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Page B-8- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel .com

Tht~rsday , November 27. 2008

••

Pleasant
alley
Hospital -

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Wmter Sports Guide
inside today's Sentinel

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Printed on HlO %
Rrcycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
1-1{ Ill.\\ , \:0\ ' 1·. '\ II\ I' H :!X . :! OoX

:; o ( 'I :\: IS • \ ol. ') X . !'\ co . 1oo

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SONGBOOK
INSIDE TODAY'S

SENTINEL

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Travelers
and others who stay at the ·
Meigs Motel will begin
paying a three-percent lodging tax in the new year.
· The proceeds from the tax
wi II be used to promote the
activities of a new
Convention imd Visitors
Bureau. That organization,
in tum, will likely take the .
place .of a tourism office
now operating as .an ann of .

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the Chamber of Commerce, new tax. Commissioners
under contract.
expect other motels to
The· tax is expec'ted to l&lt;ica~e in th(: county in
generate between $2,000 commg years .
and $J,OOO.in its first year
Meigs County is the
or two , which would be re- · exception rather than the
invested in promoting the rule when it comes to the
county as a travel destina- lodgint: or "bed" tax.
lion. Commissioners hope Commts.sioners believe it is
that anticipated ~rowth the only county - or at least
will result in additional one of just a handful - that
lod~ing facilities. The does not levy the tax.
Metgs Motel is the only
Tourism
Director
motel in the county, lind Michelle Donovan said she
~uests at b.ed and breakfast · will meet with commissionmns are not included in the ers Wedn.esday to further

Of

determine what steps are
required to form the CVB
and administer the tax pr()ceeds. She said it is likely
the tourism board, representing four members of the
Board of Directors of the
Chamber of Commerce and
six appointed by commissioners, will stay on as CVB
board members.
Those lourism board
members are Donovan ,
Stines, Patty
. Woody
Pickens ,, Bill Quickel.
Dixie Sayre, Dave Berry,

Bv BETH SERGENT

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-~· Romo leads~

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Charlone Hoelllchlphoto

· ;pJtge AS
. The 'eastern ,·aen Choir directed by Kris Kuhn will perform at the Christmas open house at the Chester Courthouse
·
,:, ~Wallace Hill,' II, 60 . Saturday, 0~9· 6.

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C~ester hosts

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INSIDE

concert of Christmas music. That will be
followed by Beth Stivers presenting
music on her singing clarinet.
CHEsTER - The annual holiday . Cookies and wassail will be served
observance of the Chestet Shade ·following the concert.
His!hrical Association. at tlie histolic
Also participating in the program
Col;.rt House will be held ·on Saturday will be Beth Stivers presenting music
arnfSqnday, D~c ..6,and 7. · .
on her singing clarinet.
.. ,V:1~itor~ , will be greetil&lt;f by an 11·
Cookies and wassail will . be seryed
foot Cbnstt'nas tree decorated as one . following the concert;
..
. ilright have bten in the .1800s, similar
Following the open house a soup dinto the Williamsburg style. · ·
· ner and sale of Christmas baked good
The traditional open house will be will be held. The dinner will be served
beld from 2 to 4 p.m. with entenainment there with take:out available and there
to feature the Eastern Bell Choir under will be a wide variety of desserts, cookthe direction of Kris Kuhn presenting a ies and candies available for sale.
Bv CHARLENE HoEFUCH

;fOr lllljlksgMng.
.~'. Page AS
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WEATHER '.
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holiday open house

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

• For the Record.
SeePageAS
·:. Many reaSons
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o.i.u. on~~
A1o
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Local jobless
rates down
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By I(EVIN· KELLY

KKELLYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INDEX
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11.0 PAGES

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Arinie's Mailbox
A3
lJ1.Jckeye .edition
Bs
Calendars
A3
B7-8
Classifieds
B9
.Comics
Editorials
A4
faith • Values
A7-9
~ovies

As

biASCAR.

Ba

i')bltuaries

As

Sports
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Weather ·

B Section

AlO

Funds raised will be used toward the
purchase of stonn windows for the
Courthouse in a step toward reducing
hearing and cooling bills. Whatever is
made on sale will be matched by the
Modern Woodmen. Donations are also
be accepted for the storm window fund.
On Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. the
annual Children's Christmas time will
be held. There is no fee for participation. Dixie Sayre will be providtng
music for the kids , Tina Kelly will be
there to tell a .Christmas story, and
Linda Blosser will be instructing the
children in a Christmas craft.
~efreshments will be served.

Legionnaire of the Year

mOctober ·
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BSERGENTIIMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

;- pastSeatUe. See Page Bl

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Tim King, Mike Gerlach,
John Musser, and Diana
Coates. The board meets
and reports to county commissioners monthly as a
term of the contract
between the Chamber and
commissioners .
That. report is also
required of the tourism
board in order to receive
monthly disbursements of
Prevention, Retention and
Contingency funds through
the Department of Job and
Family Services.

Hearing held
on Gatling
pennits

SPORTS
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HOUDAY ·

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RACINE - This week
there were many -questions
but only one person provided formal testimony at . a
public hearing concerning a
Pollutant
National
Discharge
Elimination
System permit and waste·
water permit applications
by Gathng, Ohio LLC.
The question and answer
period and formal hearing
was conducted by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency which is .considering
the · applications,
According to the Ohio EI'Ai
if approved, the discharges
from the facility would
result in a lowering of water
quality of Yellowbush
Creek and Jennie Watts Run
but they cannot cause violations of water quality stan·
dards that protect human
health and the environment.
Elisa ' Young, Racine , was
the only person to formally
go on the record with her
comments. She requested to
see a copy of the NPDES
and wasterwater permits as
soon as possible and any
others which may follow.
She said she was not confi·
dent about the monitoring
Pleese see Hearlnc. AS

Overbrook
celebrates 20th
•
anmversary
BY BETH ·SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center recently celebrated
its 20th anniversary as
Meigs County 's largest
employer at 130 employees
serving 96 residents in a
facility with room for 100.
According to Michelle ·
Kennedy, director of marketing and admissions for
Overbrook, the facility "provides quality nursing care to
its residents and values their
employees." Several of the
employees have been there
for over a decade .
"Our core management
team has worked closely
together for over 10 years
and we'don 't have that turn
over which ·allows use to
provide more consistent, .
qul)lity .nursing care,"
Kennedy·added .
Overbrook often ties in its
anniversary with its annual
Oktoberfest which Kennedy
says "alerts the community
of Overbrook's willingness
to be involved in the com. munity ." For the last 13
years, the free event provides free food and enter·
tainment for those young
and the young at heart. This
year a balloon launch
opened the event and chil·
dren were able to enjoy two

,, GALLIPOLIS - In contrast to the state's small
increase in unemployment
durin{: October, the jobless
rate m Gallia and Meigs
counties was down for the
month.
·
In its county-by-county
survey released this week,
the Ohio . Departmellt qf
Jobs and Family Services
found · . Gallia's · rate
decreased by .six-tenths of a
percent in October to 6.3
percent. The rate was 6.9
percent in September.
Meigs County ·continued
to ,see 11 small but steady dip
in joblessness, with . its
October rate at 10.1 percent. That's·e. four-tenths of
a· percllnt . fa\1 from
September ;s, reading of
·
Subml- photo
10.5 perceQI. , The rate for . i ·
Robert
Byet,
Sergeant
at
Arms
lor
the
Feeney-Bennett
Post
128,
Ameriqan
Legion, right.
August was 11l.8 ~ri:ent.
.The trend was seen was honored as Legionnaire , of the Year during the post's recent Veterans Day and·
Thanksgiving awards night. He is congratula,ted by Roscoe Wise, Adjutant. Delbert Blake
PIMH -Rates, As ~ t~as honored as Legionnaire of the Decade, but was unable.AP atltjnd.
Plu~-~AI
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The Daily Sentinel
If

Public meetings

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Parade Line Up At The· Football Stadium
Step Off 2:00
Bring Your Pet And Be A Part Of
Our Pet Parade
...
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Santa Photos And Treats After ·
The Parade

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Don't be critical of daughters hours

Monday, Dec. 1
tions to 992-3214 by Dec. 3.
POMEROY
Take books for children· or
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary older young people for
Club to meet at noon, Bun's Christmas gifts.
Party Bam.
Friday, Dec. 5
SYRACUSE - Sutton
POMEROY - PERI, I
Township Trustees , 7:30. p.m., Mulberry Commonit)l
p.m. Pt the Syracuse Village Center. Pot'luck luncheon
Hal'.
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with meat, beverage, cake
RACINE - Racine chap- and table service furnished .
ter 134, O.E.S. 7:30 p.m. Bring covered dish and
Take secret pal gift. exchange gift.
Refreshments.
Thesday, Dec. 2·
MIDDLEPORT - Stated
meeting of · Middleport
Masonic Lodge #363 , 7:30
Thursday, Dec. 4
·
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1
POMEROY
p.m., Masomc , emp e.
Installation of officers. All Decorate/take home ginmembers and Master Masons gerbread houses, ·6 p.m .,
invited. Refreshments at Pomeroy Library, ·supplies
furnished, for children o'f
6.·30 , meet'mg at 7 :30.
Thursday,-Dec. 4
all ages.
POMEROY·
The
Sunday, Dec. 7
Meigs County Retired
POMEROY
The .
Teachers Association, noon Coolville Community Choir
luncheon at Trinity Church, under the . direction of
Pomeroy District Director . Martha Sue Matheny will
Walter Bevins to speak , present "The Name .. Jesus"
Eastern Bell choir to play. ill 7 p.m. at God 's NET,
Guests welcome, reserva- Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy ..

8\1 !CAntY MTcttEu
AND MARCY $UGAR

Other events

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Hartwell
Ho·
u
se
100 east Main~ Pomero9,'0H
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Gift Certificates

· ~

Si~G.
. .ift .· ~

,,,,$

~~99

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7+0-992-76~6

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t~· JOO's of·Ornamcmfs .

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Santas &amp; Snowmen • H~liday· Dec:QratiQns
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Stop In
For Our

Stop In
For Our

OPEN
HOUSE!

. OPEN
HOUSE!

Sunday, November 30th 124
Just In! Snowville Creamery Milk

In
I

. • Trollbeads• Lang Calcnd'l!lre • Watehcraft
·
. • Candleberr.Y Candles • Stairyed.G\a~~ Picture rramee ....__
·
. • Liii.Y f)arraek Ri~gx :
' ·. .
Holida9 Hours ~ginnil).~ NO'I. ~h: Mon.I0-7, Tues.-thUT5: 10-6, rri.-Sat.IO.,, Sun:•. l2.-+
Gift Certificates • Layaway · ·
·

Your loeizl source for qua#ty n/JiutTJI and organic foods!
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212 East Maio Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
Pbone: 740..992·3785

·--~--~-----------~--~---~

The following good through
Thesday.

Christmas

Holiday Recliner Sale
Rocker/Recliner and Wallaway Recliners
OVER $0 IN STOCK!

Glider Rockers
Nice Selection, Assorted Wood Finis~es &amp;Fabrics

•
. wrappmg
pa

1/2 price

Jt=\I'Vt:lry

Com'-lete ~tock

1/2 pnce ,

10 am- 12 Noon

25% Off
12 noon- 5pm

Assorted Chocolates

1/2 Price

Limit 2 per customer
25%011
.·
· 12 noon- Spm

Amity Billfolds

25% OFF

Mens &amp; Womens

1/2 Price
' 25%011

12 noon- 5pm

Weekly Pill
. Boxes

$2.00

Crosley
E!dusive l yr. Warranty
FREE Re~acement Warranty
21l'"l CD TV
' Fla1.li!.""~n
' HD 1

l l2"'
lCDTV
" A •1Screen

ZIPPO
LIGHTERS

30%0FF'

Timex Watches

Russell Stover

.While SuPplies
Last1

1/2 Price
25% Off

12 noon.- Spm

Ohio State .
Merchandise
200/o Off

Christmas
Tokens ..

' 50¢

.

Toys

Men &amp; Women's
Colognes,
Perfumes, Gift Sets

"FOR

. HOUDAY NEEDS"

Stop In Fer Some 8e~n Boulmrd CMfee
&amp;Cappuccino and Our Fresh Baked Pastries
LET US H ELP WIT H YOU HOLIDAY PLANNI ·'JG
WE H AVE G!F T 8ASKETS 1

25%
OFF

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4TLCD TV
"Rill &amp;reen

749, 00 'HDI899, 00 'HDI1,299, 00

PARTY TRAYS &amp;CATERING

Lm'•
• LV• I• Good

CONTACT US ABOUT OUR NEW HOI.IlAYSELECTIONS
' DONT FORGET TIE DtLL DIP"

• lfoolricll
•LIIwu
• RM Willw Slul•

AND NOW Sl'tHACHtliPINA TUSCAN BREAD BOULE
PR&amp;ORDER YOUR FRESII MOZZARaLA, SltQED SWIOII,
PIIOSC!UTTO, PIN WHEEL TRAYS, 7 LAYER SALAD,
WIIG PLATTERS I CANNOU TRAYS
We Have The Beaujolais Nouveau

.c.,.,

Holiday Wine
FRIDAY._DEC. 12TH
PAUL DuEFFINGER
" LIVE IN THE ROOM Wlnt HOLIDA. Y CHEER.,
7~10 pm

s.t 6 A GrMt Meell
836 Eut Main Slrwl, Pomeroy, OH 74Gfl2-41
Come Early For A GOOd

Almual OpiD llilaaa
......... 11. . . .
Parade Lint-Up At The FoolbaU Sladium,
Step Off 2:00
BriRK Yoor Ptt And
1k APllrt Of Our Pet Parade...
Santa Phot~ And Treals After The Parade
..
Sponsored By Peoplts ~nk!

For Here lifo &lt;Mild TOitJ at m-7141 qr !tl·Dll

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2008

Ohio leaders stand by tax reform in tough economy

For .Mo~e Information ·contact Toney
at 992-7141 or 591-2260 ·

'.

Friday, November 28,

reassurance that she 'still matters. Giwe
her your biggest smile, be super-friendly,
tell her how smart she is and how mud!
Dear Aoale: I recently found out that rou appreciate her pointers, and then
my 14-year·old grandsol! has' been tak- 1gnore her. This has nothing to do with
ing money fro!D my billfold. I calJed his you and everything to do with how in~- '
· mOther about it. She 'confronted him and cure Rosalie 1s, She needs to feel iuipol•
.~e ~lied &gt;it. }:lcpwevet, so.far I haven't. tant. Let her.
·
receJ.ved'l!n .apOlogy from h1m.
.
Dear Annie: You hit the nail .on the
Mydaughteri$ a single mom and works ·head with your response to "Cinderella's.
nights. I ~ to Iter ~ and ¥nd time Stepmother." We, too, have had· to deal
withthe)(idswhileshework$.(Thisgrand- with my in-law's extreme.favoritism for
· son is the youngest.) I think my daughter my hysband 's son from his first marriage . .
should wQdc days so she knows what is
When my husband and I had our fii'St
g'oin~ on in ber·llome at night. What's your child toge*er, my in-Jaws serit us a ball- ·
· opil}!on?- A:FI'W Dollars Out
· ket with. a box of condoms - lhe clear
· ~ar Few. DO&amp;an~ .Please don't criti- message being that we were not to bring
ci?;e · youi, daughtet~s hours. We assume any more children into .the family to•!.
·she works ,nights ~ause that's the best compe~e with "The Precious." They, told
.. ,she call· ~o. li~W~Cially;, Teenage~ . steal u~ they only wanted to $ee ' my s~psoll
. .for ~any reasons. Jlie ·'!loY could need and not the rest of our .family on week;~ 1
t. more·aUePI:io.n from Mom, or he may be ·ends. My father-in-law made sure ·Tilt; '
' •!fr;ng tO compete: with or ilflPress his Precious was the orily grandchild ttfbeQi " .
4
. frlends, or iom~th•pg ,wors~. ,Howev~r,
efit when dle great•grandmotllei, died~.·
Sunday, Nov. 30
your daughter should not 1gnore th1s. Aqd when my mothef-in-law passed,'
POMEROY - Council
Your grandson should lipolo~ze to you away, he doled out thousands more·to lhe'
1664, Knij'hts of Columbus,
and repay the money, either, y;!th his boy, in&lt;lulging his· extravagant whims ..
6:30 p.ll' , Sacred Heart
allowance or by doing chores. Your while barely acknowledging the Olbei'
Church hall.
daughter also ·can call 1ier son's school grandchildren. As our kids ~ older, ·
·
'ilnd Sj!t!ak to tbe guidance cou~selor if they resented the blatant favontism.
,. the.;e IS one.
It's important not to make excu~s to. •,
. ~ Dear Apoie: I've'·been working as a children for their relatives' liadbehaviar.'
'receitionistatarelirementhomefor'four They will know the truth anyway,lmth
COLUMBUS (AP) - A fiscal year 2009 ends June repeatedly that he wants to
. y,eats~ Everythinpoout this job is'terrif- · it's best to. deal with it hOnestly.~ used.to .
tax reform package passed 30, the $18.7 billion iri gen- uphold the .ta~ reform.
close to home. my boss treats me · tell the children, "Life is.:often unfair;·.•'
in .2005 is compounding eral revenue tax colleCtions
''Despite the immediate
w.onde(WIIy and the pay is' good. •:. .·
Let's not dwell on it." ·. . .· , /' . •.[(•!
state budget diffiFulties dur- will be a record $735 mil- imJ)act on the state's budget,
. l ,'ju'st have one problem. There is ·an ., My children ·are now ~ ·their teens. "
ing a tumultuous economij; lion drop from the previous givirig it time to work and
&amp;derly wo!pBJI who ~.resident at the · They are very close to my mother, whd ..
period, but both Republican year. Actual tax receipts are continuing the implementahome l(nd W~rkS the'tece~tiondesk right loves . them aJJ deeply a!'d tq\lally. Th_ey:
· and Democratic leaders say currently running behind tion is important for trans· before J amve. · ''RosiJ)ie ' ,is· constantly have little love or respect for my father-m- ,,
the changes are necessary projections because of the fanning the state's tax cli·pointing things 011t that she · considers law, who thougl!l he needed 'to compen-1·
for Ohio's future.
worsening economy.
mate," Strickland spokesman
•mproper. She lingers '.arourid my desk sate The Precious with the lion's share of '
. Republican leaders in
Without' the tax reform , Keith Dailey said.
, trymg. to fmd fault with everything I do. · everything. Honestly, it's his .loss. 2005 passed a package that tax . revenue would have
Harris said crafting the· · She criticizes my handwriting, the way I Rising Above in the Mii~·Hilth City · .
~eluded a 21 percent reduc- increased $675 million from next two-year budget is
interact with ''reside'nts, and says I am
Deat Rising Above: We firmly
Qon in the state's income fiscal year 2006 to fiscal likely to be the most chal·"snooty" with my nose in the air.
.
believe what goes around,cOQ!es around,
'!IX over five years and Y!lar 2007, $785 million in lenging budgeting process
This comes as a surprise to me because · A111J.ie's Mailbox is wrlt!tn 'bY 1(tltiJ1·· ·
phased out the state corpo- 2008 and roughly $120 mil· he's seen in his 14-year legI greet everyol)e with a smilf as they MitcheU and Marcy Sugar,lqngtunudi· ·
rate franchise tax.
lion in 2009.
· islative career.
. 'come in and know most of the residel!ts rors of the A11n IAn!lers .rMumn.• Pkase ,
The Columbus Dispatch
"I don't have any
Strickland ha.s already
· by their ·first lliunes. I've 'never had a ,e-mail your question,s to annies,mail- . ·
said
Senate forced cuts and accounting
reported Thursday that regrets ,"
prob~em with ' lhJyont; except Rosal,ie. i boxf!icon,rcasUet, or wrjte ro:. A.llllie.'s
state revenue has dropped President Bill Harris, an me&lt;~s ure s to account for a
. Sho.uld I say SOJ!Ielhing aboqt this? How · Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chu:agq, .IL ·
each of the past three years Ashland Republican. " I $1.3 billion hole in the cur.do L deal w1th her? ..,. Arizona. 60611, To find out more about A1111ie's
since 2006. That only hap- would argue that had we not rent budget, after the slow- . ~ece'ptionlst·· .'
. ·· .., ·
. Mailbox, and . read features by Olher
pened three times during done tax reform, things ing economy sent less tax · ~ar· Arizona!'~iih humor and for: Creators.Syndicale writers and carto(HI- .
the 50-year period . that would be even worse."
revenue to state coffers than
bearl(nce. ,Rosalie thinkS' criticizing you ists, visit the Crealors Syndicau Web
Gov. Ted Strickland, a was forecast when lawmak- (.will .make her su~rior,. and ~he ·n~ J. page al w.ww.creators.com.
ended in 2006.
• Estimates show that when Democrat, has also said ers crafted the budget.
VVednesday,Dec.3
PAGEVILLE - Regular
monthly meetmg of Scipio
Township Trustees , 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
REEDSVILLE
Regular and special meeting
of Ohve Township Trustees,
6:30p.m .. at the township
buildmg.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. regular
meeting, 6:30 p.m., town
hall.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30
p.m. at the home of fiscal
officer, Osie Follrod.

Clubs and
organizations ·

Sponsoreq.J3y People's Bank

"

Community Calendar

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THE POM·E ROY
MERCHANTS RlNG IN
THE HOLIDAY SEASON·

BYTHEBEND
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The Daily Sentinel
If

Public meetings

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Parade Line Up At The· Football Stadium
Step Off 2:00
Bring Your Pet And Be A Part Of
Our Pet Parade
...
.
Santa Photos And Treats After ·
The Parade

,,

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Don't be critical of daughters hours

Monday, Dec. 1
tions to 992-3214 by Dec. 3.
POMEROY
Take books for children· or
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary older young people for
Club to meet at noon, Bun's Christmas gifts.
Party Bam.
Friday, Dec. 5
SYRACUSE - Sutton
POMEROY - PERI, I
Township Trustees , 7:30. p.m., Mulberry Commonit)l
p.m. Pt the Syracuse Village Center. Pot'luck luncheon
Hal'.
· ·
with meat, beverage, cake
RACINE - Racine chap- and table service furnished .
ter 134, O.E.S. 7:30 p.m. Bring covered dish and
Take secret pal gift. exchange gift.
Refreshments.
Thesday, Dec. 2·
MIDDLEPORT - Stated
meeting of · Middleport
Masonic Lodge #363 , 7:30
Thursday, Dec. 4
·
.,.
1
POMEROY
p.m., Masomc , emp e.
Installation of officers. All Decorate/take home ginmembers and Master Masons gerbread houses, ·6 p.m .,
invited. Refreshments at Pomeroy Library, ·supplies
furnished, for children o'f
6.·30 , meet'mg at 7 :30.
Thursday,-Dec. 4
all ages.
POMEROY·
The
Sunday, Dec. 7
Meigs County Retired
POMEROY
The .
Teachers Association, noon Coolville Community Choir
luncheon at Trinity Church, under the . direction of
Pomeroy District Director . Martha Sue Matheny will
Walter Bevins to speak , present "The Name .. Jesus"
Eastern Bell choir to play. ill 7 p.m. at God 's NET,
Guests welcome, reserva- Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy ..

8\1 !CAntY MTcttEu
AND MARCY $UGAR

Other events

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'.

Friday, November 28,

reassurance that she 'still matters. Giwe
her your biggest smile, be super-friendly,
tell her how smart she is and how mud!
Dear Aoale: I recently found out that rou appreciate her pointers, and then
my 14-year·old grandsol! has' been tak- 1gnore her. This has nothing to do with
ing money fro!D my billfold. I calJed his you and everything to do with how in~- '
· mOther about it. She 'confronted him and cure Rosalie 1s, She needs to feel iuipol•
.~e ~lied &gt;it. }:lcpwevet, so.far I haven't. tant. Let her.
·
receJ.ved'l!n .apOlogy from h1m.
.
Dear Annie: You hit the nail .on the
Mydaughteri$ a single mom and works ·head with your response to "Cinderella's.
nights. I ~ to Iter ~ and ¥nd time Stepmother." We, too, have had· to deal
withthe)(idswhileshework$.(Thisgrand- with my in-law's extreme.favoritism for
· son is the youngest.) I think my daughter my hysband 's son from his first marriage . .
should wQdc days so she knows what is
When my husband and I had our fii'St
g'oin~ on in ber·llome at night. What's your child toge*er, my in-Jaws serit us a ball- ·
· opil}!on?- A:FI'W Dollars Out
· ket with. a box of condoms - lhe clear
· ~ar Few. DO&amp;an~ .Please don't criti- message being that we were not to bring
ci?;e · youi, daughtet~s hours. We assume any more children into .the family to•!.
·she works ,nights ~ause that's the best compe~e with "The Precious." They, told
.. ,she call· ~o. li~W~Cially;, Teenage~ . steal u~ they only wanted to $ee ' my s~psoll
. .for ~any reasons. Jlie ·'!loY could need and not the rest of our .family on week;~ 1
t. more·aUePI:io.n from Mom, or he may be ·ends. My father-in-law made sure ·Tilt; '
' •!fr;ng tO compete: with or ilflPress his Precious was the orily grandchild ttfbeQi " .
4
. frlends, or iom~th•pg ,wors~. ,Howev~r,
efit when dle great•grandmotllei, died~.·
Sunday, Nov. 30
your daughter should not 1gnore th1s. Aqd when my mothef-in-law passed,'
POMEROY - Council
Your grandson should lipolo~ze to you away, he doled out thousands more·to lhe'
1664, Knij'hts of Columbus,
and repay the money, either, y;!th his boy, in&lt;lulging his· extravagant whims ..
6:30 p.ll' , Sacred Heart
allowance or by doing chores. Your while barely acknowledging the Olbei'
Church hall.
daughter also ·can call 1ier son's school grandchildren. As our kids ~ older, ·
·
'ilnd Sj!t!ak to tbe guidance cou~selor if they resented the blatant favontism.
,. the.;e IS one.
It's important not to make excu~s to. •,
. ~ Dear Apoie: I've'·been working as a children for their relatives' liadbehaviar.'
'receitionistatarelirementhomefor'four They will know the truth anyway,lmth
COLUMBUS (AP) - A fiscal year 2009 ends June repeatedly that he wants to
. y,eats~ Everythinpoout this job is'terrif- · it's best to. deal with it hOnestly.~ used.to .
tax reform package passed 30, the $18.7 billion iri gen- uphold the .ta~ reform.
close to home. my boss treats me · tell the children, "Life is.:often unfair;·.•'
in .2005 is compounding eral revenue tax colleCtions
''Despite the immediate
w.onde(WIIy and the pay is' good. •:. .·
Let's not dwell on it." ·. . .· , /' . •.[(•!
state budget diffiFulties dur- will be a record $735 mil- imJ)act on the state's budget,
. l ,'ju'st have one problem. There is ·an ., My children ·are now ~ ·their teens. "
ing a tumultuous economij; lion drop from the previous givirig it time to work and
&amp;derly wo!pBJI who ~.resident at the · They are very close to my mother, whd ..
period, but both Republican year. Actual tax receipts are continuing the implementahome l(nd W~rkS the'tece~tiondesk right loves . them aJJ deeply a!'d tq\lally. Th_ey:
· and Democratic leaders say currently running behind tion is important for trans· before J amve. · ''RosiJ)ie ' ,is· constantly have little love or respect for my father-m- ,,
the changes are necessary projections because of the fanning the state's tax cli·pointing things 011t that she · considers law, who thougl!l he needed 'to compen-1·
for Ohio's future.
worsening economy.
mate," Strickland spokesman
•mproper. She lingers '.arourid my desk sate The Precious with the lion's share of '
. Republican leaders in
Without' the tax reform , Keith Dailey said.
, trymg. to fmd fault with everything I do. · everything. Honestly, it's his .loss. 2005 passed a package that tax . revenue would have
Harris said crafting the· · She criticizes my handwriting, the way I Rising Above in the Mii~·Hilth City · .
~eluded a 21 percent reduc- increased $675 million from next two-year budget is
interact with ''reside'nts, and says I am
Deat Rising Above: We firmly
Qon in the state's income fiscal year 2006 to fiscal likely to be the most chal·"snooty" with my nose in the air.
.
believe what goes around,cOQ!es around,
'!IX over five years and Y!lar 2007, $785 million in lenging budgeting process
This comes as a surprise to me because · A111J.ie's Mailbox is wrlt!tn 'bY 1(tltiJ1·· ·
phased out the state corpo- 2008 and roughly $120 mil· he's seen in his 14-year legI greet everyol)e with a smilf as they MitcheU and Marcy Sugar,lqngtunudi· ·
rate franchise tax.
lion in 2009.
· islative career.
. 'come in and know most of the residel!ts rors of the A11n IAn!lers .rMumn.• Pkase ,
The Columbus Dispatch
"I don't have any
Strickland ha.s already
· by their ·first lliunes. I've 'never had a ,e-mail your question,s to annies,mail- . ·
said
Senate forced cuts and accounting
reported Thursday that regrets ,"
prob~em with ' lhJyont; except Rosal,ie. i boxf!icon,rcasUet, or wrjte ro:. A.llllie.'s
state revenue has dropped President Bill Harris, an me&lt;~s ure s to account for a
. Sho.uld I say SOJ!Ielhing aboqt this? How · Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chu:agq, .IL ·
each of the past three years Ashland Republican. " I $1.3 billion hole in the cur.do L deal w1th her? ..,. Arizona. 60611, To find out more about A1111ie's
since 2006. That only hap- would argue that had we not rent budget, after the slow- . ~ece'ptionlst·· .'
. ·· .., ·
. Mailbox, and . read features by Olher
pened three times during done tax reform, things ing economy sent less tax · ~ar· Arizona!'~iih humor and for: Creators.Syndicale writers and carto(HI- .
the 50-year period . that would be even worse."
revenue to state coffers than
bearl(nce. ,Rosalie thinkS' criticizing you ists, visit the Crealors Syndicau Web
Gov. Ted Strickland, a was forecast when lawmak- (.will .make her su~rior,. and ~he ·n~ J. page al w.ww.creators.com.
ended in 2006.
• Estimates show that when Democrat, has also said ers crafted the budget.
VVednesday,Dec.3
PAGEVILLE - Regular
monthly meetmg of Scipio
Township Trustees , 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
REEDSVILLE
Regular and special meeting
of Ohve Township Trustees,
6:30p.m .. at the township
buildmg.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. regular
meeting, 6:30 p.m., town
hall.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30
p.m. at the home of fiscal
officer, Osie Follrod.

Clubs and
organizations ·

Sponsoreq.J3y People's Bank

"

Community Calendar

'

THE POM·E ROY
MERCHANTS RlNG IN
THE HOLIDAY SEASON·

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OPINION
.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008.

Richard Ostling has never
gotten used to seeing journalists commit sins of omission and commi6sion on the
religion beat.
Religion can get complicated. witb layers of emotion st~tcked on centuries of
history, doctrine, svmbolism and ritual, said 6 stling.
who is best known for his
decades of work with Time
and the Associated Press.
But mistakes are mistake.s,
and it isn't good for readers
to keep seeing stories that,
week after week. cause
them to- mutter, "Wait a
minute . That 's just wrong."
Here's a prime example, a
mistake Ostling keeps seei'ilg in reports about the
declining number of ordinations to the Catholic priesthood. This mistake often
shows up in news coverage
of mandatory celibacy for
priests or the scandals
caused. by clergy sexual
abuse .
Journalists often report
that Rome does not ordain
married men .
"Now it would be accu·
rate," said Ostling , "to say
that the overwhehning .
majority of men ordained as
Catholic priests are not married. It would even be accurate to say that 'almost all'
p'riests are not married. But
what about Eastern Rite
Catholicism. where · you
have married priests? Then
there are the married men
who have been ordained in
the Anglican Rite, who used
to be Episcopal priests. You

111 Court Street ·Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
· www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher .
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, •or prohibitiug the
free exercise thereof; or abridgitJg the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, atJd to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
· -The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Nov. 28, the 333rd day of 2008. There
are 33 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 28, 1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that
destroyed the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Boston.
On this date:
In 1520, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan
reached the Pacific Ocean after passing through the South
American strait that now bears his name .
In 1907 , future movie producer Louis B. Mayer opened
his first movie theater, in Haverhill, Mass.
In 1919, American-born Lady Ast0r was elected the first
female member of the British Parliament.
In 1943, President Roosevelt , British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin began
conferring in Tehran during World War II.
In 1958 , Cnad, Gabon and Middle Congo became
autonomous republics within the French community.
In 1964. the United States launched the space probe
Mariner 4 on a course to Mars.
In l 979, an Air New Zealand DC- 10 en route to the South
Pole crashed into a mountain in Antarctica, killing all 257
people aboard.
In 1987, a South African Airways Boeing 747 crashed
into the Indian Ocean with the loss of all 159 people
aboard.
In 1990. Margaret Thatcher resigned as British prime
minister during an audience with Queen Elizabeth II. who
conferred the premiership on John Major. ·
In 200 I, Enron Corp. collapsed after would-be rescuer
Dynegy Inc. backed out of an $8.4 billion deal to take it
over.
·
Five years ago: President Bush returned to his ranch in
Crawford, Texas, after a secret, nearly 36-hour journey that
took him to Iraq for a Thanksgiving visit with U.S. troops.
· One year ago: A day after an international Mideast peace
conference in Annapolis, Md ., President Bush told the leaders of Israel and the Palestinian territories he was personally committed to their mission of peace. Republican presidential rivals Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney clashed ovef
immigration in a provocative, no-holds-barred
CNN/YouTube debate ~ O.J. Simpson pleaded not guilty in
Las Vegas to charges of kidnapping and armed robbery
stemming from a· confrontation with spoits memorabilia
dealers. (Simpson and ·a co~defendant were convicted last
month.) Broadway stagehands and theater producers
reached a tentative agreement on ending a crippling 19day-old strike.
Today's Birthdays: Recording executive Berry Gordy Jr.
is 79. Former Sen. Gary Hart, D-.Co.lo. , is 72. Singer-songwriter Bruce Channel is 68. Singer Randy Newman is 65.
Movie director Jpe Dante is 62 . CBS News correspondent
Susan Spencer is 62. ·"La t~ Show" orchestra leader Paul
Shaffer is 59.
Thought for Today: " ! am not sure . that God always
knows who are His great men : He is so very careless of
what happens to them while they live ." - Mary Hunter
Austin, American novelist and playwright (1868- I 934).

n~w s

Terry
Mattingly

have a few Lutherans. too ."
Journali sts will. always
argue about the meaning of
words like "objectivity ...
"fairness" and "balance."
But at some point reporters
and editors should agree
that accuracy is important
and that it's a bad thing
when - year after year critics accuse journalists,
with good cause, of getting
the basic facts wrong .
That's the bqttom line in
my chapter in "Blind Spot:
When Journalists Don't Get
Religion," a new book produced by my colleagues at
the Oxford Centre for
Religion and Public Life.
It's hard for journalists to do
a credible job covering religimi events and trends when
they cannot keep their facts
straight. This is true
whether one is parsing
Vatican documents, the sermons of Iraqi clerics, the
canon laws that affect millions of dollars in pensions
and properties during a
global Anglican schism or
the faith testimony of an
evangelical seeking the vice
presidency ..
The problem is that journalists who cover religion

- along with thc»e
whn col'er other complicated heats such as sc·ience.
sports. law and tile arts must write stories that work
on t\\'o levels. Their stories
mti St he accessible enough
for reader:-; and vet tll'CU rate
enough to pass .inuster with
clergy. scholars and cievout
believers.
Ho w can joumalists "get"
religion'! How do we
improve .the odds that our
newsroom., get it rig.ht 'l It's
c:rtici al that journalists find
journalistic solutions to this
iournalism problem:
· • Jounmlish must face this·
reality: .Jt 's impossible to
understamJ what is happening
in our world without understanding die power of religion in t\!al life at the local,
natio'nal and global levels .
• Journalists must be more
·humble and own up to our
mistukes. In particular, we
need to be more careful
about om use of religiou s
l angu&lt;~ge. especially loaded
l~ibels such as "moderate''
and "fundamentalist."
• Newsroom managers.
even during these hard
times, 111ust seek out skilled
professionals who want to
work . on this beat. while
. striving .to promote cultural
and intellet:tual diversity.
They need to offer training
to other journalist' whose.
work constantly veers into
religious territory. Today.
religion stories are everywhere .
• Repotters and editors
who cover religion must find

ways to get inside the daily
lives of the people they
cover. When religious
believers tell their stories. we
have to understand what they :
are saying and try to accurately capture their poinl of .
view. even when what they .
believe is con[foversial.
Yes. this can get complicated. Do~s an Orthodox.
rabbi have the same beliefs.,
as a Reform rabbi? Do
"moderate" Baptists (think ·,
Bill Moyers) have the same.
beliefs as "conservative':,
Baptists
(think
Rick
Warren)? .Will an Anglican' .
bishop in Nigeria automati-.
cally have the same doctri-..
nal beliefs as one in New ·
Hampshire? Will a Sufi ·
mystic in Kashmir have the
same understanding of the
word "jihad" as an lslamist
in the mountains of
Pakistan? Words matter on'··
the religion beat. Some ot:
them are even sacred.
'·some people would say·
that little mi stakes like this
do not matter all that
much," said Ostling. "Well,
they matter to · the people
who read the story and·
know that what . they are
reading is wrong. What,
does this say about our jour~
nalistic standards?"
(Terry Marringly is direc·
tor of the Washington
Joumalism Cemer at the
Council' for Cltristian
Colleges and Universities
(md
leads
the
Ge1Re/igion.org project to
study religion and rite.

RACINE - Dale Wallace Hill. II. 60, Racine, died
Tuesday_. Nov. 25. 200M at the Holzer Medical Center in
Galhpohs .
Born on March 31, 1948 in Pomeroy. he was the son of
Dale Wallace Hrlll and Mary Jane Wolfe Hill.
He was a sales representative with Darrell Non-is &amp; Suns.
He was a m~mber of Racine First Baptist Church. He lo.ved .
gardemng, cook1ng, and spurts, especially Tornado basketball. He loved and was devoted to his family and was loved
by all. Dale,lor the last 20 plus years oas been involved in
the Greenhouse mdustry . most recently with Darrell Norris
&amp; Sons Greenhou~es.
·
He is survived by his wife Karen Rhodes Hill of Racine ·
children: Nicole Dawn Koren and husband Da;id Racine'
and Jeremy Hill and wife A !lana. Wooster: a gra1;ddaugh~
ter, Zoey Jane H1ll ; brothers·, Marvin T. Hill and his wife
Jan .. Racine. Ohio: Michael J. Hill and his wife Mindy,
R.acme; and Dame! C. H11l and his friend Mindy, Coral
Sprmgs, Fla .; aunts and uncleand special aunt. Donna;
father and mother-rn-law : Robert and Lucille Rhodes,
Racine; brother-in-law: Mike Rhodes and wife Sharon
Logan: nieces and nephew s. Dolly, Andrew, Mich~l(;[ :
J_enni, Lauren .and Kris~en and their familie s: a special
fr1end. Larry Ctrcle, Racme. and many other friends.
Funeral services will be beld Satmday, No~ . 29, 2008 ·
at II a.m. at the 'first Baptist Church in Racine. Pastor
Ryan Eaton will officiate and burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
,
Friends may visit the family at Roush Funeral Horne,
Ravenswood, W.Va., on Friday, Nov 28. from 4 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers memorials may be made in Dale's
name to the Racine First Baptist Christian Outreach Center.
P: 0. Box 340, 404 Fifth Street, Racine , Ohio 45771.
Condolences may be expressed to the Hill family by email at roush I us2000@yahoo.com.

RAY tGt\IN ...

Marine·Corps League
gathering names for toys

..

' POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- The Mason , Galli a. Meigs
Detachment of the Marine Corps League are accepting
names of children for the annual Toys for Children through
Dec. 12. Toys will be given out I to 3 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
20, at City National Bank in Point Pleasant. To sign up , call
and leave a message 304-675-2647, 304-675-5299, 304895,3062 or 740-3 79-9063 .

.,
•

For the Record

new.~.·. )

ORANGE ~

Crystal R. Vance, 36, Coolville, WitS trans. poned to St. Joseph's Hospital with incapacitating injuries
by Meigs County EMS following a two-vehicle accident
that occurred Monday morning around 8:25 a.m.
AcGording to troopers, Vance was eastbound on Ohio·6S I
. nqar~~st ~2 in her 1999 Toyota Camry when she lost
control on the icy roadwar. and the vehicle slid left of center and struck a 1997 Ford F-250 being driven westbound
on Ohio 681 by Benjamin K. Buchanan, 37, Reedsville. ·
Vance was cited for failure to control and her vehicle sustained severe damages. The vehicle Buchanan was driving
,·'
sustained disabling damages.

Nf:PN.

•••

CHESTER - Clarence L. Atherton, 72. Long Bottom,
was cited with failing to maintain an assured clear distance
ahead following a two-vehicle scrape that occurred at
approximately 3:50p.m. on Tuesday.
·
According to troopers, Atherton was westbound on Ohio
248 near mile post I iri his 1988 Ford F-150 when his ve.hicle struck a 2007 GMC Topkick·J.A. Provence garbage collection truck that had just completed a stop and was beginning to accelerate also traveling westbound on Ohio 248.
The garl;lage truck, being driven by Ronald E. Freemen,
55, Middleport, sustained non-functional dal)lages while
Athert~m 's truck sustained disabling damages.
No injuries were reported.

Rates from Page Al
· around the area as well.
At)jens County fell almost a
full percent, from 7.7 percent in September to 6.8 in
October. Lawrence County
was .down five-tenths of a
percent to 5.7 percent in
October. Its September rate
was 6.2 percent.
- Washington County was
at 5.4 percent for October,
down four-tenths of a percent from 5.8 percent during
the previous month . .
Jackson County remamed
· unchanged at 8.5 percent,
and Vinton County rose by
one-terith of a percent, from
9.9 percent in September to
10 percent in October.
ODJFS said the state's
unemployment rate was 7.3
J)ercent in October, ~p
slightly from 7.2 percent m
September.

Beware of the 'Fairness Doctrine'

Letter&gt; to the editor are welcome. They should be less
rlwn 300 words. Ail letters are mbjecr to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
umigned leiters will be published. Lerrers should be in
There are ominous signs
good rasre. addressing issues, nor personalities. Lerrers of
thanks to organi~ations and individuals will nor be accept- that certain forces on the
left are gearing up for a new
ed for publicMion .
·
attempt to impose a "fairness doctrine" on American
television and radio commentary:
Incredible as it may sound
Reader Services ·
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m retrospect, there actual! y
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ' was a so-called "Fairness
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.

1

William

Rusher

there is no ' fairness' whatever in the 'fairness' doctrine. On the contrary. it is a
chilling federal attempt to
compel some . undefined
'balance' of what ideas
radio and television new
programs are to include ....
The 'fairness doctrine·
undercuts free , indf:pendent,
sound and responsive journalism - substituting governmental dictates . That is
deceptive , dangerous and.
in a democracy, repulsive."
But not, in the opinion of
some liberals. as repulsive
as the relatively small number of liberal opinions being
expressed. So now some of
them seem to be getting
ready to readjust the situation to make it more to their
liking.
Thus, last year Sen,
Dianne Feinstein. D-Calif,
told Fox News Sunday that

she was ''looking at" a miw
Fairness Doctrine. Talk
rAdio. she complained,
"tends to be one-sided. It's
explosive. It pushes people
·to, I think. extreme views
without a lot of information." Apparently. she does"
n't want them to hold such
views without first getting a
heavy dose of what she
regards as the correct information .
Aild on Election Day this
Charles
month , . Sen.
Schumer. D-N.Y., argued
that people who oppose the
Fairness Doctrine "want the
FCC to .limit pornography
on the air." and are therefore
inconsistent.." You can't say
·government hands off in
one · area' to a commercial
enterprise, but .YOU're
allowed to intel'vene in
another. That's not consistent." To Schumer, if you
are willing to limit pornography on the air, you must
(to be consistent) be ready
to demand the expression of
liberal views on pol.itical
topics.
Whether · Feinstein and
,Schumer will get. their way
is another matter. The "fairness doctrine" was abolished in I 987 amid a good

deal of ]?ipartisan self-congratulation, and it seem~
likely that it still retains
most of its unpopularity:
Logically, it simply cannot .
withstand analysis. It certainly doesn't follow that
every political viewpoint
that manages to get .
expressed must be accom;
panied, or followed. by an
equivalent expression of the'
opposite viewpoint. One
can support laws againsi
murder without necessarily
insisting' en equal time foi
the arguments in favor of it.
What those who support
the "fairness doctrine" are..
really saying is that the~:
don't · enjoy the fact thaC
their views have so littl~
suppon. And. while that'!(.
perfectly understandable, i•:
ts no .justification for tha·
proposition that societf,:
must artificially create a sit..:
uation in which unpoputW::
views receive the sami
attent\on and respect as oth~
ers that have more.
•;
(William Rusher is a,;;
accomplished author, for~·
mer publisher of ; thlNarional Review and forme I',:
vice chairman of the'.
American
Conservativ9
Union.)
•

-

Figures released last week .
show that the n·umber of
unemployed wor~ers in
October was 435,000, up
from 433,000 in September.
The number of unemployed
people has. increased by
91 ,000 in the past 12 months.
The rate this October was
up from the 5. 7 percent rate
a year earlier.
The state's 7.3 percent
unemployment figure tops
the national rate of 6.5 percent.
ODJFS .OhiQ's labor
market continued to reflect
a weakening national economy.
The agency said job loss~ .
es occurred in both goodsproducing and services
industries.
(The Associated Press
comributed to .this story.)

November
., 29 &amp; 30
•

am - l pm
Sunday 1 pm - 5 pm

Harvesting the PAST
8 East State Street • Pon~erc1l1

· (Monk!!Y Run)

1\iearly 400 bonowers got fixed-rate
mortgages.
protection from foreclo,ure Rogers suid.
In manv of the modified
during the legal proceedings. Thil1}-thrc~ Loan' ha\c loan,, the.intere&gt;t rates were
lx:cn modified and 41 more 'ignificant ly reduced. some
by up to 'ix percentage
are being renegotiated.
Of the modified mort- poinh .
The company 1mn't comgages. more than 5250.000
in principal have peen for- ment on the settlement.
given , more than $90.000 in ·accord in!! tn the Cleveland
fees and .:osts have been law firm \vhil:h handled the
. waived und adjustable-rate mailer fo r New Century
loans were c-o1wertcd to Financial.

Overbrook rrom Page At
intlatable games while various musical acts performed
throughout the day.
"Whether it s enjoying
apple l'ider and listening to
the entertainment or enjoying a ·hayride with their
family, our residents look
forward to the eve nt· every
year," Kennedy added.
For the pa st 20 years,
Overbrook has provided
healthcare services to
Southeastern Oh.io and
West Virginia. Overbrook
strives to be the nursing
facility of choice in their
service
communities.
Overbrook managment says
its therapy. program is
designed with individual
goals to return rehab
patients back to their previ ous independence. The
therapy staff provides r~si ­
dents
with
specially
designed therapy programs
to treat a wide array of
physical needs.
Overbrook provides not
only therapy services bu't
short and long term care as
well.
According
to
Overbrook management.
the staff's primary goal is to
enhance the lives ·of ·each
resident.

Staff photo

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center recently celebrated its 20th anniversary and for the past
13 years that anniversary has been celebrated with Oktoberfest, a community evt;tnt featuring free food, entertainment and activities for the young and young at heart. Here, visitors sample some of that free food during the celebration.

of water quality which !ems . Before giving her for- .
would not be done indepen- mal testimony. Young said· .
dently but by offici&lt;tls from she had heard water ·was in
Gatling. She asked if there the New ' Haven mine and
were back up generators for miners were wading in it.
electricitv if the power
Also before the hearing
should ~o out in terms of · portion began , . Young
monitonng. She asked to requested the cml1menl
see a list of priority poilu- period be extended because
tants the Ohio EPA was con- the applications were not
sidering in the permits. She available for viewing at the
asked for an analysis of local library. Jed Thorp with
commulative. environmen- the Ohio EPA said he had
tal impacts which would ·already contacted the directake into account the affect tor about an extension of the
of industries already in comment period but hadn't
place in the area.
heard a decisio·1 yet.
"There are times when we
During the question and
literally choke on the air answer period , Aaron
here," she said:
Pennington of the Ohio EPA
She also asked tb be con- . said there were seven sedi·
!acted if there were any nlentation ponds associated.
modification made to the with the permit which were .
permits. She asked if the to be lined with clay. Both
Ohio EPA could develop a Pennington and Thorp said
system similar to the one in the ponds had to be
·West Virginia where those designed with an extreme
interested can join an e-mail flood event . in mind.
lists which keeps. those on • Pennington got more spec ifthe list informed of when ic and said they are
industries (such as coal, or designed to withstand what
power) apply for a permit. he called a 10-year flood
Sbe also asked if Oh10 EPA event in tern1s of 3.8 inches
has looked at the applica- of rainfall per hour falling
tion for Gatling's Big River . during .a 24 hour period.
Mine in New Haven. W.Va. Pennington said there
'to see if any modifications would be no slun·y ponds.
had been made due to probResident Albert Proffitt of ·

Yellowbush Road said he
was concerned about what
would happen during a
flood event and said: "All
I'm worried about is them
containing what is on their
propet1y ."
Proffitt alSo questioned
why Gatling needed to discharge. at all into the creeks
and why not keep the mate·
rial in the sediment ponds.
Pennington said that was
part of Gatling's non.-antidegradation a['ternative · in
the permits. Pennington

said if the agency approved
the
non-antidegradation
alternative. it would require
larger ponds and an irrigation sy,tem.

43216-1049.

ED 11126/08 • THURS 12/04108

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•
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Main Facility
1pm-6pm

HOLZER
CLINIC

.I

For IW\1' , the comment
period is s()f to end on Dec . .
2 and Hn.inen commenrs
\\'ill be consider the same as
oral conmu~nH. ThDse written comments can be
mailed to Ohio EPA ,
Dil'ision of Su1ja ce Wmer
Permits Processing Unit,
PO Box 1049. Columbus,.

Thanksgiving Day

GRAND OPENING .
Saturd~y .10

liquidated in bankruptcy
cou11 and Ill' longer uperat~s. Rogers· office ;aid.
The C&lt;'mpan} alkgedl y
inflated
appraisal&gt; ,
imposed excessive charges
and was engaged in predatory lending in which bor·
rowers ·got bigger loans
then their finances could
handle. according to assistant Attorney ,General
Robert Hart .

Hearing from Page At

Highway Patrol ·

I

·The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS (A P)
A
bankrupt subprime lender
accused of shoddy practices
ha, been barred from
accepting rrlongage applications in Ohio, state Attorney
General Nancy Rogers
announced Wednesday.
·
The agreement with New
Century Financial Corp. of
Irvine, Calif .. settled a lawsuit tiled ·by the state last
year. The company is being ·

Local Briefs

WE ·l&lt;ttW
\"'UAT Yd.!

~T10

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www. mydailysentinel.com

Dale Wallace Hill, II

•P

I JUST

2008

Obituaries

·'

Getting the focts wrong

The Daily Sentinel

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Friday, November 28,

PageA4

Jackson, Athens, Meigs Facilities
12pm-6pm

Friday..Saturday. and Sunday
Main Facility
1pm-9pm
Meigs Facility
11am-9pm
Jackson Facility 11am-9pm
Athens Facility
9am-9pm

'

�•

•

OPINION
.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008.

Richard Ostling has never
gotten used to seeing journalists commit sins of omission and commi6sion on the
religion beat.
Religion can get complicated. witb layers of emotion st~tcked on centuries of
history, doctrine, svmbolism and ritual, said 6 stling.
who is best known for his
decades of work with Time
and the Associated Press.
But mistakes are mistake.s,
and it isn't good for readers
to keep seeing stories that,
week after week. cause
them to- mutter, "Wait a
minute . That 's just wrong."
Here's a prime example, a
mistake Ostling keeps seei'ilg in reports about the
declining number of ordinations to the Catholic priesthood. This mistake often
shows up in news coverage
of mandatory celibacy for
priests or the scandals
caused. by clergy sexual
abuse .
Journalists often report
that Rome does not ordain
married men .
"Now it would be accu·
rate," said Ostling , "to say
that the overwhehning .
majority of men ordained as
Catholic priests are not married. It would even be accurate to say that 'almost all'
p'riests are not married. But
what about Eastern Rite
Catholicism. where · you
have married priests? Then
there are the married men
who have been ordained in
the Anglican Rite, who used
to be Episcopal priests. You

111 Court Street ·Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
· www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher .
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, •or prohibitiug the
free exercise thereof; or abridgitJg the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, atJd to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
· -The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Nov. 28, the 333rd day of 2008. There
are 33 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 28, 1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that
destroyed the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Boston.
On this date:
In 1520, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan
reached the Pacific Ocean after passing through the South
American strait that now bears his name .
In 1907 , future movie producer Louis B. Mayer opened
his first movie theater, in Haverhill, Mass.
In 1919, American-born Lady Ast0r was elected the first
female member of the British Parliament.
In 1943, President Roosevelt , British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin began
conferring in Tehran during World War II.
In 1958 , Cnad, Gabon and Middle Congo became
autonomous republics within the French community.
In 1964. the United States launched the space probe
Mariner 4 on a course to Mars.
In l 979, an Air New Zealand DC- 10 en route to the South
Pole crashed into a mountain in Antarctica, killing all 257
people aboard.
In 1987, a South African Airways Boeing 747 crashed
into the Indian Ocean with the loss of all 159 people
aboard.
In 1990. Margaret Thatcher resigned as British prime
minister during an audience with Queen Elizabeth II. who
conferred the premiership on John Major. ·
In 200 I, Enron Corp. collapsed after would-be rescuer
Dynegy Inc. backed out of an $8.4 billion deal to take it
over.
·
Five years ago: President Bush returned to his ranch in
Crawford, Texas, after a secret, nearly 36-hour journey that
took him to Iraq for a Thanksgiving visit with U.S. troops.
· One year ago: A day after an international Mideast peace
conference in Annapolis, Md ., President Bush told the leaders of Israel and the Palestinian territories he was personally committed to their mission of peace. Republican presidential rivals Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney clashed ovef
immigration in a provocative, no-holds-barred
CNN/YouTube debate ~ O.J. Simpson pleaded not guilty in
Las Vegas to charges of kidnapping and armed robbery
stemming from a· confrontation with spoits memorabilia
dealers. (Simpson and ·a co~defendant were convicted last
month.) Broadway stagehands and theater producers
reached a tentative agreement on ending a crippling 19day-old strike.
Today's Birthdays: Recording executive Berry Gordy Jr.
is 79. Former Sen. Gary Hart, D-.Co.lo. , is 72. Singer-songwriter Bruce Channel is 68. Singer Randy Newman is 65.
Movie director Jpe Dante is 62 . CBS News correspondent
Susan Spencer is 62. ·"La t~ Show" orchestra leader Paul
Shaffer is 59.
Thought for Today: " ! am not sure . that God always
knows who are His great men : He is so very careless of
what happens to them while they live ." - Mary Hunter
Austin, American novelist and playwright (1868- I 934).

n~w s

Terry
Mattingly

have a few Lutherans. too ."
Journali sts will. always
argue about the meaning of
words like "objectivity ...
"fairness" and "balance."
But at some point reporters
and editors should agree
that accuracy is important
and that it's a bad thing
when - year after year critics accuse journalists,
with good cause, of getting
the basic facts wrong .
That's the bqttom line in
my chapter in "Blind Spot:
When Journalists Don't Get
Religion," a new book produced by my colleagues at
the Oxford Centre for
Religion and Public Life.
It's hard for journalists to do
a credible job covering religimi events and trends when
they cannot keep their facts
straight. This is true
whether one is parsing
Vatican documents, the sermons of Iraqi clerics, the
canon laws that affect millions of dollars in pensions
and properties during a
global Anglican schism or
the faith testimony of an
evangelical seeking the vice
presidency ..
The problem is that journalists who cover religion

- along with thc»e
whn col'er other complicated heats such as sc·ience.
sports. law and tile arts must write stories that work
on t\\'o levels. Their stories
mti St he accessible enough
for reader:-; and vet tll'CU rate
enough to pass .inuster with
clergy. scholars and cievout
believers.
Ho w can joumalists "get"
religion'! How do we
improve .the odds that our
newsroom., get it rig.ht 'l It's
c:rtici al that journalists find
journalistic solutions to this
iournalism problem:
· • Jounmlish must face this·
reality: .Jt 's impossible to
understamJ what is happening
in our world without understanding die power of religion in t\!al life at the local,
natio'nal and global levels .
• Journalists must be more
·humble and own up to our
mistukes. In particular, we
need to be more careful
about om use of religiou s
l angu&lt;~ge. especially loaded
l~ibels such as "moderate''
and "fundamentalist."
• Newsroom managers.
even during these hard
times, 111ust seek out skilled
professionals who want to
work . on this beat. while
. striving .to promote cultural
and intellet:tual diversity.
They need to offer training
to other journalist' whose.
work constantly veers into
religious territory. Today.
religion stories are everywhere .
• Repotters and editors
who cover religion must find

ways to get inside the daily
lives of the people they
cover. When religious
believers tell their stories. we
have to understand what they :
are saying and try to accurately capture their poinl of .
view. even when what they .
believe is con[foversial.
Yes. this can get complicated. Do~s an Orthodox.
rabbi have the same beliefs.,
as a Reform rabbi? Do
"moderate" Baptists (think ·,
Bill Moyers) have the same.
beliefs as "conservative':,
Baptists
(think
Rick
Warren)? .Will an Anglican' .
bishop in Nigeria automati-.
cally have the same doctri-..
nal beliefs as one in New ·
Hampshire? Will a Sufi ·
mystic in Kashmir have the
same understanding of the
word "jihad" as an lslamist
in the mountains of
Pakistan? Words matter on'··
the religion beat. Some ot:
them are even sacred.
'·some people would say·
that little mi stakes like this
do not matter all that
much," said Ostling. "Well,
they matter to · the people
who read the story and·
know that what . they are
reading is wrong. What,
does this say about our jour~
nalistic standards?"
(Terry Marringly is direc·
tor of the Washington
Joumalism Cemer at the
Council' for Cltristian
Colleges and Universities
(md
leads
the
Ge1Re/igion.org project to
study religion and rite.

RACINE - Dale Wallace Hill. II. 60, Racine, died
Tuesday_. Nov. 25. 200M at the Holzer Medical Center in
Galhpohs .
Born on March 31, 1948 in Pomeroy. he was the son of
Dale Wallace Hrlll and Mary Jane Wolfe Hill.
He was a sales representative with Darrell Non-is &amp; Suns.
He was a m~mber of Racine First Baptist Church. He lo.ved .
gardemng, cook1ng, and spurts, especially Tornado basketball. He loved and was devoted to his family and was loved
by all. Dale,lor the last 20 plus years oas been involved in
the Greenhouse mdustry . most recently with Darrell Norris
&amp; Sons Greenhou~es.
·
He is survived by his wife Karen Rhodes Hill of Racine ·
children: Nicole Dawn Koren and husband Da;id Racine'
and Jeremy Hill and wife A !lana. Wooster: a gra1;ddaugh~
ter, Zoey Jane H1ll ; brothers·, Marvin T. Hill and his wife
Jan .. Racine. Ohio: Michael J. Hill and his wife Mindy,
R.acme; and Dame! C. H11l and his friend Mindy, Coral
Sprmgs, Fla .; aunts and uncleand special aunt. Donna;
father and mother-rn-law : Robert and Lucille Rhodes,
Racine; brother-in-law: Mike Rhodes and wife Sharon
Logan: nieces and nephew s. Dolly, Andrew, Mich~l(;[ :
J_enni, Lauren .and Kris~en and their familie s: a special
fr1end. Larry Ctrcle, Racme. and many other friends.
Funeral services will be beld Satmday, No~ . 29, 2008 ·
at II a.m. at the 'first Baptist Church in Racine. Pastor
Ryan Eaton will officiate and burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
,
Friends may visit the family at Roush Funeral Horne,
Ravenswood, W.Va., on Friday, Nov 28. from 4 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers memorials may be made in Dale's
name to the Racine First Baptist Christian Outreach Center.
P: 0. Box 340, 404 Fifth Street, Racine , Ohio 45771.
Condolences may be expressed to the Hill family by email at roush I us2000@yahoo.com.

RAY tGt\IN ...

Marine·Corps League
gathering names for toys

..

' POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- The Mason , Galli a. Meigs
Detachment of the Marine Corps League are accepting
names of children for the annual Toys for Children through
Dec. 12. Toys will be given out I to 3 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
20, at City National Bank in Point Pleasant. To sign up , call
and leave a message 304-675-2647, 304-675-5299, 304895,3062 or 740-3 79-9063 .

.,
•

For the Record

new.~.·. )

ORANGE ~

Crystal R. Vance, 36, Coolville, WitS trans. poned to St. Joseph's Hospital with incapacitating injuries
by Meigs County EMS following a two-vehicle accident
that occurred Monday morning around 8:25 a.m.
AcGording to troopers, Vance was eastbound on Ohio·6S I
. nqar~~st ~2 in her 1999 Toyota Camry when she lost
control on the icy roadwar. and the vehicle slid left of center and struck a 1997 Ford F-250 being driven westbound
on Ohio 681 by Benjamin K. Buchanan, 37, Reedsville. ·
Vance was cited for failure to control and her vehicle sustained severe damages. The vehicle Buchanan was driving
,·'
sustained disabling damages.

Nf:PN.

•••

CHESTER - Clarence L. Atherton, 72. Long Bottom,
was cited with failing to maintain an assured clear distance
ahead following a two-vehicle scrape that occurred at
approximately 3:50p.m. on Tuesday.
·
According to troopers, Atherton was westbound on Ohio
248 near mile post I iri his 1988 Ford F-150 when his ve.hicle struck a 2007 GMC Topkick·J.A. Provence garbage collection truck that had just completed a stop and was beginning to accelerate also traveling westbound on Ohio 248.
The garl;lage truck, being driven by Ronald E. Freemen,
55, Middleport, sustained non-functional dal)lages while
Athert~m 's truck sustained disabling damages.
No injuries were reported.

Rates from Page Al
· around the area as well.
At)jens County fell almost a
full percent, from 7.7 percent in September to 6.8 in
October. Lawrence County
was .down five-tenths of a
percent to 5.7 percent in
October. Its September rate
was 6.2 percent.
- Washington County was
at 5.4 percent for October,
down four-tenths of a percent from 5.8 percent during
the previous month . .
Jackson County remamed
· unchanged at 8.5 percent,
and Vinton County rose by
one-terith of a percent, from
9.9 percent in September to
10 percent in October.
ODJFS said the state's
unemployment rate was 7.3
J)ercent in October, ~p
slightly from 7.2 percent m
September.

Beware of the 'Fairness Doctrine'

Letter&gt; to the editor are welcome. They should be less
rlwn 300 words. Ail letters are mbjecr to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
umigned leiters will be published. Lerrers should be in
There are ominous signs
good rasre. addressing issues, nor personalities. Lerrers of
thanks to organi~ations and individuals will nor be accept- that certain forces on the
left are gearing up for a new
ed for publicMion .
·
attempt to impose a "fairness doctrine" on American
television and radio commentary:
Incredible as it may sound
Reader Services ·
(UsPs 213-960)
m retrospect, there actual! y
Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ' was a so-called "Fairness
Our mam concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
Doctrine" in force in the
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
United States from 1949 to ·
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
tn a ~tory, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
1987. Its ostensible purpose
992-2 156.
Member: The Associated Press and
was to compel radio and TV
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
statiorls to broadcast stateOur main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correcments of opinion that "bal(740) 992·2156.
lions to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court
anced"
th9se.
being
Department extensions are:
Street, ·t-'Omeroy. Ot1io 45769.
expressed voluntarily. Since
Subscription Rates
a substantial majority of the
By
carrier
or
motor
route
News
statements being broadcast
One month ........... . '10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , EKt. 12
voluntarily were more or
One year . . ....... ....'115.84
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
less
conservative, the effect
Dally ...................50'
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
was to force broadcasters to
Senior Citizen rates
One month ............'10.27
air comparabk programs
One year ............'103.90
expressing liberal sentiAdvertising
&amp;ilscribers should remft 01 ........,
ments .
Outllda Sales: Dave Harris, Ext 15 cirect k:11he DMy Senlinel No subscrl pIf that strikes you as a vio!fon
tJi
mail
permitted
in
areas
'htlere
Outelda Sales: Brenda Davis, E~t16
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serviCe
is
ava1lable.
lation
of
the
First
Clou./Circ.: Judy Clar'o&lt;, Ext. 10
Amendment, go to the head
Mall Subscription
of
the class. It is , of course,
lnolde Melga Cou(&gt;ty
General Manager
exactly
that - as Congre~s
13 Weeks ....... _.... '32·.26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
recognized in 1987, when it
26 Weeks
........ .'64.20
52 Weeks . . . . .... .' .. 127.11
eliminated
it . At the time;
E·mall:
even
powerf
ulliberal voices
newsOmYdailysentinel .com
Outside Meigs County
,13 Weeks . . . . . . . . . .'53.55 endorsed its demise . A
Washington Post editorial
26 Weeks ...... . . , ...'107.10
Web:
of
June 24, 1987,put it this
52 Weeks . . . . . . . ....'214.21
www.rnvdailysentinel .com
way: "The !ruth is ... that
.

1

William

Rusher

there is no ' fairness' whatever in the 'fairness' doctrine. On the contrary. it is a
chilling federal attempt to
compel some . undefined
'balance' of what ideas
radio and television new
programs are to include ....
The 'fairness doctrine·
undercuts free , indf:pendent,
sound and responsive journalism - substituting governmental dictates . That is
deceptive , dangerous and.
in a democracy, repulsive."
But not, in the opinion of
some liberals. as repulsive
as the relatively small number of liberal opinions being
expressed. So now some of
them seem to be getting
ready to readjust the situation to make it more to their
liking.
Thus, last year Sen,
Dianne Feinstein. D-Calif,
told Fox News Sunday that

she was ''looking at" a miw
Fairness Doctrine. Talk
rAdio. she complained,
"tends to be one-sided. It's
explosive. It pushes people
·to, I think. extreme views
without a lot of information." Apparently. she does"
n't want them to hold such
views without first getting a
heavy dose of what she
regards as the correct information .
Aild on Election Day this
Charles
month , . Sen.
Schumer. D-N.Y., argued
that people who oppose the
Fairness Doctrine "want the
FCC to .limit pornography
on the air." and are therefore
inconsistent.." You can't say
·government hands off in
one · area' to a commercial
enterprise, but .YOU're
allowed to intel'vene in
another. That's not consistent." To Schumer, if you
are willing to limit pornography on the air, you must
(to be consistent) be ready
to demand the expression of
liberal views on pol.itical
topics.
Whether · Feinstein and
,Schumer will get. their way
is another matter. The "fairness doctrine" was abolished in I 987 amid a good

deal of ]?ipartisan self-congratulation, and it seem~
likely that it still retains
most of its unpopularity:
Logically, it simply cannot .
withstand analysis. It certainly doesn't follow that
every political viewpoint
that manages to get .
expressed must be accom;
panied, or followed. by an
equivalent expression of the'
opposite viewpoint. One
can support laws againsi
murder without necessarily
insisting' en equal time foi
the arguments in favor of it.
What those who support
the "fairness doctrine" are..
really saying is that the~:
don't · enjoy the fact thaC
their views have so littl~
suppon. And. while that'!(.
perfectly understandable, i•:
ts no .justification for tha·
proposition that societf,:
must artificially create a sit..:
uation in which unpoputW::
views receive the sami
attent\on and respect as oth~
ers that have more.
•;
(William Rusher is a,;;
accomplished author, for~·
mer publisher of ; thlNarional Review and forme I',:
vice chairman of the'.
American
Conservativ9
Union.)
•

-

Figures released last week .
show that the n·umber of
unemployed wor~ers in
October was 435,000, up
from 433,000 in September.
The number of unemployed
people has. increased by
91 ,000 in the past 12 months.
The rate this October was
up from the 5. 7 percent rate
a year earlier.
The state's 7.3 percent
unemployment figure tops
the national rate of 6.5 percent.
ODJFS .OhiQ's labor
market continued to reflect
a weakening national economy.
The agency said job loss~ .
es occurred in both goodsproducing and services
industries.
(The Associated Press
comributed to .this story.)

November
., 29 &amp; 30
•

am - l pm
Sunday 1 pm - 5 pm

Harvesting the PAST
8 East State Street • Pon~erc1l1

· (Monk!!Y Run)

1\iearly 400 bonowers got fixed-rate
mortgages.
protection from foreclo,ure Rogers suid.
In manv of the modified
during the legal proceedings. Thil1}-thrc~ Loan' ha\c loan,, the.intere&gt;t rates were
lx:cn modified and 41 more 'ignificant ly reduced. some
by up to 'ix percentage
are being renegotiated.
Of the modified mort- poinh .
The company 1mn't comgages. more than 5250.000
in principal have peen for- ment on the settlement.
given , more than $90.000 in ·accord in!! tn the Cleveland
fees and .:osts have been law firm \vhil:h handled the
. waived und adjustable-rate mailer fo r New Century
loans were c-o1wertcd to Financial.

Overbrook rrom Page At
intlatable games while various musical acts performed
throughout the day.
"Whether it s enjoying
apple l'ider and listening to
the entertainment or enjoying a ·hayride with their
family, our residents look
forward to the eve nt· every
year," Kennedy added.
For the pa st 20 years,
Overbrook has provided
healthcare services to
Southeastern Oh.io and
West Virginia. Overbrook
strives to be the nursing
facility of choice in their
service
communities.
Overbrook managment says
its therapy. program is
designed with individual
goals to return rehab
patients back to their previ ous independence. The
therapy staff provides r~si ­
dents
with
specially
designed therapy programs
to treat a wide array of
physical needs.
Overbrook provides not
only therapy services bu't
short and long term care as
well.
According
to
Overbrook management.
the staff's primary goal is to
enhance the lives ·of ·each
resident.

Staff photo

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center recently celebrated its 20th anniversary and for the past
13 years that anniversary has been celebrated with Oktoberfest, a community evt;tnt featuring free food, entertainment and activities for the young and young at heart. Here, visitors sample some of that free food during the celebration.

of water quality which !ems . Before giving her for- .
would not be done indepen- mal testimony. Young said· .
dently but by offici&lt;tls from she had heard water ·was in
Gatling. She asked if there the New ' Haven mine and
were back up generators for miners were wading in it.
electricitv if the power
Also before the hearing
should ~o out in terms of · portion began , . Young
monitonng. She asked to requested the cml1menl
see a list of priority poilu- period be extended because
tants the Ohio EPA was con- the applications were not
sidering in the permits. She available for viewing at the
asked for an analysis of local library. Jed Thorp with
commulative. environmen- the Ohio EPA said he had
tal impacts which would ·already contacted the directake into account the affect tor about an extension of the
of industries already in comment period but hadn't
place in the area.
heard a decisio·1 yet.
"There are times when we
During the question and
literally choke on the air answer period , Aaron
here," she said:
Pennington of the Ohio EPA
She also asked tb be con- . said there were seven sedi·
!acted if there were any nlentation ponds associated.
modification made to the with the permit which were .
permits. She asked if the to be lined with clay. Both
Ohio EPA could develop a Pennington and Thorp said
system similar to the one in the ponds had to be
·West Virginia where those designed with an extreme
interested can join an e-mail flood event . in mind.
lists which keeps. those on • Pennington got more spec ifthe list informed of when ic and said they are
industries (such as coal, or designed to withstand what
power) apply for a permit. he called a 10-year flood
Sbe also asked if Oh10 EPA event in tern1s of 3.8 inches
has looked at the applica- of rainfall per hour falling
tion for Gatling's Big River . during .a 24 hour period.
Mine in New Haven. W.Va. Pennington said there
'to see if any modifications would be no slun·y ponds.
had been made due to probResident Albert Proffitt of ·

Yellowbush Road said he
was concerned about what
would happen during a
flood event and said: "All
I'm worried about is them
containing what is on their
propet1y ."
Proffitt alSo questioned
why Gatling needed to discharge. at all into the creeks
and why not keep the mate·
rial in the sediment ponds.
Pennington said that was
part of Gatling's non.-antidegradation a['ternative · in
the permits. Pennington

said if the agency approved
the
non-antidegradation
alternative. it would require
larger ponds and an irrigation sy,tem.

43216-1049.

ED 11126/08 • THURS 12/04108

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1'30, 3,30, 7:30 &amp; 9,30
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•
•

Main Facility
1pm-6pm

HOLZER
CLINIC

.I

For IW\1' , the comment
period is s()f to end on Dec . .
2 and Hn.inen commenrs
\\'ill be consider the same as
oral conmu~nH. ThDse written comments can be
mailed to Ohio EPA ,
Dil'ision of Su1ja ce Wmer
Permits Processing Unit,
PO Box 1049. Columbus,.

Thanksgiving Day

GRAND OPENING .
Saturd~y .10

liquidated in bankruptcy
cou11 and Ill' longer uperat~s. Rogers· office ;aid.
The C&lt;'mpan} alkgedl y
inflated
appraisal&gt; ,
imposed excessive charges
and was engaged in predatory lending in which bor·
rowers ·got bigger loans
then their finances could
handle. according to assistant Attorney ,General
Robert Hart .

Hearing from Page At

Highway Patrol ·

I

·The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS (A P)
A
bankrupt subprime lender
accused of shoddy practices
ha, been barred from
accepting rrlongage applications in Ohio, state Attorney
General Nancy Rogers
announced Wednesday.
·
The agreement with New
Century Financial Corp. of
Irvine, Calif .. settled a lawsuit tiled ·by the state last
year. The company is being ·

Local Briefs

WE ·l&lt;ttW
\"'UAT Yd.!

~T10

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www. mydailysentinel.com

Dale Wallace Hill, II

•P

I JUST

2008

Obituaries

·'

Getting the focts wrong

The Daily Sentinel

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Friday, November 28,

PageA4

Jackson, Athens, Meigs Facilities
12pm-6pm

Friday..Saturday. and Sunday
Main Facility
1pm-9pm
Meigs Facility
11am-9pm
Jackson Facility 11am-9pm
Athens Facility
9am-9pm

'

�I

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA6
Friday, Npvember 28,

2008

Huge crowds cheer NYC Thanksgiving Day·Parade
BY COLLEEN LONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

NEW YORK
Val
Bonner planned for a
decade to attend the Macy 's .
Thanksgiving Day Parade
on her 50th birthday, and
this year she got her wish
Thursday.joining throngs of
holiday
revelers
in .
Manhattan cheering the
giant balloons and thousands of marchers .
"It's just fabulous - I
cried when I saw it," said
Bonner, of Steilacoom,
Wash. "This is my gift to
myself. I've been saving for
· years for it. It's a dream
come true."
Bonner, her · husband
Frank, and son Jack stood
with shrieking, delighted
children throwing confetti
as the 82nd annual Macy 's
Thanksgiving Day Parade
wound its way through
Manhattan streets under
sunny skies.
· Quincy Kersbergen of
Wyckoff,_
found a
pnme v1ewmg spot . perched_on a pol ice barricade near the beginning of
the parade - and proclaimed herself a big fan of
a ¥,iant 'dog balloon.
'This is just fantastic!"
the ll-year-old Kersbergen
said. "So amazing to be here
in person! I'm just so excited about today!"
New to the revelry this
year were Buzz Lightyear,
the square -jawed, actionfigure astronaut from the
1995 film "Toy Story;"
Horton, the compassionate
elephant of Dr. Seuss books;
and a five-story Smurf, a
blue, gnome-like creature
. popularized by a TV show
that began in 1981. Old
favorites · like Kennit and
the Energizer Bunny also
were back.
Organizers said more than
a million spectators viewed
the 82nd annu&lt;~l parade in
person, with another 50 million watching on television.
The 2 .5-mile route winds
from Central Park West and
West 77th Street to Herald
Square, in front of Macy 's
flagship store.
Crews on Wednesday
inflated the 13 giant balloons and 31 smaller ones.
Each giant balloon requires
more than 5,000 cubic feet
of helium, much of .which
supplier
Linde
North
America intended to recover and recycle, said Nick
Haines, the company's helium director for the
Americas. Linde tested the
process of sucking the gas
out of the balloons, compressing it and later purifymg it for resale last year.
·Among the smaller billloons was a newcomer that
pays tribute to graffiti mist
Keith ' Harin~. who died in
1990. The parade also featured 28 floats, 10 marching
bands and perfonnances by
Miley Cyrus, Trace Adkins,
James Taylor and the Radio
City Rockettes.
"She's just. the coolest!"
6-year-old Isabella Muccio
said of Cyrus.
The parade, which began
in 1924 and , was canceled
for two years during World
War II, also provided a coveted yearly spotlight for
Broadway productions. This .
year, cast members of
"Hair," "In the Heights,"
"The Little , .Mermaid,"
"South Pacific" and "Irving
Berlin's White Christmas"
were featured.
"I'm so excited! ... The
c'rowds, just seeing it in person!" said parade-goer
Phyllis
Grodnicki
of
Plainsboro, N J.
The atmosphere along the
route was upbeat and jovial
despite the nation's economic downturn . "It's
something you can do with
your kids for free," said
of
Martha
Muccio
Manalapan, N.J_ " And it
makes them ·happy, takes
our minds off everything ."
In Detroit, thousands
braved near-freezing temperatures in hats, mittens
and scarves to stake prime
spots to view the city 's
parade, which has been held
for more than 80 years.
Harry Vanuden, a 45year-old Chrysler LLC
worker, said he was grateful
to still have his job this
Thanksgiving. He's among
200 remaining employees
Chrysler's Mack engine

plant in Detroit. Two years
ago, Vanuden said they
numbered I ,500.
"I've been a toolmaker for
26 years." said Vanuden,
who lives in the Detroit s~b­
urb of Warren. "You hope
for the best. I'm just thankful I'm still there."
His I J-year-old daughter
Kelsey was excited at the
prospect of seeing the
Warr~n
Cousino High
School marching band.
which she hopes to join
when she stru1s at the school
next fall.
Kelly Smith, 44, and her
husband Tom, 46. brought
their ·4-year-old daughter
Annalise to her . first
Thanksgiving Day parade .
"We're just happy with
what we have, and we're
hopeful the economy will
rebound,'.' Smith said.

•
Chute._ of Jnus Cbrilt Apottotic
Ylln/ .andt ifld Ward Rd .. Pastor; Jame~
Miller, SUJ\day School - 10:30 a.m.,
EH:ning • 7:)0 p.m.

Santa Claus rides down Broadway on a float during the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. in New York, Thursday.
Organizers said more than a mtllton spectators vtewed the
82nd annual parade in person, with another 50 mtllton
watching on television.

RlVfl'Vallty

Ri,·er Valle)' Apostolic Woo;hip Cenler,
873 S. 3rd
Ave .. Mtddleport , Rev.
Michael Bradford , Pastor. Sunday, 10:30
a.m. Tilt's. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
S1Udy

AP photo

Emmanuel Apo!itollr Tabtrn•dt Im:.
Loop Rd otT New Limu Rd . Ru!lond,
Servic.ts: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thun. 7:00p.m.. Pastor Many R. Hunon

.,!,
~

come visit us during our

OPEN HOUSE
Friday, Nov. 28th 10-?
Saturday, Nov. 29th 10-?
Hrs -lites- Sat.l0-5

Refreshments • Door Prizes

Corner of Bashan (CR28) and Tackervi'lle
Racine, Ohio
f'rom Tornado Rd- turn onto CR 28 go .I mile- f'rorn SR JJ exit

at Raci11e, turn right go 2 miles.

Watc~forsign

~

of God
•,. Assembly
Uberty Asaembly or God

••

' P.O. Bo~ 467. Duddiilg Lane, Mason.'
W.Va.. Pa•tor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Services- 10:00 am. and 7 pm.

lt

Baptist

.••
••

1•ap:vllle FreeWill Baptist Churw:h
Pastor: Floyd Ross .,Sunday School9:30 to
10:30 am . Worship :.ervic~ l0:30 to II :00
am. Wed . preoching 6 pm

f
·I
(

C•rptnter lndtpeAdentBaptist Churth
Sunday School · 9:30am. ~a~hing
Service JO:JQam . Evening Service
7:00pm. Wedntsdo.y Bible Study 7:00pm,

~

Rutlllnd Free WtU BapU11
Salem St., Pastor: Ed Barney . Sunday
School • 10 11.m .. Evening - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Sen lee~- 7 p.m.
S«ond 81ptbt Church
Ra\'emwood, WV, Sunday School 10 am' Morn ing worship II am Evenin&amp; - 7 pm,
·Wedneitlay 7 p.m.
Flnt Baptist Chun:h ol Muon. WV
(Independent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pastor: Robe11
Grady, Sut'lday schoo l 10 am . Momin&amp;
churrh II am. Sunday evening 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

.Catholic
· Sacred Hurt Clltholk Church,
161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy. 992·.S898.
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Hein z. Sat. Con.
4 : 4 .~ - 5:1-Sp.m. : Mm- ~ : 3 0 p.m .. Sun.
Con. -8:4~·9! 1~ a.m ., . Sun . ~a ss- 9:30
a.m., Daily Ma:ss · tl :30 a.m.

· Church of Christ
Wests~dt

r'
,•'
\

33226 Child~n's Home Rd , Pomeroy, OH
740·441 -12% Sunday morning
10:00, Sun morning Bible 5tudy :
following worslaip. Sun. eve 6:00 pm •
Wed bible study 7 pm

Hemlock Grove ChrlsUan Chun:h
Minister: Larry Brown, Worship ~ 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bibli::
SIUdy · 7 p.m.

,.

Pnstor: Ste,·e Little . Sunday S.Choo): 9:30
am, Morn ing Worship: 10:30 am.
We\lne~} Bible Smdy 6:3flpm: cho ir
pmctice 7;30: youth and Bible Buddies
6::.0 p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

•

. Hope Baptist Church (Sollth«a)
570 Orant St., Middl eport. Sunday school
· 9:30a .m.. Worship · I I a.m. and 6' p.m.. · ·
Wednem~y Service .· 7 p.m . Pastor: Gary
e.m~

KutJarid 11'11'111 Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
10 :45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
P~sto r Jon Brocken . East Main St ..
Sundny Sch . l):JO am. Wnr.;hip JO:JO am

(

'
'•'
•

Fl~t Southern Baptist
41872 Pnmeroy Pike. Sunday SchOol·
9:.10 tt:m.. Worship · 9:45am &amp; 7:00 P·'!l· ·
· Wcdni:sday Service~· 7:00p.m.

••
•
'
\

Flnt RaptM .Cbbrc~
f'astqr: Di ll y Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
MiJ dleport. Sunday Schoo l - 9:1.5 a.m .,
Wor~hi p . 10 : 15 a.m., 7:00 p.m ..
Wedne.~day Service· 7:00p.m.

•'
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•

•

••
•

J~
•
••
•

••

••

•'

'..

· 18"

Slw

••

Rac:lnt First Baptist
Pas10r: Ryan Eaton , pastor . $'und11.y
School ·9:30a.m.. Wonhip · 10:40 a.m.,
6:1111 p.m., Wedne~&gt;day Services • 7:00
p.m
Silver Run Baptist
Pll5tur: John Swan~un. Sunday School ·
. IO,_tfn ., ~ \Yfl.l'$hip - lla .m. , 7:00 p..m .
,Wedn esdtly Services-7:00p .m.
ML Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
1) :45, a.m.. E\'ening - 6 :30 p .m.,
W~nesday Services · 6:30J).m. ,

Bethlehem Baplhl Churth
. Great Bend. Route 124. Racine, OH .
Pastor: , Sunday School"· 9:30 a.m .,
Stmd11 y Woo:hip- 10:30 a.m .•; Wednesday
Bible Smdy - 7:00p.m .

w/La•r lulde
•

''

Old Bethel Fm Will Baptk,t Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middlepon . Sunday
Setvicc · 10 a.m .. 6:00 P.m., Tuesday
Strvices -O:(XJ
Hllls~e Bap~t

"'

;,

Vidocy Baptbtlndependmt
.S2~ N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keese e. Worship • JOa .m.. 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Sci"\' ices .' 7 p.m.

Holidav Cookbook
Get aFREE bearing test between
now and Christmas · get a·
FREE Holiday cookbook.

~

Faith Baptht Church
R~ilroad

'

I

;

St., Ma5on. Surlduy School - 10
a.m .. Worship · I I a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'kes · 7 p.m.
Jl'omt Run Bapllsl· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday SchOOl · 10
a.m., Worship · II :30 a.m.

Middleport Church of Chrki
5th and Main. Pas10r: AI Hanson.
· Childrtns Dir~tor; ShDron Sayre, Teen
Dirttlor: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .• Wonhlp· '8:15, 10:30 a.m. 1
p.m .. Wedn~sday Strvice~- 7 p.rri.

..

Keno Churtb of Christ

Worship ~ 9 ~ 30 a.m., Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. Istand
.3rd Sunday
Bearwallow Ridp Church or Christ
Pastpr:Bruce Terry. Su.nday _School -9:30

•.m.
Worst!lp : • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.nl ,
Wcdnesd'-y Services· 6:30p.m.

zton Chtirda of Christ
Pomtro}', Harrison vi lle Rd. (Rt.l43) .
Pa5tor: Roger Watson, Sunday Sehoul 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 .a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wedne!lday Servic~ · 7 p.m.
. Tuppcn Plain Church of C,hrlsl
lnsuumenull . Wor!ihip Service • 9 a.m.,
Communion- 10 a.m .. Sunday School ·
IO:!S a.m.• Youth· ~i:JO pm Sund11y, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Brlldbwy Ch.rch .or Chrill
Mini5ter; Tom Runyon. 395!i8 Bradbury
Road, Middle:pnn, Sunday School . 9:30
a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
RullaDd Chun:h or Chrl~t
Sunday School • 9:30a .m .. Worship and
Communion • 10 :30 a.m.. David
Wiseman. Mini ster

Bradford Church or Christ
· Comer-of St, &amp;t. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School -' 9:JO a.m.
Worship - 8:00 ·a .m.. 10:30 a.m., 1:00
p.JIJ .. Wednesda~ Sc:rvices · 7:00 p.in.
Hickory HIIIJ Churc:h or Christ
Tuppers PlainS, Pastor Mike ~oore, Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sunday : worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bihle
class 7 pm Wed.

Rmlsvlllr Churdlol Christ
Pastnr! Philip Smnn, Sunday Scllool: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Sel"\'ict: 10:30 a.m.,&lt;Bib!e
StULiy. Weililesday. 6;30 p.m.

44t-wn or (800) 434-4194

R•dud Chun:b of God

Paswr: Ron Healh. Sunday Worship · 10
~ . m .. 6
p.m.. Wednesda~ Services - 7
p.m.

Syncuse 1-lnt Ca..r-dl of God
Apple- and Second Sll., Plstor: Rev. David
Russell , Sund.ly School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evenin&amp; Servicn· 6:30 p .m ..
Wtdnesday Services · 0:30 p.rn. ·
Church of God ol' Prophecy
OJ. White Rd . ~ff St. Rt 160, Paltor: PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School • 10 a.m..
WOrship - II a.m.. Wednesday Services · 7
p.m. -

Sund!ty school 9:30a.m .. Sunday wor.;hip
• 10:30 a.m.
Tbe Chun-h or Christ or Pomeroy
lntenect ion 7, and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Siudy ·
9:30 a.m. , Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.rn .. Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptbl
Founh &amp;: Main St ., Mlddlepon , Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Michael L Thompson, Jr.

Christian Union

•
·••
''
''

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .• Worship •
10:45 a.m .. Sunda~ Eveni!lg · 6;00 p.m ..
Pasmr: Don Walker
·

.

Hartford Cb~~rth of Christ In
.'Ciuittlan Union
Hanrord. W.Va .. Pastor: Mike Puckett,
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.• Wo~hip ·
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m., WednesdayServices· 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Morllth Churth otGod
Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Pastor:
I

Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.. Wor ~ h ip ·
I 0:30a.m.
letdsvllt
Worship · 9;30 a.m., Sund11y School •
10:30 a.m .. First Sundlly of Month - 7:00

Trlnlty Cb~~rt.

Second &amp; L)'Jin . Pomeroy, PMtor:
Worship J0:2!i a.m.,

Episcopal
G""' Ept.ropol Churdi
326 E. Main St ., Pomeroy,
Holy
Eucharist 11 :30 a.m. Sunday &amp; 5:30pm
Wtd. Rev. Leslie Aemmins

Community Cbun:b
Pastor: Steve Tomek, MaiD SU'eet,
Rutland, Sunday Woohlp-10:00 am.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m,
Danville HoUneM Cllu"n:b
31M7 State Route 325 , Langsvlle. Pastor:
Brian Bailey, Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m..
Wedne ~U.1 y prayer service - 7 p.m .

Cahory Pllpim Chaprl
Hllfrisonvillc Ro-'. PastOr. Charles
McKenzie. Sunday School 9:30 a.rn.,
. w0r!&lt;hip . 11 a.m ,, 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service · 7:00 p.rri.
R~ 01 Shama HollntM Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland , Pastpr: Rev.
Dewey King,' SuOOay school· 9;30 a.m.,
Sunday worship ·7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pine Grove Blblt HoH.eu Cburcb
112 mile off Rt . 325. PliStor. Rev . O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

To"'"

CtolniCI ....
Asbury (Syl'lll:usc), Pwor: Bob Robin~')~, ,
Sunday School . 9:45 1.m.• Worship - II
a.m., wednesday Sen'icet. 7;30 p.m.

Fomt.RDII

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

United Methodist
Gnolwn Ualtrd Melhodlol
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
B«htfl Ualkd Mttbodftt

New Haven,

Ri c lm~

Nease, Pastor•

Sunday worship 9:30 a.!l'. Tues. 6:30

MI. Ollre United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilke5ville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .• 1 p.m .. Thursday
Sel'\'ices - 7 p.m.
Mtlp Cooptraltvt Parilh
Nonh~ast Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chella'
Pastor: ,Jim Corbitt. Worship - 9 a.m..
Sunda~ School • 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services • 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null, Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· !0:30a.m.

Calv1ry Bible Chun::h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. P:Nor· Re\
Blackwood. Sunday School · 9JIJ a.m..
Worship 10 :30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wcdnnday Service · 7:30pm.

Amallna Gratt Community Chu~h

a..th (Mid&lt;ltrpon)

Pa:stor: Wayne Dunlap, Slate Rt. ~81,
Tuppen Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:~ pm., Wed. Bible Slu.dy 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School·
9:30a.m .. Worship · II :00 a.m.

Mhwrs"Uie
Pastor: }lob Robinson, Sunday School • 9
a.m .. Worship· 10 a.m .

Stlvenvtlle Communit)' Chun'h
Sunday School 10:00 am . Suud&lt;~) W1•r~bip
11:01) 11m. Wednesday 7;{)() pm Pa~10r:
Bryan &amp;. Mi ssy Dailey

OuU Christian Fel~"sblp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Meiss Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor; Chris Scewan
10:00 am· Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship,Chi.lq,ren 's min istry

PuriChoprl
Sunday School· 9 a.m., Worship· 10 a.m.

.........,

New Bqtnnlnp Cbarcb

RtJokiD&amp; Urt Church
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. P1rstor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emr-ritus law~nce
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 11m
Wedoesd.ay Services· 1 p.m.

Commwdty or Chrkt
Ponland-Racint Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffit!,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
.10:30 a.m .. Wedne!iday Services · 7:00
p.m.
· Bt:tbtl WonbJp Center ·
39782 Sr. Rt. 7, 2 miles south of Tuppen
Plains. OH . Non·denominltional wich
Contemporary Praise &amp; Worship. 'Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc. Pasror Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Deny Fullti. Sunday
· services: 10 'am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes. Wed &amp;: Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pm. 'fhurs morning ladies '
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wod . evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit II! online at www.bcthclwc.org.

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Worship · 9:2S
a.m .. Sunday School- 10:43 a.m.
Roc:k Sprtnp
Pa~tor: Dcwayoe Stutler, Sunday Sl.:hool ·

9:00 a.m .. · Wor!hip - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni Dunh~m

Rulloud
PastCr: John Chapman, Sutkiay School ·
9:30a.m., Wot'$hip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
-Services· 1 p.m.

Stdelq Ceatrr
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship· 9;l!i a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sundlly School. 10 11 .m ., Worship· 9 a.m.

Morntna Star
Pastor. ~n Gilmore, Sunday School · II
a.m .. Worship - Hl a.m.

Sl. Pa~l Lalhtran Churc•
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomero~.
Sun. &amp;:hool - 9:45a.m., Worship ~ I I 11..m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m .. Wof)hip · ?:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study· 7:00 p.m.
Flilb Felknrablp Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rn. Franklin Dickr-rt~, Suvrce:
Friday. 7 p.m

Cbun:b
2480 Second St,. Syracust , OH
SUn. School 10 a:m, S1,1ndy nigbt6:30 pm
Pl!itor: Joe Gwinn
A Nrw llqinaloa
(FuU GosptJ Chufth) HIIT'isonville.
Pastors: Bob IUid Kay Marshall ,
Sunday Sel'\'i(.:e, 2 p.m.

Flatwoech

Laurtl Clltr Fftt Metbod.lst Chunh
Pastor: Glen McClung, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 11 .m, and 6
p.m ..Wednesday Sen·lct · 7:00p.m.

Oar Savlour..Lullw:,... Church
Walnut and .Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell, Sunday
Schooi - IO:OOa.m., Worship - lla.m.

Fl..lnitw INblc Ch~rc:h
~tan , W.Va . RL I. ~m~tnr: Rriun M~)

Other Churches·

Pastor: Dewayrw! Stuttler, Su_nday School ·
10 a.m., WOJShip · II a.m.

Hysell Run Communit~ Churdl
. Pastor: Rev. l...arry Lemley: Sunday School
• 9:30a .m.. Worship · l0:4!i a.m., 1 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study IUld Youth · 7 p.m .

Lutheran

WIUta'l Cltlptl Wesleyan
Coolville Road , Pastor: Re v. C'harlci
Martindale, Sunday School · '9:.lQ a.m ..
Wonhip · !0:30a.m.. W~dn Nl.ty Scn.·ice
• 7 p.m.

S)'I'KUX Commanlt)'

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp;. Buhan Rds.. Racine , Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School ·
9:4S a.m., Worship· 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed . 7:30p.m.

SL John Luthtran Churcll
Pin~ Grove, Worship • 9:00 a.tb:, Sunday
School- JO:OO a.m. Pllli!or:

Pulor: Rev. Cunis Randolph. Sund•y
School -9:30a.m .• Worlhip • 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday eveniftg fi pm
........ Ch-olthrNPistor: George Stadler, Sunday SdlOOI •
9:30 a.m .. Worship .· 10:10 a.m., 6:30
p.m., W.lday Se...-ices· 7 p.m.

PWu St. Pa.t
Patlor: Jim Corbitt, Sunday Stbool - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 am., Tue§day Services
. 7:30p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday SchOOl - 10
a.m., Worship . 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services - 10 a:m.

The Chlll'tb of Jcaus
Chrisl of Latttr-D.y Slllnll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20·11 a.m .. Relief
Socie!y/Priesthood II :OS-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Sei'vic~ 9- 10 :15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs .· 1 p.m.

Bald Knob , on Co. Rd J l . Pastor: Rev.
ROJtr Willford. Sunda~ So.'hool · Y:JV
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

0..0...&lt;:-.ottbe-

Wt:!!leyan Bible HollnfM Chu.rda
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor: Doug
Co-1.. Sunday School • 10 a.m. Worship ·
10:4S · pm., Sunday E.ve. 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesds.y Service-7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Pomnoy Clllartb or 1M' N....-.nt
Pulor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9JO a.m., Worship - 10 :30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wcdncwiay Services - 7 p.m.

p.m . ~ice

Congregational

praje_r and Bib~ Study.

.

CENTER
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis

.

Pomeroy Westside Church of Chrilt
· 33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School . II a.m.. Wonhip • 10a .n1 .. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Sel"o'ices - 7 p.m.

Kingsbury Road . Pa~tor : Rohe n \ 'tl l"-'t,
Su nday · School · 9·.\0 am. \\o1\hip
Sef\·ice 10:30 a.m . E\eninf ~rv1ce 6
p.m.

p.m.

Dt1ter Chun:h ol Christ

~ADVANCED HEARING

24 MO.NTHS
.
NO ·INTEREST

Chun:h
St. Rl. 143 JUSt off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev
J 11me~ R. Acree, Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service. Worship · 10:30 11 .m.. 6 p.m. ,
Wednnday Sef'olicts -7_p.m.

212 .W. Main St., Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Semce~ ... p.m.

Evenin[l: - 6 p.m., Wednesday Serv~s • 7

Holiness

Pomeroy Cburth or Chrilllt
Chnhlrc Baptlsl Chun:h

••
•

c•ardt or Chrl!lt

Conl~ct

f'o!&gt;tOC

N.-'--

ar

;.............~ ....WOR.SJDP (;(JjJ"'JHIS WEfi"", ......,...,..,

CUfton fibtraacle CbuKh
Clifton, W.Vi.., Sunday School · I\I ~ . rn ..
Worship· 7 p.m ., Wednesda y Sc!'\'I(C • 7
p.m.
The Ark Chu~h
3773 Georges Creek Road. G:.l\ i po1 li~. 011
Pastor: Jamie Wire'T'3" · SUnday SL•ni.;~·~ ·
10:30 11 .m. WcUnesday- 7 p.m. Thursdu}
Pr~'yer &amp;. Pmi.-.e ·at 6 pm. Clusse~ fnr ull
ages every Sunday ~ Wednt~uy .
www.thearkchurch.net
Full Gospel Churt'h
of1be Living Savior
Rl.338 , Antiquity, Pastnr: Je ~).(&gt; Mnrris.
Services: Sarurday 2;00 p.m.

Ash Stred Churtll
l98 Ash St., Middleport-Pastors Mark
Morrow &amp;. Rodney Walker Sunday
S•hool - 9:30 a.m., Morning Worship ·
10:30 a.m.&amp;. 7:00pm. WtdnCMtay Service
-7:00p.m .. Youth Service· 7:00 Ji.m .
Appt Life Center
''Full-Gospel Chu~ch". Pastors JOhn &amp;
Pany Wade , 603 Second Ave. Mason , 773~017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 H.m ..
Wedriesda y 7 pm

Salem Communll)' Chun·h
Back of West Columbia. W.V1l.r1m Ltc~ing
Roud. Pastor: Charles Roush n 04l 075 228R, Sunday School 9:30 um . t.;unJ:1y
e\'tning service 7:00 pm . Htbl ~· Sw!.l y
Wednesday sen·jce 7:'uo pm
H;obAon Christian FrJiow~hip '- 'hurch
Pastor: Herschel White. Sun,J:,_I \.:holVt·
10 am, Sunday Church .er,·iw - tt:.~O pm
Wednesday 1 pm

Abundant Grate R.F.I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport, Putor Teresa
Davis, Sunday service, 10 a.m .;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Ratoradon Christian Fcllow~hip
r,136S Hoope r R1&gt;ad. Ath ~ n '. l' '"''&gt;r
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Wrmhr p \tl (~I am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Churtb
Long Bonom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School · 9:30a.m. Worship · 9:~ a.m.
and 1 p.m., Wednesday . 7 p.nl., Friday •
fellowship scrviCt: 7 p.m.

l:ut Le1111
Pas10r: Bill Marshall Sunday School ·
98.m ., ·worship - 10 a.m.. 1st Sunday
every month evening service 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday. 7 p.m.

Ho\llt or Healing Mlni •trir~
St. Rt: 114 Lanwwlllc, 011
Full Gospel, CJ Pastors Rohe M &amp; R,lb~rta
Mu~ser•. :Sund'ay Scho&lt;ll Y..1rJ ~111. .·
Worship 10:3.0 am · ?:00 pn1: Wed .
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesus 1\llnl~tries
Meeling 333 Mechanic Strel't. [' 0 nii!TO)'.
OH . Pastor Eddie Baer. Ser' i~,· r cv(:ry
· Stmday td:OO a.m.

Harrison riDe Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., WedneJ4ay · 1 p.m .

Radne
Middlepnrt Community Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evening-7:30pm . •Wednesday ~rvice ·
·7:30p.m.

Pastor: Ke:rry Wood, Sunday School • 10
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm: Th\Jt Bible Study 7 pm

Coohlllr Ualtrd M..-. Parish
Pastor; Helen Kline, Coolville Church,
Main&amp;: Fifth Sr., Sun. School- 10 a.m.,
. Wotship · 9a.m., Tues. Sen·ices -7 p.m.

Pentecostal
l'tolealslal As.-wmbl,\
Pastor: St. Rt. 124. Racin&gt;! , To1rnad•l Rd .
Sunday S,chool • 10 a.m-. Ew_ni nJ! · 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services " 7 pm

Faith Vallty Tobtrrildo Cirv&lt;lr
Bailey Run Road. Putor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service'- 7 p.m.

Bethel Churclt
Township·Rd ., 46RC, Sunday 'School- 9
a.m, Worship • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Pmibyltrlan Church
Pastor: Robtn Manh!ln . Wor•hi]l · IJ:OO
a,m. Sunday

S)TitUR MIMIU.

141J Bridgeman St., .SyraCu!.e, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. Evening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 1 p.m.

Hoc&gt;l-Cbon:h
·Kathryn Wiley, Sunday School • 9:30
un ., Worship· 10 : ~ a.m .. Pllstur PhiUip

Middleport Prrsbyterian
Pastot: James Snyder. Sunday S.:hool 10
a.m .. wonhip service II am.

H•ul Community Churtb
Off Rt. 124, Pattor: Edsel Hart, Sunday
sChool- 9:30-a.m .. Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .•
7:30p.m.

Bell
Torch Cbun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .•
WoRhip - 10!~ a.m.

Severith"Day Adventist
Se\'tnlh-Day Adnntist
Mulberry Hh . Rd ., Pomeruy. Saturday
Service~ : S~tbblllh S1 ~wol · :! p.m ..
Worship - 3 p.m.

Dyavlilr Cemmwtlly Cbor&lt;b
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. , Wor.ship ·
10 ~ 30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Point lor.t Cb•rd. or tile NazartM
Route 689, Albany, Rev. Lloyd Grimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am; worhslp
· sci'\' ice II am. evcnin[l: !iCJVi~;:e 7 pm. Wed. •
prayei meeting 7 pm
MkkUeport Cburcb ellbt NUU"Cnt
Pastor: Leomm:l Powell, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.,Worsl\ip - 10!30 a.m .• 6:~ p.m.,
Wedne!day Servic-es· 7 p.m.,

Rrrd"lllr Frlknnhlp
Church of !he Nazam~e, Puror: Russell"
.Cil'SOII. , Sunday .School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship. 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services·- 7 p.m.
Syrac:uJt Oarcb ol the Nll.lftnt
Pastor Mike Adkius, Sunday ~boo! · 9:30
a.m. , Worship · 10:~ a.m .• 6 p.m..

United Brethren

Monr Chaprl Ch~h

Mt.llermon l lnlted 81'tthrm
In Christ Church
Te:cas Community 36411 Wid:hmn Rd ,
Pastor: Peter Mllftinda\e, Sunda) S'hool9:30 a.m .. Woi"ship - IOJO u.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wedne~day Sr-rvices - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group mtttin~ 2nd &amp;: 4th Sunday.~
7p.m ,
Eden United Brethnn ln. Christ
Srate Route 124, bttween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport, Sunday School · 10 a.m..
Sunday Worship · 11 ;00 a.m. Wednesday

Sunday school • lO a.m .• Wonhip · II
a.m .. Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Faith Gooprl Chur-dt
Long Bottom. Suoday School· 9:30a.m ..
Worship - 10:45 n.m _. , 7!30 p,m.,
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Ftdl Goopei1Jcbu.3304S Hiland Road. Pomeroy, Pastor. Roy
Hunter, Sunday School· tO a.m., Evening
7:30p.m .. Tuesday 4 Thurs .- 7:30p.m.

Soulb lktbtl Commualty Cburth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood,
Sunday School · 9 a.m .. Worship Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday
Clll'ltloa lnttrdenomiDitlonal Church

.

No¥. 28 •Dec. 29 2008

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�I

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA6
Friday, Npvember 28,

2008

Huge crowds cheer NYC Thanksgiving Day·Parade
BY COLLEEN LONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

NEW YORK
Val
Bonner planned for a
decade to attend the Macy 's .
Thanksgiving Day Parade
on her 50th birthday, and
this year she got her wish
Thursday.joining throngs of
holiday
revelers
in .
Manhattan cheering the
giant balloons and thousands of marchers .
"It's just fabulous - I
cried when I saw it," said
Bonner, of Steilacoom,
Wash. "This is my gift to
myself. I've been saving for
· years for it. It's a dream
come true."
Bonner, her · husband
Frank, and son Jack stood
with shrieking, delighted
children throwing confetti
as the 82nd annual Macy 's
Thanksgiving Day Parade
wound its way through
Manhattan streets under
sunny skies.
· Quincy Kersbergen of
Wyckoff,_
found a
pnme v1ewmg spot . perched_on a pol ice barricade near the beginning of
the parade - and proclaimed herself a big fan of
a ¥,iant 'dog balloon.
'This is just fantastic!"
the ll-year-old Kersbergen
said. "So amazing to be here
in person! I'm just so excited about today!"
New to the revelry this
year were Buzz Lightyear,
the square -jawed, actionfigure astronaut from the
1995 film "Toy Story;"
Horton, the compassionate
elephant of Dr. Seuss books;
and a five-story Smurf, a
blue, gnome-like creature
. popularized by a TV show
that began in 1981. Old
favorites · like Kennit and
the Energizer Bunny also
were back.
Organizers said more than
a million spectators viewed
the 82nd annu&lt;~l parade in
person, with another 50 million watching on television.
The 2 .5-mile route winds
from Central Park West and
West 77th Street to Herald
Square, in front of Macy 's
flagship store.
Crews on Wednesday
inflated the 13 giant balloons and 31 smaller ones.
Each giant balloon requires
more than 5,000 cubic feet
of helium, much of .which
supplier
Linde
North
America intended to recover and recycle, said Nick
Haines, the company's helium director for the
Americas. Linde tested the
process of sucking the gas
out of the balloons, compressing it and later purifymg it for resale last year.
·Among the smaller billloons was a newcomer that
pays tribute to graffiti mist
Keith ' Harin~. who died in
1990. The parade also featured 28 floats, 10 marching
bands and perfonnances by
Miley Cyrus, Trace Adkins,
James Taylor and the Radio
City Rockettes.
"She's just. the coolest!"
6-year-old Isabella Muccio
said of Cyrus.
The parade, which began
in 1924 and , was canceled
for two years during World
War II, also provided a coveted yearly spotlight for
Broadway productions. This .
year, cast members of
"Hair," "In the Heights,"
"The Little , .Mermaid,"
"South Pacific" and "Irving
Berlin's White Christmas"
were featured.
"I'm so excited! ... The
c'rowds, just seeing it in person!" said parade-goer
Phyllis
Grodnicki
of
Plainsboro, N J.
The atmosphere along the
route was upbeat and jovial
despite the nation's economic downturn . "It's
something you can do with
your kids for free," said
of
Martha
Muccio
Manalapan, N.J_ " And it
makes them ·happy, takes
our minds off everything ."
In Detroit, thousands
braved near-freezing temperatures in hats, mittens
and scarves to stake prime
spots to view the city 's
parade, which has been held
for more than 80 years.
Harry Vanuden, a 45year-old Chrysler LLC
worker, said he was grateful
to still have his job this
Thanksgiving. He's among
200 remaining employees
Chrysler's Mack engine

plant in Detroit. Two years
ago, Vanuden said they
numbered I ,500.
"I've been a toolmaker for
26 years." said Vanuden,
who lives in the Detroit s~b­
urb of Warren. "You hope
for the best. I'm just thankful I'm still there."
His I J-year-old daughter
Kelsey was excited at the
prospect of seeing the
Warr~n
Cousino High
School marching band.
which she hopes to join
when she stru1s at the school
next fall.
Kelly Smith, 44, and her
husband Tom, 46. brought
their ·4-year-old daughter
Annalise to her . first
Thanksgiving Day parade .
"We're just happy with
what we have, and we're
hopeful the economy will
rebound,'.' Smith said.

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Chute._ of Jnus Cbrilt Apottotic
Ylln/ .andt ifld Ward Rd .. Pastor; Jame~
Miller, SUJ\day School - 10:30 a.m.,
EH:ning • 7:)0 p.m.

Santa Claus rides down Broadway on a float during the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. in New York, Thursday.
Organizers said more than a mtllton spectators vtewed the
82nd annual parade in person, with another 50 mtllton
watching on television.

RlVfl'Vallty

Ri,·er Valle)' Apostolic Woo;hip Cenler,
873 S. 3rd
Ave .. Mtddleport , Rev.
Michael Bradford , Pastor. Sunday, 10:30
a.m. Tilt's. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
S1Udy

AP photo

Emmanuel Apo!itollr Tabtrn•dt Im:.
Loop Rd otT New Limu Rd . Ru!lond,
Servic.ts: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thun. 7:00p.m.. Pastor Many R. Hunon

.,!,
~

come visit us during our

OPEN HOUSE
Friday, Nov. 28th 10-?
Saturday, Nov. 29th 10-?
Hrs -lites- Sat.l0-5

Refreshments • Door Prizes

Corner of Bashan (CR28) and Tackervi'lle
Racine, Ohio
f'rom Tornado Rd- turn onto CR 28 go .I mile- f'rorn SR JJ exit

at Raci11e, turn right go 2 miles.

Watc~forsign

~

of God
•,. Assembly
Uberty Asaembly or God

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' P.O. Bo~ 467. Duddiilg Lane, Mason.'
W.Va.. Pa•tor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Services- 10:00 am. and 7 pm.

lt

Baptist

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1•ap:vllle FreeWill Baptist Churw:h
Pastor: Floyd Ross .,Sunday School9:30 to
10:30 am . Worship :.ervic~ l0:30 to II :00
am. Wed . preoching 6 pm

f
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C•rptnter lndtpeAdentBaptist Churth
Sunday School · 9:30am. ~a~hing
Service JO:JQam . Evening Service
7:00pm. Wedntsdo.y Bible Study 7:00pm,

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Rutlllnd Free WtU BapU11
Salem St., Pastor: Ed Barney . Sunday
School • 10 11.m .. Evening - 7 p.m..
Wednesday Sen lee~- 7 p.m.
S«ond 81ptbt Church
Ra\'emwood, WV, Sunday School 10 am' Morn ing worship II am Evenin&amp; - 7 pm,
·Wedneitlay 7 p.m.
Flnt Baptist Chun:h ol Muon. WV
(Independent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pastor: Robe11
Grady, Sut'lday schoo l 10 am . Momin&amp;
churrh II am. Sunday evening 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

.Catholic
· Sacred Hurt Clltholk Church,
161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy. 992·.S898.
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Hein z. Sat. Con.
4 : 4 .~ - 5:1-Sp.m. : Mm- ~ : 3 0 p.m .. Sun.
Con. -8:4~·9! 1~ a.m ., . Sun . ~a ss- 9:30
a.m., Daily Ma:ss · tl :30 a.m.

· Church of Christ
Wests~dt

r'
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\

33226 Child~n's Home Rd , Pomeroy, OH
740·441 -12% Sunday morning
10:00, Sun morning Bible 5tudy :
following worslaip. Sun. eve 6:00 pm •
Wed bible study 7 pm

Hemlock Grove ChrlsUan Chun:h
Minister: Larry Brown, Worship ~ 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bibli::
SIUdy · 7 p.m.

,.

Pnstor: Ste,·e Little . Sunday S.Choo): 9:30
am, Morn ing Worship: 10:30 am.
We\lne~} Bible Smdy 6:3flpm: cho ir
pmctice 7;30: youth and Bible Buddies
6::.0 p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

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. Hope Baptist Church (Sollth«a)
570 Orant St., Middl eport. Sunday school
· 9:30a .m.. Worship · I I a.m. and 6' p.m.. · ·
Wednem~y Service .· 7 p.m . Pastor: Gary
e.m~

KutJarid 11'11'111 Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
10 :45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
P~sto r Jon Brocken . East Main St ..
Sundny Sch . l):JO am. Wnr.;hip JO:JO am

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Fl~t Southern Baptist
41872 Pnmeroy Pike. Sunday SchOol·
9:.10 tt:m.. Worship · 9:45am &amp; 7:00 P·'!l· ·
· Wcdni:sday Service~· 7:00p.m.

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Flnt RaptM .Cbbrc~
f'astqr: Di ll y Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
MiJ dleport. Sunday Schoo l - 9:1.5 a.m .,
Wor~hi p . 10 : 15 a.m., 7:00 p.m ..
Wedne.~day Service· 7:00p.m.

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· 18"

Slw

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Rac:lnt First Baptist
Pas10r: Ryan Eaton , pastor . $'und11.y
School ·9:30a.m.. Wonhip · 10:40 a.m.,
6:1111 p.m., Wedne~&gt;day Services • 7:00
p.m
Silver Run Baptist
Pll5tur: John Swan~un. Sunday School ·
. IO,_tfn ., ~ \Yfl.l'$hip - lla .m. , 7:00 p..m .
,Wedn esdtly Services-7:00p .m.
ML Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
1) :45, a.m.. E\'ening - 6 :30 p .m.,
W~nesday Services · 6:30J).m. ,

Bethlehem Baplhl Churth
. Great Bend. Route 124. Racine, OH .
Pastor: , Sunday School"· 9:30 a.m .,
Stmd11 y Woo:hip- 10:30 a.m .•; Wednesday
Bible Smdy - 7:00p.m .

w/La•r lulde
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Old Bethel Fm Will Baptk,t Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middlepon . Sunday
Setvicc · 10 a.m .. 6:00 P.m., Tuesday
Strvices -O:(XJ
Hllls~e Bap~t

"'

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Vidocy Baptbtlndependmt
.S2~ N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keese e. Worship • JOa .m.. 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Sci"\' ices .' 7 p.m.

Holidav Cookbook
Get aFREE bearing test between
now and Christmas · get a·
FREE Holiday cookbook.

~

Faith Baptht Church
R~ilroad

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St., Ma5on. Surlduy School - 10
a.m .. Worship · I I a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'kes · 7 p.m.
Jl'omt Run Bapllsl· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday SchOOl · 10
a.m., Worship · II :30 a.m.

Middleport Church of Chrki
5th and Main. Pas10r: AI Hanson.
· Childrtns Dir~tor; ShDron Sayre, Teen
Dirttlor: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .• Wonhlp· '8:15, 10:30 a.m. 1
p.m .. Wedn~sday Strvice~- 7 p.rri.

..

Keno Churtb of Christ

Worship ~ 9 ~ 30 a.m., Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. Istand
.3rd Sunday
Bearwallow Ridp Church or Christ
Pastpr:Bruce Terry. Su.nday _School -9:30

•.m.
Worst!lp : • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.nl ,
Wcdnesd'-y Services· 6:30p.m.

zton Chtirda of Christ
Pomtro}', Harrison vi lle Rd. (Rt.l43) .
Pa5tor: Roger Watson, Sunday Sehoul 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 .a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wedne!lday Servic~ · 7 p.m.
. Tuppcn Plain Church of C,hrlsl
lnsuumenull . Wor!ihip Service • 9 a.m.,
Communion- 10 a.m .. Sunday School ·
IO:!S a.m.• Youth· ~i:JO pm Sund11y, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Brlldbwy Ch.rch .or Chrill
Mini5ter; Tom Runyon. 395!i8 Bradbury
Road, Middle:pnn, Sunday School . 9:30
a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
RullaDd Chun:h or Chrl~t
Sunday School • 9:30a .m .. Worship and
Communion • 10 :30 a.m.. David
Wiseman. Mini ster

Bradford Church or Christ
· Comer-of St, &amp;t. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School -' 9:JO a.m.
Worship - 8:00 ·a .m.. 10:30 a.m., 1:00
p.JIJ .. Wednesda~ Sc:rvices · 7:00 p.in.
Hickory HIIIJ Churc:h or Christ
Tuppers PlainS, Pastor Mike ~oore, Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sunday : worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bihle
class 7 pm Wed.

Rmlsvlllr Churdlol Christ
Pastnr! Philip Smnn, Sunday Scllool: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Sel"\'ict: 10:30 a.m.,&lt;Bib!e
StULiy. Weililesday. 6;30 p.m.

44t-wn or (800) 434-4194

R•dud Chun:b of God

Paswr: Ron Healh. Sunday Worship · 10
~ . m .. 6
p.m.. Wednesda~ Services - 7
p.m.

Syncuse 1-lnt Ca..r-dl of God
Apple- and Second Sll., Plstor: Rev. David
Russell , Sund.ly School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evenin&amp; Servicn· 6:30 p .m ..
Wtdnesday Services · 0:30 p.rn. ·
Church of God ol' Prophecy
OJ. White Rd . ~ff St. Rt 160, Paltor: PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School • 10 a.m..
WOrship - II a.m.. Wednesday Services · 7
p.m. -

Sund!ty school 9:30a.m .. Sunday wor.;hip
• 10:30 a.m.
Tbe Chun-h or Christ or Pomeroy
lntenect ion 7, and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Siudy ·
9:30 a.m. , Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.rn .. Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptbl
Founh &amp;: Main St ., Mlddlepon , Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Michael L Thompson, Jr.

Christian Union

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Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .• Worship •
10:45 a.m .. Sunda~ Eveni!lg · 6;00 p.m ..
Pasmr: Don Walker
·

.

Hartford Cb~~rth of Christ In
.'Ciuittlan Union
Hanrord. W.Va .. Pastor: Mike Puckett,
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.• Wo~hip ·
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m., WednesdayServices· 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Morllth Churth otGod
Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Pastor:
I

Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.. Wor ~ h ip ·
I 0:30a.m.
letdsvllt
Worship · 9;30 a.m., Sund11y School •
10:30 a.m .. First Sundlly of Month - 7:00

Trlnlty Cb~~rt.

Second &amp; L)'Jin . Pomeroy, PMtor:
Worship J0:2!i a.m.,

Episcopal
G""' Ept.ropol Churdi
326 E. Main St ., Pomeroy,
Holy
Eucharist 11 :30 a.m. Sunday &amp; 5:30pm
Wtd. Rev. Leslie Aemmins

Community Cbun:b
Pastor: Steve Tomek, MaiD SU'eet,
Rutland, Sunday Woohlp-10:00 am.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m,
Danville HoUneM Cllu"n:b
31M7 State Route 325 , Langsvlle. Pastor:
Brian Bailey, Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m..
Wedne ~U.1 y prayer service - 7 p.m .

Cahory Pllpim Chaprl
Hllfrisonvillc Ro-'. PastOr. Charles
McKenzie. Sunday School 9:30 a.rn.,
. w0r!&lt;hip . 11 a.m ,, 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service · 7:00 p.rri.
R~ 01 Shama HollntM Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland , Pastpr: Rev.
Dewey King,' SuOOay school· 9;30 a.m.,
Sunday worship ·7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pine Grove Blblt HoH.eu Cburcb
112 mile off Rt . 325. PliStor. Rev . O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

To"'"

CtolniCI ....
Asbury (Syl'lll:usc), Pwor: Bob Robin~')~, ,
Sunday School . 9:45 1.m.• Worship - II
a.m., wednesday Sen'icet. 7;30 p.m.

Fomt.RDII

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

United Methodist
Gnolwn Ualtrd Melhodlol
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
B«htfl Ualkd Mttbodftt

New Haven,

Ri c lm~

Nease, Pastor•

Sunday worship 9:30 a.!l'. Tues. 6:30

MI. Ollre United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilke5ville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .• 1 p.m .. Thursday
Sel'\'ices - 7 p.m.
Mtlp Cooptraltvt Parilh
Nonh~ast Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chella'
Pastor: ,Jim Corbitt. Worship - 9 a.m..
Sunda~ School • 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services • 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null, Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· !0:30a.m.

Calv1ry Bible Chun::h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. P:Nor· Re\
Blackwood. Sunday School · 9JIJ a.m..
Worship 10 :30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wcdnnday Service · 7:30pm.

Amallna Gratt Community Chu~h

a..th (Mid&lt;ltrpon)

Pa:stor: Wayne Dunlap, Slate Rt. ~81,
Tuppen Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:~ pm., Wed. Bible Slu.dy 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School·
9:30a.m .. Worship · II :00 a.m.

Mhwrs"Uie
Pastor: }lob Robinson, Sunday School • 9
a.m .. Worship· 10 a.m .

Stlvenvtlle Communit)' Chun'h
Sunday School 10:00 am . Suud&lt;~) W1•r~bip
11:01) 11m. Wednesday 7;{)() pm Pa~10r:
Bryan &amp;. Mi ssy Dailey

OuU Christian Fel~"sblp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Meiss Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor; Chris Scewan
10:00 am· Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship,Chi.lq,ren 's min istry

PuriChoprl
Sunday School· 9 a.m., Worship· 10 a.m.

.........,

New Bqtnnlnp Cbarcb

RtJokiD&amp; Urt Church
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. P1rstor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emr-ritus law~nce
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 11m
Wedoesd.ay Services· 1 p.m.

Commwdty or Chrkt
Ponland-Racint Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffit!,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
.10:30 a.m .. Wedne!iday Services · 7:00
p.m.
· Bt:tbtl WonbJp Center ·
39782 Sr. Rt. 7, 2 miles south of Tuppen
Plains. OH . Non·denominltional wich
Contemporary Praise &amp; Worship. 'Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc. Pasror Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Deny Fullti. Sunday
· services: 10 'am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes. Wed &amp;: Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pm. 'fhurs morning ladies '
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wod . evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit II! online at www.bcthclwc.org.

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Worship · 9:2S
a.m .. Sunday School- 10:43 a.m.
Roc:k Sprtnp
Pa~tor: Dcwayoe Stutler, Sunday Sl.:hool ·

9:00 a.m .. · Wor!hip - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni Dunh~m

Rulloud
PastCr: John Chapman, Sutkiay School ·
9:30a.m., Wot'$hip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
-Services· 1 p.m.

Stdelq Ceatrr
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship· 9;l!i a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sundlly School. 10 11 .m ., Worship· 9 a.m.

Morntna Star
Pastor. ~n Gilmore, Sunday School · II
a.m .. Worship - Hl a.m.

Sl. Pa~l Lalhtran Churc•
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomero~.
Sun. &amp;:hool - 9:45a.m., Worship ~ I I 11..m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m .. Wof)hip · ?:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study· 7:00 p.m.
Flilb Felknrablp Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rn. Franklin Dickr-rt~, Suvrce:
Friday. 7 p.m

Cbun:b
2480 Second St,. Syracust , OH
SUn. School 10 a:m, S1,1ndy nigbt6:30 pm
Pl!itor: Joe Gwinn
A Nrw llqinaloa
(FuU GosptJ Chufth) HIIT'isonville.
Pastors: Bob IUid Kay Marshall ,
Sunday Sel'\'i(.:e, 2 p.m.

Flatwoech

Laurtl Clltr Fftt Metbod.lst Chunh
Pastor: Glen McClung, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 11 .m, and 6
p.m ..Wednesday Sen·lct · 7:00p.m.

Oar Savlour..Lullw:,... Church
Walnut and .Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell, Sunday
Schooi - IO:OOa.m., Worship - lla.m.

Fl..lnitw INblc Ch~rc:h
~tan , W.Va . RL I. ~m~tnr: Rriun M~)

Other Churches·

Pastor: Dewayrw! Stuttler, Su_nday School ·
10 a.m., WOJShip · II a.m.

Hysell Run Communit~ Churdl
. Pastor: Rev. l...arry Lemley: Sunday School
• 9:30a .m.. Worship · l0:4!i a.m., 1 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study IUld Youth · 7 p.m .

Lutheran

WIUta'l Cltlptl Wesleyan
Coolville Road , Pastor: Re v. C'harlci
Martindale, Sunday School · '9:.lQ a.m ..
Wonhip · !0:30a.m.. W~dn Nl.ty Scn.·ice
• 7 p.m.

S)'I'KUX Commanlt)'

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp;. Buhan Rds.. Racine , Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School ·
9:4S a.m., Worship· 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed . 7:30p.m.

SL John Luthtran Churcll
Pin~ Grove, Worship • 9:00 a.tb:, Sunday
School- JO:OO a.m. Pllli!or:

Pulor: Rev. Cunis Randolph. Sund•y
School -9:30a.m .• Worlhip • 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday eveniftg fi pm
........ Ch-olthrNPistor: George Stadler, Sunday SdlOOI •
9:30 a.m .. Worship .· 10:10 a.m., 6:30
p.m., W.lday Se...-ices· 7 p.m.

PWu St. Pa.t
Patlor: Jim Corbitt, Sunday Stbool - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 am., Tue§day Services
. 7:30p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday SchOOl - 10
a.m., Worship . 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services - 10 a:m.

The Chlll'tb of Jcaus
Chrisl of Latttr-D.y Slllnll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20·11 a.m .. Relief
Socie!y/Priesthood II :OS-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Sei'vic~ 9- 10 :15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs .· 1 p.m.

Bald Knob , on Co. Rd J l . Pastor: Rev.
ROJtr Willford. Sunda~ So.'hool · Y:JV
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

0..0...&lt;:-.ottbe-

Wt:!!leyan Bible HollnfM Chu.rda
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor: Doug
Co-1.. Sunday School • 10 a.m. Worship ·
10:4S · pm., Sunday E.ve. 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesds.y Service-7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Pomnoy Clllartb or 1M' N....-.nt
Pulor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9JO a.m., Worship - 10 :30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wcdncwiay Services - 7 p.m.

p.m . ~ice

Congregational

praje_r and Bib~ Study.

.

CENTER
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis

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Pomeroy Westside Church of Chrilt
· 33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School . II a.m.. Wonhip • 10a .n1 .. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Sel"o'ices - 7 p.m.

Kingsbury Road . Pa~tor : Rohe n \ 'tl l"-'t,
Su nday · School · 9·.\0 am. \\o1\hip
Sef\·ice 10:30 a.m . E\eninf ~rv1ce 6
p.m.

p.m.

Dt1ter Chun:h ol Christ

~ADVANCED HEARING

24 MO.NTHS
.
NO ·INTEREST

Chun:h
St. Rl. 143 JUSt off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev
J 11me~ R. Acree, Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service. Worship · 10:30 11 .m.. 6 p.m. ,
Wednnday Sef'olicts -7_p.m.

212 .W. Main St., Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Semce~ ... p.m.

Evenin[l: - 6 p.m., Wednesday Serv~s • 7

Holiness

Pomeroy Cburth or Chrilllt
Chnhlrc Baptlsl Chun:h

••
•

c•ardt or Chrl!lt

Conl~ct

f'o!&gt;tOC

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;.............~ ....WOR.SJDP (;(JjJ"'JHIS WEfi"", ......,...,..,

CUfton fibtraacle CbuKh
Clifton, W.Vi.., Sunday School · I\I ~ . rn ..
Worship· 7 p.m ., Wednesda y Sc!'\'I(C • 7
p.m.
The Ark Chu~h
3773 Georges Creek Road. G:.l\ i po1 li~. 011
Pastor: Jamie Wire'T'3" · SUnday SL•ni.;~·~ ·
10:30 11 .m. WcUnesday- 7 p.m. Thursdu}
Pr~'yer &amp;. Pmi.-.e ·at 6 pm. Clusse~ fnr ull
ages every Sunday ~ Wednt~uy .
www.thearkchurch.net
Full Gospel Churt'h
of1be Living Savior
Rl.338 , Antiquity, Pastnr: Je ~).(&gt; Mnrris.
Services: Sarurday 2;00 p.m.

Ash Stred Churtll
l98 Ash St., Middleport-Pastors Mark
Morrow &amp;. Rodney Walker Sunday
S•hool - 9:30 a.m., Morning Worship ·
10:30 a.m.&amp;. 7:00pm. WtdnCMtay Service
-7:00p.m .. Youth Service· 7:00 Ji.m .
Appt Life Center
''Full-Gospel Chu~ch". Pastors JOhn &amp;
Pany Wade , 603 Second Ave. Mason , 773~017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 H.m ..
Wedriesda y 7 pm

Salem Communll)' Chun·h
Back of West Columbia. W.V1l.r1m Ltc~ing
Roud. Pastor: Charles Roush n 04l 075 228R, Sunday School 9:30 um . t.;unJ:1y
e\'tning service 7:00 pm . Htbl ~· Sw!.l y
Wednesday sen·jce 7:'uo pm
H;obAon Christian FrJiow~hip '- 'hurch
Pastor: Herschel White. Sun,J:,_I \.:holVt·
10 am, Sunday Church .er,·iw - tt:.~O pm
Wednesday 1 pm

Abundant Grate R.F.I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport, Putor Teresa
Davis, Sunday service, 10 a.m .;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Ratoradon Christian Fcllow~hip
r,136S Hoope r R1&gt;ad. Ath ~ n '. l' '"''&gt;r
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Wrmhr p \tl (~I am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Churtb
Long Bonom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School · 9:30a.m. Worship · 9:~ a.m.
and 1 p.m., Wednesday . 7 p.nl., Friday •
fellowship scrviCt: 7 p.m.

l:ut Le1111
Pas10r: Bill Marshall Sunday School ·
98.m ., ·worship - 10 a.m.. 1st Sunday
every month evening service 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday. 7 p.m.

Ho\llt or Healing Mlni •trir~
St. Rt: 114 Lanwwlllc, 011
Full Gospel, CJ Pastors Rohe M &amp; R,lb~rta
Mu~ser•. :Sund'ay Scho&lt;ll Y..1rJ ~111. .·
Worship 10:3.0 am · ?:00 pn1: Wed .
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesus 1\llnl~tries
Meeling 333 Mechanic Strel't. [' 0 nii!TO)'.
OH . Pastor Eddie Baer. Ser' i~,· r cv(:ry
· Stmday td:OO a.m.

Harrison riDe Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., WedneJ4ay · 1 p.m .

Radne
Middlepnrt Community Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evening-7:30pm . •Wednesday ~rvice ·
·7:30p.m.

Pastor: Ke:rry Wood, Sunday School • 10
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm: Th\Jt Bible Study 7 pm

Coohlllr Ualtrd M..-. Parish
Pastor; Helen Kline, Coolville Church,
Main&amp;: Fifth Sr., Sun. School- 10 a.m.,
. Wotship · 9a.m., Tues. Sen·ices -7 p.m.

Pentecostal
l'tolealslal As.-wmbl,\
Pastor: St. Rt. 124. Racin&gt;! , To1rnad•l Rd .
Sunday S,chool • 10 a.m-. Ew_ni nJ! · 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services " 7 pm

Faith Vallty Tobtrrildo Cirv&lt;lr
Bailey Run Road. Putor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service'- 7 p.m.

Bethel Churclt
Township·Rd ., 46RC, Sunday 'School- 9
a.m, Worship • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Pmibyltrlan Church
Pastor: Robtn Manh!ln . Wor•hi]l · IJ:OO
a,m. Sunday

S)TitUR MIMIU.

141J Bridgeman St., .SyraCu!.e, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. Evening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 1 p.m.

Hoc&gt;l-Cbon:h
·Kathryn Wiley, Sunday School • 9:30
un ., Worship· 10 : ~ a.m .. Pllstur PhiUip

Middleport Prrsbyterian
Pastot: James Snyder. Sunday S.:hool 10
a.m .. wonhip service II am.

H•ul Community Churtb
Off Rt. 124, Pattor: Edsel Hart, Sunday
sChool- 9:30-a.m .. Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .•
7:30p.m.

Bell
Torch Cbun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .•
WoRhip - 10!~ a.m.

Severith"Day Adventist
Se\'tnlh-Day Adnntist
Mulberry Hh . Rd ., Pomeruy. Saturday
Service~ : S~tbblllh S1 ~wol · :! p.m ..
Worship - 3 p.m.

Dyavlilr Cemmwtlly Cbor&lt;b
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. , Wor.ship ·
10 ~ 30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Point lor.t Cb•rd. or tile NazartM
Route 689, Albany, Rev. Lloyd Grimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am; worhslp
· sci'\' ice II am. evcnin[l: !iCJVi~;:e 7 pm. Wed. •
prayei meeting 7 pm
MkkUeport Cburcb ellbt NUU"Cnt
Pastor: Leomm:l Powell, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.,Worsl\ip - 10!30 a.m .• 6:~ p.m.,
Wedne!day Servic-es· 7 p.m.,

Rrrd"lllr Frlknnhlp
Church of !he Nazam~e, Puror: Russell"
.Cil'SOII. , Sunday .School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship. 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services·- 7 p.m.
Syrac:uJt Oarcb ol the Nll.lftnt
Pastor Mike Adkius, Sunday ~boo! · 9:30
a.m. , Worship · 10:~ a.m .• 6 p.m..

United Brethren

Monr Chaprl Ch~h

Mt.llermon l lnlted 81'tthrm
In Christ Church
Te:cas Community 36411 Wid:hmn Rd ,
Pastor: Peter Mllftinda\e, Sunda) S'hool9:30 a.m .. Woi"ship - IOJO u.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wedne~day Sr-rvices - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group mtttin~ 2nd &amp;: 4th Sunday.~
7p.m ,
Eden United Brethnn ln. Christ
Srate Route 124, bttween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport, Sunday School · 10 a.m..
Sunday Worship · 11 ;00 a.m. Wednesday

Sunday school • lO a.m .• Wonhip · II
a.m .. Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Faith Gooprl Chur-dt
Long Bottom. Suoday School· 9:30a.m ..
Worship - 10:45 n.m _. , 7!30 p,m.,
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Ftdl Goopei1Jcbu.3304S Hiland Road. Pomeroy, Pastor. Roy
Hunter, Sunday School· tO a.m., Evening
7:30p.m .. Tuesday 4 Thurs .- 7:30p.m.

Soulb lktbtl Commualty Cburth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood,
Sunday School · 9 a.m .. Worship Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday
Clll'ltloa lnttrdenomiDitlonal Church

.

No¥. 28 •Dec. 29 2008

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Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
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Acts 24:
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�•

AITH •

The Daily Sentinel

.PageA8

VALUEs·

Friday, November 28,2008

..

Samaria nearl y two thousand
yean, ago. She learned that
k sus was crucified in her
place. sh(lwing an uncondi1ional love that even death
Pastor
cannot suffocate or defeat.
Thorn
..1:1mi" bowed her head
Mollohan tight then, admitting that she
had sinned and St.&gt;eking' His
forgiveness. She gave Him her
hem1 :md found thahhe was
both beautiful m1d precious 'to
sOUI thirsts for God. tl&gt;r the
living dod ... Why a re ynu Him . With this new s~1rt she
racing from relationship to
downcast. 0 my soul'! Wh y quit
relationship
and event ually
so disturhed witl:in me'' Put
found
a
man
who also
your hope in God . f(lr I will
belongect
to
the
Lord
and with
yet praise Htm . my Savior
and my God'' (Psalm42: l.:i l. whom she truly belonged .
Today. if our eyes are on
Throughout the age, . 111cn
anything
Other than God, darkand wo men have J iscovc rc;~d
that there is hope in onl y ness will infect our sight caus.Jesus Christ. It has becnm,• ing us to either despair or to be
crystal clear that even in our s ~ noned into the shot1-lived
changing world that we des- del usion that we can find happerately necu hope . "Rein" piness :md wholesomeness in
was sure that he could find ourselves or in some soil of
ful fillmetit in his wotL anu · substitute tor God. But the
always gunned tor bi ~,:12er ami gloom of humanity's hopelessbetter jobs. But then he lost """ is shattered by .the pierchi s job through a l" yo ll. ing light of God's presence.
During this time of k t'l i n ~ The rays of His love still bring
like a failure ami in th i., ,ca· new lite to heartS and souls
son of worry for l1 is litmily\ wit hered by lite's unfulfilled
needs. a neighbor tl&gt;ld hmt promises. scorching hatreds.
that God could gi ve: lti m hope . and p:ud1ing Godlessness.
·'Do not put your trust in
and proof of it was thnt Jesus
princes,
.in mortal men, who
died for his sin . ·'.Ron" p{;!l·ed
his faith in Jesus and found n umot saw. When their spirit
his hopelessness· turneu into dcpm1s, they rerum to the
an irrepressible ce11ainty that 12round: on that very day their
plans come to nothing .
God was in control.
After a few mllnths or Blessed is he whose help is
ttusting .that God 's time was God ... whos.e hope is in the
best, a door was opened 1\&gt;r LORD his God, the Maker of
hiin at a new C'ompany ... Oll l ' heaven and earth, the sea, and
in which his nee,b were mel everything in them , the
and also one in which he LORD. Who remains faithful
could share with others what l(m:ver" (Psalm 146:3-6 NIV).
Remember that thi s seahe had found in Jesus Christ.
son
is a ce lebration of hope
"Tumi'' discovered that the
uncumliti o n&lt;~{
love and . .. . hope that is only found in
acceptance for which she had God's gift of His Son. This
been searching· in an endless · .,cason is all about the hope
string of rocky relationships we can find in Jesus Christ.
(Til om Mollohan and his
couldn't be lo und in a nHHl. ·
One after another. the rela· fami(l' have ministered iu
tionships resulteu in her .wmthem Ohio tile past 13
being betrayed and broken. year.1· and i.~ tlie author of
She lost all sense of personal "The Fairy Tale Parables."
wonh and had •no hope left. He is the pa.~tor of Pathway
But then she hi t a we bsite that Community Church and
talked about tilling up the may be reached for CO!II·
emptiness inside with hope ... mellls or que.~tions by ethe kiod of hope that Jest" mail at pastortlwm@path:
gave to·•t woman m· u WI."! II in waygallipo/i.~ .com).

Woman who sued can keep BE GODS license plate
JNDIANAPOLIS (AP) The Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has reversed an earlier ruling and decided that a
woman may have a personalized license plate carrying
the words "BE GODS "
The reversal came after Liz
Ferris sued the BMV in federal court for refusing .to
issue a new plate carrying the
same·words she had on other
plates for se.veral years.

Ferris contended in her law- tiona lity of the state's "In
suit that the BMV was di s- God We Trust" license plate.
crimtmling against her l(u·
Ferri s had the same .plate
expressing her bel iefs.
on her car for eight or nine
The agency told Ferris years hut fo rgot to renew it
that it prohibit s va nit y on time for 2008 . When she
plates referrin g to race, rcli · suhmi!tcd a new personalgion. deity. cthn icity. gc n· ized plate application , the
der, sexual orientation or BMY den ied her request
political party or atfi I itttio n.' due to a recent policy
Her suit was fi led' the " 11nc dwnge banning any referday the Indiana Cuurt of ences to religion or a deity
Appeal s upheld tlie cnnst itu- on new personalized plates.

As you digested yesterday's turkey and all the rest.
did you reflect on reasons to
be thankful? After all.
thanks-giving is what this
whole holiday is suppOsed to
be .about!! (No , it's not just
the day . before the biggest
shopping day of the year).
I have much' to be thankfu I
for this Thanksgiving. I
returned from my mission
trip to Haiti safely; and as a
result of that trip. I am more
aware of what we American s
so often take for granted.
I am thankful that I can
tum on the water in my bathroom, kitchen , and outdoor
spigot at any tittle and drink
the. water safely. I am thank- .
ful that I have (mostly) uninterrupted electrical service
capable of turning on· all the
lights, electronics, and power
tools and appliances in my
house with no problem. I am
thankful.that our sewage system safely and consistently
takes away waste products
and keeps our . homes and
businesses clean and pleasant-smelling. I am thankful
that I can go to a store and
purchase just abonr anything
I £an imagine - as long as I
have the money to pay for it.
In Haiti, one cannot assume
·any of those things to be true .
The water is not safe to drink .
Electrical service is inconsistent and low-powered (I've
never seen so many 5-watt
tluorescent mini-bulbs in my .
life) . Sewers are only in the
cities , and ·only panially
effective. The market in Les
Cayes (where l stayed) was
well stocked with fresh fruit,
rice and beans - but not
· much else. Our efforts to
make certain repairs and build
cet1ain things at the school
and orphanage were often
stymied by missing equipment and supplies.
Haiti is a beautiful country
filled with many beautiful
. people, but the country is at
least 80 years behind the U.S.
in so many ways - especially ones related to basic infrastructure. But I've never seen
a more resourceful people.
How they can do so much
with so little is simply amazing! And the hospitality our
team received was second to
none. A simple "Bon jou 1"
would be met with mercurial
smiles and waves.
I am also thankful for children. The kids at the school
and orphanage were incredi. ble - and they thought we
"blanca's" were pretty amazing. too. I sat on a bench at
the orphanage as one child
after another came up to me
and tried to put their fingers
around my wrist, upper arm,
and ankle. They couldn't do

rich and poor - the ditfiir·
ences mattered much less rf\;in
the commonality we fo~d
worshiping the one Lord $ d
Savior,
Jesus Christ.
.
Pastor
I pray that you, too, h&lt;\!e
Kerry
many reasons to be· thanknrl
Wood ·
- perhaps some less obYt- - - - . ous, but nevet1heless im~·truJt. In these uncet1ain e&lt;lo. nomic times ,. we can still
remember to thank God lor
it - my "big bones·· were all that we do have, for all !liar
too big. Then they had me we can do with what we ha~ .
put my lingers around their and how we can continue :Jo
'wrists. mms·. and ankles as Creole murmurs of aston- · improve ourselves and others
ishment .were expressed by living in Jesus' name. As
between them . My hair also you hang the Christmas dec(l;
fascinated them. Straight, rations , don't let go .JJf
silky hair was mesmerizing . · Thanksgiving too quickly. ;;n
And J· have enough arm hair &lt;~titude of gratitude will ma:lle
that thev simply wanted to your Christmas spirit tliat
stroke it like petting a cat. I much better during the nat
· ·
could have basked in · the 'four weeks!
"Do
not
be
anxious
about
attention for hours!
I' m thankful for ' my own anything. but in everything.
family. My wife came to the by prayer and petition, with
Detroit Metro airpot1 at mid· thanksgiving. present yottr
night to help retrieve our requests to God. And the
team . By the time we . peace of God , which . tra'nreached home, it was after scends all understandin·g,
I :30 a.m . - but my daugh- will guard your hearts and
ter stayed up to give ine a yout minds in Christ Jesus." ·
tremendous bear hug as soon (Philippians 4:6-7 NIV)
(Kerry Wood is now assoas I walked through the door.
Finally, I am eternally grate- ciaJe pastor at Grace Unit,d
Church in
ful to God . The circumstJJces Methodist
that allowed me to go on this Perrysburg, Ohio ~r servtrip had to have been Go9-led. ing Racine United Methodist
Touches of the divine sur- . Church for three years. He
rounded me throughout my -ca11 lie reached through his
experience, and I am forever website: /ltrp:llpursueholichanged . What an amazing ness.lilogspot.com. Note:
God to create us with such there will he no column next
diversity and unity. American week because Pastor Kerry
and Haitian , black and. white . will be out of the country). ·

'•.·

'
'

Cheerleading &amp;.:
Basketball
..

Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center
(Fifth at Main)

740-992-2914 -daytime
740-992-5034 ~-evening

Registration dates:
Saturday- Nov. 29th &amp; Dec.
6th
.8:30 am - 4:30 pm

.•

..

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

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

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We lived in a typical small town just live miles down The
from my maternal grandfather's home . Kids
BeautifuiOhio
..
. ,, -· -~
could find plenty to occupy their time in that ideal hometown venue of Middleport, Ohio. during that decade of
mid-thirties to mid-forttes. But I longed to be done with
Middlepon and school ·and 'studies so that l could visit
·
grandpa's for weekends and whole summers.
He , along with a beloved aunt and uncle , was always on
hand to welcome me, my twin sister, and younger sister. Oh.
how one could be loved and spoiled and taught time-honored
values at that home! In contrast to our Middleport home, it
boasted about six or seven acres Of land on the River.
UpOn arising at Gnmdpa's house, one might see a beauti·
ful tug boat or sternwheeler passing the house or "spot"
someone in a "john" boat trying a hand at fi ohing . The River
had many faces: It might be clear and calm, angry and rough .
or seeming to resemble a huge boiling cauldron on a foggy
morning - all depending upon the weather and season .
At my parents' home , Daddy took pride in his garden; but.
of necessity, it had to be small and the extent of the bucolic
life. But Grandpa's place was a dilferent matter. While it
wasri 't a (arm, I remember the glorious days of rural life .
Yes , I remember letting the chickens escape from the coop
high on the hill for a bit of fresh pick ins' , with the cenainty
of their retuming to roost and my going back to prop the
door shut. On one particular day, l got quite a surprise after
reaching tor eggs under a mother-to-be hen only to touch a
fat, coiled black snake. You may be sure a little girl can
come out of a chicken coop hooping and hollering a-plenty!
I remember, too, rising very early, dressing in my -uncle's
slightly large trousers and old blue work shirt , and donl_li~g
galoshes. I was ready to go with Grandpa to a .field wet w1th
dew where we would pick the ras~berries he liad cultivated
•· ,, POMEROY - A ce)ebraThe · United Brethren and tended. Grandpa was armed wtth a couple of very sharp
··.'!ion of the merger of the for: ·
denomination joined with sickles that he had honed on a stone moistened with spittle. I
· ·mer Enterprise and Pomeroy
The Evangelical denomina- carried the pails, and grandpa forged our path - hoping not to
•United Methodist church
tion in 1946 and Entetprise startle any copperheads or rattlers. Well , you may be sure the
.;ongregations into the New
became an EUB Church. In dessert at supper time that evening was well worth our effot1!
· Beginnings United Methodist
1968, a union with the
Today, I am grateful for the natural science and gardenChurch will be held Sunday.
Methodist denomination ing lessons of those long-ago, carefree days. Gardening is
· The two congregations
and the Evangelical United a hobby I enjoy to this day. Now, my uncle was a college1will worship in the former
Brethren resulted in the educated.~cientific gardener who was detem1ined to out-do
:: Pomeroy church building
church name becoming all his neighbors by growing the "biggest and best" of the
: I 12 E. Second St.
Enterprise
United veggies he ·rlanted.
: Worship begins at 9:25
Methodist Church . Things · l;low wei I remember picking up individual turnip seeds
. went well and the church and planting .each one carefully in its own fertilized area.
.. a.m. and will ·include
:preaching by the District
continued in ministry.
Needless to say, those 1\lmips were the "Pride of Minersville."
:; Superintendent
Dennis
On Monday, June 13, Yes, I remember great areas of rhubarb, long rows of
2005, it was ·noticed that the · "Country Gentleman" sweet com , the ever-perennial thick
: Mohle~. singing by the new
front doors were standing asparagus stalks, glass-covered lettuce beds, pole beans, and
~ choir, a presentation by the
wide open with no services succulent tomatoes. (I sprayed the pale beans regularly.)
: youth of the' church, and the
District Superintendent
going on and no one around.
Dennis Mohler
·reading of histories fro111
Grandpa's sturdy, attractive frame house, built in 1875,
Investigation revealed that a was flanked by huge sycamores , and the shady, velvet lawn
·both ofthc former churches .
.
The celebration is being Nyesvtlle (now known as the
beam .above the ceiling of was a delightful place to go for some "air conditioning." The
:called "A Day of New Kerr's Run area~. ~ter, the .
the sanctuary had broken trivet hedge, bordering the yard, was often trimmed by yours
: Beginnings."
pasto.r of the ctrcmt, Rer
and had fallen into the body truly and always with a hand-powered cutter. As I was toil: The completion of the . Ousun, held ser_v1ces m
of the church, bringing the ing at the hedge work one day, a very long, ribbon-bedecked
• merger occurred on Sept. 7 Pomeroy. at a cabmet shop
ceiling with it. No one pigtail fell into the blades and was immediately shortened to
·and became effective on and then m a copper shop. .
knows exactly when this the tune of about six inches. (Maybe that was planned!).
iNov. 1.
·
, . In the early I~40s ,a frame ,
occunred. The minister and
Yes, it is amazing now-a-days to think that such a gorgeous
: , "It has been· a joyqus ; churcli was bUt It behind. a
peo)lle of the congregation lawn, inters{'Crsed with apple and plum trees, lilacs and roses,
·adventure exploring · the . fEICtory on upper East Mwn
thariked God that it had not were all mamtained wilh not one power tool. Sickles, sythes,
:merger possibility ovet the · Street. It ~as used as a
1\appened on the day before · push mowers and clippers did a professional job when com: preceding · 12 months and chl.!rch u.nlll 1856 . when
when worshipers were bined with the right amount of elbow grease. (I still cut my
· coming to nearly a unani- 'Umon Chapel was built. The
own lawn today - but hand tools are only a memory.)
·
inside sitting in the pews ..
: mous vote from both church· church membership grewWhat a set of values was given to me in those years of the
After this, the Enterpnse
: es to enter into this union," and it becal!le ,a station
Church met for awhile in the visits to my grandfather's home. That lovely home is still
·said Pastor Brian Dunham.
rather than a ctrcu1t. In )890
auditorium at Carleton there for me to see and remember. It has been perfectly kept'
• He invites the community and '91, 'surrmer camp .
School. Then the Pomeroy and preserved by the preseni owners and "Old Man River"
, :to the "grand opening."
. meetings , were ~eld at the
Church of Christ elltended an still rolls by,
.
: Following worship, dinner Rock. Spnngs Fwrgrounds:
invitation to join them as they
Note: The former Zahl home mentioned in this story is
: wUl be served in the social - Uruon ChaJ&gt;!ll was sold m
were without a pastor and we .currently owned by Mark and Cindy Rhonemus.
· room. TUrkey and ham will . ~891 and serv1ces were .held
were .without a church build(Martha Ohlinger Vennari resides in Pomeroy.)
: be provided and .those attend- m th~ Court Hou~e .while a
ing. The Enterprise pastor,
: ing may take a side dish or beautiful new bwlding was
the Rev. Arland King, accomdessert. The dinner will ~ constructed ·on Second S~t
panied his flock to the church
on West Main Street and they
followed by music provided where it would be ~er m
QY the "Truly Saved Trio."
case of a fl~.lnApnl1892,
spent two good years of
shared ministry.
• The activities at the church continual rams . caused s01l
In August 2007, the
~ill end in time for everyone and rocks to slide off the hill
Enterprise
congregation
tb mo\'e to Main Street for behmd the church and tt had
GALLIPOLIS
moved
again,
leasing
a hand- Central
rpe Pomeroy Christmas t? be dug out. Th~ work conChristian
icapped ac.cessible building Church, 109 Garfield
~arnde which begins at .2 unued though and the new
· owned by Home Creek Ave., Gallipolis, is welp.m . The new church. w!ll church, named The S1mpson
Enterprises on Hiland Road coming its new evangeljave a float in the parade as, Method1st Ep~scopal Chutch
in Pomeroy and .remained list, DanielDavenport ll . .
~id Dunham, "to share with ~ honor of Btshop_ Matthew
there .11111il September 2~8
tjll of Meigs County the joy Stmpson, was dedicated . on
Daniel and his wife,
when they began attendmg Kendra, have come to
in our hearts of what God 1s Sept. 18, 1892.
,
church at the Pomeroy Gallipolis
doing among us." · ·
In May 1943, the Bethany
from
United Methodist Church on Edenton, N.C.
I Pomeroy Church History Methodtst Church, which
East Second Street in
· In 1838, Methodism began had been st~rted as a
lri 2002, Davenport
Pomeroy. On Nov. l, 2008, received his bachelor
in the Pomeroy area on what German-speakmg church
the two churches cOmpleted of arts in Bible, with a
hs .called the c;he~ter and was also located on
a merger and became the minor in preaching,
Circuit. The fir~! semces Second Street, . and the
New Beginnings United from Roanoke Bible
"ere held on Sunday· after- Simpson Methodist Church
Methodist
Church.
noons in a school house at umted and took the new
College,
Elizabeth
City, N.C .
Since that
time,
Daniel - has acquired
Submitted photo
substantial evangelistic Daniel Davenport II is the new
I
e11perience throughout · evangelist at the Central
The public is invited to attend a North Carolina and in Christian Church in 'Gallipolis.
faith. The ev.ent is expected to last
He is seen here with 'his wife
free soup lunch .on the second and MissourL
about 15 minutes . .
Daniel's
wife,
Kendra,
Kendra.
fourth Saturdays of the month at the
Chiropractic · G:enter is a licensed cosmetolo·
Saturday~ . , Gallipolis
parking lot at 990 Second Ave., !list and will soon be working in the Gal~ipolis area.. .
; GALLIPOLIS - FellpwshiP,; of
sponsored by the· Rio ~hristian . ,The congregation ofthe 'Central Chnsttan Churchmv1tes
~-.
Christian ·Athletes ·.~ill: sponi\Ot ;. B0r
you to hear this young, vibrant evangelist speak tfte word
Church.
"
·'', ',;•
$ilent - Be H~ard th!s .Sunday at :1
The lunch is held at noon. For · while 'maintaining Scriptural doctrine and restoring New
Homeless?
· ~.m. in the Galhpoljs;Clty Park,
. · "GA.LLIPOLIS - information,
contact the church at Testament Christianity.
• Believers are encouraged to stand . Unemployed? Have a job but finding
To reach the church and Daniel, call (740) 446-0062 .
(740) 245--9873.
,
tol!eth&lt;er and silently proclaim their it hard to feed -your family? u
t l ·;

1
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j

New evangelist joins
Central Christian Church

Soup-er
planned

Middleport, OH

7 40-992-6128

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 4S769·0683
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BY MARTHA OHLINGER VENNARt

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

t

2008

I

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

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Friday, November 28,

Summers at Grandpas
house in Minersville .

'Be 'Silent, Be Heard'
.. event Sunday

'If yt Qhide in Me, ~nd My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
Johlll5:7

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FAITH. FAMILY

·:The Daily Sentinel

Thanksgiving

Many reasons
The day after Thanksgiving
Day for some means a return
to work, for others , it's a day
for visiting family or resting
at home, for lots of folks it"s a
crazy day for shopping . But
whatever is required of you
this day, may it be spent well.
Give thanks to God. for whatever He's given you and prepare to celebrate anew the
amazing and wonderful hope
we have in our Savior!
Hopefully your day yesterday was spent in a genuine
. spirit of thanksgiving . The
benefits for you are countless
in spite of the world's tendency to consider. ourselve'
somehow deprived (because
there is·always soineone who
has something that we don't
have). The realization that
there are things in our lives
for which all of us rnay be
thankful can begin the soothing work of calming our fran tic nerves and helps to open
the door for those spiritual
blessings which those who
have trusted Jesus as Lord
and Savior ha·ve become
heirs. Those things for
instance which we may pause
to consider during the en.suing Christmas season (e.g ..
hope, peace, love, and joy)
suddenly find that "room at .
the inn" has been made by the
cleansing work of gratitude.
And the fact that there is truly
a deserving recipient of our
thanksgiving , namely God.
remind~ us that there is One.
greater than ourselves, Who
is in control of our history
even as it continues to untold
before our very eyes.
Our gratitude causes us to
recognize that He is actively
at work today in spite of our
pride and inclination for sci rJshness: at work in the world
... and at work in our indivitluallives. Remember that our
hope is not in a new presidential administration . Nor is
it in an improving economy. .
It isn't in military prowess or
in technology or even in
guaranteed medical coverage. Our hope is in God .
"As the deer pants for
streams of water, so my soul
pants for You, 0 Godl My

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AITH •

The Daily Sentinel

.PageA8

VALUEs·

Friday, November 28,2008

..

Samaria nearl y two thousand
yean, ago. She learned that
k sus was crucified in her
place. sh(lwing an uncondi1ional love that even death
Pastor
cannot suffocate or defeat.
Thorn
..1:1mi" bowed her head
Mollohan tight then, admitting that she
had sinned and St.&gt;eking' His
forgiveness. She gave Him her
hem1 :md found thahhe was
both beautiful m1d precious 'to
sOUI thirsts for God. tl&gt;r the
living dod ... Why a re ynu Him . With this new s~1rt she
racing from relationship to
downcast. 0 my soul'! Wh y quit
relationship
and event ually
so disturhed witl:in me'' Put
found
a
man
who also
your hope in God . f(lr I will
belongect
to
the
Lord
and with
yet praise Htm . my Savior
and my God'' (Psalm42: l.:i l. whom she truly belonged .
Today. if our eyes are on
Throughout the age, . 111cn
anything
Other than God, darkand wo men have J iscovc rc;~d
that there is hope in onl y ness will infect our sight caus.Jesus Christ. It has becnm,• ing us to either despair or to be
crystal clear that even in our s ~ noned into the shot1-lived
changing world that we des- del usion that we can find happerately necu hope . "Rein" piness :md wholesomeness in
was sure that he could find ourselves or in some soil of
ful fillmetit in his wotL anu · substitute tor God. But the
always gunned tor bi ~,:12er ami gloom of humanity's hopelessbetter jobs. But then he lost """ is shattered by .the pierchi s job through a l" yo ll. ing light of God's presence.
During this time of k t'l i n ~ The rays of His love still bring
like a failure ami in th i., ,ca· new lite to heartS and souls
son of worry for l1 is litmily\ wit hered by lite's unfulfilled
needs. a neighbor tl&gt;ld hmt promises. scorching hatreds.
that God could gi ve: lti m hope . and p:ud1ing Godlessness.
·'Do not put your trust in
and proof of it was thnt Jesus
princes,
.in mortal men, who
died for his sin . ·'.Ron" p{;!l·ed
his faith in Jesus and found n umot saw. When their spirit
his hopelessness· turneu into dcpm1s, they rerum to the
an irrepressible ce11ainty that 12round: on that very day their
plans come to nothing .
God was in control.
After a few mllnths or Blessed is he whose help is
ttusting .that God 's time was God ... whos.e hope is in the
best, a door was opened 1\&gt;r LORD his God, the Maker of
hiin at a new C'ompany ... Oll l ' heaven and earth, the sea, and
in which his nee,b were mel everything in them , the
and also one in which he LORD. Who remains faithful
could share with others what l(m:ver" (Psalm 146:3-6 NIV).
Remember that thi s seahe had found in Jesus Christ.
son
is a ce lebration of hope
"Tumi'' discovered that the
uncumliti o n&lt;~{
love and . .. . hope that is only found in
acceptance for which she had God's gift of His Son. This
been searching· in an endless · .,cason is all about the hope
string of rocky relationships we can find in Jesus Christ.
(Til om Mollohan and his
couldn't be lo und in a nHHl. ·
One after another. the rela· fami(l' have ministered iu
tionships resulteu in her .wmthem Ohio tile past 13
being betrayed and broken. year.1· and i.~ tlie author of
She lost all sense of personal "The Fairy Tale Parables."
wonh and had •no hope left. He is the pa.~tor of Pathway
But then she hi t a we bsite that Community Church and
talked about tilling up the may be reached for CO!II·
emptiness inside with hope ... mellls or que.~tions by ethe kiod of hope that Jest" mail at pastortlwm@path:
gave to·•t woman m· u WI."! II in waygallipo/i.~ .com).

Woman who sued can keep BE GODS license plate
JNDIANAPOLIS (AP) The Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has reversed an earlier ruling and decided that a
woman may have a personalized license plate carrying
the words "BE GODS "
The reversal came after Liz
Ferris sued the BMV in federal court for refusing .to
issue a new plate carrying the
same·words she had on other
plates for se.veral years.

Ferris contended in her law- tiona lity of the state's "In
suit that the BMV was di s- God We Trust" license plate.
crimtmling against her l(u·
Ferri s had the same .plate
expressing her bel iefs.
on her car for eight or nine
The agency told Ferris years hut fo rgot to renew it
that it prohibit s va nit y on time for 2008 . When she
plates referrin g to race, rcli · suhmi!tcd a new personalgion. deity. cthn icity. gc n· ized plate application , the
der, sexual orientation or BMY den ied her request
political party or atfi I itttio n.' due to a recent policy
Her suit was fi led' the " 11nc dwnge banning any referday the Indiana Cuurt of ences to religion or a deity
Appeal s upheld tlie cnnst itu- on new personalized plates.

As you digested yesterday's turkey and all the rest.
did you reflect on reasons to
be thankful? After all.
thanks-giving is what this
whole holiday is suppOsed to
be .about!! (No , it's not just
the day . before the biggest
shopping day of the year).
I have much' to be thankfu I
for this Thanksgiving. I
returned from my mission
trip to Haiti safely; and as a
result of that trip. I am more
aware of what we American s
so often take for granted.
I am thankful that I can
tum on the water in my bathroom, kitchen , and outdoor
spigot at any tittle and drink
the. water safely. I am thank- .
ful that I have (mostly) uninterrupted electrical service
capable of turning on· all the
lights, electronics, and power
tools and appliances in my
house with no problem. I am
thankful.that our sewage system safely and consistently
takes away waste products
and keeps our . homes and
businesses clean and pleasant-smelling. I am thankful
that I can go to a store and
purchase just abonr anything
I £an imagine - as long as I
have the money to pay for it.
In Haiti, one cannot assume
·any of those things to be true .
The water is not safe to drink .
Electrical service is inconsistent and low-powered (I've
never seen so many 5-watt
tluorescent mini-bulbs in my .
life) . Sewers are only in the
cities , and ·only panially
effective. The market in Les
Cayes (where l stayed) was
well stocked with fresh fruit,
rice and beans - but not
· much else. Our efforts to
make certain repairs and build
cet1ain things at the school
and orphanage were often
stymied by missing equipment and supplies.
Haiti is a beautiful country
filled with many beautiful
. people, but the country is at
least 80 years behind the U.S.
in so many ways - especially ones related to basic infrastructure. But I've never seen
a more resourceful people.
How they can do so much
with so little is simply amazing! And the hospitality our
team received was second to
none. A simple "Bon jou 1"
would be met with mercurial
smiles and waves.
I am also thankful for children. The kids at the school
and orphanage were incredi. ble - and they thought we
"blanca's" were pretty amazing. too. I sat on a bench at
the orphanage as one child
after another came up to me
and tried to put their fingers
around my wrist, upper arm,
and ankle. They couldn't do

rich and poor - the ditfiir·
ences mattered much less rf\;in
the commonality we fo~d
worshiping the one Lord $ d
Savior,
Jesus Christ.
.
Pastor
I pray that you, too, h&lt;\!e
Kerry
many reasons to be· thanknrl
Wood ·
- perhaps some less obYt- - - - . ous, but nevet1heless im~·truJt. In these uncet1ain e&lt;lo. nomic times ,. we can still
remember to thank God lor
it - my "big bones·· were all that we do have, for all !liar
too big. Then they had me we can do with what we ha~ .
put my lingers around their and how we can continue :Jo
'wrists. mms·. and ankles as Creole murmurs of aston- · improve ourselves and others
ishment .were expressed by living in Jesus' name. As
between them . My hair also you hang the Christmas dec(l;
fascinated them. Straight, rations , don't let go .JJf
silky hair was mesmerizing . · Thanksgiving too quickly. ;;n
And J· have enough arm hair &lt;~titude of gratitude will ma:lle
that thev simply wanted to your Christmas spirit tliat
stroke it like petting a cat. I much better during the nat
· ·
could have basked in · the 'four weeks!
"Do
not
be
anxious
about
attention for hours!
I' m thankful for ' my own anything. but in everything.
family. My wife came to the by prayer and petition, with
Detroit Metro airpot1 at mid· thanksgiving. present yottr
night to help retrieve our requests to God. And the
team . By the time we . peace of God , which . tra'nreached home, it was after scends all understandin·g,
I :30 a.m . - but my daugh- will guard your hearts and
ter stayed up to give ine a yout minds in Christ Jesus." ·
tremendous bear hug as soon (Philippians 4:6-7 NIV)
(Kerry Wood is now assoas I walked through the door.
Finally, I am eternally grate- ciaJe pastor at Grace Unit,d
Church in
ful to God . The circumstJJces Methodist
that allowed me to go on this Perrysburg, Ohio ~r servtrip had to have been Go9-led. ing Racine United Methodist
Touches of the divine sur- . Church for three years. He
rounded me throughout my -ca11 lie reached through his
experience, and I am forever website: /ltrp:llpursueholichanged . What an amazing ness.lilogspot.com. Note:
God to create us with such there will he no column next
diversity and unity. American week because Pastor Kerry
and Haitian , black and. white . will be out of the country). ·

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Cheerleading &amp;.:
Basketball
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Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center
(Fifth at Main)

740-992-2914 -daytime
740-992-5034 ~-evening

Registration dates:
Saturday- Nov. 29th &amp; Dec.
6th
.8:30 am - 4:30 pm

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

Helping Others
Fulfill Their .Dreams
Vt11' qf llw fH&gt;.~I Ihin;1s lhai u·,· nm t/II_(r,r ou r·:•t:fr•'!i on ll dtJ i{JI (!as~~ ,:, tn think a~Pout &lt;Ill
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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they.
shall see God.
. Matthew 5:8

kfcpi"9 tt.S in tt pihtt fnmwt{ mrru[, au!l it ulS4; lu,t.~ lhr /;I'H{~fit nf ..
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507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

l'ii:'.

(740) 992-3279

~

Tot FreeI 1-877-583-2433.

We lived in a typical small town just live miles down The
from my maternal grandfather's home . Kids
BeautifuiOhio
..
. ,, -· -~
could find plenty to occupy their time in that ideal hometown venue of Middleport, Ohio. during that decade of
mid-thirties to mid-forttes. But I longed to be done with
Middlepon and school ·and 'studies so that l could visit
·
grandpa's for weekends and whole summers.
He , along with a beloved aunt and uncle , was always on
hand to welcome me, my twin sister, and younger sister. Oh.
how one could be loved and spoiled and taught time-honored
values at that home! In contrast to our Middleport home, it
boasted about six or seven acres Of land on the River.
UpOn arising at Gnmdpa's house, one might see a beauti·
ful tug boat or sternwheeler passing the house or "spot"
someone in a "john" boat trying a hand at fi ohing . The River
had many faces: It might be clear and calm, angry and rough .
or seeming to resemble a huge boiling cauldron on a foggy
morning - all depending upon the weather and season .
At my parents' home , Daddy took pride in his garden; but.
of necessity, it had to be small and the extent of the bucolic
life. But Grandpa's place was a dilferent matter. While it
wasri 't a (arm, I remember the glorious days of rural life .
Yes , I remember letting the chickens escape from the coop
high on the hill for a bit of fresh pick ins' , with the cenainty
of their retuming to roost and my going back to prop the
door shut. On one particular day, l got quite a surprise after
reaching tor eggs under a mother-to-be hen only to touch a
fat, coiled black snake. You may be sure a little girl can
come out of a chicken coop hooping and hollering a-plenty!
I remember, too, rising very early, dressing in my -uncle's
slightly large trousers and old blue work shirt , and donl_li~g
galoshes. I was ready to go with Grandpa to a .field wet w1th
dew where we would pick the ras~berries he liad cultivated
•· ,, POMEROY - A ce)ebraThe · United Brethren and tended. Grandpa was armed wtth a couple of very sharp
··.'!ion of the merger of the for: ·
denomination joined with sickles that he had honed on a stone moistened with spittle. I
· ·mer Enterprise and Pomeroy
The Evangelical denomina- carried the pails, and grandpa forged our path - hoping not to
•United Methodist church
tion in 1946 and Entetprise startle any copperheads or rattlers. Well , you may be sure the
.;ongregations into the New
became an EUB Church. In dessert at supper time that evening was well worth our effot1!
· Beginnings United Methodist
1968, a union with the
Today, I am grateful for the natural science and gardenChurch will be held Sunday.
Methodist denomination ing lessons of those long-ago, carefree days. Gardening is
· The two congregations
and the Evangelical United a hobby I enjoy to this day. Now, my uncle was a college1will worship in the former
Brethren resulted in the educated.~cientific gardener who was detem1ined to out-do
:: Pomeroy church building
church name becoming all his neighbors by growing the "biggest and best" of the
: I 12 E. Second St.
Enterprise
United veggies he ·rlanted.
: Worship begins at 9:25
Methodist Church . Things · l;low wei I remember picking up individual turnip seeds
. went well and the church and planting .each one carefully in its own fertilized area.
.. a.m. and will ·include
:preaching by the District
continued in ministry.
Needless to say, those 1\lmips were the "Pride of Minersville."
:; Superintendent
Dennis
On Monday, June 13, Yes, I remember great areas of rhubarb, long rows of
2005, it was ·noticed that the · "Country Gentleman" sweet com , the ever-perennial thick
: Mohle~. singing by the new
front doors were standing asparagus stalks, glass-covered lettuce beds, pole beans, and
~ choir, a presentation by the
wide open with no services succulent tomatoes. (I sprayed the pale beans regularly.)
: youth of the' church, and the
District Superintendent
going on and no one around.
Dennis Mohler
·reading of histories fro111
Grandpa's sturdy, attractive frame house, built in 1875,
Investigation revealed that a was flanked by huge sycamores , and the shady, velvet lawn
·both ofthc former churches .
.
The celebration is being Nyesvtlle (now known as the
beam .above the ceiling of was a delightful place to go for some "air conditioning." The
:called "A Day of New Kerr's Run area~. ~ter, the .
the sanctuary had broken trivet hedge, bordering the yard, was often trimmed by yours
: Beginnings."
pasto.r of the ctrcmt, Rer
and had fallen into the body truly and always with a hand-powered cutter. As I was toil: The completion of the . Ousun, held ser_v1ces m
of the church, bringing the ing at the hedge work one day, a very long, ribbon-bedecked
• merger occurred on Sept. 7 Pomeroy. at a cabmet shop
ceiling with it. No one pigtail fell into the blades and was immediately shortened to
·and became effective on and then m a copper shop. .
knows exactly when this the tune of about six inches. (Maybe that was planned!).
iNov. 1.
·
, . In the early I~40s ,a frame ,
occunred. The minister and
Yes, it is amazing now-a-days to think that such a gorgeous
: , "It has been· a joyqus ; churcli was bUt It behind. a
peo)lle of the congregation lawn, inters{'Crsed with apple and plum trees, lilacs and roses,
·adventure exploring · the . fEICtory on upper East Mwn
thariked God that it had not were all mamtained wilh not one power tool. Sickles, sythes,
:merger possibility ovet the · Street. It ~as used as a
1\appened on the day before · push mowers and clippers did a professional job when com: preceding · 12 months and chl.!rch u.nlll 1856 . when
when worshipers were bined with the right amount of elbow grease. (I still cut my
· coming to nearly a unani- 'Umon Chapel was built. The
own lawn today - but hand tools are only a memory.)
·
inside sitting in the pews ..
: mous vote from both church· church membership grewWhat a set of values was given to me in those years of the
After this, the Enterpnse
: es to enter into this union," and it becal!le ,a station
Church met for awhile in the visits to my grandfather's home. That lovely home is still
·said Pastor Brian Dunham.
rather than a ctrcu1t. In )890
auditorium at Carleton there for me to see and remember. It has been perfectly kept'
• He invites the community and '91, 'surrmer camp .
School. Then the Pomeroy and preserved by the preseni owners and "Old Man River"
, :to the "grand opening."
. meetings , were ~eld at the
Church of Christ elltended an still rolls by,
.
: Following worship, dinner Rock. Spnngs Fwrgrounds:
invitation to join them as they
Note: The former Zahl home mentioned in this story is
: wUl be served in the social - Uruon ChaJ&gt;!ll was sold m
were without a pastor and we .currently owned by Mark and Cindy Rhonemus.
· room. TUrkey and ham will . ~891 and serv1ces were .held
were .without a church build(Martha Ohlinger Vennari resides in Pomeroy.)
: be provided and .those attend- m th~ Court Hou~e .while a
ing. The Enterprise pastor,
: ing may take a side dish or beautiful new bwlding was
the Rev. Arland King, accomdessert. The dinner will ~ constructed ·on Second S~t
panied his flock to the church
on West Main Street and they
followed by music provided where it would be ~er m
QY the "Truly Saved Trio."
case of a fl~.lnApnl1892,
spent two good years of
shared ministry.
• The activities at the church continual rams . caused s01l
In August 2007, the
~ill end in time for everyone and rocks to slide off the hill
Enterprise
congregation
tb mo\'e to Main Street for behmd the church and tt had
GALLIPOLIS
moved
again,
leasing
a hand- Central
rpe Pomeroy Christmas t? be dug out. Th~ work conChristian
icapped ac.cessible building Church, 109 Garfield
~arnde which begins at .2 unued though and the new
· owned by Home Creek Ave., Gallipolis, is welp.m . The new church. w!ll church, named The S1mpson
Enterprises on Hiland Road coming its new evangeljave a float in the parade as, Method1st Ep~scopal Chutch
in Pomeroy and .remained list, DanielDavenport ll . .
~id Dunham, "to share with ~ honor of Btshop_ Matthew
there .11111il September 2~8
tjll of Meigs County the joy Stmpson, was dedicated . on
Daniel and his wife,
when they began attendmg Kendra, have come to
in our hearts of what God 1s Sept. 18, 1892.
,
church at the Pomeroy Gallipolis
doing among us." · ·
In May 1943, the Bethany
from
United Methodist Church on Edenton, N.C.
I Pomeroy Church History Methodtst Church, which
East Second Street in
· In 1838, Methodism began had been st~rted as a
lri 2002, Davenport
Pomeroy. On Nov. l, 2008, received his bachelor
in the Pomeroy area on what German-speakmg church
the two churches cOmpleted of arts in Bible, with a
hs .called the c;he~ter and was also located on
a merger and became the minor in preaching,
Circuit. The fir~! semces Second Street, . and the
New Beginnings United from Roanoke Bible
"ere held on Sunday· after- Simpson Methodist Church
Methodist
Church.
noons in a school house at umted and took the new
College,
Elizabeth
City, N.C .
Since that
time,
Daniel - has acquired
Submitted photo
substantial evangelistic Daniel Davenport II is the new
I
e11perience throughout · evangelist at the Central
The public is invited to attend a North Carolina and in Christian Church in 'Gallipolis.
faith. The ev.ent is expected to last
He is seen here with 'his wife
free soup lunch .on the second and MissourL
about 15 minutes . .
Daniel's
wife,
Kendra,
Kendra.
fourth Saturdays of the month at the
Chiropractic · G:enter is a licensed cosmetolo·
Saturday~ . , Gallipolis
parking lot at 990 Second Ave., !list and will soon be working in the Gal~ipolis area.. .
; GALLIPOLIS - FellpwshiP,; of
sponsored by the· Rio ~hristian . ,The congregation ofthe 'Central Chnsttan Churchmv1tes
~-.
Christian ·Athletes ·.~ill: sponi\Ot ;. B0r
you to hear this young, vibrant evangelist speak tfte word
Church.
"
·'', ',;•
$ilent - Be H~ard th!s .Sunday at :1
The lunch is held at noon. For · while 'maintaining Scriptural doctrine and restoring New
Homeless?
· ~.m. in the Galhpoljs;Clty Park,
. · "GA.LLIPOLIS - information,
contact the church at Testament Christianity.
• Believers are encouraged to stand . Unemployed? Have a job but finding
To reach the church and Daniel, call (740) 446-0062 .
(740) 245--9873.
,
tol!eth&lt;er and silently proclaim their it hard to feed -your family? u
t l ·;

1
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j

New evangelist joins
Central Christian Church

Soup-er
planned

Middleport, OH

7 40-992-6128

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 4S769·0683
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BY MARTHA OHLINGER VENNARt

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

t

2008

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MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

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Friday, November 28,

Summers at Grandpas
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'Be 'Silent, Be Heard'
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'If yt Qhide in Me, ~nd My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
Johlll5:7

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FAITH. FAMILY

·:The Daily Sentinel

Thanksgiving

Many reasons
The day after Thanksgiving
Day for some means a return
to work, for others , it's a day
for visiting family or resting
at home, for lots of folks it"s a
crazy day for shopping . But
whatever is required of you
this day, may it be spent well.
Give thanks to God. for whatever He's given you and prepare to celebrate anew the
amazing and wonderful hope
we have in our Savior!
Hopefully your day yesterday was spent in a genuine
. spirit of thanksgiving . The
benefits for you are countless
in spite of the world's tendency to consider. ourselve'
somehow deprived (because
there is·always soineone who
has something that we don't
have). The realization that
there are things in our lives
for which all of us rnay be
thankful can begin the soothing work of calming our fran tic nerves and helps to open
the door for those spiritual
blessings which those who
have trusted Jesus as Lord
and Savior ha·ve become
heirs. Those things for
instance which we may pause
to consider during the en.suing Christmas season (e.g ..
hope, peace, love, and joy)
suddenly find that "room at .
the inn" has been made by the
cleansing work of gratitude.
And the fact that there is truly
a deserving recipient of our
thanksgiving , namely God.
remind~ us that there is One.
greater than ourselves, Who
is in control of our history
even as it continues to untold
before our very eyes.
Our gratitude causes us to
recognize that He is actively
at work today in spite of our
pride and inclination for sci rJshness: at work in the world
... and at work in our indivitluallives. Remember that our
hope is not in a new presidential administration . Nor is
it in an improving economy. .
It isn't in military prowess or
in technology or even in
guaranteed medical coverage. Our hope is in God .
"As the deer pants for
streams of water, so my soul
pants for You, 0 Godl My

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Fr~day, November 28,2008

Today's Forecast
~oroeul tor Friday,

conununities in need ·o f salt
STAFF REPORT

COLUMBUS
Recognizing that a signifi- ·
cant number of local com- .
munities have been unable
to access salt for this winter
driving season, the director
of the Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT) is
expanding his department's
Smart Salt Strategy to share
some of the state's supply
with counties and local
communities.
By adjusting its resources
across the state, OOOT will
·ratimi 100,000 tons of ·salt
from its stockpiles, allowin~ for a one-time sale of
thts material to counties and
local communities which
were unable to secure salt
contracts.
ODOT Director James
Beasley has worked with

the County Engineers tial salt assessment survey
Association of Ohto, the will then be given an opporOhio Municipal League . tunity to panicipate. If there
and the Ohio . Township is any material remaining
Association to identify after addressing the needs
communities in need of of those who have previousassistance.An initial survey ly been a part of OOOT's
revealed a need of about process, any community in
the state will be given the
70,000 tons of salt.
Under this Local Salt opponunity to purchase salt
Assistance Plan, the first pri- on a one-time, first come,
ority will be to maintain an first serve basis.
With a few exceptions, the
adequate supply of salt for
the safety of travelers on · price for salt under this plan
state routes, US routes and will be $75 per ton, based on
interstates that OOOT must OOOT's .contract price and
maintain. Off the state high- . cost for shifting resources to
way system, priority will accommodate this Sman
then be given to counties and Salt Strategy. In order to be
local communities that had as fair as possible and to
previously signed up to par- avoid shonages, ODOT will
ticipate as part of ODOT's determine the location from
competitive bidding process which a· local community
but were unable to buy salt can purchase salt.
Since the 1930s, rock salt
due to a lack of bids.
has
been the most-utilized,
Communities
that
responded to ODOT's ini- cost-effective, ice-fighting

material for keeping road~
ways safe. However. Ohio
has seen a dramatic spike in
the price of rock _salt thts year,
ranging from 50 percent to
300 percent cost increases.
Having the uniq\le ability
to stoekpile salt over the
past year, ODOT purchased
a significant amount of
material at last season's
prices. Then through its
competitive bidding process
this season, OOOT secured
contracts for additional salt
With
the
deliveries.
increased cost of salt and a.
growing demand to be more '
environmentally sensitive
with its qse, ODOT also put
together a Smart Salt
Strategy :- designed to
make certa1n that the depart. ment is as efficient as possible with . the salt on hand
while still ensuring continued safety o~ the roads.

J. SHEEFIAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS .
- Ohio's new schools chief
gets good grades from colleagues and parents for a
high-energy,
innovative
approach to her work, which
includes extensive experience dealing with underperforming youngsters from
poor families.
Deborah S. Delisle, 55,
superintendent of the
Cleveland
HeightsUniversity Heights district,
takes office Monday as
Ohio's superintendent of
public instruction. She will
be paid $194,500 a year as
successor to Susan Tave
Zelman, who left on Oci. 31
after nine years in the job.
Zelman announced in
May that she would resign
amtd a plan by Gov. Ted
Strickland to replace her
with an education chief
accountable 10 ·him instead
of the state board ..·
Delisle, pronounced dehLEYE' -el, will s~nd her
first week on the Job meet·
ing state education officials,
representatives from the
governor's office ,legislators
. and educators in Cleveland,
Columbus and Youngstown,
the agency said.
. Delisle turned down interview requests last week to
discuss her views on school
financing, vouchers and
teacher unions . ·
·
Her credeniials include
work in fast-growing rural
Geauga County east of
Cleveland and the upscale
Orange and Shaker Heights
districts.
The Cleveland HeightsUniversity Heights district
has 6,500 students, 54 percent of which come from
poor families. The district's ·
graduation rate rose from 89
percent to 96 percent in the
past year, but tts state rating
ts one step below effective.
"It's a tough district, it's a
very demanding district,"
said Tom Schmida, president
of the local teachers' union .
Schmida credited Delisle
with helping reach a teacher
contract agreement in midNovember by getting personally involved in the
talks. He also credits her
wit!) an innovative approach
to teacher collaboration to
deaf with failing students.
He believes Delisle's

cttymeg~an

..

High I Law lon'4)S

Nov. 28

Friday, November 28, 2008

New Ohioschools chief has hands-on reputation
BY THOMAS

l...ocAL SCHEDULE
S.tunter Nqyemher 21

"~

Girlollook-il
&lt;'lhena al Oallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Pllui Eastern at Soulhern, 6 p.m.
River Valley al Meigs, 6 p.m.

*Columbuo

40° 129"

·'

Clriclnnetl

IRVING, Texas - Tony
Romo might not want to
take the splint off his passing hand the way-he and the
Meigs at Eaotem. 8 p.m.
Dallas Cowboys are playRiver Valley at GaUl a_Academy, B p.m.
mg.
Romo crisply · guided
Dallas to touchdowns on its
lelpre at
Varley, e p.m.
first
three drives and points
Eastern at Waterford-, e p.m. ·
on
the
first four, then turned
lilllllo Academy .at Chaoapeoke. 8
p.m.
the early surge into a 34-9
Millar at Soultlern, 8 p.m.
victory over the Seattle
Seahawks
on Thursday. ·
DtcrnMr s
··Belpre
, . atFrk'a
-..,.ao-n
The Cowboys won their
Molga, 8:30 p.m.
third straight, matching their
C:roaa Lann at South Gatua, 7:30
best roll of the season, all
p_m.
;eastern at Southern. 18:30 p.m.
coming
since
Romo
OVCS tournament, TBA
returned
from
a
broken
right
Gino Baok-11
pinkie . .Dallas is 8-4 and
Crou Lanes at sOuth Gallla, 6 p.m
,OVCS tournoment, TBA
·
back near the top of the NFC
playoff. race. Now comes the
. 8tbtiJIQ Dlct'mbtr I
.
hard
pan .,.- staying there.
lloyo llaokttblll
\'lalllo Academy al Rock ·Hill, 6 p.m. ·
The Cowboys.' next three
Meigs at River .Valley, 8 p.m.
games
are
against
OVCS tournament, TBA
Pittsburgh, the New York
South Gallla at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
:
Glrlo Bookttbllll
Giants and Baltimore. That
Jact&lt;aon at Gatlla Academy, 8 p.m.
stretch will be even tougher
OVCS tournament, TBA
if they're without linebacker
.....
Mondey D
btr 8
DeMarcus Ware and run•.
Glrt.look-11
.
.
_
·
AP photo . ning bac,k Marion Barber.
. 1Aitxander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
River VaHey al Eastern, 6 p.m.
Dallas .Cowpoys quarterback Tony Romo, right, scrambles past Seattle Seahawks defen- Both left with injuries in the
· Southtrn at South Galtta, 8 p.m.
Sive end Lawrence Jackson for a first down during the first quarter NFL football game on third quarter, Ware because
of a sprained left knee and
Thanksgtvlng Day, ThlJrsday in Irving, Texas. Dallas won 34-9.
.
'
at Fairland, 8:30 p.m.
South GaiHa al Symmn Valley, 8 p.m.

i. Ovcs

~ Cloudy ~ :r"'*· ~ Flu- ~~ ""
., ' p--.,_ ~tf," . ....... -~~,·.. : .. : ;~

~

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c._:)
.
Showtrt

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Rain

·

-;::~
~
e •
Snow , ••u•

Local Weather
Frlday...Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday nlght •. Mostly clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s. West winds around 5 mph in the
evening ...Becoming light and variable.
Sat11rday•..Mostly sunny. Highs .in the mid 40s.
Southeast winds around· 5 'mph. ·
.
. Saturday nlght ...Mostly cloudy with a :iO percent ·
chance of snow showers. Lows in the lower 30s.
Light an&lt;! 'variable winds.
· Sunday••.Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain
showers. Highs around 40. Chance of rain 50 percent.
.
Sunday nlght... Snow showers likely with a
chance of rain showers. Light snow accumulation
possible. Lows in the upper 20s. Chance of precipi·
tation liO percent.
Monday...C!oudy with a 50 percent chance of
snow showers. Hig)ls ·in the upper 30s.
.
Monday nlght ••.Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of snow showers. Lows in the lllid 20s.
1\li!sday••.Partly sunny. Highs in ihe upper 30s.
Thesday nlght •..Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper
20s. .
. .
Wednesday ••.Partly sWJny. Highs in the mid
40s.
· ·
·
Wednesday night ... Mostly cloudy with a 30
-percent chance of r~· .• :;bowers. Lows in the lower
30s.
•·
Thursday...Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 40s.

i t ness

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-. Prep Football"
OHIO .
STATE FINALS

I

&gt;

DIViSION I

· Cie. Sl. kl!latius (13-1) vs. Cin: Elder

tt:J.1),

,;

Stadium,

Fawcett

p.m. ,

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DIVISION II

..:·

I)IVISION Ill

.

· biVISIOft IV ·

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,Sylvania Souihldew (14-0• vo. Cln.
..:nd0110n (12-2). Maas~lon Paul Brown
llger Stadium, Friday, 7 p.m.

:

Alter

;Staubenvllt. U4.0f vi. ~&lt;attM~g
112-2), ConlOn Fawoet! Sladlum, lfflday,
Bp.m.

,'

DIVISION V

'Youngs. Ur$ullne (14.0) vo. Rndlay
!Jbe
. rty·Benlon
rll
11~). Mu8.111on Paul
Tiger Stadium, Satuldly. 3 p.m.

.!!.""""
"
DIVISION VI
.
.~; WEST Vlll(tiNIA
.

~·St. John's (12-2) va. Ba. "!!powali·loudon (14.0), Ma.. INon Paul
Brown .Tiger Stodlum, Friday, 11 a.m.

'

$TATE SEMIFINALS

--

CLASSAAA
Frldoy
George WashlngtoJJ 29, .B&gt;Idgeport t4

Ctlldlo'VIIC....., Pin
the ~~eattannma ....._ tw

llolunley

Morgentown 21. Capitol o
.
South Charleston 28, Martlnol&gt;urg 21

·

Whoellng Park2t, Unlllerelty 13
Somllnolo
·~~ . '
NeW. 21-21
No. 3 Morgantown (11-1. vo. No, t
South Charleston (12-0•
·
No. 8.Unlverally (11-1• vs. No. 2 George

ODIWI IIOillt -ttwspy and U!O

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Satul&lt;lay, Dec. 8, noon

CLASSAA

.

,-

- Frldly
·.....nd
Magnolia 23, Keyser t9
Gro11on 41,"11a¥Wliwoad 7
~ 41. Bluellok135 .

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lol!nd"Y

.tomeo Monroe 14, Weir 7

'
28-21
No.8
Magnolia"""·
(lo-3)
va. No. 12 James
Monroe (9-3)

No. 2 G~alton (11 -1)
a•~•

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VI.

No. 3 Wayne

Cllomplonol\lp

; . . AI WhMIIng lolond Stodlum
!Friday, Dec. 5, 7:30p.m.
!·

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CLASSA

leoDnd Flound
Frldly
i\'lllllamotown 21 , Man t 6
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LET US HELP YOU GET READY FOR THE HOLIDAYS

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lllo. 1 Willa- (It-t) va. No. 4
WMttlng Control (to-2)
7 Modon111 (12.0· · VI. No. fi St

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Elder, St.
Ignatius
have won

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L----------~~-------~
came~chiClk out cu .... t.c~~tr.
YIY ow ¥10, I mi.U. euper tMd
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Barber with a bruised righl
pinkie toe. Coach Wade
Phillips said X-rays showed
no break for Barber and that
Ware seemed to be OK.
" It will be a challenge to
get into the playoffs , but we
feel very confident in our
ability to win football
games," Romo said. "I like
our chances."
·
The Seahawks lost. their
fifth straight game and fell
to 2-10. 11 matches the most
losses outgoing coach Mike
Holmgren has had in his 17
years in the NFL, and there
are four games left.
Seattle was within a
touchdown of winning its
past three games, but this
one was never close after
former Dallas running back
Julius Jones fUmbled on the
Seahawks' first possession.
The Cowboys wound up dfi.
ving for a touchdown that
made it 14-0 on the way to
24-3 midway through the
second quarter.
Seattle's Matt Hasselbeck
was 22-of-38 for a seasonhigh 287 yards. He threw
one interception and· was

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POMEROY' - A IChedult of upcoming high
IIC:hool wrsJty 'POrting ....,,, ~ tnrna
fnlm Meigl, Muon &amp;nd O.lia countlft.

Robert Jackson, 49, who Michael Dougheny said.
experience in local schools
will assist her in Columbus. has nieces ages 9 and 12
Because there is no busing
"Coming from a superin- enrolled in the district, said he for the high school, nearly
tendency, as opposed to was concerned about school 2,000 students leaving at the
another bureaucracy, a state safety and said fighting at the end of the day might create a
bureaucracr,, is valuable high school has been a probexperience, ' Schmida said. lem. He blamed the problem disorderly perception outDallas Schuben, a school in,pan on an ongoing rivalry side of the school, he said.
.,
•
f"'
'.
parent and PTA leader, Said with Shaw High Scllool in
Delisle has a reputation for nearby East Cleveland.
•
"They have a lot of chaos
getting to know students by
-i
here, a lot of fighting and
name.
"She's genuinely moved rivalries," he said as he
by their accomplishments," waited for a bus at a comer
near the school.
she said.
He said the safety situa-·
Delisle ha&amp; restored confidence for parents concerned tion had improved a bit
about the ·socioeconomic under Delisle's leadership,
divide that separates low- but believes she should
~--------------~--~-~
income and wealthy stu- have acted more quickly to
address safety concerns.
dents, Schuben said.
The high school has surThe high.energy Delisle
made it clear a disadvantaged veillance cameras, hall
background wasn1t an excuse monitors and a former
for failure, Schuben said.
police officer hired during
I
I
Not everybody sang Delisle's tenure to supervise
Delisle's praises, however.
security, district spokesman .
,...

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

·ttus, McCoy roll over Aggies, Page 82
1ltans, Fagles get easy wins, Page B4
,BCS title picture sWJ lllldt!ar, Page 86
llearuls eollclt comes dean, Page 86

ODOT to offer assistance to
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· Doug Ramsey lQOks at 'the .
two teams com'peiing for
the Division 1 state title and
says the amazing thiiig is
not their' differences but
how · much they have in
common.
"This is two fairly similar ·
teams playin$ against•each
other," Cinctnnati Elder's
coach sa!~· compa9ng his .
squad wtth Cleveland St.
· Ignatius. "Sure, the· offenses
are different. The defense
are different. But both have
similar kinds of players."
It takes a cenain kind of
player to produce a cqm- ·
bined 11 (nine by St.
Ignatius, two for Elder)
state playoff titles. Only a
select few schools collect
those types of players hoard them, even. And several of those schools are
back at the 37th annual
football finals · this Friday .
and Saturday in Stark
County.
.
·
A common question for
St. I~natius coach Chuck
Kyle 1s, bow does this team
compare with (fill in the
blank) team that won ·a
championship? Kyle refuses
the invitation to step into
that trap.
"The way I look at it, you
have children. Your ehildren
are special, they 'n; unique,"
Kyle said. "Every one of
those teams was unique ,
with strengths and weaknesses and distinct personalities."
·
The Elder-St. Ignatius
game, to be played Saturday
night · at Canton Fawcett
Stadium, is just one of an array of hillhly anticipated
championshtp games alternating· between Canton's
Fawcett Stadium ·and
Massillon's Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium.
Things get under way on
Friday morning with No . ll
Delphos St. John's (12-2),
which has won four state
titles, going up against the
No. I team in the final
Associated Press regularseason
poll,
Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon ( 14-0)
for the Division VI crown. ·
Next, the Big Red of. second-ranked Steubenville
(14..9), who· bave captured

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��Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

· Page B3 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008·

www;mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Novem!Jer 28,2008

.www.mydailysentinel.com
'

Texas rides another big game by McCoy to win
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Colt McCoy finally got a
win over Texas A&amp;M, and
No. 4 Texas pUI a historic
whipping on a bitter rival.
The question now is, was it
enough?
.
. Was a 49-9 victory impres·
stve enough to gtve McCoy a
fighting chance for the
Heisman Trophy and keep
.his team in the hunt for the
Bowl Charnpionshi~ Series
championship game. ·
Longhorns coach Mack
Brown thought so.
"I felt ·they made the statement they needed to make,"
Brown said. "Starting with
Colt."
McCoy passed . for two
touchdowns and ran for two
more as the Longhorns (II I, 7-1 Big 12) posted the
largest margin of victory in
the rivalry smce a 48.-0 Texas
victory way back in 1898 .
McCoy finished with 311
yards on 23-of-28 passing
and ran for 49 more to earn
his first win over the Aggies
in · three tries. He also got
career victory No. 31, passing Vince Young to set a
Texas record for starting
quarterbacks. and set a
Longhorns season record
with 3,594 yards passing .
·Defensively. Texas held
the Aggies (4-8, 2-6) to ·245
total yards and minus-24
yards
rushing .
The

Longhorns sacked quarterbacks Jerrod Johnson and
Stephen McGee six times
Texas, cutTently No. 2 in
tile BCS standings. now
must wait until this weekend
to see if its national title
dreams are intact. The
Longhorns are in prime posilion for at least a berth .in a
BCS bowl, but need some
help if the team that spent a
month at No .. 1 will be able
to play for the Big 12 title
and BCS tmtional cham pionship.
A potential three-way tie
for the Big 12 South division
could sw ing to No. 3
Oklahoma if the Sooners
beat No. 11 Oklahoma State
on Saturda.v and leap Texas
in the BCS rankings. Even if
the Sooners lose. No. 7
Texas Tech still holds a
head-to-head tiebre'!ker· with
the Lon~horns going into the
Red Ratders' game against
Baylor. · ·
That's why Texas needed a
big' win over a big rival in
front of a national television
audience. Style matters at
this poinl in the season and
the question now is whether
Texas' victory impressed
BCS voters. The Associated
Press rankings are not part of
the BCS.
'The voters have ·a real
tough decision," Brown said ..
"Oklahoma is a great team.

Te~as Tech is a,greatteam. I yards but could ohly lead
do not want to sit here and A&amp;M to a first-half field
take anything away from goal. Johnson returned in the
them. This league is better fourth .
than it's ever been."
"I just wanted to get out
McCoy deflected ques- there and play. just get out
lions about what should ha{)- there with the guys and pla~
pen to his Longhorns at this the game 1 love so niuch. '
point.
McGee said. "I'mjust thank"We can't control all that. ful for one final opportunity
We wanted to leave it all out to put on the maroon and
on the field ·and we did that ." whtte and suit up and go get
he said. "It's been a great in there and compete."
season."
McCoy's TD passes of 20
While the final score was yards to Brandon Collins and
lopsided . the Longhorns Quan Cosby made it 21-3 at
quickly found themselves in halftime: The strike to Cosby
a physical battle.
came three plays after
The game got chippy even McCoy had been staggered
before the start. Shortly with a hard hit to the chest.
before kickoff. dozens of McCay dodged a pass rushLonghorns and Aggies play- er, ran to his right and fired
ers were exchanging words back across the field to
in the end zone before coach· Cosby in the end zone. .·
es and game officials broke it
In the third, Texas marched
up. After McCoy capped an 80 yards on five plays and
80-yard opening drive with a McCoy got his second rush14-yard TO run, he was ing TD, this one coveiing 16
sacked three times in the first yards. McCoy . Split two
half and knocked down on defenders and got spun high
several othef occasions.
in the air wben he leaped
The Texas· defense, how- between, them at the goal
1
ever, held the Aggies to line.
·
minus- I yard on their first
The Aggies have struggled
three possessions. Texas mightily under first-year
A&amp;M tried to find a spark in coach Mike Shennan m a
the second quarter with season that began with a IO!ls
McGee, wbo beat Texas the at home to Arkansas State
last two years but has been and never got any better. The
relegated to .backup duty . Aggies went winless in the
most of this season. ·
· Big 12 ~O\lth for the first
McGee, pMsed for 207 time.

.

... 11 you h~Jve a question or a comment, write: NASCARThis Week, c;o The Gaston Ga~ette, P.O. BoK 1538, Gaston ia. NC 28053

,.: All 12 Chase.dtiveia hid at ·

i: least one top-10 finiSh In it. Nat·

\ son 11!1&lt;.1 rttnner-up C8rl EdWards

r. ted the.W8'f with eight each.

·
~ ... tn ~ways , the attention
. ~. &lt;le\'tJieCI ti) the c~ drivers ls
,, JtlatH)ecl. In the 10 Chase races.
~ Chne d!lvers colnbined to.tead
, 81.7 (ie!tent of the laps.
i "~Buich
~ 11M-Toyota Its •
;• firsl Yic:tOIY and

Finals

f 'be&lt;lamli the

.· . ~stdrlver
~~,t&lt;,.wln at

1 •

~' Dirlingtorr.
•· •l&lt;asey Kahne

· became the·
: sixth c,triver 10

' KYLE bctt

'· win both the •

! Sprint Atf.Star

Race and the Coc&amp;Cola 600 at
loWe'S' Motor

Speedway. '

AP photo
Texas quarterback Colt McCoy eludes Texas A&amp;M delen·
·sive back Alton Dixon as he scrambles around left end during the first half of an NCAA college football game Thursday
, in Austin, Texas.

Liberty-Benton (14-0) for ignatius, "They're here for a Ignatius has outscored its
the Division V title. ·
n;ason. This will be an four playoff opponents 116That sets the stage for the awful big challenge for our .. 14; Elder averages over 36
battle between No. 4 St. team.''
points per game .... Players
Ignatius and No. 5 Elder.
NOTES: In the ESPN to watch at the finals, each
St. Ignatius' Wildcats are RISE Fab 50 national poll, of whom was an AP divione of the two or three most St. Ignatius iS' II th and sion player of the year:
dominant 'teams in !he histo- Elder is 18th ..,. Liberty- Elder QB Mark Miller and
. ry of the. playoffs. But Benton has outscored its St: Ignatius QB Andrew
Cincinnati schools have opponents 649-36 this sea- Holland; Steubenville QB
captUred five of !,he last six son ' and has recorded I I Dwight Macon and LB
.Division I titles.
shutouts, .includingin three Brank.o Busick: Alter QB
"I have great respect for of its four postseason wills. Austin Boucher; LibertyCincinnati football," Kyle ... St. Johns has made four Benton QB Aaron Craft and
said. ·"Over the years, St. prior state finals trips and LB Jacob Miller; HopewellXavier, Moeller, Elder, won titles eve'ry time, while Loudon QB Tyler Brown
Colerain - they've been this is the second straight and LB Hudson Smith ....
very good foot~all teams finals trip for Hopewe)l- SportsTime Ohio and Time
and we have great respect Loudon. ... Aurora started Warner Cable will provide
for that."
the season I -2 but has sincp exclusive live coverage of
Ramsey said of St. won 11 in a row. ... St. the finals :

Cowboys

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'

SPRINT CUP ROOKIE OF THE YEAR

.
·
'
'

1

•&lt;.
. l·

·:~

failed to win In
2008 were Jeff
Gordon, Matt
Kenseth and
Kevth Harvick.
.,. Greg Biffle

~-:;...-

won consicutlve raees, In

Recently the presidents of the
Big Three automakers came under •
criticism for taking s~parate private
jets to hearings in Washington. What
stnngs will be attached if the government bails out the industry? Will it
affect the commitment of GM. Ford '
and Chrysler to NASCAR?

New Hampshire
and Dover, !OJ
l the flrst time 'in
ljls car,eer.
l lio Fifteen differ· ·
l ent drivers won pole~. Twelve
different drivers won races.
t .,. There were no flrst·time win• ners, but there were four first·
time pole winners: Patrick Car·
' pentler, Paul Menard, Travis Kva
· pll and David Reutimann.
:• .,. W)tan llindon
c cassllll\'00 the
Nationwide $e.
ries pole at ·' .
New Hampshire
• in July, and Car•
• pentler fo~

-·s

NASCAR litis
Monte Dutton
gives his take: "Everyone might as
well get prepared. This is likely to be

an issue."

Dear NASCAR litis-,
... We have been avid fans for
over 40 years, but when Toyota came .
on the scene, everything changed,
which was predicted.
·
Why can't the Amencan people
see what is happening? We need to
support and promote our Amencan
cars ..,.. I'm. doing so- (because)
this makes o,ur economy stronger
and keeps our people working ....

•

. MORE LOCAL NEWS. -

-M9RELOCALSPORTS.
· · Suhictibe today.

John Clark I NASCAR This Week

RICI!n Smith, drher of 1M No. 01 Dale Earnhardt Inc. Cltevrolet, won the 2~ Splint CUp Roolde of the Year o\wanl over Paftske Racing's
Sam Homlsh Jr. Smith's best finish In 2008 was 14th at Mtlitltmtlle ln Man:h.

ISa

NASCAR This Week welcomes let·

rers ro the editor, but please be aware
that we have room for only a few
each week. We'll do our !Jest to select
the best. but individual replies are impossible due to the bulk of mall re- .

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2008 class of rookies fails to impress
By Monte Dutton

won more ·
races arid had
more topftve
and top-10 fin.· .
lshes, but the
Sprtnt Cup
champion was
Jimmie John-

son.

.w..o
.. ,.I&lt;!Jrt Bosch
failed.to ma~e

~Chase ,

teammatll
Jiyan Newmart ,
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did his Penst&lt;e

Stl!wart-Heas ·' ·
~lng..

•

•. _,.

... Wake up, America and
NASCAR, and support our own.
C.A.Carter
Kinston. N.C.
Thanks for letting us know how
you feel.

I

Menard, Juan
• Pablo Montoya, GORDIIIN
Brtan Vlc~rs
and Michael
Waltrip.

19' 720p LCD HDTV

with a stock·car,radng background, was 35th Neither had a single top·IO
Regan Smith. The most unheralded 1 finish.
NASCAR This Week
driver in the field wound up winning
Smith deserves an asterisk, howev·
the award. It was largely by default. . er. In what would have been the sea- ·
Before the 2008 season began, the
Almost everyone underestimated · son's biggest shocker, Smith took the
media declared the Raybestos Rookie · the difficulty of adapting to stock checkered flag at Talladega, Super·
class in the .Spriot Cup Series the cars. Villeneuve was gone almost im- speedway in the fall. NASCAR offi·
· greatest in history, when, in truth, it mediately. Franchitti ran out of spon- cials penalized him, however, for
was merely the most prestigious.
sor support. Carpentier lost his ride. passing Tony Stewart "below the yelAt the beginning of the year, a So did McDowell.
low line" (only banned at restrictor·
world driving champion, Jacques Vii·
By the final race, the only rookies .Plate tracks) and awarded the victoIeneuve, had committed to NASCAR. were Smith and Hornish. Harnish ry to Stewart.
Officially, Smith's finish was 13th.
Also in the field were Indianapolis didn't 'make the starting field fortbe
The top·rookie award aside, that
500 winners Sam Hornish Jr. and Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speed·
Dario Franchitti. A popular Indy·car way. Regan won the award because NASCAR decision may play a pivotal
role in Smith's career. As these
veteran, Patrick Carpentier, found a he was racing and Harnish wasn't.
NASCAR ride. A highly regarded
The Greatest Rookie Class in words were written, Smith didn't
young driver, Michael McDowell, NASCAR History wound up the sea- have a ride for 2009.
joined the field in the spring.
In retrospect, the "greatest class"
son ·with its top performer finishing
Then there was the lone driver 34th in the Sprint Cup points. Horn ish wound up being rather ill-fated.

ceived. Please do not send stamped
and.self-addressed envelopes with
your letters, which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week
The Gaston Gazette
P.O. Box 1538
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

Not ~tills c:ounlrJ
In one Sprint Cup race lllis year !lnft.
neon Raceway. Sonoma. Gal~.). a
record five foreigr&gt;bom drivers v.ere in
the field. They were Maroos Ambrose
(Australia!, Patrick Carpentier and Ron
Fellows (Ganada). Juan Pablo Montaya
(Colombia) and Ma&lt; Papis iitaM. For·
eign drivers are more common in
NASCAR now, but they are hard~ new.
Eigtltt•mes in the sport's history, three
foreign!Jom drivers hal&lt; been in the
starting fields. Is Montcya the best Fl
driver eyer to compete in NASCAR? Full
time. tna)tle, but bne of the alftime
greats. jim Clark, competed in the
1960s .It a race in ROCIIO&gt;gJlam, N.C.

.

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The Daily Sentinel

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JrJO·;~ ·f.OI~J J J
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pole, it mar!&lt;ed

, rookie~ swept
,
' tht poles at the $8me.tn1Ck Jn a
: single weekeitd.
•
; .,. Eight drivers'
who didn't win
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don, Harvick,

·

c

! the first ume

first time all season· the
Cowboys scored touchdowns on three straight d.rives. And it was the first time
they'd started a game that
way since Oct. 9, 1994,
according to Stats Inc.
Another indication of
how ~asy it was: Dallas
gained first downs on ·17 of
their tlrst 23 plays.
Ramo finished 22-of-33
for 331 yards and three
touchdowns with an interception. Jason Witten was a
big part of the offense for
.the first time since breaking
a rib·, catching nine passes
for I 15 yards and a touchdown, and Owens had five
catches for 98 yards and a
touchdown. He blew his
chance for a second straight •
IOO-yard game by dropping
a wide-open ·slant in the
fourth quarter.
''T.O. will tell you I'm
playin.g at a ridiculously
high level," Ramo said,
smirking.
. Joked Phillips: "If we ·get
. the splint off, he might
throw for 300 yards - oh,
wait, he did."
·
Jone s was held to 37
yards on 11 carries in his
return to Texas Stadium .
Dallas fans booed every
time he got the ball . .
While Ware got the
majority of Dallas ' sacks,
Bradie James ~ot two, Tank
Johnson got hts first of the
season and Greg Ellis added
another.
Johnson followed his with
an anns-tlapping gyration
in sonie sort of gobbling
turkey version of the ·
Chicken Dance. The game
was so lopsided by then that
every sack was punctuated
with other players trying to
copy it.

s·
u
s

~
NASCAR
No\IICAR vs. the gowa IMMil

the Chase at

1

E
R

_

Jvne. Among
'

v

-%
~
~
.... _.

f ' .IOWII!I-illt-..tth 8
1 · Sprint Cup

from Page Bl

Cowboys have turned their
since
season
around
Ramo 's return. His broken
bone actually isn't healed
completely, so he 's been
playmg with a splint protecting it. With 10 days off
before the next game. Ramo
might be 'lack to normal by
then .
"I'd be very surpri sed if 1
wore the splint against
Pittsburgh , but you never
know what's going to hap- .
pen in the next week.''
Ramo said.
He was in fine form
Thursday.
Romo started 12-of-14 for
I 98 yards and two touch ·
downs, with Barber scoring
once in between. It was the

..

'

I. Name the direct lineage of the four generations of racing Pettys .
2. Wha: three-time champion never missed a single race due to injury?.
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s mother is the daughter of what famous mechanic/crewman?
4. Who are the only brothers lo win the Daytona 500?
S. Who..are the only brothers .to win chAmpionships)
6. During Fred Lorenzen's heyday, what car dealership sponsored his No. 28 Ford?
7. Who was the owner when Dale Earnhardt won his first Winston Cup championship?
8. Where did Craftsman 'fruck Series champion Johnny Benson win his only Cup race?
9. Who is known as" Awesome Bill"? .
IO.' Whicb Wood brother dr9ve tpe team's Fords in the early days?
II. Who earned fame driving the No. 92 "Fabulous Hudson Hornet"?
,
12. What driver won consecutive championships and was then killed at the beginning of
the next season?
·

llti)Se who

football, and trying to avoid Giesting said it hasn't'been
making big mistakes," he easy maldng a run at a secsaid. "We made a number of and straight title .
·
from Page Bl
mistakes
against
"Any time you defend a
Steubenville two years ago . title, there is added presthree playoff titles, take on and we stood around watch- sure," he said. "Not all of it
No.5 Kettering Alter (12-2) ing them take advantage of · is what you put on yourselves; the fans, the commuto decide the top dogs in them .I'
Friday's . nightcaf pits nity also put pressure on .
Division IV.
·
defending
Division I cham- And opponents make sure
That game is a req1atch of
Cincinnati
Anderson you have . a . big target on
pion
the Division Ill champi·
onship game two years ago (12-~2) against' first-time your backs."
The first game on
between the two ultrasuc- finalist and sixth-ranked
cessful programs, w.on by Sylvania Southview (14-0). Saturday features Aurora
''It's been a great ride, to (12~2) against No. 109
Steubenville, 34-33.
Eastmoor
Asked about the tipping win 14 games," Southview Columbus
point . in the showdown, coach Jim Mayzes said. To Academy (13-l{ for the
Alter coach Ed Domsitz put it into perspective, he Division III trophy. .
revealed he hasn't forgotten added, "To win 10 games is
In a battle of unbeatens.
that .last meeting.
an awesome deal."
No. 1 Youngstown Ursuline
"The key is moving · the
A11derson coach Jeff (!4-0) meets No. 3 flndlay

sacked seven times, 'the
most by Dallas since having
nine on Nov. 9, 1997. Ware
had three, giving him an
NFL-best i 5 this season .
With the defense playing
like that and the offense
scoring in the JOs in consecutive weeks , the Co~boys
clearly are playing thlyway
they need to be down the
stretch. The)' may be getting
another boost with suspended cornerback-punt returner
Adam "Pacman" Jones eligible to play again starting
against the Steelers. Jones
watched this game from the
Dallas sideline.
·whatever
giddiness
Cowboys fan s might be
feeling must be tempered by
the caliber of their past two
foes, and the caliber of the
next three. Another stumbling block. is their woeful
recent
history
in
Decembers . Dallas hasn ·1
hl\d a winning, record that
month since 2001.
"I think. everyone knows
the importance of these last
games down the stretch,"
receiver Terrell Owens said.
"There's really hot~ whole
lot to be said, just go out
anft .~Ia:~· coincidence the

urattr, CharnpiOO Jimmie John.

-~

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•
•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

· Page B3 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008·

www;mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Novem!Jer 28,2008

.www.mydailysentinel.com
'

Texas rides another big game by McCoy to win
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Colt McCoy finally got a
win over Texas A&amp;M, and
No. 4 Texas pUI a historic
whipping on a bitter rival.
The question now is, was it
enough?
.
. Was a 49-9 victory impres·
stve enough to gtve McCoy a
fighting chance for the
Heisman Trophy and keep
.his team in the hunt for the
Bowl Charnpionshi~ Series
championship game. ·
Longhorns coach Mack
Brown thought so.
"I felt ·they made the statement they needed to make,"
Brown said. "Starting with
Colt."
McCoy passed . for two
touchdowns and ran for two
more as the Longhorns (II I, 7-1 Big 12) posted the
largest margin of victory in
the rivalry smce a 48.-0 Texas
victory way back in 1898 .
McCoy finished with 311
yards on 23-of-28 passing
and ran for 49 more to earn
his first win over the Aggies
in · three tries. He also got
career victory No. 31, passing Vince Young to set a
Texas record for starting
quarterbacks. and set a
Longhorns season record
with 3,594 yards passing .
·Defensively. Texas held
the Aggies (4-8, 2-6) to ·245
total yards and minus-24
yards
rushing .
The

Longhorns sacked quarterbacks Jerrod Johnson and
Stephen McGee six times
Texas, cutTently No. 2 in
tile BCS standings. now
must wait until this weekend
to see if its national title
dreams are intact. The
Longhorns are in prime posilion for at least a berth .in a
BCS bowl, but need some
help if the team that spent a
month at No .. 1 will be able
to play for the Big 12 title
and BCS tmtional cham pionship.
A potential three-way tie
for the Big 12 South division
could sw ing to No. 3
Oklahoma if the Sooners
beat No. 11 Oklahoma State
on Saturda.v and leap Texas
in the BCS rankings. Even if
the Sooners lose. No. 7
Texas Tech still holds a
head-to-head tiebre'!ker· with
the Lon~horns going into the
Red Ratders' game against
Baylor. · ·
That's why Texas needed a
big' win over a big rival in
front of a national television
audience. Style matters at
this poinl in the season and
the question now is whether
Texas' victory impressed
BCS voters. The Associated
Press rankings are not part of
the BCS.
'The voters have ·a real
tough decision," Brown said ..
"Oklahoma is a great team.

Te~as Tech is a,greatteam. I yards but could ohly lead
do not want to sit here and A&amp;M to a first-half field
take anything away from goal. Johnson returned in the
them. This league is better fourth .
than it's ever been."
"I just wanted to get out
McCoy deflected ques- there and play. just get out
lions about what should ha{)- there with the guys and pla~
pen to his Longhorns at this the game 1 love so niuch. '
point.
McGee said. "I'mjust thank"We can't control all that. ful for one final opportunity
We wanted to leave it all out to put on the maroon and
on the field ·and we did that ." whtte and suit up and go get
he said. "It's been a great in there and compete."
season."
McCoy's TD passes of 20
While the final score was yards to Brandon Collins and
lopsided . the Longhorns Quan Cosby made it 21-3 at
quickly found themselves in halftime: The strike to Cosby
a physical battle.
came three plays after
The game got chippy even McCoy had been staggered
before the start. Shortly with a hard hit to the chest.
before kickoff. dozens of McCay dodged a pass rushLonghorns and Aggies play- er, ran to his right and fired
ers were exchanging words back across the field to
in the end zone before coach· Cosby in the end zone. .·
es and game officials broke it
In the third, Texas marched
up. After McCoy capped an 80 yards on five plays and
80-yard opening drive with a McCoy got his second rush14-yard TO run, he was ing TD, this one coveiing 16
sacked three times in the first yards. McCoy . Split two
half and knocked down on defenders and got spun high
several othef occasions.
in the air wben he leaped
The Texas· defense, how- between, them at the goal
1
ever, held the Aggies to line.
·
minus- I yard on their first
The Aggies have struggled
three possessions. Texas mightily under first-year
A&amp;M tried to find a spark in coach Mike Shennan m a
the second quarter with season that began with a IO!ls
McGee, wbo beat Texas the at home to Arkansas State
last two years but has been and never got any better. The
relegated to .backup duty . Aggies went winless in the
most of this season. ·
· Big 12 ~O\lth for the first
McGee, pMsed for 207 time.

.

... 11 you h~Jve a question or a comment, write: NASCARThis Week, c;o The Gaston Ga~ette, P.O. BoK 1538, Gaston ia. NC 28053

,.: All 12 Chase.dtiveia hid at ·

i: least one top-10 finiSh In it. Nat·

\ son 11!1&lt;.1 rttnner-up C8rl EdWards

r. ted the.W8'f with eight each.

·
~ ... tn ~ways , the attention
. ~. &lt;le\'tJieCI ti) the c~ drivers ls
,, JtlatH)ecl. In the 10 Chase races.
~ Chne d!lvers colnbined to.tead
, 81.7 (ie!tent of the laps.
i "~Buich
~ 11M-Toyota Its •
;• firsl Yic:tOIY and

Finals

f 'be&lt;lamli the

.· . ~stdrlver
~~,t&lt;,.wln at

1 •

~' Dirlingtorr.
•· •l&lt;asey Kahne

· became the·
: sixth c,triver 10

' KYLE bctt

'· win both the •

! Sprint Atf.Star

Race and the Coc&amp;Cola 600 at
loWe'S' Motor

Speedway. '

AP photo
Texas quarterback Colt McCoy eludes Texas A&amp;M delen·
·sive back Alton Dixon as he scrambles around left end during the first half of an NCAA college football game Thursday
, in Austin, Texas.

Liberty-Benton (14-0) for ignatius, "They're here for a Ignatius has outscored its
the Division V title. ·
n;ason. This will be an four playoff opponents 116That sets the stage for the awful big challenge for our .. 14; Elder averages over 36
battle between No. 4 St. team.''
points per game .... Players
Ignatius and No. 5 Elder.
NOTES: In the ESPN to watch at the finals, each
St. Ignatius' Wildcats are RISE Fab 50 national poll, of whom was an AP divione of the two or three most St. Ignatius iS' II th and sion player of the year:
dominant 'teams in !he histo- Elder is 18th ..,. Liberty- Elder QB Mark Miller and
. ry of the. playoffs. But Benton has outscored its St: Ignatius QB Andrew
Cincinnati schools have opponents 649-36 this sea- Holland; Steubenville QB
captUred five of !,he last six son ' and has recorded I I Dwight Macon and LB
.Division I titles.
shutouts, .includingin three Brank.o Busick: Alter QB
"I have great respect for of its four postseason wills. Austin Boucher; LibertyCincinnati football," Kyle ... St. Johns has made four Benton QB Aaron Craft and
said. ·"Over the years, St. prior state finals trips and LB Jacob Miller; HopewellXavier, Moeller, Elder, won titles eve'ry time, while Loudon QB Tyler Brown
Colerain - they've been this is the second straight and LB Hudson Smith ....
very good foot~all teams finals trip for Hopewe)l- SportsTime Ohio and Time
and we have great respect Loudon. ... Aurora started Warner Cable will provide
for that."
the season I -2 but has sincp exclusive live coverage of
Ramsey said of St. won 11 in a row. ... St. the finals :

Cowboys

Answers
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'

SPRINT CUP ROOKIE OF THE YEAR

.
·
'
'

1

•&lt;.
. l·

·:~

failed to win In
2008 were Jeff
Gordon, Matt
Kenseth and
Kevth Harvick.
.,. Greg Biffle

~-:;...-

won consicutlve raees, In

Recently the presidents of the
Big Three automakers came under •
criticism for taking s~parate private
jets to hearings in Washington. What
stnngs will be attached if the government bails out the industry? Will it
affect the commitment of GM. Ford '
and Chrysler to NASCAR?

New Hampshire
and Dover, !OJ
l the flrst time 'in
ljls car,eer.
l lio Fifteen differ· ·
l ent drivers won pole~. Twelve
different drivers won races.
t .,. There were no flrst·time win• ners, but there were four first·
time pole winners: Patrick Car·
' pentler, Paul Menard, Travis Kva
· pll and David Reutimann.
:• .,. W)tan llindon
c cassllll\'00 the
Nationwide $e.
ries pole at ·' .
New Hampshire
• in July, and Car•
• pentler fo~

-·s

NASCAR litis
Monte Dutton
gives his take: "Everyone might as
well get prepared. This is likely to be

an issue."

Dear NASCAR litis-,
... We have been avid fans for
over 40 years, but when Toyota came .
on the scene, everything changed,
which was predicted.
·
Why can't the Amencan people
see what is happening? We need to
support and promote our Amencan
cars ..,.. I'm. doing so- (because)
this makes o,ur economy stronger
and keeps our people working ....

•

. MORE LOCAL NEWS. -

-M9RELOCALSPORTS.
· · Suhictibe today.

John Clark I NASCAR This Week

RICI!n Smith, drher of 1M No. 01 Dale Earnhardt Inc. Cltevrolet, won the 2~ Splint CUp Roolde of the Year o\wanl over Paftske Racing's
Sam Homlsh Jr. Smith's best finish In 2008 was 14th at Mtlitltmtlle ln Man:h.

ISa

NASCAR This Week welcomes let·

rers ro the editor, but please be aware
that we have room for only a few
each week. We'll do our !Jest to select
the best. but individual replies are impossible due to the bulk of mall re- .

·..

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2008 class of rookies fails to impress
By Monte Dutton

won more ·
races arid had
more topftve
and top-10 fin.· .
lshes, but the
Sprtnt Cup
champion was
Jimmie John-

son.

.w..o
.. ,.I&lt;!Jrt Bosch
failed.to ma~e

~Chase ,

teammatll
Jiyan Newmart ,
Ilia Is now

n'tcl.'lrC 10 '·
16·264 Reg. 14.99.

as

did his Penst&lt;e

Stl!wart-Heas ·' ·
~lng..

•

•. _,.

... Wake up, America and
NASCAR, and support our own.
C.A.Carter
Kinston. N.C.
Thanks for letting us know how
you feel.

I

Menard, Juan
• Pablo Montoya, GORDIIIN
Brtan Vlc~rs
and Michael
Waltrip.

19' 720p LCD HDTV

with a stock·car,radng background, was 35th Neither had a single top·IO
Regan Smith. The most unheralded 1 finish.
NASCAR This Week
driver in the field wound up winning
Smith deserves an asterisk, howev·
the award. It was largely by default. . er. In what would have been the sea- ·
Before the 2008 season began, the
Almost everyone underestimated · son's biggest shocker, Smith took the
media declared the Raybestos Rookie · the difficulty of adapting to stock checkered flag at Talladega, Super·
class in the .Spriot Cup Series the cars. Villeneuve was gone almost im- speedway in the fall. NASCAR offi·
· greatest in history, when, in truth, it mediately. Franchitti ran out of spon- cials penalized him, however, for
was merely the most prestigious.
sor support. Carpentier lost his ride. passing Tony Stewart "below the yelAt the beginning of the year, a So did McDowell.
low line" (only banned at restrictor·
world driving champion, Jacques Vii·
By the final race, the only rookies .Plate tracks) and awarded the victoIeneuve, had committed to NASCAR. were Smith and Hornish. Harnish ry to Stewart.
Officially, Smith's finish was 13th.
Also in the field were Indianapolis didn't 'make the starting field fortbe
The top·rookie award aside, that
500 winners Sam Hornish Jr. and Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speed·
Dario Franchitti. A popular Indy·car way. Regan won the award because NASCAR decision may play a pivotal
role in Smith's career. As these
veteran, Patrick Carpentier, found a he was racing and Harnish wasn't.
NASCAR ride. A highly regarded
The Greatest Rookie Class in words were written, Smith didn't
young driver, Michael McDowell, NASCAR History wound up the sea- have a ride for 2009.
joined the field in the spring.
In retrospect, the "greatest class"
son ·with its top performer finishing
Then there was the lone driver 34th in the Sprint Cup points. Horn ish wound up being rather ill-fated.

ceived. Please do not send stamped
and.self-addressed envelopes with
your letters, which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week
The Gaston Gazette
P.O. Box 1538
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

Not ~tills c:ounlrJ
In one Sprint Cup race lllis year !lnft.
neon Raceway. Sonoma. Gal~.). a
record five foreigr&gt;bom drivers v.ere in
the field. They were Maroos Ambrose
(Australia!, Patrick Carpentier and Ron
Fellows (Ganada). Juan Pablo Montaya
(Colombia) and Ma&lt; Papis iitaM. For·
eign drivers are more common in
NASCAR now, but they are hard~ new.
Eigtltt•mes in the sport's history, three
foreign!Jom drivers hal&lt; been in the
starting fields. Is Montcya the best Fl
driver eyer to compete in NASCAR? Full
time. tna)tle, but bne of the alftime
greats. jim Clark, competed in the
1960s .It a race in ROCIIO&gt;gJlam, N.C.

.

:"'...
u••

1

~

The Daily Sentinel

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JrJO·;~ ·f.OI~J J J
C I ;;- rf~;r.J Fli~.ii'1l rJOi! ;&amp;~\.!J ~jG)

pole, it mar!&lt;ed

, rookie~ swept
,
' tht poles at the $8me.tn1Ck Jn a
: single weekeitd.
•
; .,. Eight drivers'
who didn't win
in 2008had
seconcl-plllce
: ,. finishes: David
Gilliland, Gor·
don, Harvick,

·

c

! the first ume

first time all season· the
Cowboys scored touchdowns on three straight d.rives. And it was the first time
they'd started a game that
way since Oct. 9, 1994,
according to Stats Inc.
Another indication of
how ~asy it was: Dallas
gained first downs on ·17 of
their tlrst 23 plays.
Ramo finished 22-of-33
for 331 yards and three
touchdowns with an interception. Jason Witten was a
big part of the offense for
.the first time since breaking
a rib·, catching nine passes
for I 15 yards and a touchdown, and Owens had five
catches for 98 yards and a
touchdown. He blew his
chance for a second straight •
IOO-yard game by dropping
a wide-open ·slant in the
fourth quarter.
''T.O. will tell you I'm
playin.g at a ridiculously
high level," Ramo said,
smirking.
. Joked Phillips: "If we ·get
. the splint off, he might
throw for 300 yards - oh,
wait, he did."
·
Jone s was held to 37
yards on 11 carries in his
return to Texas Stadium .
Dallas fans booed every
time he got the ball . .
While Ware got the
majority of Dallas ' sacks,
Bradie James ~ot two, Tank
Johnson got hts first of the
season and Greg Ellis added
another.
Johnson followed his with
an anns-tlapping gyration
in sonie sort of gobbling
turkey version of the ·
Chicken Dance. The game
was so lopsided by then that
every sack was punctuated
with other players trying to
copy it.

s·
u
s

~
NASCAR
No\IICAR vs. the gowa IMMil

the Chase at

1

E
R

_

Jvne. Among
'

v

-%
~
~
.... _.

f ' .IOWII!I-illt-..tth 8
1 · Sprint Cup

from Page Bl

Cowboys have turned their
since
season
around
Ramo 's return. His broken
bone actually isn't healed
completely, so he 's been
playmg with a splint protecting it. With 10 days off
before the next game. Ramo
might be 'lack to normal by
then .
"I'd be very surpri sed if 1
wore the splint against
Pittsburgh , but you never
know what's going to hap- .
pen in the next week.''
Ramo said.
He was in fine form
Thursday.
Romo started 12-of-14 for
I 98 yards and two touch ·
downs, with Barber scoring
once in between. It was the

..

'

I. Name the direct lineage of the four generations of racing Pettys .
2. Wha: three-time champion never missed a single race due to injury?.
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s mother is the daughter of what famous mechanic/crewman?
4. Who are the only brothers lo win the Daytona 500?
S. Who..are the only brothers .to win chAmpionships)
6. During Fred Lorenzen's heyday, what car dealership sponsored his No. 28 Ford?
7. Who was the owner when Dale Earnhardt won his first Winston Cup championship?
8. Where did Craftsman 'fruck Series champion Johnny Benson win his only Cup race?
9. Who is known as" Awesome Bill"? .
IO.' Whicb Wood brother dr9ve tpe team's Fords in the early days?
II. Who earned fame driving the No. 92 "Fabulous Hudson Hornet"?
,
12. What driver won consecutive championships and was then killed at the beginning of
the next season?
·

llti)Se who

football, and trying to avoid Giesting said it hasn't'been
making big mistakes," he easy maldng a run at a secsaid. "We made a number of and straight title .
·
from Page Bl
mistakes
against
"Any time you defend a
Steubenville two years ago . title, there is added presthree playoff titles, take on and we stood around watch- sure," he said. "Not all of it
No.5 Kettering Alter (12-2) ing them take advantage of · is what you put on yourselves; the fans, the commuto decide the top dogs in them .I'
Friday's . nightcaf pits nity also put pressure on .
Division IV.
·
defending
Division I cham- And opponents make sure
That game is a req1atch of
Cincinnati
Anderson you have . a . big target on
pion
the Division Ill champi·
onship game two years ago (12-~2) against' first-time your backs."
The first game on
between the two ultrasuc- finalist and sixth-ranked
cessful programs, w.on by Sylvania Southview (14-0). Saturday features Aurora
''It's been a great ride, to (12~2) against No. 109
Steubenville, 34-33.
Eastmoor
Asked about the tipping win 14 games," Southview Columbus
point . in the showdown, coach Jim Mayzes said. To Academy (13-l{ for the
Alter coach Ed Domsitz put it into perspective, he Division III trophy. .
revealed he hasn't forgotten added, "To win 10 games is
In a battle of unbeatens.
that .last meeting.
an awesome deal."
No. 1 Youngstown Ursuline
"The key is moving · the
A11derson coach Jeff (!4-0) meets No. 3 flndlay

sacked seven times, 'the
most by Dallas since having
nine on Nov. 9, 1997. Ware
had three, giving him an
NFL-best i 5 this season .
With the defense playing
like that and the offense
scoring in the JOs in consecutive weeks , the Co~boys
clearly are playing thlyway
they need to be down the
stretch. The)' may be getting
another boost with suspended cornerback-punt returner
Adam "Pacman" Jones eligible to play again starting
against the Steelers. Jones
watched this game from the
Dallas sideline.
·whatever
giddiness
Cowboys fan s might be
feeling must be tempered by
the caliber of their past two
foes, and the caliber of the
next three. Another stumbling block. is their woeful
recent
history
in
Decembers . Dallas hasn ·1
hl\d a winning, record that
month since 2001.
"I think. everyone knows
the importance of these last
games down the stretch,"
receiver Terrell Owens said.
"There's really hot~ whole
lot to be said, just go out
anft .~Ia:~· coincidence the

urattr, CharnpiOO Jimmie John.

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�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

B5 • The Daily Sentinel

Once-beaten Titans dominate winless Lions 47-10
. BY LARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT
The
Tennessee Titans wanted to
re-establish the run to get .
back on track after losing
for the first time.
The i)j!troit Lions were
very accommodating.
• ' '
Chris Johnson ran for 125
yards and scored twice in
the first quarter and
;
LenDale Whne had two
touchdowns in the second
and finished with I06 yards
up
rushing.
setting
Tennessee for a 47-10 win
over Detroit on Thursday.
"It's nice to be able to do
what you set out to do,"
coach Jeff Fisher said.
"Both backs got a lot of
yards on their own, but they
goi a lot of help up front."
Johnson was untouched
on a short run to the outside
and a long gain up the middle.
The two plays were symbolic of the canyon-like gap ·
between Jhe once-beaten
Titans and the· winless
Lions.
·
AP photo
Tennessee (I l-l ) bounced Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson (28) celebrates his 58-yard touchdown run with Len Dale White (25) in the
back from its 21-point loss first quarter of an NFL football game against the Detroit Lions in Detroit, Thursday.
at home to the New York
The Lions fell to 10-34 in Indianapolis . against New Ml·Donald fumbled on
Jets quickly. surging to a 28- NFL's first 0-16 team, losDetroit's second play from
3 lead early in . the' second ing by a franchise-worst 37 nearly three seasons under Orleans and at Green Bay.
quarter.
·
·
points and giving up a fran- Marinelli and lost for the
"We are desperate for a scrimmage and Tennessee .
''We hit the first punch chise-record 47 points in 19th time in 20 games, lead- win," said quarterback needed jt1st two snaps to
and they fell," White said.
their 69th . game on ing to more questio'ns about Daunte Culpepper, who was take · the lead. Two plays
whether he deserves to keep benched for the third time in later. Johnson had so much
With a 34-point lead mid- Thanksgiving.
way through the fourth , "We only confirmed WIJat his job.
four games.
room on a 6-yard run to the
Marinelli said he doesn't
It was a rare nationally left that pulling guard
quarterback Vince Young ev~rybody was thinking
played for the first time about us as far as outside of expect to be fired.
televised game for both Eugene Amana didn't have
"The record doesn't show teams and it didn't take long anybody to block.
since spraining his left knee Detroit and in Detroit,"
in the opener. He skipped a kicker Jason Hanson said. "I it, but I have great belief in for the nation to witne ss
"When I got to the outscheduled MRI exam a day know everybody in here myself." Marinelli insisted. why Tennessee is terrific side, there was no one
later. then prompted a police feels embarrassed that we
Six teams have lost at and Detroit is awful.
there ," Amano said. "I had
search when he panicked did that on national TV."
least their first 12 games · Did the Titans prove any- to turn around to find somesomeone by taking off hours Coach Rod . Marinelli sine~ Tampa Bay finishe~ 0- thing to their do11bters?
body to hit."
·
later without .his cell phone. refused to acknowledge he 14 m 1976 and the L10ns
"No, because people .are
Johnson took ~ handoff up
"''m good," Young said as was embarrassed, insisting have done it twice . They going to say, 'It was just the middle on the fourth
he walked ·away from the Lions were only beaten. started 0- 12 in 2001 before Detroit."' cornerback Nick pl!iy of Tennessee's next
· repor!ers . ·' J'II talk about it
"We got handled in all beating the Minnesota Harp~r said.
· drive, ran through a huge
Monday."
areas ....: coaches, players , Vikings. who play Dec. 7 at
The game was essentially hole and sprinted past helpThe'Lions (0-12) moved a offense. defense ." special Detroit.
over in the opening minutes. less safety Dwight Smith to
step closer to becoming the teams," Marinelli said.
The Lions finish at
Wide receiver Shaun make it 14-3 .

"'

.

•
•

Backup defensive tackle
Dave Ball got in on the fun
by returning an interception
15 yards for a score. capping it by leaping o_ver the
goal line and flappmg hts
arms like a turkey.
·'The last time I scored a
touchdown was my junior
year in high school. so I'm
not exactly a fre~uent visitor
to the end zone.~ Ball said.
The Lions continued to
hurt themselves on the ensuing possession. getting
called . for delay of game
after calling a timeout .
White added TD runs of 6
and 2 yards to make it 35-3
late in the first half.
Tennessee's·Kerry Collins
made a rare mistake, fumbling as he dropped back to
pass to set up•Detroit's only
touchdown.
· Young
helped
Ro!1
Bironas get in position for
his fourth field goal by tossing a short pass .to fullback
Ahmard Hall and watching
him outrace defenders as if
he was an Olympic sprinter
for a 54-yard gain.
Culpepper was 13-of-26 ·
for I 34 yards with ~ TD and
an interception.
Drew Henson replaced
him late in the fourth quarter, playing for the first time
' ince his appearance witb
the Dallas Cowboys ori
Thanksgiving in 2004 an~
becoming Detroit's fifth
quarterback to take a snap
during its miserable season ;
Notes: Hanson kicked hi~
40th field goal from 50-plus
yards,
tying - Morted
Andersen's NFL record, an~
made his se venth of the sea•
son, pulling him within one
of Andersen's single-seasori
mark .... The Titans swept
the NFC North this season:
... Detroit was 0-for-11 on
third down .... Collins beat
Detroit for the first time ,
leaving Miami as the only
team he hasn't beaten.

Friday. November 28. 2008

www .mydailysenti nel .com

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Mc~abb, Westbrook lead Eagles over Cards ·
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - well." . Reid said. "He
Right from the start,
Donovan McNabb got pulled blocked everything out and McNabb looked like the guy
for Kevin Kolb again. This went about his business. It's , who led the Eagles to four
time. he earned a seat on the a credit to him and the kind straight.NFC championshiP.
bench with a superb perfor- of guy he is."
games and one Super Bow .
mance instead of a stinker.
Westbrook, playing with a He was 5-for-5 for 38 yards
McNabb threw four touch- sore ankle and knee, had 110 oh the opening drive, capdown
passes. . Brian yards rushing and 20 more ping it with a 5-yard TD pass
Westbrook .tied a :earn record receiving. He had two TDs to Westbrook. Whoever was
with four scores and the on the ground and two calling the plays - Reid or
Philadelphia Eagles beat the receiving. Wideout Irving offensive coordinator Marty
Arizona Cardinals 48-20 on Fryar was the last Eagles Mornhinweg
finally
Thursday night.
player to score four TDs in mixed it up instead of relying
"Adversity always hap- 1996.
heavily on the pass. The runpens in our position,"
"We needed this game. It nin~ backs carried six times
McNabb said. "It's hciw you was a little vindication for dunilg the 12-play drive .
pull yourself out of it . I knew my offensive line . We did a
"Anytime you get a good
coming into this game if I great job," Westbrook said. mix, the defense has to play
just continued to be myself The Eagles (6-5-1) desper- both," Reid said.
and know what I"m seeing ately needed to win to mainWhen Kyle Eckel ran for a
out there and react , good lain their slim playoff hopes . first down on third:and-1 to
things will happen ."
They'll have a few extra keep the dnve gomg, fans
Just four days ago, days to prepare for the New gave. the Ea~les a standing
McNabb was benched for York Giants (I 0-1) on Dec . ovatiOn. That s because they
the first time in his career at 7.
. had passed unsuccessfully
halftime of a 36-7 loss at
The Cardinals (7-5) will .on their four previous thirdBaltimore. The Eagles only clinch their first division title and-! atteq~pts over the .past
trailed 10-7 when coach in 33 years if San Francisco twogames : Also, Kolb threw
Andy Reid decided to put loses at Buffalo on Sunday.. an mtercep!1on on second
Kolb in after McNabb threw · "It sure seemed like we down from ms1de the I that
ii've interceptions and lost . came out flat ... Arizona was. returned an NFLCrecord
· two fumble s in his previous coach Ken Whisenhunt said. 108 yards by Ed Reed.
seven quarters.
' " I don 't know if we were
Joselio Han son, starting
But Reid gave McNabb mentally prepared. We for . tht . mJured Asante
another chance and the five- played hard, but obviously S~uel, set up the n~xt score
time Pro Bowl quarterback . made too many mistakes. We Wtlh h1s first career mlercepresponded with his best weren't as crisp as we. had lion and a 13-yard return to
game si nce Week I. He com- been ."
the Anzona 41. Warner's
Kurt Warner had 235 yartls ~ass into tight coverage was
pleted 27 of 39 passes for
260 yards and a passer rating passing. three TDs and three tipped. by Stewart Bradley.
Westbrook ran four strmght
of 121.7 . Kolb ran out the interceptions.
clock while McNabb cele"It 's not the game we
brated the win on the side- wanted to play," Warner
line .
said. ··1 came out and forced
"He was very determined , one earl y. We just didn't
he .commanded the offense, have our game .today and it
he relaxed and played very was across the board."
••

P:~~"~~~~41l~~~

t . 'l/04411, e~ Qift J
l Stop in and see our selection of: ~
·f. Gym Bags • School JacketsJ
l• Back Packs • T-shirts
J
l •Ball Caps • Hoodies J

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plays, scoring from the I to
make it 14~0.
Quintin Mikell intercepted
Warner on the next series,
but the Eagles went threeand-out. They went . right
down the field on their following possession and
Westbrook caught a 2-yard
TD pass for a 21-0 lead.
Hank Baskett made a diving
catch for a 20-yard gain and
DeSean Jackson had a 14yard reception to set up the
score.
Warner tossed a 1-yard TD
pass to Larry Fitzgerald to
cut it to 21.7 late in the second quarter. It was his 20th
straight game with a TD
pass , breaking Neil Lomax's
franchise record.
Westbrook had a 9-yard
TD run in the third quarter to
put Philadelphia ahead 31-7.
McNabb connected with
Jackson for 24 yards on
third-and-23 one play earlier.
Notes: Eagles ·right guard
Max Jean:Gilles, starting for
the injured Shawn Andrews,
will miss the rest of the season ·after breaking his right
ankle. Nick Cole took his
spot .... The Eagles swept the
NFC West, a teat they also
accomplished in 2002. . ..
Westbrook passed Timmy
Brown for first place on the
club's career list with 27 TD
catches by a running back.

.

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2008
I

L

photo
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb scrambles in the first quarter of an NFL football game against the
Arizona Cardinals, Thursday in Philadelphia.
AP

t

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to Linda Diddle, James · Dlddl~ o.- Maxtlle
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designated and adhered to for your permit to
b e valid . tt you have permission to hunt In one
place and you are found In another area your
permission will be withdrawn forev•. People
without wlitten permission -will be prol!llll!tcuted.
JAMES 1!! . DIDDLE

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Nov. 8 @ Nort:h~Sitern
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Sept. 6 Ohio
Sept. 13 @ USC
Sept. 20 Troy
Sept. 27 Minnesota
Oct. 4 @ Wisconsin
Oct. 11 Purdue
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�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 28, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

B5 • The Daily Sentinel

Once-beaten Titans dominate winless Lions 47-10
. BY LARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT
The
Tennessee Titans wanted to
re-establish the run to get .
back on track after losing
for the first time.
The i)j!troit Lions were
very accommodating.
• ' '
Chris Johnson ran for 125
yards and scored twice in
the first quarter and
;
LenDale Whne had two
touchdowns in the second
and finished with I06 yards
up
rushing.
setting
Tennessee for a 47-10 win
over Detroit on Thursday.
"It's nice to be able to do
what you set out to do,"
coach Jeff Fisher said.
"Both backs got a lot of
yards on their own, but they
goi a lot of help up front."
Johnson was untouched
on a short run to the outside
and a long gain up the middle.
The two plays were symbolic of the canyon-like gap ·
between Jhe once-beaten
Titans and the· winless
Lions.
·
AP photo
Tennessee (I l-l ) bounced Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson (28) celebrates his 58-yard touchdown run with Len Dale White (25) in the
back from its 21-point loss first quarter of an NFL football game against the Detroit Lions in Detroit, Thursday.
at home to the New York
The Lions fell to 10-34 in Indianapolis . against New Ml·Donald fumbled on
Jets quickly. surging to a 28- NFL's first 0-16 team, losDetroit's second play from
3 lead early in . the' second ing by a franchise-worst 37 nearly three seasons under Orleans and at Green Bay.
quarter.
·
·
points and giving up a fran- Marinelli and lost for the
"We are desperate for a scrimmage and Tennessee .
''We hit the first punch chise-record 47 points in 19th time in 20 games, lead- win," said quarterback needed jt1st two snaps to
and they fell," White said.
their 69th . game on ing to more questio'ns about Daunte Culpepper, who was take · the lead. Two plays
whether he deserves to keep benched for the third time in later. Johnson had so much
With a 34-point lead mid- Thanksgiving.
way through the fourth , "We only confirmed WIJat his job.
four games.
room on a 6-yard run to the
Marinelli said he doesn't
It was a rare nationally left that pulling guard
quarterback Vince Young ev~rybody was thinking
played for the first time about us as far as outside of expect to be fired.
televised game for both Eugene Amana didn't have
"The record doesn't show teams and it didn't take long anybody to block.
since spraining his left knee Detroit and in Detroit,"
in the opener. He skipped a kicker Jason Hanson said. "I it, but I have great belief in for the nation to witne ss
"When I got to the outscheduled MRI exam a day know everybody in here myself." Marinelli insisted. why Tennessee is terrific side, there was no one
later. then prompted a police feels embarrassed that we
Six teams have lost at and Detroit is awful.
there ," Amano said. "I had
search when he panicked did that on national TV."
least their first 12 games · Did the Titans prove any- to turn around to find somesomeone by taking off hours Coach Rod . Marinelli sine~ Tampa Bay finishe~ 0- thing to their do11bters?
body to hit."
·
later without .his cell phone. refused to acknowledge he 14 m 1976 and the L10ns
"No, because people .are
Johnson took ~ handoff up
"''m good," Young said as was embarrassed, insisting have done it twice . They going to say, 'It was just the middle on the fourth
he walked ·away from the Lions were only beaten. started 0- 12 in 2001 before Detroit."' cornerback Nick pl!iy of Tennessee's next
· repor!ers . ·' J'II talk about it
"We got handled in all beating the Minnesota Harp~r said.
· drive, ran through a huge
Monday."
areas ....: coaches, players , Vikings. who play Dec. 7 at
The game was essentially hole and sprinted past helpThe'Lions (0-12) moved a offense. defense ." special Detroit.
over in the opening minutes. less safety Dwight Smith to
step closer to becoming the teams," Marinelli said.
The Lions finish at
Wide receiver Shaun make it 14-3 .

"'

.

•
•

Backup defensive tackle
Dave Ball got in on the fun
by returning an interception
15 yards for a score. capping it by leaping o_ver the
goal line and flappmg hts
arms like a turkey.
·'The last time I scored a
touchdown was my junior
year in high school. so I'm
not exactly a fre~uent visitor
to the end zone.~ Ball said.
The Lions continued to
hurt themselves on the ensuing possession. getting
called . for delay of game
after calling a timeout .
White added TD runs of 6
and 2 yards to make it 35-3
late in the first half.
Tennessee's·Kerry Collins
made a rare mistake, fumbling as he dropped back to
pass to set up•Detroit's only
touchdown.
· Young
helped
Ro!1
Bironas get in position for
his fourth field goal by tossing a short pass .to fullback
Ahmard Hall and watching
him outrace defenders as if
he was an Olympic sprinter
for a 54-yard gain.
Culpepper was 13-of-26 ·
for I 34 yards with ~ TD and
an interception.
Drew Henson replaced
him late in the fourth quarter, playing for the first time
' ince his appearance witb
the Dallas Cowboys ori
Thanksgiving in 2004 an~
becoming Detroit's fifth
quarterback to take a snap
during its miserable season ;
Notes: Hanson kicked hi~
40th field goal from 50-plus
yards,
tying - Morted
Andersen's NFL record, an~
made his se venth of the sea•
son, pulling him within one
of Andersen's single-seasori
mark .... The Titans swept
the NFC North this season:
... Detroit was 0-for-11 on
third down .... Collins beat
Detroit for the first time ,
leaving Miami as the only
team he hasn't beaten.

Friday. November 28. 2008

www .mydailysenti nel .com

I

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Mc~abb, Westbrook lead Eagles over Cards ·
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - well." . Reid said. "He
Right from the start,
Donovan McNabb got pulled blocked everything out and McNabb looked like the guy
for Kevin Kolb again. This went about his business. It's , who led the Eagles to four
time. he earned a seat on the a credit to him and the kind straight.NFC championshiP.
bench with a superb perfor- of guy he is."
games and one Super Bow .
mance instead of a stinker.
Westbrook, playing with a He was 5-for-5 for 38 yards
McNabb threw four touch- sore ankle and knee, had 110 oh the opening drive, capdown
passes. . Brian yards rushing and 20 more ping it with a 5-yard TD pass
Westbrook .tied a :earn record receiving. He had two TDs to Westbrook. Whoever was
with four scores and the on the ground and two calling the plays - Reid or
Philadelphia Eagles beat the receiving. Wideout Irving offensive coordinator Marty
Arizona Cardinals 48-20 on Fryar was the last Eagles Mornhinweg
finally
Thursday night.
player to score four TDs in mixed it up instead of relying
"Adversity always hap- 1996.
heavily on the pass. The runpens in our position,"
"We needed this game. It nin~ backs carried six times
McNabb said. "It's hciw you was a little vindication for dunilg the 12-play drive .
pull yourself out of it . I knew my offensive line . We did a
"Anytime you get a good
coming into this game if I great job," Westbrook said. mix, the defense has to play
just continued to be myself The Eagles (6-5-1) desper- both," Reid said.
and know what I"m seeing ately needed to win to mainWhen Kyle Eckel ran for a
out there and react , good lain their slim playoff hopes . first down on third:and-1 to
things will happen ."
They'll have a few extra keep the dnve gomg, fans
Just four days ago, days to prepare for the New gave. the Ea~les a standing
McNabb was benched for York Giants (I 0-1) on Dec . ovatiOn. That s because they
the first time in his career at 7.
. had passed unsuccessfully
halftime of a 36-7 loss at
The Cardinals (7-5) will .on their four previous thirdBaltimore. The Eagles only clinch their first division title and-! atteq~pts over the .past
trailed 10-7 when coach in 33 years if San Francisco twogames : Also, Kolb threw
Andy Reid decided to put loses at Buffalo on Sunday.. an mtercep!1on on second
Kolb in after McNabb threw · "It sure seemed like we down from ms1de the I that
ii've interceptions and lost . came out flat ... Arizona was. returned an NFLCrecord
· two fumble s in his previous coach Ken Whisenhunt said. 108 yards by Ed Reed.
seven quarters.
' " I don 't know if we were
Joselio Han son, starting
But Reid gave McNabb mentally prepared. We for . tht . mJured Asante
another chance and the five- played hard, but obviously S~uel, set up the n~xt score
time Pro Bowl quarterback . made too many mistakes. We Wtlh h1s first career mlercepresponded with his best weren't as crisp as we. had lion and a 13-yard return to
game si nce Week I. He com- been ."
the Anzona 41. Warner's
Kurt Warner had 235 yartls ~ass into tight coverage was
pleted 27 of 39 passes for
260 yards and a passer rating passing. three TDs and three tipped. by Stewart Bradley.
Westbrook ran four strmght
of 121.7 . Kolb ran out the interceptions.
clock while McNabb cele"It 's not the game we
brated the win on the side- wanted to play," Warner
line .
said. ··1 came out and forced
"He was very determined , one earl y. We just didn't
he .commanded the offense, have our game .today and it
he relaxed and played very was across the board."
••

P:~~"~~~~41l~~~

t . 'l/04411, e~ Qift J
l Stop in and see our selection of: ~
·f. Gym Bags • School JacketsJ
l• Back Packs • T-shirts
J
l •Ball Caps • Hoodies J

f

~

Middleport

.

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J
J

hu~&amp;a!~~~~.tii.A
"

plays, scoring from the I to
make it 14~0.
Quintin Mikell intercepted
Warner on the next series,
but the Eagles went threeand-out. They went . right
down the field on their following possession and
Westbrook caught a 2-yard
TD pass for a 21-0 lead.
Hank Baskett made a diving
catch for a 20-yard gain and
DeSean Jackson had a 14yard reception to set up the
score.
Warner tossed a 1-yard TD
pass to Larry Fitzgerald to
cut it to 21.7 late in the second quarter. It was his 20th
straight game with a TD
pass , breaking Neil Lomax's
franchise record.
Westbrook had a 9-yard
TD run in the third quarter to
put Philadelphia ahead 31-7.
McNabb connected with
Jackson for 24 yards on
third-and-23 one play earlier.
Notes: Eagles ·right guard
Max Jean:Gilles, starting for
the injured Shawn Andrews,
will miss the rest of the season ·after breaking his right
ankle. Nick Cole took his
spot .... The Eagles swept the
NFC West, a teat they also
accomplished in 2002. . ..
Westbrook passed Timmy
Brown for first place on the
club's career list with 27 TD
catches by a running back.

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L

photo
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb scrambles in the first quarter of an NFL football game against the
Arizona Cardinals, Thursday in Philadelphia.
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Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

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Friday, November 28,

www .mydailysentinel.com

BCS·title picture ~remains unclear
Bv~l::;,a!=TZ

2008

standings. He said thi s week
that he d1dn '.t want to
·
explain his rationale ~au se
PITTSBURGH (AP) Remember the dramatic
it would be a distraction .
13-9.
end to last year.'s college
'Asked if he regrets not
It's not likely many West
football season? The nationhaving a vote now, Stoops Virginians played those
al title chances for Ohio
replied, "Probably."
numbers in any lottery comState and LSU looked
Florida's Urban Meyer bination this year. They're
doomed, until a series of
Brawl
does have a vote - he said still too recognizable , too
unexpected upsets resurrecthe took note of Oklahoma's painfuL too emblematic of
WEST VIRGINIA
ed those teams and eventualdecisive
-.:ictory
last
week
the
bleakest
days
one
of
. vs.
ly matched tliem in the
but
said
he's
glad
the
SEC
since
the
Mountaineers
PITTSBURGH
national title game.
doesn't
have
BCS
standings
began
playing
football
more
FRIDAY,
Nov.
28 - HEINZ FIELD
If you liked last year's
involved
in
his
conference's
than
a
century
ago.
twtsts and turns, chances are
tiebreaker.
13-9 .
·
. "It's just an hour up the
that this year will see even
'"To
have
a
voter
in
The
score
that
cost
West
road
, just like Florida- .
more corkscrews. If anyOregon
or
Texas
or
San
Virginia a national champi- Florida
State,"
West
thing , 2007's convoluted
Diego
or
New
York
City
onship
game
appearance,
Virginia
assistant
Doc
Bowl Championship Series
mak
e
.
a
decision
about
and
may
have
sent
former
Holliday
said
of
the
10
!situiltion might look simple
VJI'tether
or
not
you
go
to
a
coach Rich Rodriguez pack- year-old ri valry known as
compared with the drama
,
boy;
that's
cHampionship
ing for Michigan.
the Backyard Brawl. ''Any
likely to unfold in the next
tough
duty,"
he
said
.
Forget
it?
How
could
time ' 'you get schools that
couple of weeks .
·
Texas
coach
Mack
Brown
they? The score triggered so close together, you get fans
Last year, the main BCS
•also
.
has
a
·
vote,
though
he
much anguish, so much sec· pass1o
· n . too. "
.
. .and th e1r
problem became one of findf
demurred
when
asked
about
ond-guessing,
so
much
m
It's
wh
y
West
Virginia
res·
mg two teams worthy of
his rankings. Like Meyer, ger-pointing, so many sig: idents
proudly
wear
. playing in the championship
•e's uncomfortabl e with the nificant changes that it Pittsburgh Steelers T-shirts ,
game. This year, the issue is
trying to choose from among
AP photo \Je BCS standings have in would be impossible for the but wouldn ·1 be caught .
. several highly qualified Oklahoma running back Chris Brown (29) reacts after scor- P«sibly determining the Mountaineers to forget in wearing anything that says
Pitt Panthers.
teams .
ing a touchdown against Texas Tech in the second quarter ou,ome of the South battJe.. only 12 months' time.
h
said
it
's
a
problem
"It
was,a
terrible
,
terrible
.. 1 don 't know if they' ll
In some respects, the pic- of an NCAA college foqtball game in Norman. Okla.,
feeling,"
cornerback
Ellis
"
wh~
we're
having
voters
ture is fairly clear-cut - if Saturday, Nov. 22.
tha,t •e don ' t know, and Lankster said of that 13-9 say it , but they' ve been gun:
the current top teams win
upset Joss by then-No. ·2 ning for us all season," Pitt
out. In that case, it is likely th is week, the South repre- Might the team that doesn't we re JIVing computers that West
Virginia to Pitt a year linebacker Scott McKillop
that the BCS championship sentative in the Big 12 get the chance to play in the we~en at the game , and ago this
." As a player, we ruined
will feature one team from championship will be deter- Big l2 championship quali- we re a~ ing coaches to run rible ." weekend. "Just ter- said
their season last year, a lot
the Big 12 versus the winner mined by the head-to-head fy for the national title up the .\ore to get more
'The Mountaineers (7-3, 4- · of fans' dreams of playing in
.
of
the
Southeastern result of the remaining two. · game? After all , the Big 12, .f&gt;tyle pom, "
I Big East) have insisted .all a na.tional championship,
Confe.rence championship.
But if the Sooners, especially teams in the . Brown \.;ed some criti- .week
that revenge won't be game, so they're going to be
But the SEC contenders Longhorns and Red Raiders South Division , can make a ~ Ism .four Y~rs ago.fortouta
factor
. when they play pumped for us."
- top-ranked Alabama and all win , determining which case that theirs is the tough- mg his team\;redentials for
neighboring but not neighWest Virginia has a flicker, .
No. 4 Florida - tirst must team will face Missouri will est conference in the coun- a BCS bowl. •I .
borly
rival
Pittsburgh
(7-3
,
of
hope of winning the Big
"I was (ca_ll1 a politician
get past fierce in-state rivals be loaded with controversy. try.
3-2)
in
a
nationally
televised
East
, but it would take the
In the event of a three-way
Or consider a team like ~nd a whme ~ he said. game Friday. They may be Mountaineers
this week. Alabama plays
· beating Pitt
disappointing Auburn on tie. the Big 12 tiebreaker Southern California. Its only Now what th system is kidding only themselves.
and South Florida on Dec. 6:
Saturday and Florida plays would come down to the loss came to Oregon State, making coaches k about
Because
the
Mountaineers
and No . 16 Cincinnati losing
up-and-down Florida State. BCS standings. which incor- which will go to the Rose why their teams · ould be
lost
a
game
on
their
home
Syracuse on Saturday:
If both emerge unscathed, porates poll voters and com- Bowl if it beats Oregon on voted in , and th 's very field a year ago that virtual- to
Pitt's chances ended when it
the winner of the Dec. 6 puter rankings. Right now, Saturday. The Trojans, who unfair to the coach in my ly no one in their home state lost
28-21 at Cincinnati las~
SEC iitle game likely clinch- Texas is ranked second in soundly beat Ohio State , estimation."
thought
they
could
possibly
Saturday.
·.
The solution, to 10wn
es a BCS spot.
the BCS . narrowly ahead of could make a decent case for
If
Cincinnati • beats·
and many others, is ob'tlus lose , many West Virginians
Sorting out the Big 12,.on Oklahoma.
.
themselves .
fear
they
may
never
again
·
Syracuse
claim the con..:
Assuming a Texas Tech
And what about unbeaten though an impossibilit~'o.i; see their team so close to ference's toautomatic
the other hand , might take a
BCS:
Ph.D.
·
win ·over Baylor, Texas Utah and Boise State, nei- year.
\
bowl bid , ,the West Virginia~
"I think the whole thi~ winning the national title.
Oklahoma, Texas and needs Oklahoma to beat ther of which plays in a BCS
"We
ruined
everything
for
Pitt winner could wind up inscreams for a playoff,"
Texas Tech each have one Oklahoma State to maintain conference?
•
them,"
Pitt
kicker
Conor
the
Sun Bowl , with the
loss in the South Division. a three-way tie to have a
All the uncertainty has put said. " If we win an Lee said .
·
Gator
an outside possibility.:
Oklahoma lost to Texas, chance to reach the Big 12 coaches in the uncomfort- Oklahoma wins and one o
Winning Friday 's game , Coach Dave Wannstedr,
Texas lost to Texas Tech and championship. But a lop- able position of feeling they us gets left out of the Big 12 hen
only a non-major bowl said the effort in this gameTech was crushed 65-21 last sided Oklahoma win could have to lobby for their own championship or one of us
may
be decided, won't can't be any less, even'
week by Ojdahoma.
give the Sooners a sufficient teams. Oklahoma's Bob gets left out of the BCS,
West Virginia's pain. though neither rival iS:
Of those three, Oklahoma boost to launch them past Stoops talked up his team's what a crying sliame. For
this
is the first time the ranked in The Associated
has the toughest chore this the Longhorns in the BCS credentials after last week's everybody.
have played Press poll for the first time
. .
victory over Texas Tech , "If you look . at the· first t~~~~;~~:~!:~~since
weekend, playing at danger- rankings.
they lost since 2001.
In other words, the though he has since decided eight teams, there is a reason
ous Oklahoma State on
of
their
lives
and
"This game ... people tall(
· Saturday. Texas shouldn't · Longhorns would love noth- to clam up ~
to say this would be the year th•, v 1-'~- ' t want to , lose
about it the rest of their;
have much trouble with 4-7 ing more than an unimpres"There 's arguments for We would have the greatest
lives ;" said Wannstedt, a;
Texas A&amp;M tonight (though sive Oklahoma victory.
and against everybody _ playoff in college football
Pitt. Not again ..
•
fo;mer Pitt player.
If that 's not confu sing not just us but anyone with (history) because there will
. the Aggies have beaten the
Longhorns the past .two enough, it only gets poten- one loss," he said .
be teams that are going to be.
Stoops turned down a left out. USC may have to·be
years), and Texas Tech tially more complicated a
should ·get past Baylor on ' week later. Say, for the sake chance to vote in the USA an at-large to get into the
Saturday.
of argument, that Oklahoma Today coaches' poll·, which BCS and they've got one of
If one of those teams loses or Texas loses to Missouri . is factored into the BCS the great.teams."

Bearcats head coach fmally coming clean

,.

www.mydallysentlnel.com
.·"'

Forget about it? WV
can't erase loss to Pitt

.

Cincinnati coach Brian
J/1!!!!!1111"!!!!!!!
pushed his career rushing
Kelly c.an admit it now, he's
5711t.61T
total to 4,292 yards, breaknot qutte sure how things
ing the record of 4,289 held
were going to work out for
by former Missouri quarterCincinnati 's ever-rotating
back Brad Smith."
·
stable of quarterbacks .
White 's speed and plar,Injuries have forced five
making al;lility mean he II
different players to take s~em s likehalmost a lock to get a chance to make it in
snaps for the Big East-lead- Pp ay Ibn t e Blnaugural St. the NFL. The question is,
ing Bearcats this year, eters ,urg . owl while where'!.
though Tony Pike now hUc onn 5 tan base would
Smith was drafted by the
seems to have a firm grasp ave a relatively short com- New York Jets in the fourth
o~ the job despite playing mute to Toronto for the ro4nd of the 2006 NFL
With a broken left arm .
International Bowl.
Draft and' has carved out a
All the Bearcats need to
West Virginia, if it doesn't niche for himself as a wide
do to complete their surpris- win
teams
.k 1the
h conference, would rece 1·ver and s·pe"I.al
ing run to the title is a· win l1 e Y ead to the Sun Bowl. player. Smith has thrown all
over Syracuse on Saturday. The Gator Bowl, which the of two passes _ both
Frkom the outside , it. looks Mountaineers won two incompletions - in his twoh e the Bearcats haven 't y~ars ago. is likely to exer- plus seasons.
missed a beat no matter who CISe Its option and pick a
The coac hes who have
is under center. It hasn't Big 12 team instead of a Big spent the last four years tryalways looked like that on Eas t team to face an 'ACC mg ~ unsuccessfully - to
stop Whi te are a little divid the mside . Thou~h Keli:Y foe.
repeatedly promised hi s
Rutgers, if it wins its sea- ed on just where White will
players everything was son finale against Loui sville fi t in at the next level.
going to be OK, even he had to cap a remarkable tumSyrac use coach Greg
·around. seems a safe bet to Robinson , a former defenhis doubts.
"We lied and lied and play in the papajohlis.com sive coordinator for th e
lied," Kelly said . "We were · Bowl with Pitt~burgh head- Denver Broncos who was
nervous because we didn ' t ing to Charlotte for the also an assistant at Texas for
part of Vince Young's
know how it was going to Mei.neke Car Care Bowl.
lay
out
."
Of
course,
all
of
th1
'
s
could
·
career.
said White has the
P
Considering the delirium change in the next two skills to be an NFL quarterthat came upon Nippert weeks, which is why back.
Stadium in the final seconds Rutgers coach Greg Schiano
" ! think Pat's style is difof last week 's win over has n't broken our the .tea ferent.'' Robinson said. "He
Pittsburgh , when fan s leaves to see where he'll be can throw the football and
stormed the field and pelted spending the holiday&gt; .
with (West Virginia's) new
the turf with oranges, repre" I know we 're bowl eligi- , ystem thi s year he's grown
senting the Orange Bowl bl e and that's about the JUSt as tar as total package .
berth that will li kely go to extent of it.'' Schiano ' aid . It ' ll take some learn ing still ,
the Big East winner, things " I am not overl y concerned but I think he's got a really
are going pretty well.
right now."' ·
good shot.''
. BOWL
PICTURE
WHITE THE QB : West
Loui sville coach Steve
CLEARING UP: With two Virginia quarte rback Pat Krag thorpe. who helped
"!!lekS to go in the regular Wh ite chose to play for Ihe coach Drew I:Jiedsoe to the
• season, the bowl picture is Moun taineers
in
part Pro Bow l as quarterback
starting to get a little less because fo rmer coach Rich coach with the Buffalo
murky. Kind of.
Rodriguez promised White Bi ll s. said White 's future
Tile conference champion he'd get a chance to play depends on what ki nd of sit- either Cincinnati or West quarterback insteJd of get- uation he fi nds himself in
Virginia - will gel the ling moved to wide receiver after getti ng drafted)
Bowl Championship Series or cornerback.
" It depends on whether
White repaid the promise they want to· use him as a
bid, ·almost certainly the
Orange Bowl.
by becoming the greatest ru nner or not." Kragthorpi:
As for where the other runn ing qu arterbac k in sa id. 'The (Atlanta Falcons)
five bowl eligible teams are NCAA history. White's 200- started to do that with
lieaded, well , it kind of yard performance in las t (Michael) Vick toward the
· depend~.
South Florida week's win over Louisville end of his tenure there. They

Friday, November 28, 2008

did some of the zone reads
and the desi~n runs to put
the ball in h1s hands. It all
depends on what team drafts
him a11d where they end up
playing him ." .
Kragthorpe said White
has made great strides as a
passer thi• year - he threw
•tOr 122 yards and two scores
against the Cardinals - but
that White 's slender frame
could be a risk down the
road.
·
White isn 'tfoeused on hi s
burgeomng
· record count or
. 'his NFL prospects.just yet ,
· after t he wm
· over
rei'teratmg
Louisville that . he simply ·
wants
to
help
the
Mountaineers win their last
two games and get ready for
what could be a fourth
straight New Year 's Day
bowl appearance.

mrtbune - Sentinel -

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$275
448-3420
339·0915
~~~':;::!~~~
NEW ANO USEO STEEL
Sreel Beams, Pipe Rebar
lor
~oncrelo
Anglo,
Channel, Flal Bar, Sleel
Grating tor Oralns, Drive·
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Melals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed &amp; Fri.

brtetcs.

and

--:"~~:""''::"::""'~

al Jack·

.345

~res

located on Equal

Opportunity

Pro ·

496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo- ~v~lde·r~an•d·E~m~p~k&gt;y;.e~r.-~

Us. Is adequate tor a mo- Gracious Living i and 2
bile home. Has all hook· Bedroom Apls. at VIllage
ups 740-441·5129
Maner
and
Riverside
Apts. in Middleport, lrom
Exceptional
200 acre $3 27
to
$592.
cattte fann in Gallia Co. 740.992·5064 .
Equat
OH.
60+
acres Housing Opportunity.
Wi)ll-drainecl
bottomland
along Raccoon Creek, Modem 1BA apr Call

&gt;JIJ"J"'

lmpoundsl

Cars cows

wtcalves. Modem

. ranoh style house
bnck
Chevys, Jeeps, Fords, &amp;. wl finished
wok-out
morel
tor
listings
~4878 ex V435
$500 1•

u~.....
~~.

PartoU

Radial AP Supar Sport
wldelread 2:l5140/R·I61n,
(740)667.(1()52
;;,;;;5;;,;;;;;;;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
·TMb
~~'!!!";;;;;;;!!"";;;;;;;~
2001 Blue Dodge Dekola, snap on bedcover,
62K. miles, clear IItie, 6
cyl. engine, · $7500.00
304•675.3151 .
.
For sale 97 5·10 2
W·D. pwr.steerlng &amp;
brakes, ale, $2000.00
OBO 304,812:0191 .
Bam-4:30pm.
Closed
Thurs, Sal &amp; Sun. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"-74Qo446-;!!!;;,;;7300~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Want To 1uy
~
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;..=
WantToluy
::"-:"....~~~:o=,;; Wan! lo. buy Junk Cars,
Used, ooncrele bloclcs call740-:l88-0884 '
74o-245-5203 T-9PM

Apto.

. 140-446·2568.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $560.
Equal Housing Opportu·
Land jAc:nago)
nily. This inslllulion is ~"

old

wks.

Beaulllul

Call 740-245-5526
60+ · acres pasture, bal· 740-446-&lt;1390
1996 Lincoln runs good ance wooded. Srock wa· -=~=~=~
21 mi~s . per gal.
HOLIDAY .SPECIAL
.
2 spnngs,
1995.00.
•••n3-5299
rer
pond,
well
P
$
farm has carriect 40-4S
at a full se~u rity deposit

Free to good home: 7 wk Jet Aeration Motors re·
old pups also 8 mon old p&amp;l~ed. new &amp; "lbum In Pollee
F blk lcib.Very frtendly stock. Call Ron Evans, Irom

Call after 5al 740-9890.
Roc-atlonal' "ehlcloo .. ............................. 1OCIO
ATV ....•....•.•.....•.~ .......................................... 1005
Blcyctoo......................................................
·
·
1010
Boato/Acceooorlaa .................................... 1015
eempe•IRVI
,,
11o Trellera .............................1020
Motorcycloa ..............:........................... .,... 1025
Othor ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai!LaaM.:.................................... 2005
Autoo ...................,...................................... 2010
Claoolc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Commorclalllnduotrlal .............................. 2020
Pano 11o Accoooorlea........... :......................2025
Sporlll Utlllly .............................................. 2030
Truct&lt;o......................................................... 2035
Utility Tralloro ............................................ 2D40
Vlno ............,............................................... 2045
Want to buy ...............................................:zoso
Real Eotate Seleo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
Commerclal................................................3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
For S.to by Ownor .....................................30~
Hau-lor S.to......................................... 3025 .
L.ood (Acreego) ..........................................3030
Loll ..................... ........ ..................... ..........3035
Wont to buy................................................3040
Rool Eotate Rimtola...................................31500
AP'Irlmonto/Townhouoea .........................3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3515
Houooolo• Ront .................. ,..................... 3520
Lend (Acreage),,, ....................:.....,............3525
Storago.......................................................3535
Want to Ront .............................................. 3~
Manufactured Houalng ••.••••• ..••••...•••••••••••.4000
Loll ........ ...... ...............................................4005
Movoro........................................................4010
Rontoto ....................................................... 4015
Salu............:..............................................4020
Supplloo .....................................................4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
RHOn Property ......................................... IIOOO
Reaort Property lor ulo ........................... 5025
Rnort Property lor rent ...........................5050
Employment...............................................IIOOO
Accounllng/Financlol ................................ 6002
Admlnlotratlvo/Pro1Holonat..................... 6004
Coohlor/Cierl&lt; ............................................. 6008
Child/Elderly Cere ..................................... 6008
Ctortcal .......................................................8010
Conatructlon .....................................:........ 8012
Drlvoro 6 Delivery .... ................ ................. 8014
Educatlon ................................................... eo11
Eloctrtcat Plumbtng ...................................8011
Employ mont Ageni:too.............................. 8020
Ent-lnrMnt............................................ 8022
Food Servl...............................................tiOH
Govomment • F-..1 Jollo .................... 802e
Help artled- Genwol .................................. 802e
L8w Enlo.........t ...................................... 8030
MalntenancWDornootlc............................. I032
Menogemont/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
Mochonlco ..,...............................................8036
Modlcat ............................................: .......... 8038
MutiCOII ....................................................... 6040
Port-Tifne.T...,porarlo0 .............................8042
Reotouronto ............................................... 8044
S.toa ...........................................................IIIM8
Tochnlcol Tnldooo .......................................8080
TextllooiFoctory ...................................... ,.. 111152

FUfll/ 011/ r...oG /

Pill

pups ~~~~~;;;:-;;;;;;;;;;

pups ml$200. Mini
Sdtnauzer
(pa~) pups,
mlf
$400; . -Boxer
black/whHe nv$600, All
AKC reg., 740-696-1085
Found While olda&lt;
male poodle in the
Gall. Ferry area
304·675·3955.

UJJ4 uttf

~w.comlos.cOm

w/stovelfridge,
utilities
pd, upstairs, no pets at
46 Olive St. $450/mo ...
dep. 740-446-3945

Serious Inquires only, ton Estates. 52 W'*'tpiease caii74G-992·3678
wood Dr., from $365 to

.l-A-~

~..;0-~..;..;-&lt;1..;~--74 36 7

spectacular (740)992-&lt;11 65
~
- m- - ·a-pl.
4 -.- -,00

vtew of the Oh io ANer. 2
car detached garage and
2 out buildings. Would
make a wonderful · lamily
home or bed &amp; breakfast.
Private and Pduresque

first shots &amp;
sian af Financial lnstl1u· warmed $250 ready to
tions OffiCe of Consumer go 11 /24108 5 males 4
Affair&amp; BEFORE you refi· females.
740-367·5037

in

Middle-

room,

enloy the

Contact the Ohio Oivi- trievers

Beautiful

Street,

beauti- port, " 2 be droom fur fully tand&amp;caped with in nished apartm en t util iground pool. Sit on the ties paid , no pets. dewrap arQ\Ind porch and posit
&amp;
mfenmce s

Ptto

Registered

~~-:~-.-~~-

dows, large kltcl'len BFld Beech

0

ll~

~~~:---:-=

wood· 11es paid 1BR no pets

dows, mpslly hew win·

~N~O~TIC~E~Bor;;i;;i;ro.iw~S;;;ma;;;rt;;;. AKC Reg. Golden Re-

nance your home or obtain a loan. BEWARE or
requests for any large
~G~ra~ve~·":e~la~n~ke~ts~.~Wr~ea~th~s advance payments of
$10 &amp; up, Blankets f~s or lnsur~J:nce. CaD
$5·$25, . Sue's Green· the Office of Consumer
Affi'ars
toll
fi'ee
at
1
.
ho
use,
4R7d3t0
MornA
ng
learn
•
278.0003
10
1
888
S1ar
·•
B!:i1ne, if the mortgage broker or
lendel Is .' properly li·
censed. (this Is a public
seN~e
announcemenl
from me Ohio Valey

Original

woft(, . n:en y piCture win· Gallipolis. 446-9523

Cotltges and Schoote1274B

hilO

, .5 bath dup lex $575 on

·

(4+)acres, to a hiS1oric81 om

()

spots, appro.lC . 4-6 mon

NOTICE .OHIO VALLEY

ade

t·888·582·3345

TownhOUMS

Private drive oft Lincoln OH
35.
Call
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 740-200 -7934
ema1t
Hill,
woods on three sides southohioliving@gmail.c

old. 740-245·0310

PUBLISHING CO. raeommends that you do
business, with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until vnol have lnvestirmt,..,..
lng the offering.

vallable edition.

No Fee Unless We Win!

Ohio Rlnr

Gafllpollo eo-

gold

or

orrectlona will

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI

Apartmonts/

Propony: ::;;;;;~~--~~!"'"'"'
Spect.:u\lr vt.w of the Brand New 2 bedroom

8utiot.U&amp;Trado
,Scltool

Fo1,.1nd
female Chllhua· ~~--~-=
hua mix on Rocksprings Septic pumping Gallia
' Road, 740-992·4038 . or Co. OH and Mason Co.
740·274-9991 ·
WI/. Ron Evans Jack·
Found: 3 lab/ret mhted son, OH. 800~537·9528 ·

dvertisement.

mission

HOUNoforSalo

,

Extroordlnlry

reject or cancel any

ad at any lime.
Errors Must B
eported on the Drs

Eo

Call

Publishing raservn

CLASSIFIED INDEX

up ro.IOOO sq:·fl. tO,r&gt;&lt;mties

l\egtster

.Sentinel

call Today... {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333

We will
no
nowlngly occept
dverllaemont
olellon of the law.

•HealS

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

;;;;;;;~:;::~;;;;;;;
.t,p lt•oll/
houtoo

~;;;;;;T;;;o~w'!'"-:o-"==
1 and 2 bedroom
spls.,
furnished
and
unfur·
nished,

and houses In

Pomeroy ano M&lt;ldleport,
security deposll required,
no pets. 740-992·2218
1BA Apl, WID hookups,
selelllle T&gt;/ Incl. wirenl,
close to hoapllal. Call
740-:139-11362
2br apt In Ak&gt; Grande
close 10 College. $375
dep .
$375/month.
245·9060
~~~~....,~~
2BR APT.Ck&gt;se 1o Hoi·
zer Hospllal on SA 160
CIA (740)441-&lt;1194
~W~A~NTE"""o"":•69"'""c""a·m·aro·s-- ~3;..;.roo~m.;;s;,:..;.a;.;nd.~ba;.;th~-u~
•

and get your lirst months
Rent Free t

AI
BOO State Route 325
Thum1 an, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170

Valley View Apartments

1·2 Bedroom Apar1 ments
With appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call for details or pick up
applicati on a l rental
office .
Posslbllity of rental
assistance.
Equal HouSI~g .

Opportunity
TDOH 19·526·0466
"This institution is'an
Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

---....,:-....,•
Tara
Townhou..
Apartmenls .· 2BA. 1.5
balh, back patio, pool
playground. (trash, sew·
age, . wa1er
pd.l
$425/rent,
$425/sec
~ - ca1174o- 367-o647

Have you priCed a Jotln Absolute Top Dollar • 911• projects or _restored cars stairs. Completely fur·
Deere lately? You'll be ver/gold caine, any · any condWon · fln~rs nishe&lt;l with W/0. No
surpriSodl Check ·oU\ our 101&lt;/141&lt;/tSK gold jew· fee paid. Cell Doug pats. Rat. Aeq. 441-&lt;1245
Commorcial
used
lnvenrory
al elry denial gold
pre 614-203-1272 cell or Apartmenl available now ;;;;;=~~""'"-=
www.CA~EO. oom.
Car· 19
US
cu'rreney 814-«4·.2909 office.
Alvarbend
Apts. New 2 ba'f' serv~ station
michael
Equipment prooflmlnt
sets,
Maven VN. Ndw accept· J_ackson
Plke. , Lease
740-446-2412 ·
monda, MTS Coin Shop.
ln9
appl~tlons
lor required. Call 446-3644
H
feod. Seed Gnli 151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
HUO.subsldizod,
one ;;fo;;,rmo...,re!!'!iinf,; ,o·;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"1•
•
• polls. 446·2&amp;12
Bedroom ApiS. U111mes
H..,_ for Ront

3s

ii'ICiuded. Based on 30% ~~~~~~~
of adjusted incom e. Call ) 199/mo~ J t-oed. 2 bait..
:
For Sal.lyOwMr ' 304-882-3121 , available Bank. Rtro~ 1:'1 '-r do.... n. 1~
Thrtrt Shop: -now open
lor S&amp;olor and Disabled years. 8'i- APR 1 for listing'
.. .
,
1
Thurs.&amp;Sat.9:oo-3.Free
House on SR S88 for
people.
800-(,20-4946 t:&lt; RU27
clothes &amp; stuf'f.4S2 Hoi'· more information and
pictures go . to o!Vb.com ~~~~~-~ 2br. house · in Mason
1.11. number: is browntng. CONVENIENTLY
LC&gt;- $32:5 man . + $325 dep. ·
&amp; SALE
740-446-7204
OATED &amp; AFFORD- no pelS 304·882·3652.

Round bales of hay tor
sale. 740-256-0071

qoo

,

GUN

SHOW

dia:

~:="'~Y~n;.;;S;;•;;Io;..;;;;;;;

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

1il

MARIETTA., OH Comfort ·--~--;;;;;,;;;; "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ABLE I Townhouse apart· 3 br. house tor rent 10£1
Inn sat. &amp; Sun. Dec ·6&amp;.7 "'
;;;;;;
menta, and/or small Uberty St. Pt. Ple11sant
Tables $25 Adrn . $4.00 ~~~~A.TV~·~;;;;:~
H - For Salo
houses for rent CaU no pels 304·593-&lt;1909 or

"BUY•SELL'TRAOE'"

Open lo
40-&amp;5 -(14

7

7 12

the .

~

;;;;;;;;;;;.....;;;;;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;

7~1 ·1111

lor appll· 304-675-4655.

pobl~ 01
Yamahagraplllcl
ROifllor. New
.
=ca;;;tlon~&amp;~lnlorm~~·tlon~·=- ~~~---:::=-~~
tandoro,
kit. 3 Bod, 2 Bathl Oftly 1BA house $375 uliiHies
sear &amp; ahoCt&lt; covero. Ex· $15,500 lor l~tlngs ELLM VIEW APTS ""' NOT included. Rete•·

=--~~~-.--.-Crau Croo1c Auction.
BuiiiiO, Soturdoy I pm

Used conslgnmeniS con·
slsting of lift chair, elec.
range, omall colleclables,
bid. Is run, k&gt;ts o1 new
lteme. Sale starts at 6pm
&amp; 9pm. Starting ro ,.II
high quality Knives such
as c188 , Buck &amp; Mossy
Dak. Vloa, Masler Cord
&amp; Debll 304-550-1616
Stephen Reedy t1839

2&amp;3BA and Ufl, Cenlral ances required. Galllpoll&lt;
Air, WID hoOIWp, lenanl area 709·1372
~~~~~~~ PI)'O electric. EHO Eltn ;;_;;;,.;.;;;;.;.;;~""":-.~
Canlpon 1RV~ a.
3 br.. 1 112 bath Aand1 , View
Apls. 2 br. house ;n Autlan.i
Tralon
gas hea~ ale, 2 car go· (304)882·301 7
$350 a month, $200 de
~--..ii&amp;o;;......_ rago,
·
Middleport,
posil, 740-742·1903
Cond . $3000 neg.

Rv

5ervloe

81

Ca~mlchaei

1!0()-620.41H6 ex

A019

$68 900 33CH8tH1J06

'

'

Trailers
3br
2ba
Qmlrtll
40-«S.:J82S
Alr.H.at
..;wly
remod·
7
tied balhroomo
now
RV S8rvloe at Cannl- hardwood &amp; 610, tloOTI.
chael
Trailerl San&lt;fhlll Ad $155,000
740-448-3825
304-675-4880

Twin Rlve!l Towa• Is ac· ~':""-~~:-cepttng applk:atiOns · tot 2 story country home in

walling liS! lor HUO subl!ldlzed, 1-BFI apartment
1or the et&lt;tortyldlsebled,
call675-$79
~

...

langsville
area
o
BdJ1&amp;1/2ba!lls.S450 per
M plus
ur~ll~slon
3acre&amp;+.740-742·2628
4BR house in Gall•polis.
740-!!67-7762

�\
Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

.'

Friday, November 28,

www .mydailysentinel.com

BCS·title picture ~remains unclear
Bv~l::;,a!=TZ

2008

standings. He said thi s week
that he d1dn '.t want to
·
explain his rationale ~au se
PITTSBURGH (AP) Remember the dramatic
it would be a distraction .
13-9.
end to last year.'s college
'Asked if he regrets not
It's not likely many West
football season? The nationhaving a vote now, Stoops Virginians played those
al title chances for Ohio
replied, "Probably."
numbers in any lottery comState and LSU looked
Florida's Urban Meyer bination this year. They're
doomed, until a series of
Brawl
does have a vote - he said still too recognizable , too
unexpected upsets resurrecthe took note of Oklahoma's painfuL too emblematic of
WEST VIRGINIA
ed those teams and eventualdecisive
-.:ictory
last
week
the
bleakest
days
one
of
. vs.
ly matched tliem in the
but
said
he's
glad
the
SEC
since
the
Mountaineers
PITTSBURGH
national title game.
doesn't
have
BCS
standings
began
playing
football
more
FRIDAY,
Nov.
28 - HEINZ FIELD
If you liked last year's
involved
in
his
conference's
than
a
century
ago.
twtsts and turns, chances are
tiebreaker.
13-9 .
·
. "It's just an hour up the
that this year will see even
'"To
have
a
voter
in
The
score
that
cost
West
road
, just like Florida- .
more corkscrews. If anyOregon
or
Texas
or
San
Virginia a national champi- Florida
State,"
West
thing , 2007's convoluted
Diego
or
New
York
City
onship
game
appearance,
Virginia
assistant
Doc
Bowl Championship Series
mak
e
.
a
decision
about
and
may
have
sent
former
Holliday
said
of
the
10
!situiltion might look simple
VJI'tether
or
not
you
go
to
a
coach Rich Rodriguez pack- year-old ri valry known as
compared with the drama
,
boy;
that's
cHampionship
ing for Michigan.
the Backyard Brawl. ''Any
likely to unfold in the next
tough
duty,"
he
said
.
Forget
it?
How
could
time ' 'you get schools that
couple of weeks .
·
Texas
coach
Mack
Brown
they? The score triggered so close together, you get fans
Last year, the main BCS
•also
.
has
a
·
vote,
though
he
much anguish, so much sec· pass1o
· n . too. "
.
. .and th e1r
problem became one of findf
demurred
when
asked
about
ond-guessing,
so
much
m
It's
wh
y
West
Virginia
res·
mg two teams worthy of
his rankings. Like Meyer, ger-pointing, so many sig: idents
proudly
wear
. playing in the championship
•e's uncomfortabl e with the nificant changes that it Pittsburgh Steelers T-shirts ,
game. This year, the issue is
trying to choose from among
AP photo \Je BCS standings have in would be impossible for the but wouldn ·1 be caught .
. several highly qualified Oklahoma running back Chris Brown (29) reacts after scor- P«sibly determining the Mountaineers to forget in wearing anything that says
Pitt Panthers.
teams .
ing a touchdown against Texas Tech in the second quarter ou,ome of the South battJe.. only 12 months' time.
h
said
it
's
a
problem
"It
was,a
terrible
,
terrible
.. 1 don 't know if they' ll
In some respects, the pic- of an NCAA college foqtball game in Norman. Okla.,
feeling,"
cornerback
Ellis
"
wh~
we're
having
voters
ture is fairly clear-cut - if Saturday, Nov. 22.
tha,t •e don ' t know, and Lankster said of that 13-9 say it , but they' ve been gun:
the current top teams win
upset Joss by then-No. ·2 ning for us all season," Pitt
out. In that case, it is likely th is week, the South repre- Might the team that doesn't we re JIVing computers that West
Virginia to Pitt a year linebacker Scott McKillop
that the BCS championship sentative in the Big 12 get the chance to play in the we~en at the game , and ago this
." As a player, we ruined
will feature one team from championship will be deter- Big l2 championship quali- we re a~ ing coaches to run rible ." weekend. "Just ter- said
their season last year, a lot
the Big 12 versus the winner mined by the head-to-head fy for the national title up the .\ore to get more
'The Mountaineers (7-3, 4- · of fans' dreams of playing in
.
of
the
Southeastern result of the remaining two. · game? After all , the Big 12, .f&gt;tyle pom, "
I Big East) have insisted .all a na.tional championship,
Confe.rence championship.
But if the Sooners, especially teams in the . Brown \.;ed some criti- .week
that revenge won't be game, so they're going to be
But the SEC contenders Longhorns and Red Raiders South Division , can make a ~ Ism .four Y~rs ago.fortouta
factor
. when they play pumped for us."
- top-ranked Alabama and all win , determining which case that theirs is the tough- mg his team\;redentials for
neighboring but not neighWest Virginia has a flicker, .
No. 4 Florida - tirst must team will face Missouri will est conference in the coun- a BCS bowl. •I .
borly
rival
Pittsburgh
(7-3
,
of
hope of winning the Big
"I was (ca_ll1 a politician
get past fierce in-state rivals be loaded with controversy. try.
3-2)
in
a
nationally
televised
East
, but it would take the
In the event of a three-way
Or consider a team like ~nd a whme ~ he said. game Friday. They may be Mountaineers
this week. Alabama plays
· beating Pitt
disappointing Auburn on tie. the Big 12 tiebreaker Southern California. Its only Now what th system is kidding only themselves.
and South Florida on Dec. 6:
Saturday and Florida plays would come down to the loss came to Oregon State, making coaches k about
Because
the
Mountaineers
and No . 16 Cincinnati losing
up-and-down Florida State. BCS standings. which incor- which will go to the Rose why their teams · ould be
lost
a
game
on
their
home
Syracuse on Saturday:
If both emerge unscathed, porates poll voters and com- Bowl if it beats Oregon on voted in , and th 's very field a year ago that virtual- to
Pitt's chances ended when it
the winner of the Dec. 6 puter rankings. Right now, Saturday. The Trojans, who unfair to the coach in my ly no one in their home state lost
28-21 at Cincinnati las~
SEC iitle game likely clinch- Texas is ranked second in soundly beat Ohio State , estimation."
thought
they
could
possibly
Saturday.
·.
The solution, to 10wn
es a BCS spot.
the BCS . narrowly ahead of could make a decent case for
If
Cincinnati • beats·
and many others, is ob'tlus lose , many West Virginians
Sorting out the Big 12,.on Oklahoma.
.
themselves .
fear
they
may
never
again
·
Syracuse
claim the con..:
Assuming a Texas Tech
And what about unbeaten though an impossibilit~'o.i; see their team so close to ference's toautomatic
the other hand , might take a
BCS:
Ph.D.
·
win ·over Baylor, Texas Utah and Boise State, nei- year.
\
bowl bid , ,the West Virginia~
"I think the whole thi~ winning the national title.
Oklahoma, Texas and needs Oklahoma to beat ther of which plays in a BCS
"We
ruined
everything
for
Pitt winner could wind up inscreams for a playoff,"
Texas Tech each have one Oklahoma State to maintain conference?
•
them,"
Pitt
kicker
Conor
the
Sun Bowl , with the
loss in the South Division. a three-way tie to have a
All the uncertainty has put said. " If we win an Lee said .
·
Gator
an outside possibility.:
Oklahoma lost to Texas, chance to reach the Big 12 coaches in the uncomfort- Oklahoma wins and one o
Winning Friday 's game , Coach Dave Wannstedr,
Texas lost to Texas Tech and championship. But a lop- able position of feeling they us gets left out of the Big 12 hen
only a non-major bowl said the effort in this gameTech was crushed 65-21 last sided Oklahoma win could have to lobby for their own championship or one of us
may
be decided, won't can't be any less, even'
week by Ojdahoma.
give the Sooners a sufficient teams. Oklahoma's Bob gets left out of the BCS,
West Virginia's pain. though neither rival iS:
Of those three, Oklahoma boost to launch them past Stoops talked up his team's what a crying sliame. For
this
is the first time the ranked in The Associated
has the toughest chore this the Longhorns in the BCS credentials after last week's everybody.
have played Press poll for the first time
. .
victory over Texas Tech , "If you look . at the· first t~~~~;~~:~!:~~since
weekend, playing at danger- rankings.
they lost since 2001.
In other words, the though he has since decided eight teams, there is a reason
ous Oklahoma State on
of
their
lives
and
"This game ... people tall(
· Saturday. Texas shouldn't · Longhorns would love noth- to clam up ~
to say this would be the year th•, v 1-'~- ' t want to , lose
about it the rest of their;
have much trouble with 4-7 ing more than an unimpres"There 's arguments for We would have the greatest
lives ;" said Wannstedt, a;
Texas A&amp;M tonight (though sive Oklahoma victory.
and against everybody _ playoff in college football
Pitt. Not again ..
•
fo;mer Pitt player.
If that 's not confu sing not just us but anyone with (history) because there will
. the Aggies have beaten the
Longhorns the past .two enough, it only gets poten- one loss," he said .
be teams that are going to be.
Stoops turned down a left out. USC may have to·be
years), and Texas Tech tially more complicated a
should ·get past Baylor on ' week later. Say, for the sake chance to vote in the USA an at-large to get into the
Saturday.
of argument, that Oklahoma Today coaches' poll·, which BCS and they've got one of
If one of those teams loses or Texas loses to Missouri . is factored into the BCS the great.teams."

Bearcats head coach fmally coming clean

,.

www.mydallysentlnel.com
.·"'

Forget about it? WV
can't erase loss to Pitt

.

Cincinnati coach Brian
J/1!!!!!1111"!!!!!!!
pushed his career rushing
Kelly c.an admit it now, he's
5711t.61T
total to 4,292 yards, breaknot qutte sure how things
ing the record of 4,289 held
were going to work out for
by former Missouri quarterCincinnati 's ever-rotating
back Brad Smith."
·
stable of quarterbacks .
White 's speed and plar,Injuries have forced five
making al;lility mean he II
different players to take s~em s likehalmost a lock to get a chance to make it in
snaps for the Big East-lead- Pp ay Ibn t e Blnaugural St. the NFL. The question is,
ing Bearcats this year, eters ,urg . owl while where'!.
though Tony Pike now hUc onn 5 tan base would
Smith was drafted by the
seems to have a firm grasp ave a relatively short com- New York Jets in the fourth
o~ the job despite playing mute to Toronto for the ro4nd of the 2006 NFL
With a broken left arm .
International Bowl.
Draft and' has carved out a
All the Bearcats need to
West Virginia, if it doesn't niche for himself as a wide
do to complete their surpris- win
teams
.k 1the
h conference, would rece 1·ver and s·pe"I.al
ing run to the title is a· win l1 e Y ead to the Sun Bowl. player. Smith has thrown all
over Syracuse on Saturday. The Gator Bowl, which the of two passes _ both
Frkom the outside , it. looks Mountaineers won two incompletions - in his twoh e the Bearcats haven 't y~ars ago. is likely to exer- plus seasons.
missed a beat no matter who CISe Its option and pick a
The coac hes who have
is under center. It hasn't Big 12 team instead of a Big spent the last four years tryalways looked like that on Eas t team to face an 'ACC mg ~ unsuccessfully - to
stop Whi te are a little divid the mside . Thou~h Keli:Y foe.
repeatedly promised hi s
Rutgers, if it wins its sea- ed on just where White will
players everything was son finale against Loui sville fi t in at the next level.
going to be OK, even he had to cap a remarkable tumSyrac use coach Greg
·around. seems a safe bet to Robinson , a former defenhis doubts.
"We lied and lied and play in the papajohlis.com sive coordinator for th e
lied," Kelly said . "We were · Bowl with Pitt~burgh head- Denver Broncos who was
nervous because we didn ' t ing to Charlotte for the also an assistant at Texas for
part of Vince Young's
know how it was going to Mei.neke Car Care Bowl.
lay
out
."
Of
course,
all
of
th1
'
s
could
·
career.
said White has the
P
Considering the delirium change in the next two skills to be an NFL quarterthat came upon Nippert weeks, which is why back.
Stadium in the final seconds Rutgers coach Greg Schiano
" ! think Pat's style is difof last week 's win over has n't broken our the .tea ferent.'' Robinson said. "He
Pittsburgh , when fan s leaves to see where he'll be can throw the football and
stormed the field and pelted spending the holiday&gt; .
with (West Virginia's) new
the turf with oranges, repre" I know we 're bowl eligi- , ystem thi s year he's grown
senting the Orange Bowl bl e and that's about the JUSt as tar as total package .
berth that will li kely go to extent of it.'' Schiano ' aid . It ' ll take some learn ing still ,
the Big East winner, things " I am not overl y concerned but I think he's got a really
are going pretty well.
right now."' ·
good shot.''
. BOWL
PICTURE
WHITE THE QB : West
Loui sville coach Steve
CLEARING UP: With two Virginia quarte rback Pat Krag thorpe. who helped
"!!lekS to go in the regular Wh ite chose to play for Ihe coach Drew I:Jiedsoe to the
• season, the bowl picture is Moun taineers
in
part Pro Bow l as quarterback
starting to get a little less because fo rmer coach Rich coach with the Buffalo
murky. Kind of.
Rodriguez promised White Bi ll s. said White 's future
Tile conference champion he'd get a chance to play depends on what ki nd of sit- either Cincinnati or West quarterback insteJd of get- uation he fi nds himself in
Virginia - will gel the ling moved to wide receiver after getti ng drafted)
Bowl Championship Series or cornerback.
" It depends on whether
White repaid the promise they want to· use him as a
bid, ·almost certainly the
Orange Bowl.
by becoming the greatest ru nner or not." Kragthorpi:
As for where the other runn ing qu arterbac k in sa id. 'The (Atlanta Falcons)
five bowl eligible teams are NCAA history. White's 200- started to do that with
lieaded, well , it kind of yard performance in las t (Michael) Vick toward the
· depend~.
South Florida week's win over Louisville end of his tenure there. They

Friday, November 28, 2008

did some of the zone reads
and the desi~n runs to put
the ball in h1s hands. It all
depends on what team drafts
him a11d where they end up
playing him ." .
Kragthorpe said White
has made great strides as a
passer thi• year - he threw
•tOr 122 yards and two scores
against the Cardinals - but
that White 's slender frame
could be a risk down the
road.
·
White isn 'tfoeused on hi s
burgeomng
· record count or
. 'his NFL prospects.just yet ,
· after t he wm
· over
rei'teratmg
Louisville that . he simply ·
wants
to
help
the
Mountaineers win their last
two games and get ready for
what could be a fourth
straight New Year 's Day
bowl appearance.

mrtbune - Sentinel -

',I.

'

'

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County

OH

In One Week With Us
classitied@~~~;:~ribune.com RE.ACH OVER ·285,000 PROSPECTS

p

::..·~~·

mrtbune

llli""'- -----,...---_:::O::,.r;.:Fax To

. • 1500 Warts/5000 BTU

•·~ year Manufactu rers W••n\t·1v

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• Energy efficienr. safe . soil, cc:;rcortalble

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SAtE RIIIIS FIITM1 I SA111TM1 lltw. 21·29

KIPLING SHOE
300 Second Ave. Oallipoli•. OH
740-441-9010
Houn: M-F 10 am- 6 pm; Sat 10-S

44S..3008

Or Fax To

875-5234

992·2157

Oeatltir~

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
""'
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50. for small
S1.00 for large

Qlsplav Ads

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

All Dleplay: tz Noon 2
Bualn••• Daya Prior To
Publlc.tlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thu.-.day for Sundaya

Por sunday• ll;l'aper

· 'All ads must be prepaid'

HOW I0 Wfuf! Aft. ~
!Uc:ces u

ds

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

«POLICIES«

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

· O!horSorvicos

Ohio Valley

SOC

Iherlghlto edit,

ay ol publlcatl
nd the l'Hbu
nllnei·Reglo.., wll
responsible lor n
ore than the coat o
he

space occupl

y the error and on!

flrsr lnsenlon. w
hall no! be liable I

he

ny lou or expen
hat resuns from th

ubllca tlon

Trae phone/ case on Lo·
St beiWeen 3rd &amp;
Ave on 11121/08.
fllease catl 448-2380

cust
4th

pups. White

w/

In the firs

Bo• number ads a
lways conlldenUal.'

cottoge
(Careers Close To Home)

home.
Cloca 1900, 5 ~------·
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2 Furnished
Apartment

Call TO&lt;Iayi 'I~S-4387
1-800-214-&lt;1452

·tun batt:ls, 2 staircases, 2nd Ave. upsta1rs all utm·-

gallipoliscareei'COtlago.edLl
ACCI'&amp;diled Member Act: red II·
ing CoLlncll for lndependenl

beautlful

I

111t

Natico.o

MoMy To Lond

breakfast

Publishlilg Company)
BalltTIIIII
WDrprooflng
UnConditional Bfetima
guarantee. Local refer·
' ences tumishect Estab·
llshed 1975. Cal124 Hrs.
740·446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing ~

BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Log
. alo ........................................................... 100 .
Announcements .......................................... 200
Blrtllday/Annlverury .................................. 205
Happy Ada ....................................................210
Loot llo Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Yau ..................................... 220
Notices .......................................................;. 225
Pereonals ..... ... .............................. ............... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Servlceo ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlco ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
·Building Materlalo ....................................... 306
aualnoM ..................................................:...308
Caterlng........................................................310
Chlld/Eidarly Care ....................................... 312
Computoro ......................................,.... :r...... 314
ContraC10ra ...................................7............. ~UI
Domeetlco1Janllorlol ................................... 318
Electrlcol ............. ,........................................ 320
Flnonclal.......................................................322
Health ...........................................................326
Heating llo Coollng....................................... 328
.Home Improvements 330 '
lnourance..................................................... 332
uwn Servl................................................. 334
Mualc/Donce/Dramo ....................................338
Other Sorvl ..o.............................................338
Plumblng/EioctriCOII .....................................340
Proluolonal Sorvtcoo.................................342
Ropalro ...............,........................................;wl
Aootlng .. .........................................................348
$1&gt;Curlty ..........'..............................................348
Tax/Accounting ..........!.. .............................. 350
TravoVEntortalnment ..................................352
F'lnonclal ............... :......................................400
Financial Servlcee .......................................405
·tnouranco .................................................... 410
.. Money to Lond .............................................415
Educallon ..................................................,.soo
Bualneu 11o Tr..,. School ........................... sos·
Instruction 11o Tralnlng ................................. 510
Leaaone ........................................................ 515
Poroonal ....................................................... 520
Anlmalo ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppltoo .......................................... 605
Hor80o .......................................................... 610
Llveotock......................................................815
Poto ...............................................................620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
AgrlcuHuro ............................................. ,.. ,.. 700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 70S
Garden 11o Praduce..............:........................ 710
Hoy FHd, SHd, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Lend ...................:....................... 120
Want to buy .. :...........................................:...725
· MerchandiM ................................................ 1100
Antlqueo ....................................................... 905
Appliance..................................................... itO
Auctlono ....................................................... t15
Bargain Baoomont... ....................................UO
ColloctlbfoO .................................................. t121l
Computofl ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplloo ...................................tl35
FIN Markoto ................................................ t40
Fuel 011 Coai/Wood/011 ............................. 945
Fumlture ......................................................950
Hobby/Hunt 11o Spon ........................... ,, ....... V55
Kid's comer.................................................980
Mlocollanoouo..............................................ves
Want to buy ..................................................1170
Yard Solo ...........................;.........................1175

SPECTACULAR VIEW

or 740-645-8098

~~~~~~~

Jack Russell ·pups ready
at Christmas $250 Reg.
379-24:39

Huffytime
Toy forPOOdles,
JuS!
Chrislma&amp;.

11 , l.f

Golden ·

!;~~;::;;:-;~:~;;;;;;;;~&lt;CI~211118;;b~y;N;E;A;,;'n;c~.

m/$200,

889

Ret

11$250;

Chlhua- Free kittens 5-6 wks

hua pup ml$200; Cocker old litter trained

..

..

Wood J Gas

~~#=~~~
seasoned

Firewood

304·273·2698.

Haldwood. 448·9204
.....-.....-..~-"!'"· ::-~"'!"'':""~:"""~
~
Fire Wood lor Sale 1\111
FrBij to good home· 7 DeiNer. us Highway 35
puppies, mother Is
304-812-6350
Australian Shepherd
304·576-2610.
Misc•lan.aua

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;iui;;...
;.;.;;;;;;;~

~02 Honda Aocord V6,
~adod, 92,000 miles.

Giveaway

1·800·537·9528.

1 For Sale 16 Bulb Tan·
nlng Bed, runs on tto. 4
Mln.Pln I Pekingese mix year old wlltl new bulbs.
$1100.
446-:1420 or

ln,3(m),

puppies

8

~~Fao~,.~E~'I'=If&gt;~nt~•~n~t~
ElY,

INTEGRITY,

KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK " TRAILERS,
LOAD MAX EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CoNCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVENTORYAT
www.CAAMICHAEL·
TAAILERS.COM
740-446·3825

339-0915
~~~:"':::::::"~~~
For Sale X BOX 360 with
Gullar Hero, w/2 conlrol·
lers,
2 extra
games or
$275
448-3420
339·0915
~~~':;::!~~~
NEW ANO USEO STEEL
Sreel Beams, Pipe Rebar
lor
~oncrelo
Anglo,
Channel, Flal Bar, Sleel
Grating tor Oralns, Drive·
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Melals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed &amp; Fri.

brtetcs.

and

--:"~~:""''::"::""'~

al Jack·

.345

~res

located on Equal

Opportunity

Pro ·

496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo- ~v~lde·r~an•d·E~m~p~k&gt;y;.e~r.-~

Us. Is adequate tor a mo- Gracious Living i and 2
bile home. Has all hook· Bedroom Apls. at VIllage
ups 740-441·5129
Maner
and
Riverside
Apts. in Middleport, lrom
Exceptional
200 acre $3 27
to
$592.
cattte fann in Gallia Co. 740.992·5064 .
Equat
OH.
60+
acres Housing Opportunity.
Wi)ll-drainecl
bottomland
along Raccoon Creek, Modem 1BA apr Call

&gt;JIJ"J"'

lmpoundsl

Cars cows

wtcalves. Modem

. ranoh style house
bnck
Chevys, Jeeps, Fords, &amp;. wl finished
wok-out
morel
tor
listings
~4878 ex V435
$500 1•

u~.....
~~.

PartoU

Radial AP Supar Sport
wldelread 2:l5140/R·I61n,
(740)667.(1()52
;;,;;;5;;,;;;;;;;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
·TMb
~~'!!!";;;;;;;!!"";;;;;;;~
2001 Blue Dodge Dekola, snap on bedcover,
62K. miles, clear IItie, 6
cyl. engine, · $7500.00
304•675.3151 .
.
For sale 97 5·10 2
W·D. pwr.steerlng &amp;
brakes, ale, $2000.00
OBO 304,812:0191 .
Bam-4:30pm.
Closed
Thurs, Sal &amp; Sun. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"-74Qo446-;!!!;;,;;7300~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Want To 1uy
~
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;..=
WantToluy
::"-:"....~~~:o=,;; Wan! lo. buy Junk Cars,
Used, ooncrele bloclcs call740-:l88-0884 '
74o-245-5203 T-9PM

Apto.

. 140-446·2568.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $560.
Equal Housing Opportu·
Land jAc:nago)
nily. This inslllulion is ~"

old

wks.

Beaulllul

Call 740-245-5526
60+ · acres pasture, bal· 740-446-&lt;1390
1996 Lincoln runs good ance wooded. Srock wa· -=~=~=~
21 mi~s . per gal.
HOLIDAY .SPECIAL
.
2 spnngs,
1995.00.
•••n3-5299
rer
pond,
well
P
$
farm has carriect 40-4S
at a full se~u rity deposit

Free to good home: 7 wk Jet Aeration Motors re·
old pups also 8 mon old p&amp;l~ed. new &amp; "lbum In Pollee
F blk lcib.Very frtendly stock. Call Ron Evans, Irom

Call after 5al 740-9890.
Roc-atlonal' "ehlcloo .. ............................. 1OCIO
ATV ....•....•.•.....•.~ .......................................... 1005
Blcyctoo......................................................
·
·
1010
Boato/Acceooorlaa .................................... 1015
eempe•IRVI
,,
11o Trellera .............................1020
Motorcycloa ..............:........................... .,... 1025
Othor ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai!LaaM.:.................................... 2005
Autoo ...................,...................................... 2010
Claoolc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Commorclalllnduotrlal .............................. 2020
Pano 11o Accoooorlea........... :......................2025
Sporlll Utlllly .............................................. 2030
Truct&lt;o......................................................... 2035
Utility Tralloro ............................................ 2D40
Vlno ............,............................................... 2045
Want to buy ...............................................:zoso
Real Eotate Seleo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
Commerclal................................................3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
For S.to by Ownor .....................................30~
Hau-lor S.to......................................... 3025 .
L.ood (Acreego) ..........................................3030
Loll ..................... ........ ..................... ..........3035
Wont to buy................................................3040
Rool Eotate Rimtola...................................31500
AP'Irlmonto/Townhouoea .........................3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3515
Houooolo• Ront .................. ,..................... 3520
Lend (Acreage),,, ....................:.....,............3525
Storago.......................................................3535
Want to Ront .............................................. 3~
Manufactured Houalng ••.••••• ..••••...•••••••••••.4000
Loll ........ ...... ...............................................4005
Movoro........................................................4010
Rontoto ....................................................... 4015
Salu............:..............................................4020
Supplloo .....................................................4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
RHOn Property ......................................... IIOOO
Reaort Property lor ulo ........................... 5025
Rnort Property lor rent ...........................5050
Employment...............................................IIOOO
Accounllng/Financlol ................................ 6002
Admlnlotratlvo/Pro1Holonat..................... 6004
Coohlor/Cierl&lt; ............................................. 6008
Child/Elderly Cere ..................................... 6008
Ctortcal .......................................................8010
Conatructlon .....................................:........ 8012
Drlvoro 6 Delivery .... ................ ................. 8014
Educatlon ................................................... eo11
Eloctrtcat Plumbtng ...................................8011
Employ mont Ageni:too.............................. 8020
Ent-lnrMnt............................................ 8022
Food Servl...............................................tiOH
Govomment • F-..1 Jollo .................... 802e
Help artled- Genwol .................................. 802e
L8w Enlo.........t ...................................... 8030
MalntenancWDornootlc............................. I032
Menogemont/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
Mochonlco ..,...............................................8036
Modlcat ............................................: .......... 8038
MutiCOII ....................................................... 6040
Port-Tifne.T...,porarlo0 .............................8042
Reotouronto ............................................... 8044
S.toa ...........................................................IIIM8
Tochnlcol Tnldooo .......................................8080
TextllooiFoctory ...................................... ,.. 111152

FUfll/ 011/ r...oG /

Pill

pups ~~~~~;;;:-;;;;;;;;;;

pups ml$200. Mini
Sdtnauzer
(pa~) pups,
mlf
$400; . -Boxer
black/whHe nv$600, All
AKC reg., 740-696-1085
Found While olda&lt;
male poodle in the
Gall. Ferry area
304·675·3955.

UJJ4 uttf

~w.comlos.cOm

w/stovelfridge,
utilities
pd, upstairs, no pets at
46 Olive St. $450/mo ...
dep. 740-446-3945

Serious Inquires only, ton Estates. 52 W'*'tpiease caii74G-992·3678
wood Dr., from $365 to

.l-A-~

~..;0-~..;..;-&lt;1..;~--74 36 7

spectacular (740)992-&lt;11 65
~
- m- - ·a-pl.
4 -.- -,00

vtew of the Oh io ANer. 2
car detached garage and
2 out buildings. Would
make a wonderful · lamily
home or bed &amp; breakfast.
Private and Pduresque

first shots &amp;
sian af Financial lnstl1u· warmed $250 ready to
tions OffiCe of Consumer go 11 /24108 5 males 4
Affair&amp; BEFORE you refi· females.
740-367·5037

in

Middle-

room,

enloy the

Contact the Ohio Oivi- trievers

Beautiful

Street,

beauti- port, " 2 be droom fur fully tand&amp;caped with in nished apartm en t util iground pool. Sit on the ties paid , no pets. dewrap arQ\Ind porch and posit
&amp;
mfenmce s

Ptto

Registered

~~-:~-.-~~-

dows, large kltcl'len BFld Beech

0

ll~

~~~:---:-=

wood· 11es paid 1BR no pets

dows, mpslly hew win·

~N~O~TIC~E~Bor;;i;;i;ro.iw~S;;;ma;;;rt;;;. AKC Reg. Golden Re-

nance your home or obtain a loan. BEWARE or
requests for any large
~G~ra~ve~·":e~la~n~ke~ts~.~Wr~ea~th~s advance payments of
$10 &amp; up, Blankets f~s or lnsur~J:nce. CaD
$5·$25, . Sue's Green· the Office of Consumer
Affi'ars
toll
fi'ee
at
1
.
ho
use,
4R7d3t0
MornA
ng
learn
•
278.0003
10
1
888
S1ar
·•
B!:i1ne, if the mortgage broker or
lendel Is .' properly li·
censed. (this Is a public
seN~e
announcemenl
from me Ohio Valey

Original

woft(, . n:en y piCture win· Gallipolis. 446-9523

Cotltges and Schoote1274B

hilO

, .5 bath dup lex $575 on

·

(4+)acres, to a hiS1oric81 om

()

spots, appro.lC . 4-6 mon

NOTICE .OHIO VALLEY

ade

t·888·582·3345

TownhOUMS

Private drive oft Lincoln OH
35.
Call
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 740-200 -7934
ema1t
Hill,
woods on three sides southohioliving@gmail.c

old. 740-245·0310

PUBLISHING CO. raeommends that you do
business, with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until vnol have lnvestirmt,..,..
lng the offering.

vallable edition.

No Fee Unless We Win!

Ohio Rlnr

Gafllpollo eo-

gold

or

orrectlona will

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI

Apartmonts/

Propony: ::;;;;;~~--~~!"'"'"'
Spect.:u\lr vt.w of the Brand New 2 bedroom

8utiot.U&amp;Trado
,Scltool

Fo1,.1nd
female Chllhua· ~~--~-=
hua mix on Rocksprings Septic pumping Gallia
' Road, 740-992·4038 . or Co. OH and Mason Co.
740·274-9991 ·
WI/. Ron Evans Jack·
Found: 3 lab/ret mhted son, OH. 800~537·9528 ·

dvertisement.

mission

HOUNoforSalo

,

Extroordlnlry

reject or cancel any

ad at any lime.
Errors Must B
eported on the Drs

Eo

Call

Publishing raservn

CLASSIFIED INDEX

up ro.IOOO sq:·fl. tO,r&gt;&lt;mties

l\egtster

.Sentinel

call Today... {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333

We will
no
nowlngly occept
dverllaemont
olellon of the law.

•HealS

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

;;;;;;;~:;::~;;;;;;;
.t,p lt•oll/
houtoo

~;;;;;;T;;;o~w'!'"-:o-"==
1 and 2 bedroom
spls.,
furnished
and
unfur·
nished,

and houses In

Pomeroy ano M&lt;ldleport,
security deposll required,
no pets. 740-992·2218
1BA Apl, WID hookups,
selelllle T&gt;/ Incl. wirenl,
close to hoapllal. Call
740-:139-11362
2br apt In Ak&gt; Grande
close 10 College. $375
dep .
$375/month.
245·9060
~~~~....,~~
2BR APT.Ck&gt;se 1o Hoi·
zer Hospllal on SA 160
CIA (740)441-&lt;1194
~W~A~NTE"""o"":•69"'""c""a·m·aro·s-- ~3;..;.roo~m.;;s;,:..;.a;.;nd.~ba;.;th~-u~
•

and get your lirst months
Rent Free t

AI
BOO State Route 325
Thum1 an, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170

Valley View Apartments

1·2 Bedroom Apar1 ments
With appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call for details or pick up
applicati on a l rental
office .
Posslbllity of rental
assistance.
Equal HouSI~g .

Opportunity
TDOH 19·526·0466
"This institution is'an
Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

---....,:-....,•
Tara
Townhou..
Apartmenls .· 2BA. 1.5
balh, back patio, pool
playground. (trash, sew·
age, . wa1er
pd.l
$425/rent,
$425/sec
~ - ca1174o- 367-o647

Have you priCed a Jotln Absolute Top Dollar • 911• projects or _restored cars stairs. Completely fur·
Deere lately? You'll be ver/gold caine, any · any condWon · fln~rs nishe&lt;l with W/0. No
surpriSodl Check ·oU\ our 101&lt;/141&lt;/tSK gold jew· fee paid. Cell Doug pats. Rat. Aeq. 441-&lt;1245
Commorcial
used
lnvenrory
al elry denial gold
pre 614-203-1272 cell or Apartmenl available now ;;;;;=~~""'"-=
www.CA~EO. oom.
Car· 19
US
cu'rreney 814-«4·.2909 office.
Alvarbend
Apts. New 2 ba'f' serv~ station
michael
Equipment prooflmlnt
sets,
Maven VN. Ndw accept· J_ackson
Plke. , Lease
740-446-2412 ·
monda, MTS Coin Shop.
ln9
appl~tlons
lor required. Call 446-3644
H
feod. Seed Gnli 151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
HUO.subsldizod,
one ;;fo;;,rmo...,re!!'!iinf,; ,o·;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"1•
•
• polls. 446·2&amp;12
Bedroom ApiS. U111mes
H..,_ for Ront

3s

ii'ICiuded. Based on 30% ~~~~~~~
of adjusted incom e. Call ) 199/mo~ J t-oed. 2 bait..
:
For Sal.lyOwMr ' 304-882-3121 , available Bank. Rtro~ 1:'1 '-r do.... n. 1~
Thrtrt Shop: -now open
lor S&amp;olor and Disabled years. 8'i- APR 1 for listing'
.. .
,
1
Thurs.&amp;Sat.9:oo-3.Free
House on SR S88 for
people.
800-(,20-4946 t:&lt; RU27
clothes &amp; stuf'f.4S2 Hoi'· more information and
pictures go . to o!Vb.com ~~~~~-~ 2br. house · in Mason
1.11. number: is browntng. CONVENIENTLY
LC&gt;- $32:5 man . + $325 dep. ·
&amp; SALE
740-446-7204
OATED &amp; AFFORD- no pelS 304·882·3652.

Round bales of hay tor
sale. 740-256-0071

qoo

,

GUN

SHOW

dia:

~:="'~Y~n;.;;S;;•;;Io;..;;;;;;;

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

1il

MARIETTA., OH Comfort ·--~--;;;;;,;;;; "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ABLE I Townhouse apart· 3 br. house tor rent 10£1
Inn sat. &amp; Sun. Dec ·6&amp;.7 "'
;;;;;;
menta, and/or small Uberty St. Pt. Ple11sant
Tables $25 Adrn . $4.00 ~~~~A.TV~·~;;;;:~
H - For Salo
houses for rent CaU no pels 304·593-&lt;1909 or

"BUY•SELL'TRAOE'"

Open lo
40-&amp;5 -(14

7

7 12

the .

~

;;;;;;;;;;;.....;;;;;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;

7~1 ·1111

lor appll· 304-675-4655.

pobl~ 01
Yamahagraplllcl
ROifllor. New
.
=ca;;;tlon~&amp;~lnlorm~~·tlon~·=- ~~~---:::=-~~
tandoro,
kit. 3 Bod, 2 Bathl Oftly 1BA house $375 uliiHies
sear &amp; ahoCt&lt; covero. Ex· $15,500 lor l~tlngs ELLM VIEW APTS ""' NOT included. Rete•·

=--~~~-.--.-Crau Croo1c Auction.
BuiiiiO, Soturdoy I pm

Used conslgnmeniS con·
slsting of lift chair, elec.
range, omall colleclables,
bid. Is run, k&gt;ts o1 new
lteme. Sale starts at 6pm
&amp; 9pm. Starting ro ,.II
high quality Knives such
as c188 , Buck &amp; Mossy
Dak. Vloa, Masler Cord
&amp; Debll 304-550-1616
Stephen Reedy t1839

2&amp;3BA and Ufl, Cenlral ances required. Galllpoll&lt;
Air, WID hoOIWp, lenanl area 709·1372
~~~~~~~ PI)'O electric. EHO Eltn ;;_;;;,.;.;;;;.;.;;~""":-.~
Canlpon 1RV~ a.
3 br.. 1 112 bath Aand1 , View
Apls. 2 br. house ;n Autlan.i
Tralon
gas hea~ ale, 2 car go· (304)882·301 7
$350 a month, $200 de
~--..ii&amp;o;;......_ rago,
·
Middleport,
posil, 740-742·1903
Cond . $3000 neg.

Rv

5ervloe

81

Ca~mlchaei

1!0()-620.41H6 ex

A019

$68 900 33CH8tH1J06

'

'

Trailers
3br
2ba
Qmlrtll
40-«S.:J82S
Alr.H.at
..;wly
remod·
7
tied balhroomo
now
RV S8rvloe at Cannl- hardwood &amp; 610, tloOTI.
chael
Trailerl San&lt;fhlll Ad $155,000
740-448-3825
304-675-4880

Twin Rlve!l Towa• Is ac· ~':""-~~:-cepttng applk:atiOns · tot 2 story country home in

walling liS! lor HUO subl!ldlzed, 1-BFI apartment
1or the et&lt;tortyldlsebled,
call675-$79
~

...

langsville
area
o
BdJ1&amp;1/2ba!lls.S450 per
M plus
ur~ll~slon
3acre&amp;+.740-742·2628
4BR house in Gall•polis.
740-!!67-7762

�,.

G""""'"'ont &amp; F..loral
Job•

Education
'B eUN 3811

new ., ~•·

In

Friday, November 28, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Help W-.1 .'Gen.ral

country, 3BA 2 bath on farm $750 Great used 16XSO th ree Gallipolis Career College ~~;~;;;;~~~~~ ServiCe Manager

a

r

Navernber28,2008

OOP

Serv·

The Daily Sentinel •

www.rnydailysentiriel:corn

I

OFF ICE
NOW M:e Technician poslttons
utilities Included . Bedroom new vtnyl sid~ IS ~E!ptlng reiumes lor POST
'new carpet, mth.
ing. $22,995.00 W11t help an accounting tnstructor HIRING avg Pay $20/t1r available. Health care &amp;
pointed, CIA, was!&gt;- S.W:729-1331
with deliver-,· Call N1kk1 A mln11111Jm ot a Bache- or
$57Kiyr,
1ncluctes Retirement plans avail·
. room w! W!O hookup.

pd.
$550/mo 3BA Obi.. Wide near 740-385·9621
lor s degree m
er4-595-m31645-5953
Pomeroy. great condition =,...-.,.,,..-,~~ "tng tS requtred

Water

~cco 1.mt- Fed Ben . OT

Place by
Please adSource, not aftitlated
200~
14x70
Mobile ema•l a cover tetter and with USPS who h1res
--~-,...~- w1tt'1 n1ce ya rd. Rent in- H
-"
'balh
·~,.:.-_ 3b
,
G
ome, 2"01ruroom,
o&lt;,
• resume to jdanickiO Mifli1-866-403-2582
rn~~~~•v~
r, w11g. a- eludes
h '" oo1
~
vmy1 sl·'·
umg, s lll9JC r · pollscareerco!lege.edu Of
rage,
$500/deposit Furntshingstwasherl,dryer
h
"~
I ermapayne
WhrvvW, fax i1: to 7~ 44 &amp;4 1 24
• or &amp; some ut1hties Included 20tt.porch 740-664'-4356
Help Wanted· G.-.1
$575/mo. No pets. Call
or 741).797-4356 lo-. =:--,~~~-"'!"'~

304-755-8744
304-675--61~3

44 1-0110 or 591-5174

cated

Rt 7 w/ Riverview. river ~~~~~~~~ $26 000

room, 2BR. t.S baths, 2
car garage, Lr. LA w!
dining
space,
laundry
rm., $600 -+ utilities.
'703-451 ·2591

at

ICCU NURSE

or apply online at: www .pvallt!\ .org
AAIEOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Ohio Valley Bank is ~ u ne nt ly 'ccl in g a
qualified ind_ividua! for th e (Xlsition llf Bril tK h
Manager in Mei£s County. Appli ~ ailt s must
possess previous manaJ;einent · ~xpe ric 1t ..::.: ,
ex.cellent communication skills, abilit y to
develop customer re lations. and cxception!il
customer servict" skill S. Expe'ricm.: e in k ml1n _g

Babysitter needed 1n my
home . Must Have refeJ ences &amp; re liaOie transportation 304-8 12-0553

FIND A JOB
ORA NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

··

more Info Competillve
wages,
mHeage
reim·
bursement and benelits
including · health insUf·
ance &amp; much more. ,

::-.""."'-~~-~~
Retail posi!llns: Prefer
someone W'rttl
experi·
ence, e)(cellent customer
ser.vice skills, be able to
work lndEif}endei"ltly E
md
creatively, be able to
stand lor long periods
and
lil1
50*
lrequently·100*
occasionally. Familiar
with
cash register, credit card
machine and calculator.
Applicant should have
transportation and valid
driver's license. Send re·

son and Point Pleasant,
WV
providing
residentiaL/community
sk1ll training w~h indi·
viduals
wiih
MR/00.
High school diploma or
GED required. No eKpe·
rietlce necessary. Criminat background check required. Must have reliable transpor1ation and
valid
auto
Insurance.
Paid training: Hourly rate
starting at $7·$:8.00/hour,
Please
call
1
304-373·10t1 or toll fmc
at1 -S77·373- 1011 .

Opt"!L'ipan: $HXl/l f

l n~i&lt;k Fc-ntl': SJ .00/lf ,

. 1

must have a current WV liccnst!.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Uuspihrl
c/o Human Resour«s
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550

io 1'o~x30'
j_.

"

44087 Wipplc Rd .

Pomeroy, OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy USI!d tirt:s .
· computer wheel
~d i gnmcnb. li ght
IH~'-· h :! ni~.: wor ~ ,
L'un iplc h.: ~c rv icc oi l
~·h: 111 gc:). ,mall en_\!i ne

,.. ,

Hours ·
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

•
•

740:446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

,,

.~ZJ~~:

earning your

nax.uc:

labor
24/hrs.

ht1p:ll)obl.lnloclalon.com

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

.

can 8fl0.89).199t

David Lewis
740-992-6971

·S.Iurdlly, Nov. 21, 2008 ..
By Bernia. a.. O•o! .
In the year ahead, mo1a emphasis man
usual will be placed on,BStabllslling good
retatlooshlps of boCh abUst ness and per•
sonal nature, and some significant things
could occur for you. Success won't be an
acc:ident.
..

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. '21-0ec.

SMITH

Cmnmert"ial·&amp; Hr111/nrtral

Vinyl
Sid_ing/Ji~plm:eme n1
Windows/KemmJd i ng
Bonded &amp; ln ~ti rcd
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-833'1 Cell
. Free· Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

SUPERSTORE

negligence, he suffered
lnjurleslo his shoulder
and arm which Plaintiff
Incurred medial expenses and will Incur
future expenses lor
medical care , dlagno·
ala and trealment.
Plalnllff, Shawn · Lam·

dence Ia unknown and bert states

that

Public Notice
NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Ralerenca:
5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
The Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed Ita work of

he has equalization. The tax

whose last known ad- suffered and continues
dreso Is 10454 Dowler to Incur a loss ol In·
Ridge Road, New come eo a dlrecl and
Marshfield, Ohio 45n6, proximate result of Oe·
Is hereby oollfled that lendont, John Hom's
on Augua1 . 21,2008, aetf~ns. Plaintiff Shawn
wherefore
Plaintiffs Iliad a Com- Lambert;
plaint In Common Plaintiffs Shawn Lam,, request
Pleas Court, Meigs · baf'lt at at_
Counly, Ohio, P.O. !lox judgment against De·
151, Pomeroy, Ohio lendant John Horn In
45769. Plaintiff alated excess ol $25,000.00
ln his Complaint thet plus pre-and post-judg·
on for about Augult24, ment interest, their
2007 the Defendant costs Incurred herein.
John Horn errlllt!d at and such otherrelfef as
Plaintiff's place ol busl- the Court may lind ro

returns tor tax year
2008 have been revised
and .the valuations
compleled and are
open lor public lnspectlon In the office oflhe
Melge county Auditor,
.Seconil Floor, Courthouse, Second Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Complalnllagalnalthe
valuations, ea ottal&gt;llohed lor tax year 2008

must be made In accordance with Secllon
S715.19 ol the Ohio fievised Code, These

ness to claim his auto- be Just and equitable. complaints must be
mobile. Plaintiff, Mr. Defendanl J~hn Horn flied In the County Au·

Lambert silted to De- Is lurther notrfled that
fondant, · John Horn this notice will be pubthat the automobile · II shed once a we~k for
could not leave the alx (6) consecullve
premlaes without pay- weeks and you are remont. Plalnllll waa In qulred to respond to
Delendan1's
pickup said Complaint within
truck bed when Dalen· lw&lt;mly-alght (28) days
dan! began moving the alter the last publica·
vehlcle. Plaintiff olates lion Dec. 12. 08 or Juclgthat Oelendantlalled to menl nury be rendered
stop the truck and aa dtmlnded herein.
dragged Plafnttff ap- BUTLER, CINCIONE &amp;
proximately twenty (201 DICUCCIO
·
feet before Pll!lnlHI By G~ll M. Zlllmanl,
Sltawn Lambert t.ll ofl laq. and Donald E.
th&amp; vehicle. Plelntlll Hura, Eaq .. 2200 Wesr
further states thai De- Fifth Ave., 3rd Fir..
fendant then fled the Columbus. Ohio 43?15,

dltor'a Office on or before the 31st day of
1

March, 200 9. All com·

plaints flied with tho
county Auditor will be
heard bl lhe Board ol
Revlalon In lha manner
provided by . Seellon
5715.19 olthe Oho Aevised Code.
Mary T. Byer-HIII
Meigs County Audllor
111) 18 19 20 21 23
24 25
28 '
'
· ' ' ' '
------Public Notice

26 27

No
trespass ing
.
scene before the Sher· A ttorneys for Plaintiffs. hunting on J i mmy

o

Iff's personnel arrived. (1.1) 7, 14, 21 , 28, (12) 5,, GriHIIh property. y0 ~
Plalnllff, Shawn Lam· 12
will ba dealt wllh by ·
bert atateathal as a dl·
proper aulhorllles, ·
(11) 27 28 30 (12) 1
reel and proxlmote
reeult of Defandant'e
' ' '

1 Corn bread
2 .Somewhat
12 wds:)
3 Oboerve
4 WildWut
show.
5 Goof• up
6 Born as
ment
7 Bowser"aiD
38 Brewing
(2 wds.)
noad
8 Fiol&gt;oxhibltl
(2wds.)
9 De Gaulle's
40 Tee partner . hat'

23
24

25 Not accord~
26
27
30
32
34
36

cumin

45 Fake butter
46 Prong
47 Cold-cull

nndor

ing to Hoyle 48 Type ol mill
Tweel
49 Mom'• girl
Tulledllilcat 52 Tool with
Cookoul
teeth
Switch
p_
ositions
Moselle
feeder ·
Warrior at
Troy

WORD
GAM I

1

21) ~

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters,
Roofing , Siding, Gutters

• Insured &amp; Bonded

740.653-9657

J&amp;l
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Addlllons
Owner:
James l(eesee II
742-2332

Stanley Tree-'
Trimming
· &amp; Removal

/Jr.'( L.UNCA JUST
WENT HOME ..

*Prompt and Quulity _.
Work

*Reasc:mabl e R'atc~
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

..

''

'

tomptete. TrH Care
lnll.nd • FrH Ett1rn1t11

740-441-9317

'

.._c_

lO,_,.u~
IICfrw-t:l1~1tl

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, ·
Electric, Plumbing,:
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
;
local Contractor '

740·367-0544 ;
Free Estimates

J

740-367.0536 :

For Remodeling and ~t·w Hnu.o,c nUUding :
Call:

enjoyable.
. CAPR'ICORN (Dec. 22-J,r.', 19) ..:.
,• ·sueoeea Is helght&amp;ntd with regard to
your major lnvoi!Mfnents because you'll ·
ignore hunches that are of little help and
rely solely on practical, methodic:&amp;!
means to achieve your ends.
AOUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)..,.. If you're
l~glnatlve end resouroefut, there Is a
wondai-rut bounty within your reach. You
don't have to focus on a pbt of gold at the
end o1 a rainbow; simply CapttaMze on
what's 'at hand.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You will
have no problem putting personal con-'
c8rna and objectives temporarily aside
eo you, c:an do certain thlngljl that will provide the greatest good lor the largea1
number.
ARIES (MArch -2t·Aprtl t9) - B&amp;oause
yoLJ're not expecting fJOY free rldes ,"yOu'!l
get your greatest array of opportunities
through career-related slf\Jalions. Your
work will create qUite a few advanteQes.
TAURUS (April »May 20) - II you're
presently 1n a leadel&amp;hlp position with
your peer groyp, you must be carelid to
treat II'J8ryone &amp;qulllty and not sliltrt
sq.rn8of,rt who lsn'f-J• glib aa 11'1e othei's.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When tt .
comes to family financial mane,.,, .use
goqd judgment - but don'l leave the
heart oU1 of It, either. A good blet'ld of
cothmon HllSe l!l]nd sensltlvll)l will yield
tne beat u1e of your money.
C..\NCER (June 21-.Juty 22) - In order
to effe&lt;itlvely .'Implement your j:lresent
plan or actiQn, nominal support from olh·
era wt!l be needed. Be aura ·tatake their
naedl and dtslres Into consideration
balonl pushing forward wtth yours.
LEO·(Jufy 23-Aug. 22) -YOu're p,..ently lrla ftnanclal trend lhat could prove Ia
be exctptlonalty fTUitttJIIt you Ckln't yleta·
to the unrealistic demand's of others.
.Aecqontze your kwed ones' needs, but
' within reason.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - II might fall
oo you lo untangle e. social arrangement
that has teken on 80fll8 serious connlcts.
VoiJ posstu the steadiness to know hOw
to 'appease these 1w0 opposing !actions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. 23) - An eKtremely '1lluable lesson wm be teamed when
something about which you have been ·
worrying suddenly Works itself out. You'M
reaRze fretting over things that may never
happen Is waatelut.
SCORPIO (Oq. 24-Nov. 22) - You're
Ukely to participate In actlvltle9'you'll tina
erttoyable, but to your cr_
erjll, you 'll
engage In tun pursuit&amp; that offar a IJOOd'
time withOut bl\lltlng your budget.

'

.•

~FA
L-A

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION :

• Room Additions • Gan1gcs ; Vinyl
· and Wood Siding • Roofin g • Pole
Barns • Patio ·s·, Porches and Deck s

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47139 Rieb&lt;l Road. Long Bounm, OH

r

,.

740-985-4141

,

:qfiiZZWELLS. .
: I &amp;UESS ·)bU'~ RI!~HT,
: ;!f6MII'IE ,,. WE Dol'l'i
· AA'IE- A 1!'1" 11'1
.

Cell: 740-4 16- 1S34

25+ years experleuce Free Estimmes

I 111\HK 'tbU~
~UCII

SOUP TO NUTZ

AN IDleST:

·~ ~

Advertist:
in this space for
$64 per month
.... I

---,,~-

DOWN

make. j'OUr hard work 'seam fun and

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Civil Claim Common
Pleas Court Meigs
County, Ohio eve
20071125 - Shawn .Lambert and
Cynthie Lambert, Plain·
llffs, v. John Horn, Delendant. ·
John Horn, whose real-

59 Noise

Some outstanding achievemenla of a ,
. materiBl nature are posslbt&amp; through! ·
, tenacity and 8ttort, yet you'll Hnd a way to

'

'

23 Polite
!erewall
26 Prepare
·to turn
28 --de-tae
29 Throw off
hoat
3t Vocal group
33 Conger•
35 G10lle pop
.
sllr
37 Atom frag-

W~!J!:

28 Years

ThankYDU

Opt 8

All pass

11
18
20
22

her clone•

39 Oreos part
41 Shadow't
place
43 Cleans
houoe
44 Mint or

~Astro-

BndiDnl Tl'll
firm
Out If BUSIIDIS

, (. Network
Satellite
,
~hi'! systems.

6 NT

I'm

Pau

58' Dolly and

actor

Make
airtight
Dietllrget
Genuine
Carry 011
Population
center
King bealer
Rocttal
piece

FY~,

'Lor:;

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

,..THE

potentlall

1·888-IMC·PAYU
Ext. 2458
Appll online:

3•

Eaat

22 "Slither"

lo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

"

North
2.11f

time

Omar Khayyam wrote, "There was a
doOr to which tlound no key: There was
the veil through w' ,ch I might not see."
We've all been in that frustrating posttion
of ha~ng winners on the board and no
way to cash them - no key 19 dummy's
door. Sometimes it was unavoidable, but
usually we erred.
Try to see through the vel! hiding the
door to Ieday's oontract. You reach six
no-trump. West leads the club queen to
dummy's ace.What would you do? What
do yo~ think Ql the auction? WouiQ you
prefer to bt In seven diamonds?
AT LEAST ·
In answer to a strong, artificial and forcFER NOW II
Ing two dubs, I believe that the "two diamonds waiting" Is overused. When
responder has a strong hand and is
immediately thinking about a slam,- he
should try to make a positive response
to let partner In on the secret. If responder starts with two diamonds, opener is
always wondenng Whis partner Is weak.
. Sewn ciamonds is great - except aHer
by Luis Campos
~'-'t a club lead. Then it loses its luster and
Celetl!llyCll1ter c~~ogrffl'ls l!tctE!Bietl !n:rn (JIO!al•ons b~ laT'iOli!i poop' a P!ISl and p!MOt
Elldlteller 1n lhect~er atan&lt;IS ror ~~e.:
1::.:.!!:!1!:::::::___;,~...:.~::::::~~l::.l:l....;::;::
here cannot be made.
Today's Clue; J !~QUaiS 8 •
In six no-trump, you should plan to take
these 12 tricks: one spade, five hearts,
" 0 U X K P ' T R C H Y X 0 B 0. Y C K A R T
e,IJT KE.I/11'\'S
four diamonds and two clubs. With' the
01' PEOP\£
club lead and 4·2 heart split, you need a DYGR YBS XKP HKKA YTKPBS ENR
PVTTI~C, Ul"
PUT UP Tf\~IR
dummy entry to get those five heart
1
C~RlSTM"-0:.
,-. '1//t..Le..t,ITI~S
tricks, and that can be opened in dia- . E Y J H R Y B S V·Y B ' E E R H H f N K E N R
I&gt;E.C.ORI&gt;-TI~ _;--o,r":t
OC&lt;.OAATI~!,.tr-~'':::1
. monds. Immediately un~ock your aca
IPVART 01, OE'f XKP." -CYPH
and queen of hearts. Then lead a low
RIC:MT M''IU.
diamond to rummy's eight. East wins
BRFGYB
IAA\'&lt;I~C.NI~! '\...--'
with his jack. but now the diamond tO is
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ "Godf1as two dwellings; oneln heaven. and rhe
dummy's door, and you can claim.
eUler in a meek and thankful t1eart.• ·lza.ak Walton

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019 1

Call NOW to learn

Weet
PaM
Pass
Pass

man

Find a door
to your winners

www.tla¢N'OI'etkcablnetr.t.oom

Maintenance Plus

Gallipolis

'

•

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

Opening lead: "" Q

·•

HardwOod Cabjllflry And FurnHure •

Mizway

1911 Eastern Ave.

2NT
3NT

l

Patto·and Porch Oecke

Look 10 hire dedicated
hard working individuals

or apply online at: www .pvallcy.mg

South

how you can atart

'WANTED

Hurry In Now

,.

www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

New Garages
Elac1rlcat &amp; Plumbing
Roofing 1 Gutters
Vlriyl Stdlng &amp; Painting

Weekly pay + bonus
potential
All Major Holidays
OFF WITH PAY!
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401k
No experience
Necessary- Paid
On-Site Training

4 2

• J 4 3

• Ks 2

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com !

Remodeling

Excellent Benefits

Work year rouf,ld
Will TrainiNo exp.
needed
Full Time With
Benefits
Weekend&amp; Required
Drive a company truck
Driving/Drug testing req.
No Fdlonles

YEAR END
TAX SALE

Stop &amp; Compare

140;,416·11&amp;4

· Room Additions &amp;

•

"'984 3
South
• A 6 4
• AQ
.AKQ95

J40-99Z·16Jl

'

CAl( US TODAY
FOR REDIJCfTJ
WINTfR RATfS
TJfC. ·FtB

• K J9 B

•QJ1076

nnd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

l!ut

• 10 3
llf l 09 8 5
• 7 6

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
Auctioneer:
BIIIV R. Gable Jr.

.tiHI

11 u.m~
5- 2

.A

Weal

1/14/1 mo. pd

i't'p&lt;~ l l.

.-.~ rvi~·c

'.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

We tlppreclale YOI"
hllslnen

Choose to work with
the world's largest
nonproflts and the
most infiLJential
conservative political
groups.

satellite Installers

Fax ro: (304) 675 :6975

AAIEOE

1.

'

l

~=:~:::::::;
L &amp; L Tl"r·~ Barn

Pomeroy, Ohio·

Pleasanl Valley Hospital · Is currently
accepting
resumes for
Full
time
REGISTERED NURSES. Appl ications

740-94~2217

. ~WtJ10'

SkiHot
43
lht
IUn thJntl
Pullopart
Go-aheldo 44 Stockpile
46 Formal
BOJ&lt;car
rider
wear
12 Popular
50 Annex
51 Nile
cookie
13 High nolo
goddtll
14 No futuro
53 A Strauu
54 family
15 Remnant
mem,
16 ct ..n wnltr 55 lon't
org.
caplble
17 Small olzeo 56 Serne
19 Nature walk
moorages
21 - ~Magnon 57 Man, af one

9KJ7s a
• l0 8 2

Mon-Fri.

to install and service Dish

RN NURSES

Inside StPrJge $-t .00/1(

• 29670 Bashan Aoad
Aadne, Ohio
45771

R:OO :l tn - -l:30 pm
Sal K:OOum - 12

TOUr
Earning Potantlall
.Up to
$25,000+/yearl

Ohio Valley B_.ank is an equiiiDppr.rtunit)
empl oye r.

0

swc.

Nortb
• Q7

~'l:n

1
4
8
1t

I

(740 ) 992·:&gt;"344

lnCrt!IIO

$17.89·$28.2'7/HR ,
now
niring. 'For
appticaliOn
and free government job
1nfo, call American AS-

Thursday- Pool Tournament
Friday- Karaoke 9- t
Sal. - Band "Bad Habit" 9:1

::.p;~~e 11. fir~t w me tiN

\\ imeri1c bo;.1 t:.
RV\

t-;;',j~i!!r:.~:=-.,

offices.

Help Wanted

9:00 a.m .- ll:OOa.m .
Rele&amp;Si. 1\pri\ 2.5. 2 ~
A fee of $20.00 wi ll be
charged f&lt;1r eArly arrival ,'
1ate am·vu 1·, ear1y rc-mova 1,
htle re ulQ&gt; :tl, or llnytimea('ct'Ss i~ w~ntcd tn
ftt irground~ uther thun
~l~ttcd · Jutcd. Ruilding

304-675-1429

and account opeAing prm:cdur~!-&gt; prcferrt'd.
We offer a competitive salar) anJ bend ih
package. Obtain a jo b applica t io n at
www.ovbc.com or vi sit any or ou r hllnk ing

Help Wan1ed

H1ll's Self
Storage

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. fairgrounds
Ocr. 25 ' 2008

We

AVON! All Areas! To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears

POSTAL JOBS

ol

to

sumo ro Gallipolis Dally
Tribune CLA BOX 104·,
P.O BOX 469, Gallipolis,
Oh.

Job~

t -913·599·8.226.
emp serv.

Phillip
Alder

or

3009 Jackson Avrt., ~1.
~--~--~Ohio
valley . Home Pleasant belween 1-3pm
M-F
He~lth, Inc. hiring Home
Health · A1des .
STNA, 't rainer Positions
CNA, CHHA, PCA may Are rou interested in a
apply al 1480 Jackson rewarding position? PAIS
PJk.e. Gallipolis, Oh10 or Is
t;; urrently
seeking
phone 740-4 41 ·1393 for fu iVpart time staff tor Ma:

Government &amp; Federal

soc.

person

42 Liverpool

ACROSS

to

Modical

com e by in

304 _882 _2645

'.

Fax ro: (304) 675-69 75

re-

Doctors Office needing
Darwlll The Athens-Meigs Edu- 00000408An
Excallenl
part
limt X-Ray Tech..
cahonal Se!Vlce Center way to eam moooy. . The
304-675- 1~37 or
has an Anticipated P091· New 'AVon. Call Mantyn Calf

Nice newer 2br on Baile y
'
Run Rd. Meigs Cq . Ref_ GQvemment funds avAil· tion Opening tar an EmoReq. No pets. $42s/rent able for home buyers t1ona11y Disturbed ( EO~
+ s 425i dep. 367 .7025
·who own land $0 down. Educational Aide for the
Call
toll
free Meigs
Mic::idle School.
Scenic location. conven-· 877·310-2577 lor pre-ap- This Is a 9 month po$1·
lll{l(
It, ll!lactued
ian! to town and alford· proval.
t1on w1th Board i:!Pproved
Houl:olll;
abl e. 2 &amp; 3 bedrOom s New 3 'Bedroom homes benehts. Applicants must
available
call from $2 14.36 pe1 month. pass a cnmJnal ·back(740)992·56;39
1ncludes many upgrades. ground check and meat
delivery
&amp;
set-up. all requh.'lnt•nts needed
Sale1
740-385·24:)4
to serve as an Educa2br all eleCtric near Hwy.
"The Proctorville
11onat Atde. Salary
will
160, no pels, deposit Brand new 3bed 2bath
Difference··
be l1&lt;l$ed on qualificaplus reference. 441 ·5062 on ~ -hall acre 111 .Pt.
tions
and • experience.
Stand a deed 1S all you
or 3"'2923
Pleasant. OWNER Fl·
Subm11 1c11e1 of mtorest,
need to own your dream
NANCE
AVAJLABLE.
re~.!Hnt'
i:lPd
re lerences
home. Call Now]
Feclaral Funds just re· (7,40) 446-3570
to ,Joh,, D. Cos t31l1:0. Su·
Freedom Homes
ltll8d tor Land Owners .
ij _
pe,,ntenden-t,
88 565 _0167
No closing cost and "AA' Government Funds
Athens-Me1gs
[ducaZERO DOWN' Will do AvaiiElbl e tor 1st time
tional
ServiCe
Center,
land :
improvementS
Emplo~ menl 320
112
East
Mau1
hOme buyers who own 6000
Bankruptcy &amp; Bat':t Credit l;m d or have lar d or
Strcr. t,
Pomeroy,
Oh
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 ' bed·
have family 'and Zrrq
. 45769·06134 , Application
rooms
available
Dealflli'r
Dccemt)et • 5,
Down Easy Finannny.
Administrative/
74()-44&lt;3-3384
Call lo be P1e Oufllllled
200~
ot
12
00 NOON.
Professional
Thr A'.Af SC IS an Equal
740·423-9728
EXTRA NICE MOB!LE
fl'e Bonrd o( Park Com- 0t1Ll \l!llfy
HOMES
FOR
RENT.
IW5HIOt1ers
of the 00 [ TP' ··mr. Provtde!
2BR 1 bath; all elect 1984 Sh1-1"z 1 Dr 11.1 H.
Me
ht}re
Park Oistm:1 ·~
plywood
floors.
new
446-4234 or 208-786 t
~-:--::-----::~HPIFurnace, cal! for 1£.'· &lt;K ~·~1!1/lQ let18fS Qf 11111,' • (~1UJ_wlis CdrPPf College
est
and
resurne!:&gt;
lrom
2, 3, &amp; 48r for rent tails
$4500 · OBO
~~ s~f'fi;nQ !Jail-lime in·pm3ons interested 1n the struetor&gt; •ho IJQS&gt;es a
(740)949·3179
367-7762
pos1110n of Park Adminis· Masters Dagree rn suD·
trator The Park Adminis· 19Ct tl.!cas
. English,
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
tralbr, is responsible lor Math, i'!CI.;'nomJcS, an d
admimstration ,
planning, soc1ology. E·marl resllme
management and opera· to
Jrlan!Ckl@galtipolisca·
lions of the countywide ree 1c:ollege.edu or. call
'
Park Distr tct Applican ts
7·10-446-4367
or
shoUld . posses a rnlni- 800·214-0452.
Pleasant . Valley · Hospital is currcnrly
rnuiPl of .a Bucl wlors De·
accepting resumes for a per Jielll' (ill!, glee. experierlce 1n corn· ~-,...~-~'":'"'~
Tho GU1d1ng Hands
n1unlty le.3.ders!,ip, com- Prescnool !S 1n need of
shifts) Regisrered Nurse in ICCU Depl
mlmlcations, public rela· Sut;Stltutc Teachers tor
Applic:.mts must have a - current Wt·~l lions. fund rats1ng. grant' clnssPs at the Early
administrative. Ch1klhood and
Virginia license. Previous ICC U c :~.pe ricn ce wnfln g.
Fam1ly
management .and finan- Center fit 77 Mill Creek
preferred.
crdi skills . Please submtl
Road
Galhpohs
Apply
Send resumes to:
1n!ormatton to 00 Mcln· to . . Gall!a County Board
t~·1·e Park . D1stnc1,. Galha of MRrOD. 77 Mill Creek
Pleasant Valley Uospilltl
Coc.Jnty
CourthOus-e. 18 Ro&lt;!d
Gallipolis,
Ohio
c/o Human Resour'l'es
Locust
Street.
Aoom 45631
· or
call
2520 Valley Drive
t 2S!2.
GallipoliS. Otuo 740-446 -6902 The Gal·
Point Pleasant, WV 255511.
4563_
1
l1a County Board Of
MR/00 IS an Equal Opportunity Employer. .

0

able. Please send
sume
LLC@CAREQ.COM
lax to 740-446-9104

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

,

&gt;

/~"--JL.

"'

~ tt«. _ _ _

-nK_AnE-r-O_Wr-1
· I·;~', ,·
7
1 I I

t...o.J......J....-1--1.--' ~

t

phil~pbcr

A
once said, .
"The gQod life is inspired by
love and guided by

I · · --'' '

c0 v0 I E '
(f-....,,r-11....;.,.1;:...;i-lsi.,19rl 8 ~;")~~~"~ ;~'"'·'":~i~Q ~~~~
-

·

·

·

·

•

vou daveloo

from step No. 3 below.

e r:;~:~~UMSfREO I' 11 13 14 Is I' l7 1 I' I
I I l ·I I I I I I
8

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11127/0~
Anemia - Hutch :- Swish - Lactic - WITHIN
"Don't look outside yourselfforcontidence and strength,"
·gramp8 told me, "they come from WITiflN."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

(

·-'

�,.

G""""'"'ont &amp; F..loral
Job•

Education
'B eUN 3811

new ., ~•·

In

Friday, November 28, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Help W-.1 .'Gen.ral

country, 3BA 2 bath on farm $750 Great used 16XSO th ree Gallipolis Career College ~~;~;;;;~~~~~ ServiCe Manager

a

r

Navernber28,2008

OOP

Serv·

The Daily Sentinel •

www.rnydailysentiriel:corn

I

OFF ICE
NOW M:e Technician poslttons
utilities Included . Bedroom new vtnyl sid~ IS ~E!ptlng reiumes lor POST
'new carpet, mth.
ing. $22,995.00 W11t help an accounting tnstructor HIRING avg Pay $20/t1r available. Health care &amp;
pointed, CIA, was!&gt;- S.W:729-1331
with deliver-,· Call N1kk1 A mln11111Jm ot a Bache- or
$57Kiyr,
1ncluctes Retirement plans avail·
. room w! W!O hookup.

pd.
$550/mo 3BA Obi.. Wide near 740-385·9621
lor s degree m
er4-595-m31645-5953
Pomeroy. great condition =,...-.,.,,..-,~~ "tng tS requtred

Water

~cco 1.mt- Fed Ben . OT

Place by
Please adSource, not aftitlated
200~
14x70
Mobile ema•l a cover tetter and with USPS who h1res
--~-,...~- w1tt'1 n1ce ya rd. Rent in- H
-"
'balh
·~,.:.-_ 3b
,
G
ome, 2"01ruroom,
o&lt;,
• resume to jdanickiO Mifli1-866-403-2582
rn~~~~•v~
r, w11g. a- eludes
h '" oo1
~
vmy1 sl·'·
umg, s lll9JC r · pollscareerco!lege.edu Of
rage,
$500/deposit Furntshingstwasherl,dryer
h
"~
I ermapayne
WhrvvW, fax i1: to 7~ 44 &amp;4 1 24
• or &amp; some ut1hties Included 20tt.porch 740-664'-4356
Help Wanted· G.-.1
$575/mo. No pets. Call
or 741).797-4356 lo-. =:--,~~~-"'!"'~

304-755-8744
304-675--61~3

44 1-0110 or 591-5174

cated

Rt 7 w/ Riverview. river ~~~~~~~~ $26 000

room, 2BR. t.S baths, 2
car garage, Lr. LA w!
dining
space,
laundry
rm., $600 -+ utilities.
'703-451 ·2591

at

ICCU NURSE

or apply online at: www .pvallt!\ .org
AAIEOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Ohio Valley Bank is ~ u ne nt ly 'ccl in g a
qualified ind_ividua! for th e (Xlsition llf Bril tK h
Manager in Mei£s County. Appli ~ ailt s must
possess previous manaJ;einent · ~xpe ric 1t ..::.: ,
ex.cellent communication skills, abilit y to
develop customer re lations. and cxception!il
customer servict" skill S. Expe'ricm.: e in k ml1n _g

Babysitter needed 1n my
home . Must Have refeJ ences &amp; re liaOie transportation 304-8 12-0553

FIND A JOB
ORA NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

··

more Info Competillve
wages,
mHeage
reim·
bursement and benelits
including · health insUf·
ance &amp; much more. ,

::-.""."'-~~-~~
Retail posi!llns: Prefer
someone W'rttl
experi·
ence, e)(cellent customer
ser.vice skills, be able to
work lndEif}endei"ltly E
md
creatively, be able to
stand lor long periods
and
lil1
50*
lrequently·100*
occasionally. Familiar
with
cash register, credit card
machine and calculator.
Applicant should have
transportation and valid
driver's license. Send re·

son and Point Pleasant,
WV
providing
residentiaL/community
sk1ll training w~h indi·
viduals
wiih
MR/00.
High school diploma or
GED required. No eKpe·
rietlce necessary. Criminat background check required. Must have reliable transpor1ation and
valid
auto
Insurance.
Paid training: Hourly rate
starting at $7·$:8.00/hour,
Please
call
1
304-373·10t1 or toll fmc
at1 -S77·373- 1011 .

Opt"!L'ipan: $HXl/l f

l n~i&lt;k Fc-ntl': SJ .00/lf ,

. 1

must have a current WV liccnst!.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Uuspihrl
c/o Human Resour«s
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550

io 1'o~x30'
j_.

"

44087 Wipplc Rd .

Pomeroy, OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy USI!d tirt:s .
· computer wheel
~d i gnmcnb. li ght
IH~'-· h :! ni~.: wor ~ ,
L'un iplc h.: ~c rv icc oi l
~·h: 111 gc:). ,mall en_\!i ne

,.. ,

Hours ·
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

•
•

740:446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

,,

.~ZJ~~:

earning your

nax.uc:

labor
24/hrs.

ht1p:ll)obl.lnloclalon.com

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

.

can 8fl0.89).199t

David Lewis
740-992-6971

·S.Iurdlly, Nov. 21, 2008 ..
By Bernia. a.. O•o! .
In the year ahead, mo1a emphasis man
usual will be placed on,BStabllslling good
retatlooshlps of boCh abUst ness and per•
sonal nature, and some significant things
could occur for you. Success won't be an
acc:ident.
..

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. '21-0ec.

SMITH

Cmnmert"ial·&amp; Hr111/nrtral

Vinyl
Sid_ing/Ji~plm:eme n1
Windows/KemmJd i ng
Bonded &amp; ln ~ti rcd
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-833'1 Cell
. Free· Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

SUPERSTORE

negligence, he suffered
lnjurleslo his shoulder
and arm which Plaintiff
Incurred medial expenses and will Incur
future expenses lor
medical care , dlagno·
ala and trealment.
Plalnllff, Shawn · Lam·

dence Ia unknown and bert states

that

Public Notice
NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Ralerenca:
5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
The Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed Ita work of

he has equalization. The tax

whose last known ad- suffered and continues
dreso Is 10454 Dowler to Incur a loss ol In·
Ridge Road, New come eo a dlrecl and
Marshfield, Ohio 45n6, proximate result of Oe·
Is hereby oollfled that lendont, John Hom's
on Augua1 . 21,2008, aetf~ns. Plaintiff Shawn
wherefore
Plaintiffs Iliad a Com- Lambert;
plaint In Common Plaintiffs Shawn Lam,, request
Pleas Court, Meigs · baf'lt at at_
Counly, Ohio, P.O. !lox judgment against De·
151, Pomeroy, Ohio lendant John Horn In
45769. Plaintiff alated excess ol $25,000.00
ln his Complaint thet plus pre-and post-judg·
on for about Augult24, ment interest, their
2007 the Defendant costs Incurred herein.
John Horn errlllt!d at and such otherrelfef as
Plaintiff's place ol busl- the Court may lind ro

returns tor tax year
2008 have been revised
and .the valuations
compleled and are
open lor public lnspectlon In the office oflhe
Melge county Auditor,
.Seconil Floor, Courthouse, Second Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Complalnllagalnalthe
valuations, ea ottal&gt;llohed lor tax year 2008

must be made In accordance with Secllon
S715.19 ol the Ohio fievised Code, These

ness to claim his auto- be Just and equitable. complaints must be
mobile. Plaintiff, Mr. Defendanl J~hn Horn flied In the County Au·

Lambert silted to De- Is lurther notrfled that
fondant, · John Horn this notice will be pubthat the automobile · II shed once a we~k for
could not leave the alx (6) consecullve
premlaes without pay- weeks and you are remont. Plalnllll waa In qulred to respond to
Delendan1's
pickup said Complaint within
truck bed when Dalen· lw&lt;mly-alght (28) days
dan! began moving the alter the last publica·
vehlcle. Plaintiff olates lion Dec. 12. 08 or Juclgthat Oelendantlalled to menl nury be rendered
stop the truck and aa dtmlnded herein.
dragged Plafnttff ap- BUTLER, CINCIONE &amp;
proximately twenty (201 DICUCCIO
·
feet before Pll!lnlHI By G~ll M. Zlllmanl,
Sltawn Lambert t.ll ofl laq. and Donald E.
th&amp; vehicle. Plelntlll Hura, Eaq .. 2200 Wesr
further states thai De- Fifth Ave., 3rd Fir..
fendant then fled the Columbus. Ohio 43?15,

dltor'a Office on or before the 31st day of
1

March, 200 9. All com·

plaints flied with tho
county Auditor will be
heard bl lhe Board ol
Revlalon In lha manner
provided by . Seellon
5715.19 olthe Oho Aevised Code.
Mary T. Byer-HIII
Meigs County Audllor
111) 18 19 20 21 23
24 25
28 '
'
· ' ' ' '
------Public Notice

26 27

No
trespass ing
.
scene before the Sher· A ttorneys for Plaintiffs. hunting on J i mmy

o

Iff's personnel arrived. (1.1) 7, 14, 21 , 28, (12) 5,, GriHIIh property. y0 ~
Plalnllff, Shawn Lam· 12
will ba dealt wllh by ·
bert atateathal as a dl·
proper aulhorllles, ·
(11) 27 28 30 (12) 1
reel and proxlmote
reeult of Defandant'e
' ' '

1 Corn bread
2 .Somewhat
12 wds:)
3 Oboerve
4 WildWut
show.
5 Goof• up
6 Born as
ment
7 Bowser"aiD
38 Brewing
(2 wds.)
noad
8 Fiol&gt;oxhibltl
(2wds.)
9 De Gaulle's
40 Tee partner . hat'

23
24

25 Not accord~
26
27
30
32
34
36

cumin

45 Fake butter
46 Prong
47 Cold-cull

nndor

ing to Hoyle 48 Type ol mill
Tweel
49 Mom'• girl
Tulledllilcat 52 Tool with
Cookoul
teeth
Switch
p_
ositions
Moselle
feeder ·
Warrior at
Troy

WORD
GAM I

1

21) ~

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters,
Roofing , Siding, Gutters

• Insured &amp; Bonded

740.653-9657

J&amp;l
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Addlllons
Owner:
James l(eesee II
742-2332

Stanley Tree-'
Trimming
· &amp; Removal

/Jr.'( L.UNCA JUST
WENT HOME ..

*Prompt and Quulity _.
Work

*Reasc:mabl e R'atc~
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

..

''

'

tomptete. TrH Care
lnll.nd • FrH Ett1rn1t11

740-441-9317

'

.._c_

lO,_,.u~
IICfrw-t:l1~1tl

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, ·
Electric, Plumbing,:
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
;
local Contractor '

740·367-0544 ;
Free Estimates

J

740-367.0536 :

For Remodeling and ~t·w Hnu.o,c nUUding :
Call:

enjoyable.
. CAPR'ICORN (Dec. 22-J,r.', 19) ..:.
,• ·sueoeea Is helght&amp;ntd with regard to
your major lnvoi!Mfnents because you'll ·
ignore hunches that are of little help and
rely solely on practical, methodic:&amp;!
means to achieve your ends.
AOUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)..,.. If you're
l~glnatlve end resouroefut, there Is a
wondai-rut bounty within your reach. You
don't have to focus on a pbt of gold at the
end o1 a rainbow; simply CapttaMze on
what's 'at hand.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You will
have no problem putting personal con-'
c8rna and objectives temporarily aside
eo you, c:an do certain thlngljl that will provide the greatest good lor the largea1
number.
ARIES (MArch -2t·Aprtl t9) - B&amp;oause
yoLJ're not expecting fJOY free rldes ,"yOu'!l
get your greatest array of opportunities
through career-related slf\Jalions. Your
work will create qUite a few advanteQes.
TAURUS (April »May 20) - II you're
presently 1n a leadel&amp;hlp position with
your peer groyp, you must be carelid to
treat II'J8ryone &amp;qulllty and not sliltrt
sq.rn8of,rt who lsn'f-J• glib aa 11'1e othei's.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When tt .
comes to family financial mane,.,, .use
goqd judgment - but don'l leave the
heart oU1 of It, either. A good blet'ld of
cothmon HllSe l!l]nd sensltlvll)l will yield
tne beat u1e of your money.
C..\NCER (June 21-.Juty 22) - In order
to effe&lt;itlvely .'Implement your j:lresent
plan or actiQn, nominal support from olh·
era wt!l be needed. Be aura ·tatake their
naedl and dtslres Into consideration
balonl pushing forward wtth yours.
LEO·(Jufy 23-Aug. 22) -YOu're p,..ently lrla ftnanclal trend lhat could prove Ia
be exctptlonalty fTUitttJIIt you Ckln't yleta·
to the unrealistic demand's of others.
.Aecqontze your kwed ones' needs, but
' within reason.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - II might fall
oo you lo untangle e. social arrangement
that has teken on 80fll8 serious connlcts.
VoiJ posstu the steadiness to know hOw
to 'appease these 1w0 opposing !actions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. 23) - An eKtremely '1lluable lesson wm be teamed when
something about which you have been ·
worrying suddenly Works itself out. You'M
reaRze fretting over things that may never
happen Is waatelut.
SCORPIO (Oq. 24-Nov. 22) - You're
Ukely to participate In actlvltle9'you'll tina
erttoyable, but to your cr_
erjll, you 'll
engage In tun pursuit&amp; that offar a IJOOd'
time withOut bl\lltlng your budget.

'

.•

~FA
L-A

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION :

• Room Additions • Gan1gcs ; Vinyl
· and Wood Siding • Roofin g • Pole
Barns • Patio ·s·, Porches and Deck s

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47139 Rieb&lt;l Road. Long Bounm, OH

r

,.

740-985-4141

,

:qfiiZZWELLS. .
: I &amp;UESS ·)bU'~ RI!~HT,
: ;!f6MII'IE ,,. WE Dol'l'i
· AA'IE- A 1!'1" 11'1
.

Cell: 740-4 16- 1S34

25+ years experleuce Free Estimmes

I 111\HK 'tbU~
~UCII

SOUP TO NUTZ

AN IDleST:

·~ ~

Advertist:
in this space for
$64 per month
.... I

---,,~-

DOWN

make. j'OUr hard work 'seam fun and

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Civil Claim Common
Pleas Court Meigs
County, Ohio eve
20071125 - Shawn .Lambert and
Cynthie Lambert, Plain·
llffs, v. John Horn, Delendant. ·
John Horn, whose real-

59 Noise

Some outstanding achievemenla of a ,
. materiBl nature are posslbt&amp; through! ·
, tenacity and 8ttort, yet you'll Hnd a way to

'

'

23 Polite
!erewall
26 Prepare
·to turn
28 --de-tae
29 Throw off
hoat
3t Vocal group
33 Conger•
35 G10lle pop
.
sllr
37 Atom frag-

W~!J!:

28 Years

ThankYDU

Opt 8

All pass

11
18
20
22

her clone•

39 Oreos part
41 Shadow't
place
43 Cleans
houoe
44 Mint or

~Astro-

BndiDnl Tl'll
firm
Out If BUSIIDIS

, (. Network
Satellite
,
~hi'! systems.

6 NT

I'm

Pau

58' Dolly and

actor

Make
airtight
Dietllrget
Genuine
Carry 011
Population
center
King bealer
Rocttal
piece

FY~,

'Lor:;

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

,..THE

potentlall

1·888-IMC·PAYU
Ext. 2458
Appll online:

3•

Eaat

22 "Slither"

lo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

"

North
2.11f

time

Omar Khayyam wrote, "There was a
doOr to which tlound no key: There was
the veil through w' ,ch I might not see."
We've all been in that frustrating posttion
of ha~ng winners on the board and no
way to cash them - no key 19 dummy's
door. Sometimes it was unavoidable, but
usually we erred.
Try to see through the vel! hiding the
door to Ieday's oontract. You reach six
no-trump. West leads the club queen to
dummy's ace.What would you do? What
do yo~ think Ql the auction? WouiQ you
prefer to bt In seven diamonds?
AT LEAST ·
In answer to a strong, artificial and forcFER NOW II
Ing two dubs, I believe that the "two diamonds waiting" Is overused. When
responder has a strong hand and is
immediately thinking about a slam,- he
should try to make a positive response
to let partner In on the secret. If responder starts with two diamonds, opener is
always wondenng Whis partner Is weak.
. Sewn ciamonds is great - except aHer
by Luis Campos
~'-'t a club lead. Then it loses its luster and
Celetl!llyCll1ter c~~ogrffl'ls l!tctE!Bietl !n:rn (JIO!al•ons b~ laT'iOli!i poop' a P!ISl and p!MOt
Elldlteller 1n lhect~er atan&lt;IS ror ~~e.:
1::.:.!!:!1!:::::::___;,~...:.~::::::~~l::.l:l....;::;::
here cannot be made.
Today's Clue; J !~QUaiS 8 •
In six no-trump, you should plan to take
these 12 tricks: one spade, five hearts,
" 0 U X K P ' T R C H Y X 0 B 0. Y C K A R T
e,IJT KE.I/11'\'S
four diamonds and two clubs. With' the
01' PEOP\£
club lead and 4·2 heart split, you need a DYGR YBS XKP HKKA YTKPBS ENR
PVTTI~C, Ul"
PUT UP Tf\~IR
dummy entry to get those five heart
1
C~RlSTM"-0:.
,-. '1//t..Le..t,ITI~S
tricks, and that can be opened in dia- . E Y J H R Y B S V·Y B ' E E R H H f N K E N R
I&gt;E.C.ORI&gt;-TI~ _;--o,r":t
OC&lt;.OAATI~!,.tr-~'':::1
. monds. Immediately un~ock your aca
IPVART 01, OE'f XKP." -CYPH
and queen of hearts. Then lead a low
RIC:MT M''IU.
diamond to rummy's eight. East wins
BRFGYB
IAA\'&lt;I~C.NI~! '\...--'
with his jack. but now the diamond tO is
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ "Godf1as two dwellings; oneln heaven. and rhe
dummy's door, and you can claim.
eUler in a meek and thankful t1eart.• ·lza.ak Walton

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019 1

Call NOW to learn

Weet
PaM
Pass
Pass

man

Find a door
to your winners

www.tla¢N'OI'etkcablnetr.t.oom

Maintenance Plus

Gallipolis

'

•

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

Opening lead: "" Q

·•

HardwOod Cabjllflry And FurnHure •

Mizway

1911 Eastern Ave.

2NT
3NT

l

Patto·and Porch Oecke

Look 10 hire dedicated
hard working individuals

or apply online at: www .pvallcy.mg

South

how you can atart

'WANTED

Hurry In Now

,.

www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

New Garages
Elac1rlcat &amp; Plumbing
Roofing 1 Gutters
Vlriyl Stdlng &amp; Painting

Weekly pay + bonus
potential
All Major Holidays
OFF WITH PAY!
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401k
No experience
Necessary- Paid
On-Site Training

4 2

• J 4 3

• Ks 2

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com !

Remodeling

Excellent Benefits

Work year rouf,ld
Will TrainiNo exp.
needed
Full Time With
Benefits
Weekend&amp; Required
Drive a company truck
Driving/Drug testing req.
No Fdlonles

YEAR END
TAX SALE

Stop &amp; Compare

140;,416·11&amp;4

· Room Additions &amp;

•

"'984 3
South
• A 6 4
• AQ
.AKQ95

J40-99Z·16Jl

'

CAl( US TODAY
FOR REDIJCfTJ
WINTfR RATfS
TJfC. ·FtB

• K J9 B

•QJ1076

nnd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

l!ut

• 10 3
llf l 09 8 5
• 7 6

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
Auctioneer:
BIIIV R. Gable Jr.

.tiHI

11 u.m~
5- 2

.A

Weal

1/14/1 mo. pd

i't'p&lt;~ l l.

.-.~ rvi~·c

'.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

We tlppreclale YOI"
hllslnen

Choose to work with
the world's largest
nonproflts and the
most infiLJential
conservative political
groups.

satellite Installers

Fax ro: (304) 675 :6975

AAIEOE

1.

'

l

~=:~:::::::;
L &amp; L Tl"r·~ Barn

Pomeroy, Ohio·

Pleasanl Valley Hospital · Is currently
accepting
resumes for
Full
time
REGISTERED NURSES. Appl ications

740-94~2217

. ~WtJ10'

SkiHot
43
lht
IUn thJntl
Pullopart
Go-aheldo 44 Stockpile
46 Formal
BOJ&lt;car
rider
wear
12 Popular
50 Annex
51 Nile
cookie
13 High nolo
goddtll
14 No futuro
53 A Strauu
54 family
15 Remnant
mem,
16 ct ..n wnltr 55 lon't
org.
caplble
17 Small olzeo 56 Serne
19 Nature walk
moorages
21 - ~Magnon 57 Man, af one

9KJ7s a
• l0 8 2

Mon-Fri.

to install and service Dish

RN NURSES

Inside StPrJge $-t .00/1(

• 29670 Bashan Aoad
Aadne, Ohio
45771

R:OO :l tn - -l:30 pm
Sal K:OOum - 12

TOUr
Earning Potantlall
.Up to
$25,000+/yearl

Ohio Valley B_.ank is an equiiiDppr.rtunit)
empl oye r.

0

swc.

Nortb
• Q7

~'l:n

1
4
8
1t

I

(740 ) 992·:&gt;"344

lnCrt!IIO

$17.89·$28.2'7/HR ,
now
niring. 'For
appticaliOn
and free government job
1nfo, call American AS-

Thursday- Pool Tournament
Friday- Karaoke 9- t
Sal. - Band "Bad Habit" 9:1

::.p;~~e 11. fir~t w me tiN

\\ imeri1c bo;.1 t:.
RV\

t-;;',j~i!!r:.~:=-.,

offices.

Help Wanted

9:00 a.m .- ll:OOa.m .
Rele&amp;Si. 1\pri\ 2.5. 2 ~
A fee of $20.00 wi ll be
charged f&lt;1r eArly arrival ,'
1ate am·vu 1·, ear1y rc-mova 1,
htle re ulQ&gt; :tl, or llnytimea('ct'Ss i~ w~ntcd tn
ftt irground~ uther thun
~l~ttcd · Jutcd. Ruilding

304-675-1429

and account opeAing prm:cdur~!-&gt; prcferrt'd.
We offer a competitive salar) anJ bend ih
package. Obtain a jo b applica t io n at
www.ovbc.com or vi sit any or ou r hllnk ing

Help Wan1ed

H1ll's Self
Storage

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. fairgrounds
Ocr. 25 ' 2008

We

AVON! All Areas! To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears

POSTAL JOBS

ol

to

sumo ro Gallipolis Dally
Tribune CLA BOX 104·,
P.O BOX 469, Gallipolis,
Oh.

Job~

t -913·599·8.226.
emp serv.

Phillip
Alder

or

3009 Jackson Avrt., ~1.
~--~--~Ohio
valley . Home Pleasant belween 1-3pm
M-F
He~lth, Inc. hiring Home
Health · A1des .
STNA, 't rainer Positions
CNA, CHHA, PCA may Are rou interested in a
apply al 1480 Jackson rewarding position? PAIS
PJk.e. Gallipolis, Oh10 or Is
t;; urrently
seeking
phone 740-4 41 ·1393 for fu iVpart time staff tor Ma:

Government &amp; Federal

soc.

person

42 Liverpool

ACROSS

to

Modical

com e by in

304 _882 _2645

'.

Fax ro: (304) 675-69 75

re-

Doctors Office needing
Darwlll The Athens-Meigs Edu- 00000408An
Excallenl
part
limt X-Ray Tech..
cahonal Se!Vlce Center way to eam moooy. . The
304-675- 1~37 or
has an Anticipated P091· New 'AVon. Call Mantyn Calf

Nice newer 2br on Baile y
'
Run Rd. Meigs Cq . Ref_ GQvemment funds avAil· tion Opening tar an EmoReq. No pets. $42s/rent able for home buyers t1ona11y Disturbed ( EO~
+ s 425i dep. 367 .7025
·who own land $0 down. Educational Aide for the
Call
toll
free Meigs
Mic::idle School.
Scenic location. conven-· 877·310-2577 lor pre-ap- This Is a 9 month po$1·
lll{l(
It, ll!lactued
ian! to town and alford· proval.
t1on w1th Board i:!Pproved
Houl:olll;
abl e. 2 &amp; 3 bedrOom s New 3 'Bedroom homes benehts. Applicants must
available
call from $2 14.36 pe1 month. pass a cnmJnal ·back(740)992·56;39
1ncludes many upgrades. ground check and meat
delivery
&amp;
set-up. all requh.'lnt•nts needed
Sale1
740-385·24:)4
to serve as an Educa2br all eleCtric near Hwy.
"The Proctorville
11onat Atde. Salary
will
160, no pels, deposit Brand new 3bed 2bath
Difference··
be l1&lt;l$ed on qualificaplus reference. 441 ·5062 on ~ -hall acre 111 .Pt.
tions
and • experience.
Stand a deed 1S all you
or 3"'2923
Pleasant. OWNER Fl·
Subm11 1c11e1 of mtorest,
need to own your dream
NANCE
AVAJLABLE.
re~.!Hnt'
i:lPd
re lerences
home. Call Now]
Feclaral Funds just re· (7,40) 446-3570
to ,Joh,, D. Cos t31l1:0. Su·
Freedom Homes
ltll8d tor Land Owners .
ij _
pe,,ntenden-t,
88 565 _0167
No closing cost and "AA' Government Funds
Athens-Me1gs
[ducaZERO DOWN' Will do AvaiiElbl e tor 1st time
tional
ServiCe
Center,
land :
improvementS
Emplo~ menl 320
112
East
Mau1
hOme buyers who own 6000
Bankruptcy &amp; Bat':t Credit l;m d or have lar d or
Strcr. t,
Pomeroy,
Oh
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 ' bed·
have family 'and Zrrq
. 45769·06134 , Application
rooms
available
Dealflli'r
Dccemt)et • 5,
Down Easy Finannny.
Administrative/
74()-44&lt;3-3384
Call lo be P1e Oufllllled
200~
ot
12
00 NOON.
Professional
Thr A'.Af SC IS an Equal
740·423-9728
EXTRA NICE MOB!LE
fl'e Bonrd o( Park Com- 0t1Ll \l!llfy
HOMES
FOR
RENT.
IW5HIOt1ers
of the 00 [ TP' ··mr. Provtde!
2BR 1 bath; all elect 1984 Sh1-1"z 1 Dr 11.1 H.
Me
ht}re
Park Oistm:1 ·~
plywood
floors.
new
446-4234 or 208-786 t
~-:--::-----::~HPIFurnace, cal! for 1£.'· &lt;K ~·~1!1/lQ let18fS Qf 11111,' • (~1UJ_wlis CdrPPf College
est
and
resurne!:&gt;
lrom
2, 3, &amp; 48r for rent tails
$4500 · OBO
~~ s~f'fi;nQ !Jail-lime in·pm3ons interested 1n the struetor&gt; •ho IJQS&gt;es a
(740)949·3179
367-7762
pos1110n of Park Adminis· Masters Dagree rn suD·
trator The Park Adminis· 19Ct tl.!cas
. English,
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
tralbr, is responsible lor Math, i'!CI.;'nomJcS, an d
admimstration ,
planning, soc1ology. E·marl resllme
management and opera· to
Jrlan!Ckl@galtipolisca·
lions of the countywide ree 1c:ollege.edu or. call
'
Park Distr tct Applican ts
7·10-446-4367
or
shoUld . posses a rnlni- 800·214-0452.
Pleasant . Valley · Hospital is currcnrly
rnuiPl of .a Bucl wlors De·
accepting resumes for a per Jielll' (ill!, glee. experierlce 1n corn· ~-,...~-~'":'"'~
Tho GU1d1ng Hands
n1unlty le.3.ders!,ip, com- Prescnool !S 1n need of
shifts) Regisrered Nurse in ICCU Depl
mlmlcations, public rela· Sut;Stltutc Teachers tor
Applic:.mts must have a - current Wt·~l lions. fund rats1ng. grant' clnssPs at the Early
administrative. Ch1klhood and
Virginia license. Previous ICC U c :~.pe ricn ce wnfln g.
Fam1ly
management .and finan- Center fit 77 Mill Creek
preferred.
crdi skills . Please submtl
Road
Galhpohs
Apply
Send resumes to:
1n!ormatton to 00 Mcln· to . . Gall!a County Board
t~·1·e Park . D1stnc1,. Galha of MRrOD. 77 Mill Creek
Pleasant Valley Uospilltl
Coc.Jnty
CourthOus-e. 18 Ro&lt;!d
Gallipolis,
Ohio
c/o Human Resour'l'es
Locust
Street.
Aoom 45631
· or
call
2520 Valley Drive
t 2S!2.
GallipoliS. Otuo 740-446 -6902 The Gal·
Point Pleasant, WV 255511.
4563_
1
l1a County Board Of
MR/00 IS an Equal Opportunity Employer. .

0

able. Please send
sume
LLC@CAREQ.COM
lax to 740-446-9104

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

,

&gt;

/~"--JL.

"'

~ tt«. _ _ _

-nK_AnE-r-O_Wr-1
· I·;~', ,·
7
1 I I

t...o.J......J....-1--1.--' ~

t

phil~pbcr

A
once said, .
"The gQod life is inspired by
love and guided by

I · · --'' '

c0 v0 I E '
(f-....,,r-11....;.,.1;:...;i-lsi.,19rl 8 ~;")~~~"~ ;~'"'·'":~i~Q ~~~~
-

·

·

·

·

•

vou daveloo

from step No. 3 below.

e r:;~:~~UMSfREO I' 11 13 14 Is I' l7 1 I' I
I I l ·I I I I I I
8

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11127/0~
Anemia - Hutch :- Swish - Lactic - WITHIN
"Don't look outside yourselfforcontidence and strength,"
·gramp8 told me, "they come from WITiflN."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

(

·-'

�.

Page ·BIO ~The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 2il, 2008

.

DON WO 0 D A UTOM 0 Tl VE'Nc·

DAYS

�.

Page ·BIO ~The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 2il, 2008

.

DON WO 0 D A UTOM 0 Tl VE'Nc·

DAYS

�Page 2•

·200B-o9 Winter Sports PreVIew

hoops season :
Bolin, . a
third team alldistrict selecROCKSPRINGS
Coming off of their first posttion from a
year
ago,
season victory in three years,
the Meigs · boys basketball
brings with
team is as confident as ever
him a 16.1
that this season could be one
point
per
to remember as they try to
game average
add a few more tournament
to lead the
EwlnJ
Maroori and
. win s - and maybe a · TVC
championship - to their
Gold last searesumes in 2008-09.
son while. also contributing in
The Marauder hoops squad, several other areas on the
coming off of a so-so 9- 13 floor. Well , an all ~ di s trict
season, have plenty of talent honorable mention, also
returning from last year's returns and brings with him
team and seemingly_have ;til plenty. of speed and court
the pieces in place to put smarts .
together a solid season while
They are joined by seniors
challen~ing for a spot atop . Corey Hut~on, Gabe Hill and
the Tn-Valley Conference Dam1an W1se . The rest of the
Ohio Division.
upperclassmen
include
"We want to win the TVC Jeremy Smith, Caleb Davis
Ohio and make a long run in and Cody Lauder)11ilt.
February with a sectional
Rouqding out the 2008-09
title ," said second year head Meigs basketball roster are
coach Ben Ewing . "We also sophomores (:ameron .Bolin
.
, Bry•n W.ttenlphoto
want to build on last year's and Jon McCarthy and freshPictured
above
are
members
of
.the
2008-09
Meigs
boys
va_rsity
basketball
team . .Sitting in
positives and learn from the men Jesse Sn,ith.
'
front
fr6m
left
,are
Damian
Wise,
Corey
Hutton,
Gabe
Hill
~
Clay
Bolin
~nd
Chad Bonnett.
negatives, be competitive in
One thing the Marauders
Stad~ing
in
back
are
Cody
Laudermilt,
Jeremy·
Smith,
Cameron
Bolin,
Jon
McCarthy,
Jesse
all of our games anp fini sh will be battling this season is
Smith,
Jacob
Well
and
Caleb
Dav.is.
·
··
with an above .500 record ."
a lack of size, but the Maroon
And there is no reason the and Gold hope t.o combat
Marauders can ' t accomplish what they lack in height with
1008-09
those goals .
a deep roster that shows little .
, M.lls
Meigs got the tournament drop off at each position.
Vor•~&amp;oys
monkey off its . back with a
Meigs will ' also need a few
'
sdiedule
75-58 vic.tory over Athens in of its players to step up · and
the Division IJ sectioJ1al - help fill the void left by grad,_.
. semifinal last year. a&amp; the ·No. uates Chris Goode and Austin
'DECeMBER
7 seed. The M~rauders then Dunfee. Goode , an honorable
went on to fall in the section- · mention on the all-district li st
5
vs Belpre
6:30p.m.
al final 68-59 to Warren.
la~t season, provided some of
at River Valley
6p.m.
ll
Despite not being able to the height that is now missing
at Athena
12
6:30p.m.
claim the sectional title, last as the team's ·center while · 13 vsJaclalon
6:30p.m.
year 's tournament Win was a .DuRfee provided key minutes
19
at Nelsonville-YDI1&lt;
6:30p.m.
big step in the right direction .off of the bench and was one
20
at 'Gallia Academy • &amp;p.m.
vs·warren
27
for Me igs and now the -'of the· team's leaders on and
8:30p.m.
Marauders ' look to go even off ttie floor.
farth er this season .
While their presence will
J~liARY
,.
He lping make that a reality ' be ·missed 1 the1r are several
'
is a roster chalked full of 'returning stll(s and role play6
at Southam
6p.m.
upperclassmen and returning ers on this yrat's roster 'to
vs VInton Cpunty
6:30p.m'
9
talent , allowing the team to help fill .the gap!· But for this
16 . atAiexa~
6:30p.m.
at Eastern
6p.m.
20
get up and running quickly.
group to make a: t'll~ a! a c~n 23 · vs Wellston
6:30p.m. ,
Leading {Ire lj st of return- ference· title , they w•ll f1rst
24
6:30p.m.
River
Valley
ing letterman is senior Clay need to come tog~:ther as a
at
Vinton
County
6:30p.m.
So
·
Bolin and junior Jacob Well. team .
6:30p.m.
31
vs
Eastem
Both players are coming off"We are a team and we all
of very successful season contribute to the team,"
with the Marauder football Ewing said , "One person is
FEBRUARY
.____.
team , with .Well and Bolin not more important than the
3
vs Net8onville-YOI1&lt;
6 p.m.
hooking u·_p·.numerous tilJ)eS team. We are a family ." ·
- 214 EaJt M-in • Pom~roy, OH '
6.
6;30 p.m.
as a dangerous quarterbackMeigs wilt . ~et its sea_son
10
at Wellston
, •
6 p.m.
receiver combo , and the two underway F'nday agamst
_
·
I I
, .
'
• t
vs
Alexandl&gt;r
6 p.m.
17
hope to continue to feed otT · :....__
.._ uders ll
'
I
20
at ~ - •
6:30 p.m.
• of ellth other h.eiidillg into.t~e ·! ·. ~~ see.~~-• •
• , L- --~~~
_:_: ________ _

BY LARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.

GO 7UIIS! · :.·
~

v'

va-

I.J ..._...._.,_.,4.16Aie•_. .....-....... ~_.~.._..... .._.... ., . ...... ,.....__...

""""'-

R

-

Insurance Services

992-8687 ·o r 992-2143

" Bv BRYAN WALTERs
_BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

pass along.
Back · to
from a ·y ear
ago are senior
Jordan Kimes
and ·juniors
Jake Lynch,
M i k e
Johnson ,
K e I 1. y

TUPP~RS PLAINS ~ It's
not the size of the dog in the
fight, it's the size of the fight
in the dog.
·
Legendary · ·author Mark .,_.
Twain may not have ·had the :·
Eastern boys basketball program in mind when he comed
~inebrenner,
that infamous phrase, but it
H. Clldw.. Titus . Pierce
certainly · does apply to the
and Andrew
Eagles -for the ·upcoming · Beneduin ~ · Lynch, Johnson
2008-09 hoops campaign. . · and Winebrenner
and
The Eagles have an open- sometimes Pierce - were
ing day varsity ·· roster that starters a '.season ago, · while
will- go 13-strong, and none Kimes and Benedum saw
of them are taller than sill- limited action off the bench.. feet on paper. But, with three
Lynch was the Green and ·
starters and six- lettermen White.:s leading scorer last
back from .a squad that went winte• at. just over p points
8•.14 overall .(4-6 TVC · per game, while Winebrenner
Hocking) while advancing to · was ·the No. ~ scorer a year
the district semifinals a· year · ago at another guard spot.
ago· - the Green and W.hite Johnson and Pierce were both'
still have plenty of in the top-three for rebounds
1 • w.ill
punching power for ~he last year at the frontcourt
· upcoming 2008-09 campaign.· spots.
The Green and White los.t
With that l}alf-dozen leadfour players to graduation in ing the way, it will be up to
Kyle Rawson, Josh Collins, the seven neweomers to help
Alex Burroughs and Tyler pick up the slack if the Eagles
Kearns . Rawson was a three- are to have success - esJ?Cyear starter underneath and a cially with only two seniors
three-time all-district selec- on the roster.
M*ing the varsity leap this
tion, while .Burroughs was
the other starter lost at .the winter will be senior Zach
junio(s. Tyler
pointg.uard position. With the Hendrix,
exception of Burroughs, the · Carro\!
and
N1kolaous
other three departures were Brannon, and sophomores
all frontcourt players.
Brayden Pratt, Tyler Hendrix,
And although a majority of Kyle Connery and Devon
the roster will be newcomers Baum. ·caldwell · believes
to the varsity level, EHS these new additions will be a
coach Howie Caldwell bonus to his squad in re~~rds
·now· entering his II th season · to the speed and. athleticism
at Eastern and 23rd overall they bring to the table .
still believes that this wjnter
That's a big plus, because
can be a productive one.
the Eagles don't plan on
· That is, as long as the slowing down a whole lot this
Eagles are ~illing to work season due to their size de~ ­
together for tt.
dency. The extra depth wJII
"Basketball is a team game also help keep peopl~ fresh
an&lt;f we expect all of our play- and at the same time allow
ers to be leaders. We expect some players to get healthy.
all of our kids to play hard,
Caldwell is e.xcited about
play smart and contribute this group of players, but he
every single day," Caldwell also notes that this ball club
commented. "Our main goal nas a long way to go if they
this year is to continue to get want to be successful.
better with each ~arne and
"We've been a little banged
with each rractice .'
up in the preseason, so we
Caldwel is looking for his need to get healthy. We will
returnees to help guide these need to learn what varsity
relatively young f;agles basketball is all about, so we
throughout the rigors of the will have to want and accept
season. Those veterans also
have plenty of-experience-to- .. ·.· Pitt'' ... rrl'-. 11 .

' ·

Bry•n W•ltM-81photo

Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 Eastern boys varsity basketball t_
eam. Kneel_ing in
front from left are Andrew Benedum, Brayden Pratt, Jake Lynch, Tyler Hendnx, Matt Whttlock,
Nikoiaous Bra~non, Brad Stone and Kyle Connery. Standing in back_ are team manage~ Jordan
Wood, Kelly Winebrenner, Mike Johnson, Devon Baum, Jorcjan Kernes, Zach Hendnx, Titus
Pierce, Jonathan Barrett and Tyler Carroll.

1008-09
Eastem
Vanity Boys

~~--·------~--~~--~~~-.

Roster

Schedule

..

DECEMBER
5
6
12
19
23
27

6:30p.m.
8:30p.m.
8:30·p.m.
.. Miller
6:30p.m.
'6:30p.m.
at River va11ey
vs Bishop Rosecrans• 1 p.m.
at Southern
vs South Galllo
at Waterfold

:M:eigs
Southern
Eastern
Wahama
Bese o f Luck To
All Area Schools

JANUARY
3
9
16

20
23

24
'30
31

atWahama
at Federal Hocking
vs Trimblevs Meigs
vs Federal Hocking
at Symmes valley
at Trimble
at Meigs

&amp;p.m.
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.
6;30 p.m.
6p.m . .
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.

fEBRUARY
3
6
10
13
17

20

6p.m.
6:30p.m.'
6p.m.
6:30p.m.
et P&amp;lkersburg Catholic 6p.m.
6:30p.m.
vsSoulhem

vsWahama
vs watlllford
, vs River valley
at Miller

·-~ -~~

•

esc E. MAIN STREET
POMEROY.OH

7

5500

--=
......
7 . . M-F

1G-4 . . . .

�Page 2•

·200B-o9 Winter Sports PreVIew

hoops season :
Bolin, . a
third team alldistrict selecROCKSPRINGS
Coming off of their first posttion from a
year
ago,
season victory in three years,
the Meigs · boys basketball
brings with
team is as confident as ever
him a 16.1
that this season could be one
point
per
to remember as they try to
game average
add a few more tournament
to lead the
EwlnJ
Maroori and
. win s - and maybe a · TVC
championship - to their
Gold last searesumes in 2008-09.
son while. also contributing in
The Marauder hoops squad, several other areas on the
coming off of a so-so 9- 13 floor. Well , an all ~ di s trict
season, have plenty of talent honorable mention, also
returning from last year's returns and brings with him
team and seemingly_have ;til plenty. of speed and court
the pieces in place to put smarts .
together a solid season while
They are joined by seniors
challen~ing for a spot atop . Corey Hut~on, Gabe Hill and
the Tn-Valley Conference Dam1an W1se . The rest of the
Ohio Division.
upperclassmen
include
"We want to win the TVC Jeremy Smith, Caleb Davis
Ohio and make a long run in and Cody Lauder)11ilt.
February with a sectional
Rouqding out the 2008-09
title ," said second year head Meigs basketball roster are
coach Ben Ewing . "We also sophomores (:ameron .Bolin
.
, Bry•n W.ttenlphoto
want to build on last year's and Jon McCarthy and freshPictured
above
are
members
of
.the
2008-09
Meigs
boys
va_rsity
basketball
team . .Sitting in
positives and learn from the men Jesse Sn,ith.
'
front
fr6m
left
,are
Damian
Wise,
Corey
Hutton,
Gabe
Hill
~
Clay
Bolin
~nd
Chad Bonnett.
negatives, be competitive in
One thing the Marauders
Stad~ing
in
back
are
Cody
Laudermilt,
Jeremy·
Smith,
Cameron
Bolin,
Jon
McCarthy,
Jesse
all of our games anp fini sh will be battling this season is
Smith,
Jacob
Well
and
Caleb
Dav.is.
·
··
with an above .500 record ."
a lack of size, but the Maroon
And there is no reason the and Gold hope t.o combat
Marauders can ' t accomplish what they lack in height with
1008-09
those goals .
a deep roster that shows little .
, M.lls
Meigs got the tournament drop off at each position.
Vor•~&amp;oys
monkey off its . back with a
Meigs will ' also need a few
'
sdiedule
75-58 vic.tory over Athens in of its players to step up · and
the Division IJ sectioJ1al - help fill the void left by grad,_.
. semifinal last year. a&amp; the ·No. uates Chris Goode and Austin
'DECeMBER
7 seed. The M~rauders then Dunfee. Goode , an honorable
went on to fall in the section- · mention on the all-district li st
5
vs Belpre
6:30p.m.
al final 68-59 to Warren.
la~t season, provided some of
at River Valley
6p.m.
ll
Despite not being able to the height that is now missing
at Athena
12
6:30p.m.
claim the sectional title, last as the team's ·center while · 13 vsJaclalon
6:30p.m.
year 's tournament Win was a .DuRfee provided key minutes
19
at Nelsonville-YDI1&lt;
6:30p.m.
big step in the right direction .off of the bench and was one
20
at 'Gallia Academy • &amp;p.m.
vs·warren
27
for Me igs and now the -'of the· team's leaders on and
8:30p.m.
Marauders ' look to go even off ttie floor.
farth er this season .
While their presence will
J~liARY
,.
He lping make that a reality ' be ·missed 1 the1r are several
'
is a roster chalked full of 'returning stll(s and role play6
at Southam
6p.m.
upperclassmen and returning ers on this yrat's roster 'to
vs VInton Cpunty
6:30p.m'
9
talent , allowing the team to help fill .the gap!· But for this
16 . atAiexa~
6:30p.m.
at Eastern
6p.m.
20
get up and running quickly.
group to make a: t'll~ a! a c~n 23 · vs Wellston
6:30p.m. ,
Leading {Ire lj st of return- ference· title , they w•ll f1rst
24
6:30p.m.
River
Valley
ing letterman is senior Clay need to come tog~:ther as a
at
Vinton
County
6:30p.m.
So
·
Bolin and junior Jacob Well. team .
6:30p.m.
31
vs
Eastem
Both players are coming off"We are a team and we all
of very successful season contribute to the team,"
with the Marauder football Ewing said , "One person is
FEBRUARY
.____.
team , with .Well and Bolin not more important than the
3
vs Net8onville-YOI1&lt;
6 p.m.
hooking u·_p·.numerous tilJ)eS team. We are a family ." ·
- 214 EaJt M-in • Pom~roy, OH '
6.
6;30 p.m.
as a dangerous quarterbackMeigs wilt . ~et its sea_son
10
at Wellston
, •
6 p.m.
receiver combo , and the two underway F'nday agamst
_
·
I I
, .
'
• t
vs
Alexandl&gt;r
6 p.m.
17
hope to continue to feed otT · :....__
.._ uders ll
'
I
20
at ~ - •
6:30 p.m.
• of ellth other h.eiidillg into.t~e ·! ·. ~~ see.~~-• •
• , L- --~~~
_:_: ________ _

BY LARRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.

GO 7UIIS! · :.·
~

v'

va-

I.J ..._...._.,_.,4.16Aie•_. .....-....... ~_.~.._..... .._.... ., . ...... ,.....__...

""""'-

R

-

Insurance Services

992-8687 ·o r 992-2143

" Bv BRYAN WALTERs
_BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

pass along.
Back · to
from a ·y ear
ago are senior
Jordan Kimes
and ·juniors
Jake Lynch,
M i k e
Johnson ,
K e I 1. y

TUPP~RS PLAINS ~ It's
not the size of the dog in the
fight, it's the size of the fight
in the dog.
·
Legendary · ·author Mark .,_.
Twain may not have ·had the :·
Eastern boys basketball program in mind when he comed
~inebrenner,
that infamous phrase, but it
H. Clldw.. Titus . Pierce
certainly · does apply to the
and Andrew
Eagles -for the ·upcoming · Beneduin ~ · Lynch, Johnson
2008-09 hoops campaign. . · and Winebrenner
and
The Eagles have an open- sometimes Pierce - were
ing day varsity ·· roster that starters a '.season ago, · while
will- go 13-strong, and none Kimes and Benedum saw
of them are taller than sill- limited action off the bench.. feet on paper. But, with three
Lynch was the Green and ·
starters and six- lettermen White.:s leading scorer last
back from .a squad that went winte• at. just over p points
8•.14 overall .(4-6 TVC · per game, while Winebrenner
Hocking) while advancing to · was ·the No. ~ scorer a year
the district semifinals a· year · ago at another guard spot.
ago· - the Green and W.hite Johnson and Pierce were both'
still have plenty of in the top-three for rebounds
1 • w.ill
punching power for ~he last year at the frontcourt
· upcoming 2008-09 campaign.· spots.
The Green and White los.t
With that l}alf-dozen leadfour players to graduation in ing the way, it will be up to
Kyle Rawson, Josh Collins, the seven neweomers to help
Alex Burroughs and Tyler pick up the slack if the Eagles
Kearns . Rawson was a three- are to have success - esJ?Cyear starter underneath and a cially with only two seniors
three-time all-district selec- on the roster.
M*ing the varsity leap this
tion, while .Burroughs was
the other starter lost at .the winter will be senior Zach
junio(s. Tyler
pointg.uard position. With the Hendrix,
exception of Burroughs, the · Carro\!
and
N1kolaous
other three departures were Brannon, and sophomores
all frontcourt players.
Brayden Pratt, Tyler Hendrix,
And although a majority of Kyle Connery and Devon
the roster will be newcomers Baum. ·caldwell · believes
to the varsity level, EHS these new additions will be a
coach Howie Caldwell bonus to his squad in re~~rds
·now· entering his II th season · to the speed and. athleticism
at Eastern and 23rd overall they bring to the table .
still believes that this wjnter
That's a big plus, because
can be a productive one.
the Eagles don't plan on
· That is, as long as the slowing down a whole lot this
Eagles are ~illing to work season due to their size de~ ­
together for tt.
dency. The extra depth wJII
"Basketball is a team game also help keep peopl~ fresh
an&lt;f we expect all of our play- and at the same time allow
ers to be leaders. We expect some players to get healthy.
all of our kids to play hard,
Caldwell is e.xcited about
play smart and contribute this group of players, but he
every single day," Caldwell also notes that this ball club
commented. "Our main goal nas a long way to go if they
this year is to continue to get want to be successful.
better with each ~arne and
"We've been a little banged
with each rractice .'
up in the preseason, so we
Caldwel is looking for his need to get healthy. We will
returnees to help guide these need to learn what varsity
relatively young f;agles basketball is all about, so we
throughout the rigors of the will have to want and accept
season. Those veterans also
have plenty of-experience-to- .. ·.· Pitt'' ... rrl'-. 11 .

' ·

Bry•n W•ltM-81photo

Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 Eastern boys varsity basketball t_
eam. Kneel_ing in
front from left are Andrew Benedum, Brayden Pratt, Jake Lynch, Tyler Hendnx, Matt Whttlock,
Nikoiaous Bra~non, Brad Stone and Kyle Connery. Standing in back_ are team manage~ Jordan
Wood, Kelly Winebrenner, Mike Johnson, Devon Baum, Jorcjan Kernes, Zach Hendnx, Titus
Pierce, Jonathan Barrett and Tyler Carroll.

1008-09
Eastem
Vanity Boys

~~--·------~--~~--~~~-.

Roster

Schedule

..

DECEMBER
5
6
12
19
23
27

6:30p.m.
8:30p.m.
8:30·p.m.
.. Miller
6:30p.m.
'6:30p.m.
at River va11ey
vs Bishop Rosecrans• 1 p.m.
at Southern
vs South Galllo
at Waterfold

:M:eigs
Southern
Eastern
Wahama
Bese o f Luck To
All Area Schools

JANUARY
3
9
16

20
23

24
'30
31

atWahama
at Federal Hocking
vs Trimblevs Meigs
vs Federal Hocking
at Symmes valley
at Trimble
at Meigs

&amp;p.m.
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.
6;30 p.m.
6p.m . .
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.

fEBRUARY
3
6
10
13
17

20

6p.m.
6:30p.m.'
6p.m.
6:30p.m.
et P&amp;lkersburg Catholic 6p.m.
6:30p.m.
vsSoulhem

vsWahama
vs watlllford
, vs River valley
at Miller

·-~ -~~

•

esc E. MAIN STREET
POMEROY.OH

7

5500

--=
......
7 . . M-F

1G-4 . . . .

�•

Page 4 • ·

Fri~y,

2008-09 Winter Sports Preview

November 28, 2008

•

Southern se~ its sights. on another•successful
campaign
.
.

'

Bv ScoTT WOLFE

.

He will be
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
aided
by
S t' e v e
RACINE - Not even the
Randolph and
most auspicious Southern
K y 1 e
fans could have imagined the
Wickline.
· success of the early 1980s,
S o u th-e r n
but any date after 1982. has
returns two of
bailed hooks of hope lhat
last year's big
prompt Tornado fans to say,
three in scor""This is the year."
mg
With any new season
J. Caldwell R o b e r t s
comes hope, and the second
(senior) with
year edition of Coach Jeff a 12 .I mark and Harris
Caldwell's
'Tornadoes (senior) with an 11.9 tally,
renewed thai hope last season Leaders in rebounding were
when ·they posted a 13-9 Roberts with a 5.9 mark,
overall record and nearly while returnees Brad Brown
staged a dramatic comeback (senior) and Roberts regisin the semi-finals of the boys ' tered 3.9 and 3.1 assists per
Southeast District semi-final. game.
The end result of that game
Besides letter · winners
wasn't a true reflection of the Brown, Roberts and Harris,
game as after Southern junior Cyle Rees, a talented
fought back to take the lead, passer and play maker, 6they went scoreless in the last foot-6 senior John Brauer and
Michael
Manuel
.two minutes. Manchester · junior
went on to win 63-49. It left a return. Up From last year's
bitter taste in Southern's reserve team are juniors
·
Bryan Watt.n/photo
mouth, a taste they don't Taylor Deem, Sean Coppick,
want lo ever experience Dustin
Salser,
Colby Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 Southern boys varsity basketball team. Sitting in
again.
Roseberry, Jordan Taylor and front, from left, are Zachary Manuel, Jordan Taylor, Dustin Salser, Taylor Deem, Cyle Rees and
Sea~ Coppick. Standing in back are Michael Manuel, Weston Roberts, John Brauer, Bryan
Most of this year's team . sophomore Zach Manuel.
·
will get a chance at revenge .
Team strengths listed for Harns, Brad Brown and Colby Roseberry.
Gone, however, · are four the team ·are that Southern
seniors from last year has a year of experience with
2008'·09
Brett Beegle, Ryan Chapman, Caldwell at the helm. "Yes,
Southem
Kreig Kleski and Trenton everyone has been in the sysVanity·Boys
Roseberry. At last year's ban- tern and we have more overSchedule
que! special awards went to all experience that we had
Ryan Chapman, Academic coming in ·tast year," said
Award; Kreig Kleski , Most Caldwell.
.
DECEMBER
Improved
Award;
Brett
"We should be better offenBeeg.le. Jonathan Rees 100 sively than last. At times we
5
vs Eastern
6:30p.m.
percenl award; Kreig Kleski struggled last year. This year
9
vs South Gallia
6p.m.
t2
VS Fed Hock
6:30p.m.
Besl
Defensive
Player we are also a little stronger
t9
6:30p.m.
't Trimble
Award: Ryan Chapman, Most physically which will also be
I
23
at Ironton St. Joe
5p.m.
Charges; Bryan Harris, Best a plus.
27 . vs Wahama
6p.m.
Free Throw Percent Award;
"Our
shooting
has
Weston
Roberts,
Most improved over the summer.
JANUARY
Rebounds and Most Assists; Hopefully. this will translate
and Trenton
Roseberry, into better offense. We should
vs Meigs
6p.m.
6
Dedication Award .
be a decent shooting team as
. at Miller
6:30p.m.
9
In addition, Roberts was a long as our shot selection is
TBA
tO
~s Belpre'
• MEIGS ·
first team All-District 13 good."
6p.m.
t3
at South Gallia
•· MARAUDERS
6:30p.m.
t6
vs Waterford
player
and
AII-Districl
Despite the upbeat atmos• EASTERN
17
atWahama
•
6p.m.
Associated Press player and p.here at Southern, the veteran
EAGLES
6:30p.m.
vs Milter
23
AII-TVC, joining teammate coach cites .ball handling,
6p.m.
• SOUTHERN
24
at Chesapeake
Kreig Kleski, a 2008 grad. team speed and rebounding
6:30p.m.
at Waterford
30
TORNADOES
Bryan Harris was Honorable as concerns. "We need to be
•WAHAMA
Mention
All-District betler defensively and we
FEBRUARY
WHITE FALCONS
Associated Press.
need to be a better reboundIt?s Not Too Early To See Us
Coach Caldwell will be in ing team . Our size is fairly
at Symmes Valley
6 p.m.
3
his I I th season as a head var- nice, but we lack overall
at Fed Hock
6:30p.m.
6
For Your Graduation Supplies.
sity coach and his second at speed and we are working on
6:30p.m.
t3
VS Trimble
at River Valley
6p.m.
17
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Southern . Caldwell owns a our defensive footwork . I'm
6:30p.m.
at Eastern
20
121-88 overall record and sure we will get to wh'e re we
MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
last year led Southern to a 13992-3345
• .•• : ~ at ¥fT't• Col~ . .
9· record, . ),.) .in· the ·leag.."",, . P.fea~. ~ Tfl'Pidoes" ,1,1, ,. ~~~~~~~~
'
.,

.. . ·····

...

Frid8y, Novemir'er .2a, 2008

2008-09 Winter SportS Preview

b~tly· Marauders aiming.for
. · . BY BRYAN WALTERS
SWALTERSOMYOAJLYTfitetm,E.COM

RQ(;K:SPRINGS - In eacb
of Carl Wolfe's three previous
seasons as,head girls ba.sketj&gt;all
coach at Meigs High School,
the Lady Marauders have
'improved theinecord from the
year before. .
··
. Meigs was 5-16 in 2005-06, ·
then went 9-12 in 2006-07
before finishinf one-game
under .500 last year.
With five returning letterwinney&gt; 8Qd .three starters back
from a S({Uad that wen~ -t 0" II"·
~&gt;Verall and '3-7 in the · TriValley
Conference
Ohio
DivisiOn fast winter, the venerable frontman - now .entering
,hiii''fourth season - . sees no
reason that the 2008-09 campaign' w.on 't COJ'Itinue in that
.trend. .
T.hat . is,, as long .as ;the
Maroon iUid Gold ·continue to·
rofke .improvements and work
hard as the season pfogresses'. .
"I really th.ink that we will be
competitive this year as long as
we learn to rebound. We should
also be able to score some
points, but .we will .win with
our d~fense," Wolfe commented . . ''Oilf main goals for this
season are the same as always.
We just .want to ke~p gettmg
better and pl~y · hard every .
night. If we do that, everything
should talce care of itself:-~
MHS lost four players to
graduation from a year ago •.
which include starters Amy
Barr and Melissa Grueser as
well as Brittany Preast and
Hannah' Pratt. Three of those
four were frontcou!'l players,
which is the reason for concern
under the basket.
· However, with a senior-laden
backeourt and the squad's top
inside presence returning from
a year ago, Wolfe feels that this
season's roster· ~ which wiU
·start the winter nine-deep can be even more productive
than the last
·
·
"All of our players will contribute something to this team.
We have four players coming
~;~p from the JV ranks to go
along with our experienced
veterans, which should help
with the tran&amp;ition," Wolfe
said. ·~Both Adrian (Bolin) apd
Catie (Wolfe) are experienced,
and they will be the main lead- .
ers .of this group becap~ t))ey

.. ....

• Page 5

...

more improvement in ~008-09

are
the
seniors."
Both · upperclassmen are ' ·
also returning
starters
at
guard spots,
particularly
Wolfe- who
. returns as a
.
three-year
. ...,_
·
·
starter.
Wolfe
-. .
. ,
- who averaged 16.1 points . last year has been the .leading scorer for
MHS !fie last 'hree seiJ,sons and
has· also been nanied AII-TVC
and aU-district in each of those
camp~igns.
.
.
Bohn .;etums to the off-guard
spot wh~re she started a year
ago, wl;!IIe sophomore Morgan
Ho\Vafd (llso comes back as the
pivot frQm a year ago. Howard .
~as also •an All-TVC and all,distirct performer in 7007-08. ·
Junior ·g~rd · Tricia Smith · ·
and sophomore forward Shellie
Bailey also return from last
year's squad and each will be
~ng on more of a sugnificant
.
role this seaspn.

PI•H ... Melp. 11

2008·09

Melp
V•nlty Girls
Schedule ·
NOVEMBER
29

vs River Valley

•

Arnold/submitted phOto
Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 MeigS varsity girls basketball team. Sitting in
froQt, from left, are Adrian Bolin and Calle Wolfe. Kneeling in the middle are Shanalle Smith,
Tricia Smitll.and Mickl Barnes. Standing in back are Miranda Grueser, Morgan Howard, Shellie
•
·
•
·
Bailey and .C.handra Sjanley. · ·
Denise

:~

6p.m.

DECEMBER

. ....

10 , ,
, 12 .
:14 ,..,
IQ

2

,a
tt
15

18
23

at Eastern
vaAiexander

·atWahama
va Nelsonville-York
at .VInton County
vsSouthem

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
p.m.
·6p.m.
6p.m.

.a

JANUARY
3

8
·to
t2
t5
t7
22

27
29

at South Gallla
at Athens
atR~Valley

at Wellelon
vs Belpre
YS Easleltt
at AJal1811dar

vswahama
at Neloonvillr York

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
&amp;p.m.
6p.m.

FEBRUARY.
2

5

va Vinton County

vsAthens
9
va Wellston
~~ • ... B.elpre

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m .

.

_;_

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Page 4 • ·

Fri~y,

2008-09 Winter Sports Preview

November 28, 2008

•

Southern se~ its sights. on another•successful
campaign
.
.

'

Bv ScoTT WOLFE

.

He will be
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
aided
by
S t' e v e
RACINE - Not even the
Randolph and
most auspicious Southern
K y 1 e
fans could have imagined the
Wickline.
· success of the early 1980s,
S o u th-e r n
but any date after 1982. has
returns two of
bailed hooks of hope lhat
last year's big
prompt Tornado fans to say,
three in scor""This is the year."
mg
With any new season
J. Caldwell R o b e r t s
comes hope, and the second
(senior) with
year edition of Coach Jeff a 12 .I mark and Harris
Caldwell's
'Tornadoes (senior) with an 11.9 tally,
renewed thai hope last season Leaders in rebounding were
when ·they posted a 13-9 Roberts with a 5.9 mark,
overall record and nearly while returnees Brad Brown
staged a dramatic comeback (senior) and Roberts regisin the semi-finals of the boys ' tered 3.9 and 3.1 assists per
Southeast District semi-final. game.
The end result of that game
Besides letter · winners
wasn't a true reflection of the Brown, Roberts and Harris,
game as after Southern junior Cyle Rees, a talented
fought back to take the lead, passer and play maker, 6they went scoreless in the last foot-6 senior John Brauer and
Michael
Manuel
.two minutes. Manchester · junior
went on to win 63-49. It left a return. Up From last year's
bitter taste in Southern's reserve team are juniors
·
Bryan Watt.n/photo
mouth, a taste they don't Taylor Deem, Sean Coppick,
want lo ever experience Dustin
Salser,
Colby Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 Southern boys varsity basketball team. Sitting in
again.
Roseberry, Jordan Taylor and front, from left, are Zachary Manuel, Jordan Taylor, Dustin Salser, Taylor Deem, Cyle Rees and
Sea~ Coppick. Standing in back are Michael Manuel, Weston Roberts, John Brauer, Bryan
Most of this year's team . sophomore Zach Manuel.
·
will get a chance at revenge .
Team strengths listed for Harns, Brad Brown and Colby Roseberry.
Gone, however, · are four the team ·are that Southern
seniors from last year has a year of experience with
2008'·09
Brett Beegle, Ryan Chapman, Caldwell at the helm. "Yes,
Southem
Kreig Kleski and Trenton everyone has been in the sysVanity·Boys
Roseberry. At last year's ban- tern and we have more overSchedule
que! special awards went to all experience that we had
Ryan Chapman, Academic coming in ·tast year," said
Award; Kreig Kleski , Most Caldwell.
.
DECEMBER
Improved
Award;
Brett
"We should be better offenBeeg.le. Jonathan Rees 100 sively than last. At times we
5
vs Eastern
6:30p.m.
percenl award; Kreig Kleski struggled last year. This year
9
vs South Gallia
6p.m.
t2
VS Fed Hock
6:30p.m.
Besl
Defensive
Player we are also a little stronger
t9
6:30p.m.
't Trimble
Award: Ryan Chapman, Most physically which will also be
I
23
at Ironton St. Joe
5p.m.
Charges; Bryan Harris, Best a plus.
27 . vs Wahama
6p.m.
Free Throw Percent Award;
"Our
shooting
has
Weston
Roberts,
Most improved over the summer.
JANUARY
Rebounds and Most Assists; Hopefully. this will translate
and Trenton
Roseberry, into better offense. We should
vs Meigs
6p.m.
6
Dedication Award .
be a decent shooting team as
. at Miller
6:30p.m.
9
In addition, Roberts was a long as our shot selection is
TBA
tO
~s Belpre'
• MEIGS ·
first team All-District 13 good."
6p.m.
t3
at South Gallia
•· MARAUDERS
6:30p.m.
t6
vs Waterford
player
and
AII-Districl
Despite the upbeat atmos• EASTERN
17
atWahama
•
6p.m.
Associated Press player and p.here at Southern, the veteran
EAGLES
6:30p.m.
vs Milter
23
AII-TVC, joining teammate coach cites .ball handling,
6p.m.
• SOUTHERN
24
at Chesapeake
Kreig Kleski, a 2008 grad. team speed and rebounding
6:30p.m.
at Waterford
30
TORNADOES
Bryan Harris was Honorable as concerns. "We need to be
•WAHAMA
Mention
All-District betler defensively and we
FEBRUARY
WHITE FALCONS
Associated Press.
need to be a better reboundIt?s Not Too Early To See Us
Coach Caldwell will be in ing team . Our size is fairly
at Symmes Valley
6 p.m.
3
his I I th season as a head var- nice, but we lack overall
at Fed Hock
6:30p.m.
6
For Your Graduation Supplies.
sity coach and his second at speed and we are working on
6:30p.m.
t3
VS Trimble
at River Valley
6p.m.
17
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Southern . Caldwell owns a our defensive footwork . I'm
6:30p.m.
at Eastern
20
121-88 overall record and sure we will get to wh'e re we
MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
last year led Southern to a 13992-3345
• .•• : ~ at ¥fT't• Col~ . .
9· record, . ),.) .in· the ·leag.."",, . P.fea~. ~ Tfl'Pidoes" ,1,1, ,. ~~~~~~~~
'
.,

.. . ·····

...

Frid8y, Novemir'er .2a, 2008

2008-09 Winter SportS Preview

b~tly· Marauders aiming.for
. · . BY BRYAN WALTERS
SWALTERSOMYOAJLYTfitetm,E.COM

RQ(;K:SPRINGS - In eacb
of Carl Wolfe's three previous
seasons as,head girls ba.sketj&gt;all
coach at Meigs High School,
the Lady Marauders have
'improved theinecord from the
year before. .
··
. Meigs was 5-16 in 2005-06, ·
then went 9-12 in 2006-07
before finishinf one-game
under .500 last year.
With five returning letterwinney&gt; 8Qd .three starters back
from a S({Uad that wen~ -t 0" II"·
~&gt;Verall and '3-7 in the · TriValley
Conference
Ohio
DivisiOn fast winter, the venerable frontman - now .entering
,hiii''fourth season - . sees no
reason that the 2008-09 campaign' w.on 't COJ'Itinue in that
.trend. .
T.hat . is,, as long .as ;the
Maroon iUid Gold ·continue to·
rofke .improvements and work
hard as the season pfogresses'. .
"I really th.ink that we will be
competitive this year as long as
we learn to rebound. We should
also be able to score some
points, but .we will .win with
our d~fense," Wolfe commented . . ''Oilf main goals for this
season are the same as always.
We just .want to ke~p gettmg
better and pl~y · hard every .
night. If we do that, everything
should talce care of itself:-~
MHS lost four players to
graduation from a year ago •.
which include starters Amy
Barr and Melissa Grueser as
well as Brittany Preast and
Hannah' Pratt. Three of those
four were frontcou!'l players,
which is the reason for concern
under the basket.
· However, with a senior-laden
backeourt and the squad's top
inside presence returning from
a year ago, Wolfe feels that this
season's roster· ~ which wiU
·start the winter nine-deep can be even more productive
than the last
·
·
"All of our players will contribute something to this team.
We have four players coming
~;~p from the JV ranks to go
along with our experienced
veterans, which should help
with the tran&amp;ition," Wolfe
said. ·~Both Adrian (Bolin) apd
Catie (Wolfe) are experienced,
and they will be the main lead- .
ers .of this group becap~ t))ey

.. ....

• Page 5

...

more improvement in ~008-09

are
the
seniors."
Both · upperclassmen are ' ·
also returning
starters
at
guard spots,
particularly
Wolfe- who
. returns as a
.
three-year
. ...,_
·
·
starter.
Wolfe
-. .
. ,
- who averaged 16.1 points . last year has been the .leading scorer for
MHS !fie last 'hree seiJ,sons and
has· also been nanied AII-TVC
and aU-district in each of those
camp~igns.
.
.
Bohn .;etums to the off-guard
spot wh~re she started a year
ago, wl;!IIe sophomore Morgan
Ho\Vafd (llso comes back as the
pivot frQm a year ago. Howard .
~as also •an All-TVC and all,distirct performer in 7007-08. ·
Junior ·g~rd · Tricia Smith · ·
and sophomore forward Shellie
Bailey also return from last
year's squad and each will be
~ng on more of a sugnificant
.
role this seaspn.

PI•H ... Melp. 11

2008·09

Melp
V•nlty Girls
Schedule ·
NOVEMBER
29

vs River Valley

•

Arnold/submitted phOto
Pictured above are members of the 2008-09 MeigS varsity girls basketball team. Sitting in
froQt, from left, are Adrian Bolin and Calle Wolfe. Kneeling in the middle are Shanalle Smith,
Tricia Smitll.and Mickl Barnes. Standing in back are Miranda Grueser, Morgan Howard, Shellie
•
·
•
·
Bailey and .C.handra Sjanley. · ·
Denise

:~

6p.m.

DECEMBER

. ....

10 , ,
, 12 .
:14 ,..,
IQ

2

,a
tt
15

18
23

at Eastern
vaAiexander

·atWahama
va Nelsonville-York
at .VInton County
vsSouthem

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
p.m.
·6p.m.
6p.m.

.a

JANUARY
3

8
·to
t2
t5
t7
22

27
29

at South Gallla
at Athens
atR~Valley

at Wellelon
vs Belpre
YS Easleltt
at AJal1811dar

vswahama
at Neloonvillr York

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
&amp;p.m.
6p.m.

FEBRUARY.
2

5

va Vinton County

vsAthens
9
va Wellston
~~ • ... B.elpre

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m .

.

_;_

-

.(" • Mldrl &amp;.rr..

Adrtllt 110111

flioll.._

c- Wollt.

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Shanalte Smith

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Page6 •

..

•

Burdette takes -over-reins.of Lady.EagleS .hoops progpam:
.
.

BY lARRY CRUM

All-district
LCRUMOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM
player, will
don the Green
TUPPERS PLAINS - For
aod White of . .
a team that hasn't had much
Eastern this·
consistency over the past few
season
and
years, things are finally startwill
bring
ing look up for . the Eastern
with her a
Lady Eagles basketball team,
double-dou"
The Lady Eagles, who have L.-.:......:!~~ ble average
gone through five coaches in
and a whopthe past five years, will have ·
ping
17,6 ·
first-year head man John
points
per
Burdette in their corner this game as a commanding presseason along with a roster ence underneath the basket.
chalked full of talented
"Turley will greatly help
underclassmen and crafty out on both ends of the court
veterans. ,
with her size and ability,"
That, combined with the Burdette said.
·
momentum of a se~tional title
With Turley and a handful
from a year ago, has the of other talented post players
Eastern girls ready to hit the receiving the ball from a slew
court and prove what they of quick guards, the Lady
can do this season,
Eagles could be a fast and "fun
"The girls · have set high team to watch in 2008.
expectations for this year and
Other returhees from last
I look forward to watching year's squad include junior
this team grow together on forwards Audrianna Pullins
and off the court," Burdette and Denise Hannum and
'
: Brylln w.itenl'photo
said.
sophomore forward Allie Pictured above are m8(Tlbers of the 2008-()9 Eastern girls varsity basketball team. Kneeling In front,
To return to prominence, . Rawson.
from left are Brooke Johnson Brenna Holter Kaylee Milam, Haley Gillian and Beverly Maxson.
the Lady Eagles will first
. Burdette noted that it will Staoding in back are Ashley 'Putnam, Kayt~ Lawrence, Kasey Turley, Audrionna Pullins, Allie
have to find a way to replace take the collective effort of Rawson and Emeri ponnery.
·
gradu.ates Katie Hayman and all of his returnees, along
~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~
Morgan Werry. Both players with the new faces , to make
1008-09
played key roles in last year's. this a successful season.
Eastern
7- 15 team and both will be
Some of those new faces
Vartlty Girls
very hard to replace.
include freshmen Haley
Hayman will be the biggest (iillian, Ashley Putnam ,'
Schedule :
void in this year's roster as Brenna
Holter,
Brooke
her 14 points per game . Johnson
and
Kayte·
DECEMBER
,
played a bi g part in Eastern's Lawrence.
Division IV sect ional cham2
vs Meigs
69.m.
Of those first-year_players,
4
ar Waterford
6p.m.
pionship . The Lady Eagles Putnam and Gillian have
vs
River
Valley
8
s p.m.
defeated lron'ton St. Joe 42- greatly impressed Burdette in
11
at FeOOral Hocl&lt;ing
6p.m.
21 in that game before f~ ling the offseason.
6 p.h).
Hi
vs Miller
to South Webster in th dis"They will both contri~ute
6p.m.
22
"" South Gallia
trict semi-fi nal 65-31.
27
at Ravenswood'
9 a.m.
with rebounding and qutckHelping fill that hole this ness for us thiS season,"
season is returning Southeast Burdette said.
JANUARY
Ohio All -district
player
While every - ·new coach
• at River Valley
Emeri Connery. The sopho- goes through a transition
5
·' 6p.m. ·
&amp;p.m.
at.Trimble
'
8
more,
along
teammate phase, Burdette hopes that
.,
6 p.m.
va
Wllhama
1~
Beverly Maxon, helped move this year's team will adapt
6p.m.
..
Soultiem
15
the ball last season from the quickly and --has already set
6p.m.
17
ai Metga .
point and both will be asked so me solid goals for the
6p.m.
at Miller
22
to step up in a big way this young team .
1 p.m.
24
alA~ ·
6p.m.
va F.,_, Hoc:ldng
28
season. Senior Kylee Milam
" I want them to wio five
- the- only senior on this games that they are not
'
· year's squad - will also play ·expected to win and I want us
FEBRUARY
a key role as -the veteran to peak at the right time,"
Sp.m.
at Gallja Acedemy
2
voice of the team.
Burdette said.
&amp;p.m.
5
vaTAlso helping make the tran1 p.m.
If they can do just that,
Vs y,,••• Dfl
7
169. N. 2nd Avenue
·
sition a little easier this year Eastern could be in for a
g
v;a TJliiCtfocd
&amp;P.m.
Middleport, Ohio
at~ -~
is Southeni-" .transfer Kasey bright season .
e.,.m. ·
12
Thrley. Turley, a two time
• - I I Aillrliflllf ~
....... ... Eastern. 10
All-TVC and second team

INGELS Ci\.RPET .

"

.

740-992-7028

I I

... \.. 1

l

'i008::G9 Wiliter'S~~:~~e..
r -_,·"'~-' .,.

~ • ~··

.,_-

•Page 7

'

Eiiii~'~Olifttll~ ~miJig 'for· :wproveD_tent in' 2008-09
~'"'.11'"
~•
~,,

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season.
·
- T ·.,a ·y I o t .

- ~~~~sit touJ~

RACINE ..:_
a so)id'
group, .of young ladies and ""~ .,.
for opposingwealth of~ developing _talent,
.guards · W.ith .
her slashing
the Southern Lady Tornadoes ·
of sixth year Cqach A1.an ·
d e f e n s i ve ·
Crisp -ate looking:for a much
skills, \vnile
improved .2008-09 basketball
overall.11-team
season. · ., . ., . ·. •
-:..
''l. u i c k n,e s s· ·
Last. season, Southern •fi!.l;
Olllp
mar1&lt;s a . plus ·
ished with . a :3-18'. ovtiraU
. . • in the SHS
mark and 1•9 slate.. in . the line-up. '~This is goi~g to be
league.
·
·
, . ., one of our quickest .teams,. .,
Gon~ from . last • year's. , This' will·allow us to do some
squad· is Whitney ··Wolfe- . things we naven't been able
Rtffle a four-~ear ..l~t(er win- ;~"1!) in, the past:" • ·
.
ner that proved to be a vaJ(J. ~- E~perience
is another
able' asset over ijer career. fn trademark that every coach
2007-08 Wolfe-Riffle won - lik~ · to flaunt. You can't
the · Most ~teals Award iu~ct · -co.ach . size and you can't
. seni~r . trop~y while e;lrlier ~~eli' _hperjence. 'rhos~ are .
serv'uig stmt~- on· ali~league Iiltl\ngtbles .that ·.you etth~;r
squads.
· . &gt;. _~ .. ,. hiiveor. you''don't.
.. . ·
. Los!ng ·Wolfe: Riftle )V~~ ~ .• · Cri~P. adc!~~ ,,"This is a very ·
big Jqs~. but ~ lood crop of · hard woflmfg te11m. Many .
ffesb\nen and a year's worth • players last year got a lot of
6f expe.-ience for most of the time on varsity. The experivarsity upper classman look ence is a plus. Our ball han- ,
Bryan Walters/photo
to replenish the Tornado line-' dling .should be improved
Pictured abOve"are members of the 2008-09 Southern girls varsity basketball team. Kneeling in
up ' Anot~er p!ayer ~ved to · over l~;iSt y.ear too." .
front,
from left, are Courtney Thomas: Emma lilunter, Gabby Johnson and Kelly Humphrey. ~tanding
another dtstnct.
..
Havmg yo)Jth on the team
in
back
are Lind~y Teaford, Morgan McMillum, Breanna Taylor, Cheyenne Dunn and Lynzee
'.Alan-Crisp is in his~ second can be good and it c~n also
stint a&amp;. Southern· mentor . his · have its downfalls . Wi'h .
,008-09
six-th' year overall. .C~ac;h-· youth comes-enthusias.m and
Crisp bas nothi'l~ :b,ut good:· yo_!it~ful ~stjikes. Some of
Soutllem
things to say about _hts young .. the L'ad,r· ~orna_does l\re
Va-:$1ty Qlrls .
team and· is -quic::k to point out' -unte11te.d ,at th,.t:s yo1.nt, but by
Schedule ·
that teaQl chenustry ts a huge th~ mtddle o.f t~e season,
positive. '"We have a family Cnsp hopes ~hat tht ~ changes.
atmo.sphere and .v ery good
So';lthern ts lc:&gt;okmg for a
Nov~MBER
team chemistry, But best of . lea~er. Wol_fe-Rtffle was the
29
vs Pike Eas~e")
6p.m.
all we play well together '' .
[IJltural c~ott:e to lead as t~e
·
·
s
h
lone sentor last year. Thts
. Returnmg to the o~t ern year· it appears that the 'role is
DECEMBER
hne-up are letter wmners up to whoever wants to take
B.reanna · !aylor, Lynzee it. " We are. going to . need
4
vs Miller
6p.m.
Tucker, Lmdsay Teaford, someone to step up and take
at South Gallia
8
• 6p.m. ·
11
vs Waterford
6p.m.
Cheyenne Dunn and Gabby . control on the floor. A leader I
15
al River Valley
6p.m.
John son , all juniors; and •. hils to-emerge from this- gf9up
18
at Trimble
6p.m.
Emma·Hunter who returns as · if we are to be succe~sful.''
23
at MeigS
6p.m.
a senior after a good sophoCrisp cited " questionable
29
at Wahama tournament TBA
more year. Taylor won the ,
at Wahama tournament TBA
30
Something Different
Best Defensive A\vard last l Please see SoutlMrn. 10
'
. JANUARY

Have A Great Seasonf

..

8
10
12
• 15

'

Jr
Jr
Jr

22

26
29

Fr

at Fed Hock
vs OVCS
vs South Gallia
at Eastem
vs Trimble
vs Harinll!l
at Walertord

6p.m.
1 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
8p.m.

fLBRUARY

Fr

700 N. Second Ave. Middleport, OH

Fr

Fi

2

fill

5
9
12

vs Wahama
vs Fed Hoc~
at'Miller
• ""&amp;slam

Stop By &amp; See Us
Before or After
The Games!

6p.m.
6p:m.
6p.m.

. • 6 p.cn •

7 40-992-3322

�l

Page6 •

..

•

Burdette takes -over-reins.of Lady.EagleS .hoops progpam:
.
.

BY lARRY CRUM

All-district
LCRUMOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM
player, will
don the Green
TUPPERS PLAINS - For
aod White of . .
a team that hasn't had much
Eastern this·
consistency over the past few
season
and
years, things are finally startwill
bring
ing look up for . the Eastern
with her a
Lady Eagles basketball team,
double-dou"
The Lady Eagles, who have L.-.:......:!~~ ble average
gone through five coaches in
and a whopthe past five years, will have ·
ping
17,6 ·
first-year head man John
points
per
Burdette in their corner this game as a commanding presseason along with a roster ence underneath the basket.
chalked full of talented
"Turley will greatly help
underclassmen and crafty out on both ends of the court
veterans. ,
with her size and ability,"
That, combined with the Burdette said.
·
momentum of a se~tional title
With Turley and a handful
from a year ago, has the of other talented post players
Eastern girls ready to hit the receiving the ball from a slew
court and prove what they of quick guards, the Lady
can do this season,
Eagles could be a fast and "fun
"The girls · have set high team to watch in 2008.
expectations for this year and
Other returhees from last
I look forward to watching year's squad include junior
this team grow together on forwards Audrianna Pullins
and off the court," Burdette and Denise Hannum and
'
: Brylln w.itenl'photo
said.
sophomore forward Allie Pictured above are m8(Tlbers of the 2008-()9 Eastern girls varsity basketball team. Kneeling In front,
To return to prominence, . Rawson.
from left are Brooke Johnson Brenna Holter Kaylee Milam, Haley Gillian and Beverly Maxson.
the Lady Eagles will first
. Burdette noted that it will Staoding in back are Ashley 'Putnam, Kayt~ Lawrence, Kasey Turley, Audrionna Pullins, Allie
have to find a way to replace take the collective effort of Rawson and Emeri ponnery.
·
gradu.ates Katie Hayman and all of his returnees, along
~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~
Morgan Werry. Both players with the new faces , to make
1008-09
played key roles in last year's. this a successful season.
Eastern
7- 15 team and both will be
Some of those new faces
Vartlty Girls
very hard to replace.
include freshmen Haley
Hayman will be the biggest (iillian, Ashley Putnam ,'
Schedule :
void in this year's roster as Brenna
Holter,
Brooke
her 14 points per game . Johnson
and
Kayte·
DECEMBER
,
played a bi g part in Eastern's Lawrence.
Division IV sect ional cham2
vs Meigs
69.m.
Of those first-year_players,
4
ar Waterford
6p.m.
pionship . The Lady Eagles Putnam and Gillian have
vs
River
Valley
8
s p.m.
defeated lron'ton St. Joe 42- greatly impressed Burdette in
11
at FeOOral Hocl&lt;ing
6p.m.
21 in that game before f~ ling the offseason.
6 p.h).
Hi
vs Miller
to South Webster in th dis"They will both contri~ute
6p.m.
22
"" South Gallia
trict semi-fi nal 65-31.
27
at Ravenswood'
9 a.m.
with rebounding and qutckHelping fill that hole this ness for us thiS season,"
season is returning Southeast Burdette said.
JANUARY
Ohio All -district
player
While every - ·new coach
• at River Valley
Emeri Connery. The sopho- goes through a transition
5
·' 6p.m. ·
&amp;p.m.
at.Trimble
'
8
more,
along
teammate phase, Burdette hopes that
.,
6 p.m.
va
Wllhama
1~
Beverly Maxon, helped move this year's team will adapt
6p.m.
..
Soultiem
15
the ball last season from the quickly and --has already set
6p.m.
17
ai Metga .
point and both will be asked so me solid goals for the
6p.m.
at Miller
22
to step up in a big way this young team .
1 p.m.
24
alA~ ·
6p.m.
va F.,_, Hoc:ldng
28
season. Senior Kylee Milam
" I want them to wio five
- the- only senior on this games that they are not
'
· year's squad - will also play ·expected to win and I want us
FEBRUARY
a key role as -the veteran to peak at the right time,"
Sp.m.
at Gallja Acedemy
2
voice of the team.
Burdette said.
&amp;p.m.
5
vaTAlso helping make the tran1 p.m.
If they can do just that,
Vs y,,••• Dfl
7
169. N. 2nd Avenue
·
sition a little easier this year Eastern could be in for a
g
v;a TJliiCtfocd
&amp;P.m.
Middleport, Ohio
at~ -~
is Southeni-" .transfer Kasey bright season .
e.,.m. ·
12
Thrley. Turley, a two time
• - I I Aillrliflllf ~
....... ... Eastern. 10
All-TVC and second team

INGELS Ci\.RPET .

"

.

740-992-7028

I I

... \.. 1

l

'i008::G9 Wiliter'S~~:~~e..
r -_,·"'~-' .,.

~ • ~··

.,_-

•Page 7

'

Eiiii~'~Olifttll~ ~miJig 'for· :wproveD_tent in' 2008-09
~'"'.11'"
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season.
·
- T ·.,a ·y I o t .

- ~~~~sit touJ~

RACINE ..:_
a so)id'
group, .of young ladies and ""~ .,.
for opposingwealth of~ developing _talent,
.guards · W.ith .
her slashing
the Southern Lady Tornadoes ·
of sixth year Cqach A1.an ·
d e f e n s i ve ·
Crisp -ate looking:for a much
skills, \vnile
improved .2008-09 basketball
overall.11-team
season. · ., . ., . ·. •
-:..
''l. u i c k n,e s s· ·
Last. season, Southern •fi!.l;
Olllp
mar1&lt;s a . plus ·
ished with . a :3-18'. ovtiraU
. . • in the SHS
mark and 1•9 slate.. in . the line-up. '~This is goi~g to be
league.
·
·
, . ., one of our quickest .teams,. .,
Gon~ from . last • year's. , This' will·allow us to do some
squad· is Whitney ··Wolfe- . things we naven't been able
Rtffle a four-~ear ..l~t(er win- ;~"1!) in, the past:" • ·
.
ner that proved to be a vaJ(J. ~- E~perience
is another
able' asset over ijer career. fn trademark that every coach
2007-08 Wolfe-Riffle won - lik~ · to flaunt. You can't
the · Most ~teals Award iu~ct · -co.ach . size and you can't
. seni~r . trop~y while e;lrlier ~~eli' _hperjence. 'rhos~ are .
serv'uig stmt~- on· ali~league Iiltl\ngtbles .that ·.you etth~;r
squads.
· . &gt;. _~ .. ,. hiiveor. you''don't.
.. . ·
. Los!ng ·Wolfe: Riftle )V~~ ~ .• · Cri~P. adc!~~ ,,"This is a very ·
big Jqs~. but ~ lood crop of · hard woflmfg te11m. Many .
ffesb\nen and a year's worth • players last year got a lot of
6f expe.-ience for most of the time on varsity. The experivarsity upper classman look ence is a plus. Our ball han- ,
Bryan Walters/photo
to replenish the Tornado line-' dling .should be improved
Pictured abOve"are members of the 2008-09 Southern girls varsity basketball team. Kneeling in
up ' Anot~er p!ayer ~ved to · over l~;iSt y.ear too." .
front,
from left, are Courtney Thomas: Emma lilunter, Gabby Johnson and Kelly Humphrey. ~tanding
another dtstnct.
..
Havmg yo)Jth on the team
in
back
are Lind~y Teaford, Morgan McMillum, Breanna Taylor, Cheyenne Dunn and Lynzee
'.Alan-Crisp is in his~ second can be good and it c~n also
stint a&amp;. Southern· mentor . his · have its downfalls . Wi'h .
,008-09
six-th' year overall. .C~ac;h-· youth comes-enthusias.m and
Crisp bas nothi'l~ :b,ut good:· yo_!it~ful ~stjikes. Some of
Soutllem
things to say about _hts young .. the L'ad,r· ~orna_does l\re
Va-:$1ty Qlrls .
team and· is -quic::k to point out' -unte11te.d ,at th,.t:s yo1.nt, but by
Schedule ·
that teaQl chenustry ts a huge th~ mtddle o.f t~e season,
positive. '"We have a family Cnsp hopes ~hat tht ~ changes.
atmo.sphere and .v ery good
So';lthern ts lc:&gt;okmg for a
Nov~MBER
team chemistry, But best of . lea~er. Wol_fe-Rtffle was the
29
vs Pike Eas~e")
6p.m.
all we play well together '' .
[IJltural c~ott:e to lead as t~e
·
·
s
h
lone sentor last year. Thts
. Returnmg to the o~t ern year· it appears that the 'role is
DECEMBER
hne-up are letter wmners up to whoever wants to take
B.reanna · !aylor, Lynzee it. " We are. going to . need
4
vs Miller
6p.m.
Tucker, Lmdsay Teaford, someone to step up and take
at South Gallia
8
• 6p.m. ·
11
vs Waterford
6p.m.
Cheyenne Dunn and Gabby . control on the floor. A leader I
15
al River Valley
6p.m.
John son , all juniors; and •. hils to-emerge from this- gf9up
18
at Trimble
6p.m.
Emma·Hunter who returns as · if we are to be succe~sful.''
23
at MeigS
6p.m.
a senior after a good sophoCrisp cited " questionable
29
at Wahama tournament TBA
more year. Taylor won the ,
at Wahama tournament TBA
30
Something Different
Best Defensive A\vard last l Please see SoutlMrn. 10
'
. JANUARY

Have A Great Seasonf

..

8
10
12
• 15

'

Jr
Jr
Jr

22

26
29

Fr

at Fed Hock
vs OVCS
vs South Gallia
at Eastem
vs Trimble
vs Harinll!l
at Walertord

6p.m.
1 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
8p.m.

fLBRUARY

Fr

700 N. Second Ave. Middleport, OH

Fr

Fi

2

fill

5
9
12

vs Wahama
vs Fed Hoc~
at'Miller
• ""&amp;slam

Stop By &amp; See Us
Before or After
The Games!

6p.m.
6p:m.
6p.m.

. • 6 p.cn •

7 40-992-3322

�.

._

.

.

~-

Page 8 • .

'

'

st of lock tO all
of ·our. Joe · . athletes! ·
.

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· · . .. •Mason County, WV . .. -Gallia Countj, QH ! L : .i t
.. •Jackson County, WV
. ·
.. •Meigs County, OH
I

. '·

·-

�.

._

.

.

~-

Page 8 • .

'

'

st of lock tO all
of ·our. Joe · . athletes! ·
.

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· · . .. •Mason County, WV . .. -Gallia Countj, QH ! L : .i t
.. •Jackson County, WV
. ·
.. •Meigs County, OH
I

. '·

·-

�,.
/

• ·'!~ •

,.
I

•Pagell
. '

Page 10 •
I

'

1,flns 'Can
will cha~ge;~Itorh ;game: to cb~tch :. js,
game.
Wtth
:.
each
game
·we
expect
to
S!'e,
__
a
group of:
••
will have to. do what h&gt; neces- yo1Jng ladies.:,Who will play , ' It a~~~~;~l~:~~~it~~~~
fromPage6
·fr:om Page 7 ·
sary to be competitive; some- hard for 32 minute{a game. ,, c"ould
times zone and sometimes The key is how fast we learn this· -lii'&gt;lll.
look -to be
,
.
.
man-to-man."
•
the new system. A_lso, tht;· quicker, , mo~ ·. expericrnced,
Eastern will get its season
The past . -several . years , dev~lopment
,t~~ yo~nger,., and hungrier 'than teams the
underway Tuesday against shooting", lack of experience'
fellow county squad Meigs . on the bench, and lack of size Waterford has b~en one of the _players off the bench ~·U be past couple of seli,Sons. And if
m
all
of Important. We are loekmg to 2008_ ·.,
't th b k t
The Lady Eagles' regular as three of_ his team's main top · teams
180.. · .e . rea ou
09
5
~
·
Southeastern
Ohio,
lasf
year
·
improve
thr6ugho'ut
the
sea~
weaknesses:
Except
for
season slate runs through
making it to .the· RegiQnal. !ft&gt;n and prepare for the tour- season, then .opposmg tellms
freshman
K 1
February 12 and features foot-7
.
.
e
sey
c
· · . 1_o ok s ".or t he namen t .
·
·
beUer
most of the team
oac h c nsp
. h look out ·next year
. ·home-away
series
with Holsmger
L,ady Wildcats to ·again .be a
"We will· look to improve anot er more. expettenced
Waterford. River Valley, 1·s 5 - 4 or' · sma 11 er. ..,n
ne
are . force an~ a top league con- greatlY,
1 ·!lver ··t ast·· s~ason..f s club: seasoned .from
·
definitely
going
to
be
giving
_ th_IS
1
Meigs, Federal Hocking,
I year s exposure ~Ill be watt·· Miller, Trimble and S&lt;&gt;uthern up several inches to .many of tender wtth 2nd place Federal record, ·. added Cnsp.
the
teams
we
play.
And
we
Hocking,
who
knocked
off
would
hke
to
see,
.8C?Od
mg. on the bott.~on. ~~~ny
and single · games against
lack
bench
strength
and
expeWat~rford once last. season. crowds. to support .the latltos: believe the future IS· now.
South Gallia, Ravenswood,
Wahama. Athens, Gallia rience; three of our fit:st g 1rls Behmd that du~, Cnsp s~es
off the bench will be fresh- Eastern and Tnmble bemg
Academy and Wellston.
men ."
much improved.
'
Along with going 7·15
Crisp expects Southern
The coach added that
overall last season, Eastern fans.
see
a
different
team
Meigs
wtll ..very strong this
to
also posted a 4-6 record in from last year. "We would year, noting
that·South Gallia
the Tri -Valley Conference like to be more fast-paced to will again be strong after
Hocking division to finish utili ze our quickness and,p)ay coming off a record winning
•s-tw~citis •Piwl• c.nf-,. :1 iwr '
fourth in the league behind to a more upbeat tempo."
season. He noted that. River
Hrs:'M-Th.u r9am - tO pm; Fri.&amp; Sal. 9 am ~ 1:30am;'OOIICd Sunday_
Hocking champ, Waterford .
Southern will have to take a ·Valley has greatly improved
Federal Hocking and Trimble different defensive approach over the last two years as
also finished above · the this rear with no true "Big well.
Eagles in league play last man' in the pivot. , Said
The outlook for the 2008year.
Coach Crisp , "Our defense 09 season in the words of the · ·

Eastern

Southern·:

Q!

..

.

'f

)

•.;.

~es

fjmaPage3 .

cQaching," Caldwell said.
·~we W8J1t to improve each
wee'k and . be ready to go
somewhere when tournament
times comes. Basketball is a
long season and there will be
many peaks and . valleys
throughout the year; We just
hope for more peaks than val·
leys ."
Besides the annual chal-

Marauders
fromPage2
Belpre. The Marauders regular s.eason slate runs through
February 20 and features
with·
home-away
series
Belpre, River Valley, Athens,
Nelsonville-York,, Vinton
County, Alexander,- Eastern .
and Wellstop ~nd single
. games · agatnst Jackson,
Gallia Academy, Warren and '
Southern. .
··
Along 'with gojng '9-13

leng~ · of ':going through . the

Tri" Valley · " Conference
Hocking Division, the Ea~les
will also be playing the hkes
of Athens, South Gallia,
River Valley, Zanesville
Bishop .Rosecrans, Wahama,
Meigs, . Symmes. Valley and
· Parkersburg Catholic.
Eastern will open its 200809 season on Friday, Dec . 5,
when it travels ·to Racine for
a TVC Hocking matchup
with county rival Southern.
T)1e JV game will tip·off ~t
6:30p.m..
·
overall ' last season, Meigs
also posted a 3-7 mark in the
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
division .to finish fourth in
the league .behind Ohio
champ
Vinton
County.
Alexander and Belpre also
finished
ahead of the
Marauders in league play. last
year. . :With the season almost
underway, · Ewing hopes to
see a ·good ci'Qwd to support
the team throughout the sea·
.s on. ·
.
.
"We want 'to see a packed
gym to give our team a crowd
advantage," Ewing said.

~

-Meigs
from PageS
Making the transition to varsity this winter will be juniors
Micki Barnes and Shanalle
Smith, as well as freshmen
Miranda Grueser and -Chandra
Stanley.
Smith and Grueser bring
depth to the frontcourt at the

wings, while Stanley will be
another solid inside addition in
the post. Barnes also adds
depth to the guatd spot.
Meigs has never had a winning season with Wolfe at the
helm or won a playoff game,
whic~ is something th_e Lady
Marauders are hopmg to
change. MHS also ~ants to
improve vastly on tts 7·23
record in the TVC Ohio over
that same span.
Besides the normal TVC

time, hopefully by season's
end, experience will improve
the depth factor. ·
Southern fans have proven to
fromPage4
like the fast paced tempo. Fans
·
will see some of that this year,
need to be with hard work.
but not 100 percent of the time.
· "Our team wjJJ only be good
"We won't be able to be
if we are good on the defensive upbeat ·all the time," asserted
end. I thought our defense was Caldwell. "We won ' t be slow
pretty good towards the end of paced either. We will just have
the season, but we lost some -to adjust to w.hat we need to do
key defensive players in Kreig against particular opponents."
K.leski and Ryan Chapman."
Flashes of full court pressThe coach noted. that ball ing, run·and-gun offense and
handling is a concern, but not . fast tempo in-yow:-face bas·
so . much just dribbling and ketball will be tempered with a
passing. "It is more about mak- buffet of pattern-oriented, coning good decisions when we trol badketball. On different
have the basketball ."
· . nights you will see differeat
Depth overall is good, but at · looks_according to the coach- .
key positions · is thin. With ing staff.

Tornadoes

.

.
.
Ohio slate - which adds
Athens twiCe this season Meigs will also take on the
· likes of River Valley, Eastern,
Wahama, Southern and South
Gallia. ·
The Lady Marauders will
officially start their 2008-09
campaign this Saturday when
they host River Valley in a
non-conference. matchup at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gxmnasium : The JV contest
wtll begin at 6 p.m.

',. •.

Caldwell sees the league
race as being up for grabs,
but also admitted that each
game will be a challenging
game. He expects every game
in the Tri· Valley Hocking
Division to be a tough one, ·
and he expects Meigs,
Belpre, River Valley and
Chesapeake to be tough in
the non-league .
"We
Caldwell · added,
'havenft set any goals as far as
wins and losses, but we want
to be in the league champi·
onship race, and hopefully be
a tough game for. each of our
opponents on our schedule."
Southern opens up the season Friday, December 5 at
Charles W. Hayman gym nasi·
urn in Racine.

s.,,._.,
Y11ar £11cal
St:lllllll
Bp11rts

,.••,.,

. -·

..

•....

Baed Lack
.

8alltll•n8Walaaaaa
Valley

&amp; Supply
Co.
·555 Park ~treet
.M iddleport. OH

740-992-6611

'

�,.
/

• ·'!~ •

,.
I

•Pagell
. '

Page 10 •
I

'

1,flns 'Can
will cha~ge;~Itorh ;game: to cb~tch :. js,
game.
Wtth
:.
each
game
·we
expect
to
S!'e,
__
a
group of:
••
will have to. do what h&gt; neces- yo1Jng ladies.:,Who will play , ' It a~~~~;~l~:~~~it~~~~
fromPage6
·fr:om Page 7 ·
sary to be competitive; some- hard for 32 minute{a game. ,, c"ould
times zone and sometimes The key is how fast we learn this· -lii'&gt;lll.
look -to be
,
.
.
man-to-man."
•
the new system. A_lso, tht;· quicker, , mo~ ·. expericrnced,
Eastern will get its season
The past . -several . years , dev~lopment
,t~~ yo~nger,., and hungrier 'than teams the
underway Tuesday against shooting", lack of experience'
fellow county squad Meigs . on the bench, and lack of size Waterford has b~en one of the _players off the bench ~·U be past couple of seli,Sons. And if
m
all
of Important. We are loekmg to 2008_ ·.,
't th b k t
The Lady Eagles' regular as three of_ his team's main top · teams
180.. · .e . rea ou
09
5
~
·
Southeastern
Ohio,
lasf
year
·
improve
thr6ugho'ut
the
sea~
weaknesses:
Except
for
season slate runs through
making it to .the· RegiQnal. !ft&gt;n and prepare for the tour- season, then .opposmg tellms
freshman
K 1
February 12 and features foot-7
.
.
e
sey
c
· · . 1_o ok s ".or t he namen t .
·
·
beUer
most of the team
oac h c nsp
. h look out ·next year
. ·home-away
series
with Holsmger
L,ady Wildcats to ·again .be a
"We will· look to improve anot er more. expettenced
Waterford. River Valley, 1·s 5 - 4 or' · sma 11 er. ..,n
ne
are . force an~ a top league con- greatlY,
1 ·!lver ··t ast·· s~ason..f s club: seasoned .from
·
definitely
going
to
be
giving
_ th_IS
1
Meigs, Federal Hocking,
I year s exposure ~Ill be watt·· Miller, Trimble and S&lt;&gt;uthern up several inches to .many of tender wtth 2nd place Federal record, ·. added Cnsp.
the
teams
we
play.
And
we
Hocking,
who
knocked
off
would
hke
to
see,
.8C?Od
mg. on the bott.~on. ~~~ny
and single · games against
lack
bench
strength
and
expeWat~rford once last. season. crowds. to support .the latltos: believe the future IS· now.
South Gallia, Ravenswood,
Wahama. Athens, Gallia rience; three of our fit:st g 1rls Behmd that du~, Cnsp s~es
off the bench will be fresh- Eastern and Tnmble bemg
Academy and Wellston.
men ."
much improved.
'
Along with going 7·15
Crisp expects Southern
The coach added that
overall last season, Eastern fans.
see
a
different
team
Meigs
wtll ..very strong this
to
also posted a 4-6 record in from last year. "We would year, noting
that·South Gallia
the Tri -Valley Conference like to be more fast-paced to will again be strong after
Hocking division to finish utili ze our quickness and,p)ay coming off a record winning
•s-tw~citis •Piwl• c.nf-,. :1 iwr '
fourth in the league behind to a more upbeat tempo."
season. He noted that. River
Hrs:'M-Th.u r9am - tO pm; Fri.&amp; Sal. 9 am ~ 1:30am;'OOIICd Sunday_
Hocking champ, Waterford .
Southern will have to take a ·Valley has greatly improved
Federal Hocking and Trimble different defensive approach over the last two years as
also finished above · the this rear with no true "Big well.
Eagles in league play last man' in the pivot. , Said
The outlook for the 2008year.
Coach Crisp , "Our defense 09 season in the words of the · ·

Eastern

Southern·:

Q!

..

.

'f

)

•.;.

~es

fjmaPage3 .

cQaching," Caldwell said.
·~we W8J1t to improve each
wee'k and . be ready to go
somewhere when tournament
times comes. Basketball is a
long season and there will be
many peaks and . valleys
throughout the year; We just
hope for more peaks than val·
leys ."
Besides the annual chal-

Marauders
fromPage2
Belpre. The Marauders regular s.eason slate runs through
February 20 and features
with·
home-away
series
Belpre, River Valley, Athens,
Nelsonville-York,, Vinton
County, Alexander,- Eastern .
and Wellstop ~nd single
. games · agatnst Jackson,
Gallia Academy, Warren and '
Southern. .
··
Along 'with gojng '9-13

leng~ · of ':going through . the

Tri" Valley · " Conference
Hocking Division, the Ea~les
will also be playing the hkes
of Athens, South Gallia,
River Valley, Zanesville
Bishop .Rosecrans, Wahama,
Meigs, . Symmes. Valley and
· Parkersburg Catholic.
Eastern will open its 200809 season on Friday, Dec . 5,
when it travels ·to Racine for
a TVC Hocking matchup
with county rival Southern.
T)1e JV game will tip·off ~t
6:30p.m..
·
overall ' last season, Meigs
also posted a 3-7 mark in the
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
division .to finish fourth in
the league .behind Ohio
champ
Vinton
County.
Alexander and Belpre also
finished
ahead of the
Marauders in league play. last
year. . :With the season almost
underway, · Ewing hopes to
see a ·good ci'Qwd to support
the team throughout the sea·
.s on. ·
.
.
"We want 'to see a packed
gym to give our team a crowd
advantage," Ewing said.

~

-Meigs
from PageS
Making the transition to varsity this winter will be juniors
Micki Barnes and Shanalle
Smith, as well as freshmen
Miranda Grueser and -Chandra
Stanley.
Smith and Grueser bring
depth to the frontcourt at the

wings, while Stanley will be
another solid inside addition in
the post. Barnes also adds
depth to the guatd spot.
Meigs has never had a winning season with Wolfe at the
helm or won a playoff game,
whic~ is something th_e Lady
Marauders are hopmg to
change. MHS also ~ants to
improve vastly on tts 7·23
record in the TVC Ohio over
that same span.
Besides the normal TVC

time, hopefully by season's
end, experience will improve
the depth factor. ·
Southern fans have proven to
fromPage4
like the fast paced tempo. Fans
·
will see some of that this year,
need to be with hard work.
but not 100 percent of the time.
· "Our team wjJJ only be good
"We won't be able to be
if we are good on the defensive upbeat ·all the time," asserted
end. I thought our defense was Caldwell. "We won ' t be slow
pretty good towards the end of paced either. We will just have
the season, but we lost some -to adjust to w.hat we need to do
key defensive players in Kreig against particular opponents."
K.leski and Ryan Chapman."
Flashes of full court pressThe coach noted. that ball ing, run·and-gun offense and
handling is a concern, but not . fast tempo in-yow:-face bas·
so . much just dribbling and ketball will be tempered with a
passing. "It is more about mak- buffet of pattern-oriented, coning good decisions when we trol badketball. On different
have the basketball ."
· . nights you will see differeat
Depth overall is good, but at · looks_according to the coach- .
key positions · is thin. With ing staff.

Tornadoes

.

.
.
Ohio slate - which adds
Athens twiCe this season Meigs will also take on the
· likes of River Valley, Eastern,
Wahama, Southern and South
Gallia. ·
The Lady Marauders will
officially start their 2008-09
campaign this Saturday when
they host River Valley in a
non-conference. matchup at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gxmnasium : The JV contest
wtll begin at 6 p.m.

',. •.

Caldwell sees the league
race as being up for grabs,
but also admitted that each
game will be a challenging
game. He expects every game
in the Tri· Valley Hocking
Division to be a tough one, ·
and he expects Meigs,
Belpre, River Valley and
Chesapeake to be tough in
the non-league .
"We
Caldwell · added,
'havenft set any goals as far as
wins and losses, but we want
to be in the league champi·
onship race, and hopefully be
a tough game for. each of our
opponents on our schedule."
Southern opens up the season Friday, December 5 at
Charles W. Hayman gym nasi·
urn in Racine.

s.,,._.,
Y11ar £11cal
St:lllllll
Bp11rts

,.••,.,

. -·

..

•....

Baed Lack
.

8alltll•n8Walaaaaa
Valley

&amp; Supply
Co.
·555 Park ~treet
.M iddleport. OH

740-992-6611

'

�-·-

~.

Page U•

2008..()9 Winter Sports Preview

S!!!urd.oy. Noywmber 29
Girts Baak.....,ll
Athens at Gallia Academy. 6 p.m.
Pike Eastern at Southern. 6 p.m.
River Valley at MeigS, 6 p.m.
.Monday !legmblr 1
Girls Baokelball
OVCS at'Fairland, 6:30p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Tuesday. Dttcamber 2
Girls Basketball
Meigs at EaStern , 6 p.m.
River Valley at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.

Thursday · DKember .4
Girls Baskatball
Belpre at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford 1 6 p .m .
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 6 p.m .
Miller at SOuthern, 6 p.m.

Frtclay. December 5
Boys Basketball
Belpre at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
Cross Lanes at South Gallla, 7:30 p.m.
· Eastern at Southern, 6 :30 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA
Girls Basketball
Cross Lanes al South Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA
Satuntoy !legmblr 6
Boys Baak-11
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 6 p.m. •
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m .
OVCS tournament, TBA
•
South Gallia at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
Girts Basketball
Jacl&lt;son a.t Gallia.Academy, 6 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA

ftmlw

MondeY. Per
I
Girts B.-INIII
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 6 p .m.
Southern at South Galtia, 6 p.m.

Tuttdey P
m4w I
BoyaBaak.-

Gallia Academy at C~ake , 6 p.m .
South GaHia al Southern, 6 p.m.
South Point at River Yalley, 6 p.m.
Wellston at OVCS, 7 p .m.

' Friday, November 28, 2008

Ohio Valley Publishing Composite Schedule
BoysBaak.....,H
Chillicolhe at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Ritchie County at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p .m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Wahama at OVCS, 7:30 p.m .
Hannan at Wellsto~. 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
'
Cross Lanes at Hannan, 7:30 p.m. ·
Ravenswood at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Thuradav Dec;emtw 18
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 6 p.m .
Southern at Trimble . 6 p.m.

Friday !loc:eml!er 1i
Boys Baakatball
Hannan at Teays Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 8 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville· York, 6 :30 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6:30 p.m .
Poca at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6:30p.m .
Girts B o - l l
Hannan at Teays Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 6 :30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 7:30 p.m.

Bciya Baaketbllll
Eastern at River Valley, 6:30 p .m.
Point Pleasant at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Southern at Ironton St. Joe, 5 p.m.
Girts Basketball
C~arleston Catholic at ,Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Boya~l

Federal Hocl&lt;ing at River Valley, 6 p.m .
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 6 p .m.
Wahama at South GaMia, 6 p .m .
Glrls"-Green at SoUih Gallla, noon
Boys BaskTeays Valley at OVCS, 8 p .m .
Glrte Baaketbooll
'
Herbert Hoovar al Point Pleaaanl, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley at OVCS, 6:30 p .m.

.

lll!ur!IQ. Ja'""'Y 3

Sa!urd.o¥- Pectmber 27
Boys Bosketball
Bishop Rosecrans at Eastern, 1 p.m.
South Gallia at Oak Hill, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southarn, 7:30 p .m.
W'!"'en at Meljjs, 6:30 p.m.
Girts Bask.tbllll
Eastern at Ravenswood. 9 a .m .
Gallla Acedamy at Portsmouth, 6 p.m.

Boys ·Baskatball
Meigs at Southern, 6 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Buflalo, 7 :30 p.m .•

Tunday. Jtnyvy

at

Dt"t1•v Pet Mtb!lr 30
BoysBaak-1
Hannan at'Wayna Tourney, TBA
Hurricane at Point .Pleasant, 7 :30 p.m.
River Valley V.. Gallla Academy (at URG),.6
p .m .
.
Teays Valley at South Gallia, 7 :30p.m.
.Wahama ·at Charleston Catholic, 7:30p.m .
·
Girts Baak-11
Hannan, Point Pleasant. Southern at
Wahama Tourney, TBA

Boys B.-INIII
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic, 7:30 p .m .
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 8 p .m.
Ravenswood at Polnt Pleasant, 7:30 p.m .
River Valley at Coal Groye, 6.p.m.
Southam at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Fdc!Q.~II '
,
Boys 8.-tNIII
Calhoun County at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6:30 p.m.
Gallia Acd88f!'IY ai'Jac;kson, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Calvary Bapllst, 7:30 p.m.
OVCS. at lltays Valley. 6 p .m .
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
River Valll!y at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at CrGJS L,anes, 7:30 p.m.
Southam at Miller, 6 :30 p:m.
Vinton CountY at Malgs, 6:30 p.m.
Glrte~

Hannan at Calvary Baptist, 7:30 p.m .
OVCS al Teays Valley, 6:30 p.m.
South GaHia at Croas Lanes, 8 p.m.
Wahal11a at Calhoun County, 7 :30 p.m.

Frlclq ..lebtwy 2
Boys Bul-l

Ironton at Gallla Academy, 6 p .m .

Boya Baekalllllll
Polnl Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7 :30 p.m.
River Valley at~. 6 p.m.
Southam al Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Glrta Baak-11
Eastern at~. 8 p.m.
Gallia Aca,demy at Warren, 8 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

Mpnclq Jtnuary 19
Boys Bask-11

13

Boya Bask-11
Cha~eston Catholic at Wahama, 7:30 p.rii.
Gallla Academy at Chillicotha, 6 1
p.m. ·
OVCS at Wellston, 7 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 6 p.m.'
Southam at South Gama, 6 p.m.
St. Joe at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Girts Bask-·
Hannan at Crosa Lanes, 7:30p.m.

'
Tbwllll¥ Jenyvy 8

Boys Basketball
Hannan at Wayne Tourney, TBA
Girts B a - l l
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
Hannan, Point Pleasant, Southern
Wahama Tourney, TBA
Sciotoville East at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Trimble at River Valley, 6 p.m .

M""'I'JIO!!MJ1l

Moodav. January 12
Girts Basketball
Hannan at Ironton St: Joa, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 6 p.m. ·
South Gallla at Southern, 6 p.m .
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.

JIDHQI 5

Wedp=d•y. .Japuary 14

JburwMy JIDUM)' 15
Girts -atball
· Belpre at Meigs, 6 p.in.
Chesapeake at River ll811ey, 6 p.m.
Sls$onvllle a!" Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Teays Valley, 6 p.m.
Southam at Eastern, 6p.m.
·

.

FrldQ. *IH!I!l! 11
Boyaa.k.....

Coal Grove at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Point Pleasant 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at Sou(h Gallle; 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6:30p.m .
OVCS a1 Hope &amp; Faith, 8 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
. Warren at Gllllla ~· ff p.m .

...

lllllld.£11t:k
Jkea.
t'eaiiiS.
..

Grace Christian at H"!'ff''n. 7:30p.m.
0

Tb!!!'W!g
. . 11
Bop BIIIUibllll
OVCS at Parlcersburg Catholic, 6 p.m.
Glrta P I liMit
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at H8lllllln, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
OVCS at Parl&lt;ersburg Oathollc. 6:30 p.m .
River VaHey at South Point, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p,m .

_,

• ' "~·

.,

.}'.J

!"

•

,.., 12
Boys--

•

•
,.,....

..

l

,.

'

,.

Eastern at Waterford, 6:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6:30 p.m .
Meigs at Athens, 6:30 p.m .
.
. South Gallia at Rock Hl!l, 6 p.m.
Girts B I I I - I
Hannan at Point Pleasant 7:30p.m.
Marlena at GaiHa Academy, 6 p.m .
..._ Wahama at Pocahontaa Co. Tourney, TBA

.......,,

01rta a·• IHI'

ovcs. e

Gllesapeake 81
p.m .
Flllrtand at Galtia Acadamy, e p.m.
tiiiiDtt~ Yortt at Meigs, p.m.
Soulh Gallla et II'Qn!On St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Soullem 81 ~ ~. 6 p.m.

e

•

•

•

•

. at

~.22

Poinl Pleuant

RHchle COUnty, 7:30 p.m.

Glrta lll•l!tlbll'l
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Meigs a t - . 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Trlrnblll81 Southern, 6 p.m. ,
.

I

F~

'CC:f

Hoc:111nG 81 Eaetem, 6:30p.m.

Gallla Academy 81 Zanesville, 8 p.tn.
Hennen at Butlalo, 7:30 p.m.
.
Miller at Southern, 8:30 p.m.
South Gllllla va. OVCS (at GAHS), 7:30p.m.
........ Ia&lt; I at~~::.:...

Pleelant_at Herbert Hoover, 7 :30 p.m .
South Gllllla va. OVCS (at GAHS), 6 p.m.
Wllhllma at St. Marys Tourney, TBA

-~24

Eas!ltm a1 Symmee'\llolleY; 8 p.m.
Ri- Valley at Melge, 6:30·p.m.
Southern at ct.sapeake, 8 p.m.
Girt. B•k 1tball
Eastern at Athens, 1 p.m.
South Gallte at New Booton, 8 p.m.

Wahama at St. Marys Tourney, TBA
Zanesville at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.

MonclnJ.......Y21
Glrla.,.._

Hannan at Southern, 7:30 p.m .
River Valley at Rock Hill, 8 p .m .
Symmes Valley al South Galha, 8 p.m.

fttnday

JIDUI[y

•

...

Girts Baak-11
Federal Hocl&lt;ing at Eastern, 6 p .m .
Portsmouth at Galli!l Academy, 6 p.m.

Tbu!ldly.JanUW¥ 2t
. Boypl!.k-..
Hannan at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Glrta ...........H
.
Coal Grove at fliver Valley, 6 p.m. ·
Meigs al Nelsonville·York, 6 p .m.
OVCS all~ 51. Joe, 6 p.m . .
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m .
.Wahama at Buffalo, '7;30 p .m.

' FrlciQ. Ja!ltlw¥ 30

BoyaBuiEaslern at Trimble, 6 :30 p.m.
. Meigs at Vinton County, 8:30 p.m.
G&gt;VCS at Ironton St. Joe, 8 p.m .
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 6 p.m.
Southeril al Watertord, 6:30 p .m .
Teeys ~ at South G.,.., 7 :30p.m.

,•t 40-992-5432
.

Pomeroy,. OH
'

.

continued

Mqncley. f'tbruiQr 2
Glrta Baak-1
Eastern at GaNia Academy, 6 p .m .
Fairland ·at OVCS, 6 p.m.
.
. Polht Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Trimble, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Coal Grove, 6 p.m .
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m :
Wahama al Southam, 7:30p.m .

ll!gday Ftbrulry 3
Boys B•ske!bllll
Galiia Academy al Ironton, 6 p.m .
Hannan at Valley Faye«e, 7:30 p .m.
Nelsonville· York at Meigs, 6 p.m .
OVCS al Calvary, 7 :30p.m.
Squthem at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30p.m .
Girls Basketball
OVCS at C4!lvary, 6 :30 p.m.

Wtd"actav Fabruerv •

Girts Basketball
Ironton at Gama Academy, 6 p .m.

Tburldly. FtbruaQI 5
Boys Basketball
·Point Pleasant at Roane County, 7 :30 p.m ..
Girts Bosk-11
Athans at Meigs, 6 p .m.
Fairland at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m .
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

Frkl!!y Ftbrulry 0
Boys Basketball
Athens at Maigs, 6 :30 p.m.
at South Gallla,.6 p."m.
calvary Baptist at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.·
GaUia ~y at Logan, 6 p.m .
Hope &amp; Faith at OVCS, 8 p.m.
H~ntington St. Joe at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Rook HiH at River VaHey, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 6:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6:30 p.m .

euna1o

Girls Bttkitbell
Calvary Baptist at Hannan, 6 p.m.

•

Glrle Stekotbal!

llgnciq

Mt'dat F9l!ruiQ! z
Boys a.kalbalt

•

Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Ba~ll ·
Logan al Gallia Academy, 8 p .m.
Pike Eastern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.·
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7 :30 p.m.
Wellston at Eastern, 1 p.m .

llc!ol!q ftbru•ry 9
.
Girls Btsk-11
Ironton St. Joe at Soulh Gallla, 6 p.m,
OVCS at Buffalo, 7 p.m .
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Waterford at. Eastern, 6 p.m .
Wellston al Meigs, 8 p.m.
Tueadlv February 10
Boys Baeketball
·Hannan at South Gallia, 7:30 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant. 7:30 p.m.
Jackson al Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley oit Eastern, 6 p.m.

Iburldly february 12
iloys Basketball
OVCS at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Southam, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
aves at Hannan, 6 p .m.
. Polnt .Pieasant at Sissonville, 7 :30p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.

Frtdly. Fabrum 1a

flbnwy 11
Glrta B•kllball

Point Pleasant at Hannan, 7 :30p.m.
St. Marys at Wahama, 7:30 p ,m .

Dteectey february 17
Boys Basketball
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
.
Eastern at Parkersburg Catholic, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS, 7 :30 p.m.
Poca at Point Ple~sant, 7:30 p .m.
South Gallia at New Boston
Southam at River Valley, 6 p .m.
·•
Girls Basketball
Hannan at aVCS, 6 p.m.
Jhuradlv ftbruQ..lS
Girls Basketball
Buffalo at aves. 7 p.m.
Wahame~: at Ravenswood , 7:30 p.m.

Frida¥- february 20
Boys Basketball
Meigs at Belpre, 6 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 7 :30 p.m.
Ri- Valley at Coal Grove, 6 p.m .
Southern at Eastwn, 6:30 p.m .
Satunday. Februa~
Boya Basketball
Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Day ol Champions, 6 p.m .

·rueadly Etbruary 24

· eoya Baoketball
, Polrit Pleasant at Ravenswood , 7 :30p.m.
Wahama at Poca, 7 :30 p.m.

Boys~ll

Eastern at Miller, 6:30 p.m.
Fairland a! River \Iaiiey, 6 p .m.
Gallia Academy' at Marietta, 6 p.m.
South Gallla·at Ironton St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southam, 6 :30 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

S!!!unll¥

Tburtdl!y Febru"V 26
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Calhoun County, 7 :30 p.m.

Frklll¥ ~27
Boys Baak-11
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7 :30 p .m .

&amp;bnwy 14

, . . , . . Fabnwy28

Girts Baablball
Gallia Aalemy at Day ol Champions, 6 p.m.·
South GaHia at Chesapeake, 6 p .m.

Boya~ll

Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 7 :30p.m.

Calhoun County at Wllhama, 7:30p.m .
Teays Valley at South Gallla, 8 p.m.

' .-..==31 '

~ ~ ~8~.f:l'.h.

W"JL.i
~~ ati'Oint~ p.m.
1

STUDENTS STAFF AND PARENTS

BE SAFE SMART AND

SENSIBLE

.
Cal Today Atd See Hn ~ Y01'Cu Sm.
:
:
Tel Us YoiArt Aa Employee Of . :..t :
: ••~ ALoal Sdleol District ForAddailnltSaviep "''lllf •,_

-:-

.~.

Portsmouth Clay at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

W!!cln!!ldq. .le!!ulcy 28

Fann •·Basinas

228 West Main

27

·
Boys Bask-11
Chasapeake at River Valley, 8 p.m.
Gallia Academy at PortsmQuth, 6 p.m.
Parkersburg Cathollc.at OVCS, 7 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p.m.
·· South Gallla at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
Girls Basketball
Parkersburg Catholic at OVCS, 6 :30 p.m.
· Wahama at Meigs, 7:30 p .m .

Auto -Home- Ufe -Health

. . 13

. . 15

Gallla ~ "'· River Valley (al l!RG), 6
p.m .

c....,.._... ai Point ~nt, '7:30 p.m.

.

'

..

..

•

frkler, n..

Bop Bu•ulball
1\thens at Gallia Academy,. 6 p m.
Jad&lt;son at Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Oak HHI vs. River Valley (at URG), 7:30p.m .
GirW IIIIIIIbizll
W8hama at Pocahontas Cc!· Tourney, TBA

Meigs at Easlem, 6 :30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 7:30 P·m·
Aock Hill at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Glrta......-11
Teays Valley at Hannan, 6 p.m.·

Point

Wecl=-::if:.nlw1D

Setuntay ""'

ll!nc!ly. January 20
Boys Basketball

·-~21

Gkta---1

Chillloo!he at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 7:30 p.rn.
Poca at Wahama, 7:30 p.m,
Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m .

OVC S at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Glrte Bask-11
Chapmanville at Point Pleasanl, 7 :30 p.m.
Gallia Acadamy at River Valley, 6 p.m .
OVCS at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Poca, 7:30·p.m.

Girts Baak-11
Gallla Academy at Chlllloolha, 6 .p .m.

.

Sou!hem. e:S6 p.JII,

• Gille Balllelbell
Hannan at Grace Christian, 7:30 p.m.

Belpre al Southern (Marietta), TBA
New Boston!il South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Glrte Baake1b1111
Gallia Academy at Jacl&lt;son, 6 p .m.
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Southern, 1 p.m.

Tl!nc!ey; .Ianum 6

Moodly, !lec:tmber 29

Watertord at

'1:,ym:\:'!:::i1~

BoyaBaaketball
Eastam al Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Girls Baakatball
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 6 p.m .
Meigs at Soulh Gallla, 8 p.m.
.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m .

Boys Bask-11
Valley Faye«e at Hannan, 7:30 p.m .
GlrtsB-11
Coal Grove at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Easlern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Buffalo, 7:30 p .m .

Boys Basketball
Portsmoulh at Gallla Acdaemy, 6 p.m.

.

.I

Mondllt

Fdctay Dec:tmber 28

Saturc!a¥ !loc:eml!er 20

.

Ohio -V~IIey· Publfshing ·Qomposite Sche·dule

..

Roane County at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

Tundav ne. ember 11

• Page 13

2008-09 Winter Sports Preview

Friday, Novepaber ~, 2008

Reed I lawtnsuranceApnty
120 East Main Street

991-3600
www.reedbaur.com
. ....... ........... ' . . . .... .. ..-.. .

•

......

Here's To A

GREAT SEASON

Good Luck·
Eastern Eagles
so·u thern Tornadoes
Meigs Marauders
·wahama White Falcons

•

�-·-

~.

Page U•

2008..()9 Winter Sports Preview

S!!!urd.oy. Noywmber 29
Girts Baak.....,ll
Athens at Gallia Academy. 6 p.m.
Pike Eastern at Southern. 6 p.m.
River Valley at MeigS, 6 p.m.
.Monday !legmblr 1
Girls Baokelball
OVCS at'Fairland, 6:30p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Tuesday. Dttcamber 2
Girls Basketball
Meigs at EaStern , 6 p.m.
River Valley at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.

Thursday · DKember .4
Girls Baskatball
Belpre at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford 1 6 p .m .
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 6 p.m .
Miller at SOuthern, 6 p.m.

Frtclay. December 5
Boys Basketball
Belpre at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
Cross Lanes at South Gallla, 7:30 p.m.
· Eastern at Southern, 6 :30 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA
Girls Basketball
Cross Lanes al South Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA
Satuntoy !legmblr 6
Boys Baak-11
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 6 p.m. •
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m .
OVCS tournament, TBA
•
South Gallia at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
Girts Basketball
Jacl&lt;son a.t Gallia.Academy, 6 p.m.
OVCS tournament, TBA

ftmlw

MondeY. Per
I
Girts B.-INIII
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern, 6 p .m.
Southern at South Galtia, 6 p.m.

Tuttdey P
m4w I
BoyaBaak.-

Gallia Academy at C~ake , 6 p.m .
South GaHia al Southern, 6 p.m.
South Point at River Yalley, 6 p.m.
Wellston at OVCS, 7 p .m.

' Friday, November 28, 2008

Ohio Valley Publishing Composite Schedule
BoysBaak.....,H
Chillicolhe at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Ritchie County at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p .m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Wahama at OVCS, 7:30 p.m .
Hannan at Wellsto~. 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
'
Cross Lanes at Hannan, 7:30 p.m. ·
Ravenswood at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Thuradav Dec;emtw 18
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 6 p.m .
Southern at Trimble . 6 p.m.

Friday !loc:eml!er 1i
Boys Baakatball
Hannan at Teays Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 8 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville· York, 6 :30 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6:30 p.m .
Poca at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6:30p.m .
Girts B o - l l
Hannan at Teays Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 6 :30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 7:30 p.m.

Bciya Baaketbllll
Eastern at River Valley, 6:30 p .m.
Point Pleasant at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Southern at Ironton St. Joe, 5 p.m.
Girts Basketball
C~arleston Catholic at ,Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Boya~l

Federal Hocl&lt;ing at River Valley, 6 p.m .
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 6 p .m.
Wahama at South GaMia, 6 p .m .
Glrls"-Green at SoUih Gallla, noon
Boys BaskTeays Valley at OVCS, 8 p .m .
Glrte Baaketbooll
'
Herbert Hoovar al Point Pleaaanl, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley at OVCS, 6:30 p .m.

.

lll!ur!IQ. Ja'""'Y 3

Sa!urd.o¥- Pectmber 27
Boys Bosketball
Bishop Rosecrans at Eastern, 1 p.m.
South Gallia at Oak Hill, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southarn, 7:30 p .m.
W'!"'en at Meljjs, 6:30 p.m.
Girts Bask.tbllll
Eastern at Ravenswood. 9 a .m .
Gallla Acedamy at Portsmouth, 6 p.m.

Boys ·Baskatball
Meigs at Southern, 6 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Buflalo, 7 :30 p.m .•

Tunday. Jtnyvy

at

Dt"t1•v Pet Mtb!lr 30
BoysBaak-1
Hannan at'Wayna Tourney, TBA
Hurricane at Point .Pleasant, 7 :30 p.m.
River Valley V.. Gallla Academy (at URG),.6
p .m .
.
Teays Valley at South Gallia, 7 :30p.m.
.Wahama ·at Charleston Catholic, 7:30p.m .
·
Girts Baak-11
Hannan, Point Pleasant. Southern at
Wahama Tourney, TBA

Boys B.-INIII
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic, 7:30 p .m .
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 8 p .m.
Ravenswood at Polnt Pleasant, 7:30 p.m .
River Valley at Coal Groye, 6.p.m.
Southam at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Fdc!Q.~II '
,
Boys 8.-tNIII
Calhoun County at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6:30 p.m.
Gallia Acd88f!'IY ai'Jac;kson, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Calvary Bapllst, 7:30 p.m.
OVCS. at lltays Valley. 6 p .m .
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
River Valll!y at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at CrGJS L,anes, 7:30 p.m.
Southam at Miller, 6 :30 p:m.
Vinton CountY at Malgs, 6:30 p.m.
Glrte~

Hannan at Calvary Baptist, 7:30 p.m .
OVCS al Teays Valley, 6:30 p.m.
South GaHia at Croas Lanes, 8 p.m.
Wahal11a at Calhoun County, 7 :30 p.m.

Frlclq ..lebtwy 2
Boys Bul-l

Ironton at Gallla Academy, 6 p .m .

Boya Baekalllllll
Polnl Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7 :30 p.m.
River Valley at~. 6 p.m.
Southam al Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Glrta Baak-11
Eastern at~. 8 p.m.
Gallia Aca,demy at Warren, 8 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

Mpnclq Jtnuary 19
Boys Bask-11

13

Boya Bask-11
Cha~eston Catholic at Wahama, 7:30 p.rii.
Gallla Academy at Chillicotha, 6 1
p.m. ·
OVCS at Wellston, 7 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 6 p.m.'
Southam at South Gama, 6 p.m.
St. Joe at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Girts Bask-·
Hannan at Crosa Lanes, 7:30p.m.

'
Tbwllll¥ Jenyvy 8

Boys Basketball
Hannan at Wayne Tourney, TBA
Girts B a - l l
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
Hannan, Point Pleasant, Southern
Wahama Tourney, TBA
Sciotoville East at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Trimble at River Valley, 6 p.m .

M""'I'JIO!!MJ1l

Moodav. January 12
Girts Basketball
Hannan at Ironton St: Joa, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 6 p.m. ·
South Gallla at Southern, 6 p.m .
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.

JIDHQI 5

Wedp=d•y. .Japuary 14

JburwMy JIDUM)' 15
Girts -atball
· Belpre at Meigs, 6 p.in.
Chesapeake at River ll811ey, 6 p.m.
Sls$onvllle a!" Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Teays Valley, 6 p.m.
Southam at Eastern, 6p.m.
·

.

FrldQ. *IH!I!l! 11
Boyaa.k.....

Coal Grove at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Point Pleasant 7:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at Sou(h Gallle; 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6:30p.m .
OVCS a1 Hope &amp; Faith, 8 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
. Warren at Gllllla ~· ff p.m .

...

lllllld.£11t:k
Jkea.
t'eaiiiS.
..

Grace Christian at H"!'ff''n. 7:30p.m.
0

Tb!!!'W!g
. . 11
Bop BIIIUibllll
OVCS at Parlcersburg Catholic, 6 p.m.
Glrta P I liMit
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at H8lllllln, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
OVCS at Parl&lt;ersburg Oathollc. 6:30 p.m .
River VaHey at South Point, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p,m .

_,

• ' "~·

.,

.}'.J

!"

•

,.., 12
Boys--

•

•
,.,....

..

l

,.

'

,.

Eastern at Waterford, 6:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6:30 p.m .
Meigs at Athens, 6:30 p.m .
.
. South Gallia at Rock Hl!l, 6 p.m.
Girts B I I I - I
Hannan at Point Pleasant 7:30p.m.
Marlena at GaiHa Academy, 6 p.m .
..._ Wahama at Pocahontaa Co. Tourney, TBA

.......,,

01rta a·• IHI'

ovcs. e

Gllesapeake 81
p.m .
Flllrtand at Galtia Acadamy, e p.m.
tiiiiDtt~ Yortt at Meigs, p.m.
Soulh Gallla et II'Qn!On St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Soullem 81 ~ ~. 6 p.m.

e

•

•

•

•

. at

~.22

Poinl Pleuant

RHchle COUnty, 7:30 p.m.

Glrta lll•l!tlbll'l
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Meigs a t - . 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Trlrnblll81 Southern, 6 p.m. ,
.

I

F~

'CC:f

Hoc:111nG 81 Eaetem, 6:30p.m.

Gallla Academy 81 Zanesville, 8 p.tn.
Hennen at Butlalo, 7:30 p.m.
.
Miller at Southern, 8:30 p.m.
South Gllllla va. OVCS (at GAHS), 7:30p.m.
........ Ia&lt; I at~~::.:...

Pleelant_at Herbert Hoover, 7 :30 p.m .
South Gllllla va. OVCS (at GAHS), 6 p.m.
Wllhllma at St. Marys Tourney, TBA

-~24

Eas!ltm a1 Symmee'\llolleY; 8 p.m.
Ri- Valley at Melge, 6:30·p.m.
Southern at ct.sapeake, 8 p.m.
Girt. B•k 1tball
Eastern at Athens, 1 p.m.
South Gallte at New Booton, 8 p.m.

Wahama at St. Marys Tourney, TBA
Zanesville at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.

MonclnJ.......Y21
Glrla.,.._

Hannan at Southern, 7:30 p.m .
River Valley at Rock Hill, 8 p .m .
Symmes Valley al South Galha, 8 p.m.

fttnday

JIDUI[y

•

...

Girts Baak-11
Federal Hocl&lt;ing at Eastern, 6 p .m .
Portsmouth at Galli!l Academy, 6 p.m.

Tbu!ldly.JanUW¥ 2t
. Boypl!.k-..
Hannan at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Glrta ...........H
.
Coal Grove at fliver Valley, 6 p.m. ·
Meigs al Nelsonville·York, 6 p .m.
OVCS all~ 51. Joe, 6 p.m . .
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m .
.Wahama at Buffalo, '7;30 p .m.

' FrlciQ. Ja!ltlw¥ 30

BoyaBuiEaslern at Trimble, 6 :30 p.m.
. Meigs at Vinton County, 8:30 p.m.
G&gt;VCS at Ironton St. Joe, 8 p.m .
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 6 p.m.
Southeril al Watertord, 6:30 p .m .
Teeys ~ at South G.,.., 7 :30p.m.

,•t 40-992-5432
.

Pomeroy,. OH
'

.

continued

Mqncley. f'tbruiQr 2
Glrta Baak-1
Eastern at GaNia Academy, 6 p .m .
Fairland ·at OVCS, 6 p.m.
.
. Polht Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Trimble, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Coal Grove, 6 p.m .
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m :
Wahama al Southam, 7:30p.m .

ll!gday Ftbrulry 3
Boys B•ske!bllll
Galiia Academy al Ironton, 6 p.m .
Hannan at Valley Faye«e, 7:30 p .m.
Nelsonville· York at Meigs, 6 p.m .
OVCS al Calvary, 7 :30p.m.
Squthem at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30p.m .
Girls Basketball
OVCS at C4!lvary, 6 :30 p.m.

Wtd"actav Fabruerv •

Girts Basketball
Ironton at Gama Academy, 6 p .m.

Tburldly. FtbruaQI 5
Boys Basketball
·Point Pleasant at Roane County, 7 :30 p.m ..
Girts Bosk-11
Athans at Meigs, 6 p .m.
Fairland at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m .
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

Frkl!!y Ftbrulry 0
Boys Basketball
Athens at Maigs, 6 :30 p.m.
at South Gallla,.6 p."m.
calvary Baptist at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.·
GaUia ~y at Logan, 6 p.m .
Hope &amp; Faith at OVCS, 8 p.m.
H~ntington St. Joe at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Rook HiH at River VaHey, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 6:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6:30 p.m .

euna1o

Girls Bttkitbell
Calvary Baptist at Hannan, 6 p.m.

•

Glrle Stekotbal!

llgnciq

Mt'dat F9l!ruiQ! z
Boys a.kalbalt

•

Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Ba~ll ·
Logan al Gallia Academy, 8 p .m.
Pike Eastern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.·
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7 :30 p.m.
Wellston at Eastern, 1 p.m .

llc!ol!q ftbru•ry 9
.
Girls Btsk-11
Ironton St. Joe at Soulh Gallla, 6 p.m,
OVCS at Buffalo, 7 p.m .
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Waterford at. Eastern, 6 p.m .
Wellston al Meigs, 8 p.m.
Tueadlv February 10
Boys Baeketball
·Hannan at South Gallia, 7:30 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant. 7:30 p.m.
Jackson al Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley oit Eastern, 6 p.m.

Iburldly february 12
iloys Basketball
OVCS at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Southam, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
aves at Hannan, 6 p .m.
. Polnt .Pieasant at Sissonville, 7 :30p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.

Frtdly. Fabrum 1a

flbnwy 11
Glrta B•kllball

Point Pleasant at Hannan, 7 :30p.m.
St. Marys at Wahama, 7:30 p ,m .

Dteectey february 17
Boys Basketball
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
.
Eastern at Parkersburg Catholic, 6 p.m.
Hannan at OVCS, 7 :30 p.m.
Poca at Point Ple~sant, 7:30 p .m.
South Gallia at New Boston
Southam at River Valley, 6 p .m.
·•
Girls Basketball
Hannan at aVCS, 6 p.m.
Jhuradlv ftbruQ..lS
Girls Basketball
Buffalo at aves. 7 p.m.
Wahame~: at Ravenswood , 7:30 p.m.

Frida¥- february 20
Boys Basketball
Meigs at Belpre, 6 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 7 :30 p.m.
Ri- Valley at Coal Grove, 6 p.m .
Southern at Eastwn, 6:30 p.m .
Satunday. Februa~
Boya Basketball
Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Day ol Champions, 6 p.m .

·rueadly Etbruary 24

· eoya Baoketball
, Polrit Pleasant at Ravenswood , 7 :30p.m.
Wahama at Poca, 7 :30 p.m.

Boys~ll

Eastern at Miller, 6:30 p.m.
Fairland a! River \Iaiiey, 6 p .m.
Gallia Academy' at Marietta, 6 p.m.
South Gallla·at Ironton St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southam, 6 :30 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

S!!!unll¥

Tburtdl!y Febru"V 26
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Calhoun County, 7 :30 p.m.

Frklll¥ ~27
Boys Baak-11
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7 :30 p .m .

&amp;bnwy 14

, . . , . . Fabnwy28

Girts Baablball
Gallia Aalemy at Day ol Champions, 6 p.m.·
South GaHia at Chesapeake, 6 p .m.

Boya~ll

Point Pleasant at Hurricane, 7 :30p.m.

Calhoun County at Wllhama, 7:30p.m .
Teays Valley at South Gallla, 8 p.m.

' .-..==31 '

~ ~ ~8~.f:l'.h.

W"JL.i
~~ ati'Oint~ p.m.
1

STUDENTS STAFF AND PARENTS

BE SAFE SMART AND

SENSIBLE

.
Cal Today Atd See Hn ~ Y01'Cu Sm.
:
:
Tel Us YoiArt Aa Employee Of . :..t :
: ••~ ALoal Sdleol District ForAddailnltSaviep "''lllf •,_

-:-

.~.

Portsmouth Clay at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

W!!cln!!ldq. .le!!ulcy 28

Fann •·Basinas

228 West Main

27

·
Boys Bask-11
Chasapeake at River Valley, 8 p.m.
Gallia Academy at PortsmQuth, 6 p.m.
Parkersburg Cathollc.at OVCS, 7 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p.m.
·· South Gallla at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30 p.m .
Girls Basketball
Parkersburg Catholic at OVCS, 6 :30 p.m.
· Wahama at Meigs, 7:30 p .m .

Auto -Home- Ufe -Health

. . 13

. . 15

Gallla ~ "'· River Valley (al l!RG), 6
p.m .

c....,.._... ai Point ~nt, '7:30 p.m.

.

'

..

..

•

frkler, n..

Bop Bu•ulball
1\thens at Gallia Academy,. 6 p m.
Jad&lt;son at Meigs, 6:30p.m.
Oak HHI vs. River Valley (at URG), 7:30p.m .
GirW IIIIIIIbizll
W8hama at Pocahontas Cc!· Tourney, TBA

Meigs at Easlem, 6 :30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 7:30 P·m·
Aock Hill at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Glrta......-11
Teays Valley at Hannan, 6 p.m.·

Point

Wecl=-::if:.nlw1D

Setuntay ""'

ll!nc!ly. January 20
Boys Basketball

·-~21

Gkta---1

Chillloo!he at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 7:30 p.rn.
Poca at Wahama, 7:30 p.m,
Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m .

OVC S at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Glrte Bask-11
Chapmanville at Point Pleasanl, 7 :30 p.m.
Gallia Acadamy at River Valley, 6 p.m .
OVCS at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Poca, 7:30·p.m.

Girts Baak-11
Gallla Academy at Chlllloolha, 6 .p .m.

.

Sou!hem. e:S6 p.JII,

• Gille Balllelbell
Hannan at Grace Christian, 7:30 p.m.

Belpre al Southern (Marietta), TBA
New Boston!il South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Glrte Baake1b1111
Gallia Academy at Jacl&lt;son, 6 p .m.
Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Southern, 1 p.m.

Tl!nc!ey; .Ianum 6

Moodly, !lec:tmber 29

Watertord at

'1:,ym:\:'!:::i1~

BoyaBaaketball
Eastam al Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Girls Baakatball
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 6 p.m .
Meigs at Soulh Gallla, 8 p.m.
.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m .

Boys Bask-11
Valley Faye«e at Hannan, 7:30 p.m .
GlrtsB-11
Coal Grove at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Easlern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Buffalo, 7:30 p .m .

Boys Basketball
Portsmoulh at Gallla Acdaemy, 6 p.m.

.

.I

Mondllt

Fdctay Dec:tmber 28

Saturc!a¥ !loc:eml!er 20

.

Ohio -V~IIey· Publfshing ·Qomposite Sche·dule

..

Roane County at Point Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.

Tundav ne. ember 11

• Page 13

2008-09 Winter Sports Preview

Friday, Novepaber ~, 2008

Reed I lawtnsuranceApnty
120 East Main Street

991-3600
www.reedbaur.com
. ....... ........... ' . . . .... .. ..-.. .

•

......

Here's To A

GREAT SEASON

Good Luck·
Eastern Eagles
so·u thern Tornadoes
Meigs Marauders
·wahama White Falcons

•

�4
I

Page 14 •
'

; 1 ~-09 ;~~(&amp;~~ ~!i~W
.

-

, • Pag~· ~S

,!A~ft. U.e zno8~.~: W~tc:~ Spo~ T~b ....

; . We ·~ OfiMViilley_ ~blishirig ~ant. to thank all 'o f tht; cba~h­

.e~, players and admJmstrators at Me1gs, Eastern and Southern

.

'!-..

'

~ • ' ... J

~1gb sch?Ols for their full ~oope~a~on in -making this produc- t1on posstble. We at The Datly Seqtmel also want to wish all of
the winter athletes in Meigs Coun~y the absolute best of luck
on your upcoming seasons. A special thanks also to Stacey
Walters for designing the 'front cover.

•

Lealand Bachus Alexander , Sr: - t~ £9ry V#les ·
: Fed Hock Sf
Kyle ·BlU1Jhoose Alexander Jr.
Kory
Williams, ·'Fed Rock' : Sf, ·
·G ~g Frost
·. Alexande.r ;Jr. "' Cot)' McCune
.Fed Hock .Sr .. _
.Eric Lynch •
~elpn~
Sr.
Jared-Gandee
Fed Hock Sr
Scott _Loyla~
Belpre
-· Jr. . _ 'OOrelc Hoge
Waterford Sr. '
So . . ··
Markle T~ . ,, . .Belpre

~

Clay Bolin
. Ja~ob Well · :
M1chael Barrick
,Andrew Eberts
Dustin Guthrie ·
-Jake Prater
Ryan Stewart
Jeff Matteson

Metgs_
Meigs ·
Nels.-York
Vinton Co
Vinton·Co
Vinton Co
Vinton Co
Wellston

Jr.
So. .

Jr.

Sr. ·
Sr.
Jr..
Sr.
So.

MOst Valuable Player

·•

Alex_Lang .

Sr-.. ·

v

Jr . ·
Weston Roberts · Southern . Jr."'' .

.

Kreig Kleski
Southern - Si · '
· Kyle Raw&amp;on
Eastern
· Sr .
Jak~ Lynch
• Eastern
. So ,_-_ ·
- Hs~ Standley
Trimble · - Sr
Dt!stm Householder Miller
Sr •

· '

.~

.
'$~

.

Cor)' Vales, Federal Hoclcing
· .•. ~h of the Year
'•·
.Bob. Vi,ate$•, Fecfs:~ Hocki'lig ~.t.f' '

'
'

~

..

ROSE'S

'

.·

1.,.0

U ·'

u

, ... ......

_ MoSt Valuable Player · -

•

-~'

~

.,.~&lt;.,'

Dustin Guthrie, Vinton County
Coach-of the Year. ·
Matt CombS, Vinton County
Vi.nton County . 10-0
Alexander
7-3
~7-3 .
Belpre ' ·
Metgs
34
Nels-York
2-8
Wellston
1-9

;' Waterford'

,.OJ~ Cunningham Waterford ·

-i

t~l

anuao•a

-~,&amp;d~Att.-~ · 7~l
Call the
earth

i

l0-0

,t-· 7•3

5-5 •

.

'
movmg

4-6

specialists!

2-8

'

''

140-949-2493
RACINE, OHIO

TSI
Over 2000 Paper Stytii; H..-ge Range of
Embellishments, Stamps,
Punches, Albums &amp;Tools
l

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Fo

~tn

Better Internet Banking.
Easy Bill Pay.
~nhan~f!C~ Security Featu,..s~

Bank

'102 WMain • Pomeroy, OH

'I

\

I

'

'

,

•

,

'

., .

i
~

t

'

•

I

I

'

•

•

'

• 1

' ,. /

,

I
-

,-•

if I

North 2nd Avenue

992-5627

Midd~ Ohio

1

M. (.f74~)- 992-3~~
SCRAPBOOK SJ9,"'f: , ,· ' on. .n. 0-5·• ~t. 9-5 . ,

_ ..

•

Member FDIC
r

•

•

r .

o

•

.... .

ts ,4ua: s~

..

J
I
'

''i

.,

�4
I

Page 14 •
'

; 1 ~-09 ;~~(&amp;~~ ~!i~W
.

-

, • Pag~· ~S

,!A~ft. U.e zno8~.~: W~tc:~ Spo~ T~b ....

; . We ·~ OfiMViilley_ ~blishirig ~ant. to thank all 'o f tht; cba~h­

.e~, players and admJmstrators at Me1gs, Eastern and Southern

.

'!-..

'

~ • ' ... J

~1gb sch?Ols for their full ~oope~a~on in -making this produc- t1on posstble. We at The Datly Seqtmel also want to wish all of
the winter athletes in Meigs Coun~y the absolute best of luck
on your upcoming seasons. A special thanks also to Stacey
Walters for designing the 'front cover.

•

Lealand Bachus Alexander , Sr: - t~ £9ry V#les ·
: Fed Hock Sf
Kyle ·BlU1Jhoose Alexander Jr.
Kory
Williams, ·'Fed Rock' : Sf, ·
·G ~g Frost
·. Alexande.r ;Jr. "' Cot)' McCune
.Fed Hock .Sr .. _
.Eric Lynch •
~elpn~
Sr.
Jared-Gandee
Fed Hock Sr
Scott _Loyla~
Belpre
-· Jr. . _ 'OOrelc Hoge
Waterford Sr. '
So . . ··
Markle T~ . ,, . .Belpre

~

Clay Bolin
. Ja~ob Well · :
M1chael Barrick
,Andrew Eberts
Dustin Guthrie ·
-Jake Prater
Ryan Stewart
Jeff Matteson

Metgs_
Meigs ·
Nels.-York
Vinton Co
Vinton·Co
Vinton Co
Vinton Co
Wellston

Jr.
So. .

Jr.

Sr. ·
Sr.
Jr..
Sr.
So.

MOst Valuable Player

·•

Alex_Lang .

Sr-.. ·

v

Jr . ·
Weston Roberts · Southern . Jr."'' .

.

Kreig Kleski
Southern - Si · '
· Kyle Raw&amp;on
Eastern
· Sr .
Jak~ Lynch
• Eastern
. So ,_-_ ·
- Hs~ Standley
Trimble · - Sr
Dt!stm Householder Miller
Sr •

· '

.~

.
'$~

.

Cor)' Vales, Federal Hoclcing
· .•. ~h of the Year
'•·
.Bob. Vi,ate$•, Fecfs:~ Hocki'lig ~.t.f' '

'
'

~

..

ROSE'S

'

.·

1.,.0

U ·'

u

, ... ......

_ MoSt Valuable Player · -

•

-~'

~

.,.~&lt;.,'

Dustin Guthrie, Vinton County
Coach-of the Year. ·
Matt CombS, Vinton County
Vi.nton County . 10-0
Alexander
7-3
~7-3 .
Belpre ' ·
Metgs
34
Nels-York
2-8
Wellston
1-9

;' Waterford'

,.OJ~ Cunningham Waterford ·

-i

t~l

anuao•a

-~,&amp;d~Att.-~ · 7~l
Call the
earth

i

l0-0

,t-· 7•3

5-5 •

.

'
movmg

4-6

specialists!

2-8

'

''

140-949-2493
RACINE, OHIO

TSI
Over 2000 Paper Stytii; H..-ge Range of
Embellishments, Stamps,
Punches, Albums &amp;Tools
l

•

&amp;4ttJ•1J4fMn &amp; ~

TODAY/

Fo

~tn

Better Internet Banking.
Easy Bill Pay.
~nhan~f!C~ Security Featu,..s~

Bank

'102 WMain • Pomeroy, OH

'I

\

I

'

'

,

•

,

'

., .

i
~

t

'

•

I

I

'

•

•

'

• 1

' ,. /

,

I
-

,-•

if I

North 2nd Avenue

992-5627

Midd~ Ohio

1

M. (.f74~)- 992-3~~
SCRAPBOOK SJ9,"'f: , ,· ' on. .n. 0-5·• ~t. 9-5 . ,

_ ..

•

Member FDIC
r

•

•

r .

o

•

.... .

ts ,4ua: s~

..

J
I
'

''i

.,

�'
\

l

.
.

Page l(j •

.

c;et

.

.

~.:.09

Winter Sports Preview

l)~lck

· · Friday, November 28, 2808

in J\ct i()ll

\\'it h
I) r . I&lt; e II \T l{ ( &gt;u s h
~

Certified. (~llir&lt;)J)ractic SI)&lt;&gt;rts 1-&gt;llysicicln
.

~.

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. :'. h·

• J

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·. ?rrrilit{i~for 'jlfflfr A-tf.J.e.us 11~ ·.·. ·

HOLZER
·c LINIC .
.

'

.

.

740-446-5818
I

••

'"
'

.

- G(f}JtJD·ILUCK
'· TO ;A·L. 'I J. AREA
TEAMS!
,.

'

.

.

.·

�'
\

l

.
.

Page l(j •

.

c;et

.

.

~.:.09

Winter Sports Preview

l)~lck

· · Friday, November 28, 2808

in J\ct i()ll

\\'it h
I) r . I&lt; e II \T l{ ( &gt;u s h
~

Certified. (~llir&lt;)J)ractic SI)&lt;&gt;rts 1-&gt;llysicicln
.

~.

.•

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. :'. h·

• J

.

·. ?rrrilit{i~for 'jlfflfr A-tf.J.e.us 11~ ·.·. ·

HOLZER
·c LINIC .
.

'

.

.

740-446-5818
I

••

'"
'

.

- G(f}JtJD·ILUCK
'· TO ;A·L. 'I J. AREA
TEAMS!
,.

'

.

.

.·

�PIIE2

~IJidll Slllbllll

PilEI

Silent ~ight

· Mary~ Did You Kn~w? ..
I

Mary, did you know That your baby boy wUI one day walk on water? ·

Mary, did you know That your baby boy will save our sons aa.d daughters?
Did you know . .
That your baby boy bas come to make you new?
ThJs dilld that y~u 've deJJvered WUI soon dellver yqu
Mary; did you know
That your baby boy.will alve sight to a bUnd man?
Mary, did you know That-your baby boy wUJ calm a sto~m wlda HJs hand?.
. Dfd you know That your baby boy has walked wbere angels trod?
And when you kiss your little ~aby You've kissed the face of

cod

Mary, did you know?
The blind wUJ see The deaf wUI bear
And the dead will live again The lame wUJieap
The dumb will speak The praises of the L•mb
· Mary, did you know That your baby boy~ Lord of aJI creation?
Mary, did you know That your baby boy wUJ bne day rule the natJ~ns?
Dldyouknow
That your baby boy Is heaven's perfect Lamb?
This sleeping chllf you're holcUng Is the Great I ~m ·
Oh Mary dfd you know?

Silent night, holy night!
All is calm, all is bright.
Round yon Virgin, Mother and Child.
Holy infant so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace,
Sleep in heavenly peace.
Silent night, hoiy night!
s'hephet'ds quake at the sight.
Glories stream from heaven afar
Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia,
Christ the Savior is born!
Christ the Savior is born.
Silent night, holy night!
Son of God love's.pure light.
Radiant beams from Thy I:toly face
With dawn of redeeming grace,
Jesus Lord, at Thy birth.
Jesus Lord, at Thy birth.

Season's Greetings ·from
Our Famil tO YotJrs!
oin our family of aatiefted customen. Aa an independent

"'.

.

agency, we tailor the best ituurance protection at ·
.

competitive prlcea.· We repreeent on.ly
cc;&gt;mpailtea, like Auto-Owners, The

"No Problem" People•. Atk ua
about the many other advantaaea
of dolna bualnea with an

Insurance Services
· 214 East Main • Pomeroy, OH
992-8687
or 992·2143
..

ipdependent inauhance aaency.

~-D'IIIw.~
....... - -.
Ute Home Oer ~ .

•*......~

the finest. insurance

�PIIE2

~IJidll Slllbllll

PilEI

Silent ~ight

· Mary~ Did You Kn~w? ..
I

Mary, did you know That your baby boy wUI one day walk on water? ·

Mary, did you know That your baby boy will save our sons aa.d daughters?
Did you know . .
That your baby boy bas come to make you new?
ThJs dilld that y~u 've deJJvered WUI soon dellver yqu
Mary; did you know
That your baby boy.will alve sight to a bUnd man?
Mary, did you know That-your baby boy wUJ calm a sto~m wlda HJs hand?.
. Dfd you know That your baby boy has walked wbere angels trod?
And when you kiss your little ~aby You've kissed the face of

cod

Mary, did you know?
The blind wUJ see The deaf wUI bear
And the dead will live again The lame wUJieap
The dumb will speak The praises of the L•mb
· Mary, did you know That your baby boy~ Lord of aJI creation?
Mary, did you know That your baby boy wUJ bne day rule the natJ~ns?
Dldyouknow
That your baby boy Is heaven's perfect Lamb?
This sleeping chllf you're holcUng Is the Great I ~m ·
Oh Mary dfd you know?

Silent night, holy night!
All is calm, all is bright.
Round yon Virgin, Mother and Child.
Holy infant so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace,
Sleep in heavenly peace.
Silent night, hoiy night!
s'hephet'ds quake at the sight.
Glories stream from heaven afar
Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia,
Christ the Savior is born!
Christ the Savior is born.
Silent night, holy night!
Son of God love's.pure light.
Radiant beams from Thy I:toly face
With dawn of redeeming grace,
Jesus Lord, at Thy birth.
Jesus Lord, at Thy birth.

Season's Greetings ·from
Our Famil tO YotJrs!
oin our family of aatiefted customen. Aa an independent

"'.

.

agency, we tailor the best ituurance protection at ·
.

competitive prlcea.· We repreeent on.ly
cc;&gt;mpailtea, like Auto-Owners, The

"No Problem" People•. Atk ua
about the many other advantaaea
of dolna bualnea with an

Insurance Services
· 214 East Main • Pomeroy, OH
992-8687
or 992·2143
..

ipdependent inauhance aaency.

~-D'IIIw.~
....... - -.
Ute Home Oer ~ .

•*......~

the finest. insurance

�HolldiJ SlllbOOl ·

PIIE4

PiiE5

.

.

We wish you a Merry Chrismas
We wish you a merry Christmas
We wish you a merry Christmas
we wish you a merry ChriStlflaS
And a Happy New Year
Good t~dings we bring
To you ·and ) 'OUr kin
Good tidings for Christmas
And a Happy New Year

.

oint tllea•ant l\egi~ter

· ·zoo Nlaln Street

· PoJnt Pl~nt, WV
Www.mydallyregts~.com

.

~Pom ()uP ~aml[i .

6}oY'oUPs · .
.r(t (flplstmas ··
..

lalldav Songbook

'

RAC I Nf: &amp; S YRACU SE

We've Got lt!

.Gl

---

' LENDER .

�HolldiJ SlllbOOl ·

PIIE4

PiiE5

.

.

We wish you a Merry Chrismas
We wish you a merry Christmas
We wish you a merry Christmas
we wish you a merry ChriStlflaS
And a Happy New Year
Good t~dings we bring
To you ·and ) 'OUr kin
Good tidings for Christmas
And a Happy New Year

.

oint tllea•ant l\egi~ter

· ·zoo Nlaln Street

· PoJnt Pl~nt, WV
Www.mydallyregts~.com

.

~Pom ()uP ~aml[i .

6}oY'oUPs · .
.r(t (flplstmas ··
..

lalldav Songbook

'

RAC I Nf: &amp; S YRACU SE

We've Got lt!

.Gl

---

' LENDER .

�. PilEI

·.ltll.ll S111111111
..

PIIEJ

Winter Wonderland

..

Sleigh bells ring, are you listening,
in the lane, snow is glistening
A beautiful sight,
. we're happy tonight,
walking in a winter wonderland.
Gone away is the bluebird, ·
here to stay is a new bird
He sings a love song,
as we go along,
walking in a winter wonderland.
•

Deck The Halls

In the meadow we·can build a snowman,
Then pretend that he is Parson Brown
He'll say: Are you married?
we'll say: No man,
But you· can do the job
when you're in town.

De~k the halls with boughs of holly

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ia-Ia-Ia-Ia
'Tis the season to be jolly

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ia-Ia-Ia-Ia

Later on, we'll conspire,
as we dream by the fire
To face unafraid,
the plans that we've made, ·
walking in a winter wonderland.

Don we now our gay apparel

Fa-la-la, la·la·la, ~~;.Ia~ ~· ,,. .
TroD tb~ ancient YuJe..ttae
Fa-la-la-la·la, la-la:.la-la• .

carol

.

In

the meadoW we can build a snowman,
· and pretend that he's a circus clown
We'll have lots of fun with mister snowman,
until the other kids knock him down.

See the blazing Yule before us.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la-la
Strike the harp and join the chorus~

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la·la
Followmem
...i q~.
...
~

'•·••

w~...

WhUe I teD ofYuli-tlde treUure. ·
Fa-la-la-la·la, la·la·la-la

..

'

I

~

.

.

When it snows, ain't it thrilling,
Though your nose gets a chilling
We'll frolic and play, the Eskimo way,
vvalking in a.wint,r wonderland. .

.

.

.

Walkins in a winter·~~.derland,
walking in a wint~t wonderland,

..

:

r

.
,....

Fast away the old year passes.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la-la
Hail the new yeat, lads ad lasses
Fa-la-la•la-la, Ia-la-Ia-Ia
Sing we joyous, all together.

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ja.Ja.Ja-la
heedless of the wind and weather.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la·la
J

'·

�. PilEI

·.ltll.ll S111111111
..

PIIEJ

Winter Wonderland

..

Sleigh bells ring, are you listening,
in the lane, snow is glistening
A beautiful sight,
. we're happy tonight,
walking in a winter wonderland.
Gone away is the bluebird, ·
here to stay is a new bird
He sings a love song,
as we go along,
walking in a winter wonderland.
•

Deck The Halls

In the meadow we·can build a snowman,
Then pretend that he is Parson Brown
He'll say: Are you married?
we'll say: No man,
But you· can do the job
when you're in town.

De~k the halls with boughs of holly

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ia-Ia-Ia-Ia
'Tis the season to be jolly

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ia-Ia-Ia-Ia

Later on, we'll conspire,
as we dream by the fire
To face unafraid,
the plans that we've made, ·
walking in a winter wonderland.

Don we now our gay apparel

Fa-la-la, la·la·la, ~~;.Ia~ ~· ,,. .
TroD tb~ ancient YuJe..ttae
Fa-la-la-la·la, la-la:.la-la• .

carol

.

In

the meadoW we can build a snowman,
· and pretend that he's a circus clown
We'll have lots of fun with mister snowman,
until the other kids knock him down.

See the blazing Yule before us.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la-la
Strike the harp and join the chorus~

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la·la
Followmem
...i q~.
...
~

'•·••

w~...

WhUe I teD ofYuli-tlde treUure. ·
Fa-la-la-la·la, la·la·la-la

..

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.

.

When it snows, ain't it thrilling,
Though your nose gets a chilling
We'll frolic and play, the Eskimo way,
vvalking in a.wint,r wonderland. .

.

.

.

Walkins in a winter·~~.derland,
walking in a wint~t wonderland,

..

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.
,....

Fast away the old year passes.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la·la·la-la
Hail the new yeat, lads ad lasses
Fa-la-la•la-la, Ia-la-Ia-Ia
Sing we joyous, all together.

Fa-la-la-la-la, Ja.Ja.Ja-la
heedless of the wind and weather.

Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la·la
J

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�PilEI

lllldiV Slllbllk

Away in a manger, no crib for a bed,
The little Lord Jesus laid down his sweet head
T~e stars in the sky looked down where he lay,
The little Lord Jesus asleep in the hay.

The cattle are lowing, the baby awakes,
But little Lord Jesus no crying he makes.
·I love Thee, Lord Jesus, look down from the sky
And stay by my cradle til morning is nigh.
Be near me, Lord Jesus, I ask Thee to stay
Close by me fo~ever, and love me, I pray.
Bless all the dear children in thy tender care,
And take us to heaven, to live with Thee there.

SAUNDERS

INSURANCE AGENCY INC•
. .-.John H. Saunders·.

437 Second Ave.
G~llipolis, OH
Phone: (740) 446-0404
'Fax: 740-446-4719
Cell: 740-709-9660
Toll Free: 800-689-5103
.
'

E-mail:
jbsaunder$@suddenlinkmail.cont

�PilEI

lllldiV Slllbllk

Away in a manger, no crib for a bed,
The little Lord Jesus laid down his sweet head
T~e stars in the sky looked down where he lay,
The little Lord Jesus asleep in the hay.

The cattle are lowing, the baby awakes,
But little Lord Jesus no crying he makes.
·I love Thee, Lord Jesus, look down from the sky
And stay by my cradle til morning is nigh.
Be near me, Lord Jesus, I ask Thee to stay
Close by me fo~ever, and love me, I pray.
Bless all the dear children in thy tender care,
And take us to heaven, to live with Thee there.

SAUNDERS

INSURANCE AGENCY INC•
. .-.John H. Saunders·.

437 Second Ave.
G~llipolis, OH
Phone: (740) 446-0404
'Fax: 740-446-4719
Cell: 740-709-9660
Toll Free: 800-689-5103
.
'

E-mail:
jbsaunder$@suddenlinkmail.cont

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-Go, Tell it on the Mountain

..

·whUe shepherd~ kept their watching O'er silent flocks by night, ·
Behold throughout the heavens .There shone a holy light

Go, tell it on the mountain Over the hills and everywhere
Go, tell it on the mountain
.
. That Jesus Christ is born.
The shepherds deared and trembled When lo! above the earth .
Rang out the angel chorus 'rhat hailed our Savour's birth;
Down in a lowly manger Our humble Christ was born;
And God sent us salvation that blessed Christmas morn ·..
When I was a seeker I sought both night and 'day
~••1aht the Lord to help me And
showed me the ·way.

He

.

.

.

He made me a watcbman Upon the city wall
And If I am a Christian I am the least of all.

~

·

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· Rudolph Th~
. Red~Nosed Reindeer
You know Dasher and Dancer
And Prancer and Vixen,
Comet and Cupid
And Donner and Blitzen.
But do you recall
-The most famous reindeer of all?
~udolph the red-nosed reindeer

(reindeer)
. Had a very shiny nose
(like a light bulb)
And if you ever saw it
(saw it)
You would even say it glows
(like a flash light)
All of the other reindeec
(reindeer)
Used to laugh and call him nam~s
(like .Pinochio)
They never let poor Rudolph
(Rudolph)
Play in any reindeer games
(like Monopoly)

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.
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Then one foggy Christmas Eve
Santa came to say
(Ho Ho Ho)
· . Rudolph with your nose so bright
Won~1 you guide my sleigh
tonight?
Then all the r~indeer loved him
(loved him)
And they shouted out with glee
(yippee)
•Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer
(reindeer)
You'll go down in history!"
(like Columbus)

. ··:·.~: ·
·

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-Go, Tell it on the Mountain

..

·whUe shepherd~ kept their watching O'er silent flocks by night, ·
Behold throughout the heavens .There shone a holy light

Go, tell it on the mountain Over the hills and everywhere
Go, tell it on the mountain
.
. That Jesus Christ is born.
The shepherds deared and trembled When lo! above the earth .
Rang out the angel chorus 'rhat hailed our Savour's birth;
Down in a lowly manger Our humble Christ was born;
And God sent us salvation that blessed Christmas morn ·..
When I was a seeker I sought both night and 'day
~••1aht the Lord to help me And
showed me the ·way.

He

.

.

.

He made me a watcbman Upon the city wall
And If I am a Christian I am the least of all.

~

·

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· Rudolph Th~
. Red~Nosed Reindeer
You know Dasher and Dancer
And Prancer and Vixen,
Comet and Cupid
And Donner and Blitzen.
But do you recall
-The most famous reindeer of all?
~udolph the red-nosed reindeer

(reindeer)
. Had a very shiny nose
(like a light bulb)
And if you ever saw it
(saw it)
You would even say it glows
(like a flash light)
All of the other reindeec
(reindeer)
Used to laugh and call him nam~s
(like .Pinochio)
They never let poor Rudolph
(Rudolph)
Play in any reindeer games
(like Monopoly)

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.

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PIIE11

.
'.

,
•
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Then one foggy Christmas Eve
Santa came to say
(Ho Ho Ho)
· . Rudolph with your nose so bright
Won~1 you guide my sleigh
tonight?
Then all the r~indeer loved him
(loved him)
And they shouted out with glee
(yippee)
•Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer
(reindeer)
You'll go down in history!"
(like Columbus)

. ··:·.~: ·
·

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PIIE11

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing

White Christmas

Hark! the herald angels sing, •
. '
"Glory to the newborn Ktog.
Peace on earth, and mercy mild,
God and sinners·reconct'1ed"
·

•

,,

I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
Just like the ones I used to know
Where the treetops glisten
and children listen
To hear sleigh bells in the snow.

•

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I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
· With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and bright.
And may all your Christmases be wh1te.
I'm dreaming of a white Christmas .
With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and brigh~
And may all your Christmases be wh1te.

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lolldaV SOIIbOilll ·

PIIE11

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing

White Christmas

Hark! the herald angels sing, •
. '
"Glory to the newborn Ktog.
Peace on earth, and mercy mild,
God and sinners·reconct'1ed"
·

•

,,

I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
Just like the ones I used to know
Where the treetops glisten
and children listen
To hear sleigh bells in the snow.

•

0

I
I

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I.
I

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I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
· With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and bright.
And may all your Christmases be wh1te.
I'm dreaming of a white Christmas .
With every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and brigh~
And may all your Christmases be wh1te.

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.;.: A new born K1ng to see,
.&gt; pa ru~ pu~ pum PU!ll
. ~ Our f1nest gifts we bnng
·;._· pa rum pum pum pum
.· •. To lay before the King
: .~ pa rum pum pum pum
-;.· rum pum pum pum
.· • rum pum pull! pi.Jm
:.·. So to honor H1m
:_· pa rum pum pum pum,
::. when we come.
·
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Little Baby
pa rum pum pum pum
I am a poor boy too,
pa rum pum pum pum
-~ _:. I have 'rio gift to bring
.: pa rum puin pum pum
&lt; That's fit to give our King.
.:·. pa rum pum pum pum·
.: rum pum pum pum
·-·~ rum pu,.n pum pum
·,.:. Shall I play for you!.

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PIIE11

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·The Little Drummer Boy

&gt; Come they told me

.

,loltdav Songbook

Busluss Card Dlrectorv

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pa rum pum pum
on my drum. .

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Mary nodded
·.J
pa rum pum pum pum.
:.-t
The ox and lamb kept t1me .~
pa rum pum piJm pum.
~
1 played my drum for H1m :.-t
pa rum pum pum
.~
I played my best for Him
_pa rum pum pum pum
~-t
rum pum pum pum
-~
rum pum pum pum
~-t
Then He smiled at me·
.~
pa rum pum pum pum
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me and my drum.
·

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Was a jeiJy happy .soul
_With a corncob pipe and a button nose
And two eyes made out of coal
Frosty the Snowman
Is a fairytale they s~y He was made of snow
But the children know how he came to life one day ·
There must have been some magic in that old silk hat
·they found
For when they placed it' on his head he began to dance
around
Frosty the Snowman was alive as he could be
And the children say he could laugh and play
Just the same as you and me

•J

Frosty the Snowman knew th~ sun was hot that day
So he said let's run and we'll have some fun
· Now before I melt away

I.

Down to th~ village with a broomstick in his hand
Running here and there all around the square aying
catch me if you can

~~

,.

Frosty the Snowman

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He led them down the streets of town right to
the traffic cop
.
And he on_ly paused a moment when
he heard him holler stop
Frosty the Snowman had to hurry on
his ~ay
But he waved goodbye saying don't
you cry
I'll be back again some day

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:: pa rum pum ~urn pum
.;.: A new born K1ng to see,
.&gt; pa ru~ pu~ pum PU!ll
. ~ Our f1nest gifts we bnng
·;._· pa rum pum pum pum
.· •. To lay before the King
: .~ pa rum pum pum pum
-;.· rum pum pum pum
.· • rum pum pull! pi.Jm
:.·. So to honor H1m
:_· pa rum pum pum pum,
::. when we come.
·
.:
.:··.
: .·:
-;:·

!· :·. "'=" ·:-:: ' '="

.

Little Baby
pa rum pum pum pum
I am a poor boy too,
pa rum pum pum pum
-~ _:. I have 'rio gift to bring
.: pa rum puin pum pum
&lt; That's fit to give our King.
.:·. pa rum pum pum pum·
.: rum pum pum pum
·-·~ rum pu,.n pum pum
·,.:. Shall I play for you!.

'

PIIE11

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·The Little Drummer Boy

&gt; Come they told me

.

,loltdav Songbook

Busluss Card Dlrectorv

•••1 1c

.· l
:.J·:

.

.··.·

J
.-t

pa rum pum pum
on my drum. .

:l~

Mary nodded
·.J
pa rum pum pum pum.
:.-t
The ox and lamb kept t1me .~
pa rum pum piJm pum.
~
1 played my drum for H1m :.-t
pa rum pum pum
.~
I played my best for Him
_pa rum pum pum pum
~-t
rum pum pum pum
-~
rum pum pum pum
~-t
Then He smiled at me·
.~
pa rum pum pum pum
.:J
me and my drum.
·

1·
1
J

Was a jeiJy happy .soul
_With a corncob pipe and a button nose
And two eyes made out of coal
Frosty the Snowman
Is a fairytale they s~y He was made of snow
But the children know how he came to life one day ·
There must have been some magic in that old silk hat
·they found
For when they placed it' on his head he began to dance
around
Frosty the Snowman was alive as he could be
And the children say he could laugh and play
Just the same as you and me

•J

Frosty the Snowman knew th~ sun was hot that day
So he said let's run and we'll have some fun
· Now before I melt away

I.

Down to th~ village with a broomstick in his hand
Running here and there all around the square aying
catch me if you can

~~

,.

Frosty the Snowman

J;.
11

1
-~J
l
·. ·,. :.{:j

- ~

.

.

He led them down the streets of town right to
the traffic cop
.
And he on_ly paused a moment when
he heard him holler stop
Frosty the Snowman had to hurry on
his ~ay
But he waved goodbye saying don't
you cry
I'll be back again some day

�BrownAge":.

D
.........................
.....-- --........
- -- -

ALONG THE ;RivER

Nltlonvl..e•
On Your SicJe•

Homes for the holiday:
Annual Gallla County
tour next weekend, Cl

()llt

clays til (Juoistnuas
33105 Hilad RO Suitt I
Pllmao~OH 45769

990S.ROIIItl60

.__.

,

Olllipolis, Otl45631

'

Prinledon 100%
llMyded Nt\"print

Hometown N'ews for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
t ' ' '" 1 \ . til&lt;., !'11 hi "l11ng

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l'oiiH 'I'll\ •

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No extension for Gatling comment

SPORTS
• McCoy lifts Pitt past
wvu. See Page 81

Young said she assumed agency feels there has been
copies of the draft permits adequate time for concerned
would be available at the citizens to obtain a copy of
COLUMBUS
Racine Library as other per- . the applications and draft
Although a · request was mits had been, making them permits and review them
made for an extension of the more accessible for those prior to submitting comcomment periOd concerning who live in Meigs Counfy lllents by Dec. 2."
Strouse not~d the Ohio
Gatling Ohio's National to review. Gatling Ohio is
Pollutant
· Discharge currently constructing an EPA issued a public notice
Elimination System draft underground cpa! mine cen- 17 months ago on June 20,
. permit and wastewater draft trally
located
off 2007, announcing the
had
received
permit with the Ohio Yellowbush Road outside of agency
Gatling's
applications.
Envjronmemal Protection Racine.
According to Ohio EPA Strouse went on to say· that
Agency, there will be no
spokesperson Erin Strouse, on Oct. 26, Ohio EPA issued
extensiOn.
The request was made by "consideration for an exten- another public notice,
Elisa Young of . Racine at sion was .given but as Jed . announcing that the agency
last week's public hearing Thorp (Ohio EPA employ- had issued Gatling its draft
on the. permits at Southern ee) explained during the permits.
Strouse stressed at the
public meeting Tuesday, the
Elementary School.
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMY!:WLVSENllNELCOM

Davenport:
E-911 start
in January
'reasona
. ble'

O~ITUARIES
Page AS
• Gary A: Foster
• Bill Slack
• Dolores L. Trout

bottom of this notice, there
were clear directions as to
, how citizens can obtain. a
copy of these draft permits
by contacting th.e district
office. ·
Strouse said Young was
one of the "handful of people to request a public
hearing" on the applications but did not ask to see
·the. draft permits until last
Friday.
Strouse
said
although . getting those
copies required some coordination with appropriate
staff, Ohio EPA were able
to provide Young the
requested copies electronically on the afternoon of

the hearing at · Southern
Elementary.
Written eomments will be
considered the same. as oral
comments concerning the
draft permits before a final
approval or denial if ·
received by Dec . 2.
Those written comments
can be mailed to Ohio EPA,
Division of Surface Water
Permits Processing Unit,
P.O. Box 1049. Columbus,
Ohio 43216-1049. The draft
permits and other related
materials are available for
review at Ohio EPA's
Southeast District Office at
2195 Front St., Logan, by
first calling (740) 385-850 I.

Ohio shoppers out in droves, but cautious
Bv LISA CoRNWELL

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI
Hundreds of Black Friday
shoppers lined up well
Bv BRIAN J. REED
before dawn at shopping
:.• Stephen L. Weethee
BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.coM plazas and malls around
&lt;
Ohio looking for bargains,
··
POMEROY - Under but many said they
;.;
&amp;tat·e law, 30 days remain planned to spend Jess than
·I·-N
for the implementation of usual due to the uncertain
' · SIDE
Meigs County's new E- economy.
.
.
~
911 system, and County . Shoppers sp11led out the
A Ch · tm
Commissioner
· Mick door as early as 4 a.m. in
~. .
rea ns as · Davenport said only pe.nd- Cincin.nati-area stores,
· -~t,Jee Page~ .~ )!!&amp;.E~!!2V.ll.t!Q!!~~4. !q,§tal-·-. w~erx_J.,.o~!ll&lt;!. J),~viJI
.-:Ut1eomft5ftable with
. lafion of equtpment ~oUTa Kuk · oF ;· oeorgetown
offlce•ehit&gt;Chat
delay the start-up. - .
arrived at a Kohl's depart,'
· ·· f
However, he said, the ment store to buy clothes
See Page~
deadline - two years and toys for their four
• Corps of Engineers
after voters approved the children.
inducts2 'in .
financing mec.hanism f?r
Jo_yce Kirk said she's
. . . .
. ..
the system - IS n?t set m. hopmg to· spend under
DistinguiShed CMjlan
stone, and whtle he $1 ,000 this . Christmas,
.. Gallery.SeePageAS
expect~ w~&gt;rk to be com- compared to the $3,000 to
pleted m ttme, the count.Y $4,000· she spent last year.
faces no real penalty tf
A line stretc}1ed around
the store when sisters
there are short d~lays..
Davenport satd. Fr~d~y Karima
and
Kavita
WEATHER
the necessary fundmg ~s m Samadi arrived at a nearby
place for the requ1red Best Buy about 5 a.m. arid
PfuH see E·t11 Al
found a high-definition
!
digital TV for about $500,
- - - - - - - - - about $100 below normal
price.
"It didn't seem as
Plean see Shoppers. Al

·;Bend

Plll18

Holldav Songbook

Frontier
Christmas
planned .

. Detllla.on Page A8

.

Customers and cashiers were busy as bees at Radio Shack in Gallipolis as the holiday
shopping season got going Friday. T~is year, electronic items such as cell phones, MP3
players and gaming systems are extremely popular.

Openhtg nears for new Holzer Clinic

BY HOPE ROUSH

HFIOUSHOMVOAILYREGISTER.COM
STAFF REPORT

INDEX
4 Sl!CTIONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

ciassifleds

D Section

Comics ·
~

.

.:

.

insert'

'

·Editorials

A4

~ovies

cs
· As

Qbituaries

·. B Section
.. I

'

~

'

. A6

Weather
. .

~·fbOII Oblo Vallq~Co.

1il. .'-'1~1)1 .
e, ;
....

• ·..
..

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• •'
•

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. I•

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Joy Kocmoudfphoto

POINt
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Step back into a
tr!lditional 18th century
Christmas
with
Fort
Randolph's Christmas on
the Frontier.
The event, slated for 10
a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
6, will feature a variety of
re-enactors as well as Fort
Lee Sco11ts. According to
Fort Randolph Committee .
President Craig Hesson, .
the · event will focus on '
what Christmas was like ·
on the frontier.
"The public i's welcome
to come share in the frontier · festivities," Hesson
said.
According to Hesson,
today 's holiday celebrations are signiftcantly difSubmitted photo
ferent compared to fron- The riew Holzer Clinic Athens at 2131 E. State St., is set to
PiunseeFrontler,A2 . !?Pen early in December, clinic officials said.

NEWSOMVOAILYTAIBUNE.COM
ATHBNS
Holzer
Clinic Athens, set to open a
new 68,000 square foot
facility in early December,
will be shown off for area
media on Tuesday from
11:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. at
the site of the new facility,
2131 E. State St.
'The media tour will offer
· a preview. of the new tech. nologies and services
offered, including ~he new
1-U
22
"Intelligent"
Ultrasound System, which
offers images with "4D
technology."
.
The new Holzer Clinic
Athens will offer state-ofthe-art care for residents
from throughout southeastern Ohio and western West
Virginia. and will feature
more than I00 employees

and physicians in a wide
array of healthcare specialties.
The opening of the new ·
facility brings with it the
creation of nearly 70 new,
high-paying jobs, clinic
officials said. It replaces the
current clinic site on
. Columbus Road in Athens,
arid offers mere than 25
medical specialties.
The new facility will
include the highest quality
digital diagnostic imagillg
available, including a · "64 ·
Slice CT Scan," 3-T MRI
for superior imaging,
nuclear medicine and breast
MR.
Special touches inlude an
espresso bar, bikeway
access, a rooftop garden and
use of solar panels as part of
an environmentally friendly
construction and operativn.

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