40
--s
Urw::onditional lifetime guar-I \1~\1 -.t 1'1'1 II"
antee. Local references fur,\ I I\ f ._I! I{ h
nished. Established -1975.
H
·

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Call

LMSTOCK

r

Desire to make $45:()()()+ jx;r year.
Bcnelits include:
Health insurance
401K
Life Insurance
Disability lnsumnce
Discount on &lt;tutomoli\'e purchases aqd

r

1!:1:'~:-----.,

MlscEi.lANEoos

I

Cashier I receptionist.
The person for this job should have good
communication skills along With a pleasant
personality. ' Some computer and multi
phone line skills arc necessary. Advancement
within the organization is possible. ·
Please apply in person. EOE

...
{ft~
~

LINCOLN

.MElCUlY

195 Upper River Road, Gallipolis

7.40-446-9800

H1Ws Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll

29670 Bashan Road

COIISTIICTIII

· Racine: Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

-...s'ic1o'
to 10"1130'
Hours

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

GRAIN

'

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nnua

..__ _ _ _ _ __, Rieport tor

JET
AERATION MOTORS

NEW AND USED $TEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar

For
Concr~te,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Wal~ys. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
TueSday, Wednesday . &amp;
Friday, sam-4:30pm . aosed
Thursda~.
Saturday
&amp;

Sunday. (740)446-7300
f&gt;ale

Barns

$6,795 Free
(937)71 8-1471

30x50x10
Delivery

r

doion. $3:500.00 Ph.(304)
675·5050 No cALLs
AFTER 9PM. Leave mes- ·

Barn lumber B.ssorted width
&amp; length apprOll. 800·1 000
BFT. per bundle $125 a bun·
die. 740·992-7428
02 Ford Explorer, Eddie
Bauer: 4D: 4WD: AT: AC,
PElS
4WABS: Sunroof, Luggage
FOKSME

t

Rack, 3rd Row Sealing,
2 Male AKC Boston Terrier Power doors . t windows!
puppies, 6 weeks old, good seatsJmirrors, heated seats.
marks, black &amp; whfte. 6 disc CD. 100.500 mi. one

owner. $9800.441-7233

'Ate"·~ YQU

~
V
RESPIRATORY
mERAPIST

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, ·

WV25550
(304} 675-4340
Or fax:
304-675-6975
Or apply online at:
www.pyalley,om

• 8 7 4 2

• Q 4
• Q J 10 9
• A KQ

741·992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neither

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need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

4JaUipoUs JBatlp U:ribuue
~oint t)lea:s~~t J..\.egtster
The Daily Sentinel
6uuba:p tltimes -.&amp;entinet

99 Beech Street
Middle rt OH

Address ____________________________
City/State/Zip ---~---------

Phone_'_____________________________
M•U or drop off thle eoupon along
with ai copy ot your photo ID lo
Ohio V•lley Publl•hlng P.O. So• 489, Ga,lllpolla, OH 45831

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

West North

East

Db!.
2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

2•
4•

••

All pass

Blow away the mist
and look clearly

IN T~IS GASE, .I
/ TtfiNIC "~TA"
STANl&gt;S fO~

Seamless Gutlers .
Roofing, Siding, Gutler&amp;

~~~~~~~~~=;;;=====~

who, when he has a choice.of two evils,

AGG~A­

is going on around them.

VATION"!
:BARNEY
AUNT LO, I FOUND OUR COW, OL' BETS'V-SHE'S OVER AT TH' NEIGHBORS' !!
WANT HALP
-

Hardlood bblnetl'f And FlnHure
www.1lmboraroo:tr.oabladey.aam

ROUNDIN'

HER UP
?

THEN LET 'ER BE
AWHILE--TMAR·
IS GREENER

ARE TH' NEIGHBORS

10 Tennyson 36. Travel atop
heroine
38 On tho rl•
11 Invito
39 Leal out
19 Two,
41 Fllletad
In Tltuana 42 Polar
21 CofiH
explorer
dispensers 43 Sklmmecl
24 Hot Springs
through
st
45 Ntrvo net·
25 Were rlvala
work
26 Rubalyat
48 Hockey'a
author
- Mikita
27 SAT Iaker 47 Pollen
28 Egyptian
· iapreacter
goddess
49 Hove title to
29 Allie
51 BIIHbltll
31 French
greet Melllhllosopher
33 ~oar grade
35 Wannabe
prince

.chooses boCh.'
The word 'pessimist' contains the letters
of another word: mist. Some bridge·players operate as If their heads are surrounded by mist They cannot sea what

TIME Of

740·653-9657

An1wer to Prevlou• Puzzle

Oscar Wilde claimed: "A pessimist Is one

"~STIMA·T~l&gt;

Insured &amp; Bonded •

!!

HOMEr

Sou1h is in four spades. West leads a
heart. East takes two tricks in lha suit,
1hen shifts to the club jad&lt;. How should
South contiooe? What do you 1hlnk ol
the bidding? WhicH heart should Wes1
lead?
First, the biddrng is line. North, in answer
to his partner;s 1akeout doiJble, cue-bids
to say 11ia1 he has a11easl 12 high-card
jlOnts. Then South, since he does no1
have a five-card suit, bids four-carders
up the line, whacever their quality. And
North jumps to game when he learns
about the eight-card spade fit.
West should lead either the heart two or

I I 1\ I~
11)\(1&lt;111
I 0\'.1 IH ( 110\
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Advertise
in this
space
-~~:L
for
·26 \'ears Experience
S60 per
David Lewis
740,992-6971
m·onth
Insured

.THE BORN LOSER

'WI-IE~ t ~E:IlREt&gt;,l&gt;.. FRIE'.~{)' ""l-IE SN !&gt;, I c.ouLt&gt; 0\00~ rCJ
6~\/E. ~ i~E BE!&gt;T (&gt;,I:IIJIC£...

p-60l.L'&lt;, \Jl'\CLE. "I'Et&gt;, Wll.\0\ ~

t&gt;l t&gt; '(OU ffiC&gt;OSE. 7

E-rno\ER US£ M.'&lt; Ml "'I&gt; OR 10
L~lT!

Free Estimates

•

WHATA DEAl!!

•
•

•

•

•

:BIG NATE
'

-Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt atid Qual icy
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
Referen,es Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

NOT JLIST PHYSI,AL

TELL ME
SOM£-

EMOTIOfiAL 1!-ALANC.E'
TOTAL BALANCE '

Tiiii'IG
:t Dlt&gt;•fT

~ALANCE!

NOT

JU~T

'iir!

I&lt;.Now.

J :Co
il.r'--1\.
Room Addition• &amp;
Remod•llng
NewG•rauEiecl~l 1: Plumbing
Roofing l Oun.,.
Vlnyi Siding 1: Pelntlng .
P1tlo snd Porch Decks ,

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•
!~~~~

:PEANUTS
WEI(!: 601"16 TO 8E 60NE
FOR A W~ILE 50 WE WANT

'I'OV TO 6VARD TI&lt;E HOU:.,EJ i"-,-..,_

'J92 6i1'
PnHIO '"I (,lwo
;•, y 'I
l I ,, E 'I I

' ,,, I

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L
Construction

Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks, ·
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
RemQdeling, Room
Additions

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing .

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

•Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jame• Kee-n
742-2332

1

:GARFIELD

· ~~~:':'T"---'1

YOU FARMEiR6
Mi 11-1! 6AI.f
OF THE: !ARfH

........,.,..........
..........12. . .

PIYIII6 TIP PIICEI ,_
WI Ill

.

the hear1 deuce, according to cholcal
Normally, wHh a weak sui1 headed by 1he
nina-eight, he would lead the nine: top of
nothing. But not in his partners unsupported suit Here, count - how many
cards he holds -Is morelmportan11han
annude - denying an honor in the su~.
South should count 1he high-card points.
Since ·dummy has ,13 and he has 14,
there are only 13 missing. And since
East opened t~a bidding, he must have
the spade king. So. aftar winning the
third tricf&lt;, declarer plays a spade to
dummy's ace, then cans for a low spade.
When East&gt; king drops: South can
claim:
·
Do not take a finesse 1hat must fall.

G

AstroGraph
'lbur 'llrthdllt':

Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008
By !!iernlce Bede O.ol

All types uf concre1e
Owher· Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Gipllef ~ama a-t cr&amp;atlld rrom qlda!ions by lamoua ~. pul 11'1!1 pment.
Ea:h ls!ter in the cipher !llanCa for arcther

TrK!IIy'S ~ue: GrJqli'" J

"D'HN

IINNB

CWOZX.

BNHNI

KNBV

AWV

FDBPCN
KAIZ . "

LN
•

VAN

OtDYDOF

AT VRNI:il KVX YA
TAl JADBP MVJ

AWV

GV~NF

OVVB

PREVIOUS SOLLITION -'I often think 1ha11he night is roore alive and more
richly colored than the day.'· Vincent Van Gogh

low

10

form four timplo wvrdl.

1

.S fl WT I C. 1

IIII1
2

RU(lOD
r----:~:-::-::-::-"1

M0 P E T

:

1--r-r--r---:r--1 m

The best way to handle this person is to

,__

simply lgna&lt;e him o' he,.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) -When an
authority figure throws his P' her weight
around, don't take it out on an Innocent
friend by being guilty of the same
offense. Get your mind off the outrage
before It eals you alive.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) -II will be a
mistake to use ang~r to support a weak
position, because an It wHI do IS make
you took worse In the eyes of others.
Keep your ego out of the picture, and a
facade won't be necessary.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) - If you con·
aider youraelf a giver and someone elY .
a taker, chances are you will be corr.ct,
because your Otterlngs can't juatlfy what
the other Is expecting In return.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When It
comes to your relat ionship with another,
be extra careful not to be too bent upon
having your own way. If vou appear 10 be
cantankerous Instead of cooperathM,
you will suffer the consequences.
CANCER (June 21-Ju!y 22)- If you end
up painting yourself into a oorner. you
are apt to quickly look around tor a
sc8.pegoat. However, If you do that, You
had better first wipe the paint off your tin·
gar before pointing II.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)- Be careful not.·
to allow winning or losing to take precedence over a good relationship when
engaged In a competitive activity. It Is far
better to lose a few points than II would
be to lose a good pal.
VIRGO (AliQ . 23-Sept. 2~)- Strive to be
a high achiever If that Is Important to you,
but take care that your method or tactics
wOn't damage your reputllllon In anY way
'or you wlll .tose tar more than anything
, - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - . . . . , you Cllln accomplish.
Yf5SJRfliS, 1'HA1''5 A Fl NE: CROP liBRA (Sept. 23-0ol. 23)- If you oomo
OF CHINS YOU GOf 'I"HISRIS
off nke • know-n-aM, you .., """""'
someone In the crowd 10 detlt)ef'l1t.!y
challenge your 1martt1. It
not pre-·
partd to II..,. up to your bravado, II could
turn out to be a humbling experience.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
aNume any long•"rm flnanolal oblige·
tlon• at thll point In time, •peci•Mv If It
,.ally 11n't n.oe~rv or It It Ia to purch••• •om•thlng lrl't'Oioua or foollah.
Down the lln1, you will rut the dtV VOU
dkl oo ..

vou .,..

SAQITTARIUS (Nov. aHleo: a1) -

Bllng totllly lrM 10 melee VDU' fMn
ohololl and do vour own thing Will De ot
looltMOIIIm~rtiOOI to yOu, yet It lln't lfkl•
I~ ya1.1 will Ol'lnt thl nm• privKege to
your oompilnk)nt. wnat 11 gooa tar ,.,,

SOUPTONUtz

5

6

"Success," the old mali mused,

1

Encountering someone who haa a forcelui personality may make you feel
uncomfortable, but challenging hla or hw

views ·won't make lhlng~ berter, ellller.

NO, Ti-115 ~OV5E ..

0 fOIIf
Rearrallp !olton ol 1ho
ocromblod -.11 be-

you'll finally be able to tend for yourself In

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 -:

8111

PIIZIIII

matters where you always had relied
upon others. As a result , you wiU enjoy
far greater Independence In a number of
things you have always wanted to do.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) -

Should you have extra responsibftltles or
duties thrown at you, adopting a negative
or resentful attitude will only make lhlngs
worse. Don't 'compound the unpteasi.nt~
n96s with more anger.

WOlD

JUT IIAII.Y

In the year ahead, you will discover that

0001• 11 good for thil gander.

Wise Concrete

CELEBRITY CIPHER .

0

0

12% All Stock
Feed
$10.50/100

r•••---~---- · ··•-••••••••••••••••

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

South

Opening lead: • ?'

66

Senior Discount*

39Jend the
turkey
1 Like permed 40 Stleno'o
hair
llotor
5 Obltlcle
41 Pay for
8 TW&gt;ooleollor 42 Talko big
12 lrfcCiurg o1 44 Dumpster
eltcoms
OUiplJis
13 Whopper
47 Pwtlng
14 Atom
words
fragments 48 Very long
15 Like
Umo
redwoods 50 ReJect
16 Strike caller 52 Latin I verb
17 Compooer 53 Blow away
- Satie
54 French 18 Canasta
llale
55 Dull devil
playi
20 ktid sway 56 Berlin
22 Circus
conlunctlon
cr'Owd nolst 57 Pulfod apart
23 Airport
code for
DOWN
O'Hare
24 SwtllfS
1 Dripping
27 Throat
2 Sandier
feature
of"The
Waterboy"
3D W""l parts
31 Game
3 l.ollhoomo
olflclala
4 Cheerful
32Tul1
colora
34 Largo green 5 Type
parrot .
of wino
35 Cella, to
6 Focue
Romans
7 Scoldlnga
8 Meadows
36 Exlotence
9 Folk
37 Testexerclst{2wdl.)
wisdom
1

AA/EOE

,If so, you qualify for .a

J 10 9 6

South

nanc al

or'older?

~t •allipolti J!atl, «rtb1tfi ·
tltbt llotnt l}lra·sant lttgi_.tt
The DaUy Sentinel

•

Rutland

Pleasant Valley
1999
Toyota
Corolla,
Hospital is currently
exc.drlving cond. 167,000
accepting resumes
miles, book price $3300,
for
two Respiratory
selling price $2700, OBO.
446-9555 or 339.0315
Therapist's
positions at our
rl5
!,RRU~~
"I
hospital location
.. v .:lJ\1-L
•
and also at qur
00 Chevy 510 , red , fo aded,
Home Medkal
CO, cruise, bedllnet'", 85,000
Equipment
Office.
miles. Excellent cond. $4700
abo. 740 _446--3185
Must be a graduate
--------of an .approved
03 Red Dodge 1500, 4M4,
Respiratory
Quad Cab, 48,700 miles, off Therapist program.
road package, new tires,
Current West
$18,500. (740)367·5022
Virginia license
1996 To~ota Tacoma 4x4
required.
4cyl. air condition, gray,
Send
resumes to:
147 000 miles $4,000 304· .
Pleasant
Valley
593·1392
Hospital
SUVs
c/o
Human
IOKSALE
Resources

After Christmas sale. Male 2000 CheVy Blazer, 20R , V·
AKC Beagles, 12 wks, lli· 61 4WD, 145,000 miles.
color, up to date shots. $65. $3600. Serious call only.
740-446-4172 or 256-1619 740-441-0616

•

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1

$250.00 740-388-8743

•

• K6

• A K J 10 7
• 5 2

Township Is complete

::~:::liac E~~:cellent

AK84
7 4 2
E~sl

.Guttering

29 Serious People 10 Work
lrom home using a compul·

t

•

ot -18-0fl

1!1411 mo. pd

Wanted:

sea ~,

Moving Sale Household
Furniture 304·675-4235

family that are self motivated, polite and cap
communicate well with others.

Nortb
• A Q 53
• 6 3

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
Help Wanted
White Tail Deer shoulder 65,310 miles, good condimount, massive, 14 points, tion. needs catalytic convert- -==~;;:==~
scores t 93, Ohio Big Bucks. er. Asking $2600. Call 740· 1
Ideal for oHice or den $995 .
Also, new orig. butt stock for
Sunfire 70:550
Remingtnn Model 870 t 2
actual miles.
conga . $95. 740·533·.3870

Huge replica "should

800·537·9528.

We arc looking for indi\'iduals to join our

l

0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In sage.
Stock . Call Ron Evans, 1-

rep~irs.

Phillip
Alder

""lcher
""75
--------Mollohan Carpel. 2212 1!::"""-":'!'-~-....,
~
· 256~
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis: Oh
HAY &amp;
LEGAL NOTICE
740·446-7444
:rh A
I Fl
I

1

For immediate considermion , send your resume
and references to
dkhill@heal11andpublication&gt;.C0111, f" 10
740-441 -0578, or mail to
Diane Hill
Heartland Publications
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis: OH 45631

I ( I .._

RENT. Call (740)441-1111 month. Call 446·4425, or goodQUalily,2yr.old.asklng ·
the Fiscal Oftlcer.
forapplication &amp; information. 446·2325
$795, (740)c42·2660
iii!;;;;-~--;;;;;;;;;; Opal Dyer,
Amos
Fiscal Officer
Computer for Sale brand
lOR SME ·
POBox 203
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
new, have receipts call 304·
Rutland, OH 45775
675-73811eave message
Hyundei
Accent {1) 18

Professional individual to join sales
staff.

Help Wanted

I~\

with all new appliances &amp;
MER&lt;liANDtiE
Ground Ear Corn bring your and
available
for
-own sacks, also Ear Corn
Townhouse
apartments, cupboar.ds. 3BA, laundry
ravlow by appoint·
and/or small houses · FOR area, 2 112 baths. $900 per ·Burgundy sectional couCh
ment, at the office of

ED Ia AFFORDABLE!

011e of the areas best places to
work, is currently looki11g for the
ollowing:

Son-Larry Rupe
Daughters-Charlotte Stewart
Lois Snodgrass, Brenda Dotson,
Grandchildren

"' I

$1500. (740)379·2877
er.
Up to ssop.oo to
a_fter 5pm.
Mollohan Furniture. New
$1
,500.00
PTIFT
- - - - - - - , - - - sofa &amp; loveseat. $400. can
·
North 3rd St. MiOdleport.
Very gentle Jersey milk cow, www.Homelncome4·U.com
74 0 38 8 17 3
One Br.Room furnished Apt ~__·__-o__,--___ bred back to beef stock, due
NO Pets. Dep &amp; Raf. 740· Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95 May .1. Angus organic fed - - - - - - - 992-0165.
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up. home II'QWn ca~. ready 10
Public Notice

1

•:

..,;..,;RmiriiiiiiRmriiiiiiio-rl

...

Maytag dishwasher: approx

_- - - - - - - Spacious second·lloor apt
req . No Pets. Call for appt &amp;
1 k.
G II' 1· Cll
app. 446-1271 or 709-1657 over oo lng a 1po IS
Y
Park and river. L.A. den,

Marl'h 6, l9?8

4W VO~U'-LI!oY

$1700 lirm; 05 Honda
CKC registered T'Ji Poodle Shadow Spiro 750, $3900

- - - : - : - - - : : - - - 10-12 years old; good wort&lt;~ . QUarter Horse! Has been to
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Nice 2BA Apt, Frig, Stove, ing condition , · $ 100 _ Call Quarter Horse COngress for
Eat.Btes. 52 Westwood Water Pd , Centenary Rd, No
Drive, from $365 to $560. Pets, Call (740)446-9442 _
17_4_0)_44_6_·7_9_37~--- Barrell's Runs in ,14 seconds

Lawrence Allen Betty Lois Jacks
Rupe
R11pe

Help Wanted

e CKC Reg. Pomeranian. 24

I

elderly/disabled call 675 " wks ()(d. Cream in color. Had . . . . . .Hm.ERSiiiiiiiiiiiooi;-pl
6679
Equal
Housing all shots, house broken,
Opportunity
$225 (l40)a79 _2306
07 Harley Soft tail Db::.,

Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740· Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call --,

992·5858.

th

r«&lt;

$592. 740-992·5064. Equal 703·528-06f7 for more 7
lnlormat"'n
007
Housing Opport~nity.
...,

Johnsons Pleasant $375 ask for Don 796-4686. 740-645-5953

In Remembrance
On Your Birthdays
Dad &amp;Mom

Jan. 8, 1926Sept. 8, 19811

rt
tf
apa men , 0&lt;

~i:iir-...;,~SPA-o;
__...,

2b' Apt. on 5th Street Pt (6 14)595-7773 or 1-800Nice

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

FoRSME

,_

Townhouse AKC Reg. ShitZU puppies for 01 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Apanments, Very Spacious, sale. Only $400. Wormed Laredo, 4x4, good cond.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 and 15t shots.
740· 367· 69,000 miles, gray e~t. black
Bath , Adult Poo &amp; Baby 7124
int, new tires, tune up, bat·
Pool; Patio, Start $425/Mo.
terv. etc. Clean car fax, non·
No Pets, Lease Plus Border Collie puppies, 2F, smoker. 740-446-6115
Security Deposit Requlfed.
3M, parents on l~rt Farm , 1999 Dod D
V8 4
(740)387.()547.
urango
Purebred but no papers, 12 wo Pow ge1 the
a~
- - - - - - - - weeks old, shots started.
er, ea r, •u row
~
Ri
~
·
pt
at $4 '""
oso· 740.•
•Win vera .ower 15 acce • Call between 8pm·8pm, se · , "tU\.1 or
lng app1·rca11 ons to r wa111 ng 304-895-3328
992-2335 .
11 t fo H d b · d 1 b
s r v ·SU SIZ9 • • r,
M~- _,

--------

1BR. Stove &amp; fridge fur3br House for Rent or Sale, 2 &amp; 3 BR available, No Pets, mshed. Waster, sewer, tra_sh
dose to PPIS &amp; LincOln Ave. Water &amp; Trash Paid. paid. $350/month Porter.·
CaH 740-339-3224 or '367 $525 plus deposit or (7 40)441 -7033
7015
$74:000
304-675·6757, 2BR 1n Mercerville, Includes - - - - ' - - - - - - - 304·675-6266 0' 304-755- water. 740-256-8132
2BR renovated doWntown
8744, leave message.
Gallipolis, C/A,HNA, water,
3BR, 1.5 bath house in
Rd.
s7e4w0-e7r0, 91r_a1s6h90$525/mo +dep.
' to'Mt $575/rent + sec dep. $375 J month +deposit. Call - - - - - - - «8·3644
740-446-4562 after 5pm
2BA, Washer/Dryer Hook3br, 1ba, Brick Home wlfull
up , Close to Hospital.
Size basement on At 2 N 3br, 2 bath. · No pe ts, (740 )44 1_3702 , (?40)286Caruthers, Mobile Home' 5789
304·895-3129
Park 304-675-3818
--------

!~=~SV111~5

Yiww.mydailysentlnel.com

ACROSS

7871

month, (740)949-2303

Friday, January 18, 2008
_ALLEYOOP

Tara

3br, House in New Haven. Trailer for rent, 3BR, 2 BA..
total Electric, appliances Call 367-7762 or 446-4060
included,
No
Pets
$400/mon, $400/dep 304APARfMENTS

2158

Friday, January 18,2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

r .=

·-- - --.

not what you oain io life or
oaccomplish for younel£ It's
'~s

..-&lt;1

I

L....I--L....J--L-,-.,J ~

_,...,...,...,.-:':"-::"--t

·1, ME R E N I

I

what )'OU- for-."

I' I .I I Ia e Comp'"'

th• dniCkl• quOCtd
by flllfng in the missing words
you develop from 11ep No. 3 below.

A

PifNT NUMBERED

0:1 lETTERS IN SQUARES

SCUMUIS ANSWERS II~(?~ 081
Plaque- Brass- Focus- Virtue-VALUES
The teeuaser had fallen in with some not so great kids. His
mom told him, "Your friends 11re a reflection of your VALUES.•

ARLO&amp; JANIS

Ott! t WAI!lij'r11111J((II.I(l
OF 111AT!

)

�I

)
.~~'•..

~~~~~~s~~~jr-~~~~4~~~~~~~----~------·

leo ~~

2 bedroom furnished house
' In Mktd1eport, 1 car garage,
stove.
refrigerator',
washer/dryer.
central
air!l1eating, CATV available,
$525+ utilities, reference
required, No pets. (740)593-

RmSME

r

882-3652

RmRENT

4br House in Mason, Gas
I and 2 bedroom apartheat. appliances included.
ments, furnished and unfur- - - - - - - - No
Pets.
$425/mon ,
mshed, and houses in
2BA house at 87 Spruce St $~00/dep 304-882:3652 ·
Pomeroy and Middleport,
S450/mo. Also Upsta1r.s Apt.
MORILE HOMI]i
security deposit required, no
on 2nd Ave . $325/mo. 446-

e

•Owner p~s water sewer
'
'
lresh -~

-"017
(304)882...

pelS, 740·992·2218.

mR R1:xr

1BR Apt, WfO hookups,
3 br. house, Pomeroy, 2 full
t4x70 , wheelchair access1· interneVsatellite TV incl .
bath, garage, full baserryent,
ble. AC. $§00/month $500 w/rent. close 10 hospital. Call
new carpet, ver~ clean . dep&lt;!sil Porter. Oh. 740740_339_0362
handicap accessible. $635 a

388-8375 or 441-2612

b~t~ Pe~:

,-..:;_..:.:..:.,.,.;:.;=;;----,

SHOP .

C=L=A=S=S=I=F=IE=D=S=
':
In Memory

2BR

at

-------Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts . in
Mid dl aport. from $327 to

Immaculate 1 bedroom Spt.
New, carpet &amp; cabinets,
freshly painted &amp; decorated,
W/0 hookup. Beautiful country setting. Only 10 minutes
from town. Must see to
apprec1ate.
$325tmo.

~-0~-~-le-Ho_m_e_P._r'_·7-40-·4_4_6- (304)812-4350
In Memory

446 ' 0390

740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Oppqrtunity. This
InStitution ·is an Eqtiat
Opportunity Provider and

Employer.
Clean &amp; quiet apts. Rodney
&amp; Gallipolis area _ Reffdep.

Jan.26, 1927- .

Everyday, a thought, an image of you in
our minds.
You never rl!ally left us, a part'of you is
·always in our hearts and out thoughts.
We miss you and it's on this, your
birthdays, our heart aches to tell you
how ~uch we love and mi~s you.

puppies, tails docked, dew- firm ; . Both
Excellent
claws r9moved, shots &amp; vet Condition., (740)339-0664 .
Newly reno1.1ated Comm. checked, colors black, apriBuilding In downtown Pt.
2000 Honda Shadow vue ,
Fleasant. 3,000 SQ. ft Csll cot &amp; cream, males $300 &amp; •I...UAw Mr'les; Great Cond"o~.
m
females $350, {740)992· $3000. (740)645-2728

c

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- large kitchen-dining area

,---.,-------

\'v:IO~
Lw--oiiiirri"""iiiiii;;,'-rl
--,

Heartland Publica1ions LLC. a fast growing
newspaper publishing company. with a regional
accounting office in Gallipolis: Ohio is seeking
the position of Accountant for imrnedialc
employment.
Accountant: A successful candidate should
have a degree in accounting or equivalent
experience and should be pmlicicnt in Excel
i:llld Word sofLware. Responsibilities w"ill
include creating and posting journal entries,
calculating inyentories. and preparing month·
end and year·end financial statement.'!. Three
years of general ledger and monrh-end closing
experience preferred.
·
Successful applicants must be people oriented
and have good organizaLional skills. Pno.; itions
offer all company benefits: including health
and life insurance. 40 l- (k ), ami paid va~:ation.

Yorkie CKC 1 yr. old 2 maier
ti:ii10~-;::~--~
$100 ea. Yorlde CKC a wks.
HoME
old 3 mate $600 ea.,3famate
IMPRoVEMEN'IS
$BOO ea. Maltese CKC 7 .....iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiorl
Want to rent house or trailer wks.
old
2male$800
BASEMENT
in Eastern School District, ea.,Pomer("LI 74041 6--3736 _
WATERPROOFING
i i i416-7240
iiiiilal40
--s
Urw::onditional lifetime guar-I \1~\1 -.t 1'1'1 II"
antee. Local references fur,\ I I\ f ._I! I{ h
nished. Established -1975.
H
·

i,O

I

~

r
___

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Call

LMSTOCK

r

Desire to make $45:()()()+ jx;r year.
Bcnelits include:
Health insurance
401K
Life Insurance
Disability lnsumnce
Discount on &lt;tutomoli\'e purchases aqd

r

1!:1:'~:-----.,

MlscEi.lANEoos

I

Cashier I receptionist.
The person for this job should have good
communication skills along With a pleasant
personality. ' Some computer and multi
phone line skills arc necessary. Advancement
within the organization is possible. ·
Please apply in person. EOE

...
{ft~
~

LINCOLN

.MElCUlY

195 Upper River Road, Gallipolis

7.40-446-9800

H1Ws Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll

29670 Bashan Road

COIISTIICTIII

· Racine: Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

-...s'ic1o'
to 10"1130'
Hours

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

GRAIN

'

e

nnua

..__ _ _ _ _ __, Rieport tor

JET
AERATION MOTORS

NEW AND USED $TEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar

For
Concr~te,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Wal~ys. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
TueSday, Wednesday . &amp;
Friday, sam-4:30pm . aosed
Thursda~.
Saturday
&amp;

Sunday. (740)446-7300
f&gt;ale

Barns

$6,795 Free
(937)71 8-1471

30x50x10
Delivery

r

doion. $3:500.00 Ph.(304)
675·5050 No cALLs
AFTER 9PM. Leave mes- ·

Barn lumber B.ssorted width
&amp; length apprOll. 800·1 000
BFT. per bundle $125 a bun·
die. 740·992-7428
02 Ford Explorer, Eddie
Bauer: 4D: 4WD: AT: AC,
PElS
4WABS: Sunroof, Luggage
FOKSME

t

Rack, 3rd Row Sealing,
2 Male AKC Boston Terrier Power doors . t windows!
puppies, 6 weeks old, good seatsJmirrors, heated seats.
marks, black &amp; whfte. 6 disc CD. 100.500 mi. one

owner. $9800.441-7233

'Ate"·~ YQU

~
V
RESPIRATORY
mERAPIST

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, ·

WV25550
(304} 675-4340
Or fax:
304-675-6975
Or apply online at:
www.pyalley,om

• 8 7 4 2

• Q 4
• Q J 10 9
• A KQ

741·992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Neither

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

4JaUipoUs JBatlp U:ribuue
~oint t)lea:s~~t J..\.egtster
The Daily Sentinel
6uuba:p tltimes -.&amp;entinet

99 Beech Street
Middle rt OH

Address ____________________________
City/State/Zip ---~---------

Phone_'_____________________________
M•U or drop off thle eoupon along
with ai copy ot your photo ID lo
Ohio V•lley Publl•hlng P.O. So• 489, Ga,lllpolla, OH 45831

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

West North

East

Db!.
2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

2•
4•

••

All pass

Blow away the mist
and look clearly

IN T~IS GASE, .I
/ TtfiNIC "~TA"
STANl&gt;S fO~

Seamless Gutlers .
Roofing, Siding, Gutler&amp;

~~~~~~~~~=;;;=====~

who, when he has a choice.of two evils,

AGG~A­

is going on around them.

VATION"!
:BARNEY
AUNT LO, I FOUND OUR COW, OL' BETS'V-SHE'S OVER AT TH' NEIGHBORS' !!
WANT HALP
-

Hardlood bblnetl'f And FlnHure
www.1lmboraroo:tr.oabladey.aam

ROUNDIN'

HER UP
?

THEN LET 'ER BE
AWHILE--TMAR·
IS GREENER

ARE TH' NEIGHBORS

10 Tennyson 36. Travel atop
heroine
38 On tho rl•
11 Invito
39 Leal out
19 Two,
41 Fllletad
In Tltuana 42 Polar
21 CofiH
explorer
dispensers 43 Sklmmecl
24 Hot Springs
through
st
45 Ntrvo net·
25 Were rlvala
work
26 Rubalyat
48 Hockey'a
author
- Mikita
27 SAT Iaker 47 Pollen
28 Egyptian
· iapreacter
goddess
49 Hove title to
29 Allie
51 BIIHbltll
31 French
greet Melllhllosopher
33 ~oar grade
35 Wannabe
prince

.chooses boCh.'
The word 'pessimist' contains the letters
of another word: mist. Some bridge·players operate as If their heads are surrounded by mist They cannot sea what

TIME Of

740·653-9657

An1wer to Prevlou• Puzzle

Oscar Wilde claimed: "A pessimist Is one

"~STIMA·T~l&gt;

Insured &amp; Bonded •

!!

HOMEr

Sou1h is in four spades. West leads a
heart. East takes two tricks in lha suit,
1hen shifts to the club jad&lt;. How should
South contiooe? What do you 1hlnk ol
the bidding? WhicH heart should Wes1
lead?
First, the biddrng is line. North, in answer
to his partner;s 1akeout doiJble, cue-bids
to say 11ia1 he has a11easl 12 high-card
jlOnts. Then South, since he does no1
have a five-card suit, bids four-carders
up the line, whacever their quality. And
North jumps to game when he learns
about the eight-card spade fit.
West should lead either the heart two or

I I 1\ I~
11)\(1&lt;111
I 0\'.1 IH ( 110\
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Advertise
in this
space
-~~:L
for
·26 \'ears Experience
S60 per
David Lewis
740,992-6971
m·onth
Insured

.THE BORN LOSER

'WI-IE~ t ~E:IlREt&gt;,l&gt;.. FRIE'.~{)' ""l-IE SN !&gt;, I c.ouLt&gt; 0\00~ rCJ
6~\/E. ~ i~E BE!&gt;T (&gt;,I:IIJIC£...

p-60l.L'&lt;, \Jl'\CLE. "I'Et&gt;, Wll.\0\ ~

t&gt;l t&gt; '(OU ffiC&gt;OSE. 7

E-rno\ER US£ M.'&lt; Ml "'I&gt; OR 10
L~lT!

Free Estimates

•

WHATA DEAl!!

•
•

•

•

•

:BIG NATE
'

-Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt atid Qual icy
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
Referen,es Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

NOT JLIST PHYSI,AL

TELL ME
SOM£-

EMOTIOfiAL 1!-ALANC.E'
TOTAL BALANCE '

Tiiii'IG
:t Dlt&gt;•fT

~ALANCE!

NOT

JU~T

'iir!

I&lt;.Now.

J :Co
il.r'--1\.
Room Addition• &amp;
Remod•llng
NewG•rauEiecl~l 1: Plumbing
Roofing l Oun.,.
Vlnyi Siding 1: Pelntlng .
P1tlo snd Porch Decks ,

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•
!~~~~

:PEANUTS
WEI(!: 601"16 TO 8E 60NE
FOR A W~ILE 50 WE WANT

'I'OV TO 6VARD TI&lt;E HOU:.,EJ i"-,-..,_

'J92 6i1'
PnHIO '"I (,lwo
;•, y 'I
l I ,, E 'I I

' ,,, I

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L
Construction

Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks, ·
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
RemQdeling, Room
Additions

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing .

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

•Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jame• Kee-n
742-2332

1

:GARFIELD

· ~~~:':'T"---'1

YOU FARMEiR6
Mi 11-1! 6AI.f
OF THE: !ARfH

........,.,..........
..........12. . .

PIYIII6 TIP PIICEI ,_
WI Ill

.

the hear1 deuce, according to cholcal
Normally, wHh a weak sui1 headed by 1he
nina-eight, he would lead the nine: top of
nothing. But not in his partners unsupported suit Here, count - how many
cards he holds -Is morelmportan11han
annude - denying an honor in the su~.
South should count 1he high-card points.
Since ·dummy has ,13 and he has 14,
there are only 13 missing. And since
East opened t~a bidding, he must have
the spade king. So. aftar winning the
third tricf&lt;, declarer plays a spade to
dummy's ace, then cans for a low spade.
When East&gt; king drops: South can
claim:
·
Do not take a finesse 1hat must fall.

G

AstroGraph
'lbur 'llrthdllt':

Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008
By !!iernlce Bede O.ol

All types uf concre1e
Owher· Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Gipllef ~ama a-t cr&amp;atlld rrom qlda!ions by lamoua ~. pul 11'1!1 pment.
Ea:h ls!ter in the cipher !llanCa for arcther

TrK!IIy'S ~ue: GrJqli'" J

"D'HN

IINNB

CWOZX.

BNHNI

KNBV

AWV

FDBPCN
KAIZ . "

LN
•

VAN

OtDYDOF

AT VRNI:il KVX YA
TAl JADBP MVJ

AWV

GV~NF

OVVB

PREVIOUS SOLLITION -'I often think 1ha11he night is roore alive and more
richly colored than the day.'· Vincent Van Gogh

low

10

form four timplo wvrdl.

1

.S fl WT I C. 1

IIII1
2

RU(lOD
r----:~:-::-::-::-"1

M0 P E T

:

1--r-r--r---:r--1 m

The best way to handle this person is to

,__

simply lgna&lt;e him o' he,.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) -When an
authority figure throws his P' her weight
around, don't take it out on an Innocent
friend by being guilty of the same
offense. Get your mind off the outrage
before It eals you alive.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) -II will be a
mistake to use ang~r to support a weak
position, because an It wHI do IS make
you took worse In the eyes of others.
Keep your ego out of the picture, and a
facade won't be necessary.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) - If you con·
aider youraelf a giver and someone elY .
a taker, chances are you will be corr.ct,
because your Otterlngs can't juatlfy what
the other Is expecting In return.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When It
comes to your relat ionship with another,
be extra careful not to be too bent upon
having your own way. If vou appear 10 be
cantankerous Instead of cooperathM,
you will suffer the consequences.
CANCER (June 21-Ju!y 22)- If you end
up painting yourself into a oorner. you
are apt to quickly look around tor a
sc8.pegoat. However, If you do that, You
had better first wipe the paint off your tin·
gar before pointing II.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22)- Be careful not.·
to allow winning or losing to take precedence over a good relationship when
engaged In a competitive activity. It Is far
better to lose a few points than II would
be to lose a good pal.
VIRGO (AliQ . 23-Sept. 2~)- Strive to be
a high achiever If that Is Important to you,
but take care that your method or tactics
wOn't damage your reputllllon In anY way
'or you wlll .tose tar more than anything
, - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - . . . . , you Cllln accomplish.
Yf5SJRfliS, 1'HA1''5 A Fl NE: CROP liBRA (Sept. 23-0ol. 23)- If you oomo
OF CHINS YOU GOf 'I"HISRIS
off nke • know-n-aM, you .., """""'
someone In the crowd 10 detlt)ef'l1t.!y
challenge your 1martt1. It
not pre-·
partd to II..,. up to your bravado, II could
turn out to be a humbling experience.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
aNume any long•"rm flnanolal oblige·
tlon• at thll point In time, •peci•Mv If It
,.ally 11n't n.oe~rv or It It Ia to purch••• •om•thlng lrl't'Oioua or foollah.
Down the lln1, you will rut the dtV VOU
dkl oo ..

vou .,..

SAQITTARIUS (Nov. aHleo: a1) -

Bllng totllly lrM 10 melee VDU' fMn
ohololl and do vour own thing Will De ot
looltMOIIIm~rtiOOI to yOu, yet It lln't lfkl•
I~ ya1.1 will Ol'lnt thl nm• privKege to
your oompilnk)nt. wnat 11 gooa tar ,.,,

SOUPTONUtz

5

6

"Success," the old mali mused,

1

Encountering someone who haa a forcelui personality may make you feel
uncomfortable, but challenging hla or hw

views ·won't make lhlng~ berter, ellller.

NO, Ti-115 ~OV5E ..

0 fOIIf
Rearrallp !olton ol 1ho
ocromblod -.11 be-

you'll finally be able to tend for yourself In

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 -:

8111

PIIZIIII

matters where you always had relied
upon others. As a result , you wiU enjoy
far greater Independence In a number of
things you have always wanted to do.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) -

Should you have extra responsibftltles or
duties thrown at you, adopting a negative
or resentful attitude will only make lhlngs
worse. Don't 'compound the unpteasi.nt~
n96s with more anger.

WOlD

JUT IIAII.Y

In the year ahead, you will discover that

0001• 11 good for thil gander.

Wise Concrete

CELEBRITY CIPHER .

0

0

12% All Stock
Feed
$10.50/100

r•••---~---- · ··•-••••••••••••••••

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

South

Opening lead: • ?'

66

Senior Discount*

39Jend the
turkey
1 Like permed 40 Stleno'o
hair
llotor
5 Obltlcle
41 Pay for
8 TW&gt;ooleollor 42 Talko big
12 lrfcCiurg o1 44 Dumpster
eltcoms
OUiplJis
13 Whopper
47 Pwtlng
14 Atom
words
fragments 48 Very long
15 Like
Umo
redwoods 50 ReJect
16 Strike caller 52 Latin I verb
17 Compooer 53 Blow away
- Satie
54 French 18 Canasta
llale
55 Dull devil
playi
20 ktid sway 56 Berlin
22 Circus
conlunctlon
cr'Owd nolst 57 Pulfod apart
23 Airport
code for
DOWN
O'Hare
24 SwtllfS
1 Dripping
27 Throat
2 Sandier
feature
of"The
Waterboy"
3D W""l parts
31 Game
3 l.ollhoomo
olflclala
4 Cheerful
32Tul1
colora
34 Largo green 5 Type
parrot .
of wino
35 Cella, to
6 Focue
Romans
7 Scoldlnga
8 Meadows
36 Exlotence
9 Folk
37 Testexerclst{2wdl.)
wisdom
1

AA/EOE

,If so, you qualify for .a

J 10 9 6

South

nanc al

or'older?

~t •allipolti J!atl, «rtb1tfi ·
tltbt llotnt l}lra·sant lttgi_.tt
The DaUy Sentinel

•

Rutland

Pleasant Valley
1999
Toyota
Corolla,
Hospital is currently
exc.drlving cond. 167,000
accepting resumes
miles, book price $3300,
for
two Respiratory
selling price $2700, OBO.
446-9555 or 339.0315
Therapist's
positions at our
rl5
!,RRU~~
"I
hospital location
.. v .:lJ\1-L
•
and also at qur
00 Chevy 510 , red , fo aded,
Home Medkal
CO, cruise, bedllnet'", 85,000
Equipment
Office.
miles. Excellent cond. $4700
abo. 740 _446--3185
Must be a graduate
--------of an .approved
03 Red Dodge 1500, 4M4,
Respiratory
Quad Cab, 48,700 miles, off Therapist program.
road package, new tires,
Current West
$18,500. (740)367·5022
Virginia license
1996 To~ota Tacoma 4x4
required.
4cyl. air condition, gray,
Send
resumes to:
147 000 miles $4,000 304· .
Pleasant
Valley
593·1392
Hospital
SUVs
c/o
Human
IOKSALE
Resources

After Christmas sale. Male 2000 CheVy Blazer, 20R , V·
AKC Beagles, 12 wks, lli· 61 4WD, 145,000 miles.
color, up to date shots. $65. $3600. Serious call only.
740-446-4172 or 256-1619 740-441-0616

•

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1

$250.00 740-388-8743

•

• K6

• A K J 10 7
• 5 2

Township Is complete

::~:::liac E~~:cellent

AK84
7 4 2
E~sl

.Guttering

29 Serious People 10 Work
lrom home using a compul·

t

•

ot -18-0fl

1!1411 mo. pd

Wanted:

sea ~,

Moving Sale Household
Furniture 304·675-4235

family that are self motivated, polite and cap
communicate well with others.

Nortb
• A Q 53
• 6 3

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
Help Wanted
White Tail Deer shoulder 65,310 miles, good condimount, massive, 14 points, tion. needs catalytic convert- -==~;;:==~
scores t 93, Ohio Big Bucks. er. Asking $2600. Call 740· 1
Ideal for oHice or den $995 .
Also, new orig. butt stock for
Sunfire 70:550
Remingtnn Model 870 t 2
actual miles.
conga . $95. 740·533·.3870

Huge replica "should

800·537·9528.

We arc looking for indi\'iduals to join our

l

0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In sage.
Stock . Call Ron Evans, 1-

rep~irs.

Phillip
Alder

""lcher
""75
--------Mollohan Carpel. 2212 1!::"""-":'!'-~-....,
~
· 256~
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis: Oh
HAY &amp;
LEGAL NOTICE
740·446-7444
:rh A
I Fl
I

1

For immediate considermion , send your resume
and references to
dkhill@heal11andpublication&gt;.C0111, f" 10
740-441 -0578, or mail to
Diane Hill
Heartland Publications
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis: OH 45631

I ( I .._

RENT. Call (740)441-1111 month. Call 446·4425, or goodQUalily,2yr.old.asklng ·
the Fiscal Oftlcer.
forapplication &amp; information. 446·2325
$795, (740)c42·2660
iii!;;;;-~--;;;;;;;;;; Opal Dyer,
Amos
Fiscal Officer
Computer for Sale brand
lOR SME ·
POBox 203
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
new, have receipts call 304·
Rutland, OH 45775
675-73811eave message
Hyundei
Accent {1) 18

Professional individual to join sales
staff.

Help Wanted

I~\

with all new appliances &amp;
MER&lt;liANDtiE
Ground Ear Corn bring your and
available
for
-own sacks, also Ear Corn
Townhouse
apartments, cupboar.ds. 3BA, laundry
ravlow by appoint·
and/or small houses · FOR area, 2 112 baths. $900 per ·Burgundy sectional couCh
ment, at the office of

ED Ia AFFORDABLE!

011e of the areas best places to
work, is currently looki11g for the
ollowing:

Son-Larry Rupe
Daughters-Charlotte Stewart
Lois Snodgrass, Brenda Dotson,
Grandchildren

"' I

$1500. (740)379·2877
er.
Up to ssop.oo to
a_fter 5pm.
Mollohan Furniture. New
$1
,500.00
PTIFT
- - - - - - - , - - - sofa &amp; loveseat. $400. can
·
North 3rd St. MiOdleport.
Very gentle Jersey milk cow, www.Homelncome4·U.com
74 0 38 8 17 3
One Br.Room furnished Apt ~__·__-o__,--___ bred back to beef stock, due
NO Pets. Dep &amp; Raf. 740· Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95 May .1. Angus organic fed - - - - - - - 992-0165.
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up. home II'QWn ca~. ready 10
Public Notice

1

•:

..,;..,;RmiriiiiiiRmriiiiiiio-rl

...

Maytag dishwasher: approx

_- - - - - - - Spacious second·lloor apt
req . No Pets. Call for appt &amp;
1 k.
G II' 1· Cll
app. 446-1271 or 709-1657 over oo lng a 1po IS
Y
Park and river. L.A. den,

Marl'h 6, l9?8

4W VO~U'-LI!oY

$1700 lirm; 05 Honda
CKC registered T'Ji Poodle Shadow Spiro 750, $3900

- - - : - : - - - : : - - - 10-12 years old; good wort&lt;~ . QUarter Horse! Has been to
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Nice 2BA Apt, Frig, Stove, ing condition , · $ 100 _ Call Quarter Horse COngress for
Eat.Btes. 52 Westwood Water Pd , Centenary Rd, No
Drive, from $365 to $560. Pets, Call (740)446-9442 _
17_4_0)_44_6_·7_9_37~--- Barrell's Runs in ,14 seconds

Lawrence Allen Betty Lois Jacks
Rupe
R11pe

Help Wanted

e CKC Reg. Pomeranian. 24

I

elderly/disabled call 675 " wks ()(d. Cream in color. Had . . . . . .Hm.ERSiiiiiiiiiiiooi;-pl
6679
Equal
Housing all shots, house broken,
Opportunity
$225 (l40)a79 _2306
07 Harley Soft tail Db::.,

Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740· Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call --,

992·5858.

th

r«&lt;

$592. 740-992·5064. Equal 703·528-06f7 for more 7
lnlormat"'n
007
Housing Opport~nity.
...,

Johnsons Pleasant $375 ask for Don 796-4686. 740-645-5953

In Remembrance
On Your Birthdays
Dad &amp;Mom

Jan. 8, 1926Sept. 8, 19811

rt
tf
apa men , 0&lt;

~i:iir-...;,~SPA-o;
__...,

2b' Apt. on 5th Street Pt (6 14)595-7773 or 1-800Nice

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

FoRSME

,_

Townhouse AKC Reg. ShitZU puppies for 01 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Apanments, Very Spacious, sale. Only $400. Wormed Laredo, 4x4, good cond.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 and 15t shots.
740· 367· 69,000 miles, gray e~t. black
Bath , Adult Poo &amp; Baby 7124
int, new tires, tune up, bat·
Pool; Patio, Start $425/Mo.
terv. etc. Clean car fax, non·
No Pets, Lease Plus Border Collie puppies, 2F, smoker. 740-446-6115
Security Deposit Requlfed.
3M, parents on l~rt Farm , 1999 Dod D
V8 4
(740)387.()547.
urango
Purebred but no papers, 12 wo Pow ge1 the
a~
- - - - - - - - weeks old, shots started.
er, ea r, •u row
~
Ri
~
·
pt
at $4 '""
oso· 740.•
•Win vera .ower 15 acce • Call between 8pm·8pm, se · , "tU\.1 or
lng app1·rca11 ons to r wa111 ng 304-895-3328
992-2335 .
11 t fo H d b · d 1 b
s r v ·SU SIZ9 • • r,
M~- _,

--------

1BR. Stove &amp; fridge fur3br House for Rent or Sale, 2 &amp; 3 BR available, No Pets, mshed. Waster, sewer, tra_sh
dose to PPIS &amp; LincOln Ave. Water &amp; Trash Paid. paid. $350/month Porter.·
CaH 740-339-3224 or '367 $525 plus deposit or (7 40)441 -7033
7015
$74:000
304-675·6757, 2BR 1n Mercerville, Includes - - - - ' - - - - - - - 304·675-6266 0' 304-755- water. 740-256-8132
2BR renovated doWntown
8744, leave message.
Gallipolis, C/A,HNA, water,
3BR, 1.5 bath house in
Rd.
s7e4w0-e7r0, 91r_a1s6h90$525/mo +dep.
' to'Mt $575/rent + sec dep. $375 J month +deposit. Call - - - - - - - «8·3644
740-446-4562 after 5pm
2BA, Washer/Dryer Hook3br, 1ba, Brick Home wlfull
up , Close to Hospital.
Size basement on At 2 N 3br, 2 bath. · No pe ts, (740 )44 1_3702 , (?40)286Caruthers, Mobile Home' 5789
304·895-3129
Park 304-675-3818
--------

!~=~SV111~5

Yiww.mydailysentlnel.com

ACROSS

7871

month, (740)949-2303

Friday, January 18, 2008
_ALLEYOOP

Tara

3br, House in New Haven. Trailer for rent, 3BR, 2 BA..
total Electric, appliances Call 367-7762 or 446-4060
included,
No
Pets
$400/mon, $400/dep 304APARfMENTS

2158

Friday, January 18,2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

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�PageB8

SCOREB.OARD

The Daily Sentinel

Leetonia 42, Lowellville 28
1 Christian ~
Lemon-Monroe 44, Carlisle 39
1 Youngs. East 71, Youngs. Chaney 33
I Lexington 53, Wooster 29
Youngs. Liberty 61, G~rard 22
Thuied.y•a Scoraa
' Lima Bath 59, Elida 31
·
Glrla Baaketbllll
Lima Cant. Cath. 51 , Spencerville 33
Thurad.yja Scoraa
1
Akr. East 51 , Akr. Buchtel46
Lima Shawnee 68, Defiance 63
Boya Baakalball
Akr. Ellet ss. Akr. North 32 •
Madison Christian 42, Delaware
Archbold 42, Hamler Patrick Henry 41
Akr. Kenmore 54, Akr. Firestone 30
Christian 37
Beachwood 67, Cuyahoga Hts. 50
Akr.
Manchester
52,
Zoarville
Magnolia
Sandy
Valley
52, 1 Bryan 71 , Montpelier 26
Tuscarawas Vallay 32
Newcomerstown 22
Caledonia A. Valley 65, Richwood N.
Ans~;&gt;nia 49, Union City Misslssinawa . Mansfield Sr. 44\ Bellville Clear Fork 31
Unlo~ 41
.
.
Valley 30
; Mansfield St. Peter's 56, Mansfield
Cardington-Lincoln 53. Manon Pleasant 36
Ashland Crestview 57 Collins Western ·christian 39
Clyde 58, Port Clinton 47
Reserve 58
'
Marion 55, Cols. Horizon Science 22
Cr'owr1 City S. Gallia 65, Hannan, W.Va. 58
Ashland Crestview 40, Mineral Ridge 35
Martins Ferry 58, St. Clairsville 53
Day. Temple 76, Xenia Nazar~ne 41
Attica Seneca E. 52, Bascom Hopewell- McComb 39, Arcadia 31
Delaware Valley 71 , Spada Htghland 50
LOUdon 45
·
McDonald 44, Salineville Southern 19
Ftndlay 72, Marion Hardtng 42
Barnesville sO, Caldwell 55
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 82, Granville 68, Whitehall-Yearling 41
Batavia 74, N.W Richmond 45
Ridgeway Ridgemont 34
Ltma Sr. 75, Fremont Ross 58
Bellbrook 58, Germantown Vallay View
Miamisburg 57, Greenville 38
Metamora E~rgreen 54, Ltberty Canter 51
47
·
Milford Center Fairbanks 63, DeGraff
MVCA 51 , Ctn. SCPA 46
Bellefontaine. Benjamin Logan 61, Riverside 58
Mtlan Edison 64, Huron 46
· Spring. ·shawnae 42
Millbury Lake 41 , Tootogany Otsego 39
Morral Ridgedale 65, GaliOn Northmor 52
Bertin Center Western Reserve 59, N. Millersburg W. Holmes 61, Orrville 39
Ohio Deaf 38, Columbus Academy 17
Jacl&lt;son Jackson-Milton 41
Mlltbn-Union 84, Eaton 80
Powell Village Ac. 68. Cols. Ltberty 41
, Berlin Hiland 63, w. Lafayette
N: Bahimore 52, Sycamore Mohawk 45
Sandusky Perkins 59, Oak Hartlor 32 . .
Ridgewood 30
N. Bend Taylor 60, Cln. Finnaytown 52
Sandusky St. Mary 62 , Castalia
Bloomdale Elmwood 39, Elmore ·Nels&lt;inville-York 62, Albany Alexandar 51 Margarena 57
Woodmore 26
New Carlisle Tecumseh 59, St. Paris . Swanton 70, Delta 61
Botkins 40, Sidnay Fairlawn 37
Graham 54
Tot. Christtan _76, Tot. Maumee Valley 39
Brookfield 67, Hubbard 33
New Knoxville 48, Minster 44
Tot. Onawa Htlls 50, Oregon Stntch 49
Can. Timken 50, Massillon Tuslaw 34
New Lebanon Dixie 39, Waynesville 36
•
Thuraday's W.Va. pnap ~oras
Caray 73, Fremont St. Joseph 47
New Madison Tri-Village 53, Newton
Thuraday's Results
Casstown Miami E. 68, Arcanum 35
Local 22
Girls
Celina 79, Kenton 17
New Middletown Spring. 52, E. Palestine 27
Braxton County 54, Wirt County 49
Chesapeake 55, Proctorville Fairland 48
New Riegel 64, Old fort 38
Bridgeport 32, Lewis County 23
Chillicothe Huntington 59, Williamsport
Norwalk St. Paul 47, New London 43
Brooke 46, Oak Glen 41 , OT
Wesffall 36
Notre Dame Academy 54, Tol. Bowsher 47
Calvary Baptist 39, Hannan 26 ,
Cln. Glen Este 47, Milford 34
Ohio Deal 52, Columbus Torah 17
Cameron 59, Hundred 47
·
Cln. Madeira 28, Reading 26
Ottoville 63, Ft. Jennings 30
Gilmer County 45, Notre Dame 34
Cln. SCPA 50, Miami Valley Christian
Oxford Talawanda 46, Lebanon 24
G. Becklay Chrlstlan 59, Shady Spring 55
Academy 38
.
Pandora-Gilboa 89, Dola Hardin 25
Lincoln 58, Robert C. Byrd 41
Cln. Winton Woods 85, St. Bernard
Pickerington N. 53, Marysville 36
Morgantown 68, East Fairmont 31
Roger Bacon .31
Pomeroy Meigs 50, Wellston 43
Cln. Wyoming 64, Cln. Deer Park 13
Powell Village Academy 29, Cols. Parkersburg Catholic 49, St. Marys 43
Point Pleasant 53, Chapmanville 42
Cle. St. Joseph 70, Hudson WRA 50
Llbarty Christian 27
Ravenswood 53, Doddridge County 40
Columbiana 41, N. Lime S. Range 28
Rlveralde Stebbins 60, Spring. NW 45
Roane County 53, Calhoun County 28
Columbiana Crestview 40, · Mineral
S. Charleston SE 57, W. Uberty-Salem 49
Tolsla 50, Burch 24
Ridge 35
Sarahsville Shenandoah 51, Hannibal
Trinity 48, Liberty Harrison 38
Columbus Grove 80, Ada 49
River 50
University 82, Buckhannon-Upshur 24
Conlloy Crestview 38, Bluffton 20
Sardinia Eastern High School 55,
Valley Wetzel 88, Paden City 18
Cortland Lakeview 61, Warren Lynchburg-Clay 5'1
Wayne 68, Poca 46
Champion 51
Sabring McKinley 65, Wellsville 29 '
Wheeling Central 45, Wheeling Park 38
Covington 52, Bradford 40
Shaker His. Laurel 69, Akr. Garfield 84
Williamstown 48, Ritchie County 26
Creston Norwayne 48, Rittman 30
Smhhvllle 84, Apple Cr. Waynedale 28
Wlnlleld 65, Slssonvllle-63, OT
Dalton 37, Jeromesville Hillsdale 25
Spring. Cent. 63, Mechanicsburg 52
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 68, Magnolia 62
Day. Belmont 70, Day. Dunbar 67
Spring. Kenton Ridge 57, Spring.
Boya
Day. Chamlnade·Jullenne 60, Cln. Greenon 38 Charleston Catholic 65, Poca 52
Purcell Marian 27
Spring. NE 62, Cedarville 52
Crown City S. Gallla, Ohio 65, Hannan 58
Day. Chrllllan 43, Day. Miami Valley 27
St. Henry 46, Coldwater 44
Day. Jellerson 57, Yellow Springs 32
St. Marys Me!T!orial49, Oltawa-Giandotf 36 George Washington 69, Capital 67, OT
Gilmer County 45, Notre Dame 34
Diy. Marahall 51, Day. Meadowdale 40
Steubenville Calh. Cant. 57, Weir, W.Va. 50
Huntington 64, St. Albans 53
Defiance Ayersvllle 37, Antwerp 27
Stewart Federal Hocking 81, Racine
Hurricane 96, Lincoln County 58
Delphos St. John's 48, Rockford Southern 32
.
Logan 83, Wayne 55
· Parkway 25
Sugarcreek Garaway 65, Malvern 30
Parkersburg
55, Cabell Midland 43
E. Cle. Shaw 55, Warrensville Hts. 42
Tipp City Tippecanoe 75, Lewistown
South Charleston 51 , Spring Valley 45
Fairfield Christian 55, Grove City Indian Lake 42
Vallay Wetzel 61, Paden City 45
Christian 38
Tot. Scott 57, Tot. Libbey 39
Findlay Llbarty-Benton 38, Leipsic 34
Tot. Waite 70, Tol. Cent. Cath. 57
Fostoria St. Wendalln 91, Bettsville 36
Tot. Whitmer 74, Tol. Rogers 69, OT
PRo BASKETBALL
Frederiicktown 48, Danville 25
Urbana 40, Bellefontaine 36
Ft. Loramie 54, Jact&lt;aon Canter 24
Ursuline Academy 55, Warren JFK 32
National B11ketball Aasoclatlon
Ft. Recovery 52, Marla Stein Marion
Utica 75, Loudonville 36
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Local 46
Van Buren 52, Arlington 28
Atlantic Dlvlalon
Gahanna Christian 46, Tree ol Lne 32
Vanlue 61, Gory-Rawson 47
WLPctGB
Genoa Area 65, Kansas Lakota !i2
Versailles 55, New Bremen 44
Boston
31 6 .838 Gsorgetown 58, Bethel-Tate 38
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 48, New
Toronto
21 18 .538 11
· Glouster Trimble 64, Reedsvlie Eastern 51 Paris National Trail41
New Jersay
18 20 .474 13),
Goshen 68, Lees Creek E. Clinton 61
W. Salem NW 47, Doylestown
Philadelphia .
15 24 .385 17
Greenwich S. Cent. 56, Plymouth 52
Chippewa 43
NewYork
12 26 .316 19).
Hanoverton United 46, Lisbon David
Wapakoneta 45, Van Wert 30
Southeaat Dlvlalon
Anderson 44
Warren Harding 43, Youngs. Mooney 37
W L PctGB
Hartville Lake Center Christian 44,
Waterford 83, Corning Miller 18
Orlando
24 17 .585Klngaway Christian 32
Wayneslleld-Goshen 45, Perry 27
Washington
20 17 .541 2
17 18 ,488 4
Houston 70, Russia 62
Wheelersburg 47, Lucasville Vallay 34
Atlanta
Jamestown ' Greeneview 43, N.
WilliamSburg 52, Batavia Clermont NE 42
15 23 .395 7).
Charlotte
Lewisburg Triad 34
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 37, Green 30
Miami
8
29 .216 14
Kidron Cent. Christian 46, Mansfield
Wintersville Indian Creek 57, Toronto 34
Central Dlvlalon
Temple Christian 42
Woodsfield Monroe 68, Magnolia 62
W L PctGB
Leavittsburg LaBrae 58, Newton Falls 48
Wooster Trlway 41, Navarre Fairless 32
Detroit
29 10 .744Leesburg Fairfield 71, W. Union 80
Younge. Austintown-Fitch 65, Youngs.
Cleveland
21 18 .538 8

PREP BASKETBALl.

I

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Friday, January 18, 2oo8

tract.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Agreed to terms
with OF Nick Gorneault and RHP
Thuraday'a Gamea
Runelvys Hernandez on minor league
Montreal 3, Atlanta 2, SO
contracts. Named Gary Ruby pitching
Toronto 3, Boston 2, SO
coach and Keith Bodie hitting coach lor
Washington 5, Edmonton 4, SO
1 Salem (Carolina). D.J. Boston hitting
Ottawa 5, Carolina 1
coach lor Greeneville (Appalachian) and
Detroit 3, Vancouver 2, SO
' John Patton trainer lor Lexington (SAL).
Anaheim 2, Nashville 1
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Agreed to
, Columbus 4, Phoenix 3
terms with RHP Chris Capuano on a
Dallas 4, San Jose 2
one-year contract.
Frlday'a Gamea
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Agreed to
EdmoDton at Carolina, '7 p.m.
terms with RHP Brad Lidge and RHP
Florida at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Ryan Madson on one-year contracts.
Allanta at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
PtnSBURGH PIRATES-Agreed to
Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
·1 terms with 3B Jose Bautista on a one
, Anaheim at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
year contract.
Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS- Named Mark
Los Angeles at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Budaska hitting coach and Blaise llslay
. pitching coach lor Memphis (PCL), Bryan
Eversgerd pitching coach lor Sprlnglield
TRANSACTIONS
(Texas), Keith Mitchell hitting coach and
Thuraday's Sports Tranaactfons
I Dennis Martinez pitching coach lor Palm
BASEBALL
'
Beach (FSL), Steve Dillard manager; Joe
1 MLB-Eiected Bud Selig, commissionKruzel hitting coach and Arthur Adams
er to a three-year extension through the pitching coach lor Quad Clites (MWI..l,
Thuraday's Games
2012 season.
'
I Jeff Albert hitting coach and Doug White
Cleveland 90, San Antonio 88
American League
pHchlng_coach lor Batavia (NYP), Tim
Denver 120, Utah 109
t BOSTON RED SOX-Named Mary : Leveque pitching coach and Mike Shlldt
Phoenix 106, L.A. Lakers 98
Sprong vice president ol human , coach lor. Johnson City (Appalachian),
Friday's Games .
resources and administration and susan Derek Ltlltqulst Ju~tter complex .pitching
Atlanta at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Goodenqw vice president ol public coordtnator, Bill Vtllanueva asststant to
New York at Washington. 7 p.m.
I affairs.
.
1 the Jupiter complex pitching coordinator,
Portland at Miami, 7 p.m.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed to 1 Mike Shlldt sp~tng tratnlng coordlnat?r
Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
terms with 3B Joe Crede on a one-year ~nd Ramon O~ttz GuiiCoast League hrtSeattle at Memphis, 8 p.m.
contract. Named Jose Bautista pitching ttng coach/La1tn Amencan hitting_coordlSacramento at Detroit, 8 p.m.
coach lor Bristol (Appalachian), Brian 1 nator.
Charlotte at New Orleans. 8 p.m.
. 1 Drahman pitching coach and Rdbert t WASHINGTON NATIONALS-Agreed
Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p,m.
sasser hitting coach for Winston-Salem 1 to terms with RHP Tim Redding on a
L.A. Clippers at Utah, 9 p.m.
I (Carolln~). Art Kusnyer minor-league I one-year con~~KETBALL
·
Golden State at Chicago, 9:30 p.m.
bullpen tnstructor, Jeff Manto minorNational Bllkalball Aaaoclatlon
league hitting Instructor, Joe McEwlng
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Recalled G
PRo HocKEY
hitting coach and Richard Dotson pitch- Shannon Brown lrom Rio Grande Vallay
1 tng coach lor Charlotte (IL), Carlos
(NBADL)
National Hockay League
Subero manager, Wes Clements hitting
·
FOOTBALL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
c~ac~ and J.A. Perdew hitting coach lor I
National Football League
Atlantic Division
B~rmtngham (SL), and Ernie Young hitting
BUFFALO BILLS-Signed FB Darlan
W L OTPts GF GA
coach lor Great Falls (Pioneer).
I Barnes
New Jersey 26 16 3 55 111 104
DETROIT TIGERS-Agreed to terms
DETROIT LIONS-Named Jim Colletto
Pittsburgh
26 16 3 55 133 120 I wtth OF Marcus Thames on a one-year offensive coordinator and Klppy Brown
1
Philadelphia 24 15 5 53 142 124
N.Y. islanders 23 18 5 51 112 126 ' c~~~~~ls· CITY ROYALS-Agreed to ~:~~\~~:orhead coach/passing game
N.Y. Rangers 22 20 5 49 114121
terms, with OF Damon Hollis, C Ken
• HOCKEY
Northeaat Dlvlalon
Huckaby, LHP Tim Hamulack and INF
·
Nitlonal Hockey Laagua
W L OTPts GF GA
David Matranga on minor league conCALGARY FLAMES-Signed G Curtis
30 12 4 64 182 128
Ottawa
tracts. Announced INF Jason Smith has ·Joseph to a one-year contract. Assigned
24 14 8 56 142 129 , accepted an outright assignment to 1 G Curtis McEihlnnay to Quad City (AHL).
Montreal
22 18 5 49 116 120 1 Omaha (PCL).
Boston
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Traded
19 19 6 44 126 127 I LOS ANGELES ANGELS-Agreed to RW Craig Adams to Chicago lor luture
Buffa:o
Toronto
18 21 8 44 132 155
terms with OF Juatt;flivera on a one-year 1 considerations. Activated C Matt Cullen,
Southeast Division
contract.
RW Scott Walk'er and D Brat Hedlcan
W L OT P,ts GF GA
MINNESOTA TWINS-Agreed to terms 1 1rom the injured list.
Atlanta
23 .22 3 49 137 155
with OF Jason Kubel on a one-year con- ' CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Signed C
Carolina
22 23 4 48 145 160
tract.
Patrick Sharp to a lou~·year contract
Washington 20 21 5 45 132 144
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Agreed . to extension.
Florida
20 23 4 44 117 134
terms with RHP Huston Street on a one- 1 EDMONTON OILERS-Activated D
Tampa Bay 17 24 5 39 13;1 157
year contract.
j Matt Greene lrom injured reserve and ·
WESTERN CONFERENCE
SEATTLE MARINERS-Agreed to assigned him to Springfield (AHL). SOC·
Central Dlvlalon
terms with OF Bronson Sardinha on a CER
W L OT Pts GF GA
minor league contract.
Major LHgue Soccer
Detroit
34 10 4 72 163 106 I TAMPA BAY RAYS-Agreed to terms
NEW YORK RED BULLS-Signed G
Columbus
23 18 6 52 121 118 I with OF Jonny Gomes on a one-year . Zach Thornton.
St. Louis
22 16 6 50 115 118
contract.
COLLEGE
Nashville
22 20 4 48 128 129 I TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to terms
BIG
SOUTH
CONFERENCE21 21 4 46 133 137
Chicago
with RHP Jason Jennings on a one-year Reprimanded Ritchie McKay, Liberty
Northwest Division
1 contract.
'
men's basketball coach, lor publicly criti. W L OT Pts GF GA
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Agreed to ' clzing the officiating lollowlng the Jan. 12
Minnesota
26 17 3 55 128 128
terms with LHP Scott Downs on a three- 'I game 'at UNC Asheville. .
Vancouver
25 17 5 55 123 111
year contract, INF Marco Scutaro, LHP
KENTUCKY-Named Thorn Kaumeyer
Calgary
23 17 8 54 138 141 1 Gustavo Chacin, RHP Jason Frasor and defensive backs coach.
Colorado
25 18 3 53 132 128
LHP Brian Tallet on one-year contracts. ~ OKLAHOMA-Named Jay Norvell coEdmonton
21 22 5 47 127 142
National League
offensive coordinator.
.
Pacific Division
ATLANTA BRAVES-Agreed to terms
PEPPERDINE-Announced the reslgW L OTPts GF GA
wlth 1B Mark Teixeira, LHP Mike nation ol Vance Walblirg, men's basket26 17 6 58 127 125
Anaheim
Gonzalez, RHP Tyler Yates and INF ball coach.
Dallas
26 18 5 57 143 129' ! Omar lnlante to one-year contracts.
PITTSBURGH-Announced the reslg25 14 7 ~7 119 110
San Jose
Acquired LHP Jeff Ridgway Irom the nation ol Paul Rhoads, delenslve coordiPhoenix
24 21 1 49 124 127 1 Tampa Bay Rays lor INF Willy Aybar and nator, to take the same job at Auburn.
Los Angeles 18 27 2 38 135 158
INF Chase Fontaine.
TUSCULUM-Named Karl Scott aaslsFLORIDA MARLINS-Agreed to terms tant lootball coach and linebackers
Two points lor a win, one point tor over- with C Man Treanor on a one-year con- •coach.
time loss or shootout loss.

Indiana
18 22 .450 11 :&lt;.
Milwaukee
16 23 .410 13
Chicago
15 22 .405 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
' Southwaat Division
W L PctGB
Dallas
26 12 .884 New Orleans
26 12 .684 San Antonio
25 12 .676 '.,
Houston
20 19 .513 6\,
Memphis
10 28 .263 16
Northwest Division
W L
Pet GB
Denver
23 15 .605 Portland
23 15 .605 Utah
22 18 .550 2
Seattle
9 29 .237 14
Minnesota
5
32 .135 17',
Pacific Division
W L
Pet GB
Phoenix
27 12 .692 '2p 12 .684 ),
L.A. Lakers
23 17 .575 4),
Golden State
15 22 .405 11
Sacramento
11 23 .324 13',
LA. Clippers

1

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REACH 3 COUNTIES
I

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'

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

~16,
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.,40·446·2342

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~oint ~leasant l\egtster

304-675-1333
www.mydailyreg~ter.com

The Daily Sentinel s!!W!··~
740-992-2155 :~~
www.mydailysentinel.com ~~.
.

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'

lMS COMPACT . 77K. exc &lt;:Ond
'oi ••

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�PageB8

SCOREB.OARD

The Daily Sentinel

Leetonia 42, Lowellville 28
1 Christian ~
Lemon-Monroe 44, Carlisle 39
1 Youngs. East 71, Youngs. Chaney 33
I Lexington 53, Wooster 29
Youngs. Liberty 61, G~rard 22
Thuied.y•a Scoraa
' Lima Bath 59, Elida 31
·
Glrla Baaketbllll
Lima Cant. Cath. 51 , Spencerville 33
Thurad.yja Scoraa
1
Akr. East 51 , Akr. Buchtel46
Lima Shawnee 68, Defiance 63
Boya Baakalball
Akr. Ellet ss. Akr. North 32 •
Madison Christian 42, Delaware
Archbold 42, Hamler Patrick Henry 41
Akr. Kenmore 54, Akr. Firestone 30
Christian 37
Beachwood 67, Cuyahoga Hts. 50
Akr.
Manchester
52,
Zoarville
Magnolia
Sandy
Valley
52, 1 Bryan 71 , Montpelier 26
Tuscarawas Vallay 32
Newcomerstown 22
Caledonia A. Valley 65, Richwood N.
Ans~;&gt;nia 49, Union City Misslssinawa . Mansfield Sr. 44\ Bellville Clear Fork 31
Unlo~ 41
.
.
Valley 30
; Mansfield St. Peter's 56, Mansfield
Cardington-Lincoln 53. Manon Pleasant 36
Ashland Crestview 57 Collins Western ·christian 39
Clyde 58, Port Clinton 47
Reserve 58
'
Marion 55, Cols. Horizon Science 22
Cr'owr1 City S. Gallia 65, Hannan, W.Va. 58
Ashland Crestview 40, Mineral Ridge 35
Martins Ferry 58, St. Clairsville 53
Day. Temple 76, Xenia Nazar~ne 41
Attica Seneca E. 52, Bascom Hopewell- McComb 39, Arcadia 31
Delaware Valley 71 , Spada Htghland 50
LOUdon 45
·
McDonald 44, Salineville Southern 19
Ftndlay 72, Marion Hardtng 42
Barnesville sO, Caldwell 55
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 82, Granville 68, Whitehall-Yearling 41
Batavia 74, N.W Richmond 45
Ridgeway Ridgemont 34
Ltma Sr. 75, Fremont Ross 58
Bellbrook 58, Germantown Vallay View
Miamisburg 57, Greenville 38
Metamora E~rgreen 54, Ltberty Canter 51
47
·
Milford Center Fairbanks 63, DeGraff
MVCA 51 , Ctn. SCPA 46
Bellefontaine. Benjamin Logan 61, Riverside 58
Mtlan Edison 64, Huron 46
· Spring. ·shawnae 42
Millbury Lake 41 , Tootogany Otsego 39
Morral Ridgedale 65, GaliOn Northmor 52
Bertin Center Western Reserve 59, N. Millersburg W. Holmes 61, Orrville 39
Ohio Deaf 38, Columbus Academy 17
Jacl&lt;son Jackson-Milton 41
Mlltbn-Union 84, Eaton 80
Powell Village Ac. 68. Cols. Ltberty 41
, Berlin Hiland 63, w. Lafayette
N: Bahimore 52, Sycamore Mohawk 45
Sandusky Perkins 59, Oak Hartlor 32 . .
Ridgewood 30
N. Bend Taylor 60, Cln. Finnaytown 52
Sandusky St. Mary 62 , Castalia
Bloomdale Elmwood 39, Elmore ·Nels&lt;inville-York 62, Albany Alexandar 51 Margarena 57
Woodmore 26
New Carlisle Tecumseh 59, St. Paris . Swanton 70, Delta 61
Botkins 40, Sidnay Fairlawn 37
Graham 54
Tot. Christtan _76, Tot. Maumee Valley 39
Brookfield 67, Hubbard 33
New Knoxville 48, Minster 44
Tot. Onawa Htlls 50, Oregon Stntch 49
Can. Timken 50, Massillon Tuslaw 34
New Lebanon Dixie 39, Waynesville 36
•
Thuraday's W.Va. pnap ~oras
Caray 73, Fremont St. Joseph 47
New Madison Tri-Village 53, Newton
Thuraday's Results
Casstown Miami E. 68, Arcanum 35
Local 22
Girls
Celina 79, Kenton 17
New Middletown Spring. 52, E. Palestine 27
Braxton County 54, Wirt County 49
Chesapeake 55, Proctorville Fairland 48
New Riegel 64, Old fort 38
Bridgeport 32, Lewis County 23
Chillicothe Huntington 59, Williamsport
Norwalk St. Paul 47, New London 43
Brooke 46, Oak Glen 41 , OT
Wesffall 36
Notre Dame Academy 54, Tol. Bowsher 47
Calvary Baptist 39, Hannan 26 ,
Cln. Glen Este 47, Milford 34
Ohio Deal 52, Columbus Torah 17
Cameron 59, Hundred 47
·
Cln. Madeira 28, Reading 26
Ottoville 63, Ft. Jennings 30
Gilmer County 45, Notre Dame 34
Cln. SCPA 50, Miami Valley Christian
Oxford Talawanda 46, Lebanon 24
G. Becklay Chrlstlan 59, Shady Spring 55
Academy 38
.
Pandora-Gilboa 89, Dola Hardin 25
Lincoln 58, Robert C. Byrd 41
Cln. Winton Woods 85, St. Bernard
Pickerington N. 53, Marysville 36
Morgantown 68, East Fairmont 31
Roger Bacon .31
Pomeroy Meigs 50, Wellston 43
Cln. Wyoming 64, Cln. Deer Park 13
Powell Village Academy 29, Cols. Parkersburg Catholic 49, St. Marys 43
Point Pleasant 53, Chapmanville 42
Cle. St. Joseph 70, Hudson WRA 50
Llbarty Christian 27
Ravenswood 53, Doddridge County 40
Columbiana 41, N. Lime S. Range 28
Rlveralde Stebbins 60, Spring. NW 45
Roane County 53, Calhoun County 28
Columbiana Crestview 40, · Mineral
S. Charleston SE 57, W. Uberty-Salem 49
Tolsla 50, Burch 24
Ridge 35
Sarahsville Shenandoah 51, Hannibal
Trinity 48, Liberty Harrison 38
Columbus Grove 80, Ada 49
River 50
University 82, Buckhannon-Upshur 24
Conlloy Crestview 38, Bluffton 20
Sardinia Eastern High School 55,
Valley Wetzel 88, Paden City 18
Cortland Lakeview 61, Warren Lynchburg-Clay 5'1
Wayne 68, Poca 46
Champion 51
Sabring McKinley 65, Wellsville 29 '
Wheeling Central 45, Wheeling Park 38
Covington 52, Bradford 40
Shaker His. Laurel 69, Akr. Garfield 84
Williamstown 48, Ritchie County 26
Creston Norwayne 48, Rittman 30
Smhhvllle 84, Apple Cr. Waynedale 28
Wlnlleld 65, Slssonvllle-63, OT
Dalton 37, Jeromesville Hillsdale 25
Spring. Cent. 63, Mechanicsburg 52
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 68, Magnolia 62
Day. Belmont 70, Day. Dunbar 67
Spring. Kenton Ridge 57, Spring.
Boya
Day. Chamlnade·Jullenne 60, Cln. Greenon 38 Charleston Catholic 65, Poca 52
Purcell Marian 27
Spring. NE 62, Cedarville 52
Crown City S. Gallla, Ohio 65, Hannan 58
Day. Chrllllan 43, Day. Miami Valley 27
St. Henry 46, Coldwater 44
Day. Jellerson 57, Yellow Springs 32
St. Marys Me!T!orial49, Oltawa-Giandotf 36 George Washington 69, Capital 67, OT
Gilmer County 45, Notre Dame 34
Diy. Marahall 51, Day. Meadowdale 40
Steubenville Calh. Cant. 57, Weir, W.Va. 50
Huntington 64, St. Albans 53
Defiance Ayersvllle 37, Antwerp 27
Stewart Federal Hocking 81, Racine
Hurricane 96, Lincoln County 58
Delphos St. John's 48, Rockford Southern 32
.
Logan 83, Wayne 55
· Parkway 25
Sugarcreek Garaway 65, Malvern 30
Parkersburg
55, Cabell Midland 43
E. Cle. Shaw 55, Warrensville Hts. 42
Tipp City Tippecanoe 75, Lewistown
South Charleston 51 , Spring Valley 45
Fairfield Christian 55, Grove City Indian Lake 42
Vallay Wetzel 61, Paden City 45
Christian 38
Tot. Scott 57, Tot. Libbey 39
Findlay Llbarty-Benton 38, Leipsic 34
Tot. Waite 70, Tol. Cent. Cath. 57
Fostoria St. Wendalln 91, Bettsville 36
Tot. Whitmer 74, Tol. Rogers 69, OT
PRo BASKETBALL
Frederiicktown 48, Danville 25
Urbana 40, Bellefontaine 36
Ft. Loramie 54, Jact&lt;aon Canter 24
Ursuline Academy 55, Warren JFK 32
National B11ketball Aasoclatlon
Ft. Recovery 52, Marla Stein Marion
Utica 75, Loudonville 36
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Local 46
Van Buren 52, Arlington 28
Atlantic Dlvlalon
Gahanna Christian 46, Tree ol Lne 32
Vanlue 61, Gory-Rawson 47
WLPctGB
Genoa Area 65, Kansas Lakota !i2
Versailles 55, New Bremen 44
Boston
31 6 .838 Gsorgetown 58, Bethel-Tate 38
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 48, New
Toronto
21 18 .538 11
· Glouster Trimble 64, Reedsvlie Eastern 51 Paris National Trail41
New Jersay
18 20 .474 13),
Goshen 68, Lees Creek E. Clinton 61
W. Salem NW 47, Doylestown
Philadelphia .
15 24 .385 17
Greenwich S. Cent. 56, Plymouth 52
Chippewa 43
NewYork
12 26 .316 19).
Hanoverton United 46, Lisbon David
Wapakoneta 45, Van Wert 30
Southeaat Dlvlalon
Anderson 44
Warren Harding 43, Youngs. Mooney 37
W L PctGB
Hartville Lake Center Christian 44,
Waterford 83, Corning Miller 18
Orlando
24 17 .585Klngaway Christian 32
Wayneslleld-Goshen 45, Perry 27
Washington
20 17 .541 2
17 18 ,488 4
Houston 70, Russia 62
Wheelersburg 47, Lucasville Vallay 34
Atlanta
Jamestown ' Greeneview 43, N.
WilliamSburg 52, Batavia Clermont NE 42
15 23 .395 7).
Charlotte
Lewisburg Triad 34
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 37, Green 30
Miami
8
29 .216 14
Kidron Cent. Christian 46, Mansfield
Wintersville Indian Creek 57, Toronto 34
Central Dlvlalon
Temple Christian 42
Woodsfield Monroe 68, Magnolia 62
W L PctGB
Leavittsburg LaBrae 58, Newton Falls 48
Wooster Trlway 41, Navarre Fairless 32
Detroit
29 10 .744Leesburg Fairfield 71, W. Union 80
Younge. Austintown-Fitch 65, Youngs.
Cleveland
21 18 .538 8

PREP BASKETBALl.

I

I

I

I

Friday, January 18, 2oo8

tract.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Agreed to terms
with OF Nick Gorneault and RHP
Thuraday'a Gamea
Runelvys Hernandez on minor league
Montreal 3, Atlanta 2, SO
contracts. Named Gary Ruby pitching
Toronto 3, Boston 2, SO
coach and Keith Bodie hitting coach lor
Washington 5, Edmonton 4, SO
1 Salem (Carolina). D.J. Boston hitting
Ottawa 5, Carolina 1
coach lor Greeneville (Appalachian) and
Detroit 3, Vancouver 2, SO
' John Patton trainer lor Lexington (SAL).
Anaheim 2, Nashville 1
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Agreed to
, Columbus 4, Phoenix 3
terms with RHP Chris Capuano on a
Dallas 4, San Jose 2
one-year contract.
Frlday'a Gamea
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Agreed to
EdmoDton at Carolina, '7 p.m.
terms with RHP Brad Lidge and RHP
Florida at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Ryan Madson on one-year contracts.
Allanta at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
PtnSBURGH PIRATES-Agreed to
Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
·1 terms with 3B Jose Bautista on a one
, Anaheim at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
year contract.
Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS- Named Mark
Los Angeles at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Budaska hitting coach and Blaise llslay
. pitching coach lor Memphis (PCL), Bryan
Eversgerd pitching coach lor Sprlnglield
TRANSACTIONS
(Texas), Keith Mitchell hitting coach and
Thuraday's Sports Tranaactfons
I Dennis Martinez pitching coach lor Palm
BASEBALL
'
Beach (FSL), Steve Dillard manager; Joe
1 MLB-Eiected Bud Selig, commissionKruzel hitting coach and Arthur Adams
er to a three-year extension through the pitching coach lor Quad Clites (MWI..l,
Thuraday's Games
2012 season.
'
I Jeff Albert hitting coach and Doug White
Cleveland 90, San Antonio 88
American League
pHchlng_coach lor Batavia (NYP), Tim
Denver 120, Utah 109
t BOSTON RED SOX-Named Mary : Leveque pitching coach and Mike Shlldt
Phoenix 106, L.A. Lakers 98
Sprong vice president ol human , coach lor. Johnson City (Appalachian),
Friday's Games .
resources and administration and susan Derek Ltlltqulst Ju~tter complex .pitching
Atlanta at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Goodenqw vice president ol public coordtnator, Bill Vtllanueva asststant to
New York at Washington. 7 p.m.
I affairs.
.
1 the Jupiter complex pitching coordinator,
Portland at Miami, 7 p.m.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed to 1 Mike Shlldt sp~tng tratnlng coordlnat?r
Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
terms with 3B Joe Crede on a one-year ~nd Ramon O~ttz GuiiCoast League hrtSeattle at Memphis, 8 p.m.
contract. Named Jose Bautista pitching ttng coach/La1tn Amencan hitting_coordlSacramento at Detroit, 8 p.m.
coach lor Bristol (Appalachian), Brian 1 nator.
Charlotte at New Orleans. 8 p.m.
. 1 Drahman pitching coach and Rdbert t WASHINGTON NATIONALS-Agreed
Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p,m.
sasser hitting coach for Winston-Salem 1 to terms with RHP Tim Redding on a
L.A. Clippers at Utah, 9 p.m.
I (Carolln~). Art Kusnyer minor-league I one-year con~~KETBALL
·
Golden State at Chicago, 9:30 p.m.
bullpen tnstructor, Jeff Manto minorNational Bllkalball Aaaoclatlon
league hitting Instructor, Joe McEwlng
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Recalled G
PRo HocKEY
hitting coach and Richard Dotson pitch- Shannon Brown lrom Rio Grande Vallay
1 tng coach lor Charlotte (IL), Carlos
(NBADL)
National Hockay League
Subero manager, Wes Clements hitting
·
FOOTBALL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
c~ac~ and J.A. Perdew hitting coach lor I
National Football League
Atlantic Division
B~rmtngham (SL), and Ernie Young hitting
BUFFALO BILLS-Signed FB Darlan
W L OTPts GF GA
coach lor Great Falls (Pioneer).
I Barnes
New Jersey 26 16 3 55 111 104
DETROIT TIGERS-Agreed to terms
DETROIT LIONS-Named Jim Colletto
Pittsburgh
26 16 3 55 133 120 I wtth OF Marcus Thames on a one-year offensive coordinator and Klppy Brown
1
Philadelphia 24 15 5 53 142 124
N.Y. islanders 23 18 5 51 112 126 ' c~~~~~ls· CITY ROYALS-Agreed to ~:~~\~~:orhead coach/passing game
N.Y. Rangers 22 20 5 49 114121
terms, with OF Damon Hollis, C Ken
• HOCKEY
Northeaat Dlvlalon
Huckaby, LHP Tim Hamulack and INF
·
Nitlonal Hockey Laagua
W L OTPts GF GA
David Matranga on minor league conCALGARY FLAMES-Signed G Curtis
30 12 4 64 182 128
Ottawa
tracts. Announced INF Jason Smith has ·Joseph to a one-year contract. Assigned
24 14 8 56 142 129 , accepted an outright assignment to 1 G Curtis McEihlnnay to Quad City (AHL).
Montreal
22 18 5 49 116 120 1 Omaha (PCL).
Boston
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Traded
19 19 6 44 126 127 I LOS ANGELES ANGELS-Agreed to RW Craig Adams to Chicago lor luture
Buffa:o
Toronto
18 21 8 44 132 155
terms with OF Juatt;flivera on a one-year 1 considerations. Activated C Matt Cullen,
Southeast Division
contract.
RW Scott Walk'er and D Brat Hedlcan
W L OT P,ts GF GA
MINNESOTA TWINS-Agreed to terms 1 1rom the injured list.
Atlanta
23 .22 3 49 137 155
with OF Jason Kubel on a one-year con- ' CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Signed C
Carolina
22 23 4 48 145 160
tract.
Patrick Sharp to a lou~·year contract
Washington 20 21 5 45 132 144
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Agreed . to extension.
Florida
20 23 4 44 117 134
terms with RHP Huston Street on a one- 1 EDMONTON OILERS-Activated D
Tampa Bay 17 24 5 39 13;1 157
year contract.
j Matt Greene lrom injured reserve and ·
WESTERN CONFERENCE
SEATTLE MARINERS-Agreed to assigned him to Springfield (AHL). SOC·
Central Dlvlalon
terms with OF Bronson Sardinha on a CER
W L OT Pts GF GA
minor league contract.
Major LHgue Soccer
Detroit
34 10 4 72 163 106 I TAMPA BAY RAYS-Agreed to terms
NEW YORK RED BULLS-Signed G
Columbus
23 18 6 52 121 118 I with OF Jonny Gomes on a one-year . Zach Thornton.
St. Louis
22 16 6 50 115 118
contract.
COLLEGE
Nashville
22 20 4 48 128 129 I TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to terms
BIG
SOUTH
CONFERENCE21 21 4 46 133 137
Chicago
with RHP Jason Jennings on a one-year Reprimanded Ritchie McKay, Liberty
Northwest Division
1 contract.
'
men's basketball coach, lor publicly criti. W L OT Pts GF GA
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Agreed to ' clzing the officiating lollowlng the Jan. 12
Minnesota
26 17 3 55 128 128
terms with LHP Scott Downs on a three- 'I game 'at UNC Asheville. .
Vancouver
25 17 5 55 123 111
year contract, INF Marco Scutaro, LHP
KENTUCKY-Named Thorn Kaumeyer
Calgary
23 17 8 54 138 141 1 Gustavo Chacin, RHP Jason Frasor and defensive backs coach.
Colorado
25 18 3 53 132 128
LHP Brian Tallet on one-year contracts. ~ OKLAHOMA-Named Jay Norvell coEdmonton
21 22 5 47 127 142
National League
offensive coordinator.
.
Pacific Division
ATLANTA BRAVES-Agreed to terms
PEPPERDINE-Announced the reslgW L OTPts GF GA
wlth 1B Mark Teixeira, LHP Mike nation ol Vance Walblirg, men's basket26 17 6 58 127 125
Anaheim
Gonzalez, RHP Tyler Yates and INF ball coach.
Dallas
26 18 5 57 143 129' ! Omar lnlante to one-year contracts.
PITTSBURGH-Announced the reslg25 14 7 ~7 119 110
San Jose
Acquired LHP Jeff Ridgway Irom the nation ol Paul Rhoads, delenslve coordiPhoenix
24 21 1 49 124 127 1 Tampa Bay Rays lor INF Willy Aybar and nator, to take the same job at Auburn.
Los Angeles 18 27 2 38 135 158
INF Chase Fontaine.
TUSCULUM-Named Karl Scott aaslsFLORIDA MARLINS-Agreed to terms tant lootball coach and linebackers
Two points lor a win, one point tor over- with C Man Treanor on a one-year con- •coach.
time loss or shootout loss.

Indiana
18 22 .450 11 :&lt;.
Milwaukee
16 23 .410 13
Chicago
15 22 .405 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
' Southwaat Division
W L PctGB
Dallas
26 12 .884 New Orleans
26 12 .684 San Antonio
25 12 .676 '.,
Houston
20 19 .513 6\,
Memphis
10 28 .263 16
Northwest Division
W L
Pet GB
Denver
23 15 .605 Portland
23 15 .605 Utah
22 18 .550 2
Seattle
9 29 .237 14
Minnesota
5
32 .135 17',
Pacific Division
W L
Pet GB
Phoenix
27 12 .692 '2p 12 .684 ),
L.A. Lakers
23 17 .575 4),
Golden State
15 22 .405 11
Sacramento
11 23 .324 13',
LA. Clippers

1

-

I
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I

I

I

I

I

.
I

I

I

I
I

I

REACH 3 COUNTIES
I

.

I

'

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

~16,
.. AC,,t"

,•

I

'~t ~alltpolts ilBatlp 'rtbune

.,40·446·2342

www .mydai~tribune.com

~oint ~leasant l\egtster

304-675-1333
www.mydailyreg~ter.com

The Daily Sentinel s!!W!··~
740-992-2155 :~~
www.mydailysentinel.com ~~.
.

-A .,.tnft -·-·- ....

'

lMS COMPACT . 77K. exc &lt;:Ond
'oi ••

'

,

l'

�PAGE TWO

PAGE THREE

Puzzle No.1

0.2

Ask About Our
On-Line Banking·

GET
STUCK
HERE!
Ohio Valley Bcink

..

CIECI CISHINI&amp;llll
446-2404
1-888-446-2684
216 Uppe~ River Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

an.,•••

1/2 mile south of the Silver
License CC700077-000 and 001
License Cl 750048-000 and 001

204 W. 2nd Sl Pomeroy, Oh
992-0461
License CC700077-G96
Ucense Cl 750048·006

CLUES ACROSS
I . Temperaments
6. Bunde_ _ : the German
federal council
10. Mild Dutch cheese
14. Brief indulgence of your
impulses
'
15. Have the skill to do something
16. Queen of Spar1Jl
17. A .K.A . Lord Verulam
-20. Basics
21 . The top point
22. Force used in pushing
25. Surprise attack killer
30. Cambodian monetary unit
31 . London radio station
32. Dry plaster fresco
33. Did go
34. Look up to
36. Physicist Georg Simon _
37. Anacronym for ~peed
39. Optical Storage and Retrieval
CLUES DOWN
I . Manuscripts (abbr.)
2 . _ e Taylor from Mayberry
3. Bobby_, NHL champ
4 . No show losses
·
5. Bosnian ethnic group
6 . Without (French)
7. Corpuscle count (abbr.)
8. 4th Caliph of Islam
9 . Exams
IO. Olide by
11. Calendar month (abbr.)
12. Much _About Nothing
13. Adult male
18. Behave in a certain manner
19. Diagonall
22. Engineering company
23. Oo quickly
·
24. Rechristens
25. Defensive nuclear weapon
26. _ fi (slang)
27. Slags
28. 1 (German).
29. _ de plume
31 . "JO" star initials
34.Mimic

41. Direct something at an objec1
43 . Popular bagel seed topping
47. Matchstick games
50. Hans :German bi&lt;M:hernist
52. Wrapped package (abbr.)
53. Japanese socks
.54. Attacked
.56. Special animal lineages
58. Equal, prefix
.59. Groom_ _: wedding
attendants
60. 1966 J. Goldman play
68. Swiss river
69. Large burrowing rodent of
S.Am.
70. Classic film director Frank·
71. Dutch colonist

72.0oze
73 . Perceived sound

35 . Eggs of female fish
38. St. Francis of_
40.1nsect head appendages
41. Alias
42. Tax collector
44. One point east of due south
45. Determine the sum of
46. Millilitre
48. Megabaud (abbr.)
49. Female sibling
51 . Utensil to remove water
from a boat
.55 . Coils
56. Yuppie status f;ar
.57. The German state
.59. Finger click
60. The bill in a restaurant
61 . Vietnamese currency unit
62. Before
63. No (Scottish)
64. Water in the solid state ,
6.5. Yearly tonnage (abbr.)
66. Stray
67. Radioactivity unit

CLUES ACROSS
I . Norse god of thunder
5 . Haiku translator Robert
9 . Erase recorded information
14. Blood clam genus
1.5 . Irish Republic
.
16. Intermediate ecologi• •I stage
17. Lucretia Coffin _ , Am .
feminist
18. Scaled map showing land
divisions
19.1ndian shot plant
20. Obvious
23. Slant away
24. Borne on the water
2.5. Scandinavian god of discord
27. Hip-hop violinist Ben-Ari
30. Unfasten
34. First offer to sell stock to the
public
37. Village of Jesus ' 1st miracle
39. Author An_ _ France
CLUES DOWN
I . Florida city
2. Same a~ Rollo
3. Number system base 8
4 . Relative magnitudes of 2
quanti lie~
5. A common liverwort
6 . Afflicts
7. W . Romanian c ity
8 . Like the stalk of a moss
capsule
9 . For'mer Portuguese
monetary unit
10. Not abstract
II . Set " Rule, Britannia" to
mu~ic

12. Capital of Yemen
13. Ardor
2 1. Veteran!&gt; battleground
22. Not I
26. Knot in a tree
28. Marsh frog genus
29. Vedic god
3 1. No (:.lang)
12 Away from wmd
31. Foot (Latin)
34. An indiVIdual unll
3.5 . River and city 10 N. Brali l
36. Come tnto exiMence

40. Old Glory
43. Feeling of fear arld
mystery
44. Pretentiously artistic
4.5 . Em_: show host
46. Pictures
48. Vents
.50. Pigmented eye membrane
52. Struggle against
.57,. After a prayer
60. Bouncing toys
63 . .55120 to 5.5123
65. __sole: undergarment
66. American state
67 . Lariat
68. _ Ladd, actor
69. London Gallery
70. Days long past
71 . Mentally healthy
72. German river

38. _ _ Spumante (Italian
wine)
40. _ bert, co 8Q834
41 . Person with power~ of
loresight
42. Amino acid found in mo' t
proteins
47, A slow way to drink
49. Seaport (abbr.)
51 . Acromyn for I ~t
Ammendment right
53. Either of Shoshoneon
people~&gt;

54. Sequence of eight
55 . Ice or roller
56. Town in Surrey, E:.ngland
57 About aviation
5!t. Postal service material
59. Oh,God!
61 . Celebration
62. Capital is Mu~ca t
64. Grandmother (Br.)

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
•

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-4340,
Ext.1672
www.pyalley.org

�PAGE TWO

PAGE THREE

Puzzle No.1

0.2

Ask About Our
On-Line Banking·

GET
STUCK
HERE!
Ohio Valley Bcink

..

CIECI CISHINI&amp;llll
446-2404
1-888-446-2684
216 Uppe~ River Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

an.,•••

1/2 mile south of the Silver
License CC700077-000 and 001
License Cl 750048-000 and 001

204 W. 2nd Sl Pomeroy, Oh
992-0461
License CC700077-G96
Ucense Cl 750048·006

CLUES ACROSS
I . Temperaments
6. Bunde_ _ : the German
federal council
10. Mild Dutch cheese
14. Brief indulgence of your
impulses
'
15. Have the skill to do something
16. Queen of Spar1Jl
17. A .K.A . Lord Verulam
-20. Basics
21 . The top point
22. Force used in pushing
25. Surprise attack killer
30. Cambodian monetary unit
31 . London radio station
32. Dry plaster fresco
33. Did go
34. Look up to
36. Physicist Georg Simon _
37. Anacronym for ~peed
39. Optical Storage and Retrieval
CLUES DOWN
I . Manuscripts (abbr.)
2 . _ e Taylor from Mayberry
3. Bobby_, NHL champ
4 . No show losses
·
5. Bosnian ethnic group
6 . Without (French)
7. Corpuscle count (abbr.)
8. 4th Caliph of Islam
9 . Exams
IO. Olide by
11. Calendar month (abbr.)
12. Much _About Nothing
13. Adult male
18. Behave in a certain manner
19. Diagonall
22. Engineering company
23. Oo quickly
·
24. Rechristens
25. Defensive nuclear weapon
26. _ fi (slang)
27. Slags
28. 1 (German).
29. _ de plume
31 . "JO" star initials
34.Mimic

41. Direct something at an objec1
43 . Popular bagel seed topping
47. Matchstick games
50. Hans :German bi&lt;M:hernist
52. Wrapped package (abbr.)
53. Japanese socks
.54. Attacked
.56. Special animal lineages
58. Equal, prefix
.59. Groom_ _: wedding
attendants
60. 1966 J. Goldman play
68. Swiss river
69. Large burrowing rodent of
S.Am.
70. Classic film director Frank·
71. Dutch colonist

72.0oze
73 . Perceived sound

35 . Eggs of female fish
38. St. Francis of_
40.1nsect head appendages
41. Alias
42. Tax collector
44. One point east of due south
45. Determine the sum of
46. Millilitre
48. Megabaud (abbr.)
49. Female sibling
51 . Utensil to remove water
from a boat
.55 . Coils
56. Yuppie status f;ar
.57. The German state
.59. Finger click
60. The bill in a restaurant
61 . Vietnamese currency unit
62. Before
63. No (Scottish)
64. Water in the solid state ,
6.5. Yearly tonnage (abbr.)
66. Stray
67. Radioactivity unit

CLUES ACROSS
I . Norse god of thunder
5 . Haiku translator Robert
9 . Erase recorded information
14. Blood clam genus
1.5 . Irish Republic
.
16. Intermediate ecologi• •I stage
17. Lucretia Coffin _ , Am .
feminist
18. Scaled map showing land
divisions
19.1ndian shot plant
20. Obvious
23. Slant away
24. Borne on the water
2.5. Scandinavian god of discord
27. Hip-hop violinist Ben-Ari
30. Unfasten
34. First offer to sell stock to the
public
37. Village of Jesus ' 1st miracle
39. Author An_ _ France
CLUES DOWN
I . Florida city
2. Same a~ Rollo
3. Number system base 8
4 . Relative magnitudes of 2
quanti lie~
5. A common liverwort
6 . Afflicts
7. W . Romanian c ity
8 . Like the stalk of a moss
capsule
9 . For'mer Portuguese
monetary unit
10. Not abstract
II . Set " Rule, Britannia" to
mu~ic

12. Capital of Yemen
13. Ardor
2 1. Veteran!&gt; battleground
22. Not I
26. Knot in a tree
28. Marsh frog genus
29. Vedic god
3 1. No (:.lang)
12 Away from wmd
31. Foot (Latin)
34. An indiVIdual unll
3.5 . River and city 10 N. Brali l
36. Come tnto exiMence

40. Old Glory
43. Feeling of fear arld
mystery
44. Pretentiously artistic
4.5 . Em_: show host
46. Pictures
48. Vents
.50. Pigmented eye membrane
52. Struggle against
.57,. After a prayer
60. Bouncing toys
63 . .55120 to 5.5123
65. __sole: undergarment
66. American state
67 . Lariat
68. _ Ladd, actor
69. London Gallery
70. Days long past
71 . Mentally healthy
72. German river

38. _ _ Spumante (Italian
wine)
40. _ bert, co 8Q834
41 . Person with power~ of
loresight
42. Amino acid found in mo' t
proteins
47, A slow way to drink
49. Seaport (abbr.)
51 . Acromyn for I ~t
Ammendment right
53. Either of Shoshoneon
people~&gt;

54. Sequence of eight
55 . Ice or roller
56. Town in Surrey, E:.ngland
57 About aviation
5!t. Postal service material
59. Oh,God!
61 . Celebration
62. Capital is Mu~ca t
64. Grandmother (Br.)

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
•

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-4340,
Ext.1672
www.pyalley.org

�PAGE FOUR

PAGE FIVE

**********

Puzzle No.3

**
**
**
**
**
**
:HOLZER:

l

:CLINIC ·:

**

MORE WOMEN THAN MEN PRE·
FER VEGETA5LES ON THEIR
PIZZA, LIKE PEPPERS, &amp;ROCCOLI
AND
MUSH·
ROOMS.

CLUES ACROSS
I . Bluish green
5. Tenninate
10. _Romeo, car
14. Swedish rock group
15. Nasomaculatus
16. Paper Moon actress Madeline
17. A .K.A. marjoram
19. So. American capital
21 . Drunkard
22. Woolen cap of Scottish origin
23. Asian gulf
24. Have already done
25. Demented
29. Eternal
35. Express a supposition
36. Donnouse
37. Atmospheric moisture or dust
38. This (Spanish)
39. Equips with weaponry
40. Gladiolus bulbs
41 . Thirteen

CLUES DOWN
I. No. ~M . artist colony
2. A Spanish over
3. Assist a plan of action
4 . Tarry behind
5. North American nation
6. A.K.A. Esau
7. A public promotion ,
8. New England river
9. Considers in detail
I0 . Members of Star Trek race
Mint_ _
II . Insect secretion used in
varnish
12. Agency insuring home
mortgages
13. Autonomic nervous system
18. Canted
20. Resounded
24. Impurity
26. St . Francis of_
27. Body politic
28. Perceive with attention
29. _ May, actress
30. Wordy
31. Shorttail weasel

42. Storklike wading bird
43. Chinese Moslem
44, Brick artificer
45. _Ling, Chinese mountain
range
'
46. Engaging in reverie
48. Football team ·
50. Manuscripts (abbr.)
51.Basics
53. One pointE of dueS
54. Bar bill
57. One who receives counsel
60. Principal sums
62. Fleshy seed cover
63. Modes of Indian music
6S. Cyprian St. Barn_ _
66. Swedish s~ag rugs
67. Fonns of original matter
68. Small boy

32. Flamboyant
33 . Deduced weight of
34. Turkish seaport ·
38. Tests
40. For public or eccle11iastic
records
•
44. "Love Takes Time" Director
Walter
46. Young women in society
47. A way to imprint
49. Doffs
.
52. A tight and perfect closure
53 . Trickery
54. Type of jug
55. Previously Sultanabad
56. Military installation
57. Swiss river
58. Not wet
59. By way of
61. Mrs. Nixon
64. Parent ~f NBC

&lt;;LUES ACRQSS

40. Leavened rum cakes
41 . River between China and
I . Portuguese nurses
Russia
5. Old Irish alphabet
42. Cosmos Bottling Corp. root
9. School faculty
beer
14. Nothing more than specified
43. Type of memory
15. No longer present
46. Feed to satisfaction
16. One who avoids others
49. Neon troP,ical fish ·
1.7 . Spot on a radar screen
51. Mary Shelly creation
18. Causing to feel sure
55. Action in opposition
20. Wllat Bo Peep did
58. Ponderosity
22. Fluid accumulation in
59. Stuffed (French)
tissues
60. Pressure unit ·
23. Representational images
·61. Norse goddess who
27. _asty: 1980's TV show
defeated Thor
28. Belongs to McEntire
62. Loses moisture
32. Oman town_ AI Bayah
33. Oral polio vaccine developer 63. Small ornamental case
64. Jim Beam and Wild Turkey
34. China clay
36. Beetle amulet
38. Bath linens
.
39. Sock hops or proms

CLUES DOWN
I . Walked slowly
2. Tonal pattern
3. Originated
4 . Ninth month (alt. abbr.)
5.Giant
6. Leaver
7. Genus of freshwater
ducks
8 . Interlocks
9. Thmcd on an axis
10. Hoagies
II . Tropical American ·
cuckoo
12. Wet spongy ground
13 . Germany
19. Balaenoptera borealis
21 . Capital of Zimbabwe
24. High in stature
25. Warm region wading bird
26. Food storage container
29. Amo_ _: one-celled
organisms
30. Napkin to protect
clothing
31. Article

33. Out that advances base
runners
34. Waterbucks
35. Expects
36. _ _ntha Eggar: actress
37. King of England 994 - 1035
38. Seaman
39. Cony
40. Degree in Arts and Sciences
42. High legislative assembly
43. Am. jazz rock band Dan
44. Something of small
importance
45. Praying insect
47. Cath_ _: purging
48. Make lacework
50. Quintessence
52. Rope fastening
53. Beige
54. Filippo_, Saint
55. Rural Free Delivery (abbr.)
56. Auricle
57. _ Lanka

*.•*
*Urgent*
* Care **
*
*
: HOurs :
*: Holzer Clinic *:
** 1.Gallipolis
*
pm to 9 pm *
: (740) 446-5287 :
..* .Holzer Clinic **
' .*
Athens
*• · 9 am9 pm *
: · (740) 589-3120:
** Holzer.Clnic **
* Jackson
*
am .. pm :
* (740) 385-8871 *
*: Holzer Clinic· ;*
** 1 pmMeigs
*
- 9 pm *
:

9

9

: (740) 992-0060 :

.•

*

*
*
**********
"

�PAGE FOUR

PAGE FIVE

**********

Puzzle No.3

**
**
**
**
**
**
:HOLZER:

l

:CLINIC ·:

**

MORE WOMEN THAN MEN PRE·
FER VEGETA5LES ON THEIR
PIZZA, LIKE PEPPERS, &amp;ROCCOLI
AND
MUSH·
ROOMS.

CLUES ACROSS
I . Bluish green
5. Tenninate
10. _Romeo, car
14. Swedish rock group
15. Nasomaculatus
16. Paper Moon actress Madeline
17. A .K.A. marjoram
19. So. American capital
21 . Drunkard
22. Woolen cap of Scottish origin
23. Asian gulf
24. Have already done
25. Demented
29. Eternal
35. Express a supposition
36. Donnouse
37. Atmospheric moisture or dust
38. This (Spanish)
39. Equips with weaponry
40. Gladiolus bulbs
41 . Thirteen

CLUES DOWN
I. No. ~M . artist colony
2. A Spanish over
3. Assist a plan of action
4 . Tarry behind
5. North American nation
6. A.K.A. Esau
7. A public promotion ,
8. New England river
9. Considers in detail
I0 . Members of Star Trek race
Mint_ _
II . Insect secretion used in
varnish
12. Agency insuring home
mortgages
13. Autonomic nervous system
18. Canted
20. Resounded
24. Impurity
26. St . Francis of_
27. Body politic
28. Perceive with attention
29. _ May, actress
30. Wordy
31. Shorttail weasel

42. Storklike wading bird
43. Chinese Moslem
44, Brick artificer
45. _Ling, Chinese mountain
range
'
46. Engaging in reverie
48. Football team ·
50. Manuscripts (abbr.)
51.Basics
53. One pointE of dueS
54. Bar bill
57. One who receives counsel
60. Principal sums
62. Fleshy seed cover
63. Modes of Indian music
6S. Cyprian St. Barn_ _
66. Swedish s~ag rugs
67. Fonns of original matter
68. Small boy

32. Flamboyant
33 . Deduced weight of
34. Turkish seaport ·
38. Tests
40. For public or eccle11iastic
records
•
44. "Love Takes Time" Director
Walter
46. Young women in society
47. A way to imprint
49. Doffs
.
52. A tight and perfect closure
53 . Trickery
54. Type of jug
55. Previously Sultanabad
56. Military installation
57. Swiss river
58. Not wet
59. By way of
61. Mrs. Nixon
64. Parent ~f NBC

&lt;;LUES ACRQSS

40. Leavened rum cakes
41 . River between China and
I . Portuguese nurses
Russia
5. Old Irish alphabet
42. Cosmos Bottling Corp. root
9. School faculty
beer
14. Nothing more than specified
43. Type of memory
15. No longer present
46. Feed to satisfaction
16. One who avoids others
49. Neon troP,ical fish ·
1.7 . Spot on a radar screen
51. Mary Shelly creation
18. Causing to feel sure
55. Action in opposition
20. Wllat Bo Peep did
58. Ponderosity
22. Fluid accumulation in
59. Stuffed (French)
tissues
60. Pressure unit ·
23. Representational images
·61. Norse goddess who
27. _asty: 1980's TV show
defeated Thor
28. Belongs to McEntire
62. Loses moisture
32. Oman town_ AI Bayah
33. Oral polio vaccine developer 63. Small ornamental case
64. Jim Beam and Wild Turkey
34. China clay
36. Beetle amulet
38. Bath linens
.
39. Sock hops or proms

CLUES DOWN
I . Walked slowly
2. Tonal pattern
3. Originated
4 . Ninth month (alt. abbr.)
5.Giant
6. Leaver
7. Genus of freshwater
ducks
8 . Interlocks
9. Thmcd on an axis
10. Hoagies
II . Tropical American ·
cuckoo
12. Wet spongy ground
13 . Germany
19. Balaenoptera borealis
21 . Capital of Zimbabwe
24. High in stature
25. Warm region wading bird
26. Food storage container
29. Amo_ _: one-celled
organisms
30. Napkin to protect
clothing
31. Article

33. Out that advances base
runners
34. Waterbucks
35. Expects
36. _ _ntha Eggar: actress
37. King of England 994 - 1035
38. Seaman
39. Cony
40. Degree in Arts and Sciences
42. High legislative assembly
43. Am. jazz rock band Dan
44. Something of small
importance
45. Praying insect
47. Cath_ _: purging
48. Make lacework
50. Quintessence
52. Rope fastening
53. Beige
54. Filippo_, Saint
55. Rural Free Delivery (abbr.)
56. Auricle
57. _ Lanka

*.•*
*Urgent*
* Care **
*
*
: HOurs :
*: Holzer Clinic *:
** 1.Gallipolis
*
pm to 9 pm *
: (740) 446-5287 :
..* .Holzer Clinic **
' .*
Athens
*• · 9 am9 pm *
: · (740) 589-3120:
** Holzer.Clnic **
* Jackson
*
am .. pm :
* (740) 385-8871 *
*: Holzer Clinic· ;*
** 1 pmMeigs
*
- 9 pm *
:

9

9

: (740) 992-0060 :

.•

*

*
*
**********
"

�PAGE SIX

PAGE SEVEN

Puzzle No.5
Cigarettes Starting
At $19.49
Visit 011r New Beer Cave!

........ ~,....~.­
.,~~--. What's the Difference?
There are five things different between Picture Aand
Picture B. Om you fmd them all?

CLUES ACROSS
I . Licenses TV stations
4. Excludes
9.Feline
12. Humbug
13. Cochise's tribesmen
15. Doctors' group
16. Actress Lupino
17. One of the greats
19. A progressive grading
2 I . Rene _, bacteriologist
22. Eight singers
24. Makes a knight of
25. An evening party
27. A weekday (abbr.)
29. Calam _ _ , or Panama
orange
30. Reprehensions
35 . Whiskies
36. Rituals
37. A prosperous state of wellbeing
CLUES DOWN
I . Hoover's office
2. Blackguard
3. Reprimanded
4. Opaque gem
5. Create a product
6. Decorate a cake with
frosting
7. ~mas the Tank Engine
8. Transmit a message
9. Chocolate substitute
10. Not functioning properly
I I . Chinese "the way"
.J 3. Cleft p_ _: congenital
fissure
.
14. One room apartment
I 8. _ Dhabi . Arabian capital
20. Purplish red
22. Bernie K __:
quarterback
23 . Hyrax
~ 26. Mistake
ODj~)lllljlltp~~ • ,oznd./llfll"~lmw~ .roq 27. Worry
11DJ f.,_lllljl~~ l.I~.IIUJXJ5,!.Glllll() 1 - 2H. Blush wines
3 I. Republic of Ireland

40. Award a mark of honor to
42. Be in a huff
43. Before
4:4. Sarcasm
46. Penny
49. Counterweights
50. Edward-· author and
writer
52.47454
54. Icon of independence
57. After B
60. An athlete who plays for
pay
6 1. A salt or ester of acetic acid
62 . Swiss river
63. Point mid'Yay between N
andNW
64. Transports
65 . Wheel wrench

32. School organization
33. Offering fun and gaiety
34. Exposing human folly to
ridicule
38. Dried up (vegetation)
39. Female sheep
41. Et-_
45 . Cornmeal mush
46. Toto's breed
4 7. Arm joint
48. One point east of due north
5 1. Engrave
52. Make a ringing sound
53. Epsom s__
54. Licensed practical nurse
55. Affirmative
56. British thermal unit
58. Cologne
59. Work unit

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

CLUES ACROSS
1. Single woman: __ sole
5. Women (Frencli)
9. Finally
J4. A postal container
15. Act as chaJrperson
16. Bowed
17. Morning condensation
18. Stole
20. One who gets things done
22 . Fl~s
23 . M~ns
25. Become angry
26. Hauling vehicles
27 . Capable of being appointed
CLUES DOWN
I . Someone who consumes food
2. Auricular organ
3. Manganese
4. Electronic data processing
5. Married woman
6. Young ladies
7. Church officers
8. Swerve
9. Paddling
10. From Nicaea
11 . Ingeniousness
12. A radioactive element
13. Old English
14. Alfred Thayer _, US naval
historian
18. Don't know when yet
19. An honorary degree in
science
20. Slow up
21. Hardwood tree
23. A spherical object
24. A passage with access only
at one end
26. Shoot a marble-

30. Teeter-totter
32. S.A. artiodactyl mammal
37. Johnny _,comedian
38. Wrinkled
4(). Wheel nuts
41. Examined by ,sight
42. An ink writing implement
43. Concerned
44. Taxable
49. International linear units
50. Like the favored hare
52. A companion (archaic)
53. Valley

28. Volcanic mountain in
Japan
29. Family Hominidae
30.Amble
31. Energy unit ·
33. Actress Bacall
34. State categorically
35. Rewards (archaic)
36. Determine the sum of
37. Force apart
38. Measure of illumination
(abbr.)
39. Move back and away
from
42. Teacher (abbr.)
45.They _
46. Canadian province
47. _ and behold
48. Final stage
49. Orte thousandth of an
inch
51 . 4th tone of scale

�PAGE SIX

PAGE SEVEN

Puzzle No.5
Cigarettes Starting
At $19.49
Visit 011r New Beer Cave!

........ ~,....~.­
.,~~--. What's the Difference?
There are five things different between Picture Aand
Picture B. Om you fmd them all?

CLUES ACROSS
I . Licenses TV stations
4. Excludes
9.Feline
12. Humbug
13. Cochise's tribesmen
15. Doctors' group
16. Actress Lupino
17. One of the greats
19. A progressive grading
2 I . Rene _, bacteriologist
22. Eight singers
24. Makes a knight of
25. An evening party
27. A weekday (abbr.)
29. Calam _ _ , or Panama
orange
30. Reprehensions
35 . Whiskies
36. Rituals
37. A prosperous state of wellbeing
CLUES DOWN
I . Hoover's office
2. Blackguard
3. Reprimanded
4. Opaque gem
5. Create a product
6. Decorate a cake with
frosting
7. ~mas the Tank Engine
8. Transmit a message
9. Chocolate substitute
10. Not functioning properly
I I . Chinese "the way"
.J 3. Cleft p_ _: congenital
fissure
.
14. One room apartment
I 8. _ Dhabi . Arabian capital
20. Purplish red
22. Bernie K __:
quarterback
23 . Hyrax
~ 26. Mistake
ODj~)lllljlltp~~ • ,oznd./llfll"~lmw~ .roq 27. Worry
11DJ f.,_lllljl~~ l.I~.IIUJXJ5,!.Glllll() 1 - 2H. Blush wines
3 I. Republic of Ireland

40. Award a mark of honor to
42. Be in a huff
43. Before
4:4. Sarcasm
46. Penny
49. Counterweights
50. Edward-· author and
writer
52.47454
54. Icon of independence
57. After B
60. An athlete who plays for
pay
6 1. A salt or ester of acetic acid
62 . Swiss river
63. Point mid'Yay between N
andNW
64. Transports
65 . Wheel wrench

32. School organization
33. Offering fun and gaiety
34. Exposing human folly to
ridicule
38. Dried up (vegetation)
39. Female sheep
41. Et-_
45 . Cornmeal mush
46. Toto's breed
4 7. Arm joint
48. One point east of due north
5 1. Engrave
52. Make a ringing sound
53. Epsom s__
54. Licensed practical nurse
55. Affirmative
56. British thermal unit
58. Cologne
59. Work unit

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

CLUES ACROSS
1. Single woman: __ sole
5. Women (Frencli)
9. Finally
J4. A postal container
15. Act as chaJrperson
16. Bowed
17. Morning condensation
18. Stole
20. One who gets things done
22 . Fl~s
23 . M~ns
25. Become angry
26. Hauling vehicles
27 . Capable of being appointed
CLUES DOWN
I . Someone who consumes food
2. Auricular organ
3. Manganese
4. Electronic data processing
5. Married woman
6. Young ladies
7. Church officers
8. Swerve
9. Paddling
10. From Nicaea
11 . Ingeniousness
12. A radioactive element
13. Old English
14. Alfred Thayer _, US naval
historian
18. Don't know when yet
19. An honorary degree in
science
20. Slow up
21. Hardwood tree
23. A spherical object
24. A passage with access only
at one end
26. Shoot a marble-

30. Teeter-totter
32. S.A. artiodactyl mammal
37. Johnny _,comedian
38. Wrinkled
4(). Wheel nuts
41. Examined by ,sight
42. An ink writing implement
43. Concerned
44. Taxable
49. International linear units
50. Like the favored hare
52. A companion (archaic)
53. Valley

28. Volcanic mountain in
Japan
29. Family Hominidae
30.Amble
31. Energy unit ·
33. Actress Bacall
34. State categorically
35. Rewards (archaic)
36. Determine the sum of
37. Force apart
38. Measure of illumination
(abbr.)
39. Move back and away
from
42. Teacher (abbr.)
45.They _
46. Canadian province
47. _ and behold
48. Final stage
49. Orte thousandth of an
inch
51 . 4th tone of scale

�PAGE EIGHT

PAGE NINE

Puzzle No.7
ALM051 ALL DOG5 HAVE A PINK
10NGUE, EXCEP1 FOR 1HE CHOW,
WHICH HA5 A
el.ACK 'fONGUE.

you g~ess what
the bigger picture
featured here is?
3/J =
'113MSNV

3NOil '30/HMW ='11'3MSNV

CLUES ACROSS

38. Hemingway novel

I . British thennal unit

42. Slender tubes of pasta

4. Slightly open
8. Ultrahigh frequency
II . Rendered hog fat
13. Compositions for one voice
l5. Bird beak
16. Narrow headband
18. Article of bedding
19. Orand _, vintage
20. Loud warning sound
22. Whale ship captain
24 . Clearly delineated
25. Chart of Earth's surface
26. Canadian province
28. Occupational safety and
health act
30. Mister
31 . Scandinavian nomad
33. Charge for borrowing money

43. Somalian shilling

CLUES DOWN
I . Bacon-lettuce-tomato

sandwich
2. _ -kwon-do
3. Large pot for mak.t ng coffee
4. Judge the worth of
something
5. The march king
6. Brew
7. Eggs of a female fish
8. Remove lid
9 . Plant lacking a permanent
woody !Item
10. Burundi franc
12. A flat circular plate
14. Speak haltingly
17 . Atmosphere
21. Former Brazilian capital
23. h.t Albus Dumbledore
26. Ryukyu Islands City
27. Detailed description of
dc~ign criteria
29. _ sel Adams: photographer
3 I . Source of remembered
information
~::!.Old Te~tarncnt hook
.~4 In thl' dir~:cllon ol
.l5 I:mployce -.tock owncr-.hip
plan

CLUES ACROSS
I . Pea shell
4 . Slavs
9,. Tooth caregiver
12. Winglike
14. Seaport in C~meroon
15. Macaws
16. Gambling town
17. Among the largest bony fish
19. Just acquired
20. Spherical
22. Capital of Venezuela
24. Expires
27. Got stuck
28. Hanks TV show
33. Relative biological
effectiveness (abbr.)
34. Soft creamy white cheese
35. Not intoxicated
39. _ _ ight: hermetical
41 . Before
42. International defense

44 . A~earth

45. A domed or vaulted recess
48. An individual's
microprocessor
49. Madagascar franc
~0. Weighing device
53. a.k.a. Bhutan dolphin
54. Pertaining to eggs
55. Bag like structure in a plant
56. Concerning
59. Bleated
63. Exclamation: yuck!
64. Bread fungus
65. Netherlands river
66. More (Spani~b)
67. Used to carry food for
serving
68. A monotonous routine
36. Site Evaluation Steering
Committee ·
37. Hormone that stimulates
the thyroid gland
39. South American nation
40. Negative response
4 I . Santa _ winds
46. Bearp me up, _I
47 . Take in solid food
49. Klaus_, physicist spy
51 . Women 's _ movement
52 . Mild yellow Dutch
cheese made in balls
53 . Narrative adventure story
5~ . A quantity obtained by
addition
57. Stake
58 . Paddle
60. Swiss river·
6 1. Cologne
62. Spring clocks ahead
(abbr.)

CLUES DOWN

~

'.

1. Young salmon
2. Vegetable oil spread
3. Irish mother of gods
4. South Dakota
5.1, Portuguese
6. Drive against
7. A group of countries in
special alliance
8 . Highly spiced fatty sausage
9. Tap or ballet
10. Fearful anticipation
II . Cutting tools
13. Kia crossover vehicle
18. I st sign of the zodiac
21. Lacking in brightness
23. Malicious burning to destroy
property
25 . The outward flow of the tide
26. Something that is certain
28. Small nail
29. Off-Broadway theate'r award
30. D . Day son, Que _ _ (X2)
31 . Paul _, Briti~h phy!&gt;icist
32. Profoundly
36. Lyric poet

organization
43 . Beloveds
45 . Draws from
47. Distilled from fermented
molasses
48. Reference
52. One to whom money is
paid
54. Original matter
. 55. In a fake way
57. Expressed pleasure
61. _ Lilly, drug company
62. Monetary unit in Yemen
64. Romanian city
65 . Blot
.
66. Small lizard of the Old
World
69. Boxing champ Spinks
70. _ juris: sane
71 . Chick-pea plant
72. Gas usage measurement

37. Ladies' bag for small
articles
38. Popular tomato for Italian
·
cooking
40. Three pip cards
44. Scornful smile
46 . Old French coin
49 . Rcluting to the abdomen
50. Leguminous plant fruit
51 . Electronic
communication
52. Pacific Islands
53. A way to excuse
65 . National law-enforcement
officers
56. A sharply directional
antenna
5S. Red organic pigment
containing iron
59. Stock ownef'ship plan
60. Ringing sound ·
63 . Resinous secretion u-.ed in
~he llac

67 . Of!

68. One 'of the six noble ga!te~

�PAGE EIGHT

PAGE NINE

Puzzle No.7
ALM051 ALL DOG5 HAVE A PINK
10NGUE, EXCEP1 FOR 1HE CHOW,
WHICH HA5 A
el.ACK 'fONGUE.

you g~ess what
the bigger picture
featured here is?
3/J =
'113MSNV

3NOil '30/HMW ='11'3MSNV

CLUES ACROSS

38. Hemingway novel

I . British thennal unit

42. Slender tubes of pasta

4. Slightly open
8. Ultrahigh frequency
II . Rendered hog fat
13. Compositions for one voice
l5. Bird beak
16. Narrow headband
18. Article of bedding
19. Orand _, vintage
20. Loud warning sound
22. Whale ship captain
24 . Clearly delineated
25. Chart of Earth's surface
26. Canadian province
28. Occupational safety and
health act
30. Mister
31 . Scandinavian nomad
33. Charge for borrowing money

43. Somalian shilling

CLUES DOWN
I . Bacon-lettuce-tomato

sandwich
2. _ -kwon-do
3. Large pot for mak.t ng coffee
4. Judge the worth of
something
5. The march king
6. Brew
7. Eggs of a female fish
8. Remove lid
9 . Plant lacking a permanent
woody !Item
10. Burundi franc
12. A flat circular plate
14. Speak haltingly
17 . Atmosphere
21. Former Brazilian capital
23. h.t Albus Dumbledore
26. Ryukyu Islands City
27. Detailed description of
dc~ign criteria
29. _ sel Adams: photographer
3 I . Source of remembered
information
~::!.Old Te~tarncnt hook
.~4 In thl' dir~:cllon ol
.l5 I:mployce -.tock owncr-.hip
plan

CLUES ACROSS
I . Pea shell
4 . Slavs
9,. Tooth caregiver
12. Winglike
14. Seaport in C~meroon
15. Macaws
16. Gambling town
17. Among the largest bony fish
19. Just acquired
20. Spherical
22. Capital of Venezuela
24. Expires
27. Got stuck
28. Hanks TV show
33. Relative biological
effectiveness (abbr.)
34. Soft creamy white cheese
35. Not intoxicated
39. _ _ ight: hermetical
41 . Before
42. International defense

44 . A~earth

45. A domed or vaulted recess
48. An individual's
microprocessor
49. Madagascar franc
~0. Weighing device
53. a.k.a. Bhutan dolphin
54. Pertaining to eggs
55. Bag like structure in a plant
56. Concerning
59. Bleated
63. Exclamation: yuck!
64. Bread fungus
65. Netherlands river
66. More (Spani~b)
67. Used to carry food for
serving
68. A monotonous routine
36. Site Evaluation Steering
Committee ·
37. Hormone that stimulates
the thyroid gland
39. South American nation
40. Negative response
4 I . Santa _ winds
46. Bearp me up, _I
47 . Take in solid food
49. Klaus_, physicist spy
51 . Women 's _ movement
52 . Mild yellow Dutch
cheese made in balls
53 . Narrative adventure story
5~ . A quantity obtained by
addition
57. Stake
58 . Paddle
60. Swiss river·
6 1. Cologne
62. Spring clocks ahead
(abbr.)

CLUES DOWN

~

'.

1. Young salmon
2. Vegetable oil spread
3. Irish mother of gods
4. South Dakota
5.1, Portuguese
6. Drive against
7. A group of countries in
special alliance
8 . Highly spiced fatty sausage
9. Tap or ballet
10. Fearful anticipation
II . Cutting tools
13. Kia crossover vehicle
18. I st sign of the zodiac
21. Lacking in brightness
23. Malicious burning to destroy
property
25 . The outward flow of the tide
26. Something that is certain
28. Small nail
29. Off-Broadway theate'r award
30. D . Day son, Que _ _ (X2)
31 . Paul _, Briti~h phy!&gt;icist
32. Profoundly
36. Lyric poet

organization
43 . Beloveds
45 . Draws from
47. Distilled from fermented
molasses
48. Reference
52. One to whom money is
paid
54. Original matter
. 55. In a fake way
57. Expressed pleasure
61. _ Lilly, drug company
62. Monetary unit in Yemen
64. Romanian city
65 . Blot
.
66. Small lizard of the Old
World
69. Boxing champ Spinks
70. _ juris: sane
71 . Chick-pea plant
72. Gas usage measurement

37. Ladies' bag for small
articles
38. Popular tomato for Italian
·
cooking
40. Three pip cards
44. Scornful smile
46 . Old French coin
49 . Rcluting to the abdomen
50. Leguminous plant fruit
51 . Electronic
communication
52. Pacific Islands
53. A way to excuse
65 . National law-enforcement
officers
56. A sharply directional
antenna
5S. Red organic pigment
containing iron
59. Stock ownef'ship plan
60. Ringing sound ·
63 . Resinous secretion u-.ed in
~he llac

67 . Of!

68. One 'of the six noble ga!te~

�PAGE TEN

PAGE ELEVEN

uzze.
YOGA IS THOUSANDS OF YEARS OLD.
STONE CARVINGS
DATING 6ACK
MORE
THAN
5,000 YEARS
HAVE eEEN FOUND
IN THE INDUS VAL·
LEY SHOWING
YOGA POSES.

POWERED TOOTH·
6RU'sHE5 MAY 6E
MORE EFFECTIVE AT
REMOVING PLAQUE
AND DE6RI5 FROM
TEETH THAN MANUAL
TOOTH6RU5HE5.

Whars the Difference?
•

Can you guess
the bigger picture
featured here is?
SDVW HliM HH31 =!IWSNV

Creative Coloring
Celebrate Famtly FitiJfestylc Month.
Color mtlus ptclurc to mate )OUf own
mastcrptece.

CLUES ~CROSS .
I . Erect leafless flower stalk
6. Slowly disappears
II. Collides and rebounds
13. Settlement
14. Article
15. Having.the skill to do
something
17. Soviet city
18. Postal abbr. for Doncaster
19. Republic of New Afrika
21. Solvent
24. Cook in nearly boiling water,
as of eggs
26. Air Force
27. S. African city
28. Brought to a conclusion
29. Forcrign Service
30. Of an ode
31. CNN's founder Turner
33. Contains cerium
35. Spanish baby
36. Fee c harged for currency
CLUES DOWN
I . In short supply
2. Large artillery gun
3 . One of the six .noble gases
4. Qlue grass genus
5. Hearte ns
6. Dry wind in the Alps
7. Parabolic
8. Carry out
9 . Indigenous
10. Magistrate
12. Tum sharply
13. Cathode-ray tube
16. And, Latin
17. Kills (slang)
20. Annex
22. An awkward stupid person
23. AM or FM listening device
25. Definite
32 . River m NE Scotland
33. A man with dishonorable
behavior
34. Egotistical person
35. Pacific island
37 . Far East temples

exchange
37. Assign a slructure to a
• sentence
38. Medical man
39. Smudge
40. Carrier invention (abbr.)
42. _ _pequa, NY 117!58
46. Of agriculture
48. One thousandth of an
ampere
49. Meat preservation
50. Washington's home
53. Milwaukee Art Museum
54. Doonesbury character
55. Expression of sorrow or
pity
56. Settled down
58.E
59. About milk
6 1. Disk for throwing
63 . s s s
64. Comb-plate

39. Wager
40. Central Iowa city
41. Vehicle
43 . What you can repeat soon
after perceiving it
44. Mariners
45 . Think highly of
47 . Belongs to king of Huns
49. Spanish suns
5 1. Holiday (informal)
52. Sodium
57. Ancient Egyptian King
60. Atomic number 55
62. Cerium

CLUES ACROSS
I. Syrian massacre 1982
5. Hoard
10. Cowbarn (British)
14. Nerve fiber
15 . Lightweight triangular scarf
16. Enlarge hole
17. A thorny Eurasian bush with
plum-like fruits
18. Sweetheart (archaic)
19. Hybrid fruit with thick
wrinkled skin
20. Harry Potter heroine
23. Organization of Central
American States
24. Water in the solid state
25. Large stinging paper wasp
28. Provencal verses
33. Covered with ivy
34. Stacks
35 . Brew
36. Dunks
CLUES DOWN
1. Corned beef left over
2. Wheel shaft
3. Secure to a dOck
4. Windflowers
5. Suspended in a liquid
6. Dignified bearings
7. Fictional Looney Tunes
Corp.
8. 1920's swing dance
9. Dawnings
.
10. Sultanate in NE \lomeo
11. Safecra~ker (slang)
12. Abnormal breathing
13. Mid-East prince or chieftan
21 . Frosted
22. Plays a role
25. Removed an animal's skin
26. Like sheep
27. Undergo maturation
28. Yes
Bob
29. Ancient Olympic site
30. Municipality In Sweden
31 . Quench
32. Dr. _ _ , children's author
34. Young salmon

There are fi\'e things different between Pictwt Aand
Picture B. Can you firxl them all?
I

37. The City of Light
38 . Liberal rights organization
39. Point midway between NE
andE- •
40. Minute tissue opening
41 . Japanese deer
42. Alter original state (as in
alcohol)
44. Makes a raid
45. Provide with staff
46. Swiss river
4 7. Headmaster of Hogwarts
55. Gentlemen
56. Co. Buff_ _: U of C
teams
57. _ _ iginal: native person
58 . Algonquian language
59. SE Sri Lankan,seaport
60. Queen of Sparta
61 . Popular avocado
62. Get into
63 . Sight organs

37. Rate based on weight
38. Large wiry-coated terrier
40. Parent school organizations
41. An open skin infection
43 . .Makes somec;me laugh
44 . More fake
46. Aspen poplar
47. "The Ax Fight" tilmmaker ·
1'im
48. Maltese monetary unit
49. La_ Tar Pits, Hollywood
50. Rom_ _ : Star Trek alien
enemy
51 . liquefied lava is _ _en
52 . Be obedient to
53. Traveled on a horse
54. Spans of time

~~~~~~IIW 5 .m&amp;!S.~~ ._.....,._...
'NHI!'If'~~ z~~~~~•n:mwr.v

�PAGE TEN

PAGE ELEVEN

uzze.
YOGA IS THOUSANDS OF YEARS OLD.
STONE CARVINGS
DATING 6ACK
MORE
THAN
5,000 YEARS
HAVE eEEN FOUND
IN THE INDUS VAL·
LEY SHOWING
YOGA POSES.

POWERED TOOTH·
6RU'sHE5 MAY 6E
MORE EFFECTIVE AT
REMOVING PLAQUE
AND DE6RI5 FROM
TEETH THAN MANUAL
TOOTH6RU5HE5.

Whars the Difference?
•

Can you guess
the bigger picture
featured here is?
SDVW HliM HH31 =!IWSNV

Creative Coloring
Celebrate Famtly FitiJfestylc Month.
Color mtlus ptclurc to mate )OUf own
mastcrptece.

CLUES ~CROSS .
I . Erect leafless flower stalk
6. Slowly disappears
II. Collides and rebounds
13. Settlement
14. Article
15. Having.the skill to do
something
17. Soviet city
18. Postal abbr. for Doncaster
19. Republic of New Afrika
21. Solvent
24. Cook in nearly boiling water,
as of eggs
26. Air Force
27. S. African city
28. Brought to a conclusion
29. Forcrign Service
30. Of an ode
31. CNN's founder Turner
33. Contains cerium
35. Spanish baby
36. Fee c harged for currency
CLUES DOWN
I . In short supply
2. Large artillery gun
3 . One of the six .noble gases
4. Qlue grass genus
5. Hearte ns
6. Dry wind in the Alps
7. Parabolic
8. Carry out
9 . Indigenous
10. Magistrate
12. Tum sharply
13. Cathode-ray tube
16. And, Latin
17. Kills (slang)
20. Annex
22. An awkward stupid person
23. AM or FM listening device
25. Definite
32 . River m NE Scotland
33. A man with dishonorable
behavior
34. Egotistical person
35. Pacific island
37 . Far East temples

exchange
37. Assign a slructure to a
• sentence
38. Medical man
39. Smudge
40. Carrier invention (abbr.)
42. _ _pequa, NY 117!58
46. Of agriculture
48. One thousandth of an
ampere
49. Meat preservation
50. Washington's home
53. Milwaukee Art Museum
54. Doonesbury character
55. Expression of sorrow or
pity
56. Settled down
58.E
59. About milk
6 1. Disk for throwing
63 . s s s
64. Comb-plate

39. Wager
40. Central Iowa city
41. Vehicle
43 . What you can repeat soon
after perceiving it
44. Mariners
45 . Think highly of
47 . Belongs to king of Huns
49. Spanish suns
5 1. Holiday (informal)
52. Sodium
57. Ancient Egyptian King
60. Atomic number 55
62. Cerium

CLUES ACROSS
I. Syrian massacre 1982
5. Hoard
10. Cowbarn (British)
14. Nerve fiber
15 . Lightweight triangular scarf
16. Enlarge hole
17. A thorny Eurasian bush with
plum-like fruits
18. Sweetheart (archaic)
19. Hybrid fruit with thick
wrinkled skin
20. Harry Potter heroine
23. Organization of Central
American States
24. Water in the solid state
25. Large stinging paper wasp
28. Provencal verses
33. Covered with ivy
34. Stacks
35 . Brew
36. Dunks
CLUES DOWN
1. Corned beef left over
2. Wheel shaft
3. Secure to a dOck
4. Windflowers
5. Suspended in a liquid
6. Dignified bearings
7. Fictional Looney Tunes
Corp.
8. 1920's swing dance
9. Dawnings
.
10. Sultanate in NE \lomeo
11. Safecra~ker (slang)
12. Abnormal breathing
13. Mid-East prince or chieftan
21 . Frosted
22. Plays a role
25. Removed an animal's skin
26. Like sheep
27. Undergo maturation
28. Yes
Bob
29. Ancient Olympic site
30. Municipality In Sweden
31 . Quench
32. Dr. _ _ , children's author
34. Young salmon

There are fi\'e things different between Pictwt Aand
Picture B. Can you firxl them all?
I

37. The City of Light
38 . Liberal rights organization
39. Point midway between NE
andE- •
40. Minute tissue opening
41 . Japanese deer
42. Alter original state (as in
alcohol)
44. Makes a raid
45. Provide with staff
46. Swiss river
4 7. Headmaster of Hogwarts
55. Gentlemen
56. Co. Buff_ _: U of C
teams
57. _ _ iginal: native person
58 . Algonquian language
59. SE Sri Lankan,seaport
60. Queen of Sparta
61 . Popular avocado
62. Get into
63 . Sight organs

37. Rate based on weight
38. Large wiry-coated terrier
40. Parent school organizations
41. An open skin infection
43 . .Makes somec;me laugh
44 . More fake
46. Aspen poplar
47. "The Ax Fight" tilmmaker ·
1'im
48. Maltese monetary unit
49. La_ Tar Pits, Hollywood
50. Rom_ _ : Star Trek alien
enemy
51 . liquefied lava is _ _en
52 . Be obedient to
53. Traveled on a horse
54. Spans of time

~~~~~~IIW 5 .m&amp;!S.~~ ._.....,._...
'NHI!'If'~~ z~~~~~•n:mwr.v

�PAGE THIRTEEN ·

PAGE TWELVE

Puzzle No. 2 Answer

Puzzle No. 11

CLUES ACROSS
1 . Artist ChagaU
5. Imminent danger
10. A group of islands in the S
Pacific
11 . Effeminate
13. Cosmetics applied to.the face
14. Outcomes
15. The first game of the season
16. Tennis star Koumikova
17. Hospital surgical rooms
18. Manuscripts (abbr.)
19. Islands
21 . Pool stick
22. Embroidered loop edgings on
lace
24. The part of the skate that slides
on the ice
26. Beauty parlour
27. Stone roof tiles
28 . Ironic or sarcastic wit
29. Ends

30. Mechanical movement
31 . Niches
32. Mythical king of Thebes
33 . Lists of menu dishes
35. Finless fish
36. Triad
37. Words per minute
40. _Aviv: Israeli city
41. New Guinea monetary unit
42. Emperor Constantine IX
Mono_ _
45. Organisms such as humans
47. Process for gathering hay
48. Lockjaw
49. Wipe out magnetically
recorded information
50. Fluid accumulation in
tissues
51 . Payment for the use of
something

CLUES DOWN
I ., Creates from raw material
2. After a prayer
3. Rake
4 . Goat sign
5. Site of the f&amp;mQus Leaning
Tower
6. A silver 5 franc piece
7. Settles
8. Entc:rs uninvited
9. Leaseholders
10. Runs down
11 . Sea eagles
12. Composes
13. Female parent
16. The lst octave above the
treble staff
' 20. Unit of loudness
22. A paved area adjoining a
house
23 . Ancient Troy
24. Nonchalant
25 . Emits coherent radiation
26. A man-made orbiting object
27 . Month
28 . Shielded

29. An anxious feeling
30. A salt or ester of acetic
acid
33 . Classic board game
34. Coach Parseghian
36. Aromatic balsam used in
medicine
37 . Card game
38 . Com__: cornbread
39. Used as a food additive to
enhance flavor
41 . Source of the Blue Nile
43 . Swiss river
44. Group of people related
by blood or marriage
46. _ aroneck, NY 10543

THROUGH THE POPULAR COMIC &amp;OOK
SERIES "X·MEN: AND &amp;LOCK&amp;USTER
MOVIES, THE WOLVERINE
HAS &amp;ECOME A HOT
TOPIC. MANY PEOPLE
THINK A WOLVERINE IS A
MEM&amp;ER OF THE WOLF
FAMILY. lfS REALLY A
LARGE WEASEL.

Canine \Nord Find
Just in time for .. Adopt a Shelter Dog Mo.O:th." see how
many related words you can find and circle throughout
the puzzle below .
A.DOPT

J:XX}

PUPPY

BARK

FRIEND

CANINE
CARINO

FURRY
L&lt;&gt;VE

SHELTER
TAIL

E

u

E

:M

v

F

v

E

1

F

Q

D

G

Q

N

L
L
H
N
0

N
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T
D

0

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l&gt;

0

L
D
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p

p

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F
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p

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WAGG-ING

I

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T
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w

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�PAGE THIRTEEN ·

PAGE TWELVE

Puzzle No. 2 Answer

Puzzle No. 11

CLUES ACROSS
1 . Artist ChagaU
5. Imminent danger
10. A group of islands in the S
Pacific
11 . Effeminate
13. Cosmetics applied to.the face
14. Outcomes
15. The first game of the season
16. Tennis star Koumikova
17. Hospital surgical rooms
18. Manuscripts (abbr.)
19. Islands
21 . Pool stick
22. Embroidered loop edgings on
lace
24. The part of the skate that slides
on the ice
26. Beauty parlour
27. Stone roof tiles
28 . Ironic or sarcastic wit
29. Ends

30. Mechanical movement
31 . Niches
32. Mythical king of Thebes
33 . Lists of menu dishes
35. Finless fish
36. Triad
37. Words per minute
40. _Aviv: Israeli city
41. New Guinea monetary unit
42. Emperor Constantine IX
Mono_ _
45. Organisms such as humans
47. Process for gathering hay
48. Lockjaw
49. Wipe out magnetically
recorded information
50. Fluid accumulation in
tissues
51 . Payment for the use of
something

CLUES DOWN
I ., Creates from raw material
2. After a prayer
3. Rake
4 . Goat sign
5. Site of the f&amp;mQus Leaning
Tower
6. A silver 5 franc piece
7. Settles
8. Entc:rs uninvited
9. Leaseholders
10. Runs down
11 . Sea eagles
12. Composes
13. Female parent
16. The lst octave above the
treble staff
' 20. Unit of loudness
22. A paved area adjoining a
house
23 . Ancient Troy
24. Nonchalant
25 . Emits coherent radiation
26. A man-made orbiting object
27 . Month
28 . Shielded

29. An anxious feeling
30. A salt or ester of acetic
acid
33 . Classic board game
34. Coach Parseghian
36. Aromatic balsam used in
medicine
37 . Card game
38 . Com__: cornbread
39. Used as a food additive to
enhance flavor
41 . Source of the Blue Nile
43 . Swiss river
44. Group of people related
by blood or marriage
46. _ aroneck, NY 10543

THROUGH THE POPULAR COMIC &amp;OOK
SERIES "X·MEN: AND &amp;LOCK&amp;USTER
MOVIES, THE WOLVERINE
HAS &amp;ECOME A HOT
TOPIC. MANY PEOPLE
THINK A WOLVERINE IS A
MEM&amp;ER OF THE WOLF
FAMILY. lfS REALLY A
LARGE WEASEL.

Canine \Nord Find
Just in time for .. Adopt a Shelter Dog Mo.O:th." see how
many related words you can find and circle throughout
the puzzle below .
A.DOPT

J:XX}

PUPPY

BARK

FRIEND

CANINE
CARINO

FURRY
L&lt;&gt;VE

SHELTER
TAIL

E

u

E

:M

v

F

v

E

1

F

Q

D

G

Q

N

L
L
H
N
0

N
N
T
D

0

I

l&gt;

0

L
D
D

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p

p

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G

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~

�PAGE FOURTEEN

. PAGE FIFTEEN

Puzzle No. 5 .Answer

Puzzle No. 6 Answer

Puzzle No..9 Answer

Maze craze
See if you can guide the witch to her cauldron
on the other side of this maze.

Dog $(ramble
•

Unscramble the letters below and uncover some facts
about dogs.
1. Dogs have about 10 CA.Y.LQ sounds.
2. Dogs have fewer taste buds on their NI E Q .Il Q than
people do, totaling 1700.
.
3. Lassie was played by several LEM Adogs because it
~as thought ·they appeared better on camera.
· 4. E £ R! R A! dogs are not dogs, but rodents.
iJ!.IJV.lJ •'fr

azvw 'E

an8uol
.'S.JJMSUV

·e. ZV:JOA

'[

�PAGE FOURTEEN

. PAGE FIFTEEN

Puzzle No. 5 .Answer

Puzzle No. 6 Answer

Puzzle No..9 Answer

Maze craze
See if you can guide the witch to her cauldron
on the other side of this maze.

Dog $(ramble
•

Unscramble the letters below and uncover some facts
about dogs.
1. Dogs have about 10 CA.Y.LQ sounds.
2. Dogs have fewer taste buds on their NI E Q .Il Q than
people do, totaling 1700.
.
3. Lassie was played by several LEM Adogs because it
~as thought ·they appeared better on camera.
· 4. E £ R! R A! dogs are not dogs, but rodents.
iJ!.IJV.lJ •'fr

azvw 'E

an8uol
.'S.JJMSUV

·e. ZV:JOA

'[

�•

ALONG THE RIVER

l.JVING

.
Different perspectives:
Father, son gain wisdom from foreign land, Cl

House of the Week: Breath of L~e. D1

I

tm
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
llhio\ ; dh-~ l'uhli~hiug( "·

l'ollll'l'll\ • \liddh-poo·t•(,;ollipoli~·J.ollll.ll '~ :.!O.:.!ooX

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DOD: R~vitalization application ·deficient in areas

'SPORTS
;• High school basketball
~ction. See Page ~1

BY

Ohio
Department
of
Development said the application scored low in two of
MIDDLEPORT
- ' six areas considered by the
Middleport's application department,
program
for revitalization funding financing and feasability
was rejected because other and implementation.
communities offere4 more . The department uses six
local leverage, and Jtecatsp criteria to rate applications
a relatively low number 'of for possible funding:
business owners were will- Community distress, proing to participate.
~ram financing, physical
Nikki Jaworski ' or the Impact and design, program
BRIAN

J. REED

BREE~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

strategy, program feasability and implementation, and
organizational capacity.
At a meeting Thursday,
members of the Middleport
. Development Group, the
volunteer board overseeing
the application · process,
said they had not received
confirmation of why this
second application for
funding was denied in
December. Buckeye Hills0

Hocking Valley Regional $170,449 from local building
Development District pre- .owners for facade improvepared and submitted the ments, locally-administered
application on behalf of the Community Development
Middleport Community Block Grant formula .funds
Association.
for
street
lighting,
Middleport's application Appalachian
Regional
requested $400,000, the Commission funding of
maximum grant award $391 ,549 for sidewalk and
through the program, to be curb replacements, funds
used with $623,449 in local
funds. The local match for from the village's tree fund
the application included ~»lease see Application, A2

BREC
•

·Issues
peak
alert
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - This
weekend's near-zero temperatures will have two certain consequences:Utility
delivery systems will be
taxed to keep up with
demand, and electric bills
for February will balloon.
Forecasters P.redict a period of bone-chliling cold for
three to .four days. Buckeye
"Jral Electric Cooperative
(BREC) is bracing for possible
record-breaking
demand across its sou~st ·-·
Ohio service territory.
The .warning to co-op
members is to prepare the1r
homes and their budgets,
according
to
BREC
Consumer
Services
Manager Russ Elliott.
"Our primary concern is
setting a new winter peak of
record," he said. "If the
forecast models hold true,
Pl..se see Peak, Al

•

OBITUARIES
PaOtA5
.• Bennie Buck, n
• Lester R. Dowell, 73
• Richard Lee Fulks, 66
·• Rose Marie Shade, 68
:• Sonja Sue Wayland, 66

PAGE SIXTEEN

Submitted photo

Your.Hometown
NEWS pers

Core drilling began at Green Elementary last Tuesday for the new Green Elementary School at Centenary. The core drilling
and Phase I environmental study have already been completed for the new Rio Grande Elementary School, according to
Gallipolis City Schools officials.
·

WEATHER

"

alltpohs iatlp ~rtbunt~.

4

INDEX
4 SECriONS - 24 PAGES

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
ClassifiedS
D3-5
Comics
insert
Editorials
A4
Movies
cs
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2
Sports
B Section
Weather
A2
© aoo8 Ohio Valley PubUsbiJNI Co.

•

740-992-215
··iunbap ~tmes -ieritinef.·

./J
C:// ''
j

"' .

~ ~

: ..

4,·

'

;

RUTLAND - Walking
in to the · Rutland Civic
Center last week felt more
like walking into a sporting
event with a banner asking
for,, solidarity and support,
not for a .team but for the
village of Rutland.
Several Rutland residents
gathered at a town mee.ting
held by Mayor Lowell
Vance to discuss problems
in the village and what is
being done about them.
Vance said he wanted to
touch base with the residents and though he may
have riot always said what
they wanted to hear, he said
he hoped at least the residents knew where he stood
on issues when they left the
Please ... Ru&amp;ncl, A2
I

'

~

.

'

"'

Complete .Ca~!
,

WheQ.Mrs.

.

·~

abe ~~~ no tdta
care Of with one~ tMtannc~
'

740 -446-2342 ~
.,,

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