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                  <text>Page B8 • The Daily

Sen tin ~l

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Back to School edition
inside today's Sentinel

Fair scenes, AS

•·

at

Printed on 100 9,
!\'(.'" ·sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,n CENTS • Vol. 58, No. 26

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 2008

lh·cJcl~d

-

.

-

t;:&gt;

www.mydailyscntinel.com

.,

SPORTS
• US 'team moves
on to medal round.
See Page Bl

God's NET distributing
.school supplies Tuesday

Dee Rader
of God's

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

child along wi th some bas ic school supplies
as needed." said Rader this week as she
accepted a $200 che~k from Peoples Bank
POMEROY - For many years God's this week to buy more. For several years the
NET, a part of the Meigs County Bank has collected supplies and then donatCooperative Parish program of service to ed them to God 's~N ET but thi s year decided
residents, has distributed school supplies to give money from their fund-raising pro' just about the time schools open in the fall. jects so that agency could purchase what was
This year will be no exception. Dee still needed in the way of school supplies.
Rader, who works in the program. advises
Rader said that last year 250 children
that the distribution will take place Tuesday came by for supplies. but this year they are
- the day before school begins - at the e.x pecting eve n more because of economic .
Genter from 2 to 4 p.m. or as .long a s the conditions here. She credited contributions
supplies last. One requirement is that ·the like the one which came from Peoples Bank
children come in to get their s.upplies. They to making it possible for God's Net to carry
cannot be picked up by parents or friends.
out its "hands- up" programs such as giving
"We' re trying to offer backpacks to every out school supplies.

NET

HOEFLICH@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

LIS4

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·
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&amp;
.

'•

PageAJ
• Jean M. Fitch, 74
• Lucy A Wi~ong, 80

INSIDE
• Hollers sweep
hay show wins.
See Page AJ
• Local Briefs.
·see Page AJ
• A Hunger For More.
See ,Page A6
• Coming soon!
See Page A6

WEATIIER

..

Detalla on Page A2

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A2
. J\2
Calendars
Bs-6,
Cl assifieds
Comics
B?
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
As-7
Movies
A3
NASCAR
B4
Obituaries
A3
Sports
B Section
Weather
© aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlshlna Co.

Eastern
Local begins
year with
open house
Bv BRII!.N

J.

REED

Please see Eastern, A3

Charlen.e
Hoefllchlphoto

Robert Strohl
(second from
11 left) showed
the grand
champion market hog at this
year's Junior
· Fair Market
Hog Show.
· Also pictured
Daniel
Buckley, fair
king·, Rebecca
Chadwell,
swine
princess.
Audrionna
Pullins, fair
queen, Ashley
Life, fair queen
first runner-up,
Mark Gibbs ,
swine prince.

BRE'E'O@ MYOAILYSENTI NELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local School
[)istrict will hold an open
house for students, parents
and the community on Aug.
18, with classes scheduled
to begin on Aug. 20.
Superintendent
Rick
Edwards said students can
meet their homeroom teachers and receive other information about the upcoming
school year at the annual open
house. Refreshments will be
served during the event,
which will be held from 5 to 7
p.m. in both the high school
and the elementary building.
Only one major staffing
change is planned for the
new school year. Edwards
said Shawn Bush has been
hired as a new middle school
principal in the elementary
building. Jody Howard will
continue in her capacity as
the elementary principal.
The school board modi.fied the admini strative
structure at the elementary
school, eliminating the
position of !ISsistant principal and dividing the responsibilities for two principals.
Bus routes
'The district has announced
minor changes in the bus
routes for the new year, and
asks that students be ready
and at their bus stop early.
Routes are' as follows :
• Bus 6 (C. Ritchie): The
route begins at Owl Hollow
Road at 7:10 a.m., and proceeds to Calaway Ridge
Road, Ohio 681, Main Street
in Tuppers Plains, Ohio 7
through Tuppers Plains to
the Athens County line, and
the Arbaugh Addition.
.
. • Bu.sh 15: The route
begins at Horse Cave Road
at 7:20 a.m. The bus travels
to Bashan Road to Keno,
exits Bashan Road at Bissell
Road before getting to
Keno. From Keno, the bus .
will travel Ohio 248 and exit
at Taylor, Riebel and Oak
Hill Roads. pick up children
in Chester, and share
responsibilities in Chester
with Tom Pullins (14).

accepts a
check from
People's
Bank fo r the
school supply giveaway program. ·

Submitted photo ,

IOIOPhOU
BY BETH SERGENT
BSE'RGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Robert Strohl and Jackie
Jordan will be showing the
grand and reserve champion
market hogs, respectively. at
· tomorrow 's livestock sale.
Strohl
and
Jordan
emerged on top of a competitive show consisting of
98 market hogs all vying fo r
the top slot.
In
addition,
Dani el
Jenkins· was named grand

champion showman and Miya Gilmore, Matthew
Michael Manuel was named Keesee, Josiah Lawson ,
reserve champion showman Breanna Colburn, Angela
during a competition which Keesee, Jennifer Fife, Jackie
included nine classes.
Jordan, .Adam Lavender,
Those placing' first in their Mitchell Howard.
respective weight classes
Those showing market
were: Tonv Roush, Sav.annah hogs at this year's Juni or
Hawley, · Shandi Beaver, Fair Market Hog Show are
Morgan Ru ssell, Jordan as follows, in random order:
Roush, Ky le Russell, Heath Nicole Andrus, Briann a
Dettwiller, Robert Strohl , Ayres , Shanda Welch .
Matt Durst, Zyon Gilmore.
Those placing second in their Mathew Gilmore, Jacob
res pective weight classes Pillow, Rebecca Chadwell,
were as follow s: Justin Lee, ·' Ple.ase see Hog show, Al

Southern Local .
announces
scheduling
.·changes
STAFF REPORT
'

NEWSilMYDA ILYSENTINEL COM

RA C INE Southern
Local School Di stric·t will
ha ve new ~ tart ing times for
sc hools
thi s
year.
Superimendcnt Tony Deem
has announced.
The superin te ndent said
that the time changes were
necessary so as to be in alignment with the vocatioml education program times scheduled at Meigs Loc ;il and
attended by some Southern
students. Busing change
times were annoui1eed earlier
by the Meigs District.
Essentially. Southern will
start 15 minutes earlier this
school year. Free Break fas ts
will be served once again
thi s year beginning at 7:30.
All students are g i v~ n a free
break!itst and all students
are urged to participate in
the program.
he
Students
cannot
dropped off at the sclwol
prior to 7':30 a.m. Deem
said adding that no unsupervised stude nts can be left on
school premi ses. Cert ified
staff will report at 7:45 a.m.
with so me duty rosters call ing for supervisory duti es at
7:30 a.m. School for stu dents will ·start Wednesda y
with teache rs reporting for
an opening day teacher's

Please see Southern, A3

Harrison, Barber have
top rabbit market pens

Charles Harrison
(front right) and
Katlyn Barber
(front left) took
the pnzes for
grand and
reserve cham pion market pens,
respectively, at
yesterday's
Junior Fair
Rabbit Show.
Also pictured ,
second row
(from left) Sabra
Bailey, rabb it
princess , Daniel
Buckley, lair
king. Audrionna
Pullins. fair
queen .

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT @MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSP~INGS - Durin g a marathon
Junior Fair Rabbit Show, Charles Harrison and
Katlyn Barber took the ·prizes for grand and
reserve champion market pens, respectively.
Of ihe upwards of 30 market pens showing
this year. in addition to Harrison and Barber,
Dakota O'Brien finished third, Eli zabeth
Teaford, fourth, .Sarah Turner, fi fth .
When it carne to ,the showmanship awards,
50 contestants competed for the top prizes
with Haley Perdas taking the ribbon for grand
champion showman and Sarah Lawrence takin2 the ribbon for reserve champion showman.
First and second place showmanship winners
in their division were as follows : Senior,
'
· Please see Rabbits, Al
.

Beth Sergentlphoto

.

. We at Home
National Banlc
.
,

•

~

GATIJNG AN,__, to we1co1te tiatli119 Coal ComPaiiY to tile Neighbol'ltOOII.
;£U OHIO. LLC
·
We are loolclft9 (owarrl to wortlng witlt ,YOM.
. . ·

3rrl St. • R«ine • 1110.9119·21l0
St Itt 1.24 • Syracllse • 140·992.fJJJ
_..,.Got It/ .

..

�,
'

TJ:l_E

The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAIL130X

Despite doubts,
maintain relationship
BY KATHY MITCHELL

AN~ MARCY SUGAR

Bt·ar Annie: I m " proud
LtthL' I

of

t\\

n h.tnd,ome

..,poh·n to my mothel-tn-Lm
about 11. but nothmg h.ts
ch~m g~ J

I 'd he

tll[et ~st e d 10

get 'omc keclb.1ck
Mid11cst 1\lom
Dear Mom: Not ,J!i
g Jdndptttl.' nh kno w how It)

hn"
.t ~cs I-I dlld II The11
'
'
mother .md I .ue dll &lt;liLod I
reLenlil lound out throu eh tt1! L' r.ll. l \\ llh \'O Uil !..! dliiDi\A le\1111); lll.\1 Ill)' 1'4 - Liten and m.u.1)· pretc ; nm
to lile) ·, e alrc.Jcly rat,cd
yrtt t-old l'Ill) hmlogrL.tl "on Tht" hd~ ch~\ . t... t(rtcd then k1ds. th,nk you. ,md
m~ t.uncll When I ·Ld lkd 111..1\\ the: U ltk.c to pur-. ut:
th ~:JI own tll iCJCs ls II Jl)C'&gt;Ill~ C\-1\lle .chou! 11. she
n't
mcdn they don't lo~e
1csponLkd. 'Whale1cr. · ami
hu11 g up the phone I the ~ randchilclrc n , and 11 s
'ety po&gt;Stblc they v.ill
h cl\Cil .t 'pokt:ll tu het "'lrH.:e.
1
d ,uc helle t when the k1ds
. . n I ~ot nu c~polot!~ Ul clllythtn ~ No\\ I hc'-11 -.he wL1nh
"' " older If yow m-1,"' '
to IIlii odULC my 'on 10 hts .tre willmg to b.tby-sit on
OCCaston. hv cl ii nl Cdn S.
htolog tc.tl !,n hcJ
co nllnUe lO ;;sk Ihem
Fuur tc~n \C.u~ 1-. d lon~
Dear Annie: I re.Jd the
lll1lt..~ diH.I 1 ·Ldll .l 1e1 !_;l) rt
hurt-.. I rn umcc rnt:d : Lbout ~ le!!er Irom "Wt&gt;JJ Jed SKk 111
the Midv. cs l.' who w.IS
Ill\ ... 1)11 cllld \\ h.tt \ on hr s
concerned
.tbout he1 colmind Wh.tl c.1n I do'' lege-age d.wgh l ~ r' s mcreas()isenl'ranchised ()ad
Dear llad: You J on·! tnob bn1nh
I have tc,ld every bil of
hd\ c to ·l et ~o ··You rtt J... ed
ddVJLe
on the subted . I
ih" hoy. ,Jnd' he IS ' till YOLII
'"n. emouon.li ly dnd pos" - th1nk. but no one has evcc
bl\ k~.~llv ,,, wel l You menlJ&lt;'Iled the 1de" ot EAT, h-o ulc(mdintdlll" rclallon- ING SLOWLY Ever Since I
. , lll p 110 Jll.llter what your was forced to Cdl slow ly due
cx -wJic dt&gt;cs It you h,J ve to Ll g~t gg tn g prohlem. I
hdvc found 11 a good hab1L
\ r... r tc~tr o n n ghts (,mJ you
'- IHnlld) \ OLI Will hdve ,111 Me,J!s bcwme more cnjoy&lt;&gt;ppollunll y to cltsnt" h1s c~ble. tood gets chewed
mo1c thnwughl ), whtch ' "
fc~l111g._, I-I O\\C\Cl. WC Ulg:C
1e( om mended .tnd you cd n
)O ll 1101 lo llldk ~ the S!IU,IJC! ,tx .tnd en1oy wh.ll you'1e
110 !1 mu1 c . . t,e-. . . tul It will
not Ill!! I \ ou1 -.on to hdve ea un g And 1hc .tmoulll ol
;~nothe t Jlc rson 1n his ltfe toocl vou con, ume be!OJe
who Cclrcs dOOUI hJJn Be leelmg sa!JS!Jed JS substansupp01 tl\ c ol any ml.:!e tmg tiallv less
uin il this "ah.t" moment.
w11h lm bmlogJc,ll lather.
\\-h!le JC . I '&gt;'&gt; lllll1g l111n th~t II I'd consl,mtly beenthink1ng
doe" nnt lessen how much .Jhout c,J!on es. qu,mtlly .md
yo u love htm And 1I hJS the v.hole dtsgustmg food
obsesstiTn
Now I dill
hJOiogt( ~.ll, f Lttl1~1 docs not
\\'dill cl Jd diJOll Ship. you r tclaxed .Jbou t the subjeCt
su n \VIII llL'Cd VOU lllOIC SJnce I know I'm not about
th ,Jll C\L'l
.
to oveJe.Jt - hu!..!e dll10llllts
Uear Annie: Wh&lt;it " the .1re JUst not .1ppe.Jimg anyc.illlcJC J H. ~ between ··~,linci ­
more. I strongly recom!W enun g" anti 'b&lt;~hy-SJ t ­ mend ,1 , Jow1 nu down of
tm g· ' I -.ay grdndpltrenllng the e.ttmg pr ot:~~ . . lot om:\
IS sp~nd tng 11111\: WJ!h )'Olll mec.J!I he,J! Lh dnd enjoygJdnJdHILhen hcl:.ll!Se you ment ol life 111 g.e netdl. wlmt to B~lby - sllttng '" Ra\'enna, Neb.
do111g It because you· ve
Dear Ravenna: Most
been .JSked to
diCLJct.tn' Will tell you th,ll
My Jn -I,Jws i1vc less than catJng mor e s lowiy gives
I1\e mile s .Jway We h&lt;1vc the b1 am LJme to regJSter
two vc1 y well-behdved th at yo u •ate lui !, .111d conchilt!J en. yet the on ly 11111e seq uently. you eat less
my in-lc~w-. see them ts on Thanks for mentioning
holtdays cllld maybe,, blflh- tillS stmple .111d ettectJve
dd} p.trt y or soccer game. dtet mel
They' ve l&lt;~ken eaLh of our
Atlllie's Mailbox is writch ild1 en to see one stage tell by Kathy Mitchell aud
sho\v , but al\ far a-. taking Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime edi·
them to the park. 'having tors o.f the A1111 La11ders
them over tor tee cream or colum11. Please e-mail your
even settJ!l.j as1de an hour a questio11s to Ullllirmwilweek to 1cad to them, f01- hox@comcmt.llel, or write
ge t 11 \1y m-l.1ws .tre just to: ·A 1111ie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
"too bu sy. ·
Box II/IJ91J, Chicago, IL
Bcc;1use the v &lt;1rc almost 60611. 1o (i11d out more
completely cemovcd fiOm about A11r11~ '.1 Mailbox,
my k1ds i1ves. I as!- them to a11d read .features by other
h&lt;tby-SJt once 01 tv.ice a Creaton Sy11dicate writers
momh I fee l I h.tve to mlli- a11d cartoo11istl, visit the
atc con tact by "neeclmg" Creators Syrzdzcate Web
the JJ '"'" lance Yes. \ · ve page at www.crealiJrs.com.

..:1

. Local Weather
Friday ... Partly
sunny
With " si Jght chdnce of
showers and lhundcrst;H ms
Hl t(h' a1ound
No1 th
w1nds ,tround 5 'mph
Chance ol ra111 20 percent
night ... Pa!lly
FridliY
cloudy. A ' light chance ol
showet s dnd Lhundet 'tOJ ms
m the evcnmg Lows 111 the
mtd ~O s Nm1hv.est wmds
.1round 5 mph Chdncc of
nun 20 pclL'ent
Saturday... Mostly sunn}.
H1ghs 111 the lower go,
Nolthwes l wmds atounu 5
mph
Saturda~· night ... P.trtly
c loud ~ Lows 111 the upper

·so

50s West v. mds .1rnund 5
mph.
through
Sunday
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs m the mid
ROs Lows 111 the m1d 60s
Tuesday and Tuesday
night ... Moslly cloudy. A
ch.mce of ' howe rs and
thundeJslotnJs H1gh' 111 the
mid 80s Lows in the mid
60s Cildnce ot r.tm 40 percem.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Hi gh, in the mid
80s Lows in the m1d 60s
Thursday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs around 90.

•

D

Friday, August 15, 2ooA

Reunions

tnfo lmdllon (Oilt .. t&lt;.:t Dord.
\J).J XH2&lt;:!0R1

Sunda). ,\ ug. 2-'
MASON COL ' N"I Y
The Wc.t1cr c~un Joll 11 til h~
held .11 the \\c,l Vll~Jn t , t
State
F&lt;ll m
1\lu;euJJ J
Kttchc n ioLLllcd J1&lt;1llh ot
Po1111
Pk.JS.Jn l
on
F.tl!gwund Rn. td Dnut,
open dl II ,, m putiLJL 1lundl .11 I p 111 Mc,Jt. d1 mk
.md tahlc ser11ce IUJJtJShcd
Rcl .llllcs
t.Jn lli\
Llnd
I I lCIJd'&gt; \Ve iL omc rm llhll c

. Youth events
Sunday, Aug. 17
MIDDLI:PORT - Oasts
CillJSl tan Fcl lowshtp wtll
' Jl""'or" lt~e school supply
g11 ~.JW&lt;J} I1om 6 to 8 p m ,
D.11e
Diles
P.Jrk
RdJcshmclll' and mu , ic.
ruesday, Aug. 19
POM EROY Metgs
M1ddlc School will have an
IIJ'C ll hllUSe f'01 aJJ ~ ixth

grade students and newly
enrolled staden" 5 to 7 p m
m the school.

Clubs and
organizations
Saturday, Aug. 16
POMEROY - Chrtsllan
Motorcycle
Assoctal!on
"De ltvered" Chapter. rcguldr meetmg. 5 .p m..
Common Grounds
Monday, Aug. 18
MIDDLEPORT

Special
meetmg
of
M1ddleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM. 7 p m., for past
ma; ters night, Mtddleport
M.1somc Temple. Work Ill
Master Mason degree. AU
past masters of lodge asked
to allend. All Masons mvit,ed. Meal fo llows.
•

Public meetings
Monday, Aug. 18
LETART FALLS ~
Letart Townshtp Trustees, 5
p.m.. otfice butldmg.

Rabbits from Page AI
Lind sey P.1rk e1. MeiJss.J
Snowden JunJoJ. S.JJ ah
LawJcnce. Fl.J}ic c &lt;..oi!Jns.
InlClllltdJ.LlC .
H.tl tl
Peed"'·
Ju &gt;iJJJ
Ehl11i.
Beg1nnct. Kchc) .lohn-.un
J.tckJ e Jotd.Jn
11

C llll l'

In

Haley Perdas
(nght) took the
nbbon for grand
champion
showma'n and
Sarah
Lawrence (left)
took the ribbor:t
for reserve
champ1on
showman at
yesterday's
Juntor Fair
Rabbtt Show.
Also pictured,
Audnonna
Pullins. fair
queen

lh c

hrcednH! CdlL' !.! OJI L'"i l. tckll.'
Jord.tn look home h~st 111
'hnw wJtil llCJ N~11
Zeal,l!Jd Doc \\h tk S,JJ.Ih
Ldwrencc
took
I\Otlll'
I e"l'i Ve be ... ! Ill ... h O\\ \\ Jttl
he1 mlm -re x 8 Jeed Jil 1

.

1
~

r e..; ult ... 111 01du ol J.tn kllH.!"'

we t e as lllllo\"'" 5cnt~Jt
Doc. S.tr~th I . JWit.'llu.'
H.tic y P~rd.JS
Ah tg,JJI
House l. JunJ oJ Doc S,u ,JIJ
LawJ~JJcC. Scn101 l:luct-

Beth Sergen1/phOioS

Sdtdh L lWtl' IKl' LnH.Iscv
Packc1. M~IJ ss, J SllolldcJi

Ste1en Ho,Ji u,J!t. JullJ U&lt;
Buck SaJ.Jh '-"'" ~n ~·e .
Sen1or Doe, J.1ckic Jotd ,m,
Jun10r
Due,
WIHtlcv
Le,~eh. Se)lJOJ Buck. S,JJ,th
Tu rnc r. S.Jrah L1 w1e nee
Sent or Doc. S.1rah Tumc1.
Juntor
Buck.
Satah
Lawrence. Sen101 Due
Sarah TLu net, lumo1 Doe
Sarah Turner. Sen1or Buck ,
S.Jr,Jh Tu1 ne1 . luni (H Doc.
Sar.th I..Jwrence, Senio1
Doe.
H,J! ey
Pe1das.
Melissa Snowden: JunJOJ
Doe. Abt¥ ,111 HnuseJ.
Sen1111
Doc.
S.tr.th
Lawrence. H,Jicy Pe1das.
AhJgdtl Huu..,eJ. J Lin IOJ
Doe , S,iJ,th L I\\J ence.
Ru ck,
S.tr,lh
SenJot
Ltwrence, Lind sey P.11keJ,
Meltssa Snowden . Steven
Hoalcralt. Jun 1or Buc·k.
S,trdh Lawren ce. Semor
Doe , Jack1e JoJd.tn. JunJOJ
Doe , Whitley Le.tch
Sentor
Buck. S.tr,th
Turner, Sarah L1wrence.
Semot Doe. Sdr.Jh TUJner,
Jumor
Bm:k,
S.trall
Lawtence , Scn1m Doe.
Junilll Doc. Scn HII Buck.
S,udh Twnet . Jun1m Doc.
S.tr&lt;lh Lm 1encc Sen11H
Doc , H.1ky Pecd,JS Meltss.J
Sncmden. Jun 101 Doe .
Abtg,l!l Hou sel: Jun,J oJ
Buck. MciJSsa Snowden
LnH.bcv
Juntot
Doc.
Pdfker.
JunJo J Buck
Meliss.J SnowdeJJ JunJ UJ
Buck. Mn-.tndd firuescc.
Semo1
Buck.
Knsten
Pc tn cc.
Juru01
Buck.
Ke lse y Howell. H,Liey
Pe1d,JS Doe .mtl LJ!teJ.
Sar,th L.twrenLe, tumor
Buck. Aht~ail Hou se r,
Jun1o1
Doc.
AhJg.111
Houset. Nethe&lt; I,IJid Dw,J!I
Jun1or Doe dlld Se ntor
Buck, Sarah Tlll ner
Tht)'.;e showllH! m,u ket
pe ns, Ill JdnclOlll OJdCJ .
were ds lollows Le,k,1
fr ,mk. Baylee CoiiJJt s.
Courtney Burnem. Jacob

Jackie Jordan
(front row, left)
took home best
1n show with
her New
Zealand Doe
whtle Sarah
Lawrence (center) took home
reserve best tn
show w1th her
mint-rex at yesterday's Juntor
Fa1r Rabbtt
Show Also pictured, Sabra
Batley, rabbit .
pnncess, Daniel
Buckley, fair
king.

These Cloverbuds ga1ned
some show ring experiente
yesterday by presenting
rabbits before a Judge for
the f1rst t1me. P1ctured are
(front row. from left) Alyson
Ba1ley, f1rst place, Marnsa
Keesee, Trenton Duvall, ·
second place. Also pictured
Sabra Bailey, rabbtt
pnncess. Dan1el Buckley, .
fa1r k1ng.

Weddle. Abtgatl Porter,
Ju slm
Ehltn.
Markita
Boll!ll&lt;t: KPndra ' Ftek ,
Stgtndn, Tyler
Hall ey
Williams.
Hannah
C1 eme,ms. Jacob Wilson,
B1 Jtlney Leach, Kylie
Kmg, Sab1 a Batley, Jamie
Catd . Brooke Johnson,
ll&lt;tl ev Musser, D&lt;tmon
Ftshe• . Kayte Lawrence,
Wh itley Le.1ch. Kelsey
Johnson, Jessica lillts,
MJJ and a Grueser, Kourtney
LJwtence: Dakota Collins.
Kel sey K11nes , Cassidy
Clclancl. Katlyn Barber,

Elizabeth Teaford , Sarah
Turner, Dakota 0' Bnen ,
Charles Harnson, Jordan
Russell, Sarah Lawrence.
Randal Davis, Macltson
Russell, Megan Dyer,
Joshua Parker.
Also, Cloverbuds who
had a rabbit project presented before the judge to gam
experience for next year
Presenting were Alyson
Balley, Marnsa Keesee,
Trenton
Duvall.
All
received tibbons wtth
Batley taking flrst place and
Duvall taktng second.

I

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Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SIPC.

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I'J

Jean M. Fitch

· PORTLAND - Jean (Mtckey) M,ulowe VanMeter
filch, 74, of 55595 St Rt 124. Portland, Oh1o. p.tssed
away Wednesday, Aug. 13 , 2008 at her residence
She was· bom Dec. 23. 1933 m Portland. Me1gs County.
-daughter of the late Charles Fredcnck and Ada Holte•
VanMeter. She was a li'fetnne resiLient ot Portland and was a
retired nurse wnh 30 years of serv1ce She worked mlon~ term
care a~d counsulttng for Health Care M.magmenl ol Dayton
She ts survtvcd by her husband Ch.trles Hobert Fitch
whom she marned Dec. 22, I \148. her children. Mary Oatley
and Keith (Cmdy) F11ch , her grandc htldrc,n. Bry,m IMtssy l
Oatley, Benny Dailey, Thomas (Tammy) Fnch. Apnl Filch
(Doug) Pound, Jason Fttch and hts lnend ; Jenny ,md
Ntcholas Fttch and his friend. Ashley. great-utandchildten.
Bryannah Oatley, Sianna Pound. Noah Po'lmd K1e"tJen
.Noelle Fttch, Amafyl Pound and .Maelynnah Matlowe
Dailey, "the loves ot my ltle, these stx great-gr.mdchilclren
helped me thru each day: a s1sler. Sharlee Ev.ms: brothers,
Ronald Mac (Jean) VanMeter and Elden VanMeter
In aclclitJon to her parents. ~he was pr~ceded 111 deuth by
a son, Charles Mtchael Fttch, two brother,, HMold
VanMeter and Dorsel Ke'tlh VanMeter, " sister, Ger,dclene
:Northway, a son-m-law, Blame Dailey and a brother-In law, M1chael Evans.
There Will be no vtstldlJon or fun eral servtces
Arrangements are by Whtte-Schwarzel Funerul Home.
Coolville, Ohio
You can s1gn the online guestbook at wwv. whJte sc hwarzeltuneralhome com

Lucy A. Wilfong
VINTON- Lucy A Wilfong, 80, ot Vinton , p.1ssecl
away Wednesday, Aug 13, 2008, at her restclence.
She was born Aug. 9, 1928. 111 Squtre. W Va .. daughtet ot
the late George and Anme Shrmler Brewster
Lucy married Olen Wtlfong on March 6, 1948. and he
preceded her m death on July 25, 2004
, She was a member of Amencan Legion Auxiliary Post No
161 ofVmton and Trinity Unned Methodist Church dl Porter
Lucy IS survtved by two sons, Olen and M,trguet Jle
Wtlfong of Mmmt, Fla., and Mtchael and Kathy Wtlfong ot
Mtddleport; a daughter, Jean and B11ly Peine ot Vmton. ctght
grandchildren and seven great-granuclllldren. lour brother..
Kenneth Brewster of Newhall, W Va , HubcJI (H.tzell
Brewster of Newhall, W.Va. , Raymond !Paulme) Brewslct
of Middletown, Ohto, and Gail (Anna ) Brewster of
Chesapeake, Va; a stster, Bohhie (Fred) Mustck of Myrtle
Beach, S.C.; and a spec1al fnend, Peggy Stevens ol Vtnton
In adcltiJOn to her husband Olen, Lucy was preceded Jn
death by a daughter, Connie Wtllong, on May 6. 1956.
three brothers, Vernon, Eugene and Burle1gh Btewslet. and
a sister, Georgia Brewster.
.
Services will be II a.m Saturday, Aug 16, 2008 tn
the Tnnity United Methocltst Church at Porter. wJth
Pastor Sharon Courneen officta,tmg Bunal will follow
m Vmton Memonal Park. Fnends may c.tll at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vmton on Fnday. Aug
.15. 2008, from 5 to 8 p.m.
- In lieu of 11owers, the family requests memotial gifts be
made to Trimty United Methodist Church. c/o Sharon
Stout, 101 Porter Road, BJclwell, Oh1o 45614 or Holzer
Hosptce, 100 Jackson Ptke, Galhpolis. Ohto 45631.

:

Eastern from Page AI
• Bus~ !Ed Hbltet l. "!he
route -.t.u h .tt 7 15 ,, rH . un
S.111d Hill Ro.td .•111u will
1!,1\ el P1ne Gr01c Ro,lcl.
Vmega&lt; Su~ct. c~nd Wh1pple
Road He 1\lll be JcsponSJhle l&lt;1&gt;&lt;n F11•c Po1111s on
Oh1o 7 tu Ea~le R1dce
Ro.1d . lllLi ucJ,ng Ct.;-w
Add!lton H ~ wtll tr.lllspntt
studems
lrom
B.wm
Add!! Jon. L ike Wood Ro,Jd.
Pomtl ll\ Pt ke allll to
Chcstet. Stu de nt s lrom
Chester to 1he r nit.~ I ..,eL t 1on
ot Sumnc1 RoaJ will , J,o
nde Holter'' hu'
• l:lus 2 (f.Jilllll)' Ad,IJllS I'
Ad,um wtll hc~ 111 her II&gt;LIIC
.tl 7 20 " m • The 1 uute
111cluJes ' the lollov.-1ng
ro.1ds Fel low ship D&lt;J\e .
Cu!lJS llolim&gt; Ro.JLI. Oh1o
124 10 ReedS\ Jlic. Hud son
Hollow Rlhtd. Numbc1 NJJlC
Ro.td. Bt idle Tr,ul. Oh1o
681 f1om Bndle Tt ,JJI ln
Tuppers Pi,uns ,IJld the
Jlllersecuon ot Ohio 7
•
l:lus
12
!Glenn
Easle ilmg). 1 hts Joule does
not dl~tng c

It bcgrns Pll
Eden R1dgc Ko,td ,11 7 15
.1 m , on Ohto 124 to
Hockin gpo rt .Jnd b.JLk to
Reeds'llic. to 01110 6H I
towards TliJl(lCJ s Pl ,uns
SllJdenb 110m Reedsville to
the JLIIILIJull of Eden R1dge
Ro,Jd will JJLlc Bu' 12

Students livmg Ill Tuppe"
Plums who rode Bus 12 will
do"' 1h1s year.
• Bu&gt; I (Lee Swam) The
route begin s al 7 I0 am on
13J giey Rtdge Road, ,md
tr,tvcls to Long Bottom to
Moum Oltvc Road. Swan
Road and LhJS yea r to
H.J yntan. Dew1Lh anu Smtih
Ridge Ro.tds betore return' ng ' to Long Bottom From
there. the bus route wtll go
to Ohw 248 to the Juncuon
of Locust G10ve Road He
will p1ck up ' ludenls 111
Riggscre'&gt;t M.tnor, Apple
Tree Eqares, Old, Oh10 7
and Bar 30 Road near the
Tuppc1 s
Pl ,!lns-Chester
W.tlet DJSlncl oil 1ce.
• Bus II ( Les,, S1dwell)
The JOUle wil l begin on East
Sh.1de Ro.td at 7· JO am .
and trave l S'kmner Run
Road .
Cook
Road ..
WJcklMm Ro.td. Burke
Ro.1d . Fl,llwood' Ro.Ju, Old
Fo1 est Ro.td, Rocksp11ugs
Ro.Jd. Tex.t' Road This
year. she ,wtll Lr.m,port all
Lhtld1en on Texas Ro,td
She wtll transport student s
livmg on the ea,tern end of
Sumnec Road !rom Ohw 7
to Parket F,JJ'm
• Bus 3 (Connie Osborne!
The route wtll begm agam at
7 10 a.m. west ol Allred on
Tuck~1 Road. She v.llllr.1vel

Local Briefs

Special meeting

.Holters sweep hay show wins

Hog show

the followmg roads Woods.
Guthne. Karr. Ohio 681 in
Allred , Douglas, Sunny
Hollow. Keebaugh-Follrod.
Cherry
Rtdgc.
Mlller.
Sumner. Stiver Rtdge.
Myers Betzmg. Partlow.
and Chnsty She Will be
responSible lor students on
Ohw 7 from B,thr Road to
the htgh 'chool
• Bus 14 (Tom Pullms):
Pullins will begm '" 7 15
a m on Long Run Road,
and ptekup chJiclren on
Rambow Rtclge. Holter.
Eagle Rtdge. Ohto 7 trom
Eagle Rtdge lo Chester
Some of the stllde nl s in
Chester Will nde his bus.
cspcctally those on Scout
Camp Road ,md Allen
Stteet He will then travel
New Hope Road and
Show,tlter Road
• Bu s 20 (Becky Maxson)
The route wtll bcQIII at 7 I0
a.m. u11 Osborn Road as last
yem, .mu wlll p1ck up students on Smith-Baker.
Lickskillet, Success, Joppa.
Coolvtlle. Rye. Rtce Run .
Lunbcrgcr Rtdge. Ptne Tree
Dm e. and Heddlcy Roucl.
Students m lh~ Morland
Adc!JtJon 111 Tuppers Plains
will ride th1s route.
Those With mlormation
.tbout the bus routes .1re
,tsked to 'onlacl Arch Kose

at 985-3329, before 9 20
am .. or the su perintendent's
olflce at 667-6079
Lunch program
The bo&lt;trd also announced
lis program po!Jcy for the
lree and reduced-pnce lunch
ptog1am IOJ students unable
to pay the full pt ice of meals
or milk 'ervecl under the
Nauonal School Lunch and
School Breaktast. After
Sehoul Care Snack or
Special Milk P10gram
The dtstrill has adopted
the followmg eltgJbiltty
scale tor household s1ze ,
mcome cltgtbtltty scale for
lree lunch and free tmlk,
and income e!Jgib1ltty for
reduced-price lunch one
member m hou se hold,
$13.520 and $19.240: two
members. $ 18.200 and
$25 .900. three members,
$22,880 .Jncl $32,560. four
memhers, $27,560 and
$39,220: live members,
$32,240 and $45.880; SIX
membet s. $36.920 and
$52.540. seven members,
$41 ,600 ,md $59.200, and
etght members, $46.280 and
$65 ,K60. For e&lt;tch addmonal member. add 54,680 for
free lunLhes and $6,660 for
reduced-pt ice lunches.
Applic.tttOns forms are
bemg dJstnbutecl to all
homes m leiters to parents

Southern from Page At
meetmg
Monday
.uH.l
IL', tchet piolcsston.ll de velopment on Tuesd,Jy
Students 111 the elementary w1ll cepon to home
room on til ~ I Jrst hell at 7 50
~1 111

Wllh, Cid'&gt;SCS htgllllllllg

.118am
Students th.Jl eli ,\,e must be
JJ\ the sLhool hy 7 50,, m 01
they wtll be tonSJdercclt.tcdy
They wtll 1epon to the gy mnastum or to the c.Jktcn.J tor
hre:tkla'l
H1gh School
bte,Jki,JSI will beum dl 7.30
With students r~po!l J ng lo
homeroom at H0) Tuto1 mg
will be ollcrcd between 7·50
.md K.m lo1 tl1osc '"'Licms
that hav6 1.1ken. hut not
passed lite OCi T
The P•" kptg iol on the
Smnhe1 n c.11npus h,JS hecn
se,tled .Jlld new '" 1pmg will
Jlldtc.Jte the new t&lt;.ttiJC p.ilteJns In .Jltgnmem wllh
st.11e codes. I JJ'C l,me' ate
bemg lll'lallcd WJlh 110 pat k-

ups wtll be adjusted to the
new schedule, ,J!lowmg lor
eac lier p1c~ - ups , while some
p1ck -ups will remain the
s,tme Further mformat 10n
on hus ptck-up limes Will
.1lso be announced.
Anvone who mtssecl
k tnde1garten

u1 ientaL1on

must stop by Southern
Elementary and pick up ,,
p.1cke1 Pac ket inform,uJon
tncludes msur,mce forms or
opt
outs.
handbooks .
!Jeelreduced lunch forms.
teo~cher lellers. emergency
medical f01 ms. food serv1ce
llllormal!on and sl udent
Jdelllthcatton mformauon
.md lunch numbers.
Ohto Umverstly wtll be
on hand al an open house
I1um 4-7 p m. Monday lo
tmplemcnl an early JntervenLJon progr.1m . whe1e
c
patents and teachers can
Cal'!l IJ1Celii!VCS up to $25
E1 111 Gmo, proJect cuordtmg next to the CLubs Tldlhc n.tlor. will be on hand to
·patterns m the parktng lot expl.tin the details of the
'TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Local Board ot hdve ch.mg~d to Improve ~ prog1 am
EducatiOn approved perso nnel and supplemental contracts morn1ng dJop-oll
and
Anyone who has not yet
durmg a special meetmg last week.
eve nmg pick-up u.tlltc p&lt;tl - enrolled a kmclergarten Sill' Gwen Hall, Betsy Marlmclale and ·Shelm Connolly wc1e let Jts. When pos,blc. pat- dent must do so that mght
approved as educatlonal a1ctes for the new school yeat K1al ents me cncouiaucd to hdvc Btrth ccrlll1cates. soctal
Welsh was approved as the assistant vat sity football coach. Lhe1r children 1,&amp; the bus
secunly numbe1s, pertmenl
Jason Warner as volunteer assistant varstty football co,tch.
''We've done 'ome th1ngs court documents or offtcJal
and Samantha Cole, junior h1gh cheerleader advisor
wnh the tr.JIIJc p.li!CJns ro custody
papers,
shot
The board approved the followmg contracts: Malone uy to tmprove some ot the records, and other VItal sta.Warehouse Ttre, Inc., tires, Englefield 011 Co., gasoltne, congcslton m the mmning ltstJcs ' are reqUired The
JUel oil, and diesel fuel, G&amp;M Fuel Co., oil and lubricants. and· e~emngs m the school s,une mfm llldiJon will be
fiiickles Bakery, bakery products. and Broughton Foods, parking lot With the 'mall needed lor all new enrollees
~ury products.
area we hdve, we .u e luntted 111 ,ill grades Students can
• ; Emert Connery, Klmton Connery and Ky le Connery to what we ca n do enroll begmmng Mondo~y ,11
:were approved as open enrollment students. Zachary However, the addJl!on of a Somhern Element.try
Lance, Rhmnnon Lance and Kolt Mtller were demed a' new bus entr,mce should
In order to help ch1ldren
'open enrollment students.
ease
some
or
the
pinblcm'
.IUJUSI
to Ktnderg&lt;~rlen 111 a
-.
•
exiting the p~u k1ng c~te,t to sm,dler cldssroom setting.
the
htghw,,y."
Deem h,ilf ol the students will
.Jitend the 11· J'iJSt d.ty on
explained
"
I
.1m
exclleu
,Jhout
thts
Thur,day
( Brov. n BeaJS )
' RACINE - Southern Elementary has announced that
·Swtsher and Lohse has backpacks !tiled wilh supplies lor school ve.1r and ahoul all and hall on Fnclay (Red
:students grades K-6 avmlable for p!Ck-up between 8 am the poSJitve thmgs we h,tve Bears) A kmdergartetl
gumg on hc1 c at Southern
chtld wtll come only one ot
and 8 p.m. begmmng today.
. We will need eve1yone's the two , days. enher
cuoper.ILJO!l to m.1ke things Tlnu sday oc Friday, August
oper.ne smoothly Parent' 2 1 or 22 All wtll report to
should adhere to the new sc hool on Monday, ~ug
~~POMEROY - In the hay judgmg at the Meigs County markmgs on the park1ng lot 25 Refreshments Will also
Pair Roy Holter of Pomeroy took !Jrst mall three classes, and the sJgn,tg~. wh1ch we be served.
.75 percent or more altalfa, all grasses and 49 percent or hope ca11 be mslalled by the
Arrival procedure
less legumes. Patricm Holter elm me second 111 each of the first d"y ol school· Safety
• Any student tliat ts a parptegories
for our duldren " our l1rst ent · drop-off · amving
pnonty. .mel we necu th' between 7:30pm. and 7 45
plibiK to cxeJctse caulJOil p.m
(students
betng
and comply wtlh the new dropped ofl by parent or
from
Al
11 .111 ic pdlletns ..
gu.udwn) can go duectly to
Pick-ups .11 the end of the the calelorium for free
Qreg Jenkins, Tony Roush,
Angela Keesee, Chnton clay arc curretllly betng ,m.l- bre,tkfasl or to the gymnastOru Jenkms, Kasey Turley, Lambert, Ttmothy Elam. lyzed to see v.h.11 c.tn be um. These students must
)uslln Lee, Trent Deem, Cheyenne Beaver, Ashlyn done to cit mJJMte conges- enter the butldmg vm the
'Travis
Ktmes,
Jordan Wolfe, Kyle Russell. Kayi,J tJon. c~nd more on p1ck-up ' rotll doors.
-Koblentz, Miya Gtlmore, Kmg, Shane Milhoan, ptocetlurc' will be Jcle,JSecl
• Studet\ts .1rrivmg after
lleith Teaford , Miranda Dante! Jenkms. Terrence 'oon , ,,lid Deem Bus p1ck- 7:45 a.m (students arrivmg
· ~alter, Savannah Hawley. Conlin. Ronme Wtlson.
'Qterra
Jenkms,
Cody Katte Durst, J~nmler Ftle.
ftayburn, Dennis Teaford, Georgana Koblenlz, Kelsey
Matthew Keesee, Makya Myers , He&lt;~lh Dettwiller,
Patterson ,
j\'hlhoan, Kayla Russell, Shawnella
Morgan Howard, Kayla Zachary Carson, Alison
Robert Strohl.
Hawthorne, Larissa R1ddle, Deem,
W1th ou r protection
K11nberly
Hawthorne.
Brett Milhoan, Chelsea
l)ohmd you . h1 tt•ng
the road IS a breeze
Jordan ,
Cole
Holter, Shandi Beaver, Enc Jackie
Wood, Josiah Lawson, Jake Graham, Andrew 0 ' Bryan!.
A ll1 e d l rlsu rar1 ce
F~el •ndepe nd e nt
Andrus, Eugene Patterson, Alyson Dettwliler, Shana
Derick Powell, !Vhchaela Roush, Julla Lantz, Adam
Reed &amp; Baur
Rebecca
Holter, Morgan Russell, Lavender,
Insurance Agency
Alexis King, Paul Morrison. Donohue. Brandon K1ng,
220 E Mam Street
Nakata Roush, Zachary Bethany Lee, M,m Durst,
Pomeroy OH
740 992 3600
'Manuel, Caitlyn Cowdery, Meghan Lambert. Chase
www
reedbaur com
Breanna Colburn, Mark Graham. Zachary Stobart.
Gtbbs, Dylan Lavender, · Brook Andrus. JtJSilll Juslts.
Allied
Mtchael Zyon Gilmore, Mnchell
Chad Roush,
[
]
Insurance
Manuel, Jordan Roush, Howard
• N•tlonwld•llfl ~omp,ny
See page A8 }{11 additJOIJKristen Ballard,, Emtly
Ott Your Sid•~
a/ sce11e' from rile hog 1/tmv
· Manuel.

Backpacks available

FREE 24.? Teehnbllupport

• ln•tant Musag~ keep your buddy 11511
• 10 e-ma11 addresses wit"' Webmallt

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.

- - -------------------~--'-

When

· Friday, August 15, 2008

Obituaries

Community Calendar

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 38.13
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 59.90
Ashland Inc (NYSE)- 39 77
Btg Lots (NYSE)- 33 33
Bob Evans (NASDAQJ - 29 62
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 43.10
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-4869
Champton (NASDAQ! - 4 52
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.51
Ctly Holding (NASDAQ) - 46 11
Colltns (NYSEJ- 53.17
DuPonl (NYSE)- 45.24
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.65
Gannell (NYSE)- 21 31
General Eleclrtc (NYSEJ - 29 52
Harley-Davtdson (NYSE) 41.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) ·- 37.81
Kroger (NYSE)- 30.32
Llmtled Brands (NYSE)- 18 56
Norfolk Southern (NYSEI 70.49

PageA2

by bus) can go to hre&lt;tklast
or slr.ltght to thetr homelooms These students must
enter the buildmg through
the s1de doors
• At 7 50 a m , a bell or
whistle wtll be so unded to
stgmty to students in grades
ltve 'through etghtto tmmedtately/promptly head to
Lheu lockers and to Lhetr
home1uoms ThJS v.tll allow
the teachets to t.tke allendcmce before the begmnmg
of first penod classes
•At R 00 am, first penod
hegtn s.
Dismissal Procedure
• The dtsmtssal procedure
wtll begm at 2 15 p.m The
pm ent 01 guardio~n must
come 111to the buildmg
betv.een 2·15 p m and 2 30
p m to "gn out their child
m the caletonum
• The chtld wtll then be
calleu by name over the
mtercom for dJS!llJSsal starling at 2 30 p.m
• If thts ttme frame is an
tnconvemence, you can
park
at
the
Umted
. Methodtsl Church .Jdjacenl
to the sc hool 10 meet your
chtld who wtll then be dtsmJssecl as a walker: or you
can p1ck up yout chtld at the
ft on I entrance after the
buses depart (2:55 p m )
wtth proper nouficaiJon by
the parent bemg made to the
oft1ce pnor to 2 15 p m
• If you arrive in the
budding p1101 to your
child's dismtss,il, please
wan 111 the cafetorium unlti
your chtld comes to you. Do
not congregate or loiter 111
the lobby.
• Parents and other vt"tm s "' e not to go to the
classrooms before di s nu~sal
wtthout checkmg 111 at the
office
• At 2:35pm. studems on
the !1 rsl lloor wt II be dismtsscd ellher by bell or
whtstle to go to thetr desltnaltons.
• At 2:40 p m . the scj10ol

wtll dJsmJSs ell her by bell or
whtstle all second floor students to go to thetr desl!natlons

• At 2 45 p m . all JUlllor
htgh athletes WJII be dJsmissecl by bell or whistle
School hours
• Sehoul hours are tram
7 45 am untt12 '4S p.m each
day. Chtldren who walk or
are dnven to school are not
allowed 10 arrive for school
lllllil 7,30 am. Breaktast wtll
start at 7.30 a.m to hopefully
help w1lh the congest10n in
the cafetet ia
• Dismissal for &lt;tll studems being ptckecl up by
thetr parentlguardtan wtll be
at 2:30p.m.
• Walke" .mel students
ndmg the bus 111 grades
kmclergarten through 4th
grade wtll be dtsm.ssed at
2.35 p.m. Walkers and students ndmg the bus in
gr,tcles 5th throu¥h 8th
grades will be dtstmssed at
2:40pm
• Jumor htgh athletes will
be dtsmtssed at 2:45 p.m.
SPRING VALLEY
&lt;&gt;I II! tl lf I•W q

So11 OHice Opens @
6 30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS I

12:30 PM FOR
WED THRU SUN MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT
MIRRORS (R)
1:10, 3:30. 7:t0 &amp; 9:30
STAR WARS: THE CLONE
WARS(PG)
1:00, 3:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00
TROPIC THUNDER (R)
_ t :30, 3:30. 7:30 &amp; 9:30
THE MUMMY: TOMB OF THE
DRAGON EMPERIOR (PG13)
1:00,3:10,7:00 &amp; 9:10
THE DARK -KNIGHT (PG13)
_jl;~. 3:40. 6:55 &amp; 9:40
PINEAPPLE EXPRESS (R)
1:10,3:10.7:10 &amp; 9:t0
SISTERHOOD OF THE
TRAVELING PANTS 2 (PG13)
1:00,3:15,7:00 &amp; 9:15
NOW SHOWING MATINEES
WED THRU SUN

Pa~e

"Kawasaki Motor.\ports Day"
**Kiddie Day a11d *Seuior Citize11s Day
7:00a.m. - Gates Open

2:00p.m. . Market Hog

8:00a.m. ·Rol l Call for
Sale· Ltvestock Arena
Market L1 vcstm;1\
4:00 p.m. · Market Steer
Mcn1ber1-1
Sale- Livestock Arena
9:00a.m. - Pretty Baby
4:30p.m. · Commcrcul
Feeder Sa le- Lrvestock
Contest· 'Dew Zone" 1-h!l
St.!gC

AI Cll.l

10:00 a.m. - Market Rabbll 5:00 p.m
Sale- Livestock Arena

I0:40a.m · Markel Pou!Jry

6:1KI p.m
C+l~[csl
6:00 p.m.

Sale- L1vcsl0t k Arena

Market Datry
Ln'e~tock

An~ na

Sale- Ltvcstock Arena

12:15 p.m. - Markc&lt; Lamb

-

Feeder Sale·

II :30 a.m. · Mat ket Go.u
S.lll!- Ltvc st o~. k An.:r1.1
12:00 p.m. . H:~rnc""'
~ Racrng · Race Trud~

Ch.ttn

Sa"

Mud Volley

B.1lt · Hor-.;c Arcn.1
6:(MIIJ.m. - ATV &amp; Youth
Gi.uJcn Tr,IL:lor Put] . Pull

rr.ll.:k

1:15 p.m. - Dmry

8:00p.m. Toug h Tr.11.:k

Swccp~wkc"-

C'lmlc"'l'" Gr ,uub.tanJ

Ltvcstock

Arena
I :30 p.m. - D.nry M.1rkct
Steer S.rlc- Lrvc,.lock
Arena

7

•Ji1(·b.:::1 11~1JA~,ONPK!
FR\8115/08- THURS 8/21108
WWW SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM

7:30p.m.
Kt~-

" Dt'\\

Karaoke

Y.rlh

Znnc" Hrll

Stat.;c
II :00 p.m. · Gale.., Clo!»C

'

�,
'

TJ:l_E

The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAIL130X

Despite doubts,
maintain relationship
BY KATHY MITCHELL

AN~ MARCY SUGAR

Bt·ar Annie: I m " proud
LtthL' I

of

t\\

n h.tnd,ome

..,poh·n to my mothel-tn-Lm
about 11. but nothmg h.ts
ch~m g~ J

I 'd he

tll[et ~st e d 10

get 'omc keclb.1ck
Mid11cst 1\lom
Dear Mom: Not ,J!i
g Jdndptttl.' nh kno w how It)

hn"
.t ~cs I-I dlld II The11
'
'
mother .md I .ue dll &lt;liLod I
reLenlil lound out throu eh tt1! L' r.ll. l \\ llh \'O Uil !..! dliiDi\A le\1111); lll.\1 Ill)' 1'4 - Liten and m.u.1)· pretc ; nm
to lile) ·, e alrc.Jcly rat,cd
yrtt t-old l'Ill) hmlogrL.tl "on Tht" hd~ ch~\ . t... t(rtcd then k1ds. th,nk you. ,md
m~ t.uncll When I ·Ld lkd 111..1\\ the: U ltk.c to pur-. ut:
th ~:JI own tll iCJCs ls II Jl)C'&gt;Ill~ C\-1\lle .chou! 11. she
n't
mcdn they don't lo~e
1csponLkd. 'Whale1cr. · ami
hu11 g up the phone I the ~ randchilclrc n , and 11 s
'ety po&gt;Stblc they v.ill
h cl\Cil .t 'pokt:ll tu het "'lrH.:e.
1
d ,uc helle t when the k1ds
. . n I ~ot nu c~polot!~ Ul clllythtn ~ No\\ I hc'-11 -.he wL1nh
"' " older If yow m-1,"' '
to IIlii odULC my 'on 10 hts .tre willmg to b.tby-sit on
OCCaston. hv cl ii nl Cdn S.
htolog tc.tl !,n hcJ
co nllnUe lO ;;sk Ihem
Fuur tc~n \C.u~ 1-. d lon~
Dear Annie: I re.Jd the
lll1lt..~ diH.I 1 ·Ldll .l 1e1 !_;l) rt
hurt-.. I rn umcc rnt:d : Lbout ~ le!!er Irom "Wt&gt;JJ Jed SKk 111
the Midv. cs l.' who w.IS
Ill\ ... 1)11 cllld \\ h.tt \ on hr s
concerned
.tbout he1 colmind Wh.tl c.1n I do'' lege-age d.wgh l ~ r' s mcreas()isenl'ranchised ()ad
Dear llad: You J on·! tnob bn1nh
I have tc,ld every bil of
hd\ c to ·l et ~o ··You rtt J... ed
ddVJLe
on the subted . I
ih" hoy. ,Jnd' he IS ' till YOLII
'"n. emouon.li ly dnd pos" - th1nk. but no one has evcc
bl\ k~.~llv ,,, wel l You menlJ&lt;'Iled the 1de" ot EAT, h-o ulc(mdintdlll" rclallon- ING SLOWLY Ever Since I
. , lll p 110 Jll.llter what your was forced to Cdl slow ly due
cx -wJic dt&gt;cs It you h,J ve to Ll g~t gg tn g prohlem. I
hdvc found 11 a good hab1L
\ r... r tc~tr o n n ghts (,mJ you
'- IHnlld) \ OLI Will hdve ,111 Me,J!s bcwme more cnjoy&lt;&gt;ppollunll y to cltsnt" h1s c~ble. tood gets chewed
mo1c thnwughl ), whtch ' "
fc~l111g._, I-I O\\C\Cl. WC Ulg:C
1e( om mended .tnd you cd n
)O ll 1101 lo llldk ~ the S!IU,IJC! ,tx .tnd en1oy wh.ll you'1e
110 !1 mu1 c . . t,e-. . . tul It will
not Ill!! I \ ou1 -.on to hdve ea un g And 1hc .tmoulll ol
;~nothe t Jlc rson 1n his ltfe toocl vou con, ume be!OJe
who Cclrcs dOOUI hJJn Be leelmg sa!JS!Jed JS substansupp01 tl\ c ol any ml.:!e tmg tiallv less
uin il this "ah.t" moment.
w11h lm bmlogJc,ll lather.
\\-h!le JC . I '&gt;'&gt; lllll1g l111n th~t II I'd consl,mtly beenthink1ng
doe" nnt lessen how much .Jhout c,J!on es. qu,mtlly .md
yo u love htm And 1I hJS the v.hole dtsgustmg food
obsesstiTn
Now I dill
hJOiogt( ~.ll, f Lttl1~1 docs not
\\'dill cl Jd diJOll Ship. you r tclaxed .Jbou t the subjeCt
su n \VIII llL'Cd VOU lllOIC SJnce I know I'm not about
th ,Jll C\L'l
.
to oveJe.Jt - hu!..!e dll10llllts
Uear Annie: Wh&lt;it " the .1re JUst not .1ppe.Jimg anyc.illlcJC J H. ~ between ··~,linci ­
more. I strongly recom!W enun g" anti 'b&lt;~hy-SJ t ­ mend ,1 , Jow1 nu down of
tm g· ' I -.ay grdndpltrenllng the e.ttmg pr ot:~~ . . lot om:\
IS sp~nd tng 11111\: WJ!h )'Olll mec.J!I he,J! Lh dnd enjoygJdnJdHILhen hcl:.ll!Se you ment ol life 111 g.e netdl. wlmt to B~lby - sllttng '" Ra\'enna, Neb.
do111g It because you· ve
Dear Ravenna: Most
been .JSked to
diCLJct.tn' Will tell you th,ll
My Jn -I,Jws i1vc less than catJng mor e s lowiy gives
I1\e mile s .Jway We h&lt;1vc the b1 am LJme to regJSter
two vc1 y well-behdved th at yo u •ate lui !, .111d conchilt!J en. yet the on ly 11111e seq uently. you eat less
my in-lc~w-. see them ts on Thanks for mentioning
holtdays cllld maybe,, blflh- tillS stmple .111d ettectJve
dd} p.trt y or soccer game. dtet mel
They' ve l&lt;~ken eaLh of our
Atlllie's Mailbox is writch ild1 en to see one stage tell by Kathy Mitchell aud
sho\v , but al\ far a-. taking Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime edi·
them to the park. 'having tors o.f the A1111 La11ders
them over tor tee cream or colum11. Please e-mail your
even settJ!l.j as1de an hour a questio11s to Ullllirmwilweek to 1cad to them, f01- hox@comcmt.llel, or write
ge t 11 \1y m-l.1ws .tre just to: ·A 1111ie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
"too bu sy. ·
Box II/IJ91J, Chicago, IL
Bcc;1use the v &lt;1rc almost 60611. 1o (i11d out more
completely cemovcd fiOm about A11r11~ '.1 Mailbox,
my k1ds i1ves. I as!- them to a11d read .features by other
h&lt;tby-SJt once 01 tv.ice a Creaton Sy11dicate writers
momh I fee l I h.tve to mlli- a11d cartoo11istl, visit the
atc con tact by "neeclmg" Creators Syrzdzcate Web
the JJ '"'" lance Yes. \ · ve page at www.crealiJrs.com.

..:1

. Local Weather
Friday ... Partly
sunny
With " si Jght chdnce of
showers and lhundcrst;H ms
Hl t(h' a1ound
No1 th
w1nds ,tround 5 'mph
Chance ol ra111 20 percent
night ... Pa!lly
FridliY
cloudy. A ' light chance ol
showet s dnd Lhundet 'tOJ ms
m the evcnmg Lows 111 the
mtd ~O s Nm1hv.est wmds
.1round 5 mph Chdncc of
nun 20 pclL'ent
Saturday... Mostly sunn}.
H1ghs 111 the lower go,
Nolthwes l wmds atounu 5
mph
Saturda~· night ... P.trtly
c loud ~ Lows 111 the upper

·so

50s West v. mds .1rnund 5
mph.
through
Sunday
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs m the mid
ROs Lows 111 the m1d 60s
Tuesday and Tuesday
night ... Moslly cloudy. A
ch.mce of ' howe rs and
thundeJslotnJs H1gh' 111 the
mid 80s Lows in the mid
60s Cildnce ot r.tm 40 percem.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Hi gh, in the mid
80s Lows in the m1d 60s
Thursday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs around 90.

•

D

Friday, August 15, 2ooA

Reunions

tnfo lmdllon (Oilt .. t&lt;.:t Dord.
\J).J XH2&lt;:!0R1

Sunda). ,\ ug. 2-'
MASON COL ' N"I Y
The Wc.t1cr c~un Joll 11 til h~
held .11 the \\c,l Vll~Jn t , t
State
F&lt;ll m
1\lu;euJJ J
Kttchc n ioLLllcd J1&lt;1llh ot
Po1111
Pk.JS.Jn l
on
F.tl!gwund Rn. td Dnut,
open dl II ,, m putiLJL 1lundl .11 I p 111 Mc,Jt. d1 mk
.md tahlc ser11ce IUJJtJShcd
Rcl .llllcs
t.Jn lli\
Llnd
I I lCIJd'&gt; \Ve iL omc rm llhll c

. Youth events
Sunday, Aug. 17
MIDDLI:PORT - Oasts
CillJSl tan Fcl lowshtp wtll
' Jl""'or" lt~e school supply
g11 ~.JW&lt;J} I1om 6 to 8 p m ,
D.11e
Diles
P.Jrk
RdJcshmclll' and mu , ic.
ruesday, Aug. 19
POM EROY Metgs
M1ddlc School will have an
IIJ'C ll hllUSe f'01 aJJ ~ ixth

grade students and newly
enrolled staden" 5 to 7 p m
m the school.

Clubs and
organizations
Saturday, Aug. 16
POMEROY - Chrtsllan
Motorcycle
Assoctal!on
"De ltvered" Chapter. rcguldr meetmg. 5 .p m..
Common Grounds
Monday, Aug. 18
MIDDLEPORT

Special
meetmg
of
M1ddleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM. 7 p m., for past
ma; ters night, Mtddleport
M.1somc Temple. Work Ill
Master Mason degree. AU
past masters of lodge asked
to allend. All Masons mvit,ed. Meal fo llows.
•

Public meetings
Monday, Aug. 18
LETART FALLS ~
Letart Townshtp Trustees, 5
p.m.. otfice butldmg.

Rabbits from Page AI
Lind sey P.1rk e1. MeiJss.J
Snowden JunJoJ. S.JJ ah
LawJcnce. Fl.J}ic c &lt;..oi!Jns.
InlClllltdJ.LlC .
H.tl tl
Peed"'·
Ju &gt;iJJJ
Ehl11i.
Beg1nnct. Kchc) .lohn-.un
J.tckJ e Jotd.Jn
11

C llll l'

In

Haley Perdas
(nght) took the
nbbon for grand
champion
showma'n and
Sarah
Lawrence (left)
took the ribbor:t
for reserve
champ1on
showman at
yesterday's
Juntor Fair
Rabbtt Show.
Also pictured,
Audnonna
Pullins. fair
queen

lh c

hrcednH! CdlL' !.! OJI L'"i l. tckll.'
Jord.tn look home h~st 111
'hnw wJtil llCJ N~11
Zeal,l!Jd Doc \\h tk S,JJ.Ih
Ldwrencc
took
I\Otlll'
I e"l'i Ve be ... ! Ill ... h O\\ \\ Jttl
he1 mlm -re x 8 Jeed Jil 1

.

1
~

r e..; ult ... 111 01du ol J.tn kllH.!"'

we t e as lllllo\"'" 5cnt~Jt
Doc. S.tr~th I . JWit.'llu.'
H.tic y P~rd.JS
Ah tg,JJI
House l. JunJ oJ Doc S,u ,JIJ
LawJ~JJcC. Scn101 l:luct-

Beth Sergen1/phOioS

Sdtdh L lWtl' IKl' LnH.Iscv
Packc1. M~IJ ss, J SllolldcJi

Ste1en Ho,Ji u,J!t. JullJ U&lt;
Buck SaJ.Jh '-"'" ~n ~·e .
Sen1or Doe, J.1ckic Jotd ,m,
Jun10r
Due,
WIHtlcv
Le,~eh. Se)lJOJ Buck. S,JJ,th
Tu rnc r. S.Jrah L1 w1e nee
Sent or Doc. S.1rah Tumc1.
Juntor
Buck.
Satah
Lawrence. Sen101 Due
Sarah TLu net, lumo1 Doe
Sarah Turner. Sen1or Buck ,
S.Jr,Jh Tu1 ne1 . luni (H Doc.
Sar.th I..Jwrence, Senio1
Doe.
H,J! ey
Pe1das.
Melissa Snowden: JunJOJ
Doe. Abt¥ ,111 HnuseJ.
Sen1111
Doc.
S.tr.th
Lawrence. H,Jicy Pe1das.
AhJgdtl Huu..,eJ. J Lin IOJ
Doe , S,iJ,th L I\\J ence.
Ru ck,
S.tr,lh
SenJot
Ltwrence, Lind sey P.11keJ,
Meltssa Snowden . Steven
Hoalcralt. Jun 1or Buc·k.
S,trdh Lawren ce. Semor
Doe , Jack1e JoJd.tn. JunJOJ
Doe , Whitley Le.tch
Sentor
Buck. S.tr,th
Turner, Sarah L1wrence.
Semot Doe. Sdr.Jh TUJner,
Jumor
Bm:k,
S.trall
Lawtence , Scn1m Doe.
Junilll Doc. Scn HII Buck.
S,udh Twnet . Jun1m Doc.
S.tr&lt;lh Lm 1encc Sen11H
Doc , H.1ky Pecd,JS Meltss.J
Sncmden. Jun 101 Doe .
Abtg,l!l Hou sel: Jun,J oJ
Buck. MciJSsa Snowden
LnH.bcv
Juntot
Doc.
Pdfker.
JunJo J Buck
Meliss.J SnowdeJJ JunJ UJ
Buck. Mn-.tndd firuescc.
Semo1
Buck.
Knsten
Pc tn cc.
Juru01
Buck.
Ke lse y Howell. H,Liey
Pe1d,JS Doe .mtl LJ!teJ.
Sar,th L.twrenLe, tumor
Buck. Aht~ail Hou se r,
Jun1o1
Doc.
AhJg.111
Houset. Nethe&lt; I,IJid Dw,J!I
Jun1or Doe dlld Se ntor
Buck, Sarah Tlll ner
Tht)'.;e showllH! m,u ket
pe ns, Ill JdnclOlll OJdCJ .
were ds lollows Le,k,1
fr ,mk. Baylee CoiiJJt s.
Courtney Burnem. Jacob

Jackie Jordan
(front row, left)
took home best
1n show with
her New
Zealand Doe
whtle Sarah
Lawrence (center) took home
reserve best tn
show w1th her
mint-rex at yesterday's Juntor
Fa1r Rabbtt
Show Also pictured, Sabra
Batley, rabbit .
pnncess, Daniel
Buckley, fair
king.

These Cloverbuds ga1ned
some show ring experiente
yesterday by presenting
rabbits before a Judge for
the f1rst t1me. P1ctured are
(front row. from left) Alyson
Ba1ley, f1rst place, Marnsa
Keesee, Trenton Duvall, ·
second place. Also pictured
Sabra Bailey, rabbtt
pnncess. Dan1el Buckley, .
fa1r k1ng.

Weddle. Abtgatl Porter,
Ju slm
Ehltn.
Markita
Boll!ll&lt;t: KPndra ' Ftek ,
Stgtndn, Tyler
Hall ey
Williams.
Hannah
C1 eme,ms. Jacob Wilson,
B1 Jtlney Leach, Kylie
Kmg, Sab1 a Batley, Jamie
Catd . Brooke Johnson,
ll&lt;tl ev Musser, D&lt;tmon
Ftshe• . Kayte Lawrence,
Wh itley Le.1ch. Kelsey
Johnson, Jessica lillts,
MJJ and a Grueser, Kourtney
LJwtence: Dakota Collins.
Kel sey K11nes , Cassidy
Clclancl. Katlyn Barber,

Elizabeth Teaford , Sarah
Turner, Dakota 0' Bnen ,
Charles Harnson, Jordan
Russell, Sarah Lawrence.
Randal Davis, Macltson
Russell, Megan Dyer,
Joshua Parker.
Also, Cloverbuds who
had a rabbit project presented before the judge to gam
experience for next year
Presenting were Alyson
Balley, Marnsa Keesee,
Trenton
Duvall.
All
received tibbons wtth
Batley taking flrst place and
Duvall taktng second.

I

..,....._
(

• Cu$1om Siart Page newt waather &amp;. morel

Surf up 1o

6X IDs/Wrl \

~--- juatt3rr~

,.

lesley Marrero In Pomt
Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SIPC.

'

v

:_,}

Sign Up Onllntl www.Loca~Net com
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DON'T Nil$$
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MONEY '$ A VINCi ,
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Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 24
BBT (NYSE) - 29.20
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 22 73
Pepstco (NYSE) - 69 64
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.93
Rockwell (NYSE) - 48.46
Rocky Boots (NASDAQJ - 6
Royal Dulch Shell - 68.54
Seers Holding (NASDAQJ 93.82
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 58.10
Wendy's INYSE) - 25.23
WesBanco (NYSE)- 25.72
Worthtnglon (NYSE)- 18 62
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes or transactions for Aug 14, 2008, provided by Edward Jones llnan·
clal advisors Isaac Mllli In
Gallipolis al (740) 441-9441 and

· ~r----------~----------~~--~--~----~~~==~~

I'J

Jean M. Fitch

· PORTLAND - Jean (Mtckey) M,ulowe VanMeter
filch, 74, of 55595 St Rt 124. Portland, Oh1o. p.tssed
away Wednesday, Aug. 13 , 2008 at her residence
She was· bom Dec. 23. 1933 m Portland. Me1gs County.
-daughter of the late Charles Fredcnck and Ada Holte•
VanMeter. She was a li'fetnne resiLient ot Portland and was a
retired nurse wnh 30 years of serv1ce She worked mlon~ term
care a~d counsulttng for Health Care M.magmenl ol Dayton
She ts survtvcd by her husband Ch.trles Hobert Fitch
whom she marned Dec. 22, I \148. her children. Mary Oatley
and Keith (Cmdy) F11ch , her grandc htldrc,n. Bry,m IMtssy l
Oatley, Benny Dailey, Thomas (Tammy) Fnch. Apnl Filch
(Doug) Pound, Jason Fttch and hts lnend ; Jenny ,md
Ntcholas Fttch and his friend. Ashley. great-utandchildten.
Bryannah Oatley, Sianna Pound. Noah Po'lmd K1e"tJen
.Noelle Fttch, Amafyl Pound and .Maelynnah Matlowe
Dailey, "the loves ot my ltle, these stx great-gr.mdchilclren
helped me thru each day: a s1sler. Sharlee Ev.ms: brothers,
Ronald Mac (Jean) VanMeter and Elden VanMeter
In aclclitJon to her parents. ~he was pr~ceded 111 deuth by
a son, Charles Mtchael Fttch, two brother,, HMold
VanMeter and Dorsel Ke'tlh VanMeter, " sister, Ger,dclene
:Northway, a son-m-law, Blame Dailey and a brother-In law, M1chael Evans.
There Will be no vtstldlJon or fun eral servtces
Arrangements are by Whtte-Schwarzel Funerul Home.
Coolville, Ohio
You can s1gn the online guestbook at wwv. whJte sc hwarzeltuneralhome com

Lucy A. Wilfong
VINTON- Lucy A Wilfong, 80, ot Vinton , p.1ssecl
away Wednesday, Aug 13, 2008, at her restclence.
She was born Aug. 9, 1928. 111 Squtre. W Va .. daughtet ot
the late George and Anme Shrmler Brewster
Lucy married Olen Wtlfong on March 6, 1948. and he
preceded her m death on July 25, 2004
, She was a member of Amencan Legion Auxiliary Post No
161 ofVmton and Trinity Unned Methodist Church dl Porter
Lucy IS survtved by two sons, Olen and M,trguet Jle
Wtlfong of Mmmt, Fla., and Mtchael and Kathy Wtlfong ot
Mtddleport; a daughter, Jean and B11ly Peine ot Vmton. ctght
grandchildren and seven great-granuclllldren. lour brother..
Kenneth Brewster of Newhall, W Va , HubcJI (H.tzell
Brewster of Newhall, W.Va. , Raymond !Paulme) Brewslct
of Middletown, Ohto, and Gail (Anna ) Brewster of
Chesapeake, Va; a stster, Bohhie (Fred) Mustck of Myrtle
Beach, S.C.; and a spec1al fnend, Peggy Stevens ol Vtnton
In adcltiJOn to her husband Olen, Lucy was preceded Jn
death by a daughter, Connie Wtllong, on May 6. 1956.
three brothers, Vernon, Eugene and Burle1gh Btewslet. and
a sister, Georgia Brewster.
.
Services will be II a.m Saturday, Aug 16, 2008 tn
the Tnnity United Methocltst Church at Porter. wJth
Pastor Sharon Courneen officta,tmg Bunal will follow
m Vmton Memonal Park. Fnends may c.tll at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vmton on Fnday. Aug
.15. 2008, from 5 to 8 p.m.
- In lieu of 11owers, the family requests memotial gifts be
made to Trimty United Methodist Church. c/o Sharon
Stout, 101 Porter Road, BJclwell, Oh1o 45614 or Holzer
Hosptce, 100 Jackson Ptke, Galhpolis. Ohto 45631.

:

Eastern from Page AI
• Bus~ !Ed Hbltet l. "!he
route -.t.u h .tt 7 15 ,, rH . un
S.111d Hill Ro.td .•111u will
1!,1\ el P1ne Gr01c Ro,lcl.
Vmega&lt; Su~ct. c~nd Wh1pple
Road He 1\lll be JcsponSJhle l&lt;1&gt;&lt;n F11•c Po1111s on
Oh1o 7 tu Ea~le R1dce
Ro.1d . lllLi ucJ,ng Ct.;-w
Add!lton H ~ wtll tr.lllspntt
studems
lrom
B.wm
Add!! Jon. L ike Wood Ro,Jd.
Pomtl ll\ Pt ke allll to
Chcstet. Stu de nt s lrom
Chester to 1he r nit.~ I ..,eL t 1on
ot Sumnc1 RoaJ will , J,o
nde Holter'' hu'
• l:lus 2 (f.Jilllll)' Ad,IJllS I'
Ad,um wtll hc~ 111 her II&gt;LIIC
.tl 7 20 " m • The 1 uute
111cluJes ' the lollov.-1ng
ro.1ds Fel low ship D&lt;J\e .
Cu!lJS llolim&gt; Ro.JLI. Oh1o
124 10 ReedS\ Jlic. Hud son
Hollow Rlhtd. Numbc1 NJJlC
Ro.td. Bt idle Tr,ul. Oh1o
681 f1om Bndle Tt ,JJI ln
Tuppers Pi,uns ,IJld the
Jlllersecuon ot Ohio 7
•
l:lus
12
!Glenn
Easle ilmg). 1 hts Joule does
not dl~tng c

It bcgrns Pll
Eden R1dgc Ko,td ,11 7 15
.1 m , on Ohto 124 to
Hockin gpo rt .Jnd b.JLk to
Reeds'llic. to 01110 6H I
towards TliJl(lCJ s Pl ,uns
SllJdenb 110m Reedsville to
the JLIIILIJull of Eden R1dge
Ro,Jd will JJLlc Bu' 12

Students livmg Ill Tuppe"
Plums who rode Bus 12 will
do"' 1h1s year.
• Bu&gt; I (Lee Swam) The
route begin s al 7 I0 am on
13J giey Rtdge Road, ,md
tr,tvcls to Long Bottom to
Moum Oltvc Road. Swan
Road and LhJS yea r to
H.J yntan. Dew1Lh anu Smtih
Ridge Ro.tds betore return' ng ' to Long Bottom From
there. the bus route wtll go
to Ohw 248 to the Juncuon
of Locust G10ve Road He
will p1ck up ' ludenls 111
Riggscre'&gt;t M.tnor, Apple
Tree Eqares, Old, Oh10 7
and Bar 30 Road near the
Tuppc1 s
Pl ,!lns-Chester
W.tlet DJSlncl oil 1ce.
• Bus II ( Les,, S1dwell)
The JOUle wil l begin on East
Sh.1de Ro.td at 7· JO am .
and trave l S'kmner Run
Road .
Cook
Road ..
WJcklMm Ro.td. Burke
Ro.1d . Fl,llwood' Ro.Ju, Old
Fo1 est Ro.td, Rocksp11ugs
Ro.Jd. Tex.t' Road This
year. she ,wtll Lr.m,port all
Lhtld1en on Texas Ro,td
She wtll transport student s
livmg on the ea,tern end of
Sumnec Road !rom Ohw 7
to Parket F,JJ'm
• Bus 3 (Connie Osborne!
The route wtll begm agam at
7 10 a.m. west ol Allred on
Tuck~1 Road. She v.llllr.1vel

Local Briefs

Special meeting

.Holters sweep hay show wins

Hog show

the followmg roads Woods.
Guthne. Karr. Ohio 681 in
Allred , Douglas, Sunny
Hollow. Keebaugh-Follrod.
Cherry
Rtdgc.
Mlller.
Sumner. Stiver Rtdge.
Myers Betzmg. Partlow.
and Chnsty She Will be
responSible lor students on
Ohw 7 from B,thr Road to
the htgh 'chool
• Bus 14 (Tom Pullms):
Pullins will begm '" 7 15
a m on Long Run Road,
and ptekup chJiclren on
Rambow Rtclge. Holter.
Eagle Rtdge. Ohto 7 trom
Eagle Rtdge lo Chester
Some of the stllde nl s in
Chester Will nde his bus.
cspcctally those on Scout
Camp Road ,md Allen
Stteet He will then travel
New Hope Road and
Show,tlter Road
• Bu s 20 (Becky Maxson)
The route wtll bcQIII at 7 I0
a.m. u11 Osborn Road as last
yem, .mu wlll p1ck up students on Smith-Baker.
Lickskillet, Success, Joppa.
Coolvtlle. Rye. Rtce Run .
Lunbcrgcr Rtdge. Ptne Tree
Dm e. and Heddlcy Roucl.
Students m lh~ Morland
Adc!JtJon 111 Tuppers Plains
will ride th1s route.
Those With mlormation
.tbout the bus routes .1re
,tsked to 'onlacl Arch Kose

at 985-3329, before 9 20
am .. or the su perintendent's
olflce at 667-6079
Lunch program
The bo&lt;trd also announced
lis program po!Jcy for the
lree and reduced-pnce lunch
ptog1am IOJ students unable
to pay the full pt ice of meals
or milk 'ervecl under the
Nauonal School Lunch and
School Breaktast. After
Sehoul Care Snack or
Special Milk P10gram
The dtstrill has adopted
the followmg eltgJbiltty
scale tor household s1ze ,
mcome cltgtbtltty scale for
lree lunch and free tmlk,
and income e!Jgib1ltty for
reduced-price lunch one
member m hou se hold,
$13.520 and $19.240: two
members. $ 18.200 and
$25 .900. three members,
$22,880 .Jncl $32,560. four
memhers, $27,560 and
$39,220: live members,
$32,240 and $45.880; SIX
membet s. $36.920 and
$52.540. seven members,
$41 ,600 ,md $59.200, and
etght members, $46.280 and
$65 ,K60. For e&lt;tch addmonal member. add 54,680 for
free lunLhes and $6,660 for
reduced-pt ice lunches.
Applic.tttOns forms are
bemg dJstnbutecl to all
homes m leiters to parents

Southern from Page At
meetmg
Monday
.uH.l
IL', tchet piolcsston.ll de velopment on Tuesd,Jy
Students 111 the elementary w1ll cepon to home
room on til ~ I Jrst hell at 7 50
~1 111

Wllh, Cid'&gt;SCS htgllllllllg

.118am
Students th.Jl eli ,\,e must be
JJ\ the sLhool hy 7 50,, m 01
they wtll be tonSJdercclt.tcdy
They wtll 1epon to the gy mnastum or to the c.Jktcn.J tor
hre:tkla'l
H1gh School
bte,Jki,JSI will beum dl 7.30
With students r~po!l J ng lo
homeroom at H0) Tuto1 mg
will be ollcrcd between 7·50
.md K.m lo1 tl1osc '"'Licms
that hav6 1.1ken. hut not
passed lite OCi T
The P•" kptg iol on the
Smnhe1 n c.11npus h,JS hecn
se,tled .Jlld new '" 1pmg will
Jlldtc.Jte the new t&lt;.ttiJC p.ilteJns In .Jltgnmem wllh
st.11e codes. I JJ'C l,me' ate
bemg lll'lallcd WJlh 110 pat k-

ups wtll be adjusted to the
new schedule, ,J!lowmg lor
eac lier p1c~ - ups , while some
p1ck -ups will remain the
s,tme Further mformat 10n
on hus ptck-up limes Will
.1lso be announced.
Anvone who mtssecl
k tnde1garten

u1 ientaL1on

must stop by Southern
Elementary and pick up ,,
p.1cke1 Pac ket inform,uJon
tncludes msur,mce forms or
opt
outs.
handbooks .
!Jeelreduced lunch forms.
teo~cher lellers. emergency
medical f01 ms. food serv1ce
llllormal!on and sl udent
Jdelllthcatton mformauon
.md lunch numbers.
Ohto Umverstly wtll be
on hand al an open house
I1um 4-7 p m. Monday lo
tmplemcnl an early JntervenLJon progr.1m . whe1e
c
patents and teachers can
Cal'!l IJ1Celii!VCS up to $25
E1 111 Gmo, proJect cuordtmg next to the CLubs Tldlhc n.tlor. will be on hand to
·patterns m the parktng lot expl.tin the details of the
'TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Local Board ot hdve ch.mg~d to Improve ~ prog1 am
EducatiOn approved perso nnel and supplemental contracts morn1ng dJop-oll
and
Anyone who has not yet
durmg a special meetmg last week.
eve nmg pick-up u.tlltc p&lt;tl - enrolled a kmclergarten Sill' Gwen Hall, Betsy Marlmclale and ·Shelm Connolly wc1e let Jts. When pos,blc. pat- dent must do so that mght
approved as educatlonal a1ctes for the new school yeat K1al ents me cncouiaucd to hdvc Btrth ccrlll1cates. soctal
Welsh was approved as the assistant vat sity football coach. Lhe1r children 1,&amp; the bus
secunly numbe1s, pertmenl
Jason Warner as volunteer assistant varstty football co,tch.
''We've done 'ome th1ngs court documents or offtcJal
and Samantha Cole, junior h1gh cheerleader advisor
wnh the tr.JIIJc p.li!CJns ro custody
papers,
shot
The board approved the followmg contracts: Malone uy to tmprove some ot the records, and other VItal sta.Warehouse Ttre, Inc., tires, Englefield 011 Co., gasoltne, congcslton m the mmning ltstJcs ' are reqUired The
JUel oil, and diesel fuel, G&amp;M Fuel Co., oil and lubricants. and· e~emngs m the school s,une mfm llldiJon will be
fiiickles Bakery, bakery products. and Broughton Foods, parking lot With the 'mall needed lor all new enrollees
~ury products.
area we hdve, we .u e luntted 111 ,ill grades Students can
• ; Emert Connery, Klmton Connery and Ky le Connery to what we ca n do enroll begmmng Mondo~y ,11
:were approved as open enrollment students. Zachary However, the addJl!on of a Somhern Element.try
Lance, Rhmnnon Lance and Kolt Mtller were demed a' new bus entr,mce should
In order to help ch1ldren
'open enrollment students.
ease
some
or
the
pinblcm'
.IUJUSI
to Ktnderg&lt;~rlen 111 a
-.
•
exiting the p~u k1ng c~te,t to sm,dler cldssroom setting.
the
htghw,,y."
Deem h,ilf ol the students will
.Jitend the 11· J'iJSt d.ty on
explained
"
I
.1m
exclleu
,Jhout
thts
Thur,day
( Brov. n BeaJS )
' RACINE - Southern Elementary has announced that
·Swtsher and Lohse has backpacks !tiled wilh supplies lor school ve.1r and ahoul all and hall on Fnclay (Red
:students grades K-6 avmlable for p!Ck-up between 8 am the poSJitve thmgs we h,tve Bears) A kmdergartetl
gumg on hc1 c at Southern
chtld wtll come only one ot
and 8 p.m. begmmng today.
. We will need eve1yone's the two , days. enher
cuoper.ILJO!l to m.1ke things Tlnu sday oc Friday, August
oper.ne smoothly Parent' 2 1 or 22 All wtll report to
should adhere to the new sc hool on Monday, ~ug
~~POMEROY - In the hay judgmg at the Meigs County markmgs on the park1ng lot 25 Refreshments Will also
Pair Roy Holter of Pomeroy took !Jrst mall three classes, and the sJgn,tg~. wh1ch we be served.
.75 percent or more altalfa, all grasses and 49 percent or hope ca11 be mslalled by the
Arrival procedure
less legumes. Patricm Holter elm me second 111 each of the first d"y ol school· Safety
• Any student tliat ts a parptegories
for our duldren " our l1rst ent · drop-off · amving
pnonty. .mel we necu th' between 7:30pm. and 7 45
plibiK to cxeJctse caulJOil p.m
(students
betng
and comply wtlh the new dropped ofl by parent or
from
Al
11 .111 ic pdlletns ..
gu.udwn) can go duectly to
Pick-ups .11 the end of the the calelorium for free
Qreg Jenkins, Tony Roush,
Angela Keesee, Chnton clay arc curretllly betng ,m.l- bre,tkfasl or to the gymnastOru Jenkms, Kasey Turley, Lambert, Ttmothy Elam. lyzed to see v.h.11 c.tn be um. These students must
)uslln Lee, Trent Deem, Cheyenne Beaver, Ashlyn done to cit mJJMte conges- enter the butldmg vm the
'Travis
Ktmes,
Jordan Wolfe, Kyle Russell. Kayi,J tJon. c~nd more on p1ck-up ' rotll doors.
-Koblentz, Miya Gtlmore, Kmg, Shane Milhoan, ptocetlurc' will be Jcle,JSecl
• Studet\ts .1rrivmg after
lleith Teaford , Miranda Dante! Jenkms. Terrence 'oon , ,,lid Deem Bus p1ck- 7:45 a.m (students arrivmg
· ~alter, Savannah Hawley. Conlin. Ronme Wtlson.
'Qterra
Jenkms,
Cody Katte Durst, J~nmler Ftle.
ftayburn, Dennis Teaford, Georgana Koblenlz, Kelsey
Matthew Keesee, Makya Myers , He&lt;~lh Dettwiller,
Patterson ,
j\'hlhoan, Kayla Russell, Shawnella
Morgan Howard, Kayla Zachary Carson, Alison
Robert Strohl.
Hawthorne, Larissa R1ddle, Deem,
W1th ou r protection
K11nberly
Hawthorne.
Brett Milhoan, Chelsea
l)ohmd you . h1 tt•ng
the road IS a breeze
Jordan ,
Cole
Holter, Shandi Beaver, Enc Jackie
Wood, Josiah Lawson, Jake Graham, Andrew 0 ' Bryan!.
A ll1 e d l rlsu rar1 ce
F~el •ndepe nd e nt
Andrus, Eugene Patterson, Alyson Dettwliler, Shana
Derick Powell, !Vhchaela Roush, Julla Lantz, Adam
Reed &amp; Baur
Rebecca
Holter, Morgan Russell, Lavender,
Insurance Agency
Alexis King, Paul Morrison. Donohue. Brandon K1ng,
220 E Mam Street
Nakata Roush, Zachary Bethany Lee, M,m Durst,
Pomeroy OH
740 992 3600
'Manuel, Caitlyn Cowdery, Meghan Lambert. Chase
www
reedbaur com
Breanna Colburn, Mark Graham. Zachary Stobart.
Gtbbs, Dylan Lavender, · Brook Andrus. JtJSilll Juslts.
Allied
Mtchael Zyon Gilmore, Mnchell
Chad Roush,
[
]
Insurance
Manuel, Jordan Roush, Howard
• N•tlonwld•llfl ~omp,ny
See page A8 }{11 additJOIJKristen Ballard,, Emtly
Ott Your Sid•~
a/ sce11e' from rile hog 1/tmv
· Manuel.

Backpacks available

FREE 24.? Teehnbllupport

• ln•tant Musag~ keep your buddy 11511
• 10 e-ma11 addresses wit"' Webmallt

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

- - -------------------~--'-

When

· Friday, August 15, 2008

Obituaries

Community Calendar

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 38.13
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 59.90
Ashland Inc (NYSE)- 39 77
Btg Lots (NYSE)- 33 33
Bob Evans (NASDAQJ - 29 62
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 43.10
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-4869
Champton (NASDAQ! - 4 52
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.51
Ctly Holding (NASDAQ) - 46 11
Colltns (NYSEJ- 53.17
DuPonl (NYSE)- 45.24
US Bank (NYSE)- 30.65
Gannell (NYSE)- 21 31
General Eleclrtc (NYSEJ - 29 52
Harley-Davtdson (NYSE) 41.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) ·- 37.81
Kroger (NYSE)- 30.32
Llmtled Brands (NYSE)- 18 56
Norfolk Southern (NYSEI 70.49

PageA2

by bus) can go to hre&lt;tklast
or slr.ltght to thetr homelooms These students must
enter the buildmg through
the s1de doors
• At 7 50 a m , a bell or
whistle wtll be so unded to
stgmty to students in grades
ltve 'through etghtto tmmedtately/promptly head to
Lheu lockers and to Lhetr
home1uoms ThJS v.tll allow
the teachets to t.tke allendcmce before the begmnmg
of first penod classes
•At R 00 am, first penod
hegtn s.
Dismissal Procedure
• The dtsmtssal procedure
wtll begm at 2 15 p.m The
pm ent 01 guardio~n must
come 111to the buildmg
betv.een 2·15 p m and 2 30
p m to "gn out their child
m the caletonum
• The chtld wtll then be
calleu by name over the
mtercom for dJS!llJSsal starling at 2 30 p.m
• If thts ttme frame is an
tnconvemence, you can
park
at
the
Umted
. Methodtsl Church .Jdjacenl
to the sc hool 10 meet your
chtld who wtll then be dtsmJssecl as a walker: or you
can p1ck up yout chtld at the
ft on I entrance after the
buses depart (2:55 p m )
wtth proper nouficaiJon by
the parent bemg made to the
oft1ce pnor to 2 15 p m
• If you arrive in the
budding p1101 to your
child's dismtss,il, please
wan 111 the cafetorium unlti
your chtld comes to you. Do
not congregate or loiter 111
the lobby.
• Parents and other vt"tm s "' e not to go to the
classrooms before di s nu~sal
wtthout checkmg 111 at the
office
• At 2:35pm. studems on
the !1 rsl lloor wt II be dismtsscd ellher by bell or
whtstle to go to thetr desltnaltons.
• At 2:40 p m . the scj10ol

wtll dJsmJSs ell her by bell or
whtstle all second floor students to go to thetr desl!natlons

• At 2 45 p m . all JUlllor
htgh athletes WJII be dJsmissecl by bell or whistle
School hours
• Sehoul hours are tram
7 45 am untt12 '4S p.m each
day. Chtldren who walk or
are dnven to school are not
allowed 10 arrive for school
lllllil 7,30 am. Breaktast wtll
start at 7.30 a.m to hopefully
help w1lh the congest10n in
the cafetet ia
• Dismissal for &lt;tll studems being ptckecl up by
thetr parentlguardtan wtll be
at 2:30p.m.
• Walke" .mel students
ndmg the bus 111 grades
kmclergarten through 4th
grade wtll be dtsm.ssed at
2.35 p.m. Walkers and students ndmg the bus in
gr,tcles 5th throu¥h 8th
grades will be dtstmssed at
2:40pm
• Jumor htgh athletes will
be dtsmtssed at 2:45 p.m.
SPRING VALLEY
&lt;&gt;I II! tl lf I•W q

So11 OHice Opens @
6 30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS I

12:30 PM FOR
WED THRU SUN MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT
MIRRORS (R)
1:10, 3:30. 7:t0 &amp; 9:30
STAR WARS: THE CLONE
WARS(PG)
1:00, 3:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00
TROPIC THUNDER (R)
_ t :30, 3:30. 7:30 &amp; 9:30
THE MUMMY: TOMB OF THE
DRAGON EMPERIOR (PG13)
1:00,3:10,7:00 &amp; 9:10
THE DARK -KNIGHT (PG13)
_jl;~. 3:40. 6:55 &amp; 9:40
PINEAPPLE EXPRESS (R)
1:10,3:10.7:10 &amp; 9:t0
SISTERHOOD OF THE
TRAVELING PANTS 2 (PG13)
1:00,3:15,7:00 &amp; 9:15
NOW SHOWING MATINEES
WED THRU SUN

Pa~e

"Kawasaki Motor.\ports Day"
**Kiddie Day a11d *Seuior Citize11s Day
7:00a.m. - Gates Open

2:00p.m. . Market Hog

8:00a.m. ·Rol l Call for
Sale· Ltvestock Arena
Market L1 vcstm;1\
4:00 p.m. · Market Steer
Mcn1ber1-1
Sale- Livestock Arena
9:00a.m. - Pretty Baby
4:30p.m. · Commcrcul
Feeder Sa le- Lrvestock
Contest· 'Dew Zone" 1-h!l
St.!gC

AI Cll.l

10:00 a.m. - Market Rabbll 5:00 p.m
Sale- Livestock Arena

I0:40a.m · Markel Pou!Jry

6:1KI p.m
C+l~[csl
6:00 p.m.

Sale- L1vcsl0t k Arena

Market Datry
Ln'e~tock

An~ na

Sale- Ltvcstock Arena

12:15 p.m. - Markc&lt; Lamb

-

Feeder Sale·

II :30 a.m. · Mat ket Go.u
S.lll!- Ltvc st o~. k An.:r1.1
12:00 p.m. . H:~rnc""'
~ Racrng · Race Trud~

Ch.ttn

Sa"

Mud Volley

B.1lt · Hor-.;c Arcn.1
6:(MIIJ.m. - ATV &amp; Youth
Gi.uJcn Tr,IL:lor Put] . Pull

rr.ll.:k

1:15 p.m. - Dmry

8:00p.m. Toug h Tr.11.:k

Swccp~wkc"-

C'lmlc"'l'" Gr ,uub.tanJ

Ltvcstock

Arena
I :30 p.m. - D.nry M.1rkct
Steer S.rlc- Lrvc,.lock
Arena

7

•Ji1(·b.:::1 11~1JA~,ONPK!
FR\8115/08- THURS 8/21108
WWW SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM

7:30p.m.
Kt~-

" Dt'\\

Karaoke

Y.rlh

Znnc" Hrll

Stat.;c
II :00 p.m. · Gale.., Clo!»C

'

�PageA4

0PINI

The Daily Sentinel

American Episcopal bishop upsets Lambeth Cotiference

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Oh1o

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

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Dar;t Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Edttor

Con,(!ress shall make no larv respecting an
establislunent of religion, or prohibiting tile
free t•xercise thereof; or abridging tire frerdom
o.f speech, or of the press; or the right o.f tire
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlu Gor,er~mtent for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC1DAY IN HISTORY
rod") " Fncl.ty Aug 15. the 22Sth day ol 2008 There
.tte I :lS d.tys lelt 111 the ye.1r
Today s H1ghlight 111 Htstory On Aug 15, 1945 ,
Empe1ot H11ohtto .mnoum:ed to hts subjects 111 ,, prerecorded 1.tdto ,Jlldre ss that Iapan hdd accepted terms of surrender
lo1 cndtn~ Wmld 'W.11 II
Onthts"d,lte In 1057 M,tcbeth. Kmg ol Scots, \\&lt;IS killed
111 b.tttlc by M.1lcolm the eldest son ot Kmg Duncan whom
IVLIL beth IMd sl,un
In 176CJ N.tpoleon Bon.tp.tnc \\as born on the tsland of
Cotstc.t
In Ill 14 the P.mama C.111al opened to truflic
In 19.:14, du11ng World W,tr II. Allied forces landed m
soutilcrn Fr.mce 111 Operatum Dr&lt;Igoon
In 1947 lnd1.J bec,1me tndependenl after some 200 years
ol BttUsh rule
In \94S tile Republic of Korea (South Kore,J) "a' procl,llmeo
In I%CJ. the Woodstock MuSic and Art Fmr opened 111
upst,!le Ne" York
In 1971 Prestdent "'•xon ,mnounced a 90-d&lt;Iy lteeze on
\1\o ~tgt:s pr ICC:--; c~nd rents
Ten ye.us ago Twenty-mne people \\ere k1lled by,, car
bomb that t01e .tp.ul the cenllo'r ol Omagh, Northern
ltcl.tno. a splinter group calling use If the Real IRA clatmed
1esponst hilny
F1ve ye.us &lt;~go Bounung back from the largest blackout
111 U S htstor~ cntcs from the M1dwest to Manhattan
1estored power to nulhons ot people - but encountered
dilltcult•es 111 lull) reH\Ing public servtces
One ) Cdr ago Former NBA referee Ttm Donaghy pleadeo gu•lty to felony chMges for takmg cash p.tyoffs trom
g.unbleJS .md bettmg on games he'd offlctated Ill a scandal
thattocked the k.tgue (A. federal Judge sentenced Don.tgh)
\" IS months behmd b,lfS ) A m.tgn!lude 8 e&lt;~rthqu,tke m
Pe1u s southern dese1 t killed at least 540 people M&lt;~ster
J,tzz pet cuss1o111st Max Roach dted 111 Ne\\ York at age 83
Tod,1y's Btrthda)s Actress Rose M,me " SS Poltttcal
c~cltvJSl Phyllis Schlafly IS 84 Actor Mtke Connors IS 83
Actress Lon Nelson IS 75 Ct\ tl 11ghts acuvtst Vernon
Jmd,m ts 73 A.ctor Jtm Dale IS 73 Actress Pat Pnest1s 72
Sup•eme Court Jusllce Stephen Brlo')lo'r ts 70 Mustctan Pete
York (Spencer DaviS Group) ts 66 Author-journaltst Lmda
Ellerbee " 64 Song\\nter hmmy Webb 1s 62 Bntam's
P111Jee&gt;S Anne 1s 58 Actress Tess Harplo'r IS 58 Actor Larry
Mathe"s ts 53 Actor Zeljko lvanek ts '51 Actor-comedt,m
Randell Shendan ts 50 Rock smger muSJct&lt;In Matt
Johnson (The The) ts 47 Movte dtrector AleJandro
Gonz,ilez Inat ntu ("B.tbel ') ts 45 Actress Debt Maz,,r IS
44 Country SJnger Angela Rae (Wild Hof'es) ts 42 Actor
Peter Herm.mn ts 41 A.ctress Debra Mes; mg ts 40 Actor
Anthon) A.nderson ts 38 Actor Ben Affleck ts 36 Smger
IVhkey Graham (Bovzone) ts 16 Actress Natasha
Henstndge IS 34 Actress Ntcole Pag~t ts 31 Latm· pop
smger Belmda (Ftlm ''The Cheetah Gtrls 2") ts 19 Rock
sntge• loe Jonas (The Jonas Btothers) ts 19
Thought lor Tuoa) 'We must nut read e1ther Ia" or hiStor) backwards" -Helen M Cam. English h1stonan and
educdlor ( 18SS-19t'iR)

The &lt;:arcer ol Bl'hop .
Cathenne Roskam of the
D1ocese ol New York has
been built on her sk11ls as a
cross-cultural ambassador
tor the mode1 n Ep!Scop.ll
Church
She led the InternatiOnal
Concerns Conumttee of her
denomln.ltton"s eXCCUtiVC
counCil, helped create her
d1ucese s Global Women s
Fund and has worked '" a
consultant on 1Sst1es ot cultur.tl sensttlvtty In some
circles, she 1s known as the
biShop who dared to 1·•P
dunng a H1p-Hop Mass· a
fe" 1ears ago 111 the Bronx
· M) stst,JS and broth,JS,
,,II m) homtes .md peeps.
stay up - keep your he&lt;~d
up holla back ,md go forth
and tell n hke n ts.'' procl.umed the b1shop, 111 her
benedtcuon
Thus, the d•mmut1ve
wh1te hatred assiStant btshop
was an unhkel) figure to
msp1re bold , .mgry he.tdhnes
dunng the recent Ltmbeth
Conference of btshops from
the
glob,tl
Anghc.tn
Communion Thts 20-da)
g.!lhenng h.td been c.trefully
planned by the~archb1shup of
Canterbury and hts staff to
focus on pr.t)er, Btble study
,md small-group sessiOns
c&lt;IIIed 'lndabas" - a Zulu
teun f01 tnbal meeltngs m pnvatc scttmgs th,tt dtd
not mclude JOUnMiists
It was espectally tmportant not to mflame already
pa111!ul diSputes between
Thtrd World tradtttonaltsts
and liberals m the United
States Canada, Engl.md
and elsewhere

Terry
Mattingly

u at1on nf the open!) g.1}
.md noncelib,ne Btshop
Gene Rohmson of Ne\\
H,unpshue
Only
617
Angltc.tn btshops prcrcgtsteJed .1nd some ot those
ldlletl to L1ttem.i dCLon.hng
to ,, report 111 The L1\ mg
ChutLh

Then dunng pl,mned t.hs
ws,;wns ol ;.domesuc ~to
lence, Ro,k;on spoke out on
.tn unlikely toptc - biShops
who be.tt theu wtves
"We h,t\ e 700 men hete
Do yo11 thmk .m) of them
beat thctr Wl\es' Ch,mccs
are they do
argued
Rusk,1111 111 The Lambeth
Wttness " dmly newsletter
for g.ty-n ghts supporters 111
the 77 mill•on -membe•
AngiJcan Commumon
"The
most
devout
ChnstJ.IllS be.JI the.•r wtves
Mdny ol ou1 biShops
come !rum pl~ces whete a
" c ultur,tll y .1ccepted to
bcdl )Uill ., de In thdl
regard a m&lt;Ikes coll\ets,tt•on qUJte d•tf~eult ·
The key she aoded, IS tl1.1l
Ytolence .tgamst women.
dlld vtolence agdms1 chi!
dren. lor that matter IS IIUlence ag,11nst the defenseless
Wtth ., omen 11 goes h.111d
m-hdnLi With mJsogyny
The New York btshop 's
aCCLtsatiOilS lOcked the COil
lerence whllh w,ts alie,Jdy
tense due to the absence ol
.tbout 280 co ns ervdllve
b1shop s 111.111) 11om
N1gcn.t and Uganda- who
decl1ned to attend due to the
presence ot U S le.tdeiS
who backed the 2003 conse-

llldgLIZille

Thus

ne&lt;trl y .t q[tartet ol the htshops 111 attendance came
It om the sm,d I but '' ealth}
U S EpJScop.tl Church
The rnn't

dam~•gmg p.11 I

ol Rusk,un s pronounce
mem "as her tone of moral
.1nd culttlr.d supe••ornv
noted commentator Rt&lt;Iz.Jt
Butt It \\ dS easy tor btshups t10m the Global South
to rc.td between the lmcs
c~nd tmd pamtul traces of
colom,d~&gt;m

What btsilops shm1ld be
conce1necl .tbout ts her
lnSllllldllOil thdt d 11011\\ hlle
culture le.1ds to domestic\ tO ·
lence ,md that ., h1te \\&lt;este111
cultut e IS too ctvtltzcd and
too ath anced to ,1\low such
.:.~trm.:llles tu ot:cur
arg:uctl
Butt. 111 The Gu.udt.tn
"Rosk,un t.11ls to tecogmze
th.Jt domestic
VIOlence
.Jftccts people reg.u dless of
then cl.tss. ethmclty rehgton ,
e"ender or e"CO"I
e dphy '
The
v. hole
epiSode
brought back memones of
the
19CJ8
Lnnbeth
Conterence when d llslllg
ude · ol Ah tc.m ,md Astdn
'ot es helped produce .1 jll\otal •esolut1on - th~ vole
was 526 111 f,l\or wllh 70
opposed .1110 4S ,Jbstentwns
- st,nmg th,ll sex outstde
of

111dfll._l gt\

mcluJmg

gd)'

sex. IS lllCUilljldltb\e With
Scnpture

The A.nglican pnmate of
Scotl,md sa1d th,tl p.trttcular
resolution lett htm feeling
I) nched .md was the
result ot Thlfo World btsh
ops trymg to ls!,m11fy
Chustwnny nMkmg It more
se\em, Protest,mt and legal"''"
One
outspoken
Ame11can bJShop complamcd th,lt many A.tncmh
h,l\e · mo,ed out nf amm!Sm mto a \er) superst Jtmus kmd ol Chnsuannv '
Now a decade l.1tei, a
fem.tle btshqp !rom a ltberal
d1ocese 111 Amenca prm tdeo new e'!dence that these
ktnd s ol cultural stereo type s
,u e h.u d to btu y
Thts kmd ot guilt byassocwuon game ts not
gomg to e,tse lensrons m the
Angltc,m
Commumon
noted ArchbiShop ot York
John Sentamu
I h&lt;Ive never beaten my
wtte although I c.m t talk
about
other
people.
Sent.tmu told the l ondon
T1mes "There IS a d.u1ger
of stereotyping people
bec.ruse of the culture the)
come from and assummg
they must su1 ely be domg
11
I hope BIShop
C.llhenne has got ligures
,md numbeJS .md people
Bec.tuse tt not she IS 111
d..mger ot cdusmg an unnecessary rumpus '
(Tell\ Mattmgh 11 duec·
101
of the
1Va1l11ngton
Jouuwl11m Cell/et at the
Cluistwn
Coull&lt; II {ot
Colleges and Unn etlillel
and
leads
the
GetRdu:wn Of£: fHOJ ecl to
\1/nh 1£'i1gton and the

The Daily Sentinel

1

,,

.tlltl\\lng homele,s people to
sleep on !Is Lit.&gt;lll 'tcp And sJn t.e,
2000 Sc.ntlc churches .tllll S) n·
BALTI~IORE St Ylll, elll
~tgogucs hd\ \! t~tken turn . . opende P.1pl Clnnch bo,tsls ,4 '1)
mg theu ],1\\ n:-. or p.trklllg lnh to
slot) tu\\eJ th,n P'"'Je, t)\et .111
10 0-p~JSon tent Clll &lt;ls
lnl'ICd SIIlgJ) gtllllllli.:J !1C1 f: h
Jo~ Veckll.t Jtrectot ol homeborhood bout)ckd h\ Cll) H.tll
less lllllllSllle' .11 Filth Avenue
dlld th~ hom~ n! d :-.J~!ll:! nl tht:.: ' llk'llt Ill ,LtCOfl.ldi1l~ \\ llh the
PJesb)lCII&lt;In s.tys he thmks \etDecl,n ,IIHlll ol lnd epc~ndL'IJLe
c.lll) chutch tudllwn ol oller- tlllg 15 people &gt;lcep on hts
And 111 the chlllch s ~ll&gt;und ­ lllg p1ol ect10n flom . tuth n11 tle' • dlUILh S \(Cps Jets Lhllll.: hgneT . .
le' el pat k lwmck" ' people
.. flte lllliV ditelltdll\e IS lllle)J betnend them
~cck1ng ~tll1llu.u ~ h . l\t" lnund .t
them It )"li sleep on our p,11k
We try to e.~rn theu trust
pe1m.ment pi.Jcc to \11 e
herKh \\e I (' !!.011H.!. tn h,t \t~ VOl! .md that s ,, p1ett) btg de,i\ .
'
The p.1rk 0\1 ned b\ the I6 7
.tuested s,11tllhe' Re' Rtch,lld
s.llll Vedella. wht&gt; "'" homeye,H -llld Rnm.m C.Jthol•c clnnd1 L,l\, renee ,t 6'i-yc,u-old pttest le ,s f&lt;JI II )e,us They teluse
IS .Ill) th111g hut pi IStii!C \\ illl h \\ ho hd' led the congrcg.ttron to1 to go .my pldCC! d..,c 11ght no\\
l1c1s pt ompted the mn cclll ol ~:) VCdf"' "Th,Lt dUt!Sll I '0l1Jld
Some peopk Llo enu up
homeless .tChtK.IIL'" .md ut\
ltke Jesus
gomg to shelt~I s
olltc I.lis r hough talltl.tb ,h .. de
B.dtnnore oltJu,Jis .ue \\nrkAlthough the chlllch re i uses to
the nc,ul) h.ti)-,Jcre ,p,tc e the t.lose the p.u k to sleepers '" ctly mg \VIlh St Vmcent de P.111l s to
dlmost h.ue g10und spoiL\ ug . t
oltict.tls \\Ould prelet St Vmcem petsuade p&lt;Irk dwellc1' to &lt;Iccept
•ette butts .mo \I r,tppets ,ts 11 ell de P tul s .tcknowled~es problems hou smQ bectu~e lll.IIl\ h~1ve d1re
'" the Occ.tSJon,ll ll -1nch de.Jd rel.tted tu sanit.tllon ,md sub- health fllognoscs
'
r.11 01 puddle ol \Oilllt Dusfy 't.tnce ,Jhuse The p,u k h.1s not
Conunon Gwuno .•tn ot~.Jntt,l­
\\l!ld h\o\\s ~111 bet\\Cen the bet. nnw 11 h.ll \Ve h.1d mlended m t•on th,lt seeb housmg tor"hometeerh ot thn-.,e ~~ek1112 . ., mlltt.u,
the ltrst pl.tcc
s,nd Audre) le ss people &lt;~dmlluqe,ed " sur
"I don l hcl te\e t\l,lt .til) hod\ Rogets "ho '' le &lt;~Jmg p.utsh '~}' thts spn ng th.ll tound the
'hou\o be s\ecpm; 111 the sited, cfto11 s to ,tLkh es' p.trk t ssuc..,
p.u k s 1esJdenh .1re 1w tee as It ke"hete\el It " so I peJson,dly
So th e chlllch lured ,, p.trk 1) to hd\e d '''k ldctOJ lllLredsmg.
cion t beltne th,tt skept ng out- m.m.tger - Ste' e Bosse .1 long- then mort.Jht) th.m 1.500 othet
stde c.tn e1er be ,, ,,utclu,u\
people
lime 1c"dent ol ,, lot .tl homeless homeless
sUI veyed
s,ud Ot,)ne Gl.tuhe1 pleSJuent ''I sl1eltcr - \\ ho st,uted 1101 k I.1st n.tltomvtde A.nd sleepmg outSJoe
B.tlttmore Homeless Se1' lles
month ro cootd n1dtc don.llwns ex.tcerb.ttes theu poor hc,Jith.
lhe governme nt .tgenL) Je.1llng \\ edly c\e,lllLlps .md .111 .tssem s,nd Beck~ K.tnJS Common
wtlh the l H) s homel ess popu\,1- hlv of restdems
Grounds dtrectul ol ll!llll\,Jlloll
·~1.tnv ch utc hes sponsor shelBut the B.ilumote chutch.
lton csttm,Hed "' 111ll!e th.ln
With up to \SO p.nJSIHonet s
I 000 people F•om " public te" b11t only .t h.tndlul n,lltnn
he,dth perspelll\C \\e doni wtoe Ill\ lie homeless people to ,lllendmg edLh \V~t·k lecls the
behe1 e we'te mecttn~ the needs sleep on the1r g•otmds pelln.t- lln.tnr.:Ittl burden ot LdiiiH! fo1 ~l
Ftlth
A;enue hts!OIIc huddmg .tnt\ dt;e, not
o! people b) ~llLtlllt.Jg.tng them nentlv
to sleep on the streets
P1 estiytell.tn ( hlllc h 111 Ne11 h.t\ e the resources lo1 "'heltet
Homeless people lt.tle 'lept Yotk Ctt) won ,, 2006 l,msutt so !Is membets .ue dlllng then
BY CHRISSIE THOMPSON
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WRI TER

'

A.NDALUSIA Al.tb,un ,, I .\Pi
,A.n 4..Lth tlll.l jLHJ gc \VllO otH..:~
\Vorc the ren Colll llldtHJments ot
the Btblc em btotdet cd on hts
10he h,ts heen ,ICC II sed ol \ 10\tl
Jng JlltiJUtt[ L'thtLS fOI PILit:lll1g_ d
group 111 It" couJl!oom to hold
il,mds .tnu pi .tv
The e\mellc.tn Cl\ II Libc'lltcs
Umon 1!\ ec\ ,, compl,unt
Cm 1ngton County C11cUtl ludge
Ashlej Me K&lt;1lh&lt;1n said OIJVJ,I
Ttn ner. exccume tl11ectm of the
ACLU ol Al.th.tm.l The com-

!I t'll ~ )

Federal funds
allow work
BILOXI. Mtss (AP) - I he
Fedet al Emergenc) Managemclll
Agency has awarded more th,m
$25 4 mtlhon to connnuc e&lt;Ise
m.m.tgement wm k by org&lt;Im7attons ol the K.ttnn&lt;I A1d Tud.1y
consornum
The
Untied
Methudtst
Commtttee on Rehel l01meo the
nattOIMI case m,m,tgement consortium tollnwtng the tl ev.tstdtlon ol Hun t&lt;.:~llle Kdtrind tn
200S to proviCk dts.tster c&lt;Ise
man~tg ement set\H.:esin indt\lllU&lt;IIs ,md t.umhcs
The consortium ptovJdes

RUSSIA

asstsldnt:e tu thlH:I s~m d :-. of 1,\lnt

lies .Jctoss the Gull Co,JSt
KAT w.ts funded th10ugh
more th,m $(&gt;6 million 111 don,J

•·~···.
~~

William
Rusher

elected. wtll be the lust
&amp;.fncan-Amenc,m ever to
stl 111 th e Oval Ofttce
Dues
thiS
mdttet'
A.mencans have gotten pretty sophtsucateo about ractal
m.Jtlet s 111 recent dec&amp;les,
and most of us arc thoroughly accustomed to
workmg SICie by stde wah
quahfted bi,Jcks 111 JUst
.tbout e\ ery aspect of our
econollty ,mel our politJc,Ji
S) stem Even grdnllng th,it
traces of race consciOusness
rem am ~ th,lt . .Js the I.1te
Wtlltam F Buckle) Jr once
observed thete will neve1
come" 11111e .vhen the a&gt;elage whtte \votker ts gen·
utnely un.tw,1re that th e col league workmg next to h11n
IS tll.tck ~ a ts s,tfe to s.ty
liMt 111011 ol us we not seuously upset by the fact Th.tt
truth " a tnumph of r.tctal
accommodauon. ,md we dre
nght to be proud of 11
But the p•eSJdency IS
somethtng else ag&lt;Itn The
president, after all represents all ol 11s, and somcthmg on the order ol three-

quarters of Ame1tcans are
non-Htsp&lt;Intc v.htte Would
,m) SJgmflcdnl numbct ot
whtte Amenc&lt;~ns be 11ne.1sy
on reflectmg tlhlt ou• chtef
natiOnal execull\e wasn't'
Mj O\\ n guess IS that thts
I .tel would be no tiled &lt;1nd
tn some cases acttvely
tegretted hy " substantt.tl
numbe1 ot whtte ctltzens,
but that most ot them would
tnmly
suppte ss
.tny
1111pulse lu ll!le out a prestocnttal e,md td&lt;~te on that
.tccnunt They would , 111
short, thmk less ot themselves tf they &lt;~li&lt;med th at
conSider.Itt on to 111 fl11ence
thelf deCISIOil
It goes wllhout s&lt;~ytng,
how ever (,It least, I hope tt
does), that thts .tss11mes the
black c,md•date 111 quest1on
" thorough Iy 4u&lt;~l d ted Ior
the JOb on nonr&lt;ICtal
gll.lunds th,Jt he 01 she has
the expe11ence. the tempetament and the poltctes th.tt
would 111&lt;1kc ,, c,mdtd.ttc
allJdcl!ve qu!le tndepenoently ol the ISsue of race
On rhat assumpl!on. I see
no t edso n why Ameucan
voters '" .1 who le would
retect .t bi&lt;Ick ptestdent1,ll
candtd:tte There "'II of
course be resolute r.JciSI'
who WIIIICjCcl d bl tck C.tllLiid.ttC out o\ hand - just'"
thctc are voters. plenty of
them, who wtll not vote lot
a woman or a Catholic (or a
Mormon) But these blocs

he't Roge" s.11o
P.uk ~esJdem.., lltk no\\ lede.e
rhcy 11.11 c he,tlth problems, b'ut
s,Lv they ,11 01d 'hel te1 s bec,IU'0
they ol!en c.mnot keep the11 pe1
SOil.ll pthSCSSlllllS ,1110 dtsltke
betng told wh,ll tn Jo
E.t~tle Hunt 61 h,Js sutfe1ed
illllll W\ele pdlll ,Ji tel the
remo' .11 of .t Vtctn.tm W,tr bullet fllllll behmd IllS ught e.u
The Jeu.:.•nt renH)\,11 ul t~o ll!!ht
toes left h11n \1 lth ,, lnnp He
s,l\ s h1s he.1lth " 111) b•ggest
concern hut he ,1\ u1ds shelteJS
to p1otect hts birth cetllltc.HC
.1nd extr.t clothes
. I CclllllOI le,l\e thiS s(lllt out
hete. he s,ud
The cillllch's ne\\ p.uk llllll.tll\cs d1cl not llllll!edt.ttel) 'uc
cccd The l11 st clc.tnup dtc"
only l\\O p.lrltclp.mts de,p1te
p!o111J..,es ot $'l dn1g,tme gtlt
c.uds No p.uk 1estdel!ls JOllied
th e p1oposed ""emhl) the ful -

Promise Keepers
reblming to Charleston
CHARLESTON W•V,1 - As the coun
try pt cp.11 es to elect n.tuonal kddcrs.
th oU,d llU S o l
\\lest Vug1nt.t
mt:n ,m.: ... omm•ttmg Ill be
MEN
INTEEiRITY
un elected
le.tde" W1th the help ul Jnte rn.JUon.tl
men s rcsotll &lt;e Pwmtse Keepers men ate
le.•rnmg to keep th c11 p•omtses :.nd he
bette! llk'll 111 theu home..., wo1 kpL.tces ,md

1m PROMISE ~
0~

Lllllllllll111tle ...

On Sept 12-1\ th ous.mds ol me n from
thw u!!hnut the Mtd AttlllttL IL~g ,on \\Ill
~.llhe; at the Ch.ulcsto n Cl\" Cc mer 111
Cll.lrlc sto n lot .t p, omJSe Keepets conferen~~ desH!.neJ to J~ntle .111d untie men to
builu the•r •ei.JtJon';,h,ps on solid Biblical
punctpks th,n c.tn Wlthst,md 11111es ot
LtnceJt,unl\ Cil,ule,ton ts one ol e1ght
lnc.J ttons lldl!Onwtde \\he•~ men will
g.1thel m 20UX 10 help e.1ch other be better
men . husb,md' ,md f,nhet '
Smce 1990 P1om "e Keepers h,JS dr.twn
mu1e tlldn 6 mtllton men to some 150 sta
lo wmg lid\
dtum ,111d sports ,uen,l conferences ,mo
But' p&lt;Ii hhll&gt;llCts 11Hend to outdoor r.tllie' .1cross North Amenc.1
keep p•nnl\lllng nc11 clements of mclL~thng tollH:"nmg: the ltt1ge.., t tehgwu . .
pdtk !tic
g,uhenng e'~' held on the W,tshlllgton.
II the p.uk dosed whete DC M,JII Pllllllls~ Keepers l.tst e'ent 111
else would \\e be'· 46-\c,ll- Cl1.1rleston \\ .1s 111 2004
old p.uk ICSJdent K1111 BI.Jxton
\\'lhlt st~U t~d llS ll l 011\ Cl S,ltlOil between
s,!ld th!O lt~h te,!l s At \c,Jsl we ltlllllel Unl\eJSil) ot Color,too he,td tooth,l\ e " peun,ment pl.lle
I b,JIIco,ll.h Bill McClltnev .mel .1 p•ole&gt;&gt;t\r
know It . ., beLdll\C ul h1111 qutckl) bec.tme ,, n,tlltlll.tl phenomenon
because of Jesu'
th.u put the needs of men on the m&lt;~p
PlOlllJSC Keere" tsn t JUSt Jbout cnnOn the Net:
lerences s,uo Promtse Keepets P•estdent
Sr VIII« liT de Paul Chw&lt;i1
.md CEO Tom Fottson Out de'tre IS to
liT It&gt; //11 11 11 \tl&lt; luoth 01 ~
meet men \\ hete the) .tre .11 and eqmp
Conmu m
G u111 wl
them\\ Jth lt?SOllllt'S ,!Jdtt'SSI!lt! the ISSUeS
men I.tee todd) ·
"
flrtp //H \1 II ( 011111/0JI~!OII!Id 01 t,:
Tod.l\ P1onme KeepeJS h.ts retooled
.tnu ICLIC.Jted Hse\1 to be ,, relevant
tt'sOillce lo• 21st centutv men Promt se
KeepeJS h.1s stJ,ttegJc.My teotgamzed to
be mote &amp;cess1ble- now o!le11n£ s.mallp\,nn t s.ttd McKdth.m VIOI.lled knees ,md pr,1ycd ,Jioud duung ,, lorme1 seuet.U) tn g.un pn . . ses
et
conle•cnccs. smgle-subJcctnMtlCI semethlls ruks ,md the US cowl ileanng Ln Fehnwy He SIOil o\ftn,I!K!,IIIeCOrds
111.11,
tndl\ tdu.tl .md sm,lil gtoup Btble
In 1e,pm1se to the c\llllpl.ttlll
CnnstttutJon s ~ep.u.tltPn ot told the Ino people Ill the co urt
slllcly
uutlcnt
.md technology tiMl ,tllo\\s
, hlll ch .md st.tte b) tHdeung the 1oom thdt he Wd..., nt.~t OJIJ.ud to \1, K.Jth.Jn told the Mobile
call on the name ot Jesus Clmst Pt css- R eg 1s te1 tor ,l stm y men to .tccc's customtzed !Csourccs,
1'10ll)1 l0 pl,l)
Fou1 )C~us ~t gn MLKttthdn w1tnesse' s,llll .md mJerco .ill llnu sday Wh.ttc\ et , omes ot enullllLtgcmcnt dlH.I commuml) ,mytune.
•
.til th.ll I II umtmue to h,I\C dll\\\he1e
donned the ren Co mnMnoment s to 10111 hdlld ~ Lllld pld\' dCLOid
Dtflcrcnt !rom the b,tby boomets ot
1obe he ,,11d to publtcly mg to the compl,tmt ltlcd 'non pe.ICe Q11ntmg Rolll.ms 111 the
the
90, tod.t) s m.tnts mme skeptical pf
Km~ l.tmes verston of the Btbk.
"' k nO\v ledge h1' belief th.11 1he .tl ter the he,Jnng
•ehg,on
,md mot e t.oncen1ed w1th the b,tlThe heatmg w.ts tor d L:Lise 111 the judge .tdded And \\C kncm
l.t\\ IS b,bed on more th ,m JUSt
.tncc
111
CICt)day
hie of work t.umly and
whtch the pastor ,md sevcr.tl that ,i\lthtn~s \\lllk to~ether lor
"01ds Wllllcn 111 l,m books
The ACLU wmpl.unt to the oe,Jcons ot Mmnm~ St.u good to theln tll.lt lnve God. to t.uth s,uu fmtson who l1.1s provtdcd
JuuJct .tl lnquuy CommJSstun M!Sstonaty B.tpltsl Ch"tuch Ill them th,lt .tre c,JIIed .trcordtng to le.JdcJSh!P to P1on11se KeepeiS smce
200:l
Ptomtse Keepets h,ts ne\er
s.11d \1c K.ttll.ln droppeo to hts MonroeVIlle sued the chutch s hts purpose
LIMngetl lh mess,lge ot encoUJ.Igement.
Llltl h.ts upd.tted ''' methodolog) to more
etlecuvel) teach the 21st ccnttuy man
Men .mendtng the Ch.u\eston Promtsc
Keepers e\ent ~~ill come 11om .111 w.tlks of
\tie lor h1gh-ene1gy muSic, u&gt;llllc relief
month .tile• UNESCO .tpptoved ch1ldren the Rom.ut C.1thollc filet s II one spouse 111 .tm,Jrn,tge .md str.ught t.tlk 11om top Cht tslt.lll spc.tkCambodt.l s .tppltc,ltlOn to l1.1ve ll Atcht.hocesc ol Culcmn.Jtl Sd)' COllVCits to Js),llll
eJS mcludtng R1ck Rtgsby
Htllm.tn
Zulktllt Noordtn . .111 oppoSition Davto Bryant .trio M1ke Sil\ .1
n.nned .1 Wmld l-leJ!l,tge Sne 111 ns most' det,uled ltst yet ol
Th.tt Prune MtnJSte• S,nnak behav to" Jecmed n1.1pp1 opu.1te membe1 ol P.trltament s.11d the
rut 11101&lt;' 111(111111!111011 &lt;i/JOIIT t/ie
p1otcst w,t.., d \\,HI11ng to 'the B.tr
for st&lt;Iff members
Sund,JFd~CJ had backed the btd.
Cluu It \ton
t onf('!i!1/{ e
liHf
The newest verston ot the Counul spectltc,tlly .mu nun- 111111 PuJJJll\i!Ktepel' m~ 01 loll 866
'parkmg demonstr.•t•ons b} antigovernment protesters who Decree on Child PJotcllton c~lso Mushms 111 genct.tl not to ch,tl- PROWISE
clauned the temple's new status p!OhibHs be,u hugs l.tp-s nung lenge the nghts ol Musl1ms
would unde1111111e Th.ul,md 's llllCl ptggy b(1ck ncles, dnl,{mg
claim lO the SUIIlJUIIdlllg .Jrea
other tnlei.Jctwns between 1ts
The dtspute h.1s conunued cletgy
,md
childtcn
despite two 10unds ot t.1lks SJnc e H,mdshakes h1gh-live s shoul
LITTLE ROCK iAPl
l,tsl month
dcl-lo-shouloer hugs &lt;~nd p&lt;~ls till Puson ofiJCI&lt;Ils 01d not vtoldte
the back a1e sttll accept.tble
POINT PLEASANT, WV,, - Wdhng
&lt;Ill 111111ate's ughts \\hen they
The ,uchchocese updates the diSctpltncd hun t01 relllsmg to Hc,u t Oull each lot Chnst I081 Oshel
rules every li\C )e.us The l.1test cut Ius h.ur ,md be,trd whtch he Ro.td. "til host ns e tg ht h .mmt&lt;tl g.nhelVCIS!On, iCle,ISCd thiS 111011111 :-.a1U would go .Jg.lln"'t hts tel!
tng bcgmmng Mond...ty ,tnd Tuesd.1y,
dlso
mdnd.ttes h.Kk gro und gtous heltefs baseo on the OILI Aug 25 .1nd 26
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo (AP) checks for cotllr.tcluts ., 01 kt ng Test.llnent a tederal .tppe.lls
A mens meeung wtll be held
- Sc\erdl rehgwus leaders have wtth chtldren
Wednesday ,md Thur~d.1y Aug 27 and
p.mel h.ts Jllled
VJctJm &lt;It.hoc,Jtes wht\ h.t ve
,JSkeo Go\ M,lll Blunt to gram
Mtch,tel Fcg,ms sued ovc1 the 28, and the v.omen s conlerence ., Ill
clemency tm ,,m,m scheouled to cnttctzed the dtchdtocese tor lis At kans.1s
Depallment
of F!ld,ty tluough Sund.t). Aug 29 11
response to p,tst dbuse c.tses s.t) CotJectton·, poltc) th,ll s,tys
be cxccutco lc~tCI tin' month
The g.niletmg te,Jtutes mdny gtfted
Dennts Skilltcotn "scheduled the) sttppn• t the ne., me.Jsu• e' m.de pusonets must keep then spcdket' s!llgets .mJ tltlenteJ tlli!Stll.tns
to be executed Aug 27, 111 as d step to.,..,ud bettet protec - h,ut l!tmmcd ,,hove thctr e.us ,md hom Honda, Nc" Jetsev New Ym k.
M!SSOll11 s !11 :-.t cxcLut 1011 smce tion ol child• en
North CuohtM OhiO .md ·west Vugtnt,l
keep then I Kldl lwr tnmmeo
200S Skilltcotll WdS CO!l\ICted
Feg,ms " lollowe• ol the Service llllles ,Jre 7 p m Mondd) through
ot k\lltng R1ch.ud Drummond 111
Assemblies ot Y.thweh ., '" ,,, Fnd.1y ,md on SllnO.J) S.nlllu.l) ,Jiternoon
Lil.tycuc County 111 19CJ4
tunes pi .teed 111 .tdnutmt rJll ve servtces beg tn at 2 p m ,uKithc cnncert IS
,,, 6 10 p m
In ,, lcttc• sent TtJesd,Jy to
SC!.!rCI!,lllO!l,
With
OC&lt;.:dSIOildl
Blunt the reltgtous le.JdcJS
Mmmng sen tees &lt;IIC 10.1111 Thursd.ty
st.tys In puntttve tsol.tllon or soltargued that Skilltcotn
\1c1s
KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysta t&lt;~ry contmemenl He clauns the and Sunday
tutned hts Ili e ,Jround hec0111111g (AP) - M,tl.tystdll pohiiCI.IIl,' pumshmcnts p•e,ented hun hom
Fw 111/olltJatWII w/1 ( W.J) li75 li5/8
,, model ol rel~ctbtlitatJon and ,ue wr,mglmg ,tbout whether to earnmg good tune whtch would
sCI VICC to othcts
They ,ISkCd tnrb10 sens!ltve deb,!lcs on telt- h.1ve reduced hiS sentence
Blunt to teduce the sentence to ,1 gll)Us diSputes 111 thiS Musl1m
The 8th U S Cu cull Cow1 of
Itie pnson te1m Without the pos- lll.ljOflty n,Jtlon
Appe.tls sa1d the ptt~on 's groo mstbtl!ly lot pc~rolc
The controvetsy wtdencd Aug mg policy " le.tsOil.lbly rel.ttThe clemency requ est was I0 .Jitc• pwtesteJs !arced the halt eo"to the st.1te's sc~fety and sec u
GALLIPOLIS - W,mt to lc.1rn more
SJgneu by Roman Catholic. of ,, conference tm lsl,muc con- nty mtere sts Long l1.111 o1 sh.Jg
the Catholic l.11th'
about
EpiScopal. Luthcldll, Bapttsl. veJStons Police told the Bar gy be,trds can allow mmates to
An)olle
mtc1 ested 1ll knuwmg mUJe
Qu.1kcr c~nd Church ot the Counul ""UlldiJon ol lawyer&gt; h1de contr.tband or dJSgutse theu
Bteth1en leaoers
to abort the l01u111 alter mme .ippeatdnce, p•e,entmg s.tl ety ,1bout the C.uhoh~ Chlllch " welcome to
.ttlend .111 mtonnat•on.d se"llm .11 St LoUis
than 300 demonstrc~tors ralltco tssues. the coun noted
C.nhuhc
Chu1 ch 85 State St thiS Sunday
Fegans, who was unpnsoned
outstde the con leJence hall .md
Ull a robbe1y COllVICiiOll ,Jisn .tl I p m A bnet tour of the chlllch .md
threateneo to storm the event
The conference w.ts suppuseo sued the dep.trtment 101 not serv- clllSWCIS lO que,liOils Will be gnen
to be .t r&lt;11 e puhlic pl.llform to mg htm kosher me,tls The Hth Fellow,hlp ,md 1clreshments ate st. heduled
I
Fen mfmmatum &lt;0/1{1&lt; t the &lt; l11m l1 at
CINCINNATI (AP) - P11esh ex&lt;Itmne how some M.JiaySJ.Jll C'nCLut &lt;~greed w•th a tn.tl judge's
(NO) .J46 OM9
should not kt", 11 ck le or "restle t.multes are c.IUght 1n legal con- ,,w,tro ol $1,500 to Feg,ms

...

Alabama judge faces complaint for praying in court

Religious Briefs

-

111 the p.u k smce the nud-1 CJH(h
\\ hl."n 8d!ttmme beg.m enlnrL
111~ .tlll tkv. Ir'J ,, scpdldtc pld':t:,t
I,IL mg Clly H,JII The chu1ch
took mer 1he ne.trbv p.uk 111
20UU ddemhng the sp.1ce ,,,; .t
s.lnclLHII 1 11 here homele" people c.m r ~?:-.t V·l lthout hltld...,, -

-

·'!!"""'

Almost w1thout reahzmg
tt, Amenca appears to be on
Lelln 1 to th e edtlot an' W&lt;'lwme The) liwuld bt' /es.~ the verge of electmg 1t s llrst
than 300 11 o1r/1 Alllellel\ ate wbJe&lt;l to edumg mun be black prestdent
Poltttcal observers are tn
11~ned and mclude adthe" and telephone number. No
general agrelo'ment that, m
111111~md lellell H 1/1 he publ11hed Lette11 1hould he m
the normal course of
~ood ltl\le addre51lll8 Hille; 110t personal111e5. Letters of
thmgs, 2008 ought to be "a
tl~tmh.\ tu m!{Wll;:,atwn\ and 1ndrvtduaH ntllnot be at(ept
Democratic year" The
ed /01 tmblrat/1011
Republicans have occupted
the Wh1te House for the
last etght years, and controlled Congress as well for
the f1rst s•x of them In a
Reader Services
(UsPs 213-960)
two-party system ltke ours.
Correction Policy
Ol)to Valley Publishing Co.
the only senous wa) of
our man concem 1n all stones 15 10 Published every afternoon Monday
shaktng up the poltt•cal
through Friday 11 1 Court Street
be accurate If you know of an error
process ts to "throw the
Pomeroy Oh o Second class postage
m a story ca ll the newsroom at (740) paid at PomEroy
rascals out" - or, to put It
r99~ 2156
Membar The Associated Press and
more gently, to replace the
the Oh10 Newspaper Assoctat1on
ms wah the outs What's
Postmaster Send add ress correc
Our mam number IS
more,
the nom1.1l accumut1ons to The Oa1ly Sent nel 111 Court
(740) 992-2156
lallon ot popular disconStreet Pomeroy Oh o 45769
tents over an etg ht -)ear
1 Department extenstons are·
Subscription Rates
penod has left the GOP dtsI
By
carrier
or
motor
route
l!nctly vulnerable The
1
News
One month
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economy IS not techmcally
/ Editor Charlene Hoeflich Ext 12
One year
'115 84
I Reporter Bnan Reed Ext 14
Dally
so· m a recessiOn. but tts condllton IS nothmg to brag
Reporter Beth Sergenl E't t 3
Senior Clltzen rates
One month
•10 2.7
about And the war 111 Iraq.
1
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Outside Sales Dave Harns Ext 15 direct to the Dally Sentinel No subscrrp
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j Outside Safes Brenda Davrs Ext 16 tron by marl permrned m areas where
So
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expectat1on of
home
camer
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rs
a
variable
I Class /Circ Judy Clark Ext 10
most poltucal observers IS
I'
Mall Subscription
th,&amp;t the Democrah are like Inside Meigs County
General Manager
ly to wm tn November 13
Weeks
' 32 26
Charlene Hoefltch Ext 12
carry •n g both Hou ses ot
26 Weeks
' 64 20
Congress, and probably
52 Weeks
' t27 t1
£.mall·
captunng the Whtte House
news@mydarlysentrnel corn
Outalde Meigs County
as well The only novelty m
13 Weeks
'53 55
the sHuatton ts the fact that
26 Weeks
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Web:
the Democratic presidenttal
52
Weeks
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www mydallysentinel com
chotce IS black, and, 1f

Friday, August 15, 2008

A place to rest: Md. church opens park to homeless

Americas first black president?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.AIT

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 15, 2008

PageA5

ttons ftom fotctgn counlltt:' dnU
nonptofJt otgdnlzattons

Cambodia
makes claim

tend to c,mcel each other
o11t Lots of women would
actually prefer a female
P' eSJdent , lots ot Catholics,
,, Catholic, etc And a black
prestdentt,tl candtdate could
ce1tamly co11nt on virtually
unammous support from
black voters
Today there ts one scnuus contender for the Whne
House who "black B&lt;1rack
Obama, who certamly
.1ppears to be a lock tor the
Democr.!liC
nomtll,JI!Oil
And polls suggest th&lt;Il he
m.1y well go on to wm the
preSidency tl se lt
It so, l hope and
expect- that he will wtn tt
because he ha &gt; conv1111,;ed a
maJonty of the Amencan
e lectorate th,n he deserves
to on the b&lt;Ists ot hJS expencncc 111 the lllmots Senate
.lnd the lJ' S Senate, illS
pol•t•c.tl poltc•cs as these
h,l)e been (and "'II contmue to be) spelled out, and
th e personal qualities he
has dtsplayed And 1f he
loses, I devoutly hope tt
will be becau se of percetved shurtcomtngs 111
these respects , ,md not 111
the lec~st becduse he happens to be bl,tck
(IVII/wm Ru1he1 11 &lt;ill
auomplniled aut/101 for·
me1
pu!Jlllhel of til£•
Natwnal Ret tell and joune1
II«' &lt;htwmwl of tile
AmeiiCWI
Conservarrve
l:Jmon.)
·

PHNOM PENH. C.1mbuo •"
(API - Ctmhodt.ltedsserted ns
cl,uml uesd,Jy ovc1 .tnuent bm
der temp les th.tl .tlso .1rc ci&lt;Itmed
by Thdtl,md ahe.tcl of t,ilks on
hngeu ng ternloii,Jit.hsputes
The tm etgn mtntsters ol the
two counlltes a1 e to meet
Mond,ty 111 Th.uLmd to ll y to
defuse miltt.uy st.mdolls ,dung
the1r sh,Jred bo• de1 - l1rst nea•
the II th century Pre.th Ythea•
temple and then at tile 13th centllly Ta Mo,m Thom temple
The two coun tu es share ,Jhout
500 tmles ol land b01oe• \\llllh
h.ts not been fully dem.trc,tted
The diSpute surroundtng til e
P1eah Vthc.tr temple esc&lt;II.tted I&lt;Jst

.,

"'"'"

I"

...

.,

o,

Policy upheld

Weeklong gathering
set at local church

Commutation
is sought

Issue debate
considered

Church plans Q&amp;A
about Catholic faith

Archdiocese
sets rules

.'

�PageA4

0PINI

The Daily Sentinel

American Episcopal bishop upsets Lambeth Cotiference

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Oh1o

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

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Dar;t Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Edttor

Con,(!ress shall make no larv respecting an
establislunent of religion, or prohibiting tile
free t•xercise thereof; or abridging tire frerdom
o.f speech, or of the press; or the right o.f tire
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlu Gor,er~mtent for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC1DAY IN HISTORY
rod") " Fncl.ty Aug 15. the 22Sth day ol 2008 There
.tte I :lS d.tys lelt 111 the ye.1r
Today s H1ghlight 111 Htstory On Aug 15, 1945 ,
Empe1ot H11ohtto .mnoum:ed to hts subjects 111 ,, prerecorded 1.tdto ,Jlldre ss that Iapan hdd accepted terms of surrender
lo1 cndtn~ Wmld 'W.11 II
Onthts"d,lte In 1057 M,tcbeth. Kmg ol Scots, \\&lt;IS killed
111 b.tttlc by M.1lcolm the eldest son ot Kmg Duncan whom
IVLIL beth IMd sl,un
In 176CJ N.tpoleon Bon.tp.tnc \\as born on the tsland of
Cotstc.t
In Ill 14 the P.mama C.111al opened to truflic
In 19.:14, du11ng World W,tr II. Allied forces landed m
soutilcrn Fr.mce 111 Operatum Dr&lt;Igoon
In 1947 lnd1.J bec,1me tndependenl after some 200 years
ol BttUsh rule
In \94S tile Republic of Korea (South Kore,J) "a' procl,llmeo
In I%CJ. the Woodstock MuSic and Art Fmr opened 111
upst,!le Ne" York
In 1971 Prestdent "'•xon ,mnounced a 90-d&lt;Iy lteeze on
\1\o ~tgt:s pr ICC:--; c~nd rents
Ten ye.us ago Twenty-mne people \\ere k1lled by,, car
bomb that t01e .tp.ul the cenllo'r ol Omagh, Northern
ltcl.tno. a splinter group calling use If the Real IRA clatmed
1esponst hilny
F1ve ye.us &lt;~go Bounung back from the largest blackout
111 U S htstor~ cntcs from the M1dwest to Manhattan
1estored power to nulhons ot people - but encountered
dilltcult•es 111 lull) reH\Ing public servtces
One ) Cdr ago Former NBA referee Ttm Donaghy pleadeo gu•lty to felony chMges for takmg cash p.tyoffs trom
g.unbleJS .md bettmg on games he'd offlctated Ill a scandal
thattocked the k.tgue (A. federal Judge sentenced Don.tgh)
\" IS months behmd b,lfS ) A m.tgn!lude 8 e&lt;~rthqu,tke m
Pe1u s southern dese1 t killed at least 540 people M&lt;~ster
J,tzz pet cuss1o111st Max Roach dted 111 Ne\\ York at age 83
Tod,1y's Btrthda)s Actress Rose M,me " SS Poltttcal
c~cltvJSl Phyllis Schlafly IS 84 Actor Mtke Connors IS 83
Actress Lon Nelson IS 75 Ct\ tl 11ghts acuvtst Vernon
Jmd,m ts 73 A.ctor Jtm Dale IS 73 Actress Pat Pnest1s 72
Sup•eme Court Jusllce Stephen Brlo')lo'r ts 70 Mustctan Pete
York (Spencer DaviS Group) ts 66 Author-journaltst Lmda
Ellerbee " 64 Song\\nter hmmy Webb 1s 62 Bntam's
P111Jee&gt;S Anne 1s 58 Actress Tess Harplo'r IS 58 Actor Larry
Mathe"s ts 53 Actor Zeljko lvanek ts '51 Actor-comedt,m
Randell Shendan ts 50 Rock smger muSJct&lt;In Matt
Johnson (The The) ts 47 Movte dtrector AleJandro
Gonz,ilez Inat ntu ("B.tbel ') ts 45 Actress Debt Maz,,r IS
44 Country SJnger Angela Rae (Wild Hof'es) ts 42 Actor
Peter Herm.mn ts 41 A.ctress Debra Mes; mg ts 40 Actor
Anthon) A.nderson ts 38 Actor Ben Affleck ts 36 Smger
IVhkey Graham (Bovzone) ts 16 Actress Natasha
Henstndge IS 34 Actress Ntcole Pag~t ts 31 Latm· pop
smger Belmda (Ftlm ''The Cheetah Gtrls 2") ts 19 Rock
sntge• loe Jonas (The Jonas Btothers) ts 19
Thought lor Tuoa) 'We must nut read e1ther Ia" or hiStor) backwards" -Helen M Cam. English h1stonan and
educdlor ( 18SS-19t'iR)

The &lt;:arcer ol Bl'hop .
Cathenne Roskam of the
D1ocese ol New York has
been built on her sk11ls as a
cross-cultural ambassador
tor the mode1 n Ep!Scop.ll
Church
She led the InternatiOnal
Concerns Conumttee of her
denomln.ltton"s eXCCUtiVC
counCil, helped create her
d1ucese s Global Women s
Fund and has worked '" a
consultant on 1Sst1es ot cultur.tl sensttlvtty In some
circles, she 1s known as the
biShop who dared to 1·•P
dunng a H1p-Hop Mass· a
fe" 1ears ago 111 the Bronx
· M) stst,JS and broth,JS,
,,II m) homtes .md peeps.
stay up - keep your he&lt;~d
up holla back ,md go forth
and tell n hke n ts.'' procl.umed the b1shop, 111 her
benedtcuon
Thus, the d•mmut1ve
wh1te hatred assiStant btshop
was an unhkel) figure to
msp1re bold , .mgry he.tdhnes
dunng the recent Ltmbeth
Conference of btshops from
the
glob,tl
Anghc.tn
Communion Thts 20-da)
g.!lhenng h.td been c.trefully
planned by the~archb1shup of
Canterbury and hts staff to
focus on pr.t)er, Btble study
,md small-group sessiOns
c&lt;IIIed 'lndabas" - a Zulu
teun f01 tnbal meeltngs m pnvatc scttmgs th,tt dtd
not mclude JOUnMiists
It was espectally tmportant not to mflame already
pa111!ul diSputes between
Thtrd World tradtttonaltsts
and liberals m the United
States Canada, Engl.md
and elsewhere

Terry
Mattingly

u at1on nf the open!) g.1}
.md noncelib,ne Btshop
Gene Rohmson of Ne\\
H,unpshue
Only
617
Angltc.tn btshops prcrcgtsteJed .1nd some ot those
ldlletl to L1ttem.i dCLon.hng
to ,, report 111 The L1\ mg
ChutLh

Then dunng pl,mned t.hs
ws,;wns ol ;.domesuc ~to
lence, Ro,k;on spoke out on
.tn unlikely toptc - biShops
who be.tt theu wtves
"We h,t\ e 700 men hete
Do yo11 thmk .m) of them
beat thctr Wl\es' Ch,mccs
are they do
argued
Rusk,1111 111 The Lambeth
Wttness " dmly newsletter
for g.ty-n ghts supporters 111
the 77 mill•on -membe•
AngiJcan Commumon
"The
most
devout
ChnstJ.IllS be.JI the.•r wtves
Mdny ol ou1 biShops
come !rum pl~ces whete a
" c ultur,tll y .1ccepted to
bcdl )Uill ., de In thdl
regard a m&lt;Ikes coll\ets,tt•on qUJte d•tf~eult ·
The key she aoded, IS tl1.1l
Ytolence .tgamst women.
dlld vtolence agdms1 chi!
dren. lor that matter IS IIUlence ag,11nst the defenseless
Wtth ., omen 11 goes h.111d
m-hdnLi With mJsogyny
The New York btshop 's
aCCLtsatiOilS lOcked the COil
lerence whllh w,ts alie,Jdy
tense due to the absence ol
.tbout 280 co ns ervdllve
b1shop s 111.111) 11om
N1gcn.t and Uganda- who
decl1ned to attend due to the
presence ot U S le.tdeiS
who backed the 2003 conse-

llldgLIZille

Thus

ne&lt;trl y .t q[tartet ol the htshops 111 attendance came
It om the sm,d I but '' ealth}
U S EpJScop.tl Church
The rnn't

dam~•gmg p.11 I

ol Rusk,un s pronounce
mem "as her tone of moral
.1nd culttlr.d supe••ornv
noted commentator Rt&lt;Iz.Jt
Butt It \\ dS easy tor btshups t10m the Global South
to rc.td between the lmcs
c~nd tmd pamtul traces of
colom,d~&gt;m

What btsilops shm1ld be
conce1necl .tbout ts her
lnSllllldllOil thdt d 11011\\ hlle
culture le.1ds to domestic\ tO ·
lence ,md that ., h1te \\&lt;este111
cultut e IS too ctvtltzcd and
too ath anced to ,1\low such
.:.~trm.:llles tu ot:cur
arg:uctl
Butt. 111 The Gu.udt.tn
"Rosk,un t.11ls to tecogmze
th.Jt domestic
VIOlence
.Jftccts people reg.u dless of
then cl.tss. ethmclty rehgton ,
e"ender or e"CO"I
e dphy '
The
v. hole
epiSode
brought back memones of
the
19CJ8
Lnnbeth
Conterence when d llslllg
ude · ol Ah tc.m ,md Astdn
'ot es helped produce .1 jll\otal •esolut1on - th~ vole
was 526 111 f,l\or wllh 70
opposed .1110 4S ,Jbstentwns
- st,nmg th,ll sex outstde
of

111dfll._l gt\

mcluJmg

gd)'

sex. IS lllCUilljldltb\e With
Scnpture

The A.nglican pnmate of
Scotl,md sa1d th,tl p.trttcular
resolution lett htm feeling
I) nched .md was the
result ot Thlfo World btsh
ops trymg to ls!,m11fy
Chustwnny nMkmg It more
se\em, Protest,mt and legal"''"
One
outspoken
Ame11can bJShop complamcd th,lt many A.tncmh
h,l\e · mo,ed out nf amm!Sm mto a \er) superst Jtmus kmd ol Chnsuannv '
Now a decade l.1tei, a
fem.tle btshqp !rom a ltberal
d1ocese 111 Amenca prm tdeo new e'!dence that these
ktnd s ol cultural stereo type s
,u e h.u d to btu y
Thts kmd ot guilt byassocwuon game ts not
gomg to e,tse lensrons m the
Angltc,m
Commumon
noted ArchbiShop ot York
John Sentamu
I h&lt;Ive never beaten my
wtte although I c.m t talk
about
other
people.
Sent.tmu told the l ondon
T1mes "There IS a d.u1ger
of stereotyping people
bec.ruse of the culture the)
come from and assummg
they must su1 ely be domg
11
I hope BIShop
C.llhenne has got ligures
,md numbeJS .md people
Bec.tuse tt not she IS 111
d..mger ot cdusmg an unnecessary rumpus '
(Tell\ Mattmgh 11 duec·
101
of the
1Va1l11ngton
Jouuwl11m Cell/et at the
Cluistwn
Coull&lt; II {ot
Colleges and Unn etlillel
and
leads
the
GetRdu:wn Of£: fHOJ ecl to
\1/nh 1£'i1gton and the

The Daily Sentinel

1

,,

.tlltl\\lng homele,s people to
sleep on !Is Lit.&gt;lll 'tcp And sJn t.e,
2000 Sc.ntlc churches .tllll S) n·
BALTI~IORE St Ylll, elll
~tgogucs hd\ \! t~tken turn . . opende P.1pl Clnnch bo,tsls ,4 '1)
mg theu ],1\\ n:-. or p.trklllg lnh to
slot) tu\\eJ th,n P'"'Je, t)\et .111
10 0-p~JSon tent Clll &lt;ls
lnl'ICd SIIlgJ) gtllllllli.:J !1C1 f: h
Jo~ Veckll.t Jtrectot ol homeborhood bout)ckd h\ Cll) H.tll
less lllllllSllle' .11 Filth Avenue
dlld th~ hom~ n! d :-.J~!ll:! nl tht:.: ' llk'llt Ill ,LtCOfl.ldi1l~ \\ llh the
PJesb)lCII&lt;In s.tys he thmks \etDecl,n ,IIHlll ol lnd epc~ndL'IJLe
c.lll) chutch tudllwn ol oller- tlllg 15 people &gt;lcep on hts
And 111 the chlllch s ~ll&gt;und ­ lllg p1ol ect10n flom . tuth n11 tle' • dlUILh S \(Cps Jets Lhllll.: hgneT . .
le' el pat k lwmck" ' people
.. flte lllliV ditelltdll\e IS lllle)J betnend them
~cck1ng ~tll1llu.u ~ h . l\t" lnund .t
them It )"li sleep on our p,11k
We try to e.~rn theu trust
pe1m.ment pi.Jcc to \11 e
herKh \\e I (' !!.011H.!. tn h,t \t~ VOl! .md that s ,, p1ett) btg de,i\ .
'
The p.1rk 0\1 ned b\ the I6 7
.tuested s,11tllhe' Re' Rtch,lld
s.llll Vedella. wht&gt; "'" homeye,H -llld Rnm.m C.Jthol•c clnnd1 L,l\, renee ,t 6'i-yc,u-old pttest le ,s f&lt;JI II )e,us They teluse
IS .Ill) th111g hut pi IStii!C \\ illl h \\ ho hd' led the congrcg.ttron to1 to go .my pldCC! d..,c 11ght no\\
l1c1s pt ompted the mn cclll ol ~:) VCdf"' "Th,Lt dUt!Sll I '0l1Jld
Some peopk Llo enu up
homeless .tChtK.IIL'" .md ut\
ltke Jesus
gomg to shelt~I s
olltc I.lis r hough talltl.tb ,h .. de
B.dtnnore oltJu,Jis .ue \\nrkAlthough the chlllch re i uses to
the nc,ul) h.ti)-,Jcre ,p,tc e the t.lose the p.u k to sleepers '" ctly mg \VIlh St Vmcent de P.111l s to
dlmost h.ue g10und spoiL\ ug . t
oltict.tls \\Ould prelet St Vmcem petsuade p&lt;Irk dwellc1' to &lt;Iccept
•ette butts .mo \I r,tppets ,ts 11 ell de P tul s .tcknowled~es problems hou smQ bectu~e lll.IIl\ h~1ve d1re
'" the Occ.tSJon,ll ll -1nch de.Jd rel.tted tu sanit.tllon ,md sub- health fllognoscs
'
r.11 01 puddle ol \Oilllt Dusfy 't.tnce ,Jhuse The p,u k h.1s not
Conunon Gwuno .•tn ot~.Jntt,l­
\\l!ld h\o\\s ~111 bet\\Cen the bet. nnw 11 h.ll \Ve h.1d mlended m t•on th,lt seeb housmg tor"hometeerh ot thn-.,e ~~ek1112 . ., mlltt.u,
the ltrst pl.tcc
s,nd Audre) le ss people &lt;~dmlluqe,ed " sur
"I don l hcl te\e t\l,lt .til) hod\ Rogets "ho '' le &lt;~Jmg p.utsh '~}' thts spn ng th.ll tound the
'hou\o be s\ecpm; 111 the sited, cfto11 s to ,tLkh es' p.trk t ssuc..,
p.u k s 1esJdenh .1re 1w tee as It ke"hete\el It " so I peJson,dly
So th e chlllch lured ,, p.trk 1) to hd\e d '''k ldctOJ lllLredsmg.
cion t beltne th,tt skept ng out- m.m.tger - Ste' e Bosse .1 long- then mort.Jht) th.m 1.500 othet
stde c.tn e1er be ,, ,,utclu,u\
people
lime 1c"dent ol ,, lot .tl homeless homeless
sUI veyed
s,ud Ot,)ne Gl.tuhe1 pleSJuent ''I sl1eltcr - \\ ho st,uted 1101 k I.1st n.tltomvtde A.nd sleepmg outSJoe
B.tlttmore Homeless Se1' lles
month ro cootd n1dtc don.llwns ex.tcerb.ttes theu poor hc,Jith.
lhe governme nt .tgenL) Je.1llng \\ edly c\e,lllLlps .md .111 .tssem s,nd Beck~ K.tnJS Common
wtlh the l H) s homel ess popu\,1- hlv of restdems
Grounds dtrectul ol ll!llll\,Jlloll
·~1.tnv ch utc hes sponsor shelBut the B.ilumote chutch.
lton csttm,Hed "' 111ll!e th.ln
With up to \SO p.nJSIHonet s
I 000 people F•om " public te" b11t only .t h.tndlul n,lltnn
he,dth perspelll\C \\e doni wtoe Ill\ lie homeless people to ,lllendmg edLh \V~t·k lecls the
behe1 e we'te mecttn~ the needs sleep on the1r g•otmds pelln.t- lln.tnr.:Ittl burden ot LdiiiH! fo1 ~l
Ftlth
A;enue hts!OIIc huddmg .tnt\ dt;e, not
o! people b) ~llLtlllt.Jg.tng them nentlv
to sleep on the streets
P1 estiytell.tn ( hlllc h 111 Ne11 h.t\ e the resources lo1 "'heltet
Homeless people lt.tle 'lept Yotk Ctt) won ,, 2006 l,msutt so !Is membets .ue dlllng then
BY CHRISSIE THOMPSON
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS WRI TER

'

A.NDALUSIA Al.tb,un ,, I .\Pi
,A.n 4..Lth tlll.l jLHJ gc \VllO otH..:~
\Vorc the ren Colll llldtHJments ot
the Btblc em btotdet cd on hts
10he h,ts heen ,ICC II sed ol \ 10\tl
Jng JlltiJUtt[ L'thtLS fOI PILit:lll1g_ d
group 111 It" couJl!oom to hold
il,mds .tnu pi .tv
The e\mellc.tn Cl\ II Libc'lltcs
Umon 1!\ ec\ ,, compl,unt
Cm 1ngton County C11cUtl ludge
Ashlej Me K&lt;1lh&lt;1n said OIJVJ,I
Ttn ner. exccume tl11ectm of the
ACLU ol Al.th.tm.l The com-

!I t'll ~ )

Federal funds
allow work
BILOXI. Mtss (AP) - I he
Fedet al Emergenc) Managemclll
Agency has awarded more th,m
$25 4 mtlhon to connnuc e&lt;Ise
m.m.tgement wm k by org&lt;Im7attons ol the K.ttnn&lt;I A1d Tud.1y
consornum
The
Untied
Methudtst
Commtttee on Rehel l01meo the
nattOIMI case m,m,tgement consortium tollnwtng the tl ev.tstdtlon ol Hun t&lt;.:~llle Kdtrind tn
200S to proviCk dts.tster c&lt;Ise
man~tg ement set\H.:esin indt\lllU&lt;IIs ,md t.umhcs
The consortium ptovJdes

RUSSIA

asstsldnt:e tu thlH:I s~m d :-. of 1,\lnt

lies .Jctoss the Gull Co,JSt
KAT w.ts funded th10ugh
more th,m $(&gt;6 million 111 don,J

•·~···.
~~

William
Rusher

elected. wtll be the lust
&amp;.fncan-Amenc,m ever to
stl 111 th e Oval Ofttce
Dues
thiS
mdttet'
A.mencans have gotten pretty sophtsucateo about ractal
m.Jtlet s 111 recent dec&amp;les,
and most of us arc thoroughly accustomed to
workmg SICie by stde wah
quahfted bi,Jcks 111 JUst
.tbout e\ ery aspect of our
econollty ,mel our politJc,Ji
S) stem Even grdnllng th,it
traces of race consciOusness
rem am ~ th,lt . .Js the I.1te
Wtlltam F Buckle) Jr once
observed thete will neve1
come" 11111e .vhen the a&gt;elage whtte \votker ts gen·
utnely un.tw,1re that th e col league workmg next to h11n
IS tll.tck ~ a ts s,tfe to s.ty
liMt 111011 ol us we not seuously upset by the fact Th.tt
truth " a tnumph of r.tctal
accommodauon. ,md we dre
nght to be proud of 11
But the p•eSJdency IS
somethtng else ag&lt;Itn The
president, after all represents all ol 11s, and somcthmg on the order ol three-

quarters of Ame1tcans are
non-Htsp&lt;Intc v.htte Would
,m) SJgmflcdnl numbct ot
whtte Amenc&lt;~ns be 11ne.1sy
on reflectmg tlhlt ou• chtef
natiOnal execull\e wasn't'
Mj O\\ n guess IS that thts
I .tel would be no tiled &lt;1nd
tn some cases acttvely
tegretted hy " substantt.tl
numbe1 ot whtte ctltzens,
but that most ot them would
tnmly
suppte ss
.tny
1111pulse lu ll!le out a prestocnttal e,md td&lt;~te on that
.tccnunt They would , 111
short, thmk less ot themselves tf they &lt;~li&lt;med th at
conSider.Itt on to 111 fl11ence
thelf deCISIOil
It goes wllhout s&lt;~ytng,
how ever (,It least, I hope tt
does), that thts .tss11mes the
black c,md•date 111 quest1on
" thorough Iy 4u&lt;~l d ted Ior
the JOb on nonr&lt;ICtal
gll.lunds th,Jt he 01 she has
the expe11ence. the tempetament and the poltctes th.tt
would 111&lt;1kc ,, c,mdtd.ttc
allJdcl!ve qu!le tndepenoently ol the ISsue of race
On rhat assumpl!on. I see
no t edso n why Ameucan
voters '" .1 who le would
retect .t bi&lt;Ick ptestdent1,ll
candtd:tte There "'II of
course be resolute r.JciSI'
who WIIIICjCcl d bl tck C.tllLiid.ttC out o\ hand - just'"
thctc are voters. plenty of
them, who wtll not vote lot
a woman or a Catholic (or a
Mormon) But these blocs

he't Roge" s.11o
P.uk ~esJdem.., lltk no\\ lede.e
rhcy 11.11 c he,tlth problems, b'ut
s,Lv they ,11 01d 'hel te1 s bec,IU'0
they ol!en c.mnot keep the11 pe1
SOil.ll pthSCSSlllllS ,1110 dtsltke
betng told wh,ll tn Jo
E.t~tle Hunt 61 h,Js sutfe1ed
illllll W\ele pdlll ,Ji tel the
remo' .11 of .t Vtctn.tm W,tr bullet fllllll behmd IllS ught e.u
The Jeu.:.•nt renH)\,11 ul t~o ll!!ht
toes left h11n \1 lth ,, lnnp He
s,l\ s h1s he.1lth " 111) b•ggest
concern hut he ,1\ u1ds shelteJS
to p1otect hts birth cetllltc.HC
.1nd extr.t clothes
. I CclllllOI le,l\e thiS s(lllt out
hete. he s,ud
The cillllch's ne\\ p.uk llllll.tll\cs d1cl not llllll!edt.ttel) 'uc
cccd The l11 st clc.tnup dtc"
only l\\O p.lrltclp.mts de,p1te
p!o111J..,es ot $'l dn1g,tme gtlt
c.uds No p.uk 1estdel!ls JOllied
th e p1oposed ""emhl) the ful -

Promise Keepers
reblming to Charleston
CHARLESTON W•V,1 - As the coun
try pt cp.11 es to elect n.tuonal kddcrs.
th oU,d llU S o l
\\lest Vug1nt.t
mt:n ,m.: ... omm•ttmg Ill be
MEN
INTEEiRITY
un elected
le.tde" W1th the help ul Jnte rn.JUon.tl
men s rcsotll &lt;e Pwmtse Keepers men ate
le.•rnmg to keep th c11 p•omtses :.nd he
bette! llk'll 111 theu home..., wo1 kpL.tces ,md

1m PROMISE ~
0~

Lllllllllll111tle ...

On Sept 12-1\ th ous.mds ol me n from
thw u!!hnut the Mtd AttlllttL IL~g ,on \\Ill
~.llhe; at the Ch.ulcsto n Cl\" Cc mer 111
Cll.lrlc sto n lot .t p, omJSe Keepets conferen~~ desH!.neJ to J~ntle .111d untie men to
builu the•r •ei.JtJon';,h,ps on solid Biblical
punctpks th,n c.tn Wlthst,md 11111es ot
LtnceJt,unl\ Cil,ule,ton ts one ol e1ght
lnc.J ttons lldl!Onwtde \\he•~ men will
g.1thel m 20UX 10 help e.1ch other be better
men . husb,md' ,md f,nhet '
Smce 1990 P1om "e Keepers h,JS dr.twn
mu1e tlldn 6 mtllton men to some 150 sta
lo wmg lid\
dtum ,111d sports ,uen,l conferences ,mo
But' p&lt;Ii hhll&gt;llCts 11Hend to outdoor r.tllie' .1cross North Amenc.1
keep p•nnl\lllng nc11 clements of mclL~thng tollH:"nmg: the ltt1ge.., t tehgwu . .
pdtk !tic
g,uhenng e'~' held on the W,tshlllgton.
II the p.uk dosed whete DC M,JII Pllllllls~ Keepers l.tst e'ent 111
else would \\e be'· 46-\c,ll- Cl1.1rleston \\ .1s 111 2004
old p.uk ICSJdent K1111 BI.Jxton
\\'lhlt st~U t~d llS ll l 011\ Cl S,ltlOil between
s,!ld th!O lt~h te,!l s At \c,Jsl we ltlllllel Unl\eJSil) ot Color,too he,td tooth,l\ e " peun,ment pl.lle
I b,JIIco,ll.h Bill McClltnev .mel .1 p•ole&gt;&gt;t\r
know It . ., beLdll\C ul h1111 qutckl) bec.tme ,, n,tlltlll.tl phenomenon
because of Jesu'
th.u put the needs of men on the m&lt;~p
PlOlllJSC Keere" tsn t JUSt Jbout cnnOn the Net:
lerences s,uo Promtse Keepets P•estdent
Sr VIII« liT de Paul Chw&lt;i1
.md CEO Tom Fottson Out de'tre IS to
liT It&gt; //11 11 11 \tl&lt; luoth 01 ~
meet men \\ hete the) .tre .11 and eqmp
Conmu m
G u111 wl
them\\ Jth lt?SOllllt'S ,!Jdtt'SSI!lt! the ISSUeS
men I.tee todd) ·
"
flrtp //H \1 II ( 011111/0JI~!OII!Id 01 t,:
Tod.l\ P1onme KeepeJS h.ts retooled
.tnu ICLIC.Jted Hse\1 to be ,, relevant
tt'sOillce lo• 21st centutv men Promt se
KeepeJS h.1s stJ,ttegJc.My teotgamzed to
be mote &amp;cess1ble- now o!le11n£ s.mallp\,nn t s.ttd McKdth.m VIOI.lled knees ,md pr,1ycd ,Jioud duung ,, lorme1 seuet.U) tn g.un pn . . ses
et
conle•cnccs. smgle-subJcctnMtlCI semethlls ruks ,md the US cowl ileanng Ln Fehnwy He SIOil o\ftn,I!K!,IIIeCOrds
111.11,
tndl\ tdu.tl .md sm,lil gtoup Btble
In 1e,pm1se to the c\llllpl.ttlll
CnnstttutJon s ~ep.u.tltPn ot told the Ino people Ill the co urt
slllcly
uutlcnt
.md technology tiMl ,tllo\\s
, hlll ch .md st.tte b) tHdeung the 1oom thdt he Wd..., nt.~t OJIJ.ud to \1, K.Jth.Jn told the Mobile
call on the name ot Jesus Clmst Pt css- R eg 1s te1 tor ,l stm y men to .tccc's customtzed !Csourccs,
1'10ll)1 l0 pl,l)
Fou1 )C~us ~t gn MLKttthdn w1tnesse' s,llll .md mJerco .ill llnu sday Wh.ttc\ et , omes ot enullllLtgcmcnt dlH.I commuml) ,mytune.
•
.til th.ll I II umtmue to h,I\C dll\\\he1e
donned the ren Co mnMnoment s to 10111 hdlld ~ Lllld pld\' dCLOid
Dtflcrcnt !rom the b,tby boomets ot
1obe he ,,11d to publtcly mg to the compl,tmt ltlcd 'non pe.ICe Q11ntmg Rolll.ms 111 the
the
90, tod.t) s m.tnts mme skeptical pf
Km~ l.tmes verston of the Btbk.
"' k nO\v ledge h1' belief th.11 1he .tl ter the he,Jnng
•ehg,on
,md mot e t.oncen1ed w1th the b,tlThe heatmg w.ts tor d L:Lise 111 the judge .tdded And \\C kncm
l.t\\ IS b,bed on more th ,m JUSt
.tncc
111
CICt)day
hie of work t.umly and
whtch the pastor ,md sevcr.tl that ,i\lthtn~s \\lllk to~ether lor
"01ds Wllllcn 111 l,m books
The ACLU wmpl.unt to the oe,Jcons ot Mmnm~ St.u good to theln tll.lt lnve God. to t.uth s,uu fmtson who l1.1s provtdcd
JuuJct .tl lnquuy CommJSstun M!Sstonaty B.tpltsl Ch"tuch Ill them th,lt .tre c,JIIed .trcordtng to le.JdcJSh!P to P1on11se KeepeiS smce
200:l
Ptomtse Keepets h,ts ne\er
s.11d \1c K.ttll.ln droppeo to hts MonroeVIlle sued the chutch s hts purpose
LIMngetl lh mess,lge ot encoUJ.Igement.
Llltl h.ts upd.tted ''' methodolog) to more
etlecuvel) teach the 21st ccnttuy man
Men .mendtng the Ch.u\eston Promtsc
Keepers e\ent ~~ill come 11om .111 w.tlks of
\tie lor h1gh-ene1gy muSic, u&gt;llllc relief
month .tile• UNESCO .tpptoved ch1ldren the Rom.ut C.1thollc filet s II one spouse 111 .tm,Jrn,tge .md str.ught t.tlk 11om top Cht tslt.lll spc.tkCambodt.l s .tppltc,ltlOn to l1.1ve ll Atcht.hocesc ol Culcmn.Jtl Sd)' COllVCits to Js),llll
eJS mcludtng R1ck Rtgsby
Htllm.tn
Zulktllt Noordtn . .111 oppoSition Davto Bryant .trio M1ke Sil\ .1
n.nned .1 Wmld l-leJ!l,tge Sne 111 ns most' det,uled ltst yet ol
Th.tt Prune MtnJSte• S,nnak behav to" Jecmed n1.1pp1 opu.1te membe1 ol P.trltament s.11d the
rut 11101&lt;' 111(111111!111011 &lt;i/JOIIT t/ie
p1otcst w,t.., d \\,HI11ng to 'the B.tr
for st&lt;Iff members
Sund,JFd~CJ had backed the btd.
Cluu It \ton
t onf('!i!1/{ e
liHf
The newest verston ot the Counul spectltc,tlly .mu nun- 111111 PuJJJll\i!Ktepel' m~ 01 loll 866
'parkmg demonstr.•t•ons b} antigovernment protesters who Decree on Child PJotcllton c~lso Mushms 111 genct.tl not to ch,tl- PROWISE
clauned the temple's new status p!OhibHs be,u hugs l.tp-s nung lenge the nghts ol Musl1ms
would unde1111111e Th.ul,md 's llllCl ptggy b(1ck ncles, dnl,{mg
claim lO the SUIIlJUIIdlllg .Jrea
other tnlei.Jctwns between 1ts
The dtspute h.1s conunued cletgy
,md
childtcn
despite two 10unds ot t.1lks SJnc e H,mdshakes h1gh-live s shoul
LITTLE ROCK iAPl
l,tsl month
dcl-lo-shouloer hugs &lt;~nd p&lt;~ls till Puson ofiJCI&lt;Ils 01d not vtoldte
the back a1e sttll accept.tble
POINT PLEASANT, WV,, - Wdhng
&lt;Ill 111111ate's ughts \\hen they
The ,uchchocese updates the diSctpltncd hun t01 relllsmg to Hc,u t Oull each lot Chnst I081 Oshel
rules every li\C )e.us The l.1test cut Ius h.ur ,md be,trd whtch he Ro.td. "til host ns e tg ht h .mmt&lt;tl g.nhelVCIS!On, iCle,ISCd thiS 111011111 :-.a1U would go .Jg.lln"'t hts tel!
tng bcgmmng Mond...ty ,tnd Tuesd.1y,
dlso
mdnd.ttes h.Kk gro und gtous heltefs baseo on the OILI Aug 25 .1nd 26
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo (AP) checks for cotllr.tcluts ., 01 kt ng Test.llnent a tederal .tppe.lls
A mens meeung wtll be held
- Sc\erdl rehgwus leaders have wtth chtldren
Wednesday ,md Thur~d.1y Aug 27 and
p.mel h.ts Jllled
VJctJm &lt;It.hoc,Jtes wht\ h.t ve
,JSkeo Go\ M,lll Blunt to gram
Mtch,tel Fcg,ms sued ovc1 the 28, and the v.omen s conlerence ., Ill
clemency tm ,,m,m scheouled to cnttctzed the dtchdtocese tor lis At kans.1s
Depallment
of F!ld,ty tluough Sund.t). Aug 29 11
response to p,tst dbuse c.tses s.t) CotJectton·, poltc) th,ll s,tys
be cxccutco lc~tCI tin' month
The g.niletmg te,Jtutes mdny gtfted
Dennts Skilltcotn "scheduled the) sttppn• t the ne., me.Jsu• e' m.de pusonets must keep then spcdket' s!llgets .mJ tltlenteJ tlli!Stll.tns
to be executed Aug 27, 111 as d step to.,..,ud bettet protec - h,ut l!tmmcd ,,hove thctr e.us ,md hom Honda, Nc" Jetsev New Ym k.
M!SSOll11 s !11 :-.t cxcLut 1011 smce tion ol child• en
North CuohtM OhiO .md ·west Vugtnt,l
keep then I Kldl lwr tnmmeo
200S Skilltcotll WdS CO!l\ICted
Feg,ms " lollowe• ol the Service llllles ,Jre 7 p m Mondd) through
ot k\lltng R1ch.ud Drummond 111
Assemblies ot Y.thweh ., '" ,,, Fnd.1y ,md on SllnO.J) S.nlllu.l) ,Jiternoon
Lil.tycuc County 111 19CJ4
tunes pi .teed 111 .tdnutmt rJll ve servtces beg tn at 2 p m ,uKithc cnncert IS
,,, 6 10 p m
In ,, lcttc• sent TtJesd,Jy to
SC!.!rCI!,lllO!l,
With
OC&lt;.:dSIOildl
Blunt the reltgtous le.JdcJS
Mmmng sen tees &lt;IIC 10.1111 Thursd.ty
st.tys In puntttve tsol.tllon or soltargued that Skilltcotn
\1c1s
KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysta t&lt;~ry contmemenl He clauns the and Sunday
tutned hts Ili e ,Jround hec0111111g (AP) - M,tl.tystdll pohiiCI.IIl,' pumshmcnts p•e,ented hun hom
Fw 111/olltJatWII w/1 ( W.J) li75 li5/8
,, model ol rel~ctbtlitatJon and ,ue wr,mglmg ,tbout whether to earnmg good tune whtch would
sCI VICC to othcts
They ,ISkCd tnrb10 sens!ltve deb,!lcs on telt- h.1ve reduced hiS sentence
Blunt to teduce the sentence to ,1 gll)Us diSputes 111 thiS Musl1m
The 8th U S Cu cull Cow1 of
Itie pnson te1m Without the pos- lll.ljOflty n,Jtlon
Appe.tls sa1d the ptt~on 's groo mstbtl!ly lot pc~rolc
The controvetsy wtdencd Aug mg policy " le.tsOil.lbly rel.ttThe clemency requ est was I0 .Jitc• pwtesteJs !arced the halt eo"to the st.1te's sc~fety and sec u
GALLIPOLIS - W,mt to lc.1rn more
SJgneu by Roman Catholic. of ,, conference tm lsl,muc con- nty mtere sts Long l1.111 o1 sh.Jg
the Catholic l.11th'
about
EpiScopal. Luthcldll, Bapttsl. veJStons Police told the Bar gy be,trds can allow mmates to
An)olle
mtc1 ested 1ll knuwmg mUJe
Qu.1kcr c~nd Church ot the Counul ""UlldiJon ol lawyer&gt; h1de contr.tband or dJSgutse theu
Bteth1en leaoers
to abort the l01u111 alter mme .ippeatdnce, p•e,entmg s.tl ety ,1bout the C.uhoh~ Chlllch " welcome to
.ttlend .111 mtonnat•on.d se"llm .11 St LoUis
than 300 demonstrc~tors ralltco tssues. the coun noted
C.nhuhc
Chu1 ch 85 State St thiS Sunday
Fegans, who was unpnsoned
outstde the con leJence hall .md
Ull a robbe1y COllVICiiOll ,Jisn .tl I p m A bnet tour of the chlllch .md
threateneo to storm the event
The conference w.ts suppuseo sued the dep.trtment 101 not serv- clllSWCIS lO que,liOils Will be gnen
to be .t r&lt;11 e puhlic pl.llform to mg htm kosher me,tls The Hth Fellow,hlp ,md 1clreshments ate st. heduled
I
Fen mfmmatum &lt;0/1{1&lt; t the &lt; l11m l1 at
CINCINNATI (AP) - P11esh ex&lt;Itmne how some M.JiaySJ.Jll C'nCLut &lt;~greed w•th a tn.tl judge's
(NO) .J46 OM9
should not kt", 11 ck le or "restle t.multes are c.IUght 1n legal con- ,,w,tro ol $1,500 to Feg,ms

...

Alabama judge faces complaint for praying in court

Religious Briefs

-

111 the p.u k smce the nud-1 CJH(h
\\ hl."n 8d!ttmme beg.m enlnrL
111~ .tlll tkv. Ir'J ,, scpdldtc pld':t:,t
I,IL mg Clly H,JII The chu1ch
took mer 1he ne.trbv p.uk 111
20UU ddemhng the sp.1ce ,,,; .t
s.lnclLHII 1 11 here homele" people c.m r ~?:-.t V·l lthout hltld...,, -

-

·'!!"""'

Almost w1thout reahzmg
tt, Amenca appears to be on
Lelln 1 to th e edtlot an' W&lt;'lwme The) liwuld bt' /es.~ the verge of electmg 1t s llrst
than 300 11 o1r/1 Alllellel\ ate wbJe&lt;l to edumg mun be black prestdent
Poltttcal observers are tn
11~ned and mclude adthe" and telephone number. No
general agrelo'ment that, m
111111~md lellell H 1/1 he publ11hed Lette11 1hould he m
the normal course of
~ood ltl\le addre51lll8 Hille; 110t personal111e5. Letters of
thmgs, 2008 ought to be "a
tl~tmh.\ tu m!{Wll;:,atwn\ and 1ndrvtduaH ntllnot be at(ept
Democratic year" The
ed /01 tmblrat/1011
Republicans have occupted
the Wh1te House for the
last etght years, and controlled Congress as well for
the f1rst s•x of them In a
Reader Services
(UsPs 213-960)
two-party system ltke ours.
Correction Policy
Ol)to Valley Publishing Co.
the only senous wa) of
our man concem 1n all stones 15 10 Published every afternoon Monday
shaktng up the poltt•cal
through Friday 11 1 Court Street
be accurate If you know of an error
process ts to "throw the
Pomeroy Oh o Second class postage
m a story ca ll the newsroom at (740) paid at PomEroy
rascals out" - or, to put It
r99~ 2156
Membar The Associated Press and
more gently, to replace the
the Oh10 Newspaper Assoctat1on
ms wah the outs What's
Postmaster Send add ress correc
Our mam number IS
more,
the nom1.1l accumut1ons to The Oa1ly Sent nel 111 Court
(740) 992-2156
lallon ot popular disconStreet Pomeroy Oh o 45769
tents over an etg ht -)ear
1 Department extenstons are·
Subscription Rates
penod has left the GOP dtsI
By
carrier
or
motor
route
l!nctly vulnerable The
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News
One month
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economy IS not techmcally
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One year
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Dally
so· m a recessiOn. but tts condllton IS nothmg to brag
Reporter Beth Sergenl E't t 3
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One month
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I Class /Circ Judy Clark Ext 10
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I'
Mall Subscription
th,&amp;t the Democrah are like Inside Meigs County
General Manager
ly to wm tn November 13
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Charlene Hoefltch Ext 12
carry •n g both Hou ses ot
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' 64 20
Congress, and probably
52 Weeks
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£.mall·
captunng the Whtte House
news@mydarlysentrnel corn
Outalde Meigs County
as well The only novelty m
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the sHuatton ts the fact that
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Web:
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52
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www mydallysentinel com
chotce IS black, and, 1f

Friday, August 15, 2008

A place to rest: Md. church opens park to homeless

Americas first black president?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.AIT

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 15, 2008

PageA5

ttons ftom fotctgn counlltt:' dnU
nonptofJt otgdnlzattons

Cambodia
makes claim

tend to c,mcel each other
o11t Lots of women would
actually prefer a female
P' eSJdent , lots ot Catholics,
,, Catholic, etc And a black
prestdentt,tl candtdate could
ce1tamly co11nt on virtually
unammous support from
black voters
Today there ts one scnuus contender for the Whne
House who "black B&lt;1rack
Obama, who certamly
.1ppears to be a lock tor the
Democr.!liC
nomtll,JI!Oil
And polls suggest th&lt;Il he
m.1y well go on to wm the
preSidency tl se lt
It so, l hope and
expect- that he will wtn tt
because he ha &gt; conv1111,;ed a
maJonty of the Amencan
e lectorate th,n he deserves
to on the b&lt;Ists ot hJS expencncc 111 the lllmots Senate
.lnd the lJ' S Senate, illS
pol•t•c.tl poltc•cs as these
h,l)e been (and "'II contmue to be) spelled out, and
th e personal qualities he
has dtsplayed And 1f he
loses, I devoutly hope tt
will be becau se of percetved shurtcomtngs 111
these respects , ,md not 111
the lec~st becduse he happens to be bl,tck
(IVII/wm Ru1he1 11 &lt;ill
auomplniled aut/101 for·
me1
pu!Jlllhel of til£•
Natwnal Ret tell and joune1
II«' &lt;htwmwl of tile
AmeiiCWI
Conservarrve
l:Jmon.)
·

PHNOM PENH. C.1mbuo •"
(API - Ctmhodt.ltedsserted ns
cl,uml uesd,Jy ovc1 .tnuent bm
der temp les th.tl .tlso .1rc ci&lt;Itmed
by Thdtl,md ahe.tcl of t,ilks on
hngeu ng ternloii,Jit.hsputes
The tm etgn mtntsters ol the
two counlltes a1 e to meet
Mond,ty 111 Th.uLmd to ll y to
defuse miltt.uy st.mdolls ,dung
the1r sh,Jred bo• de1 - l1rst nea•
the II th century Pre.th Ythea•
temple and then at tile 13th centllly Ta Mo,m Thom temple
The two coun tu es share ,Jhout
500 tmles ol land b01oe• \\llllh
h.ts not been fully dem.trc,tted
The diSpute surroundtng til e
P1eah Vthc.tr temple esc&lt;II.tted I&lt;Jst

.,

"'"'"

I"

...

.,

o,

Policy upheld

Weeklong gathering
set at local church

Commutation
is sought

Issue debate
considered

Church plans Q&amp;A
about Catholic faith

Archdiocese
sets rules

.'

�...

A Hunger For More·One of the things I fmd
truly remarkable about
Jesu;' earthly ministry is the
fact of -His catalytic presence and the controversy
that con·s tantl y followed.
Everywhere He went,
thmgs were not only challenged, but were shaken to
the1r
foundallons
and
changed. As He walked and
talked, lives were met w1th
an authority so absolute that
those lives were never the
same again, As He healed
and appealed to the crowds
that gathered around Him,
complacency was stirred up
to active response b)t His
passionate zeal to usher
men and women into the
Father's
tavor.
Some
accepted , by God's grace _
And ·some rejected. still by
God's grace in order that no
one could claim that God
coerced people into compliance. Rest assured that His
presente continues to reap
the same effect today.
H1s Spirit moves in the
lives of men and women
and even children whispering in thetr ears, "Come.
follow Me" (e .g., Mark
I: 17) just as literally as did
Jesus with lips of tlesh prior
to His lonely walk to the
cross on which He would
die, His life and death, you
realize, are still controversial t'o each of us. His life
trumps our tendency to
rationalize our condition.
Through the testlmon y m
His Word of His· day-to-day
.llvmg, we realize that there
really is more to life than
just "getting ahead," more
to the Lord than strict
adherence to a moral code;
and more to love than warm
fuzzy feelings.
And His death'' · Well. it
· remains a grim reminder of
the fact of our rebellion
against God and the destiny
that awaits us apart from
His forgiveness and substitutionary sacrifice for us. It
not only reveals that "certain something" about our
hearts that we try desper-

PageA6

FAITH •VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

ately to h1de from the
world and from ourselves.
but also clearly underswres olr immen se i'ndebtcdness to God should we
avail ourselves of that sacrifice through faith. Jesus
died for you. Through faith
in His death and · resurrection. you may rece1ve Him
as Savior. But not Savior
only To receive Him as
S:tvior, you must also submit to Him as Lord.
But don ' t be afra1d. While
the immensity ot your
indebtedness to Him would
be unbearable (how wuld
anyone " repay'' Him for
what He has done?). He
shoulders that respons1biltty
Himself by His own Spirit's
dwellmg w1thm us as we
daily submit to Hi s love and
leading. And as we do so,
y,e find that His "catalytic
presence" abiding in us is
stdl challenging, shak1ng
and changmg lives. Was this
His
plan
all
along?
Naturally. Jesus H1mself
said. "This is what is written . The Christ will suffer
ami rise from the dead on
the third day, and repe'nlance and forgiveness or
sins w11l be preached m His
name to all nations . .. You
will rece1ve power when the
Holy Spirit comes on you;
and you will be My witnesses m Jerusalem, and in all
Judea and Samaria, and tr,
the ends of the earth" (Luke
46-47 and Acts I :8 NIY).
Of course, this message of
which we are Witnesses has
a way of soliciting either of
two 1esponses. The first,
obviously, is one of rejection Perhaps in the form of
out-and-out
hostiliiy.

Perhaps a sneeri ng condescension . Or.maybe even an
im:essant attempt to postpone a perso nal response
(wh1ch is still rejeCtiOn)
bcc~use of fear or a reluctance ·to "let go" of one's
own agenda. But the second
potential respo nse is the
sweet humbling of a person's heart as he or she
allows the strong arms of
God to )itt the weight of
condemnation from his or
her shoulders. It always has
been and always will be one
of life 's greatest experiences
to see a human life c9me
under the grace of God,
transformed and set free
from the weights of enJan gling selfishness and sin.
And what is even more
beautiful is the fruit of1joy
and peace that is harv,ested
m a life as it abides under
the Lord's will for him or
her. It occurs to me, as my
mmd prayerfully considers
Jes us ' invitation for us each
to become genuine disciples, that there really is'n 't
any other opt1on. Not
because we are " being
made" to follow H1111, but
because noth.mg else has
the lasting appeal that
docs,
knowin g
Him
Consider today what Jesus
means to you. Does HIS
love have practicill meaning
for the way you live your
life? Does His pre sence
come shining through you ,
influencmg your deci sions.
attitudes, and priorities? If
you've not yet received
Him as Savior and Lord of
yoLir life. why not do so
today and finally begin living the life for which you
were created-all along? ·

(Tiwm Mollohar1 and his
family have ministered in
muthem Ohio the past 13
years and is tl1e author of
"The Fairy Tale Parables."
He is the pastor uf Pathway
Commur1ity Church and
may be reached for commerits or questions by email at pastortlwm@pathwaygallipolis.com).

Muslim teenager files complaint over head scarf
TULSA, Okla. (AP) - A Muslim civil
rights group has filed a federal complaint on
behalf of a Muslim teenager who alleges she
was denied a job at Abercrombie &amp; Fitch
because she wears a htjab, or head scarL
The complaint, filed at the Oklahoma City
oftice of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commis~ion , claims that a d1strict manager
for the clothing ~tore at Woodland Hills Mall
told the gtrl in late June that the head covering, wom by observant Muslim women, didn't fit the chain's image.
"Employers have a clear legal duty to
accommodate the religious practices of their

workers," smd Razi Hashmi 7 execu'ti~e
director of the Counc1l on. Amencan-lslam1c
Relatmns-Oklahoma, wh1ch helped the gtrl
file the complaint. "To deny some_one
employment b_ecausc of apparent religiOus
bias ~oes agamst long-stand1ng. A•~encan
traditions ot tolerance and mclusiOn,.
Hash1m declined to name the g•rl, but
said she is youn$er than I R.
.
Under the CIVIl R1ghts Act ot 1964,
employers must reasonably accommodate
the rehg10us practtces of an employee
unless doing so would create an undue
hardship for the employer.

•

Friday, August 15, 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008
Fl:!llowship
Apostolic

Coming soon! ·

I leamed the other day _that
a new Star Trek movie is in
the works, I am a confinmed
"Trekker," so this is big news
for me. I went on the Internet
to learn as much about the
new movie as I could. The
last movie, "Star Trek:
Nemesis," was very disappointing . I hope the new
movie will be much better.
Going onlln~. I uncovered
r,umo( after rumor about the
new S.tar Trek movie, The
, variatio'ns on plot lines,
casting, and release dates
reminded me of one of my
fay()rite "Star Trek-isms":
inlinite diversity in infinite
combinations (or IDlC) .
The thovie is going to be
about · Jean Luc Picard; no,
i{s .going to be about Kirk,
Spock, and McCoy. · But
wait 1 How can they even
thtnk about putting 70ish
actors William Shatner and
Leonard N1moy back on the
': bridge of the Enterprise ?
Bes1des. · didn't Kirk get
killed about 4 movies ago?
No, the movie is going to
be about Kirk and co,, but
going back' in time to
BEFORE they came together on the original Enterprise
on the original series using all different actors in .
their 20s to till the roles.
Uh-oh, that could be troublesome for Star Trek
purists like me.
The original Star Trek was
produced in the late 1960s.
Watchmg reruns or DYDs of
those episodes, the aura of
· 1960s fashion and special
eft·ects make them incredibly
cheesy by today's standards.
When Star Trek: Next
Generation aired, creator and
producer Gene Roddenberry
wisely set ·that series about
70 years into the future from
the original series. The thencurrent production techniques used for the series
helped everything looked so
much more "hi t~ch" than
before. and yet the future_
setting protected the integrity of the origmal series.
After
Roddenberry's
death, a different producer
conceived "Enterprise" as a
series set back in the earliest·
day s of Starfleet - nearly
!50 ye~s BEFORE Captain
Kirk took the bridge . But
the Enterprise' series was
produced using 21st century
productiOn technology. As a
result, it made Kirk's time
appear less technologically
advanced and cheesier than

Ch urch of Jl'~u ~ Chri~t Apostolic
VanZandt and W,mJ Rd Pa.tor Jam~~
M•tler , Sunda} S~h1m l - tO 30 am,
E\·e mng · 7 JO p m .

Then God responds:
"Write down the revelation
and make 1t plain on tablets
so that a herald may run
w•th it. For the revelation
awaits an appointed time; it
speaks of the end and will
not prove false. Though it
linger, wait fo r it ; it will certamly come and will not
delay." (Hab 2.2-3)
God goes on to promise
that all things will be made
nght; but things will get
worse before they get better,
But no matter how bad it
gets, remember that God is
sti ll present, still prepared,
and still will make things
right. But God doesn't give
many detmls about the how
or when. In short, Go,I ' ays
this : " Have faith. Trust me."
If you are I ike me, then
sometimes tru sting God is
hard . Maybe the hardest
thing any of us are ever
asked to do . Just like the
new Star Trek movie, God
has something coming
soon. I don ' t have to trust
that Paramount Pictures will
do Star Trek right by me,
but l do have to trust that
God will do right - not by
me, but by God's own standard of holiness.
I pray that each of us will
be able to proclaim along
with Habakkuk (i n Hab
3: 17-18): "Though the fig
tree does not bud and there
are no grapes on the vines,
though the alive crop fails
and the fields produce no
tood. though there are no
sheep in the pen and no cattle m the stall s, yet I will
rejoice in the Lord. I -.,viii be
joyful in God my Savior."
It's coming soon' God will
noi prove false . Wait for 11!
It will certamly come and
w1ll not delay

Pastor
Kerry

Wood

~ Rher \'aile\
R1 •n Vi!lll'} Apo'itnll, \\'(,r,h tp Ctnter,

S7J S 3rd
A&gt;e M1ddlepon. Re\
Mtchael Br.u.iford. Pasmr. Sunday, 10 30
am TLIC ~ 6 JU prayrr. Wed 7 pm Bthle
Stu.dy
Emm1muel 1\post.ohc Tabt'rnacll.' Inc.
Loop Rd uff Nc1.1 Luna RJ Rutland.
Semces Sun 1000 &lt;t .rn &amp; 7·30 pm .
Thurs 7 00 p m P~ ~tur Many R Hunan

metaphor for exploring core
understandings of hum an
nature, the imp! ic ations o(
philosophical, pohtical and
reli gious under~ tandin gs.
and the role technology has
in shaping those ex plorations. Star Trek lets us as
the basic Why? What ' and
How? questions of life .
Amazingly, the Bible does
the same thing. Scripture also
asks those questions, but
even better than Star Trek, ii
offers answers that have
divine· inspiration, authority
and applicabll1ty to us' My
Bible reading this week took
me to the Old Testament
book of Habakkuk, I haven't
read this prophet 's writings
in a while, so it was startling
stuft' - ·almost like something· brand new.
During his time, Jerusalem
is filled with people who
ignore God, including .the
kmg and all his court, The
Babylonians have defeaied
the prev1ous empires - the
Assyrians and the Egyptians .
And now Babylon is doing
some "mopping up" by taking the little kingdoms, too.
That · means Judah and 1ts
capital Jerusalem.
Habakkuk asks God the
basic "why'?'' question of all
time: "Why do you tolerate
wrong?" (Hab I :3) He goes
on to list the injusuces that he
sees all around him, and yet
the wrong-doers are not punished . Then he asks again,
(Kerry Wood is now asso"Your eyes are too pure to ciate pastor at Grace Uniled
look' on evil; you cannot tol- Methodist
Church
in
erate wrong. Why then do Perrysburg, Ohio after servyou 'tolerate the treacherous? ing Racine United Methodist
Why are you Silent when the Church for three years. He
wicked swallow up those can be reached through his
more righteous than them- website: http://pursueholiselves?" (Hab I: 13)
ness.blogspot.com.)

Assembly of God

Libfrt) Asst&gt;mbly of GAd
PO Ba:o. 467. DuJdmg Lane. Mason
W Va , Pa~tor Neil ~ Tennam. Sunday
Sen·tces- I0 Oil a m and 7 p m.

Baptist
Palill.'vitle Freewill Bapti&lt;il C hurch
Floyd Ro~~. Sunda~ School 9 30 to
10 lOam "-or,ht]) '~rYl~e 10 ~0 to II 00
,Jm Wed pn.',J• hmg 6 pm

P.t~ror

Carptnlrr lpdepcndtnt 8apli'it Church
Sunday Schuo] - 9 lOam Preuchmg
Scrvtce 10 lllam. E'emng Ser.tce
7·00pm . Wedne&lt;.d,t) I:JiiJic Study 7 00 pm .
Pus tor
C h~hire Buptlst Churt"b
Pastor Ste ve Ltl!le Sunday S~;hoot 9 30
am . Mom1ng Wo r~htp 10·30 am.
Wedne~ay ll1 hle Study 6 ~Opm, d mr
pnll.:tlce 7 \[) youlh und Bit"&gt;le Budqie ~,.
6 .!0 p 111 Th ur~ 1 pni hook , rudy

llopc Ha)Jii!il Church jSouthernt
"i70 Gmll! St . Mtddle purt, Sunda&gt; S\:hool
- 9 :lfl ,J m . Wohhtp - II a m und 6 p m.
Wt.'l.lne:.day Sci'\ 1ee · 7 p m P&lt;~stol Gary
Eilt s
Rutlund t'irst 811p1lst Church
Sunda~ s,ht10l - 1,1 30 :~ . m . Wor~htp 10 45 am
l'omf'ro~ 1-irst Baptist
Pastor Jon Rn~tlert East Matn St,
Sunday S~.·h 9 lflum Wm ~ h1p 10 l Oam

First Southern Baptist
41!17::! Pome ro y P1h , Sunduy School
?lO a m Worsht p - Yol5am &amp;700p m,
WednesdH y Sc rv t c~:, - 7 (X) p 111

Jo'irst Rapt!SI Church
Pa~tor Bil ly Zu~ pan 6th und Palmer St
Middleport. Sund.t) Sdmul . 9. 15 am,
WnrS h1p - 10 I 'i am .' 7 00 p m ,
Wcdne!iday Ser.·1 ee- 7 00 Pm
Racine' First Hapttst
Pastor Ryit n Eotun. p a~wr . Sunday
Schoo l - Y 30 a m.. Wor5htp - 10.40 a.m.
6·00 p m . WeJn~~dJy Serv1~es - 7 00

pm.
Silver Run Haptlsl
Pastor John Swan~nn Sunday s,hool IOa.m .. Worship · I lam 7 01.! pm
.Wednesday Servkcs 7,(10 p m

MI. Union Baptist
Pastor· Denr11s Weaver Sunday Sc~ool 9 :45 am .. Evcn1ng - 6 30 p m,
Wednesday Services - 6 ~p m
Bethlehem B11ptlsl Church
Grear Bend , Route 12-l , Racwe, OH,
Pastor· Ed Carter. Sunday School - 9 30
am .. Sunday Worshi p - 10 30 n m ,/,l. 7
pm. W~:dne~day B1ble Stud) - 7 00 p m.

ever.
Why does any of this matter, you ask? My response is
that Star Trek has become
more than casual entertainment for me . It IS a

Old Bethel Free Will Uaptlst Church
28601 St Rt 7, Mtd dle port . Sunda~
Sen1ce - 10 a m.. 6 00 p m . Tu!'sdny
St:TYICCS -6 00

Srnle 1 Now you can own tho Picture of that uniOrgaUatlle
moment capturad In tMe nDW&amp;peper Photos become t1meless
when framed or printed on a mug o r mouso pad

and chck the blue buuon .

Hlllglde HapUsl Churc:h
St Rt 143 JUSt off Rt 7, Pastor Rev
James R. Acree. Sr. Sunday Umftfd
Service, Worshtp - 10 30 a,m, 6 p m,
Wedne!idB} Semces ·1 p m
Victory Bapllsllndeptndenl
S25 N 2nd St Middleport. Pastor: James
E. Kee~ee , Worship - lOa.m.. 7 p.tn,
Wednesday Scrvtce~- 7 p.m

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

t for Justice
lndudiltg lbl;s.• td/() fimgbl fi,!f' justiCe. ,
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·
l'baroilh. ro~nplmnh•g

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

••,ifk.wgu.r."(E.rodus·4.11!J
rhl Mo.~'

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

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(740) 992·6472

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Open 7 days a week

740·949-2217

MI. Moriah Bllpli§l
Fourth &amp; Mam St , M1ddlepor1 . Sunda}
School - 9 30 a rn Worshtp · 10·45 11 rn
Pas10r Re\ . Mrchael L Thompson. Jr.

Hours-

Fnend"

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

_, Racin_e, OH

Fonst Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev Jo~eph Wood'i Sunday School- lO
a m . Wor~ htp - II 30 a.m

Fax (7401992·7406

740-949-2210

29670 Bashan Rd.
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Fallh Baptist Churrh
Railroad St . Mason. Sunday School - 10
a. m., Wurship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne-sd a) Scn· t~ c~- 7 p m

Anllqult} Hapll§t
Sunday Sl h0\1] · 9 30 am . Worship 10 45 a rn, Sundlt) E\chtng • 6'fl0 p ri1 .
Pastor. Don Walker

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

'

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel ·Page A7

WORS1rl1P GOD THIS WEEK .
Rutland Fret Will Baptlsr
Salem St .. Pastor Ed Bam~y Sunday
School - 10 a m . Evemng - 1 p m..
Wednesday Servtces · 7 p m
Mtond Bapd51 C hurch
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 amMonung worshtp II am Evrning - 7 pm .
Wednesday 7 p m
Fim Baptlsl Cburch ot Mu&gt;n, WV
(Independent Bapust)
SR 652 and Ander5on St PastOr Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Mornmg
church II am, Sunda) e~enmg 6 pm . Wed
Btble Stud y 7 pm

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catbelk Chun:h
161 Mul~rry Ave. Pomcro), 992-5898,
Pastor Re\1 Walter E Hemz. Sat. Con
4 45-5' l5p m , M~ss- 5 30 p m Sun
Con -8. 45-9 15 a.m... Sun Mass - 9·30
am. Da 1ly Mass - 8 JO am

· Church of Christ
or

Evening - 6 p m , Wedne sda) Sef\ 1.:e~ . 7
Sunday School · 9 JO am ., Worship
10.30 am

pm

Worshtp - 9 JO am , Sunda} S~hool
JO 30 am. F1~1 Sunday of MoJJth - 7.00
p m sel'\'tcr

Pom~ro} Ch ureh ufthr Namnme
Pa,tnr Ja n Linendt"r Suw;la} S~.hon l q 30 am Wonh1p - 10·30 a m und {,
v m • Wedn!!sday Serv1ces - 7 p m

1\appen Plalll'l St. Paul
Pa~l•lr Jtm Corbm. Sunday s,hool - 9
am . Worsh1p - 10 am. Tuesday Servt,es
730p m.
Cl'nlral Ct uster
Asbtlry ( S)'mu~r). Pastor Bob Robtn~on
Sunday School - 9 45 a m , Wor~ htp - II
am. Wednesday Semces - 7 3U pm

lO
Chesttr Church or the Nazu rrne
Pbt or Re' Cur11~ Randolph . Sumla)
School- 9 30 am . Worship . 10 30 am ,
'\ hltr 's Chap.!'! \\l'sleyan
Sunda~ e\emng 6 pm
CoL•l11lle RuJd. Pa, tnr Re\ Charle~
Rutland Church or the Nazarrne •
Marrm tlal~ SunJa1 s, lllllll · II 30 u m ,,,
Pastor Ueor~e Stadb, Sunday Sdlllol
, Wor\h1p · !U 1() J m . ~\ed ne, J a) Sef'\ l(;e
9 ~0 am Wonhtp - 10 .10 Hm . 6 JU
7 pm
p.m.. WednesdaY Sen ttr;,- 7 p m

S) racust' First Church of God
Apple and Second Sts , Pastor Re\' Davtd
Russell: Sunday School and Won;hip- 10
a n;1 E•emng Sen tces · 6 30 p m,
Wedne~a) Sef\ tees - (l 30 p m
Chun:b or God of Prophety
O J Whtle Rd uffSt. Rt 160 . Pa~tnr PJ
Chapma n.,. Sunday Schroo l - 10 am .
Wo~h1p - ll am . Wedne sda) Ser~tces . 1
p.m

Congregational
l'rlnll} Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomero~
Worsh1p 10 25 a.m..

PitMor

Episcopal
Grace to:piscopal Chun:h
326 E Matn St • Pomeroy
Hoi}'
Euchartst 11 .30 am Sunday &amp; 5 Jo 'pm
Wed Rev. l..eshe Aemmmg

Hemlock Gro\e Christtan Church
Mmtster: Larry Brown. Worsh1p - 9 ~0
a.m S~ nduy School - 10 30 am Bible
Study· 7 p.m

Community Churth
Pastor: Ste\"e Tomek, Mam Strttt ,
Rutland. Sunday Worsh1p-tOOO a m .
S11nday Scf'\ltce- 7 p m.

Pomeroy Chun::h of Christ
212 W Main St . Sunday School- 9 30
am , Worsbtp- 10:30 a m . 6 p m •
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Danville Holmftl Church
31057 State Route 325 Langsvlle. P.o1Stur ·
Benjamm Crawford. Sunday schoo l - ~ -JO
a m., Sunday worship - 10·30 am &amp; 7
p m • WedflcMiay P,rayer !iei'VICl' 7 p.m.

"' Middleport Church or Chrlsl
5th and Marn. Pa stor AI Hartson.
Chtldrens Direclot Sharon Sayre. Teen
Dtrector Dodger Vaughan, Sunda) School
-930 ll-·m, Worsh1p- 8 15 10 30a m. 7
p m.. Wednesday Servtces • 7 p m

Keno Church or Christ
· 9 30 am , Su nday Sc hool ·
10 30 am, Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. 1st and
3rd Su nday
Wo r ~ h1 p

Bearwi.llow Ridge Churth of Chrlsl
Pastor·Hruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30

•m
Worship - 10 30 a m . 6 30 p m.
Wednesday Ser.tces- 6.30 p m
Zion Chun:b or Chtist
Pomeroy, Harnsonvllle Rd . (Rt 143).
Pastor· Roger Watson, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worsht p - 10·30 am. 1 00
p.m , Wednesday Serttces - 1 p m

Holiness

Calury Pll[lrim Chaptl
Hamsonv1lle Road . Pas tor. Chjlfles
McKenzte, Sunda) School q. m am ,
Worslup · 11 am., 7 00 p m.. Wedn~ay
Semce- 7 00 p.m

Rose of Sharon Hollneu Churth
Leadtng Creek Rd. Rut l11nd, Pastor· Rev
Dewey Kmg. Surl&lt;by schoo l- 9 30 am .
Sunday worsht p -7 p m . Wednesd3y
prayer meetmg· 7 p m ,
Pine Grove Bihle Hollneu Church
lf2 mile off Rt. 325. Paslor· Rev O'Dell
Man ley, Sund;ty School - 9 30 am .
Won;h1p - 10 30 a.m. 7.30 p m.
Wednrsday Serv1ce · 7.30 p m
We5l~yan

Rlhle Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middlepon Pa stor Do ug
Co:o.., Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worshtp 10 45 p m , Sunday Eve. 7.00 p m..
Wednesday Serv1ce · 7.30 p m.
I

, '

HyseU Run Community Church
Pastor. Re v Larry Lemley. Sun dn) School
- 9 30 am .. WorshLp- 10.45 am. 7 p m
Thursday H1ble Study and Youth · 7 p m

Thppers Plain Church or Cbrlst
Instrumenta l, Wor:shtp Servtce - 9 a m ,
Communion - 10 am . Sunday Schoo l 10 IS am .. Ymnh- BO pm Sunday. Bt ble
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Laurd Cliff Fret' Methodist C hurch
Pastor: Glen McClung. Sunday School 9.30 am . Wor.;htp - 10 30 am and 6
p m ,Wednesday Serv1~e- 7.00 p m.

Rradhury Church or Christ
Mmister. Tom Run&gt;on , 39558 Bradbury
. Road, Mrddlepon . Sunday School- 9 30

The Church of Jesu~
Christ of Latter-Da) Saints
St Rt 160, 446 -6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10.20 -l l am. Reiter
Socte!y/Pnesthood II 05· 12 00 noon,
Sacramenl Ser'tltCe 9-10 15 am,
Homemakmg meeung , 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m

&lt;m
Worshtp - 10:30 a m

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m , Wor:sh1p and
Commumon- 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry,
Mtmster

Bradrord Cbatth or Christ
Corner of St Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury ~d,
Mtmster. Doug Shamblin, Youth Mmt sler
Rill Am!Wger, Sunday School • 9 30 a.m.
Worshtp - B:OO am , 1030 am . 7 00
p.m. ,Wednesday Serv1Ces -7.00 p m
Hlckor, Hills Church or Christ
Tuppers Platns , Pastor M1ke Moore. Bible
class. 9 am. Sunday , worsh 1p 10 am
Sunday, wor:sh1p 6·30 pm Sunday; Bible
cl ass 7 pm Wed .
Reed!vtlle Church or ChriJt
Pastor. Philip Stunn, Sunday School· 9 30
a.m., Worship Service 10:30 am . B1b.le
Study, Wednesday. 6.30 p.m
Dexter Church of Chrkt
Sunday.school9 30 am .. Sunday worshtp
- 1030a.m .
'
The Chlll'th of Christ Pomeroy
lntersectton 1 and 124 W E\angehst
Denm s Sargent. Sunda~ B1ble Study .
9 30 am., Worsh1p · 10 30 am and 6 30
p m.• Wednesday Bible SIUdy - 7 p m

or

Christian Union
Hanford Churth of Christ In
Christian Union
Hartford , W.Va ... Pastor :Da v1d Greer,
Sunda y "Schoo l · 9 30 a.m, Worship 10 ·30 am , 7.00 p.m.. Wednc~day
Serv1ces · HXl p m

Church ofGod
or

Mt. Moriah Churth God
M1 le Htlt Rd , Racme, Pastor . Jame s

Car ltton lntudenom lnalional Church
Kmg,bun RH~d Pa o,Jur fl. ol:k'rt \'an ce
SunJ~\ SLhUid - 9 1(1 J m
\\'llr)hlp

Rutland Church of God
Pastor Ron Heath . Sund2v Worsh1p 10
am. 6 p m Wednesday Ser\u,: e ~- 7

We:!itsldr Churth Christ
3 U26 Ch1ldren 's HolllC' Rd , Pollll:ruy. OH
Contact 740-441 -1296 Su nday momm g
10 00, Sun morning 81ble stud:(.
foll owing worsh1p, Sun. eve 6 .00 p111,
Wed b1ble stud~ 7 pm

Pomt!roy WestsJde Churc:b Gl Chrilll
33226 Ch1ldre~' 5 Home Rd , Sunday
School - I I a.m.. Worship - IOn m , 6 p m,
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

Pa ~tor M1ke Adluns Sund11 v School 9 30
am . Worshtp - 10 10 am . 6 p m,
Wedne~ay Sen tee~ - 7 p m

Lana Bottom

pm

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran
St. Jahn Lutheran Church
Pme Grove. Worship - 9 00 am. Sunday
School· 10 00 a.m Pastor:
Our Sa"lour Lullwran Church
Walnut and Henry Su , Ravenswood.
W.Va, Pastor Davtd RU5se ll Sunday
School- 10 00 am., Worship · l I am
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer S)camore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sun School- 9.4S a.m. Worshtp - II a m

United Methodist
Graham Valttd Methodkt
Worsh1p - II a.m. Pastor: Rtchard Nease
Bechtel Unlled Methodist
New Haven , Rachard Nea!e, Paslor ,
Sunday worsh1p q 30 am Thes 6 JO
prayer and Bible Study
Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behmd W!lkesvtlie, Pastor Re~
Ralph Spires. S unda~ School - q 30 am •
Worsh1p - 10.~ 0 a.m , 7 p m , Thursdny
Serv1tcs 7 p.m .

Meigs Cooperatln Parish
Nonheast Clusler, Al fred, Pastdr Jun
Corbilt, Sunday School - 9 30 am.
Worshtp - I I a.m.. 6 30 p m.
Chester
Pasror J1m Corbt tt , Worship - IJ a rn ..
Sunda~ School - 10 a m , Thursday
Sem~es - 7 p m.
• ,
Joppa
Pasror . Denl1l Null. Worsh1p · 9 30 am
Sunday School - 10.30 a.m.

R~ svll le

Enterprise:
Pa~tor Ar land Kmg . Sunduy School - 9·JO
am . Worship - JO 30 am 33105 Hllli:nd
Rd. Pomeroy
flatwoods
P..tstor [)e..,·ayne Stu ttler. Sunday School lOam,Wor~h•p-11 am .
Foust Hun
Pastor Bob Robmson, Sunday School · 10
am., Wurshtp - 9 am

Heath (Middleport )
Pastor. Bnan DunhHm. Su nd ay
930am. Worshtp - II OOam

S~ hool

-

Mlnl'n"llle
Pastor Sob R o bm ~on, Sunday Sch'ool - 9
a m , Worshtp · IOa m
Peal1 Chapel
Sunday S!:hool- 9 am , Wor.; h1p - 10 am ,
Pomeroy
PaS1or· Brian Dun ham Wors~1p - 9 30
a.m. Sunday School- 10 ~5 .1m

Other Churches"
S)racuw Communit y Chunh
NBOSecondSt S)mcu~ . UH
Sun Slhuol 10 am , Sundy mght 6 \0 pm
Pa~tor Joe Gwmn
A Nl'w Beginning
tFull Gospel Church) Harn~un\i[lt,
Pa~ to n, Bob and Kfl~ Mar,h,lll
Sunda~

Sl'r\ tCl'

Rutl11nd
Pasror Joh n Chapman Sunda y School 9 10 n m Wor;h1p - J O· \0 a m . Thursday
Serv1ces 7 p m
Salem Center
Pustor. Wtlllam K ' Mar.)hall. Sundn~
School - 10 15 am, Wo'rshtp · 9. 15 a m
B1hl e Stud&gt; Monda} 7 00 pm
Snowville
•
Sunday School 10 3m Wor~h tp - 9 ,1m

Bethany
P.dsror John Gilmore, Su ndJy School - 10
a m . Worsh1p · 9 am . Wednesday
Servtces - 10 a m
Carmei-Suuon
Carm~ l &amp; Ba~han Rd~
Ractlk', OhiO.
Pa~or John Gtlmorc, Sunda y Sehou l 945 a m . Wor~h tp- l l 00 a m , B1ble
Study Wed 1 30 p m
Mornin~ Star
Pa,.lor John Gt lmore, Sun da~ Sc hool
am . Wmshtp lO am

ll

EIISI Letart ,
Pastor Btll Marshall Sunday School 9a m . Worship - IU a m , ht Sunda}
every month C\enmg serv1ce 1 00 p m ,
Wednesday - 7 Pm

~pIll

Amuing Grace Community Church
Pastor Wa ~ nL' Dunlap Slate Rt 611 1.
Tuppers Plam~ Sun Wor,]up J(l am&amp;:
6.JO pm , Wed Btblc Stud] 7 00 1• m
Oa~is Christian ··~uu~o~ s hip
• tN[m-denommJtmna l fe lloll·~h t p)
Meetmg m rhe Me1gs M1d dle S~ilool
Cafeh:na Pu~ lnr Chn~ Ste\\.art
· 10 00 am Noon Sunday. ln fonn~l
Wo rsh1p. Chddr~:n·~ mm 1Mry

Coolville United MrlhOOisl Parl§h
Pa~lor Helen Khne, Coohdle Ch u"h ,
Mam &amp; Fifth St , Sun School · 10 am,
Wursh Jp 9 am, Tues Serv 1ccs- 7 p m ·
Bethel Church
Township Rd. 468C , Sunday School - 9
a m. Worshtp - 10 am, Wednesday
Serv11xs- 10 a.m

Hockingport Churrh
Kathryn Wiley. Sunday School - •9·30
a.m, Worshtp- 10 30 u m.. Phsror Phillip
Bell
Torch Church
Co RJ 63, Sund3y School - q 30 am ,
Y..orsh1p- 10 .30 am

Nazarene
Point RocJs Churth of the Nazartne
Route 689, Albany . Rev. LIO)'d Gnmm
pastor. Sunday Schuol 10 am. \\OrhsLp
servtce llam, eve mng servtce 7 pm Wed
prayer meetmg 7 pm

Middlepon Church of the Nar.artne
Le onard Powell. Sunda) School 9 30 am ,Worsh1p • 10.30 am, 6.30 p.m..
Wedne§day Semces - 1 p m ,
r~stor.

Reedsville Fellowshlp
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor. ~ussell
Carson . Sunda)' School · 9..10 am .,
Worstup - 10 45 a m , 7 p m , Wednc sda}
Sef\'lces - 7 p.m

l: \l·n mg St"r iiC ~ 6

t'rerdom Gospd ~fissiOn
Jl,dd Knnb . 1111 Co RJ 11 PJ,tor
Rnger \\ dlturd ' ~unJJ, Sdt ••~&gt;l u Ill \\ur,hlp ... r Ill

Faini~~ B1bltChurch
Le111 rt. W \'a Rt l. P•• ~ to• Bn.tn \1a)'.
Suni..la~ School - 9 ~(I am \\ ,,t,h•p . 1 00
p 111 ~ edne~d~) B1ble Stud\ -7 IMt p 111
Faith Fdto~ship Crusade fo r Chri~t
Pa•tor Re1 Fra nk lw Dt d.en~. S~r1 J ~e ·
Fmluy, 7 pm

Cah :tr~·

Bible Chun·h
P1lo..c (',, Rd Pa,lnr Rt'\
Bla cb~ orKL Sund~ y S~hn1&gt; l
9,10 ,t lll
Wor•l11p 10 JO .1 m
1 ~0 p m
We d nt.'~d.l&gt; SerYKe - 1 10 p m
Slht'tsville Cummunil) Church
Sund.Jy School W [I() um, Sunday Worsh1p
I! 00 am . Wedn ~ ,Ja} 1 (t(l pm Pa)lor
Bryan &amp; Mt .,~y Dati ~·,
R~Jnicln g Llf{'

Churrh
1aJ A1e \ l t~ldlcport. PNor
Mtkc Foreman Pa,r.•r Ernctll\1' L~~.~rc n~e
Fnreman Wor,h•p- llllM I,, n•

Community of C hrist
Punl anJ Raun~ Rd Pastor J1 m l'rnffitt.
Sunda y s~hool - 9 JO a m.. Wor~h 1p .
IU JO am. Wedne ~lby Sem~e~ i 00
Hf'thel Worship Ce nter
39782 Sl Rt. 7, 2 rmle ~ so ulh of Tuppers
Plams OH Non-denomi natmnal ""'lth
Contemporary Pra1se &amp; Worshtp Phto r
Rob BHrber Assoc Pa~Lor Kar~n Davr s
Youth Dtre..:tor Be uy Fulb Sunday
servtces 10 am Wnr.htp &amp; b pm Famtl)'
Ltfr Cla~ s&lt;.'s Wt"d &amp; Thu r n11;IV Ltf~
Groups at 1 pm . Thur&gt; morn ut~ ludte\
Ltfe Group m 10 Outer L1m11-. Youth Ltk
Group nn Wt:d e\ ~mng fr~•m 6 JU 1t1 S 10
Vl'iit us on l m~ at wv. w be thl' lw~ nrg
A!h Streel Chun:h
~9H Ash St . Mlddlepurt-Pu.,tor !&gt; Mork
Morrow &amp; Rodn ry Wallo..cr Su11d11)
School 4 ]0 am Mnrntl\g Wunh tp .
I0 ~0 &lt;1 ~~ &amp; 7 00 pm Wed nt",dll~ Sm to.' l'
· 7.00 p m. Youth Ser VIle- 7 tl() p m
Aljl:tpt' Lire Center
"Fui l-Go,prl l hurd1". Pa~ton Julm &amp;
Pat I) Wad~ . 6(H Srcund AH' M.!&gt;on, 77150 17, Srr\JCe lllne Sunda) 10 ~0 am .
Wrdne ~ da y 7 pm

Wednesd~) Serlt•· ,~

7 r 111

Cllnon l'ah~rnadt• Church
Cltfton W V,t . Sund n Sdtu~&gt;! - 10 ;.t m ,
Worsh1p - 7 pIll \\'elin~:, d .•l S~tltl.t: . 7

pm

Thl' Ark

rhur~h

3773Gro~gt·,C t,~k Rn.ul G:ilhp&lt;oJI., OH
Pa~t(lr J .tnu~

\\ lll:llt.lll SunJa\ Scr\ tees ·
10 30 a m \\ e.l n, .d.n - 7 p m l11unda)
Pr~yer &amp; Pr,n .. ~.: .II h pm n .• -..e, h• r ;J]]
a11e~
I.'I' Cr~
Sund ,t l .\: \\,•dn,,dn~
"'"'"'th~~~hhu,,hlll'! .
tull (, ospt'l Chun:h

ur lht• I 11 ing s ~, h~r
Rt 3:\R, &lt;\mt4Ulll P hhw J,,., ~,, t\ lorrt'
Sef""\' t Ce ~ S.1turd.11 ~ 1~1 ]1111
S11lt n1 Comrnumh Churd1
ll.lt k oF \\,••t C"lumh11' \\ \,1 &lt;'Ill Lt cl lll g
Road Pu-.wl Chmb H., ,u,h 1~1)-ll 6~'i228~. Sun d,t) S&lt;.h1•11i 'J 'o .1m Stmd uy
el't:nt ng "l:f\ lu ~ [10 pm. H1hly Study
\\lcdnc s da~ ~er1 t&lt;c 7 (l(l tml
Uobson Christian hlltm~h1p Church
Jl&lt;t stor H t'r~..:h\'1 Wh 1te Sundt!) St'hnol·
lOi!m.Stmtlt~(hu r.:ll,l'rltn• OJ(l pm
Wcdne•d,l: 1 pm

Abundant Gracr R.t'. I.
IJ2 3 S Tht rd Sl . Mtddltport Pa~tor Ten.·.,~
D,t\IS. Sunday sent,:e. IU ,1 m.
Wednesday serHle. 7 p m

9 1(,~

Faith l' ull Go~pel Chul'(h
Lnng Rottom, Pastor S te\~ Rec:-d. Sunduv
Sl ~ool 9 Je 11 m. Wor-.h•p - q JU am
and 7 p m 'Wedne sd ay . 7 p m , Frtduy lello~sh1p M~ f Vtle 1 p m.

11f lit ahng \lin•~trws
St. Rt. 12-tl.angs,illl', OH
Fu ll Go,pd. Cl P.NOI" Rt•bert &amp; R(1hel1a

H.arrtsonvUie Community Churclt
Pastor Theron Durham , Sunday - Y 10
a.m and 7 p.m , Wednesday- 7 p m
Middleport Communi!} Church
1
575 Pear l St Mi ddleport P~~tor Sam
Anderson "'S UI:tday School 10 am.
Evemng 1 30 p m, . Wednesday Semce •
7 30 pIll
Failh Valley Tabernacle Church
Batley Run R_pud Pastor Re ~ Emmel!
Raw~ o n, Sunday Eventn~ 7. p m..
Thursdlly Sen ICC - 7 r m

Syracuse Mission
1_41I Bndgeman St . Syra cuse. Sunda y
School · 10 am. E~ enm g · 6 p m,
Wednesday Scmcc- 7 p m.
fbzrl Community Church
Off Rt 124. Pastor Ed St:l Han. Sunday
School - q 30 am Worshtp - 10 10 a.m ,
7 30 p m

O)'enillr Community Church
Su nd ay School - 9 30 a m , Worsht p 10.30u m 7pm
Morse Chapel Churth ,
Sunday school - 10 a rn .. Worshtp - II
am, Wed nesday Sef""\l'C- 7 p.m.

Faith Gosptl Church
Long Bottom Sunday School - Y30 a m .
Worshtp - I 0 45 o m . 7.30 p m ,
Wednesday 7 10 p m

Full Gospel Lighthouse
3304.'\ Hiland Road: Ptmwrny Pa~t q r Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - 10 am. E\e mng
7 JO p m Tue~ d ay &amp; Thurs.- 7JO p m

Rt'slnra1111n Chns!1,m t'ello.., ~ hip
lltlupt'l R. r• td '\tht·n~ Pn't11r
Lumu~ (tla t... SunJ,\~ Wnr~htp 10 UO nm
Wcdnc~d.1 y 7 Jlltt
.

llou~r

Mu •Nr Sunda) Sd uml '/ J(l ,Jill .
Wnr~h1p HI ~ 0 .1111 · 7 00 pm . W~d
Ser~ tce 7 (Xl pm
Teom Jesus ~linislms
M~tmg 333 MeehanJl' Street. Pomeroy
OH P&lt;htur EdJte Bacr, S~nt ~ e e1 ery
Sun Ja) III ()(L.I m

Pentecostal

Pf'nlrl'ost~l i\ssrmblv
P,1,h1r Sr /{t ~~J R,t\111&lt;.', Torn,Jdu Rd
Su nd l!) Srhnnl · 10 &lt;1m E\enmg - 1
p m . Wednc&gt;doty St'r\ t~·,.~ 7 p 111

Presbyterian
Harrison I ill{' Pi't'Sh\terlan Church
Pa,l or fl.nlx-11 M.tr-.hall Wor.,htp 9 J 111
\hddltport

Pmb~

lenan

Puswr· J,un~~ Sn)'dl' r Sum!.t~ Sd mn! 10 .
11 m.. \.\llt\lup s.eTI' t t~' J I ~ 111

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulber r) Ht ~ Rd . Pumerm Sutunht)
Sen tn!~ S;~bh.lllt SlhPul • 2 p m .
Wur,hlp - J p m

United Brethren
~II.

Hermnn Unit{'d Hr~lhren
ln ( hrist Clturch
..
Te~a- ('(llfl111Ul11t~ 364 1! Wl cklmm fl.d .
Pa&gt;hlr P~·tcr ~ l;~rtmd.tle Sllnd,t)' Sehoul1,130 am \\lor\h tp · 10 'fl am 7 UO
p m . Wedne~da~ S~n ll' e~ 7 00 p m
Ynutlt gwup mcctmg 2nd &amp; ·hh Su nday~
7 p 111
fdl'n Umlt'd Hrrthrrn in l'hrist
State Rout e dol hl'tween Rceds\'li]e &amp;
Hot:kmgport. Sunda y School- 10 :1 m .•
Sunda~ Wunhtp - II 00 :.1m Wedn~ ~d ay'
S ~ntH'!S - 1 00 p nl P~ )IOI· ~~ Adam
Wtll

Soulh Bethrl Community Church
Stl~er fl.tdgr - P-.sto r Lmd a Damewood.
Sunday Scho11 l - q am , Wor~h1 p Ser ~ •~e
JO a.m Znd and 4th Sunda y

740·992-7713

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

•

your light so shine before
.. IIICU, that they may See YOUr
works and glorify your
ll'atl1er in heaven,"
Matthew 5:1

Sizes available 5x 10 1o 10 x 20

5mnut1 17} Qr.

ii:Mirll qfj!Jr berflOI qf,.. broil
Dillin.! *IllS n amnnn u.IJo
ltiaw.J kl .l.tbry oof!l'illl! CmiiWII«~.
(lli.wJ aNU/11011} Is lk fJIIe

lk someuilal 011/J:Jb hero u-ilb"
Uudi,'ll5 IJ 16) So. ulxllis,.. llliJI'Ili ofan tbe!e !lorillis? Jfu•
mlif halvGod on our side. u• are I~ to f!m'llil. Anti u• Jfuultl
il!iill...l..,~IMiiiMI ,/he&lt;rlru./II.V'' 15 &lt;Ill n•lfr•wl one uilbvtml!l,m.

.... In lilt l.onl and in the Slmlgth.of hl1 might Put on tht whole annor
tfGtll, 111M,.,.. maybe ablt to 11and agtllll.\1 the wile$ of the del'il,
R.H Ephesiart, 6:10.11

The Appliance man
740·985·3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts

All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

MIDDLEPORT
.TROPHIES &amp; TEES
t 90 N. Second St

. Middleport, OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
Ia ues t·shirts and more
(740)992-645 1

SO~ Mulberry Heights

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
{740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Oh1o 45769-0683

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in ¥e, and My
Full line of

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

'
AOE~CIES

Bill Quickel

In, .

992·6677

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

liTill
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

174 LIJ'II&lt; Simi• PO Box l70
New Haven,WV 15165
Funtr•l Dirtetor

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main ~.

992·5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
in h~art; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear bel'on~ I

God and man."

Acts 24:1

R~\

Q

5011 N

Rucln~

Pastor Kerry Wood. Sunda} School - 10
a.m , Worsh1p · II a m W~dneiday
Servtces 6 pm. Thur Bthle Study 7 pm

10.1 m

pm

PomeH•~

pm
Rotk Sprln~:s
Pastor Dewayne Stuller, Sunday School 9.00 am , Worst11p •· 10 am , Youth
Fello....sh1p. Sunday - 6 p m Early Sunday
wor.;h1p 8 am Je1111 Dunham

S~ni•C JO

~L"

'"'f""ily Mp

prorm yo11.r _famil!J '

Suppression • Ex tm gu1~hcr~ • Spnnkler~

• Secl,!rJt):

172 N. 2nd Ave. M1ildleport. OH
353-0837 Fax:

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport; OH
992-6376

�...

A Hunger For More·One of the things I fmd
truly remarkable about
Jesu;' earthly ministry is the
fact of -His catalytic presence and the controversy
that con·s tantl y followed.
Everywhere He went,
thmgs were not only challenged, but were shaken to
the1r
foundallons
and
changed. As He walked and
talked, lives were met w1th
an authority so absolute that
those lives were never the
same again, As He healed
and appealed to the crowds
that gathered around Him,
complacency was stirred up
to active response b)t His
passionate zeal to usher
men and women into the
Father's
tavor.
Some
accepted , by God's grace _
And ·some rejected. still by
God's grace in order that no
one could claim that God
coerced people into compliance. Rest assured that His
presente continues to reap
the same effect today.
H1s Spirit moves in the
lives of men and women
and even children whispering in thetr ears, "Come.
follow Me" (e .g., Mark
I: 17) just as literally as did
Jesus with lips of tlesh prior
to His lonely walk to the
cross on which He would
die, His life and death, you
realize, are still controversial t'o each of us. His life
trumps our tendency to
rationalize our condition.
Through the testlmon y m
His Word of His· day-to-day
.llvmg, we realize that there
really is more to life than
just "getting ahead," more
to the Lord than strict
adherence to a moral code;
and more to love than warm
fuzzy feelings.
And His death'' · Well. it
· remains a grim reminder of
the fact of our rebellion
against God and the destiny
that awaits us apart from
His forgiveness and substitutionary sacrifice for us. It
not only reveals that "certain something" about our
hearts that we try desper-

PageA6

FAITH •VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

ately to h1de from the
world and from ourselves.
but also clearly underswres olr immen se i'ndebtcdness to God should we
avail ourselves of that sacrifice through faith. Jesus
died for you. Through faith
in His death and · resurrection. you may rece1ve Him
as Savior. But not Savior
only To receive Him as
S:tvior, you must also submit to Him as Lord.
But don ' t be afra1d. While
the immensity ot your
indebtedness to Him would
be unbearable (how wuld
anyone " repay'' Him for
what He has done?). He
shoulders that respons1biltty
Himself by His own Spirit's
dwellmg w1thm us as we
daily submit to Hi s love and
leading. And as we do so,
y,e find that His "catalytic
presence" abiding in us is
stdl challenging, shak1ng
and changmg lives. Was this
His
plan
all
along?
Naturally. Jesus H1mself
said. "This is what is written . The Christ will suffer
ami rise from the dead on
the third day, and repe'nlance and forgiveness or
sins w11l be preached m His
name to all nations . .. You
will rece1ve power when the
Holy Spirit comes on you;
and you will be My witnesses m Jerusalem, and in all
Judea and Samaria, and tr,
the ends of the earth" (Luke
46-47 and Acts I :8 NIY).
Of course, this message of
which we are Witnesses has
a way of soliciting either of
two 1esponses. The first,
obviously, is one of rejection Perhaps in the form of
out-and-out
hostiliiy.

Perhaps a sneeri ng condescension . Or.maybe even an
im:essant attempt to postpone a perso nal response
(wh1ch is still rejeCtiOn)
bcc~use of fear or a reluctance ·to "let go" of one's
own agenda. But the second
potential respo nse is the
sweet humbling of a person's heart as he or she
allows the strong arms of
God to )itt the weight of
condemnation from his or
her shoulders. It always has
been and always will be one
of life 's greatest experiences
to see a human life c9me
under the grace of God,
transformed and set free
from the weights of enJan gling selfishness and sin.
And what is even more
beautiful is the fruit of1joy
and peace that is harv,ested
m a life as it abides under
the Lord's will for him or
her. It occurs to me, as my
mmd prayerfully considers
Jes us ' invitation for us each
to become genuine disciples, that there really is'n 't
any other opt1on. Not
because we are " being
made" to follow H1111, but
because noth.mg else has
the lasting appeal that
docs,
knowin g
Him
Consider today what Jesus
means to you. Does HIS
love have practicill meaning
for the way you live your
life? Does His pre sence
come shining through you ,
influencmg your deci sions.
attitudes, and priorities? If
you've not yet received
Him as Savior and Lord of
yoLir life. why not do so
today and finally begin living the life for which you
were created-all along? ·

(Tiwm Mollohar1 and his
family have ministered in
muthem Ohio the past 13
years and is tl1e author of
"The Fairy Tale Parables."
He is the pastor uf Pathway
Commur1ity Church and
may be reached for commerits or questions by email at pastortlwm@pathwaygallipolis.com).

Muslim teenager files complaint over head scarf
TULSA, Okla. (AP) - A Muslim civil
rights group has filed a federal complaint on
behalf of a Muslim teenager who alleges she
was denied a job at Abercrombie &amp; Fitch
because she wears a htjab, or head scarL
The complaint, filed at the Oklahoma City
oftice of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commis~ion , claims that a d1strict manager
for the clothing ~tore at Woodland Hills Mall
told the gtrl in late June that the head covering, wom by observant Muslim women, didn't fit the chain's image.
"Employers have a clear legal duty to
accommodate the religious practices of their

workers," smd Razi Hashmi 7 execu'ti~e
director of the Counc1l on. Amencan-lslam1c
Relatmns-Oklahoma, wh1ch helped the gtrl
file the complaint. "To deny some_one
employment b_ecausc of apparent religiOus
bias ~oes agamst long-stand1ng. A•~encan
traditions ot tolerance and mclusiOn,.
Hash1m declined to name the g•rl, but
said she is youn$er than I R.
.
Under the CIVIl R1ghts Act ot 1964,
employers must reasonably accommodate
the rehg10us practtces of an employee
unless doing so would create an undue
hardship for the employer.

•

Friday, August 15, 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008
Fl:!llowship
Apostolic

Coming soon! ·

I leamed the other day _that
a new Star Trek movie is in
the works, I am a confinmed
"Trekker," so this is big news
for me. I went on the Internet
to learn as much about the
new movie as I could. The
last movie, "Star Trek:
Nemesis," was very disappointing . I hope the new
movie will be much better.
Going onlln~. I uncovered
r,umo( after rumor about the
new S.tar Trek movie, The
, variatio'ns on plot lines,
casting, and release dates
reminded me of one of my
fay()rite "Star Trek-isms":
inlinite diversity in infinite
combinations (or IDlC) .
The thovie is going to be
about · Jean Luc Picard; no,
i{s .going to be about Kirk,
Spock, and McCoy. · But
wait 1 How can they even
thtnk about putting 70ish
actors William Shatner and
Leonard N1moy back on the
': bridge of the Enterprise ?
Bes1des. · didn't Kirk get
killed about 4 movies ago?
No, the movie is going to
be about Kirk and co,, but
going back' in time to
BEFORE they came together on the original Enterprise
on the original series using all different actors in .
their 20s to till the roles.
Uh-oh, that could be troublesome for Star Trek
purists like me.
The original Star Trek was
produced in the late 1960s.
Watchmg reruns or DYDs of
those episodes, the aura of
· 1960s fashion and special
eft·ects make them incredibly
cheesy by today's standards.
When Star Trek: Next
Generation aired, creator and
producer Gene Roddenberry
wisely set ·that series about
70 years into the future from
the original series. The thencurrent production techniques used for the series
helped everything looked so
much more "hi t~ch" than
before. and yet the future_
setting protected the integrity of the origmal series.
After
Roddenberry's
death, a different producer
conceived "Enterprise" as a
series set back in the earliest·
day s of Starfleet - nearly
!50 ye~s BEFORE Captain
Kirk took the bridge . But
the Enterprise' series was
produced using 21st century
productiOn technology. As a
result, it made Kirk's time
appear less technologically
advanced and cheesier than

Ch urch of Jl'~u ~ Chri~t Apostolic
VanZandt and W,mJ Rd Pa.tor Jam~~
M•tler , Sunda} S~h1m l - tO 30 am,
E\·e mng · 7 JO p m .

Then God responds:
"Write down the revelation
and make 1t plain on tablets
so that a herald may run
w•th it. For the revelation
awaits an appointed time; it
speaks of the end and will
not prove false. Though it
linger, wait fo r it ; it will certamly come and will not
delay." (Hab 2.2-3)
God goes on to promise
that all things will be made
nght; but things will get
worse before they get better,
But no matter how bad it
gets, remember that God is
sti ll present, still prepared,
and still will make things
right. But God doesn't give
many detmls about the how
or when. In short, Go,I ' ays
this : " Have faith. Trust me."
If you are I ike me, then
sometimes tru sting God is
hard . Maybe the hardest
thing any of us are ever
asked to do . Just like the
new Star Trek movie, God
has something coming
soon. I don ' t have to trust
that Paramount Pictures will
do Star Trek right by me,
but l do have to trust that
God will do right - not by
me, but by God's own standard of holiness.
I pray that each of us will
be able to proclaim along
with Habakkuk (i n Hab
3: 17-18): "Though the fig
tree does not bud and there
are no grapes on the vines,
though the alive crop fails
and the fields produce no
tood. though there are no
sheep in the pen and no cattle m the stall s, yet I will
rejoice in the Lord. I -.,viii be
joyful in God my Savior."
It's coming soon' God will
noi prove false . Wait for 11!
It will certamly come and
w1ll not delay

Pastor
Kerry

Wood

~ Rher \'aile\
R1 •n Vi!lll'} Apo'itnll, \\'(,r,h tp Ctnter,

S7J S 3rd
A&gt;e M1ddlepon. Re\
Mtchael Br.u.iford. Pasmr. Sunday, 10 30
am TLIC ~ 6 JU prayrr. Wed 7 pm Bthle
Stu.dy
Emm1muel 1\post.ohc Tabt'rnacll.' Inc.
Loop Rd uff Nc1.1 Luna RJ Rutland.
Semces Sun 1000 &lt;t .rn &amp; 7·30 pm .
Thurs 7 00 p m P~ ~tur Many R Hunan

metaphor for exploring core
understandings of hum an
nature, the imp! ic ations o(
philosophical, pohtical and
reli gious under~ tandin gs.
and the role technology has
in shaping those ex plorations. Star Trek lets us as
the basic Why? What ' and
How? questions of life .
Amazingly, the Bible does
the same thing. Scripture also
asks those questions, but
even better than Star Trek, ii
offers answers that have
divine· inspiration, authority
and applicabll1ty to us' My
Bible reading this week took
me to the Old Testament
book of Habakkuk, I haven't
read this prophet 's writings
in a while, so it was startling
stuft' - ·almost like something· brand new.
During his time, Jerusalem
is filled with people who
ignore God, including .the
kmg and all his court, The
Babylonians have defeaied
the prev1ous empires - the
Assyrians and the Egyptians .
And now Babylon is doing
some "mopping up" by taking the little kingdoms, too.
That · means Judah and 1ts
capital Jerusalem.
Habakkuk asks God the
basic "why'?'' question of all
time: "Why do you tolerate
wrong?" (Hab I :3) He goes
on to list the injusuces that he
sees all around him, and yet
the wrong-doers are not punished . Then he asks again,
(Kerry Wood is now asso"Your eyes are too pure to ciate pastor at Grace Uniled
look' on evil; you cannot tol- Methodist
Church
in
erate wrong. Why then do Perrysburg, Ohio after servyou 'tolerate the treacherous? ing Racine United Methodist
Why are you Silent when the Church for three years. He
wicked swallow up those can be reached through his
more righteous than them- website: http://pursueholiselves?" (Hab I: 13)
ness.blogspot.com.)

Assembly of God

Libfrt) Asst&gt;mbly of GAd
PO Ba:o. 467. DuJdmg Lane. Mason
W Va , Pa~tor Neil ~ Tennam. Sunday
Sen·tces- I0 Oil a m and 7 p m.

Baptist
Palill.'vitle Freewill Bapti&lt;il C hurch
Floyd Ro~~. Sunda~ School 9 30 to
10 lOam "-or,ht]) '~rYl~e 10 ~0 to II 00
,Jm Wed pn.',J• hmg 6 pm

P.t~ror

Carptnlrr lpdepcndtnt 8apli'it Church
Sunday Schuo] - 9 lOam Preuchmg
Scrvtce 10 lllam. E'emng Ser.tce
7·00pm . Wedne&lt;.d,t) I:JiiJic Study 7 00 pm .
Pus tor
C h~hire Buptlst Churt"b
Pastor Ste ve Ltl!le Sunday S~;hoot 9 30
am . Mom1ng Wo r~htp 10·30 am.
Wedne~ay ll1 hle Study 6 ~Opm, d mr
pnll.:tlce 7 \[) youlh und Bit"&gt;le Budqie ~,.
6 .!0 p 111 Th ur~ 1 pni hook , rudy

llopc Ha)Jii!il Church jSouthernt
"i70 Gmll! St . Mtddle purt, Sunda&gt; S\:hool
- 9 :lfl ,J m . Wohhtp - II a m und 6 p m.
Wt.'l.lne:.day Sci'\ 1ee · 7 p m P&lt;~stol Gary
Eilt s
Rutlund t'irst 811p1lst Church
Sunda~ s,ht10l - 1,1 30 :~ . m . Wor~htp 10 45 am
l'omf'ro~ 1-irst Baptist
Pastor Jon Rn~tlert East Matn St,
Sunday S~.·h 9 lflum Wm ~ h1p 10 l Oam

First Southern Baptist
41!17::! Pome ro y P1h , Sunduy School
?lO a m Worsht p - Yol5am &amp;700p m,
WednesdH y Sc rv t c~:, - 7 (X) p 111

Jo'irst Rapt!SI Church
Pa~tor Bil ly Zu~ pan 6th und Palmer St
Middleport. Sund.t) Sdmul . 9. 15 am,
WnrS h1p - 10 I 'i am .' 7 00 p m ,
Wcdne!iday Ser.·1 ee- 7 00 Pm
Racine' First Hapttst
Pastor Ryit n Eotun. p a~wr . Sunday
Schoo l - Y 30 a m.. Wor5htp - 10.40 a.m.
6·00 p m . WeJn~~dJy Serv1~es - 7 00

pm.
Silver Run Haptlsl
Pastor John Swan~nn Sunday s,hool IOa.m .. Worship · I lam 7 01.! pm
.Wednesday Servkcs 7,(10 p m

MI. Union Baptist
Pastor· Denr11s Weaver Sunday Sc~ool 9 :45 am .. Evcn1ng - 6 30 p m,
Wednesday Services - 6 ~p m
Bethlehem B11ptlsl Church
Grear Bend , Route 12-l , Racwe, OH,
Pastor· Ed Carter. Sunday School - 9 30
am .. Sunday Worshi p - 10 30 n m ,/,l. 7
pm. W~:dne~day B1ble Stud) - 7 00 p m.

ever.
Why does any of this matter, you ask? My response is
that Star Trek has become
more than casual entertainment for me . It IS a

Old Bethel Free Will Uaptlst Church
28601 St Rt 7, Mtd dle port . Sunda~
Sen1ce - 10 a m.. 6 00 p m . Tu!'sdny
St:TYICCS -6 00

Srnle 1 Now you can own tho Picture of that uniOrgaUatlle
moment capturad In tMe nDW&amp;peper Photos become t1meless
when framed or printed on a mug o r mouso pad

and chck the blue buuon .

Hlllglde HapUsl Churc:h
St Rt 143 JUSt off Rt 7, Pastor Rev
James R. Acree. Sr. Sunday Umftfd
Service, Worshtp - 10 30 a,m, 6 p m,
Wedne!idB} Semces ·1 p m
Victory Bapllsllndeptndenl
S25 N 2nd St Middleport. Pastor: James
E. Kee~ee , Worship - lOa.m.. 7 p.tn,
Wednesday Scrvtce~- 7 p.m

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

t for Justice
lndudiltg lbl;s.• td/() fimgbl fi,!f' justiCe. ,
IJII!Ifj~rnfjtvJjitJtlM IIIli/ugUt11SI:'J!I•ntlllg6•
,Jttwf, uoo (&lt; fll'rlliip.· tbt grruksl l!crv oftbt (1/tf
·
l'baroilh. ro~nplmnh•g

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

••,ifk.wgu.r."(E.rodus·4.11!J
rhl Mo.~'

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

•IHI•IImlr.&gt;r, ufJ/Ie lxmtl bad
llh~lifll ...wi q P.rM:bJiu/1 qfs/ori&lt;IS,

,.,,,...lai ((

and
Respite Care Available
Call today to schedule a tour
333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472

6anr - 8pm

Amw~plwre

Mi[[ie's j{estaurant

':A Home Bank for
Home People"

Open 7 days a week

740·949-2217

MI. Moriah Bllpli§l
Fourth &amp; Mam St , M1ddlepor1 . Sunda}
School - 9 30 a rn Worshtp · 10·45 11 rn
Pas10r Re\ . Mrchael L Thompson. Jr.

Hours-

Fnend"

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

_, Racin_e, OH

Fonst Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev Jo~eph Wood'i Sunday School- lO
a m . Wor~ htp - II 30 a.m

Fax (7401992·7406

740-949-2210

29670 Bashan Rd.
RK&lt;l/1

Lon~ Term, Short Term

~~~ m

HiUs Self Storage
tMII6 M lmjfi'J IIIII uml

@~~~

Middleoort OH

·~/()IJ' qf

Fallh Baptist Churrh
Railroad St . Mason. Sunday School - 10
a. m., Wurship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne-sd a) Scn· t~ c~- 7 p m

Anllqult} Hapll§t
Sunday Sl h0\1] · 9 30 am . Worship 10 45 a rn, Sundlt) E\chtng • 6'fl0 p ri1 .
Pastor. Don Walker

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

'

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel ·Page A7

WORS1rl1P GOD THIS WEEK .
Rutland Fret Will Baptlsr
Salem St .. Pastor Ed Bam~y Sunday
School - 10 a m . Evemng - 1 p m..
Wednesday Servtces · 7 p m
Mtond Bapd51 C hurch
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 amMonung worshtp II am Evrning - 7 pm .
Wednesday 7 p m
Fim Baptlsl Cburch ot Mu&gt;n, WV
(Independent Bapust)
SR 652 and Ander5on St PastOr Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Mornmg
church II am, Sunda) e~enmg 6 pm . Wed
Btble Stud y 7 pm

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catbelk Chun:h
161 Mul~rry Ave. Pomcro), 992-5898,
Pastor Re\1 Walter E Hemz. Sat. Con
4 45-5' l5p m , M~ss- 5 30 p m Sun
Con -8. 45-9 15 a.m... Sun Mass - 9·30
am. Da 1ly Mass - 8 JO am

· Church of Christ
or

Evening - 6 p m , Wedne sda) Sef\ 1.:e~ . 7
Sunday School · 9 JO am ., Worship
10.30 am

pm

Worshtp - 9 JO am , Sunda} S~hool
JO 30 am. F1~1 Sunday of MoJJth - 7.00
p m sel'\'tcr

Pom~ro} Ch ureh ufthr Namnme
Pa,tnr Ja n Linendt"r Suw;la} S~.hon l q 30 am Wonh1p - 10·30 a m und {,
v m • Wedn!!sday Serv1ces - 7 p m

1\appen Plalll'l St. Paul
Pa~l•lr Jtm Corbm. Sunday s,hool - 9
am . Worsh1p - 10 am. Tuesday Servt,es
730p m.
Cl'nlral Ct uster
Asbtlry ( S)'mu~r). Pastor Bob Robtn~on
Sunday School - 9 45 a m , Wor~ htp - II
am. Wednesday Semces - 7 3U pm

lO
Chesttr Church or the Nazu rrne
Pbt or Re' Cur11~ Randolph . Sumla)
School- 9 30 am . Worship . 10 30 am ,
'\ hltr 's Chap.!'! \\l'sleyan
Sunda~ e\emng 6 pm
CoL•l11lle RuJd. Pa, tnr Re\ Charle~
Rutland Church or the Nazarrne •
Marrm tlal~ SunJa1 s, lllllll · II 30 u m ,,,
Pastor Ueor~e Stadb, Sunday Sdlllol
, Wor\h1p · !U 1() J m . ~\ed ne, J a) Sef'\ l(;e
9 ~0 am Wonhtp - 10 .10 Hm . 6 JU
7 pm
p.m.. WednesdaY Sen ttr;,- 7 p m

S) racust' First Church of God
Apple and Second Sts , Pastor Re\' Davtd
Russell: Sunday School and Won;hip- 10
a n;1 E•emng Sen tces · 6 30 p m,
Wedne~a) Sef\ tees - (l 30 p m
Chun:b or God of Prophety
O J Whtle Rd uffSt. Rt 160 . Pa~tnr PJ
Chapma n.,. Sunday Schroo l - 10 am .
Wo~h1p - ll am . Wedne sda) Ser~tces . 1
p.m

Congregational
l'rlnll} Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomero~
Worsh1p 10 25 a.m..

PitMor

Episcopal
Grace to:piscopal Chun:h
326 E Matn St • Pomeroy
Hoi}'
Euchartst 11 .30 am Sunday &amp; 5 Jo 'pm
Wed Rev. l..eshe Aemmmg

Hemlock Gro\e Christtan Church
Mmtster: Larry Brown. Worsh1p - 9 ~0
a.m S~ nduy School - 10 30 am Bible
Study· 7 p.m

Community Churth
Pastor: Ste\"e Tomek, Mam Strttt ,
Rutland. Sunday Worsh1p-tOOO a m .
S11nday Scf'\ltce- 7 p m.

Pomeroy Chun::h of Christ
212 W Main St . Sunday School- 9 30
am , Worsbtp- 10:30 a m . 6 p m •
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Danville Holmftl Church
31057 State Route 325 Langsvlle. P.o1Stur ·
Benjamm Crawford. Sunday schoo l - ~ -JO
a m., Sunday worship - 10·30 am &amp; 7
p m • WedflcMiay P,rayer !iei'VICl' 7 p.m.

"' Middleport Church or Chrlsl
5th and Marn. Pa stor AI Hartson.
Chtldrens Direclot Sharon Sayre. Teen
Dtrector Dodger Vaughan, Sunda) School
-930 ll-·m, Worsh1p- 8 15 10 30a m. 7
p m.. Wednesday Servtces • 7 p m

Keno Church or Christ
· 9 30 am , Su nday Sc hool ·
10 30 am, Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. 1st and
3rd Su nday
Wo r ~ h1 p

Bearwi.llow Ridge Churth of Chrlsl
Pastor·Hruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30

•m
Worship - 10 30 a m . 6 30 p m.
Wednesday Ser.tces- 6.30 p m
Zion Chun:b or Chtist
Pomeroy, Harnsonvllle Rd . (Rt 143).
Pastor· Roger Watson, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worsht p - 10·30 am. 1 00
p.m , Wednesday Serttces - 1 p m

Holiness

Calury Pll[lrim Chaptl
Hamsonv1lle Road . Pas tor. Chjlfles
McKenzte, Sunda) School q. m am ,
Worslup · 11 am., 7 00 p m.. Wedn~ay
Semce- 7 00 p.m

Rose of Sharon Hollneu Churth
Leadtng Creek Rd. Rut l11nd, Pastor· Rev
Dewey Kmg. Surl&lt;by schoo l- 9 30 am .
Sunday worsht p -7 p m . Wednesd3y
prayer meetmg· 7 p m ,
Pine Grove Bihle Hollneu Church
lf2 mile off Rt. 325. Paslor· Rev O'Dell
Man ley, Sund;ty School - 9 30 am .
Won;h1p - 10 30 a.m. 7.30 p m.
Wednrsday Serv1ce · 7.30 p m
We5l~yan

Rlhle Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middlepon Pa stor Do ug
Co:o.., Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worshtp 10 45 p m , Sunday Eve. 7.00 p m..
Wednesday Serv1ce · 7.30 p m.
I

, '

HyseU Run Community Church
Pastor. Re v Larry Lemley. Sun dn) School
- 9 30 am .. WorshLp- 10.45 am. 7 p m
Thursday H1ble Study and Youth · 7 p m

Thppers Plain Church or Cbrlst
Instrumenta l, Wor:shtp Servtce - 9 a m ,
Communion - 10 am . Sunday Schoo l 10 IS am .. Ymnh- BO pm Sunday. Bt ble
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Laurd Cliff Fret' Methodist C hurch
Pastor: Glen McClung. Sunday School 9.30 am . Wor.;htp - 10 30 am and 6
p m ,Wednesday Serv1~e- 7.00 p m.

Rradhury Church or Christ
Mmister. Tom Run&gt;on , 39558 Bradbury
. Road, Mrddlepon . Sunday School- 9 30

The Church of Jesu~
Christ of Latter-Da) Saints
St Rt 160, 446 -6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10.20 -l l am. Reiter
Socte!y/Pnesthood II 05· 12 00 noon,
Sacramenl Ser'tltCe 9-10 15 am,
Homemakmg meeung , 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m

&lt;m
Worshtp - 10:30 a m

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m , Wor:sh1p and
Commumon- 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry,
Mtmster

Bradrord Cbatth or Christ
Corner of St Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury ~d,
Mtmster. Doug Shamblin, Youth Mmt sler
Rill Am!Wger, Sunday School • 9 30 a.m.
Worshtp - B:OO am , 1030 am . 7 00
p.m. ,Wednesday Serv1Ces -7.00 p m
Hlckor, Hills Church or Christ
Tuppers Platns , Pastor M1ke Moore. Bible
class. 9 am. Sunday , worsh 1p 10 am
Sunday, wor:sh1p 6·30 pm Sunday; Bible
cl ass 7 pm Wed .
Reed!vtlle Church or ChriJt
Pastor. Philip Stunn, Sunday School· 9 30
a.m., Worship Service 10:30 am . B1b.le
Study, Wednesday. 6.30 p.m
Dexter Church of Chrkt
Sunday.school9 30 am .. Sunday worshtp
- 1030a.m .
'
The Chlll'th of Christ Pomeroy
lntersectton 1 and 124 W E\angehst
Denm s Sargent. Sunda~ B1ble Study .
9 30 am., Worsh1p · 10 30 am and 6 30
p m.• Wednesday Bible SIUdy - 7 p m

or

Christian Union
Hanford Churth of Christ In
Christian Union
Hartford , W.Va ... Pastor :Da v1d Greer,
Sunda y "Schoo l · 9 30 a.m, Worship 10 ·30 am , 7.00 p.m.. Wednc~day
Serv1ces · HXl p m

Church ofGod
or

Mt. Moriah Churth God
M1 le Htlt Rd , Racme, Pastor . Jame s

Car ltton lntudenom lnalional Church
Kmg,bun RH~d Pa o,Jur fl. ol:k'rt \'an ce
SunJ~\ SLhUid - 9 1(1 J m
\\'llr)hlp

Rutland Church of God
Pastor Ron Heath . Sund2v Worsh1p 10
am. 6 p m Wednesday Ser\u,: e ~- 7

We:!itsldr Churth Christ
3 U26 Ch1ldren 's HolllC' Rd , Pollll:ruy. OH
Contact 740-441 -1296 Su nday momm g
10 00, Sun morning 81ble stud:(.
foll owing worsh1p, Sun. eve 6 .00 p111,
Wed b1ble stud~ 7 pm

Pomt!roy WestsJde Churc:b Gl Chrilll
33226 Ch1ldre~' 5 Home Rd , Sunday
School - I I a.m.. Worship - IOn m , 6 p m,
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

Pa ~tor M1ke Adluns Sund11 v School 9 30
am . Worshtp - 10 10 am . 6 p m,
Wedne~ay Sen tee~ - 7 p m

Lana Bottom

pm

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran
St. Jahn Lutheran Church
Pme Grove. Worship - 9 00 am. Sunday
School· 10 00 a.m Pastor:
Our Sa"lour Lullwran Church
Walnut and Henry Su , Ravenswood.
W.Va, Pastor Davtd RU5se ll Sunday
School- 10 00 am., Worship · l I am
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer S)camore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sun School- 9.4S a.m. Worshtp - II a m

United Methodist
Graham Valttd Methodkt
Worsh1p - II a.m. Pastor: Rtchard Nease
Bechtel Unlled Methodist
New Haven , Rachard Nea!e, Paslor ,
Sunday worsh1p q 30 am Thes 6 JO
prayer and Bible Study
Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behmd W!lkesvtlie, Pastor Re~
Ralph Spires. S unda~ School - q 30 am •
Worsh1p - 10.~ 0 a.m , 7 p m , Thursdny
Serv1tcs 7 p.m .

Meigs Cooperatln Parish
Nonheast Clusler, Al fred, Pastdr Jun
Corbilt, Sunday School - 9 30 am.
Worshtp - I I a.m.. 6 30 p m.
Chester
Pasror J1m Corbt tt , Worship - IJ a rn ..
Sunda~ School - 10 a m , Thursday
Sem~es - 7 p m.
• ,
Joppa
Pasror . Denl1l Null. Worsh1p · 9 30 am
Sunday School - 10.30 a.m.

R~ svll le

Enterprise:
Pa~tor Ar land Kmg . Sunduy School - 9·JO
am . Worship - JO 30 am 33105 Hllli:nd
Rd. Pomeroy
flatwoods
P..tstor [)e..,·ayne Stu ttler. Sunday School lOam,Wor~h•p-11 am .
Foust Hun
Pastor Bob Robmson, Sunday School · 10
am., Wurshtp - 9 am

Heath (Middleport )
Pastor. Bnan DunhHm. Su nd ay
930am. Worshtp - II OOam

S~ hool

-

Mlnl'n"llle
Pastor Sob R o bm ~on, Sunday Sch'ool - 9
a m , Worshtp · IOa m
Peal1 Chapel
Sunday S!:hool- 9 am , Wor.; h1p - 10 am ,
Pomeroy
PaS1or· Brian Dun ham Wors~1p - 9 30
a.m. Sunday School- 10 ~5 .1m

Other Churches"
S)racuw Communit y Chunh
NBOSecondSt S)mcu~ . UH
Sun Slhuol 10 am , Sundy mght 6 \0 pm
Pa~tor Joe Gwmn
A Nl'w Beginning
tFull Gospel Church) Harn~un\i[lt,
Pa~ to n, Bob and Kfl~ Mar,h,lll
Sunda~

Sl'r\ tCl'

Rutl11nd
Pasror Joh n Chapman Sunda y School 9 10 n m Wor;h1p - J O· \0 a m . Thursday
Serv1ces 7 p m
Salem Center
Pustor. Wtlllam K ' Mar.)hall. Sundn~
School - 10 15 am, Wo'rshtp · 9. 15 a m
B1hl e Stud&gt; Monda} 7 00 pm
Snowville
•
Sunday School 10 3m Wor~h tp - 9 ,1m

Bethany
P.dsror John Gilmore, Su ndJy School - 10
a m . Worsh1p · 9 am . Wednesday
Servtces - 10 a m
Carmei-Suuon
Carm~ l &amp; Ba~han Rd~
Ractlk', OhiO.
Pa~or John Gtlmorc, Sunda y Sehou l 945 a m . Wor~h tp- l l 00 a m , B1ble
Study Wed 1 30 p m
Mornin~ Star
Pa,.lor John Gt lmore, Sun da~ Sc hool
am . Wmshtp lO am

ll

EIISI Letart ,
Pastor Btll Marshall Sunday School 9a m . Worship - IU a m , ht Sunda}
every month C\enmg serv1ce 1 00 p m ,
Wednesday - 7 Pm

~pIll

Amuing Grace Community Church
Pastor Wa ~ nL' Dunlap Slate Rt 611 1.
Tuppers Plam~ Sun Wor,]up J(l am&amp;:
6.JO pm , Wed Btblc Stud] 7 00 1• m
Oa~is Christian ··~uu~o~ s hip
• tN[m-denommJtmna l fe lloll·~h t p)
Meetmg m rhe Me1gs M1d dle S~ilool
Cafeh:na Pu~ lnr Chn~ Ste\\.art
· 10 00 am Noon Sunday. ln fonn~l
Wo rsh1p. Chddr~:n·~ mm 1Mry

Coolville United MrlhOOisl Parl§h
Pa~lor Helen Khne, Coohdle Ch u"h ,
Mam &amp; Fifth St , Sun School · 10 am,
Wursh Jp 9 am, Tues Serv 1ccs- 7 p m ·
Bethel Church
Township Rd. 468C , Sunday School - 9
a m. Worshtp - 10 am, Wednesday
Serv11xs- 10 a.m

Hockingport Churrh
Kathryn Wiley. Sunday School - •9·30
a.m, Worshtp- 10 30 u m.. Phsror Phillip
Bell
Torch Church
Co RJ 63, Sund3y School - q 30 am ,
Y..orsh1p- 10 .30 am

Nazarene
Point RocJs Churth of the Nazartne
Route 689, Albany . Rev. LIO)'d Gnmm
pastor. Sunday Schuol 10 am. \\OrhsLp
servtce llam, eve mng servtce 7 pm Wed
prayer meetmg 7 pm

Middlepon Church of the Nar.artne
Le onard Powell. Sunda) School 9 30 am ,Worsh1p • 10.30 am, 6.30 p.m..
Wedne§day Semces - 1 p m ,
r~stor.

Reedsville Fellowshlp
Church of the Nazarene, Pastor. ~ussell
Carson . Sunda)' School · 9..10 am .,
Worstup - 10 45 a m , 7 p m , Wednc sda}
Sef\'lces - 7 p.m

l: \l·n mg St"r iiC ~ 6

t'rerdom Gospd ~fissiOn
Jl,dd Knnb . 1111 Co RJ 11 PJ,tor
Rnger \\ dlturd ' ~unJJ, Sdt ••~&gt;l u Ill \\ur,hlp ... r Ill

Faini~~ B1bltChurch
Le111 rt. W \'a Rt l. P•• ~ to• Bn.tn \1a)'.
Suni..la~ School - 9 ~(I am \\ ,,t,h•p . 1 00
p 111 ~ edne~d~) B1ble Stud\ -7 IMt p 111
Faith Fdto~ship Crusade fo r Chri~t
Pa•tor Re1 Fra nk lw Dt d.en~. S~r1 J ~e ·
Fmluy, 7 pm

Cah :tr~·

Bible Chun·h
P1lo..c (',, Rd Pa,lnr Rt'\
Bla cb~ orKL Sund~ y S~hn1&gt; l
9,10 ,t lll
Wor•l11p 10 JO .1 m
1 ~0 p m
We d nt.'~d.l&gt; SerYKe - 1 10 p m
Slht'tsville Cummunil) Church
Sund.Jy School W [I() um, Sunday Worsh1p
I! 00 am . Wedn ~ ,Ja} 1 (t(l pm Pa)lor
Bryan &amp; Mt .,~y Dati ~·,
R~Jnicln g Llf{'

Churrh
1aJ A1e \ l t~ldlcport. PNor
Mtkc Foreman Pa,r.•r Ernctll\1' L~~.~rc n~e
Fnreman Wor,h•p- llllM I,, n•

Community of C hrist
Punl anJ Raun~ Rd Pastor J1 m l'rnffitt.
Sunda y s~hool - 9 JO a m.. Wor~h 1p .
IU JO am. Wedne ~lby Sem~e~ i 00
Hf'thel Worship Ce nter
39782 Sl Rt. 7, 2 rmle ~ so ulh of Tuppers
Plams OH Non-denomi natmnal ""'lth
Contemporary Pra1se &amp; Worshtp Phto r
Rob BHrber Assoc Pa~Lor Kar~n Davr s
Youth Dtre..:tor Be uy Fulb Sunday
servtces 10 am Wnr.htp &amp; b pm Famtl)'
Ltfr Cla~ s&lt;.'s Wt"d &amp; Thu r n11;IV Ltf~
Groups at 1 pm . Thur&gt; morn ut~ ludte\
Ltfe Group m 10 Outer L1m11-. Youth Ltk
Group nn Wt:d e\ ~mng fr~•m 6 JU 1t1 S 10
Vl'iit us on l m~ at wv. w be thl' lw~ nrg
A!h Streel Chun:h
~9H Ash St . Mlddlepurt-Pu.,tor !&gt; Mork
Morrow &amp; Rodn ry Wallo..cr Su11d11)
School 4 ]0 am Mnrntl\g Wunh tp .
I0 ~0 &lt;1 ~~ &amp; 7 00 pm Wed nt",dll~ Sm to.' l'
· 7.00 p m. Youth Ser VIle- 7 tl() p m
Aljl:tpt' Lire Center
"Fui l-Go,prl l hurd1". Pa~ton Julm &amp;
Pat I) Wad~ . 6(H Srcund AH' M.!&gt;on, 77150 17, Srr\JCe lllne Sunda) 10 ~0 am .
Wrdne ~ da y 7 pm

Wednesd~) Serlt•· ,~

7 r 111

Cllnon l'ah~rnadt• Church
Cltfton W V,t . Sund n Sdtu~&gt;! - 10 ;.t m ,
Worsh1p - 7 pIll \\'elin~:, d .•l S~tltl.t: . 7

pm

Thl' Ark

rhur~h

3773Gro~gt·,C t,~k Rn.ul G:ilhp&lt;oJI., OH
Pa~t(lr J .tnu~

\\ lll:llt.lll SunJa\ Scr\ tees ·
10 30 a m \\ e.l n, .d.n - 7 p m l11unda)
Pr~yer &amp; Pr,n .. ~.: .II h pm n .• -..e, h• r ;J]]
a11e~
I.'I' Cr~
Sund ,t l .\: \\,•dn,,dn~
"'"'"'th~~~hhu,,hlll'! .
tull (, ospt'l Chun:h

ur lht• I 11 ing s ~, h~r
Rt 3:\R, &lt;\mt4Ulll P hhw J,,., ~,, t\ lorrt'
Sef""\' t Ce ~ S.1turd.11 ~ 1~1 ]1111
S11lt n1 Comrnumh Churd1
ll.lt k oF \\,••t C"lumh11' \\ \,1 &lt;'Ill Lt cl lll g
Road Pu-.wl Chmb H., ,u,h 1~1)-ll 6~'i228~. Sun d,t) S&lt;.h1•11i 'J 'o .1m Stmd uy
el't:nt ng "l:f\ lu ~ [10 pm. H1hly Study
\\lcdnc s da~ ~er1 t&lt;c 7 (l(l tml
Uobson Christian hlltm~h1p Church
Jl&lt;t stor H t'r~..:h\'1 Wh 1te Sundt!) St'hnol·
lOi!m.Stmtlt~(hu r.:ll,l'rltn• OJ(l pm
Wcdne•d,l: 1 pm

Abundant Gracr R.t'. I.
IJ2 3 S Tht rd Sl . Mtddltport Pa~tor Ten.·.,~
D,t\IS. Sunday sent,:e. IU ,1 m.
Wednesday serHle. 7 p m

9 1(,~

Faith l' ull Go~pel Chul'(h
Lnng Rottom, Pastor S te\~ Rec:-d. Sunduv
Sl ~ool 9 Je 11 m. Wor-.h•p - q JU am
and 7 p m 'Wedne sd ay . 7 p m , Frtduy lello~sh1p M~ f Vtle 1 p m.

11f lit ahng \lin•~trws
St. Rt. 12-tl.angs,illl', OH
Fu ll Go,pd. Cl P.NOI" Rt•bert &amp; R(1hel1a

H.arrtsonvUie Community Churclt
Pastor Theron Durham , Sunday - Y 10
a.m and 7 p.m , Wednesday- 7 p m
Middleport Communi!} Church
1
575 Pear l St Mi ddleport P~~tor Sam
Anderson "'S UI:tday School 10 am.
Evemng 1 30 p m, . Wednesday Semce •
7 30 pIll
Failh Valley Tabernacle Church
Batley Run R_pud Pastor Re ~ Emmel!
Raw~ o n, Sunday Eventn~ 7. p m..
Thursdlly Sen ICC - 7 r m

Syracuse Mission
1_41I Bndgeman St . Syra cuse. Sunda y
School · 10 am. E~ enm g · 6 p m,
Wednesday Scmcc- 7 p m.
fbzrl Community Church
Off Rt 124. Pastor Ed St:l Han. Sunday
School - q 30 am Worshtp - 10 10 a.m ,
7 30 p m

O)'enillr Community Church
Su nd ay School - 9 30 a m , Worsht p 10.30u m 7pm
Morse Chapel Churth ,
Sunday school - 10 a rn .. Worshtp - II
am, Wed nesday Sef""\l'C- 7 p.m.

Faith Gosptl Church
Long Bottom Sunday School - Y30 a m .
Worshtp - I 0 45 o m . 7.30 p m ,
Wednesday 7 10 p m

Full Gospel Lighthouse
3304.'\ Hiland Road: Ptmwrny Pa~t q r Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - 10 am. E\e mng
7 JO p m Tue~ d ay &amp; Thurs.- 7JO p m

Rt'slnra1111n Chns!1,m t'ello.., ~ hip
lltlupt'l R. r• td '\tht·n~ Pn't11r
Lumu~ (tla t... SunJ,\~ Wnr~htp 10 UO nm
Wcdnc~d.1 y 7 Jlltt
.

llou~r

Mu •Nr Sunda) Sd uml '/ J(l ,Jill .
Wnr~h1p HI ~ 0 .1111 · 7 00 pm . W~d
Ser~ tce 7 (Xl pm
Teom Jesus ~linislms
M~tmg 333 MeehanJl' Street. Pomeroy
OH P&lt;htur EdJte Bacr, S~nt ~ e e1 ery
Sun Ja) III ()(L.I m

Pentecostal

Pf'nlrl'ost~l i\ssrmblv
P,1,h1r Sr /{t ~~J R,t\111&lt;.', Torn,Jdu Rd
Su nd l!) Srhnnl · 10 &lt;1m E\enmg - 1
p m . Wednc&gt;doty St'r\ t~·,.~ 7 p 111

Presbyterian
Harrison I ill{' Pi't'Sh\terlan Church
Pa,l or fl.nlx-11 M.tr-.hall Wor.,htp 9 J 111
\hddltport

Pmb~

lenan

Puswr· J,un~~ Sn)'dl' r Sum!.t~ Sd mn! 10 .
11 m.. \.\llt\lup s.eTI' t t~' J I ~ 111

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulber r) Ht ~ Rd . Pumerm Sutunht)
Sen tn!~ S;~bh.lllt SlhPul • 2 p m .
Wur,hlp - J p m

United Brethren
~II.

Hermnn Unit{'d Hr~lhren
ln ( hrist Clturch
..
Te~a- ('(llfl111Ul11t~ 364 1! Wl cklmm fl.d .
Pa&gt;hlr P~·tcr ~ l;~rtmd.tle Sllnd,t)' Sehoul1,130 am \\lor\h tp · 10 'fl am 7 UO
p m . Wedne~da~ S~n ll' e~ 7 00 p m
Ynutlt gwup mcctmg 2nd &amp; ·hh Su nday~
7 p 111
fdl'n Umlt'd Hrrthrrn in l'hrist
State Rout e dol hl'tween Rceds\'li]e &amp;
Hot:kmgport. Sunda y School- 10 :1 m .•
Sunda~ Wunhtp - II 00 :.1m Wedn~ ~d ay'
S ~ntH'!S - 1 00 p nl P~ )IOI· ~~ Adam
Wtll

Soulh Bethrl Community Church
Stl~er fl.tdgr - P-.sto r Lmd a Damewood.
Sunday Scho11 l - q am , Wor~h1 p Ser ~ •~e
JO a.m Znd and 4th Sunda y

740·992-7713

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

•

your light so shine before
.. IIICU, that they may See YOUr
works and glorify your
ll'atl1er in heaven,"
Matthew 5:1

Sizes available 5x 10 1o 10 x 20

5mnut1 17} Qr.

ii:Mirll qfj!Jr berflOI qf,.. broil
Dillin.! *IllS n amnnn u.IJo
ltiaw.J kl .l.tbry oof!l'illl! CmiiWII«~.
(lli.wJ aNU/11011} Is lk fJIIe

lk someuilal 011/J:Jb hero u-ilb"
Uudi,'ll5 IJ 16) So. ulxllis,.. llliJI'Ili ofan tbe!e !lorillis? Jfu•
mlif halvGod on our side. u• are I~ to f!m'llil. Anti u• Jfuultl
il!iill...l..,~IMiiiMI ,/he&lt;rlru./II.V'' 15 &lt;Ill n•lfr•wl one uilbvtml!l,m.

.... In lilt l.onl and in the Slmlgth.of hl1 might Put on tht whole annor
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Blessed are the pure
in h~art; for they
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Matthew5:8

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Pastor Dewayne Stuller, Sunday School 9.00 am , Worst11p •· 10 am , Youth
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�FAIR SCENES

The Daily Sentinel
.

------ - -...

Page AS

.,

Friday, August.15, aoo8

- - _...

Cowboys have to start
somewhere. Just ask thla
young man participating In
the Small Fry Lead In at
the Open Horse Show. Get
along little doggies!
Beth Sergent/photo

•

· Beth Sergent/photo

The ·market pen cqmpetition was tough durirYg yesterday's Junior Fair Rabbit Show.
Pictured are 4-H exhibitors doing a "rabbit roundup" for the judge who had over 30 pens
to review.
...............
..... _.... .. ... ,., ...... ___...
.._,,_,....- ...
'

~,

__

__________

· Cheri- Hoefllohlplloeo

Video games are big wherever you go. The arcade tent at the fair was no exc;eptlon 11
both the young and the not so young put their skills to the test.
I

jl.,' •
. ·,

I

Submitted photo

Daniel Jenkin's .(far right) took home the ribbon for grand champion showman at the Junior
Fair Market Hog Show. Also pictured (from left) Rebecca Chadwell, swine princess, Audrionna
Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen first runner-up, Mark Gibbs, swine prince.

·-·-

--· -···-·· ....... _...... ·--· ---.._....,_.·-·-·:.·-··

Submitted photo

Submitted photo

Michael Manuel (far left) took home reserve champion showman at the Junior Fair Market
Hog Show. Also pictured (second from left) Daniel Buckley, fair k!n.g, Rebecca Chadwell ,
swine princess, Audrionna Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen· r~ ner- up , Mark
Gibbs, swine prince. .
.

Jackie Jordan (front) showed the reserve champion market hog at this year's Junior Fair
Market Hog Show. Also pictured (from left) Daniel Buckley, fair king, Rebecca Chadwell,
swine princess, Audrionna Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen first runner-up, Mark
Gibbs, swine prince.
·

•

�Page AS

FAIR SCENES

The Daily Sentinel

--

...

Friday, August 15, 2008

---... --- -· ...._..,___ .

--

,

Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

Olympic Roundup, Page B2
Edwards shines for Bills, Page B8 ·

j

I

Friday, August 15, 2008

Eastern
golf soars
past ller
opener

Countdown
to Kickoff
Cowboys have to start
somewhere. Just. ask this
young man participating in
the Small Ff\1 Lead In at
the Open Horse Show. Get
·along little doggies!

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYD AI LYSENTINEL.COM

Beth Sargent/photo

•

DAYS
locAL SCHEDULE
,'GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming high
school varsity sporting ErVI\IIlls irwolvi1g teams
from Gallis and Meigs counties.'

'

FrldiY. August 15
Golf
River Valley, Wellston at
(Fairgreens), 11 a:m.
Mf&gt;nday Ayquat 1 B

Golf
River Valley, Jackson at Gallia Academy
(Cliffside), 4:30p. m .

Vin1on County at Meigs (Pine Hills), 10

· AP photo

Michael Phelps of the United States on his way to winning the gold medal in the me.n's 200-meter individual medley during the swimming competitions in the National Aquatics Center at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing Friday.

a.m.

uold

SPORTS BRIEFS
Bv PAUL NEWBERRY

recorcl I minule, 54.23 seconds - more than two seconds ahead of the next guy.
BEIJING
Michael He knocked off his own
Phelps hung on the lane rope mark of I :54.80 sel at last
in a familiar pose. admiring month\ U.S. trial s. his sixth
another
world record while world record in China.
TUPPERS PLAINS his rivals gasped for breath.
Phelps matched his wins
Eastern High School season Make it. 6-for-6 at the from Athens four years ago ,
sports passes for the 2008- Beijing Games.
where he al so took six golds
09 fall season are currently
Next up: Mark Spitz and along with two bronzes.
on sale. ~asses C!\11 be pur- the· grandes) of Olympic He's already the most sue· cha~ tbe.main office at records: •
•.cessful athlete in Olympic
EHS .. ~lWeen 8 a.m. · and
Blowmg away the field, hi story with 12 golds, but
3:30p.m.
~help_s won the 200-!lleter hi s sights-arc on eight.
Spitz won seven golds at
to · purchase any of the · mdtvtdual medley 111 a
available non-student passes, you must be a resident of
Eastern Local School
District.
An adult pass for the '08
fall sports season may be
purchased for $50. The pass
is good for junior high and
high school volleyball and
football games. ·
·
A student pass may be
purchased by Eastern students for $25 for the '08
junior high and high .school
volleyball and football seasons.
A senior pass may be purchased for the '08 fall sports
season for $10. You must
have a Golden Buckeye
Card to purchase this pass .
The pass is good for junior
high and ·high school volleyball and football games.
An 11dult volleyball pass
may be purchased for $30
and is good for all fall junior
liigh and · high school volleyball matches.
An adult football pass
may be purchased for $25
AP photo
andis good for all fall junior USA'S guard Lebron James reacts after scoring against
high and high school foot- Greece during their men's preliminary basketball game at
ball games.
the Beij ing 2008 Olympics in Beijing Thursday.
·· ::Athletic ticket prices for
!lie 2008-09 school year for
high school and junior high
· gjlmes will be $4 for adults
and $2 for students.

Fall sports passes
available at EHS

'!

.

\
~"';...
Beth Sargent/photo

The market pen cqmpetition was· tough duri11g yesterday's Junior Fair Rabbit Show.
Pictured are 4-H exhibitors doing a "rabbit roundup" for the judge who had over 30 pens
to review.
•

~·---·

••

•&gt;7

··~-~·-.................

..

--·~-

....

-----·---.....

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

Charlene Hoalllchlphoto

Video games are big wherever you go. The arcade tent at .the fair was no exception as
both the young and the not so young put their skills to the test
'

.

·~

....... .__.,. ..,..

SubmiHed ph~to

Daniel Jenkins (far right) took home the ribbon for grand champion showman at the Junior
Fair Market Hog Show. Also pictured (from left) Rebecca Chadwell, swine princess, Audrionna
Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen first runner-up, Mark Gibbs, swine prince . .

US team moves
on to medal round

'

Meigs Athletic
~oosters to meet .

SubmiHid photo

SubmiHid photo

Michael Manuel (far left) took home reserve champion showman at the Junior Fair Market
Hog Show. Also pictured (second from left) Daniel Buckley, fair king, Rebecca Chadwell,
swine princess, Audrionna Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen runner-up, Mark
Gibbs, swine prince.

Jackie Jordan (front) showed the reserve champion market hog at this year's ~unior Fair
Market Hog Show. Also pictured (from left) Daniel Buckley, fair king, Rebecca Chadwell,
swine princess, Audrionna Pullins, fair queen, Ashley Life, fair queen first runner-up, Mark
Gibbs. swine prince.

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bv BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.. .
,
BEIJING - It s ofllcml
now. This is NOT Japan and
: 'ROCKSPRINGS - The. the
. . 2006
World
Meigs High School Athletic Champtonshtps, not to menB.oosters will meet on tion A~hens and the 2004
Tuesday, August 19, at 7 Olymptcs.
This is Beijing an'd the
p.m. to finalize plans for the
upcoming football season. 2008. Olympics, a~d the
Anyone involved or inter- U.S. ts back m men s bascsted in participating are ketball.
These Americans, who
urged to attend.
looked so lost two years ago
at the World Championship
in ,Japan, appear to have
found their Olympic way in
CoNr'AcrUs
China.
Batting away balls or
1-740-446-2342 e&gt;d. 33
swatting shots on seemin'gly
every possession late in the
FIX -1·740-446·3008
second
quarter,
the
Americans broke open a
aportaOm~dallyaentlnel.com

close game and went on to a
92-69 victory Thursday
night to clinch a spot in the
medal round.
"We played like we want· ed to win. We played together," U.S. guard Dwyane
Wade said. "We were very
aware of their offensive sets
we were very aware of thei;
personnel and we played
like that. So we were kind of
a step in front of what they
wanted to do' because we
kind . of knew everytning
.already."
The Americans were also
able to l'ind the range 'on
jump shots when the Greeks
went to a zone defense to
slow them down. Kobe
Bryant, who entered the·
Please see USA. 88

the 1972 Munich Games.
Phelps has two more events
to leave little doubt he's the
greatest Olympian ever.
li.yan Lochte tried to pull
off a daunting double, going
against Phelps just 29 minules after swimming the
final of the 200 backstroke.
He cuuldn 't keep up, though
he did hold on for bronze.
Luszlo Cseh of Hungury
picked up his third silver of
the games - all of them
trailing Phelps.
When the official results

were posied, Phelps extended his. right hand to Lochte
in the next lane. The friends
shook hands and patted each
oiher on the head.
Later, they yukked it up
on the medal stand before
Phelps hustled off to grab
hi s racing gear; he had to
come back right for the
semifinals of the I 00 butterfly.
.
.
.
"Tswitched from my dress
sweats to my parka, shoe s.

.

Please see Phelps. Bl

GLOUSTER - Talk about
making a l'irst impression.
Eastern ~o lf wasted little
time getting the 2008 season
off to a grcal start after post·
ing a 30·
stroke victory
over
Miller on
.Tuesday
during . the
Tri- Valley
Conference
Ho ck in g
Division
opener for
both schools
Amsbary
at
Forest
Hill s Golf
Club in Athens County..
The Eagks I 1-0) posted a
winning leum score of 184,
easily coming in ahead of the
host Falcons tally of 214.
Freshman Christian Amsbary
also made a splash'in his l'irst
varsity COllies\ wilh the Green
.and White . firing the low
round score of .:r3 to earn
medalist honors.
EHS sophomore Colin
Connolly was one shot of the
pace with a 44, followed by
freshman Jay Warner with a
46. Senior Dwight Beaumont
rounded out the Eagles team
tally with a 51.
Miller (0-1) was led by the
duo of Matt Weiner and Kyle
Wimermllle with mmch1ng
45s, followed by Nick Weiner
· with a 58. Megan Scott completed the MHS scoring with
a 66.
,
Eastern returns to TVC
Hocking pluy ne xt Tuesday
when it trave ls to Belpre to
pluy Federal Hocking , at
Oxbow Country Club. That
event will stan at 4:30p.m.

.

"It is our go·al .to provide you with
excellent
medical treatment. while
.
helping you maintain physical health."
.• ···i'·.~4.,.,. . .
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to 5p.m.
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,Mipdlepor4 OH
I

• Telep.. hon~: .

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(740) 992-6434

Tess Simon, MD
Internal Medicine
1 Point Pleasant Office:
Tuesdays, Thursdays &amp; Fridays
PVH Medical Office Center
2414 Jefferson Avenue
o Accepting New Patients
Point Pleasant, WV
o Most Insurances Accepted
o Same Day Appointments Available

PLEASANT VALLEY·HOSPITAL
Tk ffl/l(tt, of P~fe,t~iol(ak

�•

Page B2 • TI1e D-c1ily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Friday, August 15, 2008

_ Friday August 15 , 2008 ·
.

.

"

111111

The Daily Sentinel-• Page B3

.tnydailysentincl.com

Liukin edges Johnson for all-around gymnastics gold
REIJI\( ; 1.-\P t
'\,tsti.t
ol the L 'r ttlt~d St;ne,
11 on tit,· 01: nq1r,· ~old

witho11t ~~ gl &gt;ld de.. , pite -.wim·
llll ll ~ fi\~ inJi\ idual events.
Site scltkd for a si lver. two
btU!l/t'' C!lld a p:tir of fourthpl.tce finishes in lll'r other

L iu ~i n

11lt'Lbl in \\llllll'll·.., ~\ l ll ll :t\11 !..:'-1 FridL1\. hL'lllln~- IL'&lt;tlll-

malc and friend- Sh'all n
Juh n-..on.

'1-.,nnis

Liu "i n. '' hn ... e fathl'r ''a\ a

Sn·tJllll'll fur a

t.lmthk · ~o iJ rnc•Jali , t fur the.
So\ iL'l (' nion· ~0 ' ca r~ ;~~n.
!'itll,ltt·d 11 ith 61.1~5 poitit.s.
more than a half-poin t ahead
o r Jnhn ... on. th e rci ~ nin ~
11 nrld ch;nnp.ion . Jt&gt;Jl n,on
i'ini,heJ 11 ith 6~.7~5.
Yan~ Yilin or China \\'t;n

kr.-. lliL'l'ti n'c! in thl' women\

fiua l.

1=~dercr leaves with his
third straight Olympic disap-

L. iukin p;tccd hac k · atltl
&lt;!'&gt;

JohlhOn compciL'J

till fluor. the linalc·ompetitnr
or the t.Ja:. clappittg as her
tc·amtn;tte lloaled hi~h in the
air. But in the e nd~ it "''"
Liuki n who .soared.
\Vh ~n

Ju hn:-.on\ st:O're

wa~

puintmenl. He also goes

. ctii'H) know ing hi s 4112--year
r~ i~n as rh c world :sio. I will
cnJ 'nc .xt week. replaced hy
S p;~in 's Rafael Nadal.
Sc rl' ll &lt;.l \Villi am ~ overcame
AP photo tll'o t1tatch poin ts, but ultiU.S. gymnast Nastia Liuk tn performs her floor.routine dur- mately lost to Deme)l(ieva 3ing the womens ' gymnastics indivtdua t att:a round f1nals at 6. 6--l. 6:.1. Li near Venus
the Beij tng 2008 Olympics in Berjing Friday.
·
William s 7-5. 7-5.
Top-"cdcu Mike and Bob
tcri'inal &gt;. hy knocking \liT a

and Liukin saw "he
\V &lt;h
th l' winn_t:r .the
'' qul'l'l l ll r• gy mna~ti c:-." a:-.
Bel;t Karolv i likes to call it .
- k'&lt;tr-. filic:J her eye~ and BL'I!.!ian d uo. and :-. hooter
!'; !lite r and coach- Valeri Mall- F.mntnns - w110"
grabbed. her in a bearltuQ.
- c. t.ec·lt wit·•,, ,·111·c·,1dv~ J1·,·1s· ,·1
. :-. qu l'Ciin~
hn
ti
ght
fm:
~ev · ~old
and a \t. lvcr .
•
era I !lltnu le'.
achan,·ct) tolhe t:r·,J,·tl,.· tll. tit•~•
J1l h LL'd.

111, pr\?\ ious eigh t

Ame ri can k l't in men 's sin-

'' llllli;1g dllllo..,t t: \·crythlll1!.
fo rt h.

had \\'on only a si n-

\\'i( h Federer.
~noc~ed !tim out 6A. 7-6
(2).
Bl ake is the only

Jo l1ll\OI1

\\' Jth

·

Bla~c.
:-.~t in
ma t ch~'

gle

Liu kin and JnhtNII l ha1·e
bc·cn i'ricndlv ril'als the last
\ l'~tr....

final

hctllvt'n l·cdcrcr and Rafael
i\:;!Lial Or tltc Williams sis-

tilL' hr~ll/ L' meda l.

l wo

m~n\

Da\' . 7 · 111 13~i jin!! be12:rn 50-me t ~r prone rifle even t
under ntce 11cathcr~ the -,tir trail ing a Ukrain'ian shooter.

Benoit Caranohc o f France

won I he bror11.c.
Hiroyuki Tomita. the only
other man to win the world
titl e since AthetK fini,hcd
fourth . Fabian Hambucch en.
the :-;i Jver rncdu l i~t at \vorhf s
last war. fe ll !'rnm the hi&lt;&gt;h.
bar. his ; ignaturc CI'Cnt. a~d
wound up\eventh.

scrubbed clean by the min Another American in the
thai
disc·ombllhulatcJ ti'Cn l. Michael Anti. was
Thur""''. ·, sc hedule . Thai ni .ntll in ctualifyin.~.
- J·ust
Yan~ i~ Chintl 's' seco nd
al so made thi np pleasant nmsing a spot in the fina l mcn 's-all-around champion.
lnt: the ~ll.OOO or 'II lolk s round.
joining IY% champ ion Li
I1cac Icd to the Bird\ Nc&gt;t for
!\len's ,.,o.vmnastics
x·1ao.s 11uang. Winnin g :1t
tile start ol track and fie ld
WI11·J··, CJ11·11 ,.1·s· y.,111 ,_, ""'
'" .t 1lOtllC nw t.J C ·II c1·en htiter.
evellt,.
added the indi vid ual ~-old to .
Swimming
·: \ tl lL'ricot n Ty:-.on Gay eu:-.i· the ll'am tiLle. AmCricans
Dllrin g .
qu;.liifyin~
ly made it throu gh the fir&gt;! weren 't ab le 10 add anything Thursday
ntght. Kati e Huff
mund ot'1 he 100-meterdash. . to their bronze collection. fu1u Kate Ziegler t'itzleu in
World rccon.t-holder Csain Jonatha n Horton finished 800-meter frccs ls k heat s.
Bolt ;nlll fel low J;unaican. ni nth and Sasha Artemev With no Atllcric·:n, in the
·
Asala Powell ;tl sn advan.:et.l ,,..IS Jlth
•
flllals. the U.S. wtll he , hut
~\tith Ca.l\1!. ·w1nninu 'th ei r
Th1ng.-. .might have been out. American ' had mcdalccl
heat s. The quarterrimlls were Jiffen:m t if reigning champ in it at eve ry Ol ym pil'.'
.set for Friua v el'enin!!. The Paul Hamm · was hcalthv. except the I'!HO hoycotl ye ar
final is Sa1urclay ni ght~
Withottt him. il was Yang\; and 1\)76. with fii'C s tra i~ lll
In other early al'lion . to lose and he never came guld.s from I YX-l-2000.
beach volleyba ll star~ Misty close to thai. winning by
For Hoff. it ;d..; o tllt' lllb a
M~P,:~ Tr e anor
anJ Kerri nearl y three points · over second strai ght Ol ympi cs
W;ti,h adl'an.:cd to the qua r- Kohei U.:himura of Japan.
L

Bryan advanceJ to the se mi·

After posting shutout&gt; and
no-hitters in its first two
games. the Americans faced
their tirst dt&gt;lkit since the
.gold-medal game in 2000.
And it took some weird circumstanccs. .
The Canadians scored a
run without a hit when an
umpire ruled that pitcher
Monica Abbott made three
illegal pitches: her violation
.was losing contact with the
pitching rubber. One of 1he
illegal pitch do-overs led to
an error by center fielder
Caitlin Lowe, her first in 123
games since joining the U.S.
team in 2()()5. Before that.
she went 237 games without
a miscue during four perfect
yea rs in the field as an AllAmerican at' Arizona.
The game was postponed
in the fourt h inning because
of the 'rain. and the teams
wi ll resume play Friday fo llowing the U.S.-Japan game.
which .begins at noon.
Canada will play China at
9:30a.m .. and then will have .
to wait mound to play the
Americans, who have won
16 straight at the Olympics
and are seeking their fourth
gold medal in softball's last
swing in the games until at
least 20 I 6.
·

fi t1al ; in doubles by beating
l .lcy ton Hewitt and Chris
Guccione of Australia 6-4 .
6- .1.
Baseball
Men's lmskctball
Rnckets star Yau Ming
Stephen Strasburg ·of San
'wrccl :10 points. to lead Diego State took a no-hitter
ChiHa past Angola H5-68 for into the seve nth inning.
tile hosts· first wrn of the Man LaPorta hit a three-run
tournamenl. &lt;tnd Lakers cen- homer and. Man Brown
ter Pau G;t,ol scored 13 in added a solo shot as the
Spa in \ 72-59 victory over Americans bou nced back
Dirk
Now i1Ai
and from losing their opener by
Germany". Nowilzki was beating t.he Netherlands 7.-0.
held It&gt; I I po in ts by a
l he game was · c&lt;~ ll ed off
dci'en se Lbig ned to shut him after eight innings following
down.
a second rain delay. The
l'lttcks center And rew Dutch protested the decision
Bngu1 ·was less or a factor because they had loaded the
!'or Austmlia. but they still bases with n.one out in the
heat lrutt 106-6S behind 24 ninth inning, but it w&lt;~s
P"ints from Brad Newley. · denied by baseball's internaA '"'· Ri mantas Kaukenas tiona] federation.
,c ored 20 poim s to lead
Cuba beat Canada 7-6 and
Litlmmia pa.st Russia 86-79, Japan beat Taiwan 6-1.
and Argentina bcal Croatia
. Fencing
77-5.\.
The Three Musketeers of
Softball
the U.S .. women's saber

team weren't so ·good as a

team. After sweepi ng the
individual medals. Mariel
Zagunis. Sada Jac'obson and
Becca Ward settled for
bronLe after a surprising
loss in the semifi nals. They
were knocked off by
Ukraine. which went on to
win gold.
Wrestling
Remember
Rulon
Gardner's glorious victory
in Sydney? Good. because
there won' t be one like it
this time.
Adam Wheeler unexpectedly won bronze at 96 kilograms. but that was it as
Dremiel Byers and Brad
Vering, Americans' top
Greco-Roman
wrestlers,
were bounced.
Golds we nt to Cuba's
Mijain Lopez in the 120kilogram division, Aslanbek
Khu shtov in 96 kg and
Italy's Andrea Minguzzi in
84 kg.
Shooting
China's Du Li was sup·
posed 10 win the tirst gold of
the Olympics. When she fin.
ished fift h, she considered
dropping out of the: games.
She stuck around. though,
and got a gold after aJ.I, winning the women 's 50-mete r, .
three-pos ition rille event
and setting ·an Olympic
record in points.
Katerina Emmons, the
Czech Republic shooter
who won that first event,
took the silver. She is married 10 American shooter
Matt Emmons. American
Jammie Beyerle was fifth.
In
skeet
shooting,
Ame ri can Kim Rhode was
part of a th ree-way tie
decided by a shoot-off - in
the rain . Rhode wound up
with a silver to go with the
double trl1p gold she won in
1996 and 2004; .the
wome n's ve rsion was elimi nated before Beijing.
Italy's Chiara Cainero
took 'the gold.

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Friday, August 15, 2008

_ Friday August 15 , 2008 ·
.

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111111

The Daily Sentinel-• Page B3

.tnydailysentincl.com

Liukin edges Johnson for all-around gymnastics gold
REIJI\( ; 1.-\P t
'\,tsti.t
ol the L 'r ttlt~d St;ne,
11 on tit,· 01: nq1r,· ~old

witho11t ~~ gl &gt;ld de.. , pite -.wim·
llll ll ~ fi\~ inJi\ idual events.
Site scltkd for a si lver. two
btU!l/t'' C!lld a p:tir of fourthpl.tce finishes in lll'r other

L iu ~i n

11lt'Lbl in \\llllll'll·.., ~\ l ll ll :t\11 !..:'-1 FridL1\. hL'lllln~- IL'&lt;tlll-

malc and friend- Sh'all n
Juh n-..on.

'1-.,nnis

Liu "i n. '' hn ... e fathl'r ''a\ a

Sn·tJllll'll fur a

t.lmthk · ~o iJ rnc•Jali , t fur the.
So\ iL'l (' nion· ~0 ' ca r~ ;~~n.
!'itll,ltt·d 11 ith 61.1~5 poitit.s.
more than a half-poin t ahead
o r Jnhn ... on. th e rci ~ nin ~
11 nrld ch;nnp.ion . Jt&gt;Jl n,on
i'ini,heJ 11 ith 6~.7~5.
Yan~ Yilin or China \\'t;n

kr.-. lliL'l'ti n'c! in thl' women\

fiua l.

1=~dercr leaves with his
third straight Olympic disap-

L. iukin p;tccd hac k · atltl
&lt;!'&gt;

JohlhOn compciL'J

till fluor. the linalc·ompetitnr
or the t.Ja:. clappittg as her
tc·amtn;tte lloaled hi~h in the
air. But in the e nd~ it "''"
Liuki n who .soared.
\Vh ~n

Ju hn:-.on\ st:O're

wa~

puintmenl. He also goes

. ctii'H) know ing hi s 4112--year
r~ i~n as rh c world :sio. I will
cnJ 'nc .xt week. replaced hy
S p;~in 's Rafael Nadal.
Sc rl' ll &lt;.l \Villi am ~ overcame
AP photo tll'o t1tatch poin ts, but ultiU.S. gymnast Nastia Liuk tn performs her floor.routine dur- mately lost to Deme)l(ieva 3ing the womens ' gymnastics indivtdua t att:a round f1nals at 6. 6--l. 6:.1. Li near Venus
the Beij tng 2008 Olympics in Berjing Friday.
·
William s 7-5. 7-5.
Top-"cdcu Mike and Bob
tcri'inal &gt;. hy knocking \liT a

and Liukin saw "he
\V &lt;h
th l' winn_t:r .the
'' qul'l'l l ll r• gy mna~ti c:-." a:-.
Bel;t Karolv i likes to call it .
- k'&lt;tr-. filic:J her eye~ and BL'I!.!ian d uo. and :-. hooter
!'; !lite r and coach- Valeri Mall- F.mntnns - w110"
grabbed. her in a bearltuQ.
- c. t.ec·lt wit·•,, ,·111·c·,1dv~ J1·,·1s· ,·1
. :-. qu l'Ciin~
hn
ti
ght
fm:
~ev · ~old
and a \t. lvcr .
•
era I !lltnu le'.
achan,·ct) tolhe t:r·,J,·tl,.· tll. tit•~•
J1l h LL'd.

111, pr\?\ ious eigh t

Ame ri can k l't in men 's sin-

'' llllli;1g dllllo..,t t: \·crythlll1!.
fo rt h.

had \\'on only a si n-

\\'i( h Federer.
~noc~ed !tim out 6A. 7-6
(2).
Bl ake is the only

Jo l1ll\OI1

\\' Jth

·

Bla~c.
:-.~t in
ma t ch~'

gle

Liu kin and JnhtNII l ha1·e
bc·cn i'ricndlv ril'als the last
\ l'~tr....

final

hctllvt'n l·cdcrcr and Rafael
i\:;!Lial Or tltc Williams sis-

tilL' hr~ll/ L' meda l.

l wo

m~n\

Da\' . 7 · 111 13~i jin!! be12:rn 50-me t ~r prone rifle even t
under ntce 11cathcr~ the -,tir trail ing a Ukrain'ian shooter.

Benoit Caranohc o f France

won I he bror11.c.
Hiroyuki Tomita. the only
other man to win the world
titl e since AthetK fini,hcd
fourth . Fabian Hambucch en.
the :-;i Jver rncdu l i~t at \vorhf s
last war. fe ll !'rnm the hi&lt;&gt;h.
bar. his ; ignaturc CI'Cnt. a~d
wound up\eventh.

scrubbed clean by the min Another American in the
thai
disc·ombllhulatcJ ti'Cn l. Michael Anti. was
Thur""''. ·, sc hedule . Thai ni .ntll in ctualifyin.~.
- J·ust
Yan~ i~ Chintl 's' seco nd
al so made thi np pleasant nmsing a spot in the fina l mcn 's-all-around champion.
lnt: the ~ll.OOO or 'II lolk s round.
joining IY% champ ion Li
I1cac Icd to the Bird\ Nc&gt;t for
!\len's ,.,o.vmnastics
x·1ao.s 11uang. Winnin g :1t
tile start ol track and fie ld
WI11·J··, CJ11·11 ,.1·s· y.,111 ,_, ""'
'" .t 1lOtllC nw t.J C ·II c1·en htiter.
evellt,.
added the indi vid ual ~-old to .
Swimming
·: \ tl lL'ricot n Ty:-.on Gay eu:-.i· the ll'am tiLle. AmCricans
Dllrin g .
qu;.liifyin~
ly made it throu gh the fir&gt;! weren 't ab le 10 add anything Thursday
ntght. Kati e Huff
mund ot'1 he 100-meterdash. . to their bronze collection. fu1u Kate Ziegler t'itzleu in
World rccon.t-holder Csain Jonatha n Horton finished 800-meter frccs ls k heat s.
Bolt ;nlll fel low J;unaican. ni nth and Sasha Artemev With no Atllcric·:n, in the
·
Asala Powell ;tl sn advan.:et.l ,,..IS Jlth
•
flllals. the U.S. wtll he , hut
~\tith Ca.l\1!. ·w1nninu 'th ei r
Th1ng.-. .might have been out. American ' had mcdalccl
heat s. The quarterrimlls were Jiffen:m t if reigning champ in it at eve ry Ol ym pil'.'
.set for Friua v el'enin!!. The Paul Hamm · was hcalthv. except the I'!HO hoycotl ye ar
final is Sa1urclay ni ght~
Withottt him. il was Yang\; and 1\)76. with fii'C s tra i~ lll
In other early al'lion . to lose and he never came guld.s from I YX-l-2000.
beach volleyba ll star~ Misty close to thai. winning by
For Hoff. it ;d..; o tllt' lllb a
M~P,:~ Tr e anor
anJ Kerri nearl y three points · over second strai ght Ol ympi cs
W;ti,h adl'an.:cd to the qua r- Kohei U.:himura of Japan.
L

Bryan advanceJ to the se mi·

After posting shutout&gt; and
no-hitters in its first two
games. the Americans faced
their tirst dt&gt;lkit since the
.gold-medal game in 2000.
And it took some weird circumstanccs. .
The Canadians scored a
run without a hit when an
umpire ruled that pitcher
Monica Abbott made three
illegal pitches: her violation
.was losing contact with the
pitching rubber. One of 1he
illegal pitch do-overs led to
an error by center fielder
Caitlin Lowe, her first in 123
games since joining the U.S.
team in 2()()5. Before that.
she went 237 games without
a miscue during four perfect
yea rs in the field as an AllAmerican at' Arizona.
The game was postponed
in the fourt h inning because
of the 'rain. and the teams
wi ll resume play Friday fo llowing the U.S.-Japan game.
which .begins at noon.
Canada will play China at
9:30a.m .. and then will have .
to wait mound to play the
Americans, who have won
16 straight at the Olympics
and are seeking their fourth
gold medal in softball's last
swing in the games until at
least 20 I 6.
·

fi t1al ; in doubles by beating
l .lcy ton Hewitt and Chris
Guccione of Australia 6-4 .
6- .1.
Baseball
Men's lmskctball
Rnckets star Yau Ming
Stephen Strasburg ·of San
'wrccl :10 points. to lead Diego State took a no-hitter
ChiHa past Angola H5-68 for into the seve nth inning.
tile hosts· first wrn of the Man LaPorta hit a three-run
tournamenl. &lt;tnd Lakers cen- homer and. Man Brown
ter Pau G;t,ol scored 13 in added a solo shot as the
Spa in \ 72-59 victory over Americans bou nced back
Dirk
Now i1Ai
and from losing their opener by
Germany". Nowilzki was beating t.he Netherlands 7.-0.
held It&gt; I I po in ts by a
l he game was · c&lt;~ ll ed off
dci'en se Lbig ned to shut him after eight innings following
down.
a second rain delay. The
l'lttcks center And rew Dutch protested the decision
Bngu1 ·was less or a factor because they had loaded the
!'or Austmlia. but they still bases with n.one out in the
heat lrutt 106-6S behind 24 ninth inning, but it w&lt;~s
P"ints from Brad Newley. · denied by baseball's internaA '"'· Ri mantas Kaukenas tiona] federation.
,c ored 20 poim s to lead
Cuba beat Canada 7-6 and
Litlmmia pa.st Russia 86-79, Japan beat Taiwan 6-1.
and Argentina bcal Croatia
. Fencing
77-5.\.
The Three Musketeers of
Softball
the U.S .. women's saber

team weren't so ·good as a

team. After sweepi ng the
individual medals. Mariel
Zagunis. Sada Jac'obson and
Becca Ward settled for
bronLe after a surprising
loss in the semifi nals. They
were knocked off by
Ukraine. which went on to
win gold.
Wrestling
Remember
Rulon
Gardner's glorious victory
in Sydney? Good. because
there won' t be one like it
this time.
Adam Wheeler unexpectedly won bronze at 96 kilograms. but that was it as
Dremiel Byers and Brad
Vering, Americans' top
Greco-Roman
wrestlers,
were bounced.
Golds we nt to Cuba's
Mijain Lopez in the 120kilogram division, Aslanbek
Khu shtov in 96 kg and
Italy's Andrea Minguzzi in
84 kg.
Shooting
China's Du Li was sup·
posed 10 win the tirst gold of
the Olympics. When she fin.
ished fift h, she considered
dropping out of the: games.
She stuck around. though,
and got a gold after aJ.I, winning the women 's 50-mete r, .
three-pos ition rille event
and setting ·an Olympic
record in points.
Katerina Emmons, the
Czech Republic shooter
who won that first event,
took the silver. She is married 10 American shooter
Matt Emmons. American
Jammie Beyerle was fifth.
In
skeet
shooting,
Ame ri can Kim Rhode was
part of a th ree-way tie
decided by a shoot-off - in
the rain . Rhode wound up
with a silver to go with the
double trl1p gold she won in
1996 and 2004; .the
wome n's ve rsion was elimi nated before Beijing.
Italy's Chiara Cainero
took 'the gold.

..

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SIIIIttS

'I' I~ I~ ' S
S (~ II 0 0 1.. II 1\ f) S
0

~I' II 1\ I.. I..

NI I{ I~ IIi\() S

1., ill. I.. Ill\ S I~ IlLl i.. I.

•.

.
"

I~ 0 (,'I' IIi\ I. I..

•,

lr 0 I.. J.. I~V lli\l. l.
It Nln~ I, 1l))S

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Open:Mon·Sallvam--ltllll',

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Ever9 stor9 Has

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1~1.. 1101\7

SI.. IU~VI~S
tlorth 2nd five.
Middleport, OH !I 0 (J fJ, II () lJ 1\ Ill) S
· (~IIIN S'l'lli\PS
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Come &amp;See
Our Wide variety of

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~~ . ' . \"""'J

on the river

SCRAPS@@ K ST@RE
102 W, Main • Pomeroy, OH • 992·3919 .
Mon, 10-7, Tues..fri. 10-5, Sat 9-6
Closed Sunday
.

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fMfJiillliUI~\HII:II)§
~ on the river

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GOOD LUCK TO ALL
AREA GOLFERS, FOOTBALL PLAYERS,
VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS, CHEERLEADERS,
AND BAND MEMBERS THIS SEASON!

.. ".·~..
,.

N. 2nd Ave • Middleport, OH
740-992·5627

(Mull PrfiMI Coopon)

•

•

Main •PomerO!J,

i

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.'

...

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S. IIOI~S

IJA'I, IIi\() S
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Ill~ A ll 'I' f) (J 1\ ll )) S
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Expires B/22&lt;118

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or;/1/dt~Ai 6/at()/11,&amp;~llntn?
Corner of Rt. 7 &amp; Hiland Rd • Brick Building
(Next To Nationwide Ins.)
. 33105 Hiland Road • Pomeroy, OH
!il'!i':""t"l~"'"'
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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday. August 15. 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

\!rrihune - Sentinel ·- l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!
~

Galli a
County,

II you have a question or a c_omment, write; NASCAR This Week . cjo The Gaston Gazette, PO. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

OH

All times Eastern

Sprint Cup
1 Race : 3M Performance 400

~.e!!nt Cup
3M Performance
400.
1 p.m., Sunday

Nationwide Series ·
Carta&lt; 2~ -~3 p.m., Saturday

Truck Series

,

o~-R~e~illy~2~0~0.~---- Lf•lk1

'

Clll.ollllllll-

7:30 p.m., Aug. 20

'
.
at bay. Two days before the seer
1 Where: M1ch1gan lnternat1on· son's 22nd race, Jeff Gordon
'" al Speedway. Brooklyn 12.0
had said he rated Busch no
mi.}. 200 laps/400 miles.
more than the third cho1ce in
· ' 1 When: Sunday. Aug. 1t
the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
Busch then went out and led 52
• Last year's w'nner: Kurt
, Bu sch, Dodge.
of the 90 laps and won for the
I ..Quallfylng record: Ryan
eighth time this season. GorNewman. Dodge, 194.232
don. by the way, finished 29th.
mpli, June 18, 2005
Shortly after takmg the check·
• Race record : Dale Jarrett.
ered nag. Busch said. 'Jia in-ca r
Ford. 173.997 mph, June 13.
rad 1o transmission: ~ Th ey keep
1999.
on playing these mind games.
;...., • Last race: Kyle Busch anand we'll JUSt keep on winning.
• , swered the critics arid quieted
Thi nk about this for a week,
the sp1n doctors. Busch , who
boys.· Marcos _Ambrose f1nished
.., had never finished better than
third 1n only his third Spnnt Cup
'l seventh at Watkins Glen Interrace. followed by Juan Pablo
nationaL polished off a sweep
Montoya, Martin Truex Jr., Kevin
of the two NASCAR road races,
Harvick and 2006-()7 champion
keeping his teammate and
Jimm1e Johnson. Denny Hamlin,
2007 winner of the Centur1on
Carl Edwaros and Kurt Busch
Boats at the Glen, Tony Stewart. also finished in the top 10.

:1

• So much for the notion that
Kyle Busch is feeling the heat.
He performed faultlessly at
Watkins Glen and effectively
clinched the top seed in the
Chase a month early.

Nationwide

Craftsman Truck

1 Race: Carfax 250
1 Where: Michigan Interna-

Race: 0 Reilly 200
1 Where: Bristoi{Tenn.} Mo·
tor Speedway 1533 mi.),
200 laps/ 106.6 miles.
1 When: Wednesday. Aug.
20
.

tional Speedway. Brooklyn
(2.0 mi.}. 1251aps/250
miles.
1 When: Saturday. Aug. 16.
1 Last year's winner: Denny
Hamlin. Chevrolet.
1 Q4atlfylng record: Greg
Biffle. Ford. 186.548 mph.
Aug. 19.2007.
1 Race record: Todd Bod·
ine, Cbevrolet , 162.749
mph, Aug. 19,2000 .
• Last week : Marcos AmOrose drove a Ford to v1ctory
at Watkins Glen, marking
the Australian driver's first
victory m a major NASCAR

touring se ries.

t'dl~il%1 \ 1 ";!(; .2

1

0

June 15

Aug.17 c:::n-tl '

I

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

i -,.

c
MARCOS AMBROSE

SPRINT CUP

5

.r-

,mgs for next year are at Stewart Haas Rac~ng, Richard Chit-'
dress Racing and Penske.

~ -WIIo's not -

Eighteenth
place at the Glen probably put an
end to Bnan Viel&lt;ers' Chase
hopes .... The same could be
said for D8'j\ona 500 \\1nner
Ryan Newman, who finished
26th.

edit,

the right to

reject or cancel any

ad at

any time.
» Errors
Must
B
eported · on the firs

ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglster

will

esponsible

b

for

n

ore than the cost o
he space occ upie
the error and onl
he first inserti on.

W

hall not be liable lo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omis

an advertise
ent. Corrections will
made in the firs
vallable edition.

c J c...dJ.r:

/lJ_r- ~J J J
C ~- ;:.'1 J~r( j ;-yr;uj 1JiJJ! ;(.;; ·._! )~:~·)

In current times, changes
are disruptive for the fan

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Marcos Ambrose had a great.Ume at Watkins Glen lnternaUonal Speedway. Alter winning the Nationwide Series race on Saturday, the
31-yeai·old
driver finished third In the Sprint CUp. race. The driver admits. he had "the right strategy when you come from
'
. the back:'

arcos
Ambrose great at the Glen, admits there's still much to learn about ovals
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Marcos Ambrose, who came to
. NASCAR from the Australian island
known as Tasmania, will never forget
the upstate New York hamlet known
as Watkins Glen.
The historic road course was the
scene of Ambrose's magical weekend.
He followed up a Nationwide Series
victory with a third-place finish in
only hi s third Sprint Cup race, the
Centurion Boats at the Glen.
Kyle Busch, in winning the race,
finished it in the same position he
started. Ambrose started 43rd, or
dead last, thanks to a qualifying rainout. The finish was the best by the
Wood Brothers team since Ricky
Rudd's runner-up fini sh at lnfineon
Raceway in Julie 2005. Ambrose's performance was 17 positions better than

·any previous finish by the No. 21 Ford
this year.
"It felt like l passed everyone three
times," said Ambrose, 31, after ~inish­
ing behind only Busch and Tony Stewart and ahead of Juan Pablo Montoya,
'whd had a bit more name recognition
when he migrated here.
· "Some guys, just through the cycle
of pit stops, I did pass three or four
times out there," said Ambrose . "We
passed quite a few on the track. We
passed quite a few in the pits, too, just ·
with our strategy. I wasn't overtaken
all day, which I'm proud of, and we did
a lot of passing. You have to have the
right strategy when you come from
the back. "
By his own admission, Ambrose has
a lot more to learn about ovals.
"There's a fair chance of getting
humbled again next week at Michio
gan," he said.

Ambrose won't .drive the No. 21
next year, bu ~for one day, he brought
back a hint of the magic once evoked
by one of NASCAR's truly historic
teams.
·
'.' I don't want to be labeled a road
racer, by the way," he said. "I'm lOt h
in the Nationwide Series points, so I'm
trying to make it as a NASCAR driver
full stop, not just a road racer. I'm really excited I've been given an·opportunity and I've been able to make the ·
most of it."
Ambrose had a unique opportuni ty
to reflect on what was happening
when th e Cup race was stopped for
more than 43 minutes to clean up a
huge crash on the S3rd lap.
"When I'm lining up there on that
red flag and! realized where I was ;·
behind Tony (Stewart) and in front of
all those other great drivers. it wa s
just areal thrill," he said.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

Current

) All

rate card

Rear

Estat

dvertisements

the Federa
air Housing Act o

968. '
)This
newspape
coopts Qnly hel
anted ads meet_in
OE standards.

&gt;we will not knowing
adver

y acctpt any

tsement in violation

I the law.

Now selll ng: .
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft Parts
• Engines, Transfer Cases &amp; Transmissions .
• Aftermarket Replacement Sheet Metal &amp; Components
• For All Makes of Vehicles

(740) 992-2155

HOLZER CLINIC

~

·d

;::::::"::·==~

r

GI\T\\\AY

Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010

Chlld/Erderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgeratlon ............................... B~O
Equipment for Aent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .............................•............ 610
Farms for Aent ............................................ ~430
Farms for Sale ...................................-........... 330
For Lease ............ .'.....•..•.•............................. 490
For Sale ........ ................................................ SBS
For Sale or Trade •..... ... ......... :......: ............... 590
Frullt &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ........................ .. ...................... ,... oso
Hay &amp; Grain .................................................. 640
Help Wanted .......... ....................................... 110
Home lmprovement9................................... 810
Hornet tor Sale ............................................ 310
HoUsehold Goods ....................................... 510
• Houses tor Rent ......•............!1... ....... . .••..•.•.• 410
In Memorlam ....................... ......................... 020
Jnsurance ..................................................... 130
• Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment .. ....•..•. ,•.•...•..... 660
.. Llvettock ............................ .......................... 630
. Lost and Found ........, .................................. ~60
Lots &amp; Acreage ................ ............................ 350
Miscellaneous ..................... ......................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... $40
Mobile Home Repalr .................................. ;.860
Mobile Homes for Rent .... ,...........:.............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
, Money to Loan ........................................ .... .220
... Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ............... ........... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ...................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ... ............................................. 560
· Plumbing &amp; Heatin g .................................... 820
• Professional Servlces ..................... .'... ........ 2JO
Radio , TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
-r: Schools rnstructlon .....................................150
._ Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .................. ,........... 650
Situations Wanted ..•.•..•............................... 120
~ Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV 's for Sale .............................................. no
Trucks lor Sale ................ :......... :................. 715
Upholstery ...............................................~ ... 870
Vans For Sale ........................................ :...... 730
•• Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies .................. 620
~ Wanted To Oo .............................................. 1BO
.. Wanted to Rent ...........................................,470
.. Yard Sale· Gallipolia .................................... 072
:-· Yard Sale~Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
~ Yard Sale· Pt. Ple&amp;sant ................................. 076
4

POLICIE S: Ohio Valley Publiahing reserwe! the right to edit.-reiect. or cancel any ad at anw time. Errort mut t be reported on thelirtt day ol pu blitllltion and
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be respOnsible for no more th afl the coat ot the ap.ace occupied bW the error and on ly the first insertion. We shall not be liable
III"Y loss or •u pense that results from the publi cation or omission of an advertisement. Correction wil l be made in th e first available edition . o Box nu mber
. are 'alwavs confidential. o Current rate cord ;~pplies . o All feel estate advertiumenb are tubject to the Fed1tal Fair Housing Act of '968. o Th i s.~~·'~P'P"'
accepts only help warited ads meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advj!!~lising in violal 1on of the law. Will not be retpon•ible lor

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

100
BEl.!" WA\"1}])

kiincarlyle@com cast. net
LOST:
Longhair
Dachshund. tap of Dead
Man's' Hill call304-675-6638

AesCare Home Care IS
accepti ng app llcat1ons for
Support AS$ocia1es . CNA &amp;
"STNA.M R/ ~0 e~p. pre-

-~~~~~~

lost Female Aollweiler on
Johnson R1dge Ad. around 4
yrs old. spayed. she belongs
to· my 4yr old and she really misses hor If found pl ease
call 740·853-2545 or 740·
446-6345

. Y.\Kil SA! .1:

n

YARil SAtE·
GAU .II~O I.IS

0

Aug. 14 IS 16 9-5 at 1190
Starcher Ad. 2000 lincoln
Cant 2002 Mazde~ Tr1bute.
Blue BOOk Wholesale .

----.!_•.

Fn &amp; Sat at 3180 State
Route 141. Clothes. furniture . etc. Just past Green
Sct1ool

w,wrm
To Do

1

wardrobfl, bedspreads; cur·
tams, cookbooks. dolls ,
electromcs,
sewmg
machine, lrg mixer. rototiller.
To much to lis! all. 63 years

Saturday Aug. 16. t/4 mile
past
Aillerbend Vet on
Bulav1lle P1ke. Watch lor

WANTEt&gt;

mlln

ferred . Apply at 8204 Carla ~~~~~~~Drive. Gallipolis. Moo • Fri. Will do babys1ttmg in my
8-4
Email resume to ·
Hom e 5 days a week , New
rharnson@rescare.com.
Haven &amp; Mason area Call
304·674-665t
Resumes bemg accepted tor
H\\'\( 1\ 1
full time Teacher. full t1me
Assistant and Substitu t9s.
1
Rr&lt;I\Eo;-;
Must be 18 yrs. and have ' "
01'1'!
JKli'~ rtT
School
Diploma.
High
E)(perlence preferreo but not
necessary.
Must enjoy
•NOTICE•
working w1th young children
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHand w1lling to dO additional
ING CO recomme:nds
tra 1n1ng. llmterested please
that
YOU do buS ineSS With
Send Resumes to: Mag1c
people you know. and
Years DM Care 201 High St.
NOT to se nd money
Pl. Pleasarrt. WV 2.5550
through the ma11 until you
AN
Jenl'lms
Memmial have invest1gated tile
Health Facility. a lOng 1erm otter~n g

·1~~~==:.:­

ri"::F;;;;;;;;;;;;___..,

YARt) SALE·
PoMF~ ROY/M itltll .~

-~~-~~~~Aides (As-needed substi·
tute basis) : Buckeye Hill s
Huge yard sale- antique Career Center IS now
tools. hOusehold items.
accepli ng
appl l&lt;: alions .
misc. Terry McGuire, 40720
Contact
the
laurel Cliff Rd . Fd-Sat9·?
~penn tendent's Office al
76
YARtl
740-245-5334 . EOE

SAt :.:-

Pr: Pu:ASAN"r

Alterat1on persOn needed
fu ll time at Dukes Cleaners
· 2 Family Yard Sale 2808 2419 Jackson Ave. Apply in
Birch Ave Thrulfri/Sat 8-2 Person.
Rain or Shine
An E)(Cellent way to earn
Yard Sale Aug 16 , 2008
money. The New Avon.
Bam-4pm
2942
Call Marilyn 304 -882-2645
Meadow!;lrook Dr Boys &amp;
Girls baby clottles
AVQN I All Area s! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304A Ul"tl(lN ,\:'J!J
675-1429

r

Ft.M M .\KKICI'

Cross Creek
Auction Buffalo
Saturday·s 6pm
.H uge Sale Saturday Night.
all used Merchand1se . loads
from Point Pleasant, At 34 &amp;
Eleanor. Building IS Full
Starting to sell higt1 qua.lity
kn1vos such as Case. Buck
&amp; Mossy Oak .
A ~r
Condllioned . Visa . and
Mast er Card &amp; Debit (3041
550·1616 Steph en A~edy
1639

Wwn-:n
m lit I '

BENNIGAN 'S now hi ring
evening cooks . servers~ host
and maintenance. Apply
withu1' no . phOne calls
please.
-~~~~~~~­

Caregi11er for elderly male,
aprox 3-4 flrs darly, half
morn-half eves, meals, light
ho'usekeeping, Hysell Aun
Pomeroy area. Caii740·388, 0281 after 5pm , need references &amp; will discuss pay.
Commercial buildmg cleaning,
flexible ·
sched~Jie
Gallipolis. 740 -446 -27~7

Cost Technician:
Absolute Top Dollar
Sliver/gold
co1ns .
any
10K/14K/18K gold jewelry,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currenc_y, proollmmt sets,
dtamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue. GalhpoiiS
446·2842
Junk cars paymg $50-$300.
If no answer, leave a mes sage 740-388-001 t
Want to buy JUNK Cars
$.250.00, Full Car 740-416·
1594
Want to buy Junk Cars. call
740-'38.8-0884

and
s.
Competi technical
ti~e wages sktll
and
great bene fits package.
Please send resume or ~ubmit appl1cal1 on to JMHF.
Attn · DON . t42 Jenkins
Memorial Rd.. Wellston. OH

110

B ELl' WA~1HJ

45692. EOE

Tools &amp; etc mech· power
Cou.rtside Bar &amp; Gri ll now
tools carpenter toots tawn &amp;
hiring e)(j&gt;erienced waitress·
garden knifes &amp; watclles,
es. Great pay in a 1ast paced
jewelry. Buy tiade or sell.
environment. Call l o set up
hOme 388-1515 br cell 208an interview or pick up an
0320
appli cation. 30&amp; 2nd Ave .
-To-o-ls~&amp;~.,-c-m_e_c_h_·-p-ow-er Gallipolis. 740-44 1-937 1
tools carpenter l oots lawn &amp; -~~~~~~garden knifes &amp; watches .
FEDERAL
jewelr y. Buy trade or sell
POS'TAL JOBS
htJme 388·15 15 or ce ll208· 5 17.89-$28.27/hr., ·now hir·
For application an d 1ree
0320
1ng.
governement ;ob inlo, call
American Assoc of Labor 1_
913 . 599 .8226 . 24/hrs . emp.
serv.

signs. Womens clothes
&amp; 110 HEI.I' W .r\1\"I'EU
scrubs
mens
new
Carhart jacket &amp; .bibs &amp;
more. Baby clot~ es. toys, 100 WORKERS NEEDED
newborn car seal &amp; mace. Assemble crafts.
wood
Purses, shoes. housewares, il emsTo $4SOiwk Matsriats.
rod&lt;er,honging lamp, etc.
provided. Free 1ntormatton
pkg. 24 Hr. 80 t_ 428 _4649

fl'4

t 10

Cand idate must be well
organized, a~e to multitask.
Cedicated with good work
ethiCS. Pos1110n requires
good basic math, spelling
and
grammar , skills.
M1crosoft Word and Excel.
Sporadic overtime f'"lay be
requ1red . Starting pay rate
of S1 4/hr Th1S IS a long term
contract pos, 1st shift , 40
hr/wk. work Joca11on is
Chesh1re OH If qual1l1ed
please 1mmed. lax an updated resume to : (6\.4) 716·
2212. note "Cost tech" on
resurne/uo~er page EOE

c:-:--:-::cc-::-~:::c:c:---:--::-'

LPN· 0esired- 1 Full-Time
LPN , I Part-Time LPN,
Tuit1on
.'Possible
Reimbursement
or
Discounted Rent on Rental
Home, Ravenswood Care
Center, A Large. Personally
Owned. L 1 c~nsed Home,
Pleasant
Environment.
Caring Stall, Paid Me~ Is,
Paid Vacation Discounts .
Partial
Pad Insurance
Available ,
Interested
Applica nts May Apply Dai ly
M-Sun .
10-4.
1113
Wash1ngton
St.,

~;:::::;:;:::==~
M• ,~E\"

ell' • '),\N
.

Immediate Open ings:
1 Car and Truck Techni cian
1 Oil and lube Technician
Car and Truck TechniCians
are compensated ba~ed on
experience and etticiency.
Oil and lube Technicians
a1e compensated hourly.
Benefits avai lable 101 both
pOSIIIOn S InClUde :
Health Insurance. Disability
Insurance, 401K
Retirement and life
Insurance
If you are under appreci(lt·
ed by your current employer
or just looking for a career
change. join us today.
At John Ssng Ford l 1ncoln
Mercury you are not just an
employee, you are part of
our fam1ly.

"

~
r

L "'"'"

•

•'"'"'

Ask for Brad Sang to
schedule VOllr interview
loday
195 Upper River Rd
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 •
1-800-272-5179

EOE
Substitu te
Teachers .
Buckeye Hills Career Center
1s now accepting applications (in all academic and C·
T areas)
Contact the
Supermtendenrs Off1ce at

&gt;40-24S-5334. EOE

OTA driver needed. Must be
24 years old and have 3
years •experience. Apply at
2204 Jackosn Pike
Overbrook Rehabi litatio n
Center is now accepling
appl1cat1ons for a lull time
Main tenance Assistant. This
w111 be a short term posillon
Must . have e~perience 1n
general mainlenance includ·
ing carpentry plumbing
electncal, tel ephone and
cable Installation, pa1nting .
grounds work , evaluation
and mspection of emergency equipment. item
assembly, and boiler system
operat1on. Contact Charla
Brown -McGui re.
Administrator with questions
at (740)992-6472 . Qualified
candidates may apply at 333
Page Street , Mlddleporl, Oh
45760. EOE

S1tter needed in downlown
Gallipoli s befo1e school only.
Must provided ref. Non smoker only. 446·1 t 50

Borrow Smart. Con tact
the Oh1o Div1sion of
Ftnanc1al
l~st l ttJiion 's
Ollice
of
Consumer
Aftarrs BEFORE you refi·
nancc your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance . Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at l·B66278-0003 to lea rn If the

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /5 51?
No Fe e Unless We Winl
1·888·582-3345

Hl\11'1\it
Trainer Positions
Are you interested In a
rewarding postt 1on? PAIS 1s
currentiy seeking a part tmie
slaff fDI' Mason. WV provldlilg residential/comm un ity
skill training with 1ndi~idu ats
w1th MRIDO Monday-Friday
3:30pm-6:30pm .
· High
schoo l diploma or GED
required. No expenence
necessary. Cr1 minal back·
ground check reqwred. Must
have reliable transpor talion
and valid aul a 1nsurance.
Paid training. Hourly rate
starting al $7-$'8.00/hour.
Please call 1 304-373·1011
or toll free at 1-877-3731011 .
In addition to Mason, WV we
are also seek1ng the follow -·
1ng poslions for Direct Care
-Part lime direct care pos1·
lions
lor
Ravenswood
(Monday-Friday 9am-noon),
Ripley (~ar1ous), and Kenna
(Saturday-Monday
8am4pm) , WV
WV BOhr
Underground
Miner Class. slarting soon.
Whit-Co -Training 304 -3728346

150

SLlllMll.,

I ~S'f'R~l"tl()N
GalllpoUs Career Collego

HI~ING

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446- 4367,
t-800-214-0452
www gHIIIpahscareen:ollege edu
Accr!Kiiled

Membe r

Acc r &amp;d~1ng

, Council lor inOOpend&amp;nt Colleges
ana Schools 1274B

t70
Property Manager needed
lor lam1ly commun1ty. Parttime Must have prev1ous
e)(per1enc:e. reliable trans·
portai10n , be dependable
and able to work independ·
ently. EOE IDFWP Please
forw ard resum"e. tncluding
salary requ1remen1s to Box
101 clo Galhpolis Daily
Tribun e. PO Bo:&lt; 469 ,
GallipoliS, Oh 456~ I

**:\OTI{' ..;**

Rockspr1ngs RehabilitatiOn
Center IS looking for dedicat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nursmg Ass 1sta nts
Competitive wages. health
and dental benefits. and
401K ava1lable. We take
pnde 1n our fa c11ity and residents and need great team
playe rs to JOin us. It you
morl gage
br o ker
or
have these qualllicat lons
lender
IS
prope rly
please
'ap ply . · to·
licensed. (Th15 is a public
Rocksprings Retlab1lita110n
servic e announcement
Center. 36759 Rocksprings
from the Chio Valley
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769. Extendi care Health
I!C
Serv1ces. Inc. is an equal
opportunity employer that
workp lace
encou1ages
d1vflrsity. M/F ON

POST OFFICE NOW
Avg Pay $.20/hr or
S57K/yr, 1ncludes
Fed Ben, OT1
Placed by adSource, not
USPS whO hires:
1-866·403-2582

~====,..===~

'P:u;':'"~":'":g:C:o:m:pa:ny::)~

Ravenswood , WV 26 164.
FOSTER PA RENTS AND (Across Ailch ie Br~dge Turn
RESP IT E
PR OVIDERS Right , Very Last Bus111ess on
NEEDED. become state Right. North 68) Resume
licensed by attendtng train- May Be Faxed to 304·273·
mgs held on Saturdays. 9236 References ReqLmed,
1
Earn'$30-$45 a day tor the E.O.E:
-~~~~~--:-..,.care of u child l1111ng in your _
-home. Homes are neected 1n Oh10 Valley Home Heahh,
your ,cou~ty. Call Oas1s toll Inc . hiring Home Health
free
1_877 _325 _1558 _ Aid es. STNA. CNA, C~HA,
T 1
A
. PCA may apply at "1480
ra ning will begin ugu st 1n
Albany.
Jackson Pike, Ga llipolis.
Ollio or phone 740-44 1House cleaning weekly in 1393
for
more
info.
GaiHpolis 740-446-2787
compet 1t1ve wage~ . mi leag e
reimbursement and benefits
lmmedial e Opening for
Great Waitress . Parklront 1nclud1ng health 1nsurance &amp;
much mme.
\
Diner. NOPhon e Calls.

Boms
tuR S.-lt.E

Foreclosure 4br. 2ba . only
S29,900! Priced to Sell I For
L1stings 800·620-4946 ' ex
T462

care facility and assisted liv1ng. is seekmg a Regrstered
Nurse with good supervisory

www.comics.com

310

Wi ll bQard your dogs "at my
hOme wh1le you are away.
Dogs must be friendly with
other dogs. 740-4 16-2424

0

Fri 8-5 &amp; Sat 8·2 at 1480
Ac:ldiso rt P1ke Boys clothes
8-12. 911ls clothes 3-5 Jr's
and small Mise

Free'" kittens, Spring Valley a_cc_u_m_u_la_lio_n~~~~area.Born6/ 1/08. Greatper· Sat ..Aug. 16 frOm 9-3 at
sonal1ties 140-578-6075
· 3541 SA 141

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ..........................•................. OJO
Antlques ........................................................ 530
Apartments for Rent .................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ..................... .... ... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Ac cessories ...........:.............. 760
AutQ Repair .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale ................ , ............................. 710
Boatt &amp; Motors for Sale. ............................. 750
Building Supplles ............ ,........................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .. ,.............................. 210
Business Tralning ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes-........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780

( ...r""'..).._j J "'J
...,
..J
- ;:::...-=-:
Labonte bros. giving liiWay
. :•rexas Two Step' prl_zes

'P'""'it«d.

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

• I'EINl\.\L&lt;

CLASSIFIED INDEX

R

~ ~~

Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• In clude Phone Number And Address When Needed

Large mov1ng-estate sale.
Sat 8116. 9am-5pm . 2742
Krin e1 Ad. Lm1!e ofi At. 2 I 8.
Kno!ts residence. Lots of
ec ve ep em er
tools, col lectible dishes ,
2008· An Y cI8 Ssl·r·ed
1 ads
some pink depression, 01 f
Pl.ced ·n the newspapa
lamps, old irons. tr unk s,
'
'hal Cost le ss than
upholstering machine. hosS25 .00 must be pre· "pital
bed,
lrg
meto\

ar

ubject to

We sympathize. Out there are
points that need to be made. There
are more netwOrk races now than
ever before./( you'll recall, back in the
1980s and '90s. most of the televised
rac~s were on either ESPN or or what ·
was then The Nashville Network.

Let's Oo Racin!!

In Next Day ' s PapefSunday In - Column: 1:00 p.m .
Friday For Suhdays Paper

ForNn

ec 1ve mme a e y,
pictures that are placed
in ads at the Qalllpolis
Daily Tribune, must be
picked up within thirty
(30) days. Any pic tures
that are not picked up
will be disca rded .

pplles.

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid"

I..A JST '\:\I)

Grandpa
look1ng for
GH;mdma I want a lady to
like me as 1 am. not some·
one she thin\...s I should.be. I
love to travel. wnte poetry.
go
to
church,
study
Amen can H1story. such as
the C1vil War. oh yes and
sports of al l kinds. I prefer
ages 50· 70. So meone wl1o
likes a good time and enjoys
a good conve rsat1on or try to
see the best in everyone. I
love life as you should 11
Interested call. My number is
740 -367-7325 or cell 419450·9321 or write me in care
of Bob P.O. Box 33, Bidwell ,
Otlia 45614 1 wil l answer all
replies. 1 prefer blondes 1n
.the 50-60 r old ran e.

number ads ar
lways confidential .

Dear NASCAR This Week,
NASCAR Inc. is trying its best to ;
eliminate itself from be1ng ttie
fastest-growi ng sport.
First of al l, it goes to a "generic "
car. No one liked it in the beginning.
and most real fans sti ll don't. They
added that to the already-idiotic re- .
strictor plate .... Now th ey have really
done it. People are trying to buy gas
to get to work where they can earn
·enough to feed their families. Twenty
to· 30 percent of the people who had
cable and dishes have had to let
them go. Can't afford itl So they
switch from a majo r network to TNT,
ESPN , Speed ond ESPN2 to broadcast the races. They JUSt lost 20 million viewers.
... I hear th ere is supposed to be
.. . a horse race on ABC. I guess we'll
watch that instead ....
A new'horse·race fan,
Jim Hunt
Murfreesboro. Tenn.

Spanning four decades, the name
Labonte has been a. fixture in
NASCAR. Brothers Terry and Bobby
have combined for three champ,,
on ships and 43 victories. The
Labonte brothers are giving away
prizes commemorating their NASCAR
success in a "Texas Two Step" contest at www.bobbylabonte.com (click
on the .··contest"· icon). First Place is
a custom-painted helmet autograpned by the brothers. Second is
an autographed, framed print, and
there are 20 third-place prizes oflimlted·editlon. autographed pnnts.

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
added Ia your classified ads
(. ~
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large .

errors in an ad taken over the phorie.

Bat

'

~

KYLE

McDowell

ion of

• Tony Stewart
is still winless,
as is Jeff Gordon, but Stew~
art has finished second
in consecutive
races.

-Kyle Busch
pressed his
advantage in
the title race .
... Carl Ed·
wards moved
up from third
to second in
the standings.

S

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves

A collision between the two
touched off an·e1ght-car pileup on lap
83 of the Centunon Boats at the Glen.
NASCAR officials called both drivers in
for a behincklosed&lt;ioors session o ut_
took no disciplinary action. "I had a
run. and I went underneath h1m, and
he JUSt didn't give me a whole lot of
room," said Mcdowell.
·
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hts take: "What had
been a notably safe race turned ugly
at the end. As Mark Marlin IS fond of
saying. ·cautions beget caut1ons ."' :

most
notable open-

• Wllo's hot

*POLICIES*

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LiNE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads Wit h A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

-

David Gilliland
vs. Michael McDowell

~The

- J _, -

I

u

leaving
Penske Racing
at year's end.

; _/- 'J : , • ...:

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

s

man, who is

MEARS

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

'

resolved is

Casey
Mears· future
remains uncertain . He said
he is weighing
several options.

Jj-_-_.

R

the future of
Ryan New-

~

'

·I

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oeacltiru ·

Daily In·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondav ~Frlday for Inser~ion

I

I -

E

Gilliland

Word Ads

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

v

No. 21 LITTLE DEBBIE FORD

Still to be

• Dale Earnhardt Jr. returns to
the scene of hiS only victory of
the. season to date with this
weeks Spnnt Cup rac e at
Michigan International Speedway.

8ankJng m
tums 14

.

.,_ Martin Truex Jr. annou nced an
agreement to remain at Dale
Earnhardt Inc. next year, and
Michael Waltrip announced that
NAPA Auto Parts will rema in on
board ne&gt;~t year as p~inc i pa l
sponsor of his No. 55 Toyota.

Kyle Busch
has won four
of the past seven races and
twice as many (eight} as anyone else this year.

18~ 1I

Length of frontstruillh:.....3,600 ft
,
Length of backslnllch:.....2,242 ft
1 12 •/fronl
,
I ,5'/boc.&lt;""""' Miles/laps:.... 400 mt. • 200 laps

road races. That's never hap.
pened before.

~

Offtce !!oar~

I I ~ Distance: .......................2 mile oval ~ 1

Foreign drivers Ambrose and

Ron Fellows have won consecutive races in Nationwide Series

Websites:
· . In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E·mail
www.mydailysentinel .com
classified@mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD .NOW ONLINE
To Place
m:ribune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••

• Last year's winner: John-

ny Benson, Toyota.
1 Qualifying record: Ken
Schrader, Chevrolet.
126.922 mph. Aug. 25.
2004 .
• Race record: Travis Kvapil,.Chevrolet. 88.813 mph.
Aug. 20. 2003.
1 last week: Toyota dnver
Johnny Benson tied a senes
record with his th ird straight
vic tory. the latest occurring
at Nashville Superspeedway
near Lebanon."Tenn.

,. From the perspective of Marcos Ambrose. Watkins Glen
was
a weekend
for the ages.
.
·'
~

· ··-------1

. Mtsn:u .,~mt :s

Pet Cremallons. Call 740-

446-3745

180

W,wrm
To Do

George·s Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your Logs to the
Mtlltust cal l 304-675-1957.

p10

HoMF.S
FOR SAU:

Large 2-story home on
Locust Street. Galt1polis. 4
Bedroo ms, 2 Bath, KIT. FM,
DR. LA . LaUndry. OUI·build·
mg. lenced yard, cl6se to
schools.
Ex celle nt
Cond1 t1 on1 740-441-1202,

304-675-6363
New Ha\1en, 3 br., 2 bath, 4
acres. hot tub. gas log lire·
place . great view. (304)882·
302'1' 553,000
Ranch styl e home. 7 rooms.
basement. Qarage. 4 bed ·
rooms, 2 baths wrth 1900 sq
lt. liv1ng area. central heating
and cool1ng. on .:3;3 acres
land loca ted on ' Union Ave.,
$25.000 down and take over
S375 monthly payment s. call
(7 40)4 16-6344
Reduced Pnce. 4 bed room.
2 1!2 bath log home. 34286
New C rew, Ad ., Pomeroy. lg
po le building &amp; out building
on
6 acres w/pond,

{8 16}668-0758
Red\JCed 1 New, Never li~ed
1n 2br, 2 bath w/ -wh1rfpool
tu bs. large LA on 3 acres
m/1. S75,000. 740-446-7029
Tri- level bricklce.dar. on 98
acres. Rutl and. Oh, private
settin g. eat-in kttchen. 3 br.,
2 full baths. lg. livingroom.
lg. tam 11y room .. out ol flood .
plain. (740)742-2404 or 740·
"949-2930

04 Clayton Southwind,
16x7D, 3BR. 2 baths, fi replace, gutters, job relocation, must mo~e. pay off. or
take over paymen ts Call
304·41 2·4715

1991 Norris 14~7 0 2 baths ·
nice All ready set up
on renl ed lot · close to new
3 bsd. HUD Homes! on ly GAHS. M1ght cons1der land
$10,000! for listmgs 800- contract $13,500, 740-446·
620-4946 ex A019

"----liiilloiiiii._.l

extra

4053

314BR , 2 bath Cape Cod
localed on 3 acres mll 1n Rio
Grand e area. Ful l basement
wl fini shed FA, v9nted gas
FP. bonus room over 2 car
gar. &amp; much more. 740-245 5416 for appt.

2 2006 t 6~~:80 Clayton 3 Bed
2 Bath ,, 2000
16x70
Fleetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath ,
1999 Fortune 3 Bed 2 Bat h
Daytime 740-388-0000 or ·
74Q-388-85 1.3, Even1ng 740·
388·8017 or 740-245-9213

3br. 1 t/2 bath Rahch Style Brand new 3bet1 2bath on
Home on 11 + acres close to + · half acre 1n Pt . Pleasa nt.
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
Pt. Pleasant 304-675·6531
ABLE . 740·446,3570
3BA. I 1/2 bth , lull bas'e·
ment , In-ground pool (needs Fede ral Funds just re leased
work). I car gar. nice neigh· for Land Owners. No closborhood. close to town mg cos! anti ZERO OOWNI
do
Land
Ask1ng 560.000 (pnce nego· W1l!
Improvements.
Bankrupt
cy
liable) 740-645-1796 leave
&amp; Bad CreQ1I OK 2. 3, 4 and
message
5 bedrooms available. 74()-

446-3384
New 3 Bedroom homes from
5214.36 p~r month, Includ es
many upgrades. delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385-2434
All real estate ad11er!ising
In !hia newspaper Is
subject to !he Federal
Fair Housing A~l ot 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "ar'ly
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
reoe, colo r, religion , aeK
famlllalatalus or nallonal
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
ditcrlminatlon."
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly ac ~ept
advertisements for real
ntate which is in
violation of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed thai sll
dwelling&amp; ad11erlised in
thll newspaper are
available on an equal

lms&amp;
AcKF:-\GI:
3 acres for sal e on Siindhill

Rd S2S.OOO: 304-89S-3929
4 Grave roac!side ·cemet~ry
lot. Ro ckspr~ngs . $400.00.
740·742-3045.

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
Ad , 441·1111
.

IH \I \I ..,

tO

BtllJSIS
11lR RI::\T

$238/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath,
Bani&gt;; Repo! (5~c down, 20
}'ears, 8% APA) for listings

L..•;;P;;P~•n.;;u;;";;"V:.";;";;';;'';;·_ , · 800-620·4946 ex . ~027

�"
,www.mydai Iysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday. August 15. 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

\!rrihune - Sentinel ·- l\e ister
CLASSIFIED
We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!
~

Galli a
County,

II you have a question or a c_omment, write; NASCAR This Week . cjo The Gaston Gazette, PO. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

OH

All times Eastern

Sprint Cup
1 Race : 3M Performance 400

~.e!!nt Cup
3M Performance
400.
1 p.m., Sunday

Nationwide Series ·
Carta&lt; 2~ -~3 p.m., Saturday

Truck Series

,

o~-R~e~illy~2~0~0.~---- Lf•lk1

'

Clll.ollllllll-

7:30 p.m., Aug. 20

'
.
at bay. Two days before the seer
1 Where: M1ch1gan lnternat1on· son's 22nd race, Jeff Gordon
'" al Speedway. Brooklyn 12.0
had said he rated Busch no
mi.}. 200 laps/400 miles.
more than the third cho1ce in
· ' 1 When: Sunday. Aug. 1t
the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
Busch then went out and led 52
• Last year's w'nner: Kurt
, Bu sch, Dodge.
of the 90 laps and won for the
I ..Quallfylng record: Ryan
eighth time this season. GorNewman. Dodge, 194.232
don. by the way, finished 29th.
mpli, June 18, 2005
Shortly after takmg the check·
• Race record : Dale Jarrett.
ered nag. Busch said. 'Jia in-ca r
Ford. 173.997 mph, June 13.
rad 1o transmission: ~ Th ey keep
1999.
on playing these mind games.
;...., • Last race: Kyle Busch anand we'll JUSt keep on winning.
• , swered the critics arid quieted
Thi nk about this for a week,
the sp1n doctors. Busch , who
boys.· Marcos _Ambrose f1nished
.., had never finished better than
third 1n only his third Spnnt Cup
'l seventh at Watkins Glen Interrace. followed by Juan Pablo
nationaL polished off a sweep
Montoya, Martin Truex Jr., Kevin
of the two NASCAR road races,
Harvick and 2006-()7 champion
keeping his teammate and
Jimm1e Johnson. Denny Hamlin,
2007 winner of the Centur1on
Carl Edwaros and Kurt Busch
Boats at the Glen, Tony Stewart. also finished in the top 10.

:1

• So much for the notion that
Kyle Busch is feeling the heat.
He performed faultlessly at
Watkins Glen and effectively
clinched the top seed in the
Chase a month early.

Nationwide

Craftsman Truck

1 Race: Carfax 250
1 Where: Michigan Interna-

Race: 0 Reilly 200
1 Where: Bristoi{Tenn.} Mo·
tor Speedway 1533 mi.),
200 laps/ 106.6 miles.
1 When: Wednesday. Aug.
20
.

tional Speedway. Brooklyn
(2.0 mi.}. 1251aps/250
miles.
1 When: Saturday. Aug. 16.
1 Last year's winner: Denny
Hamlin. Chevrolet.
1 Q4atlfylng record: Greg
Biffle. Ford. 186.548 mph.
Aug. 19.2007.
1 Race record: Todd Bod·
ine, Cbevrolet , 162.749
mph, Aug. 19,2000 .
• Last week : Marcos AmOrose drove a Ford to v1ctory
at Watkins Glen, marking
the Australian driver's first
victory m a major NASCAR

touring se ries.

t'dl~il%1 \ 1 ";!(; .2

1

0

June 15

Aug.17 c:::n-tl '

I

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

i -,.

c
MARCOS AMBROSE

SPRINT CUP

5

.r-

,mgs for next year are at Stewart Haas Rac~ng, Richard Chit-'
dress Racing and Penske.

~ -WIIo's not -

Eighteenth
place at the Glen probably put an
end to Bnan Viel&lt;ers' Chase
hopes .... The same could be
said for D8'j\ona 500 \\1nner
Ryan Newman, who finished
26th.

edit,

the right to

reject or cancel any

ad at

any time.
» Errors
Must
B
eported · on the firs

ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglster

will

esponsible

b

for

n

ore than the cost o
he space occ upie
the error and onl
he first inserti on.

W

hall not be liable lo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omis

an advertise
ent. Corrections will
made in the firs
vallable edition.

c J c...dJ.r:

/lJ_r- ~J J J
C ~- ;:.'1 J~r( j ;-yr;uj 1JiJJ! ;(.;; ·._! )~:~·)

In current times, changes
are disruptive for the fan

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Marcos Ambrose had a great.Ume at Watkins Glen lnternaUonal Speedway. Alter winning the Nationwide Series race on Saturday, the
31-yeai·old
driver finished third In the Sprint CUp. race. The driver admits. he had "the right strategy when you come from
'
. the back:'

arcos
Ambrose great at the Glen, admits there's still much to learn about ovals
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Marcos Ambrose, who came to
. NASCAR from the Australian island
known as Tasmania, will never forget
the upstate New York hamlet known
as Watkins Glen.
The historic road course was the
scene of Ambrose's magical weekend.
He followed up a Nationwide Series
victory with a third-place finish in
only hi s third Sprint Cup race, the
Centurion Boats at the Glen.
Kyle Busch, in winning the race,
finished it in the same position he
started. Ambrose started 43rd, or
dead last, thanks to a qualifying rainout. The finish was the best by the
Wood Brothers team since Ricky
Rudd's runner-up fini sh at lnfineon
Raceway in Julie 2005. Ambrose's performance was 17 positions better than

·any previous finish by the No. 21 Ford
this year.
"It felt like l passed everyone three
times," said Ambrose, 31, after ~inish­
ing behind only Busch and Tony Stewart and ahead of Juan Pablo Montoya,
'whd had a bit more name recognition
when he migrated here.
· "Some guys, just through the cycle
of pit stops, I did pass three or four
times out there," said Ambrose . "We
passed quite a few on the track. We
passed quite a few in the pits, too, just ·
with our strategy. I wasn't overtaken
all day, which I'm proud of, and we did
a lot of passing. You have to have the
right strategy when you come from
the back. "
By his own admission, Ambrose has
a lot more to learn about ovals.
"There's a fair chance of getting
humbled again next week at Michio
gan," he said.

Ambrose won't .drive the No. 21
next year, bu ~for one day, he brought
back a hint of the magic once evoked
by one of NASCAR's truly historic
teams.
·
'.' I don't want to be labeled a road
racer, by the way," he said. "I'm lOt h
in the Nationwide Series points, so I'm
trying to make it as a NASCAR driver
full stop, not just a road racer. I'm really excited I've been given an·opportunity and I've been able to make the ·
most of it."
Ambrose had a unique opportuni ty
to reflect on what was happening
when th e Cup race was stopped for
more than 43 minutes to clean up a
huge crash on the S3rd lap.
"When I'm lining up there on that
red flag and! realized where I was ;·
behind Tony (Stewart) and in front of
all those other great drivers. it wa s
just areal thrill," he said.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

Current

) All

rate card

Rear

Estat

dvertisements

the Federa
air Housing Act o

968. '
)This
newspape
coopts Qnly hel
anted ads meet_in
OE standards.

&gt;we will not knowing
adver

y acctpt any

tsement in violation

I the law.

Now selll ng: .
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft Parts
• Engines, Transfer Cases &amp; Transmissions .
• Aftermarket Replacement Sheet Metal &amp; Components
• For All Makes of Vehicles

(740) 992-2155

HOLZER CLINIC

~

·d

;::::::"::·==~

r

GI\T\\\AY

Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010

Chlld/Erderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgeratlon ............................... B~O
Equipment for Aent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .............................•............ 610
Farms for Aent ............................................ ~430
Farms for Sale ...................................-........... 330
For Lease ............ .'.....•..•.•............................. 490
For Sale ........ ................................................ SBS
For Sale or Trade •..... ... ......... :......: ............... 590
Frullt &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ........................ .. ...................... ,... oso
Hay &amp; Grain .................................................. 640
Help Wanted .......... ....................................... 110
Home lmprovement9................................... 810
Hornet tor Sale ............................................ 310
HoUsehold Goods ....................................... 510
• Houses tor Rent ......•............!1... ....... . .••..•.•.• 410
In Memorlam ....................... ......................... 020
Jnsurance ..................................................... 130
• Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment .. ....•..•. ,•.•...•..... 660
.. Llvettock ............................ .......................... 630
. Lost and Found ........, .................................. ~60
Lots &amp; Acreage ................ ............................ 350
Miscellaneous ..................... ......................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... $40
Mobile Home Repalr .................................. ;.860
Mobile Homes for Rent .... ,...........:.............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
, Money to Loan ........................................ .... .220
... Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ............... ........... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ...................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ... ............................................. 560
· Plumbing &amp; Heatin g .................................... 820
• Professional Servlces ..................... .'... ........ 2JO
Radio , TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
-r: Schools rnstructlon .....................................150
._ Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .................. ,........... 650
Situations Wanted ..•.•..•............................... 120
~ Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV 's for Sale .............................................. no
Trucks lor Sale ................ :......... :................. 715
Upholstery ...............................................~ ... 870
Vans For Sale ........................................ :...... 730
•• Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies .................. 620
~ Wanted To Oo .............................................. 1BO
.. Wanted to Rent ...........................................,470
.. Yard Sale· Gallipolia .................................... 072
:-· Yard Sale~Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
~ Yard Sale· Pt. Ple&amp;sant ................................. 076
4

POLICIE S: Ohio Valley Publiahing reserwe! the right to edit.-reiect. or cancel any ad at anw time. Errort mut t be reported on thelirtt day ol pu blitllltion and
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be respOnsible for no more th afl the coat ot the ap.ace occupied bW the error and on ly the first insertion. We shall not be liable
III"Y loss or •u pense that results from the publi cation or omission of an advertisement. Correction wil l be made in th e first available edition . o Box nu mber
. are 'alwavs confidential. o Current rate cord ;~pplies . o All feel estate advertiumenb are tubject to the Fed1tal Fair Housing Act of '968. o Th i s.~~·'~P'P"'
accepts only help warited ads meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advj!!~lising in violal 1on of the law. Will not be retpon•ible lor

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

100
BEl.!" WA\"1}])

kiincarlyle@com cast. net
LOST:
Longhair
Dachshund. tap of Dead
Man's' Hill call304-675-6638

AesCare Home Care IS
accepti ng app llcat1ons for
Support AS$ocia1es . CNA &amp;
"STNA.M R/ ~0 e~p. pre-

-~~~~~~

lost Female Aollweiler on
Johnson R1dge Ad. around 4
yrs old. spayed. she belongs
to· my 4yr old and she really misses hor If found pl ease
call 740·853-2545 or 740·
446-6345

. Y.\Kil SA! .1:

n

YARil SAtE·
GAU .II~O I.IS

0

Aug. 14 IS 16 9-5 at 1190
Starcher Ad. 2000 lincoln
Cant 2002 Mazde~ Tr1bute.
Blue BOOk Wholesale .

----.!_•.

Fn &amp; Sat at 3180 State
Route 141. Clothes. furniture . etc. Just past Green
Sct1ool

w,wrm
To Do

1

wardrobfl, bedspreads; cur·
tams, cookbooks. dolls ,
electromcs,
sewmg
machine, lrg mixer. rototiller.
To much to lis! all. 63 years

Saturday Aug. 16. t/4 mile
past
Aillerbend Vet on
Bulav1lle P1ke. Watch lor

WANTEt&gt;

mlln

ferred . Apply at 8204 Carla ~~~~~~~Drive. Gallipolis. Moo • Fri. Will do babys1ttmg in my
8-4
Email resume to ·
Hom e 5 days a week , New
rharnson@rescare.com.
Haven &amp; Mason area Call
304·674-665t
Resumes bemg accepted tor
H\\'\( 1\ 1
full time Teacher. full t1me
Assistant and Substitu t9s.
1
Rr&lt;I\Eo;-;
Must be 18 yrs. and have ' "
01'1'!
JKli'~ rtT
School
Diploma.
High
E)(perlence preferreo but not
necessary.
Must enjoy
•NOTICE•
working w1th young children
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHand w1lling to dO additional
ING CO recomme:nds
tra 1n1ng. llmterested please
that
YOU do buS ineSS With
Send Resumes to: Mag1c
people you know. and
Years DM Care 201 High St.
NOT to se nd money
Pl. Pleasarrt. WV 2.5550
through the ma11 until you
AN
Jenl'lms
Memmial have invest1gated tile
Health Facility. a lOng 1erm otter~n g

·1~~~==:.:­

ri"::F;;;;;;;;;;;;___..,

YARt) SALE·
PoMF~ ROY/M itltll .~

-~~-~~~~Aides (As-needed substi·
tute basis) : Buckeye Hill s
Huge yard sale- antique Career Center IS now
tools. hOusehold items.
accepli ng
appl l&lt;: alions .
misc. Terry McGuire, 40720
Contact
the
laurel Cliff Rd . Fd-Sat9·?
~penn tendent's Office al
76
YARtl
740-245-5334 . EOE

SAt :.:-

Pr: Pu:ASAN"r

Alterat1on persOn needed
fu ll time at Dukes Cleaners
· 2 Family Yard Sale 2808 2419 Jackson Ave. Apply in
Birch Ave Thrulfri/Sat 8-2 Person.
Rain or Shine
An E)(Cellent way to earn
Yard Sale Aug 16 , 2008
money. The New Avon.
Bam-4pm
2942
Call Marilyn 304 -882-2645
Meadow!;lrook Dr Boys &amp;
Girls baby clottles
AVQN I All Area s! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304A Ul"tl(lN ,\:'J!J
675-1429

r

Ft.M M .\KKICI'

Cross Creek
Auction Buffalo
Saturday·s 6pm
.H uge Sale Saturday Night.
all used Merchand1se . loads
from Point Pleasant, At 34 &amp;
Eleanor. Building IS Full
Starting to sell higt1 qua.lity
kn1vos such as Case. Buck
&amp; Mossy Oak .
A ~r
Condllioned . Visa . and
Mast er Card &amp; Debit (3041
550·1616 Steph en A~edy
1639

Wwn-:n
m lit I '

BENNIGAN 'S now hi ring
evening cooks . servers~ host
and maintenance. Apply
withu1' no . phOne calls
please.
-~~~~~~~­

Caregi11er for elderly male,
aprox 3-4 flrs darly, half
morn-half eves, meals, light
ho'usekeeping, Hysell Aun
Pomeroy area. Caii740·388, 0281 after 5pm , need references &amp; will discuss pay.
Commercial buildmg cleaning,
flexible ·
sched~Jie
Gallipolis. 740 -446 -27~7

Cost Technician:
Absolute Top Dollar
Sliver/gold
co1ns .
any
10K/14K/18K gold jewelry,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currenc_y, proollmmt sets,
dtamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue. GalhpoiiS
446·2842
Junk cars paymg $50-$300.
If no answer, leave a mes sage 740-388-001 t
Want to buy JUNK Cars
$.250.00, Full Car 740-416·
1594
Want to buy Junk Cars. call
740-'38.8-0884

and
s.
Competi technical
ti~e wages sktll
and
great bene fits package.
Please send resume or ~ubmit appl1cal1 on to JMHF.
Attn · DON . t42 Jenkins
Memorial Rd.. Wellston. OH

110

B ELl' WA~1HJ

45692. EOE

Tools &amp; etc mech· power
Cou.rtside Bar &amp; Gri ll now
tools carpenter toots tawn &amp;
hiring e)(j&gt;erienced waitress·
garden knifes &amp; watclles,
es. Great pay in a 1ast paced
jewelry. Buy tiade or sell.
environment. Call l o set up
hOme 388-1515 br cell 208an interview or pick up an
0320
appli cation. 30&amp; 2nd Ave .
-To-o-ls~&amp;~.,-c-m_e_c_h_·-p-ow-er Gallipolis. 740-44 1-937 1
tools carpenter l oots lawn &amp; -~~~~~~garden knifes &amp; watches .
FEDERAL
jewelr y. Buy trade or sell
POS'TAL JOBS
htJme 388·15 15 or ce ll208· 5 17.89-$28.27/hr., ·now hir·
For application an d 1ree
0320
1ng.
governement ;ob inlo, call
American Assoc of Labor 1_
913 . 599 .8226 . 24/hrs . emp.
serv.

signs. Womens clothes
&amp; 110 HEI.I' W .r\1\"I'EU
scrubs
mens
new
Carhart jacket &amp; .bibs &amp;
more. Baby clot~ es. toys, 100 WORKERS NEEDED
newborn car seal &amp; mace. Assemble crafts.
wood
Purses, shoes. housewares, il emsTo $4SOiwk Matsriats.
rod&lt;er,honging lamp, etc.
provided. Free 1ntormatton
pkg. 24 Hr. 80 t_ 428 _4649

fl'4

t 10

Cand idate must be well
organized, a~e to multitask.
Cedicated with good work
ethiCS. Pos1110n requires
good basic math, spelling
and
grammar , skills.
M1crosoft Word and Excel.
Sporadic overtime f'"lay be
requ1red . Starting pay rate
of S1 4/hr Th1S IS a long term
contract pos, 1st shift , 40
hr/wk. work Joca11on is
Chesh1re OH If qual1l1ed
please 1mmed. lax an updated resume to : (6\.4) 716·
2212. note "Cost tech" on
resurne/uo~er page EOE

c:-:--:-::cc-::-~:::c:c:---:--::-'

LPN· 0esired- 1 Full-Time
LPN , I Part-Time LPN,
Tuit1on
.'Possible
Reimbursement
or
Discounted Rent on Rental
Home, Ravenswood Care
Center, A Large. Personally
Owned. L 1 c~nsed Home,
Pleasant
Environment.
Caring Stall, Paid Me~ Is,
Paid Vacation Discounts .
Partial
Pad Insurance
Available ,
Interested
Applica nts May Apply Dai ly
M-Sun .
10-4.
1113
Wash1ngton
St.,

~;:::::;:;:::==~
M• ,~E\"

ell' • '),\N
.

Immediate Open ings:
1 Car and Truck Techni cian
1 Oil and lube Technician
Car and Truck TechniCians
are compensated ba~ed on
experience and etticiency.
Oil and lube Technicians
a1e compensated hourly.
Benefits avai lable 101 both
pOSIIIOn S InClUde :
Health Insurance. Disability
Insurance, 401K
Retirement and life
Insurance
If you are under appreci(lt·
ed by your current employer
or just looking for a career
change. join us today.
At John Ssng Ford l 1ncoln
Mercury you are not just an
employee, you are part of
our fam1ly.

"

~
r

L "'"'"

•

•'"'"'

Ask for Brad Sang to
schedule VOllr interview
loday
195 Upper River Rd
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 •
1-800-272-5179

EOE
Substitu te
Teachers .
Buckeye Hills Career Center
1s now accepting applications (in all academic and C·
T areas)
Contact the
Supermtendenrs Off1ce at

&gt;40-24S-5334. EOE

OTA driver needed. Must be
24 years old and have 3
years •experience. Apply at
2204 Jackosn Pike
Overbrook Rehabi litatio n
Center is now accepling
appl1cat1ons for a lull time
Main tenance Assistant. This
w111 be a short term posillon
Must . have e~perience 1n
general mainlenance includ·
ing carpentry plumbing
electncal, tel ephone and
cable Installation, pa1nting .
grounds work , evaluation
and mspection of emergency equipment. item
assembly, and boiler system
operat1on. Contact Charla
Brown -McGui re.
Administrator with questions
at (740)992-6472 . Qualified
candidates may apply at 333
Page Street , Mlddleporl, Oh
45760. EOE

S1tter needed in downlown
Gallipoli s befo1e school only.
Must provided ref. Non smoker only. 446·1 t 50

Borrow Smart. Con tact
the Oh1o Div1sion of
Ftnanc1al
l~st l ttJiion 's
Ollice
of
Consumer
Aftarrs BEFORE you refi·
nancc your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance . Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at l·B66278-0003 to lea rn If the

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /5 51?
No Fe e Unless We Winl
1·888·582-3345

Hl\11'1\it
Trainer Positions
Are you interested In a
rewarding postt 1on? PAIS 1s
currentiy seeking a part tmie
slaff fDI' Mason. WV provldlilg residential/comm un ity
skill training with 1ndi~idu ats
w1th MRIDO Monday-Friday
3:30pm-6:30pm .
· High
schoo l diploma or GED
required. No expenence
necessary. Cr1 minal back·
ground check reqwred. Must
have reliable transpor talion
and valid aul a 1nsurance.
Paid training. Hourly rate
starting al $7-$'8.00/hour.
Please call 1 304-373·1011
or toll free at 1-877-3731011 .
In addition to Mason, WV we
are also seek1ng the follow -·
1ng poslions for Direct Care
-Part lime direct care pos1·
lions
lor
Ravenswood
(Monday-Friday 9am-noon),
Ripley (~ar1ous), and Kenna
(Saturday-Monday
8am4pm) , WV
WV BOhr
Underground
Miner Class. slarting soon.
Whit-Co -Training 304 -3728346

150

SLlllMll.,

I ~S'f'R~l"tl()N
GalllpoUs Career Collego

HI~ING

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446- 4367,
t-800-214-0452
www gHIIIpahscareen:ollege edu
Accr!Kiiled

Membe r

Acc r &amp;d~1ng

, Council lor inOOpend&amp;nt Colleges
ana Schools 1274B

t70
Property Manager needed
lor lam1ly commun1ty. Parttime Must have prev1ous
e)(per1enc:e. reliable trans·
portai10n , be dependable
and able to work independ·
ently. EOE IDFWP Please
forw ard resum"e. tncluding
salary requ1remen1s to Box
101 clo Galhpolis Daily
Tribun e. PO Bo:&lt; 469 ,
GallipoliS, Oh 456~ I

**:\OTI{' ..;**

Rockspr1ngs RehabilitatiOn
Center IS looking for dedicat·
ed compassionate State
Tested Nursmg Ass 1sta nts
Competitive wages. health
and dental benefits. and
401K ava1lable. We take
pnde 1n our fa c11ity and residents and need great team
playe rs to JOin us. It you
morl gage
br o ker
or
have these qualllicat lons
lender
IS
prope rly
please
'ap ply . · to·
licensed. (Th15 is a public
Rocksprings Retlab1lita110n
servic e announcement
Center. 36759 Rocksprings
from the Chio Valley
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769. Extendi care Health
I!C
Serv1ces. Inc. is an equal
opportunity employer that
workp lace
encou1ages
d1vflrsity. M/F ON

POST OFFICE NOW
Avg Pay $.20/hr or
S57K/yr, 1ncludes
Fed Ben, OT1
Placed by adSource, not
USPS whO hires:
1-866·403-2582

~====,..===~

'P:u;':'"~":'":g:C:o:m:pa:ny::)~

Ravenswood , WV 26 164.
FOSTER PA RENTS AND (Across Ailch ie Br~dge Turn
RESP IT E
PR OVIDERS Right , Very Last Bus111ess on
NEEDED. become state Right. North 68) Resume
licensed by attendtng train- May Be Faxed to 304·273·
mgs held on Saturdays. 9236 References ReqLmed,
1
Earn'$30-$45 a day tor the E.O.E:
-~~~~~--:-..,.care of u child l1111ng in your _
-home. Homes are neected 1n Oh10 Valley Home Heahh,
your ,cou~ty. Call Oas1s toll Inc . hiring Home Health
free
1_877 _325 _1558 _ Aid es. STNA. CNA, C~HA,
T 1
A
. PCA may apply at "1480
ra ning will begin ugu st 1n
Albany.
Jackson Pike, Ga llipolis.
Ollio or phone 740-44 1House cleaning weekly in 1393
for
more
info.
GaiHpolis 740-446-2787
compet 1t1ve wage~ . mi leag e
reimbursement and benefits
lmmedial e Opening for
Great Waitress . Parklront 1nclud1ng health 1nsurance &amp;
much mme.
\
Diner. NOPhon e Calls.

Boms
tuR S.-lt.E

Foreclosure 4br. 2ba . only
S29,900! Priced to Sell I For
L1stings 800·620-4946 ' ex
T462

care facility and assisted liv1ng. is seekmg a Regrstered
Nurse with good supervisory

www.comics.com

310

Wi ll bQard your dogs "at my
hOme wh1le you are away.
Dogs must be friendly with
other dogs. 740-4 16-2424

0

Fri 8-5 &amp; Sat 8·2 at 1480
Ac:ldiso rt P1ke Boys clothes
8-12. 911ls clothes 3-5 Jr's
and small Mise

Free'" kittens, Spring Valley a_cc_u_m_u_la_lio_n~~~~area.Born6/ 1/08. Greatper· Sat ..Aug. 16 frOm 9-3 at
sonal1ties 140-578-6075
· 3541 SA 141

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ..........................•................. OJO
Antlques ........................................................ 530
Apartments for Rent .................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ..................... .... ... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Ac cessories ...........:.............. 760
AutQ Repair .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale ................ , ............................. 710
Boatt &amp; Motors for Sale. ............................. 750
Building Supplles ............ ,........................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .. ,.............................. 210
Business Tralning ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes-........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780

( ...r""'..).._j J "'J
...,
..J
- ;:::...-=-:
Labonte bros. giving liiWay
. :•rexas Two Step' prl_zes

'P'""'it«d.

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

• I'EINl\.\L&lt;

CLASSIFIED INDEX

R

~ ~~

Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• In clude Phone Number And Address When Needed

Large mov1ng-estate sale.
Sat 8116. 9am-5pm . 2742
Krin e1 Ad. Lm1!e ofi At. 2 I 8.
Kno!ts residence. Lots of
ec ve ep em er
tools, col lectible dishes ,
2008· An Y cI8 Ssl·r·ed
1 ads
some pink depression, 01 f
Pl.ced ·n the newspapa
lamps, old irons. tr unk s,
'
'hal Cost le ss than
upholstering machine. hosS25 .00 must be pre· "pital
bed,
lrg
meto\

ar

ubject to

We sympathize. Out there are
points that need to be made. There
are more netwOrk races now than
ever before./( you'll recall, back in the
1980s and '90s. most of the televised
rac~s were on either ESPN or or what ·
was then The Nashville Network.

Let's Oo Racin!!

In Next Day ' s PapefSunday In - Column: 1:00 p.m .
Friday For Suhdays Paper

ForNn

ec 1ve mme a e y,
pictures that are placed
in ads at the Qalllpolis
Daily Tribune, must be
picked up within thirty
(30) days. Any pic tures
that are not picked up
will be disca rded .

pplles.

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid"

I..A JST '\:\I)

Grandpa
look1ng for
GH;mdma I want a lady to
like me as 1 am. not some·
one she thin\...s I should.be. I
love to travel. wnte poetry.
go
to
church,
study
Amen can H1story. such as
the C1vil War. oh yes and
sports of al l kinds. I prefer
ages 50· 70. So meone wl1o
likes a good time and enjoys
a good conve rsat1on or try to
see the best in everyone. I
love life as you should 11
Interested call. My number is
740 -367-7325 or cell 419450·9321 or write me in care
of Bob P.O. Box 33, Bidwell ,
Otlia 45614 1 wil l answer all
replies. 1 prefer blondes 1n
.the 50-60 r old ran e.

number ads ar
lways confidential .

Dear NASCAR This Week,
NASCAR Inc. is trying its best to ;
eliminate itself from be1ng ttie
fastest-growi ng sport.
First of al l, it goes to a "generic "
car. No one liked it in the beginning.
and most real fans sti ll don't. They
added that to the already-idiotic re- .
strictor plate .... Now th ey have really
done it. People are trying to buy gas
to get to work where they can earn
·enough to feed their families. Twenty
to· 30 percent of the people who had
cable and dishes have had to let
them go. Can't afford itl So they
switch from a majo r network to TNT,
ESPN , Speed ond ESPN2 to broadcast the races. They JUSt lost 20 million viewers.
... I hear th ere is supposed to be
.. . a horse race on ABC. I guess we'll
watch that instead ....
A new'horse·race fan,
Jim Hunt
Murfreesboro. Tenn.

Spanning four decades, the name
Labonte has been a. fixture in
NASCAR. Brothers Terry and Bobby
have combined for three champ,,
on ships and 43 victories. The
Labonte brothers are giving away
prizes commemorating their NASCAR
success in a "Texas Two Step" contest at www.bobbylabonte.com (click
on the .··contest"· icon). First Place is
a custom-painted helmet autograpned by the brothers. Second is
an autographed, framed print, and
there are 20 third-place prizes oflimlted·editlon. autographed pnnts.

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
added Ia your classified ads
(. ~
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large .

errors in an ad taken over the phorie.

Bat

'

~

KYLE

McDowell

ion of

• Tony Stewart
is still winless,
as is Jeff Gordon, but Stew~
art has finished second
in consecutive
races.

-Kyle Busch
pressed his
advantage in
the title race .
... Carl Ed·
wards moved
up from third
to second in
the standings.

S

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves

A collision between the two
touched off an·e1ght-car pileup on lap
83 of the Centunon Boats at the Glen.
NASCAR officials called both drivers in
for a behincklosed&lt;ioors session o ut_
took no disciplinary action. "I had a
run. and I went underneath h1m, and
he JUSt didn't give me a whole lot of
room," said Mcdowell.
·
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hts take: "What had
been a notably safe race turned ugly
at the end. As Mark Marlin IS fond of
saying. ·cautions beget caut1ons ."' :

most
notable open-

• Wllo's hot

*POLICIES*

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LiNE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads Wit h A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

-

David Gilliland
vs. Michael McDowell

~The

- J _, -

I

u

leaving
Penske Racing
at year's end.

; _/- 'J : , • ...:

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

s

man, who is

MEARS

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

'

resolved is

Casey
Mears· future
remains uncertain . He said
he is weighing
several options.

Jj-_-_.

R

the future of
Ryan New-

~

'

·I

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oeacltiru ·

Daily In·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondav ~Frlday for Inser~ion

I

I -

E

Gilliland

Word Ads

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

v

No. 21 LITTLE DEBBIE FORD

Still to be

• Dale Earnhardt Jr. returns to
the scene of hiS only victory of
the. season to date with this
weeks Spnnt Cup rac e at
Michigan International Speedway.

8ankJng m
tums 14

.

.,_ Martin Truex Jr. annou nced an
agreement to remain at Dale
Earnhardt Inc. next year, and
Michael Waltrip announced that
NAPA Auto Parts will rema in on
board ne&gt;~t year as p~inc i pa l
sponsor of his No. 55 Toyota.

Kyle Busch
has won four
of the past seven races and
twice as many (eight} as anyone else this year.

18~ 1I

Length of frontstruillh:.....3,600 ft
,
Length of backslnllch:.....2,242 ft
1 12 •/fronl
,
I ,5'/boc.&lt;""""' Miles/laps:.... 400 mt. • 200 laps

road races. That's never hap.
pened before.

~

Offtce !!oar~

I I ~ Distance: .......................2 mile oval ~ 1

Foreign drivers Ambrose and

Ron Fellows have won consecutive races in Nationwide Series

Websites:
· . In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E·mail
www.mydailysentinel .com
classified@mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD .NOW ONLINE
To Place
m:ribune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••

• Last year's winner: John-

ny Benson, Toyota.
1 Qualifying record: Ken
Schrader, Chevrolet.
126.922 mph. Aug. 25.
2004 .
• Race record: Travis Kvapil,.Chevrolet. 88.813 mph.
Aug. 20. 2003.
1 last week: Toyota dnver
Johnny Benson tied a senes
record with his th ird straight
vic tory. the latest occurring
at Nashville Superspeedway
near Lebanon."Tenn.

,. From the perspective of Marcos Ambrose. Watkins Glen
was
a weekend
for the ages.
.
·'
~

· ··-------1

. Mtsn:u .,~mt :s

Pet Cremallons. Call 740-

446-3745

180

W,wrm
To Do

George·s Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your Logs to the
Mtlltust cal l 304-675-1957.

p10

HoMF.S
FOR SAU:

Large 2-story home on
Locust Street. Galt1polis. 4
Bedroo ms, 2 Bath, KIT. FM,
DR. LA . LaUndry. OUI·build·
mg. lenced yard, cl6se to
schools.
Ex celle nt
Cond1 t1 on1 740-441-1202,

304-675-6363
New Ha\1en, 3 br., 2 bath, 4
acres. hot tub. gas log lire·
place . great view. (304)882·
302'1' 553,000
Ranch styl e home. 7 rooms.
basement. Qarage. 4 bed ·
rooms, 2 baths wrth 1900 sq
lt. liv1ng area. central heating
and cool1ng. on .:3;3 acres
land loca ted on ' Union Ave.,
$25.000 down and take over
S375 monthly payment s. call
(7 40)4 16-6344
Reduced Pnce. 4 bed room.
2 1!2 bath log home. 34286
New C rew, Ad ., Pomeroy. lg
po le building &amp; out building
on
6 acres w/pond,

{8 16}668-0758
Red\JCed 1 New, Never li~ed
1n 2br, 2 bath w/ -wh1rfpool
tu bs. large LA on 3 acres
m/1. S75,000. 740-446-7029
Tri- level bricklce.dar. on 98
acres. Rutl and. Oh, private
settin g. eat-in kttchen. 3 br.,
2 full baths. lg. livingroom.
lg. tam 11y room .. out ol flood .
plain. (740)742-2404 or 740·
"949-2930

04 Clayton Southwind,
16x7D, 3BR. 2 baths, fi replace, gutters, job relocation, must mo~e. pay off. or
take over paymen ts Call
304·41 2·4715

1991 Norris 14~7 0 2 baths ·
nice All ready set up
on renl ed lot · close to new
3 bsd. HUD Homes! on ly GAHS. M1ght cons1der land
$10,000! for listmgs 800- contract $13,500, 740-446·
620-4946 ex A019

"----liiilloiiiii._.l

extra

4053

314BR , 2 bath Cape Cod
localed on 3 acres mll 1n Rio
Grand e area. Ful l basement
wl fini shed FA, v9nted gas
FP. bonus room over 2 car
gar. &amp; much more. 740-245 5416 for appt.

2 2006 t 6~~:80 Clayton 3 Bed
2 Bath ,, 2000
16x70
Fleetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath ,
1999 Fortune 3 Bed 2 Bat h
Daytime 740-388-0000 or ·
74Q-388-85 1.3, Even1ng 740·
388·8017 or 740-245-9213

3br. 1 t/2 bath Rahch Style Brand new 3bet1 2bath on
Home on 11 + acres close to + · half acre 1n Pt . Pleasa nt.
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL·
Pt. Pleasant 304-675·6531
ABLE . 740·446,3570
3BA. I 1/2 bth , lull bas'e·
ment , In-ground pool (needs Fede ral Funds just re leased
work). I car gar. nice neigh· for Land Owners. No closborhood. close to town mg cos! anti ZERO OOWNI
do
Land
Ask1ng 560.000 (pnce nego· W1l!
Improvements.
Bankrupt
cy
liable) 740-645-1796 leave
&amp; Bad CreQ1I OK 2. 3, 4 and
message
5 bedrooms available. 74()-

446-3384
New 3 Bedroom homes from
5214.36 p~r month, Includ es
many upgrades. delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385-2434
All real estate ad11er!ising
In !hia newspaper Is
subject to !he Federal
Fair Housing A~l ot 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "ar'ly
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
reoe, colo r, religion , aeK
famlllalatalus or nallonal
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
ditcrlminatlon."
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly ac ~ept
advertisements for real
ntate which is in
violation of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed thai sll
dwelling&amp; ad11erlised in
thll newspaper are
available on an equal

lms&amp;
AcKF:-\GI:
3 acres for sal e on Siindhill

Rd S2S.OOO: 304-89S-3929
4 Grave roac!side ·cemet~ry
lot. Ro ckspr~ngs . $400.00.
740·742-3045.

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
Ad , 441·1111
.

IH \I \I ..,

tO

BtllJSIS
11lR RI::\T

$238/mo! 3 bed. 2 bath,
Bani&gt;; Repo! (5~c down, 20
}'ears, 8% APA) for listings

L..•;;P;;P~•n.;;u;;";;"V:.";;";;';;'';;·_ , · 800-620·4946 ex . ~027

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentin.el

www.mydailysentinel:com

='ii:

APARTMtNrs

2br Mobile Home, Kitchen Oblw1de 3BR/2BA', lrg yard

2br Apartment on Viar1d St.
appliances. NO beside Domina's
$375
Mason, 304-675-7783
PETS /SMOKING, Bidwell month, $375 deposit 304area
$600/rent+Depos,t . 812-4350
4br. 2ba. HUO! only $317 740 _367 _0507

Funi., depos1t required &amp; in ~itchen

r'nonth1 Great Locallon 1 (5°o
down,
20yrs,
aooAPA)

-·

Listings 800-621).4946 ex.

;::-~-----, 2BR, CIA, water. sewer,

u:

At•ARl)U:v rs
R
fUR

fNf

7 Rooms. 3br House 1n Pt

-

APARThtF.NfS

APAKIMENTS

mR RLvr

FOR

'"" RFNf

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

I'I."!S

R£to.,·

~79 ~
.~~
r:ilf

1 and 2 bedroom apart- A~artment available now
Pt. Rets. a must' $500 per ments. turmshed and unlurRivi:lrbend Apts. New Haven
month &amp; depoSit 304-675- rnshed. and houses in
WV. Now accepting applica4532 or 304-675-5751
Pomeroy and Middleport,

r:

tions lor Hud-Subs1dized.
N1ce 2BR 1 1/2 bath in town . secur~iy deposi t requ1red , no one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
pets .. 74()-992-2218
inch,Jded. Ba~ed on 30°·~ of
Ref &amp; dep. 740-446-1079
adjusted 1ncome. Call 3041BR Apt , W/D hoo~ups , 882-3121. available lor
MOIIILE HOME&lt;;
satellite TV incl w/rent , Semor'and 01sabled people
FOR RE~'f
close to t~ospital. Call 740·

SPACE

FOR IbM

Aetaii/WarehouiMJStorage
Location in Gallipclis 1800
sq. h. building $400 mo. off
call Wayne at
stree t

tUKSALE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Free Rent
Special!!!

Raynor Peacl1 Orchard, pick
yeur own. $20/bushell. 740446- 4807. Bring container.
Closed
da

s

I \ll\1 "I 1'1 '1 II ..,
,\ 11\I 'I I IUh

·

EQuiPI\-IENT

\It IH II\ \l ll'll

ANTIQUFS

LOAD

,

740·245-9170

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Rooting &amp; Guners
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.'C . YOUNG Ill
992·6215

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/GONC ESS ION
TRAILER S. B•W GOOSENECK
HITCHES.
CARM ICHAEL
EQUIP·
MEN T /C A AM I C HA E L
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE . · SPEC IAL 20FT
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIR E

7:00AM· 8 :00 PM

RIGER HYSEllS
·. GAUGE

Ill\ I',
( tl"\( I{ I I I

SLIt 124 P1t11nY. II

( 0\'d i( l ( 110\

740·992·5682

Concrete·Removal
and Replacement

., .

(

Johnson's Tree

* Prompt

74G-441-i317

and

Quali ty

Dealer: East
Vu lnerab le: Both

W\1042182

I

..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-59 1-8044
Please leave messa e

•••
BARNEY
DURN, THAT AIN'T
FAIR!!

· TH' PARSON WENT AN' ,
IT !!

BURGL.AR·PROOFEl)

740 44.6 92.00

r 4~=ruY

I

~

i

1
I !
L,.;..;.L_~:..c..;.....---1-J !
THE BORN LOSER
'WIU')t.Rf'ORC£ IS C£TIIi'IC. ~ . f'"tx&gt;~T &amp;&amp;. YOUR
E.XPt:C.Ifo.T\Of-600
TOO BIG TO &amp;./1\I::.&amp;J!~Wifo
I-llS S\ z.e: -1-\CS
~...,.
LIKE. l-IE. t:&gt;OES! l
BIC. !'OR. J.\IS ~~· ·L...
Wl~l-\ 1-\E.'t&gt; ~ T

f'"TIJ.E.~ l NI~I-\ 1-\E:'C&gt;
t..C.r I-llS J.\E.\(,1.\T !

..:::;:.JnS:,

WE COULD SHOP
RlR 'SACK·TO· SCHOOL
SUPPLIES! WE COULD
GET SOME BINDERS,

OR. WE COULD
GtVE FRANC.\S A.
TURBO WEDGtE .

PSI CONSTRUCTION

HE'r', MANA6ER! IT'S TOO
j.tOT TO PLA'f TODA'( !

All Athletics 20% off
SANDALS 50% off
"Life is Good" T-shirts
30% off
300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

MillE W. •RCUM, OWNER
.740-985-4141

•

YOU1RE ALWA'(S COMPLAININI&gt;'I
ITS EITI-IER TOO J.lOT OR

IT'S TOO COLD!

COWandBOY
PEOPLE SPEND THEIR
WHOLE LIVES T11'11~G
TO !lEACH SOME LEVEL

OF FINANCIAL SECtJRITV.

THINKING THAT WHEN

tHEV GET THERE,
THEV CAN FINALLY BE
· HAPPY ANO EN..OY LIFE.

.lj·· ~
·
•..

Kipling Shoe Co's

BACK TO
SCHOOL SALE!

z•

4• ·
5•

,.
••

All pass

cake

37 F,_jl~
39 Twig
junctures
40 Hole
puncher

.....

GARFIELD
HOW WIU. YOU KNOW
11"'6 THE RI€JH:f HOU5E i"

.

hand and wih be naming a weak suit ,hence East's initial pass. After South
opened one heart, I am tempted to say
1hat West's one-spade overcall was in
the modern style, but it ,as still very
rich, espec ially when vulnerable. North
might have cue-bid two spades to
announce at least game-invitational val- .
ues with heart support,· but understandably hoped to describe her hand fully:
tong diamonds, three-card heart sup.,
port, and a game-force.
In the second movement (round ), East
cue·bid two hearts to describe a maxi·
mum pass with 'spade support. South
overbid badly with three hearts; she
shoutd have passed. And North raised
cautiously to four hearts.
Now East broke discipline by bidding
four spades. He had good defense and
had revea led his hand. It was West's job
to sacrifice in four spades. But East's bid
worked vmen North took the push to five
hearts. North , holdin g a doubleton

AstroGraph
"""''lltrthclllv:

Saturday, Aug. 18, 2008

By Bemlca Bed• Oa~l

PE!ICILS, PENS. RULERS ...

PIYIIIG TOP PIICU f8l

••••tillS··-··......

"Pa ss

G

BIG NATE ·

·Trina Bachtel

I

Pass

Pass

spades. which would have gone down
two i1 Nonh had led a red caret.
Finally, East was cautious in not doubli ng five-hearts.

------=---

M

1•

East
Pass

spade, should have anticipated losing
two tricks in that su it and one in the
wa'sh. ~e should have doubl.ed four

.-••-.,. ....... "'-' l&gt;&amp;t .

-

~::::::::::~8_7_4_3--------~--

••
,.

North

10 Greasy
38 Shadowed
11 Make
·39 Nat evan
an aHempt
one
19 Day before 41 Skyrockets
DOWN
21 Moo
42 Hay stor·
companion . age unit
t Bark or yelp 24 Recede
43 Mortgage,
2 A Guthrie , 25 Main dish,
e.g.
3 Laugh-a·
ollen
45 A Great
minute
26 Huntar"s
Lake
4 More spiffy
wear
46 Vine valley
5 Escape
27 Summits
47 Startle
artisl
28 Maj. Hoople's 49 Cleveland
· word
hoopster
Houdini
6 Conceit
29 Earring site 51 Rent out
7 Actress
31 Ste~pest
Shlrley 33 College
8 Dusls the
dogs.
cake pans 35 Gape open
9 Skill
36 Get sluck
movers
(2 wds.)

The auction in this deal resembled musical chairs: Everyone kept bidding until
the music stopped, when South was 1n
five hearts undoubted. This contract
went down one, losing two spades and
one diamond. An aty ze the whole auction
dnd decid e what wollld you have done
differently.
When you hold ace-king-ace. open the
bidding untess you have a ba ~ n ced

Cali Gary Stanley @

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furmure

West

When should
the bidding stop?

References Availab le!

Free Estimates

South

41 T!Wn
oharply
42 Thin
pancakes
44 Of the peat
47 Lock up
48 Kind
of system
50 Vaccine
type
52 Toward
shelter
53 Astronaut
- Shepard
54 Use a
sponge
55 Tear apart
56 RCA prod·
ucts
57 Shipshape

t Adventure
tale
5 Skirt bottom
8 Tootsy
12 Soprano"s
piece
13 Famous
Khan
14 Hideout
15 Story line
t 6 Fabled bird
17 Monsleur"s
airport
18 Riverbank
clown
20 Really awful
22 Cammon
creeper
· 23 Atmosphere
'24 Banquel
host
27 T""' trirnner
30 Grizzly or
Kodiak
31 Beep
32 Tar
34 Ka-pow!
35 Cry of
dismay
36 RuliHIOIIked

Opening lead: • K

*Ex pericm:cd

L

20% off

K Q J

•

~

r

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS .

• A K 5
• J 8 2

AI
PC . *Reaso nahl e Rates
· COncrete
'Work
.
. .,. *Jn sure.d

Insured

:10 YHnl U/HfiM!n
SMtlor C!llftll
.I Clwrth DNtOIJnF

flow,

• . 10876

9K J10852
• l0

Work · ·

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Complete Tree Care
1n1~1.cl• Free IEIIImlllll

r

• J 9 3
4 95 43
South

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

15
TRucKS
PUBLIC NOTICE
· required for each set of proposed action may
iOKSALE
NOTICE : is hereby plans and specifics- be submitted within 30
HAY&amp;
given that on Saturday, lions , check made · days of notice of lhe
August 16, 2008 ·at payable to •· The (ull proposed action . An
L.---GiiiRAINiiiiiii.-_..1 1994 Toyota pickup SR5
•
w ith
custo m
topper
10:00 a.m., a public amount
will
be adjudication hearing
4x5 round bates. Goed Hay. Ex cellent Condition . 1996
· sale will be held at 211 returned within thirty may be held on a pro·
740-742-245 7 o'r 740-4 16· · Honda ST1 100 mol ercycle.
W.
Second
St., (30) days alter receipt posed action II a hear·
Pomeroy, Ohio . The of bids.
ing request Qr objec4862
~~~~uent condition 446 .
Farmars Bank and Each bid must be lion is received by the
Hay for sale: 800 lb round
SUVs
www.ttm~ablnetty.cctn:a
Savings Company Is ~ccompanied by either OEPA within 30 days of
bala , 1600 lb round bale.
SAL
selling for cash in a bid bond In an Issuance of the prohand or certified check amount of 100% of the posed action . Written
800-537-9528.
Home: 740-446-1947 , Cell :
FOR
E
t~ following collater- bid amount with a comments, requests
740
794
NEW AND USED STEEL
" "I )St
99 Ford Explorer Sporl.
t
t
ai :
surety satisfactory to for public meetings ,
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
4WD, - bl ue&amp;grey, 120000
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GalUpoUs
2006 Harley Davidson the aforesaid Meigs and adjudication hear·
For
Cencrete.
Angle , 2003 Si mplicity Prestige, rid· mile s, loaded, runs/looks
S a · r t I a I I C o u n I y ingrequestsmustbe
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ing mower, 20hp, 5 0in cut., good. Good tires. 446-4448
1HD1BVB196Y058487 Commissioners or by sent to: Hearing Clerk,
Gr8ti ng
For
Drains, Good
Opn dition.
New ;;aft:iie!'-r;;t
5;;;m.;...~~-.;....,
The Farmers Bank and certified
check, Ohio Environmental
In Memory
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L $5,700 asking $2,500 mise
4x4
Savings
Company, cashiers check, or let- Protection
Agency,
Scrap
Meta
ls
Open
Monday,
putt
behind
accessories
304FoR
SALE '
Pomeroy,
Ohio. tor of credit upon a sol· P.O.
Box
1049,
Tuesday, Wednesda·y &amp; 675 _3600
reserves the right to vent bank in the Columbus,
Ohio
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
11n \'ll'f H( 1 \IIO\
bid at this sale, and to amount of nat less 4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9
02 Ford F-150 Supercab
Thurs day,
Satu rday
&amp;
withdraw the above than 10% of the bid (Telephone: 614·644·
4x4, 4.6L Triton VB, air, tilt,
10_...;1iiAilurosiiiiiiilii-,..l cruise, Tonneau cover, other
collateral prior to sale. amount In favor of the 2129). ""Final Actions:
_s_un:...d_"'·_1_74...;D_J4_4_~_7_3o_o__ L,V•
Further, The Farmers aforesaid
Meigs Are actions or the
extras 83.000 ·mi. $7900 .
Set 3 blac~ . birdcages.
FlJR SU.E
Bank and Savings C o u n t y director . which are
446·9278
18x30 with dividers, perchRacine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Company reserves the Commissioners. Bid upon issuance or a ·
es, food cups on stand. $60. 1971 Chevy Nova 3501350.
40
right to reject any or all Bands shall be accom· stated effective date.
Bonus
free
birdcage Runs and looks great. 7401
bids submitted.
pan led by Proof of Pursuant to
Ohio
Cell: 740-416-5047
18x18x19 t ~ and 2 cock· 245·0125
Owners:
The above described Authority of the official Revised Code Section
atail nest boxes. Must take
email:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
collateral will be sold or 1111enf signing the 3745.04, A final action
It~ been I year
1995 Firebird Fermula 350- ~ 9 -96 Honda ATV 300
&lt;:~11 . 245-5146
new.
740-446Fourtral\,
like
jrshadfrm@aol.com
"as ls·whore Is"", with bond.
may be appealed to the
Paul Rowe
LT1 , 1999 Saturn 2-dr, 2003
·
today since
4605
no
expressed
or Bids shall be sealed Environmental Review
Yamaha Elec. Piano w/full Stratus 2-dr. •other quality - - - ' -- - - - Implied
warranty and marked as Bid far Appeals Commission
we 've seen your keyboard &amp; Console Reco rd vehicles in sleek wilh war- 1998 Yamaha Gas Gall Cart,
given.
Portland Community (ERAC)
(Formerly
MIKE MARCUM
Player &amp; Radio 304-882· ranty. Priced to sell. Stop or 4-stro~e. gas engine, new
smiling face.
For further .lnforma- Cenler Electrical and know
as
the
call COOK MOTORS 328 tirem, tune-up, belt., $2,500
2804
1!11111 IN I, &amp; ill ~ lOili LI NI, (11.
tlon, or for an appoint· mailed ar.dallvered to: Environmental Board
Jackson Pi~e . 740- 446-0103 more available 30 4-675Gone
hut
never
Rtohber
Roo lin ~. Room Addi l torrs. Decks. Slllttqlr•s
mont to Inspect colla!· Meigs
County of Review) by a person
PE:rs
7386 or 304·675·5631
S•dmq. Window'• PoiP Bo1rn~; Gnrnqes
forgotten.
eral; .prior to sale date Commissioners
who was a party to a
!OR SALE
2003 Nissan Xetra. 135.000 r;;;:o-':':'"---~-.,
Insurance Work. flestrlnttt.11 X- Cortllttl•rr t;tl
contact Cyndle or Ken Courthouse
proceeding before the
miles, dark green , 4 whee l
CAMI'FJIS &amp;
I..nve
nlwnv&lt;
740-24~-0~]i'
at 992·2136.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ' director by filing an
MOTOR HoMES
Ltcl'nsed 11.- Bonded
AKC. Boston Terrier puppies. dri11e, $10,000; 2000 Chevy
:Hl 1'f'ars
Frue Esl tll ldll!s
(8) l3, 14, 15
Anentlon of bidders Is appeal within 30 days
Ex~H'r i cnce
6 wks old, shots &amp; wormed. Cavalier, 160.000 miles, - called to all of the of notice of the final
coac hman
23 11
$200 each. Call 740-388- mBnual transmission , sun- 1994
requirements
con- action. Pursuant to
roof, silver, $2,500,740-415- camper
$3400.
1989
THE WINDOW
H&amp;H
Public Notice
talnad In this bid pack· Ohio Revised Code
6300 or 740·416·6301
Citation 21ft caArper $ 1700.
LADY
et, particularly to the Section 3745.07, A
Guttering
Call 441 -5(162 or 379-2923
20 years experience
In Memory
In Memory
2004 Dodge Neon 4 cyt. 5
IN THE
COMMON Federal
Labor · Final Action Issuing,
in sewing
Seamless G utters
speed , sun r90f, spoiler. RV Service at Carmichael
PLEAS COURT, PRO· Standards Provisions denying, · modifying,
Roofing, Siding , Gutters
Trailers 740-446-3825
BATE DIVISION. MEIGS and
Davls·Bacon revoking, or renewing
li"'~F=========="M=i! $4750. 740-256-1142
Drape .~. Sheers. Rod
Insured &amp; Bonded
COUNTY, OHIO
Wages, various lnsur- a permit, license, or
" I I{\ tt I '\
Pocket Drape s,
740·653·9657
93
Camara,
till
,
cruise,
PW,
IN THE MATIER OF anca
requirements, variance which is nat
SwagS. Valances,
In
Loving
Memory
Of
PL.
CO
player.
cold
air.
3.4
nfo~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SETILEMENT
OF various equal opparlu· preceded by a pro·
· Rom an Shades and
V6, looks great. runs great
HOME .
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE nlly provisions, · and posed action, may be
BAD CREDIT?
· More ...
$2900. 446·9278
IMPROVE!IIEmS
. COURT MEIGS COUN· the requirement for a appealed to the ERAC
NO CREDIT?
Plus Pillow. Bedskirts
TY, OHIO
payment band and per· by filing an appeal
BANKRUPTCY?
99 Eddie Bauer Frod
BASEMENT
Table Co~· ers &amp; Table
Accounts and vouch· farmance bond for within 30 days of
Nov.
25,
1971
·Aug.
15,
2007
w,. 1..!!1 IH · 11 1
Expedition. LaS8r red , PW,
WATERPROOFING
Runn ers
ers of the following 100% of •the contract Issuance of the final
C.d l rltJ ! l1tll f l'i
PL, PB, PS, heated teatller ·unconditional lifetime guarCALL SANDY
named fiduciary has price.
action. ERAC appeals,
seats, su nroof, 6 disc CD &amp; antee . .Local refQrences furHome:740-992-3220
866·56q·8679
Our
hearts
stin
ache
been filed In the No bidder may with· accompanied by a $70
3rd
seat.
Motor
has
approx.
nished
.
Established
197
5.
'::(;:"•:11::7:40:·:4:16:·6:1:44=~!!!!!!!!!~
Probete Court, Meigs draw his bid within filing lee which th
· with sadness, and
60,000 miles, body has Catl
24 Hrs. (740) 446· f
County,
Ohio
lor thirty (30) days alter ecommlsslan In II dis·
165,000
miles.
Very
good
OB70,
Rogers Basement
9
se~ret
tears
still
approval and settle· the actual date of the cretlon may reduce if
~~~~ition . S9,600 304·882· Walerprooting.
ment.
opening thereof. The by aHidavll the appal·
what it meant
ESTATENO. 2006 2 Meigs
County lant demonstrates that
to lose you017· First account filed Cam mIssIoners payment of the full
I) Police Impounds! Cars froffi
Superior
Home
by Carroll Mowery, reserve the right to amount of the fee
no one can ever know.
$500!, Hondas. Chevys. Mainle nance. All home
5031111SL ......n,OI«iiiiO
Guardian of the person reject any or ail bids. would cause extreme
Jee ps, Fo rds, &amp; more! tor repair, inside and out.
740-112-1194
hardship,
must lie
and estate of Patricia (8) 15, 20,27
listings 800-620-4876 ~. V435 Plumbi ng. carpentry, etc .
A. Frazier, an alleged
filed
with:
\Ve Love &amp; Mis.&lt;
cal\339·3442
. . . . . ..,...lll:llllll-6:111m
Incompetent.
Environmental Review
You,
.
SIIIIUVI:DD.a-:tttllll
Unless exceptions are
Public Notice
Appeals Commission,
Dad, Mom &amp; Family
flied thereto, said - - - - - - - - 309 South Fourth
account will be set for Public Notice
Street, Roam 222 ,
hearing before said County: Meigs
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Court on the 15th day The fallowing appllca· A copy of the appeal
iiiiiiJIIC
....... · - · ·
of September, 2008, at lions and/or verified must be served on the
....llllnllllllrll
which
time
said complaints
were director within 3 days
IM fir Cl~ Prlt:lll
account will be conoid· received, and the fal· after filing the appeal
GRAND VICTORIA
ered and continued lowing draft, proposed, with the ERAC.
from day to day until or final actions were Final
Issuance of
RESORT &amp; CASINO
finally disposed of.
Issued, by ,The Ohio Permit to Install
RICK PRICE
Rising Sun, Indiana
Any person Interested E n v I r a n m e n I a I Kllbarger Costructlan, '
New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
may file written excep- Protection
Agency Inc.
October 19 &amp; 20, 2008
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
lion Ia said account or (OEPA) last weak. P.O. Box 946 Logan,
$120/person · double occupancy ·
Bathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
to matters pertaining '" Actions '" Include the OH 43138
to the execution of the adoption, modification, Action ·
$115/person ·triple occupancy
Data;
wv ~040954 Ce ll 740-590-7665 740-992-0 7:.!0
trust, not less than five or repeal of orders 08107/2008
$11 0/person · quad occupancy
days prior to the date (ather than emergency Facility Description:
$150/person • single occupancy
set for hearing.
orders); the Issuance, Solid Waste
CORNER STONE
J&amp;L
J. S. Powell
denial, modification or Identification No. :06·
Construction CONSTRUCTION
Common Pleas Court, revocation of licenses, 08419
Includes breakfast buffet, dinner
Probate Division
permits, leases, vorl· This final action not
•
Vinyl Siding
buffet &amp; overnight
Roofing, Siding,
Meigs County, Ohio
anc.es, or certtficataa; preceded by proposed
•
Replacement
accommodat)ons.
Soffit, Decks,
(8) 15
·
and the approval or action and Is appeal·
Wlndpws
To make reservatloll$
Doors, Windows,
disapproval of plans abhla
to · ERAC.
• Roofing
Elec;tric. Plumbing.
and
specifications. Persons wishing to be
please call
• Decks
Public Notice
"' Drall Actions '" are on · Ohio
EPA 's
Drywall,
PVH Community Relations,
•
• Garages
wr!nen statements of Interested parties mail·
Remodeling,
Room
304·675·4340 Ext. 1326
NOTICE TO CDNTRAC· the
director
at lng list for this project
• ~ole Buildings
Additions
Accept cash, credit and chttcklll
TORS
!
EnvIron m e ·n t a I must submit a request
• Room Additions
Local Contractor
Sealed proposals for P r o I e c I I o n • s In writing to Ohio EPA ,
LIMITED SEATS!
Owner:
'
7 40-367.0544
the
Portland (Director's) Intent with Division of Solid and
James Keesee II
Free Estimate•
Community
Center respect
to
the lnfecllous
Waste
740-367.0536
742·2332
Electrical
Project, Issuance, denial, ate . Management,
Attn :
Friends ·&amp; Family VIP Event
Meigs County Ohio as of a permit, license, Systems Management
Extra
10% off Almost Everylhing•
per specifications In order, etc. Interested Unit, P.O. Box 1049,
For Remodeling and New House Building
bid packet will be persons may submit Columbus, OH 43216·
Including Sale and Clearance
received by the Meigs wrtnen permit, license, 1049, Tel : (814) 844·
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
Prices.
C o u n I y order, etc. Interested 2621 . Notice Ia hereby
•E~«:udflll Electronics, Great Price items and
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
Cammlasloners
at persons may submit given that on August 7.
Kenmore Pro. Additional e~c t usiOns apply. &amp;Eta
(across lrom City Park)
balo8 for details
their office at the wrlnan comments or 2008, tho director of
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Courthouoe, Pomeroy, request a public meet· Ohio EPA Issued a·
Mon., Aug. 18,2008 until8 pm only I
Hrs: M·F 9 a.m · 6 pm
Barns • Patio's , Porches and Decks
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 -lng regarding droll final permit to inllali
Sat9am-5pm
p.m., Sept. 4th, 2008 aclions. Commanta or (PTINa. 08·08419) far
.'
andlhanat1 :15p.m.at public
maetlng . K 1 I b a r g e r
All Ke~more Appliances and
uld office opened and requests must be sub- Construction,
Inc .
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom . OH
reed aloud for lhe fol· milled within 30 days (Applicant). This final
Floor Care
MilWAY
TAVERN
lowing:
of notice of the draft permit
authorizes
E•cludM Kenmore PRo, counler1op microwaves,
Pool Tourn Thurs 7 :30 pm
Greet Pr1ce items and closeouts. ONer good ltlru
Portland Community action.
""Propoaed expansion of lhe waate
Cell : 740·-116- 1834 .
8/18108.
Center
Electrical Actions '" are written handling area at lhe
BAnd Fri. Slick Nickle 9:00 • 1 :00
Plus
12
Months,
No
lne
rest,
25+
years
experience Fret Estimates
Project.
statements of the Meigs County Transfer
Sat. Karaoke 9:00 • 1 :00
No Payments
Specifications, and bid dlreclor'a Intent with Station located · at
Outside Cornh.ole Game
lonna may be secured respect
to . the 34878 Rock Springs
or Free Standard-Delive r
Day or night
at the office of Meigs ,Issuance, denial, modi· Road, Pomeroy, OH
Aner onl1ne or mail-In rebate on any appliance over
$399
'
C a u n t y fication. rev~tlon, or 45769. This autharlza·
Co .m m Ia ai one r s , renewal of a permit, tlon Is subject to all
SEARS
Courthouse, Pomeroy, license, or variance . rules, regulations, and
2200 Eastern' Ave. Ga llipolis. OH
Ohio 45~69 Phone 740· Written commenta and specilll!f conditions.
I ,, .
912·2895. A depdsH of request• for a .public (8) 15
0 dollars will be meeting regarding a

Trina ·.
Bachtel

• A LO 5 ·
• 9 4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

28 Years. Experience

·

r

Ea!i\

. KQ763
• 6

J40-992-1m

Tr!'es

1·12SII.

Have you priced a John
Deere late ly? You'll be surprised! Check out our used
2 plastic storage water 1nventory
at
tanks, 1,000 gal. &amp; 1,500 WWW . CA REQ . COM
gal. water pumps &amp; more Carmichael Equipment. 740304-675-6307
446-2412

West

1/1411 mo. pd

-···6,1·1

Service

• A2

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling ·

Hours

Pomeroy Oh1o
25 Year~ Locill Ex1-.Hmenu.•

¥ A Q 7
t Q87642

CINSTIUCTION

SIZes.5;X10'
.
to 10'.x30'

08-ts-oa

."

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

Remodeling

MAX

WWW .CARMIC HAEL ·
TAAILEAS.COM 740·446·
3825

1-2 Bedr'oom Apartments
With 1;\ppliances furn ished.
On site Laundry facility.
Exercise
equipment,
Call for details or pick up
applicatien at rental office. Outdoor furnitu re, Little
. Tikes toys call 304·675·
Poss1bi lity of rental
2157 1eave messa ge
assistance.
Equal Hou sing OppOrtunity
TOO# 41 9·5 26·0466
JET
"This institutien is an Equal
AERATION MOTORS
opportu nity Provider and
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Emp loyer" .
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

Hil l's Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

~ - New Garage•
ElectrJcilt &amp; Plumbing

TRAILER INVENTORY AT

Valley View Apartments
BOO State Rou te 325
Thurman, Ohio 45685

North

Room AddHion• I

r·------,..1
r
· rARM

TRAIL ERS,

Wanted To lease: Hunting
Prcperty in Mason County
2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up,
304-882-2252 or · 304-675Cebtral Air. lf!ID Heokup,
5679
Tenant pays electric. EHO

JBR 2 batll MH on farm 212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
$600 per month + utililles.
_ _
.
bath , furnished , no pe ts.
540 752 0826
Rent+ Dep. 740-441·0245
For Rent (2) Mob1le Homes
both 2br, 1ba , now ta~ing
appl icatiens 304-593-6197

r:~·--'•'~•.•~ITS-AB·~-·--~
10

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

EBY, INTEGRITY..KIEFER
BUILT,
VALLEY
H 0 A'S E Ill V ESTOC K

2BA 2 bath, all electric. CIA, 339·0362

\'our KigM to Kno~o~·, Dfliu·red Rigbt to Your Door.

www..mydallysentinel.com

Townhouse
apartm ents. list for Hud·Sllbsldized, 1-br J papers, bo111 parents are on
and!or small houses FOR apartment
for
the site. Call 740-367-0274
RENT. Call (74.0) 441 -1111 elderJy/disabh~d. call 675tor app lication &amp; information

trash Included. Ill town. Rent

PubiH: ~oti~ in ,N,'"'~"l'"'·fJ

Friday, August 15, 2008
ALLEY OOP

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ]win Rivers Tewer is accept- Labradof Aetnever pups,
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
lng applications fer waltfng 6wks old, $30.00, no

$475. oepos" $475 339-

10 min. fr_om Power Plants- 2 bedroom apartment for
9101 SA 7. Chesllire. OH rent in Middleport . no pets.
740-446-4234 or .740-208(740)992-5858
7861
2 bedroom Garage Apt ..
2BA · at Johnsons Mob ile 2316 1/2 Mt. Vernon Ave,
Home Park. Call 740-645- $200 damage Oepo$11, $425
0506 or 740-446·2003
• montll 304-675-7902

Friday, August" 15, 2008

l-IE!(, MANA6ER! IT 15
TOO ''JUST RI61-1T" TO
PLA'( TODA'( !

Joint ventures that come you r way in th e
year ahead should att be thoroughly
investigated, because there wJI I be one
hidden among lh€1 WBtid&amp; that will have
considerable promise. Avoid !tilting outward appearances scare you off
LEO tJuly 23-Aug. 22)- Don 't let a tittle
misunderstanding with someone spnit
what should otherwise be e. most fun and
satisfying · day. Be prepared .to make a
compro mise or concession in your thinkIng lor the sake of harmony.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept .. 22) - You might
not be-too happy In arrangements where
demands are made on you, but by the
same token, th ings should balance . out
' wonderfully in situations where you can
use your own initiative
UBAA (Sept . 23: oct. 23) - Things can
go wrong with a friend when 'money Js an
issue - so ke ep these kind s ol dealings
businesslike. Howeve r, when your
involvement Is pure ly social re.lax and
4
have a good lime
$COAP t0 (Qcl. 2&lt;4-N9v. 22) - Even if
the greater part of the doy Is filled with
pleasant expe riences. there is a possibility that-a crisis ceuld arise concerning a
domesUc matter. Don't be caught oN
guard
1
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - A
good friend might put yeur patience and
tolerance to the test because, although
yout pal has a generous nature, he or 1
she may have a demanding attitude. Put
blinde rS on when it comes to these shortoominge.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·}an. 19) Financial affairs will be a miX9d bag. on ·
the one hand, ~ou could tose funds due
to poor conditions, but than turn around
and gain something that's comes out of
sheer tuck. Go figure.
AOUAAIUS (Jan .. 20· Feb. 19) - Be on
your toes and be mentally aware or all
forms of opposition so that you can go
along with procedures that otter the pa th
of least reslstam:::e. It'll be the sales!
route to take.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Many
things will go your way, but II you fai l to
keep pace- with your duties or ·responsibilities, compl JcatJons will ~elop and
bring headaches. Don't l"!egate thrt;l good
because of neglect.
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19) - "It was the
best of tln'i es, lt was the worst ot times" Is
hew you may vJ8w this day. Seme·pleasant Involvements with lrlenda could ta,ke
place, wh1,18 a maj or disappointment'
occurs at the ·same lima .

TAURUS (Apnl 20·Moy 20) -

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C•p~er cryjllograms are created !rom ~uota11ons by 'amo;s oec~e. Past an~ present
EOK:h lttter tn the c•phtr sranas lor a'lOlllt&lt;t

Todays clue: G equals J

'" " R C B

HK

DBKJJI

o' M Z T Z N B M R

YZMS

BABMR

RCKR

JZTB . "'

•

FT

K

RFFV

GKHBL

L B AB M·

E K L,

HZDKNP J FPL
VJKNB

ZM

HI

NFWPDM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I ask yo" to pray !or me. !or once age has
overtaken us, we find consolation only in religipn."- Paul Cezanne

~~~~:t~~y s~~~1Vi-LGr-trs·

WORD
GAM£

- - - - - - - lillod by CLAY R. POllAN

0 lour · strctmbled
Redrrongc

low

I

!etten

ct' Ihe

words be-

lo .form four simple word!.

A s E G0 D

:I I I
I

1

I

1

NA Y0 G

"'Have you ever noticed;· the
man asked, ""that it" s eas ier to
give up good hab111 li1an ···

I I I I I Io··~:mplete

, . liEBEAR
6

.

I

the thue&lt;lo quoteci

filling ir. fhe miu1r.g ~~;ords
you develop frcm_step Nc_3 below·.

by

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS !114/08
EFFORT- ~OCK ··GRAPH- STOLID - PROFIT

"If you count all your assets," the mother lold 11er daughter;
"youwiil show a PROFIT.''
•
ARLO &amp; JANIS

A big

ebjectlvv that meane a lot to you might
not be •• equally maanlnglul to your
aMOCiates. Oorl't be turprleed If they go
their own way, le.vJng you to de your
own thing .
QEMINI (May 21.Junt 20)- Authorth lp
will m.. n a lot to the peraon who orlglnatet an Idea, 10 If you choa1a to ua1 11
In tomt manntrr bl turw to credit t1'11
IOUf'CI, Therw't everything to !oM tr you
fell to do t o.
CANCE~ (Jun• 21·Juty 22) - Financial
lnvoivtmentt wilt havt to b1 managed
with llrtrtme tkttl, bloau11, although you
migl'lt make a winning tnvettmant, you
oauld alta find a way tel come aut on tha
llhort end by nightfall.

SOUPTONUTZ
NoBcP4 IOoJO'riiS

WHaT

GoD IPc\&lt;ll. t..i Ice ,

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

---·

----- ~ --

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentin.el

www.mydailysentinel:com

='ii:

APARTMtNrs

2br Mobile Home, Kitchen Oblw1de 3BR/2BA', lrg yard

2br Apartment on Viar1d St.
appliances. NO beside Domina's
$375
Mason, 304-675-7783
PETS /SMOKING, Bidwell month, $375 deposit 304area
$600/rent+Depos,t . 812-4350
4br. 2ba. HUO! only $317 740 _367 _0507

Funi., depos1t required &amp; in ~itchen

r'nonth1 Great Locallon 1 (5°o
down,
20yrs,
aooAPA)

-·

Listings 800-621).4946 ex.

;::-~-----, 2BR, CIA, water. sewer,

u:

At•ARl)U:v rs
R
fUR

fNf

7 Rooms. 3br House 1n Pt

-

APARThtF.NfS

APAKIMENTS

mR RLvr

FOR

'"" RFNf

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

I'I."!S

R£to.,·

~79 ~
.~~
r:ilf

1 and 2 bedroom apart- A~artment available now
Pt. Rets. a must' $500 per ments. turmshed and unlurRivi:lrbend Apts. New Haven
month &amp; depoSit 304-675- rnshed. and houses in
WV. Now accepting applica4532 or 304-675-5751
Pomeroy and Middleport,

r:

tions lor Hud-Subs1dized.
N1ce 2BR 1 1/2 bath in town . secur~iy deposi t requ1red , no one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
pets .. 74()-992-2218
inch,Jded. Ba~ed on 30°·~ of
Ref &amp; dep. 740-446-1079
adjusted 1ncome. Call 3041BR Apt , W/D hoo~ups , 882-3121. available lor
MOIIILE HOME&lt;;
satellite TV incl w/rent , Semor'and 01sabled people
FOR RE~'f
close to t~ospital. Call 740·

SPACE

FOR IbM

Aetaii/WarehouiMJStorage
Location in Gallipclis 1800
sq. h. building $400 mo. off
call Wayne at
stree t

tUKSALE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Free Rent
Special!!!

Raynor Peacl1 Orchard, pick
yeur own. $20/bushell. 740446- 4807. Bring container.
Closed
da

s

I \ll\1 "I 1'1 '1 II ..,
,\ 11\I 'I I IUh

·

EQuiPI\-IENT

\It IH II\ \l ll'll

ANTIQUFS

LOAD

,

740·245-9170

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Rooting &amp; Guners
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.'C . YOUNG Ill
992·6215

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/GONC ESS ION
TRAILER S. B•W GOOSENECK
HITCHES.
CARM ICHAEL
EQUIP·
MEN T /C A AM I C HA E L
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
VICE . · SPEC IAL 20FT
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIR E

7:00AM· 8 :00 PM

RIGER HYSEllS
·. GAUGE

Ill\ I',
( tl"\( I{ I I I

SLIt 124 P1t11nY. II

( 0\'d i( l ( 110\

740·992·5682

Concrete·Removal
and Replacement

., .

(

Johnson's Tree

* Prompt

74G-441-i317

and

Quali ty

Dealer: East
Vu lnerab le: Both

W\1042182

I

..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-59 1-8044
Please leave messa e

•••
BARNEY
DURN, THAT AIN'T
FAIR!!

· TH' PARSON WENT AN' ,
IT !!

BURGL.AR·PROOFEl)

740 44.6 92.00

r 4~=ruY

I

~

i

1
I !
L,.;..;.L_~:..c..;.....---1-J !
THE BORN LOSER
'WIU')t.Rf'ORC£ IS C£TIIi'IC. ~ . f'"tx&gt;~T &amp;&amp;. YOUR
E.XPt:C.Ifo.T\Of-600
TOO BIG TO &amp;./1\I::.&amp;J!~Wifo
I-llS S\ z.e: -1-\CS
~...,.
LIKE. l-IE. t:&gt;OES! l
BIC. !'OR. J.\IS ~~· ·L...
Wl~l-\ 1-\E.'t&gt; ~ T

f'"TIJ.E.~ l NI~I-\ 1-\E:'C&gt;
t..C.r I-llS J.\E.\(,1.\T !

..:::;:.JnS:,

WE COULD SHOP
RlR 'SACK·TO· SCHOOL
SUPPLIES! WE COULD
GET SOME BINDERS,

OR. WE COULD
GtVE FRANC.\S A.
TURBO WEDGtE .

PSI CONSTRUCTION

HE'r', MANA6ER! IT'S TOO
j.tOT TO PLA'f TODA'( !

All Athletics 20% off
SANDALS 50% off
"Life is Good" T-shirts
30% off
300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

MillE W. •RCUM, OWNER
.740-985-4141

•

YOU1RE ALWA'(S COMPLAININI&gt;'I
ITS EITI-IER TOO J.lOT OR

IT'S TOO COLD!

COWandBOY
PEOPLE SPEND THEIR
WHOLE LIVES T11'11~G
TO !lEACH SOME LEVEL

OF FINANCIAL SECtJRITV.

THINKING THAT WHEN

tHEV GET THERE,
THEV CAN FINALLY BE
· HAPPY ANO EN..OY LIFE.

.lj·· ~
·
•..

Kipling Shoe Co's

BACK TO
SCHOOL SALE!

z•

4• ·
5•

,.
••

All pass

cake

37 F,_jl~
39 Twig
junctures
40 Hole
puncher

.....

GARFIELD
HOW WIU. YOU KNOW
11"'6 THE RI€JH:f HOU5E i"

.

hand and wih be naming a weak suit ,hence East's initial pass. After South
opened one heart, I am tempted to say
1hat West's one-spade overcall was in
the modern style, but it ,as still very
rich, espec ially when vulnerable. North
might have cue-bid two spades to
announce at least game-invitational val- .
ues with heart support,· but understandably hoped to describe her hand fully:
tong diamonds, three-card heart sup.,
port, and a game-force.
In the second movement (round ), East
cue·bid two hearts to describe a maxi·
mum pass with 'spade support. South
overbid badly with three hearts; she
shoutd have passed. And North raised
cautiously to four hearts.
Now East broke discipline by bidding
four spades. He had good defense and
had revea led his hand. It was West's job
to sacrifice in four spades. But East's bid
worked vmen North took the push to five
hearts. North , holdin g a doubleton

AstroGraph
"""''lltrthclllv:

Saturday, Aug. 18, 2008

By Bemlca Bed• Oa~l

PE!ICILS, PENS. RULERS ...

PIYIIIG TOP PIICU f8l

••••tillS··-··......

"Pa ss

G

BIG NATE ·

·Trina Bachtel

I

Pass

Pass

spades. which would have gone down
two i1 Nonh had led a red caret.
Finally, East was cautious in not doubli ng five-hearts.

------=---

M

1•

East
Pass

spade, should have anticipated losing
two tricks in that su it and one in the
wa'sh. ~e should have doubl.ed four

.-••-.,. ....... "'-' l&gt;&amp;t .

-

~::::::::::~8_7_4_3--------~--

••
,.

North

10 Greasy
38 Shadowed
11 Make
·39 Nat evan
an aHempt
one
19 Day before 41 Skyrockets
DOWN
21 Moo
42 Hay stor·
companion . age unit
t Bark or yelp 24 Recede
43 Mortgage,
2 A Guthrie , 25 Main dish,
e.g.
3 Laugh-a·
ollen
45 A Great
minute
26 Huntar"s
Lake
4 More spiffy
wear
46 Vine valley
5 Escape
27 Summits
47 Startle
artisl
28 Maj. Hoople's 49 Cleveland
· word
hoopster
Houdini
6 Conceit
29 Earring site 51 Rent out
7 Actress
31 Ste~pest
Shlrley 33 College
8 Dusls the
dogs.
cake pans 35 Gape open
9 Skill
36 Get sluck
movers
(2 wds.)

The auction in this deal resembled musical chairs: Everyone kept bidding until
the music stopped, when South was 1n
five hearts undoubted. This contract
went down one, losing two spades and
one diamond. An aty ze the whole auction
dnd decid e what wollld you have done
differently.
When you hold ace-king-ace. open the
bidding untess you have a ba ~ n ced

Cali Gary Stanley @

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furmure

West

When should
the bidding stop?

References Availab le!

Free Estimates

South

41 T!Wn
oharply
42 Thin
pancakes
44 Of the peat
47 Lock up
48 Kind
of system
50 Vaccine
type
52 Toward
shelter
53 Astronaut
- Shepard
54 Use a
sponge
55 Tear apart
56 RCA prod·
ucts
57 Shipshape

t Adventure
tale
5 Skirt bottom
8 Tootsy
12 Soprano"s
piece
13 Famous
Khan
14 Hideout
15 Story line
t 6 Fabled bird
17 Monsleur"s
airport
18 Riverbank
clown
20 Really awful
22 Cammon
creeper
· 23 Atmosphere
'24 Banquel
host
27 T""' trirnner
30 Grizzly or
Kodiak
31 Beep
32 Tar
34 Ka-pow!
35 Cry of
dismay
36 RuliHIOIIked

Opening lead: • K

*Ex pericm:cd

L

20% off

K Q J

•

~

r

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS .

• A K 5
• J 8 2

AI
PC . *Reaso nahl e Rates
· COncrete
'Work
.
. .,. *Jn sure.d

Insured

:10 YHnl U/HfiM!n
SMtlor C!llftll
.I Clwrth DNtOIJnF

flow,

• . 10876

9K J10852
• l0

Work · ·

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Complete Tree Care
1n1~1.cl• Free IEIIImlllll

r

• J 9 3
4 95 43
South

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

15
TRucKS
PUBLIC NOTICE
· required for each set of proposed action may
iOKSALE
NOTICE : is hereby plans and specifics- be submitted within 30
HAY&amp;
given that on Saturday, lions , check made · days of notice of lhe
August 16, 2008 ·at payable to •· The (ull proposed action . An
L.---GiiiRAINiiiiiii.-_..1 1994 Toyota pickup SR5
•
w ith
custo m
topper
10:00 a.m., a public amount
will
be adjudication hearing
4x5 round bates. Goed Hay. Ex cellent Condition . 1996
· sale will be held at 211 returned within thirty may be held on a pro·
740-742-245 7 o'r 740-4 16· · Honda ST1 100 mol ercycle.
W.
Second
St., (30) days alter receipt posed action II a hear·
Pomeroy, Ohio . The of bids.
ing request Qr objec4862
~~~~uent condition 446 .
Farmars Bank and Each bid must be lion is received by the
Hay for sale: 800 lb round
SUVs
www.ttm~ablnetty.cctn:a
Savings Company Is ~ccompanied by either OEPA within 30 days of
bala , 1600 lb round bale.
SAL
selling for cash in a bid bond In an Issuance of the prohand or certified check amount of 100% of the posed action . Written
800-537-9528.
Home: 740-446-1947 , Cell :
FOR
E
t~ following collater- bid amount with a comments, requests
740
794
NEW AND USED STEEL
" "I )St
99 Ford Explorer Sporl.
t
t
ai :
surety satisfactory to for public meetings ,
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
4WD, - bl ue&amp;grey, 120000
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GalUpoUs
2006 Harley Davidson the aforesaid Meigs and adjudication hear·
For
Cencrete.
Angle , 2003 Si mplicity Prestige, rid· mile s, loaded, runs/looks
S a · r t I a I I C o u n I y ingrequestsmustbe
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ing mower, 20hp, 5 0in cut., good. Good tires. 446-4448
1HD1BVB196Y058487 Commissioners or by sent to: Hearing Clerk,
Gr8ti ng
For
Drains, Good
Opn dition.
New ;;aft:iie!'-r;;t
5;;;m.;...~~-.;....,
The Farmers Bank and certified
check, Ohio Environmental
In Memory
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L $5,700 asking $2,500 mise
4x4
Savings
Company, cashiers check, or let- Protection
Agency,
Scrap
Meta
ls
Open
Monday,
putt
behind
accessories
304FoR
SALE '
Pomeroy,
Ohio. tor of credit upon a sol· P.O.
Box
1049,
Tuesday, Wednesda·y &amp; 675 _3600
reserves the right to vent bank in the Columbus,
Ohio
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
11n \'ll'f H( 1 \IIO\
bid at this sale, and to amount of nat less 4 3 2 1 6 • 1 0 4 9
02 Ford F-150 Supercab
Thurs day,
Satu rday
&amp;
withdraw the above than 10% of the bid (Telephone: 614·644·
4x4, 4.6L Triton VB, air, tilt,
10_...;1iiAilurosiiiiiiilii-,..l cruise, Tonneau cover, other
collateral prior to sale. amount In favor of the 2129). ""Final Actions:
_s_un:...d_"'·_1_74...;D_J4_4_~_7_3o_o__ L,V•
Further, The Farmers aforesaid
Meigs Are actions or the
extras 83.000 ·mi. $7900 .
Set 3 blac~ . birdcages.
FlJR SU.E
Bank and Savings C o u n t y director . which are
446·9278
18x30 with dividers, perchRacine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Company reserves the Commissioners. Bid upon issuance or a ·
es, food cups on stand. $60. 1971 Chevy Nova 3501350.
40
right to reject any or all Bands shall be accom· stated effective date.
Bonus
free
birdcage Runs and looks great. 7401
bids submitted.
pan led by Proof of Pursuant to
Ohio
Cell: 740-416-5047
18x18x19 t ~ and 2 cock· 245·0125
Owners:
The above described Authority of the official Revised Code Section
atail nest boxes. Must take
email:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
collateral will be sold or 1111enf signing the 3745.04, A final action
It~ been I year
1995 Firebird Fermula 350- ~ 9 -96 Honda ATV 300
&lt;:~11 . 245-5146
new.
740-446Fourtral\,
like
jrshadfrm@aol.com
"as ls·whore Is"", with bond.
may be appealed to the
Paul Rowe
LT1 , 1999 Saturn 2-dr, 2003
·
today since
4605
no
expressed
or Bids shall be sealed Environmental Review
Yamaha Elec. Piano w/full Stratus 2-dr. •other quality - - - ' -- - - - Implied
warranty and marked as Bid far Appeals Commission
we 've seen your keyboard &amp; Console Reco rd vehicles in sleek wilh war- 1998 Yamaha Gas Gall Cart,
given.
Portland Community (ERAC)
(Formerly
MIKE MARCUM
Player &amp; Radio 304-882· ranty. Priced to sell. Stop or 4-stro~e. gas engine, new
smiling face.
For further .lnforma- Cenler Electrical and know
as
the
call COOK MOTORS 328 tirem, tune-up, belt., $2,500
2804
1!11111 IN I, &amp; ill ~ lOili LI NI, (11.
tlon, or for an appoint· mailed ar.dallvered to: Environmental Board
Jackson Pi~e . 740- 446-0103 more available 30 4-675Gone
hut
never
Rtohber
Roo lin ~. Room Addi l torrs. Decks. Slllttqlr•s
mont to Inspect colla!· Meigs
County of Review) by a person
PE:rs
7386 or 304·675·5631
S•dmq. Window'• PoiP Bo1rn~; Gnrnqes
forgotten.
eral; .prior to sale date Commissioners
who was a party to a
!OR SALE
2003 Nissan Xetra. 135.000 r;;;:o-':':'"---~-.,
Insurance Work. flestrlnttt.11 X- Cortllttl•rr t;tl
contact Cyndle or Ken Courthouse
proceeding before the
miles, dark green , 4 whee l
CAMI'FJIS &amp;
I..nve
nlwnv&lt;
740-24~-0~]i'
at 992·2136.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ' director by filing an
MOTOR HoMES
Ltcl'nsed 11.- Bonded
AKC. Boston Terrier puppies. dri11e, $10,000; 2000 Chevy
:Hl 1'f'ars
Frue Esl tll ldll!s
(8) l3, 14, 15
Anentlon of bidders Is appeal within 30 days
Ex~H'r i cnce
6 wks old, shots &amp; wormed. Cavalier, 160.000 miles, - called to all of the of notice of the final
coac hman
23 11
$200 each. Call 740-388- mBnual transmission , sun- 1994
requirements
con- action. Pursuant to
roof, silver, $2,500,740-415- camper
$3400.
1989
THE WINDOW
H&amp;H
Public Notice
talnad In this bid pack· Ohio Revised Code
6300 or 740·416·6301
Citation 21ft caArper $ 1700.
LADY
et, particularly to the Section 3745.07, A
Guttering
Call 441 -5(162 or 379-2923
20 years experience
In Memory
In Memory
2004 Dodge Neon 4 cyt. 5
IN THE
COMMON Federal
Labor · Final Action Issuing,
in sewing
Seamless G utters
speed , sun r90f, spoiler. RV Service at Carmichael
PLEAS COURT, PRO· Standards Provisions denying, · modifying,
Roofing, Siding , Gutters
Trailers 740-446-3825
BATE DIVISION. MEIGS and
Davls·Bacon revoking, or renewing
li"'~F=========="M=i! $4750. 740-256-1142
Drape .~. Sheers. Rod
Insured &amp; Bonded
COUNTY, OHIO
Wages, various lnsur- a permit, license, or
" I I{\ tt I '\
Pocket Drape s,
740·653·9657
93
Camara,
till
,
cruise,
PW,
IN THE MATIER OF anca
requirements, variance which is nat
SwagS. Valances,
In
Loving
Memory
Of
PL.
CO
player.
cold
air.
3.4
nfo~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SETILEMENT
OF various equal opparlu· preceded by a pro·
· Rom an Shades and
V6, looks great. runs great
HOME .
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE nlly provisions, · and posed action, may be
BAD CREDIT?
· More ...
$2900. 446·9278
IMPROVE!IIEmS
. COURT MEIGS COUN· the requirement for a appealed to the ERAC
NO CREDIT?
Plus Pillow. Bedskirts
TY, OHIO
payment band and per· by filing an appeal
BANKRUPTCY?
99 Eddie Bauer Frod
BASEMENT
Table Co~· ers &amp; Table
Accounts and vouch· farmance bond for within 30 days of
Nov.
25,
1971
·Aug.
15,
2007
w,. 1..!!1 IH · 11 1
Expedition. LaS8r red , PW,
WATERPROOFING
Runn ers
ers of the following 100% of •the contract Issuance of the final
C.d l rltJ ! l1tll f l'i
PL, PB, PS, heated teatller ·unconditional lifetime guarCALL SANDY
named fiduciary has price.
action. ERAC appeals,
seats, su nroof, 6 disc CD &amp; antee . .Local refQrences furHome:740-992-3220
866·56q·8679
Our
hearts
stin
ache
been filed In the No bidder may with· accompanied by a $70
3rd
seat.
Motor
has
approx.
nished
.
Established
197
5.
'::(;:"•:11::7:40:·:4:16:·6:1:44=~!!!!!!!!!~
Probete Court, Meigs draw his bid within filing lee which th
· with sadness, and
60,000 miles, body has Catl
24 Hrs. (740) 446· f
County,
Ohio
lor thirty (30) days alter ecommlsslan In II dis·
165,000
miles.
Very
good
OB70,
Rogers Basement
9
se~ret
tears
still
approval and settle· the actual date of the cretlon may reduce if
~~~~ition . S9,600 304·882· Walerprooting.
ment.
opening thereof. The by aHidavll the appal·
what it meant
ESTATENO. 2006 2 Meigs
County lant demonstrates that
to lose you017· First account filed Cam mIssIoners payment of the full
I) Police Impounds! Cars froffi
Superior
Home
by Carroll Mowery, reserve the right to amount of the fee
no one can ever know.
$500!, Hondas. Chevys. Mainle nance. All home
5031111SL ......n,OI«iiiiO
Guardian of the person reject any or ail bids. would cause extreme
Jee ps, Fo rds, &amp; more! tor repair, inside and out.
740-112-1194
hardship,
must lie
and estate of Patricia (8) 15, 20,27
listings 800-620-4876 ~. V435 Plumbi ng. carpentry, etc .
A. Frazier, an alleged
filed
with:
\Ve Love &amp; Mis.&lt;
cal\339·3442
. . . . . ..,...lll:llllll-6:111m
Incompetent.
Environmental Review
You,
.
SIIIIUVI:DD.a-:tttllll
Unless exceptions are
Public Notice
Appeals Commission,
Dad, Mom &amp; Family
flied thereto, said - - - - - - - - 309 South Fourth
account will be set for Public Notice
Street, Roam 222 ,
hearing before said County: Meigs
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Court on the 15th day The fallowing appllca· A copy of the appeal
iiiiiiJIIC
....... · - · ·
of September, 2008, at lions and/or verified must be served on the
....llllnllllllrll
which
time
said complaints
were director within 3 days
IM fir Cl~ Prlt:lll
account will be conoid· received, and the fal· after filing the appeal
GRAND VICTORIA
ered and continued lowing draft, proposed, with the ERAC.
from day to day until or final actions were Final
Issuance of
RESORT &amp; CASINO
finally disposed of.
Issued, by ,The Ohio Permit to Install
RICK PRICE
Rising Sun, Indiana
Any person Interested E n v I r a n m e n I a I Kllbarger Costructlan, '
New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
may file written excep- Protection
Agency Inc.
October 19 &amp; 20, 2008
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Decks,
lion Ia said account or (OEPA) last weak. P.O. Box 946 Logan,
$120/person · double occupancy ·
Bathroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
to matters pertaining '" Actions '" Include the OH 43138
to the execution of the adoption, modification, Action ·
$115/person ·triple occupancy
Data;
wv ~040954 Ce ll 740-590-7665 740-992-0 7:.!0
trust, not less than five or repeal of orders 08107/2008
$11 0/person · quad occupancy
days prior to the date (ather than emergency Facility Description:
$150/person • single occupancy
set for hearing.
orders); the Issuance, Solid Waste
CORNER STONE
J&amp;L
J. S. Powell
denial, modification or Identification No. :06·
Construction CONSTRUCTION
Common Pleas Court, revocation of licenses, 08419
Includes breakfast buffet, dinner
Probate Division
permits, leases, vorl· This final action not
•
Vinyl Siding
buffet &amp; overnight
Roofing, Siding,
Meigs County, Ohio
anc.es, or certtficataa; preceded by proposed
•
Replacement
accommodat)ons.
Soffit, Decks,
(8) 15
·
and the approval or action and Is appeal·
Wlndpws
To make reservatloll$
Doors, Windows,
disapproval of plans abhla
to · ERAC.
• Roofing
Elec;tric. Plumbing.
and
specifications. Persons wishing to be
please call
• Decks
Public Notice
"' Drall Actions '" are on · Ohio
EPA 's
Drywall,
PVH Community Relations,
•
• Garages
wr!nen statements of Interested parties mail·
Remodeling,
Room
304·675·4340 Ext. 1326
NOTICE TO CDNTRAC· the
director
at lng list for this project
• ~ole Buildings
Additions
Accept cash, credit and chttcklll
TORS
!
EnvIron m e ·n t a I must submit a request
• Room Additions
Local Contractor
Sealed proposals for P r o I e c I I o n • s In writing to Ohio EPA ,
LIMITED SEATS!
Owner:
'
7 40-367.0544
the
Portland (Director's) Intent with Division of Solid and
James Keesee II
Free Estimate•
Community
Center respect
to
the lnfecllous
Waste
740-367.0536
742·2332
Electrical
Project, Issuance, denial, ate . Management,
Attn :
Friends ·&amp; Family VIP Event
Meigs County Ohio as of a permit, license, Systems Management
Extra
10% off Almost Everylhing•
per specifications In order, etc. Interested Unit, P.O. Box 1049,
For Remodeling and New House Building
bid packet will be persons may submit Columbus, OH 43216·
Including Sale and Clearance
received by the Meigs wrtnen permit, license, 1049, Tel : (814) 844·
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
Prices.
C o u n I y order, etc. Interested 2621 . Notice Ia hereby
•E~«:udflll Electronics, Great Price items and
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
Cammlasloners
at persons may submit given that on August 7.
Kenmore Pro. Additional e~c t usiOns apply. &amp;Eta
(across lrom City Park)
balo8 for details
their office at the wrlnan comments or 2008, tho director of
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Courthouoe, Pomeroy, request a public meet· Ohio EPA Issued a·
Mon., Aug. 18,2008 until8 pm only I
Hrs: M·F 9 a.m · 6 pm
Barns • Patio's , Porches and Decks
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 -lng regarding droll final permit to inllali
Sat9am-5pm
p.m., Sept. 4th, 2008 aclions. Commanta or (PTINa. 08·08419) far
.'
andlhanat1 :15p.m.at public
maetlng . K 1 I b a r g e r
All Ke~more Appliances and
uld office opened and requests must be sub- Construction,
Inc .
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom . OH
reed aloud for lhe fol· milled within 30 days (Applicant). This final
Floor Care
MilWAY
TAVERN
lowing:
of notice of the draft permit
authorizes
E•cludM Kenmore PRo, counler1op microwaves,
Pool Tourn Thurs 7 :30 pm
Greet Pr1ce items and closeouts. ONer good ltlru
Portland Community action.
""Propoaed expansion of lhe waate
Cell : 740·-116- 1834 .
8/18108.
Center
Electrical Actions '" are written handling area at lhe
BAnd Fri. Slick Nickle 9:00 • 1 :00
Plus
12
Months,
No
lne
rest,
25+
years
experience Fret Estimates
Project.
statements of the Meigs County Transfer
Sat. Karaoke 9:00 • 1 :00
No Payments
Specifications, and bid dlreclor'a Intent with Station located · at
Outside Cornh.ole Game
lonna may be secured respect
to . the 34878 Rock Springs
or Free Standard-Delive r
Day or night
at the office of Meigs ,Issuance, denial, modi· Road, Pomeroy, OH
Aner onl1ne or mail-In rebate on any appliance over
$399
'
C a u n t y fication. rev~tlon, or 45769. This autharlza·
Co .m m Ia ai one r s , renewal of a permit, tlon Is subject to all
SEARS
Courthouse, Pomeroy, license, or variance . rules, regulations, and
2200 Eastern' Ave. Ga llipolis. OH
Ohio 45~69 Phone 740· Written commenta and specilll!f conditions.
I ,, .
912·2895. A depdsH of request• for a .public (8) 15
0 dollars will be meeting regarding a

Trina ·.
Bachtel

• A LO 5 ·
• 9 4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

28 Years. Experience

·

r

Ea!i\

. KQ763
• 6

J40-992-1m

Tr!'es

1·12SII.

Have you priced a John
Deere late ly? You'll be surprised! Check out our used
2 plastic storage water 1nventory
at
tanks, 1,000 gal. &amp; 1,500 WWW . CA REQ . COM
gal. water pumps &amp; more Carmichael Equipment. 740304-675-6307
446-2412

West

1/1411 mo. pd

-···6,1·1

Service

• A2

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling ·

Hours

Pomeroy Oh1o
25 Year~ Locill Ex1-.Hmenu.•

¥ A Q 7
t Q87642

CINSTIUCTION

SIZes.5;X10'
.
to 10'.x30'

08-ts-oa

."

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

Remodeling

MAX

WWW .CARMIC HAEL ·
TAAILEAS.COM 740·446·
3825

1-2 Bedr'oom Apartments
With 1;\ppliances furn ished.
On site Laundry facility.
Exercise
equipment,
Call for details or pick up
applicatien at rental office. Outdoor furnitu re, Little
. Tikes toys call 304·675·
Poss1bi lity of rental
2157 1eave messa ge
assistance.
Equal Hou sing OppOrtunity
TOO# 41 9·5 26·0466
JET
"This institutien is an Equal
AERATION MOTORS
opportu nity Provider and
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Emp loyer" .
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

Hil l's Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

~ - New Garage•
ElectrJcilt &amp; Plumbing

TRAILER INVENTORY AT

Valley View Apartments
BOO State Rou te 325
Thurman, Ohio 45685

North

Room AddHion• I

r·------,..1
r
· rARM

TRAIL ERS,

Wanted To lease: Hunting
Prcperty in Mason County
2&amp;3BR apts. $385 and up,
304-882-2252 or · 304-675Cebtral Air. lf!ID Heokup,
5679
Tenant pays electric. EHO

JBR 2 batll MH on farm 212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
$600 per month + utililles.
_ _
.
bath , furnished , no pe ts.
540 752 0826
Rent+ Dep. 740-441·0245
For Rent (2) Mob1le Homes
both 2br, 1ba , now ta~ing
appl icatiens 304-593-6197

r:~·--'•'~•.•~ITS-AB·~-·--~
10

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

EBY, INTEGRITY..KIEFER
BUILT,
VALLEY
H 0 A'S E Ill V ESTOC K

2BA 2 bath, all electric. CIA, 339·0362

\'our KigM to Kno~o~·, Dfliu·red Rigbt to Your Door.

www..mydallysentinel.com

Townhouse
apartm ents. list for Hud·Sllbsldized, 1-br J papers, bo111 parents are on
and!or small houses FOR apartment
for
the site. Call 740-367-0274
RENT. Call (74.0) 441 -1111 elderJy/disabh~d. call 675tor app lication &amp; information

trash Included. Ill town. Rent

PubiH: ~oti~ in ,N,'"'~"l'"'·fJ

Friday, August 15, 2008
ALLEY OOP

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ]win Rivers Tewer is accept- Labradof Aetnever pups,
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
lng applications fer waltfng 6wks old, $30.00, no

$475. oepos" $475 339-

10 min. fr_om Power Plants- 2 bedroom apartment for
9101 SA 7. Chesllire. OH rent in Middleport . no pets.
740-446-4234 or .740-208(740)992-5858
7861
2 bedroom Garage Apt ..
2BA · at Johnsons Mob ile 2316 1/2 Mt. Vernon Ave,
Home Park. Call 740-645- $200 damage Oepo$11, $425
0506 or 740-446·2003
• montll 304-675-7902

Friday, August" 15, 2008

l-IE!(, MANA6ER! IT 15
TOO ''JUST RI61-1T" TO
PLA'( TODA'( !

Joint ventures that come you r way in th e
year ahead should att be thoroughly
investigated, because there wJI I be one
hidden among lh€1 WBtid&amp; that will have
considerable promise. Avoid !tilting outward appearances scare you off
LEO tJuly 23-Aug. 22)- Don 't let a tittle
misunderstanding with someone spnit
what should otherwise be e. most fun and
satisfying · day. Be prepared .to make a
compro mise or concession in your thinkIng lor the sake of harmony.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept .. 22) - You might
not be-too happy In arrangements where
demands are made on you, but by the
same token, th ings should balance . out
' wonderfully in situations where you can
use your own initiative
UBAA (Sept . 23: oct. 23) - Things can
go wrong with a friend when 'money Js an
issue - so ke ep these kind s ol dealings
businesslike. Howeve r, when your
involvement Is pure ly social re.lax and
4
have a good lime
$COAP t0 (Qcl. 2&lt;4-N9v. 22) - Even if
the greater part of the doy Is filled with
pleasant expe riences. there is a possibility that-a crisis ceuld arise concerning a
domesUc matter. Don't be caught oN
guard
1
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - A
good friend might put yeur patience and
tolerance to the test because, although
yout pal has a generous nature, he or 1
she may have a demanding attitude. Put
blinde rS on when it comes to these shortoominge.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·}an. 19) Financial affairs will be a miX9d bag. on ·
the one hand, ~ou could tose funds due
to poor conditions, but than turn around
and gain something that's comes out of
sheer tuck. Go figure.
AOUAAIUS (Jan .. 20· Feb. 19) - Be on
your toes and be mentally aware or all
forms of opposition so that you can go
along with procedures that otter the pa th
of least reslstam:::e. It'll be the sales!
route to take.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Many
things will go your way, but II you fai l to
keep pace- with your duties or ·responsibilities, compl JcatJons will ~elop and
bring headaches. Don't l"!egate thrt;l good
because of neglect.
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprll 19) - "It was the
best of tln'i es, lt was the worst ot times" Is
hew you may vJ8w this day. Seme·pleasant Involvements with lrlenda could ta,ke
place, wh1,18 a maj or disappointment'
occurs at the ·same lima .

TAURUS (Apnl 20·Moy 20) -

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C•p~er cryjllograms are created !rom ~uota11ons by 'amo;s oec~e. Past an~ present
EOK:h lttter tn the c•phtr sranas lor a'lOlllt&lt;t

Todays clue: G equals J

'" " R C B

HK

DBKJJI

o' M Z T Z N B M R

YZMS

BABMR

RCKR

JZTB . "'

•

FT

K

RFFV

GKHBL

L B AB M·

E K L,

HZDKNP J FPL
VJKNB

ZM

HI

NFWPDM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I ask yo" to pray !or me. !or once age has
overtaken us, we find consolation only in religipn."- Paul Cezanne

~~~~:t~~y s~~~1Vi-LGr-trs·

WORD
GAM£

- - - - - - - lillod by CLAY R. POllAN

0 lour · strctmbled
Redrrongc

low

I

!etten

ct' Ihe

words be-

lo .form four simple word!.

A s E G0 D

:I I I
I

1

I

1

NA Y0 G

"'Have you ever noticed;· the
man asked, ""that it" s eas ier to
give up good hab111 li1an ···

I I I I I Io··~:mplete

, . liEBEAR
6

.

I

the thue&lt;lo quoteci

filling ir. fhe miu1r.g ~~;ords
you develop frcm_step Nc_3 below·.

by

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS !114/08
EFFORT- ~OCK ··GRAPH- STOLID - PROFIT

"If you count all your assets," the mother lold 11er daughter;
"youwiil show a PROFIT.''
•
ARLO &amp; JANIS

A big

ebjectlvv that meane a lot to you might
not be •• equally maanlnglul to your
aMOCiates. Oorl't be turprleed If they go
their own way, le.vJng you to de your
own thing .
QEMINI (May 21.Junt 20)- Authorth lp
will m.. n a lot to the peraon who orlglnatet an Idea, 10 If you choa1a to ua1 11
In tomt manntrr bl turw to credit t1'11
IOUf'CI, Therw't everything to !oM tr you
fell to do t o.
CANCE~ (Jun• 21·Juty 22) - Financial
lnvoivtmentt wilt havt to b1 managed
with llrtrtme tkttl, bloau11, although you
migl'lt make a winning tnvettmant, you
oauld alta find a way tel come aut on tha
llhort end by nightfall.

SOUPTONUTZ
NoBcP4 IOoJO'riiS

WHaT

GoD IPc\&lt;ll. t..i Ice ,

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

---·

----- ~ --

�Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Phelps
from PageBl
threw my cap and goggles
on and then they pushed us
on out. No time." he said.
"The medal was in my
warmup jacket.''
·
History can't wait.
A half-hour after winning
anot her gold, Phelps · was
second
fastest
behind
Milorad Cavic of Croatia in
the I00 fly, setting himself
up to tie Spitz's record in
Saturday's final. World
record-holder Jan Crocker of
the U.S. bounced back from
a disappointing swim in the
prelims to post the thirdfastest time
"There wasn't much
time," Phelps said, "but I
think there's going to be a lor
of time for me to rest over
the next 18 hours or so. and
I' II be able to be ready for
tomorrow morning's 100."
If ''all goes according to
plan,,Phelps will get No. 7 in
the fly - his signature
stroke - and have the coronation Sunday in the 400
medley
relay.
Ttie ·
Americans are always heav-

USA
fromPageBl
game shooting just 37 percent in the first two games,
was 7-for-14 from the field
and finished with 18 points.
Chris Bosh also had 18
points, Wade added 17 and
LeBron James had 13 for
the United States (3-0),
which moves on to a
matchup of Group B
unbeatens Saturday night
against world champion
Spain. The winner will earn·
the group's top seed for the
quarterfinals.
Greece
stunned
the
Americans two years ago in
the semifinals of the 2006
world
championships,
shredding the U.S. defense
for 63 percentshooting with
clinical execution of its
pick-and-roll offense in a
101-95 victory.
This time, the Greeks hit
just41.3 percent (26-for-63)
from the field and just 4for-18, 22 percent, from 3 point
range
as
the
Americans used a suffocating defense to extend a
seven-point lead io a 19point cushion in the final 5
112 minutes of the first half.
"Any time you get beat
it's embarrassing and that's
enough," Bosh .said. "And
we can really use .that. as a
tool to help us . with our
defense now, and that's the
name of the game. Because
if you play good defense, no
matter how you're shooting

www.mydailysentinel.com

ily favored for gold in that
Lochte won despite a
one.
problem with his LZR
Nevertheless, he's taking Racer.
nothing for granted, espe"My suit came undone
cially in the tly.
after the tirst 50," he said. "I
" It' s definitely a tough was just trying to control my
race," he said. "With (Cavic) legs."
and ian having a great semiP-eirsol ,won the 100 back
final, it's going to be a good in Beijing, but failed to
race tomorrow. I'm goi ng to match his backstroke double
do everything I can to be a from .Athens four years ago.
little bit closer in the first 50. He earned the si lver in
:.. and, hopefully, if I'm I :54.33, while Russia's
there at the 50,1'11 be there at Arkady Vyatchanin claimed
the finish. "
the bronze.
"That's the theme of the
Lochte got quite a consolation price: a world record meet. You have to b~eak a ·
and the tirst individmil gold world record to win. I gave it
medal of his career in the my all and I had nothing
backstroke. The laid-back left," Peirsol said. "I' m very
Floridian edged teammate . proud of what I've done .
Aaron Peirsol in I :53.94 to Ryan swam well. He earned
break the mark he shared it."
Rebecca Soni gave the
with Peirsol.
" I touched the wall and U.S. women's swim team a
was like, 'Thank you, finai- much-needed boost, setting
Jy. " ' -Lochte said. "It felt a world record in the 200
breaststroke wilh an upset of
good the whole way."
Lochte was known as "Mr. Australia's Leise! Jones.
Soni had ruready claimed a
Runner-up" for his frequent
second-place finishes to surprising silver behind
Phelps and Peirsol. Then, he Jones in the 100 breast. a
stunned Peirsol at last year's race she wasn't even supworld championships in posed to be in. She took over
I :54.32, before Peirsol when Jessica Hardy failed a
matched the time in beating doping test at the U.S. trials
Lochte at the U.S. Olympic and was dropped from the
trials last month.
·team.

. the ball you're going to be
in the game."
The Americans' defense
failed them at the 2004
Athens Olympics. The U.S.
finished 5-3 and gave up an
average of 91.6 points per
game in the three losses.
The disappointing showing
was the impetus that led to
the three-year training this
squad underwent to prepare
for these Summer Games.
This is not just a roster of
NBA All-Stars, these play- ·
ers feel a part of a team.
Thursday night Theo
Papaloukas led Greece with
15 points. but like China
and Angola before them, the
Greeks stayed close for
about I 112 quarters before
the Americans' depth and
athleticism blew open the
game.
After the . previously
slumping · Bryant finally
knocked down a 3-pointer,
James blocked a shot that
led to Bosh's three'point
play' for a 44-30 lead with
2:31 remaining in the sec- .
ond quarter. Ja(lles came up
with a steal less than 30 seconds later and threw down a
reverse dunk.
Bosh swiped at a ball that
led to another Greece
turnover, and James found
him on the next possession
for another three-point play
and a 49-30 bulge. The
Greeks then turned it over
again, with James keeping
his balance while nearly
falling down to take an outlet pass and convert a layup,
and Bosh blocked the final
Greek shot of the half to

·o
~

Programs;
1
Business Management
1
Early Childhood Development
1
General Studies(l'ransfer Module
1
Information Technology

For more information contact:
Brent Patterson (740) 992-1880 or
Rebecca Long (BOO) ZBZ-7201, ext 72J6
Email: brentp@rio.edu or rlong@rio.edu.
On the Web, go ~~ www.ri~Ledu

BERNARD V. FULTZ CENTER
FOR IHGHER EDUCATION
42377 Owles Chancey Drive
Pomeroy. Obio 45769
Mj,.;enr ro the Meigs Middle School Dnd
Mfigslligh Scltool Compuses

make it 51-32 at the break.
The United States had 12point lead in the game in
Japan two years ago before
handing it over with its
sloppy defensive effort. The
Americ'ans came out much
sharper this time, with
Jason Kidd picking up three
fouls in the first I :25 while
aggressively defending , and
Bryant guarding Vasileios
Spanoulis, ·the top Greek
scorer. •
And after stubb0rnly
sticking to what wasn' t
working in the game two
years ago, the Americans
showed the Greeks different
looks ihis time. They picked
up full court on one early
possession. then fell back
into a zone defense on
another.
"I don't think the pickand-roll tonight was as big a
problem as it was in '06,"
Carmelo Anthony said.
Unlike their easy victory
against Angola two nights
earlier, the Americans kept
up the defensive intensity
after halftime. Dwight
Howard smacked away a
shot right into Kidd's head,
leading to a shot clock vialation, and James and Bosh
had rejections on the sam~
third-~uarter possession a
few mmutes later.
·
The Americans still struggled from the . free throw
line and 3-point arc. They
were 7-of-20 on 3s and just
13 of 23 at the line.
Greece (1-2), . which lost
to Spain in its opener, faces
winless Angola before closing pool play against China.

FJ;iday, August 15, 2008

Edwards shines in Bills' debut in Toronto
TORONTO (A P) - 0,
Canada, did Trent Edwards
ever find hi s groove during
the Buffalo B1lls' debut in
their new northern home
away from home: ·
Shaking off a sluggish performance in the Bills' preseason . opener last week,
Edwards was near-perfect in
two series, going 9-for-11 for
I 04 yards and two touchdowns, in Buffalo's 24-21
win over the Pittsburgh
Steelers on Thursday night.
In hitting tigh.t end Robert
Royal fo r both scores,
Edwards showed wh¥ the
Bills placed their faith m the
2007 third-round draft pick
by awarding him the starting
job ahead of J.P. Losman
midway through last season.
Rookie first-round draft
pick Lerxlis McKelvin made
a splash. too. The cornerback
sealed the victory by scoring
on an electric 95-yard kickoff
return immediately after the
Steelers ( 1-1) cut it to 17-14
on Rashard Mendenhall's 6yard run.
Best -of all. it allowed the
Bills ( 1-1 ) to make a strong
first impression in kicking off
their five-year. eight-game
series in Toronto. playing
before a near-capacity crowd
at the downtown Rogers
Centre. As part of the series,
which runs through 2012, .the
Bills will become the first
NFL team to play an annwil
regular-season home game
outside of the United States,
starting on Dec . 7, when
Buffalo faces Miami.
Edwards shook off a poQr
outin~ in a 17- 14 loss at
Washmgton last weekend, by
going deep on the tirst play
from scrimmage, hitting Lee
Evans in the seam for a 33yard gain. He also showed
great touch on both touchdown passes. Royal made a
leaping catch on a 7-yard
pass in traffic deep in the end
zone to open the scoring.
Edwards then placed a perfect pass. hitting Royal on an
out-pattern for a 17-yard
touchdown. The score capped
an 11-play 90-yard dnve.
Edwards accounted for 79
yards of the drive, 57 passing
and a 22-yard scamper up the

APphoto

Pittsburgh Steelers' Byron Leftwitch. left, tries to fend off
Buffalo Bills' Chris Ellis during the first half of a preseason
NFL football game in Toronto on Thursday.
·
·

middle to convert a third-and13 deep in the Bills' zone.
"I was pleased with some
of the thmgs 'that we did,
especially on that drive where
we went 90 yards," Royal
said. "Overall, we did better
today. But we still have a lot
of things that we need ·to
improve on."
Maybe so, but the scoring
drives ·did come against the
Steelers' tirst-string defense,
a unit which allowed the
fewest yards in the NFL last
season, but one that was
minu s strong safety Troy
Polamalu (hamstring).
"We weren'.t at our peak,"
defensive tackle Casey
Hampton said.
St\!elers quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger had a · solid
outing. ~oing, 9-of-ll for 142
yards wtth a touchdown - a
40-yarder
to
Santonio
Holmes - in three series.
More focus was on the
Steelers' backup situation,
with newly signed Byron
Leftwich making his first
appearance after Charlie
Batch broke his collarbone in
a
16-10
win
over
Philadelphia last week .
· Leftwtch completed his
first attempt, a 24-yarder over
the
middle
to
Nate

Washington, but then proved
inconsistent, looking like
someone· who had only three
days to pick up the Steelers
offense.
The former Jacksonville
starter, who spent last season
wi·th Atlanta, finished 5-of-11
for 41 yards during six series .
He nearly lost a fumble
before the ball rolled out of
bounds, had a pass batted
down by Spencer Johnson
and didn't get help from
rookie second-round pick,
receiver Limas Sweed, who
had an easy pass go through
his hands.
Steelers third-string quarterback Dennis Dixon also
scored on a47-yard run.
The announced attendance
of 48,434 was about 5,000
short of capacity, and considered a disa{lpointment for
series organ1zers, who are
paying the Bills ·an average
$9.75 million per game to
show the NFL that Canada's
largest city and financial capital can be home to a permanent franchise. Steep ticket
prices. ranging from $75 to
$575, didn't help. Hours
before the game, fans were
purchasing tickets with a
$575 face value for as little as
$90.

�Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Phelps
from PageBl
threw my cap and goggles
on and then they pushed us
on out. No time." he said.
"The medal was in my
warmup jacket.''
·
History can't wait.
A half-hour after winning
anot her gold, Phelps · was
second
fastest
behind
Milorad Cavic of Croatia in
the I00 fly, setting himself
up to tie Spitz's record in
Saturday's final. World
record-holder Jan Crocker of
the U.S. bounced back from
a disappointing swim in the
prelims to post the thirdfastest time
"There wasn't much
time," Phelps said, "but I
think there's going to be a lor
of time for me to rest over
the next 18 hours or so. and
I' II be able to be ready for
tomorrow morning's 100."
If ''all goes according to
plan,,Phelps will get No. 7 in
the fly - his signature
stroke - and have the coronation Sunday in the 400
medley
relay.
Ttie ·
Americans are always heav-

USA
fromPageBl
game shooting just 37 percent in the first two games,
was 7-for-14 from the field
and finished with 18 points.
Chris Bosh also had 18
points, Wade added 17 and
LeBron James had 13 for
the United States (3-0),
which moves on to a
matchup of Group B
unbeatens Saturday night
against world champion
Spain. The winner will earn·
the group's top seed for the
quarterfinals.
Greece
stunned
the
Americans two years ago in
the semifinals of the 2006
world
championships,
shredding the U.S. defense
for 63 percentshooting with
clinical execution of its
pick-and-roll offense in a
101-95 victory.
This time, the Greeks hit
just41.3 percent (26-for-63)
from the field and just 4for-18, 22 percent, from 3 point
range
as
the
Americans used a suffocating defense to extend a
seven-point lead io a 19point cushion in the final 5
112 minutes of the first half.
"Any time you get beat
it's embarrassing and that's
enough," Bosh .said. "And
we can really use .that. as a
tool to help us . with our
defense now, and that's the
name of the game. Because
if you play good defense, no
matter how you're shooting

www.mydailysentinel.com

ily favored for gold in that
Lochte won despite a
one.
problem with his LZR
Nevertheless, he's taking Racer.
nothing for granted, espe"My suit came undone
cially in the tly.
after the tirst 50," he said. "I
" It' s definitely a tough was just trying to control my
race," he said. "With (Cavic) legs."
and ian having a great semiP-eirsol ,won the 100 back
final, it's going to be a good in Beijing, but failed to
race tomorrow. I'm goi ng to match his backstroke double
do everything I can to be a from .Athens four years ago.
little bit closer in the first 50. He earned the si lver in
:.. and, hopefully, if I'm I :54.33, while Russia's
there at the 50,1'11 be there at Arkady Vyatchanin claimed
the finish. "
the bronze.
"That's the theme of the
Lochte got quite a consolation price: a world record meet. You have to b~eak a ·
and the tirst individmil gold world record to win. I gave it
medal of his career in the my all and I had nothing
backstroke. The laid-back left," Peirsol said. "I' m very
Floridian edged teammate . proud of what I've done .
Aaron Peirsol in I :53.94 to Ryan swam well. He earned
break the mark he shared it."
Rebecca Soni gave the
with Peirsol.
" I touched the wall and U.S. women's swim team a
was like, 'Thank you, finai- much-needed boost, setting
Jy. " ' -Lochte said. "It felt a world record in the 200
breaststroke wilh an upset of
good the whole way."
Lochte was known as "Mr. Australia's Leise! Jones.
Soni had ruready claimed a
Runner-up" for his frequent
second-place finishes to surprising silver behind
Phelps and Peirsol. Then, he Jones in the 100 breast. a
stunned Peirsol at last year's race she wasn't even supworld championships in posed to be in. She took over
I :54.32, before Peirsol when Jessica Hardy failed a
matched the time in beating doping test at the U.S. trials
Lochte at the U.S. Olympic and was dropped from the
trials last month.
·team.

. the ball you're going to be
in the game."
The Americans' defense
failed them at the 2004
Athens Olympics. The U.S.
finished 5-3 and gave up an
average of 91.6 points per
game in the three losses.
The disappointing showing
was the impetus that led to
the three-year training this
squad underwent to prepare
for these Summer Games.
This is not just a roster of
NBA All-Stars, these play- ·
ers feel a part of a team.
Thursday night Theo
Papaloukas led Greece with
15 points. but like China
and Angola before them, the
Greeks stayed close for
about I 112 quarters before
the Americans' depth and
athleticism blew open the
game.
After the . previously
slumping · Bryant finally
knocked down a 3-pointer,
James blocked a shot that
led to Bosh's three'point
play' for a 44-30 lead with
2:31 remaining in the sec- .
ond quarter. Ja(lles came up
with a steal less than 30 seconds later and threw down a
reverse dunk.
Bosh swiped at a ball that
led to another Greece
turnover, and James found
him on the next possession
for another three-point play
and a 49-30 bulge. The
Greeks then turned it over
again, with James keeping
his balance while nearly
falling down to take an outlet pass and convert a layup,
and Bosh blocked the final
Greek shot of the half to

·o
~

Programs;
1
Business Management
1
Early Childhood Development
1
General Studies(l'ransfer Module
1
Information Technology

For more information contact:
Brent Patterson (740) 992-1880 or
Rebecca Long (BOO) ZBZ-7201, ext 72J6
Email: brentp@rio.edu or rlong@rio.edu.
On the Web, go ~~ www.ri~Ledu

BERNARD V. FULTZ CENTER
FOR IHGHER EDUCATION
42377 Owles Chancey Drive
Pomeroy. Obio 45769
Mj,.;enr ro the Meigs Middle School Dnd
Mfigslligh Scltool Compuses

make it 51-32 at the break.
The United States had 12point lead in the game in
Japan two years ago before
handing it over with its
sloppy defensive effort. The
Americ'ans came out much
sharper this time, with
Jason Kidd picking up three
fouls in the first I :25 while
aggressively defending , and
Bryant guarding Vasileios
Spanoulis, ·the top Greek
scorer. •
And after stubb0rnly
sticking to what wasn' t
working in the game two
years ago, the Americans
showed the Greeks different
looks ihis time. They picked
up full court on one early
possession. then fell back
into a zone defense on
another.
"I don't think the pickand-roll tonight was as big a
problem as it was in '06,"
Carmelo Anthony said.
Unlike their easy victory
against Angola two nights
earlier, the Americans kept
up the defensive intensity
after halftime. Dwight
Howard smacked away a
shot right into Kidd's head,
leading to a shot clock vialation, and James and Bosh
had rejections on the sam~
third-~uarter possession a
few mmutes later.
·
The Americans still struggled from the . free throw
line and 3-point arc. They
were 7-of-20 on 3s and just
13 of 23 at the line.
Greece (1-2), . which lost
to Spain in its opener, faces
winless Angola before closing pool play against China.

FJ;iday, August 15, 2008

Edwards shines in Bills' debut in Toronto
TORONTO (A P) - 0,
Canada, did Trent Edwards
ever find hi s groove during
the Buffalo B1lls' debut in
their new northern home
away from home: ·
Shaking off a sluggish performance in the Bills' preseason . opener last week,
Edwards was near-perfect in
two series, going 9-for-11 for
I 04 yards and two touchdowns, in Buffalo's 24-21
win over the Pittsburgh
Steelers on Thursday night.
In hitting tigh.t end Robert
Royal fo r both scores,
Edwards showed wh¥ the
Bills placed their faith m the
2007 third-round draft pick
by awarding him the starting
job ahead of J.P. Losman
midway through last season.
Rookie first-round draft
pick Lerxlis McKelvin made
a splash. too. The cornerback
sealed the victory by scoring
on an electric 95-yard kickoff
return immediately after the
Steelers ( 1-1) cut it to 17-14
on Rashard Mendenhall's 6yard run.
Best -of all. it allowed the
Bills ( 1-1 ) to make a strong
first impression in kicking off
their five-year. eight-game
series in Toronto. playing
before a near-capacity crowd
at the downtown Rogers
Centre. As part of the series,
which runs through 2012, .the
Bills will become the first
NFL team to play an annwil
regular-season home game
outside of the United States,
starting on Dec . 7, when
Buffalo faces Miami.
Edwards shook off a poQr
outin~ in a 17- 14 loss at
Washmgton last weekend, by
going deep on the tirst play
from scrimmage, hitting Lee
Evans in the seam for a 33yard gain. He also showed
great touch on both touchdown passes. Royal made a
leaping catch on a 7-yard
pass in traffic deep in the end
zone to open the scoring.
Edwards then placed a perfect pass. hitting Royal on an
out-pattern for a 17-yard
touchdown. The score capped
an 11-play 90-yard dnve.
Edwards accounted for 79
yards of the drive, 57 passing
and a 22-yard scamper up the

APphoto

Pittsburgh Steelers' Byron Leftwitch. left, tries to fend off
Buffalo Bills' Chris Ellis during the first half of a preseason
NFL football game in Toronto on Thursday.
·
·

middle to convert a third-and13 deep in the Bills' zone.
"I was pleased with some
of the thmgs 'that we did,
especially on that drive where
we went 90 yards," Royal
said. "Overall, we did better
today. But we still have a lot
of things that we need ·to
improve on."
Maybe so, but the scoring
drives ·did come against the
Steelers' tirst-string defense,
a unit which allowed the
fewest yards in the NFL last
season, but one that was
minu s strong safety Troy
Polamalu (hamstring).
"We weren'.t at our peak,"
defensive tackle Casey
Hampton said.
St\!elers quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger had a · solid
outing. ~oing, 9-of-ll for 142
yards wtth a touchdown - a
40-yarder
to
Santonio
Holmes - in three series.
More focus was on the
Steelers' backup situation,
with newly signed Byron
Leftwich making his first
appearance after Charlie
Batch broke his collarbone in
a
16-10
win
over
Philadelphia last week .
· Leftwtch completed his
first attempt, a 24-yarder over
the
middle
to
Nate

Washington, but then proved
inconsistent, looking like
someone· who had only three
days to pick up the Steelers
offense.
The former Jacksonville
starter, who spent last season
wi·th Atlanta, finished 5-of-11
for 41 yards during six series .
He nearly lost a fumble
before the ball rolled out of
bounds, had a pass batted
down by Spencer Johnson
and didn't get help from
rookie second-round pick,
receiver Limas Sweed, who
had an easy pass go through
his hands.
Steelers third-string quarterback Dennis Dixon also
scored on a47-yard run.
The announced attendance
of 48,434 was about 5,000
short of capacity, and considered a disa{lpointment for
series organ1zers, who are
paying the Bills ·an average
$9.75 million per game to
show the NFL that Canada's
largest city and financial capital can be home to a permanent franchise. Steep ticket
prices. ranging from $75 to
$575, didn't help. Hours
before the game, fans were
purchasing tickets with a
$575 face value for as little as
$90.

�Page 2•

Back to School 2008

. Friday, August 15, 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

New school year can mean scheduling anXiety for parents;

·
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

right lessons now? And anyhow, who doesn't want the
kids doing something safe
and supervised when mom
and dad aren't around?
For parents contemplating
which - and how many activities to sign their children up for this fall, some
guidelines from the pros:

Shannon.Conner keeps a 2foot-by-3-foot calendar on
the wall and also carries a
Palm, just to make sure she
knows which of her six kids
· belongs at which activity.
The Indianapolis mom used
to have a rule: Choose one
•••
sport and one non-sport a
Say no first, uilless there's
season. But then her 10-yeara good reason to say yes.
old daughter, Grace, wanted
to do so much. Grace's
That's the . advice of
schedule now goes like this:
William
. Doherty,
a
swim team, kickball, basketUniversity of Minnesota proball, volleyball, student
fessor
who
co-founded
· counci I and Girl Scouts.
Putting
Family
First,
an orgaEvery day an activity.
And Conner, who has said nization that raises awareness
no to still other activities, of overscheduled kids.
Parenting has become a
worries: Is it too much?
form
of competition, he says.
A new school year means
it's time for parents to sched- "Parents are more worried
the children are not keepule afterschool and weekend that
.mg up. "
actiVIties again. They've
Of course, a lot depends on
heard the experts: Childrefl
each
child. In Conner's case,
need some unstructured time
to make up their own games, it's Grace who's pushing her
find their own friends and to say yes .
. "When you have a kid that
problem solve.
"Children need down time wants to do something, it's
to relax and decompress, just hard . You have to set boundlike adults," says Paul aries with that child," Conner
Donahue, a -child psycholo- says. "She sees the (enrollgist in Scarsdale, N.Y. "They ment) .forms and she wants to
also need time to ju st know when we're turning
explore, play on · their own them in."
The camps, sports league s
and usc their ima g ination .~·
Ye t the pressure to schedule and other activities keep
and overschedulc
sending the forms to maintain
rcmains strong. Will your o r grow their enro llm ent
chi ld fall behind if she docs - numbers.
n' t take soccer or ballet with
"Once you· ve done someher friends ? Could yo u have thing, it's like you're in that
the world's next piano prodi - loop. They market to the overgy if only you give him th e scbeduled child." Con ner says.

"We're on the sucker list."

(MS) - For the millions of
junior high, hi-g h school and
college students heading
back to school' shortly, the
idea of returning to the classroom may ·be met with mixed
emotions .
While the school experienc·e is built upon educational advancement , attending
school is also laregly a social
experience. Many students
find themselves working as
hard to "fit in" as they do to
improve their gr.ades. These
pressures can take a toll on
someone already susceptible
to .emotional and behavioral
conditions , such as depression or anxiety and eating
disorders , or trigger feelings
in someone who never struggled before. Centers like
Timberline Knolls, a 43-acre
residential treatment center
for women and adolescent
girls, want to educate students and parents about
potential problems, and let
them know assistance Is

Make time for
family and play

•••

What's the rush?
Look at sports . and activiThe choices for babies as ties as part of a pyramid,
young as 6 . months .can Doherty suggests: The base is
mclude m~s1c, -tu!Dbhng, lots of family time, then
dance, Spamsh and Sign lan- . unstructured play with other
guage! but th~ best re~on for kids, then playing on their
e~rolhng might be JUSt to own, and only then organized
gtve mom or dad a chance
activities . .
get out of the house.
· ,
"The problem is when
E.ven preschoolers don t those structured activities
really need any structured
.
.
activity,
according
to c.ome a~ the pnce of famtly
Doherty. ·
t~me, hke meals toget.he~:
"You're not actually doing time to hang out as a family,
· them any good beyond just he ~ays. .
.
playing. You have to ·ask
Ltttle ktds, e~pec1ally, may
yourself, why do ii? It's ne~d .. more time between
social comparison,'' he said.
actlyttles.
.
.
In sports, forget teaching
Ktmm· Elhs, · of Indio,
technique or proper form Calif., signed her son Cabot,
until a child is at least 8, then 2, up for a 7 a.m. swim
according to Brooke de class twice a week before
Lench, editor of the site preschool. For about seven
www.momsteam.com.
months, he loved it.
What if a child is p~rticularly
Then he "started crying and
. g~d ~t a s~ort? Playmg some- screaming in the car.
.thmg mtens1vely from age 4 or
" I think he was oversched5 often makes the child .want to uled . It was just bad timing,"
dr?p o~t later ~nd . try -~orne- says Ellis, who pulled Cabot
thmg different, she says.
out of swimming.
Donahue , author of the new
" He's much happier " · she
b.o ok " Parenting Without
•
' ·
. Feur" (August, St. Martin 's says.
•••
Press), agrees: Specializing
On
the
Web:
too young can make the sport
National Alliance for Youth
feel like a job, he says.
Sports
: http: //www .nays .org
He sugges.ts limiting act.ivi Putting
Family
First:
ties to one or two a season
when child re n arc undet X. http :// www .putting fam i Iy. Older kids often ha ve two or first.org
three activities go in g, but he
Moms · .
Team :
suggests keeping at least ooe http :// www.momsteam.com
or two days a week open.
Paul
Donahue:
•••
http://www.drpauldonahue.com

!O

·Elect

JOE BROWNING
'

Glllll COUNTY SHERIFF ·

2008
Proudly Supporting tire Youth ofGallia County
Have .a Safe &amp; Successful School Year!
Paid tor by Ihe candidate, Joe 3rowning 560 Evergreen Rd .. Bidwell, OH 45614

_,

I

Jan. 19 - Martin Luther
~ing's birthday
.Feb. 16 - Instructional
support and enhancement day
AprU 10. - Instruction
enhancement day
13-17 - Spring
May 25 - Memorial Day
June 3 - Last day for students
·
June 4 - Instructional
support and enhancement day
June 5:6 - Outside environment days
'June 9 - Preparation for
closing· schools . '
.

.BElT WISHES TO
WAHAMA HICiH SCHOOL
POINT PLEASANT HICiH SCHOOL
HANNAN HICiH SCHOOL

GAIL

ROUSH
·C ounty ·

~on

· • Page 3

Body image is a concern for students of all ages

tips ·on keeping things sane

BY AMIE WMNER

Back to School 2008

-.

available when necessary.
A common concern of students of all ages . is body
image. Many students admit
to feeling the pressure to
have a good body, whether to
fit into a certain clique or
meet th~ weight requirements ·
of a scholastic ~ports team .
Others want to emulate their
favorite stars they see in
movies and on · television.
Eating disorders like anorexia nervosa and bulimia are
growing concerns in scho-ols
around the country.
·
·
As many as !0 million
females · and one million
males are fighting a life and
deatl) battle with anorexia or
bulimia and another 25 million are fighting a binge eating disorder, according to the
National Eating Disorders
Association.
Others
are
exhibiting borderline symptoms of these conditions,
including
poor attitudes
about body weight and food .
· Eating disorders are usually

shrouded in secrecy, but
those who are suffering
should realize that reaching
out for assistance is the first
step to getting bl;lck on track.
. "We want to share the message of hope and acceptance
with students everywhere,"
says Dr. Kimberly Dennis,
Timberline Knolls' .medical
director. "We show individuals how to take a positive step
toward recovery, and educate
families on how they can support their loved ones."
Timberline Knolls offers
cuiting edge psychiatric and
psychological
therapeutic
approaches coupled with constant attention to an individual's strengths and disorders .
Their goals are to work with
women and their families to
develop a program that celebrates successes. There are
programs tailored for eating
disorders, · substance -abuse,
risk-taking behavior, and
depression. Learn more by
visiting
www.timberline-

knolls.com . .
"behavior.
Treatment for eating disorders is best when started at
Physical symptoms other
the onset of ariy indicators of' than weight loss that could
a problem.
be indicators of an eating
disorder include:
Here are the top signs
• Dry skin and thinning
that someone you know ·scalp hair.
·
may be suffering from an
• Stomach and intestinal
eating disorder:
problems.
,
• Cessation of menstrua• Exhibits concern · about·
tion.
her weight and attempts to
• Growth of lanugo (fine
control weight by diet ,
refusal of food, vomiting or hair on body surface).
• Erosion of tooth enamal;
laxative anJ diuretic abuse.
tears
in the esophagus. (from
• Does prolonged exercising despite fatigue and weak- vomiting).
For more il~j(mnation on
ness .
• Has peculiar patterns identifyin!i the signs and sympregarding handling food . toms (!l eating disorders, visit
www.ti mberli neknolls .com or
May eat in secrecy.
(·all
(877) 257-961/ to speak
• Exhibits abnormally fast
weight loss , without any with a Timerbline Knolls staff
other known medical condi- member.
Support and professional
tion. Bulimics might be
slightly underweight or over- help can go a long way
weight.
toward helping · students
• Experiences depressive through the myriad of presmoods and self-depr~cating sures they face.

ANNUAl BACK.To·· SCHOOL ·TENT SALE
Now _Thru Sunday, August 17th .
Stop By The Point Pleasant Location Of Kipling Shoes For Great Sa.vings Under Our Tent!
W
, e also have NEW ARRIVALS for back to school in Nike, New Balance &amp; More
All Sock .... .20% Off
All Athletic Shoes ..... .Buy 1 Get 1
.112 PRICE .
All Sandals 50% off Sugg. retail

••

neW balance

KIPLING SHOE CO.
Route 2 Bypass
Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-7870
Mon- Sat 9 - 6; Sun 1 2-S

•

(Excludes clearance items)

*·

COnVERSE

�Page 2•

Back to School 2008

. Friday, August 15, 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

New school year can mean scheduling anXiety for parents;

·
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

right lessons now? And anyhow, who doesn't want the
kids doing something safe
and supervised when mom
and dad aren't around?
For parents contemplating
which - and how many activities to sign their children up for this fall, some
guidelines from the pros:

Shannon.Conner keeps a 2foot-by-3-foot calendar on
the wall and also carries a
Palm, just to make sure she
knows which of her six kids
· belongs at which activity.
The Indianapolis mom used
to have a rule: Choose one
•••
sport and one non-sport a
Say no first, uilless there's
season. But then her 10-yeara good reason to say yes.
old daughter, Grace, wanted
to do so much. Grace's
That's the . advice of
schedule now goes like this:
William
. Doherty,
a
swim team, kickball, basketUniversity of Minnesota proball, volleyball, student
fessor
who
co-founded
· counci I and Girl Scouts.
Putting
Family
First,
an orgaEvery day an activity.
And Conner, who has said nization that raises awareness
no to still other activities, of overscheduled kids.
Parenting has become a
worries: Is it too much?
form
of competition, he says.
A new school year means
it's time for parents to sched- "Parents are more worried
the children are not keepule afterschool and weekend that
.mg up. "
actiVIties again. They've
Of course, a lot depends on
heard the experts: Childrefl
each
child. In Conner's case,
need some unstructured time
to make up their own games, it's Grace who's pushing her
find their own friends and to say yes .
. "When you have a kid that
problem solve.
"Children need down time wants to do something, it's
to relax and decompress, just hard . You have to set boundlike adults," says Paul aries with that child," Conner
Donahue, a -child psycholo- says. "She sees the (enrollgist in Scarsdale, N.Y. "They ment) .forms and she wants to
also need time to ju st know when we're turning
explore, play on · their own them in."
The camps, sports league s
and usc their ima g ination .~·
Ye t the pressure to schedule and other activities keep
and overschedulc
sending the forms to maintain
rcmains strong. Will your o r grow their enro llm ent
chi ld fall behind if she docs - numbers.
n' t take soccer or ballet with
"Once you· ve done someher friends ? Could yo u have thing, it's like you're in that
the world's next piano prodi - loop. They market to the overgy if only you give him th e scbeduled child." Con ner says.

"We're on the sucker list."

(MS) - For the millions of
junior high, hi-g h school and
college students heading
back to school' shortly, the
idea of returning to the classroom may ·be met with mixed
emotions .
While the school experienc·e is built upon educational advancement , attending
school is also laregly a social
experience. Many students
find themselves working as
hard to "fit in" as they do to
improve their gr.ades. These
pressures can take a toll on
someone already susceptible
to .emotional and behavioral
conditions , such as depression or anxiety and eating
disorders , or trigger feelings
in someone who never struggled before. Centers like
Timberline Knolls, a 43-acre
residential treatment center
for women and adolescent
girls, want to educate students and parents about
potential problems, and let
them know assistance Is

Make time for
family and play

•••

What's the rush?
Look at sports . and activiThe choices for babies as ties as part of a pyramid,
young as 6 . months .can Doherty suggests: The base is
mclude m~s1c, -tu!Dbhng, lots of family time, then
dance, Spamsh and Sign lan- . unstructured play with other
guage! but th~ best re~on for kids, then playing on their
e~rolhng might be JUSt to own, and only then organized
gtve mom or dad a chance
activities . .
get out of the house.
· ,
"The problem is when
E.ven preschoolers don t those structured activities
really need any structured
.
.
activity,
according
to c.ome a~ the pnce of famtly
Doherty. ·
t~me, hke meals toget.he~:
"You're not actually doing time to hang out as a family,
· them any good beyond just he ~ays. .
.
playing. You have to ·ask
Ltttle ktds, e~pec1ally, may
yourself, why do ii? It's ne~d .. more time between
social comparison,'' he said.
actlyttles.
.
.
In sports, forget teaching
Ktmm· Elhs, · of Indio,
technique or proper form Calif., signed her son Cabot,
until a child is at least 8, then 2, up for a 7 a.m. swim
according to Brooke de class twice a week before
Lench, editor of the site preschool. For about seven
www.momsteam.com.
months, he loved it.
What if a child is p~rticularly
Then he "started crying and
. g~d ~t a s~ort? Playmg some- screaming in the car.
.thmg mtens1vely from age 4 or
" I think he was oversched5 often makes the child .want to uled . It was just bad timing,"
dr?p o~t later ~nd . try -~orne- says Ellis, who pulled Cabot
thmg different, she says.
out of swimming.
Donahue , author of the new
" He's much happier " · she
b.o ok " Parenting Without
•
' ·
. Feur" (August, St. Martin 's says.
•••
Press), agrees: Specializing
On
the
Web:
too young can make the sport
National Alliance for Youth
feel like a job, he says.
Sports
: http: //www .nays .org
He sugges.ts limiting act.ivi Putting
Family
First:
ties to one or two a season
when child re n arc undet X. http :// www .putting fam i Iy. Older kids often ha ve two or first.org
three activities go in g, but he
Moms · .
Team :
suggests keeping at least ooe http :// www.momsteam.com
or two days a week open.
Paul
Donahue:
•••
http://www.drpauldonahue.com

!O

·Elect

JOE BROWNING
'

Glllll COUNTY SHERIFF ·

2008
Proudly Supporting tire Youth ofGallia County
Have .a Safe &amp; Successful School Year!
Paid tor by Ihe candidate, Joe 3rowning 560 Evergreen Rd .. Bidwell, OH 45614

_,

I

Jan. 19 - Martin Luther
~ing's birthday
.Feb. 16 - Instructional
support and enhancement day
AprU 10. - Instruction
enhancement day
13-17 - Spring
May 25 - Memorial Day
June 3 - Last day for students
·
June 4 - Instructional
support and enhancement day
June 5:6 - Outside environment days
'June 9 - Preparation for
closing· schools . '
.

.BElT WISHES TO
WAHAMA HICiH SCHOOL
POINT PLEASANT HICiH SCHOOL
HANNAN HICiH SCHOOL

GAIL

ROUSH
·C ounty ·

~on

· • Page 3

Body image is a concern for students of all ages

tips ·on keeping things sane

BY AMIE WMNER

Back to School 2008

-.

available when necessary.
A common concern of students of all ages . is body
image. Many students admit
to feeling the pressure to
have a good body, whether to
fit into a certain clique or
meet th~ weight requirements ·
of a scholastic ~ports team .
Others want to emulate their
favorite stars they see in
movies and on · television.
Eating disorders like anorexia nervosa and bulimia are
growing concerns in scho-ols
around the country.
·
·
As many as !0 million
females · and one million
males are fighting a life and
deatl) battle with anorexia or
bulimia and another 25 million are fighting a binge eating disorder, according to the
National Eating Disorders
Association.
Others
are
exhibiting borderline symptoms of these conditions,
including
poor attitudes
about body weight and food .
· Eating disorders are usually

shrouded in secrecy, but
those who are suffering
should realize that reaching
out for assistance is the first
step to getting bl;lck on track.
. "We want to share the message of hope and acceptance
with students everywhere,"
says Dr. Kimberly Dennis,
Timberline Knolls' .medical
director. "We show individuals how to take a positive step
toward recovery, and educate
families on how they can support their loved ones."
Timberline Knolls offers
cuiting edge psychiatric and
psychological
therapeutic
approaches coupled with constant attention to an individual's strengths and disorders .
Their goals are to work with
women and their families to
develop a program that celebrates successes. There are
programs tailored for eating
disorders, · substance -abuse,
risk-taking behavior, and
depression. Learn more by
visiting
www.timberline-

knolls.com . .
"behavior.
Treatment for eating disorders is best when started at
Physical symptoms other
the onset of ariy indicators of' than weight loss that could
a problem.
be indicators of an eating
disorder include:
Here are the top signs
• Dry skin and thinning
that someone you know ·scalp hair.
·
may be suffering from an
• Stomach and intestinal
eating disorder:
problems.
,
• Cessation of menstrua• Exhibits concern · about·
tion.
her weight and attempts to
• Growth of lanugo (fine
control weight by diet ,
refusal of food, vomiting or hair on body surface).
• Erosion of tooth enamal;
laxative anJ diuretic abuse.
tears
in the esophagus. (from
• Does prolonged exercising despite fatigue and weak- vomiting).
For more il~j(mnation on
ness .
• Has peculiar patterns identifyin!i the signs and sympregarding handling food . toms (!l eating disorders, visit
www.ti mberli neknolls .com or
May eat in secrecy.
(·all
(877) 257-961/ to speak
• Exhibits abnormally fast
weight loss , without any with a Timerbline Knolls staff
other known medical condi- member.
Support and professional
tion. Bulimics might be
slightly underweight or over- help can go a long way
weight.
toward helping · students
• Experiences depressive through the myriad of presmoods and self-depr~cating sures they face.

ANNUAl BACK.To·· SCHOOL ·TENT SALE
Now _Thru Sunday, August 17th .
Stop By The Point Pleasant Location Of Kipling Shoes For Great Sa.vings Under Our Tent!
W
, e also have NEW ARRIVALS for back to school in Nike, New Balance &amp; More
All Sock .... .20% Off
All Athletic Shoes ..... .Buy 1 Get 1
.112 PRICE .
All Sandals 50% off Sugg. retail

••

neW balance

KIPLING SHOE CO.
Route 2 Bypass
Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-7870
Mon- Sat 9 - 6; Sun 1 2-S

•

(Excludes clearance items)

*·

COnVERSE

�· Page 4. •

Friday, August 15, 2008 .

Back to School 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

Gallipolis City Schools announce 2008-09 bus routes
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis special pickups in city going
CitY Scholls 'will ohserve the back to Green Elementary.
f(JiioH'iiiK hus routes ./{1r .{he·
Bus #6, Eugene Valentine,
2008-09 school vear:
driver - High School, 7 a.m.,
All
student s
between
Sycamore Street and Vine
Street are walking student s
(including Vinton Avenue and
Neil Avenue).
All buses unload at 7:45a.m.
at Galliua Academy Hi g h
Sc hooL Buckeye Hill s Career
Ce nter/ Bus #9 will depart at
7:50a.m. ·
Bus # I, Huberta Roach, .
driver - Hi gh School: 6:55
a .m .. Graham School Rd ., ·
Ce nte nary
Rd .,
Vanco
Rd. ,State Route. 588 , Haskins
Rd ., Krau s-Bec k Rd ., Safford
School Rd. ,Texas Rd . Grade
School: 8:00 a.m . Green
·School) Bob McCormick,
Safford School Rd. , State
Route 588, Haskins Rd , KrausBeck Rd., 588 to Vanco Rd.,
Centenary Rd.
Bus # 2, Tom Walters, driver - High School: 6:45a.m .,
Yellowtown Rd, State Route
218, Williams Hollow Rd to
Friendly ~idge. SR 2 18 to
In gall s Rd., Cooper Rd ., SR
2 18 to
Kriner Rd ., to
Neighborhood Rd to SR
2 18/SR 7. Grade School :
8:08am (Green School) SR
2 18.
Williams
Hollow,
Yellowtown Rd. Ingalls Rd. ,
Cooper Rd ., Herman Rd . to SR
141.
Bus# 4, Hilda Copley, dri~
ver - Special Route: Grade
School /Rio Grande aArea to
Green and Washington-pick up
Washington students at Wee
Care (Church of God) SR 141.
8:05a a.m ., Sanders Dr. , SR
141 to SR 7, Burkhart Ln . And

SR 160 Martin Dr.to Bulaville
Rd. , Plants Subdivision, 160 to
Pine St. , Bastiani and Ohio
Ave., Mill Creek Rd to
Warehine Rd . and to school.
Grade School: 8:10 a.m. (Rio
Grande) Buck Ridge Rd. to Rio
Grande.
Bus# 7, Donna Jean Wells,
driver - Special Route: In
Rio-Washington
Student
attending Early Child Care
Center.
Bus #8, Pam Saunders, driver - High School, 7:15a.m .,
Buck Ridge Rd , Jackson Pike,
Honeys uckle , Cherry Dr.,
Lariat
Dr.Grade
School,
(Washington) . 7:50
a .m.,
Jack$o n Pike , Lariat Dr.,
Honeysuckle: Cherry Dr., :lay
Dr., Buhl-Mor.ton Rd ., Bob
McCormickRd. , SR 588 to
Texas Rd , th~;n to Chillicothe
Rd . to Washington .
Bus #9, Jim Clarkson, driver - Hi gh School, 6:25
a .m ., Adamsville Rd , Gabriel
Rd . Goetting Rd , Harri sburg
Rd . SR 554, Tycoon Rd ,
Gooch Rd ,.. Vaughn Rd , SR
554 to SR 325 to Rio Grande
to meet with Bus #31. to
GAHS. 7:50 a.m., GAHS to
BHCC with high sc hool students attending Center with
grade sc hoQI students attending Rio Grande Elementary.
Grade School (Rio Grande):
8:1.5 a.m., Buckeye Hill s Rd .,
Pleasa nt Valley Rd. Kyer Rd
to Rio Grande, Lake Dr.,
Cherry Ridge , Campbell Rd ,
Wayne Ln., Holcomb Rd. ,
She lion Rd ,
Pine St.,

Richard s St.
Bus #10, Mark Brown, driver
Grande
School
(Washington), 8 a .m. , SR 7
from Clay School to Raccoon
Rd .. Ann Dr., Dillon Rd ., and
back to· SR 7 North, to Lover's
Ln. and SR 218 Neighborhood
Rd to Kriner.
Bus #12, Reba Wilcoxon,
driver - High School: 6:30
a.m. (same .as last year), Cora
Mill Rd , Pioneer Trail Rd , SR
325, Garners Ford, Shelton
Rd , Holcomb Hollow, Cherry
Rid ge, Pine St , Lake Dr,
Brushy Point, Starcher Rd ,
Cora Mill Rd, back to SR 588
to GAHS. Grade School: (Rio
Grande) 7:55 a.m., SR 588,
· Cora · Mill Rd , Starcher Rd ,
Brushy Point, Garners Ford,
Pioneer Trail, Creek View Rd .
Bus# 14, Marilyn Corwin,
driver
Special Route :
Green area to Washington and
Kineon , Bastiani , Teadoni Dr. ,
Early Child Care Center on
Mill Creek Rd.
· Bus# 16, David Miller, dri.
ver - Grade School :(Green)
7:55 a.m ., Kriner Ridge Rd.
Paxton,
King
Rd,
.. Neighborhood Rd , to SR 141
from Vault Plant to Safford
School Rd, Debbie Drive, and·
SR 141 to Green Elementary.
.Bus# 19,
Shelia. Slone,
driver - High School, 6:50
a.m.,
Shoestring
Ridge ,
Plymale Rd , Orchard Hill Rd ,
SR 218 from Kriner Rd to SR
7, SR 7 North/Garfield Ave .
Grade School : (Washington),
7:55 a.m., same as 'high school
route.
,
Bus#20
Laura Baker,
driver -'- High Schoo~, 6:55
a.m., SR . 588 in Rio Grande,

Autumn Hill, Rodney II dents
to ·
Washington
Village, Merry Rd, SR 850, Elementary.
Watson Rd, Greer Rd , Left
Bus #27, Judy Byrd, driver
Fork, · Pinecrest Dr, Jackson - High School, 7:05 a.m., SR
_Pike, Sun Valley, Fraley Dr, 588 from Rodney to Mitchell
Bob McCormick Rd. to GAHS. Rd (Stone Harbor) , Mitchell
Grade School: (Rio Grande), Rd. Jackson Pike, Jay Dr, Oak
7:55 a.m., Mitchell Rd , Sun Dr, Hilda Dr, Maple Dr, Bu)ll-.
Valley , Fraley Dr (turnaround Morton· Rd .Grade' School:.
at cinema) Jackson Pike, (Washington) .8 a.m., Kathy Dr,
.Pinecrest Dr, Left. Fork, Greer SR 160, Bulaville Rd, Plantz.
Rd ,- Watson Rd , SR 850, Subdivision, then back to SR
Rodney · II , . SR 588 to 160'to into Gallipolis.
RioGrande.
Bus #28, Sharon ·Lykins,
Bus #23, Jody Wilcoxon, ' driver - High School, 6:10
driver - High School, 6:45 a.m., Ebllin Hollow, Hazel
a.m. Northup Rd ; Arbuckle Rd, Ridge , Cargo Rd, Providence
SR 775·. Taylor Rd, VFW Rd .. School Rd , Teens Run Rd ,
Pitchford Rd, SR 141 to Par Davis Rd , Frier.Jdly Ridge to ·
Mar @ Centenary, Portsmouth · Burnt Run , Cha.mbers Rd ,
Rd from Burkhart Ln to Marabel Rd , Barcus Hollow,
Garfield Ave. Grade School SR 7 to Clay Elementary, to
(Green), 8 a.m., SR. 775 , VFW transfer students to Bus #25 to
Rd . Pitchford Rd, Taylor Rd , GAHS .
Grade
School
Northup Rd, Arbuckle Rd, (Washington), 7:10 a.m ., same
Lincoln Pike to SR 14·1 to as high school route, then meet
Green Elementary.
bus #25 at Clay Elementary to
Bus #25, Barb . Bowling, .pick up students to Washington
driver - High .School, 6:15 Elementary.
.
.
a.m., SR 7 , Eureka, Bea( Run
Bus #28 will pick up all preRd , Clay Chapel, Friendly school students going to Early
Ridge , Burn't Run , Clay Child Care . Center on Mill
Chapel to Clay Elementary to Creek.
meet Bus #28, then 7:05a .m. ,
Bus #29, Jane Ann Miller,
start picking up students from driver - High School, 6:45
SR 7 North to Raccoon Road , .a.m. , Blessing Rd, Lincoln
turnaround at Rocky Run , . Pike, Yellowtown Rd , Ingall s
return back Raccoon Rd, Rd, Herman Rd , Klicker Rd ,
Dillon Rd, Ann Dr, SR 7 LeGrande Blvd. to GAHS.
North , Lover's Lane, Paxton Grade School (Green) 7:55
Rd , Neig hborhood Rd to 141 a.m. (same as high school)
to GAHS. NOTE: (J&gt;icking incluqing Wee Care at Church
up high school students this · of God going to Green
year from Bus #10 and #16 Elementary.
from last year's routes).
.Bus #31,
Jack Parsons,
Grade School Washington) , driver - High School, 6:15
7:55 a.m., same as hi g h a.m., Sailor Rd , Deer Creek, .
school and meet- Bus #28 at
Please see Routes, 5
Clay School - transfer stuc-IPor

· ·Back to School 2008

Routes rrom Page 4
Woods Mill Rd . Eagle Rd,
Deckard Rd, Will Thomas Rd.
Brandy Rd , SR 325, Mt.
Carmel Rd , Biglow Rd. Plas
Rd , Kyer Rd , Pleasant Valley,
Buckeye Hills Rd, to Rio
Elementary to transfe r students to Bus 119· to GAH.S.
Grade School (Rio Grande),
7 :40 a.m., Adamsville Rd,
Harrisburg Rd, Gaberial Rd.
Gooch Rd , Tycoon Rd , Eagle
Rd , Deckard, Rd , Brandy Rd ,
Woods Mill : Rd , Vaughan Rd .
Goetting Rd, Dee r Creek,
Sailor Rd, Mt. Tabor, SR 325,
Mt. Carmel, Plas Rd to Rio
Elementary.
Bus #33, Nellie Hinchman,
driver - High School, 7: 17
a.m ., Chatham Ave (stopping
at every intersec tion-picking
up s tudents from all side
streets including all of
Chestnut St, Mill Creek to
Warehine Rd, 1100 block of
Second Ave . Spruce St.
Extension. Grade School .
(Washington), 8 a.m. (same liS
high
school
including
Madison and Lincoln Ave.)

Bus #35, John Haffelt, driver - High School, 7:05a.m. ,
Burnett Rd , Railroad St.
Liberty. Peach St , Hubbard
Ave, SR 7 N orth to Kanauga
Drive In, Flamingo Dr. and
Eastern Ave to Mill Creek Rd .
Grade School ·(Washington) ,
7:55 a.m. , same as high school
except starting up Eastern Ave
picking up students to Kanuaga
Area and returning down
Ejtstern Ave to Washington
Elementary.
Bus #39, Paul Russell,
driver __:__ High School, 6:40
a.m., Vanco Rd, Cora Mill
Rd,
Pleasant
Hill
R,d ,
Fairfield
Church
Rd,
Dogwood Dr. SR 141 , Mud
Creek Rd , SR 141 from
Centenary ·Rd. Debbie Dr,
Stafford School Rd , SR 141
to Burkhart Lane to SchooL
Grade (Green), 7:55 a .m ..
Vanco Rd , Fairfield Church
Rd , Pleasant Hill Rd , Cora
Mill Rd, Mud Creek. SR 141 ,
Graham School Rd , then SR
141 to Lincoln Pike to Green
Elementary.
_,_

Puzzles: An educational tool
, through the grades
• Early education : Even if a child isn ' t
going "back" to school but rather just
beginning their life as a student, puzzles
can be a great way to give a child a head
start. Toddlers will lea r·n to recognize
• shapes and solve problems by matchin g
puzzle pieces to complete bea utiful illustrations on a broad range of subjects in
which they are interested. like pirates .
baseball, fairies, puppies, butterflies , frogs
and many o.t hers. As a child ages, brain
teaser puzzles like · Scramble Squares will
help strengthen log ic skills.
• Elementary sc hool : Elementary school
children are often exposed to puzzles
depending on the ir course of study. For
eXllmpJe, WOrd pu zz les are Used tO boost
vocabulary, while logic 'puzz les are often
used to foste r arithmetic skills. As Metroff
has in Illinoi s , ed ucators across the country
have now begun to use Scramble Squares
i'n their classrooms as well.
• Upper grades : Middle and secondary
sc hool math and science teachers often usc
puzzles to challenge 'th eir stud en ts ' skills .

Affurdabk Cars.&amp; l'nu.: k.s

GalliP-Olis
Career College

for the new driHr
in the family!
DAVE WINE • OWNER
1393 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, O.H

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, OH

'

Mon-Fri 10-7pm • Sat 11 -4pm
PHONE: (740) 446-4400
FAX: (740) 445-4006

'

c
.

"·CQ.reers Close To Home., u

Call Today To Enroll!
446-4367 or 800-214-0452
www .gall ipoliscareercollege.ed u
or emai l: gcc@gallipoliscareercollege.ed u
'

•

I

I

t

•.

It

I

,

.

Schoors back
-•n sesston
.
...
Please drive
carefullY·

-

Have a

g~eat

2008-2009

Now That Your Kids Are
Back To School...

"IT"S YOUR TURN!!!""

Science ex periments and mec hai1i ca l pu zzles that emphasize building and des ig n
help to foster a student's k1iowledge of
ph ys ics and geometry. Other puu.l e~ can
stimulate different learnin g skills and may
eve n offer trivia tidbits . For exa mple . cad1
Scramble Squares puzzle package includes
an inte rpretive panel of fascinating facts on
the subjed of th e puzzle. as well as a triv - ·
ia qu es tion and the hidd en answer to th e
trivia ques tion. This is all packaged in a
uniqu e and hand y resealable c lear vinyl
trave l pouch which ca n be co l-lected and
stored eas ily in the cla~sroom Of at hom e in
a standard 3-rin g binder.
•· Co ntinuin g education : Getting back in
the swing of thin gs ca n be tou g h for stu dents after a few months , but adults return in g to sc hool may find it eve n more c hal le ng in g after bein g removed from th e
school scene for several years . As teac hers
across th e co untry have learned, puzzles
can be a prodtictive activity for .stud cnt s of
all ages.

________....

&amp;lcMoltU7..

PENPLE

• Page 5

school _year!
Variety of sizes to fit your
needs.
Delivery Available
Prices from ·

,;f1~~~~~-':~"r.

neral·Home

$743.65- s 1,599.65

I

M11.11111

Co1111tr Fw11ilr (hml'ti a111/ Opemtec/ In· Daritl. f)o1111a &lt;~ Ill ,u/ lkal

David Deal Director/Ucensee in Olarge
Charlie Huber, Director· Tom Wilson&amp;.. Sam Ferrell, Associates

140 I Kanawha Street, Point Pleasant, WV

675-6000

�· Page 4. •

Friday, August 15, 2008 .

Back to School 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

Gallipolis City Schools announce 2008-09 bus routes
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis special pickups in city going
CitY Scholls 'will ohserve the back to Green Elementary.
f(JiioH'iiiK hus routes ./{1r .{he·
Bus #6, Eugene Valentine,
2008-09 school vear:
driver - High School, 7 a.m.,
All
student s
between
Sycamore Street and Vine
Street are walking student s
(including Vinton Avenue and
Neil Avenue).
All buses unload at 7:45a.m.
at Galliua Academy Hi g h
Sc hooL Buckeye Hill s Career
Ce nter/ Bus #9 will depart at
7:50a.m. ·
Bus # I, Huberta Roach, .
driver - Hi gh School: 6:55
a .m .. Graham School Rd ., ·
Ce nte nary
Rd .,
Vanco
Rd. ,State Route. 588 , Haskins
Rd ., Krau s-Bec k Rd ., Safford
School Rd. ,Texas Rd . Grade
School: 8:00 a.m . Green
·School) Bob McCormick,
Safford School Rd. , State
Route 588, Haskins Rd , KrausBeck Rd., 588 to Vanco Rd.,
Centenary Rd.
Bus # 2, Tom Walters, driver - High School: 6:45a.m .,
Yellowtown Rd, State Route
218, Williams Hollow Rd to
Friendly ~idge. SR 2 18 to
In gall s Rd., Cooper Rd ., SR
2 18 to
Kriner Rd ., to
Neighborhood Rd to SR
2 18/SR 7. Grade School :
8:08am (Green School) SR
2 18.
Williams
Hollow,
Yellowtown Rd. Ingalls Rd. ,
Cooper Rd ., Herman Rd . to SR
141.
Bus# 4, Hilda Copley, dri~
ver - Special Route: Grade
School /Rio Grande aArea to
Green and Washington-pick up
Washington students at Wee
Care (Church of God) SR 141.
8:05a a.m ., Sanders Dr. , SR
141 to SR 7, Burkhart Ln . And

SR 160 Martin Dr.to Bulaville
Rd. , Plants Subdivision, 160 to
Pine St. , Bastiani and Ohio
Ave., Mill Creek Rd to
Warehine Rd . and to school.
Grade School: 8:10 a.m. (Rio
Grande) Buck Ridge Rd. to Rio
Grande.
Bus# 7, Donna Jean Wells,
driver - Special Route: In
Rio-Washington
Student
attending Early Child Care
Center.
Bus #8, Pam Saunders, driver - High School, 7:15a.m .,
Buck Ridge Rd , Jackson Pike,
Honeys uckle , Cherry Dr.,
Lariat
Dr.Grade
School,
(Washington) . 7:50
a .m.,
Jack$o n Pike , Lariat Dr.,
Honeysuckle: Cherry Dr., :lay
Dr., Buhl-Mor.ton Rd ., Bob
McCormickRd. , SR 588 to
Texas Rd , th~;n to Chillicothe
Rd . to Washington .
Bus #9, Jim Clarkson, driver - Hi gh School, 6:25
a .m ., Adamsville Rd , Gabriel
Rd . Goetting Rd , Harri sburg
Rd . SR 554, Tycoon Rd ,
Gooch Rd ,.. Vaughn Rd , SR
554 to SR 325 to Rio Grande
to meet with Bus #31. to
GAHS. 7:50 a.m., GAHS to
BHCC with high sc hool students attending Center with
grade sc hoQI students attending Rio Grande Elementary.
Grade School (Rio Grande):
8:1.5 a.m., Buckeye Hill s Rd .,
Pleasa nt Valley Rd. Kyer Rd
to Rio Grande, Lake Dr.,
Cherry Ridge , Campbell Rd ,
Wayne Ln., Holcomb Rd. ,
She lion Rd ,
Pine St.,

Richard s St.
Bus #10, Mark Brown, driver
Grande
School
(Washington), 8 a .m. , SR 7
from Clay School to Raccoon
Rd .. Ann Dr., Dillon Rd ., and
back to· SR 7 North, to Lover's
Ln. and SR 218 Neighborhood
Rd to Kriner.
Bus #12, Reba Wilcoxon,
driver - High School: 6:30
a.m. (same .as last year), Cora
Mill Rd , Pioneer Trail Rd , SR
325, Garners Ford, Shelton
Rd , Holcomb Hollow, Cherry
Rid ge, Pine St , Lake Dr,
Brushy Point, Starcher Rd ,
Cora Mill Rd, back to SR 588
to GAHS. Grade School: (Rio
Grande) 7:55 a.m., SR 588,
· Cora · Mill Rd , Starcher Rd ,
Brushy Point, Garners Ford,
Pioneer Trail, Creek View Rd .
Bus# 14, Marilyn Corwin,
driver
Special Route :
Green area to Washington and
Kineon , Bastiani , Teadoni Dr. ,
Early Child Care Center on
Mill Creek Rd.
· Bus# 16, David Miller, dri.
ver - Grade School :(Green)
7:55 a.m ., Kriner Ridge Rd.
Paxton,
King
Rd,
.. Neighborhood Rd , to SR 141
from Vault Plant to Safford
School Rd, Debbie Drive, and·
SR 141 to Green Elementary.
.Bus# 19,
Shelia. Slone,
driver - High School, 6:50
a.m.,
Shoestring
Ridge ,
Plymale Rd , Orchard Hill Rd ,
SR 218 from Kriner Rd to SR
7, SR 7 North/Garfield Ave .
Grade School : (Washington),
7:55 a.m., same as 'high school
route.
,
Bus#20
Laura Baker,
driver -'- High Schoo~, 6:55
a.m., SR . 588 in Rio Grande,

Autumn Hill, Rodney II dents
to ·
Washington
Village, Merry Rd, SR 850, Elementary.
Watson Rd, Greer Rd , Left
Bus #27, Judy Byrd, driver
Fork, · Pinecrest Dr, Jackson - High School, 7:05 a.m., SR
_Pike, Sun Valley, Fraley Dr, 588 from Rodney to Mitchell
Bob McCormick Rd. to GAHS. Rd (Stone Harbor) , Mitchell
Grade School: (Rio Grande), Rd. Jackson Pike, Jay Dr, Oak
7:55 a.m., Mitchell Rd , Sun Dr, Hilda Dr, Maple Dr, Bu)ll-.
Valley , Fraley Dr (turnaround Morton· Rd .Grade' School:.
at cinema) Jackson Pike, (Washington) .8 a.m., Kathy Dr,
.Pinecrest Dr, Left. Fork, Greer SR 160, Bulaville Rd, Plantz.
Rd ,- Watson Rd , SR 850, Subdivision, then back to SR
Rodney · II , . SR 588 to 160'to into Gallipolis.
RioGrande.
Bus #28, Sharon ·Lykins,
Bus #23, Jody Wilcoxon, ' driver - High School, 6:10
driver - High School, 6:45 a.m., Ebllin Hollow, Hazel
a.m. Northup Rd ; Arbuckle Rd, Ridge , Cargo Rd, Providence
SR 775·. Taylor Rd, VFW Rd .. School Rd , Teens Run Rd ,
Pitchford Rd, SR 141 to Par Davis Rd , Frier.Jdly Ridge to ·
Mar @ Centenary, Portsmouth · Burnt Run , Cha.mbers Rd ,
Rd from Burkhart Ln to Marabel Rd , Barcus Hollow,
Garfield Ave. Grade School SR 7 to Clay Elementary, to
(Green), 8 a.m., SR. 775 , VFW transfer students to Bus #25 to
Rd . Pitchford Rd, Taylor Rd , GAHS .
Grade
School
Northup Rd, Arbuckle Rd, (Washington), 7:10 a.m ., same
Lincoln Pike to SR 14·1 to as high school route, then meet
Green Elementary.
bus #25 at Clay Elementary to
Bus #25, Barb . Bowling, .pick up students to Washington
driver - High .School, 6:15 Elementary.
.
.
a.m., SR 7 , Eureka, Bea( Run
Bus #28 will pick up all preRd , Clay Chapel, Friendly school students going to Early
Ridge , Burn't Run , Clay Child Care . Center on Mill
Chapel to Clay Elementary to Creek.
meet Bus #28, then 7:05a .m. ,
Bus #29, Jane Ann Miller,
start picking up students from driver - High School, 6:45
SR 7 North to Raccoon Road , .a.m. , Blessing Rd, Lincoln
turnaround at Rocky Run , . Pike, Yellowtown Rd , Ingall s
return back Raccoon Rd, Rd, Herman Rd , Klicker Rd ,
Dillon Rd, Ann Dr, SR 7 LeGrande Blvd. to GAHS.
North , Lover's Lane, Paxton Grade School (Green) 7:55
Rd , Neig hborhood Rd to 141 a.m. (same as high school)
to GAHS. NOTE: (J&gt;icking incluqing Wee Care at Church
up high school students this · of God going to Green
year from Bus #10 and #16 Elementary.
from last year's routes).
.Bus #31,
Jack Parsons,
Grade School Washington) , driver - High School, 6:15
7:55 a.m., same as hi g h a.m., Sailor Rd , Deer Creek, .
school and meet- Bus #28 at
Please see Routes, 5
Clay School - transfer stuc-IPor

· ·Back to School 2008

Routes rrom Page 4
Woods Mill Rd . Eagle Rd,
Deckard Rd, Will Thomas Rd.
Brandy Rd , SR 325, Mt.
Carmel Rd , Biglow Rd. Plas
Rd , Kyer Rd , Pleasant Valley,
Buckeye Hills Rd, to Rio
Elementary to transfe r students to Bus 119· to GAH.S.
Grade School (Rio Grande),
7 :40 a.m., Adamsville Rd,
Harrisburg Rd, Gaberial Rd.
Gooch Rd , Tycoon Rd , Eagle
Rd , Deckard, Rd , Brandy Rd ,
Woods Mill : Rd , Vaughan Rd .
Goetting Rd, Dee r Creek,
Sailor Rd, Mt. Tabor, SR 325,
Mt. Carmel, Plas Rd to Rio
Elementary.
Bus #33, Nellie Hinchman,
driver - High School, 7: 17
a.m ., Chatham Ave (stopping
at every intersec tion-picking
up s tudents from all side
streets including all of
Chestnut St, Mill Creek to
Warehine Rd, 1100 block of
Second Ave . Spruce St.
Extension. Grade School .
(Washington), 8 a.m. (same liS
high
school
including
Madison and Lincoln Ave.)

Bus #35, John Haffelt, driver - High School, 7:05a.m. ,
Burnett Rd , Railroad St.
Liberty. Peach St , Hubbard
Ave, SR 7 N orth to Kanauga
Drive In, Flamingo Dr. and
Eastern Ave to Mill Creek Rd .
Grade School ·(Washington) ,
7:55 a.m. , same as high school
except starting up Eastern Ave
picking up students to Kanuaga
Area and returning down
Ejtstern Ave to Washington
Elementary.
Bus #39, Paul Russell,
driver __:__ High School, 6:40
a.m., Vanco Rd, Cora Mill
Rd,
Pleasant
Hill
R,d ,
Fairfield
Church
Rd,
Dogwood Dr. SR 141 , Mud
Creek Rd , SR 141 from
Centenary ·Rd. Debbie Dr,
Stafford School Rd , SR 141
to Burkhart Lane to SchooL
Grade (Green), 7:55 a .m ..
Vanco Rd , Fairfield Church
Rd , Pleasant Hill Rd , Cora
Mill Rd, Mud Creek. SR 141 ,
Graham School Rd , then SR
141 to Lincoln Pike to Green
Elementary.
_,_

Puzzles: An educational tool
, through the grades
• Early education : Even if a child isn ' t
going "back" to school but rather just
beginning their life as a student, puzzles
can be a great way to give a child a head
start. Toddlers will lea r·n to recognize
• shapes and solve problems by matchin g
puzzle pieces to complete bea utiful illustrations on a broad range of subjects in
which they are interested. like pirates .
baseball, fairies, puppies, butterflies , frogs
and many o.t hers. As a child ages, brain
teaser puzzles like · Scramble Squares will
help strengthen log ic skills.
• Elementary sc hool : Elementary school
children are often exposed to puzzles
depending on the ir course of study. For
eXllmpJe, WOrd pu zz les are Used tO boost
vocabulary, while logic 'puzz les are often
used to foste r arithmetic skills. As Metroff
has in Illinoi s , ed ucators across the country
have now begun to use Scramble Squares
i'n their classrooms as well.
• Upper grades : Middle and secondary
sc hool math and science teachers often usc
puzzles to challenge 'th eir stud en ts ' skills .

Affurdabk Cars.&amp; l'nu.: k.s

GalliP-Olis
Career College

for the new driHr
in the family!
DAVE WINE • OWNER
1393 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, O.H

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, OH

'

Mon-Fri 10-7pm • Sat 11 -4pm
PHONE: (740) 446-4400
FAX: (740) 445-4006

'

c
.

"·CQ.reers Close To Home., u

Call Today To Enroll!
446-4367 or 800-214-0452
www .gall ipoliscareercollege.ed u
or emai l: gcc@gallipoliscareercollege.ed u
'

•

I

I

t

•.

It

I

,

.

Schoors back
-•n sesston
.
...
Please drive
carefullY·

-

Have a

g~eat

2008-2009

Now That Your Kids Are
Back To School...

"IT"S YOUR TURN!!!""

Science ex periments and mec hai1i ca l pu zzles that emphasize building and des ig n
help to foster a student's k1iowledge of
ph ys ics and geometry. Other puu.l e~ can
stimulate different learnin g skills and may
eve n offer trivia tidbits . For exa mple . cad1
Scramble Squares puzzle package includes
an inte rpretive panel of fascinating facts on
the subjed of th e puzzle. as well as a triv - ·
ia qu es tion and the hidd en answer to th e
trivia ques tion. This is all packaged in a
uniqu e and hand y resealable c lear vinyl
trave l pouch which ca n be co l-lected and
stored eas ily in the cla~sroom Of at hom e in
a standard 3-rin g binder.
•· Co ntinuin g education : Getting back in
the swing of thin gs ca n be tou g h for stu dents after a few months , but adults return in g to sc hool may find it eve n more c hal le ng in g after bein g removed from th e
school scene for several years . As teac hers
across th e co untry have learned, puzzles
can be a prodtictive activity for .stud cnt s of
all ages.

________....

&amp;lcMoltU7..

PENPLE

• Page 5

school _year!
Variety of sizes to fit your
needs.
Delivery Available
Prices from ·

,;f1~~~~~-':~"r.

neral·Home

$743.65- s 1,599.65

I

M11.11111

Co1111tr Fw11ilr (hml'ti a111/ Opemtec/ In· Daritl. f)o1111a &lt;~ Ill ,u/ lkal

David Deal Director/Ucensee in Olarge
Charlie Huber, Director· Tom Wilson&amp;.. Sam Ferrell, Associates

140 I Kanawha Street, Point Pleasant, WV

675-6000

�'

Making the most of back-to-school night
BY M M ILiccm
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - It's a time
to meet teachers , tour classrooms and nibble on snacks.
But back-to-school night
shouldn't stop there.
The night, which usually
occurs within a few weeks of
the first day of school, is a
chance for parents to ask
questions to prepare for the
coming year.
Experts suggest parents use
the night to learn more about
the curriculum, class . structure and academic expectations , along with what they
can do to help their children
succeed in school. · ·
" Any time the teacher is
made aware of how proactive
you are about your child's
education and child's well. being , I think the teachers
become
a
little
more
engaged," says PTA natio·nal
president Jan Harp Domene .
She encourages parents,
particularly of elementary
school -age children , to meet
th e teache r before th e big
ni ght to al e rt the m of specific
proble ms or concern s .
" The teac her will have
more time and the information will al so s·tay private,"
says Michelle Rid gway, who
teac hes readin g at Je hue
Middl e Sc hool in C o lton,
Calif. " As a pareQt , you don' t
necessarily want everyo ne in
the room knowing wh at your
child is or isn' t do in ~."
· Here are some tips for
making the most of the
night:
• For youn ge r childre n, ask

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back to School 2008

Page 6 •

how reading is taught, says
Nina Senatore, an assistant
professor of education at
Simmons College. Where
does spelling fit in? What is
the homework policy?
"Every school will· say they
have an amazing reading program ," says Senatore . "What
exactly does that mean?"
• Find out how the school
accommodates different math
and reading levels. In middle
and high school, ask how students are placed in advanced
classes.
·
"Certain kids work ft~ster
than others," says Ahn
Steininger, a mother of three
and
co-founder
of
miniMasters, a cultural learning center in New York . .
" Some kid s' need a little help .
How do they deal with that?"
• Ask about the extras .
Besides the normal curriculum , how much emphasis is
placed on the foreign languages, art, music and physical education?
• Be ·sure to ask abo ut
Social development. In wh at
ways are children encouraged
to get to know each other'and
work together as a team?
" Is there a lot of emphasis
placed on development of the
person as a human being not just the ac ademics?" says
Steininge r. " Be ing a good
person ?"
• Find out wh at th e major
projects are, such as research
papers and book reports, and
get a ge l)eral idea of wh e n
they are du e, says Ridgway.
"Thme are majo r projec ts
th at are go ing to take so me
reso urces and so me tim e,"

she says.
• Ask how you can help
your child succeed . For
example, are . there certain
materials you should have at
home?
• Be sure to ask about the
best way to communicate
with the teacher, says
Senatore, whether e-mail,
phone or sending a note with
your child. For middle and
high school students, who
have several teachers, she
suggests bringing a folder to
hold handouts and making
sure parents have each
teacher's name and contact
information .
. • Ask about progress
reports . "What type of communication about academic
progre.ss will I receive from
you?" says Ridgway. "I want
to know as soon as possible if
my child is struggling or not
turning in assignments."
• Inquire about how you
will be notified in case of an
emergency, says Steininger.
Will the teacher call you or is
there a telephone tree where
one parent calls another?
• Back-to-S choor Night
doesn' t lend itself to networking 'with other parents,
but Se natore say s parents
should bring some business
card s and try to exc han ge
inform ati on . You may need
them for homework emergencies , or to double-chec k fi eld
trips or specilll days .

Strategies ·for helping
sruggling students
(MS) - As any veteran educator can attest, no two students
are the same. There's no guarantee that an approach which
works for one student will work
for another. That's part of what
makes being an educator so difficult. With so many students
depending on teachers to help
them learn, how does a teacher
identify or deyelop a method
that helps all students?
While most educators would
be quick to point out that there
is no universally successful
method to reachmg students,
there are some approaches that
have proven effective when it
comes to connecting with students who are struggling in the
classroom. l'he Association for
Psychological Science offers
the following tips for educators
looking to get through to students who might be struggling.
·• Solicit information from students at the onset of the semester.
This is essentially a pree,mptive
measure that could help identify
reasons for struggling down the
road. This .inventory should
include questions about students'
time commitments, study habits,
reasons for taking the course,
whether or not they have a job,
their major, and other questions
that offer some background and
potential r;:lues that could be
helpful if a student struggles with
coursework down the road . This
can be accomplished by asking
students to fill out a simple questionnaire on the first day of class.
Should a student begin to strug· gle, a teacher can then. consult
the students' questionnaire to see

if the cause of the struggles
might be something related tp
poor study habits or working too
much at a part-time job or having
too many extracuniculars.
· • Focus on development skills,
not grades. In today's competitive academic environment, the
pressure·to get good grades c.an
be overwhelming. Sometimes
. an ·outcome-focused teaching
strategy that emphasizes earning
grades can alienate students who
might start off struggling. A shift
in teaching strategy to one more
about developing skills, such as
information processing and
building better memory skills,
might be necesslll)' before a student can 'begin focusing on
grades. Once a student masters
or·gains a better grasp of these
skills, grades will begin to
improve.
·
·
• Be accessible. Keeping
accessible office hours outside of
the classroom is one way to let
students know you are there for
them. However, thanks to technology, teachers ·can now be
more accessible than ever before.
With e~mail it's easy for students
to reach a teacher at all times of
the day, and teachefl&gt; should
encourage struggling students to
e-mail them with any problems .
In addition , offer discussion
forums through a school or university Web site that enable students to connect with classmates.
Once their academic careers are
over: students wiU need to work
with others to solve problems, so
why not iQstitute this practice in

Back to School 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

_,

..

• Page 7

5 lessons for parents from kindergarten teacher Strategies
fromPage6
BY

Help Children Listen, Learn
and Cooperate at Home ."
. The book, released Tuesday
MILWAUKEE
Lisa by Penguin Group's Perigee
Holewa was amazed by how division, is aimed at parents
easily her daughter's kinder- · of 3 to 6 years olds, with help
garten class moved from one from other tefichers nationproject to another. There was wide, Holewa 's pediatrician
no whining, no tantrums.
and other writers.
At home, Holewa's daughter dawdled or tried to negotiHere are five of their tips:
ate when changing tasks, and
Holewa - assumed · it was
I. Get A Child's Attention
because she wasn't firm
enough. But the teacher, Joan
Be physically in the child's
Rice, simply had the 5-year- presence when speaking.
olds put their unfinished pro- ·Make eye contact; and touch
jects in a "Not Done" pouch him on the shoulder or hand
- giving them a signal that to get his attention. The
they would get to return to authors recommend creating
the project.
a "listen to me signal," like
"That's the moment when I turning off the light or ringthought there's really some~ ing a bell.
thing magical going on here,"
Holewa said .
2.Break Up Tasks Into
Holewa, a former reporter Pieces
for The Associated Press,
went on to write, along with
It's important to have clear
Rice, "What Kindergarten endings and beginnings to
Teachers Know:·Practical and activities and to give specific
Playful Ways for Parents tci directions broken into manCARRIE ANTLFIN8ER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ageable steps. For instance,
instead of saying, "Clean up
this mess ," they recommend
saying, "Put all the cars into
this bin then put it on the
shelf in your bedroom ."
. Rice, now a third-grade
teacher with two daughters ages
II and 13, said she started
using the "Not Done" pouch
because she knows how, even
as an adult, it's hard to put a
project down that isn't finished .·
"In a child it's just manifesting so much more in their
feelings," she said .

routine every night to build
toward bedtime. Parents can
sprink!e "sandman's dust" or
baby powder over children
before sleep, or rub "sleep
potion:· or body lotion on
arms and legs as a gentle
massage .
Once in bed, parents can
offer a gentle back, face or
head rub, play soft music or
whisper a special message.
5. Use Quiet J'ime

Some teachers feel the concept of a "time out" has
3. Play Is Important
become overused and puni tive . The authors suggest
True play isn't participating approaching a child gently
in organized sports or playing before the quiet time with
computer games. It involves words like "You could use a
children using their imagina- quiet time to relax ." That
tion , such as using wooden · allows children to save face
blocks to build a roadway for with their friends ~
They illso recommend givrace cars .
ing a child a quiet journal so
the child can express his or
4. Create A Routine
her frustration and then focus
For reluctant sleepers, fot -· on what can be done the next
low a .relaxing , consistent time

the world of academia? .
• Be se11sitive. Few people are
willing to admit they're struggling. Therefore, getting struggling students to admit this often
requires some clever thinking.
For example, instead of asking
"Is anyone struggling with this?"
ask "Would anyone like me to
repeat that information?" Jt
might seem like a subtle difference, but the latter is more likely
to draw a response than the former. In addition, privately ask
struggling students, via e-mail or
by pulling them aside after class,
to meet with you. Doing so in
front of the class could be humil- iating, which might tune the student out entirely.
For more tips tind information
on helping struggling students
reach their full potential, visit the
Association for Psychological
Science Web site at www.psycho·logicalscience.org.

RED .FLASHING LIGHTS
or an . extended ·STOP sign
indicate that a school bus is in
the process of picking up or
dropping otT children. Motorists
on both sides of the street are
required to .stop their cars . and
wait until the red lights stop
flashing, the extended "STOP"
sign is withdrawn, and the bus
begins moving before they can
continue driving.

Please see Strategies, 7

Preparing For Your Future...? .
Sttut Today
•

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�'

Making the most of back-to-school night
BY M M ILiccm
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - It's a time
to meet teachers , tour classrooms and nibble on snacks.
But back-to-school night
shouldn't stop there.
The night, which usually
occurs within a few weeks of
the first day of school, is a
chance for parents to ask
questions to prepare for the
coming year.
Experts suggest parents use
the night to learn more about
the curriculum, class . structure and academic expectations , along with what they
can do to help their children
succeed in school. · ·
" Any time the teacher is
made aware of how proactive
you are about your child's
education and child's well. being , I think the teachers
become
a
little
more
engaged," says PTA natio·nal
president Jan Harp Domene .
She encourages parents,
particularly of elementary
school -age children , to meet
th e teache r before th e big
ni ght to al e rt the m of specific
proble ms or concern s .
" The teac her will have
more time and the information will al so s·tay private,"
says Michelle Rid gway, who
teac hes readin g at Je hue
Middl e Sc hool in C o lton,
Calif. " As a pareQt , you don' t
necessarily want everyo ne in
the room knowing wh at your
child is or isn' t do in ~."
· Here are some tips for
making the most of the
night:
• For youn ge r childre n, ask

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back to School 2008

Page 6 •

how reading is taught, says
Nina Senatore, an assistant
professor of education at
Simmons College. Where
does spelling fit in? What is
the homework policy?
"Every school will· say they
have an amazing reading program ," says Senatore . "What
exactly does that mean?"
• Find out how the school
accommodates different math
and reading levels. In middle
and high school, ask how students are placed in advanced
classes.
·
"Certain kids work ft~ster
than others," says Ahn
Steininger, a mother of three
and
co-founder
of
miniMasters, a cultural learning center in New York . .
" Some kid s' need a little help .
How do they deal with that?"
• Ask about the extras .
Besides the normal curriculum , how much emphasis is
placed on the foreign languages, art, music and physical education?
• Be ·sure to ask abo ut
Social development. In wh at
ways are children encouraged
to get to know each other'and
work together as a team?
" Is there a lot of emphasis
placed on development of the
person as a human being not just the ac ademics?" says
Steininge r. " Be ing a good
person ?"
• Find out wh at th e major
projects are, such as research
papers and book reports, and
get a ge l)eral idea of wh e n
they are du e, says Ridgway.
"Thme are majo r projec ts
th at are go ing to take so me
reso urces and so me tim e,"

she says.
• Ask how you can help
your child succeed . For
example, are . there certain
materials you should have at
home?
• Be sure to ask about the
best way to communicate
with the teacher, says
Senatore, whether e-mail,
phone or sending a note with
your child. For middle and
high school students, who
have several teachers, she
suggests bringing a folder to
hold handouts and making
sure parents have each
teacher's name and contact
information .
. • Ask about progress
reports . "What type of communication about academic
progre.ss will I receive from
you?" says Ridgway. "I want
to know as soon as possible if
my child is struggling or not
turning in assignments."
• Inquire about how you
will be notified in case of an
emergency, says Steininger.
Will the teacher call you or is
there a telephone tree where
one parent calls another?
• Back-to-S choor Night
doesn' t lend itself to networking 'with other parents,
but Se natore say s parents
should bring some business
card s and try to exc han ge
inform ati on . You may need
them for homework emergencies , or to double-chec k fi eld
trips or specilll days .

Strategies ·for helping
sruggling students
(MS) - As any veteran educator can attest, no two students
are the same. There's no guarantee that an approach which
works for one student will work
for another. That's part of what
makes being an educator so difficult. With so many students
depending on teachers to help
them learn, how does a teacher
identify or deyelop a method
that helps all students?
While most educators would
be quick to point out that there
is no universally successful
method to reachmg students,
there are some approaches that
have proven effective when it
comes to connecting with students who are struggling in the
classroom. l'he Association for
Psychological Science offers
the following tips for educators
looking to get through to students who might be struggling.
·• Solicit information from students at the onset of the semester.
This is essentially a pree,mptive
measure that could help identify
reasons for struggling down the
road. This .inventory should
include questions about students'
time commitments, study habits,
reasons for taking the course,
whether or not they have a job,
their major, and other questions
that offer some background and
potential r;:lues that could be
helpful if a student struggles with
coursework down the road . This
can be accomplished by asking
students to fill out a simple questionnaire on the first day of class.
Should a student begin to strug· gle, a teacher can then. consult
the students' questionnaire to see

if the cause of the struggles
might be something related tp
poor study habits or working too
much at a part-time job or having
too many extracuniculars.
· • Focus on development skills,
not grades. In today's competitive academic environment, the
pressure·to get good grades c.an
be overwhelming. Sometimes
. an ·outcome-focused teaching
strategy that emphasizes earning
grades can alienate students who
might start off struggling. A shift
in teaching strategy to one more
about developing skills, such as
information processing and
building better memory skills,
might be necesslll)' before a student can 'begin focusing on
grades. Once a student masters
or·gains a better grasp of these
skills, grades will begin to
improve.
·
·
• Be accessible. Keeping
accessible office hours outside of
the classroom is one way to let
students know you are there for
them. However, thanks to technology, teachers ·can now be
more accessible than ever before.
With e~mail it's easy for students
to reach a teacher at all times of
the day, and teachefl&gt; should
encourage struggling students to
e-mail them with any problems .
In addition , offer discussion
forums through a school or university Web site that enable students to connect with classmates.
Once their academic careers are
over: students wiU need to work
with others to solve problems, so
why not iQstitute this practice in

Back to School 2008

Friday, August 15, 2008

_,

..

• Page 7

5 lessons for parents from kindergarten teacher Strategies
fromPage6
BY

Help Children Listen, Learn
and Cooperate at Home ."
. The book, released Tuesday
MILWAUKEE
Lisa by Penguin Group's Perigee
Holewa was amazed by how division, is aimed at parents
easily her daughter's kinder- · of 3 to 6 years olds, with help
garten class moved from one from other tefichers nationproject to another. There was wide, Holewa 's pediatrician
no whining, no tantrums.
and other writers.
At home, Holewa's daughter dawdled or tried to negotiHere are five of their tips:
ate when changing tasks, and
Holewa - assumed · it was
I. Get A Child's Attention
because she wasn't firm
enough. But the teacher, Joan
Be physically in the child's
Rice, simply had the 5-year- presence when speaking.
olds put their unfinished pro- ·Make eye contact; and touch
jects in a "Not Done" pouch him on the shoulder or hand
- giving them a signal that to get his attention. The
they would get to return to authors recommend creating
the project.
a "listen to me signal," like
"That's the moment when I turning off the light or ringthought there's really some~ ing a bell.
thing magical going on here,"
Holewa said .
2.Break Up Tasks Into
Holewa, a former reporter Pieces
for The Associated Press,
went on to write, along with
It's important to have clear
Rice, "What Kindergarten endings and beginnings to
Teachers Know:·Practical and activities and to give specific
Playful Ways for Parents tci directions broken into manCARRIE ANTLFIN8ER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ageable steps. For instance,
instead of saying, "Clean up
this mess ," they recommend
saying, "Put all the cars into
this bin then put it on the
shelf in your bedroom ."
. Rice, now a third-grade
teacher with two daughters ages
II and 13, said she started
using the "Not Done" pouch
because she knows how, even
as an adult, it's hard to put a
project down that isn't finished .·
"In a child it's just manifesting so much more in their
feelings," she said .

routine every night to build
toward bedtime. Parents can
sprink!e "sandman's dust" or
baby powder over children
before sleep, or rub "sleep
potion:· or body lotion on
arms and legs as a gentle
massage .
Once in bed, parents can
offer a gentle back, face or
head rub, play soft music or
whisper a special message.
5. Use Quiet J'ime

Some teachers feel the concept of a "time out" has
3. Play Is Important
become overused and puni tive . The authors suggest
True play isn't participating approaching a child gently
in organized sports or playing before the quiet time with
computer games. It involves words like "You could use a
children using their imagina- quiet time to relax ." That
tion , such as using wooden · allows children to save face
blocks to build a roadway for with their friends ~
They illso recommend givrace cars .
ing a child a quiet journal so
the child can express his or
4. Create A Routine
her frustration and then focus
For reluctant sleepers, fot -· on what can be done the next
low a .relaxing , consistent time

the world of academia? .
• Be se11sitive. Few people are
willing to admit they're struggling. Therefore, getting struggling students to admit this often
requires some clever thinking.
For example, instead of asking
"Is anyone struggling with this?"
ask "Would anyone like me to
repeat that information?" Jt
might seem like a subtle difference, but the latter is more likely
to draw a response than the former. In addition, privately ask
struggling students, via e-mail or
by pulling them aside after class,
to meet with you. Doing so in
front of the class could be humil- iating, which might tune the student out entirely.
For more tips tind information
on helping struggling students
reach their full potential, visit the
Association for Psychological
Science Web site at www.psycho·logicalscience.org.

RED .FLASHING LIGHTS
or an . extended ·STOP sign
indicate that a school bus is in
the process of picking up or
dropping otT children. Motorists
on both sides of the street are
required to .stop their cars . and
wait until the red lights stop
flashing, the extended "STOP"
sign is withdrawn, and the bus
begins moving before they can
continue driving.

Please see Strategies, 7

Preparing For Your Future...? .
Sttut Today
•

NATIONAL

N&lt;

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•

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(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1711

··~-----~

~ (i!IJ
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�Page 8 • .

Back to School 2008

Puzzles help students prep for school
(MS) - Perhaps no sound
"Back-to-school is a good
in the world is more musical time to 'take stock' and do an
to a kid's ears than the final inventory of what children are
recess bell on the last day of playing with, what is not used
school. Summer vacation has and what they need next in
long been a time for kids and their development," says Dr.
educators to relax. and for Stevanne Auerbach (a.k.a.
parents to spend more time " Dr. Toy"), a childhood develwith their children.
opment ·specialist and expert
But as the saying goes, "All in play, toys, children's prodgood things must come to an ucts, and education .
end." , As summer vacation
Barb Metroff, a junior high
nears its inevitable end , reac- math teacher in Illinois, says
climating students to a more she has found something that
academic mindset is some~ provides both entertainment
thing with which parents and and educational value that can
teachers alike often struggle. help kids stay sharp through
Largely gone are the days of · the summer months without
required summer reading lists, · feeling as though they're
which were used to keep kids doing schoolwork .
"I have been collecting
minds ' sharp and ease their
transition into the next grade challenging puzzles for my
level. What's left)s a collec-. students to work on dufjng
tive group of parents and edu- free · time," says Metroff. "I
cators who work to find ways recently
came
across
for kids to continue to have Scramble Squares puzzles,
fun during their summer vaca- and my students, children and
lions .but also stay sharp so relatives have been having a
they can excel when it's time . great time playing with them."
to go back to school.
Scramble Squares® puz-

zles, from b . dazzle, inc., offer first time or even adults who
precisely the type of ·Stimula- are returning to the classroom
tion educators and parents after a long layoff from acadhope to provide their children emia. Scramble Squares have
through the dogs days of sum- even
proven · beneficial
mer and into the school year.
beyond the parameters of the
Dr. Auerbach has determined
the entertaining nature of the traditional . classroom, as
social
worker
puzzles keeps kids engrossed school
enough .that they hardly real- Gwendolyn Russell, who
ize the fun they're having is works with at-risk youth,
also of great educational found out when she first tried
value. ·
·them with two of her students.
"Although each puzzle has
"I met with two teen males
only nine 4" X 4" pieces, they and they could not get enough
are perhaps the world's most of the puzzles," says Russell.
challenging puzzle," says "They opted to miss dinner to
Auerbach. "Puzzle play teach- stay wit~ me, the therapis~, to
es patience, perseverance, fine conntinue to solve their puzmotor skills and critical think- zles. They both seemed so
ing skills and helps maintain
mental agility while providing delighted that I was able to
stimulating entertainment as a ·easily engage them with the
either a solitaire game or a therapeutic process and they
even indicated they were
cooperative activity."
As Auerbach notes, puzzles looking forward to my
can stimulate the brain in a return."
number of ways, which is
For more information on
beneficial for youngsters Scramble
Squares,
visit
heading off to school for the WWII(.b-dazzle .com

Friday, August 15, 2008 .

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back to SchooJ 2008

• Page 9

Penmnnship takes
a back seat in ·
·many elementary
schools
BY EILEEN PuTMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - John
Hancock wouldn't recognize
the handwriting taught in
. many schools today. And his
loopy slanted script might as
well be a foreign language to
21st century students. .
Time and technology have
largely done away with traditional penmanship, leaving
schools with a challenge that
mirrors today's fast pace:
how to teach a cursive style
that's faster to write than
older, ornate methods and ·
easily readable.
·
The reality in many schools
is that handwriting instruction has slid far down the list
of education priorities . Many
teachers have all they qm do
to ready students for stan-

'

.

$1f.,tur("-'f1t&lt;"'ni"' $p111'ts (!,f,inf.c.s

Piuse see Wrltlna. 11

August l3rd • October 25th.
.

740-446-5818

�Page 8 • .

Back to School 2008

Puzzles help students prep for school
(MS) - Perhaps no sound
"Back-to-school is a good
in the world is more musical time to 'take stock' and do an
to a kid's ears than the final inventory of what children are
recess bell on the last day of playing with, what is not used
school. Summer vacation has and what they need next in
long been a time for kids and their development," says Dr.
educators to relax. and for Stevanne Auerbach (a.k.a.
parents to spend more time " Dr. Toy"), a childhood develwith their children.
opment ·specialist and expert
But as the saying goes, "All in play, toys, children's prodgood things must come to an ucts, and education .
end." , As summer vacation
Barb Metroff, a junior high
nears its inevitable end , reac- math teacher in Illinois, says
climating students to a more she has found something that
academic mindset is some~ provides both entertainment
thing with which parents and and educational value that can
teachers alike often struggle. help kids stay sharp through
Largely gone are the days of · the summer months without
required summer reading lists, · feeling as though they're
which were used to keep kids doing schoolwork .
"I have been collecting
minds ' sharp and ease their
transition into the next grade challenging puzzles for my
level. What's left)s a collec-. students to work on dufjng
tive group of parents and edu- free · time," says Metroff. "I
cators who work to find ways recently
came
across
for kids to continue to have Scramble Squares puzzles,
fun during their summer vaca- and my students, children and
lions .but also stay sharp so relatives have been having a
they can excel when it's time . great time playing with them."
to go back to school.
Scramble Squares® puz-

zles, from b . dazzle, inc., offer first time or even adults who
precisely the type of ·Stimula- are returning to the classroom
tion educators and parents after a long layoff from acadhope to provide their children emia. Scramble Squares have
through the dogs days of sum- even
proven · beneficial
mer and into the school year.
beyond the parameters of the
Dr. Auerbach has determined
the entertaining nature of the traditional . classroom, as
social
worker
puzzles keeps kids engrossed school
enough .that they hardly real- Gwendolyn Russell, who
ize the fun they're having is works with at-risk youth,
also of great educational found out when she first tried
value. ·
·them with two of her students.
"Although each puzzle has
"I met with two teen males
only nine 4" X 4" pieces, they and they could not get enough
are perhaps the world's most of the puzzles," says Russell.
challenging puzzle," says "They opted to miss dinner to
Auerbach. "Puzzle play teach- stay wit~ me, the therapis~, to
es patience, perseverance, fine conntinue to solve their puzmotor skills and critical think- zles. They both seemed so
ing skills and helps maintain
mental agility while providing delighted that I was able to
stimulating entertainment as a ·easily engage them with the
either a solitaire game or a therapeutic process and they
even indicated they were
cooperative activity."
As Auerbach notes, puzzles looking forward to my
can stimulate the brain in a return."
number of ways, which is
For more information on
beneficial for youngsters Scramble
Squares,
visit
heading off to school for the WWII(.b-dazzle .com

Friday, August 15, 2008 .

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back to SchooJ 2008

• Page 9

Penmnnship takes
a back seat in ·
·many elementary
schools
BY EILEEN PuTMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - John
Hancock wouldn't recognize
the handwriting taught in
. many schools today. And his
loopy slanted script might as
well be a foreign language to
21st century students. .
Time and technology have
largely done away with traditional penmanship, leaving
schools with a challenge that
mirrors today's fast pace:
how to teach a cursive style
that's faster to write than
older, ornate methods and ·
easily readable.
·
The reality in many schools
is that handwriting instruction has slid far down the list
of education priorities . Many
teachers have all they qm do
to ready students for stan-

'

.

$1f.,tur("-'f1t&lt;"'ni"' $p111'ts (!,f,inf.c.s

Piuse see Wrltlna. 11

August l3rd • October 25th.
.

740-446-5818

�..

Page 10 • _

Back tQ ~hool 2008

Friday, Au~ 15, 2008

Books about starting the school. year aim to.help kids overcome anxiety
BY IMwmiA CRITCHE11.

. • Let's Take Over the Kindergarten
. (Bloomsbury,

ASSOCIATED PREss WRITER

"Are you ready for school?"
That's a pretty big question for a little
kid. It could mean, are you dressed,
with teeth and hair brushed? Is your
· backpack · ready with all the supplies
inside? Or, can you handle what might
he your first day away from home?
Cute, pint-si~e pig Cornelius P. Mqd
can confidently say "Yes!" to all of the
above - and he does in the new picture
book. "Cornelius P. Mud, Are You
• Ready for School?" (Candlewick, ages
2-5), by Barney Saltzburg:
Of course, Cornelius is an unconventional pig .and does manage to put his
own spin on school: He stands at the
bus stop upside down.
The book is among many that aim to
ease children's fears and answer questions about what goes on inside that
place called school they've heard so
much about. Some books are geared
toward those going off to nursery
school, others for 1,1ew kindergartners or
kids starting another grade that can
seem like a life-altering move.
The books are a gentle reminder to
parents that there are a lot of_emotions
tied to the first day of school.
·
Some recent •itles:
• Ready, Set, School! (HarperCollins,
ages 3-6) by Jacquelyn Mitchard , illustrated by Paul Ratz de Tagy'o s.
Before Rory will be convinced he's
ready to start Remarkable Raccoon
Suburban School , he has to pass a test
he's set for himself: 'a sleepover at his
cousins' house. It's the first time he' ll
be away from his parents. He leaves
with tears running down his face , but as
soon as he sees his cousins having a ball
hanging upside down , all is right in
Rory's world .
By the time his fri ends come to pick
him up for the first day of school, Rory
declares, " I think I'll like school, but
home will still be my favorite place."

ages 3-6) by Richard
Hamilton, illustrated by Sue Heap.
Kindergartners· get their chance to
rule the school when their teacher, Miss
Tu~;k, gets stuck in the jungle .g ym. .
The children waste no time changing
the ntles. They think it's a good idea to
play with water, then with glue and then
paint the whole place. But they learn
their lesson when Molly and Polly fight
over a dolly, and Tim pinches Kim.
The most grown-up decision they can
make is to spring Miss. Tuck and start
acting like children again.
. • How Do Dinosaurs Go to School?
(Blue Sky/Scholastic, ages 3-5) by Jane
Yolen and Mark Teague.
The latest installment in the wpular
series that puts dinosaurs in everyday
situations. The centrosauruses and
iguanodons !Jlake surprisingly good role
models for young· readers: They never
. roughhouse or punch, and they don't
even think about making a grab for · a
classmate's packed lunch. Instead, they
carefully navigate the room so they're
not disruptive and they' re happy to give
a .hand - guess that's what you'd callit
- when 'classmates need help. :.
• Harry and the Dinosaurs Go to
School (Random House, ages 3-7) by
Jan Whybrow ahd illustrated by Adrian
Reynolds .
Harry can ' t be scared about going to
school because his pet Stegosaurus is
nervou s enough for both of them . But
the shaky dinosaur ri ses to the occasion
when Harry intr9(iuces him to another
boy who is even more apprehensive.
The first day of school ends with a
happy group of new friends.
• The Bus Stop (Dutton , ages 3 and
tip) by Janet Morgan Stoeke.
The bus stop is a crossroads for all
sorts of kids - kids with di fferent interests, different pets, different hair colors.
But when the "awfull y big and tal'l bus"
roars down the road headed for the ir little spot, the children reali ze they have a

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lot in common and are happy the bus
stop gives them a reason to be together.
• Lissy's Friends (Viking, ages 3 and
up) by Grace Lin . '
·
Lissy · really wants to make new'
friends, but s.ince the kids at school
aren't receptive· at first, she takes matters into' her own hands - literally. She
makes paper friends, using ongami.
They make good company and attract
other children, too.
•I Don't Like to Read (Viking, ages 5
and up) ~y Nancy Carlson.
· Henry can't understand why all his
friends in the first grade like to read so
much . All those letters don't make
much sense.
His. teacher explains that everyone
learns to · read in their own way and,
with a little extra help at school and a
little extra reading time at home, Henry
sees the joy in it and passes on his wisdom to his little brother.
• Oliver and Amanda: Amanda Pig,
First Grader (Dial , ages 4 and up) by
Jean Van Leeuwen, illustrated by Ann
Schweninger.
·
·
The fli'St thing Amanda notices when
she boards the bus as a fli'St grader is that
the seats don't seem.as tall as they. did
when she w~s a mere kindergartner. And

r

PIMse see Books. 11
•

The

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

When Jeff Barnes listed his
graduation cap and gown on
eBay, he was thinking more
about the environment than
his wallet. ·
Barnes, who lives in a onebedroom apartment, said he
didn't have the space or the
sentimental inclination to
keep the go~n from his graduation at Macalester College,
but didn't want to throw it
away, either. •
.
"It might as well go to
someorie else rather than the
landfill," said Barnes, a graduate student at Carnegie
Mellon
University
in
Pittsburgh.
It's a decision more students face as a growing num ber of colleges and high
schools require graduates to
buy gowns rather than rent
them . The gowns , made of
polyester or acetate , cost
about $25 and are designed to
be worn once. Some coinpa-

nies market them as "souvenir gowns" and encourage
students to hang onto them as
a keepsake.
"Thousands of these things
end up in landfills/' said Tim
Giuliani, who sells the
gowns. · The owner of
Graduate Affairs said he was
disappointed as gown sales
eclipsed rentals in recent
rears . . "We have a huge
mventory that never . gets
.used ."
The . impact of disposable
gowns has grown exponentially as graduation ceremonies
have . expanded
beyond high school and col.fege . Today, many schools
' honor multiple milestones completing
preschool,
kindergarten , fifth-grade or
eighth-grade -- with a stroll
in a cap and gown .
,
. And as the milestones pass ,
the· gowns remain. Experts
say polyester can take
decades to decompose .
Scott Allan bought hi s first
cap and gown four years ago

when his son, Andres, gradu- "logistical ease" ·of singleated from kindergarten . "I use gowns is a selling point,
thought it was a bit much," since schools avoid collectsaid
Allan,
39,
'of ing the gowns afterward.
Birmingham, Ala. "It was
At Northwest High School
only kindergarten."
in Germantown, Md ., school
But he's hoping to buy two officials use gown sales as a
or three more, eventually : fundraiser, said senior class
"Medical school would be adviser Clayton Putnam. The
price of the gown . increases
great." .
Renting reusable gowns from $60 to $100 as graduawould seem to be the more tion nears; the history te11cher
environmenllilly
friendly said. The additional money
option, said Sierra Club greeri goes toward prom, .a senior
living expert Bob Schildgen . banquet and graduation.
"I think Americans are disPutnam also -sees problems
gusting with their obsession with rented gowns.
with convenience," added
"It would be a difficult task
Schildgen, . author of " Hey ·to ask (students) to bring
Mr. Green ." " It's not that them back," he said . "They're
much trouble to launder a out the door. They've gradu. a ted.'~
graduation gown."
Giuliani, the gown salesThe school has never conman, said he tries talking sidered the potential impact
school officials into rentals on the environment, Putman
but most consider collecting said, but he can imagine
and returning the gowns too those conversations taking
place. It's something even
much of a hassle .
Do)lg Rosenberg, the direc - Jostens, a major provider of'
tor
of
budgeting
for
Macalester College , said the
Please see Gowns, 1l

~

For

Talented and Gifted Program would like
to than~ the following people businesses
for !)ponsoring our Bas~et-a-Day drawing
for the month of July.

•Shoes by NIKE, REEBOK and EASTLAND • School
Shirts • Gym Bags In School Colors • Hats

Buckeye RUI81
Eleclric
Cooperative

North 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH

.

----------------- ------lt•s BACK-TO-SCHOOL TIME••.
... D~IVE SAFELY!!

Audrey and Lany
Bums

Keelon '
Excawting

Sticks and Stones
Loggng

C &amp; M Auto Parts

Kyger Dental
Associates

Or Rick Sl. 0nge

Chapman and
Boois, CPA

Toler and Toler
Steve McGhee, lnsulllflCA!
Galha County
Tri-Mat
Treasurer
Construction
Nonis Northup
Tw1n Rive~S
Dodge
Manna
Paul Davies.
Wood Real Estate
Jewelefs

what makes the difference.
• Big Bad Wolves at School
(Simon &amp; Schuster, ages 4-8}
by Stephen Krensky, illustrated
by Brad Sneed.
Not everyone is cut out to
be a student at the Big Bad
'Wolf Academy, especially not
Rufus, who prefers to play in
the woods and howl at the .
moon . But when the wolves
are confronted by hunters, it's _
not huffing , puffing or wearing an old-l'ady getup that
saves them, but a good oldfashiom:d "Whhooooo!"
• Let's Go on a Class Trip
(Reader's Digest, ages 2-5) by
Carol Monica.
This lift-the-flap book not
only explores the idea that
learning can take place · outside classroom walls, it gives
preschoolers a sense of what
they might see on ·common
class trip destination s, such
a s a · science mu seum or
nature center.

\

Local Sd
Principals

Joe Browning.
Candidate lor
Gallia Co. Shenfl

~"

~ 9atl.i4 ~ Suta 1951
site Post Office • 446-0404 · Galli lis OH

••

'

s

•

\ i

'

1!

"

A

•

\...

I' .

\ , , _,

-'"•

J

•{

,H' . ..

Vl•ll U• FOI' Oul'
Open Hou•el
Su..day, Augu•l 24th, 1-3pm
(

-

.........
..............
,
see

'

C orne in to
our Expaitd~·d Facllil)'. · ·
Expand£'fi: lnf'.1.1nls und Tnddleo·s l'ro~raun
·
School A~~· l'o·o~rauu
WV Po·c - K l'n&gt;J(rana
, N~· w Snt't.·l y f&lt;'cahn·c s: New Sccuril)' I)(K&gt;I'
llircct EMS Nlnnhcr
Cmucrns in All The R(K.mts
N~tlinnall y A~cn• dilcd I'J ' UI(l'll m \\'ith l&gt;cl(r&lt;.-cd SlufT
J•t·t..~- K t•t· u~•· nnt With
lsc ()f ( .. ,.(•atth'C ( ... uiTi&amp;.·uhun

t

.W V

( A c ti v it)'

l'n•~• ·un1

tct protnotc dcv c h•pnl c llhlll
s kill,. fur cada KI(C l(r&lt;mp.)

*.* ENROLL NOW!**
..:·

.,.....

I

(

Saunders
lnsorance

t

Mon - F ri.

&gt;.

c._ 7(:.' \0- 5:30/
.... - ...."...

1

..

.. '••

Starting Childre11 6 Weeks
To 12 Year.,.

G allla.Cou n~
I Rat~ffs Pool
I Republican
arty j Center

GaUipolis
Chiropractic
Center

.1

-··-····""
EARLY EDUCATION
STATION

.

Gallia C~

Saunders
Insurance
Auencv
'N4"as-e tM

David K. Sml1h,
ODS·
Commissioner

Bur111e Oil

Sandra Foster

Roger
Bra:%r
Candidate
Galha Co Shenff

Jeffers C&amp;DD
Facility

Jeffers Trucking
and Exca~ating Spalde Suppi'l

Dailey Tire

Business • Group • Health ·Auto
• L!fe • Homeowners &amp; Farm

~~

'from Page 10

, "Starting Childt:en ·On &gt;The Right -Tra
¢' ,
.:· ;Preschool: Will• Extended Care
,

740-992-5627

Books

.

'

YOUR BACK TO SCHOOL NEEDS

437 Second Avenue o

•Pagell

(Disposable' graduation
gowns
are
keepsake-turned-landfill
.

and

. Shoe Place

fhr Huckcyc Hills Car&lt;.·cr
Ccntl•J~ &amp; FFA Students
Thru Sept. I st~ 200~
9-6 • Sat.9-S • Closed Sund.ay &amp; Monday

an

- - - - - - - - - - - - .- - - - - - - - - - --""''""'"'

10%
Off
Pu rchase ·
·
Tues. - l&lt;~ri ~

she doesn;t have to take a nap. And she .
gets to play on the big kids' playground!
What turns out to be most important
in the world of a first grader, however,
· is learning how to read. It's the,. only
way she'll know where not to play ball
and when it's time ~o enjoy cupcaic.es for
. a classmate's birthday.
•
Off
to
Kindergarten
(Cartwheel/Scholastic, ages 4-8) by Tony
Johnston, illustrated by Melissa Sweet.
How big a backpack does one need
for kindergarten? Well, you need space
for a stuffed bear and his chair, cookies
and milk, books and
easel to paint a
tree, right?
.
Wrong, says Bill's mom. ''Your
teacher will have everything," she
pwmises.
"I'm off to kindergarten now," Bill
says. '\f\nd alii take is me!"
• Silly School (Frances Lincoln, ages
4-8) by Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick.
When each member of her family tries
to coax Beth out of hiding to get ready .
· for her fli'St day of school, they talk up all
the fun things she' ll do: paint, play, listen
to stories. But no one tells her that her ·
friends will be there. In the end, that's

Back to School 2008

Friday, August IS, 2008

.

-/

C·

~

·· ~.

304-675-4956

817 30th STREET • I'T. PLEASANT
-,.. ''
"&gt;'' ''&gt;'' 'f&gt;"

•

*&gt;''

�..

Page 10 • _

Back tQ ~hool 2008

Friday, Au~ 15, 2008

Books about starting the school. year aim to.help kids overcome anxiety
BY IMwmiA CRITCHE11.

. • Let's Take Over the Kindergarten
. (Bloomsbury,

ASSOCIATED PREss WRITER

"Are you ready for school?"
That's a pretty big question for a little
kid. It could mean, are you dressed,
with teeth and hair brushed? Is your
· backpack · ready with all the supplies
inside? Or, can you handle what might
he your first day away from home?
Cute, pint-si~e pig Cornelius P. Mqd
can confidently say "Yes!" to all of the
above - and he does in the new picture
book. "Cornelius P. Mud, Are You
• Ready for School?" (Candlewick, ages
2-5), by Barney Saltzburg:
Of course, Cornelius is an unconventional pig .and does manage to put his
own spin on school: He stands at the
bus stop upside down.
The book is among many that aim to
ease children's fears and answer questions about what goes on inside that
place called school they've heard so
much about. Some books are geared
toward those going off to nursery
school, others for 1,1ew kindergartners or
kids starting another grade that can
seem like a life-altering move.
The books are a gentle reminder to
parents that there are a lot of_emotions
tied to the first day of school.
·
Some recent •itles:
• Ready, Set, School! (HarperCollins,
ages 3-6) by Jacquelyn Mitchard , illustrated by Paul Ratz de Tagy'o s.
Before Rory will be convinced he's
ready to start Remarkable Raccoon
Suburban School , he has to pass a test
he's set for himself: 'a sleepover at his
cousins' house. It's the first time he' ll
be away from his parents. He leaves
with tears running down his face , but as
soon as he sees his cousins having a ball
hanging upside down , all is right in
Rory's world .
By the time his fri ends come to pick
him up for the first day of school, Rory
declares, " I think I'll like school, but
home will still be my favorite place."

ages 3-6) by Richard
Hamilton, illustrated by Sue Heap.
Kindergartners· get their chance to
rule the school when their teacher, Miss
Tu~;k, gets stuck in the jungle .g ym. .
The children waste no time changing
the ntles. They think it's a good idea to
play with water, then with glue and then
paint the whole place. But they learn
their lesson when Molly and Polly fight
over a dolly, and Tim pinches Kim.
The most grown-up decision they can
make is to spring Miss. Tuck and start
acting like children again.
. • How Do Dinosaurs Go to School?
(Blue Sky/Scholastic, ages 3-5) by Jane
Yolen and Mark Teague.
The latest installment in the wpular
series that puts dinosaurs in everyday
situations. The centrosauruses and
iguanodons !Jlake surprisingly good role
models for young· readers: They never
. roughhouse or punch, and they don't
even think about making a grab for · a
classmate's packed lunch. Instead, they
carefully navigate the room so they're
not disruptive and they' re happy to give
a .hand - guess that's what you'd callit
- when 'classmates need help. :.
• Harry and the Dinosaurs Go to
School (Random House, ages 3-7) by
Jan Whybrow ahd illustrated by Adrian
Reynolds .
Harry can ' t be scared about going to
school because his pet Stegosaurus is
nervou s enough for both of them . But
the shaky dinosaur ri ses to the occasion
when Harry intr9(iuces him to another
boy who is even more apprehensive.
The first day of school ends with a
happy group of new friends.
• The Bus Stop (Dutton , ages 3 and
tip) by Janet Morgan Stoeke.
The bus stop is a crossroads for all
sorts of kids - kids with di fferent interests, different pets, different hair colors.
But when the "awfull y big and tal'l bus"
roars down the road headed for the ir little spot, the children reali ze they have a

Shop At HomeHometown Tools
46 State St.
GaDipoUs; OH
446-2201

lot in common and are happy the bus
stop gives them a reason to be together.
• Lissy's Friends (Viking, ages 3 and
up) by Grace Lin . '
·
Lissy · really wants to make new'
friends, but s.ince the kids at school
aren't receptive· at first, she takes matters into' her own hands - literally. She
makes paper friends, using ongami.
They make good company and attract
other children, too.
•I Don't Like to Read (Viking, ages 5
and up) ~y Nancy Carlson.
· Henry can't understand why all his
friends in the first grade like to read so
much . All those letters don't make
much sense.
His. teacher explains that everyone
learns to · read in their own way and,
with a little extra help at school and a
little extra reading time at home, Henry
sees the joy in it and passes on his wisdom to his little brother.
• Oliver and Amanda: Amanda Pig,
First Grader (Dial , ages 4 and up) by
Jean Van Leeuwen, illustrated by Ann
Schweninger.
·
·
The fli'St thing Amanda notices when
she boards the bus as a fli'St grader is that
the seats don't seem.as tall as they. did
when she w~s a mere kindergartner. And

r

PIMse see Books. 11
•

The

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

When Jeff Barnes listed his
graduation cap and gown on
eBay, he was thinking more
about the environment than
his wallet. ·
Barnes, who lives in a onebedroom apartment, said he
didn't have the space or the
sentimental inclination to
keep the go~n from his graduation at Macalester College,
but didn't want to throw it
away, either. •
.
"It might as well go to
someorie else rather than the
landfill," said Barnes, a graduate student at Carnegie
Mellon
University
in
Pittsburgh.
It's a decision more students face as a growing num ber of colleges and high
schools require graduates to
buy gowns rather than rent
them . The gowns , made of
polyester or acetate , cost
about $25 and are designed to
be worn once. Some coinpa-

nies market them as "souvenir gowns" and encourage
students to hang onto them as
a keepsake.
"Thousands of these things
end up in landfills/' said Tim
Giuliani, who sells the
gowns. · The owner of
Graduate Affairs said he was
disappointed as gown sales
eclipsed rentals in recent
rears . . "We have a huge
mventory that never . gets
.used ."
The . impact of disposable
gowns has grown exponentially as graduation ceremonies
have . expanded
beyond high school and col.fege . Today, many schools
' honor multiple milestones completing
preschool,
kindergarten , fifth-grade or
eighth-grade -- with a stroll
in a cap and gown .
,
. And as the milestones pass ,
the· gowns remain. Experts
say polyester can take
decades to decompose .
Scott Allan bought hi s first
cap and gown four years ago

when his son, Andres, gradu- "logistical ease" ·of singleated from kindergarten . "I use gowns is a selling point,
thought it was a bit much," since schools avoid collectsaid
Allan,
39,
'of ing the gowns afterward.
Birmingham, Ala. "It was
At Northwest High School
only kindergarten."
in Germantown, Md ., school
But he's hoping to buy two officials use gown sales as a
or three more, eventually : fundraiser, said senior class
"Medical school would be adviser Clayton Putnam. The
price of the gown . increases
great." .
Renting reusable gowns from $60 to $100 as graduawould seem to be the more tion nears; the history te11cher
environmenllilly
friendly said. The additional money
option, said Sierra Club greeri goes toward prom, .a senior
living expert Bob Schildgen . banquet and graduation.
"I think Americans are disPutnam also -sees problems
gusting with their obsession with rented gowns.
with convenience," added
"It would be a difficult task
Schildgen, . author of " Hey ·to ask (students) to bring
Mr. Green ." " It's not that them back," he said . "They're
much trouble to launder a out the door. They've gradu. a ted.'~
graduation gown."
Giuliani, the gown salesThe school has never conman, said he tries talking sidered the potential impact
school officials into rentals on the environment, Putman
but most consider collecting said, but he can imagine
and returning the gowns too those conversations taking
place. It's something even
much of a hassle .
Do)lg Rosenberg, the direc - Jostens, a major provider of'
tor
of
budgeting
for
Macalester College , said the
Please see Gowns, 1l

~

For

Talented and Gifted Program would like
to than~ the following people businesses
for !)ponsoring our Bas~et-a-Day drawing
for the month of July.

•Shoes by NIKE, REEBOK and EASTLAND • School
Shirts • Gym Bags In School Colors • Hats

Buckeye RUI81
Eleclric
Cooperative

North 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH

.

----------------- ------lt•s BACK-TO-SCHOOL TIME••.
... D~IVE SAFELY!!

Audrey and Lany
Bums

Keelon '
Excawting

Sticks and Stones
Loggng

C &amp; M Auto Parts

Kyger Dental
Associates

Or Rick Sl. 0nge

Chapman and
Boois, CPA

Toler and Toler
Steve McGhee, lnsulllflCA!
Galha County
Tri-Mat
Treasurer
Construction
Nonis Northup
Tw1n Rive~S
Dodge
Manna
Paul Davies.
Wood Real Estate
Jewelefs

what makes the difference.
• Big Bad Wolves at School
(Simon &amp; Schuster, ages 4-8}
by Stephen Krensky, illustrated
by Brad Sneed.
Not everyone is cut out to
be a student at the Big Bad
'Wolf Academy, especially not
Rufus, who prefers to play in
the woods and howl at the .
moon . But when the wolves
are confronted by hunters, it's _
not huffing , puffing or wearing an old-l'ady getup that
saves them, but a good oldfashiom:d "Whhooooo!"
• Let's Go on a Class Trip
(Reader's Digest, ages 2-5) by
Carol Monica.
This lift-the-flap book not
only explores the idea that
learning can take place · outside classroom walls, it gives
preschoolers a sense of what
they might see on ·common
class trip destination s, such
a s a · science mu seum or
nature center.

\

Local Sd
Principals

Joe Browning.
Candidate lor
Gallia Co. Shenfl

~"

~ 9atl.i4 ~ Suta 1951
site Post Office • 446-0404 · Galli lis OH

••

'

s

•

\ i

'

1!

"

A

•

\...

I' .

\ , , _,

-'"•

J

•{

,H' . ..

Vl•ll U• FOI' Oul'
Open Hou•el
Su..day, Augu•l 24th, 1-3pm
(

-

.........
..............
,
see

'

C orne in to
our Expaitd~·d Facllil)'. · ·
Expand£'fi: lnf'.1.1nls und Tnddleo·s l'ro~raun
·
School A~~· l'o·o~rauu
WV Po·c - K l'n&gt;J(rana
, N~· w Snt't.·l y f&lt;'cahn·c s: New Sccuril)' I)(K&gt;I'
llircct EMS Nlnnhcr
Cmucrns in All The R(K.mts
N~tlinnall y A~cn• dilcd I'J ' UI(l'll m \\'ith l&gt;cl(r&lt;.-cd SlufT
J•t·t..~- K t•t· u~•· nnt With
lsc ()f ( .. ,.(•atth'C ( ... uiTi&amp;.·uhun

t

.W V

( A c ti v it)'

l'n•~• ·un1

tct protnotc dcv c h•pnl c llhlll
s kill,. fur cada KI(C l(r&lt;mp.)

*.* ENROLL NOW!**
..:·

.,.....

I

(

Saunders
lnsorance

t

Mon - F ri.

&gt;.

c._ 7(:.' \0- 5:30/
.... - ...."...

1

..

.. '••

Starting Childre11 6 Weeks
To 12 Year.,.

G allla.Cou n~
I Rat~ffs Pool
I Republican
arty j Center

GaUipolis
Chiropractic
Center

.1

-··-····""
EARLY EDUCATION
STATION

.

Gallia C~

Saunders
Insurance
Auencv
'N4"as-e tM

David K. Sml1h,
ODS·
Commissioner

Bur111e Oil

Sandra Foster

Roger
Bra:%r
Candidate
Galha Co Shenff

Jeffers C&amp;DD
Facility

Jeffers Trucking
and Exca~ating Spalde Suppi'l

Dailey Tire

Business • Group • Health ·Auto
• L!fe • Homeowners &amp; Farm

~~

'from Page 10

, "Starting Childt:en ·On &gt;The Right -Tra
¢' ,
.:· ;Preschool: Will• Extended Care
,

740-992-5627

Books

.

'

YOUR BACK TO SCHOOL NEEDS

437 Second Avenue o

•Pagell

(Disposable' graduation
gowns
are
keepsake-turned-landfill
.

and

. Shoe Place

fhr Huckcyc Hills Car&lt;.·cr
Ccntl•J~ &amp; FFA Students
Thru Sept. I st~ 200~
9-6 • Sat.9-S • Closed Sund.ay &amp; Monday

an

- - - - - - - - - - - - .- - - - - - - - - - --""''""'"'

10%
Off
Pu rchase ·
·
Tues. - l&lt;~ri ~

she doesn;t have to take a nap. And she .
gets to play on the big kids' playground!
What turns out to be most important
in the world of a first grader, however,
· is learning how to read. It's the,. only
way she'll know where not to play ball
and when it's time ~o enjoy cupcaic.es for
. a classmate's birthday.
•
Off
to
Kindergarten
(Cartwheel/Scholastic, ages 4-8) by Tony
Johnston, illustrated by Melissa Sweet.
How big a backpack does one need
for kindergarten? Well, you need space
for a stuffed bear and his chair, cookies
and milk, books and
easel to paint a
tree, right?
.
Wrong, says Bill's mom. ''Your
teacher will have everything," she
pwmises.
"I'm off to kindergarten now," Bill
says. '\f\nd alii take is me!"
• Silly School (Frances Lincoln, ages
4-8) by Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick.
When each member of her family tries
to coax Beth out of hiding to get ready .
· for her fli'St day of school, they talk up all
the fun things she' ll do: paint, play, listen
to stories. But no one tells her that her ·
friends will be there. In the end, that's

Back to School 2008

Friday, August IS, 2008

.

-/

C·

~

·· ~.

304-675-4956

817 30th STREET • I'T. PLEASANT
-,.. ''
"&gt;'' ''&gt;'' 'f&gt;"

•

*&gt;''

�Page 12 •

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back .to School 2008

Writing

ready. In third grade, all stufrom Page 8
. dents are taught cursive.
But not all master it easily.
dardizcd tests and require - for public schools, the com- In a recent third-grade class
ments for core courses like pany said, and the program is at the ·county's Barcroft
Elementary · School , some
math , science and readin.g.
used by many homeschool- . students using the older cur"The printing and cursive ers. The company didn't prosive method labored over letarc taking more of a back vide sales figures.
ters.
Their 'complaints: The
scat ... said Barbara Willer,
It's a method that might capital S "looks like a duck,"
deputy executive director of . strike Hancock, known for
the National A~sociation for his flowery signature on the the loopy lower case K is
the Education of Young Declaration of Independence , "hardest to make" and the
dotted line between ledger
Children.
as heresy.
lines is "in my way." Teacher
Why teach cursive at all.
The cursive is vertical when computers and key- no slanting. Gone are the Donna Crocker gave them
boards are so prevalent? For , fancy capital letters . Writing catchy poems to copy to
make the les~on more inter• · one thing, .younger children paper has two lines , not esting.
may not have the skills to three: The traditior;Jal middle
Writing progress in her
fully learn keyboarding , aTJ,d dotted line that disciplined
not all classrooms have com- wayward lower-case letters is class is so varied that Crocker
puters . Handwriting is how now a solid line , and there's has students print, rather than
write in cursive, when they
young students express them- no top line.
produce written samples for
sci ves and develop as learnOne school system that evaluation several times a
ers, said Steve Graham, spe- switched is Arlington County,
ciaf education professor at Va., in the Washington sub- ·year. "Teachers have · to be
able to read it," she
Vanderbilt
University's urbs ,
which
adopted explained.
Peabody
College
in "Handwriting Without Tears"
Crocker, who has taught for
Nashville, Tenn. ·
as standard curriculum for , more than two decades and
Unfortunately, some who . the fall.
has special education certifi.
. have trouble with writing
"It's not so flowery look- cation, said she tries to
mechanics have problems ing . It's easy to read and the
with other language arts letters are easy to make," said devote I~ minutes · to handwriting at the beginning of
skills.
Mary
Zolman,
English most days, but test prepara"What we see with some Language Arts supervisor for
tion and other subjects take
young kids' who struggle, Arlington's public schools, ·. priority.
they don't like writing a lot," which have more than 18 ,000
"In order of importance,
Graham said.
students.
this is way down," she said.
The goal is for handwriting
"Handwriting
Without
But if cursive is down, it's
mechanics to b'ecome auto- Tears" was developed by Jan
certainly
not out.
mali~: so the y don ' t get in the Z. Olsen, a Cabin John, Md. ,
On
the
essay section of the
way of other sk ills.
pediatric occupational thera- SAT, required by most colDepending on the school pist, to help' her first-gr&lt;!de
distri ct. children may be son's handwriting problems . leges for admission, students
taught handwritin g methods She found traditional cursive writing in cursive averaged
known as Zaner-Bioser, "way too curlicue" and shtnt- slightly higher scores than
"Loops and Gro'ups" or ed. which she said is difficult those who printed . The
D'N_ealian - and th '!t's only for children with "any sort of College Board, which administers the SAT. said the differa few. Another program learnin g issue."
ence
wasn't significant and
ca lled " Handwriting Without
Like many school systems, ·couldn ' t be attributed to
Tears" is gett ing a close look Arlington starts cursive in the
around the country. Fifteen second grade for students handwriting , yet the result
states ha ve recommended it who are d ev~ lopmentall y has intrigued researchers .
In on'e study, college stu-

'

Back to ·School 2008

• Page 13

Fridl!,y, August 15, 2008

Students turn
to.
for .
'competitive edge

dents who took good le.cture
notes _got higher scores on
essay tests. The best predicCO-Op
tor of quality notetaking was
writing speed , said researcher .
Stephen T. Peverly, professor
Bv LisA CoRNwEu.
of psychology and education
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
at Columbia · University's
Teachers College in New
CINCINNATI - Ren Brown
York.
is banking on the work experi"Since at least for many ence she gains while at college
kids the thoughts they think to give her a compe.titive edge
up are a Iittle ahead of their over other young job seekers
- an advantage increasingly
handwriting, they need to be sought by students and
able to write fast or they're employers amid a weak econogoing to forget them," he . my and a changing workplace.
education
said. Faster writing also helps .. Schools and
groups
are
seeing
growth
in
the brain spend less effort on
established programs that link
forming letters and more on students with employers, who
higher-ordet cognitive tasks . also are showing increased
like composing good essays, interest. Many point to student
concerns over job competition
he said.
The findings are a boost for in a tight labor market and
employer needs to replace
~cursive, since its continuous retiring baby boomers.
linking of letters is faster
"Historically, interest in
than print, in which the pen cooperative education increases when the economy slumps,
must be lifted.
"For most people cursive is especially since it does seem to
give people a leg up in the job
a more efficient form of writ- market," said Terry Hartle,
ing ," Peverly said. .
·senior vice president of the
Council
on
. Ultimately, most studentJi American
Education:
and adults end up adopting a
Employers are looking to
hybrid writing style of printcooperative education as a way
ing
and
cursive, said to observe potential employees
Peabody's Graham .
over several months to better
determine
if they fit the compa"What Americans tend to
gravitate towards is function- ny, said Phil Gardner, director
ality," Graham said. "We of the Collegiate Empl'oyment
Research Institute at Michigan
want things that can be done State University.
quickly and efficiently. When
National recruiting studies
you look at the scripts now, have found a majority of
you can argue that we've lost employers ratirig their retu~n .
something in terms of aes- on money spent on co-op as
Please see Co-Op, 1l
thetic beauty ."

.

The Pll'~e Turtle
Check Out Our New
Viva Beads In All
The School Colors!
The Lafayette Mall
300 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio .

Co-Op

year and a half of real-world growing. A bill Congress iarity with the company and the
work exP.erience when I gradu- passed July 31 would provide work, and better relent ion ...
atet
..
grants for qualifying public and said Steve Rean , P&amp;G's associfrom Page 12
The Cooperative Education private schools that want to
ate director for North America
and Internship Association esti- establish co-op programs.
mates that 400 to 500 U.S.
"Kids and their families are talent supply.
Walt Disney Parks and
excellent, Gardner said.
schools offer coop~rati've edu- making an enormous. invest'The bottom line is that cation and 250,000 to 300,000 ment in . higher educatton and Resorts provides internships
many companies won't even students participate in co-op or · they clearly want there to be a •similar to C!Hlp in terms of pay
look at a graduate without internships.
payoff," said U.S . Rep. and structure through its college
work experience," he said.
The University of Cincinnati Timothy Bishop. D-N.Y., who program that started in 19R I
As the job market suffers and Drexel University . report wrote theco-op provision.
with a few host s~:hools and has
from an economic · downturn 25 percent growth in co~op
Bishop said co-op helps
that has increased layoffs and placements over the p~sr ftve ensure that investment. with grown to 2XO. About X.OOO to
made new jobs harder to find, years. Seton Hall Untverstty about 70 percent of co-op stu- 9.000 students parti~:ipatc . in
employers are under pressure placements increased I00 per- dents turning the expenence Disney's college and prulesto more quickly find the best .cent over that time , and the into a full-time job after gradu-. sional internship programs.
replacements for talent and University of Wisconsin at at ion. It also saves employers
Medium- · and small-sized
experience lost as baby · Stout saw a 37 percent recruitment and training costs. companies also have been turnboomers start to retire.
increase. · The ·university of
Ohio will spend $250 million
Cooperative education-work Louisviile, ·Auburn University over fi v·e years to create more ing more to co-op. Kolar
programs alt~rnate classroo~ and Northeastern University co-ops and internships . The. Design's president credits ·it for
instruction wtth . patd JObs m are among others experiencing state is counting on more ot much · of her company's
students' study fields.
growth.
·
·
those students likely being hired growth, with 12 ; of her 15
Brown , majoring in graphic
Some schools, such as by the businesses and staying in employees former co-op studesign at the University of Potsdam , N.Y.-based Clarkson Ohio after gradual ion .
dents. The company designs
Cincinnati, is working full time University, are making profesLarge employerS' such as interior and exterior environfor several months at Kolar sional work experience manoa- Walt Disney Co.. General ments for corporations, univerDesign Inc .
tory in ail majors.
.
Motors Corp. and Procter &amp;
.
"It definitely helps financial"Our students are demanding Gamble Co. haye long offered sities and cit(es.
"Co-op has been a huge
ly, and I don't have to worry an equal chance to gain ex peri- · co-ops and internships.
resource
pool for us , tlt)d we
about trying to work while tak- ence in their areas 'of study," · "We feel it is a fantastic
ing classes," said Brown, 20, of · said Marty Ford , director of selection process that gives us want that constant new thinkemployees with a stronger ing and energy," Kelly Kolar
suburban Cincinnati. "But Clarkson's Career Center.
most importantly, I wiH have a
Government support also is early. performance, more famtl- said.

.

MA&amp;tc YE:At~S

from. ~
graduation-r~lated

products.
is thinking about. said
spokesman Rich Strobe. The
majority . of its custom.:rs
choose to buy gowns.
"We see some opportunities
in the future." he ~;aid from
the company's head4uart.:rs
in
Minneapolis.
Minn .
"We're not p'repan,:d to talk
about · those ideas at this
point."
David Baker hopes companies find a better solution.
The 56-year-old kept his
gown for I0 years after
receiving his master 's degree
in physical therapy. but
recently listed it for free .on
Craigslist.
"It· lost its sentimental
appeal," said Baker, of San
Francisco. "If somebody else
can use it, I'd like that."

Desk

DA.y LA.I~E CE.NTEf~
201 High Street

Gowns·

675"-5"8J.f l · Point Pleasant

"Putting Children First'~
Director-Robin Bias
•
Serving tile community since 1980

*Licensed by the State of West Vir·ginia

6 Weeks - 12 Years
• Open enrollment
• Secured play area
• frivate Pay I WV Link Accepted
• Quality Child Care
• After school transportation available to front doors.
• Dependable and caring staff
• Very low staff turnover
• Staff is' CPR &amp; First Aid Certified

·The philosophy of the day care is the stimulatiot1 of
the whole child, emotional, ifltellectual, and physical.
Emphasis is placed on 'tmhat~cit~g the child's
self-cotlcept, promoting social it1teraction
a11d la11guage skills.

."From Our Home To Yours''r"'

Corbin &amp; Snyder !furniture

446-1998
• t

955 Second Ave. • Gallipolis; Ohio
Open .til7 p.m. Monday
740-446-1171 - 1-800-664-5462
.. .
f

I

�Page 12 •

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back .to School 2008

Writing

ready. In third grade, all stufrom Page 8
. dents are taught cursive.
But not all master it easily.
dardizcd tests and require - for public schools, the com- In a recent third-grade class
ments for core courses like pany said, and the program is at the ·county's Barcroft
Elementary · School , some
math , science and readin.g.
used by many homeschool- . students using the older cur"The printing and cursive ers. The company didn't prosive method labored over letarc taking more of a back vide sales figures.
ters.
Their 'complaints: The
scat ... said Barbara Willer,
It's a method that might capital S "looks like a duck,"
deputy executive director of . strike Hancock, known for
the National A~sociation for his flowery signature on the the loopy lower case K is
the Education of Young Declaration of Independence , "hardest to make" and the
dotted line between ledger
Children.
as heresy.
lines is "in my way." Teacher
Why teach cursive at all.
The cursive is vertical when computers and key- no slanting. Gone are the Donna Crocker gave them
boards are so prevalent? For , fancy capital letters . Writing catchy poems to copy to
make the les~on more inter• · one thing, .younger children paper has two lines , not esting.
may not have the skills to three: The traditior;Jal middle
Writing progress in her
fully learn keyboarding , aTJ,d dotted line that disciplined
not all classrooms have com- wayward lower-case letters is class is so varied that Crocker
puters . Handwriting is how now a solid line , and there's has students print, rather than
write in cursive, when they
young students express them- no top line.
produce written samples for
sci ves and develop as learnOne school system that evaluation several times a
ers, said Steve Graham, spe- switched is Arlington County,
ciaf education professor at Va., in the Washington sub- ·year. "Teachers have · to be
able to read it," she
Vanderbilt
University's urbs ,
which
adopted explained.
Peabody
College
in "Handwriting Without Tears"
Crocker, who has taught for
Nashville, Tenn. ·
as standard curriculum for , more than two decades and
Unfortunately, some who . the fall.
has special education certifi.
. have trouble with writing
"It's not so flowery look- cation, said she tries to
mechanics have problems ing . It's easy to read and the
with other language arts letters are easy to make," said devote I~ minutes · to handwriting at the beginning of
skills.
Mary
Zolman,
English most days, but test prepara"What we see with some Language Arts supervisor for
tion and other subjects take
young kids' who struggle, Arlington's public schools, ·. priority.
they don't like writing a lot," which have more than 18 ,000
"In order of importance,
Graham said.
students.
this is way down," she said.
The goal is for handwriting
"Handwriting
Without
But if cursive is down, it's
mechanics to b'ecome auto- Tears" was developed by Jan
certainly
not out.
mali~: so the y don ' t get in the Z. Olsen, a Cabin John, Md. ,
On
the
essay section of the
way of other sk ills.
pediatric occupational thera- SAT, required by most colDepending on the school pist, to help' her first-gr&lt;!de
distri ct. children may be son's handwriting problems . leges for admission, students
taught handwritin g methods She found traditional cursive writing in cursive averaged
known as Zaner-Bioser, "way too curlicue" and shtnt- slightly higher scores than
"Loops and Gro'ups" or ed. which she said is difficult those who printed . The
D'N_ealian - and th '!t's only for children with "any sort of College Board, which administers the SAT. said the differa few. Another program learnin g issue."
ence
wasn't significant and
ca lled " Handwriting Without
Like many school systems, ·couldn ' t be attributed to
Tears" is gett ing a close look Arlington starts cursive in the
around the country. Fifteen second grade for students handwriting , yet the result
states ha ve recommended it who are d ev~ lopmentall y has intrigued researchers .
In on'e study, college stu-

'

Back to ·School 2008

• Page 13

Fridl!,y, August 15, 2008

Students turn
to.
for .
'competitive edge

dents who took good le.cture
notes _got higher scores on
essay tests. The best predicCO-Op
tor of quality notetaking was
writing speed , said researcher .
Stephen T. Peverly, professor
Bv LisA CoRNwEu.
of psychology and education
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
at Columbia · University's
Teachers College in New
CINCINNATI - Ren Brown
York.
is banking on the work experi"Since at least for many ence she gains while at college
kids the thoughts they think to give her a compe.titive edge
up are a Iittle ahead of their over other young job seekers
- an advantage increasingly
handwriting, they need to be sought by students and
able to write fast or they're employers amid a weak econogoing to forget them," he . my and a changing workplace.
education
said. Faster writing also helps .. Schools and
groups
are
seeing
growth
in
the brain spend less effort on
established programs that link
forming letters and more on students with employers, who
higher-ordet cognitive tasks . also are showing increased
like composing good essays, interest. Many point to student
concerns over job competition
he said.
The findings are a boost for in a tight labor market and
employer needs to replace
~cursive, since its continuous retiring baby boomers.
linking of letters is faster
"Historically, interest in
than print, in which the pen cooperative education increases when the economy slumps,
must be lifted.
"For most people cursive is especially since it does seem to
give people a leg up in the job
a more efficient form of writ- market," said Terry Hartle,
ing ," Peverly said. .
·senior vice president of the
Council
on
. Ultimately, most studentJi American
Education:
and adults end up adopting a
Employers are looking to
hybrid writing style of printcooperative education as a way
ing
and
cursive, said to observe potential employees
Peabody's Graham .
over several months to better
determine
if they fit the compa"What Americans tend to
gravitate towards is function- ny, said Phil Gardner, director
ality," Graham said. "We of the Collegiate Empl'oyment
Research Institute at Michigan
want things that can be done State University.
quickly and efficiently. When
National recruiting studies
you look at the scripts now, have found a majority of
you can argue that we've lost employers ratirig their retu~n .
something in terms of aes- on money spent on co-op as
Please see Co-Op, 1l
thetic beauty ."

.

The Pll'~e Turtle
Check Out Our New
Viva Beads In All
The School Colors!
The Lafayette Mall
300 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio .

Co-Op

year and a half of real-world growing. A bill Congress iarity with the company and the
work exP.erience when I gradu- passed July 31 would provide work, and better relent ion ...
atet
..
grants for qualifying public and said Steve Rean , P&amp;G's associfrom Page 12
The Cooperative Education private schools that want to
ate director for North America
and Internship Association esti- establish co-op programs.
mates that 400 to 500 U.S.
"Kids and their families are talent supply.
Walt Disney Parks and
excellent, Gardner said.
schools offer coop~rati've edu- making an enormous. invest'The bottom line is that cation and 250,000 to 300,000 ment in . higher educatton and Resorts provides internships
many companies won't even students participate in co-op or · they clearly want there to be a •similar to C!Hlp in terms of pay
look at a graduate without internships.
payoff," said U.S . Rep. and structure through its college
work experience," he said.
The University of Cincinnati Timothy Bishop. D-N.Y., who program that started in 19R I
As the job market suffers and Drexel University . report wrote theco-op provision.
with a few host s~:hools and has
from an economic · downturn 25 percent growth in co~op
Bishop said co-op helps
that has increased layoffs and placements over the p~sr ftve ensure that investment. with grown to 2XO. About X.OOO to
made new jobs harder to find, years. Seton Hall Untverstty about 70 percent of co-op stu- 9.000 students parti~:ipatc . in
employers are under pressure placements increased I00 per- dents turning the expenence Disney's college and prulesto more quickly find the best .cent over that time , and the into a full-time job after gradu-. sional internship programs.
replacements for talent and University of Wisconsin at at ion. It also saves employers
Medium- · and small-sized
experience lost as baby · Stout saw a 37 percent recruitment and training costs. companies also have been turnboomers start to retire.
increase. · The ·university of
Ohio will spend $250 million
Cooperative education-work Louisviile, ·Auburn University over fi v·e years to create more ing more to co-op. Kolar
programs alt~rnate classroo~ and Northeastern University co-ops and internships . The. Design's president credits ·it for
instruction wtth . patd JObs m are among others experiencing state is counting on more ot much · of her company's
students' study fields.
growth.
·
·
those students likely being hired growth, with 12 ; of her 15
Brown , majoring in graphic
Some schools, such as by the businesses and staying in employees former co-op studesign at the University of Potsdam , N.Y.-based Clarkson Ohio after gradual ion .
dents. The company designs
Cincinnati, is working full time University, are making profesLarge employerS' such as interior and exterior environfor several months at Kolar sional work experience manoa- Walt Disney Co.. General ments for corporations, univerDesign Inc .
tory in ail majors.
.
Motors Corp. and Procter &amp;
.
"It definitely helps financial"Our students are demanding Gamble Co. haye long offered sities and cit(es.
"Co-op has been a huge
ly, and I don't have to worry an equal chance to gain ex peri- · co-ops and internships.
resource
pool for us , tlt)d we
about trying to work while tak- ence in their areas 'of study," · "We feel it is a fantastic
ing classes," said Brown, 20, of · said Marty Ford , director of selection process that gives us want that constant new thinkemployees with a stronger ing and energy," Kelly Kolar
suburban Cincinnati. "But Clarkson's Career Center.
most importantly, I wiH have a
Government support also is early. performance, more famtl- said.

.

MA&amp;tc YE:At~S

from. ~
graduation-r~lated

products.
is thinking about. said
spokesman Rich Strobe. The
majority . of its custom.:rs
choose to buy gowns.
"We see some opportunities
in the future." he ~;aid from
the company's head4uart.:rs
in
Minneapolis.
Minn .
"We're not p'repan,:d to talk
about · those ideas at this
point."
David Baker hopes companies find a better solution.
The 56-year-old kept his
gown for I0 years after
receiving his master 's degree
in physical therapy. but
recently listed it for free .on
Craigslist.
"It· lost its sentimental
appeal," said Baker, of San
Francisco. "If somebody else
can use it, I'd like that."

Desk

DA.y LA.I~E CE.NTEf~
201 High Street

Gowns·

675"-5"8J.f l · Point Pleasant

"Putting Children First'~
Director-Robin Bias
•
Serving tile community since 1980

*Licensed by the State of West Vir·ginia

6 Weeks - 12 Years
• Open enrollment
• Secured play area
• frivate Pay I WV Link Accepted
• Quality Child Care
• After school transportation available to front doors.
• Dependable and caring staff
• Very low staff turnover
• Staff is' CPR &amp; First Aid Certified

·The philosophy of the day care is the stimulatiot1 of
the whole child, emotional, ifltellectual, and physical.
Emphasis is placed on 'tmhat~cit~g the child's
self-cotlcept, promoting social it1teraction
a11d la11guage skills.

."From Our Home To Yours''r"'

Corbin &amp; Snyder !furniture

446-1998
• t

955 Second Ave. • Gallipolis; Ohio
Open .til7 p.m. Monday
740-446-1171 - 1-800-664-5462
.. .
f

I

�.. '

Back to SchQOI 2008

Page 14 •

Friday, AugUst 15, 2008

Back to school: Facts and figures ftom the Census
WASHINGTON (Business Patterns:
2005
Wire) - Summertime winding (http://www .census .gov /Pressdown and summer vacations Release/www/releases/archive
county-business-patcoming to an end signal that s/
back-to-school time is near, It's terns/0 10 192.html) .
a time that many children
• Students
eagerly anticipate - catching
75.2 million: The number of
up with old friends , making children and adults enrolled in
new ones and settling into a school throughout the country
in October 2006 - from nursnew daily routine.
Parents and children alike ery school to college.
scan the newspapers and Web
Source: School Enrollmentsites looking for sales to shop Social
and
Economic
- for a multitude of school sup- Characteristics of Students·:'
plies and the latest clothing October 2006 (http://www.cenfads and essentials. This edi- sus . gov/Presstion of Facts for Features high- Release/www/releases/archive
1ights the many statistics asso- s/ education/0 11921 .html)
ciated with the return to class•
Pre-K through
12
rooms by ou r nation's st udents Enrollment
56 percent: Percentage of 3and teac hers.
• Back-to-School Shopping and 4-year-olds enrolled in
$7.5 billion: The amount of school in October 2006.
money spent at family clothing
Source: School Enrollmentstores in August 2007. Only in Social
and
Economic
November and December Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.centhe holiday shopping season were sales significantly higher. s u s . g o v / P r e s s Similarly, sales at bookstores in Release/www/releases/archive
August 2007 totaled .$2.3 bil~ s/ education/0 11921 .html)
lion, an amount approached in
72 percent: Percentage of .
2007 only by sales in January children 3 to 6 enrolled in
and December.
kindergarten who attended all
Source: Monthly Retail day, as of October 2006.
Trade and Food Services
Source: School Enrollment, (http://www.census.gov/mrts/w Social
and .
Economic
ww/mrts.html)
CharacteristicS of Students:
For back-to-school shopping , October 2006 (http:l/www.cenchoices of retail establishments sus .g ov/Pressabound: In 2005, there were Release/www/releases/archive
24,659 family clothing stores, s/ education/0 1192 1.html)
6,305 chi ldren and infants
56 million: The projected
clothing stores, 26,4 16 shoe number of students to be
stores, 9,50 1 office supply and enrolled in the nation's elemenstationery stores, 23,195 sport- tary through high sc hool s
ing goods stores, 11,077 book- (grades K-12) this fall.
stores and 9,589 department
Source:
Upcoming
· stores .
Statistical ·Abstract of the
· Source: . County Business · united States: 2009, Table 211

(http://www.census .gov/com- Lessons include those taken
peodia/statab/)
after school or on the weekend
17,000: Number of students in subjects such as music ,
30 and older enrolled in ele- · dance, language, computers or
mentary school, as of October religion. The corresponding
2006.
percentage a decade earlier was
Source: School Enrollment- 24 percent.
Social
and
Economic
Source: A Child's Day: 2004
Characteristics of Students: (http://www.census.gov/PressOctober 2006 (http://www.cen- Release/www/releases/archive
s u s . g o v I P r e s s - s/ children/010850.html)
Release/www/releases/archive · 26 percent : Percentage of
children 6 to .II who had ever
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
I i percent: Projected per- . attended or been enrolled in
centage of elementary through first grade or higher · and had
high school students enrolled chang~d schools at some point
in private schools this fall.
as of 2004, down from 30 perSource:
Upcoming cent a decade earlier. For chilStatistical Abstract of the dren 12 to 17, 'the correspondUnited States: 2009, Table 211 ing rate declined from 52 per(http://www.census.gov/com- cent to 42 percent over the
. period.
peridia/statab/)
· 41 pe~cent: Percentage of
Source: A Child's Day: 2004
elementary
through
high (http://www.census.gov/Pressschool students · who were Release/www/re leases/archive
minorities , as of October 2006 . s/ children/0 10850.html) ·
Source: SchOol Enrollment7 percent: The percentage of
Social
and
Economic children 6 to II who had ever
Characteristics of Students: repeated a grade as of 2004,
October 2006 (http://www.cen- unchanged from a decade earlis u s . g o v I P r e ·s s - er. For children 12 to 17 , the
.Re1east;/www /releases/archive rate declined from 16 percent
to II percent over the period.
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
23 percent : Perce ntage of · Source: A Child's Day: 2004
elementary
throu g h hi g h (hitp://www.cen);us.gov/Pressschool students who have at Release/www/releases/arc hive
least one foreign-born parent in s/ children/0 I0850.html)
October 2006 . Five percent
• Languages
were foreign-born themselves.
10 .9 million : · Number of
Source: School Enrollmenr- school-age children (5 to 17)
Social
and
Economic who speak a language other
Characteristics of Students: than English at home; 7.8 milOctober 2006 (http://www.cen- lion of these children speak
s u s . g o v I P r e s s - Spanish at home .
Release/w ww/releases/archive
Source: 2006 American
s/ education/0 11921.html)
Community
Survey
. 33 percent: Percentage of (http://factfinder.census.gov/)
children 6 to II who participat• Lunchtime
ed in lessons as of 2004. · 30.5 miJJion: Average num-

ber of children participating
each month in the national
school lunch program in 2007. ·
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 551
(http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
9.3 billion: The nation's total
apple production , in pounds, in
2007, down from 9.9 billlon in
2006. The chances .are good
that . the apples your children
present to . their teachers or
enjoy for lunch were grown in
Washington
state,
whiCh
accounted for more than half of
the nation 's t(}tal production .
Source: USDA National
Agricultural Statistics Service
(http://www.usda.gov/nass/)
• College
18.4 million: The projected
number of students enrolled in
the nation's colleges and universities this fall. This is up
from 13.5 million 20 years ago.
· Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 211
(http://www.censl\s.gov/compendialstatab/)
37 percent: Percentage of all
college students 25 and &lt;;&gt;lder in
October 2006; 55 percent of
these older students attended
schoo.l part time.
Source: School EnrollmentSocial
and
Economic
Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.cens u s . g 0 v t p r e s s _
Release/www/releases/archive
1 d
· /011921 h J)
s e ucatiOn
· tm
69 percent: Percentage of
· undergraduates enrolled in
fQur-year colleges in O~tober

Census
from Page 14
2006. Of those enrolled in such
schools, 80 percent attended
full time.
Soun:e: School ·Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.census.gov/Press· Re1ease/www/releases/archive
sf education/Oll92l.html) ·
46 percent: Percentage of 18and 19-year-olds enrolled in
college in 2006.
Source: School Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of · Students:
October 2006 (http://www.census.gov/PressRelease/www/releases/archive
sf education/0 1192l .html)
56 percent: Percentage of
undergraduates who . were
women in October 2006.
Source: School Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of Students:..
October 2006 (http://www.cens u s . g o v I P r e · s s .Release/www/releases/archive

college degrees in 2005.
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
.
Sour.:e:
Upcoming
8.6 million: Number of peoStatistical
Abstract
of the .
ple who . hold bachelor's
degrees in btlsiness. Twenty- United States: 2009, Table 269
five percent of bachelor's (http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
.
degrees were in this field.
3,690:
The
number
of
public
Source:
What
It's
Worth:Field of Training ' and charter schools nationwtde in
These · schools,
Economic Status in 2004 2005-06.
(http://www .census .gov/Press- exempt from selected state and
Release/www/releases/archive local rules and regulations,
enrolled I million students.
s/ education/0 11392.html)
Source:
Upcoming
5.6 years: Average amount of
time tt takes people to com- Statistical Abstract . of the
plete bachelor's degrees . It · United States: 2009, Table 230
took 4.4 years to complete an (http://www.census .gov/compendia/statab/)
associate's degree.
• Teachers and Other
.Source: What It's Worth:
School
Personnel
of Training
and
Field
.l
million: Number of
7
Economic Status in .2004
(http://www .census.gov /Press- teachers in the United States in
Release/www/releases/archive 2007. Some 2.9 million teach
at the elementary and middle
sl education/0 11392.html)
school
level. The remainder
• How Many Schools?
includes
those teaching at the
97,382: Number of public
schools in 2005-06. The corre- postsecondary, secondary, and
sponding number of private preschool and kindergarten
·
schools was 28,996 in 2005-06. levels.
Source:
Upcoming
Source:
Upcoming
. Statistical Abstract of the Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Tables United States: 2009, Table 596
231 and 254 (http://www.cen- (http://www .census .gov /compendiil/statab/)
sus.gov/compendia/statab/)
$59 ,825: Average annual
4,276: Number of institutions ·
of higher .learning that. granted salary of public school teachers

·:Your

.

446-2314

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Residential • Co-nmercial • Wholesale • Retail
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Serving Gallia County Since 1950 ·Now ~erving Meigs County
990 State Route 160
Gallipolis. OH 4563 I
7 40-446-1960 .

33105 Hiland RD Suite I
Pomeroy. OH 45769
7 40-992-2318

4147 State Route 160

Gallipolis, Ohio

C1e006 Natonwkte ~utual i'lsurance Company and Affilla.OO Companies Nationwide Lite Insure~ Company

17Ceunsaeet

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pendia/statab/)
• The Rising Cost of College
$14,203 : Average t4ition,
room and board (for in-state
students) at the nation's fouryear P!lblic colleges and universities for an enti~e academic
year (2006-07). That . is more
than double the corresponding
figure in 1990.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 282
(http://www .census .gov /compendia/statab/)
(Editor's note: The preceding~
data were collected from a
variety of sources and may be
subject to sampling variability
and other sources of error. .
Facts for Features are customarily released about two
months before an · observance
in order to accommodate magazine production timelines.
Questions or comnients should
be . directed to the Cemus
Bureau :1· Public !!!{ormation
Office: telephone: 30 1-763 3030;.fax: 301-763-3762; ore·
nlail: (piocensus.gov).

lnstock Laminates
Ceramic .Tile, Carpet, Vinyl &amp; Hardwood

CHECI
'

in California as of the 20052006 school year- the highest
of any state. Teachers in South
Dl\kota received the lowest pay
- $34,709. The national average was $49,026 . High school '
principals earned $92,965
annually in 2006-07.
Source:
. Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Tables
244 and 247 (http://www.census .gov/compendia/statab/)
$15.48: Average hourly wage
for the nation's school bus drivers in 2006-07. Custodians
earned $13 .78, while cafeteria
workers made $1 LJ 6.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 247
(http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
• Technology
14.2 million : Number of
computers available for classroom use in the nation 's
schools as of the 2005-2006
school year. That works out to
one computer for every four
students.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 252
(http://www .census.gov/com-

Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

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is back in
session ••• Piease helP
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Home oftice : Colurrt:lul. OH 432 15·2220 Natonw~. fle Naionwkfe Framemark and On Your ~e are federally
regi!IIBfed seMce m&amp;rtts of NatiOnwide ~tual lntJUranoe eorr.&gt;anY Not avallabf&amp; In all
sooted 10

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Back to SchQOI 2008

Page 14 •

Friday, AugUst 15, 2008

Back to school: Facts and figures ftom the Census
WASHINGTON (Business Patterns:
2005
Wire) - Summertime winding (http://www .census .gov /Pressdown and summer vacations Release/www/releases/archive
county-business-patcoming to an end signal that s/
back-to-school time is near, It's terns/0 10 192.html) .
a time that many children
• Students
eagerly anticipate - catching
75.2 million: The number of
up with old friends , making children and adults enrolled in
new ones and settling into a school throughout the country
in October 2006 - from nursnew daily routine.
Parents and children alike ery school to college.
scan the newspapers and Web
Source: School Enrollmentsites looking for sales to shop Social
and
Economic
- for a multitude of school sup- Characteristics of Students·:'
plies and the latest clothing October 2006 (http://www.cenfads and essentials. This edi- sus . gov/Presstion of Facts for Features high- Release/www/releases/archive
1ights the many statistics asso- s/ education/0 11921 .html)
ciated with the return to class•
Pre-K through
12
rooms by ou r nation's st udents Enrollment
56 percent: Percentage of 3and teac hers.
• Back-to-School Shopping and 4-year-olds enrolled in
$7.5 billion: The amount of school in October 2006.
money spent at family clothing
Source: School Enrollmentstores in August 2007. Only in Social
and
Economic
November and December Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.centhe holiday shopping season were sales significantly higher. s u s . g o v / P r e s s Similarly, sales at bookstores in Release/www/releases/archive
August 2007 totaled .$2.3 bil~ s/ education/0 11921 .html)
lion, an amount approached in
72 percent: Percentage of .
2007 only by sales in January children 3 to 6 enrolled in
and December.
kindergarten who attended all
Source: Monthly Retail day, as of October 2006.
Trade and Food Services
Source: School Enrollment, (http://www.census.gov/mrts/w Social
and .
Economic
ww/mrts.html)
CharacteristicS of Students:
For back-to-school shopping , October 2006 (http:l/www.cenchoices of retail establishments sus .g ov/Pressabound: In 2005, there were Release/www/releases/archive
24,659 family clothing stores, s/ education/0 1192 1.html)
6,305 chi ldren and infants
56 million: The projected
clothing stores, 26,4 16 shoe number of students to be
stores, 9,50 1 office supply and enrolled in the nation's elemenstationery stores, 23,195 sport- tary through high sc hool s
ing goods stores, 11,077 book- (grades K-12) this fall.
stores and 9,589 department
Source:
Upcoming
· stores .
Statistical ·Abstract of the
· Source: . County Business · united States: 2009, Table 211

(http://www.census .gov/com- Lessons include those taken
peodia/statab/)
after school or on the weekend
17,000: Number of students in subjects such as music ,
30 and older enrolled in ele- · dance, language, computers or
mentary school, as of October religion. The corresponding
2006.
percentage a decade earlier was
Source: School Enrollment- 24 percent.
Social
and
Economic
Source: A Child's Day: 2004
Characteristics of Students: (http://www.census.gov/PressOctober 2006 (http://www.cen- Release/www/releases/archive
s u s . g o v I P r e s s - s/ children/010850.html)
Release/www/releases/archive · 26 percent : Percentage of
children 6 to .II who had ever
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
I i percent: Projected per- . attended or been enrolled in
centage of elementary through first grade or higher · and had
high school students enrolled chang~d schools at some point
in private schools this fall.
as of 2004, down from 30 perSource:
Upcoming cent a decade earlier. For chilStatistical Abstract of the dren 12 to 17, 'the correspondUnited States: 2009, Table 211 ing rate declined from 52 per(http://www.census.gov/com- cent to 42 percent over the
. period.
peridia/statab/)
· 41 pe~cent: Percentage of
Source: A Child's Day: 2004
elementary
through
high (http://www.census.gov/Pressschool students · who were Release/www/re leases/archive
minorities , as of October 2006 . s/ children/0 10850.html) ·
Source: SchOol Enrollment7 percent: The percentage of
Social
and
Economic children 6 to II who had ever
Characteristics of Students: repeated a grade as of 2004,
October 2006 (http://www.cen- unchanged from a decade earlis u s . g o v I P r e ·s s - er. For children 12 to 17 , the
.Re1east;/www /releases/archive rate declined from 16 percent
to II percent over the period.
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
23 percent : Perce ntage of · Source: A Child's Day: 2004
elementary
throu g h hi g h (hitp://www.cen);us.gov/Pressschool students who have at Release/www/releases/arc hive
least one foreign-born parent in s/ children/0 I0850.html)
October 2006 . Five percent
• Languages
were foreign-born themselves.
10 .9 million : · Number of
Source: School Enrollmenr- school-age children (5 to 17)
Social
and
Economic who speak a language other
Characteristics of Students: than English at home; 7.8 milOctober 2006 (http://www.cen- lion of these children speak
s u s . g o v I P r e s s - Spanish at home .
Release/w ww/releases/archive
Source: 2006 American
s/ education/0 11921.html)
Community
Survey
. 33 percent: Percentage of (http://factfinder.census.gov/)
children 6 to II who participat• Lunchtime
ed in lessons as of 2004. · 30.5 miJJion: Average num-

ber of children participating
each month in the national
school lunch program in 2007. ·
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 551
(http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
9.3 billion: The nation's total
apple production , in pounds, in
2007, down from 9.9 billlon in
2006. The chances .are good
that . the apples your children
present to . their teachers or
enjoy for lunch were grown in
Washington
state,
whiCh
accounted for more than half of
the nation 's t(}tal production .
Source: USDA National
Agricultural Statistics Service
(http://www.usda.gov/nass/)
• College
18.4 million: The projected
number of students enrolled in
the nation's colleges and universities this fall. This is up
from 13.5 million 20 years ago.
· Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 211
(http://www.censl\s.gov/compendialstatab/)
37 percent: Percentage of all
college students 25 and &lt;;&gt;lder in
October 2006; 55 percent of
these older students attended
schoo.l part time.
Source: School EnrollmentSocial
and
Economic
Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.cens u s . g 0 v t p r e s s _
Release/www/releases/archive
1 d
· /011921 h J)
s e ucatiOn
· tm
69 percent: Percentage of
· undergraduates enrolled in
fQur-year colleges in O~tober

Census
from Page 14
2006. Of those enrolled in such
schools, 80 percent attended
full time.
Soun:e: School ·Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of Students:
October 2006 (http://www.census.gov/Press· Re1ease/www/releases/archive
sf education/Oll92l.html) ·
46 percent: Percentage of 18and 19-year-olds enrolled in
college in 2006.
Source: School Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of · Students:
October 2006 (http://www.census.gov/PressRelease/www/releases/archive
sf education/0 1192l .html)
56 percent: Percentage of
undergraduates who . were
women in October 2006.
Source: School Enrollmentand
Economic
Social
Characteristics of Students:..
October 2006 (http://www.cens u s . g o v I P r e · s s .Release/www/releases/archive

college degrees in 2005.
s/ education/0 11921 .html)
.
Sour.:e:
Upcoming
8.6 million: Number of peoStatistical
Abstract
of the .
ple who . hold bachelor's
degrees in btlsiness. Twenty- United States: 2009, Table 269
five percent of bachelor's (http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
.
degrees were in this field.
3,690:
The
number
of
public
Source:
What
It's
Worth:Field of Training ' and charter schools nationwtde in
These · schools,
Economic Status in 2004 2005-06.
(http://www .census .gov/Press- exempt from selected state and
Release/www/releases/archive local rules and regulations,
enrolled I million students.
s/ education/0 11392.html)
Source:
Upcoming
5.6 years: Average amount of
time tt takes people to com- Statistical Abstract . of the
plete bachelor's degrees . It · United States: 2009, Table 230
took 4.4 years to complete an (http://www.census .gov/compendia/statab/)
associate's degree.
• Teachers and Other
.Source: What It's Worth:
School
Personnel
of Training
and
Field
.l
million: Number of
7
Economic Status in .2004
(http://www .census.gov /Press- teachers in the United States in
Release/www/releases/archive 2007. Some 2.9 million teach
at the elementary and middle
sl education/0 11392.html)
school
level. The remainder
• How Many Schools?
includes
those teaching at the
97,382: Number of public
schools in 2005-06. The corre- postsecondary, secondary, and
sponding number of private preschool and kindergarten
·
schools was 28,996 in 2005-06. levels.
Source:
Upcoming
Source:
Upcoming
. Statistical Abstract of the Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Tables United States: 2009, Table 596
231 and 254 (http://www.cen- (http://www .census .gov /compendiil/statab/)
sus.gov/compendia/statab/)
$59 ,825: Average annual
4,276: Number of institutions ·
of higher .learning that. granted salary of public school teachers

·:Your

.

446-2314

1111111111, lhlo

. #1 Floor Covering Dealer!

Residential • Co-nmercial • Wholesale • Retail
Marlin &amp; Nancy Rose, Owners

Remnants 200/o ,Off

No Hassle, No Credit Check
We Can Help!

.OHIO lALLEY

D

ON -SALE NOW!

Nationwide•
On Your Side"'

Serving Gallia County Since 1950 ·Now ~erving Meigs County
990 State Route 160
Gallipolis. OH 4563 I
7 40-446-1960 .

33105 Hiland RD Suite I
Pomeroy. OH 45769
7 40-992-2318

4147 State Route 160

Gallipolis, Ohio

C1e006 Natonwkte ~utual i'lsurance Company and Affilla.OO Companies Nationwide Lite Insure~ Company

17Ceunsaeet

)

pendia/statab/)
• The Rising Cost of College
$14,203 : Average t4ition,
room and board (for in-state
students) at the nation's fouryear P!lblic colleges and universities for an enti~e academic
year (2006-07). That . is more
than double the corresponding
figure in 1990.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 282
(http://www .census .gov /compendia/statab/)
(Editor's note: The preceding~
data were collected from a
variety of sources and may be
subject to sampling variability
and other sources of error. .
Facts for Features are customarily released about two
months before an · observance
in order to accommodate magazine production timelines.
Questions or comnients should
be . directed to the Cemus
Bureau :1· Public !!!{ormation
Office: telephone: 30 1-763 3030;.fax: 301-763-3762; ore·
nlail: (piocensus.gov).

lnstock Laminates
Ceramic .Tile, Carpet, Vinyl &amp; Hardwood

CHECI
'

in California as of the 20052006 school year- the highest
of any state. Teachers in South
Dl\kota received the lowest pay
- $34,709. The national average was $49,026 . High school '
principals earned $92,965
annually in 2006-07.
Source:
. Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Tables
244 and 247 (http://www.census .gov/compendia/statab/)
$15.48: Average hourly wage
for the nation's school bus drivers in 2006-07. Custodians
earned $13 .78, while cafeteria
workers made $1 LJ 6.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 247
(http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/)
• Technology
14.2 million : Number of
computers available for classroom use in the nation 's
schools as of the 2005-2006
school year. That works out to
one computer for every four
students.
Source:
Upcoming
Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2009, Table 252
(http://www .census.gov/com-

Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

Please·see Census, 15

~School

is back in
session ••• Piease helP
keeP our kids safe!

Back to School 2008

Friday,AUgtist 15,2008

Home oftice : Colurrt:lul. OH 432 15·2220 Natonw~. fle Naionwkfe Framemark and On Your ~e are federally
regi!IIBfed seMce m&amp;rtts of NatiOnwide ~tual lntJUranoe eorr.&gt;anY Not avallabf&amp; In all
sooted 10

*'"·

t,RjetwMng guktellnes. review and approval

.

.

.........

'

. . .'

..

740-446-21
~.

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.

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

Take me to the other side:
Rio students experience life in China, Cl

Youth recognition day: a Meigs County
Fair highlight, D1

,
111· m ~6 ,
-~ "" ~ "

-

~',

Printed on 100'1,
NewSJprint

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
( lhio \all&lt;·~ l'uhli,hing ( " ·

SPORTS
• Ex-Rio standout Boyles
came close to competing
. at Beijing Olympics•.
See Page Bl

l'omno~ • :\-Jiddleport • (;allipolis • .\ugust

R l·c~-cll•d

,-,:.woN

$1.!)0 •

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLU MBUS - A copy
of an alleged internal e-mail
from an emp loyee at the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency wit h
a
question s justifying
wastewater "draft permit has
been obtained by The
Sunday Times-Sentinel.

•

The wastewater draft per- Sierra Club through a public
mit is in re lation to records request s, co ntains
American
Municipal two sentences on the wastePower-Ohi o's
proposed water draft permit.
power plant in Letart Fall s.
On April 10 .. OEPA
The e-mail was re fer~ emp loyee Mike Yandrich
enced in the recent public wri tes to supervisor Bruce
. hearings on the wastewater Goff: "Don't have the SEJ
and land fi ll draft permits (social and econom ic justi issued by the OEPA for pub- fication) done. I am struglic comme.nts. The e-mail . -gling personally and profeswhich was obtained by the sionally with this, as I can-

Fair

not i1i good fait ll prov ide
any type of posit ive social
or economic JUst ifiaat ion."'
The OEPA must cons ider
tl]e tec hnical. · economic .
social ami environmenta l
aspects of the project before
deciding to issue or deny a
water quali ty certificati on.
It should also be not ed.
AMP has proposed miti gati on fo r deg rada tion of

n

•

STAFF REPORT

BY ELIZABETH RtGEL

PageAS
.
• Stella Marie Clark
• Minnie V. Harrison
• Eloise Matson
• Arleene Delores Murrell
• Jarrell R. O'Dell

Page 16 •

Back to School 2008

Friday, August 15,2008

INSIDE

'•

• Accident topples
archway sign.
SeePageA2
• Making ex-husband the
villain. See Page A3 ·
• Bush tells Russia to get
out of Georgia.
SeePage AS
• Forum on faith puts
Obama-McCain back in
~potlight. See Page AS
• Ney released from
halfway house:
SeePageA6

WEATHER

Details on Page A6

INDEX
4

SEcnoNs- 24 PAGES

AiQu,nd Town

'

Cel~brations

.dassifieds
Cdmics

C4
D Section
insert

Editorials

A4

Movies

C3

bbituaries
sports

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.

A.3

.

Weather

As
B Section
A6

© 20o8 Ohio Valley Publiohins Co.

.

304-675-4340
.•

Please see Program, Al·

Please see OEPA. Al

NEWS@ MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

ERIGEL@MYDA ILYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS · - · Local
law enforcement hopes to
crack down on prescription
drug abusers with the aid of
a computer database recently implemented through
Ohio's Prescri ption Drug
Monitoring
Program
(POMP) in order to monitor
the sale of prescripti ons that
fa ll under schedule II , Ill,
IV, and V controlled substance categories .
The Ohi"o Automated Rx
Reporting
System
(OA~RS)
was initially
established- by the State ·
Board 9f Pharmacy to in
2006. However, the Gallia
County Sheriff s Offi ce has
only had access to it for the
past several month s and
already a handful of people
have been prosecuted for
abusing prescription 'drugs
due to information obtained
fro m the database.
According to the National
Alliance for Model State
Drug Laws. 36 states have
operating .PDMPs or have
approved POMP legislation
for the purpose of detecting
and preventing the abuse of
prescription
medication.
Information comprised in
all
POMP
databases
includes patient name,
address, type and amount of
dru g "dispensed, prescribing
phy sician's name , pharmacy
. name, date of dispensing,
and pre scription number.
Other relevant information is also gathered
depending on individual
state needs. Re cords are
maintain'ed for one yea'r
unless authorities sec fit to
more ex tensive monitoring.
The main idea of this system is to crack down on
"doctor shopp ing," it is not
intended to affect legi timate
patients who need medication .
Doctor shoppin g refers to·
patients that request care
from multiple physicians,
usually
si multaneou sly,
without notifying· the physicians of multiple caregivers,
in order to obtain additional
prescription drugs or other
medical treatment. Patients ·
who doctor shop may exaggerate the extent of their

water ways wi thin tile proposed area. Still. however
the proposed plant might
affect waterways. it cannot ··
violate Ohio's wate r qua lity
sta ndards. that
protect
human health and the environm ent.
Nac hy Kan fer of the
Sierra Club's offices in

Visit to focus
on arts as tool
in developm-ent ·

•

OBITUARIES

Vol. 42. No. :Jo

OEPA e-mail questions plant permit

Program
helps stem
prescnpt1on
nus uses
I

~

.....

·-~

.

,

.

'

Beth Sergentlpholoo

The 2JlOB Meigs County Fair wrapped ·up Saturday night but before the l!jst gate was
closed, there were chickens to wash.and dry as well as pets to show off. Above, two
boys at the 4-H Pet· Show· attempt to get their golde~ retriever to "sit" while Jesse
Mortis, standing, and 6reanna Hayman prepared poultry for Saturday's big livestock
sale.

GALLIPOLIS - James
Le vin of Cleveland is coming to Gallipoli s fo r two
days . Wed nesday and
· Thursday, Aug. 27. and 28,
sponsored by the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing
Arts Centre. the French Art
Colony anJ the Gallia
Co unt y
Chamber
of
Commerce. ·
The purpose of hi s vi sit is
to share his unique ex pertise
in promoting th e art~ a·nd
culture of a loca le to successfull y in vigo rate the
populace to ach ieve positive
economic growth.
Through hi s presentations, he demo·nstrates
clearly how the arts and culture can serve as a powerful
economic engine for a communit y. and transform what
is under-u sed to become
vibrant ai1d vital. ~nd ultimately help in defining that
co mmunity. ·
In 2007. his caree r work .
in community development
and activism ea rned him the
Ohio
Arts .. Council ·
Governor\ Awa rd . He is
kn own throughout the Ohio
as a community activist , arts
advocme. festival director.
stage director and prflducer,
playwri ght . lyric ist and .
·impresario. A resident of
Cle veland, he co-founded
Ingen uit y, the Cleve land
Festi val
of Art and
Tec hnology in 2003 . .Since
the n. he has directed this
event. which annually trans,
forms. downtowil Cleveland
.into a wonderland of performance, ex hibi ts and hig h
tech in stallations
When he arrives in
Gallipolis on Aug. · 27. he
will first tour the Ariel at 2
p.m .. Following that he will
tour th e Our Hou se
Museum at 3 p.m.. and the
John Gee Muse um at 4 p.m.
He wi ll conclude his ·day
with a dinner, joi ned by a
group of communit y cultural leaders.
On Aug . 28, he will forst
visit .the radio stati on at 9:30
a. m. for a guest interv iew on
"Talk of the Town." From
there he will go to th e
French Art Colony at l 0
a.m .. the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors
Bureau at II a.m., and arrive
for hi s public presentation at
the Ariel Theatre at noon.

Please see Arts. Al

Middlepolt demolitions on increase
BY BRIAN

J.

REED .

BAEEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - With
a"full-time building inspector in place, the condemnation of un safe building s is
on the rise in Middleport
an d Village Council continues to raise qu estions
and red flags when they
identify potentially . unsafe

'

building s.
A duplex apartment building condemned after suffer·
ing extensive damage in a
July fire remains a safety
hazard. according to cou ncil
members, who di scussed
the building 's conditi on at
last week's council meeting.
Other buildings were also
di scussed , including two
belonging to the owners of

At the Aug. I I meeting.
properties damaged in the
cmmcil
membe~ Jean Craig .
downtown fire.
A duplex apartme nt build- discussed the current condiing on Coal Street, owned .tion of the building. noting
by Raymond Andrews, was th&lt;Jt only one window has
condemned shortly after it been boarded up, and that
was damaged in the fore that the front dpor to the first leveled anoti.er apartmelll floor apartment is open. pro·
building ow ned by Ed Baer. viding access to ~he interior
Andrews was given 60 days ' of the bumed,out building.
Gerlach said Buildin g
to bring the apartment up to
·
In spector Randall Mulhn&gt;
code or demolish it.

,

has contacted both Baer and
Andrews about cleaning up
their properties, but neither
has responded.
. Council also di scussed
the condition of other properties Andrew' and 6aer
own . Craig said Baer had
been ordered earli er this
year to clean up another
·

Please see Increase, Al

•

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